Daily constitutionalist. (Augusta, Ga.) 1846-1851, January 13, 1847, Image 4

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(Concludedfrvm First Pogt.) I Leave Greeuville every Tuesday, Thuiaday, and Sa- 1 turd vatti p in,arrive at Columbus ncxt days by ts a in. j Leave Columbus every Monday,iWednesday,and Fn- j duv at 3 p in, arrive at Greenville next days b> 3 a in. Propo-als for service every other day,also I’ur daily : -service on tins route will be considered. Proposals to commence (his route at Gritßn, 31 miles further, and to run daily between Grilliu and Columbus vvhlh a view to the transportation of the great uoribcru aud »oui hern mails will also be considered. To run by the following schedule: ! Leave Griffin daily at 1 p in, arrive at Columbus next day by 2 a in. Leave Coleiitbu;: daily at 10 pm, arrive at Grillin next day by I I a nr J-'rom Lagrange, by Cane Point, Carlisle, and ('oclirsu's x Ko&ds, to “Hamilton, 23 miles and back,once a week. Leave Lagnibge dvery Friday irt 5 a in, arrive at Ham ilton same day by 12 m. Leave ilamdtrfb every TViday at 1 p m, arrive at La grange same dby by S p m. 3300. Froth Lagrange, by Houston, Wehadkee, Ala., aud ritroud’s Greek,tc Fredoliia, 31 miles and back, once i a week. , , Leave Lagrange every Friday at7 a ife, arrive at Fre dunia same day by 5 p>«.. Leave Fredcnia every Saturday alCa m, arrive at La grange saibe day by 4 pin. 3370. From Uarnesville, by Union Hill. Thoniaston, ; Double Bridges Pleasant Hill, Bellevu, Bluff Springs, , Wamby Hall,and LHersHe, to Columbus, 74 miles and | back, three times a week. Leave Barhesville every Monday, 'Wednesday, and i Friday at Ip m, arriveut Columbus next davsby 8a m. j Leave Columbus every Tuesday, I h irsdav, and satnr eav at 3p m, arrive at Barnesville next day sby lOufb. j Proposals for service every sillier day, cbo td r daily | service, will be considered. Proposals for the transportation of the great northern ; and southern mails on this route, by the flalowng sc he- ■ dule. will also he codsidered: . i I,eaves Barnesville daily at I p m, arnVc rft CUuff.bus j next dav bv 2 a in. I Leave Columbus daily at 10 p in, arrive at Ba uerville i next day II a in. 3371. From Knoxville,by &bpsl r Well,lo Russellville, 12 miles and back, once a wc«'k. Leave Knoxville every Friday at 7 am, aVrtYo at Rus sellville same day by 10 a m. Leave Russellville every Friday at 12 m, arrive at Knoxville same day by 3 p m. f 3372. From Knoxville, by HanuflocVs Grove, Callo den.and Wayiuansville,to TlibiiiastOu,2Bmilesafidback twice a week. Leave Knoxville every Monday and Friday at 9 a m,ar- j rive at Thoinaston same days bv'C p in. Leave Thoniaston every Tuesday and Saturday atC a m, arrive at Knoxville same day s by 0 pm. 3373. From Knoxville,by Hickory Grove, Hootcnsv ille, ! Carsonv ille, Pattshurg, and Centre, Ki Talbolou,3c miles i and back, once a we k. Leave Knoxville every W ednesday at 5 a lit, arrrv e at Talbotou same day by 7 p in. Leave Talhoton every' ’1 hursduy at 5 a 18, arrive at j Knoxville same day by i p in. , i .3374. FromTalbotou to Piuev ille, 111 miles aiid baca, once a wet k. le ave Talbotou every Saturday at Ipm, arrive at I'ineville same day by 4 p in. Leave Pineville every Saturday at 9am, arrive at Talhoton same day by' 12 in. 3375. From Columbus, by Piedmont, Mulberry Grove, and Whiteville,to West Point, 39 miles and back, once •a week. Leave Columbus, every Thursday at 0 am, arrive at . West Point same day hv 7 p m. Leave West Point every Friday at 6 am, arrive at 1 Columbus same day by 7 p in. j 3370. From Columbus, by Shell Creek, Hannaliatchee, Lumpkin, Snminerfield, Cutlibert and Cotton Hill to Fort Gaines, SO miles ami hack, twice a week. Leave Columbus everv Tuesday' and I' riday at 5 a in, arrive at Fort Gaines ne.vt day by 12m. Leave Fort Gaines every Wednesday and featurdayat , 1 p in, arrive atColumbus next day by 8 p m. Proposals for tri-weekly service w ill be considered. 3377. From Fort Gaines, by Blakely, Potter’s herry, Crawford and Olive Grove, to Cliattahooehie, Fla , <8 miles and hack, twice a wc k. Leave Fort Gaines every Wednesday and Saturday at ) pm,arrive at Cliattahooehie next, days by 8 p m. Leave Cliattahooehie every Tuesday and Friday at 6 a in, arrive at Fort Gaines next days by 12 in. Proposals for tri-weeklv service will be considered. O’ Proposals for supplying the following offices in Georgia, at a sum to be named, and subject to the condi- | tion of being limited to the net proceeds of the office j are invited. Argo, from Gainesville, 12 miles and back, once a , week. Alt:tpulgus, from Baiubridge, I2J miles and back, once a week. Barber’s Creek, from Jeffersou, 13 miles and back, and • once u week. Batesville, from Nacoochee, 8 miles and back, once a | week. Berrien, from Franklin, 10 miles and back, once a j week. • Big Creek, from Gumming, 10 miles and back, onee a i week. Brooksville from Cutlibert, 12 miles and back, once a , week. Centre Village, from Jcffersonton, 8 miles and back, •once a week. , Crackersueck, from Greensboroiigh, 10 miles andbai k 1 ‘once a week. Cut Off, from Monroe,7 l miles and back, once a we-k- Double Cabius, troui Griffin, 5 miles aud back, once a week. Kutaw,from Cutlibert, 12 miles and back, once in two •weeks. Fairborn from Carapbellton, 8 miles and back, once sa week. Fair Play, from Madison, 12 miles aud back z>,ace a 'week. Frederica, from Darien, 14 tuiles and back, once a week. Free Bridge, fromOotiicaloga,B imlesand back, once la week. Fryer’s Ponds,from Waynesboro, 12 miles and back, ‘oneeaweek. Golgotha, from Marietta, 10 miles aud back, once a 'week. Good Hope, from Monroe, 7 miles and bfick, ouce a •week. Green Hill, from Lumpkin, lOiniles and back, once a week. Hebron, fromSandcrsviltc, 12 miles and b.vk,oncea ’week . Henderson, from Perry, 10 mites and back, once a week. Hermitage, from Rome.'g miles and back, ncea week. Hog Mountain,from Gainesville, 14 miles and back, 1 oneeaweek Johnson's Store, from 'Newnan, 40 milts and back, '-twice a week. Lester's District, from Waynesboro’, 12miles and back, once a week. Long Shoals Factory, from Greensboro’, 10 miles and : back,once a week. Mobley Pond, from Mill Haven,-9 miles aud back,ouce a week. Ogeche,(now Eden,) from Railroad,3 miles and back, •once a week. Oxford,from Covington, 3 miles and back, six times a 'week. Park’s Bridge, from Greensboro’, 8 miles and back, •once a week. Pea Bridge, from Pineville, 7 miles aud back, onee a •week. Petawla, from Georgetown, 9 miles and back, once a Aveek. Pistol Creek, from Danbury, 7 miles and back, onee a •week. Pleasant Valley, from Spring Place, 7 miles and back, -once a week. Poolesvillo, from Decatur, 10 miles and back, once a wreck. Powder Springs, from Marietta, 9 miles amd-hack,once a week. Quito, from Bellevue,'7 miles and back, once a week. Kailie’s Store,from Marion. 