Newspaper Page Text
r
imsm
Sheriff’s- Sales.
On the Jirit Tuetday in July next,
W ILL bt sold at the Court House in the
City of 8avannah, betareen|the houn
of ten end four o'clock,
All the building) end improvement) on Lot
Mo 40, W>rren word, w th the unexpire,, lore
of Wid Lot of Land, levied on aa the property
of Chain H Hayden, under a fla. fa on fore-
eloaure in favor of Frederick W Heinnmann.
A. D’LYON, D. 8. C. C
(lav 9 9
SWAIM’S PANACEA.
Sheriffs hate,
On Ihejf' it Turtilay in July next,
dtflbb be aold at the Cuurt Houie be,
\## tween the uiual hours of ten and four
o’clock,
All the northern half of Lot and improve,
menu No. twelve (IS) Columbia Ward, in
the city of Savannah, levied on aathe proper-
y of Wm. Stone, tinder an execution from a
Justices Court in favor of Wm, Hubinson, and
turned over by a Constable.
Three Bnck tenements on the Steam-Boat
Company’s Wharf, levied on aa the properl,
of John Davidson, Agon- of the Steam Boat
Company of Georgia, in favor ofBarney M’Cai-
lan. turned o'er to me by a Constable-
A negro woman named Diana, levied nn
aa the property of John M Nish. to aatiafy an
elocution in favor of Ztchariah M. Winkle',
issued from the Hon- toe Inferior Court of
Chatham county.
All that lot of land and the improvements
thereon, aituate, lying and being in the city of
Savannah,andkoown and datingciahed ins
plan of said city by the description of I ot No
one, (tj) Wilmington Tything, Darby Ward
containing 6" feet in front on Bav st and 9 >
feet on Bud at. and bounded on the south b
Bay lane, levied un as the property uf Jam.-:
Morrison, to aatiafy an execution in favor of
James Dickson It co
ISAAC D’LY JN S. C. C.
June 6 Ad
Administrator’s Sale.
On the Jim Tuesday in Ju'y next,
B ETWEEN the usual hours, will be sold
at the Court-House in Bryan County,
th* following described property, being part
of the estate of Matthew Carter, dec. and
aold for the benefit of the hein and creditors,
and by an order of the Court ol Ordinary ot
laid county, via:
250 acres of land in Gwinnett County,
known aa Lot No 363, in the 7th District.
350 acres in Early County, known as Lot
Mo 174, in the 20th District
300 acres Pine Land, in Effingham County.
Also, two slaves.
Conditaons of sale m dr known on the day.
EL1ZVBETH CARTER, Adm’rta.
Anri I 2d .TCf-,*
Sheriff’s Sale.
O N the first Saturday after the fi -t Tues
day in tuguit next, will be sold at the
Market-House in the town nf st Marys, be
tween the hours of ten snd four o’clock of
that day, a negro man named John Smith,
levied on aa the property of Jamca William-
nn, to aati fy an execution on the foreclosure
«f s mortgage, in fivor of Edward F. Tattnall,
•dminist ator of John Hamilton, deceased.
M. H. HF.HBARD, 8 C. C.
St. Maryi, S.h May, 1S2S.
June 2 39
City Sheriffs Sale, Con’inued.
On the Jirit Tuetday in July next,
K\0 ■i.L. bi. d at iht Court nous? in the
i## city of Savannah between the u.ual
hours of ten a d three o’clock,
All ihe buildings o ' Lot Nn. (.10.) thir’y.
Warden Ward, bounded east by Lot No. (31,)
thirty-one, west by Lot No. (29) twenty-nn •?,
north by Congrets st and south by a lane, le
vied on as the property of Ann B Finder, to
aatiafy an execution fur ground rent in favor of
the Trustee! of the Chatham Academy.
A. 1. D’LYON, C- .8
June 11 68
Sheriff’s ..ales—Continued.
On the Jirit Tueeday in July next,
\4blLL be sold in front of the Court-
W House, in the city of Savannah, between
the usual hours of ten and four o’clock,
Five negroes, Titus, Betsey, Prime, Rachel,
and Phillis, levied on as the properly of Titos.
N. Morel, to satisfy, in execution in favor of the
Bank of the State of Georgia.
A. D’LYON, D. S. C. C.
June 9 AS
Sheriff’s Sale.
O n the first Saturday after the first Tuesday
in August next,will be aold at the Market
House in the town ol St, Mary’s between t u i
ususl hours of ten and four’cluck a tract of
land aituate and lying in the county of Cam.
den. on Brownlow’s Creek containing eigh
teen hundred anil fifty acrea more or less, le
vied on as the property of Harman Courier
dec. to satisfy an execution in favor of James
Vincent. «.
St. Marys, June 25,1825.
M. H- HEBBARD, sec,.
June 30 82
Administrator's Notice.
A LL persons indebted to the nutate of
Randolph M’Gillis, latq of Camden
County, deceased, are requested to make
payment, and those having demands against
•aid estate, will present them to the under-
iigned. HANNAH M’GILLIS,
Administratrix.
G.U’DONALD.
