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OLD AGE AND YOUTH.
( v rom Dentlev'a Mi*ce!luny.)
Old Age shs boat an his iron-gr »y sieed;
YouUi iiile» eraci on hi* roitra ir I dark i
And little lia think* in b* ruckles* sjieoil.
Old age contra on m the e.-ry tame tracts.
And an Youth go**, with In* cheek like ill* re**,
And hit radiant ey.t, ami hi reio i h nr;
And hi»laiigo hsiniya !to a t.til• he know*
Os Age, and U s sure companion, Cake.
The eour«or Mark it put to his speed.
And .Vgt pla it o i, in a qu-6'.cr way.
And little Yiiuth think* tint the iron-gray steed
Approaches him nearer every day !
Though one teem* strong n< thjforHt tree,
Th* other ind m, and wanting brevh,
Ifmer Youth bn2!a* Old Auk, 'twill h*
liy nulling into the arm* ol Death !
On hitrouner black away Youth goes,
The pmaine aago mu«i r,*l at home ;•
Ual> laugh and quail tor well he know*
That years mint pa«« ero Age can com.
And tinea too hrie. 1 " era Iha daylight hotin,
For thota who would 1 mgh th dr live*
With beaming lamp*.and mimic fl iwara,
1 la'll teach the night to mock the day !
Again ha’ll hath, again he’ll foait,
Hit lagging 100 he 11 ut il deride 7
Until—whan heel poets him least—
Old Age end he atanda atdo by side!
He then look* into bit toilet-glnaa.
And aeat Old Age rail <cted ibore!
//e ertea, •‘Ala*! how quickly pm
tingni eyea, and bio nn, an 1 raven hair
The lord »f lha ronraar bla> k mnat ride
Ou ilia iroo-g-ay tieil, sad Ho in I alow!
An I that to him wh - hi* power ch-fi d,
Ul 1 age mart co-na likt a conquering foe.
1W ilie p-oi ne sale not preach'd in vain.
Had Youth n<a w Hen Ira word* ou sa id,
Had he ovrly pa-sed, and given ihn rein
Ol hit c inner b!a k to u steadier baud:
Oh! justnsgiy might hit <1 iy« Invo hron,
* Though nnr h with gmv<r ihonthti m gb'. hlend,
And whrn nl hit ti le i Hd dg ■ was « on,
Jit had been hal'd a, a iiimly hi nd.
From ihe Columbia Tileaiopa
PAST, PRESENT & FUTURE TIMES.
Vinruty iho preaent are Ihe word ol n'l limes
*fnr a aenlintonial iimu to ex.at in. Oil! that
I Imil lived three or lour thousand years a#"?
during*those golden days which iho sceptical
moderns presume lo consider fabu ons, be.
«MISC SO different from Ibe.r own! All llion
Nvas romantic and strange, and wonderin', mid
■enchanting. The air was always mild and
Itabny, the am bright mid cl ar, and tlm face
nf nature lit up wit han universal smile. The
earth had bm lately risen from tho forming
lia.ul of its divine Creator, mid si ill shone
with the frMhnesa of i's virgin be inly. lie
peaceful bos*in had not ycl been convulsed
ty earthquakes and volcanoes, nor its shores
strewn with innumerable shipwreck*, nor iis
plain* with (he min* of demisted cities, mn
its battle fields with the boors of mill on* of
thu alam. Then there were neither (cures
nor d lehrs, nor mill-ponds, imr ploughs, nor
inaohioes, nor tarifTs ; mid folks had nothing
, Ui da but (o gather Ihe fruits which nature
spontaneously produced, and then lay them
solves down la rest amidst the sh ide and (low
« a and fragrance of perpetual summer. In
those days of primeval innocence, the girls
were all beautiful, mid never said no when
they meant yes. The fantastic idol wliii h
they now au fondly worship, under Iho name
■us Fashion, had nut ilien seduced their hearts
(fnun nature aid simplicity. The sw ed crea.
.turcs ran about with their long irc'sct flow,
ing unrestrained over their ivory shoulders,
sod dressed—l don’t know exactly how—
flaying nothing lo do all tlioir days but to piny
■talk, hmgli. dance, sing, and love. Nymphs.
INeneds, Finns, and Dryuils, Imnnted each
Jonelv monnisin, srq ic«tered grotio, verdant
pluin'giiAhing fountain and murmuring stream.
The start tvo'o virgins trmislnled to the sky ;
Tlif thunder was Iho voice of the Olympic god; i
tfis moon w*s a sweet goddess who lieu le t
her blue path in hon-o i, and descended upon
starlit to taste the j»h of mortal love The
world was then young end ficsh and beami
ccs; every br-czt bony inspiration ou iia
wings, for all »ilurc was an immemo volume
of ready made poeiry-
Nuw, btnk at the presonf, am! ihe melan
choly contrast. Tlmns.od* of years have
passed away, mid Nature In* turned into a
wriuk ed old woman. 'l’ho world is far gone
in Us do :ay. The bloom of la early bounty is
withered, the fountain of hr young limcics ie
dried up. The face of the earth, once nil
green ami flowery, is now half covered with
briars and deserts, and pine-barrens, and
swamos.’ Its inhabitants are not less changed
than itself. Wo are a set of cold, did 1 , cmlcii.
lating, incredulous personages, who believe
nothing less than actual demonstration. We
have unfortunately learnt 100 much. There
nothing in the earth, nr in the waters under
the earth, winch «"» have not thoroughly ex
amined. Wo huvu dra."n up the old woman
Truth, from the bottom ol the well where she
has been *o long hidden, and now look at
every thing through her miidt’” spec" l ties.
All illusion, and romance, ami cncliati,' ,lUJ h‘t
has been dispelled. Wo have got so confuSii'* I
dedly wise as to have found out that there are
no such things as jack-o-lan'.crns, and giants,
and unicorns, and griflius, ami dragons, and
raermiid*, and men with heads under their
•boulders. My old acquaintance, the man in
the muon, is now almost ashamed to show In*
face, and thu story of the moon’s hoi. g made
of green cheese, is laughed at na an absurd
fiction. Calypso’s Island and Plato's Atlantis,
are both sunk in the *ei. A man may wan.
der all the year through the woods without
hoing fallen in love with by the nymphs.
Far es, and genii, and witches, and wizirds,
and conjurors, are nil defunct. E'en tho
very ghost* have given up the ghost. In
short, all the illusions that amazed our aliens
tors, and charm -d our own youthful fancier,
have he m dispelled, and nothing is left but
plain dull matter of fact. We have nothing
to do hut to plod through 1 fe, calmly, coldly,
■ ihrrly. *nd almost loveleegly, and then he
dawn and die.
Having thu* g’nncnd at the Past and ihe
Present, lei u« now turn to the Future. Will,
out g ling so far as those enthusiasts who talk |
sad dream about human perfectibility, we I
may safely predint, than in a tew cent ties I
m ire, mankind will have attained lo a wonder, i
ful degree of science and improved ont. For 1
a* yet we have only entered the vestibule of I
the temple of Wisdom The godde s dwells 1
far in the labyrinth of its interior, ami it is only
UVr many long ages of toil l hat man cun win
«'• way into her eicr.'J presence, anil receive
from her hand the talisman of pe feel know
ledge, wh se light w II illumine the world and
whoso viiine will so renovate his physical
and moral iia'ure, os almost to restore lorn to
the purity and happiness from which he ori
ginally fell. D'C,ily is it lobe lameutc I that
we have fallen upon the most evd us nil times
jo*l half way between the past and the future,
hating beun alike forbidden to seethe world
in the glory of its youthful prune, nr the full
•ess of its matured refinement. I will en.
deavor to give some slight idea of the slate of
things long hence, hy a few extrnc's from a
newspaper which wo will suppose lo be pub
lished about the vear4,2oo.
