Newspaper Page Text
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BY j GARDNER .JR. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBERS, IB4G. VOL. XXIVr-NO. 34.
THE CONSTITUTIONALIST.
i OFFICE IN MclN'i Ot'll-STKEKT,
Thirddoor from the Sorth-Wrst corner of Broad-st
, Sale*. of LAND by Administrators. Executors .or
Gnan!i.in-. are required, by law,in be 10-lo on tDe
fir*! Tuesdav in the month, between the hours of
ten in thl forenoon anti three in the afternoon, at
the Cour.t House which the property issinmte.
Notice of these sales must be gi'tn in a public
Gazette sixty - n.\ vs previous to the day ofsale.
Sales of NEGROES must beat public auction, on
the first Tuesday of tin- month, between the usual
hours ofsale, at t lie place of public sales in the
county where tHe Letter* Testapieiitary, or Ad
ministration, or Guardianship, may h*i'c been
grained, fi»t giving sixty days'notice thereof,
in one JTtin* public Gazettes of this State.and at
t h’ 1 •hi&r of the Court House whe re such sale sa re
to be rujd.
N d'ice for the »al<-«f Personal Property must fie
ri ven i iiTike-manner fort vda vspreviom today
of
Notice iq the Debtor* and C reditors of an Estate
must be published for forty days.
Notice that application will be made tothcCourtof
Ordinary for leave to sell LAND, must be pub j
lished for FOUR months.
N dice for leave to sell NEGROES,must he pub-
I,shed FOUR MONTHS before any orderabsolute ,
can he given hv the ( ourt.
[From Chamfers ’ Journo/.]
WHITE AND UR.OWN BREAD.
Several years ngo, we threw out the
surmise that the separation of the white
from the brown parts of wheat grain "as
like Iv to he baneful to health. \\ e pro.
c-ccletj upon theoretical pounds, believ
ill_r that Providence must have contem
plated our using the entire grain, and rot
a portion only; selected by means of a
nicely arranged machinfiiy. It stuck ns
forcibly, that to go on, for a long course
ofveais, thus using a kind of food differ
ent from what nature designed, could not
fail to he attemh d with bad YWisequencf s.
We have since learned that our views
leave some recognised support in science.
The following paragraph fiom a recent
pamphlet y\i!l at once serve to keep the
subject alive in the minds of our leaders,
and explain the actual grounds on which
the separation of flour is detrimental:—
“The general belief,” says the writer, “is
that bread made with the finest flour is
the htfsf, and the whiteness is the proof
of its quality; hut both these opinions are
popular errors. The whiteness may be,
and generally is communicated by alum,
to the injury ot the consumer; and it is
known by men of science that the bread
ot unrefined flour will sustain life, while
that made with the n fined will not.—
Keep a man on brown btead and water,
and he will live and enjoy good health;
give hint "into bread aii-f waier only,
and ho will sicken and die. Ihe meal
ot which the first is made contains all ihe
ingredients necessary to the compo it ion
ot nourishment ot the various structures
composing our bodies. Some of these in
gredients are removed by the millet in
Ins efforts to please the pub ic; so that fine
fl >ur, instead of being better than the
meal, is the least nourishing; and io make
the case worse, it is also the most difficult
of digestion. The loss is, therefore, m all
respects a waste; and it seems desirable
that the admirers of while bread (but es
pecially the poor) should be acquainted
with these truths, and brought to inquiie
whether they do not purchase at 100 dear
a rale the privilege ot indulging in the
use it. The unwise preference given
so universally to white bread lead to the
pernicious practice of mixing alum with
the flour, and this again to all sorts of
adulterations and impositions; lor it cna
bled bakers, uho were so disposed, l<y
addmg more and more alum, to make
bread made from the ilour of an interior
grain look like the be>t or most costly,
and to dispose of it accordingly; at once
defrauding the pm chaser, and tampering
with his health. Among the matters te
moved bv the miller are the large saline
substances, w Inch are indispensable to the
growth of the bones and teeth, and are
required, although in a less degree, for
daily tepair. Known bread should there
fore be given to nurses and to the young
or the growing, and should be preferred
by all, of whatever age, whose hones
show a tendency to bend, or who have
wvak teeth. It is believed that brown
bread will generally be found the best by
all j-erstms having sluggish bowels, and
stomachs equal to the digestion of the
bran. Hut with it w ill jjisagree; I
for it is top exciting to irritable bowels, |
and is dissolved wih difficulty in some j
stomachs. When this happens, the bran
should be removed either wholly or in
part; and by such means the bread may
be adapted, with the greatest ease to all
habits and all constitutions.”
