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BY SAM&i I GARDNER, JR. Al (iUSTA, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORMXG, JILY 15, IB4C. ” ~~
THE COxNSTITUTIOSALIST.
OFFICE IN JdcINTOSIi-STREET,
'Fhirxi door from the North-West corner yf Broad-st.
tSale* of LAND by Admin iterator*, Kzecntora,or
v»uarJlan», art; require*!, by law,to be heldontbe
tir*t Tuesday in the month, between the hours of
ten u» llte forenoon and three in the afternoon, at
the Court House tit which ihe property issituate.
Notice of these sale.;, must be given in a public
Gazette sixty p.iV a previous to the day ut 'ale.
Sale* of NEGROES must beat public auction, un
the first Tuesday of the month, between the usual
hoars of sale, at the place of public sales di the
county where the Letters Testamentary, or Ad
ministration, or Guardianship, may have !>*-en
granted, first giving sixty days’notice thereol,
in one of the public tiazetie* oi this £ late, and a;
ihe door of the Court House where suchsalerare
lo be held- f
N dice for the sale of Personal must be
given i n like -manner Font V da \ tpre vioustoday
of sale.
Noticctothe Debtors and Creditors of an Estate
must be published for forty days.
Notice that application will be made to the Court of
Ordinary for leave to sell LAND, must be pub
Halted for FOUR months. *
Notice for leave to sell N ECHOES, must be pub
lished four months before any order absolute
can lx* given bv the Court.
[From (tie U. S Catholic Miscellany, July 11.] {
DEATH OF HIM lIOLIXIiSS POPE
GREGORY XVi.
Our late files bring us the intelli- 1
gcnce of the Popes death which look
place on the Ist ult. We copy the j
following paragraphs:
JVlarseihl.es, June G.
The news of the death of Gregory
XVI. was received in town yesterday.
The lollowina exiiucis of u lellei pub- i
lished by the Semaphore lids morning, !
containing home particulars of the Pon- i
tiff’* malady, as vw*ll as of I tie political ;
position in winch his death leaves the Ro- ]
man capital, are interesting. “On the ;
21st of May (Ascension Day,) the Holy I
Father vta-Gn peifecl healih. fits voice |
was hemd to the very ♦•xi families ol the
Place de Saint Jean Je Latran. it would i
appear, however, tiial tho length of the |
service, the heal of tho weather, and the
fatigue of the journey born tlte Vatican
to Sun Giovanni di L ilt ano, concurred lo ;
overpower his Holiness. The hydroccne
under which he was laboring increased j
considerably, fever ensued, and the issue I
(or scion) which ii was of the utmost im
portance to keep open, simultaneously
and spontaneously closed. Gregory XVI,
notwithstanding lie had never been ill,
had a pre entiment of die gravity ot this
e lack, and was painfully afflicted by it.
From die first, li< pronounced his life in
danger, especially when erysipelas de
rated itself. Monsignor Vizardni, at
tached to die person of his holiness, died :
of a gangrenous rrvsipt-las about a month i
ago. Gregory XVI ,as soon as he per
ceived himself attacked declared with
tho emphasis of conviction—“l will end
like Vizardni.” This apprehension was
realized. From Tuesday to Friday :
the fever raged without inlet mission, j
On Friday the Holy Father signed the I
documents cordoning on ministers the j
power of acting without concurrence of I
the Soveieigu. In the evening an evident I
improvement in the Pope’s health ensued,
and he was aide to receive the visits of
several prelates. Sunday, 31st May, j
was anxiously awaited, as being tbe da}’
oil which the crisis of the malady Mould j
declare itself—it was the fifth day of the i
fever and third day of tho erysipelas.—
On thisdav fresh complications devolved, 1
• 1 j
not only did the swelling of the legs as- :
cent), hut the chest began to fill, in the ;
course of the night the sacrament was
admin isle rod to the august old man. At i
about six in the morning he ceased to re- ;
cognise any one, and the rattleof death an
nounced his approaching end. At 20
minutes past nine the same morning he {
breathed his la-t.
“Gregory XVI had entered his 84ih j
year. The Roman Almanack only makes
him 82. But it is usual for Ins official
record not to count the current year, nor
thatofbirth in regard to the age of Popes. !
