Newspaper Page Text
Icular comfort or respectability.”
agistrate asked with some little
perhaps, then, you wish mar
-2”
oa 1 Idinna ken,* your Worship,
[ht. Not that 1 want a husband,
ive me ; but do you, as it is, I can
ny leebeity in ony way.”
some further interogation, she
ished with a warrant for for the
isioii of the “ gay deceiver,” and
;td off with it to the constable of
ne at which place it seems the
in” is at present residing.
Nat. Advocate.
he I.cndon Examiner, Sept 3 ]
)E OF Mil. QUINCY ADAMS.
Washington Gust lie of July 10th
a speech of six columns in length,
ras delivered by the Hon. John
\dams, Oil the Anniversary of A
ludependence. This document
talked of across the Atlantic
oined extract is the peroration :
d forth, ye champions of Britan
rof the waves ! stand forth, ye
is knights of chartered liberties
rotten borough ! Enter thn lists,
;is of inventive genius ! Ye migh
ts of the paielte and brush ’ Ye
•s upon the sculpture of the Elgin
Ye spawners of fustian romanc
vious lyrics ! Come and enquire
America done for the benefit of
! In the half century which has
iince the declaration of American
lence, what have you done for
fit ol mankind ?—When Themis
is sarcastically asked by some mu
ius of his age, whether be km w
day on the hits ? be answered,
ic knew how. t>> make a great city
!I one. We shad not contend
for the prize of music, painting,
ure. We shall not disturb the
trances of your chemists, nor call
heavens the ardent gaze of your
lers. We will not ask who was the
Ident cf yourlloyal Acade ny. Wc
inquire by whose mechanical com
i it was that your steam boats sem
;nts cf your rivers, and vanquish
isition of the winds themselves
ir seas. We will not name the
of the cotton-gin, for we fear
would ask us the meaning of the
id pronounce it a provincial bar-
We will not name to you him
raver delies the imitation of for
d saves the labour of your exccn
y taking from your greatest geni
obbery the power of cbmuiiliing
e. He is now among yourselves,
2 your philosophers have permit
to prove to them the compressi
water, you may, perhaps, cluin
your own. Would you soar to
on a rocket, or burst into glory
liell 2 We shall leave "you to eu
y our naval heroes their oplmon
;eam Battery and tlie Torpedo,—
by the contrivance of agents ot
on that America*"wishes to com
r inventive genius to the admira
ite gratitude of after times j nor
t in the (-.election of the secrets,
imposition of new modifications,
:al nature.
'ident itlii spiranti morillus <eru ”
ven is her purpose the glory of
■obition j nor “tu regeie Imperto
—her memento to her sons. Her
not dominion, but liberty Her
the march of mind. She has a
da shield: but the motto upon
eld is— Freedom, Independence,
This has been Iter declaration;
been, as far as her necessary in
ewith the rest of mankind would
her practice.”
not but be allowed by the truest
hers to America, that this sneccli
.dams is in bad taste. There aic
ter admirers of American revo
an nniselves. We have even an
ty nff. clion for the United States
r founder, and we believe that the
example afforded by the first En
, as it were, who had an opportu
ttting up for themselves, will have
test possible effect, in a course of
11 over the world But why do
lo Americans think it, worth their
talk in this n. aimer 2 Why cac
he content with doing and having
ngs unequivocally great, without
their petulant jealousy (for it is
else after ail) of things which
dently wish they had been able to
It is not honorable to John Quin
we trust there are great’num-
Amencans who think so, besides
ish party. T e Americans, who
an off-set from the English, and
en chiefly engaged in setting up
w establishments, are not bound
literary dk the mother country;
' should they exhibit the soreness
ring so ? The true state of the
this:—The Americans are not as
as the English, but tin y have un
ly, as they say they have, done a
'a! for liberty, and in love of it.—
jiisli, outlie other hand, are more
but they have not done so much
ty! or if it shall ultimately torn
they have, they did not intend it.
shing republic set up, and stupid
;s of legitimacy brought back, arc
ierent things But the Americans
forget, not only that they arc not
i) be as literary as the whole Eng
ple, with all its facilities of educa
ercourse and inspiring haunts, —
Americans and English hav.- both
ton ancestry to be proud of, with
iliakspeares, Miltons, and Bacons,
ijericans may even,'if they please,
bviops reason, call themselves the
lants, par excellence, of the Mil
arvells, and our other great le
t's. Why then do they disgrace
•vn glory by behaving as if they
ot sensible of what they boast of?
by does Mr. Quincy Adams prot
undervalue what he would give
1 ears possess. He talks of The-
Es It was more fit in Bonaparte
of fhuTiistocles, than republicans
J \a a Ve tVeedom. Epaminon
dd have been more to the purpose,
not tor Mr Adams’ sophistry : for
loudas, besides being trie deliverer
country, was a musician and a
ter fronTwadiington.
