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NEWS AND GAZETTE.
WASHINGTON, GA.
7’ THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1844. 1
FOR PRESIDENT, 1
HENRY CLAY, I
of KKvrruKv,
FOR VICE-PRESIDENT,
THEODORE FRELINGHUYSEN, j
OF NF.W-jr.GSEV.
FOR ELECTORS : J£fi|
[elected nr general ticket.] • - .A-*.i
.Oil the first Monday in November ■ ‘
fc JOEL CRAWFORD, of Early.
It WILLIAM I>. McCONNELL, of Liberty. I
f THACKER B. HOWARD, of Muscogee.
I CHRISTOPHER IS. STRONG, of Bibb.
f ROBERT A. T. RIDLEY, of Troup. !
DAVID* IRWIN, of Gobi).
CHARLES DOUGHERTY, of Clarke. !
WILLIAM C. DAWSON, of, Greene.
CHARLES J. JENKINS, of Richmond.
WILLIAM LAW, of Chatham.
Georgia Elections.
A Locofoco majority in Georgia~The State \
become a roosting place for pokes, ■
and other obscene birds !
Ftpr the last few days the Whigs ofGeor- r
gia, have been deafened by the triumphant
cackling, crowing and bfaying of the Eo- !
cofocos over their victory in Georgia.—
Every empty-headed braggart of their party
has set up for a wit in a small way, and
has had his joke to or-ack about the long K) |
oes of the Whigs, and the regret they exhib
it at the degradationwhich seems to impend
over their State. Though their victory j
has only resulted*in a meagre majority,
obtained as we have every-reason to believe, j
by not the most creditable means, and at j
the cost tothem of two members OfCongress, j
yet it is a small crumb of comfort to then) :
amid the dismay which has lowered over,
their party so long! lie that believes, after I
examining the returns, that this victory of j
k theirs is any thing that an honest man ought i
f to crow over, or lias been faiity obtained, j
[ must have faith much greater than a
tag&rain of mustard seed, ar.d is 100 green to
H^nture into a cow-pen !
Tlie result of the contest lias been the
the election of 4 Whigs, and 4 I.ocos, to
‘Congress. > i
The Loco majority in the State is about ■
2.300-4 counties to hear from.
In the Ist District, King’s majority, so!
far as received, is 586 : the 4 counties to
hear frorrajgave last year. 138 Whig ma- I
jority.
In tjie ‘3d District,-Jones beats Crawford
by 280 majority ; a small increase for
them on that of last year.
In tlie 3d District, Chappell. (Locofooo)
is beaten by Poe. Whig majority, 147.
This is a most gratifying result, for the
Locos had made the district their battle- :
ground, and used every effort to carry it.
We had rather that every Whig candidate
in the State should have been beaten, than
Chappell should have been elected.
In the 4th District, which never has giv
en a Whig majority but once, Floyd is beat
en by Haralson 563 votes.
In the sth District, wp “ get scissors,’
‘this is the district which beats us in the
;o/?>iate. Lumpkin more than trebles Coop,
er’s majority of last year, beating Millet
some 3,000 votes, .while the Whig vote is
not diminished by any means sufficiently
to explain the phenomenon.
In several of the counties, the Locofoco
vote has increased over ‘,IOO since last elec- ,
tion. !
Hurrah for Young Hickory,
Lumpkin and trickery.
Underwood is benlen by Cobb by a ma
’ jority of 1,945; some strange appearanees
about the votes of one or two of the counties
in this district. Old. Elbert still stands
like a noble oak amid the storm.
fStepEsns’ majority in the 7th District, is
1,011. / Greatest falling off in Wilkinson,
l owing'to a dirty trick concocted by the Lo
cos about MiljodgeviHc.
ITooiibs has increased the Whig vote in
this District about 200, showing that the
falsehoods put out against him, had no ef
fect ott the Whigs. The Locos of Scriven
have managed to get 70 additional, votes ;
from simewhere (not from the Whigs as j
- their vote shows,) and that is the chief gain i
I agains. us the Locos have made.
