Georgia courier. (Augusta, Ga.) 1826-1837, August 06, 1827, Image 3

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AUGUSTA. UTnOAY, AUGUST, 6, 1827. The friends of General Jackson are busily engaged in repairing the breach, which their otm fully has made in thf wall of the old general’s defence. The expression we used in a late paper is reit erated in several publications not unfr.end- Jv to the character and pretensions of Gen. Jackson, that he “ has more to fear from his friends than his enemies.” We oe li CV e the General has but little to an swer for in the publication of the Beverly correspondence. It has been teazed out .f fiim, and then twisted and turned, and explained, or rather mystified, till its pro mulgators themselves scarcely know its beginning or end. They first endeavored to create the impression that Gen. Jackson had directly and publicly accused Mr. Clay, who could not escape the imputa tion of guilt with the weight of General Jackson’s testimony against him. Then comes the letter of Gen. Jackson to Bev- 011 v, and there as General J. says he does not know, that his informant came from Mr. Clay, to whom by such a surmise he rnav do injustice, Gen. Jackson is now no .ouger the public accuser of Mr. Clay,— it is Mr. B. and Mr. M. and Mr. B. and Tom, Dick and Harry, and it will soon appear, or we are very much mistaken, that no one will be willing to encounter so forlorn a hope. All that we wish, is that Gen. Jackson rnay he allowed to follow that dignified and magnanimous course, which has already won the admiration of his country, and not he dragged by indis creet friends into the political amphithea tre, like the commonest blackguard, who may be battling away on its arena for pub lic amusement, I] is fame is a sacred property of his country.. Gentlemen, hands off. . : - If General Jackson knows any thing that can criminate Mr. Clay, we cannot reconcile his declining to bring it forward with the high opinion we have always en tertained of his integrity and perfect dis regard of personal consequences, when he believed be was discharging his duty.— His not having done so, at the times when both policy and duty required it at his hands, is the most positive proof with us, 'hat he knows nothing of the matter, and has been deceived by the officious forwaid- i;ess of his . friends. If the statements which are at present before the public arc all true, the whole matter is thus explain ed : Mr. Buchannan is “the distinguished member of Congress” who made the al leged communication to Gen’l Jackson ; but as lie was not permitted to give Gen. Jackson the name of his informant, the General very naturally concluded the overture came from Mr. Clay. But it seems it was at the suggestion of Mr. .Markley, or from information which he imparted to Mr. Buchannan, that the lat ter made his communication to General Jackson. The whole then will be thus settled : Gen. J ickson will give up the name of Mr. Buchannan, who will deny any concert with Mr. Clay, and will give up Markley as his author. And it is pro bable from the character for intrigue which his friends (or enemies) have given this gentleman, he will acknowledge that he was the sole author of the proposition to General Jackson, in hopes of benefiting himself; for if his plan had succeeded, and General Jackson thereby had been made President, and Mr. Clay Secretary of State, it was natural to conclude, they would not forget, in the distribution of their favors, Mr. Markley, the humble instrument of their elevation. ^leop, Falcon, We publish, to-day, Mr. Clay’s Speech, delivered at the late Lexington Dinner in Kentucky. It is, in the main, expressed in a moderate and digitized style, without those exhibitions of passionate violence, which have distinguished the declamations against him. Occasionally his proud spi rit, roused by unworthy accusation, and strong in the consciousness of its own in nocence, bursts beyond the limits of mod eration, and flashes its indignation in the face of his enemies. This will be readily excused by all who remember, how un mercifully this statesman has been treated by his political opponents, and who have «ver experienced themselves those indig nant feelings which are the natural guards of every man’s character. It is to he wished, that as little malignancy of invec tive had characterized the philippics of his onemies. TV e would eulogise Mr. Clay, if our present feelings towards him were of new growth. But they arc not ; they date their origin many years back, and have been strengthened and matured by a close observance of his whole political life.