Newspaper Page Text
••Ths Sage ~ 1,1 '' ' '
dents are called’ K their ndamer—. nd
as, at the instance ot a lady, Mr. > .:.i l.iuen h..s
adopted the name of LooA .<■•«(/ lot iu> l-'-ICiUI
villa, in the environs ot Kinderhook, wu
leave to claim the credit ot fi-st naming its dis-
Utmuished owner as the sag: ot tlrat roman tc
itv Thus much for introduction to he
€r«e are about to state, winch ts tins. Ihe
X ofLindendori hasarrived tn Albany, where
K expected to remain unti the mm hmerv ot
the Allcmv Regenev works het er than it has
done of late—the wheels, ard spi m.Z>, and
screws, and wires, hat iuggot sadly out ot order.
A". Y. Coin.
Mr. Clay at Jackson,
The reception of the Hou Henry ('lay, at the
Capitol of .Mississippi, is represented to have
lieen grand and imposing m a very high degree.
He le°t Vicksburg Tuesday morning last, via
the railroad, accompanied by a delegation from
Jackson, a large concourse ot citizens and the
volunteer companies of Vicksburg as an escort.
At the depot near Jackson, he was met by an
immense assemblage ot people, from all parts
of the State, numbering from tour to six thous
and persons, of all ages, sexes and conditions,
by whom he was conducted to the large square
in front of the State tiouse. Here he was wel
comed in a neat speech by the Hon. Daniel
Mayes, to which he replied in an address occu
pying in its delivery nearly an horn. His
speech is spoken of as one of bis happiest cl
forts.and was received with the most enthusiastic
plaudits. At the conclusion of his lie
accepted an invitation trom his Excellency Gov.
Tucker, to visit the Executive m msioti mid
make it his quartets for the reception ol visitors,
where,during the dav, he was ca.led upon by
thousands, without regani to politics. M-n m
all patties united in paying the homage due to
his unrivalled talents and exalted patriotism,
and we are assured that hjs visit produced the
kindliest feelings on all sides. At night he at
tended a very elegant ball prepared at the thea
tre which was graced by a larger portion ot the
beauty and Worth ol the Slate than is often seen
congregated at the Capitol. At ten o’clock,
Wednesday morning he took his departure for
Vicksburg, arid was accompanied to the depot
by a crowd scarcely smaller than that which
the day previous greeted him on his arrival.
Wednesday night lie attended a splendid enter
tainment givan him by the Hon. S. S. Prentiss,
at his residence in Vicksbursr, mil at 1-2 o'clock
embarked otijthe steamer Vicksburg, < /antain
Glover, for tyfemphis, bearing with him the
kind wishes and fervent aspirations tor health
and happiness! of all with whom he had been
brought in contact. He stops for a day or so M
Memphis, and then departs for his home at Ash
land, bidding-adieu to the great States watered
by the mighty Mississippi. —.V. O. Tro/iu:
'll It.
Tobacco.
The following account of the first introduc
tion of this article into England, we find in a
note to an interesting historical article by Dr.
William Bacon in the Magnolia, en
titled, “ First'English Voyage to Virginia.'-- ;
This voyage, merely exploratory, was- made in i
1584, by Captains Amadus and Barlow,, a! :.‘»e
charge and under the auspices nt Sir Sv alter >
Raleigh: 1
Anderson, in his History ot Commerce, and |
Oldmixon say, they look home with them some j
Tobacco, “(he first that was ever seen in Eng- ,
Xind.’’ But this is erroneous, as in Slow’s Chiu- j
nicle nis staled that Sir John Hawkins carried ;
it thither in the year 1565, hut it was then con- t
sidered as a mere drug, and the chronicler tells <
u.s, “ all men wondered what it meant. 1 his t
account of Stow is confirmed by Hakluyt, uno ;
in his narrative of the voyage ot Sir John Haw- |
kins in 1565, thus speaks ui tiie article as <»!>- ,
served by that navigaloi among the r londian
Indians.’ “The Floridians, when they navel, |
have a kind of herb dri»?d, which, with a cair.* •
and an earthen cup in the end with lire, and the
dried herbs put together, do suck ihrougti the |
cane the smoke thereof, which smoke satisficth (
their hunger.” Hawkins probably carried a |
specimen ol it to England, as a curiosity. ;
Camden, and other authorities, however, as- .
serf that Tobacco was. first taken to England by ,
Ralph Lane, Governor ot the Virginia ad ven- ,
Hirers, in 1586. That the colonists at that time |
learned the use of this narcotic, is evident from (
what Mr. Hariot, a man ot science an I obscr- i
vation, who accompanied Mr. Lana, says;-
“The Indians,’ he writes, “used lu l.u»e th
fume, or smoke thereof, by sucking it through ■
pipes made of clay. We ourselves, during the ,
time we were there, used to Mick it after their ■
manner, as also since our return. The infer?
est and example of Sir Waller Raleigh, a man t
of gaiety and fashion, soon brought it into such ;
vogue at court, says Smith, that many great ■
ladies, as well as noblemen, made no scruple to
take a pipe. We are not informed whether the ,
Queen herself made use of it, but it is curtain |
she gave great countenance and encouragement t
to it as a vegetable of singular strength an 1 t
power, which might therefore prove of benefit »
o mankind, and Jfie nation. So j
far ;».s Mr. <vefi doser ves, was u tsu y
princess from the refined taste of her successor, (
who held Tobacco in such abomination, that |
he not only refused the use of it himself, but ,
endeavored to destroy and suppress it among j
his subjects, and would thereby have robbed the t
crown ot what has since proved one of its no- ,
blest jewels and most considerable revenue, and .
the nation of a very advantageous and import- (
ant branch of trade. Sir Walter Raleighs to- (
bacco-box, with some of his pipes, was lately j
extant, and laid up among the rarities in the ;
museum of that curious antiquarian, the late
Mr. Ralph Thoinesby, ot Leeds, in Yorkshire.
There are also some humorous stories still re- (
membered concerning the first use of lobacco; (
particular!v his wager with the Queen, that he ?
would determine exactly the weight of, the
smoke that went off in a pipe of tobacco. This
he did by first weighing the tobacco, and then
carefully preserving and weighing the ashes,
and the Queen readily granted that what was 1
wanting in prime weight, must lx* evaporated
in smoke, an 1 when she paid the wager, she (
said pleasantly, that she had heard ot many la
borers in the fire who had fumed their gold into
smoke, but Raleigh was the first man who had
turned his smoke into g->ld. It is also related,
that a country servant of his, bringing him a
tankard of ale and nutmeg in his study, as he
was intently engaged at his book, smoking a
pipe of tobacco, the fellow was so frightened at
seeing the smoke leek out ot his mouth, that he
threw the ale into his face, in order to extin
guish the fire, and ran down stairs alarming the
family, and crying out his master was on fire,
and before the could gel up would be burnt io
ashes.”
“Certainly,” says Camden, “from that tim
forward it began tu grow into great request,and
to be sold al an high late, it is remarkable, that
in all our early accounts of the American abo
rigines, we find the use of Tobacco specified.
Cartier, in 1535 found it in Canada, and thus
describes it: “ There groweth a curtain kind of
herb, whereof in summer they make a greal
provision lor all the year, making great account
ufil, and unly w men use ot And first they
cause it tobedrieu in the sun, they wear it about
their neck wrapped in a little beast s skin made
like a little bag, with a hollow piece of stone or
wood like a pipe: then when they please they
make powder of it, and then put it into one end
ot the said cornet or pipe, and laying a coal of
fire upon it at the other end, suck so long, that
they fill their bodies full of smoke, till that it
cometh out of their nuuth and nostrils, even as
out of the tunnel of a chimney.”
Bereton, in his journal ofGosnold’s Voyage,
in IGO2, and Rosier, in his account ot VVev
mouth’s voyage tu New England in 1G95. both
speak of its use among the Indians of tho-c
parts. But in this ease it was nut smoking or
chewing or snutiing, but tlriiding. “ They gave
us, also,’’ says Brendon, “of their lobaueo,
which they drink green, but dried into powder,
very strong and plea.-mnl.” “We thank of their
excellent tobacco,” writes Rosier, “as much
we would with them; but we saw not any great
quantity to trn a for, :.n.t it sceme*ithuy kac. not
much left of oil, lor they spend a great quantity
yearly by ihui- cpmiqual. drinking, ’ L un
ion nd it aityqHg the Virginians—Hawkins a
mqng tlie Fluridjiaus, and the Spaniards among
the Mexicans, “where the natives took it not
only in smoke at the mouth, but also in snuff
at the nose; and it was such a luxury with
them, that the lords of Mexico composed them
selves to sleep with it.’’ Us name, says Ander
son, was probably given it by the Spaniards be
fore this lime, from the isle of 'Mugo, one of
the Caribbees, where it was produced in abua
dance.
Boasting.—-SuiHe Yankee philusophei says
you should make up you r mind never to be out
done by a boaster. “If any such one says, w ith
an air of superiority, that he keeps a yacht, di
rectly affirm that you have a man of war of your
own private property.”
We would also recommend that when a blus
tering fellow fells you he can whip his weight in
wild cats, yoq immediately coolly observe that
jqu can tame a hyena with a wink, and hug a
grizzly bear so as to make him grunt “ewnigh,!”
fl* again, a man should tell you that he swam
across the Gulf of Mexico, you can swear that
you fell overboard in the middle of the Atlantic,
and swam back to New Voikdo Igingthesharks
all the way! Keep in advance of a boa ter on
all occasions, and in the end he u ill have’* -give
you his hat.”
We cut the above from an exchange paper.—
The advice contained in it brings to our recol
lection an occurrence at a country tavern a year
or two since; a travelling dentist and notorious
piaster was partaking of a Christmas dinner,
whet; he seated to his comrades that an uncle of
his was in the habit of taking a turkey on his
fork at dinner, in one hand, and holding it up.
whilst he carved it bv the dexterous use of the
knife in the other. Nothing dashed by the bold
ness of the doctor’s lie, a constable, who was
present, instantly asserted that he had a c ousin
in Texas who could go through the same per
foroiance with a tfouog holding; a pitch-
fork in one hand, and an axe in the othei! The
doctor stood treat all round. A. . I ribua .
Moral Effect or Mesic.—Major Davezac
in his Chapter on C arikning, in the last num
ber ot the Democratic Review, speculates thus
on the effect which the cultivation ot music has
upon the German character:
Whoever has sojeurned in Germany lung e-
n ■ i •<o laic w i.h iii ' Gcriuiins, must have
I ’•'n.bk ’d the ‘ jugular mildn:' . I r pleasing
, m.’h 4.ci yol i).aimers, th.: cic., t .nce of nubia ,
I and the general urbanit yof dept, rtme-nt, forming
; the cliaiautei istius of a pe««ple which, in ordu.
to hold a first rank among th ■ power" of
the earth, need only to be united undui a "ingle
and national government. ’f’h.:t a people so
long oppresses by a mulivndeid pci. v piuii < s,
domineered ovn »y a n-iuierou and li<‘.r.l»
aristocracy, imtabiling t > ■. a cuuxuy oft •< de
solated by the invasion offoieign armies, which
for centuries have made it th ir battle-ground,
should have preserved, mwuiibeless. the piinii
tive kindness and amenity of their nature, is a
moral phenomenon, which, while visiting in
that country both the palaces of the greatest,
and humblest abodes ot the pe isanirv, 1 have
been tempted to attribute mm** to the lo\euf
music that obtains through all < I isscs, of Gel
man sceiety, than to any othei cause, ’['here
the fiercer passions kindled during a day of Mtf
liringand trial, instead of being exasperated by
the anm v repinings of the family circle, when
the workingman returns home, are, on the con
trary. lulled to rest by the harmony of song.—
The madness of Saul yielded to the harp of Da
vid. Polybius says that music softened the
ferocity of the Arcadians, who inhabited a re
gion where the climate was impure and damp;
while th ? people of Cynoethe. who held that
science in contempt, continued to be the most
barbarous of the Greeks. In Germany, music
creates ior the c o .'-worn laborer another and
better world, a ini idle region between this earth
when* wealth :md Hie enjoyments i: procures
are allotted to the few, v Idle t«) (tie many are
assigned privations, contumelies, irremcm .lJe
poverty, and that future t worl i where equality,
that banished exile num earth, ins fixed its on
ly and last abode. It is to that i ieal region,
that the German peasant s mind i> gently afl
ed on the wings of melody, by the soil voices of
his wifi-, daughters and suns, togetner with the
strains of his own flute or hautboy. It is mu
sic, in fact, which while Frenchmen, Russians,
and Englishmen lord ilovei earth and seas, has
given toGermans the undisputed sway ofbound
less imaginary space.
