Southern banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1832-1872, April 21, 1853, Image 1

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■shshhbh SOUTHERN BANNER. PUBLISIID TItURSDAt' gOBW^q. „., OrriCE UP STAIRS, NO. ?, GRANITE HOW , '<1 » »« »■ * " * ***'* TERMS. TwADoHHrt*pan»nBnm,<«tr«ctl> U.ntf- ss^atsKasi^i (&&£& it bw !»«"«“ «{iUm U cootlnmitit.twM 3 - 0*S7|»«per will be -Iweoaunued (except •ulwflp. leeoftl'eEditor) nntilsHarreengesate pdd.^tf £J* Legal Adtortlsements ln»encd at jhe AoBoueclagcandidatexfor office, 65, (payable |V advance.) jx ST Husband, advertising tbeir wives, will be ehsrgd 61, to be paid invariably in advance. OTHER ADVERTISEMENTS, ONE DOLLAR for every twelve Jinea of wri type, (or space equivalent) first insertion, ana FlRf Cents for each weekly continuance—cr-rj other week Si«ty-Two Ceat*—monthly Seventy- pin cents for each continuance. Special eon. U *rrT‘*N«lce of*the aale o/tand and Negroes by Ad ministrators. Executor, or Gakolians. roust be pub- Isbed Forty Day* to the day of sale. S3* Notice to Debtors and Creditors of an estate «. 1.1 be published Forty Days. 0*Norice that applteattoo will be made tothe Court «f Ordinary for leave to aell land or Negroes, DUttt be published Two Month*. weekly. Notice of application for Letter* of Admintstra’ w* aum be published Thirty DaytJ end Letters Of Dtitai.Moa of Kxscutors or Admtmstfstors.! Months— DUmUsion of Guardians. Forty pays. Rales of personal property of a perishable ostore, by the Act of 18W, by Executors and Administrator., SicstUpesaam, (that is. administrators to collect the es tate,) at the discretion of the Ordinary, upon not less this «mday’# notice. Sale* by regular Adrouiatra- tors, as under ike old law. Forty pays. . . , Advertiaemsau should always have foe aumber of insertions marked upon them wnen handed In, o» otherwise they will be published "TIM. tor- tin," and charged accordingly. 03* All letters to the Editor on matter* connected ith the Esublishmani, roust be POST-PAID in rder to secure notice. r BU1NE88 CARDS. HQj^sHoigEya -$»«?. as fsiiajss, rnmt, mtomtwmm-, IW. A. HARP ( . PUBLISHER. VOLUME XXII. ATHENS, GEO., THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1853. NUMBER 6 Walsh, Mallory & Co., IMPORTERS OF FOREIGN, AND COMMIS SION AGENTS FOR American Hardware, 211 Pearl Street, New York, SOLICIT a* KXSXINATIO.V or THKtn GOODS. .laninry 13—14—1 y. The Early Spring Flowers. Beautiful flower* wherever yo bloom. With your soft-limed leaves nod your fragraut perfume, Whether, in spring ye come forth from the ground. Or when autumn scatters lierdead leaves nruaud, Whether nenl cottage nr palace ye dwell, . Booutifol fluwisM luVeye well. , r Behold a young girl, inker ihirthfnTplay. Laughing the hours of chihlhood away ; The light winds are waving her sunny hair. And her voice sounds sweet in the silent air. Whiles her fair hands Are twining from summer bbwdrs Wild blooming wreaths of the beautiful flowery. The scene is no w changed, for years have flown— That gay laughing girl to a woman bos grown; And the lover is there who fain would tell The secret tlieireyev have revealed too well. But flowers be pluuts in ber snowy breast, And their eloquent leave* have his love coufest. C. & W. J. PEEPLES, #ltcIF.KlEf ATLm 9 AT EONS AND GAINESVILLE, CA I’hactick in the following countiesClark Morgan. Walton, Jackson. Lumpkin. Forsyth, Hall, Gwinnett, Habersham, anil Franklin. Onn or the firm will constantly attend these counties, and most of them will be attuuded by both partners. . . , The ollico ofC. Peeplc»ts over the store ofD. N. Jiulson, who can, at alltirac»,eilherbeor Mr. Iluggiur, give correct information as to our ab- onen or presence in Athens. |)oc. I—39—ly. tggr yy TVHITE BfflE!S©MAMT TOIL®®, BROAD STREET, ATHENS. Jan. 1,1851. W. P. SAGE, Wholesale and Befall Jeweler No. 7, GRANITE ROW,ATHENS. Jan. 1st, 1851. DOCTSL HILL & SMITH, Wholesale and Retail Draffglsts AND DEALERS IN PERFUMERY AND FANCY ARTICLES, No. 10, nkw bkicx hange, Athens. an. 1, 1331. •Tis a br idol morn, and loudly swells A merry peal from the old chercb bells ; The white robed bride is smiling now 'Neath a budding wreath from the orange bough, Aud bright eye maidens before her strew Beautiful flowers of every hue.. There’s a voice of sorrow, for lime hath flcil A wife and n mother lies cold aud dead ; They have laid her to sleep in endless rest. With a young babe clasped on her marble breast And flowers are there with their perfumed breath. Decking the bud and the blossom iu death In the green church-yard is a lonely s|iot, Where the joyous sunshine euters not; Deep iu the gloom of the cypress shade There