The Western herald. (Auraria, Lumpkin County, Ga.) 1833-1???, December 14, 1833, Image 3

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, tii*> section, nru] was engagou in the Question of exempting the property of the com pany fiom taxation or not, or how far, when an adjournment was moved and carried. J Tuesday, Dec. 3. After some business of minor interest, the house, resumed the (Bfinished business of yes terday, being the act to incorporate the Union Rail Road Company. The question of allow ■ _ jj, e company to be taxed was much dis cussed.* X variety of clauses, amendments am i substitutes were offered or discussed by Messrs. Harrisof Walton, Young of Oglethorpe, Stanford, Pace, Cooper, Meriwether, King of Mclntosh and Starke. It was finally agreed that the company be exempted from all taxation for seven years from the time the said roads or any of them shall be completed and no tax after that to exceed 2 1-2 per cent on the next pro jlts The rest of the bill was then gone through sections and at half after 11 o’clock the vote ,/as taken on its final passage by the house and carried, years 131, nays 12. ‘ The House then took up the penal code and progressed with but few amendments as far as to the sth division and then adjourned till three o’clock P.~M. ~TUK XVESTERV HERALD; AORARIA, GEORGIA, DECEMBER 14, 1833. We must apologise to our patrons for losing a paper last week. The change in our weather gave us solemn warning to leave our transparent abode, and seek some other, more congenial to our devil’s fingers and feelings, than the one we then occupied. The whistling of the westlin winds and northern blasts, as they played their .Kolian strains through the varied dimensions of our Lumpkin starlights, might suit very well the fiery fancy ot’a poet, or the musical ear of a minstrel, but they are too refrigerating for the geniuses of our devils, whose mu •leal lingers mast be kept at a proper temperature. The removal then of our office to a house more suitable for the approaching winter, engrossed so much of our time, that we were compelled to postpone the publication of last week’s paper. fldWo&ncffd.— Much complaint exists among tne ctti aensof this place on aceouut of the mail arrangements. They have had a post office established there for severa swaths, but have not yet been able to get a mail. There is considerable business done at this new town, and the Merchants, Miners and others, arc compelled to send better than five miles to this office for their letters. Surely this is a great inconvenience, and one which might easily be remedied. It is true that Cane Creek Hiil would, make the continuation of the Stage line somewhat haz ardous, but a mail-bag might betaken thrice a week from this place, and thus much inconvenience, time and ex pense saved the upper part of the county. We would all the attention of those most interested, to this subject, ;„d recommend the speedy adoption of such measu.es as would remove tliocxisting evil. —: 2K3K : We are informed by Mr. John N. Rose, of this place, vbo has been engaged for some time past in purchasing „„ld, that the last two months have afforded a greater quantity of the precious metal in nrnrket. than the same length of timein any proceeding part of the mining sea son! The mining business is better now than it has been .1 any time previous, and for ties obvious reason; all who are now engaged in the business, may be considered suc cessful operators : there arc of course not near so many adventurers experimenting here as there were last spring, but the enterprising and industrious miner, is genera y well rewarded with thcglittcring treasure, for Ins research fs. On many of the branches, the gravel has been wash ed a second time, and well reward jd tho labourer. e have heard of a third time’s re-washing to have paid good wages. This has indeed appeared strange, and lias in vited philosophic speculation. Some iiave contended from these and other premises, that the gold was produced in its native rock,and might seem again to reawaken the hy jiothetical hope of discovering the long sought “ Philoso phers Stone.” But wc confess ourselves still skeptical amt unbelieving, and presume to account for the success ful re-washing