Newspaper Page Text
PWI-.1 U
TAe following spirited nnd beautiful stanzas we
copy from the Baltimore. Gazette.
GREEK SONG.
Jflouut, soldier, mount, thy gallant steed,—
Seek, seek, the ranks of war ;
’Tis better there in death to bleed,
. Than drag a tyrant’s ear.
Strike ; strike! nor think the blow unseen
That frce9the limbs where chains have bean.
Oh noeach dying shout that peals
FroVn continent or isle,
Each syioke that curling slow, reveals
A city’s funeral pile,—
Are heard nnd seen among the free,
"Whose hearts are struggling, Greece,-with the#.'
i
On, on, for Karaiskaki’s hand !
Look where the crescents wave ;
They glance above a ruined land,
Like dcath-liehts o’er a grave ;
One prayer, nine thought, of Marathon,
And they are quenched,—on, soldier, oh '
But yet, if not t' e glorious past,
For hope of future fame,
Nor chains of kteel .around thee cast,
Urge thee to War w ith shame ;—
Think that beyond; the parting sea
The prayers of beauty rise for thee
Na v cast not on tbv infant child
That look of fond regret.—
Mind not that shriek of sorrow wild,—
Thv wife shal' clast'thee vet,—
God, and the fair ac-oss the wave
Watch o’er the clii'rircn nf tire brave.
Then, soldier, mount t[h(j gallant steed,—
Seek, spek, the ranks of war ;
’Tis better there in death to bleed.
Than drag a tyrant’s car;
One clasp,—one kiss.—then soldier, oe—
■fyi.d win another Marathon. SIMONIDES.
nni3t be no compromise in Ihe matter; how
ever painful it may be to give up a friend
and former benefactor, it must be done ;
it is one mode of checking intemperance,
that black cloud which hangs over our
otherwise bright and happ End. It is bet
ter that one guilty should suffer than, fifty
innocent should be exposed to ruin.!
Bos. Med Intel.
From tht Western Quarterly Review.
THE MISSOURI TRAPPER.
At the sources of the Missouri, Yellow
Stone, Plait, White, Arkansas, and Red
Rivers, and on all their tributaries, that
have sourses in the Rocky Mountains, the
the great object of pursuit of the trappers]
white and savage, is the Beaver
buffalo is hunted for food, beds, clothing,
PROPOSALS
BT p. PRICE. JR.
NO. 66 LOMBARD-STREET—PHILADELPHIA,
For publishing a Literary Journal to be called
THE
embellished WITH
A%n1 , r Tftni • Splendid Quarto Engravings.
Apple Trees. If the following Statement j F intended as an agreeable and
is true, ,t is very important; and if no- j f I j„ struct jve companion for the parlour, and
true it would be well that it might be con- , ..^nnronriate attendant at the Toilet—to be is-
for money
tradicted by Somb one who has or may be a . sued every Wednesday, commencing with the first
bio to speak from experiment. It is ta- j Wednesday in July oext. _, TI „ ;
ken from an European Magazine■; but we j s0 ^!vJr“ilrcsjecu worthy the paTron- j
r ^.„,, bave olten seen and heard sinuuar state- j ,„ eo f the public, both as a cheap and elegant:
rpi ’ meets, originating from other sources. i emporium of useful and interesting information, j .