6 miles aud back, once a •week. Red Clay, from Red Hill, 7 miles aud back, ouce a week. Rehobothville, front Salem, 8 miles aud back, once a Rockville, from Eatonlon, 11 miles and back, once a ■week. Saliquoy, fom Pine Log, 11 miles aud back, once a week. Sheffield, from Covington, 10 miles and back, once a week. Sumtcrville, from Starkv ille, 12 miles aud back police a week. Troy,from Social Hill, 51 miles and back oneeaweek. Uniouvillc, from Forsyth, 32 miles and back, once a week. Warm Springs, from GrceuviHe, 12 mites and back, | three times a week. Welbourne’s Mills aud Wilua, from Perry, 14 milesand back, ouce a week. Windsor,from Monroe C.H., 10 miles and back,once a ' We VVoodburn,from Waynesb. ro’, 18 miles and back, ouce * York* from Griffin,7 miles and back.once a week. Form for a bid where nn change for adveitisemeut is J •contemplated by the bidder. “I (or we as the case may he) {here write the name or [ names in full] ufjhere state the residence or hereby propose to carry the mad on Mo. from to ' as often as the advertisement requires in the ! time stated in the schedules, aud by the following mode t of conveyance, to wit; {Here state how it is to bo eon- | xeyed.) for the annual sum of $ .” Dated. Form of guarantee to accompany each bid . ‘•The undersigned [here insert the name of the guar antor or guarantors] guaranties that, [here insert name j of bidder or names of bidders, as the case may be,] if his I for their) bid for carrying the mail from to he | accepted by the Postmaster General, shall enter into an j obligation pi ior to the first day of July next w ith good and sufficient sureties to perform the service proposed.” i Dated. IMSTRUCT'OXS. 1. Seven minutes are allowed, for opening and closing the mailsatall offi.;ss wh re no particular time is speci tb*d; but on railroad and steamboat routes there is to be ud more delay than is to deliver aud receive the bags. 2. The mail is to tie conveyed in preference to passen gers .and to their entire exclusion, if its w eight and bulk require it. 3. Post office bluaks, mail bags, aud the special agents • of the department, on the exhibition of their credentials, i | tt re to be convey eil w ithout lurthcr charge, on mad hues I admitting of such conveyance. 4. Mail agents aie to be conveyed without charge on the principal railroad and steamboat lines, where the i size of the mails aud the number of the officers will re- i i quire their employment by the depar meat; and initial ; I case, a separate apartment for the assorting and safe- j keeping of the mail is io he provided hy the contractor, ! uutler the directiouof the department. 5. In all case- there is to he a forfeiture of the pay of j the trip, w hen the tr.p is not run; a forfeiture of at least one-fourth part of it when the running or arrival is »o tar j behind th m as to lose the connexion with a depending ! mail; aud a forfeiture of a due proportion of it when u i grade of service is rendered inferior to that in the Con- ; tract. These forfeitures may be increased into high ' penalties of higher mount, according to the natuie or ■ frequency of the failure and the importance of the mail. 6. Fines w ill Lie imposed, unless the delinquency he sa tisfactorily explained in due time, for failing to take from, | or deli\er at, a post office, the mail, or any part of it; for suffering it to be wet, injured, lost, or destroyed; lot eon vi \ iug it in a place or manner that exposes it to depre dation. loss, orinjury; for refusing after demand to con vey a mail by any coach, railroad car, or steamboat, which the contractor regularly runs on the route beyond the specified numbci of trips in the contract, and for not ar riving at the time set; and for settingup or running an express to transmit commercial intelligence in advance i of lire lua il, a penally vv ill be exacted equal to a quarter's 1 p**y j 7. The Postmaster General may annul the contract for ! repeated failures; for violating the post office laws; for ! disobeying the instructions of the department; forrefus ; mg to discharge a carrier w hen required by the depart ment: ft>r assigning the contract without the consent of the Ph-umister General, orlor sell) g up or running an j express as aforesaid. 8. The Postmaster General may alter the contract, aud alter the schedule, be allowing a pro rain increase of I compensation, within the restrictions imposed by law, for ; the additional service required, or for the increased i speed, if the employment of additional 'lock or carriers is : rendered necessary; but the contractor may, in such I case .relinquish the contract, on timely notice, if he pre- j : fers it to the change. The Postmaster General may an nul the contract or curtail the service, and pay when he 1 wishes to dispense with the serv ce in whole or in part, or place a higher or different grade of service on the route, he allow ing one mouth’s extra pay on the amount | i di-peiised with. 9. The payments will be made through drafts on post I i offices or otherwise, after the expiration of each quarter, j i say in February,May, Augus!,and November. I 10. The distances are given acccurditig to the best in- j J formation; but no increased pay will be allowed, should i they prove to be greater than is advertised, if the places i are correctly named. 11. The Postmaster General is prohibited by law trem ! knowingly making a contract foi the trasportalion of the j j mail with any person who shall have entered into any j I combination, or proposcM to enter into any combination, i ! to prevent the making of any bid for a until contract by | any oilier person or pe sons, or who shall have made any I agreement, or shall have given or performed or promised j j to give or perform any consideration to do, or not to do j i aitv thing whatever to induce any other person not to bid I . for a mail contract. Particular attention is called to I lie j | 28lh section of the act of 18-jC, prohibiting combinations j to prevent bidding. 