— Though we have differed with hint in some questions, it has not blinded us to his distinguished merits as a Statesman, Pa triot, and Lover of universal freedom. It w 3s his eloquence that fixed the hopes of of freedom, and cheered their hearts in the gloomiest hour of their struggle. To him we owe the final adjustment of a question, which shook the steady fabric of our government, and cast a gloomy an ticipation over the hopes of our most sanguine patriots. It is true, the lamented Lowndes poured the pacific influence of his angelic spirit upon the angry excite ment ; but his country recognizes with pride and gratitude, in Henry Clay, the master spirit, who rode through the whirl wind and averted its fury. During the canvass before the last Presidential elec tion, we always considered him more in dependent in the declaration of his opin ions, than any of his competitors. On questions, from iheir sectional bearing calculated to injure his interests, he spoke without disguise, and that too, not to a few confidential friends—by letters to corres pondents—to his own immediate constitu ents,—but in the face of the Nation, in its Legislative Hall. No doubtfui interpre tation rests upon his sentiments, with re gard to any of the great questions of na tional policy. This independence, arising from the conscious purity of his own mo tives, produced the only act of his life, on which his enemies have been able to fix their accusations with any appearance of truth—we mean his acceptance of the of fice of Secretary of State from Mr.^dams, after giving him his vote and influence in the election. Of the value of the pre sumption arising out of this rcceptance, his enemies manifest their opinion by the space its discussion occupies in the news papers, and on public occasions. We have already expressed our disbelief in the whole accusation, and our inability to discover, why his preference of Mr. A- dams in the election should disqualify him for office in the administration. We know of but one statesman who could with any justice have competed with him for any office then in the gift of the Nation. We are no doubt anticipated in our allusion. That statesman was already placed by his admiring country in what ought to be con sidered the second place in cur govern ment. To whom, then, was Mr. Adams to offer the office of the Secretary of State? —To someinferior statesman 7 No. Mr. Clay’s talents, eloquence, splendid servi ces, &long acquaintance with all the great interests of his country, demanded from her gratitude the most distinguished office in her gift. That country has gratefully re sponded to his claims. SUMMARY. Important.—Mr. Clay walked across Pennsylvania Avenue to speak to General Jackson, before the last Presidential E- lection! ! ! Capo d’lstria, a native Greek of the Island of Corfu, lately in the service of the Emperor of Russia, has been placed at the head of the Greek government.— Since the arrival of Lord Cochrane in Greece, the rival chiefs have in some measure ceased their private dissentions, and united in the glorious cause of their country. Under General Church, Ka- raiskaki, Fabvier, &c., the Greeks have gained a great victory lately, destroying 10,000 Turks, and so far routing their enemies that it is expected it will, if it has not already resulted in the relief of A- thens. Several of the Greek Generals are worthy of the age of Miltiades,— Karaiskaki and the French Col. Fabvier, have immortalized their names, and will descend to posterity, with all the admira tion, which rests on the names of Epami- nondas and the other chiefs of the era of Grecian Liberty. Mr. Benjamin Gorham is elected in Boston to succeed Mr. Webster. Votes stood thus—for Mr. Gorham 1659, Col. Blake 698, Henshaw 459. At the great dinner given Mr. Clay at Lexington, among the 15 hundred gentle men present, was Mr. Rochester, the Se cretary of the Panama Mission. ' A very rich Gold Mine has been lately discovered in Union District, S. Carolina, of such extent as to be sufficient to employ 500 hands, at good wages. Dr. Cooper has examined sonic of the ore, and pro nounces it equal in purity to any he ever saw. The Southern Patriot states on the au thority of experiment, that the depth of the rain that fell on the 27th, 2S'.h and 29th ult. was 9 inches. Commodore Porter has lately been in New-Orleans. The Commodore’s long stay at Key West, has been