Newspaper Page Text
______ : M■ I 1 II I "' Ml | IT TT II 11. I .mi - -
BY P. C. GHEII. AUGUST* f, («toO TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 93. 1831. V3L. MI. NO. 98.
*gjr7 -jr mmi *umvnc mn-» ■mpacr-:* <■■■■«■■—
THE C O \Sil T UTIO A A IA\T.
Published every Tuesdsiy stud Friday.
IN MACINTOSH STREET,
Third door from the north-west corner of Broad.Streel.
Sates of LAND, by Administrators, Executors, or Guardians, arc
required, by law, to he held on the first Tuesday in the month,
between the hours of ten in the forenoon and three in the after
noon, at the Court-House in which the property is situate. — No
nce as these sates must he given in a public Gazette SIXTY
DAYS previous to the day of sale.
Sales of NEGROES must he at public auction, on the firstTues*
day of the month, between the usual hours of sate, at the place
of public sates in the county where the tetters Testamentary, n r
•Administration or Guardianship, may have been granted, hrr-t
‘giving SIXTY DAYS notice thereof, in one of thepublicGa
e.ettes of this Slate, anti at the d<tor of the Court House, where
•torch sales nre to be held.
Ivdlirc for the sale of Personal Property must be given in like man
u«r, FORTY days previous to the day of sale.
Notice to the Debtors and Creditors of an Estate must be published
for FORTY DAYS.
Notice that application will he made to the Co„,t of Ordinary for
leave to sell LAND, must be published for FOUR MON I IIS,
Notice for leave to sell NEGROES, must be published for FOUR
M< INDUS, before any order absolute shall be made by th£ Court.
From the New- Yurk Christian Advertiser and Journal ,
es A upast 31, 1832.
<lnoklio!ii« of the Board of UcaUlj,
In relation to Malignant Cholera, with the answers of
the Special Medical Council; together with a lie.
port upon the causes of the cessation of Cholera at
Bellevue.
The Special Medical Council, to whom was
referred the communication of your honorable
board, proposing certain queries, to which an
answer was requested, bey leave to report the
following answers :
Question I.—Whether the malignant cholera,
as it now exists in the city of New. York, can
<t be prevented by sanitary or quarantine regula
tions ?
From the limited period, during which we •
have had an opportunity of acquiring from our 1
own observation, a know ledge ol the laws which
govern the malignant cholera, we are reluctant
to express an opinion upon this subject. Hut
inasmuch as that duty is enjoined upon us, we
beg leave to say, that many statements, appar
ently entitle* 1 to credit, have been made, which
go to show that the disease is transmissable
from one place to another, by persons affected
ik with it. Until these facts can he thoroughly
investigat'd, the council are unwilling to put
forth an opinion winch would he at variance
with the great, weight of medical authority on
the subject; at the same time, we feel bound to
■declare our conviction, that no quarantine re- :
gulations hitherto employed or known to us j
■have been, or, we fear, are likely to be eiiectu- j
fti in excluding the malignam cholera from any j
populous town or village on this continent.
Question 2. —When it comes, what are the
best means to mitigate its malignancy I
*| . On the part of the authorities, the strictest
attention should be given to the removal of all
the common causes o( disease ; all local sources
of impure exhalations, such as privies, sinks,
i sewers, pools of waier, should be cleansed ;
the dwellings of the poor should be thoroughly
cleansed and whitewashed : they should be pre
sented from congregating in large numbers;
• ami crowded houses should be emptied, and the
inhabitants placed in clean and airy situations ;
the sick should at once be removed to large and
airy hospitals.
On the part of private individuals, the mode
of life should be strictly temperate, and no ex
cess should bo indulged in.
The- food should be nutritious, simple, and
! easy of digestion, and in sufficient quantities to
| preserve a healthful vigor ; any article of diet
that is known to he easily susceptible of fer
mentation in the stomach or bowels, should be
scrupulously avoided : so readily is the diges
live process disturbed during the epidemic pre
valence of malignant cholera, that, with us. no
fruits, or any other than simple farinaceous ve
getables can be eaten with safety.
The destructive tendency of the disease may
be farther mitigated by the early discovery and
judicious treatment of such symptoms as are
known to precede it, and give warning of its
approach. These vary in degree, but all e
vince more or less disorder in the digestive or
gans. The milder forms of these premonitory
symptoms are merely an uneasiness or pain in
the bowels, accompanied sometimes with slight
cramps, or dizziness ; but a looseness of the 1
bowels, or diarrhoea, is by far more common,
v and an almost invariable precursor of the dis
ease itself. It has been found with us, that this
diarrhtea is successfully treated by purgatives,
and especially by calomel ; and that it cannot
bp neglected without imminent danger—if ne
glected, the cholera is its usual sequel.
Question 3. —When it comes, what are the
; best means to protect life against its attacks 7
The disease is characterized by vomiting and
purging of a fluid, almost colorless and inodor
ous, together with cramps or spasms of the ex
tremities—the strength of the patient is rapidly
exhausted —a failure of the natural heat of the
body, and of the circulation of blood soon oc
: curs, constituting the dangerous stage of col.