is her home in the cold earth made, And o’er ber still the sweet fl.iwrs bloom; They were near her iu life, and forsake not ber toomb. Beautiful flowers ye seem to bo Linked in the fond ties of memory 1 Companions ye were to ourchildhood's day. Companions yc are to our lifeless clay ; And barreu and drear were this wide world of ours, ' Lacking the smile of the beautiful flowers. miscellaneous. the laws there prohibiting the entree of jaleut medicines, Holloway's ingenuity iaa Been at work, aud obviates this, dif ficulty by forwarding supplies to his Agent at Odessa, a port -situated on the Black Sea, where they filter.themselves surreptitiously by varions channels, into the very heart of the empite. Africa has not been forgotten by this, iudefati- S ible man, who has an agent on the iver Gambia : also at Sierra Lone, the jdague spot of the world, and the inlis.uants readily avail tbemselvesofiho . ffipfwant-yfAffittr;JTbttf see can~*lranv oar res.ders that Hollowly has made the 1 complete circuit of the globe, commenc ing with India, and ending as we do, with the Gape of Good Hope, where his medicines are published in the Dutch and English languages: and while speakeng ofD.utch, we have heard that he lias made large shipments to Holland and is about advertising in every [ taper or periodical published in that ringdom : we might add that he has al so started his medicine in some parts of France; in some portions of Germany; as also in some of the Italian states.— We have been at some litile trouble to collect.all these facts, because we fear that the article before alluded to, “The Art of making Money," is calculated to leud people to spend their means in the hopo (as the author states) of making a hundred thousand pounds in six years lor tbeir pains,‘hy holding up an easy example to follow each a roan as Hol loway, who is really a Napoleon in his way. Many »nay have tho means, bin -have they the knowledge, ability, ener- f y, judgment, and prudeuce necessary 1 'ailing in any one of these requisite, a total loss is certain. Holloway is a men calculated to undertake any enterprise requiring immense energies of body and timid. He has made a large fortune hy his labours; aud is, we should suppose, every day greatly increasing his wealth. Of course it is not to our interest to de ter the public from advertising; but, ns guardians of their interest, we think it our incumbent duty.tn place a ligehthnus, upon what we consider a dangerous shoal, which may perhaps sooner or li ter prevent shipwreck and ruin to the sanguine and inexperienced about to navigate in such waters. The Editor of the “ Edi nhu rg Re view,’ in a number published about three years ago, stated that he considered he was r- ~ ~ **?‘l «,■***> . *' ' verely upon thetr hospitality. A fnend enthusiasm of the masses,” aud encoun- is received with open arms. Society iu ter the perils and hardships of the mis. the eternal city is free, unrestrained, sion to which he was invited Eveutual- informal. Petty aristocracy, exclusive- ly, however, the struggle ends: the no- rather, is quite unknown. Virtue bio impulse of patriotism triumph over and worth * aro too well recognized j selfish consideratiutis.and after “two da vs and too sure of rauk to need hedging of silent deliberation,” Santa Anna told ‘ I the messenger: Tho next day after presentation t« 61 “That his heart c uld only be Mexi- house,you mas* expect, a number; of lean; that, notwithstanding the'past' he its domestics at your door-to saluteymi, JVished to show to- bis compatriots how You ore expected togive a trifle.; the I dear they were to him; that their msifor- sumU not greaLerilhaJf that distributed lanesjvere his, and he couldnevdr be <N»TW iWNe WThiMa^ar wdtles of indifferent to them; that. looking at ob- Germany. It is received with a profti-Meets from a distance, their deformities Sion of compliments, salutations, and were better seen; that he did not wi>h withal a dignity thaLwpald startle one I that history should ; olio day say that be who did not know thatthey are descend- hud been deaf to the call of his country ants of Caesars. J when she honored him with a call to meet Almost all the houses of Rome are the. common danger, and that he had from five to seven stories high. They I seeR with indifference her fate; that be are built of travertine, or brick ; the lat- j desired to end his days in’ the spot he had ter jointed over, iu imitation of the for-1 chosen as a residence for his family; that Floors are marble laid on an I his unly wish was to see his country hap- frame-work. Very often the py, and that, casting aside everything marble is laid in mosaic, like floors of j