1 The. Whig majority in Maryland, is as-
to be 544. It will doubled afthe
f Residential Election. Some of the Loco-;
--so agents, we understand, are claiming |
~”iyland, as well as little Delaware.— !
VAnow they are guilty of falsehood— j
JfJ_‘ s Liof these gallant States are yet so
the in corruption as to give their vote
ct avV K -what'shis-namc in preference to j
/ Y?man 6f Kentuckv. •
State Elections.
Brilliant, success of the Whigs, in Ohio,
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Connecti
cut; An uprooting of the Folk-stalks!
Mr. Clay's Election certain ,
The Whigs will carry Ohio in the Gov*
j ernor’s election, by a majority of several
j thousands. In every county heard from
I they have gained largely. Full returns
: have not jjet been received ; but there is e.
i nough to show that Ohio goes for Clay, by
! a larger majority than she gave to Ilarri
'son. The Loeos have heretofore claimed
i a majority of 4,000 for Polk in Ohio, and
‘ tlie name of that State has formed the apex
of the Democratic pyramid which has gra
’ ord their papers. They will have to take
i it down, wo reckon.
New Jersey. —The Whig majority for
Governor, is between 1200 and 1500. Tins
is the first election for Governor under tlie
hew Constitution ; heretofore, that magis
trate has been elected by the Legislature.
A large Whig majority in tlie Legislature
! whicii secures to us aU. S. Senator. The
Jersey Blues have done well ; they had
i much to contend with—all the aristocracy
jof Democracy ; Government patronage ;
I Rail-road monopolies; Captain Tyler and
1 Capt. Stockton, to whom the State has been
! said to belong : “ As goes Captain Stock
ton, so goes the State.”
Pennsylvania goes for Clay in November
! to a dead certainty ; Shunk, the Loco can
! didate for Governor may be elected, but it
I will be by a small majority over Markle,
I who was an untried and unknown man.—
; The Whigs have reduced the majority of
[23000 for Porter down to a mere circum
i stance. In the city of Philadelphia, they
have had not only the Locos, but the Na
tive Americans (who run a ticket of thedr
own) to contend against. It is said by
some of our exchanges, that Clias. J. In-
I gersoll, that precious pink of Democracy,
who said if he “had lived in the time of
the Revolution he would have been a tory”
j has been beaten ; Others say he is elected.
I The result of the wlieie election still re-
I mains in doubt. Tlie Constitutionalist
(says that Shunk is elected by from 5 to
! 10,000 majority, but that paper also said
: some time since that his nomination ensured
: a Democratic majority of upwards of 20,000
| it may be that one assertion is as correct as
the other! ,
j Connecticut. —The local Elections held
! last week, prove tiie State so thoroughly
Whig, that hjo;dt . w.prth while to count
! up the majorities.
A word to the Whigs !
The vote at tlie late Congressional Elec
tion, makes apparent a majority against
you in the State. That such a majority
will rcaliv exist after a fair contest, and tlie
Whig party polls its full strength we do
’ not believe, and even if it does, it is not so
| great that you need despair. There is
I nothing in tlie present condition of things to
discourage vou, but this reverse should la
ther excite you to increased exertion. Lar.
■ ger majorities have been overcome in as
short a time as now remains to the Presiden
-1 tial election; witness Pennsylvania in 18,-
1 40, which State, after giving the Locos a
majority of some three or four thousand in
October of that year, yet reversed it in No
vember, and gave her Electoral vote for
Harrison. Such may be made the result
in this State, as it will be again this year in
Pennsylvania. We sincerely believe that
the Whigs of Middle and Southern Georgia
can if they will, increase their vote suffi
eiently to overcome the Loco majority of
Upper Georgia !
How can this be done ? We have here
tofore depended too much upon mass meet
ings, barbecues, &c. They are good in
their places, but only as supplying argu
ments to the Whigs to be used in private.
