Georgia courier. (Augusta, Ga.) 1826-1837, August 09, 1827, Image 3
^Tmnr, weakness,of a
sh^mC
total insensibili-
caudi-
horcarofouF^or more can -
lhtr f. ‘ !.,,nrs of the People.
to
Where u**-'' 1 *' —; 'r
'^'''"TcstoXul tho Union »™
»S%a whAthc favourite of a
Bjority oftke whole ; “ d ^“cm.
»
nlntives as another ^ a ^|J“,o°Mlect
from the t i ^ distinguished by
toltal Cr e Lb Cr of votes.—Consider-
C ? rCatG l l important which of the
- 11 n r ' i be elected, than that their
,CC S | uld be confined immediately to
°‘ C f'hen. Mr. Adams was second by
c electoral college vote, and not far be-
foremost,& a portion of.he votes
Mr. Crawford and Mr. Clay,
, 0U Has well have elected himas ue-
r -,1 Jackson. It is impossible the,e-
,'eto say, which of them would have
tration of Justice, and a claim on public
nd the
yen to
rn preferred if they alone had been he
re the people, unaccompanied cither JV
fc. Clay or Mr. Crawford.
"flow boldly this objection bears upon
, fi conduct, or how ill it suits the mouths
f those who ardently advocated l *r.
rawford’s election by the House ot kep-
when he was much lower on
Mr. Adams
putes
lie disedssion and public interest, and in
flicting wounds on feelings of others, the
more difficnlt to be borne, because of
their publicity—such publications rank
high among th& causes which keep up
the practice of duelling, and whereas the
right to insert such publications has no
more to do with the liberty of the press,
than the right to violate the security or
happiness of individuals in any other mode
has, with the enjoyment of civil liber
ty ;
Therefore, Resolved, That this Board
is particularly charged with the adoption
and prosecution of such measures as may
conduce the suppression of the practice
of Duelling and as they consider the pros
ecution of the Printers who admit such
erticles in their columns, as the only effec
tual means of putting a stop to such pub
lications ; the Committee will consider it
the duty on the appearance of any similar
publication hereafter, to institute a prose
cution for the offence against the editor of
the Paper in which such publication shall
appear.—Charleston City Gazette.
be electoral poll than either
r General Jackson, we forbear to tx-
Fearintr lest the constitution and the
• • i. _ ._1J hn orroinct i hOrti
AUGUSTA.
so stated, that Mr. Buchanan is the person to
whom General Jackson alluded, in his letter to
Mr- Beverly, of the 6th ult. We have authority
for saying that Mr. Buchanan will not act on the
presumption that he is the person. He cannot
consent to become a volunteer in this business.
Should it hereafter become necessary to make
anv statement upon .the subject, Mr. Buchanan
will then immediately publish, in detail, the only
conversation which he ever held with General
Jackson, concerning the last Presidential election,
prior to its termination. In the mean time, we
think it right to state, that, what we believe to have
been the premature introduction of Mr, B’s name
in the Telegraph, has been without his authority,
and against his consent.
His Excellency Gov. Troup, it is presumed, in
order to avoid any difficulties which might arise
when the boundary line between Georgia and
Alabama is run, refuses to give grants for land
beyond the limits of the New Treaty in Carroll
county. If by that line, when it shall be fixed,
the granted lands should be thrown into Alaba
ma, as we have ever believed some of them would
be, the grantees might not find their titles per
fectly good, and might besides have to look to
Georgia for the value of their improvements —
The Governor is perfectly right, however incon
sistent it may appear with his former opinions
about the right of this State to all the lands with
in the supposed limits of the Old Treaty. He is
now certainly on'the safe side, and though by re-
fusing these grants which could be demanded
under an act of the Legislature, he may be
stretching his prerogative, we can but give our
sanction to the good sense and prudence of the
THURDAY. AUGUST, 9, 1827.
We understand that Mr. David Lynar, one of
the persons engaged in the outrage upon young
, the II
1( ] to this accusation, as grots as tt is
:: worthy, as hideous as it is unfounded,
I
previously arrested and sent to jail.
