Newspaper Page Text
jjorace Geely, editor of the Trimme,
-toid whig - authority, safd, in a recent
" ieech to the whig young men, that if
polk was elected that the tariff must
, a ]l.” The N. Y. Express (the most in
fluential whig paper in N. Y.)in allusion
Mr. Polk’s recent letter upon the tariff,
‘nvs, (we fully agree with the Express,
tyth m regard to Mr. Clay and Mr. Polk,
• at notes speak louder than words.)
“We publish Mr. Polk’s last letter up
on the Tariff to-day. It was written for
the nothern market and savors a little of
moderation. Such sentiments, however,
mean nothing. Two such opinions as
the following answer a hundred such let
ters as Mr. Polk has sent into the Penn
svlvania market.
The followingextractfrom a speech de
livered by James K. Polk, before the Peo
ple of Madison county, Tennesee, on the
of April, 1843, will show that he is,
andal wavs has been, an uncompromising
opponent of a Protective Tariff:
“ The difference between the course of
the Political Party with which he (Mr.
Milton Brown) acts and myself is, while
they are the advocates ofdistribution and
a protective tariff—measures which l
consider ruinous to the interests of the
country, and especially to the interests of
the planting states—l have steadily and
at all times opposed both.”
Ox wool. —“The wool growers con
sider the duty on foreign wool as impor
tant to their prosperity, this opinion I ap
prehend is founded in error.” * *
} “My own opinion is that wool should
be dutv free.” —Congressional debates,
v 01.9, p n ? e 1194-
Mr. Clayton of Delaware, has recently
shown how Mr. Polk voted when in
Congress upon the question, and as votes
speak more powerful than words, we
.hall answer Mr. Polk’s unintelligible
letter by the following very intelligible
record of votes.
On the 23d of June, 1832, lie voted for
the motion of Mr. McDuffie, of South
Carolina, to reduce the duty on cotton
roods, costing not exceeding 45 cents the
square yard, to 12 1-2 per centad valorem.
Oil the same day he voted for Mr. Mc-
Duffie's motion to abolish the duty of
.■J3O per ton rolled iron. On the pre
vious day he voted to reduce the duty
,m salt 5c per st> lbs., and voted against
the duties on boots and bootees, on cabi
net ware, hats and caps, whips, bridles,
saddles, carriages, and parts of carriages,
blank books, earthen and stone wares,
and manufactures of marble; and also a
gninst the duty of wool. On the 28th
day of February, 1834, within one year
alter the passage of the Compromise, Mr.
Hall, of North Carolina, in the house of
representatives of the United States, in
troduced a resolution, the object of which
was to procure from the Committee of
Ways and means a report of a plan ac
companied by a bill, to repeal the protec
tion guaranteed by the Compromise; un
der the pretext of immediately reducing
the revenue to the necessary expenses of
the government; and James K. Polk of
Tennessee, who was at that time, the
chairman of that very committee of Ways
tid Means, voted for that resolution.—
There were 09 yeas in favor of that re
solution-, and 115 nays against it. 111
voting fnv this resolution, the deliberate
design of which was to violate all the
pledges given in the compromise, Mr.
Polk was backed by the vote of six of the
nine members of that same committee,
and by all the nullifiers and ultra anti
tariff men in the house. This movement
shows the dissatisfaction with the com
promise cherished at an early period by
the enemies of protection.”
Mr. Polk Claims great merit for having
voted for Mr. Verplank’s bill ot 1832.
He could not havevoted for a more ruin
oils measure, That lull proposed in
three years the following reduction of
duties to be assessed upon foreign instead
of home valuation.
