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{to* THIS tNIONIOIE *M. ftt.MTJWKI.J
• miutim-i:
Fiji* ode ! how sweet Hi? Mi< rt't! Juiuiiln
W fcrrc. \nmdfring m the hour ui evi,
n> }l*r the gentle winds,
] Ji»nd tnyrnvish’d oar,— nvjsh’d
ihoQ ’li ii rmight the moiiow i;ot«'s
OfAr-goU.ch wi er ’ d muni their throneof light,
. rr.'*rr.7 ibnd.ug
I* Jfci m* 1 lnp into the *ofnes*
O! ’ii» sweet,
I»y my s f iuitws*—air.vni stubbie-
Furnu nutted, vtjljjary, alone,
To lend lo fancy In r soaring wing.
Now she* travels back the sirromof tunc.
Till that moment which me* lining gave,
H lien ilivrp'uk of Immortality,
Kind Tel by the breath or power divine,
First warm'd into iite this mortal frame
&he muses o’er my childhood’* ftovv’ry wS’du,
And Ibe paths of buoyant yuuth retreads,
And, like ihc busy bee, from each bloom
Os by-gone joy, ihc extract* a sweet,
And tilth her pencil dipp'd in coloring}
Richer than the rain-bow'* varied hu«.
On memory'scanvass,she portray*
The face of ut wiy n youthful friund,
Radiant with the smile* of spartivu gifts—
Radiant with lustre, beaming cloud let.*
From the tyeuf mirth, and radiant
With rwwta lints of Mourning health
And, in voice softer than lie music
t?f Rohan Harp, when the zephyr*
lightly pans their airy finger* o’er
listfhrdlous string,*, Fancy whispow.
In my ready *mr f the jocund laugh,
And ih>. nurry kl.ont of sehuol-hoy play*,
Whan the air wo* freighted, with the sound
Ol’ hr* ns in untold pladms* leaping,
And nil i.riuulun* I ho sj.oninjr ground,
Willi elastic tread of rampant feet.
O’ how scetKie «f \ oiuhtul innocence
Which f bow’d a b* nn unknown to sorrow,
A mind from Corroding rare set freo—
Idko images of Ir^ht —heav’nly light—
On inrumry's focining canvass crowd!
Anon,—pausing hot one short moment
On her returning flight, where 1 sit,
*1 bn 5iJ rnahly to proclaim,
That tin kc halcyon dm have fi -d, and borne
Fume ol those hallow'd, gladsome spirits
Ton more rang ni»l clime away,—
Fancy strive* to penetrate t !»<• veil
Os fiiMiretitne,and read iheovont*
Os r oiling year*. High to bo.'iv’n sbobonndi;,
And conv< r; «• f<cks,wiih bright rollin'? star*.
Through wides;mee t from Simla sin aha leaps,
Ami creation w ith a span would male.
W hence this mighty universe, she oaks,
And when begun thesebrilliant glwrip*,
To burst in eten.nl harmony
< M order u!. ] magnificence,
From out the sable depUiu of chaos?
W hugnvo them mot on, "olor, beauty?
Uh • nee that cuu«f omnipotent? and whence
r l he forming bond tit it gave them being?
Vbctc'a no reply. Hut uh! nil ia Mark; ■ %
? ol drfivv'vi for human ken to scan.
And huiithlM at her vain, impious flight*
fclw learns humility;— she learns it.
From the dtainucc of tho vesper star,
Ho far, herudv-iiMiroiis wing bayorai
Trembling o'er the horizon’s verge—
Horizon * golden vmg alio Irnnvi it.
From iho fc phiru heaven, too brilliant
Tor i»»»r to gaze upon,—* ) profound,
»Sho ii lost m daring to explore
Its jboaadlossdepihsof uxurev.— sho loams it
Ftom i be solemn voice of Hod, speaking
Through tho eitauco of nature * atillitoan,
And lam'd to devotion's gentleness
Hfn? bend* her way to Immanuel's cross
A memo much beseeming solitude—
And m penitential grief lor mu,
■Converses with her God. convene*
n tin* breathing sigh* of holy prayer;
1 A’hile trickledevotion's sacred tear*
Sollly dow n the me.kly bonded choeK,
Like drop* of m illed diamond, pure.
■Wt:in» A'i.'V? timr.r ipmrnprtn tiWfsmni
To i .u \ ivid wanntU of iloav'nly love,
In tho holy flame the pumiorui wither, —
The sympnilnes of the soul expand,
And tho foul iti-.cU restor'd, drink* in
Th' nutrient milk of l.lnu nan charity.
Along th' uiihci'd nerve* us palsi'd arm,
’i lie healing tide ol strength flows warmly,
And the vig'rune hand of faith etrru.hd out,
(hasp* tho nou n of evorlußiing life,
furebas'd ut tho price of Jesu .’ broad,
O solitude quiol, still retreat!—
To gay pleasure's devotee,
Unknown to thu*a who toil hard lor find
Bowing aft bolorc nmbitiou’s shrine—
And with quenchless ardor drink applause,
From the muddy fount of public praise,
And dny« of ihauglu and siooplcusniglitj
Tu Ihoir nvil!—n.ikmnvii
To iliimu whudanco ’lnn- t he halls of mini),
AiLdiii.ru llat'dimuliau ihcotij;,make
Off’rinn.l ui ih ■ nhrinot.ra.ttiß and nini-'
Thou art Ui.‘ «ttidt'iu > a calm IVniaamia—
t'uared lo tho hours ol tohor thought—
To Apollo, ai.il iii». slater, nine—
AA hithiT, h«* his footslops bond, to drink
The warm ufl'aaudian fount
Thy s.lo'il ahadc, )ioorlsornni'iuotil icd.,,
Ann (msls her aighi of grief and wo,
Opnu ilu- pasting w inds;--ihc pmu.
rsuim on thy oalm heights sweat convene hold, I
't i ll Him, who in aoewi, bleuing, givu
To ihj>, who, in soorot, s.'.'k husruih’i.
Augusta, Juno27th, H 37. CORVDON.
’IOU THK CIIRONIri r. ,NU SKNTINEL.]
SO.NC-Utl.U! OATCHKIiS.
r.V MRS C. I.ADD.
l!< an ratehen. now lire undo of gold,
Oh! wh it will poor girls du!
Kin.-lt i,, alas! aroofno use,
iNort yo* of lumv hluo.
AU mo, uh! me,
OU! w hat will poor girls do 1
Uh! what w ill poor girls do!
The raijtiC*prl!,of lova are broke.
The lilll# god In, fled,
And those that now would hind the hoy,
Jlfttal get a gulden thread.
Ah! mo, ah! mo,
1 have no guidon thread—
-1 hate no gulden llmiad.
Ileaoly reigned in days of old.
Naught else lo lovo had charms;
Em now theiilllogod can rest,
In none but golden arm*.
Ah! me, eh! mo,
I ime no guidon a*ra»—
1 lu . • no golden arms.
II poverty bn; passes by,
Or peeps in at the door,
I-ov« spreads hi, wings—alas! alas!
dies hoard of there no more.
Ah! mo, ah! me,
Love s tied for ever more—
Love’s fled forever mure.
I’owcUon, Ga.
HiusxtAt CuueusixT. Th* following
line, appear in a Pennsylvania paper, on the oc
casion ol ih* marriage of Mr. Abraham Scamp, to
Miss Maria Ilopkinm
May they, while life shall circle round,
B, free from sorrow '» cramps.
And may (heir happiness be crown'd
Ey divers Ziffle scaurs.