We have purposely avoided saying any thing
son Convention have lent them- j concerning the unhappy affair above alluded to,
* ' ! because we knew not the circumstances with
sufficient certainty to be answerable for their de
tail, and find so many variant stories afloat, that
a straight consistent tale could scarcely be made
of them. The simple story, without its aggrava
ting circumstances, which we believe are greatly
exaggerated, appears to be this :—Two women,
coming to Hamburg in a gig. passed a man and
, imc an d reflection ought to have induced | a negro fellow with a cart One of the women
had got down to walk up the hill, but the one
riding seeing, as she thought, some suspicious
whispering and gestures between the man and
negro, advised her companion to get into the gig.
They had not gone far, before, hearing a noise
behind them, they looked back and found a ne-
ic Jac. - . . e . .
fives with all the positive force of .heir
ime , and with all the artificial influence
If,heir learned notes and commentaries.
■ Th t the first moments of mortified dis-
Ippoin'ment should have given rise, a-
|; I1? some men, to a heated and irrasci-
* bulition of this sort, was neither to
ive been wondered at r.or regarded—but
jus’er construction of things. It is easy
L indulge in accusation against men, and
kidnapped from their owner a young la
dy of this city about two years since, and
although every inquiry was then made
nothing certain was ever known as to
their fate, until last Monday evening. An
anoymous communication having been
then received by Mr. Saltar, a magis
trate of this city, advising him to search
the residence of a free coloured woman
named Hannah Elliot, in Gihbs-street.—
Mr. Saltar accompanied by a friend and
a detachment of the guard; proceeded
to the place—and underneath a bed-stead
a place was found cut in the floor, beneath
which the children were discovered in a
most wretched condition being confined
between the joists of the house and the
earth, without sufficient elevation to stand
upright, and scarcely to sit; and entirely
excluded from the light. They were
stretched upon a miserable mattrass which
was nearly immersed in water, occasion
ed by the late heavy rains—both of
them naked, and nearly with the loss of
their limbs. Their skin has assumed a whi
tish colour from the darkness and damp
to which they have been confined so long.
The parties who have been apprehended
on suspicion of committing this act, are
Hannah Elliot, a free woman, and Judy,
her sister, a slave, both said to he aunts to
the children.
Southern Patriot.
'inws of high political ferment, the dis
position to yield a submissively credulous
irto imputations against those whom it is
ir purpose to oppose
pi).
iore ju
is oficri the vice of
Let us however judge by safer and
aws of construction, and more
com in rr the high character of all.
In the absence of every thing like posi-
r proof, which is admitted by the Op-
isition in this case, they have recourse
circumstantial proof, in the construction
which we maintain that it is <l violation
nil rule of interpretation and of moral
light to recur to supposed corrupt motives
.ml views to explain that, which may be
f ;ually well explained by obvious and
Miowi’i fair ones. As a representative in
Congress at the time of the late presiden-
ial t lection, Mr. day was obliged to vote
effect limited to a choice be-
gro in the act of taking off their trunk. One of
them immediately jumped out and endeavored to
overtake the fellow in his retreat with the trunk,
but being old and with a sore foot, she soon be
came exhausted and stopped. She followed him
back so near the place that she left the cart, that
she thinks the man, if he had remained where
she left him, must have heard her cries for assis
tance—but she saw nothing more of him.
When Martin and the negro were brought to
trial before the Magistrate, the woman swore to
his identity. The boy also confessed he took
the trunk, and from his describing it so exactly,
the idea that his confess! on was the result of fear
is negatived. It is not certain whether the boy
i Jen mV Adimis and General Jackson, | was whipped before or after this confession.—
irlhecondidion of Mr. Crawford’s health,
Bit that time, put him out of the question
| ■ uli ail who were not previously pledged.
I He! ween Mr. Adams and Gen. Jackson
•.here was an entire good understanding;
but between neither of them and Mr.
■Clay, did lliere exist any prepossession—
■indeed lliere was something more between
■General Jackson and Mr. Clay, than the
■ordinary feelings between rival candidates.
(To be concluded in our next.)
—
I IMPORTANT TO COTTON PLANTERS.