remonstrated against by the Spanish Minister at Wash ington, which is supposed to have produc ed the order from the Navy Department, for the Commander on the West India station to rendezvous with his whole force without delay at Key West. Mr. M’Lean has returned with his fami ly to Washington. Gen. Brown had ar rived on his return from his tour of inspec tion at Sackett’s Harbour, where he was handsomely received with military honors. The passengers who left the shipwreck ing boapnid all reached the shore in safety. Tl»e Newbern Centinel says that the passengers who landed in the long boat of the Falcon, at Beafort, N. C. were shame fully treated by the inhabitants of that neighborhood, who plundered them of most of the articles saved from the wreck. The North-Carolina 74 has arrived in Hampton Roads. Bolivar, in an address to the inhabitants of Caraccas, says—“ Born a citizen of Caraccas, my highest ambition will be to preserve that precious title : a private life among you will be my delight, my glory, and the revenge I expect to take of my enemies.” The Hon. J. M’Phersou Berrien and George R. Gilmore, Esq. have been elect ed trustees to fill the vacancies occasioned by the absence of the Hon. Stephen El liott, and the death of Dr. Joel Abbot, in the University of Georgia. The Hon. John Sargeant, with his pri vate Secretary, Mr. Reed, arrived in the Delaware on the 27th ulr. He is one of the Commissioners to the South America Congress. A young lady by the name of Suydam, has leaped or fallen into the watery gulph, at the Trenton Falls. Whether this oc currence, which is very frequent, is owing to giddiness in looking down from a great height, or whether as some have described the sensation, there is an irresistible and rather pleasing propensity to enjoy these cavities by leaping into their embraces, whatever be the cause, the consequence ought to be sufficient to caution visitors of such places against too great confidence in their own powers. A similar sensation to the one which we presume is fell on occasions like the one we have mentioned, is produced by lying down on the back in the morning or evening, and fixing the view strongly on the blue heavens as up on the bottom of a great gulph over which you are suspended. the tidings of 1 a great battle wod, and then there was a second silence. ^The people fell on their knees, and with anthem? of thankfulness rejoiced at the dismal sound ofthat tolling death-bell; for it was a signal of that plague being so abated that men might again mourn for their friends, and hallow their remains with the solemnites of burial.” MORGAN. , The Black Rock Gazette mentions tnat the raking and sweeping of the bot tom of the Niagara river, and also in the Lake contiguous to Fort Niagara, on the calculation of findiug the body of Morgan, is still preserved in. Messrs. Editors.—The following aw ful description of the Great Plague in London, (says the Boston Recorder^pf 1825) is from the writings of Wm. Galt. It was not probably intended to be his torically exact, but no description, it is presumed, can greatly exceed that ap palling visitation. “ In its melignancy, it engrossed the ill of all other maladies, and made Doctors- despicable.—Of a potency equal to death it possessed itself of all his armouries, and was itself the death of every other mor tal distemper. The touch, yea, the very sight of the infected was deadly ; & its signs were so sudden, that families seated in happiness at their meals, have seen the plague spot begin to redden, and have wildly scatter themselves forever—The cement of society was dissolved by it.— Mothers, when they saw the signs of the infection on the babes at their bosom, cast them from them with abhorrence.— Wild places were sought for shelter—some went into ships and anchored themselves afar off on the waters, But the angel that was pouring the vial had a foot on the sea as well as on dry land. No place was so wild, that the plagne did not visit—none so secret that the quick-sighted pestilence did not discover—none could fly that it did not overtake. “ It was as if Heaven had repented the making of mankind, and was shovelling them all into the sepulchre. Justice was forgotten, and her courts deserted. The terrified jailors fled from the felons that were in fetters—the innocent aud the gujlty leagued themselves together, and kept within their prisons for safety—the grass grow in the market-place—the cat tle went moaning up and down the fields, wondering what had become