The Flower Markets cf Holllsd.—-In
the same article, Major Davezac gives the fol
lowing account of the superb fiov. sr mac rets of (
Holland: ’
Al Amsterdam, Utrecht. Rotterdam, th? i
Hague, an I abv.c all, at H idem, the iloral I
city, crowds ol individuals of all the classes ot ]
society are seen assembled al the dower mar
kets, held twice a week Wi each of these great
cities. The rich attends them to make exclu- j
sively his own, by purchase, the emeralds, the <
rubies, the sapphires of the vegetable kingdom, ,
in addition to those which he already possessed,
formed in depths of the earth through the slow
elaborations of ages; but, in spite ot his covet
ous eagerness to obtain, the monopoly even ol
these, nature’s treasures, the indigent 100 has
seen these dazzling gems ot the spi mg; he has
inflated their perfume: and, while the variega
ted Camelia, die purple Lcgistemia, the gaudy,
inodorous Co'tus, the more sweet scented but
still gorgeous Peony, and all thee •-.ily exotics
are burn? away to spread a greater I u .tie over
the abod<* of opulence, the humble Violet, the
Rose, (now thought to be a vulgar flower, though
still blushing its loveliness and exhaling the
most exquisite of fragrance,) are taken to the
home ol the poor, to light the gloom of his lo w
ly shed—to give sweetnes; tu the little air h? is
yet allowe {to breathe. I always attended these
flora! markets, and I do not remember,crowded
as they always are, ever to have heard a quarrel
there. An elegance of manners, nay, of lan
guage, seemed inspired by the <naceand beauty
us the ephemeral gardens; cvety one present
acted and spoke as if he feared either to injure
by brutal a< is, or to soil by the expression of in
delicate lhe<e tender and fragile trea
sures os tii ‘ spring. All clustered aroun I them,
like lev* ; and all, like bees, appeared t >gather
from ilium nothing but sweetness.
There is a tiadition at Hie Hague, that Johan
nes Sucundus, the Dutch poet who sanguf Kiss
es, (who. u house,’De?, r the flower market•; in
that city is still lu he seen,) alwaj s wruti with
a nosegay <»n bistable.— But after hearingul this,
as I lead his over again, I fancied in the
poetrv, besides thecharm inherent to the subject,
the aroma of the flowers he loVed. Here, 1 may
be allowed, without digres sing much, to speak
of the harvest of roses which always draws to
the lie! is where they are cultivat'd, near the
Hague, numerous visiters. In the month of
.‘day, not.'iingcan’bc , imagined more beautiful
(han the as; eel of those ru>e field:. The air
tilh'd w ith tho. c sweet emanations, make you
av, :ru of yo-irapproa* h tu them, beforeyou have
come in ."ighlu! them siiiTmiii lud a*, they an* by
thick live h -.iges, ini a Ito guard the young
buds from the in dement’wm is. \n airm lu.--
tivalspread all ;ht>lui«* pi t laims thal this is no
vulgar wuik-ucld. Hundreds ot' young girls,
dressed a- if for a village holiday, commencing
the g.ithc: ing with appropri.itesongs. The first
time I wittie: .• cd thi < novel harvest scene, it seem
ed like a drcam; 1 became doubtful whether I
stood on Batavian ground; the etheri al sweetness
inhaled in every bieezu.xhe earth cov^»* : i as it
ucic ut<r. u carpet embroidered with ros
es, the nick) lions voices of so many young and
beautiful girls, would have indeed wafted the
imagination to the milder regions of Greece or
Italy, but that the azure eyes and golden hair of
the pretty R -sZ '>y, proclaimed them us Norman
race.—Those roses gatheied in Holland, strange
as it may appear, are shippe 1 to Constantinople
destined I » ref urn to Euione so concentrated by
chemical an, that the penume of ten thousand
is o:teii ii'C.i by a lady so ment her embroidered
handkerchief.-—A. V. /<*>■.
‘The roses are packed up in laige hogsheads, in alter
native layers of Howers mul salt, and pressed with great
force. It appears that the salt does not destroy the e
- oil winch contains the aroma of the rose.
The Deaf and Dumb.
The *2;>tli Report ol the Directors of the Han
ford Asylum, foi the education of the Deaf and
Dumb, pres mt- th • following in ere ting statis
tics i.i a nummary form :
The census of the United States for the y.-ar
1840. exmbited its number uftiie deaf anddumb.
in the respective Statu-, an I 'Territories ot the
Union, i' lom this source, we le.un ih.it the
total population us the State oi’Main *, uasodl,-
793. an 1 the number ot deaf and dumb persons
included in that enumeration was 235. It to
litis we add 21, (the number of youtiis who are
known to have been out of the State at school at
that time,) we find that the total number ot deaf
mutes belonging to Maine, was 256; which is,
in the proportion of I to 1969 of the whole pop
ulation.
Adopting the same metho I in regard to New
Hampshire, the results arc—total population,
234,571; deaf mutes 203, and the propoition as
I to 1401.
In Massachusetts, the entire population is
737,699; deaf mu ies 325, and the proportion they
bear to the whole population a" 1 i » 2270.
in Vermont, the whole popnlatimi i* 291,968;
deaf mutes, 159. and the proportion is 1 to 1336.
In Connecticut, the loial population is. 3'19.-
978; deaf mutes 207, ana the proportion as I io
1197.
In Rhode Island, the total population i s 108.-
830; deal inutes 77, and th? proportion a -A io
1413.
The entire population of New England is 2,-
234,822; deal mutes 1227, and the ratio which
these beat lu the whole is a> 1 to 1812.
In South Carolina, the total i/Vt/’.*' population
is 259,081; deaf mutes 111, and the proportion
as 1 to 18iM>.
In the same State, the colarel population
Amounts tu 32 5,218 ; deaf mutes 76, and the pro
jioriion tu I 114106.
Theumi.e population of the Slate is 591,393;
deaf m.itu" 218, and Ihe proportion as I to 272th
luGcm q.i, me tmal popuUli.»a is 108,-
229; du.;f mute 207, an I the proportion as 1 to
1972.
The < »re i population amounts to 283,697 ;
deaf mil; ■ iii. and tin- proportion i as 1 to
I‘3-!.
The cLlhe o'ptfl.Hfoii ofihe r?late is 691,926:
deafmuk' 2ft m. i the ; rjpra;fo:i is as I to
2553.
Th‘States above mentioned, except Rhode
l-land, are those which support beneficiaries at
the Asylum.
The whole population of the United States is 1
staled at 17,065.(M»i): the whole deat and dumb
population at 7659, and the proportion between
these two numbers is about 1 to
MARR I E D ,
On th.' sth instant, at Fore st Hill. Burke Co.,
by the Ke\. F. H. Golding, Col. Parick B. Con
nelly, of Erin, Jeff rson county, to Miss VV. A.
Belt, of the former place.
JOB PRINTING,
.In all Its vari ;s branches, neatly and
expedi nisly executed,
AT THE Er 1 C E OF T H R
C II RON ICE & SENTINEL.
Circulars, I>ray Receipts,
Cards. Railroad do.
Bill Beads, j Wagon du.
Bills of La . ?, I Pamphlets,
Handbills, 1 Posters,
Labels, I ’i'icliels.
Votes 1 -Policies,
Chcriis, j ' A<\ t
Work requiring Ruling or Binding, will be
executed in the best style*
B U A N K S,
Os every variety, and of superior quality to any
heretofore sold in this city, both as regards
paper and typ »graphical execution, will be
kept constantly on hand, or can be
print'd to order at short
feb 18 notice. ts
i J'IARNWELL Court of Common
£) Picas eoinmmict s on the fourth M mdriy
(27th) ol .March. Service must be |x riecicd til
, t;en days previously. Bu.-iauss committed to
th. undersigned will’receive ids personal ata n
ti in, and that of a competent .Ut.irney in the
. district. (feb 23) S. T. CHAPMAN.
—2OO bbls. Baltimore White
' JL Wheat Flour win be landed this day. and
< for sale from the wharf. T S METCALF.
On the way.
500 bbls Canal Flour,
100 j bbls “ gteb 23
ifninnicrtifll.
A 111 ST A M \ RkET.
Wednesday Evt.ning, March S.
Outibn -The weather during the week has been mj un
favorable tor Lusito '•*, that little has been done in any
department of irade. either out or within doors. Oui
ton marset ha>, therefore, been\ejy quiet,and we
have no c hange to note in tiny descriptions since our
l;«>t repoi L Wo quote 3} (a) cents as extremes of the
market—principal sales -1J (d) o| cents.
Rnhwgf. The supply of exchange is abundant, at
iatvs previously noted—pal on Savannah. Chail.eston,
New York, and 6thvr Northern cities. Central money
continues al 15 to 30 cent discount.—Alahami fluc
tuates w ith the lutes at Mobile, and ratnge fiom J“» to .‘k»
ct discount.
JZjr~<’ontidence is so entirely destroyed in the I'hic
ni.x Batik and Commercial Bank «»f Columbus, the
Bank of Hawkinsville and the Exchange Bank ot
Brunswick, that there art- no fixed rates for their bills.
EXCH AA « E TAB LE.
(specie basis.)
AVGUSTA NOTES.
Mechanics’ Bank p< ir -
Agency Brunswick Bank
liank of Augusta
Augusta Insurance & Banking Company
Branch Georgia Rail Road
Branch J*tale of Geoigia
SAVANNAH NOTES.
State Bank
Marine and Fire Insurance Bank
Planterßank “ .
Centra! Rail Road Bank 5 I® 16 dis.
COUNTRY NOTES.
."(ate hank Branch,Macon
Other Branches State Bank
('(■inuiercial Bank, Macon
Brunswick Bank
.Milledge', ill Bank
Georgia Rail Road Bank, Athene
City Council of Augusta
Ruckersville Bank
Brunch Marine and Fire Insurance Bank j"
Si. Mary’s Bank " .
Branch Central Kail Road Bank, Macon. '» 10 dts
Central Bank ’■&> »o) 3u “
Exchange Bank of lh unswick No sale.
Insurant e Bank of Columbus. Macon.... No sale.
Phcenix (tank, Columbus
Bank of Hawkinsville
t'ity Council of Milledgeville Vnceitain.
City Count il of Columbus "
City Council of Macon - “
Monroe Rail Road Bank Broke.
Bank ol Darien and Brant he*
ChatLihhoochee ll Rond A: Banking Co. “
Western Bank oi Georgia....
Bank of Columbus “
Planters and Mechanics Bank Columbus.
B ink ol i >. mulgec “
Geoigia 6 y/teni Bunds for specie - Cd) 5U dnl.
Georgia 8 IP’cent Bonds tor specie None in mar l.et
:oi;rn Carolina notes.
Chui lesion Ranks pat.
Bunk <>l Hamburg
< ■»«unli y Batiks
Alabama Notes..’ 25 Ci 35 dis
CHUNKS.
New York sight par
Philadelphia..
BalUiuore “
l.exingtun pa) Cd) A piem
lti>*liei<>nd, Vn
Savuimah ..parfa) | dis
t/h iil.'stoii par (d) i “
Mobile, March 2
Cnh.n. - The discouraging accounts per the Acadia
have caused nearly a suspension of operations, the to
lal sale.', to-day being only some few hundred bales. A
day or twi.or more, may probably be necessary fully
to deveiepe the inllin.-nce those accounts may have up
on our- gm n rnar'.u L
Rx'Vi z ßank of Mobile refused to draw to
day. and the c.emind tor bills on all points could not be
supplied by/out-dnor dealers. There Mere Lui few
transactions, 60 day Lids on New York brought 15 (a)
17,and late .n the day |y* cent was demanded. We
hear ot sale of |T. H. Treasury notes in large sums at
26, and ot small lots of gold at 27 (a) 30prem Holders
of the currency evince much reluctance to investing in
exchange and other premium funds at these high rates,
and fur the greater number of them “hold oli. ’
Riciphf ' continue active.- Adr.