tending to detain him. he resigned him- the ancients. A room in the palace of j self to give the last proof of bis pat riot- the Altieri, one of the proudest families J ism, although .history taught him to place of Rome, is laid with mosaic as precious no confidence in the passing enthusiasm as any yet discovered among ancient of the masses.” ruins. All true Romans despise, car-1 In accordance with this magnanimous pets; soft textures like these are thought resolution, he embarked on an English unworthy of a proud and noble people. I steamer, and by this is again on the soil The Gabelin tapestry is shown at the | of Mexico. Now, we assert that this narrative abounds in incidents ofgrent dramatic in terest and historical grandeur. It is scarcely surpassed in the elements of the Vatican ; but rather as a curiosity than a luxury in use. Almost every house hersrfis filled with paiutin_ Scent contrast to our empt ..... moral sublime.by anything in ancient ny families have undoubted works of-the and modern story.. Is it fac’. or is it fic- gieatest masters, of Guido, CoreggioJ lion ? Is Santa Anna the hero and the Raphael, Celltnni, and Michael Angely.j patriot which he seems on the canvass The great palaces, with extensive pictur I i-f Senot Escobar I Oris he what mau-! April 6. E utes concerning the isthmus of Te- uantepec hare had the effect to exas perate the animosities and prejudices of the Mexican nation; until at this mo ment they are probably more vindictive against the American people than at anv previous period in their history.— Admitting, therefore, that his intentions are all of a pacific character, it is still a matter of serious doubt whether Santa Anna will find it possible to crab the hostile impulses of the Mexican people] It is an oerasion of unfeigned regret that the relations between,the two ral publics of North America are uot of a more cordial and friendly character.— This government is sincere in r its desire for the preservation pf peace with the Mexicau natiou, and wifi, we are confi dent, never give them any just cause of offence or complaint. Tho declamatory appeals to the vulgar animosity of the populace in which we regret to find that the politicians of Mexico delight to indulge, their fierce denunciations of northern aggressors, and their idle gas- codade about inJeftcndenre, are simply gratuitous ebullitions of bad temper. They can do no possible good—they may lie the cause .of inconceivable ca lamities to Mexico. If, indeed, Saiim Aima feels the patriotic sentiments which he so ostentatiously boasts—-If it he his ambition to preserve the indepen dence and nationality of Mexico, and to be adjudged by history the lienefactor of his coutifry, L let Him nwiirtlsftte the fero cious passionsof his people by vindictive denunciations of this republic,but let him rather conciliate its friendship and culti vate its alliance by a policy of peace, jus tice and honor.— Washington Union., Faiiny Pern on tyidpirf. Eaiiny is going it on a high figure this . morning—she's down on the widows : I hate widows. They are the very u~“. 1 ve heard the heathen- tailed nemghted; they have sense enough *to hnrn widows when their husliar-ds die. and thats a step further, in ban vve have tufeeh. There’s notl.if.g like em, If they make up tlieir miud to tnavry r man ids done. I know ouo' ‘hat was terribly afraij of fightening, : and every-time a storm cotne up sKe WPtthl fte»^urtOrMiu%*kW|l l ouae (ho wasuwutowci) ami c ap her litile hands; and fly touud nil the man was.half distracted for fear she wpuW'Oet kill ed the cotispqueiicd was, she Was Mm. John Smith before three thunder storms had rattled over her head. Wasn’t that diplomatic ? . ’ , Then there’s that little blue-eyed Widow Wilkins, didn’t she drop hsr prayer book coming out of cb'urclt. for my handsomet husband to pick-^ip t— And when I told him a long rigmarole of a story gating, home to divert-his mind, from the liule minix,, ^i^i| , tihtt ; $nsytJ'Br “yes” and “no” in the wrong place T And didn’t he the next rnoi ning put salt •indiiscoffep auti sugar oujusbpef st^ik 1 And won’t she be Mrs. Samuel Jpncjs No.2. Answer me that! i ahWlcUtgo to cut her up into inch pieces with a dull jack knife. Dut it’s no use to stiuggle against fate. I shall have to put my pride in my pocket and tell Samuel it is my request lie should marry her when ! am gone, and that will “pull wool" over the eyes of the people and save his credit, for he’ll have her if an earthquake should be the consequence. ■->-?. It’s astonishing, w idows shouTd be .so indtdic.ate as to doff their weeds. Its nothing more nor less than a Walking advertisement for another husband.