GROCEilIES,

AUGU TA HERALD •
v OL.
XXITI ...•.•N o. 78.
IDll~~®lli W~ll®~ e
This Day Received,
HE Co-partnership of BI LBRO AND
GROVES, was di~solved on the 25t'1 of
February last. All debts due by th e con.
concern will be settled by Sylv mrus B.
G1·oves and all d ebts due to the concern will
be rendered to him, who alone :s to settle
the business.
HENRY T. BILBRO,
S. B. GROVES,
BY
T
ltespectfully tenders his serv ices to his
friemls and the public in the
},actorage and Commission Business,
and hopes for a continuance of their cus-
tom.
March 6.
6t
71
AND
Commission l\usiness,
The Subscrber having taken a lea.~t
on the ·Ware-House recently occupied by
HOLCOMBE & TUCKER,
(Opposite .Messrs. Sima ~ William)
ILL be tha~kful to his fri en ds
W
l
and the public for a share of
their · p a tronage.
Every . atteot.ion
will be paiJ to the interest .of those
who mav favor him ~itb their busitie11s, whether in receiving and f'orlwarding sales and purchases of'
f
FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 29, t822.
Cotton oY M.e;rc,\\an(\.ise.
of any
description~His
WARE-
HOUSES ~STORES are now ready for the reception of Cotton and
Merehandise.
R Malone.
Augusta, May i
SS
Cotton WaYe-llou.se.
JOHN C. HOLCOMBE,
R
m
l3HURNS thauks to his friends
and the public f'or pu.st fav ours
his Line of' Bu ~ ine s s, and tahn
this method of' in.formiug them-that
be has erected
A New
"\VaY~-\louse.,
FOR THE R,ECEPTION OF
(C®crr1r®!l9
Near the upper end South side
Broad-Street-on the Lot nexl below
Messrs. R. & B. Lang & H. Mus·
grove, and he hopeii from strict personii.l attention to all BusineSil com:.mitted to his care, to ensure a eootinuation of patrooo:ge. He will continue to re·c eive and forward GOODS
to his friends in the country ancl to
transact all Busiueu in the COM.
MISSION LINE.
J? The situation .of the WareHou~e, exeludes it entirely from the
danger of tire.
--On Consignment-U.@~,@~ Best Cypress Shin
gl~s and
._
60 Tiert>es Boston Stone Lime,
For sale low for euh-arply a.s
above.
21.
4t T
Sepfemher H
"Dissolution.
STOCIC, JJ.NfJ EXCHJJ.NGE
T
HE subscriber has taken an of·
fi ee in the building lately occupied by .M.essrs. Stewart &. Hargraves, on the North side of Broads t reet, opposite tu the Post Officewhere he offers his services in the
above business, and hopes, by strict
personal atleltti-0·n, to obtain lhe patronage of hi!l f'rieuds and the public.
The great facilities afforded by brokers in commerci.al operalion11 geneq1.lly, render it remarkll. ble that the
merch.i.nts of Au gusta 11.ud the planters ba.ve long sus l':iiue<l the inconvenience of haviag none, an<l pa rticu ·
larly a Cotton Broker. In almollt
every other cotton mart the bu~iness
is p rincipally dune by brokers; and
hP uce tire ~ai.e, Ctl rtainty and d .spatch
wi l b 1th1ch it is executed. '.' he same
system is perfectly praotic!lble here.
·The merchant, by 'l pplying at the of.
fice 11f the subscriber, may hereafter
save hi.tnself I be tr1iuble of sam pling
his cotton and looking up a purchaser;
--the planter need be no longer involved in doubt and difficulty to
11.seertain the true state of the market, nor iubject himself to the caprice
of' tbe wary speculator-and the purchaser will at all times know where
to resort for cotton at the market
price..
,
Otlice Regulations relative to
Cotton.
lst. In order to give time _for sam·
piing, citize1115 offering cotton are re·
quested to leave the warehouse receiptti by eight o'clock, A. M.-if'
lef't l,ater than nine, sales ca nuot be
re1d1zed till the succeeding day, lf
more cooveuient, the receipts niay be
enclosed in a letter of' in!itruetions
aed dropped in the letter box the
night. previous.
.2d. Cotton will be sampled and receieved from wagons till te n o'clock,
A. M.-if offered after that hour,
sales cannot be realized till next day.
Ware hous e expen~ e s wdl in1 ad.
vari11bfy be deducted from the account
sales,
4th. Sale• will commence at ten
o'elook llUd close at twelve, A. M.
5th. P rsons chooiing to limit a11d
lim iting higher than the ma i:._ket, will
have their recei1,1s retu rned Lbem on
paying 6i cents for a bag entry and
sampl iug.
6th. Commissions on aales, 25
cenh a bale.
Orllers from the ~ountry, enclosing th e w a r ehouse receipts will
be promp1ly exee ui-ed.
Stoei\t, "Exeinange,
l\rokerage,
IN THEIR VAllIOUS
I
I '
BRA~OHES
Will be at tend eel to at all times dur·
ing office hours, which will be from
eight o'clo ck A. M. till twn o'clock
P . M. and from three o'clock till five
P. M.
John Kinney, jun.
aJ' Money is sometimes worth more than
at oth ers: P ersons having it to loa11, may, in
the strictest confid ence, avail themselves of
t he advantage s of the market, by applying at
the above office.
Decembe r 11
tf
47
T
I
1liinoeik 8c
IDill®IJS.mIBo
HE Co-partnership heretofore
The Subscriber,
exi s ting un<ler the firm of
BEGS
leave fo !nf~rm hi& friends
M'LAws ~ HoLT, is this day dissolv·a ud the pubhc in ge-oeral, that
ed by limitation. The unsettled business of the concern, will be attend - he has removed to HA MBURG, a nd
bas taken a house in that p laee on
ed to bv Mr. JoHN S . HoLT, who
Bay-street,
No . H, where he will
will be found genernlly at t he Comptlittencl to any bu sin ess i11 the
ing-Room or Ware-House of the late
Commisshm Line,
firm.
We return our sincere thanks to th11t may be entrusted to him. From
our friends · and the 1rnblic f'or the hii! loug experience in the purchase
liberal support they bave given us , of
and hope Lheir successor, Mr. J. S.
COTTON,
HoLT, will coo~ioue to enjoy an
equal share of' public patronage, in he flatters himself he will be able to
gi ve genera l satisfac t ion. He will
the
al !lo pu t h imself to mucb trouble in
~1tr®IB&®lll ·
acl.'.ommodating persons from the
country, who may wish to have orAND
ders &li ed-a nd by his most acti v:e
Com1nissioo. Business. exerti ons shall be constautly enc
It is desirable to hll.Ve the affairs g aged to render sati sfaction. He
the late firm settled without de- respect fully solicits a p crtio11 of
lay, and we therefore solicit those public patronage.
who are indebted to make payment,
John Marsh.
and those who have llDY demands
Hamburg, Feb . ii.
4t T · 65
against the late; eoneeru, to present
:Notice.
them for »ettlement.
LL
persons
having demands aJames M'Laws,
gainst tile estate of Gideon M.
John S. Holt.
Cuile, d eceased, are requested to
St T 37'
!'f ffnmber 6
render· them in duly attested, within
the time -pre~cribed by law, and
aH those indebted, to niake pay»•UTED GN THP. M©!lT }{EASON'ABL E
ment.
Jolm Brigham;- .11.dm~r.
TERMS, AT THE
BMrkf.•
Count1, Feb. 2iil o*t 69
HERJlLD OFFICE.
or
A
[WHOLE
Just "Fub\i~\l.e..d,
MER CH.11.NT T .IJ.ILORS,
HEA RLD .. OFFIC.E,
By the ~ross, J)ozen or Singl1
Opposite the City Hotel,
THE
~rll®lli®JA
.11 Fresh supply of Fashionable R eady .llifade
~Ui!>~OOil~®a
Made after the L atest New-York ar.d P hi\a.
de lphia FAS HlO NS, and of the best mat erials and workmanship,
AND
SlY\1T\-\.;.~..I\. l\. O"Ll.N A
ALMAN_ACK,
CONSI STING OP
FOR TJIE YE.llR OF OU.J( LORD
Rla"ck and Blue Dress Coats
Frock Coats, with and without capes
With an extensive assortment of VESTS
and PANT JI.LOONS, of various colors. A ll
of which will be sold at as L " w Prices ail can
be purchased·elsewhere in th is city.
.March 12.
. 4t
73
us;~~e
Calculated by H. GHHR, W;lke' Cou nt!J
- -.c
0 NT A l
NI
N G-·
ASl'RONOMICAL CALCULATIONS,
The Bi·e sO\V Table, with observations r es·
pecting the dl!rat ion and va luat ion of li\"¢5
founded on the do ctr ine of chances,
On th e New.Yea r
True Feli b ty
Phenoinen.a of the Planets for 1822
CO~PLETE IN SEVEN VOLUMES,
on the Weather, by the Rev'd
·Octavo-new and fine Edition. Observations
W. Jon e s
Englis~
Proverbs
on do.
ALERUS, a Roman Story-for J{eview
of this, see North American Review for A. Chr istian
Va.lue of Foreign Coins in the Yoney of the
October,
United States
Say, oii Political Economy,
Bigelow's Sk:etch es of Ramble 1s -North~ Brit- A T able of Interest et Seven per cent .
Ditto
do
at Eight per do
ain and Ire land,
'
Solar 8r. Lunar Eclip, es fo r 1822
No, 50, Quarterly Review,
~loveable F e asts ~
No. 24, B ackw uod's Magazine,
Names and Characters of the Aspects
Annals of the Parish,
Chrono logical Cyc les
The Mour ning Ring, by Mrs. Inch bald,
Th e Anatomy of J\Ia;i's Body as governed by
Swanton's Chancery Hep (lrts, Vol . ht.
the twelve Constellations
.
Lacon or ma ny things in few words to those
Up on the t welve Signs
who think,
The Se:isons
The Life of Com. STEPHEN DECATt:R. ~.loon's Phases
Together with a Geno·al
Equation of T ime
Su ns Risi ng :ind Setting
ASSORTMENT OF
Moon's Rising, Setti ng ~nd Southing, a.nd
R1s1g n t•f the Zud1ac sh e is in at no on
~tationar-,.
Misc ellaneous P a rticula1·s
Fine Paper Hangings,
sing, Setti11g and Southing of the Star
D o of the most co ns pi cuous Planets,
Garden Seeds,
Pred\ctioos of the We ather
A.ND
Officers of th~ government of the U. States
Ditto of holding the Sup <' rior and Inferior
Lucern Grass ~eeds.
Courts of th e severa l coun ties in this State;
FOR S ..:LE, 1JY
,
according to the provisions of the act of
1819, as a:nended by the se of 1820
~
Mi lit ary Hep at·trne"nts of Ge nl'gia
o::J Want e rl Johnson's Quarto Dicti onary Ofll.cers
of tke Executi ve of SOUTH-CARO.
and Lavoi ~nes' A tla ss, for which other Books
LINA
will be given in excharige.
JU <lg t: s of the Courts of Commom Plea!. and
February 8
64
Sessi ons
"Jud,: e s and Commissioners.in Equity
Times a .1d pla ce s of holding with Courts,
Ne w-Gardner's Cale ndar
.
Bette1· Times
rrIN Bitthing Tubs , very superior List of tlie Civil Offi cers in Augusta
do. Roaste rs ditfereut sizes.
Offi cers of the Bank of Augusta
do Scales with beams properly Officer s- of the Executive a11d Judicial Departrnents of Georgia
regulated
,
Time and places of holding Courts of the
do Btiekets, diiferent sizes
U11ited States
do Coffee Pots do
do
Do Branch Hank of the State of Georgia
do P u.ns anti S11uee Pans do do
(at AuKusta)
do Waterirg pots
do do
Do Branch
do do (at :Milledgeville)
do Powder, fea. and Sur;a.r C11.n- Do llranch do of Darien do
Do Steam Boat Company of Georgia
niste1s,
Do Fe male Aovlum
do C andle Sticks
Do Trustees oi' the Richmond Academy
do Canrlle Boxes
List of the Civi l Office rs in Chatham C ounty
do Ca ndle M oulds
Officers of the Branc!-i Bank: of the U. States
the Officers of e ach Uistrict
do Cheose Toasters,
j;taff of the Militia of South-Carulina
do Liquor Pumps,
Do State Ba nk
do L iquor Measures
Do Planters' do
Gr,1ters, large, fQr kitchen use Do Foreign Vice-Consuls
do Nutmeg graters upon an im- Do Nolanes Public
uo Marine & Fire Insurance Company
proved plan
Do P oo1· House & Hospital
do Chandeliers, in a sets of su- Do Union Suc1ety
·
perior construction
Do Union Axe and F iremen
Do Public Auctioneer>
do Sconces, an improvedattern,
Do K.,·eper of the Powder Magazine
do Cups, pint and half pint.
List of officers of the Custom House De·
tlo , Spitting Boxes
·
p:i.rtment
do La_nterns, both large & small Do Commissioners of Pilotage
•
do Skimmers and I,adles
' Do Branch Pilots
Do Certific ate do
do Cullendeu
Do .., Ste am Boat Company
do Scoops and Funnels
Cotton Seed Oil
do ~ngiues for_ the purpose of Nati\'e d o '< ·
watering Gardens, &c.
