The Georgia constitutionalist. (Augusta, Ga.) 1832-184?, July 17, 1832, Image 1

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111 «IIEU & BIXCE. AFBgSTA, BA. TUESDAY, M i l 17, 1838. V W| >.J1.....>0.^ Till: CONSTITUTIONALIST, ev«*rjr T«r»aay und Friday, fN MACIN' fOSH 9T HE ET, T!iini door from the north-west comer of Broad-Street. Sales of LAND, by Administrators, r.T*cutnr*,or Goar, Jian», are required, by late, to he held or, the first Tuts, duo in the month, between the hours of ten in the fore noon and three in the after noon, at the Court-House in the ru-jnty in which the property is situate. —Satire of. these sales must he given in a public Gazette SIXT\ i DA V .S' previous to the day oj sale. I j •S’ tiles of A GROKS must be at public aurt.on . on the first Tuesday of the month, between the usuwl hourstf sale, at the place of public sales in the county irher tlye letters Testamentary, o f Administration or Guar dianship. may hare been granted, first giving SfA T\ ! I) IV.S notice thereof, in one of the public Gazettes oj \ this State, and at the door of the Court-House, tcherep such sales are to he held. Notice for the sale of Persona! Property must I *> given in , like ma oner, FOR TV days previous to the. day of sale. Notice to the Debtors and Creditors of an Instate must he published for FORTY days. ! Notice that application trill h* made to the Court of Orth /.ary for leave to sell LAND, must be published for FOUR MONTHS. j Notice fur leave to self NEGROES, must be published for \ FOUR MONTHS, be fore any order absolute shall be made thereon ho the Court. >l lst EUAMEOUS. I From the Nic-En gland Farmer. UKOTIIK ft JONATHAN’* t DVICE TO HIS MON. Well, Charles, the Ion" wished for day has ar rived; and from this time you are no longer un- j d< rmy care and control: you are now your own ; man, and the world is before you. Such has; been your obedience, industry, and deportment,. ( during vour minority, hat 1 have lull confidence! that you will never williiurly place a thorn in rnr pillow ; but that you will hy industry, m'eg-j 1 rity and honesty, play the man, auu tnerehv es tablish a clmracter for yourself. 1 As von have been educated in the habits of indnsti v. I need not say much on iha; score : yet it cannot he too olten repeated, that at all events the haunts of idlers, dram shops and pla ces of dissipation ; us it is not respectable to bo se n at such places except on imperious necessi ty. )\,r vour general conduct in society, be plea sant and obliging to your espials and interiors ; i »pt eiful to your superiors and seniors: sincere| ami upwnght with all. Avoid contention and; strife, and shim all had company. Despise not . the poor ami decrepit —show pity to the unfortu-j nate, and extend charity to the needy, especial-! Iv those who are worthy to receive it. Small injuries treat wiih silent contempt, never retali ate, but manfully defend yourself when neces sary. it gard virtue as the great ornament of man —govern vour passions. Let your language! be'pure, and speak with deliberation. Shun the unfruitful works ot darkness ot every kind, and let vour conduct he such as will bear the light of day. Should vou he in the employment of another, b* faithful to the man ; remember always, that hi- business, is vour business, and that his inter est, in a sense, is your intercs . Fry no into li; • s-'cre'-sof vour neighbours, but keep yourown, find the man's with whom you may live. {should you go into hustness yourself, pursue it early aiid late with resolution, and never put oil’ any thin" till to-morrow tiiat ou.>ht to be done to-day. Never be above your business, nor let your business drive you; personally su-, perintend it ; and let your uniform industry be! h pattern tor those you may employ or have un der your care. Let your commands bo under stood and promptly obeyed. As to dress—leti it be docent and according to your employment, j Be not anxious to follow the fashions, but rc-| member that cleanliness is a cardinal virtue.