The Democrat. (Columbus, Ga.) 1830-18??, November 20, 1830, Image 1

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r COS AM Evil ft BARTLETT— EDITOR] THE DEMOCRAT, will be published every week in Columbus, Muscogee County, (ieorgiu, at Three Dollars per annum if paid in advance! or Four Dollars at the end of the year It is expected that all application for subscription frmn a distance will be accompanied with the money, Advertisements will b»; inserted at reasonable rates Sales of land and negroes, by admtnis , trators, executors or guardians, are required by few to be he'd on tha first Tuesday in the month, between the hours of ten o’clock in the forenoon I 4- three in the afternoon, at the court house of the I county in which the property is situated. Notice lof these sales must be given in a public Gazette I sixty days previous to the day of sale. Notice of the sale of personal property must Ibc givei in a like manner forty days previous to ■ the dav of sale I Notice to debtors and creditors of an estate, ijnust be published forty days. I Notice that all application will be made to the I court of ordinary for leave to sell land must be published four months. . PIiOJiFLC 11.-. ■ For publishing at Columbus, Oa. a Political and f Miscellaneous Newspaper, to be entitled th DEM OCR A I’. In ffteseuttng to the pu.Hic his Pros- B pectus for anew paper at Columbus, the ■ subscriber does not deem it uecessaiy or I expedient to go into u minute detail of his I political doctrines, or of his particular I views in regard to the various topics which I now engage public attention. fie pre- B sumes that his character as an editor is too ■ well known in Georgia to allow him to ■ gain credit amoug any party, with mere ■ prof ssious and empty promises. The ■ public will be apt to look to the past in lor lining their estimate of tne futute, and by Bth.it ordeal is he willing to be tued. in F the numerous political discus 'ions, whiih ■ the events of the day h ive called forth, Ins ■opinions of men and things itave been free liy expressed, and are doubtless familiar ■to many of those to whom he now looks for ■patronage and support. Those who have : hitherto apomved of his sentiments and Been satisfied with the u.annei in which he |i i» uiged them, will, he trusts, still con |inue their confi leuce, without the renew *1 of Dledges, or a formal confession of fct.h. ’ |H lii reference however to the present Bta to of pit ties, he begs leave to lemarK, that he trusts the absence of all political excitement, will prove propitious to tite came <.f truth; ami that now ail parties, by wb. lever names they may have been dts tiu o ishod, wrfl be permitted to labor for the general w> Hare, unobstructed by the jelil'.usy, or the rancor of by-gone feuus. ft e undersigned will endeavor to extend stfli lui titer this cordiality ol feeling, and to allay tile occasional symptoms ol ex. cerb atjon to which a warmly coniesieu election mav give rise; and in this, aud whalevet cite he may undertake for the purpose ol advancing the prosperity of the state, he vi|! count on the cordial co operation of every good citizen, however they tnay bJvo previously differed on points of polit Bl faith. ■Att ached to the doctrines of the ReVolu tiiln, <llll holding m high veneration the Binoiy of tliose heroes and sages by whom our liberties were achieved, and our admirable form of government es* the subscriber will endeavor to gbnif st the sincerity of his proft ssions, by fedcitiug a feeling of attachment to the tUiiion, and encouraging an entire conli djuce in the institution's of our country. Hr will inculcate the docinus that it is to bear and temporary evil, BdHinst which we have a constitutional Ipniedy, than to hazard all for which our falters fought and so many martyrs labor- M and bled. He will not in any respect, SMrerlook or disregard the rights cr the in tetrests of his own state; vet he must always view particular rights and interests, as re lallivelv connected with others, and he will fivnr consent to tine sacrifice of a greater a lesser good. |B she subscriber will endeavor to make Wfkc Democrat a vehicle of general tnteUi* IBiice, and art interesting periodical to the of lileratine, the agi iculturalist tab merchant and the mechanic. C. E. Bartlett, A NEW MAP OF GEORGIA. ■ IliK subscriber!) have now under the B hauris of the engraver in New York, Homplete and splendid map of the state ■ Georgia, the greater part compiled from fliunl survey, with all the districts careful- Htaid down mid numbered, the whole com- Heted with great labor and exactness from tte latest and most authentic information In a style not inferior to any thing yet pre- Bicd to the public, with a table of distan ces' front the seat of government to every CKioly site, or place of importance in the s«te. The districts in the new purchase