.j" i Itisa general complaint that the finest j and a valuable repository of choice specimens of I Have just received a fresh supply of the celebrated
. , aDDle trees of this country TG Britain! Miscellaneous literature. Strict attention will
and furniture; the other animal is trapped < ,{P , °. *, * 4 be bestowed on the moral tendency of “ THE
It is the cliie f mean of gain j huvc , g cnerateJ . and many of the best j so( jveNIRand a constant watchfulness pre-
To tliese lonely .and sequestered regions,
isolated from social nature and man, by
ragged and lofty mountains, and wide and
sterile deserts, repair hundreds of white
hunters who hunt for subsistence and trap
for gain. They make their way 'here in
armed partnerships, fitted out as a kind of
guerrillas. Arrived at the frowning bar-
i iers of nature, they separate. Some times
a pair of sworn friends trap together.-
There are not a few, who repair, each
by himself, and as far as may be, from a
known haunt of another, to those solitary
streams and mountains. Outlawry, ne
cessity, avarice, an appetite for lawless,
unrestrained, and unwitnessed roving; con-| °” H c l ua u y nJ JpJ^ e ^discovered * n two
'' " ' out
the
point out ail effectual method of retaining
good apples in this country without the
trouble of grafiing, as in every perfectly
ripe apple there will be found one and
sometimes two round seeds the others will
have one or more flattened sides. The
round ones will produce the improved
fruit from which they are taken, and
those with the Halted sides will pio-
duce the fruit of the crab [or stock] upon
which the graft was inserted. It requires
not a long time to ascertain the difference ;
for if a circle is drawn in rich ground, and
the flat sided seeds planted therein and
the round seeds in :he centre, the varia-
TURP1N & D’ANTIGNAC,
AGENTS.
Swaim’s Panacea.
1500 SADDLES,
17
FOR SALE.
At the old stand of Bostwick, Gilbert, Co. s 3r
of which are of a very superior quality.
—also—
S ADDLE TREES, IJorskins. Skirting, Br
die and Harness Leather, Plated, Brass, ar.c
Complaints, and most Diseases arising in de- ;
bilitated constitutions, or froman impure state i
of the Blood, &c. fcc.
ril HIS Medicine has acquired a very extend-
1 ed and established celebrity both in Hos
pital and Private practice, which its efficacy alone
has supported for these seven years past.
As a spring or fall purifier it has given new
The first will throw
cr ib, and the latter
as follows :
from tiie best
Biographi-
persons, male and
female, particularly the latter; Anecdotes, Bo.i
Mots, .v,’c. Sec. The original matter necessary
for this department of our paper will be furnish
ed by individuals who are ift vantageously known
to the public through the medium of their Lite
rary production ; besides the numerous corres- j constitutions to thousands, it is by its operation
pondents who may lie expected to contribute. j on the Blood that such surprising cures have been
2. Miscellany.—Interesting items of intelli- ' performed in numerous diseases.
gence. foreign and domestic occurrences, deaths, j The effect of this medicine is such as not to in-
man iages, &c. ! terrupt either business or pleasure, and requires
3. Engravings.—The first number of every I only the common restraint of moderation in diet,
month w ill he embellished with a splendid quarto ! It is conveyed by the circulating iluids, and cor-
Copper Plate Engraving, fitted to the size of the ! vccts their tendencies to all those diseases w hich
work, among which will be the following. j originate in vitiated blood, diseased liver, or de-
Albambra, Ancient Pal-jMan. P raved a PP etitd - U is a safe - medicine - and rc-
Japand Saddlery Ware, Harness Mountin'
| Whips, Spurs, Szc. together with cvciy other •
For the cure of Scrofula, or King’s Evil, Ulcers, tide, usually kept in the
Rheumatism, Syphilitic, Mercurial and Liver ; SiI3>DLH\ r X-ZFE,
all of which v. id be sold at the very lowest nr
ces. S. KITTREDGE. "'
No. 301A Broad-Street, Augu,ta, Gee
July 19 21 ti
S'
CASTINGS FOTTWD.
OME of my children found yesterday wri
the House occupied by my family J,.'.
Ovens and Lids, and one small Skillet' T,,,.
were concealed in the dust, and are apparent!,
new.' Persons who have lately lost such in
cits, may have them bv describing the propert
| and paying for this advertisement. Apply to ti:
Subscriber, No. 323, North side of Broad-Stree:
HENRY
July 23
FROM THE N. C. STAR.
TO MARY.
’(Then those we love are laid in dust,
Or gone to climbs that’s far away,
"We sadlv rnve thro’ srenps where erst
With them we fondly lov’d to stray.
Oh ! then the breeze is sorrow’s breath,
And tears with dew.drops mingle fast;
The fiowers wear the hut of death,
The brook seems murm’ring oflhc past
The da}-liaht fading in the west.
