Newspaper Page Text
I cniist, and with an Instrument cx-
I fi-j<ivvly of American invfhitnSn. It
I |ieX t to the discoveries ojf Franklin
I tlcctticity, the most splendid con-
I tjUintion wo have hitherto made to
I Sl i nee, and will secure to the acco'm-
I piisiied professor a high rank in the
I finals of chemistry.
I if UflMSteto
I WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, US23,
I \' e ws later than the hicst wo caunot
I f u mi?h, but the dates of numerous foreign
I 3r t,cles (his day given, evidence ttiat we
■ :.re in possession ofEuropean intelligence
■ several days later than tl'iat before pub-
I jishetl- Our readers will judge lor tliem-
I selves of the prospects they present.—
I The French, it will be seen, still make
I progress in Spain, though they occasion-
I ally meet with difficulties which indicate
I ♦hat they are not to expect to move at
8 all times upon a smooth and even surface.
■ j t cannot be rationally supposed, that the
8 constitutional bodies in Spain would have
I made the show of resistance they have
I (jojg, to the menaces and aggressions of
I France, had they not felt in some degree
I confident of being able to oppose in a
I manner honorable and effectual their es-
I torts to coerce them to their views. We
I therefore have us yet, seen little of the
I effects of the warfare which it is
I intended shall be carried on against their
I invaders. When these are spread over
I the country, and presenting a less impo-
I sing form than what they do in a solid
I body, then the detached and scattering
I parties will select their victims, and the
I flower and pride of the French army
I will probably but enrich with their blood
I that soil which they expected to conquer.
I Should the invading army move on,
I and without many opposing obstacles
I even reach, find possess themselves of,
I Madrid, the business of returning to
I Frame will be one of some little interest
I 4oi(l hazard; and if they can neither keep
I possession of the place with comfort, nor
I leave it wl h safety, the consequences of
I th” ' ■ tor-taking may be presented to
I them with new features. It might not
I com;;iirt altogether with the dignity of
I the to consider the French, even
I in their successes in Spain, as but enter
I ing Ihe trap in which their destruction i?
I to be insured. It is well known that in
I liigh spirits and frolicksome glee, the rat*
I anil mice will enter those wire apart-
I nients, the entrance to Which is made
I easy and convenient, and into the occu
| pation of which a tempting bait often in-
I vltesthem —But when they have feasted
I in fancied security till the hour of re-
I turning home arrives, then it is that
I their temerity becomes obvious; and
I they find themselves within the power ol
I an enemy against whom they are unable
I to contend, and from whom they have
I no power to escape. Whether there
I may not be somethin;; - like rat. traps to i
catch men, or men traps to secure sol
diery in Spain, time will determine.-
Overrunning a territory, and conquer
ing > nation, are two very different per
formances.
It is stated in some of the northern pa
pers, that most of the houses consumed
in the late destructive fire at Fredericks
burg, were insured at the Mutual As
suranco Office in Richmond, Va. and that
the loss to that office will not probably
be short of forty thousand dollars.
■ An elderly and worthy lady, in Vcr
mont, with the exulting feelings of a
parent, being desirous of exhibiting her
eon’s proficiency in knowledge and accu
racy of memory, particularly La his ac
quaintance with his cate. - bism, called
him up in the presence of Col. Levi, and
asked him, “ray son, into what estate
did the fall bring mankind ? “Into tie
state of Vermont,” replied the lad.—
Whether such a location was considered
by f be mother a sufficient evidence of a
fallen state, or whether the shrewdness
of the lad led him to consider it a just
consequence of it,,- is not known; but it
seems his catechetical exercises were not
continued,—had they been, it is pro
bable that his sagacity might have sug
gested a relief from his deplorable con
dition, by a removal to Alabama, Mis
souri, or New Connecticut.