Bd lower counties are all numbered in the so as to enable a person to ascot fl*l the exact situation of any lot of land will be painted and finished off in the 'flu test manner, a part of them canvassed and put on rollers, the balance iflthiu paper nicely folded in meoedt fliers and will he for sale in Mtlledgeville fl the Ist of October. Those on rollers flfive dollars, and the pocket map of the size, at four dollars. Persons resid at a distance wishing to procure the Bp c n do so by sending by the members B a sufficient number of them will be kept B Mtlledgeville during the session. Carlton Welborn , • Orange Green. moct. IS3O A V APPRENTICE, ■ITILb be taken at this Office. A v smart active Ud of goodaiora’ cha- None other need apply. THE MMOGlilg. PROPOSALS, or publishing by subscription a compendium of the Laws rj the State of Georgia, by Arthur roster 9 < fmboning all 'he statutes, and the substance ot all the resolutions of a general and pubbe na ture, and now of force, which have been passed in said State from the year IBVO, to the year 1829 both inclusive, with occasional explanatory notes and references, and a list of the statutes repealed or obsolete To which is added an appendix, containing the constitution of the state of Geor gia. as amended; also references to such local acts as relate to towns, counties, internal naviga- tion, county academies, Ac and a collection of the most approved forms used in carrying the above laws into effect; with a copious index to the whole It will be something.like a continua tion of Prince’s Digest, noting the laws in said Digest, repealed or altered ft may be obse ved, that the legislature of Georgia are in the constant practice of repealing, alteiing, or amending laws passed at their previous sessions, so that without such a digest, or compilation of them, as is now respectfully offered to the public, it actually re-! qnires a lawyer, or a person who has devoted much time to the examination and comparison of the diff rent enactments of each succeeding ses ston of the legislature, to be acquainted with all the laws which arc offeree. And having witnes sed with much pleasure the immense public utili ty and popularity of the digest compiled by Oli yer II Prince and also having ho dou' t but a similar compendium of the laws from the time of that publication down to the present with the ad dition of the precedents, on forms, which will he placed in the appendix and which will add great ly to the public utility of the work, and to the fur therance of justice would he very acceptable to the public, the compiler has ventnred upon the srduous and important undertaking. However, not reiving altogether on his own experience of having been a member of the legislature during the passage of'he mostofthe Laws now proposed to be published, and at the administration of them for eight y ars, as justice ot the inferior court, in a county where much business of an in tricate nature is transacted in that court and the court of ordinary; after collating the manurcript 1 it has been placed in the hands ofgentlemen em- | inent in the law, who after a strict and careful 1 examination have politely tendered to him the subjoined certificates. I have examined a digest of the Laws of Geor gia from I*2o to 1*29 inclusive, by A. Foster, esq. and think the work executed with great judg ment and accuracy. The work is intended as a continuation of Prince's Digest, and is. in my opin ion, well calculated to answer that valuable pur pose Although the author is not professionally a Lawyer, he seems, in ascertaining tne statutes’ now ot force, to h- vo added much care examina tion and'studv, to his advantages as a practical le gislate, during most of the period embraced in his work JOHN P. KING. Augusta, July, 1830 Augusta, July 28. 1830. I have attentively examined a Digest of the Laws of Georgia, from 1820. t 2 1829 inclusive, and find the work is executed with much judg ment and accuracy, bv A Foster, esq. of i oluin bia county,. I have no doubt the work will prove valuable to every citizen who feels desir ous to become informed of the statutes now of force in the state, and would recommend ail jus tices of the inforior court, justices of the peace, cleiks, sheriffs, 4c. to possess themselves of the work as soon as published. THOMAS GLASCOCK. Wrightsborough, sth June. 1830. Sir—As far as I have yet had an opportunity of examining the manuscript copy of your digest, of the laws of the state of Georgia, 1 highly ap prove both of its plan and execution. The vol ume canuot fail to answer well the purpose for which it was intended In the appendix there are a number of precedents or forma, which ap pear tc have been modeled with accuracy, and in strict conformity to the digested statues from which they were drawn; and without doubt will add much to the value and usefulness