Manur es
do Pepper
On P ea Hay
Urudging Boxes,
A remedy
the Gout, which was said to
do Sdlabub Churns,
have be e n p urchased by Napoleon, at the
do Trumpets f'llr hunters & stage
price of 25,000l. ster li ng
dri vers
The R ich and Poor
do Pudding Pans,
To Fine or Clearify Beer
Or any other article or articles in Good Advice ·
the Tin-Pla te W orker'8 line, by Orig in of Yankee Doodle
The lffs and Opinions of Dr. Monro
Wholesale or Reta'i l, will be fttr- Kitty of Colrain
oished at the shortest notice and the 'l'ogether with a 'Variety of other Entertain·
work well executed on the most reaing Jlfatte1•.
sonable terms, Ly applying at the New line Stage Road, from Fayetteville to
Norfolk, over a beautiful level c ountry,
store of
g oes through in 3 days wit hout travelling
John Hayles & Co.
at night.
Road from August& to Natchez
1J1:? TIN GUTTERS f or houaee, Do
from Augusta to Nashville
made and put up at short notice.- Do · from Augusta to Milledgeville
Apply as 11.bove.
Do from Augusta to At hens
Do from Augusta to St. M&ry'~
April 6
81.
Stage Road from Augusta to Marne.
1
a:J' A hanrlsome discount p-iade to those
Notice.
t hat tak e a qu an tity .
-
Tb.e Dai\~ an(\ Counh-,
C~Ull®ill®ll&~'?)
.II.ND FOll S.llLE .AT THE
~'htYsn,
THE
WaveY\l Novels,
V
Rooks and
J,
H. Ely.
ao
1rnd
for
T
HE subscriber has taken into
C op artnership Mr. B u RKETT
DAVENPORT .
Their bu11ineu "ill
he transaeted under the firm of JoHN
M 'BllYDE &Co.
Dhnock a.ml
~\arsh,
MERCHANT TAILORS,
rnis D.AT OPEN . at their StMe
opposite the City H otel, an extensive assortment of
/J E dited and P ublished in the City of Sa'Van.
nah,-by GEO. ROBER1'SON, Jr.
M.
ORE than :hree yean have now expir·
ed since the establisnment of the
l: corgian, It is known, at leaJt with th ose
g e ?t le men with whom it originated, that tho
only an<l undiv ided object fur which it was
created, was the ad vancement ol the interests
of tne community w l1ich was e xpected to
foster an d. patronise it. As the Ge orgian was
the offsp r111g of no faction, sci 1t mas engraftupon no party, save 1 hat in which Geor•
gi:m was .embraced. Nearly a 1e:.r has now
e lafJsed srnce t 11e Georgia11 w as lransferre d
to the present proprietor. He entered up.
on the duties which 1t imposed under m•ny
e~1~arra ssment:S . . Ho~ far he may'have disc '.1a1ged .these duties, is referrt-d to the dec1ston ot those less . interested, and cor1seq11~ntly better_qualified to judge than himself. Of his 111t7nt1on; , howc::ver 0 he can
~p ea~ w11h _ce rtarnty; rur they have been
mvar1a?ly _d1re eted to the end .,f equal and
exact ;ust•ce. t~ all a.nd mjury .to none. Alt.houg:u a native . ul Gevrgia, his absence
from 1t, ~1th out impairing his attachment
!o her so~I, has. prevented his forming preJUu1ces of any krnd to her polit ical parties.
0':1"111g all egiance to no11e, he is without h 0 s.
tthty to an). Dive sted of po i1t1cal att:.ch•
ments, ana being of the people, he is for the
people. H~v i ng no party purposes to· serve,
his 'J o ly obj ect will be the service ol his na.
t1ve state. The Ge"rgian shall be the ad.
vacate of Ge~rgia-_equally against those
who would assail her from abroad, and those
who would oppress her at home. Jt will
eve r be opflosed to the present domestic
factwus, whilst they cout~nd for the aggran.
d 1zement ot the few agarnst the welfare <if
tile m~ny ; and what1: ver may becom the
cor 1d1twn ·of pu_blic !'eeling, the Georgian
shaH e_ver raise its voice against the elamors
of fact1on.-lf. ever there should be formed
a party, and such there must an<l wil l be
1vhose object shall be ti\e vi11d1catit•ll
t he state against the factions wbich op pres1
h~r, then, and not till the11, will the Geo1·.
g1an advo .ate a party ; tor such. a party will
be the people.
·
In reliition to the politics of the un'i on, the
Georgian wdi ma, 111ain an equally i udepen<le i.t pos1uon, Hepublican in iLs principles
~t will alw:ij s recur to the fundamental max.
1ms o~ 1798. Oppos ed to tf1e undue agi-;~and1ze rn ent of tl~e gene1·al govei-nment, it
will a_lways ma111tarn the inde pencfent powers ol the statt:s. Viewing the ag1·icu ltural
and corn1~ercial . as '.he m~st impo1"' a 11 t in.
terests ot the. union, the Georgi:i.n will e ver
advoca Le their cause, •garnst any other that
sh ~ll atte mpt to oppress them whe ther by
ti-le attarnrne nt of government prote ction,
exclusl\·e privileges, or by any pretext, how.
eve1·. specious,_ under which t hey are assail·
ed, for pecuma1·y 01· pol;t1cal agg randize.
ment.
With these im1wessions and inlentions, the
Georgian is offe 1·ed to the patronage of the
p1.1b hc, whose verd ict m11st be conclusi ve
oi it s fate. Already in possessio11 of a r esp ect.a?le patronage, the E d itor will be
g 1·at.fi e'1 to r ec ..- ive such au increase as will ·
e~1able him tu he more extensively usefu l to
his fel10w-citi;.1e ns.
· T he Geo1·gian ·is sent to a ll parts of tho
U1nu11 at the 1ollow111g i·ates :
DAI LY PAPER,
• $8 per Annum.
CC>UNTRY PAPER, (three ti me~ a. wee k)
$5 do.-Payahle in 11.dvance.
Sub,criptions will be reeeived by Me~srs,
I.&; H. Ely, llooksellers, .llugurta.
Messrs. Ginn it Curtiss, Booksellers .Mil·
.J.:
e?.
J\
leclgeville,
'
An<l at the different Post Offices in the
S!ate . Or by letter to the Editor.
Advertisements inserted at tke usual rates
Savannah, Fe brua1·y, 1822.
M. •Kenzie. & l\e.nnocb.,
ffave received by late arrivats, an ex•
tensive
S~PPLY OY SEASONABLE
IDIB'i! ®®l>ID~QTheir_auortmeut is now very eom•
plete, and they offer the whole to
Country \.1erchauts on the mo11t l!.C•
eommodating terms.
O ct ober I 2
Cambridg-'il 8 . C. ls-tJam..1-r., r1,, liH.
Gentlemens Re!ldy made
Notice.
CLOTHING,
S
IX month!! after date, appJi .
cat io11 will be made to the Bon-Consisting of orable the I nfe rior Court of Burke SUPERFrNE Blue and Bia.ck Dres
county, for letters d ism is so r. J from
COATS,
the administration on the estate of~ w a.terfoo and Frock COATS,
FerglisoD Cook, d eceased.
Pantaloon1, Vests, Shirts, ~c. ~c.
James Ward,
Which will be sold low for CA&ll
Jldministrator of F. Cook onfv.
Deeember 4, 1 i21 ~ · ~m1m ti
· ianuary 41
H
lI
ao
'
No tic~.
J
OSEPH HAC u N, has formed 11.
coooectiou in business with Mr.ABRAHAM llANFORTH ,
und e r th&
firm of BACON and OANFOR l H,
they offer their se r vicei ~o their
l<'riend 11 1tnd th e Public, in the CO ~1 .
MIS SION LIN~, for the disposal
of Produce, 11.nd all kinds of Merchan~ i ze; they have taken a 11tore ill
Myers's Buildin ;~, upper end Broad.
Street-Also, the ex teesi\'e W .A. RE·
HOUS E, f ormerly ·ccupied by .l . S.
BARN KY, for tke rec ution of Cotton
whi r b wi ll .be takt-, on very !oV:
tPrms, and liberal ad.ance1 made if
lodged for sale.
THEY HAVE OJ'v Tl.8..ND,
And always t(eep
WILL
John M'Bryde.
No. H 56.
- A GEN E R A L AS , ORTMENT OF-
GROCEilIES,
Which ·bey will seU
terms for CAsH.
December 18
~
oil
moderde
TO RENT.
THE Two Story Tenement on
~Broad-Street, next do" r above Capt.
Cor mick's. , l1Dmediate posse13ion given.Apply to
Augustns
)larch i
Moore, Ca1h'1".
~
7~
I '
:~~~=:=:=!~='
l\ona~a.-rt~'s Wil\.
a letter t9 tl1e editor of the London
0f
Extract
p aria,
· J.an. 17, 1822•
·
'Tii;ies, dated
1 send you an extract fr?m t~e last will and.
testament of Bonap~t"te, d1spo_s1ng 0f sums ot
W hich he claims as hts property, to
mone Y
h h d " II
tnose friends 1An_d servants w o a ,o owed him in his exile, _or ~horn he thought
faithful to him in hu1 dtfferent changes of
fortune. ft is printed h~re, and handed about
. t ly in tbe shane 'of a small pamphlet,
prtva
e ,
r:
ld
. .
but can neither publicly be ~o , nor 1s 1t·a 1•
lowed to be copied into the Journals .. 1 have
made ·i nquiries· about its authent1c1ty, a_nd
have hearcl that no dou?t nee~ be entertamed on the subject. Besides t~1s. testament, of
which an extract is bere s':1~Jomed.' the ~x­
Empiwor left a kind of pohtica_l y;11l, which
spe,ik:s"ofhigher things, and dispose_s of_ la_rgd sums. This latter do~ument, which Ii in
the possession of M. DU.pm, has as yet been
knoWl,l to very few pel'sons, and will for so~e
time--a't least be kep• a .secret from the public.
In it the pri5oner of St. Helena. d1!p_os_es of an
' almost imperial fortu11e of 40 rmlho~s of
francs to public instittttions, to particular
classes, and for political pu1 poses. lt would
be curious to learn how such a treasure WQS
11cquired, and B<.>naparte does not conceal the
fact. As Emperor, he enjoyed ~civil l.ist of
24 millions a year ; and out of this, ?Y living
within his income, he saved 10 milhuns eveyear for tbe four years before _his marri·
11ge.-After his return from Russia, or during the Russian exped1t1on, he ordered. all
those savings to be lent for the public service.
This loan he re.claims i!l his will, and dis. poses of it in a manner of which I shall pro·
' bably be able in a few days to inform yeu.
After thi11, nobody need wonder that the
Pope, on the discovery of America, thoug"t
himself entitled to the disposal r1f the western
world.
TESTAMENT 01" NAPOLEON.
This da.y, April 14th, 1821, at Longwood,
in the island ot St. Helena.
This is my testamtmt, or act of my last
ry
will:-
/
1 leave to the Comte de Montholom,
:2,000,000 francs, as a proof: of my satisfaction
.for the attentions he bas paid to me for these
six years, and to indemnity him for the losse~
which my re~idence in St. Helena has oc·
casiom:d him.
I leave to the Comte Bertrarid 500,000
frallCS,
I leave to Marchand, my first valet de
chambre, 400,000 francs ; the se~v1c~s he
has performed for me are those ot a fnend.
I desire that he may marry a widow, SISier,
or daughter uf an officer or soldier . of my
'old guard ; to S.1int Denis, 100,000 tr~ncs ;
to .Navarre, 100,000 francs ; t<.> 1"1Jeron,
100,000 francs; to Archambaud, 50,000
francs ; to Cuvier, 50,000 francs; to Chan·
delle, id6m.
• To the Abbe Visnale, 100,000 francs.
desire. that he may build his house near
}'onte -Nevo de Rosma.
To Count Las Casas, 100,000 francs.
To Count Lavalette, 100,000 francs.
To the Surgeon-in-Chiet; Larry, 100,000
francs. He is ~he mosL virtuou3 n1an I have
known.
·
To Gen. Lefevre ,Desneuettes, 100,000
francs.
To General Drouet, 100,000 francs.
' To Gen. Chambronne, 100,000 francs.
To the children uf Gen. Maton Duvernais,
100,000 francs.
·
To the children of the brave Labedoyere,
100,0()0 francs.
To the cluldren of Gen. Girard, killed at
Ligny, 100.0UO francs.
To the cluldren uf Gen. Chartrau, 100,000
francs.
To the children of the vi::.-tuous General
'l'ravost, 100,000 francs.
To Gen. Lallemand, the elder, 100,000
francs.
Tu Costa B astilica, also 100,000 francs,
To Gen. Clausel, 100,000 traucs.
Tu the Baron rle Menevalle, 100,000
francs.
To Aru.:iult, author of Marius, 100,000
francs.
To Col. Marbot, 100,000 francs: I request
l1im to cont111ue to write for the defence
and the glory of the French armies, and to
confound th~ cal"mniators and the apo111tatt:s.
To the Baron Bignon, 100,000 francs: I
request him to write the history uf Freuch
Diplomacy from 1792 to 1815.
To Poggi de Talaro, lOLl,000 francs.
To the Sur3eon l'~mmery, 100,000f.
.