Mr. Smith, in his late remarkable work
on Fruits and Farinacea as the food of
man, gives some illustrations of this doc
trine. “Bulk,” he says, “is nearly as ne
cessary tolhearticlesofdu t asthe nutrient
principle. They should be so managed
that one will be in proponion to the other.
Too highly nutiitive is probably as fatal
to the prolongation of life and health, as
that which contains an insufficient quan
tity of nourishment. It is a matter of
common remaik among old whalemen,
that during long voyages, the coarser
their bread the better their health. “I
have followed the seas for thirty five
years,” said an intelligent sea captain to
Mr. Graham, ‘and have been in almost
every pa l l of the globe: and I have al
ii ay found that the coarsest p.lot-bread,
w liiclt contains a considerable portion of
bran, is decidedly the healthiest lor my
men.’ •! am convinced, from my own
experience/ says another captain, ‘that
bread made of the unbolted wheat meal
is fur more wholesome than that made
from the best superfine flour—the latter
always lending to produce constipation,’
Captain Dexter, of the ship fsis, belong
ing to Providence arrived from China in
Di cernber, 1804. He had been about one
hundred and ninety days on the passage.
The sea-bread, which constituted the
7 # |
principal article of fond (or ins men, w'as
made of the best superfine flour. He had
not been .ong at sea before his men be
gan to complain of languor, loss of appe
tite, and debility. These difficulties con
tinued to increase during the whole voy- |
i age; and several of the hands died on the
passage of debility and inanition. The
ship was obliged to come to anchor thirty ;
miles below Providence; and such was
the debility of the men on board, that they
were not able to get the ship under weigh
again, and the owners were under the j
necessity ©{’sending men down from Pro
vidence to work her up. When she ar
rived, the owners asked Captain Dexter
what was the cause of the sickness of his
men? He replied, “The bread was 100
i good.”
[From the T. Journal of Commerce, Sept. 2.]
THE GREAT CHRISTIAN I MON -MEE T
ING IN LONDON.
The United will doubtless be
well represented in this great Protestant
assembly, and some benefit, at least, may
b" anticipated from the examination and
discussion, hv able men, of diftere nl sects, ;
of the grounds and terms of More intimate i
Chrisiia’n Union. The absence of a spirit ;
of candor and justice is the great pre- ;
j vailing dt feet among Christians of differ- i
cm denominations and nothing can better
lend to supply this, than A more thorough j
knowledge of each oilier —than, an inter
change of sentiments and opinions on one
common platform, and in circumstances,
awakening mutual personal respect. It
is obvious that all Christians agree in
what is essential to chi istianily, and this
is enough to secure such mutual esteem
and courtesy between the members ofthe
Convention, as will dispose them, advan
tageously to consider non essential dil
r
lercnco', and how tar these are to lie per
mitted to divide, and therefore weaken,
their exertions for the propagation and !
triumph of the vital power and morality |
of their religion. Should their mutual |
j esteem and courtesy govern in all the
i deliberations and debates of this Conven
! don, we may expect the best results. But
lwo or tioec ra>h and bigoted men, more
concerned I© lithe, mint, annis and cum
min, than to hind in good fellowship ami
practical union/ all the friends of the
Redeemer, may do infinite mischief, and !
de eat its laudable purposes. We trust
ail such will be absent. For it is no to
argument or eloquence we mainly trust
for the good to be realized by this Con
vention, but to the spirit in which it
assembles, and the brotherly kindness I
winch may and should predominate in its 1
proceedings.