St. Marys, April 10th, 1825.
April 27 29fi,
administrator’s Notice
A LL persons having demands against
John Street, late of Chatham County,
deceased, are requested to hand them in,
within the time prescribed by law, duly at
tested, and those indebted are requested to
make immediate payment to
HENRY CHAMPION,
Qualified Executor.
Mav 5 ifirt
N otice.
N INE MONTHS after the date of this
notice, application will be made to the
Honorablo the Court of Ordinary of Liber
ty County, for permission to sell a part of
tile real estate of John Stacy, deceased, for
tile benefit of the iieirs and creditors of said
deceased. JOHN W. STACY,
Administrator.
dec 18 21
E
Wanted,
MPTY PORTER BOTTLES.—Ap
ply to GEO R YERSON.
March 4
T HIS medic w is offered • remedy fur
Screfu!i. Kind’s Evil, Ulcerated Sort
Throat, long sta d'ng Rheumatic Affec
tions, Cutaneous Diseases, White Swelling
and Disease! of the Bmes, ai d all caao.
generally of an uiceroua character, and
Chronic diseases, awing in debilitated consti
tu'iona, but inure especially for Syphilis, o
ff ctions arising therefrom. Ulcer* of the
Larynx, Node*, ac., and that dreadful dia
eaae occasioned by a long at d eicenive use
of Mercury, Ac. Ac.—It oat also been found
useful in Diseases of the Liver.
In a l diaorderu arising Arum an impure or
contaminated state of tiie Blood, it will be
fiund a powerful and an effectual remedy.—
The discovery of this mid cine has been. the
effect of long end attentive study, and it is
now made public from tha most decided con
viction, founded on ample experience, of its
p iwer in eradicating those diseases,a/ter every
other medicine hat failed
It cannot, however, be supposed, that this
'axacea will invariably cure—the moat es
teemed medicines, employed by the Faculty,
will often fail in the very diseases for which
they are considered specifics; but if the use ol
it be persevered in, it will radically remove al
most every cause|of the disorders specific).
Thousands are lingering under those ci.m*
damts, in some form, linking to the grave,
vitliout a remedy, whom tnis medicine would
certainly restore to perfect health and vigour.
Its safety and innocence have been fully test
'd, so that it may be administered to the ten-
derest infiv t The most distinguish id phyai*
dans in the United States recommend it, and
dmit, that a more important discovery ia me*
dicat science has not been madei and to use
the language of one of the most eminent Pro*
iessors «f the age, it it a triumph in the healing
art. To the prtsent and rising generations,
the ben fit mus prove incalculable, not only
oy saving many many valuable lives, but im
parting strength and soundness to thbilitaed
am corrupted const'titiniis,—thereby preterv
ing their offspring from hereditary diseases.-
These fact*, t; g-M • r with the numerous cures
made, form irrestible.proof of the h t h value
ot this remedy, No »ni, however, is >d*ised
to take it, without first fully convincing him
self of the truth of what is here stated, and
the rectitude of the Pr p.-ietor’s intentions.
The cures performed in this city alone, es
tsblisb its superior virtue on a basil too solid
to be affected by the malignity of the envious.
I is worthy of remark, that the greater part
of the patients who have been permanently
cu’ed, had, previous to the proprietor’s un
dertaking them, received the ablest assignee
aod several were abandoned by their Pbysi
ciana, as being beyond the reach of f.umar
skill Such is the f et, and to extraordinary
were many of ihe c-set that an exhb lion was
made of ./v.-m in the University of Per.my 'vun
»u, by the P ofessor of Surgery, b Jo e a c> oltid
ed audienc'. of uudents, who p onounced them
wonders m the healing art. it i.us been intro*
uce t into the Philadelphia Alms-House and
Pennsylvania and New York Hospital, ami
such were its surprising effects—its success
after ad other medicines had faded, that the
’Surgeon of the Penusy!vaiiia|Hopital, Cr.Wm
P ice, was induced to abandon his highly
respectable offic , from the laudable design
ot benefiting u s fellow creatures, by carry-
ng the Panacea to England ; where it has al
ceaiiy superseded the use of the genuine
French Rob of Lafacteur in a number of in-
stances, n di/emes for which thut >s intended,
snd its virtues are publicly acknowledge by
some cf the most eminent surgeons there.
11 al! complicated esses cf Seofnlu end Sy
philis. and where the Syphilitic Virus of U\t
parent onuses a rievelopement of Scrofula in
the child, ill’s is the only remedy upon which
a sing e ho e of recovery can be reasonably
founded; there has bi n no instance of its
foilu e, where prope. ly used It impacts vi
gour to the wh’-Je sygtgtn while the . cure is
oing on—on operation to long looked for in
vain by the medical world; at ttie .Mine tin e
the patient is en- b ed to take nourishing food,
which under the common mode.i of practice,
s usually w ithheld from the sufferer. In ma
ny iiuUnces where the horrible rav-ges of u:-
cera v ion had laid bare ligament ami bone, and
where, toad appearance, no numnn means bu
amputation could have saved lire : in cases
ext. erne even as here described, have pa
tients been snatched from the grave and re
stored to good health, and the devnu ng dis
ease completely eradicated• The discovery of
a remedy like thi* now offered for sale, has
been a desideratumf om tin immemorial,
The Piopnctoi do *8 no. ’uppose his bare
assertion will convince : ne wi I therefore give
references to such aa have been cured, and
those u, d rh.scare among whom are many
highly re.pec acie c.tiz :s. that sh-dl satisfy the
most incredulous of its superior efficacy in the
disorders for which it is here recommenced.
