Augusta chronicle. (Augusta, Ga.) 1820-1821, November 23, 1820, Image 2

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> * * 7-* JPUBLISHKI) *T , kban a ciumroN. '■ TteftAoj iVloTning. J. 'I ' -t-t wr.rs . r • 7 ~~' Chtictaw Treaty . We feel great pleasure in being able to communicate to the public, the inter esting intelligence of a lieaty having been mane with the Choc aw tribe of In diai**; by which an extensive tract ,ot country is added to the limits of Our stau ; giving at , -.cean estenaiou to our popu lation and strength} ami embracing a large surface of as fine land as any in the Uni ted States. Lying in a mild and tempe ratr- latitude—possessing the fine riv<-rs of P-*arl, Dig lilac It, and Yazoo; the two latter running Imo tbe .Mississippi—#sd , bounded by Ibis river for the distance of two hundred miks:. exhibiting at once lh> most* pleasing variety of hill and dale, piairie and grove, and furnishing a variety ot sell, and a salubrity of air, not Hurpas. sed by any otllfcr region—making it alto geliter a most important acquisition.—- yv heartily congratulate our fellow cit izens on the sue essfnl ir-sue of tins tri-a ly, vdiiih, under every sspect, was diffi cull ,md presented,-at first, almost insurmountable harriers. * Unqualified praise isduc to Genls. Jack luu and Hinds for their indefatigable and unwearied cxti'iioas to surm.o®pt the clif fir ,Pies which pr< sented themselves; anti we sav, without any hesitation, rtu other men in the government coujd have been selected, so well qualifi-d to ac comjdish the -andtmus task, and fulfil the duties which devolved on them. Bv this treaty we have an addition*©! nearly six millions of acres-, which, when runout and •cttled, will give us at once five or six populous counties, thereby throwing into the North Eastern scale a weight suffi ci / to equipoise with the South West, and will fix the central point where th. coWtmon interest and convenience -of the citizens will unite. We have long since, in corifmou with our fellow citizens felt the deepest solicitude for the success p) thl« treaty; knowing how important ii lain promoting our strength and yespec t-u-diiy as a State. *> Jf Treaty offrier dly limit* and aeeomnurda- Hoi. between the United Slates of .‘lnter ira und the Chsctniv Nation of Indians . Setnm and concluded at the treaty ground in' said Nation, rear Duke* Stand, on the Natch s Hoad, PREAMBLE. WiitniAs, it an important object with the P' esidt nt of the United States to pro moie,'*lie civilization of the Choctaw In diana, by the establishment of schools a mongst them, and, to perpetuate them as a nation, by exchanging for a small part of their lands here a country beyond the Mississippi riaer, where all, who live by hunting, and will not work, may be col lected anti settled together;—and, Where aa, it is deslmb’e to the State of Missisklp {ii,to obtain « small part of tbe land be onging to the said Nation, for the tin tut al accommodation of the parties, and for securing the happiness and protection of the whole Choctaw nation, as well as preserving that harmony aid friendship which so happily'subsist betw.en them and the United States—-James Monroe, President’ of the United States of Amer ' ica, by Andrew Ji-ckson, Major General in the Army of th>* Unit' d Stales; and General Thomas Hinds; of the State of • Mississippi; commissioners plenipotentia ry of the,United States oh the one part: j and the Mingoes, Head Men and Warri*. ors ol the. Choctaw Nation, in lull coun cil assembled on the other part: have freely and voluntarily entered into the following Articles, viz:— Art it hi Ist—To enable the President of the United Stales to carry into effect the above grand and humane objects, the Mingoes, Head Men and Warriors of the Choctav Nation; in full council assembled, in behalf of themselves ami said nat ion, do by these presents cede to the United States of America, all the land lying end being within the boundari a 'following, ■viz;—beginning on the Choctaw bounda ry, east as Pearl river, at a