These sums shall be taken from the s1Jt
millions which 1 depo>1ted on leaving Paris
in 1815, and from ti.le interest at the rate uf
~ per ceut since ,July, 1815; the account of
which shall be adjusted w1tll the ba11kers by
the Counts }lomhulun, Bertrand, and Mar·
c:hand.
These legacies, in the case of death, shall
be paid to rne widows 'a nd children, and 111
ti:Jeir default, shall revert to tlH capital ..
I institute the Counts M-.1 uthulon, Ber•
trand, and Marchand my testamentary execut3rs. ·
·
This present testament, written entirely
by my own hand, 1s signed and sea&led wnn
wy arms.
NAPOLEON.
April 14, 1821, Longwood.
This is my cod1ctl to tile .. ct of n~y last
will:On the liquidation of my civil list of ltal~
-such ai mo11ey, j e wels, plate, linen, cotfers, caskt:ts, ot which. the Viceroy 1s Iii..:
depositary, and wlrn:h belon~ tu me-I dt>·
pose of two nnil1uns, wh1c1J 1 1eave lo my
mosl faithful servants.-!· bope t h;1.t, w1lhuut
their show111g a1~y cause my son Eull"en"
Napoleon wul d ischarge the:u faith.fuiiy. He
c:an forget the for ty 1niiho111{ wtuch I have
gi_v~n tum in llaly ur by tile nght ( parag e)
ot Ins mother's u1 ierilance.
Tu the Cumte A1u111holon 200,000 francs,
100,000 of which he wi tl pay u1tu Lae ch est,
fur \he same use as the above, 10 be employed accordrng to my . dispositions 111 tile d,s.
charge of legacies of conscience.
/
. This codicil is \nitten in my own hand,
&Jgned and sealed with my a 1·ms,
penses in offices, f~r journeys, commission,
consultations, pleadings, we mtend that our
testamen1ary executors shall retain 3 per
cent. on all the legacies, both on the 6,800,000
francs,:md on the sums b1:que1.thed by tbe codicils,
The sums pro·ceeding from these deductions shall be deposited in the bands of a
treasurer, and expended on the order of our
testamentary executors.
We appomt Comte Las Casas, or in his default, his son, and m his defa•ilt, Gen. Drouot,
treasurer.
This present codicil is entirely written
with our own hand, and sealed with our arms.
N.HOLEON,
This 24th of April, 1821, Longwood.
This is my codicil and act of my last will.
From the funds remitted in gold to the
Empre~s Maria Louisa, my very dear and
well-l!eloved spouse, at Orleans, in 1814,
there remain due to me, two mill1ons, which
I dispose of by the present codicil, in order
to recompense my most faithful servants,
whom I b esides recommend to the protection
of my clear Maria Louisa.
I leave 2GO,OOO francs to Comte Muntholon, 100,000 francs of wilich he shall pay
into the chest uf the 1 reasurer for the same
purpoie as above, to lie empl •yed, accord111g
to my dispositions, in legacies of conscience.
This codicil 1s written with my own hand.
Signed and sealed with my arms.
NAPOLEON,
MONSIEUR LAFITTE-I remitted to you in
1815, at tfle moment of my departure trom
Paris, a sum of nearlr six millions, for which.
you gave me a double receipt. I luve cancelled one of these receipts and I have charg·
ed Count de Montholon to present to you
the other receipt, in order that you may
after my dellth deliver to him the said sum
w ith interest at the rate uf 5 per cent from
the 1st Ju ly, 1815, dedllcting the payme11ts
with wluch} ou have been charged in virtue of
my order.
I desire that 1he liquidation of your accnunt be settled by mutual consent llletween
you, Comte Montholon, Comte Bertra11d, and
the S1eui· Marchand; and th~l this liquidation
bting adjusted, I give you by these preHnts
full and absolute d1sch.arge of the sum.
I also remi tted to you a box containing my
medallion, I beg you will deliver 1t to Comte
Montho lon.
,
This letter having no other object, l pray
God, Monsieur Lafitte, that he may bave you
in his holy and worthy keeping,
NAPOLEON.
Longwood, in the Island of St, Helena,
A~ril 25th, 1821.
This testament was presented on the lOih
of December, 1821, to the Prerogative Court
of the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, deposited and registered, accorJmg to the
affidavit, in the hands ot Mr. l'ox, nolary and
attorney of the court.
The Man in the Bell.
Frem JJtackwood's Mugazine, N~. 57.
In my younger days, bell-ringing was
much more. in l.shion among the you ng men
of--, than it is now. Nobody, I bt!ileve,•
practises it there at present, except the ser·
vanta of the church, and the melody has
been much mjured in consequence Snmt:
fifty years ~go, about twenty of us who
dwelt in the v.cinity of the Cathedral, formed a club, which used to ring every peal
that was called for ; and, from continual
practice, and a rivalry which existed between
us and a club attached to another steeple,
and wh•ch tended cornfiderably to sharpen
our aeal. we became very Muzarts un our
favourite ins•ruments. But my b<Jll-ringmg
practice .vas shurtenea by a s111i;u lar accident, \\·hich not only stopt my perfonnance, but made even the sound of a bell tei··
r1ble to my ears.
·
One Sunday, I went with another into the
belfry, to ring forenoon prayers, b t1t thesecond stroke we had pulleJ, shewe d U3 that
the clapper of the bell we were a t wa~ · muf·
fled. Some one had been bttried tliat mc1r11·
ing, and ll had been prepared, of course , to
ring a mournful nott. We did not know of
this, b11t the remedy was easy. "Jack,''
said my companion, " step up aloft an(I cut
off the hat ;" for the way we had o r rnuf.
llmg, wa~ by tying a piece of an old ha t, or
of cloth, (the former was prefe1·red) to one
side of the clapper, wllich deadened every
second toll. I complied, and m nunting into
the belfry crept as usual, into the be ll, wi1ere
I b ~ gan to cut away. Tne hat llad been
tied on in some more complicated ma1rner
than usual 1 and, I w<1s, perhaps, three or f,, ur
minutes in getting 1t off; during which time,
my cornpan10n below was hastily called a ·v,1y
by a message from his sweetheart, I beleive ;
but that is not material to my story. Th e
person who ca lled him was a brother of the
club, wh<.>, knowing that the time had come
tor ringing for ~en·ice, a nJ not tbinking
that a ny one was ab ove, b ... g·an to pnll. At
this mon1en\ I was just coming out, when I
fel th~ bell moving; I guessed the 1•eason at
on ce-it was a moment of terror ; but, by a
hasty and ab10st cunvuls1 ve effol't, I succetded in jumping down, and throwing my.
self on th t: fiat of my back. ui1der the bell.
The room in which 1t was, was lit de more
than suffic11mt to contain 1t, the battom of
the bdt com ing wnh.111 a couple of fe et of
the Allor ot la.t u. At that time, I cer1a1n ly
was no t sn bul ~ y as [ a 1n nulV, but, a , I lay,
it was within an inch of my face. I llad not
laid myself do1vn a seco nd, wi1e11 the ringi ng
began. IL was a dreadful situation, Over
me swung an immense mass of metal, .,,ne
touch uf wnich would have crushed me to
piect:S ; the 6oor under me was, p r incipa lly, comp osed ot cruy laths, and if they g ave
way, I was prec1p1tated to the d 1st:rnce of
about filty feet up on a loft, which would, in
all pruba::iility, have . unk under the impulse
of my fall, and sent me to be d a ~hed i o a to ms
upoa the mar ble flour of the ch ance l, a hundred feet bt:l ow. I remembe red, ( for fear
is q ui ck in r ecollect10R) ho w a comm on
clock: wright, about a month before, Ll ad fa 1Ie n, an~ bt1rs1'i ng through the H.oa rs uf the
stee ple. d riven m the ceilings ot the porch,
!!nd eve n broken mtu the marb 1e tomb st one
ot a bishop, wlio slept be11eat h . This 1vas
mv fo·stterr or; but the rmg1ng had not co11.
1i;1u cd a mmu te, before· a mo~e awful a nd i.1,.
NA!'OL:EON.
. .
April 24, 1821, Lo .1gwoud .
mediate dread came 011 me. T ile dc atle n'J.'h1a IS also anulilc1· cud1cu, or act 01 my
iug sound uf the be ll sm'> te mto my eara with
last Will:
a t hunder which made me fe rtr tne 1r d ru ms
The 9,0001. sterling, wh ich 1ve have given
wouM crac k. T here was not a fibre of my
to the Comte arid tile C uume:;s i\to•nnoton,
body 1t did not thrill Lhrough ~ 11 e 11 tered
if tll<!Y have b.een p .ud, an: to be deducted
my very :.oul, though t and r e rl ccti,>n we re
and cna rged 111 accoum_ a;l'ainst tile 1egac1 e s
almost utterly ban1sbed. I o nly r <t •ined the
w 111 c i1 we nave maue 111 .n bi oiu· te slamen t,
se11oat10R o f agon1z.J 1g t error. Every molf tll ey bave uot bee n paid, our buts.shall be
me nt I saw t he bell s weep witlun an inch of
my face; a nd my e}es, ll cnu l<l not c 1o;e
Cll11ceited.
ln c llnsequcnce of the legacy made by
t hem, though to lnok at the o bj e c r was bi tour testame 11l l0 ihe ~o m le Mumh ulun, the
te r as tlL aI.I>, ) tOlluwed it inst1nc 1 1ve ly 1n 1h
p ension ot 20,uUO tranC• i;r •ll ed to lus w.J e
o:;cill...ting progress until it came back again.
l• an uulled. (.;omte Muntbalou is 01rected
It w~ :1-111 va111 I said to my.elf tllat 1t cou lj
co r.e no neare r at a n)' fu tuic swing t han it
to pay it te her.
d 1<1 at n rst ; eVt ry time it <leS'cende d, l enTu e acl mi111stratioR of such s•1ccession
deavoured to sh rmk into the very floor, to
u ul i~ euurc liquidation, requuw g ex-
W ASllll"CJTO'N, March 15.
me, and I slipped d it "'ith the utmort
av.:iid being 9uried under the down:sweep•
Spai1i1!t C~aims.-The Board of Co 111misrapidity, and rose. I st~od; l suppose, for a
ing mass; and then, reflecting on the dan·
minutt!, looking wit~ ~ silly ~onder on the sioners, appointed under the lltb art1c .e of
ger of pressing too weighty on my frail supplace of my imprisonment, penetrated wit~ the Treaty of Amity, Settlement and Limits
. port, would cower up again as far as I
joy at escaping; but then . r~tihed down tht: between the United States of Amer ica
dared.
J
stony and irregular stare.s with the v.o locity His Catholic Majes\y, cooc l ~cled at Washing.
At fir~t, my fears \Vere matter of fact. I
of lightning, and.arrived Ill the bdl-rmger's ton, on the 22d F~bruary, 1819, have passed
was afraid the pullies would giv~ way, and
room. This was the last act I had power to the following orders-of which those con•
let the bell plunge on me. At another time ,
accomplish, I leant against th~ waU motion- cerned are desired to take notice :
the possibihtv of the clapper being shot out
"Ordered, That all persons having claims
less ahd deprived of t~ought, in wh1c~ posin some sweep, and dashing throegh my boture my compasions found me, when, 111 the to be recrived by this Comm1s:iinn, memorials
dy, 11s I harl seen a ramr..id glide through a
course of a r:ouple of hours, they returned to of whic8 have not yet been fi led, do file. .a
rloor, flitted across my mind. The dread
memorial of their said claims with the Secre.
their occupation.
also, as I have already mentioned, of the
They were shocked, as well they might, t~ry,.on or before t!ie TENT~ day of June ne:tt;
crazy floor, tormented me, but these soon
at the figure before them . The wrnd_ of the n;ftei• which date no memorial wilt be 1·ec,ived
gave way to fears not more U1\foanded, but
bell had exeoriated my face, and my dim and by the Boai·d, unless good cause be shown
more visionary, and of cour~ e, more tremenstup ified eyes were fixed with a lack lus tre why the same has not been before exbibltt'lil•
dous. The roaring nf the bell confused my
gaze in my raw qe-iids. ~ly ~ands were in pursuance of the repeated orderi; req11Jr.
intellect, and my fancy soon began to teem
·
torn and bleeding ; my hair dishevelled; ing tbe same to be presented.
with all sorts of strange and territying ideas.
"It is further Ordered, That each of tbe
and 1oy clothee tattered. They 8p<.1ke to me,
The bell pealing ab ove, and opening its
but l returned no answer-they shook: me s.aid memorials hereby required to be filed,.
jaws with a li1deous clamour, sa.erned to me
but I remained insensible . They became st~all be prepared and verified rn conformity
at one time, a raveni~g monster, ragrng to
alarmed, and hastened to remov_e me. He with the d irections prescribed in the orders
devour me ; at another, a whirlpool ready
who hao first gone up with me m the fore· of the 14. h June, 1821.
to suck me into its bellowing abyss. As I
" lt is further O•·de1·ed, That the Secretary
nuon, met them as they carried me through
gazed on it, it assumed all shapes : it was
the church yard, and through him, who was cause t~e above wde1·s to be published ln
a flying eagle, or rather a roe of the Ar3·
at having, in some measure, occasioned the the National lutelhg«>ncer, print~d at Wash·
~ian story tellers, clapping its wmgs a nd
accident, the cause of 111y misfortune was mgtou."
screaming i>ver me. As I looked upward
On the l~th instant, the Board adjourned
discovered. 1 was put to bed at home, and
into it, it would appear sometimes to lengthen into indefinite extent, or to be twisted at ' r e main ed for th ree days delete1 iuus, hu t gra- . to meet agarn on the 11th June rext. By
T. IV ATKINS, Secretary.
dually recovered my senses. You may be. order,
the ends into th.e spiral folds of tbe t'.lil of a
11th .March, 1822.
sure the bdl formed a prominent topic of
flying dragon,-N1>1· was the flaming breath,
my ravrngs, and it 1 heard a pea l, they were
or very glance of that fab led anirr: al, \VantF'>-om the Charleston Courier.
in stantly mcreased to the utmost violence.
ing tu complete the picture. My eyes inEven when the delirium abated, my sleep
fia1ned, bloodshot, and glaring, invested tr.ll
"L~gis\ation.
was continually d1st11rded by imag ined rmg·
supposed monster with a full proportion of
ings, and my dreams were haunted by tl~e
unholy light• .