\ lapse. A striking feature in the character of
| this disease, is a complete suspension of many
of the secretions, especially of bile and urine.
It is in the first place important to allay the
? vomiting and spasms of the stomach. If the
! subject be of a constitution not enfeebled by pre
t • vioiis disease, or habitual intemperance, and the
pulse is in a condition to admit of it, general
blood-letting is found to mitigate the spasms, and
render the system more susceptiole to the ac
tion of the grand remedy, mercury. A large
dose of calomel, alone, or combined with two
grains of opium, if the cramps bo distressing.
with the r‘ ■ • ' ' '
the region of the stomach; ••eltcvcs
and. especially after uL-d-iMtaig, sometimes
arrests the disease. Kiiervescmg draughts,
small of iee cnewed and svt allowed, or
minute doses of tincture of.camphor quiet the
stomach. The lore ol cuiomji shou.-J oe re
peated at intervals of one, two, or throe hours,
until the colorless evacuanonc assume a dm u oi
bilious hue. In the interim, (if the poise be
come very feeble, or the extremums co y, wi ii
a sunken aspect of the eye.) fiictionsw.th ru
befacients should ho employed to allay the
cramps, and moans of preserving the neat of
the extremities should be employer, for ’"'h-ch
purpose, bags of hot sand answer Hie best pur
pose. dry heat being found preferable to its com
bination* with moisture. If the skin be w
ed with copious clammy perspiral.mi, ?' ‘
dered chalk should be well rubbed over Me ro
i dy. If the pulse become feeble, or the extrem
ities cold, indicating the approach of the state
of collapse, much benefit ffias been derived from
rubbing the whole body, especially the extrem
ities with an ointment composed ol (wo parts
of strong mercurial ointment with one of finely
powdered camphor, and the same quantity of
cayenne popper.
The internal use of calomel is combined with
this external medication, and when the mouth
becomes sore, or the discharges bilious from the
operatic!i of mercury, the patient is compara
tively safe. Hot injections of brandy and wa
ter in large quantities and frequently repeated,
are also important means of preventing the col
lapse.
This active treatment frequently restores the
circulation and the lost heat o( the body, and
reaction follows. Frequently, but most rarely
under the mercurial treatment, secondary fever
succeeds. This is characterized by determina
tions of blood to some important organ, as the
brain, the lungs, or the liver, and is successful
ly treated by bleeding, genera! or local, accord
ing to the indications of the case, by purgatives
and small doses of nauseating medicines.
Question -1. —What regulations, especially ia
warm climates, should be adopted in relation to
the dead ?
In general, putrefaction occurs more slowly
after death from this than from other diseases.
There need therefore be no precipitation in the
burial of the dead, and sufficient time may safe
ly intervene to make the death unquestionable.
The apartments of the dead should be purified
bv the extraction of chiorne gas, hut more es
peciully by thorough ventilation, and the floors
I should be washed with ley.
J The corpse should be covered with a cloth
' wet with a solution of chloride ol" lime.
Alex. 11. Stevens, President.
Jos. Bavley,
-W. .!. M’Njsven,
Jno. Neilson,
t7fLREi?T Smith,
H. M’Lean,
R. K. Hoffman,
Anthony L. Anderson.
report.
That the medical officers ofthe Bellevue esta
blishment, in all its departments," have taken the
most efficacious measures, as well as most (brtti
i note in their results, for enforcing among all the j
i pcrs iis under their charge, an undeviating at
j tent ion to their recommendation so earnestly on
; joined by the special medical council, of making
known, ntiho first onset, the forewarning symp
toms of cholera, and of obtaining immediate
medical assistance. It is to the good judgment
and laudable assiduity of the indefatigable su
perintendent, and those medical officers, m car
rying the injunctions of the council into elfect, |
that vour committee attribute, in part, the imp- I
py chan ;e widen lias taken place.
No longer confiding to the inmates of the Bel
levue establishment the earn of reporting their
own illness, the medical officers themselves go
around daily, and question every person inclivi- j
dually, and whenever diarrhoea is detected, med- |
ical treatment is ordered on the spot. From
twenty to thirty such cases are prescribed for
every day. It is the impression of the officers j
that many of those cases, if neglected, would still j
pass into malignant cholera.
The same medical police isobsorved on Black- ;
well’s island, and the penitentiary prisoners re- |
siding there are daily paraded, quest oned, ex- j
amined, and inspected; and if any are found to
present the premonitory symptoms,they receive
instant, medical treatment. Will it he believed
that all this vigilance, which has only their own
safetv for its object, requires to be supported by
a degree of constraint ?
Coincident with the strict enforcement of this
system the disease has been seen to decline, and
at last to cease.
We are of opinion that one of the causes of
its decline may also be found in the elfect of
habitude, the inmates ofthat establishment being
in the slate of acclimated persons.