*' rom Boston Centinel.
govern ClTr . November 5,1821.
t'ons are making here sot the
aot Ccj)gr eS j which will be in less
first y aa
v a very »
') ke iS) os
y ither »b
i ban a month, Ihe grand electioneering
campaign, it is said, will bs opened as soon
after tlie meeting as time will afford for
feeling the pulses ot the members——a large
proportion, ot whom are new ones. T*he
prominent candidates lor the next presi
deucy now spoken of, being on the spot,
a pretty active canvas is expected No
one has any idea of a Congressional Can
chs. It would damn any cause which should
adopt one: Os course individual ex
erlions must be the greater, and the cam
paign begin earlier.
“ It is intimated, that many of the in
cumbents in office, some of whom have
held lucrative appointments from fifteen
to thirty years, will be invited to fold up
their robes, and retire with decency. By
the law of May, 1821, limiting the term
ot olfice ot certain officers, all commissi
ons or appointments made prior to the Ist
ol October, 1816, are to cease after the
30th September last; and all others four
years from their dates. The object of this
law was to enable the President to gel
rid of old and rich incumbents, without
the disagreeable course c f absolute re
moval. It will bo recollected, that the
taw in question, refeis to District Attor
neys, Collectors of Customs, Naval Olfi
cers, Surveyors of Customs, Navy Agents,
Registers of Land Offices, &c Ac. if the
spirit cf the law is executed, as it is
it will be, you may easily conceive of the
• xcitemem it will create among the vote
ran ofiice-holdcis, and the activity it will
occasion among the office seekers- As fui
as the public voice on this subject lias
been ascertained, it is loud in favor of the
execution of the law in its spiait, and that
the present time is the best to make the
experiment. Tlie president, it is sug
gested, will readily hearken to the gene
ini voice, when ascertained from the
emb» rs, If there are honors and enrol,
utnents in the public offices, they ought
to be shared by the community, and not
by any perpetuities, if the public service
will admit of it; and if labor and duties
are to be performed, they ought lo he di
vided.
‘ The health of this vicinity has been
restored”
_TaU«UBTA.~
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1821.
We understand that a strong opposition
to Mr. Cheves is manifesting itself at the
North East. They object to him, that lie
is more of a Lawyer than a man of business;
more speculative than practical; and that
v hen he should be employed in devising
meats for an increase of dividend, he is
engaged in arranging formulas for the
Bank or its branches.
Mr Lloyd, Mi. Willing, and Mr. Jones,
are severally spoken of as his probable
competitor ; bat owing to this diversity of
opinion, it is supposed that Mr. Cheves
will be able to retain his place.
We hardly know what reply to make to
the following article extracted from the
Charleston Gazette. The writer would
seem to be most strangely ignorant of our
polities; or to be ifluenced by motives
which are too palpable to be objects of
suspicion with anv one.
How far the pride, or the interest, or the
self-love of Carolina, may be concerned in
tlie matter, we know not; but this we
have heard, that our late election created
as strong a sensation among the people of
our sister State, as it did among the Go
venter's friends, on this side of the Sa
vannah. Now it happens most unfortu
nately for the object of these extra ordin
ary volunteers, lha‘ the feelings of Gen,
Clark’s party are personal to himself, but
irrelative to Mr. Crawford.—Between the
present competitors for the Presidency,
Georgia would give nun an undivided votes
and we are really of opinion, that it is
more than any man’s popularity would be
worth, to canvass actively against him.