— Never judge the character of a man by his ex ternal appearance. Punctuality is of the utmost consequence ; by! it vou may draw money (should you w ish) from ) your neighbor's pocket. Let vour accounts be accurately kept, both! debit and credit, and settle often. Reckon with | yourself once a year, perhaps about the first of January is the best time. Make a close calcu lation and sec in what latitude you are sailing: I see where vou have missed a figure, and let these errors be as beacons and landmarks to warn you in future. For the neglect ot such reckoning, and running on in a supposed pros perous course, many have been shipwrecked and ruined. Small debts and interest are too, often overlooked by debtors, but creditors never ! | forgot them; hence, bring them all into reckon-j | mg, whether for or against; they often make a' r.. ' * - \ large item in the general account. Should you build a house, let it be no larger | than is necessary for the purpose designed, for | buddings in the country larger than necessary, are poor property; but tu any case, lot the cel [ lar bo us large ns the frame. Have an opinion of your own. but ever keep [ your mind open to conviction. Never despise a' | man because he differs in opinion from you. As 1 to religious matters, be no stranger to your bible, i and form your creed from its pages, but not from the opinions of men. As to politics —endeavor to understand in some measure, the government in which you live, and the character and motives | of the men who direct it. Never give your vote to a man who is unworthy to receive it; and dis aaui the man who would so disgrace human na ture, as to sell his vote for a glass of rum. Should you have the misfortune bv roiscalcu tion, treachery of others, or otherwise, to fail, | compound w ith your creditors —be honest, deli ver up all. and begin the world anew. But re member, Charles, that a debt is not morally paid when a creditor relinquishes, reluctantly, a part to save the remainder ; therefore, Isay, be hon est, and should you ever be able, pay those cre ditors both principal and interest to the last cent; and shew to the world that you have acted the -tan and r.ot the knave. Lastly. Should you, sometime hence, think '-i entering into a family state, be not in a hur ry ; k*t judgment control fancy. A thorough understanding of the business of the kitchen is •f the greatest importance to any lady: to say vAC least, the lady who is unacquainted with this important accomplishm-.-nt, is continually liabl to imposition by hoi ivants. The sound of the "ridiron to a ... man, is bettor music than j the sound of t ic ! mo. Seek one who is prudentj and discreet, in wTorn there is neatness and good | sense ; such a o is of great price. “Digni y and honour ” in domestic life, “archer cloth ing, and on her tongue is the law of kindness.” !j it mark the reverse : “ i : is bet'er (said the wise prince) to dwell in the corner ot <he house : lop,” or, if vou please, in one end oi the garret, where mother-worth, and tansey, and many use less combustible matters are promiscuously thrown together, “ Mian with a brawling woman! in a wide house,” where all the capacious rooms| are richly garnished with the bes: of furniture. MECHANIC*’ \VJ\ J>, i Speaking of the middle ranks of life, a good. ! writer observes:—There we behold women in : all th«ir glfiry; not a doll to carry silks and jew- j < Is, not a puppet to be dandled by fops, an idol) i for profane adoration; referenced to-day, dis- ! I carded to-morrow,” always jostled out of the 1 1 pi: ce which nature and society would assign her, b sensuality or by contempt; admired but not | ; respited; desired but not esteemed ; ruling by! passion, not utl chon; imparting her weakness,! not her cons - mev, to the sex which she should) exalt, the s tree and mirror of vanity ; we see I her as a wue partaking the caves, and cheering) I (lie anxiety of the husband; dividing the labours) ijhy her domes’ic diligence, spreading cheerful-! ! ness around her; for his sake, sharing the do-j jjeent refinements of the world without being vain | II of them; placing all her pride, all her joy, all ! her happiness in the merited approbation of the i man she loves. As a mother, we find her the I affectionate, the ardent instructress of the cliil-j lldrcn she lias tended from their infancy : training! ! | thorn up to thought and virtue, to meditation and i II benevolence ; addressing them as rational be-j : ings and preparing them to become men and i women in their turn. Mechanics’ daughters ■ make the best wives in die world. From the United States Ga-cite.. | THE CHIMXEV SWEEP AN SO tils DOG. I It is Bulwer, we believe, who allows himself, ! the pleasant anticipation of meeting in another! ! world the only faithful companions he has found) in this, viz;—well-disposed and well-trained j ‘dogs.