To meiWry brings the parting smile
Of he^.witljjjvhom in converse blest,
We/did our’ evening hours beguile
Oh ! '^laryA $hall oft frequent
The sernes thro’ which with tliec I strayed,
zVhen hope was warm and fancy lent
Her charms to all that we survey’d.
Oh ! then I thought thv heart was mine,
A pfl f'hprish ti hopPb now sigone j
But still my love is ever tiling,
Tho 7 1 am left to pine alone.
Oh ! say, wilt thou one thought bestow
On him who oft Will think of thee,
And pray (hat thou may’st never know
The grief from which he’ll ne’er be free
)V, D. D,
—G—
HUMAN G AND’ UR.
IVe gaze on a billow with wonder and awe
Swelling high as it threatens the shore ;
. .Till broken and lost we forget that we saw,
And think of that billow no more.’
So the pomp of the great .so the fame of the brave,
So the treasures of glory and pride,
Tho’ they mount on the Hood like the high swell
ing wave,
Like that too must ebb with the tide",-
FRINTER’f^ORftER.
A printer was leading a bachelor’s life,
’Cause be could 4 not cr would not procure him a
wile ;
Industrious and prudent, he cut but few capers.
Printed pamphlets, blanks, “greetings,” and
weekly newspapers.
On newspaper any. a friend happen’d to call,
While creak went the press, and thump, thump,
went the hall;
Oo the part ol the she»t he was casting his eye
Which tells us who many, and also who die—
Then says to the printer, ‘ Unless inv eyes fail,
Xour impression just thereabouts looks rather
pale.”
“ Who wuuld’nt look pale,” repMes Type, "in
this case, \
With marriage and death staring fallen the face?
—OO©—
Drinking water neiliier makes \ n)an
4^/k, nor in debt, nor his wife a widov.
On the choice of a Physician.—In the
first place, he should possess a good un
derstanding. IV dak men, with plausible
manners and superficial attainments, make
very good q.tacks, and often bec -me suf
ficiently current and popular to acquire
business and money—but never can be
come able physicians.
The young physician must laboa long
■and diligently, and nnderrlTF'clirecT on of
the best guides, liefo'C lie cat; be afeiy
trusted to enter alone on the duties jf Jus
profession.
Select a man of principle.
Every physician carries about win him
amoral or immoral atmosphere and influ
ence, as some recent events sufficient v im
ply if the fact had not been demons ated
a thousand times before.
He should be a man not given to flat* ry.
He should be upright and indeprndei .
He should be a man of temperate hab ■—
The physician is like the fficer T the
day in the military encampment; a vays
liable to be hastily called ■ n wher auv
difficulty or accident recurs, a^d liklv to
need theiul! excercise of his facultie and
recourses, natural and acquired.. Thvre
slant exposure to danger, and a habit ofj °. r l ^ lree y ea rs.
defying the elements, of becoming suffi- ! { ie eaV *- s f •
cient to themselves, the absoluteliecessiiy j ’ ''' cs 0 ' lr hj m pro\ed dee distinguished in ria
of relying alone upon their own nersonal j s 1J I )e ai * 1 re > a P c ' with a wot^ly appear- : vie
strength and resources,create an astonish- I anct alH hi due time the fruit of each will! Arc
ing compound cf quickness of precoption, ! cvcr }' thing beyond douot.
their with arcckless confidence in own pro-} . .
wess. YY r e have seen more than one person ! .. arsni P s and Peas. A friend
of this cast incurably attached to solitude of
acc of (he Moorish I Burning Fountain, one
Kings in Spain j of the seven w onders
View of the permanent' of Daophinv.
Bridge over the Schuyl- Grotto of Oselles.
kill. |Temple of Pluto.
jEtna. from the Gardens Pont Du Gard, near
of the Prince ofBisca-l Nismes. Languedoc,
ria. jSaussurc’s ascent of
iew of St. Petersburgh ! 'Mont Blanc,
ch Street Ferry, Phil- Cascade near Oysans,
i labor and danger, compared with which
Robinson Crusoe’s sojourn on his Island
was but a mero pastoral experiment. They
furnish ah impressive proof, that there is
no mode of life intrinsically so repulsive
and painful, but man may become recon
ciled to it by habit.