Numbers of the good citizens of New
York have recently been attracted to
Brooklyn, where rumor has declared,
with imposing gravity, that a new born
infant, with distinct articulation, pro
nounced the alarming prophecy, that
New York would the present year be
desolated with yellow fever, so far be
yond all former example, that those who
should escape the ravages of the pesti
ence would not be sufficiently numerous
b «ry,the dead.” We have not seen
the affidavits of those who heard
Ibis alarming sentence-and the child it
** av * n t uttered It, closed its eyes and
ook leave of all earthly prospects. Tol
“ 09e who are aware of the influence of
■s *“P #r »Utioo on the human miuJ, and* of
with which Usings mnrvellou,
received, It will not be surprising
tach a report should gain belief, and
,\hoh* so Strong too, that many who did
,; not hear the Infant’s oration will have
i Utile doubt that they have seen peisons
• wto d,d hear it, or who came very „W,
’ hearing it. Hundreds, it is said, wont
to see the prodigy, or learn the particu
lars of its first communications with the
things of this world—and there are, we
have no doubt, hundreds in New York
who wduld now be ten times more alarm
ed at the appearance of a case of fever,
than they would have been, had not the
genius, or the folly, of originating this
wonderful infant prediction been called
into exercise. Thousands of persons, we
presume, might be collected to sec a
man creep into a pint bottle, and many
would more readily believe that an infant
of an hour old, delivered a smart sensi
ble speech to those who first welcomed
the squalling orator into that cin le
where his consequence was acknowled
ged, than they would believe that in the
payment of their debts, and particularly
of such debts as were due to printers,
they were not only performing an act ol
justice, but one which might put the
language ot (hanks, if not of prophecy, into
the mouths of both children and adults.
/ COMMUNICATED.
Tli/l ladies of the Edgefield Village
Congregation, to promote the Bible
cause, and to offer a small token of
respect for their minister, have made
him a life-member of the American
Bible Society. The certificate of
membership was presented to him,
on Saturday the I-ltli June, and on
the succeeding day, an opportunity
was taken to make die following pub
lic acknowledgement.
i It is with the sincere;;) pleasure
that 1 acknowledge the receipt of a
certificate constituting me a member
for life of the American Bible Socie
ty ; which.certificate has been pro
cured at the expense of S3O 00, con
tributed by the ladies of this congre
gation. Considering this as a token
of personal regard from you, my fe
male friends, 1 can never he insensi
ble to it, nor can 1 suffer this oppor
tunity .to pass without tendering to
you my hearty thanks, and the assur
ances of my reciprocated esteem —
l\lay the great Head of the Church
sanctify our mutual relations, and
during the period of (heir Subsistence,
whether long or short, may we live
in a still more endeared and profita
ble intercourse.
But your minister is far the least
important object, on which this art of
yours reflects its lustre. It looks
the grand object of the American Bi
ble Society, the dissemination of the
hible to the destitute. Already has
this little effusion of your benevo
lence mingled with the bright-rolling
waters of that ‘ River, the streams
whereof make glad the city of our
God—of that river which directs its
renovating and glorious course to till
i the ends of the earth, fast on lire bor
ders of which grows the tree of life,
bearing all manner of fruits, whose
leaves are for The healing of the na
tions.
And, oh delightful thought! In
that day when the amount of all hu
man charities shall he summed up,
and the effect of all human efforts shall
bo fully disclosed, will it be seen, how
much you have contributed to rescue
mankind, and your own sex in parti
cular, from degradation and wretch
edness—to sanctify and dry up the
torrents of ruthless woe—to light up
the path to heaven to the benighted
and despairing—and to lead the wea
ry, repentant wanderers home to
God. Then shall you reap the fruit
of your doings—Then shall it be said
unto you—come ye blessed of my fa
ther, inherit the Kingdom prepared
for you from the foundation of the
world—For I was an hungred and ye
gave me meat —f was thirsty and ye
gave me drink—l was a stranger and
ye took me in, —Naked and yc'clolh
ed me—l was sick, and ye visited me
—I was in prison, and yc came unto
me —For in as much as ye have done
it unto one of the least of these my
Brethren, ye have done it unto me.