12. A bid received after time, to wit: the 'Olh March i J next, sit 9 a.m.,or without! e guaranty required by law, j I or thrffcor-ibinesseveral routes in one sum or conipensa- j tion,x;auitot l.e considered in competition with a regular proposal not adjuged t.) be extravagant. ( 13. A bidder may offer, w here the tiv asportation called : I for in the advertisement is difficult or impraticable at ce, - ! tain seasoiis.to substitutee uinferior mode ofconveyancc, j I or to in tent; it service a speefied number of days, weeks, ! j or months He may propo eto omit an office that it iliac- j ! cessible, or is not on t e stage road, the railway, or at a ! I steam boat binding, as tin- case may be; or be may offer j to substitute an inferior mode of supply in such cases— , He may propose different days and hours of departure I and arrival, provided no more running time is asked, and j j it is obvious that no mail connexion ‘or other public ac- j i conimodatioii is prejudiced. Ho may ask for more run- I 1 ning time to the trip .during a specified number of days, | at certain seasons o( peculiarly bad reads; but beyond 1 these changes, a proposal for service different from the j advertisement will prevent its being considered in com- i petition with a regular bid not set aside for ex tmvagance; J aud where a bid contains any of the above aitenhions, j their disadvantages will be estimated in comparing it i with other proposals. 14. There should lie but one route bid Tor in a proposal. ! 13. The route,the serv ice, the yearly pay, the bidder’s, | name and residence.aud the name of each member of the j j firm, where a company offers, should be distinctly stated j 1 —also the mode, o*'conveyance, La kifher mode'than on ( [ horseback is intended. I IG. The bid should be sent under seal, add&indd to the | | First Assistant Postmaster General, with “Wad Proposals in the State of written mi the face of the letter; j and should be despatched in time to be receeved by or j before the 10th March next, at 9 o’clock, a. m. 17. The are to be executed by or before <lrb ( 1 Ist July' next. 18. Postmasters at offices situated upon or near rail roads, but more than eighty rods from a depot, will. Ini- j mediately after tin; Ist April next, report that fact to the 1 j department,stating their exact distance from the railroad j ■ depot, and how otherwise supplied with the mail, to cna- | ) ble the Postmaster General to direct the proper supply | ! to he made from the railroad by mail messengers, from j j and after the L.t July next. j 19 Under the act of3d March. 1345, the route is to bo I let to the lowest bidder, tendering sufficient guaranties I for faithful performance, without reference to the mode ! of transportation than maybe necessary to provide for | the due celerity, certainty, and security of .-.utdi trans portation. { i When the lowest bid proposes a mode of conveyance j that is inadequate for the route in respect to the certain- j ty, security, and celerity of the mails, aside from any ac commodation for travel, it will not be entitled to the route -20. When the bid docs not name a inode of conveyance, it will he taken and understoodto bcforthijlowest node of conveyance to wit; mi horeback. When it proposes to curry according to the advertisement, and uo mode of conveyance is stated for the route in the advertisement, it will Reconsidered as offering only for horseback con veyance. 21. Since the passage of the act of March 3, lens, a j new description ofbid has been received. It specifics no mode of conveyance, but engag s to carry the mail with certainty, celerity, and security, using the terms of the law. These bids are called, from the manner ia which they are designated onthe books oftbe. department, '-star bid." It has been decided, after nurture consideration, that a bid proposing a specific mode of conveyance of as hieh a grade as two Imr-e co ach transportation is to be preferred to til•• star bid T ! experience of the depu t inent enables it to lay down the follow ing rules, viz ; When the mail on the route is not so large as to requira two horse conch conveyance, u star bid. if the lowest,will | be preferred to the specific bid. 22. When the mails are of such size and weight as to I renderif necessary or expedient, in reference to them alone, to provide two-horse coach conveyance, tbc spe cific bid. though the highest will tie preferred to the star bid, to ike extentof u moderate diff« rence in the compen sation, in <'a*-e i iJie difference is not such as to interfere with the policy of the new law, w hich looks to a reduc tion imho Cost of transportation. Exceptions, however, may be allowed where the star bid if made try the present on ner of the slock on the route, and it is manifest that the reasons for preferring the specific bid do not exist ia fits case. 23. On Voutee of the highest class, where four-horse coach or steamboat transportation is required by the erase and importance of the mails, the preference mr the spe cific bid will be, if necessary carried to a greater extent of difference than on 'lie inferor coach routes, subject, however, to the exceptions above stated. 24. A modification ofa bid, in any of its essential terms is tantamount to a new bid, find cannot be received, so as to interfere with regular -comjieiilion, after the last hour set for receiving nids, JOHNSON. Postmaster General. Post Offi-ck Feia’Ltme.vt, N0v.23, IS4C, Dec. 22 w!2w 70 LEGAL NOTICES. GEORGIA Richmond C .untv’~' MYWr II FR E A S. WILLIAM FULCHER and ! v » JOHN C. FULCHER, administrators en the estate of JOHN FULCHER, sen., deceased, 1 by their petition laid before the Court of Ordinary on the IOH i day of November, 1816, stating that they bad fully administered on sail! esta e, and praying that citation for dismission may issue; or dered by the court that the clerk issue citation: These are therefore to cite and admonish, all and singular, the kindred and creditors of said de- I -ceased, to be and appear at my office within the i time prescribed hy law, to show cause, if any they | have, why said letters should not be granted. Given under my hand, at office in Augusta, nov 29 Cm LEON I*. DUGAS, Cleric. GEORGIA. Scriven Countv. 'ft) ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. ¥jiTHE&EAS, SARAH M. STEWART, hath V w applied to the Honorable the Court of Or j dinary of Scriven County fur Letters of Adminis tration on the estate and effects of DAVID STEW ART, late of said County, deceased ; These are therefore to cite and admonish all and I singular, the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to file their objections, if any they have, to the ap- ; plication, in the clerk’s office of said Court on or be fore the second Monday in December next, other wise Letters of Administration will he granted. Witness the Hon. Gieorge Pollock, one of the Justices of said Court, this Cth day of Nov. 1846. ALEXANDER KEMP, c. c. o. s. c. Nov. 13 37 ]^TOTICE. —All persons having demands xwl against the Estate of Beverly Allen late of Elbert county, deceased, are requested to hand them in duly attested; and all persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate pay 'kS j November 29, idlfit lisv 23 47 ffl ffi - csa dID ,asv_ S 9 g»BS) «» RATES OF FREIGHT ON T1 liE GEORG LI AND WESTEKN & ATLANTIC R AIMOAD. ' ' " «l )RG A R\II ROAI W. . ft, K. R. | BETWEEN AUGUSTA AND ||f f3M s£| 9 | g §=?! - x ®*- = .'»