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BY JAJiKSCSARDXKR, JU. ' AUGUSTA, UEOKGIA, W£DN£SUAY HOiI\LVG, SEPTKIiSES 30, 181*3. VOL. XXIV,—AO. 13.
mi |- ■ -• '
the constitutionalist.
OFFICE IN M INTOSH-STREET,
Third iloor from tUr North- West corner of Ij roads I
Ktles of I. A Ml by Administrators.Executors."'
Guardian*, are required, by law. to be belu ""“'I
iirfi Tuesday in the month, between the
i s, m tli- forenoon ami three in iheafternnnn.at
th- ( onrt i louse in which tin- properly issiuin.e
Noiire of the- sales most be given in a puhac
Gazette si XT v otv.i prev ions to 1 < I sa.t*.
il.e firm Tuesday of tlf month,oe« wet n the u>> i*
hours of «ale, at tin- place of publu sab *n ihe
county where the Inters Testam«,it«r>.ur Ad
ministration, or Guare.iHiw-uip. V l “- ■
granted. fir-t giving 9t*T‘ i»ay*» . ' ' j ’
in one of the puhlir Gazettes of ihmh
t (.*■ door of the Court House wheresucUsalesare
to he belli. ~p
Notice forth.; sale of Personal P r o r e,iy mu. oe
i»i v«ni n like-manner forty i>a t i-j-r %iU - ‘ 1
Not ire to! he Debtors and Creditors of an Estate
most he published for forty days. , c
Notice that application will be ,
Ordinary for leave ms. I! LAND, must be pub
I ished for Koc K tun ms. .... , , „
Notire for lea% e sell NECUOES.mm.tbc P “
I ished fim a months before any order absolute
can hi* givi.-n t*S’ tii** i >urt.
07/” The following, from the Liver
pool Times, is atioiher instance arttong
the hundreds now crowding upon public
Hltrntion, of the benefits accruing from
f ree Trade. It is especially to the south
ern States, tho only true and wise policy.
The present year exhibits a remarka
ble increase in the commerce of the 1 ai
led States with the kingdom of Sardinia.
This increase is owing to the successful
efforts of tlie American Minister at 'ru
tin, Mr. Wick I iff, inducing the leading
merchants and manufacturers of Genoa
to import American produce and export
<hal of their own country to the United
.Slates directly. As a consequence, Ame
rican commerce lias been relieved from
(the intervention of third nalion-s, and hy
the establishment of direct relations, aug
mented. As an instance oftlie increase,
llte article of cotton may betaken. Ihe
disual average quantity of American cot
ton imported into Genoa yearly has been
lon thousand bales; during the first six
.months of the present year eighteen thou
sand bales leave been already imported.
—Liverpool Times.
[From the Richmond Enquirer.]
To -show the increasing demand for the
agricultural fruils of this country in the
British matkols, we quote the following
summary of the receipts in a single week.
Jl will he seen that two vessels, direct
from liichmond, have discharged in Lug
lomJ 6,360 barrels of flour, and 9,407
bushels of corn. The “home-market”
does not, then, consume all our produce ;
London, Bcpt. 3—The following com
prise the principal of the anivals of pro
visions of various descriptions from the
United States and Canada at the ports of
London aid Liverpool during the past
week: The Madura, front New Orleans,
brought 2,4D0 hags of wheat; the Ant
werp from Uichmond, 4,085 bbis. of flour
,nud 4.500 bushels of corn; the Roscius,
from New York, 2,611 sacks of wheat;
11.500 barrels of dour, 336 boxes of
cheese, 257 barrels and 72 ! kegs of lard,
JOO 1,1,15. of bread, and 25 barrels of beet
.and hums; the Christiana, from N. York,
1,206 bids, of flour, 1,456 boxes ofeheese,
{VS bids, of hams and tongues, 153 tcs.
•of beef, 228 bids, and 20.591 lbs. weight
in hulk of oil seed cake for feeding cattle,
and a variety of other articles of food
and general merchandise; the Lurope,
.from New Orleans, 180 boxes of cheese,
:3l firkins of butter, 300 bblsofcorn meal,
several of flour, 20 bids, of bread and
other articles; the New llampshire, from
New Oilcans, 3.221 sacks of wheat; the
America, from New Orleans, 806 bids,
of flour, 4.119 sacks of corn, and 3.325
•sacks of w heat; Ike llanrood.from Rich
mond, 2,275 hbls. of (lour and 4.707
bushels of corn; the Waldron, from New
Orleans, 427 sacks of wheal, 105 pack
ages of lard, 373 bids, of (lour, and 114
tierces, ami 15 halt bhls. of beef; the
.Champion, from Now Oil, aus, 1,166 bis.
and 6 half bhls. of flour, 136 bids, of lard,
and 566 kegs, 10 bhls. and 30 halt bids,
of grease butter; the Concordia, from N.