In the building called the fever hospital, con
taining at present one hundred and fifty-two pa
tients, the resident physician proscribes for s ; x
or seven daiiv, who are laboring under bowel
complaints; and the physicians in the alms house
for eight or ten, among a population of six hun
dred, ah hough the greater portion oi" those pre
disposed to disease ol the bowels have been al
ready carried off by the epidemic.
It appears inconceivable that poisons should
be so negligent of their own welfare, as to slight
this warning diarrhtea, although they have been
so often io!d that it is the first stage of the lata!
cholera. Something like an explanation of it
may be found in the fact, that looseness of the
bowels is the endemic, disease of the Bellevue es
tablishment, as it is of all places where the in
mates are much confined, and always fed with
the same food. A slight looseness, giving ro
pain, and to which they are accustomed, gives
uoalarm. Thus the first stage passes over un
noticed, and the stage of collapse has been be
fore the distemper has been recognized. To this
circsmstance we must, in part, ascribe its fatali
ty at the commencement. An irregular state of
the bowels is also a disease that frequently car
ries off old and infirm people. It is in some sort
natural to them, so that when the poison of the
malignant cholera is superadded, it is not sur
prising that they should sink rapidly.
The entire cessation of the disease at Bellevue,
without the cause having been van'-hod or cv
: j n ... s . fthes me a
I railv i. i . : * , icl like man
;n t and m of’-. hands h: - '.■ so s.iocessfd
' when applied in timtq is highly encov.rar'rm.
The whole munbek of the inhabitant: of the
| Bellevue establishment is fourteen I*.and red r.or-
SODS :
i Ml whid is respeqtl lj admitted bv your
i committee.
W. J, Macneven,
T Ib.V V,
V' ri m-v L. -vnderc--a
Whereas, the board • health de an It a duly
to put their icilow citizms n jv-s.se ■.■gian ofc-vcrv
information within l i en newer that relates to the
pestilenceofmalignani cholera which stilt aluicts
us :—t herefore resol veil, mat the special medical
council be, and they are in «• by requested to an
swer fully and in detail, and in writing, (Nr the
purpose of publication, the I* a • .mg question:—
Qttc-lion I. —Are th.i 'in ui a and with
out any exceptions, premonitory Os warning
symptoms of the approach or dangei* of malign
ant cholera ? If there be exceptions, what pro
portion do such exceptions bear to a given num.
her ?
Question 2.-—What are the different premoni
tory or warning symptons of the approach or
danger of malignant cholera ; and what symp
toms are the most marked and Usual? Specify
such symptoms in the ordinary common terms,
as well as in terms which are technical or pro
fesslonal.
Question 3.—ls during the pfettlorlltofy or
warning stage of malignant cholera, a physician
acquainted with its action uponthehuman frame,
be called to the patient, what proportion of a
given number of persons of ordinary constitU
tions can, by known and certain medical means,
| be secured against death by the threatened at
; tack ?
i Question 4.-~What proportion of cases oftte
j glected diarrhoea have terminated in malignant
cholera'during the present season? And what
: proportion of those were intemperate?
i Question- o. —What measures, in the judg
-1 ment of the special medical council, are the best
' to guard against, the attack of malignant chole
ra ? Specify them especially asrelastes to diet,
temperance, clothing, sleeping, labor, exercise,
exposure, and the like, to the. end that the same
may be laid before our fellow citizens, for their
government, and the safety of themselves and
families.
Question 6. —What measures, in the jifdg
j ment of the special medical council, ought to be
| taken by our fellow citizens, who are absent
; from their homes, to purify and render healthy
I their dwellings before their families return?
fust hj.-— lf the whole body of the people could
be swayed by a great moral principle, and scru
pulously and rigidly observe all the means of
protecting life, can malignant cholera, like the
small pox, ln r human means, of course directed
bv Providence, be driven from our city ?
The board of health is aware of the delicacy
and difficulty involved in their last question.
The special medical council have had but a short
period to watch the movements or to examine
the natureof this hitherto, with us, unknown
disease. The board of health therefore submits,
to their special medical council, the question,
but leaves it entirely to them, how far they can,
ai this time, discreetly return an answer thereto,
f To the <|uestions proposed by the board of
health, the special medical council have the hon
or to reply:—
Answer to question I.—There are almost uni.
versaliy symptoms premonitory of the attack of
cholera. The number of exceptions is excee
dingly small. The actual proportion the excep
tions bear to the whole number cannot be ascer
tained ; but it. is probable that in forty-nine ca
i ses out of fifty some premonitory symptoms do
joccli r.
Ans rer to question 2.—The most marked and,
universal of the symptoms premonitory of the
approach of cholera, is diarrhoea, or a loose and
relaxed state of the bowels, attended with fre
i quent loose or watery discharges. These dis
| charges are of an unhealthy charac
tsr, as of a black color, or like dirty water,
j when they involve a disordered state of the stom
! ach and liver, as well as the bowels, or they
i may arise from simple irritation or increase of
j the natural action of the bowels. In the latter
j cam the discharges are merely thin or liquid,
j but otherwise of a healthy character. The first
lis the severest form of the two. In other cases
the premonition consists merely of slight pain
or uneasiness of the bowels, with discharges of
wind.