On woolens to 15 per cent; on all not
exceeding 35 Cents the square yard, 5
per cent; on worsted stuft goods ot all
kinds, 10 per cent; on worsted and vvool
hi hosiery, gloves, netts, bindings, and
stockinets, 10 per cent; on all other cloths,
merino shawls, tlannels, baizes, and cas
hmeres, carpetings and rugs ot all kinds
•,'0 per cent; on clothing, ready made, of
nil descriptions, 20 per cent; on all cot
ton goods,2o percent, except nankeens,
from India, on which Mr. Potts’ duty
was 15 percent; and cotton hosier, gloves,
mitts, and stockinets, on which his duty
was 10per cent; as well as upon cotton
hvist, yarn and thread; on ah manufac
tures of tlax and hemp, or sail duck and
cotton bagging, 15 per cent; on all man
ufactures of tin, japanning, gilt, plated,
brass, copper and pewter, and on saddle
ry, plated brass, and polished steel, 20
|«r cent; on common saddlery, 10 per
«nt; on earthen and stoneware, 20 j>er
cent; on all side and fire-arms, rifles and
muskets, 20 per cent; on bridle-bitts and
glassware, 20 percent; on manufactures
fl f iron and steel generally, a duty of 20
r cent;ou salt and coal, 5 percent; on
'iery tiling produced by the farmer in
l ae middle and northern states; Mr. Polk
who is a cotton-grower, recommended, in
'bis bill, one unvarying standard of only
15 per cent on potatoes, 15 percent on
°ats, 15 per cent on wheat, and wheat
Hour, butter, bacon, beef and pork.
■‘Search the records of Congress, and
Von will find, in every instance where
•be American system was attacked, while
be was in Congress he was its assailant,
i's constant and uncompromising enemy.
Still later and mure to the point.
The New York Tribune in the paper
of the 9th. uses the following strong and
emphatic language, in reference to this
matter:
“However he may pick out a line or
two here or there from Mr. Clay’s letters
! md speeches which seem to concur with
Polk, there is in truth the most vi
tal discrepancy.”
COMMUNICATIONS.
[communicated.]
Mr. Editor, —I have this moment seen
a circular issued by a portion of the com
mittee appointed to draught resolutions
to be read before an Annexation Meeting
in Greene county, and I feel irresistibly
impelled to give just applause to those
gallant few who have so nobly risen in
defence of their country’s cause, and
who with giant hands have burst the
bonds and shackles of servile partizan
ship, and unfurled the banner of the con
stitution. This is the spirit which gives
to us a confidence in the permanency of
of our institutions, in the stability of our
national character, and this is the prin
ciple which though seemingly quenched
and dead foi a time, whilst the wild spi
rit of demagogueism with its deep and
corrupting influence is blighting the land
—withering virtue—and mildewing the
morals, will rise in its majesty and pow
er, and with virtue, morality, honesty
and integrity for its armour shall bid this
pestilence cease; and these are the men
who scorning submission and base servil
ity to party dictation, dare to feel and
think and act for themselves—they dare
to profess more love for their country,
than servility to party —to acknowledge
no leader but wisdom and honour—no
weapon but reason—no party but princi
ple. To these men I render honor; not
only that this action is a manifestation of
a rising spirit from a county which lias
been more leader-ridden and party-crush
ed, more servilely obedient to the dicta
tion of demagogues than any other por
tion of Georgia: but that it comes at a
time so fraught with ruin and desolation
to the South as has had no life in the his
tory of the Republic—at a time when the
genius of the Constitution seemed about
to take its flight; its protecting arm of
power was paralyzed and withering a
way, and that noble fabric, cemented with
the blood of our ancestors and planted
upon their tombs, seemed fast crumbling
into ruins. l.et it not be that in a lew
years, and the historian shall say, “Illium
suit.” It becomes us now to be doubly
strong; so many discordant materials are
mingled with the elements of our present
political factions, engendering such di
versity of opinions, and interests, and
feelings, that wisdomand prudence should
watch with unslumbering vigilance, lest
jarring collision should again strike dis
cord from her dormancy as in eighteen
hundred and forty, when like some pes
tilential vapor she overspread the land,
infecting the very atmosphere we breath
ed, maddening the brain, brutifying
reason, and crushing the moral man.
Who of us does not see and fear the
mingling of religious fanaticism with
party rancor and political demagoguism?