Gregorv XVI. reigned fifioen years.
“Here we are then spectators of a new !
conclave! Who will he elected? That j
is the question of the day, which every I
one resolves as he lists; for as yet theie
are but few probable conjectures hazard- ;
able.
Mauro Capellari was a native of Bc!-
luno, in the Venetian states, where he
was born Sept. 18, ITtio. He early en
tered the Cauraldolese branch of the
Benedictines, in which he soon distin
guished himself for learning and piety.
He became a distinguished oriental scho- ,
lar, wrote several works w hich have been
repeatedly published—and, after shar
ing in the vicissitudes of the fortunes of
his country, ouring ihe revolution in the I
commencement of the*present century he
returned to Rome, where, in a consistory
of 13th March, IS2O, he was made Car
dinal by Pone Leo, XII. The Pon
tiff, in exalting Idm to this dignity, de
lated ho did so in consideration of the
gravity of his irreproachable life, the
excellence of his learning, and Ids inde
fatigable industry. Upon the death of 1
Pope Pius VIII. he was elected to preside
over the universal Church in 183 J, w hich
fie has since continued ;o govern with con
summate wisdom lo the day of ld.s lamen
ted decease.
In him Ireland in particu’ar has lost a
ftiend. He early made himself acquaint
ed with her complicated and peculiar
interests, and not unfrequently, it is said,
differed with his Cardinals in the view
;hcv took of the a ATMrs of the I :*if d chart h
We believe that the nomination of the
! present illustrious Archbishop of Tuam
was his indiv.duakact, and we know that
in an audience of leave, j/ivon lo one of
j our Bishops in the commencement of the
1 year 1843, Ids Holiness requested that the
Irish prelate should intimate to Ids breth
ren, the Irish hi.-hops, that he did not in
the least wish them to moderate anything
of the substance of their demands on the
British government, but only lo moderate
the tine of their re i non d ranees.
Tbe Church of Rome is now rr-nder
ing iho deceased Pope its last offices,
which are called llie Novem Diali, be
cause they last nine dnvs. The Cardin
! als, formally assembled, exercise the
sovereign authority, and are making pre
i pa rat ions for the great act of the election
| of the successor to the lute nontiiT, who
must he one of their body. The Diplo
| matisfs are adndt'ed to short audiences. '
Each Minister, after the nsual compli
ments, vent tires to give Ids private re- ■
commendations, but always in general
: terms, wailing til! fits letters of credence
, arc to he enounced, and which must be j
addressed to the sacred College, w Inch ro- j
ceives them ot the grated wicket of the
• Conclave. In the evening of the day on :
; which Ihe Cardinals enter into the Con- [
( clave, they proceed there* in procession J
I chauniing the “Veni, Creator.” During 1
iltisevcuing the members of the diplomatic
body may enter the Conclave, and even
the cells or apartments of the Cardinals, j
At the closing in of the night an official {
walks through the corridors ringing a bell, |
as the signal of departure, and the Con
clave is closed in, not to be re-opened un- j
| til after the election is consummated. All :
this will pass on the 11th inst., between
seven and ten o’clock. The Conclave is 1
guarded hv a prince called the Marshal j
of the Conclave, posted at the outer gates. I
The first steps in the election will be taken |
lon the 12th. All business is suspended
during lire sitting of the Conclave, even
1 the tribunals suspend their proceedings,
j and the only authorities that retain their j
functions are the Camerlingua, the Grand 1
O 7 |
‘ Penitentiary, and the Vicar of Rome.
No order can be issued from anv other au
thority without being speedily confirmed
by the assembled cardinals, w Inch con
firmation is transmitted immediately to
the Governor of Rome, and the Treasu
rer-general. According to the custom
which has always been observed, tbe ar
rival of the cardinal lega es and tbe fo
reign cardinals w ill be waited for before
the election is seriously entered upon i
The first may arrive at Rome in time for
I the second or third day of the Novem
Diali , and the others hv the twentieth day
after the death of the Pope; consequently
there can he no election before the 20th
instant, unless some unforseen event shall
' occur. To constitute a valid election,
I the candidate must obtain at least two.
thirds of the votes minus bis own. If 45
cardinals aie assembled, he must have 30
votes, and if there be 40, the majority !
mint be 31. If the Conclave he com- |
posed of 57 members, the election will |
be completely canonical if one of the
candidates Ims 38 votes w'ilhout reckoning
I his own.
