Newspaper Page Text
* DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE.—Four months
J\_ after Jale 1 will apply Ij the Honorable the
Inleiior Court of Richmond county, when silting
lor ordinary purposes, for leave to sell the land
and slave* belonging to the estate of the late Mr.
R. Robert Malone, for the benefit of hi. hen . and
creditors.
July 20,1839. 1). W. ST. JOHN.
Till 11 undersigned having retired from inrich.ni
difing, will resume the practice of law. He
will practice in connection with Jasper M. (louder,
Esq. They will practice under The from of (»()!_ HER
& THOMAS, and will be constantly found in their
office, when not absent on business connected with
their profession. JAMES THOMAS.
Sparta. June 19 : ®
LANDS Foil SA 1.11.
rjAUE subscriber will sell on reasonable terms,
three small Farms or Plantations, in Walton
county—two of which are known as the < ow-l’ens,
adjoining lands formerly owned hj Judge Harris,
(now the property of < - 01. John A.Cohli.) these
Farms or Plantations are well improved, having
all necessary and comfortable buildings, with ex
cellent sptings of water, with a small and well
selected apple orchard and other p'eusant fruits.
The other about lw-o miles fiom the former, with
a comfortable dwelling house, with a few well se
lected apple trees, and several negro cabins. ’1 lo se
farms or plantations are well known to be as healthy
as any section of the State, South or East of the
mountains. Terms, Five Thousand Hollars for
the two first mentioned! and Three Thousand
for the last—possession will be given on the lir-t of
November next. The terms of payment will he
made easy to the purchaser or purchasers,
jnne 7 Him MINES HOLT, Sr.
CDTTON LANDS.
fIAFIE subscribers have several settlements of
| fine Cotton Lands, which they oiler for sale in
settlements of from 320 to 1,920 acres —lying on
the Lochessga Creek, or Soukahatehrei 11 miles
north of Tuskeega.and 20 miles east of I allassee.
Any person or persons wishing to purchase and
iioike good farms in a healthy seel inn ul country,
aie invited to examine mil Lands.
HKF.SK FITZPATRICK,
JOHN U. MAI lON E.
LoehessgaCreek, Macon co. Ala. June 3 w3m
1 AW NOTICK. —The undersigned having
Sj removed (rom Clark comity to Lincolnlon,
will ntiend to Ihe practice ot Law in the Superior
and Inferior Courts of i.ineoln county, and the ad
jacent counties. KusuieHoinl Misled to his ca re will
be promptly ulli ndod to.
HENNING IE MOORE.
References—Hon Charles Dougherty, lion. A
S. Clayton, Hon. Thomas W. Hams, <ion. Edward
1 Urden, Athena; C. J, Jenkina, O. W, (rnwford,
A. J Miller,Col. John Milledge, Willia.n E. Jones
Augusta Lincolnlen, JVinrch 21, IH3H. "If
i;i)lS< (> ACADIMIV,
Huckcrscillc, Klbert county, (la.
fBNIHS Fi •male Seminary is now in full operation i
£ under the miperllitenjanee of .Miss Anna M.
Sir mi r, of New \ oik, whose literary attainments
as a lady, and qualilicationa as a teacher, we (latter
ourselves will give the amplest satisfaction to pa
rents and guardians of Females. j?he has the high
est testimonials of merit, both in relation to abili
ties and as a governess,among which is that of the
Philadelphia Society for procuring teachers, Sir. —
In short, it only requires to be an pi a in ted with Miss
Stuart, to bo convinced that she is capable of in
stituting youth in all the various qualilications so
desirable in the female character.
In this Academy \vill be taught all the rudiments
of an English education, also, Music, Painting,
Drawing, Stc.
The liealthfulness of the situation is too well
known to require comment, being unsurpassed by
any place in the up-country. Terms of Tuition
moderate, aml hoarding low.
JOSEPH ROOK EH,
TIIOS. F. (HHIIS,
JOHN JONES,
WILLIAM H. WHITE,
rouert McMillan J
By ordes of the Board,
ROBERT MiW ILL AN, Secretary.
July S 2 wSt
VAi.HAULM LANDS FOR SALE.
riAHE subscriber being desirous of settling his
| aliaiis in Jell'urson county, offers for sale bis
sett eluent of first quality oak and hickory land
Consisting of live hundred acres, well improved
with a commodious dwelling house, liarn, gin house
negro houses, and other out-buildings, with one
hundred and lifty acres new cleared land under
good repair, adjoining land of O. W. Crawford
■Gardner Connelly,ami others,on the waters id Dry
creek. Also, live likely young negroes, all to be
disposed of at public outcry, at the market house
in Louisville, on the Sth day of December next. —
Terms on the day. JAMES CROSS.
Louisville, Nov. 22,1538. wtf
NOTICE.
nnilE subscriber being desirous to remove to the
J west, oilers for sale on the most reasonable
and accommodating terms, his entire possession of
Land, os follows : s7.’> acres of land adjoining the
Indian Springs Reserve, in Hulls county i about
22d acres of open land, in good order for a crop,
most cf it fresh land. To limse who may bo dis
posed to purchase a healthy place, 1 would recom
mend th.in to this; and as to conveniences to mar
ket, there is none more so—any thing for sale can
find a ready market at the Indian Springs during
the wateiing season. Ca l and examine the prem
ises. Good indulgence will be given. 1 will sell
a part or the whole to suit purchasers,
july 22 w3m WILLIS C. .I KNKK.NS.
IF. MILO Oil \. (1. PUTNAM
OLIN x PUTNAM, Vttornies and Counsellors
at Law and Solicitors !!! Equity, will practice
in Warren, Hancock, Wilkes, Taliaferro, and
Oglethorpe, of the northern circuit. Bibb, of the
Flint, Richmond and Columbia of the middle, —
Ollice m Wavrcnton, Warren county Ga.
may 16 w3m
/j ( ACTION— she public is cautioned against
(J ) trading for a promissory note,made by Samuel
Howell, on or about the third day ot April last,
payable Ist of January last, for One Hundred Dol
lars, interest from date, in favor of J. W. Kittles,
and by him endorsed —the same having been lost or
mislaid by the subscriber, to whom settlement has
been made by the drawer. THUS. BARNES,
mar 6 "ti
NOTH'M.