?• v. r 33 >“«.!• s V. *-*5 = : T fK a.?i: gait • • First Class —Boxes ofliats, Bonnets and Furniture, per loot $0 B§o Bso ID $0 15.$ 16 Second Class —Boxes and Bales of Dry Goods, Slices, i Saddlery, Glass, Paints, Oils, Drugs, and Confection- /■ 40 50 55 85 90 aries, per 100 lbs. 3 Third Class —Sugar, Coffee, Liquor, Bagging, Rope. But-'] ter, Cheese, Tobacco, Leather, Hides, Cotton-Yarns, I Copper, Tin, Bar and Sheet-Iron, Hollow-Ware, Crock- \ 30 30 30 50 55 ery. Castings, Hardware, and other heavy articles not enumerated below, per 100 lbs. J Fourth Class —Flour, Rice, Bacon, Pork, Beef, Fish,') Lard, Tallow, Beeswax, Feathers, Bales of Rags, Gin- ) 0 _ or o . o . ntm} ' seng, Green and Dried Fruit, Mill-Gearing, Pig Iron, f ~ D ~ D oJ °'2 Mill and Grind Stones, Georgia Domestics, per 100 lbs. J j Cotton —Per 100 lbs. . 25 25 25 40 45 Sait —Per Liverpool Sack, not exceeding 4 bushels, 30, 35 35 55 GO Per Bushel, 8 9 9 15 17 Molasses —Per Hogshead, 4 00 5 00 5 00 8 00 8 50 Ploughs, Wheel-Barrows, Cora-Shellers and Straw-Cut- ) ' „ ! _ -j ters, each, \ 50 000 0 75 75 Oats in casks or sacks, per bushel, j 0 6 6 9 10 I Corn, Wheat, Peas, Beans, Rye, Nuts, and Grass-Seeds, ) j per bushel, \ ° 14 14 I Lime —ln Casks or Boxes not exceeding bushels, each, 30: 30 30 45 50 ' Hogs and Sheep, by the t'a r Load, each 50 5o 5o 7o 75 * O’Bacon to casks or boxes will t»e transported from Oothcaloga to Augusta at 30 cents per 100 ibs. (LTFor other articles see list. ILPFreight lor Atlanta, Kingston and Oothcaloga, payable either at Augusta or at those | stations. F. C. ARMS, Superintendant of Transportation, j Trunsjiorlaiiun Office, Oeurgia Rail Road and Hanking Company, ) Augusta, Ga., Sept. 2, 1846. £ sept ‘2B GEORGIA AM) \\ ESTERS AM) AT LANTIC HAIL. HOADS. * - -■: - - 1- rgAHE Passenger Train, carrying tli? Great i Southern .Mail between New \ oik and New Orleans, leaves Augusta daily at 8 o'clock, p. m., arriving at Atlanta at 8i o’clock, a. m . Returning, leaves Atlanta at 4 o’clock, p. ai., and arrives at Augusta at 4o’clock , a. m. in connection with this train, thepassenger car, by locomotive, runs from I nion Point to Athens, on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays; and by horse power,on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and fealur days. The Passenger Train upon tiie State Road leaves Atlanta daily, (Sundays excepted.) at 8 o’clock, A. m.; and arrives at Oothcaloga at 34o’clock,p. m. Returning leaves Oothcaloga at 7 a. m., and ar rives at Atlanta, in lime fur the evening train to Augusta. Stages run in connection with the cars.asfol lows: Daily. —The Express Mail Line, the Georgia Rail Road Line, and the South Carolina Rail Road Line, from Atlanta to New Orleans, passing through New nan and La Grange to Chehaw. thence by Hail Road to Montgomery. Also, via La Grange, to Columbus; arriving at 7 o’clock, a. m. From Warrenton to Macon via Sparlaand Mil edgeville. From Ma li- on,every Monday.Wednesday.and Frida y v.a 1. ..Urnmn and Clinton to Macon and via Eaton ton to Mil.leJ.gi~i[He. From Athens, on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sa turdays, via Gainesville u> Cassville, and Dahlo- T.cga. From Double Wells, on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, to Washington, Wilkes county, an;) Abbeville, S. C. From Cdvington, on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, through Griffin, and Greenville to La Grange. From Kingston every day, (Sundays excepted,) via Rome, Double Springs, Warrenton, and De catur to Memphis, Tenn. From Atlanta on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, to Jonesboro’ and Griffin. Office Geo. R. R. A: B’k’g ('<>., March 23,1846. SOUTH CAROLINA RAIL ROAD. ••'**» The Special Train for Aiken w ill liere fr LA,. after not leave on Sunday afternoons. ‘ Hamburg, S, (J., August *2B, D IG. aug.3l 3d THE WESTERN CONTINENT, A Southern Family Newspaper of the largest size, published every Saturday in the city i. f Baltimore, by Samuel Smith «jr Go., Kdited hy IF. T. Thompson, author of ''Major Junes’ Courtship,” "Chroniclescf J'vie nlie,” 4‘C- 4' c * Terms—Tiro Dollars, in advance. have long regarded it as a most lini'iiiiating re j v flection upon the youth, that no professedly non j trill family journal hus yet been sustained w thin herbor- j tiers. Wo have tested the experiment whether -itch a p&per could not be supported at the immediate South, I and though not Wholly unsuccessful, our experience has taught us that the papers of tins class publislied ri the lame Northern elites, possess advantages over tiro.-c of i the country, which, in a measure, d fy comiteiitiou. ‘lint here the case is different. Baltimore, standing as it does ' on the frontier of the Southern States, is yet near enough i to tlie great commercial, literary and political emporium, i to be included in the neighborhood of great American J cities, and to enjoy all the advantages, as a radiating j point, which are possessed by either Philadelphia, Boston or New York. A paper issued from Baltimore has all the facilities for obtaining the latest literary intelligence, as well as tlie current literature of the day, foreign and do mestic, that are enjoyed by the journals of the Northern cities. The Western Continent is as large, as cheap, j and can be better adapted to the wants and tastes of South- j ern readers, than those Northern papers which now draw so large an amount of their patronage from the Southern public. Entertaining these views, we have looked with confi dence to the success of the Continent. Eight month’s experience has tended to strengthen that confidence, and hov we enter upon its publication with a firm conviction that all that is necessary to secure for it a circulation equal to that of its Northern cotemporarics, is a faithful and energetic devotion of our best abilities to make it a useful and entertaining Family Journal. It is our de sign to make the Western Continent emphatically a Southern family paper, that may be read with interest and profit by every member of a Southern family.