New York, March 4.
Cotton— The market has been rather moderate, put
chasers holding oti until the arrival of the Great Wes -
ern. 'rhe > des are <mly tiom strJ t<» SOJ bales aday.—
I plum's ;-.iid FLu ida>-l{ fa* 7c; Mobile 5 fa? 8; New Or -
leans 5 (d)
Phnii'— The market is quiet and the demand .‘mall—
in same instances Gd h- s has been accepted. Genesee,
Ohio and Michigan al « G2A 61)-5 75. But little N 0.-
ie.u.s hi m irk. i price < range from f l 37A a 4 50. l.ow
ei grade-. <.f Honthi m from #4 to 4 12|.
Cl.njt- i'li. sales have rather increased. Sales of
Id U i.ao- Brazil at 6.J (d) Laguayra 7| (d) 8A; .lava
il|; Sumatra
Pn.es aie so low that the holders have ra
tio t withdrawn lium the market. N Orleans is more
iir til at IS£ cents; Trinidad in lots 18; Porto Rico 23.
AUGUSTA PRICES C URRENT.
BAGGING, Hemp Jp* yard 16 (a) 20
Tow " •• 12 (a) 18
BALE ROPE “ ll*. 6 to) 12
IIACOa. log louml “ " 5 fa) GA
la ill? “ “ 7 dd *
j.boukicr.s “ 5 (</) 7
bides ■' 6 fa) H
Bl'ri'Eß. Go lien “ “ 16 id) 20
Sol di Carolina.. M “ 10 |u) 15
C.Hintiv “ 12 (a) 2d
CtllFFl'., G.ven piimc Col.a. '• ' Id (a) I .’A
Ordinal yto Good.. “ •' (d) I2j
;'-i. D0ming0....... " “ ••• (id 10
Rio “ “ in) l»Jt
Lagmr.i “ '• Id (a)
Porto Rico “ *• 10 (a) 12.4
Java “ “ I2| ftp 16'
Mocha ..." - I' f«» 20
CANDLES, Spermaceti “ ” -« (a) .‘Ja
T.idow ” I? in l ‘<t
CHEESE, American “ “ w Cd) I2J
English. ” ■■ nnmh
’omni.. .. •• Gbl. 9U) (a) 5 50
m boxes... “ doz. 350 (d) f 50
CIGARS, Spanish “ M. 15 00 f# 20 00
American “ 5 (» fa) 12 03
CORN 14 bush. 37k fa) 50
FiSli, Hen mgs “ I.ox. 75 f«) 1 25
Mackerel No. 1 *• bbl. 10 00 fa) 12 U)
No. 2 •• “ 8 txi fa) lu 0u
No. 3 “ " 600 Cq> 8 tkl
FLOL'R, Canal ... ki " 573 «,) 650
Eallimnie “ •• nenu*.
Western “ “ none.
Country ” •• 4 0.) (fd) 5 s'l
FEATHERS ‘‘ lb. 25 («) M 3
GINGLR “ 10 dd 121
GUNPOW DER " keg. 6 0J (d) 7 00
Blast.ng " " 4.03 fa) 450
GLASS, 10 * 12 •• box 3 2'5 Cd) 375
8 z 10 - •• 250 (a) 350
IRON, Russia •... " cwt. SUO fa) 5 iX)
Swedes, assorted “ •• 450
Hoop " “ 703 fa) 800
Shed “ “ 700 Cd) 800
Nad Rods ,l “ 7 Ot) (a) 800
LEAD “ lb. 7 (a) H
LEATHER. Sole “ - 21 (d> 2-,
Upp-.r “ side 150 fa) 2 (XI
Calfskins •* doz 18 0i) (a) 36 00
LARD ” IL. li (d) 7
MOLASoES, N. Orleans •• gal. ’ll Cd) M .‘.
Havana “ • 22 f<z) 2"
English Island.. “ •• none.
NAILS - 10. ’4 (a) 7
OILS, Lamp “ gal. 1 t.) fa) 1 25
Linseed *• I 1 » («) 1 25
O ATS.. dHU . ..’.'. ’.'. ’. ’...’ Lu -:!. :j7 J .a)
PEAS “ ' 40 fa) 50
PAINTS, R. d Lead “ lb. 15 (a)
W hite Lead '• keg 200 (d) 325
Spanish Brown lb 4 (d)
i Ochre -
PEPPER, Black •. “ “ 12 fa) 13 j
PORTER, London “ do/.. 3 50 Cd) 4 50 t
and Ale, American. “ bbl. I (kl (d) 450 >
R AlSf NS, Malaga “ box 200 (d) 250
Muscatel *• - 209 (<t) 2 '>
“loom “ *• none.
RICE Prime “ cwt. 2 ‘>o (d) 350
Inferior to Good •• •• 200 fa) 250
SUGAR. New O. leans “ ll*. G (a) 2
Havana, while •• 11 fa)
•• brown “ “ 7 fa) b
Muscovado “ “ 7 (d) q
St. ( roix “ •• 4 (d) 11
Porto Rico •• “ 7 fa) 0
Lump “ “ 14 (d) 16
Lo.d •• 15 (d) .0
Doable refined '• 12 f$ 13
SPICE “ ■ tt fa) ) i
SOAP, American, N<>. I " G (a) S
'• No ? '• “ 4 (,0 t
SALT. Live) pool ground “ Lush. 55 fa) GO
“ “ “ sack I 75 (a) 200
STEEL, German •• lb. L> (d) 16
Blisteied * l “ ft to) 12|
SHOT, ail sizes *• bag 175 (a) 200
SPiRJ i'S, Cognac 4th puail.• gal. I . 0 (g> 2 (XI
Peach “ " I (Id (q) 1 50
Apple * “ 37| (a) 50
Gm. Holland *• •• I 20 (d) 1 5..
" American. ....“ “ 40 (a) 7»
Rum, J iinai.-a '■ •• 125 Cd) 150
" N. England.. “ •• 3.» fa' 40
• Whiskey,Northern. •• *• 3* (u) 3>
Western . “ " 2/ f(0 371
“ Mououga. “ *■ 75 fa> 1 Ik)
'■ Irish • ' 203 (d 303
TOBACCO, N. Carolina “ 11., 8 fa’ 15
\ trginia “■ •• l.> f.p 4tl
TWINE “ - 25 fa) 31
i’EA, B-rhe-i '• “ N) (./) 7’»
Som-hong, “ " ul (d) 75
Hv- n - •• U (d 125
Gan; ...vdex “ ‘ 1 txt (d) 125
WINE, .Madeira “ gal. 250 (d) 350
Si. ily Madeira “ ” 125 (a) 175
SneiTV il “ 00 (a) 350
t en. *<:D “ 7 > (d 1 25
Sa<• • i .Malaga 4»» (d) * »
P /•» (a) 3 OU
(.2 •. i u •' none.
I • -■•.lir- •• d,»z :: (O (d‘ 6< a 1
• L- ' 1 ? - 11 ' " " 1 11,1 1 ? 1,11
Law notice—john wTwil-
SONand LEWIS POTTER having asso
ciated themselves iu the Practice of Law, will
punctually attend to any professional business
entrusted to them in the counties of Taliaferro,
Green, Oglethorpe, Columbia, Hancock, Lincoln,
Warren and Wilkes. Oilice at Crawfordville, Ga.
jan 10 wtf
I” i< 11Z1NES.— Jotdph Mason'sre
-IVI publi cations of the Dublin Universit y Ma
gazine, and Blackwood’s Edinburg Magazine.—
Also, the New World edition of Blackwood’s, just
received. Contents— Arnold’s Lectures on His
tory; Poems and Ballads by Schiller; Reynold’s
Discourses; the Young Grey Head; Imaginary
by Lnndor; Oliver Cromwell an 1
Sir Oliver Cromwell; Caleb Stukely; the World
of London, Eyre’s Cabul; the Evacuation of Atl
ghnnistan; Death of Thomas Hamilton, Esq. &c.
Very attractive numbers. Single copies 25 cents.
Yearly subscriptions solicited.
.8. A. HOLMES,
mh 7 Literary Depot, underU. S. Hotel.
4 R( IMA NCE < >F (HJI TIMES -
7 u. Forest Da . a romance of old times, in
which Robin il <n! figun s as th • principal b.* ro,
i>) G. P. R. J.kiic-'. Esq., author us the Robber,
etc. Harpers’ edition -price 18; cents. Just
rnos l;l: H
E > te \ CK WOOD S EDfNBt R(.
k il A GAZIN E—R(.-print—Two dollars a
year. Copies f»r salt at 25 cents each, at the Li
terarv Depot, I . S. Hotel.
mh_4 S A HOLMES.
EpOREST DAYS—A RomanceofOW
Time, by G. P. R. James, Esq., received by
the steam ship Acadia. First published in .in
< xtra trible number of the New Woild, from th.
London edition iu 3 vols : and ottered at the fo-.v
price of 25 e nts.
No. 1 and 2 Martin (‘huz/.h wit, Toni Bmk ot
Gms. .C. S. D..or Aj <-<mn: ;.T[ ishlLits. Wfod
; a (’astle, and the Loitt rings *»f Arthur U‘Li i y.
Just rec* iv.'d mid ofli red at only 12i cents.
uf the Barons! — Lu.'..*!' th. iktum-. bv E.
L. Bulwvr. A further supply of this fo:i 2 nflki d
<>!" and c tgeilv sought after production, Harpi rs’
; <fi so ; st received and for sale .a: ar.du •-
rd price—only 25 cents. Orders trom the coun
n v promptly attended to.
S. A. HOLMES,
in 1 Literary Depot, underU. S. Hotel
STEPHENS & BURCH.
■, : at lav..
Ciawi >!<hii!e, Gw.
Will practice lu the n.iiiities ol I'aliaieiiv,
(Jreoru-, Hancock, Ouletborp., Wilkes, Wanen,
Elbert un.t Lincoln. .r. 11. Stbi'iibss,
jail 11-1 v Kobbkt S. Bciich,
IMIII.U’ CLAVrON,
Attorney at i.utv.
Athens, Ga.
Will piacticein the counties of Clarke, Walton,
Gwinnett, Hall, Jacks. tn, Habersham and Kratik
Hu. ts jttnSl
JOI: x SNEAO,
Attorney a Law,
Augusta. Ga.
Will pmetiee in. /Superior and Intel for t ’>urt,
of Richmond con tiy, and the Court of Common
Pleas <»i tile city. nlice adjoinin<i hfo dwelling
Greun slreut, opp «s tu the Alethodist Church.
;• 5;
A. C. SCOTT,
Will practice Law in the several counties of the
Flint Circuit. Office at Jackson, Butts county,
Gu. ts sept|s
RUSSELL MILLER,
Attorney at Law,
Sparta, Ga.,
Will piaciice in the counties of Hancock, VVash-
Wa ire uH nd Taliaferro. i fob i
JOH \ R. STANI < >RD,
Attorney at Law,
Clarkesville, Ga.
Will practice in the countie s of Clarke, Fiank
lin, Habersham, Forsyth, Lumpkin, Gilmer,
Union, Murray and Gwinnett, and in th • Fedciai
Citcuir t 'um t io, ‘ <«•■.<. mi. jy r.
FEUX C MOORE,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
Crawfordville, Ga.
Will practice Law in the Courts of Taliaferro
and adjacent counties.
N. B. Will also attend to cases in Bankruptcy.
Office near Rail Rond Depot. w6m jan .7
LUCIUS J. GARTRELL,
Attorney at Law,
Will attend the Cbmts of the several counties
in the Northern Circuit. Bufiine.:j entrusted to
his care wi;l receive prompt an 1 mnumittiug at
tention. Office at Washington, Wilkes county,
Ga. jan > v.3nt
mr.L,
Attorneys at Law,
Monticello, Ga.
Have resumed the practice, mid will attend the
Courts oi the Ocmuigec, and th ■ adj. ining couh
iesor the Flint Circuit. ts up 19
MURRAY & GLENN,
Attorneys at Law,
McDonoimb, Heniy Co., Ga.
Wiil punctually attend to any business entrust
ed to th.-ir care. Office at JlvDuiiough, Heniy
coumy, Git. A. Cr. ivl casa r,
M i ERRU ...