May you ever enjoy she richest con
solations of that bihle you would give
to others, and may you be made par
takers of the-eternal inheritance it
reveals, through Jesus Christ our
Lord.’
Rise on the Mississippi . —A letter
from Nathez, of the 15lh ult. states
“ that all (he hopes of the Louisiana
planters are destroyed. The low
lands are all under water; and, with
hut here and there a high ridge, this
immense stream presents a breadth
of thirty miles. Immense crevices
are bursting the levees below, which
strike terror into the plan ters all
along the coast. The overflow, it is
apprehended, will be as great as in
1815. Crops are pretty generally
abandoned. —The destruction among
the cattle, the deer, and the inhabi
tants of the forest generally, will he
great. As the water approaches,
they take refuge upon the highest
points they can find, until, surround
ed and famished, they sink down and
parish. Families flying from this
ii u sistuhh evil, prevent a melancholy
sight.’*
( From Acw Orleans. —Accounts
? J n oin Ncw-Orleuus of the Ist iust.
s state that the waters of the Missis
i sippi continue high and had broken
i through the levee in several places.
. ihe cotton market was brisk, but
, without any improvement in prices.
Freights were declining.
It is said in the National Intelli
, | gencer, that Com. Porter and a
> 1 part ol bis squadron may soon be e\-
i | pected home.
l i ■■
I 'U' C *Q(fi ceo J Postmaster General.
1 I his office, from which the incum
bent is about to retire, is one of great
i difficulty and involving an onerous
. responsibility.
1 1 here are in the United States up
, wards of 5000 Post Offices, to each
, of which the Postmaster General has
to assign adeputy. This itself is a
, most arduous task. And one in the
performance of which, do as ho may,
[■ he will incur censure. Each appli
cant has his host of friends, who urge
his pit tensions with all possible ar
dor. The selection, which from the:
equipoise ot recommendatory’test!-'
monials is often extremely difficult—|
is almost certain to produce dissatis
faction, and hostility to the appoint- i
■jing power, among the unsuccessful
•I candidates, and their numerous sup-,
' porters. The incumbent himself
enters upon the duties of his office
‘ surrounded by opponents vigilant in
the* scrutiny of iiis official acts, and
’ although ignorant of what constitutes
1 his duty, predisposed to complain of
his conduct, and ever ready to repre
sent him ns unworthy of his trust.—
Hence, the Postmaster General is
perpetually beset with animadver
-1 sions against his deputies. Petitions
1 for their removal, and counter peti
tions defending fheir conduct and
character, pour in upon him daily.—
No matter what may he his decision
upon them, one party or the other is
1 disappointed—ami tints new sources
of discontent and defamation are
opened.
Almost every individual in the
’ nation has some correspondence
through the channel of the mails; and,
among the thousands who have inter-
J course with the thousand of Officers
‘ throughout the country, events daily
■ occur which give rise to complaints
against the mail regulations. A let
ter is expected—it does not arrive
because - ' it never was written—the
Postmaster General is blamed ! A
• letter is misdirected, or lost by a
1 servant on his way to the Post Office
", —the impatient expectant vents his
- imprecations against the management
’ of the Post Office system! A hun
gry creditor has been promised a
I remittance through the mail, from
‘ his pennyless omnprincipled debtor,
and another letter informs him that
' the bank bills were duly committed
' to l!ie mail—the falsehood gives some
respite from the pain of being dunned,
’ or the horrors of a suit, and the fault
is heaped, with curses, upon the
’ heaus of the Postmaster General and
his Agents ! Money has really been
deposited in the mail, but, through
the villany’ofa Postmaster, or Car
rier, has been purloined—but the
utmost vigilance and the most active
investigation have been unable to
delect the robber; as a consequence,
the Postmaster General is pronoun - :
ced unfit for his station.