! They are not the means to make votes.—
i Our opponents work much more cunning,
i ly and effectually ; they cared nothing for
: die trutlj proclaimed to the people by the
! Whigs—they found falsehood serve their
’ turn, in private, much better. While our
i speakers were proclaiming truth from the
stand, and utterly routing their champions
in argument whenever they met them, their
understrappers in secret were destroying
the effect of Whig arguments by misrepre
sentations of our principles, and slander of
our candidates. While we gained the emp
ty honor of a victory in public, they reaped
its substantial fruits in private.
Let no man say that it is now too late to
i remedy the results of our mistaken policy I
{.lt is never too late to make an effort in the
j cause of truth and patriotism. It is never
I too late to deal a manly blow at corruption
and political knavery ! Every Whig can
| do something, either in reclaiming some de
| luded dupe of Locofoco chicanery, in de-
I tecting some of their tricks, exposing some
lof their falsehoods ; in exciting his Whig
neighbors to go to the polls, attending at
the polls himself, and seeing that no cheat
ing is there practised. Let no man say that
he cannot spare time from his business to
attend to politics ! Let him remember that
the consequence of his negligence may be
years ofmisrule, public robbery and which
may take from his purse the reward of
years of labor ; his neglect may result in
the disgrace and dishonour of his country,
in tlie shameful failure of the experiment of
a Republican Government; it may give
success to the traitors, who are plotting tlie
destruction of our Union, plunge us into civ
il war, and make us a bye-word and mock
ery among the nations of the earth. We
do not exaggerate tlie influence any one
plan may exert on the Presidential elec
tion ; it may he decided by the vote of
Georgia, and that vote may be decided by
the exertion or neglect of any man no mat
ter how much without political influence he
may think himself.
Our opponents feel the importance of ac
tivity to keep their ascendency ! Already
agents are at work, every nook and corner
gs the State will be again canvassed by
them ! Every doubtful voter will be as.
sailed by them, every timid and venal one
bullied or bought, their lying pamphlets
and papers paid for with Britisli money, will
be more profusely scattered. Already they
are boasting what they will do ; that there
shall not be 20 Whig majority in the Bth
district; that the State shall give 10,000
Polk majority ; that Old Wilkes shall be
no longer a Whig county ! The Whigs
must prove thernpUse prophets ; they can
if they will ; to counteract these schemes
the Whigs (in the words of one of their ex
cellent songs,) must
” Work—work—work,
In country and in town ;
Work by tlie rising Bun —
Work till the sun goes down.
For who would be a slave
Under the Loco’s sway,
Bettei to join the good and brave
And vote for the Patriot Clay.”
OO” It is computed that at least 1300 il
legal voles were cast by the Locos in Balti
more at the late election. The authorities
have commenced making arrests of tlie
rascals, several have been taken, one of
whom, si first-ran Democrat, voted seven
times in as many different places! This
is a small specimen of what tlie Whigs
every where have to contend'with.
The Locos profess to believe that
the S|i< aker ship of the House ofßepresen
tatiye, the only National office Polk ever
Aid—(and in which he disgraced himself,
and dishonored tlie nation) is a station of
high eminence and responsibility. J'wo
out of every three of them, cannot tell who
is now Speaker of the House of Represen
tatives, so little importance is the office in
uie eyes of the people! “
OCT - It is often a complaint against tlie
people of the South, that they will not sup
port literary periodicals of high character
among theVn—but in most cases this is ow
ing to the foolish conduct of their mana
gers, rather than any want of liberality a
morg Southern people. “ The Southern
Quarterly Review” the only professedly
literary periodical, south of Virginia, we
prophecy will share the fate of others, un
less tlie Editor has the good sense (which
we fear he iias not, as lie lives in tlie land
of “Chivalry”) to exclude papers of a par
tizan character from his magazine. We
have often noticed papers of this stamp in
the Review, but the number for October, is
distinguished above all others, by a long dis
quisition on the Texas humbug—lauding
Tyler’s rascally treaty, and puffing the
speeches of Bob Walker and “ Cyphering
Levi” on the subject. If the Editor ex
pects Whigs to patronize his magazine, he
must make it what it pretends to be, exclu
sively literary. We want no politics, and
least of all such politics as he gives us.