— galleries, are always open to the public, kind have been taught to regard him a All have great 1uve for choice morsels of restless adventurer—an indefatigable in- A Chapter on Housekeeping. I never can see the reason why your . The walls of many houses the result of the secret msch.nattons and | mont , IS wilh one of lh ; 8 arc covered with fresco, in the richest | atifu! contxivancesof h,s btreltngagents? i shouI ,| like to have seen the adven- Did he xeel or did be feign the reluctance tulou8 8pi( ] el . lhat w<)U |j have dared t« which he manifested to resume the eov- „i„„ i.; ' Mrs. I.ee was.spending a short timeet the sea shore in her new regimontals, when one of the ladies at the tea table, struck with a sudden thought; said very innocently—“By - the way, Mrs. Lee. where is is your husband?'’ I should have been sorry to have told where'! thought he was; for the way be used to swear when be talked was ! &wful to mention ! . ‘Now what a glminus example J’cjj he to the . sex; if Providence hoc Ids she fit to make me a widow!. I wonder if Samuel’ll pop off! I. should hate tb ;iut my purls tibhitid my ears, but I’d dp, i t, and ! wouldn’t so much ax’ look at u, map, unless it was Tome King ! Won der if he’d marry. me!' VVel)!—-theta now ! I’ve spuken in meeting! It can’t be helped now, as Deacon Smith said when his daughter surprised htnl.by kiss ing‘Widow Moore. “It’s nature, Sally; it’s nature." ■ . ; : ; : ’ and most got geous style. Constant advices concerning the late rebellion are constantly pouring into I eminent of Mexico 3 the city from all quarters. Theconspir — acy was" ,,u u " t neC,,, T r ‘ Wit , h , ^ 8CU " a ‘ W - 8 nB o ne . , n °" e8t man I “ wink after daylight beneath the roof, more extenstve than at fir.l and devoted patriot, or did he but exhib- Even l, er old rioter crowed an hour IU .1— C—I— I.. .L.. *»- eatnca | emotions of consumate These are points which the read- B the gov In his interview Escobat was he the honest man play his cunning trade in Mra.Carriot’s premises. N obody was allowed to sleep imagined, especially in the two Sicilies it the theatrical emotions of consumate La,lier than any of tho neighbors’— nnn 111 rIISM nw I ^ctof I ■ ooon eeo nmota iol.««L sL^ — I I — ■ « ^ ® and in Tuscany, The Pope surely goes to Paris. wiH remain about two months. Some J pose to considers question of more prac- TT i , . a .. ... 1 Go ahead,” was written on every He | er must determine for himself. We pro- broomstick in the establishment. say he will reside at J TERRY & CO., WHm.StALI 4*1) RKTA1I. DEALER* ■ N Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Trunks, Ac No. 7, GRANITE ROW, ATHENS. Jaa. l.iasi. ;; NEWTON & LUCAS. WHOLESALE AND retail SEALERS I N Dry Goods. Groceries, Hardware, &c No. 2, BROAD STREET, ATHENS. Jan-1st, 1831. T. BISHOP, Wholesale and Retail Grocer, NO. 1, BROAD STREET, ATHENS. Jnn.13,1850. THOMAS H. WILSON, Doal«lu Brjr Goods,Groceries,* No. I,COLLEGE AVENUE,ATHENE. J»u. 1*1,1850. New Cash Stotc, KENNY & SLEDGE, Outer the old .Central Hotel, opposite Nercton >5- Lucas. DEALERS IN Hrjr Goods, Groceries, Hardware. COTLERr, CROCKERY, tadcoantiy prodneo generally. ATHENS GEORGIA. Nov. U, 1852. ©. R3. IH10LIL &e®. dealers is SILX, fancy AND STAPLE GOODS, IIARD-. WARE, CROCKERY, GROCE RIES, *C. No. 4, Granite Row, ATHESS, GA. , Choice Family Groceries. J UST recewing a large and complete assort meat of tho very best Family Groceries ; Hermetically Sealed FRESH OYSTERS 8ALHON, CLAMS * LOBSTERS; Assorted Preserves, Pickles and making a JesirableTiequest tcTposterity, PbntatnbTSiTi. Fortune made by Advertising. From a small pamphlet, entitled “The art of making money,” an extract has been taken, and is going tho round of tho provincial press, pointing out the facili ty of making immense sums by tho sim pie process of continuous advertising.— Doubtless largo sums have been, are, and will be made by such a system, by ccr- by handing down to them the amount of talent and ability required by the pres ent class of large advertisers. At that period Holloway’s mode of advertising was most proniinetly set forth; and if these remarks, conjointly with his, should descend to a generation to come, it will be known to what extent the su b ject of this article was able to carry out his views, together with the consequent expenditure in makiug khown the mer its of his preparations to nearly the , ,|... ,, ., .