Bpj/roef of h letter from an intelligent gentleman
now traveling in New England.
| “ In Connecticut, and in Providence,
I uid its neighborhood, I made enquiries
■ respecting the manufacture ot cotton, bag-
Iging out of cotton. I had many conver-
jnation with owners, agents and superinten-
I dants of small and large works. My in
quiries were, what would be tho actual
cost of bagging 42 inches wide, weighing
|lilb. per yard, and at what price they
■ would make it, the stock or material be-
Iing found 1 I showed thorn the coarsest
■ sample I had manufactured out of cotton
■ by Mr. Allen, of Nashville, Tennessee.
| 11 The following is the result: One of
my informants estimated the actual cost
for labor at cents ; all other expenses
cents ; at 20 cents he would turn out
any quantity. He supposed that one wo
man could weave 160 yards per day on a
I power loom. Another' said it could be
made for 15 or 18 centfc, and that one wo-
I man can weave 80 or 100 yards. Another
I cost 6 cents, sold at 17 cents. Another
I could deliver the cloth at 5 cts. and could
I make 50 yards on each power loom. A-
1 nnther says 8 cents and 50 yds. per day.
1 Another 3 or 400 per week for 4 or 5 cts.
1 Another for 4 or 5 cents. It was a new
1 article to them, and it was with difficulty
I that I could get some of them to express
“ an opinion as to its cost and what they
would make it for, as many of them are
tri the fine goods line, and did not wish to
change their machinery for small consid
erations. Indeed some of them were
at a loss what changes would be requisite.
However, from what I saw and hoards, I
think one of their machines could he used
with Tuttle or no alteration for the warp.
For the filling there might be no difficulty.
Sheeting 37 iuch.es wide sells for 13 to 14
cents. One pound will make 3 yards.
Waste, 10 to 14 per cent. Sheeting costs
1J to 2 cents per yard for weaving.”
[Nashville Banner
He also said his young master made him take
the trunk, and when he went to get it and found
it not where he said he left it, accused his master
of having moved it. The suspicion of guilt was
universally so strong in all who heard the de
tailed circumstances on the trial, that an almost
unanimous expression of give him “ Lynch’s
law” burst from every mouth. Mr. Shultz, at
Martin’s own request, went with him into the
swamp to make the boy, who was then hunting
it, get the trunk. We have it from an unques
tionable source, that Mr. Shultz talked to the
young man, both before the Court and on his
way to the swamp, as if he had been liis father
or brother, telling him he was young and this
was probably his first offence—that if he would
make his boy get the trunk, the matter should be
dropped in such a way as not to injure his cha
racter—nothing more would be said about it.
At this time our informant, who heard the con
versation, says he is sure Mr. Shultz had no
more design of ill using the young man than he
had himself—that he was convinced himself, and
believes Mr, Shulft was sure of his guilt. The
young man proceeded to where the boy was in
the swamp, and after hunting about to no pur
pose through briars and mud, the search was
given up; and we presume that then such symp
toms of prevarication were shewn by Martin,
that it was thought not unadvisable to work a
little upon his fears, as the appeal to the nobler
qualities of his nature bad been ineffectual.—
The violence offered the young man in the pro
measure.
It is fortunate Mr. Clay’s rout is through a
plentiful country, or famine raust have been in
evitable. There were 5000 people at one dinner
at Paris, and among them 700 ladies! We do
notlearn that Mr Clay made a speech at Paris ;
we suppose the ladies had so much to say, he
could not slip in a syllable.
If we were bachelors, we should certainly look
out for a couple of the girls, whose industry and
dexterity are recorded below. Our friend, Mr.
Noah, we judge to be a bachelor from the many
witty pieces he gives upon the subject of matri
mony. Might not a visit to “ Adams' South Vil
lage Cotton Factory” be attended with good con
sequences to him ? One of these girls might
weave into him justcr views of the policy of the
Administration t
/ Industrious Example.—In the M Ad
ams South Village Cotton Factory,” last
week, 4856J yards good Shirting were
wove by seven girls on eighteen looms,
finished as early on Saturday, as half past
3 o’clock P. M. This is an extraordina
ry week’s work, and those who performed
it deserye great praise.
A New York paper gives us a long catalogue
of Editorial Miseries. A Baltimore paper adds
to the list by saying one of his subscribers dis
continued his paper because he was a Jackson
man, while a few days after another struck off
his name because he thought he was most inclin
ed to Adams ; but still worse, a third withdrew
his patronage because he thought he was neuter
in the controversy. We hope none of our sub
scribers will compel us to add to the list of Edi
torial troubles, by withdrawing, because ws are
for them both.
The last census makes the population of Lon
don 1,274,300 souls.