Astronomical —“Telescopes are now
brought to such perfection, that last night we
distinctly saw a fight b-tw. m a grasshopper
and a spider, In the planet Saturn. The bat
tle was a touglione—the grasshopper losing
two leg*. and the spider three claws and five
teeth in tho contest.”
Travelling —“Mr. Perkins ha* invented
• compound which he calls *he “concentrated
essence of the sublimated spirit of steam.”—
A parson has only to put a little phite of it into
pocket;* it w ll.ciatr; him along at the rate
of fifty miles an hour; Dr by merely swallow
mg three drops whin you go to bed at night.
in the morning yen will wake up in Oil)' pari
us tho world you choose.” .
Nautical.—“ Ships lo go under water in
-loud of units surlm c, *ic now brought lo
perihelion, *o tlroi henceforth such things a*
storm* nod ship-wrecks aie no more tu be
dreaded.”
Mm t ;*i, —“The wonderful medicine called
the 'sublime elixir,’ is producing most union
tailing effects. A Mr. Joi oj of Virginia, walk
ing into a mill, ami incautiously apufoaching
100 near the machinery, was muglii between
the wheals and crushed into ion thousand
atom*: iwo drops el the elixir being poured
m'o the pond above, I.e w»a insiairly rson
walking mil at the dour us souiu as a roach,
and haa'nt hcen wiltim three miles ol a mill
s nee. A .Mr. Smith had his head shot off hy
a cannon ball; three weeks uftef he was dead
ard bltrie I, li s ,‘i'diid cousin happening lo hear
of ihe elixir, lie was immediately restored to
perfect I fe and health.”
Geographical. —The discovery *hip, the
'Wniie Dear,’ relumed yeslerday from the
northern seas; site safely reached the exact
•pot ul't c north pole, hot there she struck,
he'd f.*t by the magnetic altraclion; her i rew
found it impossible lo getaway until they had
throw n overboard every particle of iron in tbe
ve iae|.
Agricultural.—'“The Philosophical So
ciety having discovered a method of produc
ing or pulling off ram just as there may be oc
casion; l-ir iln- (inure our co'ion and cibLagcs
will never be rum d by u dry season.”
Mechanics.—“ The farnmi* architect Mr.
Axiom, who li * discove.cd the perpetual mo
tion, is now ereciinga machine nor the north
pole, upon Hie phi'/ of Arch 'inodes, for the
(impose ol shove mg iho world twenty llircc
degrees hack In i's original pos lion,and thus
restorin'! perpetual summer.”
Fokeiun.—“Thu weekly balloon packet
arrived from the mom) yesterday. No par
, tun nr news there, exeeoi that green cheese
is in great deniand. On its return ihey inter*
i epicd the tvila of tliirty-uue poets, and one
hundred and nmcty-lhn o lovers, and brought
them ail buck, slop’d optugotiier in a glass
phial.
Most wonderful or all Discoveries.
—Tho great secret, the philosopher's stone,
the elixir v.le, so anxiously wished for, so
long soiiglii slier, is at length found out I The
learned ulchymisl. Dr. Alomhie, Inis invented
a compound which turns all things into gold,
mid bestows perpetual youth! We aie for
bidden In say much shout ihi* wonderful dis
covery ; ii was only completed yesterday, and
this morning Iho doctor’s w.fe, an ugly old
woman of seventy, was seen transformed mto
a girl of (“ghie n ! A little child hardly able
to crawl, whs also seen in the house, mid no
body could ti ll whore it came from, tin'll at
Inst it was ti unil out to he the doctor's grand
mol her, who hid got m the phial and taken
rathe- 100 large a dose. Resides elm ging,
us above stated, Ic id into gold, nge into youth,
mid ugliness into homily, it also lorn* rascals
into honest men, water into chmnpitignc, sand
Into ice cream*, and rooks into gingercal.es.'*
A* to this situation of the world in the year
8,000,1 reserve tlmi for aimilior occasion.
Steam in tub Astoh House. —There
arc many more wonders under the sim than
man or woman dreams of; and a guost at the
Astor House, who is eating of the good ihlngs
of tins life theie, and seeing the line tilings of
the world, liulu imagines that 4 tliero is down
Muirs, in the collar, under ground, a curious
follow without head or heels, togua or ears,
lends or loot, who is doinga mirae'e of things,
for iho guests nil over the house—ironing
clothes in one place, washing in another,
grinding collie here, and scrubbing knives
mere, now cooking victuals, and now pump
ng water from eight to lei) lliousand gallons
per day. mid throwing much ol it even hi ihe
sixth story ! The maids in the wash room
use him to dry clothes, as well as boil them—
mill there is a railroad there mo, to move the
clothes presses in ! The cooks me Inin lo
cook all sorts of vego iiblcs Iron) cabbage to
politic ci. Indeed he is used for almost every
th ng, so that he is i luimheruiniil, washerwo
man, kn lb scomer, kiichen maid, rook, cidTe
grinder, > lollies ironer, bathing mom hoy, &c.
Sic.—and yot he lias the capacity to do a
thousand other things with the same puff, lor
he can grind flour, saw boards, row, paddle,
or do any thing, or almost every thing you cun
ask him to do. Yet lie is not officious at all.
He does not hustle all over the house—but he
lays in a little corner of the celler, in a small
*pace there, not bigger than the “hig cheese.”
Gsn. Jackson lias lately served up m Wash
ington. The “admirable Crichton" who has
aifthese useful aceomplodiment*, is “Avery’s
Rotatory Eoi’ine." —An admirable Crichton
in (act lie i* though not with the showey ac
complishments ot him who travelled over Italy
and who un npured swords and tongues at
tournaments, tilts, and'at universities; now
with chevaliers and anon with doctors—but
with the practical accomplishment* belter tit
led lor this day of ours, when men arc halt
locomotives, and steam is tho great agent
of action. It is truly astonishing to see the
i amount of labor performed hy that engine,
U 'id foecial'y when it is understood that the
>t of fuel used in 12 hours costs on an
*" U U ‘, -ly $ 112 J cents. The advantages
average in... (• piston engine consists
of the rotary Ov » econ „ n ,« A lwenly
in ns simplicity a,. , b.tilures o. fix
horse power engine vv m d w|
lures, can be purchased lor ’ -o . ..
in use. it will cost less for attendant.. ’ 1 ** .
fuel—to drive any kind of machinery that,' ,lIC
piston engine. A twenty homo power engine
makes over 2,000 revolutions per minute; but
experience lias demons’rated that its rapid
motion does not destroy its usefulness. The ,
engine in the Astor House was used seven (
months ever ten hours per day, ot the speed
~f over 0,000 rc-edutions per minute, and !
when exon ned ai the expiration of that pe
riod, it was f mud almost a* perfect as when It ,
was first put in operation.— [A r . Y. Express. {
A Wife in a Thocsani'. —An old gentleman, i
somewhat iamuu* for hi* Ircmcndously tough ,
yams, h oadird one during iho late pressure,
! which was amusing enough for its absurdity, as
well as for the confident air in which ho deliver- 1
ed it. He said he had not been pressed for mon- ■
jey during tale years, hut lie was once when lie ,
! wus doing a targe business. “One day in par
j lieidar,’ in use the first person. ‘I looked so lorn- (
! h!e grim at breakfast lira! my wife discovered 1
! something was lire matter. ’VVhal ails you, my I
I dear!’ said she. •Nothing,’ says I. • Uut there ,
is says she. ’Well.’says I,'if you will know, I (
have gol seventeen thousand dollars to pay to-day
ami nothing to do it will*.’ -Is that all!’ says 1
she. ’And enough too,'says I. With that she i
says nothing, but whip* up stairs, and brings me
down seventeen thousand dollars, ell in (he small
change 1 had given Iter from time to time to do
her marketing with."— Picayune.