of the gravel, by supposing that much of the precious mineral, must necessarily passoverthe rock r, from the moist state in which the rocks were thrown :n, and that not being washed entirely free from the ad hesive mud, the exposure to the air and sun has made, the golden particles yield on rc-washing, more readily to the iterators wishes. —: 2T2K XVc have ever since (lie sitting of our Legislature, giv tit to out readers, a journal of the proceedings of an im portant or public character in the Sedate and House of Representatives, omitting the private or local acts, except “here we were specially interested. \ e have to ay continued our abbreviated journal from our last, wuc includes the actings and doings of two weeks. n a 1 “on, we have been informed by private communication, flat the bill to incorporate the Rail Road Company, from Augusta to Athens, has passed the House. The Governor has appointed N. B. Juhan, Francis Tennille and William Searcy, Esqrs. Commissioners of the Lottery, for the Fractions in the Cherokee country. The drawing commenced on the 6th inst. and is now pro talily concluded. The prizes we understand, were pla ced in the Gold and Land wheels, and to be drawn to the names remaining undrawn from the wheels of the thrmcr Lotcrica. The number of prizes, were about twelve hundred; names remaining undrawn, many thousand. Thus has the State of Georgia continued from year to pear, to gamble away her rich inheritance. It is indeed Painful lor one wlio feels as a Georgian should, to con itast Georgia as she is, with Georgia as she might have been. Her immense extent of terri'ory which might have been so appropriated, as to havo filled our whole state withtho most splendid works of internal improvement— tniglit have have afforded employment to thousands of her citizens, and thus have filled then barns and store houses, with plenty —might have forever dispensed with the necessity of taxing her citizens—might have been a tesort to the oppressed and enterprising of all nations, and have stood forth, the pride of her people, for the emulous admiration of her sisterstates. But alas for her, her Le rislatures have listened to the syren song of gaming, ami ofGeorga Ims disgracefully iiilVMatcd,literally and emphatically, gambled away her rich iiikeiitance, and must sooner or tutor, feel through every member of her political body, the effect of her misguided legislation, and the infatuated spirit of her policy. . FOR. THE WESTERN HERALD. In accordance with a previous notice, and in furtherance of the call of she State Rights Par ty, at Millcdgeville, a respectable assemblage of the Party in this county, convened on Wed nesday the 4th inst. at the MINERS IIALL inthis place; whenon motion, Dr..L H. Thomas, was appointed Chairman, and Alfred B. llolt, Esq. appointed Secretary. The object of the meeting being explained, the following resolu tions offered by J. J. Hutchinson, Esq. were unanimously adopted. Resolved, That we approve of Caucus nomi nations, as the best method of guaranteeing to us, by an unanimous suffrage of the Stale Rights Party, a representation calculated to honor, exalt and protect t[ie sovereignty .peace and Union of the States. Resolved, That inasmuch ns we have but one representative from this county whom we can claim as belonging to our party; that Col. A. G. Fambrough, be to make up that de ficiency, and to associate with our Republican Representative Isaa'c R. Walker, and with hjtfi to act for us in the proposed convention to be held at Mdlcdgeville on the .k?th ins.t. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be signed by the Chairman and Secretary, and that the ldtterbe instructed totransmit the same to Col. Fambrough and solicit his acceptance of the appointment. On motion of Allen Esq. Resolved that-the proceedings of this meeting be signed by the Chairman and Secretary and published in the Western Herald. J. H. THOMAS, Chairman. A. B. Holt, Secretary. At the same time and place, it. was Resolved, To form a State Rights Association in this coun ty, and a committee was appointed to drufta Constitution, and by Lws'for.the Governmjpt of the same, ahd to make their report to a meet ing to be held on the 28th inst. torthat purpose. The following gentlemen compose that Commit tee. • • . J. H Thomas,'’ J. J. Hutchinson, A. B. Holt ; ‘ G. Capers. % Hines Holt, Jr. ■_ A. /?. Mattheus, H. H. Shav % rUm. Lumpkin , P. Caliwcll, J. JY Rose,- ‘ •• J. Aladdinr . 