The House of Representati_ves of the U,
fancies which almost maddened me wb1le m State•, havmg exhati>ted themselves. on the
It would be endless, were I to merely hint
the steeple. My fri e nds removed me tu a Bankrupt bill, and exh.a usted also the patience
nt all the fancies that possessed my mmd.
house in tl1e cou ntry, which was sufficiently of the nation, a.re relaxing their wearied in •
Every obj ect that was hideous and ro;mng,
distant frnm any place of worship, to save tell~ct by very facetious innovations on the
presented itself to my imagination. I otten
me from the apprehensions of he«ring no rule,; ul the house, It has been m parliamen.
thought that I was in a hurricane at sea, aBd
church-going bell; for what Alex:rn iler ~" l· tary bodies the practict:, to report and adopt
th at the vessel in which I was embarked,
luck,
in Co1Vp er's peom, complamed of as a the rules of debate at the threshold of the
tossed nnder me with •he most tiirious vehe·
m isfortune, was than to me as a blessing. se ssion, but this Is a new country and fruitful
mence, The air, set in motion by the swmgH ere I r <' covered; but, even long after re- of novelti es,
ing of the bell, blew over me, nearly with the
covery, if a gale wafted the notes uf• peal tov1olence, and more than the thundet• of a
We notice among the grave propositions
wards rne,I started with nervNh appr<!hen- sub'mnted tp- the hou6e, the fol' owing, \\ohich
tem pest; and the flo or seemed to reel under
sion.
I
felt
a
Mal1ometan
hatred
to
all
the
me, as under a druuken man.-But the most
if they be not as imp ortant as t.ie recogmt1on
bell tribe, and e11vied the 8ubjects of the
awful of all the ide as tha1 seizer\ on me,
of'south American independence-whJ, how
commander
of
the
faithful
the
sonorous
Toice
were drawn from the supernatural. Jn the
can we help that-who mu~t take lh111gs as
of their Mezzin. Time cu reel this, as it dues we find them,
vast cavern of the bell hideou; face ~ appear·
the
most
of
our
follies
;
but,
even,
at
the
ed, and glared down on me with terrify.
Mr. MERCER, submitted a resolution "that
present day, if, by chance, my 11er,es be uning frowns, or with grinning mo::k:ery still
no n:embt1· 8hnli reacl a newspaper in his seat,
sLrung, some particular tones ol the cathe.
more appalling. At last the devil h imself,
rluring the aesszo11 of the House." lnueed ?·
dral bell, have power to surprise me iuto a
accoutred, as is the common description of
sens1t1ve gentlema11 ! we thought it was 01dv
momentary start.
the evi l S~)irit, with hoot; horn and tail, and
the Alb1ne, s whose eyes could not bear th~
eyes of infernal lu8tre, n1ade his appearance,
hght. Mr. ME11ct:R proposed also "that no
a11d called on me to curse G[}d and worship
Dcca/iitation by the Gi;,i/lotfae.-A gentle- ~nen:iber should read or write a private lei.tar
hi•11, who was powerful to save me. This
man ofintelligenceandof'literaryattainrne 111, m h~s sea•, during the session.'' What an a.
dread sugge&tion he uttere r) with the lullin· an accnu111 of h 1s travels on the Cont111- Vel'sion to letters!
to11ed clangout of the bell. l had h im with.111
ent, makes the foll11w i11g most sing-ular reMr. WRIGHT, moved "that no memb-er
an inch of me, and I thought on the tate of
marks un a11 ex,~cution he witness ed, in 1 shall be permi tted tu smoke a segnr •n the
the Santon Ba;rsisa. Stren .iously and deswhich the c11lp1'it was beh eaded by the gu1l- I h.all, nor in the ... uter lobby 01 the hall.'' 1 his
perately !•defied him, and bade him bego<1e.
lolme.
" lt appear,," s;ys he, " to be the was negat !Ve d wit
· tlout a division, .t l.Jemg the
b
R eason then fot' a mC>ment r <:sum ed her
est of all pos~tble modes ?f inflicting the ,stand111g rule of the house "e:t fumo dare Ju.
sway, but it was only to fill me with tie sh terpun1sh.inent .ot death ; cumbmmg tl1e.1'reat- cem 1' to make a r elit smoke out of )r ·
ror, just as the lightn i113· dispels tne g loom
est 11npre ssion on the 'spectator, w1tl1 the lit'le fire
Mr ~\IERCEI'
d ,} lecioua
a- •
. .
·
•
• '
• move
t 1at no
that S'1 1'1'ounds the l1en1gh1ed ma1•iner, but
l east poss1·b le suuerrng
to the victim. It is member rem:.in covered 1· n th h II · I
· l s .."' ou lei d uu I>t w t1etl1er t h ert: leave uf the speaker" It' te 1·a /• wit 1011t
to sht: w hun that his vessel is driving on a
so r~p1 d , that
.er
b f
I
•
o 1gr1te11 t11e1r
rock, wh.ere she must 111ev1tably be dash ed
hca<ls was tu enlighten them, this would bt: a
'":'ere ~ny suner1ng: ut rom t 1e ex ores
to pieces. l found l was becomi ng d elir10 J1S,
51on ot the counten• nce,whtn the eitecu t1 o!l· good device'.
•
and trembled lest reason should utterly deMr. Cac KE, moved "that no member
t;r held up the he .id, I am 111clin ed t•> besert me. T~1s is at all times an aganizing
heve that sense and cousr;ioustres.~ mt1y remain lowed to sbeak moi·e tha
h
lJ~ alr.
d
,J'
h
"
d
.ll"
'l'h
•
n one our, at any ont
.
thought, but 1t smote me tnen w1tl1 t•· nfo!d
j or a .1eiu secon s <!J ..er t e ,.ea i• o.u.
e lime, without spe:ciol /ea~·e of the house" We
agony. I feared lest, wh en utte dy de . r ived of
eyes seemed to 1"ela111 specu at 1011 tor .a mo- tli •nk the wisdom vf Ml'. Cocke's pro 0 it' ·
my senes, l should rise , tu <lu wh1en 1 was
ment or two, and thHe was a look in the en i 1 tle~ him fairly to crow ,,ver hi
P .s ion
5
every mome nt tempted by that strange leelghastly stare with which they stared upon b•it it was lo"t ot coui·•e , t
associate~;
1
·
1
·
d
•
'
'
'
·
•
ouc
1
my
speec11
ing- which calls on a man, whose head is
I wh1c h imp 1e that tne head was sir and vou toucl rn.y I
t h e Ct'OW(,
'
'
f · ··
· ·
·
·
d .
•
,
'
wnour
dizzy from standing on the battle ment of a
aware o tts 1gnomin10us _situation'. An , mMr. Hoss, moved •· tliat 110 'member be al.
lofty castle, to prtcipitate himself from 1t,
dec:d, however extraordinary this m~y ap- lowed to re ad a si)cech 0 f
.
and then de~th would b e in stant and tre·
• b a bl em
· tl1e Ill·
·
e titan
one
Pear there
. . ·s . noth
. rng _1mp1.o
h0u1· without &pecial ltave." mo1How
c
l ·
mendous, When l thcrnglit ol thts I became
terpos1t1011, tor m a•I WJUrte~ of the sp1ne1 Mr. Ho~s, for he knnws verv well tha/;~\ in
1
di>sperate. I caught tbe fl oor with a grasp
whereby a commumcation with the ~en~o- ,h not 1e;id their ow . ·
. ~y
which drove the blood from my nails, and
rium i.s cut off: 1t is the par.ts belo':"" the inju- 1~ever be rear! at all. n speecb.ei<, they will
I yelled with the cry of de~pa1r. I caiied
ry which are deprived of · sensation, whilst
}.1r UEuci;a sub 'tt I
for help, prayed, l ~houted, but all the ef.
those ~b()ve retai11 their sen.ibil,ty, And so "tha~ after three \~rn. e< an _am~ndmen.t,
forts of my vuice was of course drowned in
in the c:ise of decapitation, tile nerves Gt' the the committee oftt ays h s~ccessive cb~te_ 11'1
the bell. As 1t pa'.ssed over my mouth, it
flee and eyes may for a short time C•>ntinue and tu rep<ii·t pro~r~essw
ei~ mot~or~ to r1>e
occasion aliy echoed my cries, wluch mixt
to_ convey imp1·essions to the brain, in spite before 7 o'clock· p Ms oul no\ e 111 orrler
not. with 11• own so11•1d, but preserved
ot the separation from the trunk"
b · d h db' · ' un ess tie que.stHlll
s'1
G
Sil m1 tt t
A
eendec1Jed." (Weptt1·ccivC>
th en· d1st111ct character, Perhaps this was
[ a em uz.
M;1'. Me1:ce1-, 111 least, reads the newspap.ers,)
but fancy. To me, I know, they then sound.
Ihs mol!on ''.f cour~e ~as o,ul of orde1·: ;long
ed as if th ey were the shouting, how ling ur
speeches b eing as rnd1;,pcns1ble as Waterloo
·west Point Academy.
laughmg, of the fiends with which my 1ma.
coat9
were 1n Charleston so1I1e time ago"--and
g1natiun had peopled the gloomy c:1ve
1 The invt:st1gat10n lately inst1tued, with te- we may add, about as obnoxious.
wh ich swung over me.
~rd to some 1negularities in tue academy,
Mr . B1rn1m wished th~t the speeches
has had a salu1ary effect. It has resulLt•d
You may accuse me of exaggerating my
not only in the cnrrection of those who were co'.1ld be curtailed. A1h'en·says t'he'·natwn.
feelings; but I am not. Many a scene of
judged by the court most relractory and . I he comm1tte~ i'ccommcndeJ tl1at one day
dread have l since passed through, but they
culpable, but rn co11vincing others how ut - 111 each week only, be ui ar.y wise :ippropria.
are nothing to the selt-inllicted terrors of
terly inccmsiste11t such conduct · s with the led to i-eceii;e p~titiuniJ.
this half hour. The alilcients have <loomed
_Mr. CANNON, wisked that the Militia Com.
spirit of the rnst1tlll.1on, its laws and obj e ct.
one af the damned, in theil' Tartarus, to be
ur1d~r a rock which every moment seems to
A strong adinomt1on has produced upon mtttee be made a ::>tand111g Cummittee. Rathbe descending to annihilate him ; and an
those less irNgu lar, a striking cha11ge in ac- er difficult tu be accunipl!:.lied .. lter disbandtion and opmion.-Ha1•mony 1s r<:'.Stored, and 1ng tlie regulars.
awful punishment it would be. But if to
~__:___
this, you add a c lamour as loud as if ten
the acquireme11t of knowledge, is interthousand furies were howhng about you-a
rupted no longer. E\·ery duty is performed
~ fe~ days since, _a stage front Bratdeaiening uproar banishillg- reason, and
with the usual promp\ness and regu!ar;tv
~el1Jor~ to llostqn, with ~1iue pas>euger~
drl\•mg you to madness, you must allow that
amJ .baueful e:umple• no l0nger exe;.;
the binerness of the pang was rende red
~heir mfiurnce. No faith should be placed 1~clu<l!ng one lady, passmg along a side
more tt:rribte. There is no mao, firm • S the
u~ .any thrng but official reports, regarding h~ll, shd fro~ the road, and was ~l'l;cl·
nerves may be, who could reta111 his cou.
!his academy ; nor should the puhhc suffe1· p~tated abou! thirty feet uown a, ~ e '
rage in this situation.
its op1111on to be swayed by aay 01he r. Tht: pttch i>cfore it met with an obstru
·' cti~ P
·
OU
m o.st lasting glory of a country (•ays a great
Jn twenty minutes the ringi ng was done,
su ffi m·n~ to overturn it. The ~-.frria e
writer)
is
in
its
"virtuous
great
me
n."