Every member ofsociety should aid in diffu>
• ng inf >r ration of this discovery—human
ity alone makes it a du.y
UeTtiffcates.
"I have within His lust two years had an op
portunity of seeing several cases ot very inve
terate ulcers, which having previously resist-
ed the regular modes of treatment, were
healed by the use of Mr. Swrim’s Panacea
and 1 do believe, from what 1 baVe seen,
that it will prove an important remedy in scio,
fulous, venereal and mercurial diseases,
"N. CHAPMAN, M. D.
Professor of the Institutes and practice
of Physic, in the University of Penn
sylvsnia £tfc ft.
’’ Philadelphia, Februat y 16,18 J3.”
“insve employed the i-auacua ol Mr.Swaim
in numerous instst.cns, within the lust thre
years, and have always found it extreme!'
efficacious, especially tn sec-ondary syphilis
and mercurial diseases. I have no hesitntio
in pronouncing it a medicine of inestimablt
value. «\v. GiUSON. M. D.
Professor of Surgery in the Uni’ty ol Pen..
Surgeon snd Clinical Lecturer to the
Alms Hout I firmity, Ike-
" February 17, -823."
*• 1 have repta e lly used Swaim’s, Panacea
both in the Hospital and in private practice,
and have fou .d it to be a valuable medicine in
cb-omc, syphilitic and scrofulous complaints,
and in obstinate cutaneous affection,.
‘‘VALENTINE MOTT, M- D.
Profess ,r -.f Surgery in the University of
New York, Surgeon of the New-York
Hospital, Ac,
For*, l,/ mo Slh, 1824.’’
Caution to l’nircYvaaers.
The great demand and wonderful success
or this medicine, have induced a number of
persons to imitate it in various ways—Some
arc selling Sarsaparilla and oilier syrups, im>
posing them on th- ignoraut for the Panacea i
Olliers are mixing the genuine medicine with
molasses, be., making three bottles out of one,
thus retail ng some ofita virtue). Th at im-
nations and and aduheratoina have in many in-
tanoea, protracted the aufinringa of patients
in eases where the genuine medicine would
have proved instantly efficacious. I therefore
<li-em K a duty I owe the the public, to ac-
quaint them, that it is impossible, from the
very nature of its constituents, to be disoover-
?Cr y .. C l ca ! ,n,l >' si * - »nd consequent!)
ihst al otber mixtures represented to be mine
snd sold aa such, are fraudulent and base im-
positions, calculated to deceive the ignorant
and unwary—The genuine medicine ha, my
•ignatureof . label representing //erculc. and
Ihe Hydra, and name on the aeal!
Communications, poat paid, and ordcra from
any part of the world, will receive Immediate
attention.
orj* Printed directions accompany the Me-
dlcine.
WM. SWAIM,
No. 13,8outh Ninth Street, opposite the
University nf Pennsylvania.
Philadelphia, February, 1835.
Tlio subscribers have just received a fresh
supply of tho above VALUABLE MEDI
CINE, and have made such arrangements
with the inventor,Mr. Wm. Swaim, as will
enable them to oftbr to tho public a pure
and unadulterated article. Druggists and
others who purchase to sell again,can have
it at the original price established by tho
proprietor.
LAY di HENDRICKSON,
Chemists and Druggists, Shad’s Buildings.
A Treatise on Swaim’s Panacea, with
cases illustrating its success, will be lonned
to those interested, by applying S6 above.
June 28
POL4DELPH18,
THE INDIAN EXTRACT.
A certain East India Curefor the Rheu•
mutism, King's Evil, $c.
Extract of a letter from the Her. James E
lish, dated at Bengal, to Dr ( F* Bedwe
London
Diun Sin r
A GREE4BLY to y?>ur request, I have with
difficultv procured and now send you by
the ship Jus >n, Capt. Robinson* a few pound?
of the Polt'd-dnh’g, or what generally goes
by the name » f India Extract, a Medicine un.
iversally esteem* d imong the people of Indian
a certain cure for the Rheumatism. Was
I to inform you of the number of people wh
are daily relieved and cured by thia valuable
‘4ed cine, it won d require more paper than
I am able to purchase and more time than 1
am able to be.«tow. Indeed, the < fleet of this
Medicinp is so immediate, that in Rheumatism
vnu would suppose it anted a§ a cha< m in giv-
incr relief and removinrr ‘hit painful disease*
lu the King's Evil it has been used with great
success, and where Mercury has been given
or used to excess, this tfcd'.cinc has proved a
nerfect cure. The great difficulty, however,
«f procuring the Extract will for many year*
♦o come, prev-nt its general circulation, it be
ing obtained from a Shrub growing on the
mountains of Thibet, in the B :rm»».n Empire
of India, and held so s*cred by the natives,
that to part with it is like parting wi'h tneir
'•xistence.”