11. -AT. Clay, . TANARUS, C. Bowen, ‘ Jl, K, Blackwell, . Robert Ligon. ‘. ’ FOR THE WESTERN IIBUILD* On the Ist inst. a meeting of the Citizens o£ Hall county, was called at Gainesville, for the purpose of appointing Delegates to a'Conven tion which will be held in Mtlledgeviile on the 12th inst. with a view of nominating a Congres sional Ticket, to be supported by said party at the ensuing October Election. On motion of Mr. Reuben Thornton, Richard Winn, Esq. was called to the Chair, and Gaston J\l. Under wood, Esq. appointed Secretary ; after the bu siness for which said meeting .had been called, had been disposed of, tho following preamble and resolutions, were introduced by Mr. R- Thornton, and ably sustained by sound logical reasoning from himsclt; when the vote of the meeting being taken thereon, they were unanim ously adopted. Whereas, for the want of a proper.inderstand ing amongst the people of the original Demo cratic Republican principles of the Government, we find ourselves as a nation fast tending to consolidation, anarchy and confusion, which in some instances have already p.oved highly in jurious, and extremely oppressive to various sections of the country, and to our own State particularly, the great evils of which, if not checked, we fear will ultimate in the basest despotism, and overthrow of the Government; and believing that the only salve for the con tinuation of the Government, and the arresting tho progress of so great an evil, is the general discrimination of a correct knowledge of the principles of the Government amongst the pie. Be it therefore Resolved, by this meeting, that a meeting of the Citizens of this county who arc attached to the State Rights Party, be called on the second Tuesday in January 1834, for the purpose of organizing a State Rights Associa tion, with a view of procuring and circulating amongst the people the best information in their power relative to the pure Democratic Republi can principles of the Government, as set forth by Thomas Jefferson in ’9B and 99, and con stituted the basis of his administration thereaf ter. 2d. Be it further Resolved, That there be a committee of five persons appointed for the pur pose of drafting a constitut'on, and making oth er necessary arrangements preparatory to the organization of said association, and that they report the same to said meeting. On motion of Col. Buffington, Resolved, That James W. Jo* Robert Mitchell, David C. Neal, Richard Winn ami Joseph Rivers com pose that committee. Resolved Further, that these proceedings be signed by the Chairman and countersigned by the Secretary, and published in the Western Herald. RICHARI ) WINN, Chairman. G. M. UNDERWOOD, Secretary. FOR THE WESTERN HERAI.I>. Mr. Editor —I have noticed in the columns of the Christian Index, a letter written from this place by one of our Citizens, containing what 1 concievo with due dcfference to the young gen tlemans “moral worth” is a gross slander upon our county. I should- be loth to ehgage in a controversy with one who has shown himself so public spirited as to appear before the public vero nomine and endeavours to awaken the sym pathies of the religious community abroad, in behalf of the destitute white savages at home ; and I should not now notice the effusion of the o-entlernan’s prolific imagination, if it were not that already have our town andl county .suffered from the misrepresentations of the msucwus, or from the desire of figuring like the gentle- j man, in the columns of a Newspap r. It is not now my object, to notice tho author of this pi- j ous, commiserhting epistle, and who thus courts public attention, and could not be better pleased than by carrying onin hisrealnamr,uncwspapcr controversy; and it would be the height of folly and extravagance in anv one, to attempt to pun ish by satirical exposure, those who thus court the lash, by baring their backs. But justice to the good people of this county, and to the ex emplary and edifying Divines, who have ci-t their lots with