point due south from the White Oak Spring, on the Old Indian Path, thence north to ■said Springe thence northwardly to a Black Oak, standing on the Natchcs road, about forty nates; eastward of Duke’s fence, marked A. J. and blazed, with two large pines and a black oak standing near thereto, and marked as pointers;— thence a straight line to the head of Black Ci-» ek, or Rouge Loosa;—t nonce down Black Creek, or Bouge Loosa, to a small lake;—thence a direct course, so as to the Mississippi, one mile below the Arkansas river;—thence down'the Mis sissippi to our boundary;—thence round and along the same to the beginning. Article 2jL—For, and ii consideration of the foregoing cession on the part of the Choctaw Nation, and in par* satisfac tion for the same, the Commissioners of the United States, inbehalf of the Unit ed States, do hereby cede ta said Nation a tract of country west of the Mississippi tiver, situate between the Arkansas an 1 Bed river, where the lower boundary line of the .Cherokees strikes.the iamb, theuc-.- up the Arkansas, to the Canadian fork, and up the same to its sopree, thence due south to the Red river* thence down Red river three miles below Little river, •vhich empties into Ued river on the north side; thenee a direct Hue to the be* ginning. Article 3d.—To prevent any dispute on the subject of the boundaries mention ed in the first and second articles, it is hereby stipulated between the parties, that the same shall be ascertained and distinctly marked, by a commissioner or commissioners, to b> appointed by the Unit< d States, accompanied by such per sons as the Choctaw Nation may select, said nation having thirty days previous notice of the time and place at which the operation will cammence. The person so chosen by the Choctaws, shall act as a pilot or guide, for which the United States will pay him two dollars -per dsy, whilst actually engaged in the perform a nee ot that duty. Article 4tn.—The boundaries hereby established between the Choctaw Indians and thetUnited States on this side of the Mississippi river, shall remain without al tendon, until the period at which said nation shall become ao civilized and en a lightened, as to be made citizens of the United States; and Congress shall lay oil 1 a parcel of land, for the benefit of each r amily or individual in the Nation. Article sth.—For the purpose of aiding and assisting,tire poor Indians, who wish to remove to the cohntry Hereby ceded, on the part of the United States, and to enable them to do w< 11 ai*d support Ujtnr families, jhe Commissioners of the United states engage, in behalf of said States, to give each warrior a blanket, kettle, rifle gun, bullet-moulds, and wipers, and am mu nit ica, snflicient for hunting' and de fence for tine yea’; said warriors shall also be supplied with. Corn, to support them and their families for the same pe riod, and whilst travelling to the coun try above ceded t o the Choctaw Nation A’■tide 6',h—The ecomiiwionejs of the United Staus further cavenant and agree, on the part of the said. States, that an Agent Sha I be appointed, in due time, for the benefit of the ClioctAw In dians. who may he permanently settled in . the country ceded to them, beyond the Mississippi river; an.f at a convenient pe riod a Factor ahall be sent there with goods, to supply their wants; a Black smith shall also be settled airfbogst them' at a point most convenient to the popula tion; and a faithful person appointed, whose duty it shall be to use every rea sonable exertion U> collect all the wan dering Indians belonging to the Choctaw Nation, upon the land hereby provided for their pt i manent settlement. Articl 7th- -O tof the lands ceded by the Choctaw Nation to the U. States, the Commissioners aforesaid, in behalt o;' Hie said States, further covenant and agree, that fifty-fonr si ctions of one mile square, shall he laid out, in good land, by tile President of the U, States, and sold for the purpose of raising a fund, to be tippl ed to the support of the Choctaw Schools, on both sub s of the Mississippi river; three fourths of said fund shall In applied for tbe benefit of the Schoo s here, | and the remaining fourth fur tile establish ' ment of one or more beyond the Missis sippi; the whole to be placed in the ’ hands *»f tl»fe President of the U. States, and to be applied by him ex’essly and exclusively to this valuable object. ' Article Bth.