Le’tcr to Dr- BedweR, d ited Jan. 7, 1823.
Pear Doctor^I have ! 'een violently affected
with a Rheumatic complaint for many years ;
even my fingers were so contracted that I
cou'.d nteithe* dress or undress myself, or give
the least assistance to mv fa nilv—I have used
only one box of the India Extlact, i”d 1 am
perfectly restored. Your’s truly,
R, RALSTON,
Philadelphia
Letter from Tobias Jenniups, Steward of St.
Thomas* Hosptnl London, Feb 1, 18‘i3
Dear Sir—I think it my duty to inform you,
that after trying every thing that e»<uld be
po-nted out by the most respectable physi
cians and surgeon* for the relief of my son,
without any success, who you know. Ins fo
ntny years been lab*, ring under severe Rheu
matism, I was induced to try the Poladelphis,
ivith a glimmering hope, that it might give
him some relief from the excessive pain he
endured, which rendered hi n a useless mem
ber of aociety,and a burthen to himself, 'fo
my utter astonishment the relief was instan
taneous, s nd by persevering in the use of die
Extract, his joints have returned to their pro
per places, and he is in pcr;ect health. Up
wards c,f sixty respectable persons have cal
ed to my son, ss ali who knew him though
it imoo«sibl'' that he P'iijH recover.
FOR SALE by GEORGE RYERSON.
Druggist, where additional certilicotes of
th? efficacy of the n.bivc medicine may be
seen.
May 20
Gen gia—• amden Countv.
TO ILL WHOM IT MAI CO/VC MIA.
W HEREAS Alexander Atbin&on, Ad .*in*
■strator on the Estate of John .\tk.n-
on, deceased,applii’S to the Cuurt of Ordin
ary of said County, fur letters di'UD'33ory o:*
i^hl estate : These are, therefore, to c te .-«»d
dmonish all and singular, the heirs snd cred
>lora of mid deceased, to file their objecti**r:s
(if any they hnvej in my office, on or before
'he fir.it Monday in January next, or letter*
vJl be granted to the applicant.
7,6'!
Witness the Hon William Gibson,
one of the J.isticr.a of said Ccnr*,
this 25 h June. 1825.
JOHN BAILEY, c. c o. c. «
June 30 S2
Georgia—Camden County.
TO ALL WHO It IT.I/Ar CO.V,. E/t.Y.
UrHB l, KA3 Louis D t'. ur, Adifiinict.stoi-
" v of thr Estate of l)mi| e Pelletier, dcu’
ipplios t-i the Court uf OvJinsry of sail! cuon-
•. fur let'crs distntS-jo-y on said estate:—
! hose are, therefore, to cite and admoii.ili ,u
and singular, the heirs and creditors .if .. ,|
deceased to file thi-ir ofjec ions (if any ib
nve) in my n flier:, on or be line ihe first Hoi
isy in Janunry next, or letteis will be grante
to the rpplxsnt.
r-“71 Witness the Hon. William Gibsc
l|L-o. ,f one of the Justices uf said Cuu •
U...J this 2sh I line, 18 'J.
JO IN BA1I.Y, c. c.o. c. c.
June 30 82
Georgia—Chatham County.
In the Court of Ordinary, May Term. 1825
O N the pe'ition of Henry Champion, admin
istrator of John Street, deceased, praying
an order JVici o be made absolute on his com
plying witn the law, lor lie sale of a Lot c.
Ground, number four, [4] second Tythinr
Reynolds Ward—Alsu, part of a Lot, nurobet
si«, Tower Tything, Decker Ward being th-.
real eitate of the said dec. (or the benefit of
the heirs and creditorsIt is ordered, that,
notice be published nine months, in one o-
the Public Gaxetta of the City of Savannah,
requiring all persona interested, to show cause
if any they hive, why the prayer of the peti-
tioner should not be grsnted.
S.M.BOND.C e.o.
May 14 445
Georgia—Chatham County
In the Cuurt of Ordinary—Mar Term i8-5
O N'!; 6 P c >' ,io "°f Rukert Hoy, Eie.uuw
of John Wackerlv dec. prayirg an order
J\r« to be made absolute, on'his complvinir
with the law, to sell Two Tracts of Lind in
Laurens County, being the real estate of the
said deceased, for the benefit of the heirs and
creditors: It is ordered, that a notice be
published, nine months, in one nf the G1
zettes of the city of Savannah, requiring all
persons interested, to show cause, if any thev
can, why the prayer of (he petitioner should
not be granted. S. M. BOND, e. c. o.