us in jhe gold region, requires that the assertions made by the gentleman allu ded to, should be flatly contradicted. He sa's, “ several thousand persons reside in this coun ty, and not one Minister ofthe gospel.” How this assertion comports with the gentleman’s “ moral worth,” I leave to the people of this county to ascertain. To my knowledge, Air. Editor, there are four resident Clergymen in the county, and mv acquaintance is quite limi ted, perhaps the geqjleman, being a public man, might on rcfleclion’ipcrease the number in the neighborhood of a dozen—one he could not for get— one of the ablest of denom ination, who resides not three hundred yards from the gentleman’s own domicil, and if he would put himself to a little trouble, he might hear from him every Sabbath, as good a ser mofi as he httr.sel&ieould preach, though he took for his text, “ The wicked on- Increases his ranks, and public morals suffer mi^b.” Again he says, “ none are found philanthro pic enough to cast their labour of love in this : populous country.” Surely the geptleman must have suffered a great deterioration’ in a faculty of the mind, that used to afford him much self congratulation, and must have forgotten the Me thodist and Baptist preachers, who put up re gularly, each, once a month at his own house. But again he speaks, and who can withstand the appeal ? th at “ so far as gospel preaching h;i3 any influence, the people of this country are as’ destitute as the savage!” Has the gentleman I never attended .any of (he religiousanieetings 4ljjs county —in the CTierokee country? |p quarterly three days meetiMJ; tne‘sMi;J and the Sabbath . Schoow ‘orTalonega alid Auraria ? or d.ffe.s his assertion of the destitution of religious influence arise from the fact, that “ he thdt is giddy,thinks the world, turns round.” V - • Thus Mr, Editor, is the ,dm and substance of this pious, pathetic, sutftuA and “ appalling”, description of the dearth and religious influence, a slander upon the good people of this county, anti it haSPSppeared in a paper published at a disrancc, and is not the first mis representation to irljure the county, that has appeared in the public prints, I have taken tho liberty to request its contraction through the medium of vour paper, (pner re ports, hurtful tt? the good name of this county, have distant prints over anonymous signatures; hut tnis last bears all the authentici ty,the author’s real name can give it, Wc ad mire the prudence that dictated? that this sym pathising, philanthropic offspring ot tho gentle man’s imagination,'should have been sent to be matured from homo—else had its authenticity best remained in umbra anonyma. Thus much may suffice in noticing one “ who grasps at stars and fastens in the mud.” By way of parting admonition, I would nd viso the young gentleman to gratify his desire ot figuring in tho columns of a newspaper, in some other way, than by slanderous attacks up on the morals of this county; as by the selection of a more discreet theme, he wonld insure to himself, tba impunity he merits. AMICUS VERI. 53“ The Christian Index, and other papers which have published the letter of Mr, P. are requested to give this also, an insertion. TOR TIIR WESTERN HERALD. UNION PARTY. This appellation has been assumed by a par ty at Millodgeville composed of the shreds of ail parties, it is a collection of the “turpitudi and ignorance” of the land, whether it has all the component parts of the “beast” mentioned by Daniel the prophet, I will not say, it is cer tain however there is a great deal of brass and some “potters clay” in the composition, it is also said there is in the evening sessions of the party a good deal of 1 eel clay. The chief object of this “Union party” seems to be the dividing out the loaves and fishes amongst themselves in the distribution of which they give to the eleventh how men , notonly an equal share but nearly the whole, however it is probable before the sepe rate all will be gratified, as they are now busily engaged in making new judicial circuits; and if there should not bo space enough, to make as many as will satisfy all who may want Judg ships; the “Superintendant of the mightywork shop” will appoint some of them to agencies in the