Strayed from the subscriber, near
AnWarren tun, Warren county, on the
t- 16th inst., a Buy Marc, rather under
the common size, slender build, and
• I * ■r •> prare head ; sin l i< a trotter, six or
seven \ ears of age, no marks or sprits
recollected ; her back bad been very sore, and il
was not entirely well when she strayed. \n> per
son apprehending and securing her so that I get her
again, will canter a favor, and I will reward the
person so doing. If any ivrson apprehends her. 1
wish a few lines addressed to the subscriber, \\ ar
renton, Georgia,conveying information of the same.
|ulj .'1 nil RKBEt 'CA CODY.
tKjdrii K, —The snbscribers have this day ad-
A N milled Mr. K. Sherman into their copartner
ship. The business will bo conducted as usual mr
dertbe firm sf WRIGHT, Bl LL, & Co.
Juno 2S 6td-w6w
VLL persons indebted to the estate of Arthur
Muncrief, late of Warren county, deceased,
are requested to make immediate payment, and
those having demands to present them in terms of
the law. HENRY LOCKHART, Adm’r.
July 10,1839. wCt
A!) VIIMSTItATOIIS’ SALE.
ON the first Tuesday in October next, will be
sold at the Court House door, in Canton,Che
rokee county, a lot of land containing I • acres, ly
iug in said county, being number 1179, in the 2d
District of 2d Sta tion, belonging to the estate of
Joseph f-hewmake, late of Burke county, deceased.
Terms on tlie day of sale.
■JOSEPH A. SHKW.MAKK,
ISAI AH CARTER,
h 80,1819. Dtr ttor*.
AMI NIsTRATOU’M MALE.
\\7 ILL be sold at the late residence of Thomas
V * J. Shackelford, deceased, in Crawfordvillc,
Taliaferro county, on Saturday the 12th day of Oc
tober next, all the perishable properly belonging to
the f-tate of sai l deceased, consisting of one horse
and wagon, a small stock of cattle and ho.-s;
household ,nd kitchen furniture, &c. Terms made
known on the day of sale.
LLOYD W. SHACKELFORD, Adm’r.
June 2u 1K39 t j
f Executive Dtfxai.aEUT, Ga, (_
Milledgeville, z»tn May, 1839. 3
WHEREAS by an Act of tbe General Assem
bly of this state, passed the 26th December,
IH3B, entitled an “ Art to provide fur the rail ol a
Convention to reduce the number of the General
Assembly ol the State of Georgia, anil for other pur
poses therein named,'' it is provided “That it shall
he the duty ol his Excellency the Governor, to give
publicity to the alterations and amendments made
in the ( onstitutiun, in reference to the reduction of
thenumbei of members composing the General As
sembly ; and the nrst Monday in i ctober, next af
ter the rising of said Convention, he shall lix for the
ratification, by the people, of such amendments, al
terations, or new at tides, as they may make for the
objects of H dnction ami equalization ol the General
Assembly only ; and if ratilied by a majority of the
voters who vole on the question of ‘ It ath icatiok
or ‘ No Rati nc stick, ’ then, and in that event, the
alteration so by them made and ratified, shall he
binding on the pimple of this State, and not other-
I wise.” —And whereon the delegates of the people of
this State, assembled in Convention under the pro
visions of the hefoic recited Act, have agreed to,
and declared the following to be alterations and
amendment! of the < .'onstitutiun of this State, touch
ing the Representatives of the people in the General
' Assembly thereof, to wit:
“ The Convention assembled under the act “to
provide for the call of a Convention to reduce the
number of the General Assembly of the State ol
Georgia, and for other purposes therein named,”
passed the 2hlh day of iJeccinber, 183 S, having met,
under the Proclamation of the Governor, on Mon
day the (Jlh day of May, 1539, propose us the final
result of theii deliberations, the following, to be
i amendments to the Constitution of the state of
Georgia, and present the same to his Excellency the
Governor of the Slate, that publicity may be given
to said alterations and amendments, according to
the sixth section of the Act under which the Con
vention assembled:
Amendments Ui the Ciinetilulinn of Hie Slute of
Ueuriria.
The I louse of Representatives shall he composed
of members from all the Counties which now arc or
hereafter may he included within this State, accord
ing to their respective numbers of free white per
sons, and including threc-lifths ol all the people of
color —to be ascertained by an actual enumeration
to be made from time to time, at intervals of seven
years, as now by law provided. Each county shall
lie entitled to ona member. Each county having a
reprcsental ive population, as above specified, of six
thousand poi sons, shall he entitled to one additional
member | and each courty having such represen
tative population of twelve thousand persons,shall
he entitled to two additional members •, but no
county shall have more than three members.
The number of members of which the House of
Representatives will be composed, according to the
aforesaid ratio, and the last census, shall not here
after he increased, except when a new county is
created i and it shall he the duty of the Legislature,
at their se ion to he holden next after the enumer
ation provided fur by law, so to regulate the ratio of
representation as to prevent such increase.
The Hcpiesentatives shall he chosen annually on
thelirst Monday of October, until such day of elec
tion shall be altered by law.
The Sen ate shall consist of forty-six (numbers,
elected annually, on the first Monday in October,
until such day of clcctftm shall he altered by law ;
and shall lie composed of one member from each of
the forty-six Senatorial Districts following:
I I hatham and Ellingham.
2 Serivcn and Burke.
II Richmond and Columbia.
•1 Lincoln and Wilkes.
<> Elbert and Madison.
(i Habersham and Lumpkin.
7 Union and Rahim.
H I orsyth and Hall.
9 Jackson and Franklin.
10 Clark and Oglethorpe.
11 Creeno and I'utnnm.
12 Taliaferro and Warren.
13 Hancock and Baldwin.
14 Washington and Jell’erson.
l.i Emanuel and Montgomery.
10 Liberty and Bryan.
17 Tainall and Bulloch.
IS Mclntosh and Glynn.
19 Camden and Wayne.
20 Ware and Lowndes.
21 Telfair and Appling.
22 Laurens and Wilkinson.
33 I’ulaski and Twiggs.
21 Bibb and Crawford.
2.0 Jones and Jasper.
2(i Hulls and Monroe.
27 Gwinnett and Walton.
2S DoKalh and Henry.
29 Newton and Morgan.
30 Gilmer and Murray.
31 Cass and Cherokee.
32 Ctihh and Campbell
33 Coweta and Fayette.
31 Meriwether and Talbot.
30 Dike and Upson.
3(1 Houston and Macon.
