Newspaper Page Text
f , .'■T'Z''•r’aWw' f'si 'Zo3t!f*n>- rw >;
G O N 5 rmj i’i. U .a A 1j I. ~ i' •
jiua vst ji :
TUBS DAY. OC fOBKU 25. 1831.
The Macon Messenger it.,; s, in reference to the
Governor ’a election—
“ From the K-tiurm given below, inaccurate as
they necessarily must be, (being inoffi .ial) we mm. ,
, luctuntly concintlc lnj*t Lumpkin will b I * iveruor..
To whine at ourdefeal would be olio, neither can,
we comfort ourselves with the reflection so flatter-1
ing to the judgment of some of our contemporaries, t
that it has resulted just as we - xpectfd. Wei 1 as:
much disappointed aggrieved, for we thought that
heavy as the weight was, ilial Gilmer carried, he
would come out ahead. Taking every thing in cony
sidel'alion, he has held a very good poll. •he op
position of many of his own parly, the lukewarm
ness of still more, and lire untiring activity of his eue- j
lines, gave, the vantage ground to his opponent.
With a Troup man who cuul * iiave con x-ntrated all
the strength of his early, the result would have been
very different.”
Yes— had Governor Thou* been the candidate, j
the result would have been different ! hut all
gers arc not death; let us be mure cordial and
in future, aud all may yet be well. R<l decpevan
fi tin !
q
“Let the next Congress develope the mdprac
tices of Jacksoniam, and wo pledge our co-operation
with a firm belief that pacts will be disci' sed which
will produce such an effect upon public ui iment
as to send Gen. Jackson back to tire iltinu age,
without a single electoral vole out of the State of
Tennessee.” [6- ’ltkgr'tph.
Wlifii we said dial Gen. Green, the leading Lai
houn Editor, and a leader of that party, was opposed
to the administration—the fact w«s positively de
nied. The above extract, from many such, will
shew whether we were right or wrung. —ls the
General be indeed a supporter of Gen. Jackson, he
has a queer way oi evincing his partiality—are lh e
Calhoun men in Georgia equally warm in support of
the administration with Gen. Green 1
The attention of our inhabitants has of lute
been seriously turned to wards the siltc worm, VV c
presume tho e described in the sunjoiued extract
Would not Hoot.sh m our country ;
fi’i'uiii ilie ( hniiis on l ily UttinUo.
Native Sik Worms. —By a letter It em Jalapa to
the litnud of Directors of National Industry, .Mexi
co, we team that the quantity of wild auk produced
In me immense forests ol that state is truly aston
ishiug. Ihe worms which produce it ate led on
the leaves of the guayubo, an evergreen with small
leaves, or on those ol tiie oak ; but the finest silk
ts that of w orms w liicfi teed on the foimet.
These worms are said to be those which a Chi
nese author describes by the name ot Tustn-Kycu
or Tyun Kycii, which are raised in tbat country,
aud with tins silk they make the stuffs which they
oiled Kytn Cheu, wli.cli is a handsome drugget
and so much esteemed that sometimes it sells as
high »■> the first tissues oi China.
i'uete worms begin their work at nine o'clock at
night i il.cn they come out of then bags and begin
to feed, in their passage they draw long auk threads,
which serve them as guides m return 10 their co
coons j lint* they make to themselves silken rods
or bridges, the ihteadsof which arc ol an extraor*
dinary strength.