Nine days are allowed for the obse
quies of the deceased Pope: on the tenth I
the cardinals ate shut up, each with one
domestic, in a common apartment in the i
Quiuinal palace: a small w indow is re- j
i served for the introduction of necessaries; j
hut boih door and window are jealously
guarded by the city’ magistrates against j
all external communication. If the elec- j
tion he not let initialed in three days, the !
tables of the electors are leduced lo a
single dish at dinner, and the same at sup-
I per, a considerable privation to those ac- |
customed from early life to the varieties
of continental fare; and after the eighth
day’ they ate reduced to a scanty pittance
of bread, water, atid wine. The votes
are given by ballot; and the integrity ol
! the voters i> fuiiher guarded by a solemn
| oath. When elected, the Pope on accept
ing the dignity, becomes temporal sove
i reign of the ecclesiastical stale, and spi
ritual head of the Catholic Church
| throughout the world. On the next festi
; val after his election he is, generally
i speaking, crowned in St. Peter’s, having |
j been, if not previously a bishop, conse
crated by’the cardinal Dean of the Sacred ;
College, to whom as Bishop of Ostia, be
longs that privilege. \\ it It i*is new dig- ;
nity fie assumes a new name, and takes j
, solemn possession of St. John Laterals,
tfie first basilic presented by the first
i Christian Emperor lo the last potvifical
dweller in the catacombs.
i “ IVhat Consummate Folly. —Half a
dozen brothers, four uncles, and a grey
headed father, try ing to stop a young girl
j f rom getting married to the man she loves,
and who loved her, just as if rope ladders
were out of date, and all the horses in the
| world spavined.”
So says somebody’, ami it may be all
! very romantic and very fine to lean over
to that side of the question; but yet ex
perience will show that when half a
dozen brothers, four uncles, and a grey
headed father take the position above in
dicated, there is sometimes pretty good
reason for it, and that if rope-ladders and
horses without spavin, are effectively
• brought in play, tlte consummate folly
will often be found in the end to have a
different location from that which the
. paragraph’-.* would give i f . D doiib'there
he on this head, look, we pray you, at the
divorces applied for, granted or not grant
j ed, and reflect also on the domestic unhap
piness with which the world abounds.—
Rather, then preach caution to the yourg
and ardent, on tins score, than tempt them
, to yield to sudden impulses ami passing
■ whims, lest the error of a moment prove
the misery of a whole life. There are
unreasonable relatives, to be sure—preju
dices will exist, and cruel thwarting* do
| occur. But yot, when brothers, uncles,
fathers are arraved against a choice, if
’ they he the proper sort of hot iters, uncies
and fathers, pause, we advise you. gen
tle maiden, and think deeply on it, before
an irrelrieva file step is taken—vour guar
dians and your friends have vour hap- 1
piness at heart, and they know the world, j
j too. If they object, depend upon it that I
the ground you stand on ciaves v. aiv i
‘ walking, and that it is safest to move i
slowly, if indeed there be not ample ca use !
jto recede. Besides there is perhaps time |
i enough, and true love is none ti e worse
for a probation. Reject the rope ladders
j and tiie horses, and he sure you arc right, ;
before the fancy and the imagination are
permitted to lead you on.
[ From ihe N. O. Picayune. ]
Matamoros, June 22, 18-16.
The 7th Regiment oi’Jnfantiy. Captain i
j Miles commanding, is under marching i
orders for Camargo, one hundred miles ;
j from this place. Tins regiment numbers |
about four hundred men. Captain Dun- i
I can’s Battery of Light Artillery will also :
go along, and a company or two of Tex
an Rangers. As soon as the steamer
Aid returns from Reynosa—and she is I
expected every moment —the command I
will start for Camargo. Thus the bail is
kepi moving as fast as prudence will per-
I mil. Monterey will soon receive a friend-
I ly visit from our troops, and they' will be
| able to see “how the land lies” out to- I
wards Saltillo, before rnaTiy weeks, or I
am greatly mistaken.