From the Phil. North American sth inst.
DELAWARE ELECTION.
The first news from Delaware, which in
duced considerable crowing on the part of
our opponents, seems to have been prema
ture and was probably prepared for effect •
on the coming elections in this State, Ohio
and New Jersey. The most authentic ac
counts, and they are extremely varied, ■
give the following result :
Counties. Whig. Loco. •
New Castle Cos. 110 maj. ]
Kent, 187
Sussex, 210
297 210
210
Whig majority, 87
This is a cheering prospect, as the Whigs
seldom turn out at the assessor’s election
in this State. Two years since they had
but four majority in Newcastle Cos., and
the Locos carried Kent by about the same
majority.
The above returns are for the vote for in
speetors, which affords the best political
tests as the Assessors are frequently sup
ported on local grounds of favoritism.
Sussex county may be Whig whenever
he Whigs choose to exert themselves.—
Two tickets were run by our friends in
ieveral of the Hundreds, which will ac
count for the apparent large Locotoco ma
ority. Little Delaware is always right at
elections and will give her
tote for Henry Clay, by an unprecedented
najority, if we can rely on those who have
he best opportunity of knowing the state of
>Vhig feeling throughout the State.
The three English lords who voted ti> re
erse the judgement against O’Connel Lvere
-Vhigs, those against him of the other pp.rtv.
GEORGIA ELE(THQ
1844. 1841*.
First Dist. For Congress. For Governor. •
Counties. King. Spaulding. Crairf'd. Coop’r.
Camden. 99 212 94 232
Mclntosh, 138 142 129 125
Chatham, 616 626 738 672
Montgomery, 200 maj. 200 15
Ware, 175 194 !
Lowndes, 312 317
Glynn, 86 19 108 35
Liberty, 194 172 128 92
Etfitighani, 194 94 162 82
Tattnall, 301 70 297 26
Laurens, 545 25 547 21
Telfair, 162 191
Wayne, 103 106 39 113
Bryan, 82 77 94 77
Bulloch, 13 387 25 296
Appling, 124 138 138 95
Emanuel, 107 100 183 165
Thomas, 357 166
3888 2919
Whig maj 969
Second District.
Crawford. Jones.
Houston, 651 729 , 575 563
Baker, 209 439 200 337
Stewart, 862 775 712 639
Muscogee, 1075 919 908 982
Irwin, 201 m. 31 277
Decatur, 357 321 345 244
Lee, 293 137 286 170
Sifmter, 602 427 459 397
Marion, 418 228 425 349
Pulaski, 232 426 233 315
Early, 212 409 110 208
Randolph, 580 655 494 513
Dooly, 282 459 278 409
Macon, 354 252 345 255
Dem. maj. 194
Third District.
Poe. *Chappell.
Harris, 865 481 735 343
Twiggs, 331 431 354 424
Bibb, 607 730 592 659
Talbot, 782 808 801 791
I Upson, 629 375 637 332
Pike, 593 804 598 562
Crawford, 388 453 403 110
Monroe, 757 720 745 690
4928 4211
Whig maj. 717
Fourth District.
Floyd. *llaralisCirl.
Troup, 973 478 944 394
Coweta, 713 738 741 637
Meriwether, 043 898 725 697
Fiyettc, 381 605 328 472
Henry, 780 797 778 709
Heard, 288 429 300 359
imi.’eil, 190 555 253 469
New n, 902 527 785 414
Carroli, 370 m. 404 516
5258 4728
Whig tnnj. 531
Fifth District.
Miller. *Lumpkin.
Dade, 47 209 43 207
Flovd, 327 421 395 348
Murray, 214 583 337 495
Cobb, ’ 039 874 618 670
Forsyth, 250 m. 390 600
Walker, 198 m. 429 501
Cass, 552 1043 ‘ 657 836
Gilmer, 158 372 267 345
KDeKalb, 545 845 577 648
Ot.aUaoga, 265 292 317 262
Paulding,- 200 3)7 -221 312
Cherokee, 484 790 001 521
Gwinnett, 624 688 709 604
5570 6349
Dem. maj. 779
Sixth District.