Who does not hear the frantic ravings of
that insane and infatuate crew, the north
ern abolitionists, who under the specious
plea of humanity; under the pretence of
ameliorating the condition of slaves, are
endeavoring to bring ruin and desolation
and death upon their kith, their kindred
and their friends—and this they call phi
lanthropy. And how melancholy is the
spectacle when we see laws of the South
colored and branded with the insignia of
servility; bridled and worked by the ipse
dixit of a pandering political demagogue
joining with those heartless distinction
ists, swelling their strength and raising
the paricidal arm to give the death blow
to the only measure that enables us to
maintain our political strength and pre
serve our social and religious institutions.
Yet so it is, and in the amalgamation of
southern whiggery and northern aboli
tionism we may see the portents that fore
shadow the storm; we may see at no dis
tant period the rising ol that cloud char
ged with all the elements of a storm
whose bursting thunder shall shatter us
into fragments—the north and the south
shall be twain—father against son, and
brother against brother. When we see
these things, the necessity for combined
action and opposition forces itself upon
our irunds with irresistible power. It is
time to abandon that system of deep and
degrading servility to ihe dictation of a
few ambitions and selfish leaders who
seek their own aggrandizement, regard
less of consequences to others. In the
people resides the power—and now let
the people rise; examine for yourselves;
do not abide by what you are told in
your secret societies, and your political
club-rooms, but demand facts ; facts that
can be proven. Let the Southern party,
the constitutional southern party, who
seek only for their safety in the preserva
tion of the Constitution, and in the peace
able enjoyment of the rights guarantied
by it, theli rise in a mass and go among
the people: not with the sad insignia of
1840, but armed with justice and truth,
with tacts, with arguments, and with doc
uments of proof; and before October
next you will scarcely find a man in our
State (save and except some selfish poli
ticians and some young political
bantlings) who will not stand by the South
in this contest for the constitution, for lib
erty, and for the peaceable enjoyments of
our reserved rights. Will you be longer
led blindfolded by men who have under
gone every political phase. Will you
longer place confidence in men who at
one time tell you that opposition to a na
tional bank enters deeply in the elements
of their party organization ; and yet with
in the next moon are striving with all
their energies to create one. Men who
at one time are willing to dissever ihe
union, and take up arms against the
north rather than bear a high protective
tariff: and yet before the assertion has
died upon the ear are found crusading
through the country in support of a still
more onerous tariff-—men who tell you
they seek only for a revenue tariff for the
economical support ol tlie government.
and yet vote for one which according to
the assertion of their prime leader will
give a surplus of twenty-seven millions
of dollars—men who tell you the scarcer
a necessary article the cheaper you can
buy it; the higher you pay lor an article
the less you give for it (my God what
logic)—men who say the abolitionists of
the north have no power: and yet they
have been able by their prospective votes
alone to win the great political leader of
a party and corrupt his sycophantic under
strappers—men who whilst pandering to
the vanity, insolence, and egotism of this
wandering demagogue have forsaken
their country and forgot their God—men
who have joined in the revelry of bacha
nals, when the deep mantled bell and the
solemn tones of the organ come rolling
on the winds from the temple of Jehovah
like a requium to departed virtue—men
who tell you England will not interfere
with our institutions of slavery when she
says she will. And what is all this for?