— | With this view, we shall draw for our literary depart- i meat, from the best sources,such matter as will interest ; and entertain the mind, without offending tiie taste or i corrupting the morals of our readers. ■Pains will he taken to give the latest intelligence on all j subjects of interest to the general reader, to tlie exclu- , sion of the vast amount cf local matter, such as personal gossip, police reports, theatrical and other criticisms, which malic up so large a portion of the staple of some of the popular weeklies of the North. In a word, though we shall endeavor to make our paper interesting to all, our chief aim shall be to adapt it to thewants and tastes of the people of the South and South-West, upon whom, and these of ocrown city who are disposed to sustain such a journal, we must mainly depend for support. R lying more upon the intrinsic merits of our paper, than on any promises we might make in a prospectus, i we will close by appealing to the readers of the South | and West for a share of that patronage which they s« liberally Fest-ow upon the -overgrown weeklies of the North. Terms^— The Western Continent is printed on a mam moth sheet<>l‘3o by 44 inches, on fair type, and securely loaded to subscribers, at Two Dollars pkr annum, »n j advance. Three copies will be sent for £3, or Seven copies for $lO. All letters on the business of subscriptions to be ad dressed, post paid to the editor. W. T. THOMPSON. SAMUEL SMITH. Baltimore, Avgust, 181 C. Sept. 11. THE SOUl’Il CAROLINIAN, BV A, (i. SUMER AM) B. R. CARROLL. sufficient encouragement fie received, the proprietors propose to issue THE SOUTH CAROLINIAN, after the first day of October next, , as follows: A Semi-Weekly Paper at $5 per annum, in ad- | vance : or $6 at the end of the year. A Weekly Paper at $3 per annum, in ad vance ; or 84 at the end of the year. Both papers will contain the same reading mat- 1 ter. and also, all new advertisements. THE SOUTH CAROLINIAN will be printed j on the very best paper, with new and beautiful j type. j june lb 153 SOUTH-CAROLINA KAIL-ROAD. ——as. "riLT - -V 2. .. - I ON and after the 10th of November, the Passen ger Trains will leave at tlie following hours: ii.m.i h. in. Leave Charleston, It Din Leave Hamburg, G 00 Smeath’s, 11 30 j Marsh’s, ti 30 Ladson’s T. O-, 11 4 j Aiken, 7 30 Summerville, 12 0()| Williston, 845 31 mile T. 0., 12 30j Blackville, 915 George’s, I 15) Graham’s, 9 45 Brancliville, 2 30i Midway, 10 15 Midway, 3 00 Brancliville, II 00 Graham’*, 3 30| Geo go’s, 11 45 Blackville, 400 31 miieT.O. 12 30 illistou, 4 30* Summerville, 100 Aiken, C 00) l.adson’s T. 0., 1 15 Marsh’s 6 30 Smeutli’s 1 45 Arrive at Hamburg, 7 00; Arrive fit Charleston, 215 COL VMBIA BRANCH. b.mj h.m. Leave Brancliville, 2 3((] Leave Columbia, 6 00 Orangeburg, 3 15 Gadsden, 7 30 Lewisville, 4 00 FoitMotte, 8 15 Fort Motte, 4 30; Lewisville, 9 00 Gadsden, 5 30) Orangeburg, 945 \rrive at Columbia, G 30;Arrive at Brancliville, 10 45 nov 10 34 SOUTH CAR()LJNA RAIL ROAD VJI Tj Freight on COTTON from the HamburgJJepbt to Charleston, per ■ » httle ; 8b 75 Cotton consigned to this Company to order in < 'harleston— From anv station on the Georgia Rail Road per KM) lbs 80 45 From Marietta, per 100 lbs ;: 50 ‘* Kingston and Cartersville, per 100 lbs. 55 “ Oothcaloga, “ “ 57* Sept. 18 38 SOUTH-CAROLIN V HAIL-ROAD. On and after Monday next. sth instant, 1 the freight of Collun to Charleston will I *■-’* ,jtlw 81 per bale. W. J. MAG RATH, Agent. Hamburg, Oct. 2,181 G. 2 SOUTH CAROLINA RAIL ROAD. ■*»■* By a recent arrangement, Tickets will i be sold to F A M I L 1 E 8 traveling upon .;l>is Road at greatly reduced rates. W. J. MAGRATH, Agent. j Hamburg, June 5, 1846. THE WASHINGTON UNION. | rpNHL “DAILY UNION” will be published, as here- I lofore.at s;l(l per annum, payable in advance. Its ! character hitherto has been almost exclusively politics I. | We purpose in future to devote a portion of its columns to domestic 110 ws of general interest, and to miscellane ous literature, which, without impairing its political in tiuence, may reader it tlie more acceptable to an ex tended class of readers. The ‘•SEMI-WKl’.KliY UNION” will be publislied every Monday and Thursday, during the recess oft ou gress, at $5 per annum. This contains all the matter contained in the “Daily Union," except local advertise ments. Duiing the sessions us Congress three munbers, instead of two, will be issued, w ithout anj extra charge to subscribers. OLAIiIiEMEM (IF IKE WEEKLY UNIOV. The “WEEKLY UNION” is issued every Saturday; ; and as arrangements are in progress to enlarge it to i near double its present size , we, shall soon lie enabled to give nearly every article which may appear in the daily and semi-weekly editions, iu tlie extremely low rate of $2. We propose also to give, in this edition, a complete synoptical summary of the proceedings in both houses of Congress—thus rendering the “Weekly Union” a most valuable channel of information to all classes of our country. But, to remunerate ns for this enterprise, an extensive subscription list is absolutely indispensa ble. W&setie this opportunity to add that some delay has taken place in putting our paper to press, which has prevented its early delivery to our readers, and conse quently circumscribed its circulation. We shall make arrangements 'to comedy this detect, and to obviate this objection'. Afterthe present week we trustthat no com plaint will be made upon this subject. ( ON GR ESSIO NA L It EG IST I: R. In addition to the foregoing, we have resolved to pub li-li, during tlie sessions cf the national legislature, a '‘‘■Congressional Register, ' to be issued weekly, and to contain a full REPOKTof the dailyproceeditigsand de bates of both houses. Indeed, the arrangements which we have made with the very best corps of reporters will enable us to give even tnorefull and extended reports than we have produced during this session, superior as we claim them to be toany preceding ones. The Regis ter will be niadeup from the daily reports in the “Union,” carefully revised by an experienced editor,and w ill con stitute a complete and authentic record of the session. An appendix w ill be added, uniform with tlie Register, and to be sent gratuitously to subscribers, comprising a li-t of the acts passed during tlie session, with a synopsis of their contents, and a reference, when necessary, to pre vious legislation. 