The uumnernf girls of accommodeiing virtue
in the oily of London, is estimated at eighty
thouiuuJ, of which nurntwr eight 'housand die
annually o* a premature death. Kir.e cut of ton
/. thfii guls etosa d;o fc* ;riid»;» U .r* tee
fv .• . V'.
W'
- V,T
- . oyramracc .h«u u>[ > i.wtu kuiuM. F»i.. y
I V\ ami her vile iK><;irji.i .. t»aM l»cui iastiu
I mental in
J mmmm i*icuuui\e.
I --
J Tli£ itUQUAR AT TfiM L.M’JUHK Lit
I'A.-aSY.
’ from Mr trtu.U ]
Many years amoe, wjn;n I was a yon;,
J min ahout twenty years r>! 1 u-cu i
ireq ;en iy to spend H o tSuri'nty wids mv m ■
j u.er, who )< ■ 0"(, ,it Voi.-ni tins bin no ii.t
--j uiov day in inn lOft on wjii'■!. 1 fould Jt-a.e
i i’irt.l. 1 guficr.,ly walked as |.tr.ia lists Uar
-1 riiT.nnd llnnice I took u scat in one of me
I mud c Carr age* In my n ‘ln r’» home. When
1 1 happened lo he early I ,r lie- diligence, I used
jlo flop and converse wun a beppar wl.c
uanif: was Anthony, and who reym.olv lunl;
] h;s station ni the Uarrier de Pansy, wln re, in
I a hmd voice, he solicited Hltnu from every out
| w 'ho piih.iied, with a eof perscv.-r.inee
i that was really aslonnhinir, J generally ;;m
: Inin a trifle without inquiring wnether he d->-
; erved it or not, paiily heciiioe I had '.{ut ml i
j Ihc habit ol doing to, ami partly to get rid ol
hi* importunities. One day summer, as I
j waited tort!i > diligence, 1 found Anthony tit
: les usual post, exerting his lungs, and bawl
ing nieces,mily inr accustomed form ol
petition—‘For the love ol heaven beatow you;
S alma on u poor man—.Messeure, Mcsdanies
the smallest tr fie will be gratefully received.’
i VV In), .imliony was in tfiiu Itimmer poin in;
hut f’Xcliifilaiion* into the eure of every on
j who enmo within tho roach of his voice; u
j middle aged man of respectable appearand
j oned me. lie hud a pleasant exp Colon o
j countenance, was Very well dreed, and ii
| might lie m en ui a glance that he was a mail
I >n gt,od circumslnees. Hero was a ill suhjnc
I |- or t 1 a heggsr, who quickly nnirta lit* ad.
vouc h, proclinruing in a loud voice his pov<
j eity, and solicling relief. 'Von need not Ie a
j beggar unless you please,’ replied the gentle
j inuii, 'when yen can have an income often
j ihommmi crowns. ‘Von are pleased to jest,
j sir,' answered Anthony, ‘liy no means’said
j the gentleman; ‘I iiov< r was more acriom
lin my hlc. l.iiti nto me, my (head. Von
, perceive that I am well dressed, and I lull
yen that, 1 have every Deng that a rcan nahh
man need desire,’ ‘Aid sir, yon are a loriun
lite man.’ ‘Well, but, my (ritnd, I would not
Jiave heen so it I had set and begged as yon
are doing. I have no other mean* nf gainin',
my living.’ ‘Are you lame!’ ‘No, sir.’ You
are not blind, or deaf, and yon certainly ure
1 not dumb, n« every passer by cun testify.—
Listen: I shall give yon my history in a few
words. Some |.i or 20 y- ir* ago,’I was a
beggar like yourself, at length I began to see
iImI it wits verv disgraceful lo live nu the
lioimiy o| others, and resolved to nhamlon
tins shameful way ot life aisooti n« I possibly
could. I quitted i’ltris—) went into the pro
viii.iil',—l lugged (or old rags. The people
wre very kind lo me, and in a slioil Lime I
returned lo I’aria with a tolerable largo bun
dle of rags of every description, I carried them
to a paper-maker, who bought thoin at a fair
price. [ went on collecting, until lomygre.il
' ~)y my (iinince encubli d me to purchase rags,
so that J was no longer compelled to beg lor
tin’ll). A l length, by diligence and industry,
I became rich enough lo by nu a.n with two
! ptmtierw. and t.Vs saved me both time and la
! _ My business increased, the paper ma
il r« found that f rtmilt liuiiestly by them ; J
never palmed of}’ bird Mgs for good ones ; I
prospered, and sue tho result-—instead of be
ing a poor despised beggar, I have lon thou
sand crown a year, and fwo houses in Paris,
j II then my h iend you can no do bolter, begin as
j a rug merchant, and here,’ ho continued,‘is
I a crown to set you up m your new trade, it
j 11 m ire than I had; and in addition, please,
| notice, that it ! find you here another
j Sunday, I •had report you to the police.’ On
1 Haying this, the old gentleman walked off,
j leaving Anthony and myself in ?i htole ol’gri ul.
1 surprise. Indeed ilia beggar had been mi much
J 111 iliu .1 , I,
! stood with open mouth ami eyes in unite as-
I loinshmimt, nor had ho even power to solicit
I alms from two well dressed ladies, who pass*
jid at that moment. I could not help being
j si rude with the story, but I hud no time to
j comment on it, no tho diligence had arrived,
| in which I spilled myscli, and pursued my
i way. From that period I lost sight of the
beggar; whether the tear of the police, or the
Impel nl ginng ten thousand crowns u year
had wrought tlie change, 1 was not aware ;it
is sullieient to say, that from linn day forward
In 1 was never seen ul the Harrier.
Many years iiliorwttrds it happened that
business called nv lo Tours. In strolling
j through the city 1 stepped into u bookseller’s
I shop to purchase a new work Unit had made
j sonto noise. I found there four young men
j busily employed, while a stout good-looking
j man was giving them orders, as he walked up
ami d iwn with an air of importance,! thought
i f had seen the taco of the bookseller before,
j hut whore, I could not lor a moment tell, nn-
I til lie spoke, and I lien 1 discovered him to bo
j my old Inend Anthony, The recognition was
| mutual; he grasped my hand, and led mo
i through Ins shop into a well furnished par*
j lor; he lavished every kindness on me; and,
j finally, i live me his history (rom tho lime
|we parted at the Harrier. With the crown
I oftho stranger he began, as ho had advised
j him, to collect rags, ho made money ; bo
| cause tbu partner of a paper mumifacluicr’iiiir
j ri-'d his daughter; In short, his hopes wore
j fulfilled ; his ambition gratified, and ho could
j now count his income at ten thousand crowns,
j 1 lo prayed every day for blessings oil Ins bunj
I elaclor, who had been the means of raising
! Inm Irom tho degraded condition of a com
j men beggar. Anthony is so convinced of the
j evil and sm ot idleness, and of subsisting on
] the alms ot others, that, while 1 bcral and kind
| to those who are willing to work, no onlrea-
I ties, no supplications, ever prevailed on him
i to bestow a single eons on those who could
i not help themselves.
p
, Kkimkt not (.oeitTKOtis. —Anecdote of
R'i.iiliil/ih. —it is related of John Randolph
i that ou one occasion, when the subject
j of making appropriation to the public build*
| ings was under consideration in Congress,
be arose,and as usual, spoke in oppos turn
to it—appropriations had been frequently
asked and ns frequently granted—and still
tho buildings went up with a stealthy pace
—ho wanted lo see the end of it, and tor
tins purpose ho removed to refer the
subject to the committee on unfinished bust
ness. A workman, in tho gallery close
by, irritated at the opposition .Mr. 11. had
shown tn what was to constitute Ins support,
and unable to bear tins taunt, cried out i i a
voice somewhat like R’s—• And I move Mr.