- - .. — i She gave ber husband his breakfast, less difficult 1 buttoned'bhn up in his ovettmat, and pin lutton. That quMtion concerns the pro- j,im out of the fiont door, with his face Milan is still closed; Martial law pre- bable designs of Santa Anna in respect ; n t |, e direction of the store, in less time vails. Many more executions have ta- to this country, ken place. Radezky pushes the Ticino question wilh decision and energy. than 1 have taken to tell it. Then she Auna gave utterance to certain expres sions, deliberate and well-studied of Return of Santa Anna. I course, which-betray an inveterate and A few days since we gave in our col-1 determined enemy to his couutry.—- In the interview with Escobar, Santa I snatched up six liule Cat riots, scrubbed umns quite an interesting narrative of an interview between General Santa Anna Such language as follows betrays some thing more—it betrays a definite pur. tain persons of ability, who no doubt . _ _ would make tbeir way in the world if whole world.—Pictorial Times, a Loa and Don Manuel M. Escobar, die gentle- pose of hostility against this country man who had been deputed to recall the On my arrival there 1 will call around their faces, up and down without regard to feelings or pug noses, till they shone like a row oi milk cans. "Clear the track’’ was her motto, washing and ironing days. She never drew a long breath till the wash tubs were turned bottom upwards, pod every article of warning apparel, sprinkled, folded, ironed and replaced on the backs called upon to play different parts on the great stage of life; but to suppose that men in general must, as a matter of course, acquire wealth by such means, is as abserd as to immagine that all the peuniles and shoeless of London are capable of rising to the dignity and -wealth of an alderman or the lord mayor of London simply by readitigUte “Young Man’s Best Companion.” Money is not so eas'tly made as the writer of tbo arti cle referred to would lead people to suppose; if it be so, few need be poor. don Weekly Paper. Carrespoudeuce of the Savannah Courier. Letter Froas Abroad. Carious Customs at Rome—Reckoning Time—Letters of Introduction—Serv ants—Houses—State. Conspiracy—Ex tent—Pope’s Visit to Paris—Hilt in Affairs. Rome, March Stb, 1853. Modes of portioning oullbeday,are us is limes and peeple. That l as that which he describes, template it a little. various as times and peeple. Thatpre- ,, . . valent at Rome and throughout Central Bui to our text: fortunes made by ad- Italy is singular enough. The day here vertising. Undoubtedly the greatest man of the day, as an advertiser, is Hoi- loway, who expends the enormous sum of twenty-five thousand pounds annual ly in advertisements alone; his name is not only to be seen in nearly every pa per amt periodical published iu tho Brit ish Isles, but as if this country was too begins where in most places it ends, half an hour after sunset, the hour of St. Mary, when every clock in the chorcb and cloister calls to the Virgins vesper. It of course changes daily as the sun ranges the ecliptic, and bgain varies ac cording to latitude. There are, however, monks enough small for this. individual’s exploits, he who have nothing else to do bat examine stretches over the wholo of India, having | dials and -titne tables, so you may have AtfVAl.SA . .« T 1 tL A ,1 « II’. , l*A t,S * 1« I m * I. -I agents in all the different parts of the confidence in the cloister clock, and, if upper, central, and lower provinces of you understand the system, there is no that immense country ' publishing liis J danger of going wrong, medicaments its the Hinitloo, Oordoo, In the nothern cities the reckoning is exiled chieftain to the head of Mexican me those persons of influence who are r affairs. The interview was at Cartha-1 true lovers of their country. I will con- of their respective owners. It gave me gena, and the narrative of Senor Escobar I fer with them; and if l find co-opera- a stitch in the side to look at her! { resents ua witha very striking picture. tion,ifI find sincerity and good a will to ab. As to her “cleaning days," I f Senor Escobar be a faithful chronicler, I negate capricious and mistaken opin-1 had courage to witness one. L bad to lie history affords not many such incidents ions ; and finally, if I find men of heart under an apple tree iu the orchard, till Ibea. Let us con-1 to make an obstinate defence of our rights rite was through. A whole platoou -of The tpan of the I against the aggressors from the north, I soldiers wouldn’t have frightened me so r 1 ’ much as that virago and her mop. You should have seen her in her glo ,, # . nr on ^baking daya,”. ber sleeves rolled c service—^ J cannot survive the disappearance ofthe l up to her‘ arm-pits, and a long check Mexican nalionallity, and desire to I apron, swathed round ber bulsler-like bury myself in its ruins, if, afterthe Mex figure; the great oven glowing, blazing, ieans