It is not probable that any one denom- j
inaiiou will give tip its peculiarities—but :
every denom.nation may be led to value ;
them less in comparison with the essen
tials of Christianity. It is hardly to he
expected that any one sect w ill cease to
atguo for their own peculiar views, but
all may resolve to do this with more fair
ness and charity, and to com* nd more
earnestly in union with their brethren, for
the ascendancy of ttio common and uni
versal principles oflheir faith. They
may all learn some lessons of humility,
candor and charity. They may separate
with belter affections, purer zeal, and
loftier designs. They may, as from some
lowering eminence, take a wide survey
I of the ignorance, crime and misery of
the world, and feel that they are sum
moned to pioclaim a truce to minor con
trover>ies, and dissensions, and combine
their energies for the relief of their race.
rs .
They may return to their homes and their
duties, not only with new /lans of useful
ness but with new energy to perform them,
i and resolved more cleat ly to demonstrate
both the power and unity of their faith, in |
bonds of peace, and hy righteousness ot j
life. Other important objects may be at
tained, but these are of sufficient impor- j
I tance, and it must be the fault of the
i members if these are not attained.
The Cojitrast. —lt does one good to go ;
into a family amP find all its members |
busily employed. One, it may be, is
sewing, another is knitting, the third is
ironing, and the fourth, perhaps, is read
ing aloud. What a contrast to the do
meslic habits of some families. Enter j
the house when you may and you will
find cards on the table or hear a constant
talking upon frivolous subjects, while no
one Ija jS any work in her hand. In the
abode of the former, all is neatness and |
order—there is a place for every tiling, ,
and every thing in its place,—in the lat
ter, all is disorder and confusion; chairs
are out of place, the carpet is wrinkled,
books are thrown about and every thing
shows the want of taste and industry.
G/ass Makers. —These men complain
because ot the new tarilF. Pot ashes and
sand aie cheaper in this country than in
Europe. So is soft soap cheap—and lye, j
and so is the lie of men who say they
pay high wages. The difference in wa
ges is not much—the difference in man
agement and economy is very considera- j
RESULTS OF ADVERTISING.
The benefits of advertising have been
appreciated in many instances by persons
whose commodities were of little value
and dependent solely upon a spurious re
putation for their sale; and hence many
persons, associating the demerits of these
u ith the potent means used to render them
i popular,'have imputed to the la’tter tlie
odium that should only be attributed to
the former. The unfairness or injustice
of tin’s course is almost too manifest to re
quire comment. It tlie end be unworthy',
hut the means both proper and efficient,
docs it not at once appear to be a duty to
divert such means from their prostituted
| purposes, and to apply them to good and
i useful ends? but since all minds cannot
be brought 10 think alike upon the various
callings and pursuits of men, the means
here indicated must be regarded as legiti
mately applied, if the object held in view
by the advertiser bo neither in viola ion
of the law of the land nor the moral feel
ingof the community. It may, however,
he asked, if profit can be realized from
an unfair business by advertising, how
can a good and useful calling, from w Inch
even moderate profits proceed, fail to fie
bene fitted through such instrumentality? |
1 reply that it cannot, and in confirmation j
of tin's assertion many striking instances ,
coul 1 he adduced. Let the following, j
however, which arc given in several ol j
tiie newspapers of the day, suffice:
Messrs. Hardin, Hmit& Co., a firm
doing an extensive business in the town of i
Worcester, Massachusetts, during tho I
past year paid about one thousand d ollars
for advertising their goods, and are satis- t
fied by this outlay they have received a !
rich harvest in return. Brandreth has
risen from poverty to be a man of exten
sive fortune; lie has now a three story
manufactory for preparing his medicine,
and whole cargoes of it are despatched
to every part of the Union. He has ex
pended thirty five thousand dollars in a
single year lor advertising. Comstock
began with nothing, but, by the sale of his |
medicines, has been enabled to purchase i
one of the first houses in Union Place, !