>*»> 2 6 57
Treftaut* Deportment,
March, 14, 1825
1V^MRREA8 on the 3d of March, 18*. 5, u
f ▼ law was passed by the Congress of the
United State*, of which the 3d, 4th, and Jth
section* are in the words following, viz :
“ ®®®* ?• And be it further enacted, That%
•ubaenption i o the amount of twelve milkms
of dollars, of the *ix p»*r cent. *«tock of the
year eighteen hundred and thirteen, be, and
the tame i* hereby proposed t for which pur
pose books shall be opened at the Treaaury of
the United State*, and at thi several loan offi
ces, on the first day of April next, to continue
open until the first day of October thereafter,
for auch parts of the above mentioned de
scription of stock as shall, on the day of sub
•cription, itand on the books of the Treasury*
and on those of the several loan offices, re
spectively / which subscription shall be effect
ed by a transfer to the United States, in the
manner provided by law for such transfers, of
the credit or credta standing on the said
books, and by a surrender of the certificates
of the stock so subscribed: Provided, That
all subscription by such transfer of stock shall
be considered as part of the said twelve mil
lions of dollars authorized to be borrowed by
the first section of hin act.
,f 8ec. 4. And be it further enactedj That for
the whole or any part of sny sum which shall
be thus subscribed, credits shall he entered to
the respective subscribers, who shall be enti
tled to a certificate or certificates purporting
that the United States owe to the holler or
holders thereof, his, her, or their assigns, s
sum to be expressed therein, equal to the
amount of the principal stock thus subscribed,
bearing an interest not exceeding four and
one half per centum per annum, payable
quarterly, from the thii '.y-first day of Decern*
ber, one thousand eight hundred and twenty
five / transferable in ihe same manner as is
provided by law for the transfer of the stock
subscribed, and subject to redemption at the
pleasure of the United Slates, as fellows: one
half at any time after the thirty-first day of
December, one thousand eight hundred and
twenty-eight: and the remainder at any time
after the thirty-first day of December, one
thousand eight hundred and twenty*nlne:
Provided, That no reimbursement shall be
mude except for the whole amount of such
new certificate; nor until after at least six
months public notice of such intended reim
bursement. And it shall be the duty of the
Secretary of the Trenaury to cause to be trans
ferred to the respective subscriber* the sever
al sums by them subscribed beyond the amount
of the certificates of four and one half pei
cent, stock issued to them respectively
“ Sec. 5. And be it further enacted. That
the same funds which have heretofore been,
*nd now are pledged by law for the paythcot
of the interest, and for the redemption and
reimbursement of the stock which may be re*
deemed or reimbursed by virtue of the pro
visions of this act, shall remain pledged in like
manner for the payment of the interest accru
ing on the stock created bv reason of such
subscription, and for the redemption or reim
bursement of the principal of the some. And
it shall be the duty of the cummiisioners of the
inking fund to cause to be anplied and paid
out of the said fun^, yearly and e*e-’y year
such sum*and sum- as may be annually requir -
cd to discharge the inte’est accruing on the
stock which may be created by virtue of thit.
set The said commissioners are, also, here
by authorized to apply, from time to tim«,
such sum and sums out of the s^id fund, sk
they may think proper, towards redeeming
by purchase, or by reimbursemeut, in con
formity with the provisions of this act, th*
piincipal of the anid stock : and such part of
the annual sum often millions of dollars, vert
ed by law in the said commissioners, as m<y
he necessary and required for the above pur
poses, shall be and continue appropriated t<
th® payment of interest and redemption oi
the puolic debt, until the whole of the stock
which may be created under the provisions of
this act, shall have been redeemed or reim
bursed. *•
Now, therefore, notice is hereby given, that
books will be opened at the Treasury of tht
United States, and at the several loan offices,
on the first day of April next, and continue
open until the first da” of October, tbereaf-
er, for receiving subscriptions in conformity
ivith the prov gions of the anid l»w ;
The subscriptions may be rustle by the pro
prietors of the stock, ei»h«'r in pernon or by
their attorneys duly authorized to subserib
and transfer it to the United States.
Sh uld subscriptions of said stock be made
to an amount exceeding twelve millions o'
lollars,* distribution oftlie said sum of twelve
millions of dollara will be made among the*
subscribers, in proportion to the sums subscri-
oed by them respectively,
SAMUEL L. SOUTHARD,
Acting Secientry of ihe rressurv*
W-»reh**fi ’ "0
JS otice.
VJINE MONTHS -L ‘r ilate, application
1.x ail! lu: minis to the Inferior Junrt of
.tn.thiin i' aunt.1, sitting for ordinary purpo-
ea, for leave ‘u sell all the reel estate of the
a 1 .• Thomas Savag-a of B-yan County, via:
Point Plantation, eonsiutingoftwo hundred
Slid eighty acres Rice Laud, i— Hie O eechee
t ver, four miles below the F rrv, >dj ining
ie plantation cf Joseph f!»b.-rsham aid Ste
Le" El iott Also, two hundred snd fifty
acres, mure or less, i-f Pine Land, appertain,
i .T the-eto. Also s Tract of La- d called
lfuinr, 0 i.i'ni ling (if y acr-.w,, on Medway Uiv
e.-, .dj-ni.Kg the Ian. » of J J Maxwell.
MARY SAVAGE, Adm’rx.