have done tbeir duty, the great and sparkling in a manner very sugges- Regulator of the destinies -of nations 1 tive to a lazy sinner like myself. Tbe should order for us such a fate.” interminable rows of greased pie-plates, These allusions can scarcely he mis- the pans of rough aud ready ginger made a last stand against invasion—the I understood. Indeed, in another para-1 bread, the pots of pork and. beans, in an man who has endured these vicissitudes I graph, Santa Anna speaka of American edifying state -of progression; and the of fortune, and played thia conspicuous I people as “our natural enemies'’ and immense loaves of brown and wheaten part, is driven at last by the triumph of makesa remark about the “military »*c- bread. To my innocent inquiry wltelh lis enemies into exile—an outcast from I cupation of Tehuantepec.” which is es- J er she thought the latter would “rise,* bis country. But iu his absence the na- pecially significant. The question for she set her skinny arms akimbo; marab- tion suffers all the calamities of altera- un is, are we to take theseexpremjotis ed up within kissing distance of my face, ate misgovernment and anarchy, of fittau-1 as judicative of a settled purpose of hos-1 cocked her head on one side, a cial embarrassment, of violated justice. I tilitv against the United States, or as|“if / thought she looked like las been passed in,the . who has been ihe successful leader of rev olutions—who has more than ouce attain ed the summit o£ power, and ruled his country with dictatoral authority—whn, when his country was overrun by hostile armies, rallied its scalttered forces and Fatal EKectol the Spirit medi um*. ' <- ’■ We are credibly informed, v t!iat Mrs. Rich, of Kirtland, was taken suddquly, in what appeared to be a fit,' about four o’clock on Monday morning, Feb. 18.— Her family supposed her to bo its a mes meric tratire, am"_ consulted a cimpit; r.f of tfie spirit mediums to ascertain what was the matter. The mediums wrote that she was tit a mesmeric state, and would not come out until two weeks from that day. Her friends refused tb administer any Medicine, or allow any othetB to do so, supposing, as they did,' that she was in a trance. At otic time, she recovered enough'to tell her atten- dauts, if she did hot have some medicine, she should die, and then became uqcbh- ciou-s. She lived along iu this manner, until Saturday morning; when she died. She lived over a week in nnuncontioua state, but most of the lime they could see . that she breathed. Aiid'probably, if her friends had not been misled by the spir it mediums in relation io her,, she now Would have - been entirely recovered.''-'ll appears to us, that any reasonable per son would now be. satisfied, that'the coummunication through the mtdums, in this instance at- least, was False; hut wejare informed that her friends are etidOavoring to keep tbe corpse until the expiration of die two weeks, supposing that her spirit has ‘left her body, which will return at the appointed time. Such instances bf ignorant superstition' as the above, in the nineteenth century, are a disgrace and reproach upon the commu nity.—Gcruga (Ohio) Republic. and asked cial embarrassment, of violated justice, I tility against the United States, or asj“jf / thought she looked like a woman of internal rebellion and threats of for- simply an appeal to the prejudices of the I to he trifled with by a u>af of bread. r, and seems to be hastening rap-1 mass of Mexican people? In behalf of 1 Tbe way 1 settled down in my slippers, .u.j lu inevitable ruin. In this crisis the the latter construction, it may be argued? without a reply, probably convinced her Goozratee, and Other native languages, I the same at ’ with us; the clock* b^in eyes of the country are turned U> the ex-1 that tbe great bulk of tto Mexican pop^ j that I was no longer a skeptic on {Aar fijsi iw. - - " '^"can uke ilte I to change a riiort distance belarw'Fmr- jifed chieftaia.as itbaooly JDayr-to amst I ulation is extremely mtler wits hatred j pomU HPPH | m ^ _ ■ classesThe*must flatter all tbeir vulgar I i n °the house—the old eutiy clock ro- i so that' tho Indian Pills and uso bis Ointment according to I ence. The day is supposed to contain ■ntr* ” ' ' " ’ - - ” ‘ tweuty-four hours,' -ending precisely —ALL KINDS OT— Pepper, Spice, Extract*, Cooking S depot? his agents ii'iiu, Arc ' - p » * For sale cboap for ca*h by D. N. JUDSON. Athens, Oet. 14, 1253- general directions, as a Cockney would do within the sound of Bow Bells. We find bim again at Hong Kong and Can ton, making his medicines known to the Celestials by means of a Chinese trans lation, We trace him front tbcnce to the