—To remove aify discon . tent which may have arisen in the Oh-c --taw Nation, in consequence of Six thou sand dollars of their annuity having been appropriated annually for sixteen t ears by some of the Chiefs, for the support of tluir Schools, the Commissioners of the U. States oblige tht mselves on the part of said States,' to a t apart-an additional tract of good land fur raising a fund equal to that given by the said Chiefs, so that the whole of the annuity mav remain in tlte Nation and be divided amongst them, and in order that exact justice may be done to thq poor and distressed of said Nation, it shall be tire duty of the ageiyt to see that ihe wants of every deaf, duin, blind and distressed Indian, shall be first supplied out of said annuity, and thehallance equal-, ly distributed amongst every individual of said Nation. / v Article 9th, AlLthose who have sepa rate settlements, and fall within the limits of the lands ceded by the Choctaw Nation to the United States, and who desire to remain where they now reside, shall be secured in a tract or parcel of land, one mi'p square, to include their improve- ■ mciits; any one tfKto prefers removing, it he doi «bo within one j ear from the date of this Treaty, shall be paid theirfuil value, to he ascertained by two persons to be ap poi> ted by the President of the United States. Article 10th. As there are some "wbc have valualbe buildings on the roads; and els-where upon the land hereby ceded; , should they remove, it is further agree# hy the aforesaid Commissioners in behalf of the United States, that the incon venience of doing so, shall be considered, ami such allowance made as will amount vo an equivalent—far this purpose the?e shall be paid to the Mingo PuckshenUbbee, five hundred dollars ; to Harrison, two hundred dollars; to Captain Cobb, two hundred dollaraj to William Hayes two hundred dollars; o Oldano, two hundred dollars, and to all others who have com fortable houses, a compensation in the same prop; rtion. Article 11th. It is also provided hy the CommisMoners of the United States, and they agree in behalf of said Stares, that those Choctaw Chiefs and Warmors, who have not received compensation for their services during tlu campaign to Pensacola, in the late war, shall be paid whatever is due themove. and above the value bf the blanket, shirt, flup and leggins which have been delivered to them. Article 12th In order to promote in dustry and sobriety iu%onggt all classes of the Red people in this Nation, but par ticularly the poor, it is further provided by tbe parties,.that the agent appointed to reside here, shall be and he is ben by vest - ed with full power to seize and confiscate all the whiskey which may be introduced into Said nation, except that used a public stands, or brought in by the permit of the principal Chiefs of the three Districts. Article 13th. To enable the Mingoes, Chief and Head Men of the Choctaw Nh ■ turn to raise and organize a corps of light horse, consisting of ten men in each Pis ' trict, so thatgood order may be maintained and that all men both White and Red may be compelled to pay their just de -ts, it is , stipulated and agreed that the sum oftu o hundred dollars, be appropriated by the United states for each, Disctrict, annual ' ly, and placed in the hands of the Agent to pay the expences incurred in raising and establishing said corps, which is to act as executive officers in maintaining good order and compelling bad men to remove ;rom the Nation, who are not authorized in live in it by a regular permit from the Agent. Article lA. Whereas the father of the beloved Chief Mushulatubbee of the low er Town, for