An English writer who professes to be extensive
ly engaged in manufacturer, aud thetefoic thoi
ougfily acquainted with ms subject, luiuishcs the
following melancholy picture :
“At present (he sat s, ) in the cotton traue a
leas!, which is already restricted by law, the hours
of work generally extend from half past five or six
in the morning till had past seven or eiglu at night,
with about two hours’ intermission, making in all
about twelve hours’ clear labour. This we would
reduce to ten hours (if such a measure should be
tendered practicable and sale by a removal ot all
taxes on manufactures and provisions;) and we a 1
gain express our conviction, after regarding the sub
ject in every possible point of view, that till this
measure is adopted, all plans and exertions for ame-,
bursting the moral and domestic condi ion of the
manufacturing labourer, can only obtain a very par
tial aud temporary sphere ot operation. We say this
with confidence, because, in every project ot the
kind which we have been enabled to form, m every
attempt for this purpose which out personal acquain
tance and habitual intercourse with the people could
suggest, we have been met aud defeated by the
song hours (absorbing in fact the whole of the effi
cient day) which the operative is compelled to re
main at his employment. When he returns home
at night, the sensorial power is worn out with fa
tigue ; he has no energy left to exert in any US did
object, or any domestic duty; he is fit only for sleep
or sensual indulgence, the only alternations of em
ployment which his leisure knows , he has no mu
ral elasticity to enable him to resist the seductions
of appetite or sloth ; no heart for regulating his
household, superintending his family concerns, en
forcing economy in lifts domestic arrang unents, no
power or capability of exertion to rise above his
circumstances, or better his condition, lie has no
time to be wise, no leisure to be good ; he is sunk
en, debilitated, depressed, emasculated, unnerved
fin- effort, incapable of virtue, unfit for every thing
nut the regular, hopeless, desponding, degrading
variety of laborious vegetation or shameless intem
perance. believe him in this particular, shorten
his hours of labour, and he will find himself pos
sessed of sufficient leisure to make it an object with
him to employ that leisure well; he will not be so
thoroughly enervated with his day’s employment ,|
he will not feel SO imperious a necessity for stimu
lating liquors i he will examine more closely, and
regulate mote carefully his domestic arrangements ;
and, what is mure than all, he will become a soil in
which the religious philanthropist may have some j
chance of laboring with advantage. We do not
sav dial a reduction in the hours o! labour would doj
C v el .y thing, but we are sure that little can he done
without it . it is indispensable as a preliminary
measure."
Wi copy the following not fur the purpose oi re
lying upon the opinion that “ the scheme” of Tem
perance Societies is •• Utopian,” but for the pur
pose of inculcating a m iscim having intrinsic force
-but deriving additional strength from the high au
thority' whence it comes. “ Jrdtnt spirits are evil
Spirits-”
Intemperance. From a letter which Sir Aslley
Cooper lately addressed to the Secietaiy ol the
London Temperance Society —“ No person has
greater hostility to dram-drinking than myself, in
loiuuch, that 1 never suffer ament spirits in my
f
hon ; thinking them evil •p ritr ! a..d if thv pons
could witness the white liters, the di >• si the
-haltered nervous sy-U ms which I hate -o n, tile
onsequencev of drinking, they would In n 1 ate
ibat .spin s ami poisons were symmy am. t-iims.
Hut still I think die ciu-n.e so Utopian, f! at I can
not annex my name to it, for I could ti' lOnn b- etne (
bat I could by my own effort slop the Cataract of.
Niagara, as prevent the poor of London troifl do
.troy mg themselves by intemperance. ’
We have been informed by the Kev John llmv
|ard, that Seven Hundred and tSeventy-Uvo memb is
| have been received in the Church within the limns
iof his District, (Milledgeville) since February las .
[. Hncan Christian Repertory. \
We are informed that die increase in the Onto
t Conference last y eat is upwards ot four thousand
I members. [that.
appears from the Pensacola Gazette, that no
election was held in that city or its vicinity, on the,
bd inst. that there were no candidates, tm judges of
j election, and no voters —thus selling at nought the.
Proclamation of Governor Duval, who, having in a
most extraordinary manner set a-idc a former elec
tion, but ordered a new one to lake place on that
Iday. but the people, it appears, would not obey
I his su muons—and Col. Wurrx will no doubt take
p fits seat in the next Congress, without oppu^j/ 1
New-York Mercantile Advertiser of (he 1 tip
' ins . stater, that the Hon. John Randolph has taken
I lodgings to that city, and that he is m a very veak
band precarious slate of health. y
?*Sp>
i Mohawk and Hudson Rail Rond. —The immlier
t of passengers on me road from die fat to dm tftli
t October, eight days, was3,(fifi’£ , being an average
, of 387 per day. The amount ol receipts was
F £1324 16.
I 1 lie Superior Court of Canada, has decided,
. “ that a husband is not bound to pay for articles of
, luxury and extravagance, furnished Ins wife without
bis knowledge aud con cut !”
1 Yesterday morning the operation of lithotomy was
. performed on the venerable Glnet Justice Marshall,
with a professional skill w filch could be rivalled only
by the admirable fortiiude witli which it was borne.