A Mexican was shot bv a Texan Ran
ger in a bilJimd-room uptown yesterday.
"Flie fellow is not dead yet. The Texan
accused him of having been instrumental
in adding to tlie distress of the Mier pri
soners some years ago, while they were i
in this place. Whether the charge was
just or not, (lie assassin will find that he
cannotwith impunity act as an avenger
of blood in a city that old Zachary has
I taken under his special protection. There
is a spirit beginning to manifest itself
i among a certain class of the Texan vol
unteers, who have been pulled up occa
sionally’ for their irregularities in the :
streets of Matamoros, which looks decid
edly seditious; and it is feared that they
will give a good deal of trouble to the
army before the campaign is over.—
Could the volunteers lie kept actively em- i
ployed they would give very little trou
ble— I allude to the restless spirits among
them—but the same patience and reuu
lariiy can scarcely he expected of them
a*i is exacted from the regulars.
The Rio G rande has been rising ra
pidly within the last twenty four hours,
j If we had four or five good boats here
i now to take advantage of the rise, it would
help the General along very much.
It has rained every day here for a
week. Between the weather, the green
corn and melons—there are more than
fifty cart-loads of melons in camp, and
are constantly arriving—the doctors stand
a chance of having plenty to do. H.
i
Matamoros, June 25, 1316.
Nothing of interest has occurred here
since the date of my last. There is a :
rumor in camp to the effect that Bnsta
, me me has been appointed acting Presi- j
dent of Mexico, and that Paredes has ta- j
ken command of the army, and is on his |
way at the head of eight thousand men ;
to jam their troops in’this region. Tlte |
steamer Aid returned lo this place from i
Reynosa day before yesterday, having on i
board Capt. McCuliogh and your Mr. K.
An account of the expedition will proha- !
bly reach you by the mail that brings you
this. The Aid is not to go to Camargo |
: as was expccleJ, the owners not being i
willing to accede to the proposals fur j
: freight, etc., made by the Quarter Master. !
Tlte Neva is expected down soon, and
; will be sent up to Camargo with supplies 1
for Capt. Miles’s command, which will
j start when the boat does. The weather I
j continues rainy and sultry. No mail yet
j from New Orleans ! 11.
Matamoros, June 27. ISIS.
The steamer Neva is at this moment j
taking on board the 7th Regiment of In- !
faulty, who will go as far as Reynosa
and march from that place lo Camargo. ;
Canales came near bein<r caught bv
•- - .
Capt. McCuliogh s Rangers fifteen miles I
from Reynosa, the other night. The bovs j
had got wind of his intention to attend a
j fandango at a rancho, on a certain night,
and prepared lo meet him there. Tuey I
| posted themselves at.a convenient distance ;
from the farm house, and awaited in the i
: darkness the arrival of Canales. When
everything seemed to be organized and
| the dancing had fairly commenced, the
Rangers changed the tune by suddenly
surrounding the house and walking into
the midst of the merry-makers. Canales
: had not arrived, but two of Ids officers
were there and were taken prisoners, and
are now at Revnosa with Cal Wilson.—
. The nex* time Canales makes up his mind
| logo to a fandango, it will probably be at ;
a safe distance from Texan Rangers.
| Ihe health ot the armv is improving, j
! the best evidence of w hich is, that the sick '
list is not as large as it was a week or j
two ago. Fins wet weather will prove j
j highly injurious to the health of the troops ;
however, if it continues long to rain as
j much as it has during the last week.
H.
j
The following is an extract from the
letter ufourspecial correspondence, dated
Matamoros, June 29, 1846.
I mentioned in a letter day before yes
j terday, that the seventh infantry were em
barking on the steamer Neva, for Camar- I
; go. Some doubts having Ireen expressed
j of the safety of the boat, on account of her
boilers, a thorough investigation was
made and she was immediately con
demned as unsafe ami unfit for service.—
She lias been taken down to Point Isabel
| for repairs. There is no boat here, and
I no possibility of transporting supplies by
laud. No newspaper mail bus yet ar
! rived fiom Point Isabel, and we expect
none until a boat arrives. This L hard j
‘ to bear, but it can’t he helped.