Orleans, 300 sacks of wheat and 4.800
:saoks ofcorn; the Devonshire, from New*
Orleans, 132 kegs of grease butter and
other articles; and the Thomas Cope, from
.Philadelphia, 1.550 bhls. of flour, 50 half
•bhls. of beef, and 197 kegs of lard; the
■Roger Sherman, from Alexandria, Uni
ted Stales, 7.100 bhls. cf Hour; and tho
Archelaus, from New Orleans, 4.41 1
ibbls. of flour and other produce. In ad
aption to the supplies mentioned, which
niave taken place since our last notice of
Ohe subject in our columns, extensive ar
rivals of cottons, wood goods, and other
.productions of a general character from
ilhe United States, and of wood good-- gen
erally from Canada and other British
provinces of North America, have, as
usual, taken place.
State of Florida. —There is a lively
•contest in Florida for the election of a
member of Congress. The democratic
candidate is William A. Kaine. The
•candidate of the whigs is one Mr. Cabell.
'Flic election will take place on the first
day of October. The whig candidate
declares that ho is not bound by party
tics, which means in plans English, that
he knows he cannot bo elected unless he
can humbug a good many democrats to
•vote for him.
[From thf \\ ariiinylon Cidon. j
THE HOME MARKET.
This is now the great hobby of the
i whig protectionists. They are professing
to raise up a lion c market, tor the con
sumption of the productions of the earth,
t They are throwing dust into the eyes of
1 the farmers, hy idly attempting to per
i euadeihem tliul they can, hy the protec
tive system, raise up as many manufac
-1 hirers as will eat up all the corn ami
wheat which the farmers can produce in
their fir Ids, and that they can spin all the
cotton which is grown in the productive
south. No scheme was ever more ridicu-
not even the project of Swift’s phi
losopher in the island of Laputa, who was
seeking to extract sunbeams from cucum
bers. No vision in the romantic brain of
Don 'Quixotic was more extravagant.
La nature alone. Ret her raise such
[trod net ions as arfe fitted to the soil and
climate, without forcing their factitious
growth by means of artificial hot-beds.
Lot our enterprising and ingenious coun
trymen, inventive beyond all other nations
in the* discovery of labor-saving machines,
devote themselves to manufactures as fast
as the accumulation of labor and of capi
tal will invite their employment. Hut
we have (no much legislation when Con
gress undertakes to say how many yards
of cloth the people shall manufacture for
themselves, and how many manufactu
rers we shall have, and how many farm
ers, and how a homo maiket shall he
created to take tl.e place of a more ex
tensive foreign market. If they were
even to succeed in this romantic project—
if they were even to raise up an army of
manufacturers sufficient to consume all
tlm productions of’the eartn —then a new
difficulty would occur in finding a mat ket
for t he immense quantity of manufactures
which this crowded manufacturing popu
lation would produce.
This wi.se scheme of the whigs to raise
manufacturers enough to consume all the
products of the earth, is almost as ridicu
lous as that of the madman in Ilasselas,
who aspired to the power of dispensing
sunbeams and showers over all the re
giou« of the earth. One would scarcely
believe, in this enlightened ago, that any
man would so egregiously mistake the
functions of the government as to make
! it a bettor judge of the private interests
1 of the people than each individual him
self. The creation of a home market is
| now, however, the desperate scheme of
the whigs to deceive the farmers, and re
concile them to their protective system for
the benefit of the rich manutaclnrers. ft
is exposed in the following editorial art;,
cle from the Saratoga Sentinel of Tues
day last.
“ The. Agricultural interest and the
Tariff'. — It is a .singular fact, that of the
numerous columns daily devoted hy the
whig press to laudations of the benign
influence of the tariff of ’42 upon the
pockets of wealthy manufacturers, scarce
ly a single syllable is offered in extenu
ation of its evil effects upon our agricul
turists. This class, by far the most nu
| onerous of the population of the United
Slates, is entirely overlooked in their zea
lous endeavors to benefit a few* wealthy
corporations. The inmates of the humble
collage are oppressed to enable the afilu
. out to amass colossal fortunes, and when
the cnerous svstem of legal robbery is j
about being modified, an universal shout !
of indignation L raised 1m them against
I the ‘ruinous’ work. ‘Leave the tariff
alone, it works admirably—our maculae- j
Hirers cannot live without it,’ &0., &c., j
to the end of the chapter'd* lamentations.
| Such is tiic language of iho whigs when
their favorites arc threatened with a re
duction of their enormous profits; but
when do we hear them condole with the
laborer who has to pay thirty dollars on
every hundred lie expends upon his fami
ly in the shape of clothing, and oilier ne
cessatics, though he has to earn it with
the scythe, under the scorching rays of a
summer's sun, or with the axe, amid the
chilling snows and biting blasts of winter?