The roads have, through the in
clemency of the elements, grown al
most impassable—horses give out,
stages break down, rills have swollen
to torrents, and cannot he crossed,
the mails are delayed, and therefore,
every one sets himself about abusing
the Postmaster General, ihe ex
penditures of the Post-Office system
transcend its receipts; yet more ex
pensive measures are called for; new
1 Post Offices are required to be estab
lished, where they will not support
’ themselves. The Postmaster Gene
' ral is invited to propose a plan to in
’ crease its revenues, and thereby au
; thorize the adoption of the measures
1 demanded : he does so, and volumes
• are written against him for it.
If his deputies, acting under the
; responsibility of a solemn oath, per
■ form their duty u without fear, favor,
t or affection,” make the law their
r guide,establish and adhere to the lair
and necessary system ol rules, in the
transaction of the business ot their
■ offices — and pursue a course of rigid
; justice in collecting the postages due
i on the letters, papers, &c. which
r come to their offices; there are those
i who, bloated with vanity and self
i consequence, grumble because they
i do not receive more accommodation;
s because their supposed title to pmi
i lege, and distinction is sligiited, in be-
I ing tiius compelled to 'submit to re
? gulalions which are, and ought to bt j
, equitable in their operation : and the |
i Postmaster General is abused for sus
r mining the conduct of men thus cx
! I act, rigid, and unaccommodating. :
• in short, there is no end to the
, vexations to which this officei is sub
l jtided—*o great as would deter any
. qualified person from accepting it,
1 hut for the vast patronage which sur
, rouildlthe station with attractions not
easily IMisled. it i» this attribute to
the office that makes it so Important
Jt|; ! ■ .V VW •> ■■ >
tint a selection should be made from [
among that class of our citizens
whose character is such, and whose
situation has been so elevated, as to
exempt them from temptation to er-1
ror; who have few friends to provide!
for, and few enmities to gratify ; who
are no man's partisans especially,
and would therefore, be incapable of
perverting the inllnence of the office
to minister to their own or any body !
else s ambition. It is of great im-j
parlance, also, that the Head of that
Department should be a man of great i
! decision o( character, of a clear head, I
quick in perception,- and methodical
in iiis arrangements.
Whoever united these qualities,'
may venture to accept the office.
[iVuf. hit,
from the Ncw-York Dally Advertiser, June 4.
TRIUMPH OF MECHANISM.
A novel sight was presented yes
terday in Maiden-Lane, by the re
moval of a three story brick house a
considerable distance back from the
street, entire, and without the slight
est injury. It is the building lately
I occupied by Messrs. Clark & Sons,
\ Druggists, and as it stood on the eas
tern side of Maiden Lane, was dcstin
jcd to the fate of the neighboring
houses, which have been all levelled
to the ground. The ingenuity of Mr.
Brown, however, has saved much
i expense which at first was consider
j ed inevitable, for by gradually re
moving the foundation and replacing
1 it with large timbers formed like the
j ways used in launching a ship, lie
! prepared it for a removal of twenty
i one feet back, which he has already
! nearly effected. The new level of
| the street is to be from 12 to 15 inch
es higher than the old, which made
it necessary to give the ways a cor
responding elevation, this ponderous
mass of brick was slowly moved up
an inclined plain by the force of five
iron screws, three of which are appli
ed horizontally to the front of the
building, and the other two in the
cellar. So smooth and gradual was
the motion, that not the slightest in
jur) was visible, though wo observed
glass vessels standing on one of the
mantle pieces; and the full adequacy
of the (bice to the object, is proved
by the fact that a considerable num
ber of people weie in the house, and
were walking about the chambers in
the third story during the removal.
Mr. Brown is a man of great me
chanical genius, and a native of Mas
sachusetts. it is hoped lie will re
ceive the encouragement due to so
ingenious and useful an invention ;
which may save a large expense to
the city every year. He has made
other successful attempts of this sort,
among which that of the house at
Richmond Hill is the most remarka
ble, where lie removed a large frame
filled in with brick, and lowered it
about 30 feet, with two stacks of
cliimnics standing. But this is the
first experiment he has made on a
building entirely of brick, and it bids
fair to be equally successful.
ilcUfltoug dutf
most buck’s anecdotes.