Speaker that the gentleman be referred to
the same committee.’’ This severe retort
upon llnsill formed ami badly made orator
of Virginia, set the whole House in a roar
and the sergeant-at arms was immediately de
spatched to arrest the olfeiider, but lie had
disappeared ami could not he found.
Ankcdote of UoinsniTU.—"Johnson and
J Goldsmith, while at supper on one occasion, tete
a-tete, at Jack’s eoflee house, Doan street, Soho,
on rumps and kidneys, Johnson observed, “Sir,
these rumps arc pretty little tilings, but then a man
must eat a great many of them before lie tills his
bally.”
1 ! "Aye," said Goldsmith, “but how many of
these would reach to the moon V*
“To the moon ! uye, sir, I fear that exceeds
vonr calculation.”
“Not at all, sit," says Goldsmith, “I think ii
could tel'..*’
I “Dray. then, let u« hear.”
1 ] “Why, one. it it w(, re tong enough."
"In the house he usually wore his shirt cohai
open, in the manner topic Luted in the portrait by !
Sir ,'osLua.— OcCMtosotty f.c read ranch at night i
T.l*U IB t*C st cm i .r. when r. r •«.spared to 1
jJ I ■ 11 /ii u?«aM»*. I j wlji .* luH uiiU'
i- j iIU.II tn ' us Bn CSMAiil** MSS l»W
i. j «'s •us i which, when <*ut us iinine-
I Julc reach, was c)i:inic(cnstir, of liu fill* as irnio
, ! I'«> v <»r r k n W‘*. ur,“*—he Hung h;■* »«hjjj*er at i»,
| wh»*ii in il*e inoining. ws*h ususlly found near the
J ovt'iUkikii t utidloltck, daubed with i're«t*e. No
# ' ‘'iqdifßiiou of a cturildhle do:-crip(ion wan made
' ji“ li iii in vain; itinerstnt mendicatiU be always
j «tewed with co.-Tij,fission, and never failed to give
: l uirii url. f, wiiile hit* acii us generally evinced
*' • nurh ul heart, and grcilcomuiiacralion
** j 1 *r the poorer (Ihssl’it of society/*
•j si oh n mui g row led rfl ihin reply for some time.
*' . hut at last ru. o|li.ctiii2 hirnfelt, said, “Well* sir, 1
'■> 1 have deaervr d it : I should not Li\r piov ked .so
d j fjohiih an so foi)iisha quc-iioii."
; From /hr \. V. Daily Exprt**.
n A* Inciurmt in Kk4l* Isiru, savoi hi sn or
e i IhtMisn;; rn, x Titj; .Strhv oj- a ]*•»ll.—
i- J How irmiiy Ofrurrencea in orr i;vi*n/»day life, (did
r J we hut heihink our which we diHiniss
i from our iniutU as coon a* we havn hcsluwcd
j up.»n them a uoiiec, as common and irn
,f uuMfiorahlo iTtt.iderili*, arc full *>?’ ini creating )nal
j ler lor coiilcniplalion und rellection! Wc liav».
ji just heard of one, which, oci-onling to our way of
i thii.kiug, deserves to he recorded, n>»i only as hc
iug socharacUdiuitic oil he kind hospitality and
genuine good feeling that have ever di.ilmguhh
<*d the place ol its occurrence, hut »;» (uinveyinr;
,1 a nio>st striking and uselul ot iho benign
u itun* of tho iiiatitutlorls wc live under in il is
* favored country* Il is the true story of
■‘A most poor man, made lame by For! one’s blown,
a v\ bom the experience of touching worm as
' .Mail..* pregnant lo good pity.*’
d livery one who has travelled on tlin main port
• f route from Boston lo Portsmouth and Portland,
u rememtx rs the fair though aomewhal decayed
’ town of IS -, so delightfully situaled on the
I* banka of that loveliest of rivers, the Merrimac k.
■- Il has ever been a place of Considerable preten
u tdon in point of wealth and population; and though
*. now sufluring deeply from the cflectn of repeated
i, conflagration*, one of which is memorable all
over New England, as having aid a large portion
,j of one ot her fairest town* in ruins, still its old
, character remain* unchanged. Its citizen* ore
(J still distinguished for their elegant hospitality and
jj enterprising public spirit, while its neat and com
modioli* buildings, it* clean and well-ordered
, as reel*, and the quiet beauty of it* position on the
f sloping banks of Iho river, continue to fasten it
upon the recollection of the traveller, as well as
r to endear it forever to the hearts of those who
~ du w their first breath within its pleasant hounds.
It was to this quid and fur spot that a poor
Polish wanderer travelling westward from Can
ada, where he hod landed a few mouths before,
v had strayed, upon one fair morning u few weeks
1 sim o. Covered with rugs, tin* picture of squalid
1 ‘ poverty, he sat starving upon the atone door-step
ot one of the handsomest dwelling* in the place,
i Hi* mien was that oi one who had seen belter
/ day* and the modicum wu* discernible in his at
- lire alone. Hi* whole manner as he sal exhaus
«l tho gale, seemed to nay in the language of
I Mhnlofpearc.
Fpetik with me—pity mo—opn your door,—
i A beggar bug*, that never hogged b* tore !”
, Attracted by a night so mutual, the Indy of the I
[ muiiaion nised the window and demanded wbat
, the man wanted. His reply was couched in
broken Ihiglnh, but. accompanied by a manner I
, strikingly respectful, and a voice appealing ul *
> OUCO to Ibo heart by it; Irctncndoti* accent for
pity and relief. He said he. was in want of food.
, Ihc next enquiry oftho Indy was why, being
stout, able-bodied, and apparently hearty and
strong, he did not work lor support? To this
he made auovVer, that he, worked, as lung n* ho j
could get employment, ul making stone wall for !
the Farmer a, on his way from Canada, and at
other similar occupations, that it was his object
lo get lo Now Voikywhoru ho hail pro* peels of
mmo permanent, employment. To relieve hi*
hunger ho wan curried in all his rag* and dirt, to
the kitchen, and then alo with an avidity whi h
clearly proved no much of his »l>ry, at all event*,,
a* related to the Male of hie appetite,
Curing his meal hr gave u more full account
ol himself, and, declaring that ho was one of
thoue unhappy Polish refuges who had been dri
oftho revolution, he recapitulated the other* ‘/»ar
ticulor* of hismary already related. He declar
ed that he had been well educated, and said that
ho very well understood nil tho languages of Ka
ropo, which was corroborated by his conversing
with great fluency and elegance in Italian, French
and Get man. He also spoke of the arts, and
said ho could draw and paint, and play upon sev
eral instruments. Being asked, what instrument
of music was his favorite, ho icplied the guitar;
and one oftho young ladies oftho bouse run and
ft Iched him hors.
Seizing it with sparkling eyes and a marked
rapture, us one salutes an old friend, be immedi
ately began to pul il in tune, and then struck it
with tho practised touch of a innslcr. The by
standers were of course delighted, and invited
ihoir nearest neighbours to witness the curious
spectacle of a tattered beggar playing that most
graceful instrument with *o much elegance and
taste. Astonishment, however, soon gave way
lo other considerations. Tho sympathies of these
two families, so strongly enlisted in his favoi,
wore soon shared by others, and t mt day’s sun
did not set, without the adoption on their part, of
measures for the peimamMit relief of the stranger.