CniTuntoN or Talent.—A street sweeper,
the other day, (tearing some praise bestowed on
the clean stale of one crossing at which a brother
of the same craft officiated, somewhat petulently
observed.’Well, now, I don’t think him any »uch
gieal shakes after all. He can gel through com
mon straishlfonvurd j >hs well enough, hut it is’nl
that It'lls a man’* anilities. Just put him to a
hit of fancy work let him try to sweep round the
posts, and sec how he’ll manage that.
Quaint Title.—lt is stated that in ths lime
of Cromwell, ■ hook was published with Ihe fol
lowing tide —•• Eg’ft of charily, tayej by the
Chiihent of the Covenant, anil boiled by the
wafer of Divine Love — Take ye and tal’”
Vagueness or Color.— A native of the
land of pul aloe and bop, asked a neighbor
if he had ever seen a red blackberry! “To be
aure i have,” said I*at, “all blackberries are
red wt cu they are green."
0
■ ■■■' ■ ■■ r
r.llUillKi il |.ll. Iba 100.. I
Put KtvtUi—Wa have licen requested lo (
■talc tli.it lire Ravel Fasii.t w.II lie in this ci.jr I
on Monday next. The favorable reception they '
have met il other places— and the general sail—
lection given, makes their arrival at thie junc
tion a matter ol mare than ordinary interest to
I the lovers of amusement. If any thing which
they can do, not “ dreamed of in our philoso
phy,” will lend to merge, if only for a moment,]
a forgetfulness of things as they are, the com
mercial panic—fall of slocks—decline of cotton
—or • lightness* of the limes in one thought
less gloomy than those which the "‘Daily Ex
press” creates—then will they he welcome. The
interest which this family lias excited elsewhere,
will it is hotted, secure for them a general en
courage merit in this city.
Baptist College.—At a meeting of the
citizens of Talholton, held on the Bth inst., a
resolution was passed, pledging lu raise from that
and the neighbouring counties, the sum ol
$134,500 in favor of this institution, upon con
dition that its anticipated location he removed
from Washington to Talhotton, and that a me
morial to this effect he forwarded to the Conven
tion to be held in Ruckersvillo, in May next.
NEW YUKK ELECTION.
The Whigs have obtained a signal victory in
electing their candidate oi Mayor, ami a majority
of the City Council. The Evening Post of the
Mill., an administration paper, admits this result
hut says that the actual vole for Mayor had not
yet been obtained. According to tiro Post the
Whigs have elected 12 Aldermen and 11 assist
ant Aldermen ; the Democrats have elected 5 Al
dermen and 0 assistant do.
From the Herald wo obtain the result for May
or in 9 wards, which stood as follows—
-Ist Ward, 69 1 majority for Clark.
2nd “ 653 do. do.
3rd “ 730 do. do.
4th “ 227 do. do.
6th “ 270 do. do.
13 « 140 do. do.
14 “ 100 do. do.
15 “ 617 do. do.
18 “ 243 majority for Morgan.
A NOEL’S PATENT FILE PRESS.
For Offices, Banks, Counting Houses, and all
other places where il is desirable to keep files of
cuircnl papers incompact order andreidy for in
stant reference. We have been presented will one
of these presses by Messrs. F. & 11. Clark, at
whoso store in Broad street, they can he had. The
invention is simple and complete, and tve think
will answer well the purpose for which il is inten
ded lor batiks and the mercantile community, it
will he very handy, as il is commended to use by
its facility for expeditious filing and lor safe keep
ing of papers.- Constitutionalist of this morn
i"S-
Mr. Joses,— Permit me through the medium
of your paper to call the attention of the Direct
ors of the Georgia Rail Road arid Hanking Com
pany, to a few facts which may not he known to
them all.
I would here remark, that I look only for (he
general benefit of their operations—(being no
stockholder) my object is to point out from a
knowledge of things—the great Benefits as well
to the company,ns to the community interested,
that tlic immediate survey, location, and lolling
out of the contracts —of tiro Branch road—land
ing from whit is known as the Union point to
Madison, or more probably from Greensboro’ to
that p ace, may go on forthwith. For several
years about 12,000 hales cf Cotton, has been
raised in Morgan county; for two or three years
past, about 40,000 hales have passed from other
counties through Morgan to Augusta—much
more would have done so—but the great market
roads have been almost impassable during the
months of January, February, and March, which
diverted the same toother markets;add (hoabove
it would he 62,000, which, averaging the hales
at 330,-it i cent per pound would produce $91,000
the up freight say at 75 per cent on the down
freight—at the same rate $68,350, making by
freights alone (without allowing for the great
increase) $159,000, these estimates ara made
within reasonable limits, my object not being to
lay any thing but fair premises—to that no dis
appointment may lie experienced in the conclu
sions.
The position of Madison to the western part
of the Stale of Georgia, may bo seen on the
map of the state —to present the finest prospects
for an immense travelling lluough'itto Alabama—
our roads wcslwardly arc very good, and summer
travelling is attended with greater comfort than
it could by nay of Millcdgevillo, Macon, &c.
the estimate for passsugers and the conveyance
of the mail.
For the first year, might ba reasonably
nss'inn d $20,000
Frciah s up and down, as previously
stated $159,250
$179,251)
* of the Macon trade might
an immense amoon. . . , ■
, , r „ *Sis puce winch is not
be expected to pass from «u- ■
added in the preceding estimate 8 —"- 18 ,talr °*" i
the roads for two or throe years past, tn.' s l * rl ' ' n
several fanners from the upper part of our can.»- I
try, and a much greater number from Newton 1
and Jasper to Macon, who would otherwise have (
sent their cotton to Augus’a. r
The object of this, is not to raise a warfare on r
the part of this county with others looking for 1
similar benefits which the completion of the *
road will undoubtedly give to all; but to point t
out in a plain way, which will he the profitable \
route, and one to which the deepest interest ought 1
to he manifested. The citizens of Athens, arc .
alive to their interest in completing the road to (
that place —they have nobly sustained themselves
in furthering the interests ot the company—in '
furthering the interest of Morgan—their own ,
will not he neglected,, l
If the preceding remarks should ho so fortunate I
as to arouse an attention to the completion of the ’
road—my object will be fully attained.
BENTIUM.