A itoriiey al La vr,
jan 11 1. * Rome, Floyd « junty , G
i .. ■\; l >N ILL .
Attorney at Law,
ap 19-inif Clarkesville; Ga.
HENRY J. LANG,
Attorney at Law,
je 23-ts Lincolnton, Ga.
I. R. MAH< >
Attorney at Law,
tip 12-ly Tuskegee, Macon county, Ala.
>t BN V \l,
Attorney at Law,
oct 18-wlv Waneri ton, Ga.
. o ;eph c y d
.Yttoi'Hi* ’, al Law,
WAI practi.-. in all the co.i.ui of th. Eastern
Cirirut. Office in Ri rbo/a, l.!b-ri. r nm'.y, Ga.
so >lll It
JAMEt) ROS;J LAW HON,
Attorney at Law,
Dahlonega, Lumpkin county, Ga.,
VV ill attend stiictly io professional business in
the following counties:
Lumpkin, Dahlonrgn.
li.xiox, Blaiisvilb-.
Gilmku, t'Jlijiy.
Cherokee, (’auton.
FoasvTit, < •nniinin.x.
Murkav, Spiing ■.
7s. B. By titillunity *)f G.-:i. Axdiiew J. llax
r.l am ♦•mp-iwercd cot.tract for rctajniiu.;
foes Ln* him as ass.juii t.- emms •! in Lumpkia
county. | tnli 4 wit] J. R.. L.
ANDREW J. HANSELL,
[hECENI LV OF DAHLONEGA,]
Attorney at Law,
C.>O,7*
Having settled permanently at Marietta, will
promptly attend to all bmfincas ( uiiiHed to him.
lie will practice, as h. relolore, in the following
COUNTIES, TOWNS.
Floyd, Rome.
Cass, (’assville,
Cherokee, Canton.
Forsyth, < hmiming.
Lumpkin, Dahlonega.
Habersham, •? I a rk□v ill e.
Gilmer, Ellijay.
Murray, Spring Place.
Walker, Lafayette.
Als , in the. counties of Paulding and Cobb,
mid in the U. S. Courts for the District of Ge.or-
N. B. James Ross Lu-.vhon, Esq., Attorney at
Dahlonega, is authoiized to contiact with patties
for retaining fees, in any business in that county.
mll4 w4t A. J. 11.
LEATHER,
10,000 SS ,LOCKSoIe
5,000 lbs Oak Bulr Leather,
5,000 lbs Harness 6 »
5,000 lbs Skirling do
300 sides I ppt-i do
200 sides B.idh do
50 dozen Calf Skim-,
100 dozen l.i.ting Skit';.,
500 lbs Sh h* Thread, as; )i t.-.L
For sale low by V.’RIGHT, Bl 1.1. & < <>. I
m 7 ttwckwlm
TIN PLATES.
' subscribers keep cor staidly on
3 hand, which are ottered fur sale (with a
tonaJl advance) ns low as the same can be iuip.»r
led from Neu Ymk, nil charges to Cfiarh •
t\m : a full assuitnh'nt us TI.N PLATES, say-
Rjofing X Tin, 14 by ”<• inches, of the\eiy
best t rands.
Roffing l C Tin, 14 by 2•> inches, of the veiy
best brands.
Manuiactuiing Tin, I CCI X, 10 by 11 inu'm s,
of tiu very best brand.
HIGH AM, FIFE Cr CO.,
m G-trw(it Ng. 55 East Bay, (’harfostun.
A L>AM BROWN, tin* Merchant.—
A new Novel by Horace Smith, mi • of th.
autho rs us Rejected Addresses, and widely known
as the author of Bratnblctye H<msc. llarpers’
edition, 18| cents. Just received bv
m 7 THOS. RICHARDS.
Opposition omnibus. —The
proprietors of this Omnibus respectfully in
forms the travelling public, us well as the citizens |
I genei.iliy, that they have procured a more con- ;
vi ide: it and larger one, and will be happy to wait
upon :l>er i at their residences.
Tin office is at th- I . S. Hotel, where a sial,
is kvp.:, and » ahs registered. \V«* solicit the pa
trona/ v u/the community, if lor no other pur
pose ‘ titan keep down Alonopobj."
mb 6 THE PROPRIETORS.
Qrf ia i BOTTuESIvIORE! SANDS’
SARSAPARILLA, received this dav.
bv .1 IVILAXD, RISLEY A CO.,
tn a:, i. in choi.Drugs, Medicines, &c.
m dlw
£ NOTH 11. I'll.* iindersiuned
i E..J prr*< iu i.i :n. r.i-.D.t, of \V tro n. Return
Da, iuri.u- Siq.cixui Court 13ih .l.trcii, inai.uii
n> 8-3t* W. MILO OLIN.
HANDY ANDY, cheap edition,
large type, pi ice 50 cents, with two illustra
tions. “Give me your fist, my darlin’ public.”—
For sale by
i ;; \ : i; < .ici VH.L.E A co.
BANKof FIRUNS
-5_.J WiClC—Tlie subscriber will take the bills
<»f the Exchange Bank us Brunswick at par for
ids. tin 1) H. P. PE( ’K*.
AT REDUCED PRICES—Har
.ZjL. pers’edition of James new novel, ‘ Forest
Days,” a Romance of Old Tinies, by G. P. R.
James, Esq. Pike IS; cents.
Adam Brown, the Merchant, by the author of
Brambktye House, dee. Price 18j cents.
The- above works from Nos. 14 and 15 Harpers
Library Select Novels. For sale bv
m7 CHAS. E. GRENVILLE & CO.
A DAM BROWN, the Merchant, is
J_jL the title of another new work by Horace.
Smith, Esq., the author of “Rejected Addr<
“Biambletye House,” Asc.&c., first published in
England, and just received al tin Litt-rarv Depot.
Pii- .-only IS cunts, [m 4] S A HOLMES,
r AW N(>TL( -E ( Jlarke .. vi •
ton, Attorneys at Law, Augusta, Georgia,
will practi-u in tin «'.»umi< sos Richmond, C<>-
luniijia, Burke and Jflh-rson. Ollieeopposite th-'
Post Oiticc.
Robert Clauki:,
W.m. A. Walton.
/?e/ere/?»25— Henry H. Cumming, Esq ,
(’h tries J. Jenkins, Esq.
fob IS ts
5 > E I.LON A SPORTING POW
8> DE:!. 100 canisters and 100 k- ;! . of tisii
ui lebrated Powder, w hich is approved by nil "<t i
entiti • shut/’ in th • South-m Stat- <, for sale
huh &ale and retail, by 11. P. PECK,
Augusta, G i.
Th; following well known shots in the vi-iniiy
»f Atmnsia. permit me to publish th« i: approba-
Thr I'll ie:'"ijei. .1 hi << ?. .. .1 ! h /A-.,-
•<-r a fair trial, and pronounce it asuperfor article.
Vll Given, I’ 'V Miller, J J Wilson,
T B i n t(, A G Bull, W G .Ximmo,
T J J.-nniiii s, J C Leitner. M Tucker.
M R Smith. jan 17 ts
| DARWS NEXT THI’RSD/, < .
GEORGIA STATE LOTTERY.
•■’ot the benefit of the Augusta imlupumlcnt
!‘Mrc Cpnipuny.
( LASS .\o. 10, FOR )Sl i.
To be liiiiwn in th-.- city oi Ah uista, '< hinsdav.
.. • :
bCiltiNK.
75 Gimbers— 12 Drawn Ballots.
H I’riase e>f
2 64
5 46 44 iIOO
UO 44 44
44 44 £SO
Brsidts an immense aif&ftmt of smaller prizes,
Krom WI 2a to S3*
Tickets #3 00— Snares in proportion.
Packages of Wholes cost $75 CO, v. an anted to
draw at least 536 Oil. Packages of Halves cost
837 50, w arranted to drawleast #lB 00. Pack
ages of Quarters cost. ,819 warranted to draw
at least $9 00.
For sale by
J. G. GREGORY & €’O., Managei-.;,
Under IL S. Hotel.
Orders from the cd tin try promptly attended to.
mh 3
A ; \ '• ?\ , \ ; i'\L,- . ; l>. .
fl / gi:t Sint. Lottery. CJfU*’ No. 9, for 1-13,
diawn in Augusta, Ga., on Thursday, March
2, 1843.
11 756 75 55 I
mh 3
DRAWING DUE NEXT T1 T.Si’.A.
GiiEUX AND PUI.ASi<i?.!t)NSJMENT
LOTTED V,
FCX'J'RA CLrLSVS’ AWt 1 il
Det. 11:5:1.-d by the drawing*of the Alexandria
Lottery, Class G. lu bedrawfi at. Aloxnn
d.ia, oil Saturday, Marell 1hh,1843.
M AGNI F'l c E N.T - 'SC itK M E.
73 .Nu inters—l 4
i i r; aj— • IWbfo.., j
1 “ 13.500
1 “ 10,000
20 Frizes of ‘ 1,000
Tickets £lo—Shares in propoition.
For sale bj
J. G. GREGORY & Managers,
mh 9 under the U. S.Tiuiel.
Orders from th? country ptomptly attended to.
Draw s
and Pulasi-.i iVlmiuineni Luti.iv, Exira
( lass ao. 9, fi,r 1343.
i 9 50 29 46 58 60 30 33 32 65 39 5
f HIEAP AND FRESH GARDEN
SEED. A sd-.-c'i assortment of Fr<-m En -
lish < laidcn •<-: d, jiisi received, .4 the follow ing
kind.-:
Early York < abbage,
du Sugar Lor.f do
tiu Drumhead do
do Buncombe do
Late do do
do Globe Savoy do
do Green Glazed do
do York “do
Beans of ail kinds,
Peas do do
Beets, Carrut , Cucumbers, &r.
All of which arc w u-rnnt. d freshanJ ■'•zihu’wc, and
will be «. jld at redhsed prices, by
rm 3 if WM. HAINES, Jr.
PRIME N. <). SUGAR.— N bids;
4. P:i ne N O S:i ;r, mi consignment and for
'ib'low. (ml) (4l.() W LAMAR A CO.
SUPERFINE FLOUR.— 2J bbls,
viz superfine s. Iccted frnnilv Flour. Just receiv
ed by (hi I) GEO W LAMAR CZ ( O.
RISII P( I’FA’l’t >ES.— >O9 hampers
Q red Fish Potatoes, landing and for sal.- by
W E JACKSON CO.,
feb 27 \ih ii muers.
r lOOPER S ELS and TABES.
VG Th? R -.l Hover, a Tate, in two voliiinns,
pii. . 50c.'iits. deceived by
te!> 2! . CHAS E GIiEN V’.M.E & CO.
gyUELDI XG’S WORKS.-Tlre \d
B. v.'iitnn s>f Jo-aph An fx-ws, anJ his fri'nd
?>li Abrah.ini A ia’ns 'l’ci 25 <■ ios. l-'or salo bv
f'b-ii ocas :: GitENvn.i.E co.
/' t EORGt A XA.XKKiTXS. -IT,
VX sale by (teb 13) __ A. SI lit EG
t LISON’S HISTORY "I E”!
1- V. No. 4. J ust received by
£vn<ii.isii < n r: r/sE.geri.o,.
’ EnglishCliee.se.. Just received by ’
feb 11 GEO. LAMAR & CO.
GE( '< >NDH INDPI \ N() !•'( )RTE.
F-J A good second hand Piano Forte, for sale.—
Apply tu (fob 16) GEO VV .LAMAR & CO.
A LLISON S HISTORY_St3 tiid
./A. -I—Received bv
id. 17 CHAS r. GRENVILLE & CO.
ORANbES CVCLOPEDIA-l’ar
3-Received bv
feb 17 CHAS’E GRENVILLE & CO.
RANDE S HNCYCLOPEdTa—
Part 111. Just received by
feb 11 THOS. RICHARDS.
STRAINED SPERM
V V OIL. 17 uatrejs winter strained Sperm
Oii reciived on ~ j. umeuf. I'm sale 1.i.. .
teb 22 T. S. AIETC.JLE.