Governoriof Georgia. —By th endorse
ment on the way bill of the Savannah Stage,
we learn thatt te present incumbent Jons
Clarke, has been re-eiected ivy a nmjontv
of two votes over his opponent, George
M. Troup. As we doubt not the correct
ness of this statement, and as the friends
of Mr. Troup, were anlicipatig the cause
quences of his election to the Executive
chair, as an iddit onal aid in tlie prospec
tive struggle of Mr Crawl*, rd for the Pics
idcncy—that case may now be consider
ed as determined Georgia will not lend
its assistance lo Mr. Crawtord.
Charleston City Gazette,
Though “ Georgia has taken time, by the
forelock,” it would appear from the fol
lowing that others are doing their best
to get their hands upon the old man’s pate,
also.
From The N. Y. National Advocate.
Mr Walsh and his friend Baptist Irvine
have simultaneously, eras. Master Walsh
would call it, consecutively complained of
our wicked suggestion of a close intimacy
between General Jackson and Hewitt Clin
ton. Walsh, deeply offended, says it is
intended to affect the General’s influence
in the choic. *of President, but his bro
ther of the type goes further; he fairly
raves at the suggestion.
Irvine, after having been fed and foster
ed in the service ot Dewitt, now pro
claims a fatal fact to the world, which he
as a friend should have concealed, name
ly—that Gov. Clinton “ has been cast below
the political horizon,” and is “at the bottom
of the wheel.” Not but what he, (Irvine)
esteems him a great man, but he says he
is a “ d f'-ctive politician,” and moreover,
(listen Mr Silvauus Miller £i Co) is stir
rounded by some “unworthy characters.”
This from one of your oldjcronies!
“Straws sheWjWhich way the wind blows”
The insirua'ion of a political intimacy be
tween the General and Governor, has se'
. all the pigeons fluttering
Certainly the toast at Tammany Hall,
> one of a pointed and rather mde nature ;
tile afuur of General Scott, and many com
plimentary letters from Gen. Jackson to
• the “projector of the Canal,” the onh
“suitable head of a great nation,” would I
seem to indicate a very favorable tinder
standing ; but these had not even a remote
agency in any remarks on the Florida af
fair, though they have been tortured to
that meaning.
Col. Edward Hardix, of the county of
Chatham, was on Tuesday hist, by a joint
ballot ot both Houses of tlie Legislature,
elected to the command of the Ist Bi igade,
in ihe Ist Division of Geotgia Militia, in
the room of Gen. F. Hopkins, late
Intosh county, deceased.
Copy cf u letter to the Post .Master of
/Savannah ■
Churleshti, yVtfr. 19, 1821
Dear Stu,
On receiving our mail from the north
yesterday, we found that a robery had been
committed, and we were inhumed it had
taken place between Marion Court-house
and Godfrey’s ferry, on tie Big Pedee.
The portmanteau was cut with a knife,
& tlie Fayetteville sealed bag for Charles
ton, Con tuning the packages from the
former to the latter and tlie offices south
of d, was missing. The Petersburg!! beg
for this office, which contains every tiling
tor us from that place and north of it, ar
rived safe. It appears, however, on the
arrival of the mail to-day, that most of the
packages which are in the missing Fay
eltville bag have been received and sent
on, and that no violence has been done lo
any except a bundle from New-York for
your office, which came in the envelope;
you will receive it This came without a
p..si bill, ana I to. k a list ofits contents,
which accompanies the pack.gr. It is
imposib e to ascertain until you can hear
from New-York, whether any thing b
missing or not.
The driver on G bson’s line, who brought
die mad to Pedee, is suspected of being
‘he pc petrator of the villiany. He ought
to have been laid hold ot immediately.
It was understood at first dial he had ab
sconded ; put it is since said he has not
and pretends no. (o be able to give any
account of the business. There is verj
bad management in every respect, with
our mails on tlie border of North and
South-Carolira, and 1 only am surprised
we get them along as well as we do. I
hare lately made heavy complaints to the
Genetal Post Office, which I am informed
by Mi- p. Bhadlet, shall be prompijy
attended to.
In basic, dear sir, I -im sincerely yours
THUS \V. BACOT, v. m
Ellaz.r Eault, Esq
■
for the Chronicle.
Imprisonment tor Debt.
No. 11.
It is an argument, often used, and one
very plausible against imprisonment for
debt, that the debtor is not thereby
enabled to pay ; imprisonment appeals to
be a gratuitous suffering on the part of the
i debior, without benefitting the creditor.