A class was raised of young ladies to ho taught
by him the art of playing the guitar, and a place
was procured for him, in tho course of a few
days more, in u school in the town, as teacher of
modern languages.
It gives us sincere pleasure to record this char
acteristic anecdote of a place so endeared to our
earliest recoiled ions—and to bo able, moreover,
to bear witness to so noble a triumph of that
loveliest olThe sciences, Music. How fortunate
for the poor exile that his wanderings led him, in
his distress, to the door of a musical family,—
and that family, too, residents in N !
The papers arc beginning lo he filled with ex
tracts from Miss Martincau’s book on Amcricu.-
Nol having yet seen tho work we ure forced lo
form our estimate of its merits from the scraps
that wc have met with, which, by the way, is not
tho very best mode of making up an opinion, as
they have been selected with reference lo tho pe
culiar notions ot the extractors, and arc soporated
from the context by which they may have been
much modified. In speaking of the newspaper
press of the country tho lady’s remarks arc per
haps more just than palatable to the self esteem
ot those connected with the public journals, who
may however find comfort in the remark that
“ henever tho many demand truth and justice
in their journals and reject falsehood and calum
ny, they will he served according to their desire.’’
Among the many things worthy of remark fur
nished by these extracts archer observations on |
American conversation, which are peculiarly
happy. She hits at what we wou’d call the
speech making stylo of talking of our country
men with admirable ctfoct, and at the same time
doe* not withhold the approbation to which the
matter of their discourse is justly entitled. Our
people are of course not, uwaio of il, but there is i
otten u peculiarity in our manner of conducting 1
conversation which does not attach to that of j
any other nation on the fare of the globe—
If wc examine we shall find that in their social !
intercourse, many of our countrymen have |
thrown aside altogether the interchange of short
pithy senleuca, and in its stead have adopted an
alternation ol sol speeches, in doing which how
ever they have not always the civility hear such
other out, but frequent iy interrupt iho thread ol
the discourse I fir own observa
tions in a higher ke, so as to drown the voice of
the person that may bo speaking. From what
wc have seen we would suppose Miss Marlineau •
has witteu n very clever book, not free however | 1
from the mwappichensions into which one wedded 1
1 to abstractions is ever prone to fall. In speaking of i *
j some of our institutions the lady shows dearly I 1
j that *be has had neither time nor opportunity, *
perhaps we might add, nor inclination, to give! 1
| them a fair examination. Some of the writer’s! 1
j thinkings are highly democratic, hut it is the de- ! T
| mocracy of books, which, we may add, has done * 1
more mischief in the world of our* than on* one *
■ thiiif us which we have any knowledge. Ho'saon !
j uU vr* **.h!; have -mo examined the conientn
sos Allen M*. work ta on ronnvodiy, vve A.ail j C;
feel at fterlv to wor* freely upon merits ( 0
1I nt«t ihi'jj wr rmi-t content oiiimjUm with it*i ;
* j Uriel nottev. — Ball. . Imrr.
* 1 firmnin tii ■■w»ihiiih wr —rT~~T " ■—“****
- I (■ rliluj- r.tcuiug< Juik'!)ll< ISU7*
“Tbe trumph of the opposition would be won
i jlorful. What! Such « party, composed of such
e lielerugenooiis materials, triumph over the repots- 1
< | Lean patty! Impossible, The repbulican parly
t ! iiinih but one phalanx, acting and moving in a
:! | Lass; it iH by but one impulse,and guiJ
:j , 'M by hut one *pinl;it Ins in view the prosperity j
: "thecountry, ami the maintenance of o.ir pub
. j lie institutions; it steadily marches onward undi r
I I the banner of the constitution am! of the laws; it .
> 1 talicrf under its fostering care, the interest of eaeli !
j section of the union, and the bene tits ciijoyed by j
! each, arc fefl by all. Can any opposition party |
j ever succeed against a parly supported as it is by .
ijli ■ t.coj!fe! Another attempt to defeat the repub
- j lit an party, will be made, but in vain; the triumph j
i , of this parly w ill be as signal as it lias ever been,
s ! and utter discomfiture cannot fail lobe the lot off
1 ! the opposition,’’
* I Ti;e ahivelexfiacl is the conclusion of a long |
' Editorial article in this m irniitg's Constitution- j
I i ails l ., in the previous portion of which, the Whig
- [ parly of ihe Union—those opposed to adminis- ;
* ■ tmf.on of Van Ilurcn—arc arraigned, condemned j
1 and executed in that summary style for which
, Mr.Guiuu is so remarkable. We copy the con- j
s | elusion, in which the writer, after having used up j
his opponents, comes to speak of his own party ;
> i because it expresses in part the opinion vve have I
j always entertained of that party.
tj "The republican party forms but one pha
> lanx, acting anil moving in a mats it is gov
* erned hy but one impulse and actuated by but j
l one spirit I”
. j This is true to the letter! The party which j
i surrounded Gen. Jackson at the expiration of his |
| term of office, and through the instrumentality of I
| which, lie transferred the Executive ehaii to Mr. |
1 Van fltircn, contained in its ranks, every tiling |
■ which could bo bought with the promise of office,
' or driven into submission by (lie denunciations j
and lineals of official scriblers. Forty thousand :
office holders, the tenants at will of an executive i
which had taught its dependents that’ the ten- j
urc of their offices was conditional upon their j
servility, with thrice lorly thousand eager oxpcc- j
| tants who wore taught that their only hope of |
| success, was ha,sen upon their submission to the I
| will of one man, might well ho said to form a |
I “phalanx, governed hy but one impulse and ac
| lusted hy hut one spirit." That this phalanx
j "marches under the llanncr of the constitution
and laws” and "lakes under its fostering care the
! interests of each section of the Union” and that
its "benefits are It It hy all,” is very happily illus
| trnled hy the present condition of the country,
j which has been ruled hy the phalanx for the last I
j right years and now find's itself suffering under an j
1 aeciiinnhiled load of urtlidtions never felt before, j
\Vilh a ruined currency, ruined commerce,
j government bankrupt, and the people impoverish- j
ed tli contented, anti seeking relief in many Stales
hy a resort to measures justified only in extraor
dinary emergencies, wo yet see men, stand tip
unl'hvshiogly before the world, and talk without j
choaking, about tho "benefits” dispensed hy those- I
under whoso administration of the “constitution
anti laws, this state ol things has been brought
about, is tho mortifying and startling evidence of ,
how far gone the country is, on the downward '
road to ruin. i
i
't on the chronicle an« sentinel j 1
We certainly live in an age of wonders. Dif
ficulties which have puzzled the brains of all the
gt cat men of former days, arc found now to be
rctnoyeable hv means so simple, that the only
Columbus had only to break the shell, and the
eg;; stood on cud. I am happy to find that a 1
process has, at last, broke upon the world, that '
will remove all the difficulties of our deranged
exchanges, hy a course most beautifully simple, J
and simply beautiful. If it will not make “gold t
ilow up tho Mississippi,” it will dispense with the <
necessity of it, and Mr. Whitney, and Mr. Blair, ‘
and Mr. Woodbury—yea, even tho great Ben-j J
ton and the little Cnuibrelling—may sit at the 1 1
feet of our modern Solomon, and learn the cure j I
for all our troubles. Do you doubt it! The £
writer is the profound and independent “ Obsci■■
wr” of tho Charleston Courier, and the equally ■'
profound and independent editor of tho Const!- ,
tutionalist refers, with marked approbation, to the a
article containing tho suggestion. And what is J
it!—"Road, mark and inwardly digest.”—"FlX
THE.RATE OF EXCHANGE BV LAW!!” '!