1 have just heaid from Barita. The :
| volunteers are in good health, generally. |
Theie must be about 12.000 volunteers |
i now- in Texas. The river is rising fearful- j
I ly, and several of the regimentsare moving j
; their tents back lo higher land. The vol-
I unteers on the opposite side of the river
I have not left for their new camp, 15 miles
up the river. The roads are so wet and
the difficulty of transporting supplies so
great, that no one knows when they will
| move. H.
Matamoros, July J, 134 C.
It seems to be the general belief in |
camp that Paredes will give our army
another brush ere long. That he is on
I his way to this region is not doubted—
that he can muster un army of 30,000
men, is pretty getie r allv believed, and if
lie does succeed in raising so large a body ;
of troops, and Gen. Taylor advances on j
Monterey, a pretty severe fight is certain ,
to ensue. The General wears his laurels ;
very calmly. “Honors are easy” with i
i him, but lie is chafing a good deal about |
being kepi here, wall a large body of i
troops, unable to act against the memy’. \
They had quite a flare up over in the
Andrew Jackson Regiment the other day,
byway of showing their dislike fora cer
tain officer who had offended them by
some sf his publications in a N. Orleans
paper. They intimated to him, as plain
ly us acts and language could express it,
that he was not popular in that corps, and i
that his “room was more agreeable than !
• a 1
his company.
There will be several vacancies in the
Andrew Jackson Regiment in a few days,
occasioned by the resignation of officers,
and, ({ course, elections will be held to
fill them. Gen. Taylor’s new rank en
titles him to a new aid-de-camp, and he
has appointed Brevet 2d Lieut. Robt. S.
Garnett, of the 4th Artillery, a young
man peculiarly well qualified for the of
fice. 'File General is fortunately situated
with regard to his stall. Capt. Bliss, the
Adjutant General of the Army of Occu
pation, is probably belter qualified for the |
post he occupies than any other man in |
the army. He is a finished scholar—re- |
markable as a linguist and mathematician i
—a man of fine talents—a good writer, I
one of the most even tempered men in the j
world, and agreeable and polished in Ids !
manners. The aids, Lieuts. Eaton, and
Garnett, are both officers of high merit.
H.
[From the New-Orleans Delta ]
Camp opposite Matamoros, June 17.
Dear Sir —We are now quietly at our
leisure, steeped lo the eyes in all the ricli |
qualities of camp laziness; and most ud- I
i mirably do we acquit ourselves. Nothing !
| troubles us now except the mess fire, in- |
numerable quantities of bugs and hum
-1 bugs. Comts martial, regimental and !
| company drills and fandangoes are thrown j
in with sweet profusion and variety, so j
I that one must admit that ours is none other I
i than the a//spice of life.
From our camp to the city (?) of Mata- j
I moros is but a pleasant half-hour’s walk, |
; and we not (infrequently regale ourselves j
with a whiff of city air, such as it is— i
1 dust, smoke, See. The eye is relieved 1
from looking on the almost interminable i
i line of tents, the snowy whiteness of j
i w hich reflects the light with painful inten- ■
■ shy, and cheered by appearance of ci
: vilized habitations —some ofhriek, a small
number of frame, and a large number of I
| Mexican stucco , constructed after the j
i rudest'forms of Indian wigwams—reeds |
stuck in the ground and bound with thongs |
; to rough poles to field them in their upright i
j position—the interior, scorning the service :
of modern plasterers, bedaubed with mud;
the whole surmounted by a thatched roof,
j To look at the frail, inflammable materi
! als of which three-fourths of the dwellings ;
I in this city are constructed, one is led lo
wonder by vvhat special providence so lit
| tie destruction has been caused by fire;
; for certain it is, that had fire broken out in
any of these tinder-boxes, favored as it
would be by the prevailing winds which
sweep across the prairies and low chap
parral thickets, not all the power of man
could rescue the city from total conflagra
tion. In these primitive dwellings the
eves of ’.he curious sojourner meet whh
Mil I I nil nil
I- still more primitive forms—women, many
i of them beautiful, clad in Eve like »?m-
I plicity, some reclining in luxurious indo
lence upon the floor or ground — pine j
. boards being an unlooked-for luxury in
j this region—others crouched over their
j Mexican grist-mills, reducing to paste the ;
j boiled corn preparatory to its being made !