—We hold to no such heresy, though we) admire the feeling with which that accomplished j i writer enforces his impressions, and have otrenj i thought that if the faithful attendant upon our) i walks —if the dorr, whose love is sometimes pass-, i ing the love of woman, is not “admitted to that) | equal skv,” then must some of the humbler ten.! | i ants of die abode of he faithful and die kind he sent down to give us examples of their accepta-i b!u virtues, in forms less upright, but in disposi-j tions more amiable than our own. A French! writer has done justice to some of the admirable! qualities of the dog; and f shows an innate! ) goodness in he animal, that these same excellen cies are exhibited in every generation without the inspiriting influences of the record upon ■ them. Dogs cannot read printing, but they can read the countenance of their master, often less legible to man than ihe finest type ; and we have j at our command some anecdotes illustrative of! • the abiding affection of the dog, that would be- 1 get for the whole race a kindly feeling in the| heart of every philanthropist, especially of the) ladies —but we repress, for the present,our in-' , clination to publish them. We hope there will) ! ho lime enough, while we live, to narrate them. | all ; hut should there not, honesty will only be j ) the sufferer, as it generally is: meanwhile, let! our simple, unadorned narrative do justice to one who, from his color and his trade, is scarce ly ranked wiih human beings. Coming down Ciiesnut-street a few mornings I since, one of the few in which the sun has been (i visible this season, our attention was attracted to j wards a cluster of people in the middle of the I street. —We hastened towards them with a view II of ascertaining the cause of the convention. li was not until we had made our way towards the centre of the mess, that we could even guess | at the cause. There was no noise, no threat, no 1 s waving backward or forward, as there is during . alight. The whole were silent and looking wistfully at some object in the centre. We soon discovered what it was. A dog of rather more than the middle size, lav stretched out in the midst of the crowd. Shortly afterwards, a little cihmncy sweep kneeled down beside the animal, applied his hand to the left side, withdrew it, lifted up the dog’s head, let it fall, and rising slowly, with a I heavy sigh, exclaimed, “he is dead.” There was a cadence in the tone of the boy 1 that particularly arrested our attention. We 11looked into his face; the tears that had gushed! up into his eye, warm from the fountain of ids heart, had worn furrows on his soot-encrusted cheek, so that had a painter desired to sketch an emblem of grief the sweep boy might have served his purpose with remarkable adaptation. The dog had been killed by the wheel of a 1 carriage passing over his neck, and thesolic;- ‘ tuJc of the sweep had drawn together the ' crowd. A lad struck the dog with his foot, and ob -1 served, “he is good for nothing; he is neither pointer, setter, nor hound. It was most true; the animal did certainly : ! rank with “ curs of a low degree,” and the re ! ■ mark was well nigh disturbing the gravity of the ’ I assembly. But the poor sweep, who had borne ' a few taunts upor himself, with patience, would not tamely hoar Ins dog discredited. “He mav • be good for no hing for you and gentlemen who • jgoa gunning, said the sweep, raising Ins cv es ■ to the person whom ho addressed, “ but ho was • good to me. He has been with me, night and 1 day, these three veal's ; and once ho su\ ed me ’ 'fromdrowning.” This was the true philosophy of the human - heart. We admire and laud tnoso whose p cu ; liar station gives them opportunities of becoming J . benefactors of the human race ;or serving with extraordinary efficacy their graietui coun t trv. But the heart pours its streams of atrcc tion upon those, whether humble or exalted, i Whose favors or services are lavished upon it s self. The heart acknowledges a pride of par rj! ticular and especial attachment, as strong and as »; 1 paramount as is the love «f wealth. The poor [sweep had turned upon himself the whole cur- \ j rent of the dog’s affection, and now that it was j jidried up, he felt how much his heart was to be- { jjcoine a wilderness, and “ lifted up his voice anu , || wept.” j A person present gathered from the crowd a | small sum of money, which he gave to the boy ;jj adding that he should purchase another dog with; the contribution. The boy ook tiie change in to his hand with a bow of humble gratitude, and for a moment a gleam of pleasure beamed in his! eye. He turned die piece of money over with his finger, and paused, as if weighing some im portant question ; at length he stood firm, and i reaching his hands towards the person who gave him the money, he said, “ If I must buy another dog with this money, I would rather not have it. ) For 1 