Now il we can but carry this principle through, „
gold anil ilow, not only “up the Mississippi,” hut j t
all over tho southern country. Fix the price of j 1
cotton hy law, and out fortunes arc all made.
1 propose that the planters of the south unite j,,
in purchasing for the author of this discovery, a |
tract of land in the Okefanokco swamp, let the U
Legislature "fix its value hy law,” and verily, he | 1
will have his reward. O. 1
* t
From the Teens Chronicle. 1
Wo understand that Congress have passed a
law to raise six hundred men, for the purpose of c
chastizing the Indians; this ought to be dons, 1
and we trust some one will he placed in com- c
tnand of the expedition, who will do his duty 1
with energy and promtness; wo need not expect a
peace until the remnants of tribes who reside on 1
the Ttinily and Brazos arc destroyed; the Mexi- ■'
cans arc constantly amongst them, inciting them J
to acta of barbarity. The manner in which the '
prisoners who have been lately token have been 1
treated calls aloud for vengeance! exemplary 1
vengeance ! both upon the infernal Savages
and their more brutal advisers, the Mexicans.— v
W c ought to invade their country, and extormi- I
naio from the face of the earth, a race of useless v
vagabonds, whose brutal deeds have scarcely any c
parallel! *
v
From the :Y f . Commercial Advertiser, June *26. i
Wall Street —One o’clock-. —There is but
little change in the market this morning. Ohio ‘
Trust fell 1, and Long Island R. R. per cent.
Delaware <St Hudson, Farmers’ Trust and Mo- J
hawk Kail Road closed the same as on Saturday.
—Utica and Harlem improved a j, and Boston '
iV Worcester J per cent. Some sales were !
made of Tradesmen’s Bank at 100 ; of Stoning- J
lon K. R. at 16, and of Conti ibutionship Ins. Co.
at 78. Thete were no transactions in United
Slates stock. .
Specie.—American gold 10 J a 12 premium; .
■!o halt dollars 10 a Ilf do ; Dollars, Spanish, I v
1 I*’ a—do ; do Mexican, 11 a 12; Sovereigns
Jo 40 a45 ; Doubloons $lB, da Patriot sl7 a *
IT, 50.
Brit ato Banks,—The Albany Evening “
Journal of Saturday says, "We understand that
the injunction against the three Banks in Bulla- d
10, viz*, Oily Batik, Commercial Bank, Buffalo n
Bank, was dissolved on the 2:5d instant, after a n
full hearing before the chancellor.” i-
At Boston, says the Sentinel of Saturday, the 1 n
money market exhibits no important variation;ip
the banks continue their discounts upon a liberal j o
scale, and slrict'y prime securities have been tea- I »
dtly negotiated at 0 per cent, per annum. \j
A bill authorising the issue of small notes by ! s
the banks has passed the House of Delagates of j u
Virginia, by a majority of ten. The same bill ie:
was rejected on the previous day by a vote of 47 1 it
tO id* I U
At New Orleans, according to Levy’c Price in
Current some of the banks are discounting mote ol
than heretofore, and the money market, Ia!
though atiU iigtf, is easier than it was. The ip;
criming' •.» banks si present ate not eqilal.fo of
theit incomes. specie is m great demand, and
tear, a premium ol 15 lo 16 per cent.
From the Huston Altar.
DID WE EVER HAVE A SOUND AND
UNIFORM CURRENCY !
The People have suffered so much and so long
I from the derangement of thirr circulating medi
um —they are now involved in such embarrass
ments and disasters—without the slightest sug
.tiun of a remedy, or the most distant hope ol
: relief—that they will be apt to forget that they
I ever had a sound and anilbrm Currency. Is it
possible that the policy of a single mad —and the
lap.-e of but five year . —have plunged u People
; like that of the United Stales in a distress so ov
erwhelming and universal! Is it possible that
a country lloodcd at the present moment with
i hundreds of millions ol irredbe.mahle PAPKR —
llucluuting in different parts of tho Country from
i ID to 25 and 30 per cent —was once in the cn
| joyment of a Currency absolutely and uniformly
I EQUi VALENT i i all respects lo specie l Such
1 was the ficl. What evidence exists of it, be
! vend lite personal remembrance and experience
jof every man in the community! Read the tes
-1 limouy submitted in the following paragraphs,
I and judge lor yourselves.
In General Jackson’s inaugural address, no
j allusion is made lo any defect in the Currency.
Reform and Retrenchment, and a correction ol
I the gio.ss abuses of Frederal Patronage in con
i nection with popular electors—all this was declar
\ed necessary, and duly promised to the People.
1 But not a'sellable,is brealhed'againsuhe Cunen
| cy. Nothing is said of any inconvenience suf
j fared or anticipated from the insufficiency or de-
I predation of the circulating medium. But by
the Decumber of his first year, the General had
received new light on this subject. He had found
i that Ihe Bank could not be made to minister to
j his lust of dominion. It was disposed to abstain
i entirely (font politics—and the General was dc
| tormined that an independent corporation should
I not exist: that it should either yield to his power,
I or he put under the ban of tho empire.
The institution was accordingly doomed. In
j the passage of December, the General staled that
i he could not injustice delay presenting to Con
gress the question ofthe Bank: that many peo-
I pie doubted of its expediency and constitutional!-
i ty; and that it had “failed in the great end
! OF ESTARLtSittNU A VNIFOR.It AND SOUND CL'It-
IIKNCV.”
Other suggestions of tho President in the same
j message we do not Intend to discuss in this arti-
I cle. >Vc propose to coniine it simply to that
! portion of the message which assails the sound
: ness and uniformity of the Currency. The topic
j wasjor.c of great importance and interest. It was
Iso considered in Congress and by the people.
The hostile demonstrations of the President de
preciated the stork from §126 pr. share to sll6 —
at which rate it was selling in February 1830.
Here was given the first impulse lo that vast and
disastrous stock-jobbing, which the violent chan
ges and fluctuations of General Jackson’s admin
istration have induced.
The subject was immediately taken up by Cou
l gross, and retorted in both branches. In the
| House it was Assigned to the Committee of Ways
] and Means—consisting of Messrs. McDuffie,
j Verplanck, Smyth, Gilmore, Overton, Dwight
I anil Ingersoll-—^ve # wartn political friends of Gen.
I Jackson, and two in tho opposition. In the Sen
j ale it was assigned to the Committee on Finance,
and consisting of Messrs. Smith of Maryland,
Smith of South Carolina, King, Silsbee, and
Johnston—tho first three of whom wore adminis
-1 tratiou men, the latter two in the opposition.—
j Both Committees, then, were organized on the
j same principle on which the Jackson patty have
I uniformly practiced—that of packing committees
with tho friends of tho ruling powers. But at
the period in question, Congress still retained the
confidence of the people, and the capacity of in
dependent action. That monstrous Executive
machinery which has prostrated the dignity, the
character and the self respect of that body—and
converted it into a mere record-court of Execu
tive edicts—shorn of its authority, stripped of its
privileges,—crushed by power and corrupted by
patronage—hud not then been set in motion.—
Integrity, love of country, honor still prevailed in
Ihe deliberations of that body—audit numbered
rat Jackson, who honestly believed that Hie ad
ministration of Mr. Adams had been tho source
of great abuses, and who were animated with the
zeal of reformers as well as of patriots.