1 bis wi 1 form the most complete his tory of the sessions of Congress, and will be furnished at the low price of seventy-five cents for the next session. ET Postmasters are authorized to act as our agents; and by sending u> five yearly subscribers, with tlie sub scription money, for either the Doily, Semi-Weekiy, or Weekly, will be entitled to one copy of the same edition as they furnish us subscribers for. OThc Congressional Register w ill he furnished them on the same terms. JZTNewspapers publishing our prospectus, with the notes attached, until the Ist of December next, will be entitled, during the next session of Congress, to receive a copy of tlie Congressional Register and Tri-Weekly Union. Clubs will he furnished with 5 copies of the Daily for S4O 00 5 do fcsemi-Weekly 20 00 10 do do 35 00 5 do Weekly 800 10 do do 15 on 20 do t’oiigressional Register 10 00 The name of no person will he entered upon our books unless the payment Os the subscription be made in ad vance. sept 11 INFIRMARY FOR NEGROES. MV PRIVATE SURGICAL INFIRMARY j will accommodate ten to twenty patients. No charge is made for board or numng, the only ; expense to the owner being tlie fees for visits, me dicines of operations, and these are regulated by the Medical Society of Augusta. PAUL F. EVE, M. D. Professor of Surgery in the Medical College of Ga. oct 16 1y 14 T THERMOMETERS.—A few LONG ones left to be had of yy 24 2. E. MARSHALL. J r ATE AT MEDICINES. COLLCTOA BirrERS. FOR DYSPEPTICS. FBAIIESE BITTERS are purely a vegetable -M. compound, and are offered to the pub* i lie from a principle of benevolence, under tbe iuil est conviction that they will be found a sale and sovereign remedy for Dyspepsia. They have been triumphantly tested not only by some ul the most i respectable families in the Stale. who have furnish* | ed ample testimony as to their decided excellence, bin aiso by the proprietor, who, for ten years, sin tered all the gloom incident to that distressing dis ease. They possess the peculiar excellence denied to most other Bitters, of not proving injurious by continued use. They contain not a single delete rious ingredient, and, as seen from the directions which accompany each bottle, may be given with entire safety*to an infant in the month If the Colleton is taken regularly and persever ingly,( which is highly important in stubborn cases,) they will, soon after the use of a few bottles, be found to act on the system like a charm—imparting vigor to the stomach, bracing the nerves, cleans ing tiie liver, promoting digestion, increasing the appetite,strengthening the chest and voice, reliev ing pains, cramps, and stitches in the. breast. They are also most excellent for cholera morbus, habitual constipation,sea-sickness,nausea, proceeding from whatever cause, in cases of general debility, it has proved one of the best remedies, and is there fore highly recommended to elderly people, literary gentlemen,students,and others of sedentary habits. I Taken in small doses frequently through the day, they have checked the most violent diarrhoea, and likewise been administered with the happiest effect in cholera infantum. in all the foregoing complaints, these Bitters w ill he found effectual if persisted in, and taken accord ing to the directions w Inch accompany each bottle. And although it lias been testified by several that they are excellent in many others, yet in none other than those above enumerated, is t lie proprietor w ill ing to vouch for their efficacy. They were prima rily and solely intended to cure. Dyspepsia. The Colleton Bitters have been eight years be- I fore the public; and in consequence oft he increas ing demand for this valuable meuicine, the proprie tor has entered largely into the business—bottles are procured having "‘Colleton Bitters” moulded in j them—they are also numbered, sealed and starnp j ed with an appropriate motto. Price $ I per bottle. E. M. CAREY, General Agent for this Slate. J. L. 31A USD ALL. Agent, Augusta. Hilton Hkao, S. C., Jan. 1846. j Os the Colleton Bitten "(purely a Vegetable • Compound” anti which, from the confidence 1 have | in t lie character and integrity of the maker and pro i prielor thereof, 1 verily beltexe to he true,) 1 en- I tertain the most favorable opinion. Several of my j personal friends and acquaintances, long afflicted j with Dyspepsia, have assured me that they hate > found these Bitters better than any other medicine ; they ever tried, for that distressing disease. And 1 I take the pleasure further to stale that I have vvit | iteased tile excellency of these Bitters, in nausia, i sick-headaclie, and bowel complaint; in this lust particular, 1 have; seen the Colleton repeatedly and | successfully tested among the children of my own ! house-hold. No family ought to be w ithout lids iu i valuable medicine. REV. A. WOODWARD, Pastor of St. Lukes Church, 8. C. j april *29 133 I AVAILS’ SAILS A PAR 11 .LA, Fur the Removal and Permanent Curt of all Diseases arising from an impure slate of the Bioud, or habit of the system, viz: 'Scrofula or King's Full, Rheumatism, Obstinate Cuta ntvas Eruptions, Pimples, or Pustules on the Puce, Blotches, Biles. Chronic bore Eyes, Ring II arm or 'Better, bculd Head, Knhu gemtut and Pam of the Bancs and Joints, Stubborn Ulcers, Syphilitic Symp toms, Sciaticnor Lumbago. and Diseases arising from an injudicious use of Mercury, Jsnles. or Dropsy. t.z posureor Imprudence m Life. Also, Chrome Consti tutional Disoraers tail be removed by this Prepara tion. fUMI IS medicine lias, in many’ thousand instances, 9. brought health and rc.iuriung vigor to the weak and laiigunltruiiie. Its operation extends itself to the remo test transactions of the geiieralsysttiin, and con.-ati.-in re moving diseased action in tne absorbing and secreting vessels. The blood contains tbe elementsof the whole animal 1 structure—dealt and libre,glands, muscles,tendons, the nails,the hah, and even the bones themselves, arc all : sustained by the blood. W ell, then, may be called the 1 stream of I ife. In proportion to the purity of fluid will i be that of the substance i.tto wbicb it is continually chang ing. Corrupt blood instead of producing healthy flesh, is j likely enough to develop sores and ulcers. When these 1 appear, whetlierin the specific form of scrofula, m all its multiform and disgusting shapes,or eruptions in all their 1 disfiguring v ariety ,rheumatism,bilious disorders,general ■ j relaxation and debility,and a host of conipiuintsarisiug i | from disordered secretions there is nodetcrgent.it is he- I lieved, that w 111 so rapidly neutralize the virus in the blood ‘ j from which they spring and elfecta radicalcure,as this | I preparation. The following is an extract from a letter just received i from Mrs. Be van, vJio had been afflicted for several years > with Scrofulous