37 Dooly and Irwin,
3S Thomas and Decatur.
39 Baker and Early.
40 Lee and Sumter.
41 Randolph and Stewart.
42 Muscogee and Marion.
43 Harris and Troup.
44 Heard and Carroll.
40 Paulding and Floyd.
11l Chattooga, Walker and Dade.
And whenever hereafter the Legislature shall
lay oil' ami establish a new county, it shall be
added to the most contiguous Senatorial District
having the smallest representative population.
JAMES M. WAYNE,
President of the Convention.
Attest :
Lucif.n L a Taste,
Secretary of the Convention.
1 therefore, in conformity with the provisions of
the before recited Act, do hereby give publicity to
the same, and enjoin each voter for members of the
General Assembly of this state, on the day thrcili
specified, to wit: on the first Monday in October
! next, to give his vote of “ Halificatii n,” or “j\o
Ratification," as provided in said Act; and that
the presiding min ers certify the same to this De
partment, accordingly.
. ivwi . Given under my hadd and seal of the
< J.. S. s Executive Department; at the capitol
' vw ' in Milledgevillo, this the day midyear
first above written. GEORGE U, GILMER.
By the Governor:
T'iin H. Steele,B.E. D. St June 11
vl» >1! MSTKA TOR’S SALE.
VGIIEE ABLE to an order of the honorable the
Inferior t omt of Burke county, when sitting
i for ordinary purposes, will be sold on the first
I Tuesday in October next, at the court house door
in Waynesboro, Burke county, between the usual
I hours of side, two negroes. Pneriby and Hannah. —
Also, four hundred acres of land, more or less, ad
joining lands of William Brookins, Samuel Barren,
and others; all sold as the property of Henry
Chance, decease, for the benefit of the heirs. —
Perms on the day of sale.
LI PTLEBERRV 1U lUTI, Adm’r.
July 86, 1839.
Gt AUDI AN’S NAM:.
511 ILL be sold on the first Tuesday in October
* V next, before the court house door in Waynes
boro, agreeal le to an order of the Inferior Court of
Burke county, when silting for ordinary purposes,
three hundred acn s pine land, in said county, ad
joining Simoon Be 1, Harvey Andrews, and others
Also, one hundred and forty-one acres oak and
hickory land, adjoining Carpenter, .Mrs. Merritt,
estate of Chance, and others. Sold as the property
of Welcome Almond, minor. Terms on the day of
sale. .MATTHEW ALMOND, Guardian.
July 89,1839.
\l> lIMSTIIATtffe’S S Vl,i;.
A STILL be sold on tbe first 1 uesday in Septem-
V V her next, at the court house in Leo county,
agreeable to an order of the honorable tbe Inferior
Court of Richmond county, when sitting for ordi
nary purposes, n tract of land emtaining 202A
acres, more or less, being lot No. ISA, in the 26th
District of said county ; of second qualify of oak
and hickory, belonging to the estate es Rachael
Kenney, decoasi 1. Sold for the benefit of the heirs
of said deceased. JOHN C. GRIFFIN, Adm’r.
June 1 I, 1839. td
ADMINISTRATRIX’S SAM'.
d VN the first Tuesday in December next, pursu
H V ant 11 an order from the Inferior court of Co
lumbia county, w hile sitting for ordinary p rposes,
will be sold before the court house door in said
comity, the Negroes belonging to the estate of
Stanton Porter, deceased.
NANCY PORTER,
ap 16 Administratrix.
rsifir. great celebrity of thin unrivalled Compo
f J silion,especially in the Northern Stales,leave*
tlir proprietor hut little uei il to say iitiy thing in its
liner; (or it has been generally concededto it,that
n is beyond all comparison the best remedy lor rx
leninl • oinplnints that has ever been discovered.
Indeed lludspeed and rerlainty of it» operations,
, have Ihe appearance of miracles ;a» ulcers, wouuds,
corns, fever sores, chithlains, w line swellings, hilts,
piles, spider and snake bites, Ac, Ac., immediately
1 yield to its superhuman influent's. Thus, il prop
-1 erly applied it will remove an inveterate eorn or
' break and heal a Idle in live nays, will allay and
" perfectly ciirean ulcer in two weeks, and the most
desperate easesol while swelling that cun be ima
gined, have been destroyed by il in less than two
> mouths. In the bites of poisonous reptiles its effi
• cacy is truly surprising,and if applied in time, its
■ powers o( nttraetion areso wonderlul that they will
I at once arrest the poison and thus prevent it from
pervading the system. Il is likewise greatly snpe
> nor to any medicine heretofore discovered for the
' ehabd hack and limbs of horses —(or tetters, ring
1 worms, ehapped lips—and in short, Ibr every exlei
’ nal hodily evil that may fall to the lot of man or
, beast.
The proprietor lias received at least a thousand
I certificates, and other documents, in favor of his
• ** Spe ific Oinlm nt,” upwards of a hundred of
f which were written by respectable members of the
i Medical faculty.
Albany, July 9th, 1837.
1 To Dr. Harrison.
Sir -I use your Specific Ointment in my practice,
and cordially recommend n as a most efficient rente
r dv for Tumors, Dicers While Swellings, Scrofula,
Rheumatic I’ains, Chapped face, laps mid Hands:
I and fir general external eomplumls. 1 write this
at the request of your agent here, who furnishes mo
wit h the article, and am pleased to have u to my
, power to award honor In merit,
RUFUS R. BEACH, M. D.
Brooklyn, N. V., Oct. 29, 1838.
Dear Sjr—My daughter,a girl ol lourlem, was
■ ndly nfllieled witn thocumplninl thin physicians
termed a scald head ; and I (eared, independent of
evert other evil, that she would bo hold in conse
quence By the recommendation, however, of the
Reverend Mr. I’errm, 1 applied your ointment lotho
allheled part; and I thank (tod that my child is
now entirely recovered from the disease, and is
. getting her hair us fast as can he expected. The
euro was e.Teelcd in lather less than two months;
during which lime 1 used five dollars worth ofoinl
inenl; I had spent upwards of a hundred dollars
dining the previous three years, without any benefit
whatever.
MARY HOWARD.
1 hereby substantiate the truth ol the above
statement.
CHRISTOPHER HOWARD.