The last instalment for slaves and other pro
perty taken away in contravention of the Treaty
of Ghent, was paid to Mr. Clay by the British
Minister on the first day of August.
Mr. Clay has returned to Washington and Mr
Southard Sec. of the Navy, has left it to visit
the North-Carolina at Norfolk.
The most active exertions arc making by Gov
Cass to put an end to the hostility of the Winne-
bagoes, or prevent as much as possible its disas
trous consequences.
Two or three lives have been lost at New York
by the falling of an unfinished three story Brick
House, whose walls on one side were 8 and on
the other only 4 inches thick. Such buildings are
said to be too common there, and are well called
rookeries.
A singular incident is related in Poul-
Son’s D. Advertiser, which is said to have
occurred on board a sloop on the 4th inst.
A dog struck by lightning and apparently
killed, was thrown overboard, when it im
mediately recovered, swam to the vessel,
and was taken on board. There it soon
became again torpid, was again thrown
into the river, resuscitated, swam to the
and was seen to run briskly up the street.
If the application ofcold water is a speci
fic against the effects ol iightning, it is a
fact that should he generally promulgated.
Salem Gaz.
[In the thunder storm of July, 1822, a
gentleman was struck by lightning in his
store in State street in this town. He
lay senseless and apparently lifeless sev
eral minutes. The application of cold
water had the effect of restoring him.]
Portsmouth N. H. Adv.
We received the following statement and infor
mation from a respectable merchant of this citv
Chop of 1826.
By the end of the season, there will have been
received,
At New-Orleans, 340,000 Bales.
Mobile, 100(300
Peusacola, 10,000
Georgia & So. Carolina, 400.000
N. Carolina Si Virginia, 100,000
Total, 950,000
Of which the imports to Engiaud alone, wilj
probably exceed 600,000 bales.
July 30—Cotton, New-York, 10 to 11 cents;
principal sales 10$
DIRS. M. C. HALL,
G RATEFUL for -the patronage she h.n re
ceived, respectfully informs the adies of
Augusta and its vicinity, that she has removed
for the present, to the store of Mr. Charles Hall,
No. 150, south side Broad-street, where she will
keep on hand, a handsome assortment of Green
Silk and Battiste Bonnets.
August 9 27 3t
of the ** Farmer’s Fire In?
surance and Loan Compa-
and thp business of H. II. Field, during his
absence, is attended to by
BIDWELL fc CASEY.
Jnly 26 23 3t
M. W. WARREN
has removed his Stock of
GOO DS, for a short time,
to the Tenement in the Bridge
Bank Building, formerly occupied by Mr. Philip
Crane.
Julv 30 24 fit
attention!!!
A1 persons who Iirsve
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 26 2tm
NOTICE.
All persons
having demands aeainst the
undersigned, will please pie-
sent them on or before the
10th of September, when
they can receive’thc cash for the same.
N. BYRAM MOORE.
August 9 27 3t
city.
July 26
Barn:i M’Kinne, Esq.
is our authorized Agent, du
ring our absence from the
HAND & BARTON.
23 tf
NOTICE.
All
During my absence
from the City, Thomas G.
Casey, Esq. and my broth
er, Frederick Harris, will attend
to any business in which I am interested.
WILLIAM HARRIS.
August 9 27 tO
August 9
Mr. L. H. Hamilton
is authorized to transact bu
siness for us, during our ab
sence from the State.
JEWETT, ABELL & Co.
27 4t
lr
NOTICE.—We have
appointed Mr. Alexander Bry
an our Agent, during our absence from
the city. II. W. SCOVELL & Co.
August 9 27 8t
AGRlCU2.TtfR£.
NOTICE. Mr. L. H.
IjPatt* Hamilton and T. H. Airy, will
act as my Agents, during my absence from the
State. JOSEPH AIRY.
August 9 27 2tw
persons having
business with the subscribers, will
please call on Messrs. R- B. h
D. G. Haviland, who are duly authorized to give
receipts, and act as our agents during our ab
sence from this State.
WASSON h NICHOLS.
Augusta, Geo. June 27,1S27 16 3m
Notice is hereby given,
that application will he made
to the Bank of the State of Georgia, for the pay
ment of the right hand half of a note for §100
Letter E. No. 369, dated December 1825. and
made payable to S. H le, at the Branch Bank at'
Augusta—which hitlf note was endorsed L. Good
win Si Co. and has been lost or stolen from the
mail between Marion, in Georgia, and Chailes-
ton, South Carolina.