But imprisonment is not a payment, but a
means of enforcing payment. If the po
* sition be true that a man may possess, and
■ often doc-3 possess, pioperty beyond the
. reach of an execution, by what other
means is he lo bo compelled to appropri
ate that property to the satisfaction of his
creditors. Even with the check of a tem
porary imprisonment,' how many means
arc resorted to, to conceal and secrete
pioperty, by men in failing ciicuinslan
ccs. Another view may be taken of this
subject. Poverty, attended with debt, is
often, 1 may say, usually the r> suit of nn
’ prudent speculations or extravagant living.
As our insolvent law ; lands, ihe fact of in
ability to pay, is the only one enquired in
to. Il ow that inability was produced,
■ forms no part ol the investig aliens Only
one species of prodigality is provided u
gainst: That of Gaming. But a man may
' run deeply in dein, waste his substance by
riotous living, and leave his creditors
bankrupt from their inability to procure
payment from him. Is the slight penalty
. of a temporary confinement within jail
limits, adequate to the demerits of such a
man. imprisonment in such a case actsas
a preventive check in the same manner as
any other penal law. Ought extravagant,
to be punts- ed 2 Yes—whet it operate-;
to the bur. ol others. A man who for pit. -
poses ofselfg at.lication incurs debts which
lie has no means to pay, or having tiios.
means afterwards, wastes them, is about
as honest in point of fact, as the thief who
enters a store and steals goods to the
same amount. In the one case, he has ob
tained U.e consent of the owner by fraud ;
in the other, he has omitted that small
pari of the crime. If it be correct to ex
ccptthe gambler from tbe operation of th
■ insolvent laws, by what principle shall th
drunkard, the man who revels in olh
luxuries beyond his means, be include
in its provisions. Gaming is only one spe
cf s .f extravagance, and to prevent tha
and leave all the othei modes untouch, d
is a positive diminution of the wealth of.
State In a growing country, like on
own, it prevents that accumulation of cap
ital wh ch is necessity to give to its
boundless capacities their full exercise.—
Franklin was fully convinced of the fact,
that the wealth of a State, depends as
much on the frugality, as on the industry
of its citizens. To diminish frugality by
taking away any check lo extravagance, is
to inflict a positive injury on ihe commu
nity at large It is in vain for any man
to say my wealth is my own, and I will
use itasl please You have no right to
use it to the injury ol others. Y .nr house
is y cur own; but you have no right to set
it on fire. But it may ,be asked. —How-
dues imprisonment operate as a check to
extravagance 2 The dread of the shame
of a jail, prevents many foolish actions;
and Utere are many men whom nothing
eisc would deter from ruining themselves
and all those who have any connection
with them. How far any punishment acts
as a preventive, we cannot know, until by
us rtmoval, the evil it did prevent come
upon us in a flood. I for one, am not wil
t ling to buy exper.ence at that price; but
would be content with the fact, that all ci
vilized nations have adopted this naeasur
to enforce payment; and I presume that
nothing else but universal experience ol
its n. cessily would have produced this
common concurrence That a law does
not entirely prevent an evil, is no reason
, for its repeal. It is* sufficient that in all
probability, it does in h considerable de« •
gree lesen tlie amount. The evils of im
prudent* peculation will fo;m the subjf
<>t anoilcr communication ; but I presume
by this time you are tired, and so am {.
F
To the Public in
General .