I know the above statement to be coirecl, and 1
can Sdd front experience that “ Harrison’s Specific
Ointment,” is an excellent medicine for external
complaints.
MATTHEW PERRIN.
Boston, Jan. 7, 1837.
Dear Sir—l havtf to request of you to forward
mo, two hundred boxes of Ointment, by iho most
inimedialo conveyance, and without regard to the
expense ol carriage, as I am quite out, and much
m warn of it —You know my estimation of your
valuable discovery, mid therefore 1 shall only add,
1 mat further i xperiotice has increased my enthusi
asm mid established me in the opinion, that itissu -
pennr to .iny remedy extant lor external diseases.
Res peel fully yours,
CHARLES P. EMERSON, M. D.
New Orleans, Match 20th, 1838.
Dr. Harrison
Sir—The virtues of your Specific Ointment, have
been long known to me,as 1 have used none other
in my ruthert xiensivepractice torseveral years,anil
if you think il wouid he to your advantage, 1 can
lurnislt you with twenty certificates of important
cures which it has effected under my own imme
diate inspection; the last being one of a severe
and apparently perpetual ulcer,in the back of a
poor woman, Mary Baxter, who resides in 216 Di
vision street, which il completely healed in twenty
one days. My present chief object in writing to
you, is io leant who is your authorised agent in tins
city, lor, being in want of a supply ol your oint
ment, and tlie person Mr, Boyle,from whom I used
to purchase it, having tailed and gone out of busi
ness, Imu fearful it 1 purchase ai random, that I
may he imposed on bv a counterfeit.
Your obedient servant,
EDWARD RAMSEY, M. D.
Cincinnati, August 9,1837.
Dr Harrison.
Sir, —1 have no hesitation in stating, in reply to
your note, that your“ Specific Ointment” is truly
equal In live majority of Ihc ends fur which you re
commend it. 1 qualify my certificate by iho word
majority, ns it is my maxim to give no opinion in
medical matters whore 1 have had no experience,
in sprains, bruises, inllaiimialioiis, eruptions, whit
lows, piles, &e., it is mv universal recipe. I have
also used it on the leg of a hoy which had been
It,lien by mi adder, mid the extraction of the poison,
mid ultimate cure was so rapid, that my patient was
as well us ever in a week ; and has remained so to
this day.
Yours respectfully,
HENRY JACOBS, M. D.
Extract of a letter from Dr. J. W. Sanders, of
Louisville, Kv.
October 8, 1837.
“ lam prepared to say, that for Rheumatic I’ains,
nml tin' Sore Breasts of females, Harrison’s Specific
Ointment has no superior, it indeed it lias any equal
in tiiu whole catalogue of external medicines, as
known and proscribed in lids country.”
Extract of aietterfrum Dr. Fotts, of Utica, N.Y.,
Dated July 28, 1839.
“ Harrison’s Specific Ointment” is, in my opinion,
a most important discovery ; and is particularly efli
cietil iiiscrolulas, ulcers,sore legs, eruptions, and
general outward complaints. 1 speak of its merits
from an experience ol four years,”
New Orleans, January 4th, 1837.
This will oertily that my face and neck were al
most entirely covered by an enormous ringworm;
mid that idler the trial of a variety of molfeclual
remedies, 1 was completely cured ul it In two
mouths, by the use nt Harrison's Specific Oint
ment.” EDGAR FOSSET.
For sale, w holesale and retail, by Haviland Uis
cy «V t 0., Thomas Barrett A: Co , mid Nelson Car
er. Retail price, 69 cents per box, with lull rliroc
| ions. June o iy
DANDRUFF AND BALDNESS^
ALDRIDGE’S BALM OF COLUMBIA.—
■ O DANDRUFF AND BALDNESS—I he ar
tide named above is a chemical combination ol
such ingredients as have proved themselves effica
cious m assisting the natural growth ol the human
hair, and removing all übslicles to its perfect devel
opement —ln commending this article to the par
ticular notice of a discerning public, the proprietor
is but recapitulating iho oil expressed sentiments
oft be many hundred, who have successfully tested
j its ollieacy and wonderful qualities -this com
pound having uequiri d lor itself a character lor sin
• gular merit and value. Il is used by ladies ami
gentlemen generally, to keep the Hair moist and
beautiful, mid the head free from Dandruff, which
1 ii does most perfectly,and thus prevents Baldness.
■ DOT' aiilton—Observe that cm h bottle of the gen
-1 nine Balsam of Columbia has a splendid engraved
I wriq per, on which is represented the Fails of Niaga
ra, I’ve. For sale by
AN 1 UN\ it HAINES, Sale Agent.
april 2 232 Broad-street.
ESSENCE OP TYRE,
1 For changing Red or Gray or any light colored
Hair to a beautiful Brown or Black,
i U arrmitcd superior to any offered,
c rfpllls celebrated Grecian Dye will change Rod
1 a or Gray Hair, to Brown or Black. It is dune
s wit h such surprising facility and accuracy, that its
presence cannot be defected. The shade may ho
left at Brown,or may be made perfectly jel Black,
• at the pleasure ol the user.
A great number of gentlemen, who have gray
h nr in pari, or entirely, are m the constant habit of
- using ilns article, and are never suspected of being
o gray. Many bach ors mid widowers have made
il their fortunes ht matrimony by useo f this dye. It
>f I is warranted mpon.irio any made in the World,
and is sold at about hall tbe pnceofthe European'
For sale by ANTONY & HAINES, No. 232
j Broad sin el, Augusta. npnl 2
LE CORDIAL DE LL'CINE. ! i
ou L’KLIXIR DE L’AMOUR.
THE subscriber has the plensureol announcing |
to the citizen* of the I Stales, that he has ,
purchased, fur a very large turn and from tue in-
Senior, the celebrated Jjr. Magnin, of lans, tie j •
rp ,.jne ard rk'bt fur making this astonishing rnedi- , ■
cine. Until the appearance of the " Lucina Cor- j
■’ (aboutthree vearssmee,) it was 1 bought that ,
the complaints, which it speedily overcomes, were i
bevond the renehol humanremcdy.au lorupwards i
„f a thousand yiars. they had baffled the wisdom | <
and inaenuity Os the most profound physicians in ; I
all linn's of the world. This Cordial, however, to |
the (treat advantage of the human rare,soon proved ,
to he the desideratum sol. rig sought lor; and , i
aeeordingty,notwithstandingtl e brief pen dol Us
ejislence.il has required a celebrity so groat, that ; |
ii is eagerly inquired for throughout the civilized ; ,
rrlube Dr Magnin soon finding that the demand ,
was so vast ns to render a supply > mpossible, d is- .
posed of the reripe and right of sale, under obliga- ,
nous of secrecy, f«r England, the United Males,
and other countries,only preserving franco and .