Answer to question 3.—ls proper medical ad
vice were taken, and judicious application of
medicine made upon the first slight appearances
of disorder of the stomach and bowels, ninety,
nine persons in a hundred, of temperate habits
, and ordinary good constitutions, would bo safe
, i from the attack of malignant cholera. That is
to sav, the number of deaths from cholera, if the
disease were uniformly prescribed for in the
stage of diarrhoea, would be exceedingly small.
Answer to question 4.—A very large proper
tion. Among the intemperate the proportion is
believed to have been the greatest.
Answer to question- s.—The following mea
sures or rules appear to your council, to be the
most important to be observed in order to pre
vail ;>.n attack of cholera.
In regard to diet. —The diet should be simple,
and should consist of food which is both nutri
tions and easy of digestion. In quantity there
should be no excess ; in quality, it should be that
which gives the greatest strength, with the least
fatigue to the digestive organs. It is also im
portant to be remarked, that too great abstinence
is as dangerous as any form of excess; and that
the diet should bo better and not mure sparing
than usual.
The most nutritious and digested articles, are
beef, mutton, or chickens, plainly cooked; eggs
1 slightly cooked, bread made of vvheaten flour,
mealy potatoes and rice. We fear that this list
could not be much extended without introducing
articles that would be found less wholesome.
Among articles wholesome m any common
season, but found to predispose to attacks of
cholera in this city, are all common green gar
den vegetables and fruits. There can scarcely
a vegetable be named, that will not be found a
mong those which have been reported to your
! honorable board as having been the cause of
i cholera. Beans, peas, peaches, whortleberries,
' raspbe.i i .os, cucumbers, cabbage, puddings con.
■ minim" raisins, and pies made of fruit have been
| <■;; edfi J as dm exetmg cause of cholera, in a
| greater or less number of cases.
f" regard to temperance, we can onl y say that
| the siigh 'St excess at this time, either in eating
• or !■••• •= • ing. a"ocars, from much experience, to
. ! be " t-ended with great danger.
! ; >i' e’mhin.- should be warm ;it should be so
■ reg”lair'd as to prevent the danger of a chill,
1 end the «ame tim®, not to exhaust the system
! j • v, 'p >'vr 'n-’-Vuir?tion. The covering should
• i t.,. pr*.*mu ! ariv warm about the bowels, and flan.
■ ■ nt'i worn next 'be skin.
; ■ The re«rnia r (tours of sleep should be, as far as
5 i practicable, observed; and the body should by nr
i j means be exposed, during sleep, to a draught o
• j night air.
Labor and exercise should be moderate ; am
‘ ! taken, r-. far as possible, neither in the heat o
i :1m di run in tin u.ght air—nor should an;
r fatiguing or exhausting labor be perlormed wnen
- the stomach is empty.
A state of debility, a using either from excess
. or inattention, want of rest or anxiety, is espe
cially prone to invite an attack ol this disease.
. It is therefore ia the highest degree important,
r that all nurses or other persons, who watch with
. or attend the sick, especially if at houses where the
r disease has occurred, should guard themselves
, against this unavoidable exposure, by not suffer
. ing their stomachs to become empty, and their
strength to be thus exhausted. It is also ot course
■ evident, that grief, anxiety and all depressing
I passions, must operate upon the empty and
, exhausted system with redoubled force.
i In regard to intemperance, it is now univer
. sally known, that cholera has a most peculiar
, affinity for the system of a drunkard; so much so,
that it is a very rare thing for the intemperate to
escape—generally speaking, it is almost as rare
. for the temperate and uniformity prudent to be
attacked.
Answer lo question 6i—The measures neces
sary to be taken by those returning to houses
that have been for some time closed, are few and
simple.
Let every door and window be thrown open,
and kept open through the day. Let small fires
be tticade in all rooms that are to lie occupied at
i night. Let all wood work be thoroughly scour
j od, and wails whitewashed. In three days it
i Will be safe to occupy the house, if it be in a heal
j thy situation, if the house be old or dirty, or in
| a sickly neighborhood, or if there have been
sickness or death in it, previous lousing the
above precaution, let it be filled with ciflorine
gas, or frequently sprinkled \. itii the disnifhclin ?
solutions which are every where to be ha ci. Let
this process be continued for three days, the
house being closed if chlorine be used, and the
floors sprinkled several imas daily if line liquids
be used.
Let all psivies and out houses be also most
carefully cleansed and purified, either with lime,
chloride of lime, or strong ley.
With the use of these precau'ions your coun
cil believe there is no danger ia occupying any
house, however long it may have been closed.
Answer lo question 7.—The grand result em
braced in this question, involves, we fear, sever
al impossibilities, for the mass as mankind, arc,
and there is great reason to fear ever will be,
insensible to the operation of great moral princi
ples.