Under wood. *Cobb.
Union, 211 470 241 400
Rabun, 44 191 83 224
Jackson, 442 617 420 563
Clarke, 508 390 509 319
Lumpkin, 531 1033 026 89L
Franklin, 303 953 323 884
Madison, 306 326 340 308
Walton, 462 702 405 622
Habersham, 289 886 402 658
Hall, 426 643 450 499
filbert, 902 152 828 165
4683 5533
Dem. inaj. 650
Seventh District.
* Stephens. Janes.
Morgan, 396 313 414 349
Putnam, 414 326 418 317
Jones, 401 405 425 404
Oglethorpe, 575 208 602 178
Greene, 725 138 710 122
Jasper, 437 519 452 503
Baldwin, 280 258 SCO 309
Taliaferro, 404 54 404 60
Butts, 235 404 203 371
Wilkinson, 330 036 459 390
4506 3003
Whig inaj. 1503
Eighth District.
Toombs. *Black.
Wilkes, 418 349 417 348
Richmond, 825 616 706 544
Jefferson, 477 98 404 90
Washington, 525 520 550 512
JJncoln, 269 174 287 181
Burke, 490 358 514 338
Warren, 538 330 547 323
Columbia, 460 264 336 172
Scriven, 227 267 228 195
Hancock, 43G 327 412 272
4467 2975
Whig maj. 1492
* Members of the present Congress.
ID* Those in italics are Whigs.
Victory in Nashville, Tennessee.
As goes the Capitol so goes the State.
—City Election j Whig Mayor ; Ten out
of Twelve Whig Aldermen !—The result
of the municipal election to-day affords
renewed assurance that our good city is
W hig to the core. Looking at the extraor
dinary influences agains: which we have to
battle with Loco-focoism, we have the van
ity to believe that Nashville can marshal,
whenever the occasion calls for it, the
truest Whig population in the Union, and
this day’s work will excuse the presump,
tion.
Our Whig Mayor, Powhattan W. Maxey
is re-elected by 200 majority.
Aldermen. —The Whigs having carried
five out of the six Wards, elect ten Alder
men *out of the twelve that compose the
Council; and in the 6th Ward pushed both
the Loco candidates within two or three
votes of a tie.
The majority for the Whig town consta-
COAL’ , iON or JAMES G. BIRNEY
WITH THE POLK PARTY.
■
The evidence of a corrupt juggle between j
James G. Birney, Abolition candidate for ,
President, and tlie Polk-Texas party, accu- j
rnu'at s daily. The Detroit Daily Adver■ j
User o’ the 4th says :
The Coalition ] Complete. —We are not !
surprised \o learn tliul the Loco Focos of
Saginaw county huve nominated, with his
assent, Janies G. Birney, Esq. the Aboli
tion candidate for the President, as the Lo
co-Foeo candidate for Representative in the
State Legislature. He received tlie nom
ination on Saturday last, after starting for
the East. But lie had previously been con
suited, and acquiesced ; so he himself sta
ted to a gentleman of Saginaw, before lea
ving home.
The Loco-Focos have exhibited a just
sense of Mr. Birney’s services to their cause
during the past year. No man lias labor
ed so hard or so effectively to secure the e- ‘
lectoral vote of Michigan to Mr. Polk. It
was right therefore that he should receive
from them this mark of their confidence and
gratitude.
His present mission to the East, we have
also reason to believe, lias been underta-;
ken at the instance of leading Loco Focus j
as well as Abolitionists of New York,
though cloaked under the pretence of a
visit to one of his children in Connecticut.
His conference with Gen. Hascall at Flint,
if divulged, would doubtless disclose that
fact. Leading Loco Focos in this city
have at any rate openly exulted over his
New York mission at this crisis.