Italy for himself. Thus has the subscriber pos- .
sensed biraself of the invaluable secret; and now ,
hastens logivelhe itiliabilaiilsof bis line of agency
the benefits of his speculation. , ,
“I e Cordial De Lucine, or, in English, the
i Lucira Cordial,” is a general invigorator of Hie
human frame! In all ibe various cases.of languor,
lassitude, ami debilimtion; ii is nn unfailing reme
dy; as it is equally Us province to impart cheerful,
ness and decision to the mind, as health and vigor -
to the body Rut ibe peculiar virtue on which us
celebrity is based, is the facility und certainly with
w hich il restores l tin virile powers when they have
hem destroved hy disease.lime. recklessness,or any
„f (he numerous causes which terminate in the
prostration of ihosc functions.
In common with the generality of really good
medicines, this' ordial contains mulling of n merj
curial or delelcrioiis nature, among the many mere
dienis which compose it; hut is, at iliesame nine,
so simple, yet so efficacious, that while it can reno
vate the prostrated encrgicsofa gmnt, an infant
may use it,not only willi impunity, but with ud
vantnge. . ,
The usages of society are unfortunately such,
that, noiw ilhstanding Hie benefits which would be
sure to result from il, we cannot enter lonian analy
sis of this ine-limable Cordial here.or publish many
of tlmdocuments which have been received, as
vouchers of die blessings n has conferred on num
bers of despairing individuals. Rut this wc cannot
forbear remarking—lhat it has been demonstrated
that there is scarcely ever, il any such thing at all,
as natural Ipirrenness, or as natural imbecility of
the proercuht functions, in either sex ; and therefore,
that those evils are the effects of artificial causes,
and may he speedily subdued and removed by the
use of “ Ue Cordial de Lucine.”
The I.ticina Cordial is also an indubitable euro
for the Gleet, and I he Fluor Albos, obstructed, diffi
cult, or painful Menstruation; also, for the incun*
tinenct ot Urine,or the involuntary discharge there
of jt is likewise nn invaluable and unrivalled
medicine incases of Chronic Eruptions of theskin,
und in flic dropsical affectionsof the aged.
Mont important to the American Public.
The United Stales proprietor of the celebrated
Lucma Cordial,” or “ Elixir of Love,” begs to lay
before the community, the following certificate, !
which lie has received from the inventor, the illus- j
irmus Dr. Magnin.of Paris : i
“ Thin is to certify, that I liave disposed of the |
j recipe for making the 11 Luc.na Cordial, or
I “ Elixir of Love,” und also t lie right to sell it
throughout the I 'rated Slates of North America,
to John Winters Holderw ell.M. D. My reasons
for so doing is, lhat I be demands to me for the above
Cordial, of which I tun the inventor, are so nume
rous, i hat 1 am unable to supply all the orders from
France and lialv alone; and have therefore dispo
sed of the privileges vouchsafed in this, and oilier
certificates of a like nature in order to generalise
the benefits of my discovery throughout the world.
Given under my band at Paris, on this nineteenth j
day of January, in the year of onr Lord, j
c.gbleen hundred and thirty eight.
FIR AST E MAGNIN. j
Gaspard Define, ) witnesses.
William Merritt,)
Postscript to the above.
As you requested me to slate the number of hot
ties ol the “ Eucina Cordial,” which I have already
sold, I have referred to my books, and find it to ex
ceed four bundled thousand ; while the orders now
on hand cannot be supplied in less than three
months.
From an immense number of testimonials from j
the regular faculty, touching the virtues of Ibe [
Cordial, I have in particular selected the following, ’
which may be of use to you. Yon will also find a j
number of others of less importance inclosed. This
immediate certificate is from a body of eight of the
ablest medical practitioners in France.
To Dr. Magnin, inventor of the Lncina Cordial, or
Elixir of Love
Respected and Honored Sir;—We have nil in a
variety of cases, tested the remarkable effects of
yonrgreal discovery, and have assembled lor the j
purpose of bearing evidence to the facts, and tend- |
ermg yon tHo honor which is your due. The
“ Lucina Cordial” is in our opinion, an infallible j
remedy for the prostration of the Procreant Fane- (
(ions, and Artificial Barrenness ; and therefore must
prove a blessing to the human race. We can also
bear evidence that there is nothing in il of a mer
curial or deleterious nature ; anil in short,that it is
one of the noblest medicinal discoveries ofany ago.
With feelings of admiration and respect wo re
main, dear sir, your obedient servants,
Josselin fiossuit, 1 Jean Blanc,
Sigismond de la Marline, | Robert Stevenson,
Adrien Decrend, 1 Louis Oniseau,
Oclave .Nicole, 1 Pierre Huffen
Extract of v ielter from the clebraled Talleyrand,
to Dr Magnin.
1 am now on the wrong side of eighty, and yet I
could be on ray honor or oal hit' necessary, that a
bottleortwo of your Cordial of Love has made me
feel as vigorous us a hoy of five and twenty . 1
think you have discoveied the “Elixir of Life,”
which the aichyaiists have been so long in quest ol;
am that (pardon my offictoilsness,) you should have
named it accordingly.
From the eminent Dr. Devigney, of Brussels.
October 3, 1837.
To Dr. Magnin: —My dear friend—l am most
gratified at she unprecedented popularity ot your
“Lucina Cordial,” and am able io bear testimony to
its surprising virtue. 1 bad a patient recently,
; i vi , a gentleman ot fortune, who laid lor
several years abandoned himself in the vortex of
dissipation ; and was only reclaimed from it at
lengih by the utter prostration of all bis virile ener
gies . Jfe was, indeed,reduced to tlie last exlremit}-
of debility and tastelessness, for, if an occasional
flash of excitement warmed his system, the reac
tion was almost mum dime,-aid the resort perfect
prostration. I had applied all the usual nostrums
in such cases; but, as 1 bad anticipated, without
success; and when I saw the “ Lucjfia Cordial”
advertised, 1 must confess that even the great weight
of your name did not give me much hope in ii, at
least so far as regarded the ease in hand. 1 felt
hound io try it, however, aml was soon satisfied of
its efficacy; fur before a bottle was expended, my
patient gave evidence of the returning elasticity of
ins system: and he is now, having used four butties,
ns well is ever.