To these committees, then, tho great subject
was referred. The report of the Senate commit
tee was made on the S'Jth of March, 1830—about
three months after the original reference, a peri
od amply sufficient for the fullest investigation.
And what did this committee—a Jack-son com
mittee—through their Jack-son chairman say!
Not having tho fear of Executive Instructions
before their eyes—nor a longing for Executive
Patronage in their hearts—they told the Sen
ate and the people:
“Wo are satisfied that Ihe country is in the en
joyment of an uniform national currency, not
only sound and uniform in itself, and perfectly
adapted to all the purposes of tho government
ami the community, but more sound and uni
form than that possessed hy any oilier country.”
"The basis of all good currency should he tho
precious metals, gold and silver; and in a mixed
currency of paper circulating with gold and silver,
and convertible into it, the great object to he at
tained is, that the paper should always be equal
to gold or silver; that is, it should always be ex
changeable for gold or silver. Such a currency
is perfect, uniting the convenience of a portable
material, with tho safety of a metallic medium.”
After speaking of the currency of Ihe local
Banks, and of tho agency of tho United States
Bank in restraining their issues hy the exercise
of a salutary control, and thus keeping their notes
on a par with gold and silver, Ute report contin
ues:
"There is, however, superadded to this curren
cy, a general currency more known, mohi.
trusted and more valuaiile than the local
currency, which is employed in the exchanges
between diflerents parts of tho country. —These
are the notes of the National Bank. These
notes arc receivable for the Government by the
3,000 receivers, scattered through every part of
the country. They arc in fact in Ihe course of
business paid in gold and silver, though they arc
not legally or necessarily so paid by the branches
ofthe Bank in every section ofthe. Union. • •
* * * In no other country can a merchant do
what every citizen ofthe United States can de
positc for instance his silver at St. Louis, or Nash
ville or New Orleans and receive notes, which he
can carry with him 1000 or 1500 miles to the
Atlantic cities, and there receive for them an equi
valent amount of silver, without any expense
whatever; and in no possible event an expense
beyond a quarter of I pcrct. * * • This seems to
present a state, of currency approaching as near
lo perfection as could bo desired; for hero is a
currency issued at twenty four different parts ot
the Union, obtainable by any citizen who has
money or credit. When in his possession it is
equivalent to silver in nil his dealings with all the
9000 agents ofthe Government throughout the
Union. In all his dealings with the interior it is
BETTER THAN silver; in all his dealings with
tho commercial cities Ear al to silver; and if
fin any purpose, he desires the silver with which
he bought il.it is at.his disposal,almost universally,
without any dimunition, and nevermore than a
dimunition of one quarter per cent, it is not ea
sy to imagine, it is scarcely necessary to desire
any cubhenci* iietteii than this.”
“ After escaping so recently from the degrada
dalion of a depreciated paper currency, tho com
mittee would abstain from every thing which
might, however remotely revive it. The period
is not remote when, in the language of the Sec
retary of the Treasury, “He country was op
pressed by a currency without any basis of coin,
or other effective check and of no value, as a
medium of remittance or exchange beyond the
jurisdiction of the State whence it had been is
sued—a currency that not unfrcqtiemly imposed
upon the Treasury the necessity of meetup, by
extravigant premiums, the mete act of transferr
ing the revenue collected at one point to defray
unavoidable expense at another.” It is still with
;n the recollection of the Senate, when at the scat
if Government itself, specie could only be had
it 20 or 22 per cent, in exchange for the bank
'■• l P“ r promise to pay specie: (hat for Bank notes
>f Baltimore 2 pet cent we.c paid- fonhose of
J I Philadelphia 91u 7 per cent; for those of New
Volk 1 5 lo 10 per cent, and lor those of Boston
I o(j tu SJ p,. r cent, ruinous mequa hies which
| have now happily disappeared.”
‘•On the whole, the committee are of opinion
that the present stale of the currenry is safe for
i the community, and eminently useful for ihe go
; vernmcnl; that for some j(pt» pa-t it lias been
I improving by the infusion into the circulating
| medium of a large portion of coin, and the sub
! stitmion of the paper of more solvent banks in i
i lieu of those of inferior credit; and that, if left lo
’ the progress of existing laws and institutions, the
_ partial inconveniences which still remain, ol the
paper currency of the last war, will be wholly
and insensibly removed. Under these circutn
t stances they deem it mens XT to aiistais prom
ALL LKOISLATIOX; TO ABIJJK II Y THE I’HACTIEAL
CiOOII WHICH THE COUNTRY ENJOYS, ANII TO PUT
NOTHING TO HAZARD 11 Y DOUBTFUL EX
_ PERIMENTS.”
it would appear then by the above evidence
l from a committee of the Senate —composed of a
majority of the friends of Gen, Jachson —that
, thu country was at one time in possession of a
! sou.vn A.vn rvipomi cvnnsxcr—a currency of
specie oh its equivalent. The length of this
’ article prevents us from adducing other evidence,
, from the report of Gen. Jackson’s friends
in the fiousp, which we reserve for another day.
1 ~€« jlitt ERcTaeT"
charleston market, june 29.
Cotton— ltoceivcd sifiee our last, lo yesterday
mottling inclusive, 12 bales of Sea Island, and 1115
bales ol Upland Colton. Cleared in Ihe same time,
■ 1190 bales of Sea Island, and -1105 hales of Upland
• Colton. On shipboard, not cleared, 360 bales Sea
] Island, and 8801 bales Upland. The sales amount
i to 3306 bales of Uplands, as follows: 338, 11; 35, |
103; 8, JOS; 224, 101; 27,- 10?; 184, 101; 348, 10; I
!4, Oil; 224,9!; 35,91; 499, 9; 57, 83; 456,81; 15,
1 81; 574, 8; 134,71; 66, 71; 218, 7, and 121,5 els. |
- Tlero were no sales of Long Cotton. The ship-1
1 merits now making are on owners’account. The
, demand lor Uplands during the week lias been stea
dy and priees of the best well maintained. Strictly
choice and prime are in most request, and the stock
of this description very light. We have doles from
1 Liverpool lo the2sth, and Havre to the 16lh .May.
- The market at Liverpool had somewhat improved,
. prices are quoted for Uplands, 5d a 71d, At Havre,
. the sales had been extensive, at a decline.
Rice— The sales amount to 522 hhls, as follows:
139 at S 3 5-16; 140 st 3}; 20 at 31; 109 at 3 3-16;
I2G at 3|; Cl at 3; and 27 at 2 8(1. The stock is
light, with a fair demand. Strictly choice would
t command $34.
■ Marine Intelligence.
Charleston, June 29.—Arr steam packets
’ Charleston, Miercken, Philadelphia ; James Ad
• ams, King, Savannah.
Went to sea. ship Jupiter, Carter, Havre ; brig
- Magnolia, Meldrum, Point Potre, Cuad.; schooner
Queen, Brovvcll, Alexandria, H. C.
' MARUIUh,"
In Louisville, Ga., on the 25th inst., by Jona
than Roberson, Esq., Mr. Jam£B 13. Bostick, of
Louisville, to Miss Jane Donaldson, of Sa
vannah.
s i <*lns,
1 f 21111*# subscriber takes this mol hod of informing
1 JL the public, and all cotton planters in this Stale
. and elsewhere, wanting Cotton Lins ofttie hestqual
- ity, made after the plan of Boatwright, can procure
i, I hem in the town of Louisville, Jefferson County,
I Ga. Gins of the above mentioned plan will be made
’ and warranted of the best single steal breasting,with
t i’.si steel or iron saws, as they may ho ordered.—
Cast steel saws at $2 50 j cr saw, iron saws at $2
- per saw.
e N.B- VNo will at all times have on hand a good
c slock, and make repairs at ihe shortest notice. AH
d orders thankfully received and promptly attended 10.
t JONATHAN KOBEiLSON.