Appearances arc all favorable; and hopes may be
1 entertained of die prolongation of an estimable life
; under circumstances of personal relief, wtnoh wilt
j ensure the'cun immuce of iis full national value. If
; we could select feelings to be envied, we should in
dicate those of a surgeon successful on such un oc
casion, with a sensibility such as that of Dt. Physick.
1 file operator was thoroughly alive to all the merits
of his patient; his esteem he probably thought jo
great that it could not he enhanced; but he witless
j ed a simple force of resolution, which must have
. convinced him that die man is equal to the judge,
i [National Gazelle,
,l Remarkable Preservation. —Some few days since,
1 says the Boston Traveller, a man stepped into a
_[ Druggist’s shop in dus city, and called for an ounce
jof Elixir Salutus; and the boy, through mistake or
. carelessness, gave h>m an ounce of Elixir Vitriol,
, Tho gentleman mixed it with an ounce ol Castor Oil,
and took the whole at once; and what is the nost
remarkable, lie received no injury from it, except a
scald of the mouth. This should se"»e as a warning
; to Apoilu caries’ lads 10 be more careful, and never
to deliver die nios 1 trifling prescription without first
ascertaining bey ond the possibility of mistake, its
Jreafipbaracler -- >
is said inal five hundred young men in I'iiiladel
, phia and us vicinity have agreed to go out to fight
■ )lhe Polish I,aides, and me pledged to answer wild]
ijJuj roll is called ! .
... ,arv -3? arm
l ui the Superior Court tie iven County .
Vcober Term 1831.
Phesent he Hon. \V. t. H ilt.
We the Ghm I Jury fur the county of- -riven,
■ I have had die -fl'urs of our county tr d . , cousidera
'lion, and we are happy to nay dist no grievance or
■ public nuisance demands our attention, with the ex
; ceplion ot ttie comb*ton of the bridge over Beaver
Dam Creek, opposi e the town of Jacksonborough, j
i winch is almost impassable. The business of the
i.coun y as lar as we have had an opportunity to m
‘spect it, has hem fotthfutiy and ptope.ly conduct
i ed by the officers charged with the execution of the
■same Itecent occurrences in the Sou.h, render it
important, at tins time, that a watchful eye should
t be kept, not only to our interests in a certain <pe
jcies of property, but also to the personal safety of
: the community in which we five. In our own coun
ty, much excitement has recently existed in relation
to supposed insurrectionary movements among our
coloured population, and it is feared that a portion
of our biethren of the North and East, have been
active and ms.ruiueutal in exciling-these deluded
beings to the premeditation of acts of violence and
bloodshed. This belief is warranted by a string of
impolitic and dangerous resolutions, offered hy John
Binns of Pennsylvania, at a meeting lately held
Philadelphia, the substance of which was the sug-|
gestion of a scheme to liberate the Slaves of the
South ; in furtherance of which measure it was
proposed to recommend Gongresi to apply the stir
plus revenue of the U. Stales, after pay ing off the
national debt, to the purchase and liberation of
Southern slaves. VVe cannot but present these re
solutions, as a movement prolific of danger aud mis
chief to the people of Georgia, in common wilhj
i those of the other Stales of the South, aud fraught 1
i with consequences which no good citizen would
i willingly produce. —We also present their mover, |
John Binns, whom wc have previously known with
Inc advantage.to himself, as a cover, and therefore
■ a dangerous enemy—as a criminal who is alone pro-1
• tecled from the capital penalties of our laws, by j
. Ills absence from the jurisdictional limits of the ■
, Slate of Georgia. We seriously and respectfully,
recommend to the citizens of Georgia, and more
L particularly to those of Set iven county, to be dtli
i gently alert in relation to the delicate and important
. ( subject wc have juHt referred to, and strictly toen
, force the Patrol Laws of the State, tor the protec-
I lion of the’persons and the property of our citizens.
We cannot part with his Honor Judge Holt with
, out tendering liim our thanks for his diligence in the
: 1 discharge of his official functions —we alsw tender
.| the usual salutation to the Attorney General, and
i[request that these presentments may be published
pin the public Gazettes oi Savannah and Augusta.