TH3 undqralgned with pleasure au
ixiunce-. to the public, that he did
commence on the 2d of July last, to erect
a town named Hamburg, in South Caroli
na, opp site Augusta, on the Savannah
river, and Im succeeded with the aid and
• assistance of his friends, to erect 78 build
ings ; among which there is a ware-h use
of .50 by 300 feet, i'orcotton and tobacco;
also a spacious and convenient building 50
by i 0 foet, for a public bouse, and a num
ber ol spacious stores, some of which aie
40 by 6U feet, all of which are calculated
lor different branches of huaim ss. "I he
stores and ware-house are from 2 to 3 feel
above the level of the streets in Augusta,
and Considered perfectly safe from all da
mages of I resiles. The ware-house ranges
up and down the river, wtthi 80 feet ol
the river bank—3o stores an fronting the
a are-In use, in the same direction, be
tween which tliete is a street of 200 feet,
intended for a maiket-streci. By the
construction ot the ware house there will
no expense of drayage. There is agouti
and safe boat lauding at present, and sub
stantial wharves will ere long be erected
to facilitate the loading and unloading of
boats. The ware house is also considered
free from all danger of fire—and two
more arc now building of the same di
mensions, ami in the same direction on the
bank of the fiver, in which there arc tie
partments calculated foi storage of
Salt, Groceries, 1 on, &c. There is also
a Post-OlHfce established, out of which
letters cun be received earlier than in Att
gusta, and which will be kept open two
hours later than the office there, which
will affoidgreat conven ence to merchants,
as they can answer their lettcis by the
return mail. There will be also be a sav
ing <>f sales at Auction of 2 too per cent,
less than io Augusta. The rate of storage
of Colton, To tacco &.c. is about half the
rates as charged in Augusta In about one
quarter of a mile from the river, the
ground elevates about 60 feet, which :d
--forcs handsome and Inanity situations for
surttnter residence, on which (here are a
number of springs of as good water as
*bii country affords 2500 hales of cot
ton have been purchased and stored in
the ware-house from 29th October to the
23d inst. and goods have been sold in pro
pnAion. There is also commenced a spa
cious building calculated fur a church, to
wbMi a liberal sum has aiready been sub
scribed.
As Hamburg will attract, (he attention
of the ci izens of South Carolina, North-
Carolina and Tennessee, and i.attire hav
ing done much for it; if assisted by art,
the until istg’ ed has not the smallest
doubt it will become a place of great im
portance.
Hei>ry Shultz.
N. B —The Editors of a.I the papers
in Soulh-Carolina, also, those in Angus a
and AVvaniiali, will insert the above three
times and forward their accounts to im
in Hamburgh for payment.
H. S.
V hr T) ■ . -3*
Hunk of Augusts),
19t h November, 1821.
\ Dividend of Four Dol ars a share for
the lust sis months, having been this day
declared on the Capital Stock of this Bank,
payment thereof will commence on Fri
day, the 23d inst.
Augustus Moore.
Nov 26 2t Cashier.
liunk of Augusta,
24 th Novi tuber, 1821
(plf ,r Mie Annual f lection
of thirteen Direc'osof this Bunk to serve
for one year ensuing, will be held at the
banking bouse on Monday, the 3d lie
cember next, from 10, a m to 4, p m.
Augustus Moore,
Nov. 26 3( Cashier
Wanted Immediately,
• *
a. GOOD ’COON, without childicn,
that is ho n( .gt an d ii-dusrious. Apply to Jo
dmn -Wercer, five doors from the upper
'id oflfarr,burgh, or at UiisOffice
Nov 26 ts
Advances on Cotton.
V
H HE subscriber will make advances on
C ittuu consigned to bis friends in Savan
ttbt
John Cormick.
Nov. 26——3 t
Wanted to Purchase,
V Two horse Wagon and Geer —apply '
t this office-
N iv. 36 ts
'i he House and Lot,
UITCATED on Bro;<d and Liuco'it
streets, are now offered f r sale, it will b- ,
m the market until the 25th day ■f I) ,
cember, ut which time, il not sold, it wiii ,
oe withdrawn anti will not be offered a- ,
gain. The situation of the property is
pleasant and healthy, its front Is 180 feet
and runs back to F.llis street 160 leet.
For the terms apply to
Win. A Cobb,
By his Agent,
I Thompson.
November 26
" " g
Vents per day •
will be paid for Fifteen or Twenty prime j
boat hands. a
W. I) Wray.
Enquire of N K. Butler, St t ; o. Bridge St.
JSo,enabnr 19 3t
AUCTION.
To-morrow at 10 O’clock,
h ill be Sold at my Store.
A LillC K AND GENERAL ASS© tITMENT OF
Dry Goods,
CONSISTING OP
CLOTHS Jc Cussimeres, Sattlnetts
Blankets Plains
Cotton Checks, Ginghams, do Robes
Calicoc's, Madrass Handkerchiefs,
Cotton Hose, Dimities
Figured and Plain Cravats
Bed-tick, Bombazetls, Bombasines
Cambric !k Jaconet MUslins
Lutestring Ik Sattin Ribbons, &r..