Philipine Islands, where lie is circula ting his preparations'in the native lan- Singapore lie bss a-large 1 fliirteeh, seventeen, twenty and twenty- ;enta there supply all Ute four o’clock. If the sun sets G* P. thirty minutes after the disc of the sun has disappeared. Then tbe clocks sound four vespers; then tbe new day begins. From tbispoint,they reckon uninterrup tedly on till the next setting of the sum, not timidly stopping at twelve aud be ginning anew; out boldly dosbiug on to the progress of national dec emies are driven from pow almost unanimous expression of tbe'ua-1 er Safety from Frightened liititSEa. •—Newell's new safely whipplb-tiee isa veiy goocT thing, but Hie mode adopted in Moscow and St.'Petersburg is bette,r, because by it thero is no necessity tbat the horse should, clear the carriage and runaway, to bis own injury anil per- perhaps the loss of life to some poor pe destrian he runs over'to secure the safe ty of the driver. It is this: Around the horse’s neck, near the neck-strap, js placed a cord with a rua- tiing knot. To this slip-nposo is attach- tional will he is acain elevated to supreme I prejudices—that his language is address-1 eluded. From that time till ^Monday power. In exile he Is selected as the ed to thispolittcal end otjly-that war monting she devoted to her husband and savicu r of his country, and its power, for- with the United States is the event of all Sabbatical exerctsra. All I havp to say tune, and destiny are laid at his feet.- others which lie must most anxiously „, it is to he hoped she earned some of We come now to the narrative of Senor avoid as fatal to his own interest—that, the /error of her secular employments Escobar. Commissioned to convey to in short, bo hazards everything with no j in to thoso halcyon bourn. Islands in tbe Indian Seas. His adver- in half an lipur, twenty-fouro’dock will tisements are published io most of tbe sound. It was twenty-two and a half at TftlSH POTATOES for planting and table nse. papers at Sydney, Hobart Town, Laun-1 ceston, Adelaide, Port Phillip, and in- 6. P. M. One would suppose their clock-face ^ ect l m almost every to\vn of that vast would be divided into twenty-four com X —21 barrels Mercer Potatoes, 25 barrels yel- portion ofthe British empire. Returning partmonts. Bizarre enough, they have chwpfoTCT-MTj° t P0C j) ,, *N Hudson' 6 * 10rnewar ^ 3 ’ We an( l Oint-1 butsix: so tbe hour hand trees roundfour }wid pthoreports in the Pacific. Doub-1 It is confusion-worse confounded. Then jjqwuuai, VUiiiiiuaaillUCU IU LUlivuj tw I iu oims*| —— » — • the exile the will ofthe nation,he finds possible chance of advantage, t e mo- him iu hjs retreat lamenting the misfor- ment he undertakes to execute ns tunes of bis country: : "i, | hostile intimations. There is much .• “How have l beet happy situation of our beloved country, the victim of passion, involved in anarc* and in imminent danger of loosing her Fanny Fern. Dee. 30. Rio Coffee. ling the Horn, we track him in tho At-1 again tho clock*strikes forty-eight times r , , r . latmc—Monte Video, Buenos Ayres, instead of twenty-four. A French sol- J COFFEE*** ’ * 'kENNe/ & SLEDGE. Santos, Ilio de Janeiro, Behia, and Pcr- !dter once naively said a chaque demie— Feb. 3. | nambuco: He is advertising m those \hcure V heure some, “at each half hour HMBiiliiMBHHiBMI * I parts in Spanish and Portucucs. In all I thn hour sounds.” It is even so. What are as familiarly known, and sold by ev- any new-come stranger. If he look at S^SSSrt£TivJd Lv C, ° ° rN T W BISHOP Sy ’ ery llru es ist » as l,lc y are a ’- home.' In (the clock, it is as the"Sphinx’s riddle, if ' KSaRfffWW J3I5UU1. the'MedUerrancan we find them selling at j he ask bis neighbor, it is worse still, 500 march 10. SACKS SALT large size and in fine order, for sale very low by T. Bli ISHOP. No. 4, Granite Row. ,, .a. . ^ b. w. hill & co.. Aro soiling .orae real Krc:sch Printed de Laioei rX’Vi CM b “ bousht io NewYo '' k - Malta, Corfu, Athens and Alexandria, They call the houis here Santa Maries, liOBides at Tunis and other portions of for this relegious people never forget the Barbary States. Any one taking that it is St. Mary that ushers in the the trouble to look at the ‘Journal’ and day. Her name is used instead of our •Courier’ of Constantinople, may find in o’clock. Hpiviirli] these, as well as other papers, that Hoi- In London you send your letters of loway’a medicines are regularly adver tised and selling throughout the Turkish empire; and even in Russia, where an almcct insurmountable barrier exists, introduction ; in Rome as in Paris, it is better to present them in person. Iu some houses it is considered very cold and forms] to send them ; reflecting se- Atmospheric Telegraph.