and during his life, did re ceive from the United States, the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, annually; it is hereby stipulated that his son and sue cesser Mushulatubbec, shall annually be paid the same amount during bis natural life, to commence from the ralificatu n of this Treaty. Article 15th The peace and. harmon; 1 'subsistingbetween the Choctaw Nation of Indians and the jjU mted States, are hereby renewed, continued and' declared to be perpetual. . , Article ]6th. These Aarticles shall take effect and become obligatory on the con'racting parties so soon as the same shall be ratified by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate of the United States. J 9 : s In testimony whereof, the- Cpmmissioit- Plenipotentiary of the United, S ales. and the Mingoes Head Men jfnd Warriors of flic Clioctav Nation, have herewith subscribed ther names and affixed their seals, at the place above written, this eighteenth day,of October in the year of oar one thousand eight* hundred and twenty and of the Independence of the Unit ed Stales the forty-fifth. » («fojrw» sr) AND HEW JACKSON. THOMAS H\NI)S. Commissioner* on the part of the U S. MKPIt hinges, PUCKSHESVBBF.R , ' pushamat H.ur , MUSHULATUBBER, [and upwards of one hundred Chiefs and Harriers ] ■ ' , J 4TO\S&TA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23. -■ ■ ■ " - MEETING OF CONGRESS. Thesec ind session of the Sixteenth Con gress commenced on the 13th inst. The. National Intelligencer 6f that da'c, informs us, that in the Senate,<*/»/<« Gailltird act cd as President, the Vice Presidin' being , absent We are unadvised of other pro-, ce< dings, except uninteresting details. r>r-pa atopy to an 'organization of both Hmist.'s. *: Commodsro Htfgh G. Catnfbell, of the American Navy, died in Washington City on the 12th instant. Georgia WgislatviTe. 03* Onr latest advices from Milledge vijle are to the 16th inst. Up to that pe,- riod the Legislature had not transact > d any business of importance—at which time it was supposed the session would not con tinue more than two weeks longer. The bill progressing before the House m' Representatives, to alter and diminish the representation, and to have biennial, instead of annual sessions, will occupy con siderable time. Mr. Upson’s resolutions instructing the Committee on Banks to examine into the stal and condition of‘.he several charter ed Banks in this State, will, it is appre In nded, elicif a dt bate by no means In considerable, or unpleasant. The avowed object of these resolutions is, t<» discover •’liether the Banks require State inlerfei • nce between than and the United Slates Bank at Savannah. The Bryan county election has consum ed much time, ahd will yct take up more The resolution requesting the Governor to issue a writ of election to fill the vacan cy, was lost in the Lower House; and a bill was then reported to authorise tlie Governor to issue a writ ot 'similar occur rences. What will be its fatels uncertain, as great diversity of opinion prevails a naong the members on the subject. The Bi/luenaa was violently raging in Milledgcville, particularly among the mem bers of the Legislature . Indeed, so gen eral was the influence of this disease, that the Legislature was on the eve of adjourn ing until the health of the members could he restored, ' The Bth I. ah or of Hercules! It will be seen from the following notice, that a spark of the old cluvalric fire, which, in times gone by, was wont to animate the heart of the Ito nan patriot, still sparkles in the bosom of one isolated native from the land of Callin' ry and Song. •But;'much as w<* admire the national chivalry of Da Ponte—much as it does honor to his .indi vidual feelings, still we cannot refrain from observing, thqt we think his enthu. siasm has rather “transported him beyond the bounds of reason ” —Poor, ill-fated Italy! so far hast thou sunk in tne mire of sensuality and crime, that thv departed glory, resplendent as it was, will not even extenuate the degraded state to which