And immediately After,
iNtl A FEW ARTICLES Os
VVAV-VITVJVUi.
A
FIRKINS Prime Goshen Butter.
Terms ut Sale
1 Thompson,
Nov. 26. Auctioneer
FOR SALK
V r \\w V* X egr i) V v\\ tvw,
LOW IOU CASU ONLY,
Apply to
1. Thompson.
November 26 3t
Sugar, WfiVo, \V\uskuy,
&e.
HI IDS. New-Orler.ns Stttrar
<2/*/ 20 boxes b-t.f ... do
50 ha. s Coffee
30 barrels Whiskey
30 burr Is Northern Gin
FOR SALE IIV
M‘ *r n ft Gordon.
N. R.—BILLS o, NV-v-Vork.
November 26 2t
Pur Sale,
r Pbc T.ot, No. 210 District No. 12:
a Monroe countv. Enquire’at this office,
Nov 26,—t f
Notice.
nr
A HE fittbscribci has taken into Co.
Partnership, Mr. Tiiov-ts J Parmei.ee;
the business tn future will be conducted
under the Firm of]}
Stanfonl ami P ivme'ee;
Who are now opening t.. d offer foi
side a Fresh Assortment . I DRY GOODA',
(or Cash or approved pant ', a tin- ,Sfto,<-
lately occupied hi vessrs H G Webster
David Sttandford.
Novembet 22 vt 4
N B For salt a handsome new Carriage
and V■ it-ol Horsts; thuhorses are young
and p fleetly gentie; suitablcffor a iiuntly
I -uquire as abt.ve.
Piom the Camp tie Hat bier,
xw nuvemiike. YEAR I.
“ Helium nee limvndum, nee Pi ovocandum,’’
i he Public is respectably and respectfully
into:mud that (he suasttiint-u still -amts
on a respectable business in the lute t.f
SHAVING U 11 A Ui-li HESS I JVC,
In all its various branches-. He has taken
u NEAT CHAMBER on the sum 11 side ol
iltoad slictl, one - out br/oni “ I he Gioh w
• uvern,” and directly “ opposite the bank
-if Augusta; ’—He is a s • nappy to a vaq
himself of this opportunity to expr.as his
gratitude for past tnco .ragementam
hopes by bis diligent at d polite attention ..
continuance of public patronage .lthuuiih
situated in tb tminediat. vicmity (film
ever to-be ttmanber-d id nevtr-lo be forgo,
ten lump of unwicny mortality mai tar-la . -
d HERO oj cake id pie remembrance wh
flourished at VVashint a as “ Bliiy-lhe Ba
and who now in constq tnc< of hi
late FLOUR SPE‘ CLATIO >■ flourishes
“ Billy-tbe-lta. t>Li, * dta pnk i,paragon
id' pm fiction, that once baiter u d -would ne
barber ych pi wiliiam uai.his, who one.
“left ms toitSTiti Eon HIS COUNTRY'
GOOD ” anil who is, notwithstanding toe
“ high style’’ in which he prom: , s l ln hi-
I'u r Ins customers ” and the sang froid ,
which he lanes tlteni by tin- nos,, tile n. ...
barbarous piece ol burbeiism that ever w
barbarously brought limit many b-irbu it .
country of mongrel but barium.
And a th ngn the subscriber dues
keep a “ Joa n ymin UobeH nor an app. cu
lice 'Torn,” ye lie modestly begs leav t
remark ilia his cost m-is can b - belli
brushed A enp-te ad adeem oy him -e's ■ ha
could b do :e b. any uppreiitce, and b
is confi cm his customers are s dmeiligi i
as to r. collect the aihigi, “A burbe de J*
on nppn-ud a mire-," —and con..eqin o t
no ie but » Itlsck-heud v/mtld sillier a sera
ping from Billy’s apprentice.
Very Uespecfully,
1 have the honor to be,
The public’s most, ob’t.
And very humbic
Servant,
HORACE PAYNE.
N. B H, P. Wishes the public to he
assured that be keeps Razors from the
frus ultra to the Jle pi ut ultra, from the
magnum bonum to th • minimum bonum an .
to a great many othei bonum* if the lingua
would allow the declination.
llcad-f^iiarters,
ELHF.UTON November 10, 1821
Diy is ion O t Aera.