L. GOODWIN &. C
Jun 7 10 90do.
Efaggp We have appointed Mr.
ft, F. Verdery, our lawful
Attorney, during our absence.
J. h. ANDERSON, h Co.
June 11 11 tf
TO CORRESPONDENTS.
“Aratus” on the Convention, is received and
will appear in our next- The poetical pieces
of “M. N.” and “ To Romeo,” he. were received
too late for to-day,
POLITICS.
It is a remarkable fact, (disclosed in
the last No. of tho North-Amertcan Re
view,) shewing the folly of indulging in the
heat with which all party questions are
maintained, that the instructions under
which the celebrated British treaty of
Judge Jav was negotiated, in 1796, have
been published for nearly a year past,
without exciting the least attention or cu
riosity ! It will be recollected, that whilst
that treaty was before Congress in 1796,
a resolution was passed, after a warm de-
X
Monday, jcly 30, 1827.
At a Regular Meeting of the Standing
Committee of the Anti-Duelling Society,
held in the Federal Court Room.—The
lollowing Preamble amd Resolutions were
adopted:—
Whereas, in the opinion of the Com
mittee, publications of the description of
*!;at which appeared in the Gazette? of
secution of this scheme was very great, but the bate of seventeen days, calling upon, the
President for a Copy of these instructions.
The eyes of the whole country were tur
ned, with intense interest, to the subject.
A week after the passage of the resolu
tion, “ General Washington sent a mes
sage to the House refusing to communi
cate the papers asked for, and assigning
his reasons for that refusal. This refusal
was considered a very strong measure,
and increased the eagerness to see the
papers to an extravagant height.” These
taraous instructions are contained atlengtii
among the documents accompanying the
Message of the President of May 20th,
1826, relative to the claims of American
citizens on the French government; and
this is the second time they have ever been
publicly noticed. Such, remarks the Re
viewer, is the effect of time upon questions
of party politics !
It is stated that it does not appear, on
examination of the instructions, that they
contain any thing which it would have
been inconvenient or prejudical to the ad
ministration to divulge; it is hence con
cluded, that the question of withholding
the instructions must have been, with'Gen.
Washington, purely a Constitutional ques
tion.—Carolina Observer.
aggravating and revolting circumstances which
are circulating are modified and contradicted
by those who were witnessas of the transaction.
We have made this statement very unwillingly,
because we may do injustice to some of the par
ties ; but so numerous are the applications for
information, that we deemed it right to give what
appeared to us to be near the true story.
The §5772 lost by Mr. H. Lowe and adver
tised in this paper, has been in part recovered.
The pocket book was found by a negro, who was
unconscious of the full value of its contents.
STTXVI WEAR'S*.
The President left Washington for his native
State on the 31st ult. for the improvement of his
health.
Straing has been found guilty under the indict
ment for the murder of John Whipple- Whip
ple’s wife is on her trial as an accessary.
The skeleton of a Mammoth has been disco
vered in ew Jersey, in excavating the Mori is
■ and Easton Canal. It is said to ,be larger than
the one in Peale’s Museum, Philadelphia.
Gen. Jackson has answered Mr. Clay in ano
ther letter published in the Nashville Republican,
and settles the question of who made the commu
nication to him. It was Mr. Buchanan, who
does not appear to be well pleased with the man
ner in which his name has been brought before
the public. The following is given under his au
thority in the Lancaster Journal:
From the Lancaster Journal, Friday, July 24,
It was with some surprise, and much regret, that
Two Chinese Ladies are in exhibition
at London. They are said to be the first
that ever left that country, as the laws
prohibiting emigration are strictly enfor
ced, especially in regard to females. Their
feet are but three inches in length.
TURNIPS.
Turnips love a light sandy or gravelly
soil or a sandy loam. It should be made
soft and fine, but not too rich lest the tur
nips be rank and ill tasted.
Ground that has been newly cleared,
yields the largest and sweetest turnips :
and on,such a spot there is the least dan-
gel - from insect.
Next to new land, swarded ground is to
be chosen for a crop of turnips ; and the
way to prepare it is, to plough it pretty
deep in the spring, and fold it by turning
in the stock for a good number of nights.