of their keepers—the rooks and the ravens came into the towns, and built their nests in the mute belfries—silence was universal, save when some infected wretch was seen clamouring at a window. “ For a time all commerce was in cof fins and shrouds; but even that ended Shrifted there was none ; churches and chappels were opened, but neither priest nor penitent entered ; all went to the char nel house. The sexton and the physi cian were cast into the same deep and wide grave ; the testator and his heirs and ex ecutors were hurled from the same cart- into the same hole together. Fires be came extinguished, as if its element too had expired—the seams of the sailorless ships yawned to the sun. Though doors were open and covers unwatched, there was no theft—all offences ceased, and no crime but the universal woe of the pesti lence was heard of among men. The wells overflowed, and conduits runs to waste ; the dogs banded themselves to gether, having lost their masters, and ran howling over all the land; horses perished of famine in their stalls ; old friends but looked at one another when they met, keeping themselves far aloof; little children went wandering up and down, and numbers were seen dead in all corners. r or was it only in England that the pbigae raged ; it travelled over a third part <ji the earth, like the shadow of an eclipse, as if some dreadful thing had been interposed between the world and the sun-source of life. “ At that epoch, for a short time there was a silence, and every person in the street, for a moment stood still; and Lon don was as dumb as a churchyard. Again the sound of a bell was heard ;—for it was that sound, so long unheard, which arres- the fugitive multitude, and caused their silence. At the third toll a universal shout arose, as when a herald proclaims — SUGAR, BACON, &c. J- Hhds. New-Orleans Sugar 22 „ W. India do 6000 lbs. Bacon 25 bbls N. Gin 10 ,, N. Rum 20 Whiskey 25 „ No. 3 Mackerel 6 „ Loaf Sugas 12 „ Canal Flour 1 cask London Best Porter 20 bags prime Green Coffee 50 ,, Shot, assorted 15 boxes Raisins 5 bales brown Shirting and Sheeting 2 cases Plaids and Stripes FOR SALE BY Collins &. Manton, No. 310 Broad-street August 6 26 Pt PICKLING CUCUMBERS. A correspondent of the American Far mer gives the following as a new process for pickling cucumbers, by substituting whiskey when vinegar is scarce : I gathered the cucumbers from the vines, and without any other preparation than washing them clean, dropped them into a stand containing a mixture of whis key and water, one part of the former to three of the latter. I secured them against gnats, flics, and external air, by tying a flannel close over the top, and lay ing over this a board and stone, and nei ther moyed or examined them until Christmas, when I found them not mere ly equal, but decidedly superior to any pickles I had ever tasted. They were hard and of a fine flavor, and what has been particularly admired in them, they retained the original color of the cucum ber, not exhibiting the green, poisonous appearance of pickles that had been salted and scalded in copper. My whiskey and water (no salt having been used or heat employed) is now excellent vinegar for the table. TO PRESERVE MILK. A spoonful of horse radish put into a pan of milk, it is said, will preserve it sweet fbr several days. To raise Turnips among Corn.—Sow about one pint of turnip seed to the acre, on os about the 21st of this month, (either before or after the last harrowing; top the corn as soon as ripe enough, and husk it as soon as tho corn will admit; cut down and beat off the stalks, to lei the sun upon the turnips, and the sweetness of the fod der trill compensate for the labor. Take in the turnips about the middle of Decem ber. By pursuing these directions, corn of 40 bushels to the acre will produce 80 or 100 bushels of turnips at the same time. &<>*<xnical Question.