of the work, as a mean (in the hands of the justices o the peace, justices of the inferior courts, clerks, sheriffs, young practitioners of the law, and oth ers) in errying the above named laws into effect with greater facility lain sir your obedient servant, PIERBDN PETIT. Arthur Foster esq. The work is now in the hands of Judge Schley, who has kindly promised as early as other en gagements will permit to take it through a care ful and minute investigation, and correction, if correction shall he found to be necessary and proper. The great public ntility of such a worn must be obvious to all; aud the compiler, who has de voted to it much time and Irborious study, flatters himself that the testimonials presented above, will fully satisfy the public, that that utility has not been lessened in the slightest degree, by any defect on his part, in its general design or the ac curacy of its execution O’At the suggestion of the professional gen- I tlemen whose names are affixed to the above cer tificates, and others who have generously taken an interest in the work, and with an aaxiousde sire to make the work as extensively useful as possible to the public, the compiler will introduce into itseveial highly important laws of tho Uni ted States, in common use among the people, and which itre often difficult to be tound; among which a~e those i relation to the naturalization of alions tho remaval of cases from the state to the United State courts, the mode of voti g for president and vice president, by electors, a..1 of making the returns, and the time of holding such elections, \c. TERMS The work will contani about 400 pages, and will be printed after the style of Prince’s digest, which is to be taken as the standard, and bound in law binding; will be published as soon as a suf ficient number of subscribers can be obtained to warrant its publication, and will be delivered to subscribers at their residences, at $3 50 per co py Any responsible person obtainiug fifteen subscribers, and becoming acceuntable for the same, shall be entitled to one copy gratis. Publishers of newspapers in this state, who will favor the above with such occasional insertions .as they may think proper, till the Ist November next, shall receive therefor a copy of the above work. NOTICE. FI OUR months afterdate, application will be made to the Honorable the Inferior couit of Muscogee county, when setting for ordinary pur poses for leave to sell the real estate of Elijah Jew ett, late of said county deed. ’ JOHN LOOMIS, Ex’r. Oct, 16th, 1830. l-w-4-m. _ jvor/cE. 4 LL persons indebted to the estate of Elijah Jewett, late of Muscogee couni y deed, will mako immediate payment to the subscriber, and those to whom the estate is indebted, will render in their demands in terms of the law. lu JOHN LOOMIS, Ex’r Oc* 16,1»30 l -** v COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 20, 1830. From the Baltimore Miner vs. SEN I’iMENTAL. An English ii iVetfei, one who hasf never j been out ol sight of cue B nv-bells, until he took it into his head to cross the 4 *H ttlau ttc o take notes.” passed through one of the southern stales, that he might have pi 00l positive tha ! the horrible practice of gouging was iu vogue among the people who call themselves Christians. II • arriv ed at a small village on the banks of the Savannah, bearing a political name, and also the reputation of being the most rip rotious place in all the state. Entering the bar-room of the hotel, which was a spa cious log edifice, ne asked the landlord, who appeared to be a peart little Y iukee full of business and bustle, if he could “ave his orse hattended to ?’ “i reckon so, answerd mine host, “here, Isam, you black rascal give the gentlemau’s ere ur, some truck." ' Our cockney friend scratched his head, and endeavored to muster brains enough to fall upon the meaning oi the word * ruck,* and lie came to the natural conclusion that it meant hay, fodder, or some other pto vender. The evening being chill and damp the landlord invited his guest to take a seat at the fire plact, which was nearly hidden from view by a of six-looters and river alligators. He succeeded, after some trouble, in obtaining a seat at the peril of having Ins garments bespattered with lobat c<>-juice, when to his utter astonishment, mine host called aloud to Isam to put au armful of truck upon the site. The cutt osity- of our traveller was not to be satisfie ; Isam entered with an armful of pine knots aud threw them on the fire ! ‘Sueath, mister,” exclaimed the aslouished guest “do you call that truck.’ “Ii > wood truck,” replied the landlord. “ Then, sir, l’u ave you to know I’m a ll'iiglishtiiaii, baud it is lit common fu> Hm glishtnen to ave their uses fed with ptue kuots. Give my orse some ay, boats, oi sit'll is.” “1 guess you re a stranger in these parts mister, ’ returned tiie 1 audlord, giving the double jointer a knowing wink,“or else you muughi have kuowu that ituck means any thing. * The cockney only hall muttered to him self, ‘ well I do think they murder the Kings iiinglisn most hiMumaiiiy Inn Hatuei tea.” The compuov now began to increase, & several men with their rill sand powder horns came in ; they were soon followed by a possee of wagoners, boatmen, Ac. until the room was so completely crowded, that one could uot put the little eud ol joining sharpened, between them Some*tugged at the bottle, and some smoked loug un.es, and some played seven-up betweeu tne liter’s legs—untill uui traveller found that his situ itioti began to be rather uncomfort able, aud requested the host to have him shown to bis chamher. He had scarcely and if and his outward sell, and thrown himself netweeu two cotlou sheets which utignt have sold well to a tallow chandler, when the hum aud buzz below gradually swollen into a contused bellowing aud howling; the foundation of the house trembled to the st imping atm sin filing of feet; A his ear was assailed wiiu sucti sound as tuese ; * 1 can chase a streak ol lightuing round a bUck jack ” “Kip, roau—the bridle’s broke ; here’s a corn stealer that can drive a wedge spontaneously tnrough the Table Rock.' May Ibe tetotaliy twisted if 1 Cant ram-squ iddle two like you, you jim* ber-jawed rascal.” 4 Gouge him—-chew him up ! * Hare the noise increased to such a pitch, trial the Englishman thought all the imps of the lower regious were let loose upon him. Tremblingly he arose from his bed & shrieked tleud for the waiter, isam came rubbing his eyes, as if he had just been aroused from a sweet stuiuber, asked biui if he wanted whiskey today ! “Whiskey toddy, you black tascai !” ex claimed the lodger, “what’s hall that ellish noise habout f “Oh, luaasa,” replied cuffoe, grinning, “nothing at all, boatmen and wagoners only quarrel a little hit. Wt hab same like dis obery night. * The Englishman only groaned and bid the uegro begone. His eats in a short time became familiar to such sounds, and be fell asleep. In tho morning when he awoke, all was quiet,and putting on his clothes, ho deceiv ed to the bai«roora to order his horse.— There were but two persons in tho room : Isam, who was sweeping the floor with a birch broom, and a stranger who sat in the chimnt-y corner—lsam was gathering up some strange looking things of a globular form, and throwing them intc a bushel bas ket, which was near'y full. “What are you got here, boyt ’ inquired the cockney, rolling one of them over with his foot and examining it; “1 did’ut know grapes grew to such a size hin this country.’’ “Golly ! massa— dat no grape; I am going to trow away dese eyse dat were gouge out last night.’* The Englishman started back with horror, his hair biistled aud he scarcely knew which way to turn to shun the dread ful scene. Summoning fortitude, he went op to theairariger who sat by the fire lean ing his head on his hand, and groauiug loudly. “What’s |he matter roy honest friend !" asked he in a tone of commisera tion. “Oh ! nothing, sir, ’ was the cool re ply, “ I only lost my right eye last night *’ “Eavens ! bonly lost an hye !—don’t you feel a good deal hos pain I” “No not much. But, d—n lit a Scrimp tion,\ rowed him him up a salt river ; and he’s gone home a little lighter than he came. Look here"——And to the most exquisite horror of our cockney journalist, i he d>ew fj„,m one waistcoat pocket two eyes and ~ nose, and from >ne oiaer a t m ot cars and a piece ol i leg, “AH tuen* be longed to the bully "1 Jumping Oraucti I l ' It Was enough—toe traveller ordered his horse and was off to a tangent, to put down this scene in his note- book as a correct pic ture of Ameiicuu society. From the Rochester Republican. HOW I O BE HI Lll. \nu say saving a cent a day is a very s nalt bustuuss—beueath the care of a gen tleman—yea Contemptible; be it so—then is notbtug: aud have you even that sum Hi your pocket or at command ? If nor, you may have by just saving at that rate for twenty years. Would there be rivers Without rills 1 Suppose Erie canal wasuev- er begun because it could be made only by the shovel-full. “Take cate of pence— pounds will take creof themselves.” 11 ow cau one save a cent a day?