As the attacks of cholera are brought on, for
the most part, by incurable follies, and impru
dence, we despair of expelling it from oar city,
while the present predisposition to that disease
exists.
Still there is no reason to doubt, ■ hat among
the decent, and orderly portion of thocornir unity,
an exemption from an attack of cholera may ho
obtained in a great degree, by n strict and pru
dent attention to the rules above laid down.
, Alex. IT. Stevens, President.
Jos. Bavley.
Jxo. Neilsox,
Gilbert Smi . ,
Wm. J as. M’Neven,
IT. M’Lean,
Richard K. Hoffman,
Anthony L. Anderson.
■ ffl EBIiDALCOLIiEGE
OF THE STATE OF SOUTH.VA ROLINA.
I'RIE LECTURES in this Institution, will begin un
the second Monday in November next, and
close on the first Saturday of March following.
Anatomy —J. Edwards Holbrook, M. D.
Demonstrator of Anatomy —Jno. Bellinger, M. D.
• Surgem/ —John Wagner, M. D.
Institutes and Tract ce of Medicine —S. lliixsi Djck
son, M. JJ. *
Chemistry —Edmund Ravf.nkl, M. B.
' Materia itedica —-Henry ii. Frost, M. I).
Obstetrics —Thomas G. Prioleau, M. D.
Physiology —James Moultrie, Jr. M. D.
JAMES MOULTRIE, Jr. M. D. Doan.
The Editors of Newspapers in North-Carolina, Geor
gia, Alabama, Florida, and elsewhere, wno published
the above last year, are requested lo do so this, and i -r.
ward their accounts as above.
July 2 eovvfiw f-
The iXorf* Aciacricaai IW* sam •
NO. 84— JULY, 1834.
CONTENTS :
ARTICLE I. Life of Schiller. —The Life Friedrich
Schiller. Comprehending an Examination of his
Works. From ihe London Edition.
11. The Philosophy of History- —Cours d’lLstoire
Moderne, par M. Guizot, Frofesseur d’ Htsloire a to Fa
culte des Leitres de Paris.
111. Roman Literature.—l. Bibliotheca Classics
Latina, sive Colleotio Aiictorurti Lati.nonim, cum Not s
et Indicibns. 2. Family Classical Library, No. 47.
IV, Usury, and the Usury Lairs. —Report of a Com
mittee of the General Court of Massachusetts upon the
Petition of W. Tuckerman and Others for the Repeal of
; the Laws against Usury.
V. The Free Cities of Flanders. —1 Histoire des
Dues de Bourgotrne de la TVlaison de Valois. iVl.de
! Barante. 2. Histoire de la Flandre deputs le Comte
I Gui de Datnpierrc jusqu’aus Dues ds Bourgogne. Par
r Jules Van Praet. 3. Notice Historique sur la Ville dt
Gand. ParAVoisin.
VI, Life and Writings of Crabbe. —Life and Poetical
! Works of the Reverend George Crabbe. In 8 volumes.
5 Vol. I. Containing the life of Crabbe. By his Son.
VII. Helen. —Helen: a 'Pale by Maria Edgeworth.
. VIII. Miss Peabody's Key to History. —Key to Histo
ry. Parts 1., 11., and 111. By Elizabeth P. Peabody.
» IX. Origin and Chat acter of the old Parties. L His
tory of the Hartford Convention, with a Review of the
1 Policy of the United States’Government, which led to
c the War of 1812. By Theodore Dwight, Secreia •> of
* the Convention. 2. Familiar Letters on Public Charac
* ters and Public Events, from the Peace of 1783 to the
f Peace of 1815.
. September 2 22
r , “ FOR SATJGU
* pWIITAT well known PLANTATION of James
, _|j_ Stallings, in Colombia County. <-n :he Savannah
- river, eight miles above Augusta, comp-whig five im;:-
1 dred and eighty two acres of land—four hundred of
| which are cleared ; under good fence and judicious c'nl
-1 j tivatiun. There is a grist mill in operation and a fishery,
1 attached.
t | The water power is sufficient fer any extent of ma
t j chmery.
’ I There is a dwelling house upon the prenn-e- v h
! oiu-honses, barns, negro quarters, *:• in good order.
Apply to J A MEi-s t; A RUNE R, Jr.
0 r Attorney for Jambs G. Stai.mncs.
q July 22 _ wtf FJ
n jmm high v- ■ -
d j ASatirens Pfifsker .r,
1- I No. 346 BitO* '•-STREET, CGI'S; ",
A fete doors a hove Mr, (L Ii- Jc- ■■..•<
ig-£IEGS leave to inform the citl'sna of Ao-i*.- ; m i
t Mi? the country, that be has < c t'i 4 hiim- : ; t
° this.city, as a M ittress Maker mid i :;,.a : :; n : | . i
)f f erß his services in his line of business, to .jli ilmse v. it.
nnv be in want of them. Ho has imu o.t iiatid Mat
, tresses, which will be add Kt«
•a MOSS of a good tr.iH.P vva ■ A r v
reasonable price will bi givct
IV I Atigt.ficir Augustlß-4
> rl OR SALE,
following named Lots of Land In the Cherokc
i purchase—
LAND LOTS.