1
From the Savannah Georgian, April 16. r
LATEST FROM FLORIDA. 1
By the steam packet George IFashinglon. (
(’apt. More, tro;a Garey’s Ferry, via Jacksonville, i
we have received the Jacksonville Courier of t
Thursday last, Extracts from it will b« found I
subjoined. i
In addition, we learn from passengers in the i
George Washington, that an express from Gen. I
Jesup, arrived at Jacksonville on Thursday lust i
with dales of the 7lh ult. nothing definite was <
gleaned from him. One of the indefinite reports <
was that neither Philip or Oseola had come in, I
nor was. Abraham in camp when the Express left, i
Gen. Jesup, it is said, advises the citizens not
to return to their homes until he announces that ]
it would be safe, and, to prevent collisions in re- I
gatd to property of the whites in the possession
of the Indians, which would probably lead to re- ,
nursed hostilities, Gen, J. il is reported, will not ,
permit any edited lo approach within 16 mile* Il
of hia encampment. ••
The inlclhgenre from Tomok* is far from en- f
couraging, and we arc, we confess, at sonre loss a
to divine the cause of Gen. Hernandez's move- e
rnent, unless it is in pursuance of order* received I
from Gen. Jesup, based on information which has s
not been divulged to the public. Peihaps the di- v
lalory course of many, w.th theii failure, to com- 1
ply with the Articles of the Capitulation, or their I
appearance, in some force, at Tomoka, has caused i
the movement. i
Time will inform us. Until then, we must be i
I content to hope that Florida, will soon be deliver- 1
ed of a race, who have hi herto retarded her pros- i
perily, and destroyed the cherished happiness of I
her enterprising population.
. 1
The Taunton Whig says that two little girls
the daughters of poor and destitute patents, lately i
died ll eir from eating the root of the Cicuta —the ,
poya.muus licnilor k. Tliis was ascertained by a
Jiott-moilem examination. The children were
employed in a Colton-Factory, along their daily
road to w hich the plant grow a. They arc sup
posed lo have been led inert the poisonous roots
f.otn their destitution of any healthier food.
Far (snovvivo Crocs.— Tiro Cumberland
Ch ilian of Saturday stntc that the prospect, in
that region, of an average wheat crop, is some
what promising. Though not far*advanced for
the season, the wheat in general, is said to have
such an appearance as to promise a tolerably
good yield.
Ctrues.—The Frederick (Md.) Herald says.—
We regret to see from various <)uailcr* of the
country, statements of the prospect of a failure
of the wheal crops again, during the present sea
son. anil in our own ncighh irhood, we arc aorry
to find, that a general opinion prevails, that the
grain Ins been very much destroyed by the se
venty of the winter, and on account of the bad
ness of the seed. Many persons, we understand,
are ploughing up their wheat fields, and pulling
thorn down in oats and com. A marked differ
ence, however, it is said, exists bet warm the wes
tern seed or the old wheat seed, and the seed of
the last crops, as the latter is by fur the most in
different.
From tlm AT Y. Co'nm"rci/l Alvertiser, April 11.
Wall-stiiket.—l o’Cliick.— We rcgict to
say that there is neither improvement in the
money market, nor alleviation in the public dis
tress. Stocks have, on the whole, experienced
rather a decline to-day, and money is as difficult
lo he had as ever. Less paper has been olltred
at some of the hanks, than heretofore; anil of
course a greater proportion of the paper offered
at such hanks, ha< been discounted. At oilier
banks, there has been no change in this respect
of any moment.
i here is one method by which relief, speedy,
suhr.tantial, and enduring, might he obtained. If
the executive would listen lo lire voice of tire na
rion, irnload of the commands of Gen. Jackson,
ami rescind the Treasury Circular, the specie
would again flow in its natural channels. By
the shipment to Eng’nnd often millions of specie,
the. Bank of England would ho enabled In aid
the American hunkers there, while, at the same
lime, the cotton crop would bring at least ten
millions more than It otherwise will. The reac
tion would he great upon tins market—confidence
would ho restored nn both sides of the water, and
business speedily assume its wonted course.
From the New York Herald.
MONEY MARKET.
Friday, April 15.
The revolution is assuming a tranquil charac
ter. The first explosion, like all new things,
created a great sensation. A failure was then a
wonder—and produced a great talk—not now.—
Whole Mocks now come lo pieces, and people
only inquire, “ any others?” The community
are becoming reconciled lo their fate. People
are only astonished that they never saw the storm
coming till its ravages were running far and with*
like a lire.on the western prairies at the close of
a dry summer.
Yesterday the stock market was inactive and
deceased—tho United States, of the whole li-l,
being the only stock that stood tire blast. The
Phoenix, Stale, and Morris Canal stocks, arc all
sadly affected. .’Phis arises from tho late fiiilmes,
A director of the Stale Bank was announced
early yesterday as having suspended, and that
event again eonrenlraled public attention on the
doings of that hank. Another fact has affected
these parlicu'nr hank stocks. They were much
engaged in foreign exchange operations, being
unable lo resist the temptations of doing a busi
ness equivalent lo 15 and 18 percent per annum.
It is generally supposed that large quantities of
foreign exchanges will ho returned, protested,
and thus affect those institutions in a still higher
degree.
By one of the late anivals, a bill of the Mon
treal Bank, for jC50,000 was returned from Lon
don. It appears that il was taken up in London,
by the Barings for the honor of the indorsers
Prime & Co. of this city. Such a circumstance
has not taken place in years. The exchange
operations of England and Canada have generally
hoenfounded on solid foundation—but the want
of assets in London has been probably erealed by
some derangement of the trade of Canada with
Liverpool, or sdefleiency in the usual importa
tion of emigrants to Canada, whose sums in spe
cie arc picked up by the Bank of Montreal and
sent to England, through New York, to form the
basis of a part of their exchange oprralions.
The present crisis in this country has, unques
tionably, been precipitated by the determination
of the Bank of England to put an end to the sys
tem of credits, or accommodation exchanges,
passing and re-passing between the two countries
Wo call it kite flying here. In February last
tho Barings made an application lo the Bank of
England, for advances office millions of dollars.
Before that date, the Bank, by its own separate
action, had struck a blew at Manchester, in order <
to cheek the credit system extended to the United
Stales. But this being a slow and self destruc
tive process, they renewed the expression of their •
purpose to the Barings, and to the other Ameri
can hankers- A loan, or an extension was lo lie ,
made to sustain them, provided those houses ,
would directly cut oil'so percent of their Ainer- (
ican credits. They assented on these conditions, i
That negocialion was, therefore, the cause of <
the rccest movements and circulars of the Ameri- !
■mhaiifeflf* ' n E iglan lon the American tra Ic. j
‘‘ . that the accommodation paper based j
,* •. -riean trade, in England, amounted lo
on l , ;i, ‘-ns, os»braring a period of six
.■«<»•— ...I ■
transactions—hut a largo propori.T-'U o. the rest- J
duo w.-.s founded on the recent high pricP* of cot- (
on and stocks which have been the principal ex- i
ports for some lime past. The depression of the s
prices of cotton will he 25 per cent on the whole
crop—equivalent to $20,980,000 in a single year (
—the return of stocks also something. This is not
equal to our English d«hi.