The number of documents, such as the above
which have been received bv .Mr, Magnin, sineetbe
first appearance ot “ Le Cordial de Lucine,” would
till a volume as largo as the Bible.
This highly important medicine is for sale by John
Winters llolderwcll, No. UiV) Liberty street, New-
Vork; Charles B. Tyler, No. 70 Cliestinit-st. Phila
delphia; and m Baltimore by Roberts & Atkinson,
John M. Laroque, and t>. R. Tyler; in Washing
ton City by Tobias Walking auu Charles Stott; in
Georgetow nby O. M. Linlhacum ; in Richmond
by Joint H. Euitice ; in Petersburg by Braggs
Thomas and Dupuy, Rosser otJor.es; and in Nor
folk by M. A. Santos and B. Emerson; and by
John Woodly, No- 65 Poydras st New Orleans
It can also lie found at all the principal Drug
| Stores in South Carolina, and in Augusta, hy liavt
( land Kisley & Co, Thomas Barrett & Co., and
i Nelson Carter. Price, S 3 per buttle, with full di
rections. June 4 ly
’Vj OITCE. —Ninety days after date, application
will be made to the Mechanics’ Bank to re
| new Certificate of Stock No. 66, issued on the P.th
i August, 1831, for 50 shares: also, Certificate No.
I 3d->, issued on the !Hh December, for 7 shares
j of the capital stock of said Bank, the same having
| been lost or mislaid. At the same time applica
I tion will be made to the Iron Steamboat Company
I of Georgia, to renew Certificate of their Stock, No.
if, issued 25th May, 1535, for live shares; also.
Certificate No. 67, issued 21st January, 1*36, for
live shares of their capital stock, the same having
been lost or mislaid. E. B. WEBSTER.
1 June SO, 1639. m3t
r a ill ESE Pills are no longer among those of doubt
t ful utility. They have passed away from the
hundreds that are daily launched upon the tide ol
experiment, and Bow stand before the public as |
hi di in reputation, and as extensively employed in
alFparts of the United States, the Canadas, Texas
Mexico, and the West Indies, as any medicine that
has ever been prepared lur the relief of suffering
man. They have been introduced wherever it was
found possible to carry them ; and there are but
few towns that do not contain some remarkable
evidences ol theirgoed effects. Ibe certificates
that liave been presented to the proprietor exceed
twenty thousand! upwards of live hundred ol |
which are from regular practising physicians, who
are the most competent judges of their merits. _
Often have the cures performed by this medicine
been the subject of editorial comment, in various
newspapers and journals; and it may with truth be
asserted,that no medicine of the kin 1 has ever re
ceived testimonials of greater value thin are at
tached to this.
They are in general use as a family medicine
and there are,thousands of families who declare they
are never satisfied until theyjiave a supply always
on hand.
They have no rival in curing and preventing
Billions Fevers, Fever and Ague, Dyspepsia, Liver
Complaints, bick Headache, Jaundice, Asthma,
Dropsy, Rheumatism, Enlargement of the Spleen,
Files,’Cholic, Female Obstructions, Heartburn,
Furred Tongue, Nausea, Distension of the Stomach
and Bowels, IncipicntDiarrhcea,Flatulence,Habitu
al Costiveness, Loss of Appetite, Blotched or Sallow
Complexion, and in cases of torpor of the bowels,
where a cathartic or aperient is needed They are
exceedingly mild in their operation, producing
neither nausea, griping nor debility.
The following was forwarded to Dr. Peters, by a
highly respectable Planter of Wake County, No
Ca ,March 3d, 1838:
Dr. Peters—Dear Sir,—By request of your agent,
Mr. Harrison, 1 send you a few lines respecting the
almost miraculous effects of your pil's; and 1 would
a-d, that you may make use ol them, in connection
with my name, in any manner you deem proper, I
speak of their merits from experience,as 1 and my
family have taken upwards of thirty boxes in three
years; and so great are the benefits we have receiv
ed from them in general, that 1 would rather pur
chase them at ton dollars abox than have my house
without them. 1 will not enumerate the afflictions
they have relieved us of; but 1 can assure you they
were many, and of very opposite natures, which
has fully proved to me that your medicine is a sim
ple purifier of the system, and therefore equally
i the enemy of every disease. 1 will mention one
case. 1 have a sister who had been for a long pe
riod severely afflicted with dropsy in the chest and
was brought by it to the very verge of the grave.
She was attended by the most eminent physicians
that money could procure; hut all their efforts to
restore her to health, or even to mitigate her suffer
ings were fruitless ; and accordingly, we all consid
ered her immediate death as inevitable. By good
fortune, however, as she was in this situation, ex
pecting every day to be her last, your pills were
introduced into my family, and so speedy and pal
pable were their effects that three doses visibly re
lieved her, and in less than three months she was
i perfectly restored to health. This case, I and all
who were witness of it, (but more especially the
i suffering party,) considered to be the next thing to
; miraculous j and yet I could mention many more
I of an equals desperate nature, in which your pills
were equally successful in rescuing the patients
from the jaws of death. Need 1 add that the popu
larity of your medicine amounts to enthusiasm in
this section of the country ! Hut this 1 presume
you know from the immense quantity you dispose
of I may mention, however, that notwithstanding
its general use, I never heard an individual complain
of its effects. My residence is 12 miles from Ral
eigh, on the road to Fayetteville. 1 am, with sen
timents of regard, your ob’t servant.
A. G. BANKS.
To Dr. Peters, —Sir —For upwards of fifteen
months, I have been cruelly afflicted with Fever
and Ague; and during the time could find nothing —
though 1 had applied lo every thing that gave me
any thing like permanent relief. At length, how
ever, your pills were recommended to me, by one
of our best physicians, and I am most grateful and
happy in being able to add, that 1 had scarcely used
two boxes when 1 found that they had restored me
to perfect health. Since then, various members of
my family have used them with equal success—
and consequently 1 feel it my duty to apprise you
; of the fact, and to request of you to publish this
i certificate, as 1 am anxious to add my public testi
mony to the almost miraculous virtues of your un
l rivalled medicine. Respectfully yours,
THEODORE JAMES.