A lonely hunter, cast upon nature and
the elements, with nothing but prairies
and mountains in view, wtthout bread or
salt, and in jeopardy from beasts and sav
ages every hour, amidst scenery and dan
gers that weuld tend naturally to rasie the
heart to God, trusting to no divinities but
his knife and his gun, and building all his
plans for the future on traps, regarding
the foot-steps of man, imprinted in the
sand, as objects of calculating apprehen
sion, and almost equally dreading the face
of the whiteman and savage; in situations
thus lonely and exposed, he braves tiie
heat of Summer, the ices and the moun
tain blast of Winter, the grizzly bear, and
robbers of his own race, and savanes for
years. When he has collected a sufficient
number of packs of beaver, he fells a hol
low tree, slides it into some full mountain
stream, paddles down the thousand leagues
of the Missouri, and is seen with a dress,
a gait and manners, as appropriate to his
pursuits as a sailor’s, bustling' about the
streets of St. Louis to make bargains for
his furs.
Improvement in Hydraulics.—A Mr.
Cooper, from Guildhall,Vt. and now res
ident in this village, has for more than a
year past been improving a new Hydrau
lic machine, and lias succeeded to the as
tonishment of all who have witnessed its
operation. He has lately exhibited one
in this place, which was in length and di
ameter eight inches and of a cylindrical
form. The machine is operated by
means o.f a crank attached to tiie gudgeon
upon each end of it. The power applied
to ?he machine, was four men who were
able to throw a confined column of water
iliree-fourths of an inch in diameter, one
hundred and twenty feet on a horizontal
line, and more than ninety feet high,—
This machine is entirely different from a-
ny tiling that lias ever heretofore been
known. Mr. C. has in his specification
for Letters Patent, termed it the “Rota
tive Piston,” yet it contains neither piston
or valves, but has the appearance of a
wheel within a wheel, operating in such a
manner as to form a vacuum on one side,
and a powerful compression on the other,
and what is most wonderful, al each revo
lution, it takes and throws out more cubic
inches 6f water, than the whole spare
which the machine itself occupies. The
machine has been shown and the principle
of it explained, to many gentleman of sci
ence and experience in hydraulics, among
which was His Excellency the Governor
of New-York; and it is the prevailing o-
pinion of all that, it will taise the place of
every other machine,'both ofPuir.ps and
Fire Engines, as soon as it is extensively
known..
Mr. C. has associated himself with two
gealemen of this village, who have PstaL-
lishel amanufactury on an extensive scale;
and wfcunderstand that the company have
sent an ^gent to Europe, to secure the
rights for France, England and other coun
tries in that'iection.— Vermont Journal.
h ANTING.
“ I am an old Yellow,” says Cowper, in
one of his letters Hurdis, “ but I had
once my dancing dayi as you have'now,
yet I could never find fsat l could learn
halt so mnch'ef a woman’s real character
by dancing w ith her as conversing with
her at home, when I could observe her
behaviour at the table, at the fireside, and
in all the trying scenes of domestick life.
We are all good when we are pleasant;
but she is ihe good woman, who wants not
ihe fiddle to sweeten her.”
Bed Bugs—A strong decoction of ripe
red pepper is said to be as efficacioirs an
antidote to beg bugs as can be selected
from the multitudinous rpceipts for the
same purpose„-
of the
editor gave u§. the following practical him,
jvhich (though we have once published it)
may be of service to some of our recent
subscribers Parsnips maybe raised to
great advantage as a second crop, to
peas ; the seed to be sowed when the peas
are, The writer of this has been in this
practice for several years, and lias gener
ally, found the crop of parsnips thus rais
ed quite as large, and frequently larger
than those raised in beds by themselves.—
1 lie peas protected them from the sun
when small.