—lu many ways. —Drink cold water the must wholesome beverage, aud s,.ve whit goes for spirits, wine, punch, beer, porlea, cider, soda, ; you will live longer, aud do more work. If uot, then give spirits to our horses and cattle, and benefit their animal systems; il profitable iu one case, why uot iu the olht r ? fie no tobacco —a poison. Now see how much in these wiysyod can save iu a year. Loor intoy UR HOUSE What furni ture is or ornament, an 1 what for use ? Y"U pay 20, or perhaps S3O for a giass to see your face in, equally comely iu one that costs but a d.dlar—sloo for a side hoard to show your glass and plate upon; SIOO for a sofa to lounge upon ; S3OO for a piano to pi y up n ; S3O for a cl t r ,ble to eat upon ; SIOO f<o a carpel to tread upon ; SSO lot a mahogany bedstead to sleep upo ; SSO lor a pair of lustres to look upon ; A mere trash compare t with the cos . Silver * .uffnts will not clip a wick better th in steel. Stlvqr candlesticks support light no better than iron or brass. M ihoguny tables no better than cherry ; Tuikey cat pets than domestic ; cut glass than eartherti ware. Iu short h>w much in v<>ur houses more than use or comfort requir.? Havu you a drawing room which is not used ten times in a year, with lurnitur enough in it to buy a small farm, all gotu fc out of fashion and not worth a quarter of their cost? The very interest of the use less deposit, would furnish your mtii room handsomely once in ten years. II v no apartments too good In be used, tin uim than needed. Yet many a bankrupts t feels have been turned outwith much suo drawing room truth among it, whose Cost saved, might h >ve saved him oriuit ri ii ly enlarged the per cent, of bis creditm divdends. Look at your cloathing. Cau you n tave a cent ther» ? Do you ri"t chang* your hat befote it ■- half worn, and was no the cost double < f one equaly durable? Is your dress suitable to your business? A man at work with a fine broadcloth coat Hid silk vest, complains ol hard limes! in deed you will scarcely see a pair of leath er shoe strings now a days; and yet they cost nothing; peiimps for that very reason; for certainly thtv are much the best auJ most durable. A man iu fine linen is uo uncommon sight; we conclude tnerefore that ie is rich enough to. afford it. Fit mers fininorly drove their teams in good stout frock trouseis; now often iu tueii suud >y deaths. Met chants, mechan ics, lawyers, physicians, iu short, all class es, almost wi flout exception instead of plain I istitig business like habiliments which in-I dicate action and thrill, are seen with fine j broad-cloth, cut in the last fashion, besvur j hats, shoes, not greased to preserve the! leather, but touched off with Day & Mar* j tin, and cravats kuotted up a-la muue, as if the proper study ofmaukiud were tne per sons of man. N >w, off with all that, and lay it up for Sunday On with plain, thorough-going, business-like garments us if one hed some thing to do io the world besides stall .tug before a looking glass, brushing a whisker rapping the dust from a pantalooo, picking a nail or pinching up a collar. A plain matt is an emblem of his whole household establishment; there is a symmetry through out, and he will thrive upon a rock or sand bar We most uot forget Dr. Fraukliu aud his precepts; act according to these, and you will not hear again from HARD TIMES SIGNS OF V GOOD FARMER. His corn land is ploughed in the fall—bis bull is from two to five years old, and he works him, He seldom lets his work drive hist. He has a cooking stove with plenty of pipe to it The wood lots he possesses are fenced. Hi* sled is housed in summer, and his cart, plough and wheelbarrow, win ter and summer, when not in use, has as many yoke of good oxen as he has tiorses.- Uoes not feed his hogs with whole grain.— Lights may be seen in his house often be fore break of day in winter—ll.s hog peu is boarded inside und out—has plenty of weeds and mud in his yard iu the fail—all his manure is carried out from his buildings and barn yard tw ice a year, aud chip dung once a year—His cattle are almost all tied up iu the winter—He begins to fiud out that mauuie put on laud iu a green state is the most profitable— Raises tlnee times as many turnips aud potatoes for his stock as he does for ins family: H <s a good luddei raised against tho rout of nis house .* lias more lamps iu his house than candlosick*: Has a house on puipose to keep ins ashes iu, and an iron or liu vessel to lake them VOLUME KIRsT— NU HER Q » up; H • has a larg. b.rat auu asn. it ,e I se dom his more pigs tln»i» c g his ling pen i.e has a hole to put wet-os and sods mil in .k> s three loads "f he-t manu.e t f out every t.ld hog auu two from every pig. A good farmer in this coumty he t ms to find out that s'eamitig vegetables can he dime at one third me expense of boiling ; and that M ntgel WurtE* 1, M (let, A'tiing. him Cairot, and Rut.i Baga, are things worth tniukiiig of; tie fences before he ploughs aud manor s before he sows; —H' deals more f n c i-h ; an ctedit, and always pays lor Ins newspaper. Palestine.—-The Modern Traveller gtvts m account ol Pali-vme, that ortnap py country which hive enjoyed or suffered all the good or ill foituue that is found be tween the tw > extremes of either.— Tiio kingdom of Divtd, the inost houmed and holy section of the earth, is now sb.u >k in fo a smal tract which is governed by the pashaw of D .masms. Tne territory is 1.