11103. GREEN, Foreman.
John M. Huberts, John 'At igltr,
Solomon Zeagler, Wilson Conner,
Eli Ji. Jircher, Uezekiuh Evans,
Stephen Mills, Cullen Williamson,
William Oriner, Jits. P. I'hompson,
David Curtis, Isaac Conner,
Walter Walker, George W liest,
1 William O. Hauler, Anthony Lewis.
Hub'l M Williamson, George Pollock,
John F. LuviU, Jesse Hamer,
Hardy Everett,
’ A true extract from the Minutes this 19th day of
October, 1831.
SEABORN GOOUALL. Chirk.
L(> TTLi 14 V JN T£ LLiGENCE.
'I iie Pillowing are the drawn number -of ihe Fir
. cJniu State (Dismal Swamp) Lottery, Extra Class
No. 3, tor 3 831.
48. 60, 57, 43, 30, 52, 27. 3, 46, 36.
jillarncfc,
In Oils city, on Thursday the 20lli inst. by the
Rev. S. K T.lin«iv, Mr. ToEOn.inu .1. Uuow.v, to
,1 Miss CHAHI.OTTB FUtMMINO. ,
|! In New York on the 13ih inst. Mr. Bsw.utu A. ,
Sthohu, to Maui inns, daughter of the late Ralph ,
.Clay, of Savannah, Ga.
‘ t©tro, !
t In this city, on the 18lh ins.. Mr. William O. Hud '
aged 26 years, a native of Franklin county, Ga. '
11 ■■ Hiatal art Ihi furs in hsnrl, fur they shall ice (/ml." j
On the 14th inst. at Glen Alla, liurke county,
Mrs. Mary Lavinia Brown, in the 2dih year ot her
‘ age. An affectionate husband and child are left to
mourn her loss.
In Edgefield District, S. C. on the l td, inst. Gen.
’ Jesse Blocker, leaving a wife and children and nu-j
friends to deplore their bereavement.
i- (fj* he friends and acquaint
t ances of Mr. JUIIEL COOK, , are respectfully iu
; vited to attend his Funeral THIS MORNING at 10
* o’clock, from his late residence on lillis-Street, next
above Mr. fhomas G- Hall’s
t October 5. -
* UIVIDENU NO. &71
ftauk 7 \ntii of lieoTgift,
> SAV'NN VH, 21st October, 1831.
j qptflF, lizard of Directors having 'his day da
1. dared a Dividend ol jg 350 per share, on the
'Capital Stock o' this Hank lor the s x months
1 coding'he 30th ultima, the ante will be paid to
s the respective Stockholders thereof, or to their
’ order, on and after Wednesday next
A. Porter, Cash’r.
“ 03" The Editors of the Augusta Cunt, ‘ution-!,
g-atiat and Courier, Recorder and Journal ot Mi!
I ledgcv.He, Washington New, S!u ) R,. Athenian,
f will please 'rublish the above tSir -e limes
Oct- her 23 3t 37
■ 1 el ua iv vu »’ ft a-x k,
s AUGUSTA, October 20 3 Si.
0 d kV WE. NBSDaY next, .he Hoard of Direc*
* V* tors will elect a Teller- icr tins U ok; pet'
©os desiring the appointment c n be inf -ruled of
tlie amount of Bond « •<! Sa tr o . amnio din to
(j'eo. NV. Lamar, Cush’r.
October 21 c 2t 36
* :
I' sMfccVianica’ Wank* /
: c
r j Auod ta * uoust 10th, 1831. )
■ t N ln*tatme t of 10 -er cent o : the Capital
h "i St :ole ol 'uis II kis required • be paid on
1 ie 17 h October, between th h.-urs o 9A. M
R id 3 I’ M , and a furl! >r 1 ifilalment o. 10 per
f . ..t, on the I7ih ot Nov mb r next, within the
(dime hours
tj lit, or,ter of ifir Hoard of Directors
George \V. Lamar, Canhier.
pL A 16 t 17
i IPii'fJStt'SUSlS*
ftnnk o? Vkal \\. tackle,
t! fi'Jwmßc jcmbt rb, tool.
I VJ *’I"R *» h ereby giv, n. ha 1 a meeting of the
I 1.8 cki.o d-trs '( the Farmer-• Hank o* Ghats
ho .Co - will be held a. the C ur -House, in 'ln
, *• i• I G ambus, on lioiid*', I li 7lh of Nov-; m
, >. r next, at 30 o’clock, A. M, for the purpose o
r iec’tng five Directors for s -iu liank. to serve fin
•jtwelve months from that dale.