New York, and gives magnificent soirees, j
&c. Moffit, by I lie sale of bitters and
pills, has amassed a fortune of nearly j
$300,000. Sherman, by the sale of lo- |
zenges, has emerged from a little shop in |
Nassau street, New York, and become a 1
buyer of lots and houses by wholesale. i
And Swaim, of Philadelphia, by the sale i
of his panacea, had attained to a degree ;
of wealih in alI probability exceeding that
of any competitor.
Success in all these cases, lie it remem- !
bered. (and it is stated without any inten-*
lion to undervalue the medicines named.)
is acknowledged to he the result of the
means used to give notoriety to the articles
sold, and those means were— newspaper
advertising. — Palmer's Road to Wealth.
TIIE COLOR OF HOUSES.
The following article, which we cut
from the Prairie Farmer, contains state
ments which, as ‘-facts” or “fancies,”
may be worth attention. If the writer’s
theory be correct, horse Lavaters may at
once come into vogue, anil color will be
as important to horses as to other artists
whose proses.-ion it is to draw. “There
is no one fact that mankind are more ig
noiant of titan this—that the color of a
horse is a sure indication of iiis charac
ter. In this article I shall attempt to give
a few roles by which a man of common
observation can fell the disposition of a
horse as soon as he sees him. The first
thing to be observed is, the color of the
animal; the second is the phrenological
developements. if his color is a light
sorrel, his feet, legs and face white, these
are marks of kindne**. Then, if lie is
broad and full between the eyes, I will
warrant him to be a horse of good sense,
and easily trained lo do any thing. Such
horses will have good treatment; the
kinder you treat them the better they will
treat you in return. A horse of the above
description will never stand the whip if he
1 is well fed. Cue thing to he always ob
! served in buying a horse, if you want a
! gentle one, is to get one with more or less
; w hite about him. A spotted one is pre
! ferahle. We see many of this color used
in circusses. Some have supposed that
this color was sought for by the owners of
these establishments because of its oddity;
it is not so; it is because horses of this de
scription are the easiest trained to per
form the difficult feats that we see them
go through at such places. Again, if you
want a safe horse, avoid one that is d sh
faced; he may be gentle—that is, he mav
not scare; but lie may have too much of
the go a head in him to be safe for every
body. If you wan: a perfect fool, buy a
| horse of great bottom, get a deep bav,
w ith not a white hair about him; if his
face is dished, so much the worse; boys,
or men that have not good care of them
selves, should never have any thing to do
| withahorseof this kind; they are always
tricky and unsafe. I have been deprived
of the use of my limbs for twenty-seven
years; in this time 1 have travelled over
a large portion of the western country by
j land, in my one-horse buggy. In using
♦be kind of horses that I have first de
scribed, 1 have invariably found them
j kind and gentle to manage. But in using
I the deep bays I have suffered enough by
their treachery to kill forty men.”
I GCTIn a volume of fugitive pieces in
prose and verse belonging to the Revo
| lutionary period, we find the following
sketch of tire origin of a description of
punishment which has been often con
demned by the popular voice.
TARRING and feathering original
ly A YANKEE TRICK.
This appears from the speech of Mc
-1 Fin gal, lire tory Sagamore, to the Yankee
mob :
“Was there a Yankee trick ye knew.
They did not play as well as you?
Did they not lay their heads together.
And gain year art to tar and feather?”
TARRING AND FEATHERING LAWFUL.