Again by the recent mint laws, gold, as well p
ns silver, is made a part of tho legal currency in
this country. Formally our legal tender and cur- ,
rency was principally silver. With England,
therefore, where gold is alone the basis of lire t
paper circulation, wo come into competition for r
a portion of that precious metal. Our 677 hanks n
and $120,000,000 of paper issues require a solid i
gold basis to support them. The various t anks
of England with a paper currency of 100 mil
lions—according to our computation—also re
quire a a solid specie basis —hence the struggle f
between the two countries for the specie. The c
great effort for the last few months has been who f
shall have this specie basis. In the struggle, '■
these terrible explosions, now on record, have g
taken place. It is a struggle whether the banking
system of England or that of the United States
shall fall to pieces. The specie in both coun- ■
tries is just sufficient, and not much more, to
sustain the credit and solvency ol either the one
ot the other—there is not enough for both. Ac
cording lo the latest returns the aggregate circu
lation and specie of lh« twa countries, expressed
in dollars, stsnd tbu*j
Specie. Circulation
England, 20.220.000 160,000,000 ■
United Stales, 40.000,009 120,000,000 J]
The temper <Jt nature of these measures cairied 1:
on between the two countries are not bow many
or haw few mercantile failures shall take place
*
It is the tnore important question whether the. |
banking system of the United Stales or that of
England shall be blown to atoms. The inflation
and expansion of both currencies have hcenenus- I
ed by overtrading and the great pressure upon ;
the banks from without of commercial credits is
sued by the merchants. The Bank ol England
was the first lo see the inequality and distur
bance. Our government, without knowing why
but merely from nairow political motives, blun
dered on Ihi very same measuiie.and the only one
that is capable ol sustaining the general solvency
of our banking system" It drew the s|iccie from
Europe, instead of taking it in the sirape of bills
exchange. At thi* moment the pel banks are,from
ill * circulation, mure fo’>cut than the Bank of
England—though the myriads of our other banks
may be. and no doubt are, rotten lo the heart. The
Pa rk i f England saw at once its position, and was
determined to save the credit of its issues at the
expense • f,he whole American trade, and even ot
i s own n a lufactiiiing system.
Su li we take to be I ic real position of things.
The havoc we have already seen is only the be
ginning of the great game. If specie does not go
to England many believe their hanking system
will receive a blow that years cannot help up.
We owe them $50,000,000. They call for the
debt—if wo refuse and break our merchants —
then our banking system will not be sacrificed.
Thus are two countries, in consequence of over
trading and inattention lo the true principles of
hanking science, placed in the position of two
gamblers trying to overreach and cheat each oth
er. Wc dread the future,
GENERAL MARKETS
The operations yesterday were on rather a smaller
order than on Wednesday. The weather is de
lightful, and it has been so for the last three days
but it does not help the lijsiness of our city, as
would be expected. The fact is, merchants give
up all their lime to raise money to meet their en
gagements, and having no confidence to buy or
sell goods, therefore we must expect that trade
will be duel.
Dry Goods,—a sale ofahout 25t) packages of
foreign acd domestic dry goods took place yes
terday—it was fail ly attended, and the articles
went off at good prices.
Cir dir—lmported yesterday, 14,613 bags wheat
and 29 235 bags rye. Hiivnte sales take place at,
wheat 145 a 150; rye 90 a 95.
Sugars—Transactions in the market continue
rather limited on private account. At auction
yesterday we notice sales of 89 brls. brown su
gars at 5 a fig; 3 do. do. crushed at 9 j ; 5 do.
loaves do. at7J; 15 do. white crushed do. at
11J a I2j ; 782 loaves while do, at 13j a 14 ;
155 brls loaf do. at 14 j a 15.
Flour—No sales of consequence—lire article
is very heavy and is declining. At auction yes
terday. 30 brls. middling and super were sold at
5J to 7,i cash.
Molasses—We have no sales to record on in
dividual account, and only 21 hhds. Porto P.ico
at auction, at 25 a 36£ cash.
Sail—Of good Liverpool wc notice no sales.
Yesterday a s nail lot damaged, about 50 sacks,
went at $1 50 private, sale. At auction 250
socks were disposed ofat 10s a I3s 3d,cash —Iss
is asked for prime; ol other description wc have
no transactions lo remark.
Reccipls of Frothier, He. received down tire
North River, April 13,211 barrels floor, 4 box
es ashes, 53 bead cattle, 100 boxes candles.
wwwmtetrr. .. . . f. wwiMg
CO.fILTaiiKUIAL.
NEW YORK MARKET, APRII. 12.
Coffee. —A catalogue ol Brazil, embracing 2427
hags, whs offered by auction yesterday, 2003 ol
which were Mil I at U* a 12, 132 i»ag* at the former,
and 20 nt t oluilor rate, averaging about 104 cans
per lb, 4 mo-* lie b ile proceeded witli some de
gree of niiiinaiiuii, though general y the qualities
were ordinary. Iho private nairs.if .sions, which
contiiv.i:} ext onHy limit. *>l, iacuido ah ml JOJ b.tga
Laguin at iJ ; mid 3n 4U ('uba,ni 111 a JOi cent)
( otto . Ilu trjiiMiotioiia have been very limited,
ami ut a lari her red not ion in rut „•« 'i ho sales, in ail,
amount to 4 a 600 bales, including besides various
Bin .11 parco s uf‘ other d serif.turns, 100 bales Up
lands at Hi a 124 ; .0.) do BL ; ami 160 Floridaai
104 a 13. coins *i be ai rivals have been—
From Jl/obilo 637
Fhu ida, 1033
Georgia, 70
Sihj lu a o’ina, 80
North Ca.ohna, 662
Total 23*1 halo.).
Flour and Meed. — Flic Flint'* market continues ex
evasively heavy, and the stilus trill.ng in all d:s rip
ii.ua. Wc fan her redtiee our quo aliens, which
may still he considered nominal, ns purchas s to any
extent would ensure a ready reduction Irma our re
vised prices ; small sales ol l’ioy nt v : d.*2s a 60;
kichiTVMid Country, $6 75; Baltimore City Mills at
the sumo rate; and snpurliiie Pennsylvania a ‘3.26,
i’he market tor Uyo Flour and Cora Aleal also re
mains very inactive.
J’fuvisions —We have no farther variation to
make in our quotations for Beef and Pork, hut lor
both the demand continues very limited- Lard also
remains qu te dull, with & declining tendency, ow
ing lo tho excessive stork which has now accumu
lated in the market. Other articles also continue
dull of sale at previous prices
Spirits,—-'Vue market for nil descriptions continues
heavy, and the sales of Foreign have been chiefly
confine 1 to small parcels to supply iho wants of th*j
trade at former prices: n sale of 200 halfpipes A
was raa lent 91.35 ; and 10 do of O.ard,
Dupuy&Co. at $1.50; small sales of New Eng
land Kum at 42 a4O rents for hhds.; and 47 for brl .
Domestic Whiskey in barrel)sold nt 36 a 30 c:s
Sugars —'l be transactions in the Sugar market
continue limited, and the operations since our l ist
exhibit a fort! *r dec line in price): among the sales,
wo notice JSO hhds. Porto Kico nt 7« a8 cents; the*
la; tor rale for a few of prime quality, 6a 600 boxes
Brown Havana, 7* a 8; 120 White do. 10a 104;
and 76 box. s Pingfi, 10 cents, 6 mo). A large por
tion ot the Whitobox Cubts recently received, wc
understand, arc to be shipped from first hands.
iTlni’iue Intelligence.
ill HIVED.
F(earner Duncan Me Kao, I’hilbrick, Charleston"
.Wercliaxuliz.’, <fcc.—lo I*. Bonnoch, owner, ami oth
ers.
DEPARTED
Steamer Chatham, Wray, Savannah, with boats
Nos. 1 and 11. 5U bales Cotton.