Half of that time passed ove r me with out
one of th"' pass g
L earning, S)ys he, is the everlasting monu- was a rnm, butI onlv
"
"'
enpower of computat1011-the other hlllf apment uf au empire. lf any one Qon~1de1·• gers wa:> . hurt .-a C')llar bone broken.
peared an age. When it ceased, I became
tlie
vaR
t
extent
of
these
states,
and
rel\
e
~ts
Onl~ ~ne of the horses fell, and this was
gradually more quiet, but a new fear rt:b11nupo11 the amount of knowledg-e d iffu sed over not lBJUrcd.
ed me. I knew that five miriutes would
th.
e
m
from
this
institution,
that
l>.
nowledge,
elapse without ringing, but at the end uf
to o, t~.1c ~ost useful and pr1found, he can~~
that time, the bell would be rung a kcon<l
~ot, it he 1s a man of benevolence and patriotWe co~gratul~te our Fellow-Citizens
time, for five minutes more. l could not
ism, but look upon the land of his b..r1h with upon the n~creasmg prosperity ofCam
calculate time; a minute a11d an hour were
th.e ref'1embrance uf the g-lory of Athens and den. ~usmess has revived, and ente•·of equal d urat10u. I feared to rise, le>t t 11e
ot Rome. A nation of learned men is a sub
p ize
·
five mmutes should have' elapsed, and the
lime ohj ect ; and men of t;enius have we pt
r
. IS OltCe more pu ttmg forth its
rwging be aga111 comm enced, m which case
over their repeated fall. The mol'e we ad- energies. Mure. produce has ·been
I should be crush ed, befo re I could escap e,
va nce m learnmg, tile nearer do we ap- p~rchased f ere this o.eason than in
against the wall or frame work ut the bell ;
proach tc>_ a ce 1e , t1 al in te ll1g r. nce, and h ow p •·e.:eding 011e. Our war'e-house an!
I there fore still continued to li e down, ca u8
?1 ffer e11t 1.s the aspect of a people dwelij 1,g filled with Cotton . ti . ·
ai e
t iously sh tfli ng myself, hoWe\•er, wi t h a care m the m1d8t of prugre>s1ve 1mpruvemen i
.
'
let e IS not a SUffi·
fo i g lidi ng, so that my e ye no lo nge r lookfrom one th~t is _wrapt in the robes o r ignur'. cien1 number of boats. employed ou the
ed int o the h ollow : th is wa3, of its dr, a c onance ! Soc1et). 1s a rreste d from cc1 ntention \Y aterce to convey lt to Charlesto
s1der:;.ble rel ie f. rhe cessation ut the noi se
by noble purrn 1ts, and ambition is devot.:d Cotton has been })Urchased I
· h~1 •
had, 111 a great measure, tbe effect uf 1tupi·
· 1orgotten
~
. . 60 ·1
.t o the h'g
1 her..t o b'.1e cts. F'·dcuon
is
season from w1tlun
f iere t IS
fy ing me, for my attention being 110 lo nger
111 the sear ch into the secrets ul nature and
mi es 0 Charlesoccupie d by tile ch imesras I h .. d conj 11 red
a. tnr une 1s noticed with 1nddf<!'. reu ce _:.. 111 ,e t~n, ~n<l t)~ an average at the diilerence
up, began to fl .•g.-All that now d1titre ,s ~ d,
we g·aze on a new-crea~ed star. So long as o price ot transpot·tution to that · t
me was the constant expectation of th e set he employments o t mankind are us efu l s" A.t lea.st fiv~ times the present am Cl
cond ringi ng, for wh •c b l10\1·e ver, I se ttl e d
lo ng as the de vt lopeme nt of knowie dg e 15 of capital m1 o·ht be em l , d
oun
mvself with a kind ut stur id re so .ut ion. I
t~e tl1111g soug ht .after, the sh btlity a nci nap- tdo-e in the trod f' l p uj e to ad van·
clo >e d my eyes, and clench ed my teet t1 a~
p1ness
ot
an
e
mpire
are
doub
ly
secure.
Ano
~
a
e
o,
t
le
place.
fi ,. mJy as 1f they were screwe d in a vice, At
archy 1s as ~~ch t he child uf id le ness as ot
[Southern ()hronicle .Afarch 1,
last the dreatled mom en t cam e, a 11d the fi rst
la wle•s ambition, and ig norance is th e anc'es~
S Wiil.{ of th.e bell extorted a g r oa11 tr om me ,
tur of' the m all . .Let us ho pe that posterit y
R ECTPE-Co11s a mpt1u 11 . -Uomplete l t<>
as t hey say the most resolute victim oc reams
w~ ll re~mber Gree ce aud Amer ica t og e tli- d icate lll! s d 1sul'de r, l wil l nut posit[v ·I era,.
at the sigh t of til e rock, to wh ich. he 1s 1o r a
e 1 ;_ le t us ho pe that our monu rn en". like the t he fo llo wing rem edy is c .. pa.ble ord;,i~iuy
second ume d esti ned. Afte r this, h.ow ever,
an cie nt of days, R1ay be li!arning, a11 d that bu t l w:ll ve nt ure to afiirm th at bv 1} t
~·
l lay sile nt and le t harg ic, with.out a tl10ug11 t
our
· h l 1Je fi ngers r a· 1e mod e o1. 11\'lll"'
.
.,.iritue111pef to mb may be en g raven wit
(avoid ing l\p
I'
-wrapt in the def eno1ve armour of stu pid i.
o gemu# aud of k11owledge .
qu.ns wholl y) w ~~rm o- flan itel. next ous 1•
ty, I defied th.e be ll and its intu nat1u us.
JV. Y. JV'a1 • .ddv
~kin,
and takin " e ve ry" mor nin"' I lf lo th•
When it ceased, I was rllu:J<:d a ilt lle by t he
.
.
"
" ia a J>1 vt
·
~~
ol new mil k, mixe d wi th the ex
d
hope c f esca pe-I d id not, ho weve r, deci de
o n th.is st~ p 1.J a , ily, but, putting up my hand
We are happy to inform the pub!"
ju ice of g •·e e ll hoa rh ound the c Pl es•~ ·
IC
w
II
t
I
b
eJ'
d
.
b'
0 01'Jh Rl ll t
with th.e utm:,s c c aut ion, l tou chet.1 til e
th a t a survey of the B a.ttery and ti
i no o n y e r •eve ' nt the inrj.,i' ' . t
r i:n. Though the ringing had ct a. ed, 1t
, a c t b fill d
'
le sliall procu1 e to himse lf a le ng th 01
rn ua
0 e
!>p
e
e
up,
were
yesterday
yo
nJ what the mi ldest ~
d.ay 11 be·
sli!I was tremu to us from t ht! sou nd, ""u
made,
preparatory
to
a
contract
for
the
r
oo
m
to
ho
pe
for.
I
am,
my~:~;
.c
ou.1d
give
shook under my hand, which instantly re ·
1
great wo rk. We understand tllat ti
ne.s of the beu ~ ficial effects-·~ "thivmg; wi.1:...
c011ed as from an elcctnc j ar. A q u Jrter ol
15 11grt:i"'
· about one ·11· ie bl e, an d t Iioug ll mnoce11t.
·
m
an h04 ir, probabl}t elaps ~d, before l again
till .mg up w1·11 requtre
"et
... ,
•
·d h
mi 1011
r t
l"
k
,. p.owerlw • "
dare d to make t he exp<::.r1ment, a nd t llen l
an a a.lf s quare feet of t
1
p ica i'.' n· our wee s use uf Ii I
} -r·
,
.
s one or gravel. and milk reli eved the. i;.·
ie IO!U' .. ound
fo und it at rest. l deler.oi ned to lose no
~ton~, we learn, IS to be useu to a a ncl gave me t u b re~the pcl111 ~ i>f lr1y brea~:
time, fearing that I mi g ht have h11 n a ·r eady
too long, and that the bell for t: Ve ni ng se r.
certain ext_ent, leaving surfac~ enou h 1 -st re ngthene d ~ud hax·n~~p·'. 1'v ng r. ncl f_~e c
for vcgetat wn.
lb .J g and r estored tu me .. b tt ntzed mY v01:!e,
vice would catcb me ; this dread $Umulakd
lu.
1. d
·
" e e1• · ta le f b • IJ
1 ua
1;d for cuany
u
and
Digninl',l\
I
h
4
!
Yt
I
<:BJO)
ye,,i· ~ ."
f.
..,,t
· I
an ass·ault QD a transient person by the
name of John Hill, and robbing him of
cash and other articles to the amount
of 24 dollars, on ·o r about the 22d of
Feoruar.y last. , . . ,, .,
AUGUST A HERALD.
··,)
FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1822'.
<!OMMUNICAT:ED.
THEJJ.TllIC.!lLS.
The c~lebrated Mr. Booth made his
'
I
first appearance before our Augusta audience on Monday evening last, in the
character of Richard, and although the
weather was unfavourable, a numerous
· ~u<litory attended to greet him. The
farce for the night was " The P1·omis-
1
So much has already been said, a.nd
justly too, of the merit of Mr. Booth as
an actor, that the subject ·has become
trite, but 'in justice we are bCitmd fo aM
our . weak plaudit to the well earned
· praise bestowed upon by othei·s; and
say, that in some respects he surpasses
any actor we ever saw.
We · understand that he will appeal'
this evening in the character of Lear,
ia which th-e late Mr. Cooke delighted
and is said. to have excelled, and yet
many who have ·seen bflth.give the preference to Mr. Booth·.
This is the first opportunity that the
citizens of Augusta have had to witfless the ·performance of ene of Shakspeare's most celebrated tragedys, anil
we therefo1-e anticipate from their taste
and liberality, a Cl'owded house.
•I
At a recent meeting of the inhabi. 't auts of Marion county, in the State of
. lllinoi!, it was
.
.
·· Jlesolved, that w11 censicler the practice of soliciting the votes of electors,
by the cand:iuates for public C'ffict>,
either from favor 01' by .flattery, promises, entertainment, treats, or rewards,
·as anti· republican in its principle, injurious to the public p·eace, interest, and
·morals, trouble:>ome, degrading, and
corrupting to the candidate; and we do
resolve that we will withhold our <sup~
port from tho'se who shall re~ort to
such practi~es in future.
------
The Alabama Republican of the 22d
"Ult. states that the Huntsville Bank was
entered on the 14th ult. and robbed of
·.$5,0uO.
The N orfoik Hei ald announces that
the Minister on his way from the new
empil'e of Mexico to Washington, is
empowered to contract for the building
and .equipment of a respectable marinu
fur the Mexil'.:an government, in the U;
States.
The 'Bill which had passed the Reprcs~ntative b~anch of .the Louisiana
Legislature, which provided for the removal of the seat of government from
New-Orleans to Baton Rouge, was lost
fo the Senate by the casting vote of the
President of that body.
--
,tllllarrtco.
In E<lgefield District, South-Carolina, on
the 21,t in,\a nl, ~y the Hev. ~lr, tl.>ic·nn be,
c,pt. J OHN H. MrnDLE'l'ON, to ~r1ss ANN
Fur.LEH, daughter of Dr. Fuller, of ~aid Bistrict,
- -, The Pr overb is, that ' old Rats bve
Chees<:.' By th0 inlot;mat1011 beluw it wiil
b.e see11 1hat o:d Byrds love Cherrys when
fully ripe.
·
0 11 the 7th inst. at 'the r e sidence of Lawrence Ch er ry, Es<?i. by the .Rev. fosepn
l3 ig-1 ~s, Mr. Edw.ml Byrd, aged 82, to M.rs.
Elizabeth Cherry, (late COll«irt of .Jesse
Chli:ny, g , q. dee\).) ag<:d 71 ; hoth of the
coun ty of Martin.
N. Y . pap.
_:__ _ .
;:=Jia:ia.
-rric.e;s .Cu.rrent,
AUGUSTA.
COTTON, lb.
15 a 16
45
5 1·2 a 6
CO T TON BAGGING,
moN.
SUGAI{,
ll:i. 121-2
29 a 32
45 a 50
87 1.2 a s1
COFFEE,
MOLASSES.,
SAL r,
bushel
RUM, J amaica,
Do, New· ll11gland,
GlN, Holl.nd,
Do. Nortlwrn,
BRANDY. Cogniac 1
WHISKl')Y,
1 2.5 a.l 37 ·
50 a 55
1 10 a 1 25
50 a 55
- 1 lG a 1 25
•
43
8:. 8 50
3 25 a 4
15 a 18
1a1 25
St a 1 2.5
FLO Un,
I'OBACCO; cwt.
BAC01'',
~UR~,
The Mobile Register states that the
sloop Actress, in t he service uf the United States, with Major Kea~ney and
J... ieutenants Thmnpsnn and Turnoull,
of the U.S. Engineers on board, having
completed the survey of the Bay and
Haroor of Mobile, c!\me u [> to the town
of Mobile on the 2.7th ult. They were
to p roceeu in a few days to survey
the harbor of Pena-acola.
----Einpei·ar
Mr. Stansbu ry---the
a,ncle1·-l'rinting Pl'esses,
( I
J1le.'tf-
~c.-Sever­
N . Y. Spectator.
We learn from the Philadelphia papers, that the Legislature ~f Penns_r:lvauia has it in con templatwn. to o~tam
by cessio1_1, Gr purchase, certau~ l.mdge.s
a.od turflpike roads. and to. ke~p ~le
same in .proper repair a11d t~ b.e tree tor
travellers anJ the tra.n!>ponat10n of th_e.
produce of tile country to the ~etrorolts
of the state, and merchand1ze from
thence, designed to counteract the exertions making by the states o_f New-Y ~rk
and Maryland, to, detract from the ct<y
0.f Philadelphia its natural commerce.
men ~ Stephen and Benja.~n
Morrell, ha.ve been committed to ja.11 ~n
· Fairtiel~ county, Cun. i>n a. charge 10r
Two,
t..:ORN lltEAt,
82 50
NORnrn 1tN HAY
}'ODDER
i Prize of s20,ooo
w,ooo
1 do do
6,000
do do
~
1,000
iO do do
600
do
~o do
iOO
do
do
60
~o
~00 do <lo
iO
3,lOO do do
$2 50
0 We a1'e autho6ted to announce Jiime• JJ1' Laws, I. 1'/wmp~ on, and E.
Byrd, as candidates for Memilers of the City
Council to represent the middle ward, at the
approaching: election.