AUGUST t
DECT, xxxiii. 19. They shall surk of the abun
dance of (lie seas, and of treasures hid in the sand.
It was on this day that Columbus
discovered the continent of America,
in the year 1498. This discovery
was no doubt intended by Providence
for the wisest of purposes, as the re
sult has proved. Here it was that
many who were persecuted in Eng
land for conscience sake, found a
safe refuge. Many indeed were their
difficulties, but they preferred the
wilds of America, rather than violate
their consciences. Here too they
learned something which probably
they would have been ignorant of,
hud they remained at home. Among
many other hardships, they were
sometimes in such straits (or bread,
that the very crusts of their former
tables in England would have been a
a dainty to them. Upon one occa
sion, necessity drove the women and
children to the sea-side to look for a
ship expected to bring them provi
sions; but no ship for many weeks
appeared; however they saw in the
sand vast quantities of shell-fish, since
called clams, a sort of muscle. Hun
ger impelled them to taste, and at last
they fed almost wholly on them, and
to their own astonishment were as
cheerful, fat, and lusty, as they had
been in England, with their fill of
the best provisions. A worthy man,
one day after they had all dined on
clams without bread, returned (iod
thanks for causing them to suck of
the abundance of the seas, and of
the treasures hid in the sand, a part
iof the blessing with which Moses
blessed the tribe of Zebulun before
bis death; a passage till now unob
served by the company, but which
i ever after endeared the writings of
Moses to them.
M i.ll ■ —I J
(£]» We arc authorized
to uiuMiuiK o Thomas L, Bohmiuk
|>). ai« Landidaii far a so i in die
Dome of Represent!' lives of this state
from Columbia County.
/tine 95 114
1 * TO FAMILIES,
on.
*id\J libls. of superior Hour, newly
ground expressly for family use, just re
j cto veil,—Persons winking for a barrel of
i excellent Flour, ‘white and sweet, cau
’ get it by callii'** nt iho More of
A. M. Woolsey & C».
.Bridge Bunk Building ;
ALSO, FOR SALE,
50 Bids, No. 3 Mackcrat
30 Do prime Pork Ncw-York City
Inspection
June 25 Jl4
07* The Branch of the Acade
my on the band-lull, will be iu operation
by Tuesday next, the Ist day of July.
J t he subscriber will receive pupils either
1 in English only, or in Classical and En
glish studies, under his own immediate
i instruction, of either sex and of any age.
Those who may wish the hours of tuition
to be limited to the loreuoon of each day
arc informed that on application to him,
particular arrangements may lie made
for their accommodation, without any
loss iu the usual number of exercises.
Mr, Samuel Douglass is employed as
English Teacher, iu town, to commence
his services the Ist of July. Such is my
confidence, both in the ability and integ
rity of Mr. Douglass, that 1 venture to
-ay, should there exist any reasonable
discontent with the proficiency of his pu
pils, die tuition money in all such cases
will be refunded.
W. T. Brautly, Rec.
June 25 l|4 2t
To be Rented,
a From the first dy of October
next, that block of buildings
fronted by the stores now occu
pied by O’Keefe & Harford, on Broad st.
and terminating on Centre-street; two
nonses on Kevnold-strcet, al present te
nanted by Mrs. Wih n and O’Hanlon.
with a commodious Ware house annex d;
also, the house occupied by O’Loan V.
Bonos, on Uroaibatrcct. Apj lication to
bo made to
Joiin B. Egan,
City ilntel.
Juno 25 114 wtO
CCTf The Steam Boat Ham
r.uuii, will leave this place lor : harlec
ton, on Saturday next, at 6 o’clo k, A
M.—(or freight, or passage apply to Hie
Captain or board, or to
Sprotill & Pincliback.