Ciiari.f.sto.v, April 17.—Arr schr Pembroke,
Clarko, tlaiauzas ; sclir Franeis, L. Kennedy, Bahi
mor-i solar Me Hum, Magee, Wilmington, N C;
ship I- liza Ann, llu gesi, bait iraorc; Br. brig Her
ald, Tucker, Dcinerara, brig Olson, (base, Alexan
dria, U. t’.; sclir Convoy, oaylord, Edenlon, 61. C.,
5 days.
Cl’d. barque Eliza, Rodrigues, Hamburg; brig
New J/amspbire, Walker, do; stoop Virginia, Hal,
Darien.
Went lo Set on Saturday, U. S. Mail schr Hope
Walker, Key, West, via, Indian Key; steam packet
Columbia, Wright, New York.
UVm to sea yesterday, Sp. barque Ehzt, Rodri
gues.llamburg; fireman Gul iot, ll aierhorst., Gerdts,
Aorih ot Europe Bremen brig UieFreuude, Meyer,
do do; brig Atlantic, Godfrey, Boston; sehrtaspain,
Pace, Alexandria, D C,; sclir Polly, Williams, Jack
sonville, E. F.
New York, Amu, 11.—Cleared ship Calhoun,
O'Neil, CliAilcstotl.
April 12—Cl'd, ship OcmulgeC, Lenvilt, Savan
nah ; brig New Jersey, Mai tho tv, Darien, Gej., R.
)*. Hem'll. •
<G«miiiiK)ia JbluTitf’s Male.
WILL he soi l at Columbia Court House, on
the first Tuesday in Juno next, between the
usual hours of sale, one negro woman slave by the
name of iVurinh, about twenty one years ol age,
and her two children Eliza axd Sarah, to sntisiy a
mortgage (i. fa. from Columbia Interior Court, Peter
Wright, vs. Pierson Peitit. Properly pointed out
in said mortgage li. fit.
ALSO,
Will be sold at Columbia Court House, on the
fi st Tuesday in June next, between the usual Imu-s
of sale, a siock of Merchandize, consisting ot Dry
GooJs, Hardware, Groceries, Crockery, &c., to sat
isty a mo. tgage li. fa from Columbia Interior Court,
Daniel Hand vs James Burnside. Property point- 1
ed oat in said nioit.uge fi. la.
HICUARD 11. JONES, d s. c c. 1
march 31 75
Sl2O lie word. ~~ ]
sen 1 will give the above reward for the ap- ,
prehension and delivery of my Negro
CHARLOTTE, nt my residene near \
Millhaven, in .SVrivcn county. She is
A ft-v) ahout tw ««y y ears o,<, > very dark com
nlected, and dres.-es fino for a servant.
she wa “ purchased some months past
-aEoSja from Mr. Thomas J. Walton, of Angus
In, by I Immas W. Oliver; and, ns her raoih'-r and "
acquaintances five in that city, it is very likely she '
is harbored by seme of them " i
„ . MARTHA OLIVER. <
Feb 28 qg
• A ditoi ills Orator’s Sale.
WILL be sold on the first Tuesday in June
nest, before the Court llensedoor in Jackson- j
lioro, within llie uond hours of saie—Five thousand 1 1
acres of fine Land more or less, lying in feriven
rounly, adjoining lands of John K. ■ humps I
ven U ackbum, Abram Hunter and others, is longing
10 tlie estate of Rebecca I’onder, dcr'd,so!d by order
of ibe honorable the Interior Court of Scrivencounty,
for a division among the heirs of said estate
GEURGE ROBBINS, ii;m'r.
apr(l S
Co-partwmliin heretofore existing between
1 I.AUK & HaSkINsON, was this clay, by
mutual consent,« ioauKcil. All personaindebted to.
or Imv ng claims nga.rsi said fi in, arc requited n»
make settlement with Geo. E. I ark, who is duly au
thorised to transact all madness connected with said
fi in.
GKO. Is. LARK.
-toilN T. HA NKIXSON.
4 mile Branch, B I)., S. C., March 13 w3m
lie»ar()
t RUNAWAY from the rutwerib *r
living four miles I) I w \\ ngblsho.o*
Colurnhia cotiiny, c»n tSieJTth of De
cern h r lac', a >cgru man named
A LIC, about 5 feet 4 in* hes high,
slight yellow complexion, about. 35
or 40 years of age. wi gbing 130 or
140 pounds, quite a smart a d intelli
gent noy wuen spoken to, bus clothing u re of wo
len mixt coat and pantaloon* I will give the above
reward for his being liken up and brought G me, or
lodged in any safe Jail so that 1 can get him, on in
formation being given me immediately,
Colnm. county, March 26,1837. AIDaM SCOTT.
marc h 29 4wi 73
ExeciilorS IXolicc,
WILL bo sold on I riday the 12th dry of May
next, at the residence ol John Magruder, laic
of Burke county, decease J, a ).mt of the perishable
prop ny of said deceased. Terms made known un
the day of sale.
JONH LODGE, ) F .
F. J. BROWN, $ 1,1 18
april 3 *7
1., in colei Mici'ilPs Sale.
WILL b" 1 sold nf I.inco'nton, Gen. on the first
Titfsday in May next, within the usual
hours of sale, a bay Mare, about five yea's old,
levied on as the property of Ang.stin J. Davis, to
satisfy a fi. fa. issued from the Inferior Court of
Wilkes county, Micnjih D. M.ahoy vs. A J. Davis
F. F. FLEMING, Sh’ff.
npril 3 77
Aciiniisistnlor’M salt 1 .
ON the first Tuesday in June next, wiH be sold
«t the Court House, in Waynesboro’ Burke
county, two lots Vo. l‘J and *3O, in the plan of said#
town of VV aynesboro 1 , S'ild ns the property ol Mnry
VV Kite, doco.ihed, and sold order an order of the
Court of O. dinary, of said minty of Burke.
I'Ll AS UKLL,
rra"cli29 Adm’rof Mary White.
Naie.
WILL he sold on t!io firsr Tuesday in May
next, before Iho Court Homo door, in Jack
sotibo rough, fcrniven County, between the usual
hours of s*ale, — I’lirea Hundred and Fifty Aries ol
Pino Land, adjoining lands of Willi tin G. Ii tinier,
W. Williams, mid Mrs Ann Newton; sold by or
der nf».ha Honorable the Interior Court of driven
County, lorn division among the heirs of David
Archer, deceased
JOHN L. SOUTHWELL,) ...
ELI ARCHER. | Adm rs.
March 0, 1*37 5G wtd
Esoicl.
Columbia S. C.
11l AVE the pleasure to inform l lie public that
the above hol'd will he opened on-thilunlay, the
11 ill instant, by .Messrs. J. M. Loach, & A. "i hump*
stui, for the accomodation of all respectable persons
tluit may think proper to call. I have no lieOiation
in r commending them as well qua ified to keep a
well regulated, quid, orderly lions', and have no
doubt hut they will give general salitdiiclii ii to gen
lit men and ladies. i*j:u , h of thus » gentlemen have
iifisiated me in the lion 1 tor several years.