——Mr. I.S, »of his country : m», I hostile intimations. I Richardson has invented a machine, the How have l been affected by tho un- force in this J’®" • t But operation of whiclt was witnessed by a situation of our bskived'couomy, Gtwmts • cSaip.jny of scientific gentlemen ami the victim of passion, involved in anarchy, | may it not l»e of the press, on Saturday, at and in imminent danger ofloosing her na- it nnp«wW© S h current to room No. 24, Merchants Exchange, for tionality. Unhappy Mexico ! Without winch <> f p ^ revenue; owing a million and a half or which he now ymiu . j would! &C- The vehicle of transportation, as back dividends on the Euglisli debt, and him a S ai .j&z : s the <rovcni- experimented upon, is a lead tube, one unable to pay last year’s interest, or even avoid. In no v f . ° he ira J i„ c l, i n diameter and twenty feet long. the salaries of her officers; without an I ment so l,,ca F^* , J® : n Mexico.—In I The letter or package to be conveyed is army, the frontiers abandoned and suff- pulses of the mas .bn rmiserva- r "~ A —ntmr.bnd to cring the greatest disasters from the at- tell.gence, wealth and all the conserva^ tacks of the savagesf the frontier States live safe-gards o a Dre ; u dice. undermined by traitors, influenced and by ’S". 0 ”"®® "!' d t he higher class | the air cannot pass it. protected by Americans—-all this tolerat- 1 he govern me ® f created. We ed for five yeara4>y P T ' JJi ‘ , "“ were opposed to the -8ro traitors, andoftly ^ , -4PP . r ! r->HL« jw—> • . sal execration. Lower California, too, current of popu a Anna will pheric Telegraph Company lias alrea- threatened in such a manner that it may again. It may «> 8D irit 1 dy been formed, and that a line is to be L ' ’ ’ ' ^ 1 discover that he has ! e rected botween this city and New York, JSSS «»>■““» “ *mm lm# e were noi c»a O i.-«J0 into • sion by the overthrow o t eu s • Riceardson is very confident that troops, tbe capture of their ciues, anu --- - - ' - the dismemberment of their terntory ; but these events seem rather to bave in flamed tbeir hatred of this country. Arista, of all Mexican statesmen, tbe best disposed towards the United S.atjs, was driven from the Prestdencyby this very anti-American feeling. ed "a pair of reins, on gentlemen's bones generally of silk cord about tho size of a pipe-stem, which always lie thrown over the dash-board, read v to be siezed at once. When ahorse start*, and. becomes unruly, the gentleman takes up his cord aud tightens the horse’s throat so that he cannot breathe. The most furious horse stops almost, in stantly, but he will not fall. or kick.— I have seen many such reins upon high spirited horses even in common city deroskies. • • Chapped Teats in Cows.—-We have had some experience with this difficulty, says the Albany Cultivator, and’ndWt found anything' better as a preventine and cure, titan washing thoroughly before milking, with clean cold water. If tho Weather is very raw, a thin coat of pure saw packages p be mentioned ab No friction is ass and ove in a be invaded and overrun without rests .—- tance; Yucatan sustaining an Indian which he cannot lay. war in which it cannottriumph ; Tehaun-1 people were not nf fh tepee threatened, and its military occu pation by our natural enemies delayed until the coming month of A,pril.” At first he refuses to return to Mexico. Its apparently hopeless condition and the past ingratitude of his countrymen are recited as reasons why ho should not, “mutilated,” as he is. abondon “this sweet repose,” “confide in the transient Tbe dis- aplunger, and is propelled by a presure , ard , applied after milking, is useful in a/ air. 1 he- plunger ui»o arrangedrthai a(]cHtio ^ P to t i ie washing, tioft butter is said to be excellent for ibis purpose. In corroboration of the great value of this treatment we quote the following from A communication in the Prairie: **1 have used various liniments, and .many kinds of ointments, but no one in my experience comes up to the mark like clean, cold water. My practice is to take the water to mv cattle yard, as much as the milk ing pail. Every teat, atui tho lower part ot the bag, whether sore or sound, is wasbedclean. The teats are thensoli, the cow stands quietlyv-and uo dirt falls into your pail. ■ And more likely to have clean butter —it only wrapt in dead rags. by means of the tube letters can be con veyed to New York in fifteen minutes, or as speedily as business is now done by telegraph. He invites business men to call between the hours of twelve and three o’clock and ex*attO% tbe instru ment and witness it* operation