; into el tortilla , a decided premonitory ,
symptom to something to eat, and with ;
sweet milk “not had to take.”
The most entertaining sight of all, how- :
• - “ r* » j
ever, is the afternoon’* family exercise— ;
useful, too, an l illustrates the w ise adage
of Solomon, “Train up a child,” &c.—
which consists of the following very ex
! eel lent arrangement; Tlte youngest child
is placed in a cradle (?) —we would call
it a sugar-trough—ihe next juvenile in
the rear, and so on back to the mother,
who forms the rear-guard; when com
mences the attack on the unsophisticated j
inhabitants of mount cranium, and most
diligently and with blood-thirsty purpose
are the unsuspecting creatures hunted
from hair to hair; and with unrelenting,
ruthless violence torn from their abiding
i place, confined and crushed between the
| thumb-nails, and dear] or dying cast upon
the floor—thus affording a living example
of the faithless monsters with whom they
had taken up bed and board. The young
warriors whose thumb-nails are not large
enough, or who are not possessed of suffi
cient physical power in the thumbs, bite
their heads off, it is said—which suffi
j cienliy accounts, in my mind, for the uni
versal whiteness and durability of Mexi
can teeth. The number of slain in an
engagement of this nature almost shocks
credulity. Supper comes next, and next
the fandango—and so on to the end of the
chapter.
I could say a great deal mote, but for
the present must close. Our regiment
is doing well. Col. Marks is a gentleman
and a soldier. FI 1 RAM.
Paralysis. — We regret to learn that
Mr. Rice, the celebrated ‘Jim Crow,’ has j
been deprived oi speech and the usa of his
limbs by a stroke of paralysis,— Evening
Mirror.
UNITED STATES HOTEL,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
To the travelling public and old. Jritudi in particular.
A;'..-!L I beg leave to inform you Unit I have
jppil made my Ust move in Augusta, back to
..‘lil; u lL.ny old stand the United Olaies iioiel, on
n.iua.u-aifeet,opposite the Dank of Angnsia.
Ever grateful for past favors, 1 feel adored iliat
you will excuse me ior agio a soliciting a continu
ance oi your patronage, as 1 invite you to the most
central hotel ami Dusinoss part ot the city.
The hotei has recently been enlarged, with many !
improvements, and is now under the sole charge of
your friend and humble servant,
. oct2B DANIEL MIXER.
gssft CHLMOTJ3JL, m
MO. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Mlilfl,
The subscriber respectfully informs the Planters,
Merchants, and Traveling Public, that be is now
tlie proprietor of tins well-known and spacious Ho
tel. 'l iie proprietor hopes from the central location
of his House and his personal attention to, find ac
quaintance with the ousiuess, iu receive a liberal
share ol patronage. Travelers going through, can
at all times be furnished with refreshments upon
tiie arrival of the cars.
F.-M JENNINGS.
April 1, 1845. 121
oC7*Having sold out my interest in the
GLOBE HOTEL taMr. Jennings, 1 return to my
friends who have so long patronized me, my mod
sincere thanks, and in uomg so, ii ailords me plea
sure that 1 can confidently ask their support and
friendship lor 31r. Jennings, with the assurance
that, on his part, nothing wail be omitted that can
contribute lo their comlort and quiet. Give him a |
trial, and “if he does not do the thing up brown,”
then quit him. JJ. F. IvENKKJK.
april 1 6m 121
""WASHINGTON HALL,
MACON, GEORGIA.
plffll Having become sole Proprietor of this
jgrgayj wp.lt-knnvvn HOTEL, repaired and im
proved us interior arrangements, secured tiie ser
vices of attentive servants, und determined as 1 am
to give to it rny own personal and undivided alien- I
lion, the public may rely upon every attention lo
| their wants and comforts that has heretofore char- j
| acterised this establishment.
The 6TABLE6 are well and amply supplied with ;
i provender, and attentive and faithful Ostlers.
; In short, nothing shall be wanting to make the ;
WASHINGTON f lALL all and more than it has
j been even in its palmiest days.
This Establishment has no connexion with any 1
; other House in Macon.