For there- is scarcely any of our fields
sufficiently rich to produce turnips without
manuring : and folding hitherto appears to
be the best method of enriching the ground
for this purpose. It should be well harrow
ed as often as once a week,while the fold
ing is continued, to mix the excrements of
the cattle with the soil.
The ground should be cross ploughed
as soon as the soil is sufficiently rotten,
and reduced by harrowing to a fine tilth,
before it is sowed. Where a good stock is
kept, as much as an acre may be sufficient
ly folded.
The time for sowing the seed is about the
middle of July. Doing it on a set day is
ridiculous, for a time should be chosen
when the ground has the right degree of
moisture to make the seed vegetate ; and
if this should happen a week earlier or a
fortnight later than the usual time, it need
not be regretted ; but the opportunity
ought to be embraced.
I have sown them in drills the first week
in August, and had a good crop. One
great advantage of sowing so late is, that
the turnips will ^escape insects. And if
the crop should not happen to be quite so
large as if the sowing had been earlier,
the roots will not fail of being better for
the table.
One pound of seed is the common al
lowance for an acre of land. But to guard
against the fly, the quantity may be a lit
tle increased. And it is recommended
by judicious writers, that it be a mixture
of equal parts of new and old seeds, that
the plants coining up at different times, the
one sort or the other may chance to es
cape the insects. With this view, Mr.
Tull constructed his turnip drill to lodge
the seeds at different depths, which it
seems had the desired effect.
The seed sown broadcast must be nar
rowed in with a short lined harrow,, and
then rolled with a wooden roller, to bieak
the clods, and level the surface.
In a week, or thereabouts, the young
plants will be up : And if it be a dry sea
son, the fly will be apt to destroy them :
To " ‘ ’
or lime
them, by sifting, in a dewey morning,
This will quicken the growth of the plants
as well as otherwise defend them. And
the faster the plants grow, the sooner they
will unfold the rough leaves, and be out
of danger of the fly. Or it may answer
well to sprinkle the ground with infusion
of elder wormwood or tobacco. But it
must be done soon as the plants are up.
But if the young plants cannot be saved as
it may sometimes so happen, the ground
may be harrowed, and sowed again, the
cost of seed being but little,to compare with
the loss of a crop.—Deane's N. E. Far
mer.
DRAWING
To be reoeived on 1 uesday Aborning.
Until that time, a chance is offered for obtaining
some of the Splendid Prizes in the
RHODE ISLAND LOTTERY,
Such as §10,000, §2,600, he. Sac. for only §4 for
a whole Ticket, and shares in proportion. Apply
without delay, at BEERS' OFFICE.
August 9
It
TO RENT,
And possession given first October,
Three Dwellings, Nos. 1, 61, and 60,
Broad-street; or either of them would
be sold, or exchanged for Negroes or
landed property, in this or the adjoining counties,
if not more than 30 or 35 miles from town.
ANDREW MACLEAN.
August 9 27 4tw
JMCTICE.
John P. King, Esq. will
£1*83? transact business for me in my
absence. SILAS BRONSON.
June 25, 1827 15 tf
NOTICE.—During the
Subscribers’ absence from the
State, Messrs. L. Reed and R. Gresham, will art
as our Attornies.
CARLTON, COOK h KNOWLTON.
June 11 11 2m3ia
IFIsgSp De. Gecrge A. Buck-
1^3? lin, offers his services to the
inhabitants of Augusta and its vicinity, in the
professions of Medicine and Surgery,
His office is in the adjoining building to Mr 1 .
Lafitt’s boarding house, on Mackintosh-Street.
June 11 11 tf
Ola, Peach Brandy, Motionga-
hela Whiskey, Sfc.
LANDING FROM STEAM-BOATS COMMERCE
AND ENTERFRIZE.
30 Boxes Claret Wine,
6 Half Pipes do.
10 Bbls. Double Refined Sugar,
65 Kegs Spiced Salmon,
12 Boxes Brandy Fruits
15 do. Capers and Olivas.
10 'do. London Pickles, (assorted)
12 Hampers French Cordials,
10 Boxes West India, do
3 Pipes Holland Gin,
2 do Otards Brandy
60 Half Bbls. No. 1 Mackerel,
IN STORE.