We did not need thisaddilional evidence
of Mr. Birney’s sympathies with Loco.Fo
coism in the Presidential struggle; but
others did, and their eyes will now be o
pened. Whig Abolitionists will not,wepre
diet, consent to he made Mr. Birney’s cats
paws in sucli a game for the exclusive ben
efit of tlie Loco Foco party, when they
come to see this last conclusive proof of his
position. They will not follow their Pres
idential candidate into the camp of Loco-
Focoistn.
A correspondent of tlie same paper adds:
Tlie Loco-Focos of Saginaw held their
convention on Saturday, and strange to tell,
James G. Birney received the nomination
to represent Saginaw county in tlie State
Legislature. Will tlie Liberty men now
doubt that he is working into the hands of
the Loco-Focos ? They cannot say he had
no agency in the matter on account of his
being absent, for I have it in my power to
prove that he was consulted ip'* tc he left,
and was pleased with tlie idedY
Connect tlie fact that Mr. Bi\ y lias re
ceived a nomination from the Loco-Focos
with the fact of his tirst marriage into the
Marshall family, and a person of ordinary
capacity can account for his inveterate hos
tility to Henry Clay.
Y’ours, &c A. P. DAYIS.
Flint, Sept: 80, 1841.
A STARTLING* DISCLOSURE.
Tlie following article from the N
;York Express of Monday, contains) .i
: sta • ing facts, and will no
a sens'atr ; wherever cifcßiateefaiu}
British Bounties to break down
Manufactures. Forcing British Goods
at Auction Sales ;.pon the American Mar
kets, a part of the same system.
In a letter from Benjamin Marshall,
Esq. of Trov, long an importer in this city,
and now a manufacturer, to Herman Bru
en, Esq. of New rscj r , was tlie following
important postscript, (the letter entire we
have published bef:.re.)
“P. S.—Respecting the bounty from the
British government, we were allowed 3d.
per yard or: ail our printed and stamped
goods imported into this country during the
years 1803 and 1812, and, in consequence,
frequently sold prints for less in New Y ork
than we purchased them in Manchester.
Tlie L unty on our imports amounted to
S3O a $50,000 per annum.”
This, to us at least, was an entirely new
fact, and one which, as we think, should
forcibly arrest and arouse public attention.
In 1803 to 1812, a period of nine years pri
or to the late war, it appears that the Brit
ish government paid one importing house
in this city from $30,000 to $50,000 per an
num, as a bounty for their importation of
British goods, so that they could sell Man
chester made goods lower in N. York than
they could bo bought for in Manchester,
where they were made. How many thou
sands, if not millions, were paid, or are to
be paid, or are now paid, we have not the
means of ascertaining. We have, however,
in such a fact as this, a clue to the opera
tions of the British government upon other
countries, and the means of guessing,
whence the money comes from which the
Polk men now have to electioneer so pro
fusely with.
This bounty money tve know too, must
come from the secret service fund of the
British Government, —for no account of it
has ever appeared in the regular appropri
ation of the Legislature, or in the public
expenditures of the Treasury. Thus, the
American manufacturer and mechanic has
to contend with two influences in Europe :
Ist. its pauper labor and low wages, and
next, with the secret service fund, which
is made by heavy taxes upon these very
half-starved laborers !
PRESIDENT OF TEXAS.
Tne New Orleans Picayune of tho 6th
inst. says :
“We learn from a gentleman, who ur-* i
rived yesterday from Washington,
that there is little doubt thai Anson
has been elected Presideni of thaj/Jjdßiiil
Ifthis be true, of 1 ,33
doubt, sotTs the qu
f ■>’ tfclri • i ti.i. ,n-f \ I Vl?i®
the iti-aiiU’ r iu:i candiS” .* . ■!
idem fIRHHBH
In Edition > the
state, ‘hat wc learn frrni
Whig, that in llnycouij®
Lo'Siv:;,;,;, and * ‘fT’V'vVl is s'!