WILLIAM A. MOTT.
I Macon. Feb. 24, 1346. 107 Reb 27
I
j .IMivffl. MERIWETHER COUNTY, GA. i’TlI ;
This establishment is again opened for the recep- !
| lion of Visiters, under the superintendence and I
| man gernent of its former ow ners, proprietors and 1
' managers,and they promise nothing more than
i vvhat they have heretofore done except additional |
: facilities iu reaching the Springs.
We have made an arrangement with the pro
i prietor of the great Central Routes, (as soon as the
I Railroad is completed to Birnesvilie,) to run bis
• Stages DAILY by tbe Springs. Passengers can
i then reach there in less than twenty hours from Sa
vannah ; and in five boms from Columbus. —
Hacks will al.-o be in readiness at all limes in
! Greenville, to lake visiters to the Springs.
k. di S. R. BONNER, Proprietors,
j June 15 mi 153
TO Til
NORTH.
TRAVELERS going North are advised that ,
their most agreeable and expeditious and only |
1 certain route is by the Charleston and Wilmington
i fttearn Boat and Rail Road line lo \V eldon, N. C.,
j and thence by the great mall route, via Petersburg,
Richmond , Fredericksburg and Washington City,
lo Baltimore, Philadelphia, New \ork. &.c.
Travelers by this route, which is the only daily
s one throughout, are subject to no detentions at any
I point reach the northern cities, in ad cases a
| business day ahead, and sometimes two days ahead |
; of travelers by the James River and Buy Boats.
FARE BY THIS ROUTE.
From Charleston to Weldon, fT2 :
From Weldon to Baltimore, $ 050 |
' OfS eof the Richmond and Petersburg K. R. Co. )
Richmond Va.,2Uth Jane, ISIS. V
June 2*5 3
L IST OF LET T E R S
Remaining »n the Post office at Augusta,
Ga., on the Ist day of July, 1546.
i£r Persons wishing letters trora this list, will
pleascsay they are advertised.
A
Aiken Col. TV atien Antony LL 3
Aldridge John B 3 Anding Martin 4
; A ('rams miss Clara F A/nold Benjamin
i Allen Wm Anderson T VV
| A veral miss Chars
n
I Bell Wm Boulineo George E
! 8.-nnefield Augustus Biaekhnrn Cornelia*
Bellamy mrs Bottom D
Bailey George M Brown mrs Charlotte
Bell HDI Bryant William
Bird mrs M A 2 Bruin Richard
Bagiev mi»» S Bush Daniel 9
Bird Henry Benton Nancy
Barton mrs. Mary M Bennett Jatue*
C
Cannon Patrick Charlton Felix E
Campbell II I*' M D Christian rar
Carr mrs Malvina Cone Gordon
Cant mrs Sarah G Cone Francis H
Cashin O E Calvin mrs .Margaret
Candler miss Susan Collins miss M
Games Patrick Crenshaw Asa
Mrs Susan Mays care of Cro»a G W
John W Campbell
D
Dent Wm B W Diraic k B C
Davis Jacob R Daniel Charley
Davis ET Dalton William
Daniel Thomas S Doily miss Lucretta
Davis Thomas Dunlap John G
Uiinon Samuel S Dmuiumn Elizabeth
Davis Rev Thomas Dunbar miss Sarah
Davis Elias
E
Elliott Wm Ector Wiloyß
F
Fitts Edgar 3 Florence Elizabeth
Field Sr 2 Freeman 11 P
Freeland mrs C A
G
Gains Ann Green David E
Gilbert (J J Griffin Alary
Gay C C Green Catharina
Gordon Lticrrtfa care of Greer B
mrs F Gardiner Grumger Conelius
Gardner James Goodman Wm H
Griffin rar W W Green Frances .