thou art .alien To the Editor efthf N. T. Evening Post. Srn—l have always considered your journal as a vehecle of well-established facts, of just and candid sentiments; and have generally observed, where the pres sure of editorial business required the publication of questionable facts, or of crude opinions, that the impression which they wouldflkturally make upon the pub lic mind was guarded against by some ac companying remarks from yourself. This however, has not been the case with re s >ect to the rermblication of the letter of Mr. Charles Philips, called by yon, the celebrated Irish orator. It cannot have es caped your observation that this letter contains an infamous slander iijjqn'tfle It. alian.character As an individual of that nation, glorying in the country from which I drew my birth, I mike use of the me dium of your paper, to invite ymirself, my former and present pupils in the Ital ian language, and all others who under, stand it, to attend a Lecture at mv house, No 17Jav—t. on the Hth of .lanuun next, in the evening, when 1 shall make an attempt to vindicate my country from the foul aspersi ms which have been pub licly cast upon it. . LOi’ENZO DA PONTE. We cannot furnish Mr. Fell with bra"ns a s well as matter.-The w ord “ amalgamated ** was merely allusive,- but was strong enough.we thought, to remind him of his strictures on the celebrated Amalgamating System, which was proposed some few years ags by a great personage.—The coupling of Queen Caroline and'Mr. C. to. gether in the manm rwe did, seems also en gmatical-to fir. F. We only meau< it as a ludicrous contrast between the freedom of enquiry, as some would have i in this country, aid as it is, iA that ot Great Britain. But, enough of this. We are now in structed to say, that the Editor of the - Chronicle alluded to, (who is absent try the country) did not get his authority from Mr. Fell, in the conversation they had— consequently his remarks, to say the leas of them, were prematui*. , <v Among the occurrences of the time, the recent events reported from Hispan iola, or St. Doming®, appear to attract a considerable share, of attention; nor is it surprising that events which *to materially affect the prospects of that important is land, and, by consequence, probably, the welfare of the neighboring islands, should be received with some interest here.— The island of St, Domingo embraces nearly 50,000 squase miles, and is, of course almost equal in s ze to some of our huge states. Next to Cuba, it is*Hot only the largest, but it is the most fertile and pleasant of all the West India Islands. Considering, therefore,- its extent and usefulness, its commercial capacities, the character of its governments, arrd its-pop/- ulatiori, aivd, yet more, its possible oppe ration upon live adjacent isfanda, it is nat j ura! that circumstances which promise to, re-modi-1 its power,.and which already give a more impeding aspect to its actual coiwiition, shou’d he considered as , wor thy of regard on this continent. /.The his’t ry of' yli’n rsliutd is famiiisr to most reai lers, as far back at has > as the hioodv r:it; litrophe which annihilated the French a*ittVmity twenty years ago, and expelled froi r the island every white who was for t.uu lie enough to escape the knife. Since the V. the island has remain-d in the bauds ofi'j-e Blacks: aid the political struggles, iti«i* Higst them wlrch followed that etCTit* end til in the establishment of an arbitra rv r t-gal government, (styled imperial tin der The lute chuff Christ ophe,) at Gape F ancois, in the northern pijrt, of the is land!; and of an elective and republican forr. j, «t Port-nn-Priivce in the South, tin dec the late President Pnfcibn, who, on his decease, was succeeded by the pre sent Presidr-ht, Gen. B< yer, a man of a bilit it-s and enterprise it Is said. A . war has subsisted for several years be twe;cn iluse two states; but the recent dei ith of the despot Chi iptophe, (receiv ini ; the late news as true,) will not only, it 1 s presumed, put an end to