Augusta, Ga., Feb 10, 1839.
i Communication received from the eminent Dr. J.
I H. Irwin of Florence, Georgia:
I Dr. J. P. Peters —My Dear Sir—On the night of
j the 11th hist., I Was called in great haste to the
, house of a fellow ciiizen, (Mr. Lee,) where I found
j his son laboring under a most alarming attack of
| Cynanche Tracnealis (Cronp) and apparently be
yond the aid of remedy, liy the greatest good for
tune, however, 1 had in my pocket a broken box of
your pills—four of which 1 administered, with
such immediate happy effect that in a few minutes
rny patient was at ease, and out of danger. This
case,in connection with my name is at your ser
vice—and 1 have the pleasure to be able to inform
you that your inestimable medicine is in such great
favor with the faculty here, that 1 believe there is
not one of them who does not use it in his private
practice. Yours must resp’y.
March 13, 1839. J. H. IRWIN, M, D.
Extract from a letter written by Dr. Francis Bo
gart, of Providence, 11. L, Dec. 17, 1838.—Peters'
pills are an excellent aperient and cathartic medi
cine, those effects being produced by the differences
of the quantity taken,and are decidedly superior
to Lee’s, iirandreth’s or Morrison’s Pills.
Extract from a letter by Dr. Hopson of Bangor,
Me , Jan. 9, 1839. They are apeculiarly mild,yet
efficient purgative medicine, and produce little, if
any,griping or nausea. 1 have proscribed them
with much success in sick headache and slight bil
lions fever.
Extract of a letter by Dr. Joseph Williams of
Burlington, Vt., July 9, 1837.—1 cordially recom
mend Peters’ Pills as a mildly effective, and in no
case dangerous, family medicine. They are pecu
liarly influential in costiveness and all the usual
diseases of the digestive organs.
Extract of a letter from Dr. Edw. Smith of Mon
treal, U. (1., Sept. 27,1836. —I neverknew a single
patent medicine that I could put the least conti
| deuce in but Dr. Peters’ Vegetable Pills, which are
really a valuable discovery. I have no hesitation,
in having it known that 1 use them extensively in
tny practice,for all complaints, (and they are not a
few) which have their souvccin the imparity of the
blood
Extract of a letter from Dr. Dye of Quebec, L.
C., March 6, 1837. —For bilious fevers, sick head
ache, torpidity of the bowels, and enlargement of
the spleen, Dr. Peters’ Pills are an excellent medi
cine.
Extract of a letter from Dr Gurney of New Or
leans, La„Oct. 9, 1837. —1 have received much as
sistance in my practice—especially in jaundice and
yellow fever, from the use of Peters’ Pills. 1 pre
sume that, on an average, I prescribe 101) boxes in
a month
Extract of a letter from Dr. Prichard of Hudson,
N. Y., June 3, 1836. —1 was aware that Dr, Peters
was one of the best chemists in the Lnitcd States,
and felt assured that he would someday (from his
intimate knowledge of the properties of herbs
and drugs) produce an etficientmedicine,iHd 1 must
acknowledge that his Vegetable Pills fully respond
to my expectations. They are indeed a superior
medicine, and reflect credit alike upon the Chemist,
the Physician, and the Philosopher.
Extract of a letter from Dr. Waines of Cincin
nati, Feb. 2,1838.—Y0ur Pills are the mildest in
their operations, and yet most powertul in their ef
fects, of any that 1 have ever met with in a practice
of eight and twenty years. Their action on the
chyle, and hence on the impurities of the blood, is
evidently very surprising.
Extract of a letter from Dr. Scott of Baltimore,
Doc. 17,1836. —1 am in the daily habit of prescri
bing them, (Peters’Tills) and they in nearly all
cases answered my purpose. I have discarded other
medicines, some of them very good ones, in their
favor.
Charlotte, N.C., Jan. 1, 1837.
Dear Sir—l have made frequent use of your Pills
in the incipient stage of bilious fever, and obsti
nate constipation of the bowels ; also, in the en
largement of the sp’een, chronic diseases of the
liver, sick hcad-ache, general debility, and in all
cases have found them to be very effective.
J D. HOVD, y>. D.
Mi vj;tr?i£Lßn Co, Va., Fc-b 7, 1537
Having used Dr. Peters’ Fills in my practice for
the last twelvemonths, 1 take pleasure in giving >
my testimony of their good effects in cases of dys
pepsia, sick head-ache, bilious fevers, and other
diseases, produced by inactivity of the liver. They
are a safe and mild aperient, being the best article
of the kind 1 ever used.
GEORGE C. SCOTT, M. D.
These much approved and justly celebrated Fills
are sold wholesale and retail, at New York prices,
by Haviland Kisley & Co., Thomas Barrett Co.,
and Nelson Carter,and by all the principal Drug
gists throughout the United States, the Canadas,
Texas,Mexico andthe Wcsllndies. Retail Price,
50 cents per box, wholesale price, $1 per dozen.
June 3 ly
CHALLENGE. The genuine
yjy i f\t French Pil's againstall the QUACK
NOSTUMUS of i he age—lor I he cure of
if t ♦ * * *
The French Pills are applicable in nil eases, foi
either sex, (warranted free from Mercury,! and 'pos
senses great advantages over ■ lie Balsams and nil
liquid medicines, by neinsr entirely free from smell,
and consequently do not effeei ihe breath, thereby
preventing the possibility of discovery while using
them. m W
Besides this important advantage, thev never ’
disagree with the stomach, and in the first stages of
the disease they usually effect a eurc in a few days,
wit h little regard to i.iet or exposure.
In the most obstinate stages of the disease, they
aroequnlly certain, having cured many after every
other remedy led failed. In short they have been
so universally successlu) that the proprietor chal
lenges any one to produce a remedy of equal eer
taimy, under a forfeiture of Three Hundred Dollars.
Harrisburg, Dee. It), 1838.