-ss than that of some A nerican counties. Tne surface is various, there are rocky, deg. rt, meadow, uliv-, and pas'ure lan is. C i.aaii is still chaiacterised as “tl wing with milk and honey,” and the “wild honey’ may he stilt united with the locust, which are eaten ill many parts of the east. F>■ the bene fi of those who would try the dish, ive ate enabled Instate, that they ate the best is* teemed, when fried with a sprinkling of salt. There are few streams in Palestine, ex cept pertudi al torrents that pour down fimn the hill, and the Jordau itself can baldly tie called a nver. Wells, therefore, are v Hu able, aud in the Sr riptures they ire many times mentio ed. They are large reserv oirs excavated and walled ru, for the use of travellers, and rioue but lire P tshaw h a a pump of hia own. Jurusdein is described as a small w riled town lot.king like the contuse.! monuments of a cemeuluiy in the desert Tti" state of society is up«>n a par with th r x em»r of the cny. A few wild Arttns, Tu ks. mis scrable Jews, and not m«>re nippy Chits- Hans compose the inhabitants. Ttiete are a few communities of monks, who still lin ger around the tomb of llie ivorui, and a self devoted baud ul Jews s'ilt watches a and pillage aud peril, t're coming of > king •ud the rebuilding of the temple. T is people is indexible in 'hen faith ; a *« iff* necked generation.” Tuoy tusiiuii to-tr hildre u tn the oysteries of iljaii t.ailtl, so i U a youth will freely off t Ins neck t . 'ho soy molar if it be the ititiiumeui of mariy - ‘"H» • this is but passive courage,™>i not me of them would strike, a blow fm i srl ibertv,->r tuft redress of nis gievu . s O Jerusalem, a late traveller reuia k.*, hat . is not rae sympton ol either “ci iiimet < >, ii for tor happiuess. it is, of course-nut avnrable to euiigrutioi., though there are i -vays some late arrivals of Spautsn mru 1- ■ alum monks. The topography of J.. us.lftm is obs. un , riere is out remaining » vesitagt-nl J with time, and the very boundaries of tin* old ci ty are disputable. Toe holy places .nd abundance of relics aie indeed shewn,.but there is oo proof, nr even probability of ideu>ity. They show however, wi hex il lation, a grot inai was the resiiii*!n , f >ne piophet Jmeiniab, and a stiotl in the rock that was his b>’d. A Hole is also rx . int< and where the same propnet » is kept by Z u ekiab. A sioue shewn uiidei which > ... inou is burn and; the monks <lso point <>u> Hie house and the vety room where our L id was held in cusiody, aud where f’. ter de nied him. They shew also, the way that was tra versed to the crucifixion. Tiie H> ly Se pulcine is supposed to lie under lue chinch of that name. Tins cnuicb is thought to contaiu the stone on which the angel sat who announced the resurrection to M iv Magdalen aud oth< is. Toe eviugelisi - ys that toe sedulchre was hewn oui of ihe ro> k, but the present sarcophagus is a G><<k marble. On mount Calviny the monks , shew the hole made in the ground by ihe I cross itself, and the rent made by the eaith -1 quake in the ruck. It. this rein they say, also, that the head of Adam was fi>«*i and. The chasm, however, is genuine, md runs in intricate windings to an unknown de,.th. There are iu lerusalen few manufactures I hut of beads aud relics, and the trade m i th'sets thriving; cargoes are sent to Italy, Portugal and Spam. A benediction i- ii.— sed upon them in ihe Court h of ihe H ly Sepulchre, and this gives (hem thei. v doc, or currency. There is nothing it. give any importance to the city but the M rhouiet no and Christian pilgrims ; yet a wall might be raised about it of the bones of the x>- .lots who died tn Palestine to rescue, or to de fend the Holy Sepulchre. Boston Courier. Now definitions of Republicanism*and Federal ism have come in fashion of lale years—. o that scarcely any man knows hu own political slalom. Mr Madison, William Smith of sf. C Mr Poinsett, and David R. Williams, and many other names which once stood in front of the Dooiociatic host, are now federalists, according to the new patent definitions—while the supporters of tho alien ami sedition laws, and tho iraduc.rs of William H. Crawford and State Rights, are converted into orthodox leaders of a parly which they formerly a,sailed with all the artillery of argument and wit. No man is a Republican, now-a uays, it would seem, with the neto lights, but he who is in favor of 1 )isuman We do not mean the teuu ills ;ai m, tor that they indignantly repudale—but t to thing itself, which must inevuanly follow, if no a. , at some not very remote dat, lion me acknowl edgment of their disorganizing doctrine. [firg/nian Thirty wagons (says the Cincinnati American,) passed ihroutfh this city last week, in compa . •, nound for Texas i’hey were, as we understood, tiom the good is la tv of CdnAeOWcut, and weie no I uoubt well supplied wail notions.