,Tn n 5 7(
NOTICE
N l.vVa months afte r date, application will hi
madt- to tbi-1? m.tlir Judges of the Coup
Ordinary ~.f Ciuitham county, for leave t«»
II ail th* real estate of the late William Craig.
d:ce*s.;d, for the benefit of the heirs audcied
t irs of skid estate.
9 JOHN M* STSH Executor.
O'-* Tt
iNOtice.
A LL pervint having demands against the
«. estste of Constant Freeman Esq (ate of
the city nf Washington, deceased, are re
qnired to hand them in. legally .’tested,
within the time prescribed by law : and those
.ndebtedto said e«tate, are required to mukc
immediate payment, to
JAMES HUNTER, Adm’r.
Jan 14 42nr,
Georgia—Camden Corn y.
Tf> ALL WHOM I! M 1 Y CONCERN.
■S7HEREASJ K.chlntt lun ndinniatra'nr
Y Y on ibe -atatrs nf Da-Id Tucker and David
M t-redie, applies to the Court rf Ordinary
of h« d County, fur T etter* dia-ni-stiry on the
. stales of said deceased pen ra: These are,
therefore, to rite and admonish the heirs and
cred tora of said deceased persona, to file
their ol:j etinns (if any 'hey have) in my of
fice, on or before the firat Monday in Januarv
next, or letters will be granted to the appli
cant
f! “I Witness the Hnn. William Gibson,
II l. S. II one of the Justices of said Court.
Imm this 25'h June, 18 "5.
JOHN BAILEY, c. c.o.c.e.
June 39 ,2
VALUA
MEDICINE.
POTTER’A
Vegetable Catholicon.
^ HB rabscrib- r respectfully solicits the st
tention of every friend ofsufTering hu
msnity, to to the above new and invaluable
remedy, whose unequal powers in eliminating
from the system (he very seeds of disease,
andin restoring the deranged and morbid
conditiun of the organs oflife to a free and
healthy exereise oftheir functions, has exci
ted the astonishment, and completely silen
ced the objections of the most incredulous —
Facta are the best argument!. In order to put
the virtue, of the''.tiholicon to as severe a
scrutiny as possible, it was offered by adver
tisement, together with the attendance of.
physician, gratuitously to any nerson who
would apply for it, and whose cause might
seem t come within the range of its healing
f iower—numbers of severe cast* of long staid,
ng, and some of them seemingly desper te
ones, pre ented themselves, all ofishich have
been cured, or so much relieved as to warrant
the assertion that a little perseverance will do
so. In fact, such is the confidence ofthe physi
cian under whose rare these patients were
placed, in this remedy, t confidence result-
ing from the irresistible conviction that has
been forced upon his mind by ocular demon
stration, and a personal trial of it on himsell
'hat he permits me to declare it as his deci
ded opinion, that -he Catholicon ia not only a
perfectly safe snd innocent, but a moat pow
erl'ul and invaluable remedy in certain dis
eases and states of the system, such as the fol
owing!—
Debility resulting from intemperance and
dissipation; Old and inveterat- Ulcers. Pains
in the bonrs attended with swellings nf the
join's; Indigestion; Blotches un the face,
pimple ", Ike.; All complaints of the Liver;
Tetter.- Yaws; Syphilis.- Cutaneousdiseises
generally ; Mercurial and acrol'ulous com-
plaints.
The Cstholicnn (which the proprieter sol
emnly pledges h'S word consists exclusively
of vegetable matter) with the exception of a
alight determi istion to the bowels, which it
preserves in a soluble state, srv insensibly, is
pleasant to the taste, and requires n-r purlieu
lar regimen, (abstinence from spirtuous li
quors always excepted,) or confinement. As
a gr title, safe and agreeable cathartic medi
cine, improving the appetite and restoring the
gencrultonc ofthe system, it is confidently
recommended to iadies in a delicate situa
tion. W W. POTTER,
66 Ohesnut-street.
Philadelphia, Muy 31, 1824.
At the request of Ur. W. W. Potter, I have
lately exhibited, in several instances, a medi
cated sirup, called Potter’s Vegetable Uutho.
'icon, with the most decided advantage- It
haB, as - et, never failed effecting a cure in
every case in which I have thought proper to
employ it. H. M’MUUX'UIE, Si O.
Philadelphia, July 28/A, 1824.
Mr. IV- IV. Potier,
De-:r Sir—You expressed a wish that 1
would give a concise atntement nf my sufi'er-
Ings, from - the nopelcss commencement, tn
he present propitious stsge of my disease ’
About five years ago, on my passage from
Bordeaux, during the month of January, from
imprudent exposure on deck, I was seized
with t violent fever. Having no medical at-
en lants nn board, I was compelled to hear
it, at I might for two weeks, when on my ar-
. ivul at Charleston, S. C. it was treated as
Typhus. The skill of my Physician subdued
'lie fever, but Phoenix-like, the termination
nf this gave rite to a disease equally distress
ing, snd which, till now, I had tnnught incur
able. Various abscesses made thei- unwel
come appearance, particularly on the joints,
which were swelled to an enormous size.—
These gradually subsided into hard tumors,
■me of which on my left knee affected the
bone—nn incision was now made amt a large
evacuation of pus, mixed with pieces of bone
took piece. In addition to if is, I suffered the
most excruciating pains in my joints that man
ever experienced. Every thing that was
adminiatered either gave me no relief nr ser
ved to aggravate the disease, the severity of
whit-h increased with every succeeding year.