don’t want to hiwe a dog that is not as ; good as that one was; and I’m sure,” continued he, the tear starting from his eye, “ I’m sure 1 j | don’t want to lose another that is as good.” The boy dragged his filthy soot rag over his shoulders —settled his black cap upon his fore ij head, and turning the comer, started the loud and piercing cry that his profession use, in order |to “ prate their whereabouts.” The first notes ; were strong ; but before he had halffinished the customary scream, his voice became tremulous i and broken, and the notes were utterly lost. It was evident the poor fellow was not fit for i his duty that meftming. A kind hearted being in the crowd took the hint. ! “ Let us” said ho, “ pay his master the money j ns a compensation for his morning’s labor, and ) j thus buy for the boy a holiday in which to en tertain his grief.” We saw no more of the sweep—but let those who think lightly of his affections, remember ' that the single lamb of the poor man, which had Main all night in his breasq and had been to him l! as ajchild, was more in the sight of the prophet j | than the countless flock of the rich man, who had a thousand different objects for his aifee tions. When all is swept away, the larger and more numerous the objects, the more is the vanity ) wounded ; the more limited in number and gene .! ral value, the more is the affection blighted. Karl Dudlnj and Ward. —As all our con ) temporaries have noticed the unhappy condition of Earl Dudley, and as the circumstances of his: i case are of a nature to forbid very confident hopes j (I of his recovery ; the motives which have hitherto ) JI res rained us from alluding to the subject are no i ;! longer of any avail. Ic is not to be concealed | )j that his lordship’s eccentricities —of which we j! sometime ago offered several curious and amus ing details —have degenerated iutoac ual men , tul aberration ; and the domestic history of his i Lordship’s life, during the lust three or four weeks,! if we could venture to relate it, would present: I a sketch of singular amusement, if its ultimate! j result were not of so painful a nature. The! following arc a few of the occurences that have) taken place during the period to which we refer, j At a dinner party given immediately after thej alia podrida ball of a month ago, a gentleman I entered his Lordship’s dressing-room about nine) 'o’clock—the dinner not being then served—and! . said, “Lord Dudley, the ladies are furnishing fori : want, and 1 am afraid my wife will have a fi*.”l i “My dear fellow,” said his Lordship, “what can ! Ido, as Lord and Lady Londonderry have not| I arrived.” Mr. look his hat, and walked!! Ito Holderness House. It must be a mistake,” j 1 i said the porter, “for my Lord and Lady dine at j ) Rose Bank.” The gentleman returned, and! | communicated to Lord Dudley the result of his) enquiry. “True,true,” exclaimed he, “I intend ed to have asked them, but forgot it.” On one occasion recently, the Noble Earl in-) vitedthirty persons to dinner, & when the guests I arrived, they found the table laid out for only! 1 four. At another rime he invited six, & a dinn-i er had been prepared for thirty. About six' ; months ago lie dined at the house of Mr. R. ; His Lordship left the table suddenly after dinner, | and it was thought that he had gone home—a I circumstance which surprised no person, as his ’'eccentricities were well known. At about 11 o’clock the gentleman of the house had occa- i * O sion to go into his library, in which a fire had) r | ' been kept, to fetch a book, for the purpose of de-: ciding a wager, and to his surprise, he there! found the Earl asleep in a chair, before the fire.! ! “ Dudley,” said he sharply. The Earl awaken-j iug. stared at him and said. “Come R., I wish i O * • m J you would go home, and the other fellows with ) you. You all know that lam an early man, and : I want to go to bed.” The Noble Lord imagin ' ed that he was in ids own house. I Lord Dudley was very eccentric when in of) jfice, and often as onished his under Secretaries' ij by the directions which he gave; but his des-; patches at that time gave no evidence of mental weakness. — London paper. Jean De Bart. —Who is here that never heard of this brave but rough seaman? When he first took his son, who was not then more than r ten years old, on board his ship, he met a Corsair [ which gave him full employment. Jean Bart 'lj watched his son, and, as he supposed, discovering some traces of fear in him,-be ordered him to be j! bound to the mast, where the balls flew about, the ‘ thickest, and he was obliged to remain t here dur- Ting the whole of the action. Tender mothers :| will certainly nor approve of this desperate mode) v j of infusing courage. Jean Bart even once un-i (j der ook a journey to court, where he certainly! j made a s’range figure. The time he was obiig-; r ! ed to wait in the ante-ebambe appeared long to; D him, he therefore drew out his pipe and bvgan to) I smoke. The guard reminded him that there ivj was improper. “I have accustomed myself to it j i intheservic of my king; it has become habi-j J tual tome. A his majesty I know will no: multiply i 3 !my necessities.” Louis (XIV.) was informed! 