No. Dist. Seel. No. Dist. Sect. No. List. Sect
141 24 2 29 25 ' 3 IG3 14 }
. 267 28 3 201 7 2 81 21 *1
i 21 14 2 393 14' 3 92 24 2
GOLD REGION LOTS.
No. Dist. Sect, f No. Dist. Sect. No. Dist. Sect
' 375 2 4 892 !7 3 1220 4 I
123 It 4 3«3 I 1 191 I? 3
■ 418 18 3 682 3 1 838 3 ]
. 654 1 3 7 3 1 623 12 1
3H 2 1 72 15 1 1157 15 2
416 2 1 392 I 2 1184 IS 5
829 14 1 842 4 1 679 H 3
Apply to LEON P, DUGAS,
Augusta,
. June 20 1 m4t
tp“ The State Rights Sentiriel will give the above
two insertions* L. P. D.
” K,' U.~BA HH S Tl'T^
Has on hand -nd offer* for sale, at his Store Under
the Masonic Hall.
A BUNDLES MAY,
3 Pipes Holland Gin,
5 Casks pure Charapaigne R randy.
If, Demijohns Claret, Port, anti Madeira Wines,
10 Barrels Northern Gin,
15 Boxes Malaga Raisins,
29 Do. Window Glass
19 Barrels No. 3 Mackerel,
39 Boxes Rosin Snip,
Canal and Baltimore Flour.
Cognac and American Brandy,
Cigars, Wrapping Paper, &c.
ALSO,
Beds, Mattrassfes and Bedsteads,
Windsor and Rock’.n| Chairs.
Tables, Stands, Classes, &c. &c.
July 25 . H
AUST’U’yCINV Iff)
13 ■ ’ Tb oman Mi r,h
i'pok svoa.t so. 293 broaii.sthkkt.
T’-'TRS. Sherwood’s Works, od vol. ; Bancroft’s His
lfi± toryof the United States, vol. Ist.; Uncle Phi
lip’s conversation about Virginia, being No. 21 Boys and
Girls Libtary.
Things as they ate; or Notes of a Traveller through
i some ot the middle and northern Stales.
Speculation, a Novel by the author of Traits and
Traditions of Portugal.
Two old men’s '1 ales. Tutti Frutti, by Prince
Puckler Muskaw. A splendid sot ot tiie British Poets.
Blue Book, Ac. &c.
At.so,
A fresh supply of Webster’s Spelling Books,
At.SO,
A small supply of Guitars and Violins, together with
a variety of Fancy articles.
« ALSO,
A supply of STEEL PENS.
September 5 23
J 3. .. [• SAfi ■ a : rr
OFFERS FOII SALE, *
ITS! 1)S. WHISKEY,
2 Pipes Holland Gin,
10 Bbls. pure Rye G : n.
5 Quarter (basks pure Champaign Brandy,
100 Boxes Sugars,
10 Cods Bale Rope* ,
30 Boxes Soap,
](> do Bhy 10 Window Glass,
All of which will he sold very low to close sales.
August 22 Id
fiATSIAEi
SN FORMS his friends and the public, that he has
closed his business in this city, and will leave in
the early pari of next month for Mobile, Alabama, lor
the purpose of establishing himself in the Auction and
a general Commission Business, and flutters himself,
from the favourable arrangements as to location and bu
siness funds, that hr will he able to give satisfaction in
the purchase of Produce, and any business imrusteo to
him —and informs those persons who has expressed a
wish to consign Negroes to his care, that his best exer
tion in disposing of them, will be bestowed, and in a
market presenting the most favourable inducements.
September 12, 183-1
PrISUR C4avieka ■LV.n.-O'.N
In Barrels, Tierces, Hogsheads and Fags.
ra ■ ' H APR FT S
10 TIERCES
5 HOGSHEADS
250 B \ GS, Landing this day and for sale by
S. KNEEL AND &• CO.
July 22 10 _ At their Ware-House
[Q 3 A House Keeper Wanted, —
an elderly, pious female of good heart, good sense,
and domestic habits, to take charge ot a family ot eight
motherless children ; and be as a mother to them, to
govern and teach them plain house keeping, to make
them pious, good, industrious, and happy if possible.
Goodness is beneficial, it tends to happiness, and is
in a measure the end of our creation; precept and ex
ample tend to make us better, nut precept and exam
pie alone is not. sufficient £0 make one good in every
sense of the word.
With that particular intent it must be begun in the
Nursery by ever countenancing mid ultimately inspiring
a love for what has a beneficial tendency, and d.sooun
tenancing and creating horror and disgust for evil or its
tendencies, though they may not be perceptible but in
their remote consequences.