Condole with him? that would be ridicu
lous; they know better than to add insult
to injury; they may endeavor to deceive
his better judgment, by entangling plain
and simple questions of self evident facts
with abstruse intricacies; but they dare
not go beyond this; if they did, the people
would crush their darling system at once,
instead of divesting it of its most gross
abuses.
“The great hobby of the whigs is a
‘home market,’ but wo have never yet
seen them back it by a good argument.
It is certainly a "beautiful theme for a su
perficial fancy to dwell upon; but how
i quickly its fallacy becomes apparent
when we divest it of its external attrac
tions, and look at the naked principle of
the thing. When the ‘American system,’
with the pleasing associations oi inde
pendence, in which whigery lias clothed
it. is forgotten, and nothing but its actual
worth considered, we cannot hut wonder
that so many still follow the delusive
phantom.
“And now we will attempt a refutation
of the much-talked of ‘home market,’
that the whigs tell us will be the fruits of
the protective policy, it is estimated
that fourteen times as many persons arc
engaged in agricultural as in all other
pursuits. In the four principal manufac
tures, (iron, hardware and cutlery, wool
lens, and cottons.) there were engaged,
iii 1839, 129,003 persons; supposing this
number to consume, per head, six bush
els of wheat, and six of corn and rye,
1 which is more than actually u-e !, and
they would consume, in the aggregate,
1,518,000 bu-hels. In the same year,
481,005,814 bushels were raised in the
middle Slates alone. This would leave
a surplus of over four hundred and sixty
seven millions of bushels of trio above
three staples. And now wo would ask
protectionists how th§y are to procure a
home market for the consumption of this
vast surplus? Why, the idea is prepos
terous. Hat suppose, for the sake of car
ryingout the principle, we could establish
one, would our laboring population be
the gainers? Would they become more
independent bv the change.? They would
gain masters and become slaves. This
| is the sum and substance of what the re
sult would fie. We have examples, even
now, in the New England States, of tin's
fact Manufacture#.ire not content with
the control of the body, but must also
control the mind. Let an operative in
New England, where men are compelled
to vote open ballots, dare cast iris suf
frage for the man of his choice, if that
choice conflicts with the views of the
master, and he is discharged for the act.
Thrown out of employment because he
saw fit to discharge his dntvto-his coun
try in preference to obeying the mandates
ni a .selfish employer. There is no idle
fancy or visionary delusion; hut reality
which every one can witness with his own
! eyes at every election that takes place in
: .Massachusetts or Vermont. Thus we
see that a home market is < ut of the ques
tion, and if it was practicable, labor
would be the loser by the unnatural
change.
‘•One more point to ho considered, and
we have done. What would become of*
our largo surplus of manufactures? One
quarter of them could not bo consumed in
1 iiio United Slates. They would have (o
be taken to foreign markets. And would
i we he any more independent then than
; we are now, or won d lie it we abolished
all restrictions on imports? Certainly
net. Then why endeavor to change the
natural channel of labor, when we would
jhe ilie losers in every view we lake of it?
Why, merely to advance the interest and
power of wealthy corporations, whose
. souls have long since been absorbed in
the pursuit Oi gam.
i “Such is, we think, a correct vlov* of a
‘home market;’ though our meagre limits
i are scarcely sufficient to present the out
lines even of a subject, the details of
which are naturally extensive.”
[From the Richmond Enquirer .]
FLEEING THE “HOME MARKET.”
The following tables show what an
amount of American produce was sent
out of a single port during a week for
foreign markets. It will be remembered,
that the week referred to was one during
which heavy and disastrous gales pre
| vailed, thereby preventing many vessels
from leaving port. The aggregate of
exports enumerated, may therefore he
considered as not so great as usual.
FORT OF NEW YORK.
Exports of the port of New York, from
the 4 1 Si totlie Ilth of Sept, inclusive :
.
TO CHEAT BRITAIN.
! I’eef, tierces, 60 j Corn, bushel?, I!,GC3
| Eecf, barrels, 319 | Wool, bales, 3
} Flour, barrets, ?.ISO j Sperm Oil, gats. ]2.T! - 2
! Lard, pounds, 14.339 j Tobacco,leaf,lbs. 9,222
Tallow, pounds, 50,000 Hops, (tales, • 126
Turpentine, bids. 2.000 | Oil Cake, lbs. 599,724
; Cheese, lbs. 107,512 I Rosin, barrels, 1,000 j
; Corn meal, bbfs, 250 j
TO FRANCE.