glorious work of turning such Indians out of possession as are found on the lands of his favorites, should any still be found unwilling to make an honest support by their own industry. “Jim Crow” and “Die in the ditch” will come in to the aid of “the Superintendant,”havc them made post masters, or enroling agents &c. “how we apples swim” what circuit in Georgia but found persons enough wil'iug to preside over it, no draft has ever been resorted to lor that office, candidates in abundance were found seeking those offices at every election, and yet this “Union party” are about to give away six thousand dollars a term for the purpose 01 doing that which could have been as well if not much better done without such expenditure, how long will the people of Georgia submit to be thus dupCd? ‘ WESTWARD 110. From the Georgia Journal. The Cohimtvis Democrat, under thfe new arrangement, has come out with its creed. The illuminated editor, comprises it under the following heads : Ist. He believes in the Omnipotence oftruLi. 2d. He believes in honesty !!! 3d. He believes in the people 111! 4th. Hu believs in the Constitution of the United Stales ! !!!! sth> do do do in <h Union of these j States !! !! ! Cth. do do iu the supremacy of the Laws!!!!!! Sec. &c. &c. It there is no salvation in behaf, tho Editor’ • will bed and to all intents and purposes. , PILGAIILIC. MaelzeVs Rival. —A French watch-maker has invented a of mceholMfc, for which he justly deservtfcto rank with Maelzel, as a skilful and ingeffiotjs aitificer. .. It is thus de- j scrib?d in the Paris Journal dps Dehata :—“ j On an ornamental Vase, a juggler about six in— ; chca in height, and dressed in the Turkish t os- i tuino, is represented seated benea'h n canopy, j with a little table before him ; at his right is a which are p'aced three goblets and 1 a drum. In tho first place you hear a. delight- J ful overture, executed by some Eternal Me- i chan ism, when this is finished, ttfi little juggler, | as a juggler should, rises and bows three times j to the company ; he then takes two of the gob lets, and thr e silver balls, which he causes to pass successively from heaeath one of the in- j verted goblets to the other, so rapidly as to deer ive the eye, until they are all found at last under one. He then rcpiacesHhe goblets and strikes three times upon the dauin, which opens anMispla vs a little dancer, who tlgmiahfia-imfliL. limiMhth infinite grace, accompanied by music produced by mediums ; while the jug. gler beats.jtkc time, and expresses his approba tion by significant gestures. The dancer then j retires vrtthin the drum, and the juggler lifts the i third which iS perceived a silver ! eg£r, ii£p which issues a beautiful and richly This bird takes its statiqg on thajfeg, cktps its wings _and sings an airft wheiwpis is over, the juggler replaces the gob let: hates and resumes his seat ; and another air dfscs the exliibitalion. . The artist was em-„ plowd for ftie space orfiveiyeg.rs in cmnpictirfg Jjoig piece of.mechanism,*android it Hues.— Bicknell’s Reporter. Aarqp Bur). — and troubled caree! 1 ofthigj gifted, but ivretched man, approached its close. History, in its - lenghened gallery, has not a single portrait on vhich the student will gaze with more adnairatioh and regret, or th'(Ujhita#pher with more surprise g/ufdoubt, thiWfhat of Aaron Burr. Tqjthjg ihomemt he is a puzzle. The early his career was all brightness; and evergnp’ moment when, eaugtX’fcrtoils of a supetsßrmind,he was dashed to thejearth blasted and -destroyed—we know not whether more to admire or Condemn. Even i!*Jrisguilt were yjitten on ■'the page of his counfl'v’s history in .colours tiy>_ glaring.to he doubted ; his penancjhas befn a long and bitter He has lived to see his-name shroud cdjh irtfairiy,; coupled with the imprecations of aloft as a .beacon light to gJrd the the wreck of ambition. He haslived to sec and feel all this, to creep j where he has soared, to bfi the object of pry-, j ing and insulting curiosity, or ot averted and . scornful distrust, where once’ he was. tho .first j atomic brightest, the central of’ ail£i topes, observed of all observers. j Ho has trod, silently and abstracted, around the walking crowds of the metropolis of