Goodman Rachael Graves Wm J
H
Harben A C Hinton Stephsa
Harris Robt S 2 Hopkins S II
Hargraves Olive Hoyt F S
Hauler L E Hundley Jane X
Harrison A H Hopkins S H
Howes James Hubbard Wary Ann
Hauham William Hussey B B
1 & J
Jones II W Johnson Eliza
Jacob Mathias Johnson Langdon C
Jones Daley Jones miss Elizabeth P
James A G Joseph Leonard
JessupGß Jarman Jas
K & L
Keadle Archibald Lot ell Jams#
Knight J L Lucas Cain
Kline Peter Little Wn
Leonard James 3 Lit tie Isaac
Lamar Henry G 2 Lozy Joshua
Lark Mildred Loyd Jno
Laventure Loftes VV m
Lincoln Henry
M
McKinney ror Headen Mary ear# of
McDonald Robt . Jonathan Meigs
McKinley Jacob Miles L P S
McCullough Samusl Meaker Richard
McClain Monchy Andrsvr
Maharrey W H Megan Hugh
Matthews G G 2 Morris W & C
Massett Jno C Moon mrs A
Markey F L Murry mrs A
Malone F H • Morgan H
Martin li S Murray mrs E
Mahoney Daniel MomonsM
Malone M H Moody W Al
Maxwell Atm Maria Moniglmn E
Martin Mary Morgan F T
O
O’Conner J Ormes W
Ogden D L T White care of mr
Oliver G H O’Brien
Owens A B
P & Q
Page mr. Peck II P
Pace mrs 9 Piper A M
Parker mrs E Purdos H
Payne C Pleasants C J
Parker mrs M A Pusey C
Piper A N Printup Wm
Piunan J Primrose J \V
Perdue D Primrose J
E ■ ohns care of J Quirk P
Pitman
R
RabeJ Richerson tnisa Franees
Ramsey A M lluath Lyman
Reid mrs L Royal mrs Martha
Red G B Rudier Monsieur Joseph
Rice mrs Mary E 2 Davis Alex care of
Ringgold miss MF2 William Robertson
s
Seay Willis Sindersine mrs Mary R
Skinner W S Shackleford G W
Sherman Lieut W T Smith James
USA Smith James L S
Sainlsimons S Stagings Herbert
Sharpe John Starke Master Reuben
Simpson W R Spear John W 2
Shackleford Levi Stubblefield G G
Sheftail mrs Sarah Symms Courllani
Simmons Dr A J
T& V
Thompson mrs Mary Mrs Sarah Cushion cam
Thompson Maj. Isliam 2 of Moses Todd
Taylor A Todd Moses
Til man Ashbury Tinley Patrick
Timmerman W A Verdery Eugen*
Templeton Wm. Taylor R B
W & Y
Waldera Michael Wiley John B
\\ ard miss G.-orgia W iiliains J
Walker Joshua S Williams Alary A
Betsey Barnes care of Wtlkinson John
Jacob Walker Williams Lewis
White Susan Delia Wilson Thomas
W'ellburn John Williams Emelins
W estbrook David Worral Alex 2
W ebb John Woodbury & Co W
V* hilely mrs Yarborough Mtuy J£
White Thomas Young mrs H 2
Whilely Georgs Young Richard
Whittington John Young mrs
Z
i Ze\ fieri Andrew
July 6 E. B. GLASCOCK, P. M.
CAUTION.—NOTES LOST.
ON the 27th March last, the lollowing Notes
were mailed to the undersigned at Augusta,
; from Eatonton, but they have never come n. hand,
and it is believed that they were robbed from, or
i with th" mail, about that lime, to-wit:
Une Note on Jas. L. Reid and IL-nry M. Trippe,
security, payable io D. R. Adams, Executor of Irby
Hudson, dec’d., dated about the last of January,
ldß>, and due on Ist January, 1*47, $650,00.
One Note on Madison Kilpatrick and Thomas
Kilpatrick, dated, due, and payable, as above, for
543U.00.
Une Note on D. R. Adams and J. T. Harwell,
dated in February, 1#46, and payable to Siovulldf
Simmons, on Ist January. I&17, for $i 16,7fi.
The makers of above Notes and all others, are
hereby notified and requested, not to pay <>r trade,
for said Notes. Any information in regard thereto,
i or the thief, w ill be thankfully received by
STOVALL & SIMMONS.
Augusta, May 4 m 4 135
i lIOTCHKISSMDOTDIFiC ATIOtf.
j A CODIFICATION UF THE LAWS oi the
i State of Georgia, for sale by
CIIAS. E. GRENVILLE,
; april 13 Only agent fur Augusta