1 jihat a man s-ood in the ante-chamber, who, in [defiance of the guard, was smoking tobacco. ’ i“ I’ll lay my life,” said the king, laughing, “it 'j • ■w \ TV* A>> T is Jean de bart. !! 1 Louis received the brave seaman with much kindness. “Only you,” said he, “are allowed to smoke in my presenceand as de Bart spoke to the king in a rough, coarse manner, the lat . Der turned to the sneering courtiers, and said:— 3 i ‘‘His words are not noble, but he has acted noblv r 1 for me. Is there one amongst you,” he con- Jtinucd, after a pause, and with a stern counten j ance, “is there one amongst you who feels him self capable of doing what he has done ?” All | were silent, and cast down their eyes. Behind ; the hero’s back they called him “the bear, i At another opportunity the king addressed .his j naval hero in these words : —“Jean Bart, I have i nominated you to the command of a squadron ’’ “In which your majesty has done very well !” implied de Bart. The courtiers again burst out in loud peals of laughter. “ Peace, my lords,” said Louis, “that is the answer of a man who feels his worth, and his determination to give me immediately new proofs of it.” Once, after a brilliant victory, de Bart sent his son with an account of it to Paris. The king wished to see the youth himself, and ordered him, booted as he was from his journey, to come in- Young Bart made his appearance, big, unac customed to waxed floors, he missed his footing, and slid down ; Louis cried out, and made a mo tion as if to save him; “It is well to be seen,” said the king, “that the Barts are better seamen than chamberlains.” The Princess do Conti also desired to see the hero’s son and on his in troduction, she drew out a flower from Iter bou quet, and requested him to entreat his father to wear that flower in his crown of laurels. In 1G97 Jean Bart, with six ships of war and a frigate, conducted thePrinceme Conii to Poland, and fortunately escaped nineteen ships of the enemy, which were watching for him. “Wc should have been lost, if we had been attacked,” said the prince. “By no means,” replied de Bart, very coolly. “What would you have done?” inquired de Conti. “ I should have blown up the ship, and together with you, have flown into the air. My son had already the order from me, A: only waited iu the powder room the first signal.” The prince shuddered, and forbade such acts of heroism so long as lie was on board tbe ship.— Kotzebue's Anecdotes. gr—————paaga-Wi Commend men f. i' HE examination ol’ the lower Classes in Franklin College will commence on Thursday, 19:h hist, and the final examination or the Senior Class oa the 24th. Candidates lor admission into College will be examined on Saturday the 23th, at which time all who expect to enter the next term are advised, it practica ble, to be present. On Sunday the Commencement i Sermon. On Monday the 3Uth, the Trustees will meet, Tuesday 31st, the exhibition of the Junior Class, and i on Wednesday the Ist August, the Annual Commence 'meat. The oration before the Demosthenian and Phi . Kappa Societies, will be delivered on Thursday. ASBURY HULL, Secretary. ! Athens, July 6 4t 8 OiSice ulttgusta Insurance mud MMidikUig Ajompany* JULY 3, 1532. ' jS 'HE Board of Directors have This Day declared a S_ Dividend ol 4 per cent, out ol the profits ot the business ol the Company lor the last six months, winch ji will be paid un demand to the Stockholder or their le | gal representatives. By order ol the Board, j ROBERT WALTON Cashier. | July 10 7 I " JDIa. WiloiLlADi SAVAiHi, | ii fk: OULD respectably iniorm the citizens of Au- I w w gustu and its vicinity, that under the auspices ! ot two ot ins friends, he has been enabled to erect a j ‘ HOSPITAL, on a high, airy, and healthy situation,! j|eight hundred yards from Broad-street, with every ue-| jlcessaryfor the accommodation ot such as may iavourj j! him with their patronage ; and tie is determined to makej • j every tllbrt to adord relief und comlort to all