tnese bus •'til* ties, but it promises to be the prelude ah in to the entire subversion of the impe ri f regim , and, the consolidation of the w hole power of the whole island under •'ye Reynblican head. Th- ferocious ■ yrannj ofChristophc prepared his jmb j res, no doubt, for this change; they are jrastening to embrace it; ‘Boyer is in the field, and nothing, it appears, will arrest tile "Republican progress, unless, indeed, there exist some secret article of a certain celebrated treaty, which shall guarantee the imperial ant’ority ! To conclude, however, wjth only the remark which we intended la make on the,subject, we should consider the em bodying of (he power of the island,' un der one government favorable to the ad* vancement erf ts strength and resources, and of its capacity for exterior operations, as an event fraught with momentous consequences at least to the ether islands of the American Archipelago. Hitherto t s .power has been crippled, and its •trength wasted by internal wars 'When this cause ,f w eakness shall cease, as in all pro vability it soon will, and its gro-r --i 'g strength begin to be felt, st will pre sent an aspect tm its neigh ors -which they cannot regard .with i.idifference. •ATuf. Intelligencer, On the 4th inst. at Boston, anbtfikrvea s ! 1 was added to the American Navy _ i ” : ie schooner pierced for 1 2 euns, and measuring 190 'tons, was, h> wnched at the Navy Yard at that plac< Sine has been'built under the approp- in tieisi made at the last session of Congn-s 1 fo’ ? five small vessels to be employed a ga b vst the pirates in the Gulph of* M<;v ici». or those n.ore nefarious criminals th e dealers in slaves urn the coast of As ric ?«.— Sav. Museum. . 1 STEAMBOAT PELT CITY. Tffve Steam Boat-Felicity, for New Or lea is, to touch at Charleston, Savannah, Havana, Blakely and Mofiile, was up a Nev-r York on the 10th inst. to sail in 10 day si.— Sav. Museum. A 'report was rec?ived at Baltimore on the I’th inst. by thfj schooner Thre Daug kters, from Uaguira. that the Pat riots had been completely' defeated in an att »ck on C rthagena, with the loss of 700 slain.— £b. By an arrival from the West Indies, we learn ti vat Henry ChristopKe, Kjng of Hay ti. is no more. .The r -port is, that his majesty tried an exp-Violent on his own brains, !>y the means of a bullet; that he had been affli«Led with a palsy, anil that Kis troops revolting, his- majesty saved them the. trouble of committing an act of treason, !hy perpetratin'* an act of suicide. Th~ rumivrsgocs on r.tale, that president Royer’s a nny was in full march, and that he was j »ine<l by a large accession of l-'irce, from the royal standard; it may be, that the eimire ofHayti is berearterdoom ed to assn ne a republican form. King Henry, though in Cowpep’s phra seology .h e ‘was guilty of having a skin not colored like our own,* will not he in fired in comparison with anv of legit, i.nate sovereigns oft he day Let it b - re-* membered that his kingdom fell into his hands, torn by faction, and threatened with war frrmn abroad—that the mass of his subjects were ignorant, cruel, turbu- I nt and unruly - anTnever before believ. ed *o he capable of self government. has established colleges and temples—he has introduced Into his kingdom the arts of civilization—he has disciplined an un ruly mob—he has erected fortifications t >r externa defence, and established jus tice in the organization of the govern ment —he reformed, an unruly body o:‘ men, and disciplined them to order; he has replenished the exhausfed finances of . his kingdom, and maintained his authority u defiance of the power of th«* Bourdons; and has not set th • whole civilized world ’u commotion, to prove bis wife guilty of violating her marriage vows. Can any Vgitimate sav more than (his—can all of 'hem say as much? —Balt Atom. Chron In the New York National Advocate we find announced the marriage of General Bloomfield, (who commanded at Camp Cold Spring, in this district, during some ue of the war, says th* Georgetown Mr •opoiiOtn,) to Mrs. Isabella Macomb.