Such was my painful ai uatiun that I despaired
of ever being restored to my beat h ; Iliad
not only tried the regular means of relief,
hut used, though in vein, every popular rem*
edy 1 could hear of- It was in this avfitl snd
despund-ng condition,that I was persuade ! to
-ommence a course ufyour Vegetable "eh I
icon, and the happy result is, •■/ om the use
of the t-wo bottles, my uiholc system has under'
gone a complete reva'ution. my pains have fo sn
ice me,-" theditehargt from’my cnee begun
io diminish, and soon ceased altogether, the
ulcer from whence it proceeded being coin
pietely healed. The tumors, for the removal
of which I have tried in vain mure remedies
than I can name, are rnpidly decreasing ; my
appetite, which was gone, lias returned—I an
in fact, nearly well, and feel confident that a
few bottles mure of your, (to me) invaluable
medicine, will make me perfectly io.
Your obliged friend,
THOMAS BROWN, JR.
Philadelphia, July °6, 1824.
My confidence in tbe vegetable catholicon
is undiminishud, and as fresh in-tancea uf Its
powers are dully occurring, in my own prac
tice. I have no hesitation in recommending it,
in the peculiar diseases to which it ix applica
ble, as superior.to any remedy I am acquaint
ed with. U. M’UUR'l IUE, M. D.
corild wish to be. With my thinks
obliged humble rervsnt, (Its.
"your
City <f Philadelphia. ,„ GE<:>RGE K «<1.
George Kane, of the District of s*„u.
wsrk, personally sppeared, snd
sworn, doth declare and say that thi* ?“'l
•tatement is in all respecu correct wd . b ° Ve
and that the ,ig„. lure P t0 it isffi J"*’
writing of this deponent. Ue hM J-
Philadelphia, May^S, 1824^ S ’ Ald ' rmM -
TO SOUTHERN PLANTERS.
The Vegetable Catholicon is neculhu
Jap ted to those diseases which areX?!
among the coloured population of ft.“I
In that disease which F. called y«-v, S*
sure remedy, a single trial ofit, willconvin/
planters of its superior efficacy to
dyof a similar nature in the United Stated
NOTICE.
Tiie advantages of this medicine i» „ ,
confining the patient unnecessarily m T
houje, or keeping him from his budi ^
With one solitary exception, that of S~
ous liquors, u dees not lay any r«, ri ^2 "^
his appetite It isio gentle in its
that the patient find* himielr getfin/S
cannot tell how. As it i. not the Mf 1
proprietor to take any thing f«
cannot g.vc . consideration equal h 1,1'
peraon. at a diatance who may vaT IT 1
Ida medicine, but who are nni „.!? . tcl ,; r f
fe te*r wifi t ' ?,ld ’ *J! d direct ad to him-;,' ;
letter will be immediately placed in hinm
S U hi 5 [.l5 0 ,h P ' Jtent 1° de5id3 ‘l* Vestion-
Should the remedy not seem to suit the dia.
ease, they will be frankly told so.
CAUTION*
To prevent disappointment it ii well to
l U *toat it takes in ordinary cases fro-n 3 t 0
«• cure so that persons *ho
are labouring under any serious infirmity
niV’rl (A AA.. .1 ’ *
must makeup their mir.d to persevere to that
extent at least—if they do not, they might JJ
well save themselves the trouble sndezpentj
"f usings smaller qusmitv.
All orders pool-paid and enclosing the min-y
immediately attended tu, and ihe medicine
paced and delivered with direnti-irs for u-e
to any place in the city, and forty aided aa db
reded
N. B. To prevent the possibility of til im.
poaition.it will bcsol.! in tne ci'y o; I’hiis ic : -
phia.attheofiico in Filth near llane-Slreet,
orat the dwelling uf the (tropr.. tor, No. 66
..he.mut street, only, and ,ibm?d by his an-
thunzedagents. W W POTTER,
fib Chesnitt Street, Fhtiade'.pfiia'
l have appointed G'HOncE HYE tSOS,
Druggist, uf Savaiinrb, my sole agent. U.u<.
gists wanting the above valuuble mcdicir.e,
will be supplied by him for cash, ut the tame
rale, its if ordered direct from me—via. (5J0
per dozen, or three dollars a r;ng!e bottle.
W. W. POTIER, Philadelphia,
Any person on application to the subscriber
will be furnished with certificates of die tft.