Hamburg, June 2i 114 lip
(£p The Copartnership
of J. .v 11. Ely is litis day dissolved by
mutual consent. All persons indebted
to said firm arc requested to make im
mediate payment lo Horace Ely, who
will attend to settling nil business of the
concern.
John Ely-
Horace Ely.
Juno 19 114 (it
itT" r f’ho Book-selling
and Stationary business will becoutio ied
by lliu subscriber, who, thankful for (he
past, will endeavor to merit the future
custom ol bis friends and the public.
Horace Ely.
June 19 114 tit
Toilent, “
Until the first of October ilekt,
.MM . 'be corner Boom irouting Ellis
and Washington streets, in the basement
story of Mr. A. J. Dill’s Dwelling House,
it is at present occupied by the subscri
ber, as a Law Office, and is a pleasant
situation.
T. F. Wells.
June 25 114 If 1
Notice. ;
DURING my absence from the State
for a lew months, Mr. Marshall
Keith and Mr. Zachariah Garnett are
authorized lo act as uiyaltornies. ]
Wm. Thomas, ,
June 25 114 3tp )
Doctor Clarke
# > E-I'EL ( FULLY tenders his ser
l!V vices, to the inhabitants of Augusta
and its vicinity in the various branches
of his profession. He has opened his of
fice on .M’lulosh street opposite the
Dwelling of Dr. Watkins, where ne may
at all t ines be found when not prolesaion
aliy engaged.
June 25 Dd
City Sheriff’s Sale.
ON toe first Tuesday in August next,
al the Market-House, in the city of
Augusta, between the usual hours, will
tic sold,
One Negro Man, named Joe,
levied on as the properly ot Lnd VV,
Harris, to satisfy an execution issuing
liom the Mayor’s Court of the city of Au
gusta, in favor of John S. Saylor & Co.
against -aid Harris. j
ALSO,
One house and lot, situate, ly
ing and being in the cily of A"(l„iulh,
bounded on the north by Ellis-street, oi |
the cast by a lot owned by Anderson Wat
kins, on the west by J. Biguun, and on th
east by a lot belonging to the estate of
James Walker, deceased—-levied on to
satisfy an execution in favor of TWlip
Crane, against George Wallace.
AI.KO,
A lot ofland, with the improve
ments thereon,situate in Augusta, round
ed ou Uiajsorth by Willson and Nesbit’s,
on the cast by Willson’s lot, oa the north
by Broad-street, and on the west by Nes
hit’s lot-levied on as the property of
Patrick Kelly, U- satisfy an execution a*
xuinst said Kelly iu favor of John I'hinlxy.
Conditions cash, purchasers to pay lor
titles,
CJcorgeM. Walker,
ShtriffC. A.
June W IV4 Ids »
AUCTION.
BY A. M. pDBBY.
To-Morrow Morning,
at 10 o'cloc k,
WilLbc sold, before his sttre,
O Hhds. Sugar
i do. Rum
1 pipe Cognac Brandy
I do. Gin
4 calks Porter
3 boxes Cotton Cords
10 bbls, Sugar
10 do. Flour
U half do. Shad
8 bbls. Jamaica Hum
20 boxes Scgara
5000 Quills
Boot*, Shoes, Hats, ic.’.Vc.
And in Store , at 11 o'rlurk ,
an assortment of
DRY GOODS,
As Cotton Shirting, Plaids, Stripes, nan
keens, Ac. &c. Uc.
Terms at sale.