J1..-* three stiand B t.ieitm Twine, for e:ilc tew by
dec 23 1 HOMAS S. METCALF. ’
IST received at T. Cosiriiovi: g, 2<);’
♦> Bio id-si,-,■, t, (100 yard B|. rwhed Slurlme,
slightly damaged, e. Ilia ; off at a great bargain.
mh 4 dlw l '
De mpster s st>N(i
licaidit d' \\x\d AL!o J 1,. Being a choice
selection of S< otti. h, Fa ii.;ii und Irish Sungs
ami Ballads, with an a. : mipanihi.-nt for the Pia
no Foih- -edited by William R. Dempster. Jml
!.-■•! iv< <1 by (ft b THUS RI( 'G iftDS.
'V o. SUGAR.—7 hhds prim.- N. I
j- v• O. Su' it, jusi ip.-t ived and for-Bitfo by I
W E J VJKSON CO., Auctioneers. I
- ft I) 27
L’iRLM’H REV< >LUTION.-- Th<
s. history ut th> French Rt v ilutihn, by 31. A.
Thi r M , late Prim. l Miniaier of France, splendi.iir
bound in morocco. Received by
fob 16 THOMAS RICHARDS.
)UK? MACKE RE Lr&c?" ~~
50 bbls sup Baltimore How.ird-st Flour,
15 “ No 2 and 3 Mackerel,
10 ti.-.ecs Rice. Just received and will be
sold low (fol. 21) GEO W_LAMAR& CO.
V&T’aNTEH. —A black or mulatto
v V Boy, about 1-1 yens of age, terAvhmn a
liberal price will be paid, bv
janfi CIEO. W; LAM Ul A ■ ■ ■.
g ji .WsiEi.A ROPE and TWINE. -
-LV.Si. f.U c.iils lu.lf i.teii Manilla Rope,
1000 Rs three slraitd Bagging Twine.
171, c; Jma re.-, i.. d. T. ... Ml-.rcALE.
£JI i,l .LA R1) TABLE.—A jitJLi d-r
ii x llii.i . ,1 Table, warranted cmnpfctr- inv-vi-rv
way. Appi - i a GKO. W. LAMAR & Co. ’
I. I. bi
,’si I: ■ fit) WA N~ Pi i’r SA L bJ—A
_i. u ,m >n about 27 years of a,*e<, u good
li, i’ ' in-.' i. i. . old low for cash. Apply to
Kb 1J GEO VV i.AMAR & CO.
iV'EW WORK BY DICKERS.—
L v Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit.
No. 1. Just received by
feb 14 ‘ THOS. RICHABfrS.
p«NGLTsn GARUEN seeds -
.si—J The subscribers have just received a supply
of fresh English Gat.b i. Seeds, warranted the
growth of 1--12. AI.EX. PlllLll* & CO.
feb 16 ‘Civ
H-f AR R Y l.< iRREtiUER—Cheap
jL_2. edition.-T'hc < smn scions of Harry Lm
requer, Nos 1, 2. 3 and 4, complete—2i cents per
[ number.
Jack Hinton—price 50 cent*;. For sale by
ft >2! CH IS GRENVILLE A CO.
Queens of
eond Seiies.—Lives of the Queens of Eng
land, from the Norman Conquest, with Anecdotes
oftheirConrts, bv Agnes Strickland. Just receiv
ed by (feb 24) “THOMAS RICHARDS.
“S’ OAF. LUMP and CRUSH SU-
J J GAR. -Ii) bh]i sup Crush Sugar, ~~
5 box.-s Loaf
5 ■ stc.ii.irt I'm- d Lump “
Landing this day.
1 GF.O W LAMAR >V < 6).
1> UM A?<i. l WHISKEY.
dTL 25 bbls N Ell mu,
30 •• Hye Whiste y.
.? n--t lauded and ior sale bv
m 1 GEO' W LAMAR C CO.
I AN AI, FlaOUlt, Ac.
BBLS CANAL FLOUR,
B. VV 30 bag.s prime Rio Cuffoc,
20 bbls uid Alonongahela Whiskey,
30 Loxes Sperm Candles,4s, 5s and 6s
Landing and fur sale bv
W E J’ACKSOX &
fob 27 fit Auctioneers.
| NSURANCE.—Th<- Protection insti
a. rance Company, of Ilarltert!, ComieeliciU,
will take ;i-.ks on smr. -. merchandize, dwellings,
(umilure, ami all <i: - -rijni msm propertv, against
loss or damage bv lire. -•Visa, on cotton and other
. i n handize on th • river, un as !•;••-.).uric terms
- any otlh r guud office, on appli cation to their
.Vdvnt a*. Hamburg, 8. C.
J. P. FORCE, Agent.
I Limburg. l'< bruary 16. ts
CRAWFORD <fk i > ...
j Skvclo’i. and Commiic: Werclm its,
; i; »v 2 -It' \o. 72 But-. 1.. Savitniiiih. Ga.
jl. WILSUNi
Healer fz; .‘foots and Shoes,
N<>. 177 Bru&d-st. 3 (fours above Eagle & Phamix
iofel. ' 1 ! !> I I
YANCLY HABERSHAM,
I tor r.eys at Imw,
Be? . C. Yancev, Hamburg, S. C.
B. I- I-LIOTT llabelfham. jan 10
CfoOT H 1 N G
.Hade to Pleasure In the best style*
CLOTHING,
jji the l e.4 Jylc, Vt.ady unot up.
H itz- Caps, Shirt.:, St r-Up,. Collars, and evmy
article pertaining tu .geutfomvn’s dress, may*be
alway f.mnd of the best kind and at the lowest
piir« s iur cash, at
WILLI .AM O. PRICE’S Establishment.
_ fob H
WYATT WARREN,
UILALEIfs IN
sl'lw, ?4us!!im< Lares. French Flowers,
Lium Cloths, Cassiuieres. Carpeting, and
Dutch lloiti.'g Cloths.
No. 206 Broad-st.
C ■ Gwi’H.AN.
Attorney at Law,
Offii'.j Ihi rd door above, the Augusta Bank,
fol; 2J
ILIGLL HOTEL,
Newnan, Georgia.
l THE subscriber respectfully hi
.iJJL 1 B'ms his friends ami the public generally,
mat ne has taken the large and commodious
Hous” <m the West side of the pubiic square, and
thoimighly repaired and fitted it up for theac
commo(iationof the travelling community and
piivatc boardrfis who may favor him with a call,
rfi/huuse is open now and will continue to be
kept open for the accommodation of all who may
call. Being thankful for the patronage heretofore
received, .solicits its continuance from his old
friends and'thi; travelling community generally.
His charges in propferiiou to the times.
; WM.U. ANDERSON.
lUo.tI.CE TO JOURIN&YMEM
—,O good Journeymen at the
alcove business wiH find constant
liberal v iges, at the Domestic Hat Manufactory,
Camak, Warren coiffity, Ga. Apply to
mh 3 w‘2m JOHN H.’HARRIS.
g * F WAR D.—Lost, on the 24th
day of December last, between my
house and Lincolnton, Lincoln county, a common
size lealhcr Pocket Book, tied with a blue string,
and eXiiMning about three hundred and twenty
dollars iii bank bills, on different banks, and one
dollar and fifty cents iu silver, and the following
notes, to wit:
One it >t on ». ash Willingham for six hundred
and fifts live dollars and fifty cents.
One uh Peter L.aai irf..r one hundred dollars.
Oneun Thomas J. Munuy f..»r forty dollars.
One on Benjamin Samu 1: for thirty tv».-> dul-
ItllS'tV.. live rent: .
One c i • W it- • ( for two htt.idrßd dollar?.
Two it . t. un.' Gg-./i.i.-u Tilman Alvey, the other
against William Reynukis— ainouni.‘- not recol
lected.
Two di:. j bills on B. B. Moore for fiit.:;-ndulluis
Thn ■ notes on Tilman Alvey, one fur seventy
fivedolbc -, one for eight dolin’. the othoramuunt
not recollect <l.
One on Th jmas Tillery for six dollars.
One receipt of Ruben F. Curry for two hundred
and twenty duliais.
One receipt on Jarno 'Lampkin for thn ; hun
dred and thirty nine dollars.
One receipt for four bales coli.ui, in Augusia,
at Gre. ii C. Andrew-‘ warehou. -, left th •to in
December, 181?.
Also many other non -> and rect ipts nam, and
amounts n.». i< .Wi d.
All persuus an-warticd ag.iirist nadit; foi th • j
ab )Vc n.im -d notes and ! ■■
.Any ir :smi limiing the ■■ .i.i Poeke.i i;.» >r. i .
ront.nt - and deliverin' l th ■ s.aiii.i to L-.a t Wil- ,
lingham, at hi; r.-idein e three mib s ifo:Li,. ■ I
colnlon, on th • Pct asburg mad, Or tu diiu A’.. ]
< 'ampb. 11, at Line Ihiod, hall b • ('milled to tli:- ’
abo\e reward of thirty dollars.
jan 7 18AA(’ GUAM. j
AU I’lo S.—Lust or mislaid, tsonb - ■
f tim since, a promis - irj note made by John
Mayes, and payable to t.ie subsciiber or bearer,
and due dn day after dule, for twenty nine dol
lars and seventy five cents, and dated April 15th,
1837. All personsar<- hereby cautioned from tra
ding for the same, and the maker or his rep.es. n
tntive, from pavin r itto am. pet ;->.i but myself.
HENRY S' .‘OT!’.
(i'J'H 'ld.- 'l'hc co-piirtivTship herfoo
d n fore rxi -.iii y b- iwr; a ij" mideisigru'd, is
this day dissolved by mutual (:o:ts.nt. ill p 1
suns h.iving demands against . ufi firm, will !
plea- ; u on the senior partner, who is auihorist d
to settle all demarals against said firm, and he is
authorized to collect ail dues.
S. G H ARRELL,
T. J. HARRELL
n, i.i, Ute. .mu
vA LUabIjE Lands cob sale.
r 8 mE subscribers, desirous of setting up
JL their buisinoss, olfui the following lands for
sale, to wit: between four and live thousand acres
in Richmond county, lyingon both sides of Spirit
creek and the Georgia Rail Road. The said land
has three, or four first rati mill stalls, within one
mifo of the Georgia Rail Rond, surrounded with
the best of timber and abundance of oak wood,
and wit'ni.i four miles of Richmond Bath.
Also, eighteen hundred acres o- land in t'dum
bi-i county, lying on both si les of the Eueh. e
creek, with a saw mill in operations Most oi'it is
oak and hickoiy, with two hmidn <1 acres of clear
ed land, in a fine state for cultivation, within one
mile of Kirkpatrick’s.
Any pers m desirous of purchasing, will do well
to call and view the premises. Apply to the sub
sciibeison the premises.
novi >-wtf J. D. & W. HAYNIE
£2U< lARS
LJ 70 hhds Ni-v. Otk-.ias Suga; , fine an I poor
cioaiitv,
J 5 hhdsp.fo; St for. ixandP.ntoßnu . 'urar,
10 him -1 l.uiii- d Alatanzas Stig':.
Will be land, d this dav.
mi :• ..
.
>Lj 40 1.1.12 L'«if u.id Gil's... I .Sugary., fro.ii
Wool . Wool.. ■■ ■ >i::t.ll:i'.:<■ I».y. ol :.:■». i.r
ip.ali ■ •■'•ill 1 f.o no ;>tatew pii.-c.
: inar'J T. UETCALr.
U
.I.' 600 bbls IS.. i.i.o I'.iuai Tteur,
100 hall bl-ls "
[.'lndia-' tt'is day ham Ohl < so. li.-.it.-'.
450 bbls Superfine Lt loin Flour,
150 “ “ Balli more “
In t ire and to anive.
iw»r9 ts T. ' oi i .
ITtßEsil l’t I r &<
A. 150 drum? F; ch< m,
17 ci ks piimc Npt-i.n AinterOil, very
ii Jit .. . • r 9-tl) T. i: Ct ’ \LF.
. . )( ' , S ; )ES &« The
lib ; - . ha; jr.Bt recci\ 1
im-nt, ia a i nti m io hi i i. .
1280 PACKAGES . ..
of all d< sciiyti .(is, a ! iplcd I >th coualiy trade,
which Ire oib ic tor sale as lu,, a- tin y can !>c
purehasen num t’ne manuf:'.c:oiie:'.
I’erui --'f’AMI, or approved payer.
D.-alt t ... i ..ji.-d i call and examine ihe
s:otk. D. I . Fi.EMIN<4,
itus. 24 and 25 -. irec.t.