Colton,bales, 2,!T5 j Fb.ur, barrels, 1,010
Tallow, pounds, 25,61 d | Rice, pounds, 31,671
Timothy Seed, lbs. 98) i V. haiebotio, ibs. 24,198
Beeswax lbs. 2,331 | Hides, 11,300
Rosin, ills. 250 } Ashes, pots, bids. 50
TO mUTISU NORTH AMERICAN COLONIES,
Cheese, pounds, 1,760 j Flour, barrels, 1‘492
Pork, barrels, 30:) I Rimer, pounds, 3,793
iteex, barrels, 120 j Rice, 5,081
TO SPANISH WEST INDIES.
Lard, pounds, 4,330 Hams, pounds, 2,583
Cheese pounds, 2,33.9 Rice. 6.286
Pork, barrels, 40 Dry fish, 43,678
i Beef, barrels, 20 Flour, barrels, 225
i Butter, pounds, 812
TO BRITISH WEST INDIES.
Floor, barrels, 80S I Cheese, lbs, 2,562
Flour, ball bbis. 52 j Butter lbs. 7,452
(.turn, bnsbeD, 1,092 j Hay, hales, 3DO
Beef, barrels, 23 live stock.
Beef, half bbis. 60 Bbeep, 100
l ard, pounds, 2,445 Oxen, 21
Rye Flour, bhls. 28 Horses, 17
j* Corn .Meal, bids. 293 Cows, 4
Rice, 6,022 Com, Adv.
j Practical Effects. — A largo merchant
ship of about 750 tons is now building
in the ship yard of.Mr. Dunkin, Fell’s
I’oint, for a house in Charleston, South
Carolina. The chain cables and anchors
required for her, costing near >53,000,
have been ordered from England. These
are to he stored in the government ware
house on arriving here, and will he ta
ken out under the low duty of the new
. Tariff, after it into operation on the
Ist December. The practical effects of
the new tariff is thus shown: Previous
to tlie order having been sent out, Mr.
| Abbot, cur townsman, who conducts an
extensive iron foundry at Canton, con
tiguous to Baltimore, and employs a large
number of hands, was applied to for the
purpose of ascertaining at what price he
could furnish the chain cables and an
chors. lie furnished his estimate. This
was found to he higher than the cables
could be imported for, by about 8150 or
i 8200, The order was therefore sent out
to England. So much for the new tat iiij
which encourages foreign labor at the ex.
| pease of our own. — [Baltimore Patriot,
CfTT’U e should be gla ! to know what
this country can produce in competition
with foreigners. According to the w hig
i pros we are certainly the most contemp
tible people on the face of the earth.—
\V e cannot manufacture any thing, if the
forf-igner has an opportunity to el for his
productions bv the side of ours. And we
cannot produce any thing from the soil
fora foreign import. England offers to
take oar corn, wheat, pork, lard, beef,
etc., but say (lie whigs we have none to
sell. We can export cotton but for that
wo are dependent upon negroes. We do
not know as trifling a race of men in the
world as the citizens of this country, ac
cording to the coon press.—iV. O. Jes
/ cr soman.
Pauper Labor. —in the New Haven
Register w*e find the following capital hit
at the li ioks of the Whigs. 8o far from
encouraging “American Industry,” the
Tariftites send across the water for the
; “pauper labor of Europe,” to carry on
j their wo its. We hope to hear no more
i the cry of foreign “pauper labor.”— liich ■ j
mond P,aquifer.
A recent London paper has the follow
j ing paragraph;
“Last wer k the represent! ves of a spin
ning establishment a t Ifoston, United
States, vi.-ited this country in order In ob
tain wool combers anil mill hands. About
a score of families from Bradford have
: already engaged, and are about to sail
from_ Liverpool as soon as 100 shin is
ready.”
When these fam'lies nre located in Lo.
well and live and move only on the
breath of their masters, wc shall see the
latter besieging Congress to put high du
-1 lies on foreign manufactures “lo protect
American industry.” Old hunfouggery!
thy name is Whiggcry.
Lowering Prices. —A writer in ihoTri
'° -
1 butte rewarks that under the new tariff—-
“the [■ rice of American carpets
have already fallen tit) to 30 percent.,
first quality three ply carpeting, which
j sold iast y ar for 8 L 40 per yard, having
been sold a few days ago for 95 cents.”