C5.CV of the above metheine, sufficient to un,
y’inoe the mind of the most sceptical, although
too numerous and lengthy for newspapers,
sertion. GEO. RYERSON, Drugget,
Corner of Bay and Whittaker Sireeti.
dec 13
Philadelphia, May 28,18 4
Sin—In consequence of imprudent expos
ure fo ir • ears sg.i I had the misfortune to be
come iifflicted with a disease, the painful re
suit8 ui which induced me to apply in suc-
cess on to several respectable phykicians ol
tvis city, from whom, however, I received
either no relief, or from whose remedies I re
ceived another complaint quite as distressing
>s the former. My whole system became
lected. I could get no rest at night on ac
count of the violent pain that I felt in every
part of my body,- the weakness snd emacia
tion of which was such that I could scarcely
walk. In this state I fortunately beard of
your vegetable catholicon—four battles of
which, has completely restored me, I have
now no pain; nty appetite is good; and my
strength restored With many thunks for
'he relief your medicine has given me, I am
your obliged friend, ttc.
WILLIAM WILSON.
Sworn and subacr'bed to before me, May 28,
1824 JOHN BINKS, Alderman.
Philadelphia, May 28, lS^.
Sir—I am now, thanks to your medicine, a
hearty ma- For nearly six years I have been
a martyr to a disease, whose ravtg-a threat
ened, if not soon stopped, to put a period to
my existence. Having had no regular medi
cal advice from the commencement, my
comnlaint at last got to auch a height that I
could not swallow without great pain and
difficulty. Tqmor* formed in different parts
of my body, amU began to think my situation
almost drspAajpjy The five bottles of the
Catholicon Welt I have taken have com
pletely ciKfSflfc, and I am now aa well aa I
ft/:
£ "C.jL"'
IN EQUITY.
Between W, Davies, Administrator, Comp’amr
ant, and John Ournochan Administrator, it
bonis no with the will annexed of Geor/e
Richardson and others, DifendunU —h
equity, Chatham Superior Court- Chauccruj
20th August, 1824.
I T appearing that John Murray Cirnochan,
one of the defemlnnta in the laid bill ol
'.omphint named* re sides without the state of
Georgia, in that part of the United Kingdoms
of Great Britain and Ireland, called Scotland :
It is ordered that the laid John Murray Car*
nochan, do appear and answer to the com*
plainant’s said Bill, within nine mentis from
the date of this order, otherwise that the
said bill; as to him, l>e taken pro confesso.*
Hud it is further ordered, that s ropy of this
order be published once a week, in one of
• he public Gazettes of this stale, until the ei«
ptrHtion ofthe time within which the said de-
frndantis required to appear and answer w
aforesaid.
True conv from the Minutes, this ?lst «hy
August, 13:4. A. B.FANNIN, Cleik.
august ?4 50f
Georgia Camden County.
TO ALL TO WHOM IT M.1Y CONCERN.
W HEKBAS Sarah Drown. Junior, widow,
applies to 'he Court of Ordinary of
County, for Letters of Administration on ti c
:statu of John Brown, Me ol s&id county,»C*
ceased, p.r next of kin: These are, therefore,
to cite and admonish, all ar*d singular, the
kindred and creditors of s*»id deceased* tcfile
their objections, if any they luve, in ni> of
fice, on or before the tint Hond»y in .reins
next,-itherwise Letters will be granted tin fp
plicant.
Witness the Honorable Britisn 11. Funi*
ley, one of th»’Justices of said Court,
thm sixteen'** d.iy of April, tigh*feii
hundred ardf^erty -fixe.
[L S. JOHN BAILEY, C. C. 0 C. C.
April 21 *4
Georgia—Camden County.
RY THE
COURT OF ORDINARY FOR
SAID COUNtY.
W HEREAS Tohn Chevalier, has applied
to said Court, ft'r Letter* Uinrrisaory
on the estates of Samuel Cozens and Ev»n L
Muck, deceased. These are, therefore, to
rile and admonish, all and singular, the kin
dred and creditors ot the said deceased vtt*
sops, tu file their objections^ if any they have,
>n my office, on or before the first Monday m
January next, or Letters will be granted die
applicant.
Witness the Honorable J unes Scott, one
of the Justices of said Court, this ii**
teei.th day of April, eighteen hundred
and twenty-five.
[L.S.] JOHN BAILEY, C. C, 0. C. C.
* n r I ^ 1 24
Georgia—Camden County.
BY THE COURT OF OHDINAUY #0
SAID COUNTY.
\4t/tlERF.AS Lewis Bachlott, applies to IM
tjy Court of Ordinary of said Countyt W
Letters Dismissory on the estate of Fr.nctj
Uuiolupe: These »re, therefore, to cite
admonish, all and singular, the kindred sn-
creditors of said deceased, to file their objec
tions. if r ny they have, in my office, on or be
fore the fi st Monday in January next, elMT
wise Lei .era Dismtliory will be granlcd tw
applicant* . .
Witness the Honorshie Samuel Claris
one of the Justices of said Court, IM
sixteenth dsy of April, eighteen hun
dred and twenty-five. „ -
[L. S.j JOHN BAILEY, C. C.O.CC
April 21
24
HAY.
BUNDLES PRIME HAY.lamM!
a)U from Brie Pheasant, for sale by
>ril 19 C. C. GRISWOtP-
April l
?{4*.‘-