(’hirh , Ft . 16, 18’ [feb 19
i vTITs k ■ l vißl . L imf er
.k_J will be de’ive) I :tt the Rail Bond Depot,
Auru. tu, of any kind o, de . {foiimi which may
be w.tn: d, at i- hm.-d p,i. tt. -s m heart
stuff 6by 7. id 1•. i ton . .: :0 ecu:.-, thusa oi 7 I
fo>'t 4 i.i ; ne : '~ Chy7, at 17c uiarid’lhes *os b ■
iietSim h- (• 5 >. lot low I. •< ing, at 14 c< nts. I
Apply to LEGN I‘. DL'GaS, Agent. !
hi 1 wlm
niG\! Vv EMI <G,
Co. ~i; rchar t,
. ■■ te’l-: .b. I
.■ gisi.n far their pa-1 pati.muve,
and solicit j a continuance of their favors. He
also asks from the planting interest of Georgia a
share of their business, and pledges himself to
use every possible means to satisfy all who may
confide in him.
Referencesin Savannah.—Andrew Low dr Co.,
John P. Williamson N Son, Cohen, Miller & Co.,
Maj. A. B. Fannin, Capt. P. Vviltberger, and Mul
ford Marsh.
In Augusta. - Pori r Fleming. J. W. Whitlock,
Hand & Williams, W. A. Beall & ( <>.
a ng 25 Gm w
1 fURAIiX SEIAtoT NOVELS,
No. 13.—The Las t of the Barons, by Sir
E. L. P.mv.tT—;aie. 2.5 ceiii-. For sale bv
mh J CHAS E GRENVILtE &
LASi Ok- TbIE BARONS.
{-'OEIES of th<? above work.
-L* v/ by Sir E. 1,. Bulwer, bound in a neat
stvl-. f-T price-.'5 ('em.-;. Just received
by THOMAS RICHARDS.
' Horace Smith’s and James’ new novel, Har
pers’ edition, daily expected. mh 3
i 'i'O HLNT.—-The store on the
coiot rof Broad and Campbell sireris, and
the offices in tie- rear. F«>r furth. r particular?,
apply to Edward Thomas, or
aua 13-trwtf .u;;i \ .1. <
a’! A •):■< HET.S.
H. PARS* LXS has just r<-
‘-ived from J. hie io ring, of ifos-
I * | U( , pjqj.) Fortes, with 1”. i
Frames, in rose and branch wood eases.
Also, one from .Nunns eV Clark, with the 51. -
taiic Tube Brace, a late and very important im
provement.
The public are invited to examine these instru
ments, as they are thought to reflect credit on the
manufacturers. feb 2!
DANCI NG ADISMI .
7k I K. J. \V 1 PILE n.spcctfnlly announ
-Lv.l. e.-s to iii- patrons, that the Spring n rm oi
his Daiicing School will ( omm- m . <.}• S.iim-i-.y
March Ilth. Days of ti*itfon Saturdays u.'y,
comiiienciif. at 10 o’clo. k a. m., and 5 < "lock r.
m., by whi !i arram. = : -ut both lesions wii! be.
received on th ? e tiim day. so as not in interfere
with the deli sos th? daily schools. T< t i.s dH.)
for a term of eighteen lesson.-, i.ieluding \».lit. ing
and all the fashionable slyies of damiim. Prac
tising panics vid be '_ivtn every f rtuig'nt, for
the advancement of his pupils, at which lim th*
parents and guardians are respectfully invited io
attend. div m 7
iVI OTICE. ’.ll p : on • havim; Haim.
I against the,* J.al' of [John Stith, lab; of
v»’.irreii county, deceased, will render them in
properly attested, within the lime presetib. dby
law, and those indebted make i.tim.ciatc pay
ment. ELIZA S i ITH., Adin K .
January 21, 1843.
Notice. —?. n p<rsoi; indek ito
the estate of llie late Fia ■ << WaiM,
late of Burke county, deceased, m . quest : io
make immediate payment, arid Rmse having
claims against said estate will render them in,
properly authenticated, within the time prescribed
l»y law. JAMES WARD, / Pvi-’q
GILBERT A. WARD, $ * xr 8 *
jVTO’fICE.—AII persons having
claims niainst the estate of Henry E. Han
son, late of Columbia county, deceased, will
please present them within the time prescribed
bylaw, duly authenticated, to the subscriber, and
ail persons indebted to said estate will please call
and settle the same. W. HANSON, Adm’r.
February 13, 1843.
NOTICE. —AH persons indebted to
the estate of Mrs. Lucy Hunt, deceased,
or the estate of William Hunt, deceased, are re
quested to make immediate payment, and those
having demands against said estates, are reques
ted to render them in, duly attested, within the
time prescribed bv law.
GABRIEL JONES, ? p .
JOHN LAMKIN, S
February 16, 1813.
months after date, application
2- will be made to the Honorable the Inferior
Court of Columbiii county, when sitting for or
dinary purposes, for leave to sell the whole of the
real estate of Anderson C. Wilson, deceased;
I EVELINA A. WILSON, Admr’x.
February 16, 1843.
months alter date, application
-it. 1 will be made to the Honorable the inferior
G.jurtof Burke county, when sitting for ordinary
purposes, for leave to sell all the land belonging
to the estate of Bailey Carp.mter, Sen. late of
Burke county, deceased. Some of the land lies
in Burke and some in old Cherokee.
BAILEY CARPENTER, Adm’i.
February 17, 1343.
months after application
-8- will be made to the Honorable ihe Inferior
Court of Warren county, when sitting for ordina
ry purposes, for leave to sell ail rhe lands belong
ing to the estate of Thomas Wesbey, late oi - War
mi county, deceased, ylokl ior the, benefit of-he
creditors.
ELISHA PERRYMAN, Jr., Adm’r.
Ffon-iimy 17, 1813.
months after date, application
will be made to the Honorable the Interior
Court of Columbia county, while sitting for ordi
nary purposes, for leave to sell all the
of Luke F. Clark, deceased.
JOHN G. TANKERSLY.
January 5, 1843. ■*
months ndate, application
TL will be made to the Honorable the Inferior
(’<»;!• t us Burke county, when sitting for ordinary
pir. p<>s.w’, for leave to the ttegroe.-: belonging
to i n j estate of Benjamin < ’. Mobley, late of said
county, deceased, for division.
WASH INC-TON MEI.KF.Y, Adrn r.
■iy 12, !•' so.
jLpOUR month?; aft* r date, application
K- will be made to the honorable, the Inferior
Court of Lincoln county, when sitting as a court
ol ordinary, for leave to sell the land and negroes
belonging to the estate ofMarv Wifoht, deceased.
LLEWALLIN EYANS, Adm’r.
Dec mber 3, 1
g AOUR months after date, application
P. will be made to the honorable, the Court of
Ordinary of Warren county, when sitting for or
dinary purposes, for leave to s; 11 a certain tract of
la t !. for the benefit of the orphans (John H Scott
and Elisha 1. Holliman) to said property
I HIGH AR MSTRONG. Guardian.
November 24, 1842.
jSjVHJR months alter date, application
U- will be made to the Honorable the Interior
Court of Burke county, when sitting tor ordinary
purposes, for leave to sell a negro boy, Fulwood,
belongingto the estate of Walter J. A. Hamilton,
deceased. I’.. A. .ALLEN, .Adm’r.
January 7, 18 k’.
3 HJR months alter date, application
8 will b - mad* to the honorable, the Inferior
Court of Jefferson county, when sitting for ordi
nary purposes, for leave to sell the lands and ne
groes belonging to the estate of Benjamin Glover,
deceased, for (hr benefit of th** heirs and creditors
of said deceased. JESSE QLOVEIL Adm’r.
MOI RNING GLOVER, Adm’x.
November 30, 1812.
[■ jM'HTIJ, months after d l<•, application
v.ill be made to the honorable, the Inferior
C ne t us Taliaicrrc. (Miimiy, v. hen sitting for ordi
nary, purposes, for leave to sell all the ljuds and
n :tl est:;:*.: of Williamson Bird, late of said eotnily
deceased, far the benefit of the heirs and creditors
of said deceased. A. 11. STEPHENS, Ex’r.
January 10, 1842.
months after date/ application
-fi- will be made to the honorable the Inferior
Court of Lincoln county, when sitting for ordi
nary puiposes, for leavp to sell a part of the ne
groes belonging to the estate of Jeremiah Blanch
ard, deceased. GEO. W. LEWIS, Adm’r.
January 2, 1812. jan 10
months after date, application
_i_ will be made to the Honorable the Inferior
Court oi’ Burke county, when sitting for ordinary
' iirposes, for leave to sell all the real and personal
property of 11. D. Burke, deceased.
January 3,1843.* B. E. GILsTRA?, Ex’r.
Georgia, (Lincoln comity:
Court ok Ordinarily February Adjourned 7'croi,
1813.
Pr< sent their Honor.: Pct* r Lamar, Aaron Hardy,
James Jennings, Alexander John-ion and Iliir
ri’sun AV. Hagaman.
RUI/tt MSI.
t T appearing to the Comt, that William
A Sudduth in his life time, executed hisb.mt! to
AVi’li t ;i Johnston of the cmmt v .»!’ Jours and
State of Gco.'-ia, to rank • him titles to lot of
i iiliy live, in the sixteenth district of
10.-nerly Lie, but nuwS.:m:.-; county, whenever
died upon s«» to do; and it furtln r appearing,
ilint inid William Suddmh depart, d this life
w i Iwai executing th title in coniplianc*- with
. :.i l bond: Itis therefore, on motion, ordered, that
\\ i iia-i; Stokes, tidmi.iistraiur on the cstuteof
t;ai 1 V\ iiiiam Ludduth, show cau.-e, at lh«* ii xi
uly tv:.a of this Com t, why he should not make
titles tosaid lot of land, agreeably to said bond, (a
copy of which is hereunto atta -h.-d,) and that thia
rul- be published in one of the public gazettes of
t!;i -dat -, three months previous to call July
i copy extract from the minutes of said
~-t. Given under my hand at office, in Lin
c auton, this 6th dav of i*'ebruary. 18.3.
HUGH HEN DEE. ON, Cleik.
Febru.iry 13, 1843.
SOUTHERN G IRDENER.
k 1 .‘ (luthern I'arin; r and Market Gardener, br
ingn compilitioii of useful artl -les on these sub
from the most approved writers, particular
ly adapted to the /ar///o?g and gaj'dcni/i f> us ihe
South, by Francis S. Holm*of < iruil ton, S.
Jie_! received bv
THOMAS RICHARD 1
’■ ij ’< PKEV E N T <•: 'NH it
.J. FEITS.—The proprietor of/>r. 'Raylor':
Batsfiin, Lirerirort li.u; caused io be executed a
pft-nd; d sleel plate engiav. -I label, by Mt-. : is.
Rawdon, Wright & Hatch, which will in fuiuu
accuii.pany tach buttle, and without which rm.;,
v. ill be genuine. li i)r. Tuvin. '■ Llccr
irorl. 175 RoicvrijC will be found oil th envelope,
and “Post Nubila I‘hmbu- i the mottu o. i the
‘ ; A •:i remedy for Con.s'.unplion.: .tad Lie, r Coin
.plainl . i u.n fully sati -fied, i?.»m long experience,
tbeiei - -Ki medicine equal to Dr. 'i ovlor s Balsam
. EE - ...at. Then can ie no question th.-1 it
.sac- itain cure tor chronic, cuufoi. niul cuiA-.
It ( l-'mis-.j the lungs by expectoration relfov* : I
difficult breathing—seems t.* held the chest, and |
' * fog pu.cly vegetabh , can be used with the itt- !
Pul .ale by Wm. HAi-X ES, Jr., Am nt for A:t-
3m febJ3
MAN SUSP A HOON ii !•: <-'A*3 .fob
| HELIVIS roonfo fur Writing mid
. Book kei ping, corner <>; Broad and Wash
ington streets. Rooms open day and # vening.
Gentlemen will ineet in tue mondrig an*! * •.:
ning, and ladies i.i the nft< rnoon.
References.—Prof. W. Erm jiuul h : J. G. i
Dunlap, I'sq.; T. J. Parmek*, E- Jn «. IO it, I
Esq.; Wni Shear, fl ; G. B. <• hart ;
.1. < !».: son, I - -
Jones.