It does seem, then, that the imposition
cf a high or low duly has something to do
with the price of an article. The whigs
| have for some time contended that “high ,
duties do not make high prices,” yet it is |
now* admitted that low duties make low
[Sr* ops. It is- a bad rule, the old adage
says, which does not work both ways.—
N, Y. Everting Post.
o i
A Whigs Editor in Trouble. —A Whig
editor who had told largo stories about
j the dismissal of laborers, and the almost
: universal stoppage of manufacturing es
! tablishmcnts since tiio passage of Mclvay ks
Dill, was recently on a visit at Lowell, :
(says the N. it. Patiiot.) and hearing j
. tiie busy hum of industry from the various j
. mills, was completely dumb J(funded. —
Stopping a gentleman whom he met, he
I inquired—“ Do the, people here know that |
j that wicked Locofoco Tariff hill has pass- :
edV “To bo sure they do,” said the [
gentleman—why do you ask that ques- I
tion?” “Why do I ask that question? why .
man the country is ruined, absolutely \
: ruined , and the people here don’t know i
j IT f»
Awful Ruin! —The New York Tele
graph says—a merchant of that city, who i
j is wealthy and doing a good business, I
j recently discharged three of his clerks
i under the excuse of hard times, and then
| went over to Brooklyn and bought three j
pews in a church for $4-100.
The Present Crop. —A few flays since I
1 ,, , J I
,we had an opportunity or seeing tho cf- i
sects produced on t ho cotton crops, by the
visit of tiie caterpillars. We saw several
cotton fields, and must confess that wc ;
never before beheld such a sight. Great
portions cf the field had been so uevas- ;
tated hy them, that of the leaves nothing i
remained hut the veins, presenting the !
i appearance of a kind of network of vege- \
table growth, while other parts were corn
plelely stripped of every leaf, having no
thing but the bare stalks very thinly or
namented with bolls. The caterpillars i
had completely swept away all the leaves
and the young forms. They were leav
ing the plants in every direction and the
ground appeared alive with them. The
road through the fields was strewed with
j them, and the ruts were filled with the
dead, killed by the heat of the sun. One
thing is certain, they had done all the
mischief Uiey could. With such a pros
pect, it is hard to estimate the present crop.
—Montgomery Adv.
Origin of the word Humbug. —lt is not
generally known that this world, present- ;
Ivso much in vogue, is of Scottish origin.
There was in olden time a race, now ex- I
tincf, called Dogue or Boag of that Ilk,
in Berwickshire. A daughter of this
famil v married a son of Hume or Home,
also of that Ilk. In process cf lime, by
default of male issue, the Dogue property
devolved on cne Georgiana Home cr
Hulme, who was properly styled Hulnae
cr Home o’ the Dog. This worthy was
somewhat inclined to the marvellous, and
had a vaM inclination to exalt himself,
Ids wife, family, brother, and all bis an
cestors on both sides. His tales, how
ever. did not pass current, and at iaM !
j when any body made any very extraor
| dinary sta'cment in the Mcarns, the heat- .
ers would shrug up t ! tdr shoulders and
style it ‘just a Lam o’ ta ; Rig. This
was soon shortened into Humbug, and in
a few years the win d spread like wiki;!re
r 11 e w ■ S
Mrs. Thnran, ot Alabama, has published
the following card:
To the public. —Having long since de
termined to quit my present husband, Jede
diah i Doran, i tins day acted in secoriaoco
with my resoil:Hon. and h it him, as I tro-t
forever, unless Goa in Ins wrath uiav con
demn me lohis companv in amvher state—l
don't mean in mo of the United B*a f e.s, nor
in a hoiy state, tor in such i state 1 never
lived; but in a future state. My husband
threatened to a Ivertire me it f loft him. and
I presume ho wni not leave in’s threat unac
: complisheii, and therefore make tins state
ment, tint the pin net mtv he furnished w.lh 1
bo’a sides oi the question at the s cm time, !
and be thereby able to judge between us. j
My reputation is dear to i ;e, inasmuch ns it
cost me much trouble tu get what little 1 am
possessed of.
The mighty b : g house lie took me to, when
we weie first married, ho had told me so i
many storks about, that I thought it had at )
i least three store s, and it was a I a store, if* :
I had promised mo furniture, and when I pined
lor it, he get me a pine table and beat me I
i with the legs. He had not chair in tie
i house, and never furnished me with a stool, ;
except tiie stool of repentance, i never drank
Irnui a enp, except the cup of sorrow. Tii a - e
i was not a window ia the house except in
winter, and then there was wind enough; nor
was there a sheet in the house, til for a w ind
ing sheet for a monkey, li • was always
complaining that I look airs upon niy.-el!,
j when heaven knows he is the father of every I
1 loir 1 have.
u-,fo r V ' If
Tt
jU W ”~.
kdJd, ■ ■ L; , : ■. :
(Dju
- • '■
UNITED STATES HOTEL, .
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
To the Iravrlh ng jmhticaud old friends in parlicv7<ir.