J. \V. former i'r prirtnr.
AllHoi/FSON, 011, | PrCSeU P "P rie,or °'
march *2»J w3m C 5
* iiiilioiti
A LI, persons ore cautioned against trading for two
isL prombory iioL'a given by me to Geo. J. Tur
ner of Jefferson county, as 1 am determined nut to
pay them unless compcll dby law. They were gi
von in corisidemtton of a trad ol Land, upon which
he had previously executed a mortgage to Elam
Voung, which will haven lien upon it, in preference
to my deed,ami I shall not pay the notes uni 1 the
mortgage is ratified. 7 lu? n**»fs cacti hear dale a
bout iho 543.1 i or 2lhh December last, both clue on
the first day of January next, one for two hundred
and thirty-seven dollars and some cents, and made
payable to Elam Voting; the ol her for three hun
dred and sixly-iwo dollars ami som? cents, payable
lo said Turner. CHARLES CLARKE
Burke county, March 2, 1837 wiJan 50
SOi> llcHiiifl.
Runaway from the sT scri
jgai . her, icsiding nenr Stanford's
X Ro ids. Putnamcounty, Ga.
astflf*. Bby on the 2:iih day of A pit, 1836,
/ u no ' ro ma " nai »®-I 'Font. “•
<T. / liriut forty-five yeirs old, five
fc~t 8 or ton inches high, with
some gray hairs about bis neck, it is thought that
lie is probably lurking about somewhere in Darling
ton or Sumter Districts, S. C or perhaps in Charles
ton The above reward will be given for him il pul
into eny sale jail m Georgia or . outh Carolina
MATTHEW FARLEY,
march 30 wlm* 74
ssb ri4WENTY~DOLI,ARA’ REW.fITTT
• "ill be given for the nppreln hsion
and lodgement in some sale jail, of a Ne
gro woman named CHARITY, who ran-
A n " a y from iho subscriber on Ibe 24ib ol
Deoomber last. Charily is twenty-five
nr six years of age, rather light nomplecl
c-sEisis cd, five feet two or Hire.', incites high,
anil very compm-tly b .ill. Site lias (as well as I re- (
collect) a large s -ar on the left side of Iter face, ex- (
lending front the lower nnrt of her oar tuber nose— (
She wus raised in Columbia rounly, in this State, (
and has iio doubt gone In that rounly.
THOB. T WILKINS.
Eafnnf.n,Jan 1(5 12 if
ICenai-il.
,* RAiVAWAY from the snh-
JSf irrihers in Colnmbii Conniy,
a bright itfnlallo fellow by
Iho name of Anthony, for
j nirrly belonged lo Miss Mary
Nulla .bite. Anthony is about
or six inches high. The nb .vo reward will be given i
for Ihc apprehei sion and delivery of Anthony, or ]
lodged in some safe Jail, so that I con get him.
Appling, March 20th 1837. ,
March 23 Im* 68 Wm. J. SANDERS. |
A (Wood Barpiii.
JnA THE Subscriber determined on mov- I
ing lo ihe West is now drsirous lo dis- I
!!*■ pose of his House and /.ol(formerly oc- 1
copied ns a Tavern) inthetown of ilStl- i
roe, Wallon conniy, Ga., which is w II improved
wilb a .St- re Room very neatly fiitod up, nnd ave- i
ry commodious Dwelling (with all the necessary out
bailings, and two back lots) in a very pleasant a’d
the most business part of the village. Any person i
wishing to purchase will do well to call and examine I
the properly. i
Also, 115 Acres of Land immediately adjoining I
the village. As to health and g.md schools this vil
lagers well known is notsurpassed by any i i - eor
gio. WM. A. DRAKE.
Monroe, Ga , April 7 w3m 81
ISaaiauay or *lo3r:a.
SR UN tic night of the 20th of J/areh last,
ycJR Ihe anhgcrilicr lu.l fri.ni his possession, in
Lincoln conniy, a .Mulatto girl named
(7 rvtt MARV said gnl is a bright mulatto, with j
A fij.Sn a bushy Iten.l of hair, some of her upper I
fore teeth a fleeted, nnj has a bluish ap
pcarnnec, spare made, nnd quick or lively *
spoken, about 15or 16 yeats of age; she {
look with her various articles of clothing which could
not easily be id ntificd. .
I have reasons lo believe, she has been inveigled f
off, if so, I will pay lor her delivery with th-> thief, 1
One Hu drod Dollars, with proof to convict; for ',
the girl alone il cartitd off, and out of the limits of
the clan of G.oraia, Fifty Dollars for Iter confine
ment so I can get her.
Should she nave run off without assistance, I will
pay Ten Dollars for her confinement in tiny safe Jail, .
or delivery lo meal my residence at Double Branch '
Post Uflic", Lincoln county, where 1 will he glad (
to receive any communication relative to such a girl p
whether in possession of any person oral largo. 8
The editors of the Columbus Enquirer, and Mont- ~
goroery Journal, will insert the above advertisement J
in their paper until directed in the same manner to r
discontinue, nnd forvv rd their accounts to me at
Double Branch Post ollic. 1 , Lincoln county, Georgia, |
which shall be immediately paid,
april 12 wtfSs CHARLES JENNINGS.
istrfftor's JVntice.
ALL persons indebted to the late Stephen Col- g
ter, doceasi d, of Jefferson county, will make
immediate payment, nnd those to whom th - deceased «
was indebted, will render in their a> counts properly fi
authenticated within ll e time pivacriltcd by law to I si
april 6 ASHLEY PHILLIPS, AdmV. (
tixefcnlov’s Notice.
UNDER an order ol the Inferior Court of Burke
cent 1;, wi 1 be sold ot- the first Tuesday m An
gust next, at me C.ittil house door in Pikecuunty
a Lot ol Land No 81, the 2d Uisl. formerly Jklou
roe, now Pike coutuy, . obtaining 2021 actes, t,®.
longing lot be estate ot Muses VValker, deceased, late
Bume countv,sold (or tke purpose of a division.
MOSES WALKER,) ~ ,
april 1 76 FJ. WALKER, f Lx n
Jidiit in istrator's Sale.
ON iho first Tuesiloy in June next, will
sold at public sole, ot the Court House, in
Waynesboro*, Burke cou .ty, (•«» undivided hall of
a llo"»e ami I.ot in said town ot Waynesboro’,
known as the tavern lan ly kepi by John Waits,
deceas'd, and now kept by the undersigned. Sola
under nn order of the Court of Ordinary of sai l
county, as the r :tl estate of John Wat hi, deceased,
for the benefit of llie heirs and creditors.—'J e;ms of
sale on the day
WULFOiID MARSH, Administraior
march 10 57 of Jtihti Walts, nied
N olive.
A 1.1, persons having demands against the estate of
Manning .Spmdley, Ice of the Cni.niy of .lelfer.
son.dc e scd.a.c request’ d to prrseni them, properly
atutienlicoied within Ihet me prescribed by lavv,m,J
ilm-e indebted to the estate are required to make tm*
meJialo payment.
EOGER L. GAMBLE, Adm’r.
march 23 W
Uolliirs Kfwnrd.
_ Ranoway from the suhseribet at
y Hamburg,S. C. on the 24tb instant,
a man nam'd PETEK, aged
25 years, and is very tall, large, an*
/] TNI likely. Pet r is quick and inlelli
gent, is dark complected and 1 think
jj has a scar on his forehead. He is
very stout, nnd well proportioned,
and weighs about 235 lbs. He was raised in Bu'ke
county (in., and I think will t y to gel bnr.k to that
place; any person taking him up and confining him
in any safe jail, shall receive the above reward.
* J ISAAC HUGHES.
.March 27 twlm 71
~ POSTPONED
JefTorsou SherilPs Sale.