Wholesome Meat.—All meats, say wri
ters on medical subjects, are best when the
animal is at maturity.—Hence to delicate
persons, chickens, lamb, veal, pig are not
near so wholesome or nutritive as beef,
fowl mutton and pork.
Sore Baclc in Horses.—White load,
moistened with milk or sweet oil, has been
recommended as the most effective appli
cation in the above cornnlaint-
adelphia.
Paraclete, founded by
Abelard.
Dauphiny.
Desert of the Grand
Chartreuse.
TOiS® PUSHED,
AT THE
Office of the Georgia Courier,
THE ETTERS OF THE
rev. j ^ ivies ©s-s rm,
Of Mount Ariel, Abbeville, Dist. S. C.
I.V AKSWERTO THE SERMON OF THE
Rev. Joseph C. Stiles, on Predestination. Those
wishing to read the above letters, can be supplied
with copies, by application to the Rev. Mr. Ken
nedy, or at this office.
July 19 21 3t
Giant’s Causeway and, East Prospect of Gi-
Bridge of Bridon. j ant’s Causeway.
State Prison, Auburn, Castle of Segovia.
New York. |Lakeof Killarney from
Tynwald Hill. Isle of Kenmure Park.
Each Subscriber will thus be furnished yearly
with 13 superior Copperplate' Engravings, the
price of which if purchased singly would more
than double the annual cost of the entire work.
4. The Toilet —In addition to the asual Litera
ry matter contained in similar publications, the
Proprietor has completed an arrangement by
which he will be enabled to furnish correct de
scriptions of Ihe prevailing fas: ions, both foreign
and domestic, illustrated with elegant engra
vings, besides the regular series, cnce in each
quarter; places of fashionable resort; sketches
of life, manners, izc. &ic. at the earliest possible
period, and from the most authentic sources.
5. Editor’s department; Notices of passing
events: The Drama. New Publications; Criti
cisms; Reviews, &lc. See.
‘ THE SOUVENIR” will be published every
Wednesday morning, on extra-medium fine white
moves all those evils which an unsuccessful use
of mercury so often occasions. No one, how
ever is advised to take it. without first fully con
vincing himself of the truth of what is here stated
anti the rectitude of the Proprietor’s intentions.
This Medicine has the singular fortune, a just
tribute to its great merit, of being recommended
by the most celebrated Practitioners cf Medicine
in the UYiited States and elsewhere, whereas not
one of the spurious mixtures made in imitation
of it, is supported by the Faculty. This fact of
fers an argument so plain and conclusive, that.it
needs only to be mentioned to enforce convic
tion.
From Dr. Wm. Price, formerly Surgeon of Ihe
Pennsylvania Hospital. k.c.
Liverpool, (eng.) Sept. 1823.
The Vegetable Syrup, called Swaim’s Pana
cea, prepared by Mr. Swaim, of Philadelphia,
has recently been introduced here bv Dr. Price,
from the United States of America, where it is
now extensively used in the treatment of a varie
ty of Chronic Diseases.
Of the efficacy of this preparation Dr- Price
has had abundant and most satisfactory evidence,
during a course of experiments made under his
direction, whilst Surgeon of the Pennsylvania
Hospital; and since his arrival in England, he
has had the good fortune of witnessing manv ad
ditioiial instances of its successful administration.
• The diseases in which this Medicine has been
paiticularly useful, are those arising from con
stitutional causes—as in the various forms of
Scrofula, whether affecting the bones, joints, or
soft parts ; and in cases, where a disposition to
this disease is manifested by debility only, it
operates as a preventive to the local disease by
ROBERT.
22 tf
MENDENHA l.l/S
Patent Improved Grift .Villi,
T HE undersigned, living in Augusta, brim
appointed, by MonfortS. Street, and John
Wilson, Assignees' of Moses Mendenhall, sol,*
Agent, in future, for selling in Georgia thraW.
i nportant and valuable improvement in the
Grist Mill, informs the Public that he is ready <
dispose ot the same to those who may want only
an individnal right, or to those who may wish t\
purchase for counties. Those who prefer seeing
specimens before they purchase, can be satisfied
at my house, or can see several new in operatioa
in this neighborhood.