—Are all plants the result of the germination ol a seed, or virgin earth and vegetable mould 1 ? It is undoubtedly a very remarkable phenom enon that the earth when dug to the depth of eight or ten feet or more produces all sorts of plants, provided it is advantage ously exposed to the sun; but what is more extraordinary, is that the new veg-, etation frequently affords plants of kinds which have never been remarked in the country. It is natural to ask, whence come these plants? Can it be admitted that the seeds of those new plants were contained in the several kinds of the earth ? But could all those seeds, which have been perhaps above three thousand years underground, without having been expos ed to to the action of the sun, have pre served the power of germination ? If we strew ashes on high and arid heaths, we should see sometime afterwards clover and vetches growing there, though those two plants had never before been seen on those two places. Shall we believe that the seeds of the clover and vetches were in the ground and only waited for a stimulus to germinate ? But how did it come there? We know that high and arid heaths never produce clover; it can not therefore be considered as proceeding fc eX j^™39 low ' from a plant which formerly grew there. But even shoul 1 we admit the possibility that these kinds of earth may contain clo ver seed, this opinion connot be main tained in some parts of East Friesland, where wild clover is made to grow by strewing pearl ashes on peat marshes. Bulletin Universal des Sciences. The following arc the Drawn Numbers in the Union Canal Lottery, CLASS 30th. 20, 11, 46, 7, 8, 14, 24, 33. Holders of Prizes will please call and receive the Cash, or renew in the Rhode Island Lottery, Class 6th. The drawing of which is expected on Tuesday, the 14th instant. Highest Prizes $10,000, $2,500. $1,112, five of $1,000, ten of $500, &c. Ste. Tickets, $4—Halves, $2—Quarters. $! APPLY AT BEERS’ Fortunate Lottery Office. No. 241 Broad-streot. August 6 26 MENDENH \ LI.’S Patent Improved Grist 3Jit T HE undersigned, living in Augusta, bein appointed, by MonfortS. Street, and Jch Wilson, Assignees of Moses Mendenhall, sole Agent, in future, for selling in Georgia the above important and valuable improvement in the Grist Mill, informs the Public tha* he is ready to dispose of the same to those w ho may w ant only an individual right, or to those who may w ish to purchase for counties. Those who prefer serine specimens before thev purchase. ca» be satisfied at my house, or can see sevcraLnow in operation in this neighborhood. Individual Rights $25. B MIMS. May 28 6m 7 It’ The Milledgeville Journal will plfiase to publish tliis weekly for two months and send the account to the office of the Georgia Courier ti.r payment. (il 18 TO RENT, From the first of October next, the two HOUSES with their STORES, next to the Building lately occupied by Mr. Robert Lang, in the upper end of Broad street. The Storea are in fine si tuations for the Grocery business, and one of them was lately' occupied for that purpose bv Mr. H. Musgrove. Apply to Mr. Win. M’Gar, or George R. Rou itree. August G 26 6t Fresh Goods. Carlton, Cook & Knowlton, No. 249 Broad street, A few doors below the Banks, Have just received from New-York, in addition to their former supply, a splendid assortment of Fashionable Goods, Suitable for the season.—Amongst which are R ICH Plaid Silks, various patterns, Rich Gros de Naples, all colours, Black Italian Lutestring, Double and plain Florence Silks, Green India Silk, Black Mode, Plain Batteste, Bobinett Lace veils. Bobinett half Handkerchiefs, Barage Scarfs and Handkerchiefs, Black, White, and Green Italian Crape, Rich Gauze Bonnet and Cap Ribbon, plaid and Plain Belting, Superfine Nankin and Canton Crapes, Rich figured, and fine plain Swiss Muslins, 6-4 Mull, Jaconet, and Cambric Muslins, Furniture and Garment Dimity, Rich Fancy Calicoes, Thread Lace, Insertion Trimming, Ladies’and Children’s Caps, Silk, Linen and Cotton Hose, Horseskin and Kid Gloves, Buff and Plaid Cravats, Black and White Cravats, Irish Linen, Cotton Sheeting and Shirtings, Artificial Flowers and Wreaths, Columbian Ldce, Chain and Leaf Gimp, Foundation Muslin, Willow Sheets, Chip Hats, Pearling and Piping Cords, Marking Cotton and Canvass, Clarke’s Spool Cotton, Linen and Cotton Floss, Linen and Cotton Tapes, Flat and Round Bobbin, Millinet and Buckram, Bonnet Boards, And an extensive assortment of LARGE SHELL AND SIDE COMBS. Ladies Bead Purses and Reticules, Ladies Morocco do Together with many other articles in the DRY GOODS and FANCY LINE, and an excellent assortment of PERFUMERY, which will be sold C£AXUE!T WINS, LO/ F SUGAR, &C. LANDING TROM STEAM-BOATS COMMERCE And enterprize. 30 Boxes Claret Wine, 6 Half Pipes do. 10 BT>ls. Double Refined Sugar, 65 Kegs Spiced Salmon, 12 Boxes Brandy Fruits 15 do. Capers and Olives 10 do. London Pickles, (assorted 12 Hampers French Cordials, 10 Boxes West India, do 3 Pipes Holland Gin, 2 do Otards Brandy 50 Half Bbls. No. 1 Mackerel. IN StORE." SO BUs, Newark Cider, GO Boxes Crab, do (equal to Champnigne. 