ILLIAM JONES, Esq of J.incoln
County, is hereby appointed Division In
spector of the Fourth Division, Georgia
Militia, with the Title and Rank of Lieu
tenant Colonel, vice Colonel Micajah
llenly, resigned All office rs and privates
in sa ; d Division, will respect and obey him
accordingly.
Wiley Thompson,
Maj Gen Com’d’g
November 22——4 t 6
FOP SALTS,
T. HE Lot No. 1:56,7 District li'WU
Enquire at tb.s Hi> e.
' T mhe’’ 26 >f
JUS I JL UU ilsAied,
AND roll SALE AT TUB
HERJL D-OFFJCE,
Hy the Gross, Dozen or Single
the
A ill
ftuwVU-Piu tlVuva,
ALMANACK,
Fuji THE IE Jit OFOUJt LUHQ
mm 3
Ca’ciil:i<edby H. Gun:n, U iihes Caunty,
Nov 26
Gin, Whiskey* Mackerel,
& c.
V)
J ' 9 nhls Whiskey,
40 do Ruthenburgh Gin
•50 do Phelp’s do
40 do No. 3, Mucker. I
S Uhs 4 h p-oof Jamaica Rum
10 111,1 s Vinegar
On Consignment.
For sun low, i-i
T. B. Gordon,
Anslej’s Range
Novembei 2' 3t
T?v I- Tliormvvon,
On o, day the jß6ih Inst ut,
the Ho ut
Me tiger,
HEII TA' Kl L, J*c.
Terms, (our months, lo’- approval cu.
dorsed paper,
ALSO.
jt puiyj ru sjle.
Two Prime Bout Hands.
N'lveo ' e 19 ids
' "AUCTION.
By 1. ’ lioiupson,
On Tuesday the first
of* next,
will m; sold,
wtii »ut n kskih k,
At the Markel-llfois in i'»e city of V. ij£
t; f at Ju nVloelc :
Two Prime
Negro S ellows.
Go I , >oai Hands— r rn,KC ish.
Nov mbe t is
•VmrV\v bt V\
A few doo s above the Pla levs’ Hotel,
kuoad.strf.rt.
Have just receiv 'l. mil nee now tj/srinyfor
stile, at n /iulrsnle or hr nil
An Extensive Agtfordneiit of
lirj Goods
ANI
CUOI KUIRS,
15000 p irof Fashionable
lioots and Sliuiis,
At sorted.
A LARGE A- OR I Vi ENT OP
<O4>SO3 8
Ordirt’ r nt kin.;s.
'l l a CL ATK,
By the Box and Wire.
Tin ai d Pv w tei* Vv aiC
Maunlactu cd by •in in as usual.
As one of the firm r*»s’d » in New-V ,rfc
hey imci'd a, all times .<• Inve their tg.
sortmeni complete. Count,’ .Wrchaut*
‘"id Traders can a 1 a l Min/s be supplied
■ the most acc >m daring terms
N v. 22- 6t
v ixoiise a.id Lot
Fun sALK.
e
■.* HAT new anrt well ct nstrurted Divcl
g (lutise an I Lot, ~n Heynold v.r
in.iu.led on the E <st bv Mis Mur; ill’s
i,oi, outlie Wes', by lot formerly owned
* d occupied by Mrs Hull a d on
null, by said Streets, and recently o.cti
uiiey by Mr. Win. Simms
For Terms A ,pli to -ili
G dpliin*
on
B fl. Warren.
M;’ Lolinesnil,
Prof < s*or of Panci "S’ $
Mr A .Unit',
Professor of Music,
I^itESENT their host respects to flic
citizens of Augusta, and informs them
tha* they have Joined tuenmelvt s together
for the purpose of giving
OotiUlm Parties,
for this season; ami that the music will be
conducted by Mr Santi, who h >s oeglect
ed nothing ,n order to proem e
new fop the public. The greatest pan ot
the Cotillons and figures which will be
danced are composed by Mr. S.
Messrs Colmesuil Si Sami, hnp-s that
lb ise Gentlemen wbo may honor them
with their patronage, may me- I with geo.
eral satisfaction
Subscription lists for the Cotillon Par.
ties are left at the Planters’ and City Ho
tels, and in the hands of several ;’e*pf c t
able citizens
November IS ——4 t