Individual Rights §2.3.
B. MIMS
May 28 * 5m ~
HP The Milledgcvillc Journal will pleasety
publish this weekly for two months and semi ih c
account lo the office of the Georgia Courier lor
pay meet.
c
SHE SUBSCHIEER
ONTlNUES the Manufactory of TIN
WARE, at No. 115, corner of Broad and
Centre-streets, opposite the lower market, where
he keeps constantly on hand, a general assort
ment of
READY MADE TIN,
At wholesale or retail.
Also, a general asso tment of
Vr hich will be sold for Cosh, or town acceptances,
W. A MITCHELL.
July 19 21 3t.
paper, printed with new and elegant type, and ! its beneficial effects on the constitution. It is
decorated, in addition to the engrav’ngs alluded j equally efficacious in mercurial disease, and in
to above, with many appropriate embellishments, i R ,e secondary forms of Sypilis, and liaslately
Each No. will comprise eight pages, stitched and ! * ,ecn gl"' en w *th marked success in chronic dis-
expr< ssly adapted for binding. Atthe expiration I eas< |s of the Liver, which had resisted the careful
of every year, or the close of a volume, subscri- ! exhibition of mercury It has, likewise, very re-
bers will be furnished gratis with a general index j cently been administered with decided advant-
of the contents, and a handsomely engraved ti : a S e by ono °f the most distinguished Surgeons in
tie page. ' c London, in a case which had entirely destroyed
Price of subscription $2 20 per annum paya- the r ‘fT ,! t eye of the patient, and a great portion
ble in advance. Post Blasters-and others out of | of the side of the face. WM. PRICE, M. D.
the cily, procuring five subscribers and becoming May 28 7
responsible for the payment will be entitled to a
sixth copy gratis.
The Copper-Plate embellishments will be su
perb tended by the Publisher, and the typo
graphical part of this work will be under the ex
clusive directi n of Messrs. Atkinson &z Alexan
der. who have been so long known to the public
as able and enterprising artizans, that it is entire
ly unnecessary to say that so far as they are con
cerned, there can be no doubt as to the elegance
of its execution ; and with regard to his own
share of the arrangements, the Publisher binds
himself, in case he should fail to perform any es
sential part of his undertaking to refund the
I rice of subscription.
Agents will shortly be appointed in different
parts of the United States, until which time sub
scriptions will be received by PHILIP PRICE,
Jr. No. 66 Lombard street, Philadelphia, to whom
all orders must be addressed, post paid—And al
so by Judah Dobson, 108 Chesnut street; at the
Office of the Saturday Evening Post, No. 112
Chesnut street, two doors below the Post-Office.
July 9 17
TO HIRE,
A good healthy Girl, for a Wgl Nurse
quire at this office.
July 9 18 tf
En
O FFERS his services to the inhabitants of
Augusta, and its vicinity^ in the different
branches of his profession
His office is on Campbell-Street, third door
round the Corner, from Al’Dowell’s Store.
June 25 15 tf
WHISKEY, RUM, S? GIN.
Just rcurtv d from New York anu Philadelphia
HHDS Rye Whiskey
10 do N. E Rum
30 Bbls Country Gin
20 do superior Beer, Fidler &z Taylor’s brand
20 do Newark Cider
20 Qr Casks Sicily Madeira, Teneriffe,
Muscatel, and Malaga Wines
Muscovado Sugars, in hhds and bbls
Coffee in Bbis and bags arid a genera! as
sortment of GROCERIES and DRY GOODS,
constantly on hand, for sale on reasonable terms
by ’ BUGG k. GREENWOOD,
224, Broad Street
February 12 77 tf
TO THE PUBLIC.