This appears by the authority of the
j sentence w Inch was pronounced on 31c
j Fin gal —(Me Fin gal, by John Trumbull,
Esq ) This sentence, be it remembered,
though seemingly the order and decree !
of a committee, in fact, had its origin in j
tiie brain of a man who was a Judge of
lire Supreme Court of tiro Stale of Con
necticut. Whether appointed Judge, from
this specimen of his judicial knowledge,
\or not, is not now in question but let us
i hear the sentence pronounced on Me Fin
: gal, king of the lories:
“Meanwhile beside the pole, the guard*
A bench of justice had prepared.
Where sitting round in awful sort,
The grand committee hold the court:
While all the crew in silent awe,
Xv ail from their lips the lore of law.
Few moments with deliberation.
They hold the solemn consultation.
When soon in judgment all agree.
And clerk declares rhe dread decree:
•That squire McFingal, having grown
The vilest tory in the town.
And now on full examination.
Convicted bv his own confession.
Finding no token of repentance.
This court proceed lo render sentence :
That first the mob a slip knot single.
Tie round the neck of said McFingal,
And in due form do tar him next.
And feather, as the law directs:
Then thro’ the town attendant ride him,
In cart with constable beside bim,
And having held him up to shame.
Bring to the pole from whence he came.’ ”
Vision and prediction of McFingal, j
j king of tc ries, when in his coat of tar and |
j feathers;
t “Tar yet in embryo in pine,
Shall run on lories’ hacks to shine;
’frees rooted fair in groves of fallows.
Are growing for our future gallows;
And geese unhatched, when plucked in fray,
bliall rue the feathering of that clay.”
McFingal, by J. Trumbull, Esq.
An Elephant's Doings. —We learn by
a genih man of this city who was at Lock
j port on’Saltmlav, that at noon of that
day, an elephant belonging to a menagerie
j exhibiting there, walked out of his tent to- i
\ wa r d a span of horses attached to a wa.
■ gon some twenty rods off. Tire horses
look fright as the huge beast approached
them, broke loose and ran a few rods to
tire angle of a fence, trie elephant follow- I
i ed, capsized the wagon and threw the |
horses some two rods over ihe fence.—
One of the horses rose with several bro- ;
ken ribs, and managed to escape from his |
assailant, who fell upon the other w ith his j
: tusks, tore out his entrails, and continued
; to toss him along the fence some ten rods i
or more.
At this time the keeper, who was at
dinner when the elephant escaped from
: tire tent, came up and called the animal
by name. The elephant immediately
; obeyed the word, and followed the keeper
| to an orchard about a hundred rods off,
I w here he was secured by strong chains
j made fast to the trunk of a full grown |
tree. Just a* our informant left in the
afternoon, he heard that the elephant had j
uprooted the tree to which he was fas- |
! tened, and had injured a man; but learned ;
no particulars. Tire rage of tire elephant, >
it is said was caused by some tobacco |
| concealed in the food that some of the j
bystanders offered him. People cannot |
! he too cautious how they trifle in such a
way w ith an elephant. —Bujfalo Cominer- ;
| cial Advertiser.
The Unwilling Bridegroom. —A young
man had engaged himself lo a playmate
j in early youth, but as bis mind developed,
j he perceived that he was misrnaled, and
wished to be released from his engage
ment. The young lady would not con
sent, and insisted upon being married.—
The young man appeared to yield, but
when asked, as usual, “Will you take
this woman to be your wife?” he answer
ed, “No.” At this unexpected answer,
the marriage party broke up in confusion.
The relatives of the rejected bride, re
; sented I fie insult offered lo their family,.
and threatened prosecution. At last the
| young lady [imposed that they should go
again to the church, and that the bride
groom should make the usual answer,
promising that when it came to her turn,
she w'ouid answer no, that the refusal
mitrht appear to come from her. The
bridegroom consented; but to Iris surprise,
the bride answered yes, the marriage
l ceremony was concluded in form, and he
found himself, against his will, a married
man.