30 Bbls, Newark Cider,
60 Boxes Crab, do. (equal to Cbampaigne,)
20 Bbls. No. 1 Mackerel,
10 Casks London Porter, 8ic. he.
CO Five Gallon Demijohns,
10 Hampers Wine and Porter Bottles,
15 Boxes white and Brown Soap,
20 M. Superior Spanish Segars.
TOGETHER WITH A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
GROCERIES,
Of the Choicest Kinds, and on fair terms.
For Sale by
N. BYRAM MOORE,
No. 202, Broad-Street.
June 7 10 tf
jjjfcggSp We are authorised to
announce Robert Dillon, Esq. a
candidate for the Representative Branch
of the Legislature at the next election.
August 2 24 tf
TO RENT,
From the first of October next, th«p
two HOUSES With their STORES,
next to the Building lately occupied
by Mr. Robert Lang, in the upper
end of Broad street. The Stores 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. Wm. M’Gar, or
George R. Rountree.
August 6 26 6t
TO RENT,
From 1st October next, a Dwelling
on Reynold-street, in rear of the one
on Broad-street, occupied by the sub
scriber—a very comfortable house
for a small family.
WM. T. GOULD.
July 26 23 tf
NOTICE.
N INE months after date, application will be
made to the Court of Ordinary of Richmond
county, for leave to sell a tract of Land, belong
ing to the estate of Ferdinand Phinizy, dec’d,
situated in the county of Greene, and State of
Georgia, on the waters of Richland creek, con
taining three hundred ,and twenty-seven acres,
(more or less,) to be sold for the benefit of the
heirs of said estate.
JACOB PHINIZY,
JOHN PHINIZY,
Administrators of the estate of F. Phinizy.
Dec. 14, 1S26. 4 m9in
EXECUTOR S NOTICE.
N INE months after date application will be
made to the Honorable the Inferior Court
of Richmond County, while setting for Ordinary
purposes, for leave to sell so much of the real
estate of John Twiggjs, dec. as has hitherto re-
pr event which, some powdered soot, mained in the possession of the widow of said de-
ime, may be sowed very thickly over ;
TO RENT,
From the first of October next, the
Dwelling House on Reynold-street,
opposite the Episcopal Church, occu
pied by M. Roff. Esq.
The Dwelling, on the ally, in the rear of the
subscriber’s grocery store, and now occupied by
James Oliver, Esq.
The Store, on Broad-street, occupied by Mr.
A. S. Turpin, an excellent stand for business.—
For terms enquire of
BENJAMIN HALL.
July 19 21 tf
Jan. 22
C. L. TWIGGS Exe’r.
71 m9m
TO RENT.
FROM the first day of October
next, the Brick Storenearthe Market
at present occupied by Messrs. Fiek-
ling h Glenn.
The Brick Store next below
Wm. Smith, Junr. at present occupied by Mr.
C. Smith, and
The Dwelling House on Rey-
nold-Street, near the Eagle Tavern, at present oc
cupied by Mr. R. Malone.
JOHN PHINIZY.
July 13 19 wtf
TO RENT,
From th<?first of October next, the
Building, No. 161 Broad-street,owned
and occupied by the subscribers —
The stand for business is desirable.-.
The store for pleasantness and convenience
is not equalled by any in the city, and is ad
mirably calculated for an extensive Wholesale
and Retail Dry Goods business. The dwelling
contains four spacious rooms, pleasant and ccn-
venieht for a family.
JEWETT, ABELL h Co.
June 28 16 tf
TO RENT,
A large commodious Dwelling on
Ellis-street, at present occupied by
Mr. Ware.
ALSO,
A Dwelling on Eilis-street, at present occupied
by Mrs. Marks.
ALSO,
A Dwellingon Green-street, at present occupied
by Mts. Hatcher.
W. H. MAHARBY,
No. 162
July 9 18 tf
TO RENT.
Two convenient Dwelling
Houses on the South side ,,
of Broad-Street near the
lower end of the Market, h '-
one at present occupied by Mr. B. B. Cheshire,
and the other, lately by Mr. Charles Wilson,
the Kitchen of the latter is prepared for moulding
Caudles, and the dwelling has a convenient store
on Broad-street. Possession given on 1st Octo
ber. Apply to
J G. M'WHORTER.
July 19 21 wtS,
EDGE cut off