— This venerable old gentleman we fin< ! • has become as gallant at the Court of Venus, aF he was in the Camp of Mars.— We wish him joy with all our hearts. "Hail happy fair, ' ‘-Hail happy pair, ‘•Hhil, hapjp y hapfjy swain-V • '■ . i . e, I AlUhor of theScotri, Mwfcwj don Magazine, lb-.- the month assert?, on what th e eTito* ♦ b-r --quesllorable aujthcritr, mb-oV'T " n ‘ formerly Miss MK*,llo C h, t SVr n< Thomas SBOtt Esq. payWer to Ls regiment, at present i„ Canada. Ve !l thtt to Sir Walter Scott, is bro ’ these novels, and not M- Ti, Lr ''f hiir.s. if, »a lately erroneously st«^^‘" Coit the Miirseillct Hymn, ami when u. ' f r * I ‘the King- was mixed with applause. *» '-tie I COMMUNICATE!) , I on Friday last I7ili tnr,, ~ I ISAUIIAItA I’IEIIOF,, I jam n P.erce of ti.is city, in the thiru' I eighth year of hef* age.—Uv the flp.ni •’ I "thtsladfi her husband his'be Jb mf ‘*![ I anafi-cuomue companion, and her cb 1 I dr<n of a kind and tender mother-jJ' . I mg her senses to Imp iast moment* n ,i I bmng perfectly resigned, site took 5?2 I fee. lonale farewell . f litem & all Um,, ? I mtmd her; and her friends have -he r „ I solauoh of believing that she died 1, I in the Lord, and is now in the enjoy ,' tl i I o’ abh sand immorality, 1 I “Th« meaary »f thejoit ii k’euM.” I ■ ■ I %A Ab*. w. I v « AXasSttir' l,ia I |d/ • I *t~ A I ’*•'' 11 "■ ,u ' I The Members I SOCI.M LODGE, ar* requested t 0 1 ■ y attend an Extra Meeting at {h,,r |, J I i To-morrow Evening aid oVToc, <n ,| j I so a regular meelicg on Friday ,|„ j*, f I December, at tin same hour —lt is tlesli- I : <■ , that AI.I, Members who are not nrj I : vented by sicktv-ss may appear at those I ■ I the Craft is to be transacted. I flv Order, I John VI. Kunzc, Sec, I November 28 t, I , d 11 ■ j -3 CMp.~ ~ I Ijl KOUAULT, coiifimies'to teach the I 4 • Forte, and French lang a«i I , -he will also give instructions in thru■!, | I i Bass and the art of preluding on me Piano I i Forte. y r , v . 9A ■ 1 liJi \KO FAI dUsi.l ” I I i 20th Novkmdkb, 1820. I 'TITHE Board of Directors having thh il y I -H declared a dividend of five I) -liars a I ts ire for the las* S’x months on the t’ap. I ital Stock of tills Hank, payment 1 1iereof |i wdl commence on Thursday (he 2dd i s’. I AUGUSTUS MOOKE, Cashier, ■ ‘November 23 * la wsw I i Irish Linens , Sugar, Ofi I Jre &c. ; I HbdsN. O. and Muscovado Sugar I 50 barrels da H 20 bags (ipffce I 20 de E. I. Sugar I 3n coils Rope H 150 pieces Cotton Bagging H 6 cases 4 4 a:,d 7 8 Irish Linens, H for sale by H Howard h VWiran, I November 23 * 3t ■ A Z ||| TO ft EXT. I Jind possession immedlateU g'ven H commodious Store sVua* JL ted mth upper p-rt ofT'road »U'c . H just nbove Mess''». 11. & it. Lang—.'p • Hj to the subscriber, or ti.Jno. Ca-ret cu* H Augustus Brux. ■ November 23 H THE SUBM'rW X I lirasHF.S to dispose oi l/ : ■ IT Hands, at reduced pi ic.s hr C':h ■ Ptoclnce or good town paper with e.al'ti-v- HHj • nient.—theJcnnwn good diaracier <4 Hands must be an induct met” to an) oi.c Hj wlio wishes to own such nroper’.v. Augustus Brux. ■ November 23 Va\w t \i\ V i\>-, H ATTOU NK £ AT tv\v. H fVJSIILXG T fjV, J/• i i { - 1 ][ 1 S - fl AVI.VG an extensive H in the atnte, can cadly fctl ’■ sons who .hive left this 'State / Hi . and-wiil leave no mt tpis u 0 • HH lect rt.y demends place ! i s Reference mav be had 'a ■ Stovall & Co. and to ’lhonu.s •Esq. wfho will receive s.ul ' ‘ mm business with which he may be - ■ Nov 20 ' ■ XsDABD. I Isham Thompson- ■ Offers his services to his frien ‘ s3nl H the public in ihe >i . Auction roinmisswn w I siness. ■ He occupies the stand ,ate '\. jL„ B ri B| Thompson and Ulark, where HB will be received and duly atte November 7. Having disposed of «?■ interest in the (JOK- H IU GUST A aiROMCLR U .if. GU G.iZETTF , to Mr- / hi . h »■ Ml Charlton, the subt -fiber tenders hanks to the community tor t ei -.» age he has hitherto cfj o .. J 51ly recommends his «nend n K consideration. „rrrrA7.VCJC if i:XJ. i.nw T. Dill CM- H. | November \