who may •| be placed under his care, on the most reasonable terms, j lie feels confident of snlficient patronage. June 29 4m 4 ! Kali’s ofStorage A- Commissions, EVIfeED and adopted unanimously by the Ware ik & House Keepers in the City ot Augusta, July 2J, 1832 : ) Bale Colton 25 cts. per Ist mo. & 121-2 each mo. after. | Bbls. &Qr. Casks, 25 “ “ “de 12 1-2 “ “ “ l Hogsheads (large} 75 “ “ “ A. 3i 1-2 “ “ “ do. (small; 50 “ “ “ de 25 “ “ “ ' Pipes • - 50 ““ “ A25 “ “ “ j! Tierces - -37 1-2“ “A id 3-4 “ “ “ i! Trunks - -37 1.2“ “de 18 3-4 “ “ “ ,i Kegs shot or Lead 37 1-2 “ “ de 18 3-4 “ “ “ j do Nails 25 ““de 1* 1-2 “ “ “ !'Colton bagging pr. ps. 12 1-2 “ de t> 1-4 “ “ “ ■ Coils Rope 12 12 “ “ & G 1-4 “ “ “ ) : Hides . -8 ““ de 4 “ “ “ ! Bacon per piece 2 ““ de 1 “ “ “ Chairs - - 12 1-2 “ “ de 6 1-4 “ “ “ li Bed Steads 50 “ “ de 25 “ “ “ .■! Carriages (4 wheel 2$ “ “ de 1.00 “ “ “ do. (2 do ; 1 ““de 50 “ “ “ I. Jersey de others wagons $1 “ de 50 “ “ “ , Crates (large) 75 cts. “ “ de 37 1-2 “ “ “ J do. small 50 “ “ de 25 “ “ “ Stills - - 50 “ “ &. 25 “ “ “ Anvils - - 12 1-2 ““ de 6 1-4 “ “ , Castings pr piece 4 “ “ de 2 “ “ “ Iron per bar 5 “ “ de 2 1-2 “ “ “ i) All small packages - - 12 1-2 cents f Boxes and Bales Merchandize, 25, 50, 75 and sl, ac )j cord,ng to size. Reweighing Cotton 121-2 cents per bale, and if Re- Ij stored the owner is subjected to extra storage. Cotton sold by Factors not subject to storage until tbe expiration of 15 days, i Commissions tor selling Cotton 50 cents per bale do “ Acceptances 2 1-2 per cent, do “ Advancing money j 2 j 2 cent> m all cases do “ Receiving and forwarding goods 50 per cent on me first month’s storage, do. “ Purchases 2 1-2 per cent. All Postages chargeable. All Storages Due at the timo of the delivery of the ! article. July 3 5 JOHN P. SEI ZE, Hus again received from New-York, a choice assort ment of STuIPL/E nil\' GOODS, AND EXPECTING SOON TO RECEIVE ADDITIONAi- SUPPLIES, ) NOW ON THE WAT I I»5 1-4 " Super Irish Sheetings, approved style, j Gentlemen’s Blue, Olive and Brown Camblcts for sum i liter wear. : Gentlemen’s Cotton mixt, do. do. do. j Superior bleach cotton Shirtings, put up as Linen, : L mdscape Bead Bags, rich patterns, 1 1 Blue, slate, lilac, pink and black Ginghams, ! Superior black watered Belt Ribbons, widest hind, Palm Leaf and dark feather Fans, in great variety, Bobbiuett quilling Laces and insertmgs, j Assorted Blond Gauze Shawls, Black, blue, black and green Italian Sewing Silks, i Green and white florence Silks, Black Hollands, and Salisa Linen, for Linings, i Lowell mixt Cottons do N. Orleans 'fancy brown Shirt ings, • Irish, French and English brown Drills, all prices, Superfine double backed, colored Marseilles Vestings, French manufacture and durable color?, Bovs’ Pearl Buttons. A*'. &~n !? MayW T! PRACTICAL BOOK KEEPIXtJf ami Priiinaiiship. R. CARPENTIER respectfully informs the citi -1 Vl zers of Augusta, that he will commence giving instructions in the above sciences, aided by able assis- I tanccs, as soon as suitable rooms are obtained. WANTED, lar£c Rooms in the vi cinity ofthe Post-OtFice, for the above business. Communicated from Charleston. Having witnessed the improvement of a large number j of pupils in Penmanship, to whom Mr. Carpentier uas i rcccmly given instruction in tins city, it gives us great j ; pleasure to iniorm the public,that the system ot Penman- ! I ship taught by him is by far the best us well as the most i expeditious that we have ever known. A. S. Willing ton. Editor of 'he Courier. Allston Gisus, Pastor of St. Philip’s Church. Charles Cotes, Principal of the Class cal Academy. ! Samuel W. Doggett, Principal of the Y ouug Ladies \ Seminary. Francis Y. Porcher, M. D. M. Holbrook, M. D. C. R. Brewster, Teacher. George Warren Cross, Joseph Leland, S. Babcock, Joseph A. Winthrop, Geo. Henry, M. Roddy. Communicated from a Committee of gentlemen in Charleston. We the subscribers, having received instruction from Mr. Carpentier in the science ot Book-Keeping, do hereby express the high satisfaction with which we have been successfully conducted through the most ob scure intricacies of that all important branch ot com mercial education; which so many tail to understand. ; though aided by the most common approved system oi managing accounts. The system of Book-Keeping taught by Mr. Carpen tier obviates, however, every difficulty in that science, and renders it what it always should be made, plain and practical; and must, when it becomes known, be ad mired for its unrivalled superiority over all the ordinary systems of Book-Keeping