Butt, ) ,
; ! it. K Tarver, \ l ' o,n ’*•
•| Hj" The. Macon Messenger, Geoigia Journal and
A ig id-B Cmisiiiudouabat, will please in* rt the
: b v w eekly, until the day of election, and for-
L ml thsiv account to the Commis’iioncrs tor pay
t iini
•! O *hnr Ift 4r 35
{Q*The Regular Annual elec
tion of the following officers of the Richmond Aca
demy, namely Rector First English faacher Clerk
Steward and Treasurer will take place on tin first
Saturday in November next. 1 lie term of said of
ficers to commence on the first day of January next,
thereafter. Persons desiring farther information
will please address the undersigned.
JAMBS M’LAWS, Clerk.
j October 11 td 33
TO VUi.XT 3
i |?»4 Several convenient STORES
jfkgj and DWELLINGS.
AMO — ,
1 Several OFFICE.-} & the Fire-
Proof STOMB3 now reined *" Mr. McK-en am!
j jicsi-rs. Hand & Bartmi adj i ni ;g the Worn Douse i
if Vs ssrs. Ilole imbe Ik Otmpfie d—Posgr-snion
■ given on the first of October next, Apr lx to 1
j ' N B. The House near the P anters* Hotel, c
-1 copied the last year by On Hobday, is now <lf r 1
i od tor Kent.
Ei. K. C»m|i«>ell.
.! Au-uo 12 <
j© A r* ® ii ii i
.M .V. UtTviiUN”
IIESPECI FUL' Y i orms his fne:. is and the j
. public go era v, 'hat hisfiCBCDL wi'l com- .
I mence or. JVEO.VKSt)AY he 26 h inst. a' the
I Masoric ai.l I n first I’rst. i a 1 Parly tor the ,
j season, will take place on tbs Lvcoing of the s, c ,
ind I rs-iiAY in November t t
This b nog the last season of Mr. GUI CON’S
reaching—he begs* all those who v ish to avsi ;
In moelves of hi. inslruc ion, particularly his for
ner Pupil 3, to nuke early apphe im i .'rir,- a
usu.l Subscription papers t r the Sell •.1 wit! b j
est at the S ores of Messi't- llii/Kahu; fe (-arahi.,)
. Ur. Hkdx and at ttie United Sta ; - Hut -I.
, Oc! <b 14 ™ 1
“iwwa'aAiii., :
A V\uubc w evvaul. ,
{ She c*n be seen at klrs htß-cCA amfi,.i,u’s. i
Ocober 25 2 1 57 i
f i ftuuk vuvA 3ub Vviuling,
I A tally executed at thu OJjttt.
T\\e VutAvvsiguwl
HAS in e*tv>ivil Mr. Wulum i‘. WkumM^n
«n hi bu ui'-. s Oi i'jH- l'i)lt -O •' (,' >aW
hjssiujV tujjjws^cnows * .n ■«..** i*-
til*' k. M(ul rcU \vi ti: IllvM’Ji lo tiH (! 5 < f» * * S
mumier» ht lh<* :r\,'}/Opr here I* ' • tiv-'
mi K(ihr > i;n m c F »iui nui. • to-the ntv firm H;
kivii uiu\ NV aVuv \'kn>vA
w be in readiness to ‘t. re C.otG-ti-a dM. . chat, -
•I c-' at a- early day, and in secure and cot,v
nif.it » iocalion a. any i the city.
From the interest the concern Imva in the navi
gation of tlie pb-ce, they pro;fee to Tectivs am.
forward Cottons from 'be interior free of Gommi -
siun, and nutbirg more iliun tlit* nioncy :.c u.* y
paid out will be charged on Cottons goinp o 'sa
vannah or Charleston, by B.mlt. c msigned ... them
Advancea wit! be madeonthe sir pmenta of ■ .olu.n
to their friends in ei her of tbc ab ve plac<
A. Mitckeiiftic.
Jiugvsia, 25ih Oct. 1831 6 t 37
Drawing to be received on Saturday Night,
| UNION CANAL
LOT T E IIY.
Class No. 21. f»r 1831.
66 Nuiuber Lottery—9 Drawn Ballots,
j SCHEME.