To elevate to the highest office in the gift
of the country a man who is destined to
afford one of the most melancholy specta
cles in the history of time—a man desti
ned to outlive the contempt of his ene
mies and the pity of his frieuds—a man
who when in Georgia in his late political
crusade, abused, insulted, and reviled her
people—who accused them of fraud and
deception and corruption—and yet before
him, around him, and at his feet were
men of the very party he so grossly in-
sulted ; yet so weighed down and shack
led by party collars that they raised aloft
their hats and shouted “To triumph
we’ll dare, we’ll dare,” they felt them
selves honored in being insulted by him,
and enraptured by reference to their do
mestic calamities. All this and more for
a wandering office-seeker whose greatest
brag is that he never changed—who once
felt honored in hurling his thunders at a
United States bank and now stands up
its chief champion—a man who at the
north is a high protective tariff man—at
the South a revenue tariff man ; a man
who once thought it a motive of necessi
ty and of national policy to have Texas :
now deems it quite unnecessary, worse
than useless to own it—who thought it
so necessary to have it, even offered to
pay for it, yet now will not take it as a
gift—a man who a few years since de
clared in our halls of Congress, that
when a nation wishing to be free, and
were able to throw off the servile yoke
and declare themselves independent, that
it was right; it was our duty to acknowl
edge their independence, and maintained
this truth as the basis of our own revolu
tion. He now declares that a country of
freemen struggling against foul usurpa
tion and bloody despotism, should be left
alone to struggle, or should be bartered
for and bought as merchandize from an
execrable murderer and usurper whose
only claim was an ineffectual effort at
subjugation—whose armies and hosts
were marauding bands and packs of
plunderers who were driven from the
land they had cursed with crime and
stained with the blood of some of our best
and bravest. All ye abandoned politi
cians, and selfish office-seekers, little trib
ute did you pay to the hearts of those
whose fathers, sons, and brothers were
basely butchered by this insatiate and
wicked man when you propose to buy
from him the very land for whose inde
pendence they so bravely fought and so
nobly fell—ay! for the very plain on
which these unburied bones are bleach
ing. I tell you blind graspers after pow
er, your measure is filled. A voice is ri
sing from the Alamo that shall resound
throughout all the length and the breadth
of the land, and shall wake a responsive
chord in the hearts of all the good and
the brave; and the nation .‘ hail stretch
out its arms and cry welcome, welcome
to her younger son. And this same man
(who never changes) would buy and
trade with Mexico as an independent
government before it was acknowledged
by Spain, will not now abide by the same
principle and extend the same privilege
to Texas, because not acknowledged by
Mexico. This man who in his speech
on the revolution of the .South American
provinces was willing and anxious to
employ the funds of the General Govern
ment in assisting them to obtain their in
dependence, though warring with a na
tion between whom and us, existed trea
ties of amity, is now unwilling to ac
knowledge the independence of a coun
try if promise of the freedom has been
now—a man who once maintained that
in these cases we had nothing to do with
“de jure” but “de facto,” now tells you
we have no concern with “ de facto” but
wall the “de jure”—a man who once
maintained that the boundary line of the
Sabine was entirely too close to our South
western seaport for our safety, now thinks
the line far enough away ; who thought
that section in its wild, savage and un
cultivated state opened the door for dan
gerous invasion of this country, now that
it is opened and cultivated and all the fa-
cilities for great expedition and sudden
attack exist, thinks no danger can come
from thence—a man who once thought
in our Republican Government a voice
of the majority should rule, now thinks a
respectable number ot citizens should
control in matters of national policy and
drown the voice of the majority when
calling aloud on subjects which they
deem of vital importance to their liberties
—their happiness—and their social exist
ence. This is the man who has never
changed, who never understands and is
never understood. This man who lias
turned to every point of the political
compass, has espoused every side, and is
now supported by those who have espou
sed every side, this political gambler
would be elevated to the highest office in
the gift of the country and surround him
self with those weathercocks who would
espouse any man’s cause and promulgate
any principle, could it advance their in
terest. And these grovelling sycophants
will even now tell you to hush up the
question of annexation until after the
election lest you defeat their candidate ;
for be with that strange fatality and be
sotted blindness which always attends
his efforts at self-aggrandizement i>y po
litical jugglery has made a false and fool
ish move. He thought lie had already
bound the South in serfish chains, and
would now gain the north by promises;
but he erred, greatly erred in deeming all
the South to be governed by party, and
not by principle, in thinking their leader
better than their country; for we have
well demonstrated to the world by our
last convention that though we love our
men, we love our country more ; and by
that sign Mr. Clay may know that the
hand writing is on the wall ; and the
same fate which attended him in ’24, ’2B,
’32, ’3B, and ’4O, shall hang around him
in 1844.
[communicated.]
Machiavel maintained that virtue was
not absolute, that it was not independent
of circumstances, original and good of it
self, that if not practicable it was dispen
sable, and that it varied according to the
different situations to which its applica
tion was called in question. Or should
he concede the point of its necessary using
in private affairs, he held that inexpedi
ency justified its renouncement in the ac
complishment of public ends. In this
assumption lie was almost original. It is
true that Tacitus was somewhat of a lat
itudinarian in the allowances he gave to
public men, though he was cautious to
avoid the character of a libertine in phi
losophy. And we read of a sophist, who
having delivered a course of lectures in
Rome on virtue, proposed to refute his
own arguments by lecturing on vice.—
But the great and good Cato moved to
expel him from the city. He made no
converts, acquired no reputation—indeed
we have forgotten his name and Country.