A-- \ I beg K-ave to inform you that I have
1 : . ij ma in my last, move m Augusta., hack to
J.-vljußiiiy o!4 stand the ! ailed States Hole!,on
Broad-streei.opiiosile the Bank ut Augusta.
liver grateful for past favors, i feel assured that
I you will excuse me, for again m i.ciiiiig a continu
ance of your patronage, as ! invite you to ibe most i
; 'U‘ntl hotel ooti business part lu iue, city.
The hotel has recently been enlarge.l. \> ith many
improvements, and is now under tiie sole eharg ■ of
your friend and humble servant,
oct2B D ARIEL MIXER.
' Cn - aU i: K 11 ••
MsJL AWUSTAj CEOKGIA. iii
The subscriber respectfully informs the Planters, |
, Merchants; and Traveling Public, that he is n< vv
! the proprietor of this v\eli-kmn\ n and spacious i fo
ld. The proprietor hopes from the central location
of his House a rid his j )ers< >nal attention to, and a <■-
quaintanco with the business, to receive a liberal
share of patronage.. Travelers going through, can
i at all turn s he furnished with refreshments upon j
i the arrival of the cars,
F M. JENNINGS.
April 1, 1316. 121
I (U/MTaving sold out tny interest in the
■ GLOBE HOTEL to Mr. Jknmnos. I return to my
i friends who have so long patronized me, my most
| sincere thanks, and in doing so, it affords roe plea
; sure that I can confidently ask their support ami
1 friendship for Mr. Jennings, with the asstiranee
i that,on his parr, nothing will he omitted that can
contribute to their comfort and quiet. Give him a
i trial, and “if he does not do the thing np brown,’*
1 then quit him. B. F. KEiNRK’K. {
april I 6 . 121
GLO BE li OTEL) ‘
DEC ATI R, GEORGIA.
The subscriber
V./-N 5 begs leave lo inform the
/V-vVY public generally, thill lie
. . -- . ha - opened ail O ( 8 E
i y !As* ■ «>••’ E> rKRTAP-'.MKVr
j r- -; p iu the town of Decatur,
j *■—Ufo 'V;- ~ ’Ufo' 3 at the old stand, for many j
A s''-.p. fofoLi 5 ,_i7 years occupied by Dr J. .
’ N' f*"'re U• Thompson, and hopes hy j
* ’ * strict attention to obtain j
; a liberal share of public patronage. His table will, |
at all times he supplied with the best the country
affords. His Stable H tinder the control of an at
j tentive Hostler, with plenty of provender, liis
: charges wilt be as moderate as can fie. afforded at ’
any similar establishment in the up-country, both
i lo regular boarders and transient persons.
E. B. REYNOLDS.
Decatur, DeKalh co.,Ga., July 29, 1846.
STUD. CIHSAPBIt !
! ON WASHINGTON-STREET,
j Three Doors Louth <f 'Thomas Die is' Store. I
A * UT) 'W)
‘ ‘ *— : —“ '/
ULTLDRaS AND RAtU OAf) CGM
PAN IKS, AND TO ALL WHOM IT MW f'NCI.RN.
The sub -cr:l>cr takes this !u': r ho I ohiafonniiie hi- 1
no I customers, and the public ecaeralljr, t.’r-t he It- -
been iiKtucsd ta lower l is prices for «-oi i. cn .‘u.rcur.t of
the dulln— of b isin aid with thi hop . :
business. !I • . • . ’
T;a Roofing put ouat s9per U!U -qaare it. or 125 c. per
square when the materials are fiiriu.-fic<l.
Large Gutters, formerly :if >. per it. reduced t» 17c.
Large Conductor 25c. “ 14 15c. j
Small Gutters, 20c. “ 44 title.
Small Conductor Pipes -he. 44 44 IV vC.
<>ilfter Hooks, 10 •• “ 44 3c.
Oi! Cans, all sizes, 20c. per ;:d. 44 I l ’-,
tlsthin; Tubs, St 3 00 apiece, “ S 8 00
He will so to any part of the country to pet up L utter
| and Roofing and lo extra charges will be luatie for it, if
! conveyance and board are furnished.
Any reference or - cun ty w ill be civcn f ui'ie o< i -rnt
• anen of :n:y work or contracts made by him. and tin best
; materials will be unj that the tna rlw i can ah rd.
Having one of the best workmen hi his < tnploy, ! ■■
; flatters himself that lie will please any who may give
him a call both in price and q iati*. v.
Sept. 23 R. F. BOUVEU.
TAKE NOTICE.
rSIIIE Subscriber is pr. pared to attend to any
9. t ail at the shortest nolle - Iv3l A SON
WORK, at the Grave Yard, cr e!.-ewiier.*.