I * -
“ Murder in a hank! I’—The 1 ’ —The Boston
, Traveller staled, a few days since, that
a bill was thrust into the face of a Presi
| dent of one of the banks, when he killed
the intruder on the spot. Out of this an
nouncement the lovers of the horrible
have manufactured a “terrible murder
j in a bank,” but it turns out that the hill
| thrust into the face of the bank officer
was that of a mus quite!
Fumn aMW**H—fa——a—
I IMPORTANT DISCOVERY—INSTANTANE
OUS STOPPAGE OF A RAILWAY TRAP.'.
We, savs Galignai’s Messenger, stated
; that we had received an invitation to he
present at some experiments with a new
: having for its object the instantaue
: oils stoppage of a rail road train without
the slightest shock to the passengers, an 1
that it was our intention to attend. The
ex| erimcnl took place in tfie Rue Chaus
i see d’Antin, ou a model railway con
structed for the purpose. The inventor
i is an engineer named Alexandre, who
1 has been, it appears, assiduously ocell
i' pied f r four years in bringing his invert
; lion to perfection. A model train waslet
off at different rates of speed, fro n fifteen
to twenty leagues an hou r , down a very
| inclined plane, and yet, notwithstanding
these circumstances, the train was check
j e l without the slightest commotion. The
j break is worked bv the conductor of the
last carriages, by which means,the whole
! of the carriages, instead of striking each
i other have a tendency to retreat. As soon
I as the breaks of the last carriage have
I taken their position, those of every other
| carriage in the train act instantaneously,
and by another admirable contrivance
they can, even at the greatest rate of
speed ho detached from the train. 'Phis
is not all. The very act of separating
the locomotive provides against accident
from its running too far forward, for as
soon as it has reached a sufficient distance j
from the train, say 50 to 100 yards, it
slops. We shall not enter into any tech
nical details of the mode in which all this
I is effected, for they could he understood
hy only a few of our readers, hut as far
j as the results are concerned we Teel con
i vinced that the invention is good. The
j inventor estimates the expense of adopt
i ing his apparatus at a thousand francs for
i each carriage, which is a small sum, if
i we consider the importance ofthe object I
! in view. A commission, appointed by the ;
j Government, have witnessed and it is said
j approved ol the experiments.
I The Censorship. —“ There appeared re
cently a work on Austrian finance—
written by one well instructed in the mat
ter, and whom the government shrewdly
suspected to reside in Prague. As the
revelations were very offensive, the gov
ernment oidere ! Herr Mnhdt, the head
of the police at Prague, to discover, if pos
sible, the author. All search was in vain.
41e then received instructions to set out
himself for Hamburg, where the work was
published, and endeavored to wheedle the
secret from Carnpe, the publisher. Muhdt |
i set off, but some one had been before him,
and bad warned Carnpe of his purpose.
Canape, who is a very knowing fellow,
played his part to perfection; suffered
! himself to be cajoled, and at last invited I
| M. to tea, half promising to tell him the !
; author’s name, under condition of secrecy. |
I At tea, Mnhdt was very pressing; and !
Carnpe, at length, begging him to make
no use of his knowledge, confidentially
whispered: ‘The author is Herr Muhdt,
the head of the police in Prague.’ Con
| ceive the state and the changing color of
j Herr Mundt. Alarmed lest, perhaps, the
author of the work might have malicious
ly taken his name—for he had no sus
picions of Carnpe—he earnestly declared
bim«elf to be the head of the police.
Carnpe affected astonishment. Muhdt
! 1
then asked him if he had many copies of
I the work on hand; on being told there
; were still two hundred and fifty be
bought them all. The next day, Carnpe
cal ed.at his hotel, to ask him whether he
would like any more copies of the work.
‘More!’ exclaimed, the astonished Muhdt,
j ‘more! why I thought you told me I had
got them all?’ ‘Sehr richtig,’ replied
i Carnpe, ‘all of the Jirst edition , hut a se
j cond is in the press —of which I can let
yon have as many copies as you please,”
— For. Qtrar. Rev.