extant; and in a word, be corae a substitute for every other. We therefore, most | gladly recommend Mr. Carpentier to the entire confi dence and most liberal patronage ot the community. Signed iu behalf of the-Class: Allston Gibbs, Pastor of Bt. Philip’s Church. J. A. Pringle, J. M. Stocker, A. Campbell, Thomas Rowan, Win. 11. Cole, L. B. Oakes. Communicated from Bishop England. Not having had the opportunity of personally witness ing Mr. Carpentier’s pupils during the term ot their in struction ; but having seen specimens which convinced me ofthe rapid and great improvement ot some whom I know, and having opportunities of knowing the senti ments of others whose judgment I respect, I have no j hesitation in recommending that gentleman as avaluable instructor. JOHN, Bishop of Charleston. July 13 m 8 LIST OF LETTERS, Remaining in the POST-OFFICE at Appling, Georgia, on the 30th of June, 1832. A Win McGar Robert Allen Win Murray ( B Mr McGahah ‘ N M Benton Mr Musick, or Adm’r. of ! Thomas Burnside Elizabeth Skies ! Micajah Bond, 3 Jesse Morris, sen’r. John Y Bayliss Robert McDonald C N | Clerk Superior Court, 8 Mrs Sarah Neal ! Thomas M Calhoun O i Wm P Carter Samuel Overbes I Inferior Court P ; Wm Cook Leonard Peak ) D Marshall Pitmaa J James Dickson Mylen Peak i Patrick Dougherty R t Miss Elizabeth Dougherty, 211 Reynolds John Dagnal Abner P RobcrtedH F Ezekiel Reed Arthur Foster Isaac Ramsey Aquilla Flint, 8 & Jane Flint Mile Shlebloots G Mary Smith Horatio Gartreli- James Shaws H Joshua Stanford Zebar Hunt T J John B Tindall Wm. Jarrmans Sarah E Tracy K W Win Kibbe Henry W ilkins L John Whittaker James Larapkin, 4 Y John Lambert Wm Young M Z Daniel Marshall Wm. Zachry Wm Merewether L. FLEMING, P. M. July 6 3t F 6 A LIST OF LETTERS” \ Remaining in the POST OFFICE, at Wayne?borough, Georgia, July Ist. 1832. A • L John Allman, sen’r. Ezekiel Lester Samuel Andrews Lewis Lovell Elijah Attaway John London B A M Livingston Richard Byne, James Lewis, Esq. William Bennett, Esq. John Lambert Elij ah Byne, Esq. Edmond W Lumpkin i Lewis Bryant M Captain Buck Mrs Hannah Milton Capt. Isaac Bush Turner B Moore Waid Brown Capt. Jeremiah Matthews Rev. Thos. C. Benning Jordan McCollum Elijah Boyd Zelpha McCrone Benjamin Boyd Henry McNorel Robert E. Butler P C Mrs Rebekah Polhill Hon. Justices of the Infcri- Lewis F Powell, 2 or Court, Burke county Nancy Powell Widow Coward John Patterson John Crane, jun’r. McCullen Pollock John Crozier Abraham Proctor Col. W. R. Caldwell R Thomas Crozier Mary Rease Rev. Lawson Clinton S D Andrew Scott William Davis, Esq. John Sandelord Arthur Davis Benjamin Y Saxton Zachariah Daniel T Robert Dixon Robert Taylor Martin M. Dye Dr Jas. W Taylor E Joseph D Thomas, Esq. Drewry Elliott Gen. David Taylor Mrs Caroline G Edwards John Tabb . Charles Ellis John Tipton F U F Fryer Henry Y Utley Joel L Forth Henry Utley G V i Mr Goodwin Jeremiah Vinson Minch Gray Y\ Hannah Grumbles Thomas P Walker j George Grumbles Maj. A Walker, 2 j William Gilstrap E Williams, Esq. II Moses Walker, jun’r. ! Carlos Hart Miss Sarah Williams Miss Emily Hacher Seaborn Weathers Rigdon Heath James Williams 'Josiah Holton William Wallace J ' Mrs Jano Williams I Moses Johnson ! James Jones, Esq. ELBERT LEWIS, P M j July 3 3t t 5 j Wanted at this Office, j f two or three APPRENTICES; applicjdMM I to V nrrr* 9 r I j. p. sbtze, By late arrivals from Neir-\ork, per ships Statira, Queen Mob, and Schr. Oregon, at Savannah, HAS JUST RECEIVED THE FOLLOWING DESIRABLE OOOMIS : Which are offered to his friends and customers on h:a usual low terms, viz : LONDON bleached Sheetings, aneV article 10 4 do do do i ti-4 do Flemish do I 20 doz. extra super Ladies white cotton HosO i 0 bides very superior brown Sheeting i 20 ps. super, assorted soft Jinish Irish Linens ! 10 ps. 0.4 cotton Bed Ticks ' 18 ps. rich French Ginghams assorted colors ■ 20 ps. very superior new style Seersucker do |ls ps. 6-4 do Nainsook Muslins | 20 ps. 6-4 super soft finished Cotton Cambrics : Painted and plain hord’d linen cambric Hdkfs. Long Lawns and super linen Cambric, assorted qua'/ ties Dark green Gros de Naple and green Lustring > 20 ps. rich chintz Prints splendid new patterns 120 Dover end other low priced Callages I Blue, white and Musqueto Netting ! Guard Ribbon and white silk Braids ■ Cap Gauze Ribbons, all colors j Cut Giass Beads, assorted do I do. Gold do. do. I Super patent gilt edge Pins, large and small sizes French fancy SSilk Umbrellas and Parasols, assorted Second mourning Bead Bags Rich blond gauze Veils and black Italian Hdkfs. 