Having hands in his employment long accustnm *d
to the Business, persons entrusting their work t r > ;
him. may rest assiTTed of lias ing it ilone in the most
substantial and workmanlike manner.
Brick in any quantity «<«r
53- Residence, the last house at the upper '-n 1 . 1 i
i Green-street. 8. L. BASSfORD.
jiiae 21 w 3ra 2
VCK AND BULK ALT. for-! ! .by
sept. 18 JOHN R. DOW
. . _ * . > *- - • - ' s •■“lka ill i
: CGI r< N . 11l ISS^CIN^&c,
NOW IN OPERATION,
.-one ofs, w. m [.lock's patent puo
: . (>w r.u c<irroN press
) - !■’ iv !»•.• s' 'i .;• «>•!'! .'it <me ration at the. Ware
■ i : i • btv. 11 Roberts, on Jackson-at.
; i.iiit- >.# ;i*o n. vuetj to rail a lit) examine the same.
.\. iC. Bl TLER & CO., Agents.
jnly 10 2m 8
iO j Sk. *
POWER COTTON
--G c. -il * ' :'j o
• .■ ■ is u.nv otiered to the public as
"C I • . the most convenient, the
. tan-.i all things considered,) the
<• and :m-s( Collvii Peeking Press in the
Her/;/.
i os Pr. ■ !;;s new been in use fouryears—sev
en! I.tt.id.. ds oj .:;, ui are in successful operation.
I.i • : is been in u e about two years,
"•’•■•re 1- n : ,sthousand Buies vt
C. . ' ■! i it works belter tit* possible) now, than
i v.b-. a nr.-t put up. Not cue dollar lias been ex
pci:.led on it in repairs—imr ever will be, if well
I used.
Ail those p-Tsons w!i.> have tried them, have de
cided t) . . i <■. lr In', time, and then hand
i i (low ato ti -;r it■. I nto the third and fourth,
■an •••'•. Not an mdivuiuui that has seen them
, til but wb.ii prom uncos them "just the thing.'*
1 (diale'ii the wcrl Ito disprove these state
ments. -Ve.v. can ns much be said of on if other
■ti •, • r Anti jei Ino still further ;
when re , bed. ! vvi!! put up the Press on the plan
tation, and ii ! doe.- imt at ever the purpose, will
| make no charge.
».! ia• on ■ ■: well aware that the planters
have bn! little on .‘‘deuce in new things, from the,
tael licit iitue out c» ten arc ** 1 ot.kre tricks,** in
tended to il i i . -. i have lieen to the trouble ami
expet;-- to ill up an establishment in Macon, with
several I*re-. , for re-paoking Hound Bales into
.'-in: .an 1 it: no.', to ttie planters that the Press is
Just the thing tney \.ant. 'These Presses are note,
and will be /.. . .' in daily use, and open to inspec
i lion. Aow. therefore, ( > induce the planter to
1 make an examination, I give below a certificate,
sigma by a;; of die m:i ny who have very kindly
eii in ■ il; ir name', since I started my Presses
, in Macon.
’To ... and all sort of meddling
lor ui.ap : 1..,; with the Machines, i have litem all
\ inaiie under ttiif own diirc/ion , and sold at onejinre.
> AH 11 •».-• wishing to give them a trial, will please
• e . - n.i mes to my A gen is who call upon them,
■ nr s- i 1 them to the ('oimuission House, where
tliey 'x i. h to go for the Machine, in order that the,
A ; til in iv bn p,-. pared lor them, otherwise they
7/in7 be delayed in veilin': a Machine when ills
i „ ...
! or Sate of ti e /<,Having places:
Ii AB I'Ml.lX «V ii AMII.TUN, ) -it n.
.. .. ’ ; Macon, Ga
JvOilf.K r I i x di.a v, >
iN. lx. Hi tij:i! A Co., Augusta, Ga.
Git i;i;n v. oon Ac Co. J , ■ ..
, , , > Columbus, ua.
.1. J. SI 1' TO N, )
!!. 1 1 \t: mkij, tsivannah, (»eo.
it>. Vv. Tu LLUCIv, Patentee,
So. 27 Peek Slip, i\cw Vork.
rr.RTu reati:.