Ulcers, Dyspepsia, Ae., and recently witliau affection of the Throat and Ctiest: BAILKVBBUKR. Va..l)er,m»i, 1 8 45. Messrs. A. B. if D. Sands —Before I commenced using ! your Sarsaparilla mv sufferings were a li-iost past expres- I sioa, my throat was completely ulcerated, I had «dr -aill'nl I cough, and there were frequently weeks together that I I could not speak above a whisper: and besides, the infla matioii from my I !i met extended into my head, so that my hearing was v cry much impaired. Alter taking the Sarsa parilla a short timemy health improved and tny throat is | now well. lam us free from cough and tightness of the i chest as lever was,and can hear quite distinctly. Mv j throat has been well about three months, the cure of which i hiisbeen effected entirely by the use ot yoursarsaparilla. Yourfrieutl, LOUISA K. RE VAN. NEW YOU K, April 2g, 1845. Messrs. A- B. if D. Sands — Cents: feeling it a duty to you ami the community at large, 1 send you this cerlifi | cateof thevirtucsof your Sarsaparilla, that others who i are now suffering may have their confidence established and useyour medicine without delay. 1 wastroubled with a severe ulcer on my ankle, which extended half way up to the knee, discharging very offen sive matter, itching, burning, and depriving me often us my restat night,and very painful to hear. I was recommended to use your medicine by Mr. James McConnel, who had been cured by it, and after using live bottles 1 waseutirelycured. 1 hate deferred sending you this certificate one year since thecure was effected, in orderto ascertain w ith cer tainty w he.ther it was a permanent cure, and it now g ives me the greatest pleasure to add that I have neither seen nor felt the slightest re-appearance of it, anti that lam eutiret\sound. Yours, SARAH M’lNTVßE,24oDelancey-st. MOBILE, ALA, N0v.28,1845. Messrs. Sands — l deem it an act of justice to myself and the community at large, to relate the following facts which occurred in our neighborhood in the latter part of July last. JaneC , a young girl aged fourteen years, : was afilicted w ith an immense sore on the middle of her back,which defied all the treatment of medical .-kill. As 1 she wasafriend ofourfamily,!employed all the means in ■ my power in endeavoring to relieve her. hut in vain. At : lust some person mentioned tome your Sarsaparilla, and 1 immediately procured two bottles Mosely & Tucker, your Agents in this city, which I gave to her. 1 c a He'd to see her the next day and she told me she had ta ken tw o doses and fell very much relieved. I laughed im moderately at this, but she said it was reallyso. and, gen tlemen,iu a word, in two weeks from the time she com menced using it, there was neither sign nor appearance of where tliesorc bad been. Yours, respectfully, J. li. HOUSEMAN, 93 Dauphin-st. XT For further particulars and conclusive evident e o itssuperior value and efficiency, soepamphicts,which 1 may be obtained ofagents gratis. Prepared and sold wholesale and retail, by A. H. &• D. 1 SANDS, Wholesale Drutrgists, 19 Fullon-street, New Y ork. Sold also by H AYILAND, RIBLEY A: Co„Au- j gusta: Haviland,Harral& Allen,Charleston: G. R Hen drickson. Savannah; (LPayne.Macon; A. Fitch, olum lna; and by druggists generally throughout the United States. Prtce&l per bottle, 6 bottles for $5. O’ The public are respectfully requested toremember that it is Sands’Sarsaparilla tiiat has and is constantly achieving such remarkable cures of the most difficult class of diseases to which the human frame issubject, t here fore ask for Sands’ Sarsapar ilia and lake no other February-18, 184fi. 8m 103 STATUTES OF GEORGIA. An analysis of the statvtes of GEORGIA, in general use, with Forms and Precedents necessary to their practical operations —and an appendix containing the Declaration of Independence; the Articles of Confederation; the Constitution of the United States-; the Constitution of the State of Georgia; Gen. Washington's Fare well Address; and the Naturalization Laws passed by Congress: by Howell Cobb, containing 779 pages, royal octavo—price 86,00. For sa eby august 5 THD3I AS RICHARDS. PERFUMERY. —A bout seventy-five differ- j entextracts of the choicest English and French Odours, from Ede, Lubin <v Prevost, with an end less variety of American Perfumes, some of them very fine, and all will be sold low. march 23 J. E. .MARSHALL. | PATENT MEDICINES. JAYNE’S ALTERATIVE? fspHIS valuable preparation combines all tha .fi. medicinal virtues of those articles, which lung experience lias proved to possess I lie must sate and efficient alterative and deohstruent properties, for the cure of Srrufulu King’s Ki 11, U bile Swell ings l it ers; Scrofulous, Cancerous and Indolent Tumours; Mercurial and SyjthilHic Affections, Rheumatism, Haul. Sennet/, Aturalgiu or Tic- Dauloun n.c, ('a uerr. (foil re or lironchocele , [swelled A< ■< k. ] I'.nlurgt alien fs oft fie Hanes. Joints, Clauds or Riga meats or of the Ovaries. River. Spleen, Kid neys. i\r. All the diseases of lhe Skin, such as Teller , Ringworm, Riles, Pimples. Carbuncles 4rc. t Dyspepsia and River Complaint, Nervous Diseases, I Dropsical Swellings, Constitutional Disorders and ■ diseases originating from a depraved or Impuru i state of the Wood or other fluids of tlie body. The proprietor of this Alterative would most re* | spectfully assure the public that he has not offered this preparation to their notice without due reflec tion. and close and rigid study, nor until after ; twelve years’experience had manifested its great superiority over every other article of the kind, — and he now recommends it with confidence, fully believing that tlie above combination of medicine will effectually eradicate from the system a class : of disease some of which have heretofore been cuu* i sideretl incurable. He has prescribed it in almost every variety of | disease and with unparalleled success, especially in cutaneous affections, cancerous, scrofulous ami scorbutic diseases, and diseases originating from obstruction or enlargement of the glands or impuri ty oft he blood. Cancer and Cancerous Tumors. He has used this preparation in upwards oftwe*- tv well defined cases of cancer and cancerous in mors, and in every case but one with perfect ami entire success, lironchocele or Goitre, (Swelled Neck.) He has prescribed it in over a hundred cases of goitre, ami it has never failed in a single instance to completely remove the disease. Not a solitary ! case of failure. All were cured. The success lie has met with in curing broncho cele and cancerous affections has convinced hint that these dangerous and horrible diseases may be removed with as much certainty as Fever and Ague, iletloes not w ish to be understood as uay j ing that they can be cured as soon as Fever and j Ague, fun with as much certainty; and further, that i he lias good reason for believing that this prepara tion will not only i nre these diseases w hen formed, hut that it destroys the virus or poisonous principle lurking in the system, from which that peculiar | class us diseases, as \v ell as that of scrofula emanate* Scrofula—King’s Evil. This preparation lias been used in numerous case# of Scrofula, King's Evil, and scrofulous swellings, and always with the must deci led success. Skia Diseases. He has prescribed it in a great variety of cutane ous affections, and found it successful in curing salt rheum, or tetter, biles, blotches, pimples,morphew i and jaundiced skin, Ac. Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint. It has been used in numerous cases of liver r»«v plaint ami Dyspepsia, and with I lie happiest effect. Tic-Douloureux. It has been used in several cases of Nenralgwy and in every case it was successful. Rheumatism. This preparation has been prescribed in n great many cases of chronic rheiunaisin, and in every i case in which it was used until the system became j affected by the medicine, llie disease was removed* . (Jotit, A number of cases of gout have been cured by : this preparation. In one cd these cases, the man had been afflicted with it so severely for thirteen 1 years as to entirely disable him from business, ami for five months immediately previous to his taking the Alterative he had been confined to his room; hut before he had finished the third bottle, he was enabled to walk about the streets and soon after re turned to his business, from which lie had so long been excluded by his afflictions. Dropsical Swellings, This medicine increases the powers of digestion, < exi ites the absorbents into healthy exercise, by which watery or calcareous depositions, and ail unnatural enlargements tire reduced, it impart* I tone and vitality to the whole system, removing I sick and morbid headaches, giddiness, wandering i pains and nervous affections. In fact, in every case where the medicine ha* been taken for some time, no mailer for wh t pur i pose, the general health of the patient has always been improved by it. In conclusion, the proprietor would say thatsomo ! of thf- most astonishing cases <>f skin diseases, ran | cer, brom-hocele,ami*scrofula, have been cured by this medicine, that have ever been recorded; but want of room in this sheet precludes their publica tion at lias lime. CANCER. ; An interesting cese cured by Jayne’s Alterative, In the spring of 1831, a cancerous tumor appear ed in the right breast of Mrs. Phoebe, wife of Peter Stretch, of Salem, N. J. It was examined by many I Physicians, and was Considered by all as cancerous, 1 and besides bore all the characteristic marks of i one All probable means of removing it were used without the slightest benefit. It continued to in | crease both in size ami painfulness, until all hope ; of saving her life, but by a painful operation, wns abandoned, w hich, after a consultation of eminent | Physicians, was performed, Jan. Ist, 1832, by Dr. Juh'li Ritea Barton, assisted by Dr. Redman, the proprietor, and two other medical gent'uinen. The whole and entire right breast was removed, and af ter examination ol the tumor, was pronounced by all present a cancer of the most malignant charac ter. In about three months, aflerenduring incredi ble sufferings, she was enabled, though broken itt spirit, to get about again. She remained feeble, and tier general health was exceedingly bad, as in deed it had been for several years before. In ihe spring of 1837, upwards of five years after her breast had been removed, a painful tumor made its ap pearance on the right side, immediately over the part formerly occupied by the nipple of the rigiit breast, previous toits removal. 'I bis minor steadi ly increased for several months, and became so painful as to deprived her of rest. The glands un der the right arm were enlarged; and scirrhus, and a hard, irregular, ami at times painful tumour, ap peared in the left breast. No operation could now arrest the disease. Indeed her w hole body appear ed to be a mass of disease. Her case was consid | ered hopeless. Site was of a very scrofulous habit, i both her parents having died of Pulmonary con | sumption. The experiment was now made with this Alterative, it was at first given in small doses, three times a day, and the doses very gradu ally, but steadily increased daily, as long as she took it, which was about six months, and the skin over anil around the tumour was wet night and morning with a strong solution of lodine and Hy driodate Potash. The tumour continued increas ing in size for about six weeks, and was at times very painful, when the pain suddenly ceased alto gether, and the tumour swelled out at the base, and became soft, and then began to diminish, and con tinued gradually decreasing until every vestige of j disease was removed. The tumour in her left I breast, ami those in her right axilla were also dis persed. No cancerous or scrofulous tumours ever appeared afterwards; and her general health, which had been so had for fourteen years as to make life a burthen, was effectually and permanently restored. The proprietor is in possession of the diseased breast, and those who choose may examine it. He would also say that he could mention over a dozen rases equally interesting, wherein Ids Alterative has subdued cancerand cancerous tumours, but he has not room hereto record them. Mrs. Sarah Young, of Quinton’s Bridge, N. J., had a goitrous tumour on the left side of her wind pipe, as large as the half of an orange, which was cured by using lias Alterative for about four j months. 31Ls R 8 , South Fourth-street, Phila ‘ delphia, was also cured of an enlargement of the | throat, which filled the entire spaee between the chin and breast-bone, and extended around on each side of her neck to behind her ears, and from her ears to her shoulders, and produced aw ful de formity. It. commenced growing when she was but five years old. and continued gradually to in crease until she was nineteen, at which time she commenced using this Alterative, w hich she took for seven months, which entirely reduced the en largement; and site has now as smooth and pretty a neck as can he found. The proprietor is not at liberty to give her name in print, but w ill refer per sons to her. For sale by VVM. K. KITCHEN, I sep2B ly 2 Sole Agent for Geotgia,