At thru <{!•. :; -Uto I
u. iHThh' r* comin-. dtc a utl nrin and i'ro
i • • : , . . ..... wt' 1
visited II njux.i l> hi... ■ *>..• ul i\ uxam- i
ship, ami his systc :a <u Bo u-.-fte-j.-iag, ;uid ha\- j
ingvxai.tiiu .1 b nh, t--. e.h; r wi;h nn:m r.cis tes- >
timonials o: the imptu/eim m i.i the cbiiogr.iphy :
of his pupils, w.- take pl< a? ure in comnu nuing
him to the fiivo. ibi'- »*i.ui.i raifon of all those '
who desire instruction in ei.hcr depart .it. I
W.Ern’i:nfi'.,< h, J.no,
T. J. Paumellj:, J. (J. Daw-ox,
J. G. E\ . •.. .
T1 (AT I VlBR! . ! ■
f: 1 I Hre.-I 1 . h
thankful lor (i.c r< linn . i ill- i- . '| lie rte
name ■ i.i i*. .>j --i io. l;. I ..jl
57 half and l.bl - tin.v. h. n: I’! >u;,
3 bueu Mm I. Pepper,
25 boxes Soda Biscuit,
20 boxes Sperm < bnitltes, '
15 n< : Madret Bask. ts. a< ~ ud,
20 I an ■ I; ilf! ds Kos 1 and 2 ,V. ; lu r. 1,.
15 te i' = <:'<' ’ll . Alter. ■
For .1,1 !■ :■ • I»;i I tel .: ■ '
d
above '• 1 '’ii- ' B k.
ROBERT \l .STIN,
d* < 19-ls .’.foursbell- ! PhmnixH'.t. L
g > U i.’ i\E i ‘uim: v, <.it-orgia
SVli. ~ as, Rub - .. .1. Dixon apptti.i’ for letters
di.uni- >;;■ on the estate of Thomas Hurst, de
ceased :
The:. oc therefore to cite and admonish, nil
<'.';d singi hu - , the kindred and ciuditora of said dc
eeased, to be and t'ppcar at iny o'Wbe, within the
time pre>-.'. ibed by h'.v, to yh cause, if any they
have, why -aid letl. rs should .•' be anted.
Given i. :t. i iny hra! at «.» •in '•V.ivhesbdTo.
Sept. 22, I ii-2. 'k. H. ..i.UUK'/; Clerk.
C COLUMBIA County, Georgia:
Whereas, Dani 1 L Ala.snail applies to me
for letters of administration on the estate oi’Lcvi
Marshall, deceased:
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all
and singular, the kindred and creditors of said de
e-.-ased, to be ami appiti- ;.t my oii’iec, within the
time prescribed by law, tu c.how cause, it any they
htive, why said letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand at office in Appling.
JONES, GIT.
COLL’Ai if I\ < 'ui.iiy. < f .
W’hereas John Cartlidge, Executor of the
will of Peyton Hawes, deceased, applies for let
ters dismissory:
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all
and sigular, the kindred and creditors of said de
ceased, to be and appear at my office, within the
time prescribed by law, to show cause, If atty they
have, why said letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand at office in Appling.
GABRIEL JONES, Clerk.
February 2,181 J.
Cuunty, Georgia:
Whereas Charles A. Crawford applies to
me for Letters of Administration, with the will
annexed, on th? estate of William 11. Torn nce,
Lite of Baldwin county, deceased.
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all and
singular, the kindred and creditors of said deceas
ed, to be andappearat my office, within the lime
prescribed by law, to. show cause if any they
have, why said k should not bo granted.
Given under my hand, at office, in Appling.
GABRIEL JONES, Clerk.
February 4, 1843.
Co < !. so M I . . < ; * orgia
) Whereas Thomas Blanchard and Uriah
Blanchard, Executors cf the will of Uriah Blan
chard, deceased, r.pply to me for Leiters Disnris
sory on said estate:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and
singular, the kindred and creditors of said dectms
ed, to be and appatirat my office, within the lime
prescribed by lav , to show cause, if any they
have, why said lei - uld not be. granted.
Given under nn Ea:tu. at office, in .Appling.
* GAERIEL J6NES, Clerk.
January 3, 1843.
COLU MBIA (tounty, (b.
Thomas Reed tolls before me, J’uhn G. Tan
kersley, a Justiee of the Peace for the 10th Dis
trict G. M., one bright sorrel Mare, fourteen hands
high, blind in her right eye, shod before, white
spot on her left shoulder, eleven or twelve years
old, and appraised by Wm. Air Levy and Elias
Scott to twenty dollars, this 28th day of January,
1843. ji«!IN G. TANKERSLEY, J. P.
Given und< ; mv hand, this Bth dav rd Februa
ry, 1813. DAVID MARiIIS, Clerk.
February 1!, 1843.
>IIUM BIA (’oiitrtv. <•<■»'<>rgiu.—
Whereas 'l’hos. Blanchard and Uri'ih Blau
* hard, executors of the will of Uriah Blanchard,
deceased, which said Uriah Blant hard was ex*.cu
toi of (lu j will of Jam. s Blanchard, deeca.-cd, ap
pl>' to me for Letters Dismissoiy. on said estate:
Th jse are therefore to rite ami admonish, all and
singular, the kindred and creditors of said deccas
♦y!, to he and appear at niy office, within the time
prescribed by law, to show cause, if any they
have, why said letters should not be granted.
Given under mv hand, at office, in Appling.
GABRIEL JONES, (’fork.
January 3, 1843.
CD >1 J\i BI A (/ounty, (xeorgia.
X Whereas, Cyrus Albe, .administrator on the
estate of 'I homas VV. Albe, t'ereased, applies for
letters dismissory:
These are therefor.- to cite anj, admonish, all
airl sin-. iilar, the kindred aud creditors of said de
ceased. i-» be and appear at iny bliice, within the
time pi<scril»*’(i.by law, to show cause, if any they
have, why said letters should not be granted.
Given under mv hand at ollie:' in Appling.
Janury 26, 1813. GA BRIEF. JONES Clerk.
/ UILUMBIA County, Georgia:
V-Whereas Tltoihus H. Dawson applies for
letters of administration on the estate of Ed
ward Wooding, deceased.
me ther.-fore to ciht and admonish, all
amt Singular, the kindred and creditors of said de
ceased, to be and appear at my office, within the
tim*' prescribed by law, to show cause, if any they
have, why said letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand at office in Appling.
F.b. 16, ISIS. GABRIEL JONES, Clerk.
C1 ()T ATMBI A County, Georgia:
/ W iu-ri as, Janies Langston, administratoron
the estate of David Langton, deceased, applies for
letters dismissory:
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all
and singular, tfie kindred and creditors of said de
ceased, to be mid appear uL iny-affiw, within thn
time pi -. Srrfb'i d 5y law, to show cause, if any they
have, why said letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand at office, in Appling.
January 26, 1843. GABRIEL JONES, Cl’k.
| IN COLN County, Georgia:
a 2 When ns Nathan Bussey applies to me for
Letteiis of -Administration on the estate of Robert
Scarls, deceased.
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all
and singular, the kindred aud creditors of eaid
deceased, to be and appear at iny office, within
the time prescribed by law, to show cause, if any
they have, why said ft tiers should riot be granted.
Given under my hand, at office, in Lincolnton.
HUGH HENDERSON, Clerk.
February 13,1843,
ij IN COLN County, Georgia :
11 A Whereas, Isaac Willingham jr., adminis
trator on the estate of John Willingham, deceas
ed, applies for letters dismissory :
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all
and sin.. ;>iar, th kindred and creditors of said
deci ..'i .i, to be andappearat my office,within the
tim* p: scribed by law, to show cans*-, if any they
have, why raid foile. s should not be granted.
Given imd r mv hand, at office in Lincolntou.
HUGH HENDERSON, Clerk.
March 7, 1843.
w I*.<• I LRSf >N ( ouiiiy. Georgia:
Q.jf Whereas, John Sumpfis applies to im- for
letters of administration *m the cstat*? of Nath’l
Samp!:senior, d< ceased :
Timarc then fore t.» cite and admonish, all
and sin pilar, the Lin.ircd and vicditois ot .-aid dt -
ceased, to b« mid appear a tiny office, within the
time pi. s.rib*d by law, to show cause, if any they
have, why said letters should not be granted.
Given under mv hand at office in Louisville,
March 9, IBi3. E. BOTHWELL, Clerk.
8 I. I’b ERSON County, Georgia:
Win rca,-., Andi i.-.on McDonald applies to me
for I tier!, of administration on the estate of Ab
nwr Munson, late oi Jefiersou county, deceased :
Tiime thcrelora to cite and admonish, ail
aud singular, the kindred and creditors, of: !d* -
ce.iifu, to be and appear at my office, within the
time piesciibtii by lew, to cause, if any they
have, why si.id ft re. i. should not be granted.
Gi/fcn under n.v hand at in Louisville. !
March E. BGI’HVV .•
| Eb’FLHSON Couitly, Georgia:
Wti.'ien:', Anderson McDonald applies to me
for lette i. of Administration on the estate of Mrs
Nancy Vimmn, deceased :
Tht.se are th. reifo.* to cite and admonish, all
and snigii’fir, th. kindred tmd credit..muf said <t.
c. .i '.!‘d, io be and app* ar at myoflic-.', within the
time p.\- : ri:> by law, to show cmi...-, if any th y
have, why : .tid 1.-ih-rs should not bv granted.
Given imd.-r ray hand at offi.---in l. iuisville.
■l.te(h!' ; I E. EOTHW’ELL, Gteito
l t-T)N <‘ounty, Ggorgid.-
Whereas Susan A. Robbins and Thomas
V<. Ifott -y, administratrix and administrator on
the estate ot Sai nut I W. Robbins, late of s'* id
county, deceased, fippyl toioe for Irtteiy -
.-.oiy iiu.'ii th- ir said adininrsnatiori.
i ne ~-. are therefor.- to . ii. and ndmoiiish. <U
and singular, the kindred and creditors of a tiri
d'.-ceaseri. !•> be and app v arat my office within thi'.
time pr<-.-«•»ib< d by law, t.o. how causi , n any they
haw, why :-aid letters should not be granted.
Giv* n under mv hand, ai office, in
I.EENEZER BOTHWELL, Clrvr.
Jamun y 5, fol.i.
p Lb I 'K!*S< )N < ’oiuity, Georgia:
oi John Tomkins, 'ate uJ said county, deceased,
up*di: s for k tb->s dismissory:
These ai<- thf u fore to cite and admoiii. h, all
and . i.Ktd i . ihe kindrod and creditors of said d* -
*\ d, Ii be and :»pj •ar my office, v.ifliiu th;-
tim: j• ii'. 1 i y law, tosh iw (•uusu, ifany they
li:* .. , why s: id 1< il< rs should nut be ;>r.inn d.
■ . • rmy hand at offic* in I .oui -. iii.-*.
J:-ry 19, 1 i.. E. BOTHV. I J.1., t.d.-ik.
g BFFERSON County, Georgia:
Wlr n-:s. Jesse Glover, administrator on the
( State oi Thomas iV. Jenkins, deceased, late of
-aid county, appli*. s to me for Jettcis disinissoiy:
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all
;’i»*| siriLfular, the kindred and ch uitors of said d. -
, * (‘osed, io iie and appear at my office, within ihe
i (inn- p;. :-ribf-d by iaw, to showeausc. if any they
i hnv*. wk', i-.iid I >*< is should not h<- «-i nil* d.
liven u ler my h m at offu e. in L I .
; Jam.:;; \ !;». 1 E. EO’i‘ll WELL, CaeiK.
j •{ EFT toR.M >N Coinity. < it.‘oi jilt.-
lii . m ll :
. . v Hors of said d<
•. a to i ana apt-, oral my office within the
>i:i ; - -rib* ii y i.-w. t.i show cause, if any th. y
ha-. , a '../ ..id I* urns should not be grant.'d.
i.. ;. e ‘ : my hand, al * flic., in Louisville.
i:b;.nezerbuthv\ell, u ejk.
Jan* :.v 21, 1843.