We, the a.. i'Mned. do hereby certify that w«
have Seen S. W. lit 1,1,i K K*’6> Prouß KSSI VK
Piuv ;•*. a I'Ri-n i:s iii 1 1- e in the City of Macon, aml
!• di . t lie i t hi be t// Hu y are recoiniuended, uml
cun say of iiein what. can lie said of but Jcm thing -•
notr-ni', ■ it, •/.■< "no humbug,** We cheerful
ly recoilin’ ii 1 ib in to the notice of tlie planters,
and lioj; • by tlmir universal adoption, to see ny
more round bales ol Cotton. Signed
Scott, Ca ibart A < ‘o. Watts Moulton,
Jlartieuian t'e Hamilton, dobn 31. Fiehl,
Pea & t 'otton, I >. <fc. W. <form,
Hassell A: Hnnbeily, Wheeler <k llarrold,
dosepli N. Seymour, JI.& J. Cowles,
J. A. VV hile, John Jones,
Cowles, Aicoll it Co. J. r T. Woollen,
A. I>. Hartwell, 'i'hos. I!. Gorman,
Grave;-, Wood A-. Co. Hebert Findlay,
Cb is. Campbell A. Co. K. A' H. H. Grave.-.
Macon, May, 1 die.
June 17 Gn Id 1
\ O i v i ■< .*h («1 i’i L' A(7I’()RV,
fjpilS'l-üb: eriber will remove on the iirst Octoljer
.ti. to bis SHOP on Green-street, two doors
above ib • Ha.pti-1 Church, where iManters can he
supplied vvilii ('niton trios. Thrashing Moehines,
Corn Crushers, «) <• , of Ins make, which will be
warranted to perform well. Ido not mistake the
place. He sure to look at tb • sign before you en
ter the shop. JAMES T. WADE.
Augusta. Sept. 2"», 18Id. ly
G R 11 ; VV (Hi D’S
DiPKOViu) COTTON (HNS,
crib' r will continue the manufacture.
IL of the ■ • (11A Sat his old establishment, in
Clinton, Jones county, Georgia.
lie < aii oil -r nobem r recommendation in favor
(■f his (bus than the ( • of having supplied more
than her lee hundred, planless with them during the
last tv. i \ - - w hile no other factory has proba
bly sold in the State a many as one hundred du
ring the same. time.
No expense will he spared to sustain their high
reputation, am! re a ! r them still more perfect, if
po- ib! *. They will be v\ arranted,as usual, to per
lore; and delivered at the purchaser’s resi.
di tiugae'-im-nts can be made with his trav
eiiin Af'ctus-, or by b ..' r directed to him.
SAM I EL GRISWOLD.
march 27 130 ‘
DRi JOEL BRANHAM’S
LIVER AND DYSPEPTIC
MEW CIXU.
TJ off"ring this valuable m-.-Jicine to the people
JtL of t b'orgfa, for the relief and cure of many dis
eases inch lent to a southern climate, I do not claim
for it in fa iibiiity; neither do 1 say il will cure all
■ii a , iini in < 'iir- riic Liver Affections and Dys
i. I cun coniideiuly ,adv ; se and rccontnv ml ilf.
use. froei my personal observation and use of the
article in my own practice. This article is favora
bly re; ei’ cd wherever it has been used. lam nl
h'V.ed ;, r ; -to Mr. < Jc/.rge Heard of Troup, Mr.
hn arr-nos Coli:m!ms,?'lr. McKaffee of Cobb,
Mr. A-bury Hull of At! m-, Air. William 1). Ter
rell oi i'uiimm, U v.Jo'.i i h Dawson of Lagr ing ?;
I a wliicli a gr-_-.il - r of names might be added,
who bear their testimony to its value. Dr. Henry
Brat.: ' n iid.-m dicine in his own-case,
and ha -c -b ■iit to many others, gives it as his
opinion, that it is one of the s ifest and most valua
hl ■ medicines that can be used in imperfect diges
tion. li .-r i raplamts, constipation and irregular
state of l:;e bowels. It, is useful in bilious com
plaints, to persons recovering from bilious fevers,
ami in sick or nervous bead-ache. To pregnant
women, w ho are subject to c -stiveness, this medi
cine is y. 11 suited. In regulating the state of the
stun: h and bov.>G,and promoting digestion, it is
particularly useful.
i cot! id i. spend a long list of certificate!*, bat for
b**ar, prefering to rely on tie; v irtue* of the medi
cine to sustain itself. The medicine is a gentle
and certain cathartic, tonic and sudorific.
JOEL BRANHAM, Ealonton,f»a.
Price -51 —For sale by
march 11 A. G. \\ ILLIIB.
PEASE’S CANDY?
CVS L of t he real “ Clarified Essence" lias
/A b -n received fresh from the manufactory,
and is for sale by the Agent.
.I E. MARSHALL.
First door below the Mechanic*’ Hank
9r'/“Ti.is standard article for coughs, colds. &r.
i: 7-o vveii <'slai>iished ilial n wouhi be folly to -ay
anything rc_- irdtng its merits, the agent has Inin
dr ' of ic.-timoiiial-, which can be seen upon ap
pi ii a i "ii. Ii i- certainly the most pleasant and
-ale rein-'dv ever discovered.
May 2*J U-l