June 10 141 w3w
c -
- lUberloii i'Vmafc Academy. ,
0 exercises of this Institution went into oper
-0 nlion on Monday 22d instant, under thesuper-
J intendence of Mr and Miss Johnson ; from the high
. testimonials of character and qualifications which 1
, Mr. and .Miss Johnson present, the Trustees feel i
5 gratified, in recommending them lo parents and I
> guardians, ns instructors ol young ladies in the 10l- 1
- lowing branches—
-1 Heading, Writing, Arithmetic, Grammar,
I Astronomy, Philosophy,
Latin arid (.’rock Languages, ,
Needle-work, Drawing and Painting and Music, I
i With the addition which is making lo the Acad- 1
emy, it will he capable of accommodating a large t
number of scholars, both in the solid and ornamen* ,1
' tal branches. ’j.
The healthy situation and good moral character t
o’s the Village, together with the preparations made t
for the benefit ol the School, entitle it to a liberal ,
share of patronage.
Board can he had with private families of the vil
lagc.at ten dollars per month.
THu.l/AS JONES, J ~
THOMAS HEARD, ?
Y. 1.. O HARRIS, J. |
LEROY UPSHAW, | f 1
ROBERT HESTER J “
Elbfilon, 26th May, 1837. [may 31 sm4t
Prolapsus Uteri. ~ ,
CURED BY EXTERNAL APPLICATION i
BR A. G. HULL’S UTERO ABDOMINAL •
SUPPORTER is off. roti lo those afflicted with
Prolapsus Uteri, and other diseases depending upon '
relaxation of the abdominal muscles, as an instru- 1
moot in every way calculated for relief and perma
nent restoration to health. When this instrument is
carefully and properly fitted to the form of the pa
tient it invariably affords the most immediate immu
nity from the distressing “dragging and hearing
down” sensations which accompany nearly all ca
ses of Visceral displacements of the abdomen, and
its skilful application is always followed by an ear
-1 ly confession of radical relict from the patient her
s “It- The Supporter is of simple construction and
can ho applied by the patient without furl her aid.
; Within the last two years 700 ofthe Utcro Ahdotni
, nal Supporters have been applied with the most hap- i
' py results.
i lie very great success which this Instrument has
met warrants the assertion, that its examination by
the Physician will induce him to discard the dis
. gristing pessary hitherto in use. It vs gratifying lo
state, that it has met the decided approbation ofeve
j ry member of the Medical Faculty who has applied
it, ns well as every patient who has worn it.
' The Subscriber having been appointed agent for
! the saleof the above Instruments, all orders address
! cd to him will bo promptly attended 10.
N.B. CLOUD, Wholesale Druggist,
F No. 232 Broad-st., Augusta, Ga.
A supply of Hull s Celebrated Trusses always
cn hand. April 4 77
Fifty Dollars IScvracd.
flTHlEsiihscribcroflcrsfiftydollars for the appre
-H- hension of JAMES 11. SMITH,& his delivery
to the jailor oi Lincoln County, Ga. 1 charge said
Smith wTh committing Forgery in Augusta, in 1834:
and conveying a forged letter to me. At the time ol
tliis transaction, Smith made his homo near Bachelor
Retreat, in Pickens district, S. C. James R. Smith is I
about 20 years of age, round bodied, strait built, has
fair hair, blue eyes, fair skin, and a sear on his left t
check, which looksilike it might have been caused by J
the cut of a razor; two of his fore-teeth out, talks bro
ken and lisps very much in his speech. Any person t
Hint will confine said Smith" in any secure jail,so that v
I can get him, I willgive thirty Dollars.
„„ r . JOEL GITTENS. c
* addition to the above reward, I will give
lor the delivery ofthe said Smith, to tlie jailor afore
said, thirty five dollars more. J. G
Lincoln county July 15 54 mtf I
-
P Augusta Chronicle. 1
ERSONS indebted to the Augusta Chroni- 1
cle previous to the first oi January Inst, are
earnestly roquesled to make immediate payment as
Uts highly desirable to the late proprietors to close
all their old business with ilmtestabhshmentas earlv
as practicable. Phey > will take the risk of remittances
by mail, where the Postmaster’s certificate ofthe re
mmance is obtained, ami forwarded to them in ca
ses of failure; and whore the amount is such as can
not he enclosed m a letter, those who have other
accounts in the city,(at the Chronicle & Sentinel 1
office, or any other office or commercial house ) hv
reuniting an additional sum to makeup an even
hank note or notes, may have the surplus placed to
'heir credit there, and a receipt returned on the
same sheet as that ol the Augusta Chronicle
Direct lo A. H. PEMBERTON,or
A. H. & W. F.PEMBERTON.
m °V 1 Iwtf 10]
Police
MY wife Martha Ann Carpenter, having ceased
lo lie a wife lo me, and apprehensive that she
is about to leave ray bed and board without my
permission, I take this painlul method of giving ft
publicity to the world,—and Ido hereby forewarn
all and every person whatever, from trading with
my said wife or giving her credit upon the faith of •
my responsibility—as 1 will not be liable lor her
contracts, conduct or conversation in any shape or '
form whatever. BAILEE'CARPENTER I
Hark county, Geo., May 3,1827. * [may 6 106 j
♦ ?
•♦ ; *
GK.VKUAL NKWSF APER A.M> fr.
LECTION AGENCY.
THE undersigned, late editor and proprietor ol
the Augusta Chronicle, having the extensive'm
stness of that ejtabhtlmirt to close, and conscioo,
tram long experience, how much sueh a facility U
1 needed, at least by the Tears, is disposed toconnr«
with it n General Agency (bribe collection of AW
I paper and oilier Debts, in tins uml the neighbor,
ing Southern .Slates,and will travel almost continual!
ly lo present them himself. .Should the business offer!
cd bo sufficient, the agency will be made u permanent
\ one—and whde his long connection with ij,„
Dress and consequent know ledge of its peculiar r»
quisittens and benefits fiom such an Agency, an ,j
his extensive personal acquaintance with ) he Jucali
tice mid people ol the country, afford peculiar focili
tics lor the perfonimnce of its dimes, ho trusts tha-'
suitable enquiries will leave no doubt of hi.- protni.t
and faithful attention to them,
may 3 A. H. PEMBERTON.