And yet Machiavel deserves the credit
of being a candid man. To avow a doc
trine so bold against which the senti
ments of mankind were arrayed, certainly
denoted either a candid mind or a pre
sumptuous one. Still we must admit
that the age in which he lived, the man
ners and habits of the people for whom
lie wrote, tended to invite the originating
of some such sentiment. The liberties,
and with them the virtue of ancient Rome
were gone. The former had been diiv
en away by the Hun and the Goth ; the
latter by luxury and ease; and the eleva
tion to which a panegeryonthe vices of the
rulers of the land would elevate the phi
losopher or the historian was too distin
guishing not to he aspired to.
It is a great pity that the opinions,
though they obtain with a great many
politicians, are not avowedly maintained.
Their founder has lost cast among men ;
and themselves would fall into disrepute,
would men but adopt his candor or his
presumption and avow them. But every
age that brings new inventions, brings
new means by which men may deceive,
mankind. With every good there comes
some lurking evil; and although the
mass of mankind is wiser and better than
in the ceutury, yet their lead-
ers are provided with a greater number
ways to deceive them. The politicians
of the present day have found that actions
are not such indices to the heart as words
are; that a man may practice vice with
as much impunity as ha will, provided
be maintain that virtue is good. They
have seen that tlie easiest method of lead
ing men is to persuade them, that you
are not only not desirous of leading them,
hut that such in yotir opinion is rank
demagoguism, and criminal to the most
flagitious extent. So that in modern
times the intelligences of the day find it
necessary only to support and argue for
the old and established maxims of socie
ty, and express heartfelt sorrow for their
disuse and decline, while they make no
scruple to pervprt truth, to promulgate
error, to maintain that assurance of the
expediency, and their conviction in the
duration of measures of whose practica
bility they are in the most perfect disre
gard.
•‘Virtus laudatur et elget”
Says the satyrist, (this was long before
Machiavel) and wfe not (infrequently bear
of politicians declaiming against incon
sistency, who have themselves been guil
ty of the grossest inconsistencies, and
lawding uniformity of sentiment, when
havingcommitted adozen. tergiversations.
But it is impossible thus to distort vir
tue. Her laws are immutable and unva
rying. There are series of events in the
physical world, and ihe spiritual world,
dependant upon each other by an unde
viating sequence. Such is the econ
omy of nature, established at the will of
one who changes not; and he is the only
wise, as \Vell as the only virtuous man
who conforms to these series, and who
aims at the chief good by the use of the
means which were made for its accom
plishment. The practice of viitue con
fers happiness. It does this universally;
establishing that the latter is the former’s
invariable consequent. The same Con
sequence and the same conclusion at*
tend the practice. Now, happiness is the
great destiny of man. It is the end of
societies and governments. For its at
tainment nations are established ; for if
men were content with the precarious
enjoyment of their property in a state of
barbarism, they would not form commu
nities and make laws for the security of
that enjoyment. Any practice then
which places out of sight this great ob
ject, is unnatural and consequently
wrong. For whoever goes out of the
natural order of means for the accom
plishment of aims however laudable,
shows a discontentednesß with, and an
unbelief in the sufficiency of nature to
achieve Iter ends, which is arrogance and
impiety.
And this same habit of modern politi
cians of preaching to the mass an invari
able adherence to fundamental princi
ples, whilst they sutler themselves to de
part from them continually in the belief of
their inexpediency, is the most strenuous
evidence of their popularity with the peo
ple. By this means pure and simple
truth is deceived and made to subserve
the purjtoses of error, as the genuine re
ligion of the lower orders of society in
the middle agos were made to pander to
the sins and corruptions of monarehism.
IN
STATU QUO, BELLO!