March ~9
78
·Los·r-on Tuesday
th~
26th inst. a head of a BltE ST PIN, set in
pearl,1Vith a Blue St61ie in the mid ..:le-Any
p e,.;on finding the ~ame and leaving it at this
office; \Yi U be handsomely rewarded.
March 26
' lt
Dari.ie,\ Macn1U~\)\1~;
NOTARIUS PUBLICUS
re~m~©fillllP~®m~
rus
P inveniatur
vicns,
!{O,\JP
aJ agendum et scribendu'll,
d omi in vico dicta Wash.ing-
ton , inter
Broad e t E ilis.
- Martis die 29no. ] 822.
3t r
78
NOR, TH 1£ Jt.N"
II.AMS
J
(_~
PORK.
-.iJ.LS0-
60 Bbls. )'less PORK
4.-0 do Prime uoNe-w-Yo rk City inspectioa .
:Benjamin Hall.
March 29-
7::s
that the d'e ;iarture of the S 1 EA ~1
B OATS are fix: - <l for TuESD.lY and Fnrn.u
morning ;, in each week.-All freig.ht must
be rece-,,·,.d on davs nrev1o•ts.
1~ al1~h Ketchum, .llgen~.
M-arc:1 22
3t
7(;
rn,ooo
1s
is
is
is
is
TICltETS. .
\l{)w to Die to-r "Lo-ve. ~
5~000
4,00()
3t,OOO
.
.
o:J TICKETS inay be had at the CityHotel, Glohe-TaveTn, Planters' Hotel, and
The annual el~ction for the t1lfembei·s
of the City Council of .l:lugusta, will_
be held on ~1QNIJJJ:Ythe sth Jlpn l
,
~. &~ M~
1& P~ice of TICKETS, si i.
next~-
FoR
.l\\\en -& c~ .
"Chai·leston,f s.,p.J
without expense, if left at ALLEN'S 1!.xchange Office; 2 doors above the Branch
.
B~~
Mar<:h 29
St
Gl:WRGIA,
78
l
J C1~rk's_ office, Inferior CotHt, March, 1s22.
CER I IFV th;it ~he foll'.1w1~~ is. u. eo~reet liHt of the names of' per.
sons of eolor, re51sleretl in tins ~ffiee, 111 conformity to an aet of' the
t!lth _D t\ eembe~, ,~818. ~uppler~1entary t.o·, : ft.fl~ ,more etfeetn.aHy to enforce
an aet, prescnh1JJg the m1~rle of. man·um1ttuig slttVes in thil§ state, fc. and
~II persons concerned or.rnte restf'rl will take nr~ti·ce, that cert ificates wilt
uisue LO t.hem, on or lwf.or~ the first ,Moliday rn_ Maj next, if objections
are not tiled theret{), on or LefoFe the s'ecoud M .mday in April uext--..to
wit:-
I
Ag'e.
:Names.
_ _ --l..::-- - · J ohn ·F oster
Bob Mart .n
Haniet Williams
William Hilt
Patsy Hill
L e wis i\ru:i:
Sarah Carnd
Vicenria Carnes
·Lucy Carnes
Vicenna Ke1iy
H enry Kelly
Nancy P·ix
Tom Purr1s
L eah lhwkins
Tom Carter .
Aaron Keating
Sarah. Rouse
Violet Harper
Betsy Keating
Carulm e Keating
Emi ly Keati11g
El i~abet h Ke .. ting
John K~ ati ng
Eleano1· Han·is
Gilbert Scot
Jenny . Keat ing
P olly Ke •tirig
Betsy Keating
Thomas Ke11.1ing
Augustus Ki:ating
Maria
Louis
Johh
.Tim Triplett
Richard
Maria Triplett
Allick Pope
Venus Mahar
----34
26
30
43
40
9
2
25
~avannah
Maryla1~d
34
Carolina
do
Maryland
So. 'Carolina
Georgia
d•l
tlo
do .'
So. Carolina
Georgia
Virginia
Augusta
do
do
.l·
70
30
12
10
7
' 2~
10
38
15
14
tle u,y Kelly
Samuel Reily
Josiah K.,lly
Marga ret Kdly
C ha1·les Grrirlt
D eborah Kelly
.
3 1-2
drl
3
2
6 months
69
16
3
do
do
Vi1'ginia
do
Angnsta
40
P e nnsylvania
57
Africa
So. Carolina
Georgia
do
Virg:nia
Georgia
24
21
37
14
12
10
7
5
3 rhonths
29 years
11
28
45
3
24
7
3
2
51
40
Jiu i ~uit.
I
-.- · --1-·- ._.___----
do
40
do
do .
do
do
do
do
11
24
do
10
do
do
do
do
21
'Occupation or
res,i·dents ·o~
Georgia.
s·o.
39
28
30
23
40
23
Edmund Chave rs
do
do
40
Leah Lar1·ie
Shadrick Casy
Isabell ,\ Lamar
Bet sy r.t•Farlan
Jack Carnes
Joe Carne~
Judy Kelly
Will iam Kelly
A>Iadison Kell}
Aug{jstus Kelly
.Ja ne Scott
RRche l Chavers
du
28
6
de1rce,
Iiow long.I
Augi.1sta '1 months
do
frum bi rth
do
. 12 yea1·!J
do
35
do
35
do
9
do
20
do
1'6
do
2
do
25
do
4
do
'5 7
do
57
Aufill.s ta
Be ach bland
Viq;rinia
Ge.urgia
'4
57
57
34
John Kel ly
Virgi 11 i11
No. Carolina
So. Ca1·olina
Augusta.
Augu >fa
23
Resi•
- - - -· -· - -
Georr,·fa
38
Sally Ro s ~
Katy Larrie
Emily Kelly
Samide! Kelly
Ne ll y Ke lly
Pl.tee of Nati"
vity.
do
14
\Vasher & S'e amstress
Seamstress
do
do
do
do
6
40
23
24
do
do
do
do
do
d()
do
do
do
do
r\o
Virgin ii
So. Carolina
do
do
: Seam~tress
my office
h . ) "t h· h
.
ey
8.'e WI ID, t e time
pre1rnrtbed by law, othe rwise letlers
of admini stration will be granted tQ
them
lii~en under mv hand and seat at .
i\DJ: t
h
.
.
•
l
, k {'k
S amuel Gar11c
, C
•
do
. 24
7
C. CLARK
4t
'
74
...
FOR .SALE,
If applied for soon,
J;OT of several acres on the_ ~and HiJI,
im proved for a family
Summey l\,e,side,nc.e •
The situation is healthy, and convenie t t
excellent water. Price 1000 dollar• n d 0
.
t'
., an ;i.
ere d 1t o o_ne or two years if desired _
A.p r ly at this office.
'
March 8,
4w F
72
Washer
Sheriff's Sale.
Carpenter
Washer & Ironer
o'clock, A. \I , _A BAY MAHE, betw,een 14
and 15 hands high-weak. eyes1 olac1<: ma 111
and tail,a small Jump on her back, and sli6'h t
marks on t.er shoulders a!ld sides, occa•ioned by working in Harness.
Ten Dollars rewi.rd will be given for the
del ivery of the MAR.E, or for such informauon as may lead to dbcnve ry.
.Tames P. Ma"'uire
.,
.15.
rn a private family, without lodging,
near Centre-Street.1- Eoq uire at this
office.
March 26
77
1
A
3
2
.
;:'.)
,'
OjifJo ~••i: the C1ty -llotel, lfro,:d-Strect .
h :.:? 6
'
With m~ny at.her, articles in the CLOTHING LINE, winch is ofrere·d for sale at low
al\d red~1ced pnces.
·
(Smith
3
31
1ta
Dress Coats,
:Frock Coats,
Pantaloons and Vests
IAppre!ltice to Black
5
. 3 months
29
-leamstre~s
1 11
28
Seamstress
23
Washer
do
oftiee 10 \Va.y nesb{)rough, thH
Sib Mareh 1822.
@Ib®~WUN~(J
do
7
24
I
I
I
.II
F1'esh mid Fashionable
llEAOY MADE
'li 'H REE or four gentlemen enn be
. ..L a~eommodated with BOA.Ill),
J \.ME~ M'l. . A W8, Cl'k.
l
And fol· sab at tile Sto re of the subscriber
(Near the .llfarket,)
~
A GENEfi.AL ASSORTMENT OF
IB®8IBIDll~C£t~
Dray man
Wnsher
Seamstl'ess
O t URti lA, Burke county.
HERJ!.;A.S J a mes Welch, ap~V
plies for l etters of admini1 trati'lu dt lTonis non, on tbe estate of
Eh J<jmanuel, dece 11 sed.
~tra~ed- o-r Bto\e,n
Theae are therefore to ci te and ad-1 F ROM the Stable oftbe Snbscr1ber, ~1ving
mouish tt.11 and singular, the kindred
on Broad.Street, on the night of he
and cr.-diturs of. said deceased, to 24th inst. be tween the hours of 6 and 10
~- UT
gen erally : liberal advatretis will be
made on c on>1ig11ments o.f produce ..
Refe1;ence to Messrs. I~. C. CANTELou & Co . .l:lugusta.
Mareh 22
st.
-~
23
d<J
do
do
do
'
,
h ~S h'is l1t~rvices in tliat line.
O .fl~F
to h~s ~ri'ends ancl tlre public
·~nrch
21
30
12
10
do
do
Comn.1i~sion. Rusineis.s,
,
IN
Charleston. ~fouth-Carolina
.
Washer&. Seamstress
Boatman
Seamstress
Washer & Weaver
Boatman
14
do
'17
EDWIN P. STARR,
do
28
10
23
26
4t
Having -established himself in tlt~
3
do
do
do
Rlcbart1 H. Wild-e, Mayor .
March 26
CONSISTING OF ,
2
6 months
13 years Wagoner
12
do
23
un~
Northern Yas-\\ions.
15
3
3.---Th1Yie
der the superintendence of Richad
Tellman, John Camp\iell and Ah~f
Camfleld, .Esqrs. or any two of tbcm.
~The Managers will keep the
Polts open from 9 o'clock, A. M. until 2 1\ M. ;and communicate to the
unde1 signeu the names of the persons
elected. ·
3
3 1-2
21
No.
.Foil DISTRICT
.Members.-At the Globe-Tavern,
.
do
.do
der the superintendence of William
J. Hobby, Fietding Bradf'ord, and
John 1 Moore, Esqrs. or any two of
them.
·
WHlCH IS AFTER THE LATEST
7
do
So. Carolina
Geo rgia
do
do
Was l1 er
Seamstress
do
do
do
lfo,1ting
30
do
do
do
Sausage maker
r,I(,)
do
For DISTRICT No. 2 ......... Three.
.ftfembers.-A t the City. Hotel, un-
Just \\;~e·eiived,
do
do
<lo
tlo
do
do
Seamstress
do
do
do
V irgini a
Seam ., tr·e~s
28
10
clo
Georgia
do
So. Carolina
Geo rgia
do
do
do
dtJ
\W:titi11g man
!Bc•at man
•Seamstress &; weaver
Ba!·ber
Seamstress
Sea m~tress & Washer
Carpenter&. Waiter
IJrayma n & Wal~r
Wash, 1 & Seamstress
23
30
29
12
No. L-'Pwo
DlsTRICT
' .Members.-'-At the Office or Richard Bush, Esq. under the superintend~nce of Asa.ph Waterman, Nicho las Delaigle and ·John H. Mann,
Esqr~. or any two of 'tl.em.
~ Orders for rickets in the above Lot'tery, \viii be received and forwarded
R~ch:1~ond Cou'nty.
Mr. BOOTH.
. .,
To which wiH be adde d, a Farce in 2 Acts,
calle rl
10,000
Fir·st drawn Number 1st
day l·;OOO
'Firat d:rawn Number Sd
day 1,000
First drawn Nu1n'ber 6th
day 1,~00
First drawn Number lOth
day 5,0<-0
Firlit drawn :Number 12th d'a.y 1,000
First drawn Number 15th day 10,0l <)
, . First draw'n Number 17th tlav 20,000
All otber prizes floating from the comrn"encelllent of the nrawing.
Prizes only are to be dr11.wn.-1'ioenty dccys draii..ing only.
~ All prizes ,payable i'n CASHw.subject to the usual <li~count of 'fifteeh
·p er cent.
file their objections in
'I
Kisg Lear-,
BTAT1.0X tr11\--:'\ "F\11Z'Ee, ..
( .1f
,HE public ar.e res pe c tluliy in fO"med,
is
R.is Tlrrtw, Daugnte:rs.
Notice.
-mbscl'iber,
Shoulders·.
820,000
10,0DO
10,000
is
Mansion House.
U3T REC.isfVED and for sale by the
!WOO wt. .No1·tlze1•n I1ll1ns and
is
prizes,
6,616 blanks.