3 ps. very superior black Mateone Lustrings Black Swiss Lustre and rich chintz bordered Hdkfs. 50 ps. long yellow Nankeens, mame chop, very fine and best vi color White and black Sulician Linens for linings 1 Box mechanics stitched Horse-skin Glove®, assorted tspattlelield Pongee silk Handkerchiefs 100 Large corded Skirts, 4b cords Birds-eye Diapers, very fine, and Cases of bleached cotton Shirtings of all prices. Together with previous Shipments and others daily expected, will make his assortment ex tensive and as complete as any in the city, and which will be sold as cheap. Augusta, June 22, 1832. 3 H. PARSONS, ' Has lately received a supply of Boston $ N, York ntadf. PIANO FORTE!*, Comprising a variety of qualities from 150 to 400 Dollars eacii. They are ollcrcd on very accommodat ing terms. June 26 3 In the Superior Court of Scriren County , OCTOBER TERM, 1831. Present, the Honorable William W. Holt, Judge* RULE Nlbl.— Foreclosure f a Mortgage. H PON the petition of John S. Rieves, stating that *l. he is possessed in his own right of a Deed of Mortgage, made and executed by Reuben Wilkinson, deceased, in his life time, to wit:—on the third day of August, eighteen hundred and twenty, bearing date on that day, whereby he mortgaged to one Robert M. Wil liamson, jun’r. Guardian of Richard W. and John S. Rieves, to secure the payment of his, (the said Reuben’s) promissory Note, dated on the day and year aforesaid, and payable on ths first day of January 1826, to the said Robert M. Guardian as aforesaid, for fifteen hundred dollars and 74 cents, with interest from date thereof— all those five several Tracts of Land, supposed to ad. join each other and form one body, containing twelve hundred seventy-five and a half acres, lying on Savannah River, in the fork of Brier Creek, in Scriven County, and known as the Lands lately owned by John Conyers, and bounded at the time of Mortgaging by lands of the estate of Seth and Josiah Daniels, Thomas Brannen and other Lands of the said Reuben Wilkinson And that the principal and interest is wholly due and unpaid on said note and mortgage, and praying the foreclosure of the Equity of Redemption in and to the mortgaged premises.—lt is therefore on motion, Ordered, That ths heirs and representatives of the said Reuben Wilkinson, deceased, or those persons who may be interested, do pay into this Court within twelve months from the date hereof the principal and interest due on said note and mortgage, or that the Equity of Redemption in and to the said mortgaged premises will be henceforth forever fore, closed, and such other proceedings had thereon as by statute are in such cases provided.— And it is further ordered. That a copy of this Rule be published in one of the Gazettes of the city of Augusta, once a month, uil. til the time ordered for the payment of said money into Court. A true extract taken from the Minutes. SEABORN GOODALL, Clerk. December 21, 1831. Iml2m 55 THOMAS I. WRAY, DRUGGIST. Together with a very general assortment, has just rev, ceived the following articles of warranted purity; which are offered for sale on the most reasonable terms. iERATUS, Patent Barley, Do. Groats, Green Ginger, Ground do. pure. Jujube Paste in sheets. Magnesia Lozenges, Bone set do. Liquorice do. called Pontrefac Caies, Hoarhound do. Tamarinds, Preston Salts, Colgatee’ superior Starch, Thermometers, Hydrometers, S accharemete rs, Red and black Ink, Chloride of Lime, Chloric -Ether, Sylvester’s Soluble Ink Powder, far producing instantaneous, durable black Ink. June 19 1 Halford’s Pearl Water, FOR THE COMPLEXION. *HIS fashionable lotion is entirely free from any dd- Si leterious ingredient, and is so innocent that fha most delicate lady or child may use it with perfect safety. It eradicates, freckles, pimples, spots, sunburns, tans, redness, all cutaneous eruptions, and effectually render® the skin white and blooming. Its cooling and fragrant properties add to the pleasures of the toilet and comforts of the nursery. Gentlemen whose faces are irritated by the operation of shaving, will find Halford’s Pearl Water to possess uncommon soothing and healing qualities.— Travellers exposed to changes of weather, causing a rough and harsh skin, will find it to possess balsamic powers of surprising energies. The celebrated Brum me! well known in the British train of rank and fashion, selected this article for his favorite Cosmetic, and the Increasing patronage of the public fully demonstrates it® utility. Prepared from the original receipt by G. Bedford, chemist, London- —And for sale bv TURPIN * B*ANTIGNACj Agwftt •eceieber^f? I