One, impressed with the conviction that much of the
■ c; st of mind and disposition is imbibed in the nursery,
ai d that it is the time to give it a favourable bias, and
ifat an unceasing personal attention and solicitude tor
tl eir welfare is indispensable to success ; one, in short,
who would delight in creating a little world oi love, of
which she would be the centre.
Any ladv acquainted with a person they may deem
suitable, will he thanked to recommend her to tiie sub
scriber or acquaint him whcr / ' bo m-.v apply.
.1. GUI MARIN, Watch Maker.
No. 145 Broad-street, Augusta, Ga.
August 26
- ri)ENTiST
• AT HOME. —The subscriber can always be found at
• his residence opposite the Masonic Hall, where he will
! be happy to attend to the calls of his Mtends They
* mav be assured of having any operation which they may
wish him to perform executed in the most approved and
- scientific manner, and in respect to beauty, durability
; and use he will warrant his operations equal to any ot
the most approved dentists, and on as reasonable, terms.
Ashe has become a citizen and is with his family lo
cated in Augusta, he hopes that that liberal patronage
which has already been extended to him w ill still in
’ crease, and the public mav he assured that every at.
1 shall be given pi ■' . r : *■
f g
Sep. 16 » 2G
’ I ' ■ VOTIOK.
• I SHE Subscril-T having 1. car. 1 idnrwflf.it. Charles
i « t ; n g. r Mtraonact q FACTORAGE AN?
1 j v , ; ..,p. <sMO\ RU ‘ INEt-8 , .«k! D / lea «to son
on hi fit nds ■ad the pub) - - 1 ■' b their pat
•i _ :c | Us MiuJiviJedattentiiGi w, I-g «ir vofed to u*ei
1 ’ /
’'■" Vii tend to rerei.vini ' >rv
1 ,s;, • t»v rite Rail Road, Siran* Bos 1 .-. -r com." *.
.. b.tl ' ■
1 aiK*s. . _ . , -ii.-; r
* : rr -'•->> '
}} FT'SF: * ’ />.
.7 nx Mscr. th. E-- _ ‘ C-aud.
•i yk-srs. John F ‘ ‘
n 1 He EH r ttcl-'osel, ; .* ’ AugmTa.
’• 1 fIicXIAS McGc.A . • .
0 j Charles «n, J ■>. Bth.
(TOLL>L LW Wit : ILE
- : , ’>o ( - - ! ■'. :■)•> •' ■ I; i']< v«.
: j i‘ i •■■■ r ■■■•< • ■
1() RENT,
/ ”\ The {IRE PROOF STORE, at
r-rr er.t iicupvd by James McDowaH, sui
': ; i : lor ua ixfciaive dry good or grocery
I he i iit- Proof Store ami Dwelling, next beW*.
Thr three r ;tv Dwelling on Campbell street, occupi
ed l>y Mr. Anderson.
The three Story Fire Proof Store and Dweflfeftg next
• above the Bridge B.irik,
The two Story fire pr»of Store and Dwelling—So. 4,
i Bridge Row.
The two Story wooden buifd-Sg below the lower Mar
ket at present occupied by Mr. Dunbar. ’
Apply to McKenzie & bennoch.
July 18 Iw oct. 9
TO RENT,
Frotn the first of Octahet neit,
yl-oinolL The large white HOUSE on Elfis
street, first below Henry Mealing, tt&f. —
arc attached to the premises all the
necessary out-buildmes. and has a pvrttnp of
excellent water in the yard. Enquire on the piemiaes.
F WM. B. SHELTON,
i August 12 16
TO THE PUBLIC.
The Subscriber, truly thankful sos
i ’hr liberal patronage heretofore bestowed
11; I r [:L“| M on him, and desirous of a continuation and
i extension of that favor, takes this method
I of informing his friends and the public generally, that
he still continues to keep, in first rate style, the llllion
Hotel in Milledgeville. The advantageous location
of his House to the business part of the tovrff, is too well
known (it being the house formerly kept by Robert
McComb) to need pointing out. Ttie establishment is
largo and commodious, and well adapted t»f the conveni
ence of either regular or transient boarders. The Ta
ble, Bar and Stables will be constantly supplied with
the best the market affords; and no pains will be Spar
ed to render comfortable and happy all persons who may
| cail on him. Thus, with every advantage that can con
tribute to the accommodation of a public houste, toge
ther with the influence of a polite, studious arid atten
live barkeeper, the subscriber flatters himself in be
lieving that he cannot fail to meet with a liberal share o 1
public favours. AARON SEARCY.
Milledgeville, Aug. 5, 15 [Atfg. 15—In]
Q:r The Savannah Georgian, Columbus Sentinel, Au.
gusta Constitutionalist, Macon Telegraph, and Miners
Recorder, A u ran a, will please insert the above regular
ly until t!ie Ist of November next, arid forward their ac
counts to the subscriber (or payment.
Milledgeville, Ga. August 5, 1834. A. S.
ffOS/F 9 S IIOTJEIi,
NEW-YORK.