I Prize of 20,000 DOLLAU'i
1 Ho «f 10 000 DOLLAR*
1 do of 2,500 DOLLARS
1 do of 1,505 DOLLARS
5 do of 10()G DOLLARS
5 Ho of 500 DOLLARS
5 do of 400 DOLLARS
10 do of SOO DOLLARS
20 Ho of 200 DOLLARS
35 do of 100 DOLLARS
&C. &,c. &.C. &c.
|d7”ot Jet* received and promptly attend-
COSNAUD’S
Lucky Lottery and Fixchange Office, o>. met o(
Uroad and Jacluon-streets. |
OCobcr 25 1
' DRJI WING EXPECTEiTtO NIGU I\
New-York Consolidated
LOTTE BY,
Extra Ll\ss N ■, 29
HIGHEST PRIZE
40,000 Dollars.
LOWEST Do. SI2.
Tickets 810, Halves g 5 Quarters IS3 50.
Drawing expected on Saturday Night.
UNION CANAL LOTTERY,
Class No. 21 for 1831.
60 Number Lottery—9 Dr?,Wn Ballots.
HIGHEST PRIZE
80,000 Dollars.
Tickets g 5, Halves 82 50, Quarlen 81 25
|Q* i’rouipt attention paid to orders at
IBOBSIBS*
fotiwDalLe NtoUw'j UlActt,
No. 241, Broad Street.
Address W. P. Beers.
October 25 It
FALL JIJ\D WIJSTFR
GOODS,
The Subscriben are now receiving their
supply of
FALL AND WINTER
Uriy* cßootoft*
CONSISTING or A GREAT VARIETY OF
UaLVU Vi A s’ ft ¥A< UY.
ARTICLES IN THEIR LINE,
I IZ
f
6-4 Thibet and Meri 10 U.otl.s, of dilfureip alors,
and the la'est style of Go uls fur Ladit,'. '-.'l and
winter dresses.
Bnglish and I'alian Lustrings, and Gros ds Na
ples.
Fancy Crape ShatvL, larys iiz;, enibroidc’ c 1 and
plain.
Fancy coloied silk a d notion IIr»«i ry, Lc Utlcs, f
rich bonnet and belt R.bbcn.'), Gipscy, 1. ;,'ioro. r
plait and open t.uv/ B'-nnets.
' ■' AtSO— «
Super blue. Hack and Lucy colored Clctl.j, Caa
time res end !>'.*.} -ets, very ch afi, • •
|5 4bluc Cloth- and with.; wi.iub Plkins, prime j
goods (or scrVsnt.; wear, «
3 bales Cart,clings, some c»’ra quality, and rich
colors,
London, d. ffi -. and point Blankets,
Domes! c Good* in grr« variety J
qjT T hey will receive th- - ghovd the season,
cm aiders ble addi ioos to thru;- present S 3 tuck,
which, fef extent and variety, i - lied -
■n this market Their priy.’ M.a’ bn r. low. II
.ot lower than goods «.f u siiui's kin 1 Crii be of
- at in this place. i
John Edgar k Co.
n- h"i- 18 35 • i
CUBAII TNERHUIF.
- JjVHE subset ber has thi- day taken into Co
i 3. partm rsb p hit hO.i, JUier. K. UssiMSOn, i
t{., |. ct'-i »(f and General Lorn.ru> aion Uu.mei*
UDdcr tbc firm of JOHN KO UNSON. fc SON,
rt h.le he returns his acknowledgments to •
friends and customer* for the lib. ml ru pon
heretofore received he s-ihi;.U, s emilinua ; ol
the time tor the present fi; m.
John IloltiiiHon. 1
Kdm .ndsto.i's D h irf
Charleston. October 1> 1331 fit ,J '
tfnwmiw MonMawr‘^vxiMKvMKPfc 1 -
Wurtiow tSb&lcsu
BY C. PHILLIPS.
vans ia®M^
Ai T i’clock,
H 4*J®
AMONG WHICH ARK :
Irish J. in-voti su frfi.';- h.ali'd S linings Cid*
licoea, Flannels Vestt! gs, iVn.arque Itibbcnr,
l-brntd" f apes, Huttons, Sail*, (luiion, Worsted
• in( I.Kr-iij* Wool •. • ' sr.d li It iicse,
Spool C( Hoi aml ( wiii'ii Hills, (livpe anti Gauze
Uan(l«« »k Whig:Mie'llcs, Scissors, Knives
tlouiba, Wjli. t-
AKU A VAUIKir OS
arWclca, &c.