Dr. Valicr—Dear Sir: Aboui a month ago, I sent
to you for three boxes of your French Pills,and feel
tv.ur li obliged to you for furnishing mo with a medi
cine so effectual and so pleasant to use. When 1 ■
sent for your Pills 1 had been troubled with the II
disease for nearly 6 months, and had tried a great. II
many medicines without any effect. During the H
first six weeks 1 was under a Physician of this ! ,
place, but finding little or no chance of being cured m
by him, I left him, and a few days alter visited I
Philadelphia, where 1 imughi a > anely of advertised W
specifics [almostenough to stock an ajiolhecary shop, k
and all ol this 1 took wdth the same success as bi- -
fore,leaving that c*** *d smell of the balsam be- I
hind them, which I think lean smell to this day 1
Not knowing what to resort to next, and seeing your
French Pil's advertised in the Public Ledger. I I
determined to try them, and am only sorry I did not
gen hem sooner, ns it might have saved me forty I
dollars and have cured me long ngo. My object in
writing to you at present, is to procure some of the
medicine for two of my friends, who are in tho
same kind of a scrape. You will therefore please
send by t he bearersix boxes, and oblige,
Yours respectfully, H R.
P. S.—ls it will be any advantage, you may pub
lish the above, with the initials.
The go mine French Pills are for sale in Augusta,
by Has iland Risley & Co., Thomas Barrett &, Co.,
and hy Nelson Curler. Prieo, $2 00 per box, with
lull direntiona. June 6 )y
I*l DUS, HAEMORRHOIDS, Ac.
I’lilCK Sl.—A’O CURE NO PAY.
HAY’S LINIMENT.
No f iction.—This extraordinary chemical com
position the result of science and the invention of a
celebrated medical man, Ihe introduction of which
to the public was invested with the solemnity of a
death-bed bequest, has since gain, d n reputation 1
unparalleled, Fully sustaining the correctness of the
lamented Dr. Gridley’s last confssion that “ho I
dared not die without giving to posterity the bene- I
litol his knowledge on this subject,” and he there- H
lore bequeathed to his friend mid attendant, Solo- I
mon Hays, thoseciet of his discovery I
It is now used in the principal hospitals, and the < I.
private practice in our country, first and most cer- ' H
taluly for tin? cure of the Piles, and also so exten- ■
sively and effectually us to haflle credulity, unless 1*
where its effects are witnessed. Externally m the I
following complaints: I
For Dropsy — Creating extraordinary absorption I
ationce. I
A I S wellings— Reducing them in a few hours. I
liheamalism, Acute or Chronic giving quick ease. . K
So re Throat— By cancers ulcers or colds. I
Croup, and Whooping Cough— Externally, and
over the chest. |
All Bruises. Sprains and Burns —Curing in a few |
hours. Sores and Ulcers —Whether Iresh or long
standing, and fever sores. « •»
its operations u|ion adults and children in redu
cing rheumiic swellings, and loosening coughs and
lightness of the chest by relaxation o< the parts, lias
been surprising beyond conception—The common
reirark of those who have used it in the Piles, is
“ It acts like a charm ”
THE PILES - —The price 51 is refunded many
person who will use a bottle of Hay s Liniment for
the Piles, and return the empty bottle without being
cured. These are the positive orders of the proprie
tor to the Agents; and out ol many thousand sold
not ono has been unsuccessful.
We might insert certificates to any length, but
prefer that those who sell the article, should exhibit
the original m purchasers.
CAUTION"—None can be genuine witliouta
splendid engraved wraj per, on which is my name
and also that of Ihe Agents.
SOLOMON HAWS.
1 O EDI 1 ORS, &c—All country papers who
will insert tlie above 12 months, and send one mini*
her to the agents shall be entitled to one dozen of
the Lineament.
Sold wholesale and retail by COMSTOCK & Co,
Sole Agents, 2 Fletcher street, neat Maiden Lane,
one door below Pearl street, N w York, and by ono
Druggist in every town in the Union.
For sale hy ANTONY& HAINES, 232 Broad
reel, A igu-la mar 30
DU. E. SPOHN, a German physician of much A
note, having devoted ids attention for some
years to the cure and removal of the cruses of N ER
VOUs AND SICK HEAD ACHE, has l lie satis
faction to make known, that he has a remedy which
by removing the causes cures effectually and perma
nently this distressing complaint. 'There are many
families who have considered Sick Headache a con
stitutional incurable lainiiy complaint" Dr. S. as
sures them that ihoy are mistaken, and labouring
under dislress which they might not only alleviate,
but actually eradicated by the use of his remedy.
It is ihe result of scientific research, and is entirely
of a different diameter Irom advertised patent medi
cines, and is not unpleasant to the taste.
HEADACHE, SICK UR NERVOUS.
The extraordinary reputation that Ur. Spuhn’s
remedy lor this distressing curnpaint is every day
gaining is certainly n matter of much astonishment,
That so m ich suffering should have existed forages
without any discovery of an effectual preventive, or
cure,is truly a subject of much regret hut Dr.’s,
now assures the public that such a remedy has been
invented us will convince the most credulous. The
principles on which it acts are simple and plain. It is
an a. milled tact that this complaint, whether called
Sick Headache, or Nervous Headache, arises prim
arily from tho stomach—those who think they have
the Nervous Headache may rest assured that this
organ, the slifuach, is the first cause, Hint th > sys
tem has become vitiated or debilitated, thiough ihe
stomach, and that only through the same channel
must they expects restoration of the na ural and
healthy 1 unctions ol the system. This object. Dr
Spohn’s remedy is eminently calculated to attain!
1 tie tnii b of tins position cannot bo controverted
and the sooner sulierers with the headache become
convinced of it, the sooner will their sulleringend
m restoration of health, Ur. Spohn pledges his
professional reputation on I his fact. Tne remedy
may be hud of apothecaries generally throughout
the United Stales.
For sale by ANTONY & HAINES, No. 232
Broad-street, Augusta. niar gg
HOOK AND JOB PRINTING
\\f *• THOMPSON respectfully informs hi
Tv • fnends and the public generally, that he
ts prepared to execute every variety of BOOK
AhDJOB PRINTING, witli neatness and despatch
His assortment of materials is equal in extent or
quality to any in the city, and from his thorough
acquamtace with the business, he hopes to be abls
to give general satisfaction to those who mav favo
him with a share of their patronage.
'1 o those who have heretofore patronized him ht
begs leave to return his most grateful acknowledge,
meats tor past favors ; and he hopes by strict at
ttuition to business and constant efforts to nlease tn
merit a continuance of their patronage
OCr-LAtV BLANKS, of every kind, keptcou
stantly on hand, or printed to order, on the shorn,
feb 13-t
- m