THE undersigned take great pleasure in presenting to tt>e public
a synopsis off what wUI be , ( their brilliant and attractive busi
ness for August. Their capita! v *# 0 prizes will include die splendid
amounts of
18(100 0000 Dollars,
15000 7000 Dollars,
12000 0000 Dollars,
10000 500 Dojlars.
And occasionally they v ill preaent A 34000 SCI I EMU for tlicir numerous patron* v. ho have dealt so suc-|
cesrfully in packages in small achenx * In short, it ia needless to dwnll upon the profusion which veil
characterize their dispensation of piizcs. They expect to send forth weekly rm-scenfrers of glad tidings,
arid cause many a spirit to rejoice at the establishment of the Grand Lottery Free from any ivrourtion with.
Sorthtrn Isittrries, certainty will mark their opefatirti=. Prizes will be paid with a spirit of promptness that
must sustain tlicir already catablished repuiation, ami five increased confidence to their business.
Persons nishinf to make an investment in any of the schemes, by enclosing’ the cash, will he forthwith
supplied, and a result of the drawing forwarded to all who purchase. Address
GEO. ROSIIYSCN Sc CC., Managers.
Macon, Julv 17, 1914.
A love of virtue is and lute always been
inherent in mankind. It was thus in
those early days when most subject to
temptation, the Roman citizen in pence
worshipped the God of war, the Ro
man matron paid her vows to the incon
tinent Juno, and the Virgin offered tier
oblation upon the altar of Venus. The
student ol Epicurus still practised the
virtue taught in the school of Socrates,
hi spite of the characters of the immor
tal gods whom men adored, and in spite
of the indulgences of philosophers whom
men revered ns their oracles, virtue has
.always had its home in the hearts of
mankind.
Wc have seen a letter from the Hon.
Win. Tylor of Randolph, to a friend in
this city. The Judge says that, he can
not act with the whigsj wllose'ncts ure
so autagonistical to their professions; that
lie is convinced that the whigjparty are
now the Tariff party of the isouth—as
the whole party in congress) with only
one honorable exception, went in a solid
column for the protective tariff of 1812;
and also refused in the senate to pass
Mr. Benton’s resolution by a party vote,
which had for their object the annexa
tion of Texas, in accordance with the
treaty stipulations of the whigs. The
Judge therefore, on the 4th irlst. at a
meeting of the Clay Club of Randolph
county, resigned the Presidency thereof,
and announced his independence of whig
party trammels.
Columbus Times.
Robert vTiiardemanTTs my authorised
Ascni, duiing my absence from the slate.
MICHAEL M. HKALY
July 10th 1544. 6—ts
lUIMAS ~
MILITARY SHAVING SOAP.
riAIIE undersigned lake pleasure in certifying that
A itiey have used the Military Shaving Soap,
prepared by Mr. William Bailey, Druggist,Brooklyn,
New T urk, and for sale by Mr. James VV. Bailey,
drug-gist of this place. It is certainly the finest and
most pleasant compound that we have ever used;
leaving the skin after the operation of shaving,
smooth and soft, and rendering the act truly a plea
sure rather than a task. All who share themselves
and desire comfort in the act, wc recommend to
them Bailey's Military Shaving Soap
SAMUEL, R. BLAKE,
JOHN DARRY,
N. C. MEN ROE,
JOHN LAMAR,
DR. JAMES WOOD,
N. ELLS,
WILLIAM SCOTT.
Macon, July 10. 8
I'ongrruK X Saratoga Water,
JUST received, and for sale by
JAMES W. BAILEY, Druggist.
July 10. 8
Swrcdisli Leeches.
JUST received from New York, and for sale by
JAMES W. BAILEY, DrUggist.
July 10 9
Received this day,
A LARGE lot of fancy Soaps, Cologne Water,
and a general assortment of fancy articles, and
for sale by JAMES W. BAILEY.
July 10 8
Received this day,
K CASKS Potash, for sale by
tJ JAMES W. BAILEY.
July 10 9
Sand’!* Sarsaparilla,
I]’ OR purifying the blood, for sale bv
JAMES VV. BAILEY.
July 10 8
Oldridffe’* Ralm,
OF Columbia, for restoring the hair, for sale by
JAMES VV. BAILEY.