Ann Ke lly
ET
AND
3,~84
10,000
Ibrt&m
~u~ca
~©mtlmm~~
Mar¥
~
al months since, Mr. Stansbury, for a
tim e at the head of the school for the r
deaf and du mo in this city, and the ingenious inve~tor of. what is termed t~1e
Stansbury Pnntmg Press, embarked tor
Russia. lt will be recoll ec teli that the
Emperor :1.kxander gave our countrym an, Mr. C !ymer ;!;6000 fur one of his
Columbian Presses, and he has now
presented Mr. s.tansilury with .a like
sum for one ot lus prnsses, wh1ch has
been put in operation in St. Petersburgh. In addition we learn that Mr.
S tansbury is much in favou r at the Russian capital, and has been made a member of the comm ittee for the Reform of
Prison Discipline, &c.
·
S. & M.. ALLEN & Co. Manage-rs ..
----
The pet·manent seat of government
-ef Missouri has been named by the legislature. of that state, the" City of Jejferson," in hono¥· of Thomas Jefferson, under whose presidency the territory was
admitted into the Union.
(FR~,)
This E't1enin5,
March 29, 1821.
Will be performed- (For the first time here)
Shakspeares Tragedy in 5 Acts, called
To commence Drawing on the 8th da.y of .11.pril next..
~!!!!!'!!!!!!!'!
Lieutenant Colonel SAMUE.L WILDE
GtLLESPIE, has been elected and commissioned Brigadie!'-Genera.1 7th Brigade, 4th Division Militia of the state of
South-Carolina.
l;NGAGEMENT,
FIRST CLAS5.
sion from the legislature of Pennsylvania, for services rendered in the revolutionar.y war. She was a very brave
soldier, and \vhen under gen. Wayne,
was accustomed to swing her sabre oyer
her head, and hilzza for "Mad Anthony,'.' as she called tile general. She
held the office of a sergeant, ind was
wounded at the battle of Brandy wine,
which led to the discovery of her sex-.
Some id-ea may be formed ·of the extent of traffick in the city o'f London,
from the following account of what
passed over London Bl'idge in one day.
Foot passengers, 56,185; coaches, 781;
gigs and taxed carts, 520; wagons, 587;
'Carts and drays, 2,576; and horses,472.
mmo
'" ~outn~Cayo\ina Ac.ad~n11 Qf 'Fine AYts. ''
Molly .Macaitl'{I has received a pen•
The name of CoBBETT's new paper
is to be the "Gridiron." The Providence Manufacturers' Journal thinks it
a very proper tit~e., if the objed is to
promote ·broils.
Last ]\ ight of
ID®®~'1l$)~
FOR .THE BENEFIT OF THE
John Hubler, a young man who some
time since shot his brother, has been
trh~d at Norristown; Pa. found guilty,
an'd sentenced to five years imprisonment in the Penitent\ary. The paper
does not say whether t~e un~ortunate
affair was the result of acc1dent or
whether the verdict of the jury was
murde or manslaughter.
, sory· Note."
· On Tuesday "Iron Chest," Sir Ed . wa:rd M<Jrtimer Mr. Booth; and the
farce -Of~' Nature and Philosophy."
On Wednesday-" Othello," and
" The .Sultan."
f '
·~m&~ID &®~tril!lIBW 9
3t
77
Will
.
• be s(J/d on the first T:uesclay in
'"1ay next, at the Court-House. in.
the town of Waynesborough, Bu~ke:
county, between the usual ~ale hours :
75 Acres of pine Lanc1, more.
or less, levied on as tlie proper ty
of Zachariah Wimberley, adjoiai~: g­
Lan<ls of Neadbam Wimberley aud
?1 h?rs to 8.athfy sun dry exeeutiom
10 favour of J oho Brigha;na~ x:e ur 1 d
to me by a consta ble.
ALSO,
200 Aeres of pine Land, moL·e
nr l_ells, Je v1ed on as the propu! y of
M"J· Hust, 8.djoin ing L -:.1.1d1 ofCbatl ~a
Co u ' t ~a u and othe: 11, to satisfy su ndry executions in favuor of G. Dug ·~ , ,
returned to IDP bi_ a CCJnStabJe.
:-;, ,V.
l\l&r!'h 25
Blc-urlt,. s.
'7~
JL
c.
,/
--
--
- ·- --- ·- ---
···-
M.iseel\a.ueous .li.Ytic\es.
.il'Iontlily .Jldvertisements.
From the Savo n11.1.1h Museum,
Notice.
THORNS AMONG THE ROS.ES,
HER darling son a mother ey'GI,
lfo child ish gambols playingWhen suddenly with joy he cried
(As near a ro;;e-bush straying) .
I'll ~eize the blu shin~ Aowers •so fair,
Which this sweet bush discloses ;
Nay, touch them not, she said, for there
Are thorns among the roses.
He chsp'd the flowers with e:iger force,
(Of good advice unheeding;)
His stubhornnesli sonn brought remorseHi> hand was torn and ble~<l i ng.
Hush ! narnrbty boy, the mother sa:rs,
And cea~e your icllP grieving,
And learn from this-appearances
Are oftentimes deceiving.
As on, in youth'• brigllt pa~h you go,
'Vhere many a flower's reveal'cl,
Remember-those that fairest blow
HavP sh s rpe~t thorns conceal'd.
Be this charge written in you~ ·breast,
And let nof time annu.l it·whatever f!owe1· thou likest best ;
Examine e'er
yon:cull
YORICK.
-: ,it.
___
For-the Ladies.-A writer in NewYork, who inveighs severely against the
use of corsets, makes the followin g quotation from a recent German work on
health:
"Corsets as well as stays ·d isfigure the .
for~ of the body, instead of making it
stra.1ght,as has been supposed, they in the
end make it crooked and hu nch backed.
They alter the internal arrangeme·nt of .
t he thorax and lower venter, and prevent
fr ~ respira tion and di.gestion.-They
lllJUre the breasts so much, that m@the'rs
~re frequently unable to nourish their
mfants and they frequently give rise to
cancers. The consequence of all these
~tfe~ts is loss of health, if not of life. It
is, tnerefore th'e 1duty of parents absolute-
ly to forbid their daughters the use of
COl'Sets."
INE months after date applica-
tion will be made to the Honorable the Court of Ordinary, of
Burke County, for leave to sell a
part of the real estate of Daniel
Enns, late of said C ownty, dee'd.
John Evans, ExecutoT.
March 15, 18 ~ 2.
*lm9m
Notice.
N
INE months after date, appli-
cation will be made to the
Honorable the Inferior · Court of
Burke County, while sitting for ordinary purposes, f'or leave to sell
or
years
A
ni.me of
(perhaps
manied Mary Warren) removc.:cl
40
D :\Y,
agQ, a 11a11
· 220 Jl.c1·es of Pine Land,
situated, lying 1rnd being in the
county of Scriven, adjoining the vil lage of Jacksonborougb, Wm. Smith,
and otr.ers, the same being part of
the Rer.I Estate of' Archihald Mills,
late of-Burke County, deeeased, aod
sold for the purpose of making a division among the . heirs of the said
deceased.
Elizabeth Mills ~ .Adm'rs "'ith
the ·will
.
'
. John B. M ills,
a11nexed.
January 26, 182:.l-62
901
N
INE months after date, appli-
cation will be made to the Honoritble the lof'erior Court of Scriven
county, while sitting for Ordin a ry
purposes, · for leave to sell a 'fro.et
of' Land, containing four hundred and
forly"six Acres, situated, l}· ing and
being in the ceunty of Scriven, -adjorning Land of' Wilkinson and John
Couyey, sold as th~ property of Jo.
siah Daniel, 8eo'r. late of said county, deceased, for the benefit of the
h'eirs and creditors of ..,aid deeesed .
18~2 1 1m9m
by the
amptnn 01• some adjacent county in Virginia,
to some of the western or sntlthern states or
ter.ritories, carrying with him his wile, and,
as is snpposed, two daughters. By tne last
will anti testa~r1ent of Vi ichael Warren, (bro.ther of the said Mary Day) the children and
grand children of the said Mary, are entitled
to a legacy_ As it is supposed the legatees
aforesaid are in indigent circumstances, it is
d~sira~le !hat ther should b:.1ve a knowledge
of their interest 111 the estate of said War·
ren.
As we are ignorant of their place of residence, we ha\'e to reqliest thnse editors of
s?uthern and western newspapers, who are
u1sposed to serve the cau~e of buinanity, tn
~ive this a place in their respective papers
foy three months; iind if they will not do so
without a charge, then the editors of tbe
State Gazettes in Tennessee and Georo-ia
alone, are requested ~o publish it, and t~r­
ward their account~ to Murfreesboro', N. C.
for payment.
· ·Collin W. Barnes,
Wm. H. Hardie,
Executors of M. 'Warren.
Northampton County, N. C. Nov. 10. 66
· 1.\ol\o\~11e. ~hae;r·.
A
Notice.
N
INE months after datr, applica-
tiou will he mo.de to the Honorable the Court of Ordinary, for the
co11nty of Burkr, for leave to,. sell.the
real estate of I<'. J . Burns, E~q. deceased.
J. E. Morris, .ll.dm'1·.
Marh,ch 7t 1822.
1m9 ,n
73
NOTICE.
N
INE months after d ate ~ereof,
·
application will be made to t.ho
·Houorabie the inferior Court of Richmond- County, for leave to divide the
real and personal estate of' Lewis
Caotelo1.1, late of E•lgefield _Di~trict,
in the state of South-Carolina, deceased, among the heirs of' the aaid
· d~ceased. ·
·
L. C. Cantelou, (_ .11.dm ·..is
Lemuel Oantelou, S
'
October 12, IB2 L.
lm9m 3Q
NOTICE.
N
INE months after date, applicatioll will be made to the Honor:-.hle the iuf'erio Cuurt of Scriven
county, while sitting for Ordinary
purposes, for leave to sell a tract of
land, containing Qne hundred acres
(more or less) situated, lying and being in the county aforesaid, on the
Waters of the Little-Ogechee, adjoining lands of George Best and
James Joyce-also. .A Negro Ma.n
named Lewis, the same being the
real estate of David Lee, late of S<iid
county deceased, aud sold for the
benefit of' the heirs and creditors ot'
ai!l deeeasedGeorge Best, .!1.dm'r~
NATIVE of the Canton of'
Berne, ·n Switzerland, left this
place in November, 1819, for the
island of'St- Domingo.
He is known to have ret.urned in
t820 to Savannah, Georgia, since
- which time his friends have n ot beP.n
able to trace him.
' ?J
Any person, therefore, having
knowledge of his still being in ex istence,
proof of his death, will confer a favor to his poor and disconsolate relations by communicating sueh
information to
F. D. TSCHIFFELY,
Washington City,
n::F Editors ofnewsr.apers South and West
in right of his wife.
of this place, and frie(1CJs to humanity, are po- ·
October 3, 1S2t.
t.m9m 29
litely requested to give the above a few in- --·
sertions.
F. D. T.
G B ORG{A, Richm.bnd County.
or
One. \lunl\:rel\ Do11a-rs
By the Hono rable the Coiirt of Ordinary of saiti County.
RE'V~HD,
To all ' w horn it ma.Y concern.
W
Ll ER.
ILL be paid f'or the ap'p reheneion of JAMES 13. COLwho escaped ls.st night from
Fa.i rfie dj a il. Coilier WM confined
f or the murder of Michael J _ Rrululph
in Julr la.st. He is aged about 30 years ,
tive ~·eet sevea or eight inehes high, he
is slim made, of a thin vi §age, fair
cor_nple_xinn , full black eyes, black
haar, lus h ands are remarku.blv ddi ea.te and so n, he is a person or ; en tee
e11.r riage anti deportment, w~ll ~rhrna­
ted, converses agreeably, wri te s a o
exce.llent h a nd and is ~ond of' reatli ug .
He 1s said to be a. nal1\·e of' Georaia
has lived in Savannah \\here he ~a:
clerk for some time, and also in Augusta. and New-Odean:s. The above
reward to be paid on llaid Collier'•
being confined 110 thal I get him.
HUGH BARKLK~ , S F. D.
Also, ~ reward ot' fifty dolla.rs will
be paid a.11 above by
JAMES BANKS, Jailor F. Dist.
o:JThe Editors of th~ City Gazette, Charl11s
ton, the Augusta Herald, a~d Savannah
Republican, are ~equested \O give. the above
six insertions, and forward on their accounts
H. BARI\ LEY,
by mail to we
>
.....
...,
,11! HERE AS H ugh Nesbitt, Exel' 'f cutor on the es tale of' Mrs.
Jean Hu ll, deceased , hn.s oppliet.I to
said C ou rt for letters Dis missory .
Now therefore these are to cite aod
admonish all and singu lar the kindred and ereditors of the said deceased, to file ~heir ohjectioos (if any they
have) in the office or the Clerk ot'this
Court, ou or before the first Monday
in October next, otherwise letlers
dis-missory will be granted to him.
Witn ess the Honoral.ile Samuel
Hale, oue of the Judges of said court
tbi~ 19th da y of Feh . 1822.
6m
r:... ;:::CD
~ ;.<CD
0
...... q
Pol
~ ~
o-3
~
e.
._.c::"'
LL persons having demands agaiust the estttte of F. J. Burns,
Esq. deceased, are requested to present them duly attested, within the
Lime preseibed by law, and all wbo
are indehted , are hereby notified to
make payment to
J. E. Monis, Jl.dm'r.
Mareh 12
st
'00
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r.n
~
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57
1m9m
conc~rn.