S
Good Advice. —Somebody lays down
the following rules to govern young men
in business. They will apply equally
well to young and old. Let the business
of every one alone, and attend to your
own. Don’t buy what you don’t want;
use every hour to advantage, and study
even to make leisure hours useful; think
twice before you spend a shilling, remem
ber you will have another to make for it;
| find recreation in looking after your busi
ness, and so yonr business will not be
neglected in looking after recreation;
buy fair, sell fair, take care of the profit ;
look over your books regularly, and if
you find an error, trace it out; should a
stroke of misfortune come upon you in
trade, retrench—work harder, but never
fly the track; confront difficulties with un
flinching perseverance, and they will dis
appear at last; though you should even
fall in the struggle, you will be honored;
but shrink from the task, and you will
be despised.
JOHN D. S MITH,
GUN AND LOCK SMITH.
(Mclntosh-street, opposite the Post OJice, Augusta)
BEGS leave to inform the citizens of Augusta
and vicinity that he carries on the above bu-
I siness in all its various branches, and will warrant
| all work done by him.
Having a first rale workman in his employ, he
is now prepared to manufacture Guns or re-stock
them on the most approved plan.
Also, Walking Canes of every description hand
somely mounted.
Thankful for past favors, hopes to merit a con
tinuance*of public patronage. nov29
T'/EIER3IO3IETERS.-A few LONG ones
left, to be had of
{ jy24 J. E. MARSHALL.
HOTELS, Sic.
UNITED STATUS HOTEL,
AUGUSTA. GEORGIA. • •
To the travelling public and old friends in particular.
I beg leave to inform you that I have
|-'iPsra made my lasi move in Augusta, bac k to
8 -s».iny old stand the United Slates Hotel, on
Broad-street,opposite tlie Hank of Augusta.
Ever grateful for past favors, 1 feel assured (hat
you will excuse me fur again soliciting a continu
ance of your patronage, as I invite you to the most
central hotel and business part of the city-
The hotel has recently been enlarged, with many
improvements, and is now under the sole charge of
vour friend and humble servant.
| ' wt2B DANIEL MIXER.
j GLOBE HOTEL m
l il AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Ml-L
The subscriber respectfully' informs tlie Planters,
Merchants, and Traveling Public, that he is now
the proprietor of tins well-known and spacious Ho
{ tel. The proprietor hopes from the central location
of his House and his personal attention to, and ac
quaintance with the business, to receive a liberal
share of patronage. Travelers going through, can
at all tine s be furnished with refreshments upon
the arrival of the cars.
F. M. JENNINGS.
April 1,1346. 121
sold out my interest in the
GLOBE HOTEL to Mr. Jennings, I return to my
friends who have so long patronized me, my most
i sincere thanks, and in doing so, it affords me plea
i sure that I can confidently ask their support and
i friendship for .Mr. Jennings, with the assurance
i that, on his part, nothing will lie omitted that can
| contribute to their comfort and quiet. Give him a
trial, and “if he does not do the thing np brown,”
i then quit him. B. F. KENRICK.
i april I 6m 121
I a Washington hall
j: !: ' B WACOM, GEORGIA.
The subscribers having associated in the man
agement of this long established and well-know n
House, their joint and individual attention will
he given to ns general superintendance, and no
effort w ill be spared to sustain its former high char
acter. We shall always study the comfort and en
tertainment oflhose who mav favor us with a call.
MOTT & SPARKS.
William A. Mott, £
Ovid G. Sparks. $
becoming associated with Mr. William A.
Molt in the management of the WASHINGTON
HALL, the subscriber begs leave to invite the
custom of the traveling public, and particularly of
his country friends. It will give him pleasure at
all times, to minister to their comfort, and to aiti
them in any way in his power, in the transaction
of such business as may call them to Macon.
OVID G. SPARKS.