THE above establishment havitfg
•iV y been in successful operation, for eighteen
[ ’il" months, is now in complete order for the ac
comniodnlion of Ladies and Gentlemen visit
ing the city, cither on business or for pleasure. In con
sult ration ol the present state ot the money market, the
Proprietor has reduced his prices ot board to the follow
ing rates, viz:
Gentlemen occupying double bedded or corapa
ny rooms, per day, each $1 «u
Those occupying single rooms, per day, each 1 25e
Ladies and Gentlemen, dining at the ladies’ ta
hie, per day, each 12&
Meals served in private rooms, per day, each ex
tra fill
Private Parlour, extra each 1 Ou
The Proprietor, returns hi? sincere acknowledgments
for the very extensive patronago he has recoived at his
establishment, and pledges himself that nothing on his
part, or that of bis household, shall be wanting to merit
a continuation of past favors, and render comfortable,
those who may in future favor him with a call.
, i HOURS FOR ME/tL«.
! ! Breakfast, from 7to 9 I Tea, from 7to 9
.1 Dinner, do. 12 to 4 j Supper, do. 9to 19?
O’ Doors never closed.
STEPHEN HOLT.
I New York, June2s, 18$4. 7 w3m
’ FIFTY , VRS REWARD,
- . > RAN A WAY from the sub 1
i A ,*■ F’ scriber < n the 29ih’ of April 1832, at
likely dark complected negro man
' mu... ' BD , about 22 or 3 years of
’ ■ ' \ or 6 inches high, stout
inuiis, end a scar on one side of
lti« Uwe, nding from opposite the
flf k ~.v eye d< - deck bone, from an inch
- to an inch and a half long, he also has
a scar on the front part ot ono of his legs occasioned
by a cut, and his lips are thick and turn out. As he
writes a tolerable hand, he will no doubt pass himself
tor a free man, or as one having leave to hire hio own
time. The above reward will be paid on his delivery
I to me residing near Augusta, or on his being lodged in
! anv Jail so that I can get him.
JAMES BEAL,
January 7, 1834 67
HIT The Charleston Courier, Columbus Sentinel, and
Darien- Telegraph, will please notice an alteration iff
he above advertisement.
TfeSs'ly dollars Reward.
RUNAWAY from the subscriber on
/v ", the 17th of July last, a dark mulatto boy
t J- I-, called SAM, about twenty six years old f
■' : ■ ■ /;S near five feet six inches high, rather
'F&’ ell uiiky built, tliick cheeks oryaWs,speaks
low, and is artful; the small pari of his
right leg having been broke or badly
•. 1 -A-. hurt, shows very different from the left<
which is notable, and he says done by a horse when he
was small; he v/t.re away au old black fur hat, white co
. lured short cost and paal-doons. Any person that will
apprehend said mu way ami bring him to me, 10 miles
north west of Green, .-bon-ugh, Hreene Cownty, or place
[. him in some safe jail, and give me notice so that I can
get him, shall have the above reward from the subscri
ber. WILLIAM WATSON.
August? ts 18
O* To be published in the Columbia (S. C.) Teles
cope week !v for two months; the account may be sent
to this office.
p&icje
258 Broad-street,
I Have just received from N. York, a FresSt StSsorlmeKi oj
1 Fashionable Ready Made
;■! G A R n E N T S,
1 ! CONSISTING OF :
• | Crape Carnbiet, ftPerino and Lineff
■f j Goa's, Frock Goa’s, and Coatees.
• j Judia Grass and Irish Linen Round Jackets,
•- j Bombuzin, Grape Carablet, Drilling, Nankeen,
e | and Merino Cassimere Pantaloons,
| Porub zln. Silk and Marseilles Vests,
M ; ! i-f ,*id Si i! ; ■'•’•locks. Black Silk Hdkfs.
>' i in. :•' C -ton Drawers, Linen Sc Cotton Shirts,
Sluri A . i S'. j;us, Suspenders and Gloves,
A I.SO,
An user.- 1 - "ii o ' F ishioßab’e Silk UMBRELLAS,
lilac;- and Dfab BEAVER HATS and Cloth Caps.
j \\; ••:> •:!<•}. v. ;il dispose of at reduced rates foreash
| or aopr -vc < uy acceptance.
i> . Angus's U ' • 16
. GOODS#
! - . . ;• A • t - ySHEAR.
'' -• c f ron New-York,
n | ' ■•■'.'b , ..i ram ■y. ! Ginghams, *
A . '1 i i j*; n ('rape Camblets ana
Hiu '•li Bond azoei 6,
"' - ’■ . \ . . r-* vies,
Ern'h.o:. ... riari i iiukis.and Rich Blond Gauze
•V* i i . “ ’
* A k;mc snupjv of FAN GY AND STAPLE ARTI
: f :: : , fir the driver Country trade, which*
! w,;i bo sold low prices.
rorr r i / V-; VkHiV HEAVY
i IS' its I tii
C r ■ ": ' ■ : - - »• ; LOS
’ A ' 91