his country, earning his daily bread in bitterness of soul, ano schooling his high and soaring spirit to endure its degradation, the mock’ rv and scorn ofhis country, and his age. History has no parallel for such a picture. Camillus’ disgrace was brief, and terminated bv a glorious reward; Marius left the ruins ot Carthage to feed fat his revenge upon his enemies; and even Belisarius was doomed to beg his obelus for a few dayH, when death laid him in an honored grave But Burr has contemplated his ow.i ruins tor more than a quarter of a century; has had during that long and bitter term, the poison ed chalice presented daily to his lips, has eat and drank and slept with the hisses of the world ringing in his ears. He has been guilty; but his guilt has general ly been misunderstood. It had nothing sordid or craven spirited in it. Burr’s treason was not the treason of Arnold; and though deserving of censure, he is also deserving of commiseration, Ho was ambitious— “Twasa grievous fault, But grievously bath CiE-sar answer it.” John Forbes, whose conviction for the mur der of Col. Daniel 11. Brailsford, we have al ready noticed, was, we understand, sentenced by his - Honor Judge Law on Monday last, at the close of the Mclntosh Superior Court, held at Darien, to be hung on Friday the 27th of December next. The sentence, we learn, was pronounced inasolemn and impressive manner. The trial occupied the Court two days. The Jury after an absence of fifteen minutes, return ed a verdict of “guilty of murder w ith malice aforethought.” The prosecution was conduc ted by William. 11. Stiles, Solicitor General, Matthew Hall McAllister and Bayard E. Hand, Esqrs. The counsel for the prisoner were John C. Nicoll and Charles S. Henry, Esqrs. jllKHifiiD. In Cnrkesville, on the,3th inst. by the Rev. Mr. tinil lian, Mr. A. RO .v LAND of Gainesville, to Mi-s MA rY CA.VJFIELD of Augusta. 11l Oglethorpe county, on the J4th November, by the Rev Janies Matthews, JOHN V. COLLIER to Miss OLIVIA MAT I HEWS. As due drops glisl’mng in the morn, Unite, if gently breathed upon; So Cupid’s breath on zephyrs borne, t ins blended these two hearts in one. We arc authorised to announce Doctor JOHN liADDEN, as a Candidate for Judge of the In ferior Court, at the ensuing January election. Dec, 11.-35 We aie authorised to announce COIt- NKLIi S I'O v NSEND, Esq. asa caudidate for Judge of the Inferior Court, at the ensuing Jamta y election ADMINISTRATORS SALE. Ban order of the Honorable the Inferior Court of Richmond county, when sitting as a Court ot 5 li dinaty, will be sold at the Court House in Union enuuty. on the first Tuesday in February next, a Tract of I,and containing one hundred and sixty Acres, No. 225 10 1 offormcrly Cherokee, now Union county. S'ld fo’ the benefit of the heiis and creditors of I’. H. Combs, dee, . STERLING T. COMBS, AduVr. GEORGIA, RABUN COUNTY. WHEREAS Andrew Miller and Jamcsß fit-nsw", apply to (no for litters of Diemisrion tVoin It ‘S furiher adiiiir.islreiHm on llie i gtute of James Ktiothnr, lateof said errdnty, licceari and : Tlicse are t’-erefiT to rite and admonish s’.l and r "’ *- enlar tiie.kirj Ir.'d Kiyi creditors of .-aid dre jared, to bn and appear wt mv oilier Rtthin the-tiine prescribed bv lav. to shew ratine i’ !ii■ v have, wbvsaitl litters stioitlil not ■ ‘ granted. Ci iv.'.l u.icr-r me hand this let Decemlier, 183.:. JACOB CAl’l MART.c. c. o. Dec. 14.—35—m G:n. - s FORSYTH TO UN LO f Bb. ON the s3il of December next the Torfri Lot” of Forsyth county, on 1.0 l .No. 127 C, in the 3d District of the Ist Sectiu t, V'tM he soM to iue lushest balder; te ! * sided the Legislature now in session, makes no uiltv - ,: in the tounlv. Terms model,miwri on the day o ’ ISAAC VV HORTON, i. I. c. . A. AI’RKECK, l. i. e. fti.AbVN EZELL, j.. i. r Nov. 1C.—32-tds. FOR SALE. The following Gold and.Load Lots : No. 407, 13t! Dis. Ist Sec. north, tits Laadtutn 504? 13 1 North. 7ae, 2 i 209, 3 1 172, 3 2 248, 3 - 533, > My .Interest. 435, 15 2 - —sro, 3*--- - 2 Lind: •“ - 119, 1 2 3(4, 7 2 L>nl. Apply! to-the subscriber in Decatur,. De Kalii county. WILLIAM M. HILL. Nov.!.