NOTE-These 261, (omitting 16 in the foregoing list sent to Cape Palmas by the Maryland Colonization Society,) added to the number previously sent, including 53 by the Isla de Cuba from New York, make 8,041 emigrants sent to Liberia by the American Colonization Society and its auxiliaries. Charitable Bequests. The following legacies to charitable and | Society for the Employment and Rereligious institutions are bequeathed by the will of the late Russel H. Nevins: To the New-York Hospital.......$5,000 New-York State Colonization So ciety... American Bible society. American Tract Society.. New-York City Tract Society. Demilt Dispensary. New-York Juvenile Asylum.. lief of the Poor..... Total.... 1,000 .$26,000 The will is dated November 3d, 1853, 3,000 and Messrs. Jas. Nevins, David H. Ne2,000 vins, Frederick Townsend, George Town2,000 send, and the Rev. Henry W. Bellows, 2,000 are nominated executors. The estate of 1,000 the deceased is said to be valued at six 1,000 hundred thousand dollars. American Female Guardian Society 1,000 Colored Home.. 1,000 1,000 American Home Missionary Society 1,000 Union Theological Seminary.... 1,000 Prison Association (for female department)..... Association for the Relief of Aged and Respectable Indigent Females 1,000 Society for the Relief of Half Or 1,000 phan and Destitute Children..... 1,000 Retreat for the Insane, for the sup- teurs.. .$1,000 1,000 Connecticut Colonization Society.. 1,000 500 And the residue of her estate, of whatever nature, after paying a few small legacies to relatives and friends, to the Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.Hartford Courant. LIBERAL BEQUESTS.-Thos. Hanna.whose death we recently noticed, left a number of Resolutions of the Putnam and liberal bequests to various benevolent and Zanesville Auxiliary Col. Society. Resolved, That we deem it expe PUTNAM, O., Nov. 12, 1853. At a meeting of the Directors and friends of the Putnam and Zanesville Auxiliary Colonization Society, to take into consideration the pro-dient, and hereby request the Parent posed amendments to the Constitution of the American Colonization Society, it was Resolved, That, after a respectful examination of the subject, the proposed alteration, is, in our opinion, wholly inexpedient, and more especially the proposition to authorize money to be drawn from the Treasury to pay "permanent" delegates, against which we hereby enter our decided protest. Resolved, That, whereas a "Committee of Correspondence," some three years ago, was appointed for this State, (of which one of our number was one,) from whom we have not heard since its organization, (if indeed it ever has been organized,) that our Secretary be directed to make inquiries of the Secretary of the Parent Society on the subject: and further to suggest to the Secretary, and consult upon the expediency and propriety of forming a State Society in Zanesville or Xenia, Society, to address the different State Legislatures who have not moved on the subject, and who may be in session at the time of the Annual Meeting, to make liberal appropriations for the cause of colonization, as well as to call upon Congress to acknowledge the independence of Liberia, and do something worthy the nation. Resolved, That we have increased faith in the wisdom, justice, and expediency of the whole scheme of colonization, and that its success calls forth our unfeigned gratitude to our Heavenly Father. Resolved, That the Treasurer be directed to forward to the Parent Society the money on hand, ($160.) Resolved, That the foregoing resolutions be forwarded to the Secretary of the Parent Society, with the request that they be published in the African Repository. By order of the Board, |