” ■
acter of the vote throughout the Republic.
lteiore wc undi nuke to . i> i , . nsidei.t
of ilio United States, therefore, whos • chief
claim for the office is, that he is in 6’ or of
the Annexation of’ Texas, we had better
wait until tlie people ofihat country elect a
i President for tliemselvi who is in favor of
| it. Augusta Chronicle.
From the Augusta Chronicle.
Messrs. Editors:—l deem it duo to thin
community to place before tho public the
circumstances of an ontrag” commuted by
one of the county officers, which I believe
has no parallel in tin- history of any party
in this free and enlightened country.
After having given my vole, on Monday
last, for the Whig candidate for Congress,
a discussion arose between several persons
ofhotli parties, as to the legality of my
vote. Among the number was Mr. Janies
McLaws, who “as \ . v warm and irrsolt
■ ing in denounti ig n,.- lot voting the Whig
ticket; and when Idr “v >!’ my papers of
naturalization-, whi !i ib;h nmy pocket, to
show ilia I vv.o :l ... . Mcl.'iws
snatched i lien if • aii u.. . ur.d :■ the
most vioient in •: vi. r ■. .: • .
and tlir. w i: i ..
j .
Asian an vri .: i..• • , ,t J
sire only la ,a .■ . . : ;i>
—whicii ! .. .ci
having the
mode pres’ ; ; ... of the
Umitod S':’V . - . . i my
country nier, t- p . ■ • uard
against these, wh > • ■ou.i nr • - ■:
lar freedom v.i is..; a,;:: err i ’ Mid
On \\ ciine- * , !>■ -• m v . tin.- ■’
SARAH j AGE, mdest .. ~ ,-r ul Mr. Henry
Hurley, a•i 11 ears ! and mcutlis.
Also,olt ihe 13thins’ .1 A.MLId \ FRANCES,
youngest daughter m Mr. 1 lenry Hurley, aged
27 months and 20 nays
.tr**- ‘7sn<>>
(£/* Tlie llev, a . Baker txf
Penfield. wi. .rear! • the B.q Church *i
Sunday.even •. ■’ candle light.
L'€*
4 1,1 er ~r- t r: •: V tr.i- ::.y v. .E
Im. CAI.AH, on my i u t, as I will pv, no
debts ol Il*’i ‘■■titractmg.
WILLIAM LNEILISON.
October 17, 1:44. 2. 8
f'tdi anti if * inter
WADOY & THOMPSON,
MOST respectfully inform tlie UitizeA\
Washington and vicinity, that they have
and are still receiving . lull supply of
JFall Winter Goods, |
Which they will sell Cheap, vert
Me think it useless to name the diilflH !
•>> ” ■ ‘IDS, ao we hope to have the
j sure of sbowinpthem. ’ •*
also receiving a large
Stock of
€h*oeee ies,
With wu.ch we will furnish tn eof cur fnendg
who are disposed to encourage us; as lew uc- and e
same article can be had in Augusta.
We will only add, u.; r bv a strict aUeii‘, . r .
business and an ardent desire to please : -.-. v e.• *
to share a fair portion oi the pud L-. paticaigc.
October 17th, 1844.
belling off at at Cost .
The subscriber will sell his large and
well selected stock of
Staple an dsFu nry,
Dry
AT COST.
Terms CASH, or a short credit to good and
prompt customers. WM. S. HEARD.
P. S.—Merchants wanting to replenish
their Stock, can do so. upon good terms,
as the goods were bought cheap, and time
will be given.
October 17,.1844. 8
Notice to Debtors and Creditors
ALL persons indebted to the Estate of John’
I‘er.eet, late of Wilkes county, decer..-ed,
are requested to selue he same immediate]v a
and those bavin., leu. tue.: will please crestggfl
them i. • -r payment JKgjj
r. jiV .■ 1 i rLKTI’i .•
. RTEK’i, JH|
Onto:
.al.vilni.j i h.-vTok’.s
Will be .;>i u:: Ti:;;rs.l.,\ the
• ember m-xt, at me into
I'erteet,
late, consisting >.••
, 1 1 W’
. A I'.. ••eh-
Jg
. 4
■ • jit’ ■ ilillllf