Macon. July J, 1816. 17 !rn July 31
~GLOFe 11 OTEL,
DECATUR, GEORGIA.
The subscriber
'i-e’s l begs leave to inform the
public generally, that he
has opened a If 6 U 8 E
OF ENTERTAINMENT
i in the tow n of Decatur,
*• at the old stand, for many
I
' '** strict attention to obtain
a liberal share of public patronage. His table will,
| at all times be supplied with the best the country
; affords. His Stable is under the control of an at
! tentive Hostler, with plenty of provender. His
I charges will be as moderate as can be afforded at
\ any similar establishment in the up-country, both
' to regular boarders and transient persons.
E. B. REYNOLDS.
Decatur, DeKalh co.,Ga., July 2 ( J. 1816.
LAN I>S I’ojUsAEE,
i , The subscriber, desirous of remnv
i his planting interest, offers for
! sale his PLANTATION in Columbia
county, nine miles above Augusta, on
—the Savannah River, containing about
; six hundred acres of Land, about one hundred
acres of which are in the woods and well timbered,
| the remaining five hundred acres are well en
| closed ami in a good state of cultivation, having
j now on it as fine a crop of corn as can he produced
i in the neighborhood. On the main and immedi
! ately on the bank of the river, and wi’hin a half
mile of the basin of the Augusta Canal, there is a
! very extensive Quarry of fine granite, which can
; be easily transported to the Canal, there being a
i deep current to the canal.
I also offer for sale, my well-known pine-woods
Residence, six miles above Augusta, containing
about one hundred and eighty acres, with a com
! fortahle dwelling house and all other necessary out
i buildings, a good spring convenient, and a well of
| excellent water in the yard. There is also a fine
; orchard of peaches, apples, pears, and almost every
kind of fruit on the premises, and the land very
j productive for pine land, as it has a clay founda
; tion.
Persons wishing to purchase are referred to John
i H. Maun, Esq., who is my legally authorized at
torney during my absence.
JAMES G. STALLINGS,
i july 15 w3m 10
BROUGHT TO JAIL "in
yk this county on Monday, the 3d instant, a
negro man, about twenty five years old,
-A— - and dark complexion, who calls himself
! ALFRED THOMAS,and says he is free, and that
Bazziel Dorson, of Augusta, Richmond county, Ga.
! is his guardian, and that he lived in Augusta for
some lime —that he came into this section with his
guardian, who was pediing Tobacco &c., that he
sold his wagon and team near Tampa Bay, Florida
i —that .Mr. Dorson then gave him a ticket to convey
him to Augusta, but that it got so much worn he
threw it away. Said negro lias several scars on
j his body and one on the elbow of Ids right arm,
which he says was caused by a foot adz.
The guardian of said rmgro can have him by
paying all charges, on proof of his being free, or
the owner, if he is not free, will please come for
ward and claim him.
MORGAN G. SWAIN, Jailer.
Troupville, Lowndes co., Ga., Aug. 5, 1846.
august 12 wtf 22
"fuTTWTO HEWARD.»
from the plantation of the Snh
■ 4-. scriher, in Burke county, on the night
! of the 25th August,instant.aGßAY MARE,about
nine years old, and 12 or 14 hands high. Site has
been snagged on the right leg immediately below
the point of the shoulder, and her under lip drops
as if the corners of her mouth had been cut, ami
w hich leaves her teeth exposed.
It is supposed that the thief crossed the river at
Shell Bluff, in Burke county, and has made his
way to South Carolina. The above reward will
be paid for the delivery of the Mare at my planta
tion in Burke county, near Waynesboro’, or at the
plantation of Gen. James H. Hammond, in Barn
well District, S. C. M. C. M. HAMMOND,
ausust 31 3 30
SMITH’S SEKiIONS. —Miscellaneous Ser
mons, by the Rev. Sydnia Smith, complete in
one vo!. Received by
Feb IS CHAP" E. GRENVILLE-