Mr Pemiierton will on Monday next, commence
a trip through Barnwell and Beuulort Districts to
Savannah—thence, through Btyan, Liberty, A/ C 'l n ,
losh, Glynn, and Camden counties, & back, through
Wayne, Acc. to Savannah; and then, through Es
fingham, Scnven, Burke, Jefferson, Washington and
Wamen, to Augusta. After which, he will travel
through most of the neighboring districts of .South
C arolina, and flic middle and upper counties of
Georgia; and through the Stales of Alabama, Mis
kissippi, Louisiana, North Carolina, Virginia &c
He will receive, lor collection, claims ol any kind
IcQns U 8 follow:
fowspaper accounts, <fr., (including those of Peri,
odicals,) when made out each q.-parately, Igj
cent; when to be made out by him, from general Itst s
forwarded by mail, Ac,, 15per cent. New uhscri
hers, with payment in advance,2s per cent; without
payment in advance, 124 percent. He has been of
lerred more, in some instances, hut cannot consent
to take more from one than another, ,r than ho him
self would willingly pay; and now fixes on these
rates as those he has paid, and as being as low as
[ can he afforded, or as he has ever known paid—trusl
-1 mg, lor remuneration, more to the probable extent of '
(business he may receive, than to the rates them'-
i fives; together with the consideration of travelling
I lor Ins health, and to collect for himself. ,
Mercantile accounts, 5 per cent, more or less, ac
cord ng to amount, &u
hemiltances will he made according to instruction,
and at the risk ol those to whom they are addressed
—he furnishing the Postmaster’s certificate of the I
amount, deposit,and description of money, when- j
ever a miscarriage occurs. When left to his ctisere- f
lion, as often as circumstances, amount collected 4
safety, economy, &c., may seem to justify, and'
checks, drafts, or suitable notes, m size, currency
whore sent, Am., can he obtained— and at tho risk of
those addressed, as before slated.
Communications addressed to him in this citv 'I
will bo immediately forwarded to him, when absent!
Kejerence- to any one who knows him; and there I
are low w ho do not in this city or section.
Ho is novv Agent for the following Newspapers
and 1 enod teals, and authorized to receive subscrip. 1
turns or payments thorolor; J
Chronicle and Sentinel, Augusta,
Constitutionalist, do.
Southern Medical and Surgical Journal, do,
Georgian, Savannah,
Mercury, Charleston,
Southern Patriot, do.
Southern Literary Journal, do.
Southern Agriculturist, do.
Western Carolinian, Salisbury, N C
Farmer’s Register, Petersburg, Va.
Southern Literary Messenger, Richmond, Vn.
Merchant, Baltimore, J
Reformer, Washington City,
Southern Review, do.
Augusta, June 24. w tf 148
iff Publishers of Newspapers, Ate., who may
t auk pi oper lo engage his services, will please give
ihe above two or three conspicuous insertions,week
*y* or monthly,and forward iho Nos. containing it,
Admiotlstrator’s Sale.
WILL he sold, by order ofthe Court tof Ordi
nary, for the county of Richmond, on tns
first Tuesday in September next, at the Market
House in the city ot Augusta, two unimproved Jots
on the north side and upper end of Broad street
known in (he plan of Mrs- Clayton's lots as No. 71
and 72. Also, at tho court house of Fayette county
on the same day, ono lot of land, No. 100, in tlm
4th District, originally Henry county. Also, on the
, r * 810 court house oi Henry county Jot
No. 237, in the 10th district, and lot No. 295, in’ the
16th district of Henry. Also on tlm same dry at
the court Jiouso ol Early county Jot No 369, aOth
district. The above sold for the benefit ot the heirs
and creditors oi James Primrose, deceased, lute oi
tie county ot Richmond. Terms cash. Titles in
disputable. G. B- MARSHALL, Adm’r
MAlt Y PRIMROSE, Adm’x.
■> unfl 20 144 wtds
...Jttuiß ancr date, I wTT) make application
to the Honorable the Inferior Court of Colum
bia county, whenaittingts a Court ot ordinary ior
Lettersdismissory, from the further Administration
oi the Estate of John Dozior late of said County
.Deceased, I hereby, require all and singular the
kindred and creditors of said deceased, lo file their
objections if any they have, in the office of said
court, within the time prescribod by Law, to show
cause why said I ctlors should not be granted. ■'
JAMES F. DOZIER Exr.
John Dozier, den’d.
uno 5, 1837 jgj
A i’ei’BiiiaiicMit School.
fg 5H E undersigned has made arrangements for es
IL tablithing a permanent Boarding School at
Poweltou, Hancock comity, Georgia. The wolf
known healthiness of this village, its qi.net and se
cluded situation, and tho unostentatious character of
Ms citizens generally, make it every way, a most elt
giblo situation fora permanent Academy.
A Georgian by Linli as wcil as in feeling, tho un
dersigned is delta mined to bend nil his energies un
ceasingly to tho establishment of an Institution, in
all respects worthy of the liberal patronage of his
lij I low-citizens a pat rorag& which he solicits so far
only ns he shall be found to merit it.
For the accommodation of Pupils from a distance,
and with a view to the pormanev of his school, his
house is now upon lor the reception of hoarders.
1 he domestic management of his house will bo con
ducted by Mrs. Ball, formerly of Washington, n m
lady long experienced and very favourably known
as a house-keeper.
Mrs, Ladd, a native of Virginia, and a lady of es
tablislied reputation as an instructress, will givo les
sons in all the ornamental branches of female edu
cation.
TKtItUS.
_. , . Per Quarter.
Tuition mlhe Ist Class, composed of begin
ners, $4 00
do. 2nd Class, composed of such as
study Geography, English Grammar, Arith
metic, Ate. 6 oo
do. 3rd Class, composed of such
ns study tho ancient languages or the high
er branches of Engli h education, 8 00
do. Drawing and Painting on paper
satin, ar.d velvet, gOO '
do. Oil and A/iniatura pointing, 3
lessons per week, jo 00
do. Oriental painting and Mezo
t! n to, 8 00
do. VV ax-work taught perfectly, and
a set of moulds furnished, 36 00
do. Ebony and Gilding, 5 00
do. Fancy work, 5 00
do. Music on the Piano Forte, 12 50,
do, do. Guitar, sl2 50
Board, washing, lodging and fuel, per month, 12 00
Ist J erra to commence on the 2d Monday in Jan
nary, ol each yeijr, and end on the 2d Friday m
Juno following.
2,1 Term to commence on the 4th Monday in June ,
of each year, and end on the 4th Thursday in No
vember. ;
Board and tuition payable semi-annually at the
close ol each term.
Powelton, March 22, 1837. * OUCHB ’
„ The Chronicle and Sentinel Augusta, nnd tho
Recorder, Milledgvtlle, will each pnblish’ihi-abuve
pnee per month, lor three months, and ..„<•« per
month for three months thereafter,and li.rward their
accuonts. ..
march 2/ 2lm3in]«in3in
GREEK’S
VEGETABLE TONIC MIXTURE,
Or Fever and Ague Conqueror.
T tik , tor jttermttentor Fever and Ague.
HIS inestimable FtctmiFUOE has warranted it
s, dh uy repeated trials, ft) be superior to any »r
tide yet ofterod to the public ; it is infallible in In
termitting and Fever and Ague ; fn rcr,cnt oases
n exterminated the Chills nnd Fever in twenty
lour to forty-eight hours ; being of a vegetable com
position, the public will apprehend no injurious ef
ects Irom deleterious minerals; it operates as a mild
nit effectual purgative, and may be given with great isl
ujvantage in Dysentery, Bowel Complaints, Deprav- mi
id Appetite,F’lutulency, Jaundice, Night Sweats, and Wl
many other affections of similar origin. For proof -
of tho efficacy of this mixture try a Lottie. The in
ventor, being aware of the many unprincipled frauds
that are daily practiced on the public, has taken the
precaution 10 prefix his signature to the genuine.
fr Beware of Im/msters and Cmt ntpint bottles
I his medicine is put up insqatc half pint bottles,
with the words “Green’s Tonic .Mixture, or Fever '
and Ague Conqueror, New-York,” blown on the
sides of the bottles
For sals by
, k. CLOL D, No. 232 Broad-gtreet.
march 30 <4 Agent for Augusta. \