H AVING seen a notice in the ‘ Savannah
./.Georgian,” (which is probably intended
for publication in other public Gazettes of the
State,) purporting to he from the “ Board of
Commissioners of the Brunswick Cana! Compa
ny,” and signed by leazer Early, Secretary,
stating that books of subscription will be opened
in various towns in this state, therein mentioned,
on the :stof September next, for the purpose of
receiving, subscriptions for stock, upon he ves
ted rights and privileges granted by the last ses
sion of the Legislature, to myself and nine others
nominally named in the charter;—this is to give
notice that the undersigned is the sole bona-fide
propi letor of the said vested rights and privileges,
and (hat there is n w, no such “ Board” lawfully
authorised to act, nor. to pm the said rights, Stc.
into market, without my consent.
Four of the most responsible men incorpora
ted with me. w ho w ith myself represent five tc-r.ths
of the charter in the present stage of the busi
ness, have resigned the control of the disposal of
those rights &rc. for tiie purpose contemplated
by the act. to me—which together with my be
ing the sole proprietor, having borne all the ex
pense of the survey, after being enticed to Glynn
county, with the Engineer in April 1826, by let-
Information Wanted,
I RESPECTING Mr. Andrew Potts aud family,
R, of Cappy, County, in Ireland. Four
of Mr. Potts’ sons, William, Hance, David, and
James, sailed from Warns Point, for America,
on the 1st of June, 1805, on board the brig Ly
dia, Captain Webb, and landed- at Philadelphia.
They settled on a farm o/ land near Lcwistown,
Mifflin County, Pennsylvania. The above An
drew Potts and wife, their daughter Jane, and
sons Andrew, John, Alexander, and Samuel,
sailed from Belfast in August, 1809, on board
the Protection, Captain Beams, bound for New
York. The last time Mr. Potts’ friends heard
from him was in July, 1818, at which time he li
ved in Hector, Seneca County, State of New-
York. Any information concerning the above
family, directed to me at. Augusta, Georgia, so
that I may forward the same to their friends in
Ireland, who are very anxious to hear from
them, will be. thankfully received and duly at
tended to.
JOHN J. MAGUIRE.
May 31 8
FOR SALE.
T HE six acre Lot above Turknetts-Spring
adjoining the property of W Smith, 12,V
The situation is commanding and pleasant and
it is in the neighbourhood of good water. I n
disputed Titles will be given lo the purchaser.
FOR TERMS Al'PLV To
w. A. l:rcw; A "(nr
Mav-31 "s ,•
THE SimSCUUSEU,
Is now receiving aud opening, four "doors
the City Hotel,
AN elW;.\\t ASS IRTMI XT OF
GLASS, CH
'A.
LOW
AND
’SS*'
Direct from Liverpool, which he will set
Par Cash, or To ten Acceptanc
Put up particularly for
Country Merchants.
JAMES BONES.
Juno 12 li ]2t
FOR SALE,
A first rate second hand four wheel CARRI
AGE. and good match of HORSES, on ac
coinmodating terms. Enquire at tiiis office.
July 2. i 7 tf
American Farmer,
W E wish every friend of this journal should
understand, and that they would have
the kindness to make it known, that to any one
who will procure four subscribers and remit on
$20. W e beg also to repeat, that all
the risk of, and addressed to “the ca
merican Farmer, Baltimore”—and
Great Luck again at
BEERS’
Combination No. 24, 51, 53,
IS THE
«S33tis^tnfiton <£iti> HotUrj>,
TK RD CLASS,
Came out on the 4ih of July, a Prize of
$500,
IN A WHOLE TICKET,
And was obtained by a gentleman of this City,
(now absent on a journey.) at
BEERS* OFFICE
Where the Cash is ready, and will be paid frr the
Prize whenever called for.
byjhe editor.
1 he American Farmer is published weekiv by
J-S, Skinner, postmaster, of Baltimore, printed
on fine paper the size of ordinary newspaper,
folded so as to make 8 pages ; about one half, or
four pages devoted to practical agriculture ; the
remainder to internal improvements, rural and
domestic economy, selections for house-keepers
and female readers and natural history and ni
ters of treachery, promising assistance and then ! ral s P ots - A minute index and title page to the
leaving me to stand alone, in that, and all other I volume is published, and forwarded with
expenses, labour, invention, k.c relative thereto. ! ‘> ;e rist number of each volume. Asingle number
gives the undersigned the lawful right as Afrent j f' e sent t0 an J’ one w * 10 may desire to sec a
for ’ “ establishing the Brunswick Canal Corn- i s r7 c *inen of the Publication,
panv.” ! 1EFT0 all editors who will give the above one
Notice is therefore, hereby given, that all who j or two ‘ nsertions > we shall feel much indebted,
may.subscribe for shares in the above m onioned
Next Lottery.