July 10 8
Hay’* Liniment,
A CERTAIN cure for the Piles, for sale by
JAMES VV. BAILEY.
July 10 8
Iloll'its Lite PiH* and Phnunix
Ritters,
FOR general debility, for sale by
JAMES W. BAILEY.
July 10 8
B tiley’s Sarsaparilla,
A CURE for all disorders arising from a bad state
of the blood, for sale at
JAMES VV. BAILEY’S
July 10 _ 8
New York Lquilable
INSURANCE COMPANY.
Capital $300,900.
HOUSES, Merchandize, Cotton in Ware Houses,
and Furniture insured against loss or damage
by fire. ISAAC HOLMES, Agent.
Macon, June 266 —ts.
NOTICE.
TIIE undersigned have associated them
selves in the practice of the law, and
will give prompt attention to such business
as ruay be inttusted to their care.
They will attend the following Courts:
Bibb, Crawford, Monroe, Twiggs, Jones,
Wilkinson, Houston, Pulaski, lienrv, and
Pike.
A. P. POWERS,
L. N. WHITTLE.
Macon, April 17, 1844. 48—ts
Office over E. B. Weed’s store, two
do.s be low Win. B. J”’ nston.
NEW DRUG STORE.
fTNHK subscriber betrs leave to inform his friend*
JL and ihe public that be is now receiving aa ex
tensive assortment of
Drugs, Medical Prej«iratlons, Paints , Oils, Dye-
Sttrffs, Patent Medicines and Perfumery.
The articles have been laid in on the most advanta
geous terms ; arc ol the best quality, as he is deter
mined to vend no other; and will he sold wholesale
or retail for rash or satisfactory town acceptances, on
the lowest terms that can be afforded in ibis section
of the country. Physicians, Country Merchants,
and others are invited to call and judge for them
selves. IAM»:s W. BAILEY.
His Store is one door above BoASdman’s Book an*
Stationery Establishment, Mulberry Street.
Sulphate Uuiiiiiie Musk, Bine Mora
do Morphine Horehound
Acet Morphine Otto Rost
Court Plaster Isinglass
Castor Oil Sf>onge, Mare
Citrate*l Kail Annato,
Chloride Soda Copperas,
Senna Alex Borax, Nutgalle
Cayenne Atriran Rosin
Indigo Spanish Float Oil Almoitds
Caraway Seed “ Annised*
Anodyne lloflarvt->nt “ Burgamoit
Aqua Fonis *• Cujipui *
Jumper Bcrrica “ Cassia
Bees Wax * 4 Cloves
Charcoal ptilv 44 Caraway
Corks Velvet “ Origanum
Calomel fclng A mhos
Calomel Am “ Jumper
Croton Tupturn “ Lavender
Gum Arabic “ Jus.'uimne
Gamboge # 44 Fennel
Blue Stone 44 Savin* fresh
Salts of Tartar 44 Goldwood
Extract Jalap 44 Warm need
do Lemon for pi**, sau r e?, 44 Double Tanas?