—32—tf. - UNIVERSITY OP GEO. rHJ | E tixt College Session will cotom. nce on Ibo Bb “ftith a candidate tnusUiavc a correct knowledge yf&Jiwro's OrjUi Jjs, Virgil, Jplm and Acts in.the Gfttli ‘I estainrnf^K or Jacbb's Greek Reader* and Geograjdiv, and be w ell acquamt • ed w ivh Arithmetic. ‘ of *?icfk’C9lyiii Class. I sir Term, .lug. to. .Mji**— P neca Majora, Ist Vol- commenced, andKiewVcncljjßßpiagc. f 2d Term, from Jan. to .Ipril.—a Mfejora, lsu vol.-and French continued. . • 3d Tenn,-\lpril to .4isg. —Livy and Cjrarca Mptora, US vifl concluded, contiuuc.d, tntu through Ratio and i’ropoititinv “ ‘ 11 * Studios of the Sophomore Class* ■ Ist Term, .lug. to.'Vbr.—Horace and Gneca Majora, 2d vol. commenced, Algebra cdncni9Cd,%nd threo b .JO I, v of Geometry, (I4uyfair’s Euclid.) ~ 2 d Ttrm, Jan. to April.-— Greaca Majorni, 2d vo*. cor* tinucd; Horace and Geometry concluded, and Jamicsona •Kh^orlc. 3.7 Term, loJiig.— Grftaca Nkijora, 2d vol. con cluded; Modern Languages; Plain Trigonometry, Men suration, Surveyinff, Botany, and Tytler’a Historv. The present Junior Class l.ave studied in addition to the alovC r the first of Cicero de Oratore, the nrs hook of Homer’s Iliad, Elair’s Lectures, and OlAistcad 9 Mechanic's in part. ~ Thoughlhc classes rcgularfy attendto Frencd-ouring the Ft cshrrfan and Sophomore years, yet it is not made are indispensable requisite for admission into any ot the etas- _ ses. Provision.*? made for those who enter without „ know ledge f French, to stuiy that language, tor. w*un there is- no alpitional charae ot tuition. . . Thps-e who desie it, will have opportunity cf ”Hi dying Helitew, Spanish, German, and Italian without any addi tional charges. • . , Tbi;rates us yearly in toßiScc.. B| Hoard cam obtamcU in respectable fstaesnersA tro.. 8 to SlO per month. By order of the Faeultv, WM. L.’ MITCHELL, Sccy. December I I.—3s—tf. TO TEACHERS. THE annua', meeting of the Teachers’ Society of Georgia, will be held in Savannah, on Monday tho 23d Decembernext, (third Monday,) e are-authorized to state, that the hospitalities of thrv city will he extended io all Teachers who attend, on ap. plication being made to Messrs. Williams and Biryh, Principals oftiie Chatham Academy. By order of Society. C. P. BEMAN, President. It. O. Brown. Secretary. Deceinbi r 14, 35, SSierifl-s Sales for January in CASS COUNTY. Lot Dis. Sec. Property of To satisfo. 232 1 1 M Duncan, IIV Cft W W UufTb. 172 13 3 Job i Engrain, Robert Brown, 872 4 3 Erasmus Camp, D. Killingworth, 151 15 3 Felix C. Cabinet, Michael Prendergras", 153 7 3 G. Fft J F Elliot. John Edwards, ~ 824 4 3H* S Douglas, Samui l Ostall cr, <062 21 2 Thomas Ligg, John Talmage, 1072 21 2 Gilbert ilase, Josiah Roberts. 1235 21 2 J Scroggin, James Kirkpatrick, Postponed. 113 22 2G C Brandi, James Brano.i, COBB COUNTY. 559 1 3 John Weir, George fiance, 1132 IS 2 Samuel Johnson, Laban S Johnson, 51 1 2 ltH Walker, Thomas Chaffin, 473 33 David Daniel. Richard T Uollijev 112 13 3 Obedinh Scoggins Saflold ft Hais. ‘ 1116 13 2 Hopson Danbury, Peter J Abbot,. 273 18 2 Howard Hurley,’ James P Waller 260 17 2 T II McCleskey, C C Collier, 853 10 2 Burtveli Hague?’ WiHianfEstcr 1090 17 2J 11 Talley, Leonard P Breedlove, Postponed. 753 1 2 A M Bishop, and 1 John R Stanford, and’ James Fielding, ) Jones ft Simmon?. MURRAY COUNTY. ISO 17 4J D Buffington, GW FLampkin 73 17 4 James Adams, Samuel Taylor * $7 13 3 John T Colqtrett, J N Spencer ft’Co. 155 12 4 James Kerr, William Wallace 79 25 2 William Hall, John Sellers, 255 1 0 4 Mathew Knight, David Duke FLOYD COUNTY, 88 5 4 John Cubhidge, D& B Fobr 178 2 2 3J G Greenhovv, Gaudry ft D’ufoar 71 24 3 Rico Durrott, M Prenders-asL ’ 135 23 3 NMe Duller, Fletcher ft Fifzsinrnof s 62 14 4 Joseph Phillips, Lamar ft Cos 210 5 4 J H Williamson, ) G.U Wilimnson, / JN Man, and F F Dcney, ) 455 3 1 T Jones, and ’ >~, , Bctij. Brewer, I Hilaries Gales, 1058 3 4 RH Caldwell Wm. T Short in 203 3 4 James \V Howard, John Wicker ‘ 0 II 4 Buckner Abanathy Henry People?’ ** 3 l'U Varb.ough, James Kirkpati’iVl. :: “tt” tfsaa* bJ2, Joseph Ba.lev, BEm’Jfbru ftMcNcu! Ft irsvth county. £35, 2.5 3 Thomurf B .Mwlin, W\y Welker ill 2 1 Samuel Scott, >BA Nk kelson’, for the 100 2 I Paniel y, ; j:; s Znhffr 500 I Il’ N Sou!,, k ’ Jo Cu "'S*mu.V 435 2 1 Reuben Holmes, Samuel .VlcWid PostKsne<l. 2 ? Bo'v ft I'r IVT#,„e, 4.,**;