June •15
Stolen,
UHT of William Paris’s waggon, of
Libert county, at a camping ground
near the Quaker Spring*, on the nlgjft
of the llllli msl. a bl;u k bromh loth coat, „
about half worn, with a small patch on"
one side opposite the pocket, the sjMyi'ot
recollected ; also, a pocket
of seventeen dollars mi-1 fifty cents, in
hills of the follow hi" description : one ten
dollar bill, on the Darien flunk, .No. not
recollected, part o I the right end of the
bill olf, pretty much w rn, and his a
red stain op one of the corners ; also, a
fivo dollar bill on the State iiank of
Georgia, stained in asimlar maum r, .u d
other small bill- not recollected , dso,
two hats, one a white, wit', a tob i ble
large brim, stained on the undti part
with cherries, not half von; 'he other
a small black hat, pretty much worn.
A reward ol leu dollars will be given
for the recovery ol the money and pro
perty, or such mfoim t'ioi as may lend
to the same.
David Barron.
Win. Davis.
Any person discovering ami delivering
the above at the Chronicle Other, will
receive the above reward.
June 25 t |J ;{(
isheri/l’s Male.
WILL be sold, al the mkelfloii'e,
i i the (own of Louisville, on the
hi-* Tuesday in August next, between
Ilia to uai houi *, Uit following property
to wit;
One Negro Woman, named
Ciiurtolte, ami her lour • 'lni tr< :, .an*
dal, Jim, John and Sally—levied on as
tho property of Lewis Lennon, to satis
fy tin execution in favor of Garland
Hardwick, and one in favoi *». John
Lyons.
ALSO,
One Negro Woman, named
Jcmnun, and tier two . hinii n, t.' •• • .-•!
ai i Roger—levied on as the pr ,;>« i .>f
Jared Tuniii.isoii, to satirdy two execu
i ons in favor ol iiaylcs k. Latbrop, and
John Lost wick. *
ALSO,
One Waggon and Gear, and
one sorrel ami one black horse —levied
on as the properly of Janies Nc< ley, to
satisfy 'in execution in favor of Wni. N.
Harmon.
ALSO,
54 Acres pine Land, with one
half ol a grist mill a.id cotton gni, lying
on the waters of Reedy creek, in Jidler-
Hon c’ty, adjoining lands ol Elisha Camp
bell —lewedon as the prey rty of dieh
ard Jackson, to satisfy an exe< ulim in fa
vor of Stephen Fohume vs. said Jackson
and Needham, dec.
ALSO,
One Negro Girl, named Beck,
taken as the property of lirya.A Lane, to
satisfy sundry ‘mail executions—The
said negro having been levied on by a
constable and returned tome.
ALSO,
One Negro Woman, named
Jude, taken as the property of Isb un
Lawrence, to satisfy sundry small execu
tions in favor of John Sibley and others—
levied on and returned by a constable.
John Herring,
Dipt Sheriff <f Jejfenun County.
June 25 114 ul
Georgia, Burke County. '
MUSts Cox, f Crept. Shubart’s dis
trict, tolls before me a bay horse,
about fourteen and an half hand- high, a
bout six years old, with his r.giit fire
fool white up to the set-lock, wdh white
streaks on his hind f el—apt r n <'d by
Thomas Ward and William d. L: idwelj,
on oath, at sixty dollars. June !(>?!• 1123.
John Bell, j. p.
Extract from the toll book, ibis !9th
June, 1823.
John Carpenter, CPk,
June 25
City .Sheriff’s IS ale.
ON the first l uesilay in Jmy next,
will be sold, at the Market house,
in the city of Augusta, between the usu
d hours of sale,
One grey horse, sold by order
of Court, as the properly of Ben jah
Collars.
Conditions of mile, cash, belorc dclive
y J. S. Beers,
Deputy sl ' : tj) C■ A.
June 25 1 14 2t
Administrator’s Sale. \
WILL be sold, on the 10th end 11 th v^“ ■
of July next, at the late reel
dent eof Benjamin L Infrey, dec. all
ilia personal estate of said deceased—
consisting of hursts, cuttle, hugs, house- *
hold mid kin hen furniture, fee.
Term* will be made knoWU*m the day.
Win. P. Iknlc,
8. Crnwl'ord,
AJmnflniMt «%
I Jssue? M»W wul