Isaac Herbert, Cl'k.
of the Cvurt of Ordinary.
<>
?
GEORGIA, Richmond county.
By the Hunorable the Com·t of Ordinary of sad county
To all whom it may concern.
W
HBRBAS Jellse An ~ ley, A d ministrator on the e~t te of'
John M'Kellur, d < c t· a~ed, .has applied f'or Letters Dismissory.
Now therefore, thes.e are to cite
aod admonish all and si11guJ1;1r the
kindred and creditors of' the said deceased, to file tbeir objections (if any
they have) in my offi1:e on or before
the fi rst Monday in July next, otherwise Letters Dismissory will be grant1ed him.
Given under mv hancl and seal of
uffi.ee ia the city of Angus r"• this
Hth day of December, . ~ SH .
6m
Jan. 9lh 1822.
0
Cl
'fl!""'"
Emily Roberts, jJ_dm'x.
~);;i J HIW.EA8 Thomas Cumming
Y V and George W atkio s, atlmin
islrators on the e~t a te aut.I effecte of
William Poe , d e ceased, hath upplied .
to the said Co n rt for le ttc rs Dismissory,
Now therefore these are to cite
and a.1lmonish all and singular the
kindred and creditors of the 'said deceased, to file their objections (if an~
they hav e ) in the office of the Clf'rk
of' this Court, on or before the first ·
M onday in Sept~mber next, otherwirn Letters D ismissory will be
granted to t hem.
.
Witness t b e Honorabl~ Samuel
Hale, one of th e Judges of' the
said ·Court_, thi s 5 t h day of
Febru a ry, 1822.
~
~·~
INE. months after date, application will be made to the honorable the Inferior Court of Srriven
county, while setting for Ordinary
purposes , for leave to sell. 535 Acres
of Laud (more or Jess) s1tua~ed, ~Y:
iog and being in the county ol Scnven, adjoining I.ands of the estate of
Theophilus Th omas, the estate-. of
.Tohn Nicholson and Land belongrng
t11 the heirs of Berij H. min Green, dr~ c.
sold as the property of' James Roberts·, late of said county, decease~,
for the benefit oftbe heirs and creditors of said deceased.
To all whom it may
r~
I
N
By the Honorable the Court oj Ordinary of said County.
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~~
Sheriff's Sale.
:NOTICE.
G~OH. GIA, Rchmond county.
~'3
J
~
Isaac Herbert, fl'k.
GEORGIA, Richmorid county.
By the H onorable the Court of Ordinat·y for said! County.
'fo all whom it may concern.
ii .'-, ·tt E Rl:<;AS Return Joh.n Mt:igs
1" · Adininistrator on the estate
of' Be11jamin H. Meigs, deceased, has
applied to said Cuort for letters Dismi~sory.
·
Now therefore, these are to cite
11 nd admonish all and singular the
kiudr-ed 11n<l creditors of' the said de-·
ePased , l< file their ~1bjections (if' any
th ey h a vt') in the oltice of the Clerk
of this Court on or before the first
Monday in August next, otherwise
Lette rs DiHnissory wiH be granted
to him.
W itness the Honorable Samuel
H a le, one nf _the J u<lges of the
sa id Court, this 15th day of' January, 1.822.
Isaac Herbert, Cl'k.
6m
Of the Court of' Oi·din~ry-
. of the Court of Ui:d inary
fl-EORGI A, Il-icfwwncl county.
B!J the Honorable the Court of Ordinary for said County .
To all whom it may concern.
"l!IJHEREAS Doetor Joh11 Carter
~'f . and James M . Carter, administrators on the es t a te of' John
Carter, dece a se1l, h11.ve a pp lied· lo
said court for letters D ism iss1Jr)
Now therefore .these are to cite
and admonish 1tll and singu lar the
kindred ilDd creditor~ of the said de-eeased, to file tbeir object ions {if a ny
they have) in tbe ofllcil of' t-Oe Clerk
of this Cou r t on or before the firs t
Monday in August next olhe.rwise
letters Dismissory will be granted
to them.
Witness the Honarable t'l amu ei
Hale, one of the Judges of t he
said Court, this 15th <lily of Jan uary, t822.
Isaac Herbert, Cl'k.
6m
Of the Cuu rt uf Ord ,nctr y
GEORGIA R ichinond-Coun !y
By the Honorable the Court of Ordinary of said County.
.
_T o all whom it may concern.
-w-
HEREAS Austin R- Gordon,
·
Administrator 011 tlie esta te
of' Francis B. Gordon, dece ased, hath
applied to .nid Court for letters Dismissory.
Now therefore, these are to cite and
admonish all and singular the kin dred a::id creditors of the said deceased , to file their objeetions (ifaa y
they have) io the office of the clerk
of' this court on or before the fi r st
MonJar in August nPxt, otherwise
Letters Dismissory will he granted to
him.
'
Witue~s the Honorahle Samuel
Hale, one of the Judges of' th e
said Court this 8th day of Jan uary, 1.822.
6m
of the Court of Ordinary.
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....
'Z (')
::3 ~ ~
l'.'D
Isaac Herbert, Cl'k.
Notice.
I
(")
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....
0
0
Notice.
Scriven county,.18th Jan.
Thoma&, who
fr<.Jm South-
I
100 J.J.c·res of Land,
situated, lying and being in the county
of Burki", adjoining lauds of the
estate of Wm. Thompson, dec~ased,
and other~ . Also,
Geo. Pollock, ./ldm'r.
Information Wanted.
BOUT 30
N
GEORGIA, ~ Clerk's Office, InScriven County . ferior Court, ht
day or March, 1s22.
CERTH'Y the following to be a
correct list of the persons Qf' color, registerr.d in this offiee, in eon forrnity to the Act oftbe 19th Decemher, HHS, supplementary to, and
more effectually to eoforec an Aet
prescribing the mo'de of manumitting
slue!I in this state, &.e. and all perlions concerned or interested will take
notice that certifleates will issue to
tlaem on or bef'ore the first Monday
in May next, if no objections are 6 led
there ti> on or bf' fore t be se ~ ond Mooday in April next, agreeably to the
Act in such case made and provided.
Isaac Herbert, Cl'lc.
of the Court of Ordinal"!/
Notice.
N
INE mouths afLer date, appli-
cation will be made to the Honorable the Justices of the Inferior
Court for the county-of Borke, for
leave to sell all the real estate of
Joseph Atta.way, late of said county,
deceased, for the benefit of' his keirs
aad creditors.
Harley Atta.way, .9.dm'1·.
March 7, ii.21
1in9m
GKORGlA, {l.chm ond county.
By lsA.A.C HERBER'!', Clerk of tlze
Court of Ordinary of Ric/wumd
County.
To all wl1om it ·uiay concern.
liEREAS All'X t~ nder .Matheson, a~ Adn,iuis t rutor- on lhe
W
e st .' tes r1f ·Duncau M~th e son, & Mer. d ock °\fa theson, both deceased," bas
:t pp lied for f,,etlers Dismissory.
N a w I h erefore, these are to cite and
admon ish all an1I s ingular the kin'.
dred 11.orl cred i tors of both the de·
e ettsed, to file their ob,jections (if any
they have) in my office on or befo1·e
the fil st Monday in July next, otherwise Letten Dismissory will be granted lo hi111.
Given under my hand a nd sea.I of
otlice, in the C ity of Augusta,
this 14th day ot' Deceruher, tS21.
Isaac Herbert, Cl'k.
6m
t;f the Court of Ordinary
GEORGIA, Scriven county.
HF.REASThomalil H. Burns,
.
Administrator in right of his
wife, on the estate of William Robe r ts, Senior, deceased, applies for
l e tters Dismissory.
'
These !lre therefore to cite and admonish 11.ll and singullll' the kindred
a11d creditors· ot' the sai d decea sed,
to_ file their. obje c.tions in my office
w11hm the time hmited by law, to
sh e w ca use (if any they have) why
s td~. lettei;s sh ould not be grnn ted.
C1veo under my hand at office in
Jaekso nhorough, this .2d day oi'
March, 1822.
W
6m Seaborn Goodall, c. c_ o. s. c.
Notice.
Will be sold on the I &t Tuesday in JJpril
next, at the Court- Bouse in Jacksonborough, Scriven county, agreeable to .an order of the Honorable the
I1}-f~rwr Cvurt of said county! while
silting for Ordinary purposes :-
. ~ Tract of Pine Land, conta~orng three hundred Acres, situated
lym_g and being in the county ot'
Se:1~e~, on the middle ground road,
adJotmng Lands of' Wm. Sheppard,
Sen'r. and James Conner, Sen'r. sold
as the pr?perty of Wm. Donald1i0n,
lat e of sa.1d conn ty, deceased, for the
benefit of the heirs and creditors of
1111id deceased.
Wm. G. Donaldson, ?_ ~d ,
John Black,
S.a rn rs
ScTiven county, 1ith Jan-. 1.822. 69
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in
Jlpril next, at the Court-House ht
the town of Waynesbot·ough, Burke
ctJunty, within tlie usual sale hours ;
~ Negroes, named Jamaica &
Smart, levied on as the 11roperty ot'
Peter J, Goulding, to satisfy Harmon and Schley.
,·
ALSO,
200 Bushels of Corn, more or
les8, one 30 Saw Gia and Running
Geer, levied un as the property or .
William Gwin, to satisfy "n execu.
tiou in favour of William Schley.
ALSO,
300 Acres land adjoining land
of Si)Deon Lowery and others, l evied
oo as the property of Abner Hollid a y, to sntisfy two executions in fa·
vour of P :rnlett and Royal and Cader
Fairchilds.
ALSO,
27 Bushels Com, levied on as
the p roperty of' Solomon W tlsun, to
§lalisfy au execntion in favour of
James Russell.
ALSO,
One Negro Woman named
Zad, levi ed ou as the property o.f
Moses Heath, to satisfy s u11d'r y executions, ii:a favour of John Adams,
returned to me by constable. Al.iSO,
:200 Acres land, more or less,
adjoining land s ot' Dennis Glison nod
others , le vied on as the prop~rty ot'
Jeremiah Wade, to saii.fy a·n execution in t'avonr of K Godfreyi11ointeil
out by E. Godlrey, returned to me
by constable.
ALSO,
One Negro woman named
Lexey_, and one :-iaw G;n and Runsing Gear, levied on as the property of
A. P. Lewis, to s11.ti3fy Harley At·
taway and others.
'
ALSO,
i
I
One Negro Boy named Andrew, levie11"on as the propcrtJ of Ba.rah Carter, to satisfy an execution in
fu.von1· of' Stephen l<'olrrnm.
ALSO,
4 Negroes, named J)ick, Phebe,
Bob, and Mar}, !!( vied Oll as the property of Peter J . Uoulding, to satisfy
sundry executions in favour of Henry Gilstap & others, returned to me
1.iy eonstabk
ALSO,
I
2 Negroes, narne<l Jim and·
Jilek, levieu on as the property of
Thomas Pierce, Sen~r. to stttisfy sun~·
dry ·executions iu favour of Will iam
Roberts an1.1 others, returned to meby a constable.
ALSO,
One Negro VV oman named·
Silvia, levied ou as the propertv of
John E.tutl edge, Sen'r. to satisf}~ an
exceut1un obt~ined in fa,·our of A,
Caner.
. S. W. Blount, s. n. c.
_..'ehruary :Z6
6\J
Sheriff's Sale.
Will b~ sold on the first .~l.'uesd!ay in
April next, at Franklin Courtllouse, within the usual hours : Two N e~ro Men, known by
the name ot' J 1m and Frank, levied
on as the pro'perty of' ~lisha Wilkin
son.
·
ALSO,
One humlrerJ. acres of. land on
Gum Log Creek,joioingJeuse Thomu, to satisfy a fifa, in fav•1ur <lf S.
Merideth, the lu ntl levied on. a!f
the property of Chrisley Cowlhon as
su(ety.
ALSO,
Three Cows and Calfs, one
year old Heifer, two fether Beds and
Furniture,
one Chesnut Sorrel Mare 9
.
l evied on as the pr : perty of Jesoeh
B Hansford, ,oo the foreelo1mre of' a.
mortgage in favour of' Riehard Hum11hreu, administrator.
•
ALSO,
Two medical Books. one case
ol' Pocket l11s1.ruo.tents, wi,t h a.small
quantity ot' Medicine, le vied on as
the property ot' Thomas G (1rhnm, t()
satisfy a fij'a in f11 vour of Oswell .B.
Jones and others.
ALSO,
One bundre<l acl'es of land,
le~i e ~ on . 11.s • the property .o f Silas
H1ggms, Jorn rug Sa qi uel Yeargin on
. Myl> •t y11 Bra1.1ch, to satisty a fifa in
favour of Beven Brooks.
ALSO,
One 1 unurecl an<l fifty acres
or
land, more 01· less, also , tl'fe nty-six
hundred a~d fifty aere~ j oiai·ng Brew.
er Gum Ll)g Creek, levied oo as the
property ot' Tate and Virdel, to satisfy ajif «, in favour of James Smi t h
and others, levied on and returned t()
m:i by a constable.
Wm. .Beall, Sheri.ff.
F ebruary 19
69
PUBLISHED EVERY
TUESDAY & :FRIDAY,
BY W I LLIAM J. BUNC!:,
Jlugusta Georgia.
.A.T FIVF.
DOLLARS PER
Paya.ble in Jldvance.
ANNUM
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