14/ILL be sold, nt Pc Market House, in the
v » Town of Louisville, on th ■ first Tuesday h
May next, between tic usual hours <>( sale, the fol
lowing properly, to wit; Three NEGROES, Amo
n. y, a man 40 yta s old, Hannah, a woman 35,
anil llcnneiy, a girl 17; I. vied on ns the property ot
h im R Daniels, to satisfy a mortgage fi. fa. issued
from the Interior Court of Emanuel county, in (avor
of I>. li. Conelly,—property pointed out in said
Mortgage. ,yy \V. GREGORY, Sheriff.
. March 13 1837 57
Ailiiiiiiisli'iilor’s Nolico. v
ALL persons indebted lo the estate of William
Bmiduth, lute of Lincoln county, deco mod, arc
requested to make immediate payment, and those
having demands against said Estate, to prcsenllhein
duly authenticated according lo law.
VV W. STOKES, Adm’r.
march 30 7>
List of LctlPi'S
REMAINING in the Post Office at Wayn»
Loro - , Uco. April 1, 1337.
A H
Alien, Julia Holland's orphans
Abrams, Isaac 3 Hill, James or Maltha
Attaway, Mr. Mari .h 2
Allen, William Hand, John
Alday, Peter Hatcher William
Alia nt, Air. Hill Louisa
Alim, John Hill, )• W. W.
B Hicks Etlnon
Baker, Esq Hatcher, James M.
Brinson, John sr. J
Barton, Samuel Johnson. Wi liam
Postic, Seim E •
Posticli, I homes Key, Joshua
Byrd, Betsey L
Beyerott, Lisha J,evvis, Elam B.
Ihinson, Staring Love), Samuel P.
Buxton, Willi m Lawson, A. J.
frown, B'iiglcton Landing, John
bindes, I o iy l.aslter, M.za
Bryan, Ann Lively, John T.
Burnham, William Lovcil, William
Bio An. Samuel B. Lewis, Thomas H
Hell, /'liomss
Bush, Joseph McColl.Tm, Jordon I
1 rmson.. tephen jv/iller, B. B. 3
Brooke. Thomas’T. 2 UUer j amc . 3 |
Bennett, W illiam hi vncltc, Willard f
Bartow, John v ’ p b
Samuel Barber’s orphans Cuke ‘ I
„ ~ . , Morrison, Lliza
Court Inferior, Justices A/ U mhy Jane
Corker, Drury Monroe, Joseph
Co son, William Milton, Peter an.
Clarke, Ann Mrs, jg
Cavanah S,troll JV*l ßo n, James j|
C arson, Meredith Nelson, Arum
Cox, Mis widow of Jcs- p
Clarlm°James {l ark t or ' J ™ oa ** I
Caswell, Alexander Proxton, Win. M.
Cook, sarah Parker, William
D K
rv i .♦ Rh >dcs, William
Dickson, Robert Russell 11. F.
Hnusc, oamuel g
Duke, William 2 Silvcs John
. nvvson J- W. 11. Simlh j amff
Duke, Mary Sandford Araelim
Dickson, Atelvina Saio:l Henry
Davis, Martha Anecd Ui.tou
Dixon, Ihomas Sanford Hill
Duiilom, Ann rp
Douelass, TRman, Turner John
r- „ 'I homns Richard
Evans, W illmm E Tabb John
F ’l’indnle James
Freeman, Elizur and J. Tabb Davis
Godtries orphans U
Fonnlain, Jimma Urqulmrt Ann
Farrow, I). M. W
Pry.-r, A/ary Mrs, Williams, Ezekiel
Farmer, Venty, Wade, P. G ?s i
Fields, Jam s Williams, Benjamin ■
r* (Vlnteh ad, Charles 4a
Green, Amelia W. st, Lewis fm
Green, AL s s B. Ward, Nancy /
Green, Elizabeth W illiamson.Thotn-s I ’.I
l askine, Asa Wimberly, Exskiel -mB
Green, Jos.ie, P. Young, David
Grillin, Stephen •% : m
JOSEPH JANSEN, -J
nnril 4 Pon-nmster^^H
Joint Bmombci 9
THIS Crlehm ed Racrr rill
bin first season at the
li T»COUR«B. near Augnata, Go.,
f/%A|ihß direction of Mr. Fruman
* *Gacv, and be lot to iMtirrs, ihreniii*^^
season, atOne Hundred
llie season, payable 25th December next, with
Ho larlo the Groom ; iho season lo commence
15tb February, and end the 15ih July next
quested that persons sending mores, will send
for the season a.td a pedigree of the marc. .k
John BaNCombo never having covered, his §
as n foal-getler are, of course, unknown : such
tlierefore, as do not prove in loal, shnll have
benefit of another season, tree of charge.
Gl.iscock & arc extensively provided with
nnd Smbles, for mares that may be frenl to
with the h rue, and will be fed ni fifty centi
d:iy. Black servants, sent with mares, led grat' B v
Every rare and attention will betaken to
agninsl accidents or escapes, hut no liability
incurred for cither. A report having gamed
lian that John Hnscombc vvonbl not cover, 1
tliis met hod to contradict it, s > far as bo has notnHv"
fuse. I
I’EDIGREE,—John light
fifteen and a half bands high, fine bone and
wiih very superior limbs and action, six s earc l o *B^ 4 '
Ibe ensuing spring; he was g< I by iho cclebn ! i^H.| ;
borso Bertrand, sen , his dam was got by
nml he by imported Citizen ; his grand dam by
porhd Buzzard ; and his great grand dam by
Hampton’s Paragon, and be by imported i
bis dam by BnrweJl’s 'J’rav. iier, bis grand dam
mi lia, by old Fearnought mil of Culista, imron*,
by Col. Bird ; Burwelfs Traveller was by Morty’BH
Traveller, our of Col. Bird’s Cilista;
great great grand dam by imported f’igme,
great grand dam was old Sbamerkin, who j
by imported Wildair.out of the imported Cub ,
Bascombe’s performance on the Turf are of aojW
cent dale, and consequently so well known. 1
il unnecessary to trouble the public with any r*‘
of mine, i i relation to them, except to state ’jj 31 !■ v j
has never last a heal sinew be liaw been in my h*’ '
JOHN GROW Fll.l. ■ • '
Mnrrli 10 ! #
liiiw iVolicc. 7, J
C” RAY A. CHANDLER, (lair ot Ororgta.) W
* permanently loratcl himself in 'fi® !°* JB 1
Columbus, .Miss, nnd will praeticß lavv in .
lies of Lowndes, Monroe, Noxubee, Fentper.
s'on, Oktibalta, nnd Chiekasavv ; and in 1
preme C.'bnneery Courts of Jarkson, Mis* ■ “ ...
llie roomies of Pirkrns, Fayette, Marion, am. gK
ra!"o a, in Alab nn. , n
He will aUo, as agent attend to to* ’,. nr JB
Lands in the Ipte Choctaw and Chirkosavv .
at a small commission. ... , ..,,, rn
GRAY A. CIlANDUt^^™
OfTiee, Columbus, Miss „ ~
The Macon Messenger, Columbus Hersa .
gusln Const it ulionalisl, Chronicle &- ® n ’ , bK[
Savannah Georgian, "ill publish the obo
week tor four weeks, and afterwards on " ,heW*H
for 6 months, and forward their accounts £ ■
•'p-rt' w Iw4w*)mto 4> E