20 Bbls. No I Mackerel, 10 Casks London Porter, Lc. fcc. 60 Five Gallon Demijohns, 10 Hampers Wine and Porter Bottles, 15 Boxes white and Brown Soap, 20 M. Superior Spanish Segars. TOGETHER WITH A COMPLETE ASSORTMEXt Or GROCERIES, Of the Choicest Kindst, and on fair terms. For Sale by N. DYRAM MOORE, No. 202, Broad-Street. Juno 7 10 tf HALL 6l HARBIN, Having purchased the Stock of GROCFRJES of Mr. A. P. ROBERTSON, would again invite the attention of their friends and the public gen erally, at No. 151 Broad-street, where they in tend keeping a constant supply of Choice Groceries i S: THEV HAVE ON HAND, kTJ T. Croix and New-Orleans Sugars, Loaf and Lump do White and Green Coffee, Cognar Brandy, Holland Gin, N. E. Gin, Canal Whiskey, superior quality, Cicili and Teneriffe Wine, London Porter, Impcriai Gunpowder and Hyson Teas, Pepper and Spice, Table Salt, Spanish and Common Scgari, Chewing Tobacco, of superior quality, Sperm and Tall w Candles, Swedes and Russia Iron, Cotton Bagging and Sacking, Newark Cider, suitable for bottling, &te. &.C And at No. 151, they have a general as sortment of Seasonable DRY GOODS, All of which is offered for sale on the most att coinmodating terms. June 7 10 tf 24 tf Tsair 2 The ICE HOUSE con - tinues to be kept open from 8 o’clock, A. M. to 1, P. M. and from 3, P. M. to sun down, every day in the week except Sunday —on that day it will only be open from 8 to 10, A. M., and from 3 to 5, P. M. August 6 It ATTENTION IS! AH persons who have taken away BOOKS from No. 2, Cumming’s Range, are re quested to return the same,and especially the 1st Vol. of the “ Wars of Europe,” and “ Lavoisne’s Atlas. August 6 2G 2tin GEORGIA FEETCXSLES! A TTEND a Company Meeting, .at the City Hall, on Wednesday afternoon, at half past 4 o’clock, on business of importance. Bj order of Lieut. Bones. GFO. W. McCOY. Sec’ryG. F. August 6 29 It SUGAR. COFFEE, And BAGGING. ON CO»TSZGNZ¥LuXgT r lO Hhds. Sugar, 50 casks Cut Nails, assorted, 24 bbls. best Point Gin, 10 quarter casks Malaga Wine, 60 reams Wrapping Paper, 30 reams Writing Paper, 10 boxes Wliittemore’s Cotton Cards, 2 hhds. Coperas, 1 pipe Cognac Brandy, 3 casks London Porter, 20 packages Shoes, assorted. 2 bales Bagging Twine, , 10 bales Plaid, S.ripc, Check, Brown, and Bleached Domestics, 100 dozen Wool Hats, 1 case Cotton Hosiery,—Ail of which will 1 e sold low, for cash or approved paper. * Apply at tire Store of //. V,'. Ssovrll A Co.' No. 271.. A BRYAN: July 30 . 21 3t 200 Pieces first quality Hemp Bagging, 15 Hhds. St. Croix Sugar, 4000 Bushels Liverpool Salt, 50 Bags Green Coffee, 30 do Rio do 5Q Barrels Old Ohio Whisker, 10 Hhds. Philadelphia tic 30 Barrels Phelps Gin, 20 do Baltimore do 25 do N. Rum, 10 do Newark Cider, 20 do Albany Summer Ate, 50 Boxes Soap, 50 do Northern Candles, 20 do Sperm do 20 Kegs Richmond Tobacco, 50 Boxes 1st quality Spanish Segais, Cognac Brandy, Holland Gin. Jamaica Rum, Madeira, Teneriffe, and Malaga ( WINES. Iron, Shot, Lead, &c. For Sale on reasonable terms. ly GEOBGE R. JESSUP, 330, Broad-Street. July 23 22 lm WHISKEY, RUM, tf «7/V, Just received from New-York anil Philadelphia HHDS Rye Whiskey iiV 10 do N. E. Rum 30 Bbls Country Gin 20 do superior Beer. Fidler & Taylor’s brand 20 do Ntwark Cider 20 Qr. Casks Sicily Madeira, Teneriffe, Muscatel, and Malaga Wines Muscovado Sugars, in hhds and bbls Coffee in Bbls and bags and a general as sortment of GROCERIES and DRY GOODS', constantly on band, for sale on reasonable terms, by ' BUGG t GREENWOOD, 224, Broad Street February 12 77 tf INSURANCE AGAINST J OHN BEACH having resigned the agency of the Hartford Fire Insurance Company in consequence of his intended removal from the State, the Board of Directors have appointed the Subscriber their Agent, who will take risks on property in Augusta and its vicinity. Apply at the store recently occupied by said Beach, No. 317, Broad Street, where the Agent can be found or at the store of J. & W. Catlin, JOFI. CATUN, Agent April 29 > 90 C TO RENT, T HAT valuable Establishment, known as the Mansion House, in the City of Augusta, situated on Green-street, and at present occupied by Mr. M’Keen. The accommodations are ex tensive and good. The situation is considered one of the most eligible for a Public House in the city. Possession given on the 1st of October next. For terms apply at the Branch Bank, Augusta. June 7 IQ tf DR. M’WHORTER feWS?* will continue bis Professional Services in the City t^nd its immediate neighborhood- May 2 & $ EDGE CUT OFF