! ’J- a ' AiUt-FN County. Georgia.-
| V ? Whereas luastus* Beall and Jesse IL
: ■ . yto rae for letters ol ■■ In ini tration on
■ii ysmn- MElizabeth .Lrahm, late oi said coun-
1 sit Im redit
. to be and uppcnr»at mywithin
he tinic j how <an» if;
Hi Hi/ . why :aidl tiers should not he granted,
Given mid i j..-. han.i ai . • ic. in Warrcnton.f
PATRICK ? . ?d \ldDl X. <;i. .]■ t-..
|.* . : ■ .
\ ViA AiiGi; PLANTATION
In Btrrke County, at Sheriff’s Sale*
WILL bo sold on the first Tuesday
i.i April next, at the court house in the
town of W ayiieaboro, between the usual hours of
sale, twenty-nine hundred and ninety-eight acres
of land, more or less, situated on both sides of
Boggy Gut creek, adjoining lands of Thos Cos
naham, Seaborn Ward, anil others; levied on as
the property of Peter Bcnnoch deceased, and Jno
McKenzie deceased. Property pointed out. by
Frederick M Cabott, agent for the Bank of Au
gusta. ISAAC MESSEX, D. Sh’ff.
Al m ch 2, 1843. Irw&wtd
BURKE Postponed Sheriff ’s Sale.—
Will be sold on the f>Ht Tuesday in April
next, ?-t the court house in the town nf Waynes-
I co, Bulk: county, between the usual hours of
• d the following negroes, to wit: Jack a man,
J . i h iu. Randal a man, Isom a man, Fanny
a koii.au, Rachel a woman, and Maria ; levied on
;;.i the property of Jacob E\ans, to satisfy a mort
gage fi fa from the inferior court of Burke county
ia favor of John Brigham.
March 9, 1843. S. VV. BLOUNT, Sh’ff.
IJOSTIN )NED Administrators' Sale.—
■l_ On tic: first Tuesday in April next, will be
sold, under order of the Court of Ordinary of
I’urko county, at the court house of said county,
the following property, belonging to the estate of
J wob Evans, deceased, viz: one tract of land,
t mtaining one hundred and fifty acres, adjoining
J.uiits Godbee and others; four hundred and for
ty acres of land, known as the Bargeman place;
a so, the following negroes : a negro woman na
i. .M Ellen, Nancey and her two children, Harriet
eid Allen. Sold fur the benefit of the creditors.—
Terms on the day.
JAMES R. MOORE, Adm’r.
ELIZABETH EVANS, Adm’x.
March 9, 1813.
i.x’tOUll months after date, application
!■. will be made to the honorable Jnloiior Court
of Burke county, for leave to sell all the real and
personal property of Eth< Idled Dunford, deceas
ed. DANIEL BRINSON, Adm’r.
March 9, 1843. * '
AUGUSTA SEED STORE.
.S’ Ji AA/: R GA R DEN SEEDS,
proprietor of this establishment
8 has jus t rect ived a large supply of Genuine
Seeds-, the crop of 1842. lie leaves the Seed to
rocommchd themselves, which thev have done
ever since he has dealt in them. The Shakers’
Garden Seed is sought for by eve: v person, and
here they may have it genuine. The usual al
lowance made to country dealers.
Bird Seed, Lucerne, Clover, Marigold, Wurtzel,
Fr*meh Sugar Beet, Rye Grass, Blue do., Hurd’s
do., Hops, Asparagus Roots, Turnip Seed, &c.,
als*) Flower Seed. tapl dec 13
DIREQTVROM FRANCE-
100 battles of the celebrated Bagncres Vermifuge.
rpHIS VERMIFUGE is preferable
Ji to all others as yet known, on account of
im being stomachic and tonic. Ir is prepared en
tirely from plants, and is warranted to contain
nothing injurious to the human constitution. —
This bring its first introduction in this place, con
. tjquenlly its viriuret? are little known, but in Eu
rope, and the diftereht cities in the United States,
wlu-te it hu been used it has never failed of com
plete success, ft may begiven to children at any
age, and in all instances where it fails of success
i • destroying every •> any kind of worm, after a
fair trial, the mom y will be refunded.
To be had at the Drug Store of
ROBERT AUSTIN & CO
b 19-ts 2 doors below Eagle di.Ph(Hnix Hotel
I ANE l S EXPECTORANT.—This
vP invaluable medicine is daily eflecttog some
of the most astonishing and wonderful cures that
have ever been known. All who have used it in
Asthma, Coughs, Spitting of Blood, Whooping
Cough, Grouper Hives, Consumption, Chronic
Pleurisy, Hoarseness, Pain and Soreness of the
Bo ast, Difficulty ot Breathing, and every other
dis< :.>(• of the L; \(.;; and Bueast, can and do at
test to itsj usefulness BRONI ’llTl'lS, a disease
which so annually sweepingthous .nds upon thou
sands to a premature grave, under the mistaken
lima.- *>i CONSI MI’TION, is always cured by il.
The usual symptoms of this disease--Bronchitis
--ra- cough, sorcm of the lungs or throat,
hoarseness, difficulty of breathing, Asthma, hec
tie fever, a •pitting up of phlegm or matter, and
sometimes blood. 11 is an inhumation of the fine
skin which lines the inside of the whole of the
wind tubes or air vt ssels, w hich run through ev
ery past of the Lungs. The Expectorant imme
diately suppresses the. Cough, Pain, Inflamma
tion, Fever and Difficulty of Breathing, and pro
duces a free and easy oKjiectoiution, mid a cure is
soon afli'Cled.
It always cures ASTHMA two or three large
doses will rm*- ihe CROUP or HIVES of ChE
dren, in from 15 minutes to an hour’s time. It
imm-xlint* ly subdues the violence of WHOOP
ING < OUGII, and etkets a speedy cure. Hun
dreds who have been given up by their Physicians
as incurable with “GON SUM PTION,” have been
restored to perfect health by it.
If this I ’.xpectorant be given in the commence
ment of Pleurisy, Inflammation of the Lungs or
in acute Rheumatism, in doses sufficiently large
sons to cause a little nausea for some time,going
to bed and rovertn.g up warm, it w ill produce per
spiration, and subdue these aflections at once.
JONATHAN GOING, D. D., President of
Granville College, Ohio, says, “he was laboring
under a severe cold, cough and hoarseness, and
that his difficulty of breathing was so groat that
he felt himself in imminent danger of immediate
suflocation, but was perfectly cured by using this
Expectorant.”
Mis. DELKS, of Salem, N. J., was cured of
Asthma of 20 years standing, by using two bottles
of this medicine. Mrs. Ward, also of Salem, was
cured of the same complaint by 5 bottles. A
young lady, also of Salem, who was believed by
her friends to be far gone with consumption, was
p« rftelly restored by three hotties. Dr. Hamil
ton, of St. •James, South Carolina, was greatly
afiected by a trough, hoarseness and soreness ol
the lungs, and on using a bottle of this medicine
found permanent relief
JAYNE’S EXPECTORANT. We esteem it
a pleasure to be able to recommend this medicine
as the best calculated for the purpose of curing
Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Asthma, and all
Alifo-tions of the Lungs. From a long personal
acquaintance with Dr. Jayne, we know that he is
no quack, and his medicines are not nostrums of
the modern cry up, but are the result of his long
(experience as a practising physician, and the ex
pense of .‘.'rent labor. Hartford, (Conn.) Daily
ASTHMA CURED BY DR. JAYNE’S EX-
Pfo iOl.'AN'r. -?disK Alary Campbell, of New
Havm, Fay* tic comity, has been cured of Asth
ma, oi mare than eighteen years continuance, by
th ) Dr. J he’s Exp ictoraht. >.he rom
mencfd takhu? the medicine last summer, and af
ter using eleven botllt s, was entirely rid of this
distressing disease. We are assured of this cure
by a holy of undoubted veracity, and requested to
make it public for the benefit of others.— Mount
Rlcaruvt (Pa.) Register.
JAYNE S EXPECTORANT fsr COUGHS,
COLDS, cVc.-—So many people are afflicted with
th* s? common every day disorders, that we deem
it our duty to point our readcis to a simple reme
dy, which we have tried and found efficacious.—
Jayne < L ipectorant is a very valuable phial of
• yrup whi fi we have Im My used with good vf
‘ et in •t'.ppingn cough, and loosening and break
i : *ip a cold. It is a very agreeable medicine.—
This recommendation is not a bought pufli but
emii-.lv voluntary. And wc feet that we can
hardly d*» a gn ater favor to our readers in these
d ivs ofclu ntin . than to recommend them as
well tri'-d. efficient remedies, <. peciylly those we
have trkd ourselves.
Daniel Henshaw,
Editor of the Lynn Record, Mass.
For sale bv
WM. K. KITCHEN,
f* bll sv. &w2m Sole Agent for Augusta ■
WAR! WAR!—the Wig
V V iVlak- is have declared hostilities against
cur neighbor, DR. J.AS NE, on account of his
HAIR TONU ‘. which i« knocking all tin ir busi
ness iiito a “cocked hat.” (.adies and gentle
ii ii, old and young, pro flocking to the DoctoPs
sianda.3. H* ads long div* sted of even the first
ri.dim* ids oi hair, after uting his Hair Tonic,)
soon up; ear with new aj-id flowing lockp, which
Ab . i hi;.: If might have envied. Beardless
boys are st-; n with large and bushy whiskers, and
l.nii smile ap.ain through their own raven ring
fol s. moo beautiful and bewitching than ever.—
Baid ht ads are doffing their wigs and throwing
t li.m t-> the “raoles and the hats,” while the wig
milk-. ' land e hrmt :ik tin y behold the demoli
■ lion of thcirl iisiiicss.
What will ho the consequence of this war wo
know not, as th* wi ies arc outrageous, and the
Docfur r* n : ins firm, and declares that “some
things can be Jon* ys well as others,” and that
l.ahi i.f-adc ji'.iy a ’■ well v.t nr th* iruwn hail as the
hairof oili *pi oplu. JltoWv i\Jf.ssen rr er.
■f t ... cd* by WAL K. KITCHEN,
leb 11 f\. i‘<w3m Sol? Agent for Augusta
F OF BALDNESS—-PRE
O bIdIVATiON GF THE ILVIR.-LAN7
DISCOVERY ANU TJIE BEST.
J.kYNE’S HAIR TONIC.
Bay it- t .c H— and - oil i-i.i nut be disappointed.
[Loth r hum Air. bank.]
PiJir.ADEi.ruiA, December 11, 1842.
Da. Javke -Dear Sir—-I cheerfully, and with
ph a ur* .-tebu.il the following to yon, with the li
hi iiyot your tnaking it public, should you have
(’;«• so rir.. I '-.r pev< ral months past my hair had
1,.. * ; rapidly fulling ofl’ so iiiiicli t o in.it <d, that
' ■ 'l.r-.: ; h it, I * '.'idd
oi ..-.i.i a quantity in u v hand. 1 hud tried Ml
l h • fra bi ;.;: I b •of th .lav, without root iving
‘he li hn.‘ > b. o t. Th: 1 only r« xnueo that
.-(?• . 4 t'ir to me, was to la*. my head shaved
lt;i\i.: lb: • has! mi v. i;o had profiled by
:• <t c, fo.tt lof th'' . ma.kt.blu cures ( tteettd by
.!?.\ >.if> TLAIII TONIG. i was induced, as a
:■ :.i' i >.t, try it. I h’av* used two bottles,
..nd 'ho ph :*.‘ - c*i to say, that a'i.-r a few applica
tion. i.ty h-.Rcf a-■ d entirely f.*»ni coming out —
i . eit app ■ .•.*..•!■ i.i ./;< at abun-
• iancc. and that. 1 now have a fine luxuriant
grow th, aud believe it to be the bt st remedy ever
yet discovered. A fair trial will be its best recom
mendation. independent <»f its virtues as a re*
-tuiative and prevt .ttntivc, it imparts to the hair
a fine, healthy, glossy appearance, rendering it
-oft and flexibit; which will render it an invalua
ble ticqui.' itiou to the toilet of every one at all dc
-iious ot b* :mtilring that greatest of adornments
R •lurniii ; my must sincere thanks for saving
UM <4 your
’.'uMc, I<k (1 sir, vour ob* dimit servant,
w Rn ' i o Saxs,
No. 103 Walnut-str.
*. * .>nstar.’ mipplv oi this invaluable Hair
■ \ . KIT< HEN
let. 11 vA \ ;m A gent for Augusta.
3