Tim 3MTEW 'SOWii
Consolidated Lottery,
NO. 4.
Was Drawn on the ISth imt.
The Drawing will be received for examination CL
Saturday Morning next, the 28th inst.
54 NUMBER COKB1NATIO& LOTT EE Y,
8 Drawn Ballots.
PICH 3CHKW5E.
Prize of$ 16000 js$16000
stock, in consequence of the said notice signed bv
Fleazor Early Secretary,"will be considered and
held as assenting by contract to the payment of
my account, amounting t 82100 for the cost cf
those vested rights and privileges, out of the first
instalment; as the object of the aforesaid purpor
ting Board, composed of a refractory minority
and the ungrateful part of the Commissioners,
under the intrigue rf the aforesaid Eleazer Early,
is to swindle the undersigned out of those vested
rights and prieileges for which^they have never
spent a do'lar, merely because I unfortunately in
troduced the names of Col. Jno, Burnett itDaniel
Blue, into the bill' for the charter, the better to
ensure its passage through both houses of the
Legislature. W. B. DAVIS,
Agent and proprietor for the
'Brunswick Canal Company.
mf” Editors who may publish the notice signed
by Eleazer Early, Secretary of the said pretend
ed "Board of Commissioners of the Brunswick
Canal Company” are requested to insert the a-
bove notice also, and forward tbeir accounts to
me for payment, W B. DAVIS.
Augdsta, July 19, 1627 21 w3t
and will g'aoly reciprocate their kindness.
P. S. The American Farmer is circulated thro’
every state and territory, and is written for by
many of the most distinguished practical farmers
1
a
of
4000 is
4000
1
61
of
2500 is
*2500
• 1
66
of
2000 is
2000
1
66
of
1600 is
1600
1
66
of
1576 is
1576
5
66
of
1000 is
5000
10
66
of
500 is
5000
10
66
of
200 is
2000
25
((
of
100 is
2500
46
66
of
50 is
2306
92
66
of
20 is
1840
1150
u
of
10 is
11500
8280
66
of
5 is
4J 400
9624
15180
PRIZES. >
BLANKS. 5
899,216
24804
TICKETS.
Tickets $5, Halves^
50, Quarte
•S 1 25.
uWhe Union.
A (
Office of American Farmer.
1Fite Hundred Dollars
REWARD.
1" OST on Monday evening, the 9th instant,
.I J between the Eagle Tavern in Augusta and
the upper Hamburg Spring, a CALF SKIN
POCKET BOOK containing Five Thousand Dol
lars of United States Bank Notes, and seven hun
dred and Seventy Dollars of the Bank of the
State of Georgia-, payable principally in Augusta.
Any person who may deliver the said Pocket
Book or give such information as may be the
means of obtaining the money, shall be entitled
to the above Reward, by calling on myself in
Muscogee Cjunty, or Edmund Bugg of Augusta,
who is my agent.-
T ,, HENRY H. LOWE.
July 16 20 2m*pd.
In this Scheme there aie about two prizes to
three blanks, and the number of tickets in the
Combination Schemes, being reduced of late bv
nearly 10,000, gives a much better chance thsr.-
usual for the larger prizes.
APPLY AT
BEERS’
Fortunate Lottery Office,
W here the Cash is paid for all prizes sold a’,
his office, as soon as presented.
And where capital prizes have been sold and
paid in nearly all the late Lotteries.
* Payable in Lots in Albany. ,
July 23' " 2 22t is
We have appointed Mr
B. F. Verbery, our lawful
Attorney, during our absence.
J. L. ANDERSON, & Co
June 11 u tf
Ifr
EDGE CUT OFF