dec , anew and very conve- 44 Peppermint
nieut article • ‘ Spearmint
Extract Valerian “ Tansey pure
“ Acconita 44 Cedrat
“ Huchii compd 44 Croton
“ Pink Root Fluid 44 Sage
44 Augusiura 44 Pulcgi
44 Hardback 44 Sassafras
44 Lettuce MWA: M 44 Orange
44 Cort Pent comp 1 44 Cedar
“ Bark Precipitated 44 Black Peppsr
Ntix Vomica 44 Hemlock
** Rhubarb 44 Spruce
4i Gentian 44 Caniiun.les
“ Kautma * Tar
44 Dandelion 44 Copavai
41 Colocymhpure 44 Amttoi rejfct
44 compound 44 44 coin
“ Balsam Copavia 44 Seneca
“ Hyoscamus 44 Rhodium
“ Cicuta 4 * Narole
44 Stramonium 44 Oai.mmi’*
4 * Belladonna 41 Valerian
44 Boneset “ Cos bees
44 Butternut “ Wormwood
“ Giycopt 44 Nutmegs
44 41 re Id Eng- 44 Ann owed
44 Sarsaparilla Spatalas suortsd
Herbs Iforehound Syringes 41
44 Cleavtrs Trusses 44
44 Caiyip Brushes *‘
44 Thoroughwort Tooth Brushes
44 Cicuta Nail Brushes
44 Harsh Melon Whit* Wash do No l, 2,3
44 Col foot Bot Brushes No 1,2, 3
44 Parsley Flesh do No l, 2,3
“ Spearmint Cloth Brushes, fancy from NO
44 ftcurrey Grass Ito 12
“ ifyoxeamoua Blacking Brushes assorted
44 Wormwood Bristol Brick
44 DoubleTansey riheep Skins, extra French Jf*
44 Hyssop 1,2. and 3
“ Horne Radwdi A’moud Paste
44 Bitter Sttcct Antique Oil
“ Lemon Haim of Columbia
14 Sweet Marjoram BiarsOil
44 Motherwort Cream of Amber
44 Penne royal Cold Cream
“ * Ate t oiugn* Farina
rantharidea “ French
Fly Btnne *• German
Olncynth “ American
Acetic Arid Extract Milliflorea
Sw*e» Oil Lip Salve
Veramne Ouo ol Roeee
Sychnnine Macassar Oil
Oigitalia Pomatum
Creta prept Pearl Powder
Irish Moee Preston Salta
Oxalic Acid Toilet Powder
Oetric do Vegetable Ho age
Prussic do Vinegar Aromatic
Tartaric do Kve Water
Opium Godfrey's Cordial
Peppenne, Uva I’rsl Hayes Linamem
Sage, Syrenges Harlem Oil
Honey, Bqui!ls Itch Oinment
Mezerwn Funnels WedgWo'-d fiom No i
Hemlock to lo
llops Galley P - * ' *
Saffron Mortal, r ,m l n.ca .o 12
Eviruma Medical Sp .-ns
Nutmegs Pill Tilt . jr I from I
Wafers inch »i-
Clevee . Polishing C! * t
Quicksilver Putty X iiv-
Arrowroot Apoth's S» a’ • • md Weight*
Logwood Wick mg lor Lamp*
Madder Extract Roces
A Htim Essence of Tyrt
Fig Blue Florida Water
Brimstone Freckle Wash
Starch Mair < >il Ward*a
Glue Hungary Water
Antimony Hair Powder
Aloes Soot Indian Dye
Rhubarb Kaphalia
Emetine Orange Flower Water
Patent . Uetticines .
British Oil Blue Smalts
Balsam Hotjsy Deep Blue Sinalts
Spice Bitters Red do
Bateman's Drops Green do
Bmler's Magnesia Brown do
Bailey's extract Sarsaparii-Blaek do
la. anew and superiorlndian Specific!
ariicle, used in prefer New England Cough S
cnee to all others Opodeldoc
Corn Plaster Mortal's Pills
Cepha.ic Snuff Phoanix Bitters
Chemical Pile Ointment Jewett’s Pills
Essence t>f Peppermint Dean's do
Gordack’s Cordial Davenport’s and
Soap Naples Mead's xtea
Castile Swaim's filter
" White Bar Saratogjjfe
“ Variegated Tomat/f, Swam's
“ in pots, Nos 1,2, and 3Vcrrvf ills
Haynes’ Pills Frq&ier's Fever &. Ague
Beckwith's do DypdU
Peters' do -alegare’s Fever & Ague
Elmore’s do i-.Tu
Meskm's do
Macon, May Bth, ISV
G-oorgi'.t c/» wford CoUntV * f
«* • fibern J. Green applies to me for
\\ , fc,KtAS administration ou the estate ot
* ’ / n nis, late of said county, diseased:
Ephraim ''>£ srt . {ore lo c i, e and admonish ail ar
• ,** kindred and creditors of said decease
singular officethe «>=>«
£SSCS?V « y *nr =~.
said \ * bould Vy b . e 1344.
of* uadot my hand j AMES i • i VY, C. C. 0.
Jtnic 2€ —6—30.1.