'i'crUid at .'hi r.
Oclob tls 1 tt
Stdietion ass.nlc»
Hv c. pulllips.
On the first Tuesday in Novcnn
ber, at the I.uiut 11 .rket House in this city, vviK
be-o.tl t.. the h ghost biddjr, .4 NBllllo'slAN
belonging in (lie Kalato of James Moore, deccaS’
ed.aun sold by order of the administrator.
tkrms casti.
o c'« h r «1 Ids 36
Administrator’s Notice.
POISONS having any demands against (ha
Estate nf .lobn Uenby, late of Iticlunund
oiimy, deceased, will present them immediate
ly to
P. 11. Mantz, Jldin’r.
0.-iober 21 3t r 36
INMB
THE SUIISCIUUBH
|"»’CEUS for sale his LOIS and BUILDING?,
” si uatcd in the village of Appling, Columbia
, county, Georgia, v z .
A three story Dwelling House, a
House in which the Appling Ft nvtlo Academy ia
k' pt, and Medical Shop, together with ether
buildings. —also —
Dis stock of MEDICINES and
Vh"p Furniture, with Surg es) Instruments. Fiti*
los'iphical Apparau* and Medical Library, con.
sisti. g ol French, English, end Ucrnsau Authors r>
also
Household and Kitclisn Furni
luie, and one Negro Woman about 30 years uS
age, g » good (look, Washer and Ironer,
The Buildings are very conveni
eni for a Tavern or is larding Sch 01. The tiiua*
don in undoubtedly healthy, as no ease of Fever
lias occurred in the family during ilia three years
iin which the Hoarding School has been in opera*
diin. Ihe whole will be sold on acc, rnmudating
terms, and if not disposed of sooner. will be sold
lo tue inghest bidder on Friday and Saturday, the
9.h and lOtli of Dec.usher neat.
JUauc lioweu.
Appling Ou October If 33
TUB SUBSCRIBER,
Has for the better accommodation of his Cue*
turners taken the Store adjoining his old stanch
and converted them both into one. He intends
in tuturc lo Keep a
Large and more extensive
has uisustosuub. Hr. is sow urcEiviau
GOODS
Suitable for this, and the approaching Season, to
which wiP be added almost weekly supplies.
CCj” Gown and country merchants will as for
merly be accommodated as a muhll advance.
J.P. BETZE.
September 9 24
ROBERTFRAZER
AND
WILLIAM NELSOV,
Fashion lie Hair Dressers and Barberu
Rli l UUN their sincere thanks to their friends
in general, for the patronage they have here
tofore r reiv'd, and still solicit a co> tinuance of
the same by assuring iheir customers they will
kp.re no p i to gvc general istisfaction in their
line I heir ah ip is on M Intosh street, opposite
o wh-ro they ia ely resided.
Oc her 14 34
GEORGIA, Striven county.
z HEUEAS l.uoy sasilKr, applies for Letters
IT of Administration on the Estate and ef
fects of Richard W. Miller, deceased, late of said
coil nly.
These are therefore to cite and admonish all
and singular th>- kindred and creditors of the
..aid deceased, to be and appear at my office with
in the lime prescribed bylaw, to trie their ob
jections (if any they have) to shew cause why
said letters *h- old not be granted
Witness the Honorable v\ illiam Smi'h, one of
the .Justices of said Court, ibis 17th day of
October 1831.
37 Seaborn Goodall, Cl’k.
GKO KOI A, Striven county .
WIIKHLAS Lucy Miller, applies for Letters
ut Administration De llo\is JVon, with the
Will annexed, upon the Estate and < fleet# of Sr,
rah Conyers deceased, late of said county.
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all
Mild singular, the kindred and creditors of the
:atd deceased, to be and appear at my office, with,
ui the time prescribed by law, to file their objec
tions, (i any they have) to shew cause why said
Letter* should not be granted.
Witness the Honorable William Smith, one of
the Justices of said Court, this 19th day of
October, 1831
. 37 Seaborn Goodall, Cl’k.
*** v Journeyman l‘rinter, will
find stow ■ercki crap 'oy, by immediately applying
~t ihi‘- Office.
OdUilur W ,