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The Wisc. %
|i\ WASHINGTON IKVIV-
The treasures ol the .lecp are net -» iue< ><>"«
As are the eonrealed eoml.uts el a nau
Lack’d up in woman's love. 1 seeut tlu . i
Os blessings, when 1 eome but near
What a delicious br.a.h marrugo sc fu 11.
The violet bed's not sw eeter Mium.»T, n.
1 have often had occasion to remark the lort.-
tude'wVt h which woman sustam the most over
whe,mine tever.es of foi tune. I hose disasters ,
? Til down the spirit ol a man, and pros- |
' vh ,‘‘ him in the dust, seem to call forth all the en
emies of the softer sex, and pive such intrepid
f.v and elevation to the,r chararte,. that at times .1
approaches to sublimilj. Nothin;; can be ntoie
toil* him;, than to behold a solt and tender female
Iho had been all weakness and dependence, and
alive to even trivial rougmiess. while treading
the prosperous paths of life, suddenly rising in
mental force to he the comforter and supporter ol
her husband under misfortune, and abiding, » ith I
unshrinking firmness, the bitleiesl blasts ol ad ter- |
the vine wt ich has long twined its graceful j
foliage about the oak, and been Idled hv it into,
sunshine,twill, when the hardy plant ,s rilled by the |
thunderbolt, cling round it with its caressing ten- |
drils, and oind up its shattered houghs ; so is n
beautifully ordered by Providence, that woman,
who is the more dependant and ornament ol man -
in his happier hours, should he his stay and solace
when smitten with sudden calamity; w Hiding her
self into the rugged recesses of Ins nature, ten
derly supporting the drooping head, and binding
up the broken heart. . , , , ,
I was once congratulating a friend, who had
around him a blooming family, knit together m the
strongest affection. ‘1 ean wish you no better lot
said he, wich enthusiasm," than •*' have ;l
and children. If you arc prosperous. there they
are to share your prosperity; il otherwise, there
they are to comfort yon. And, iiiuced, I have ob
served that a married man tailing inti* nnMortune,
is more apt is retrieve his situation in the world
than a single one; partly because he i-» more stim
ulated to exertion by the necessities of the help
less and beloved oeings who depen.l upon him for
subsistance ; nut chierty, because his spirits are j
southed and relieved hi domestic endearment, ami
tils sell respect kept aiive by finding, that though j
all abroad rs darkness and humiliation, yet there ,
still a little world of love at home, of which he
ts the monarch. Whereas, a single man i: apt to 1
mn to waste and self-neglect ; to fancy himself *
lonely and abandoned, and Ins heart to t ill to ruin,
like some deserted mansion, tor want ot an in hub i- i
rant.
These observations call to mind a little domes- .
tic story,of which 1 was once a witness. My in- |
tim&te friend, Leslie, had married a I cantilul and \
accomplished girl, who had been brought up in the j
midst of fashionable life. She had, it »> Hue, no •
fortune, but that of my friend was ample ; and he j
delighted in the anticipation of indulging her rn ,
every elegant pursuit, and administering to those 1
delicate tastes an.l fancies that spread a kind ol |
witchery about the sex.—Her lite, saiti be, |
• shall be like a fairy talc.'
The very difference in then characters produced |
u harmonious combination; and "is of a roman- j
tic and somewhat serious class ; >be was -all lilt* j
and gladness. 1 have often noticed the mute rap
ture with which he w ould ga/e upon her in com- |
pant,of which her sprightlv nower? made her the ;
delight . and how, in tht midst of applause, her '
eye would turn to him, a« if there alone she sought
favor and acceptance. —When leaning on his arm,
her slender form contrasted finely with his manly !
person. Ibe loud confiding air w ith whn li she
looked up to him seemed to call forth a flush of
Ciiuinhant pride and cherishing 'tenderness, as
if he poated on his lovely burthen for its very
helplessness. Never did a couple set forward on
the flowery path ol early and well suited marriage
with a fairer prospect of felicity.
It was the misfortune of my friend, however, to ,
Lave embarked his property in large speculations ;
.md he had not been married many months, when, j
by a succession of sudden disasters it was swept 1
irom him, and he found himself reduced to almost
penury. Fora lime he kept his situation to him
self, and went about with a haggard countenance
and a breaking heart. His life was but a protrac- I
ted agony ; and what rendered it mure insupporta
ble was the necessity of keeping up a smile in the :
presence o*’ his wile : for he could not bung him- ,
self to overwhelm her with the news. She saw
however, with the quick eyes ot affection that all ;
was not well with nim. She marked his altered i
looks stifled sighs, and was not to be deceived by
his sickly ami vapid attempts of cheerfulness, j
She tasked ah her sprightly p >wers and tender ,
blandishments to win him back to happiness; hut
she only drove the sorrow deeper into his soul. — i
The more lie saw cause to love her, the more tor- ;
luring was the thought that he was soon to make
her wretched. A little while, thought lie, and the ‘
smile will vanish from that cheek —the song will
die away from those lip>—the lustre of those eyes j
will be quenched with sorrow—and the happy ;
heart which now heals lightly in that bosom, will |
be weighed down, like mine, by the cares ami I
miseries of the world.
At length he came to me one day, and related !
his whole situation in a tone of the deepest despair. J
When I had heard him through, I inquired, ** Does j
your wife know all this At the question lie j
burst into an agony of tears. “For God’s sake!” j
cried he, “ if you have any pity on me, don’t men- |
lion my wife; it is the thought of her that almost i
drives me to madness!”
“And why not ; ” said I. “She mqst know it
sooner or later; you cannot keep it long from her, |
and the intelligence may break upon her in a more
startling manner th in il imparted by yourself ; for '
the accents of those wc love soften the
tidings, Besides, you are depriving yourself of j
the comforts of her syn ,{»uth y ; a»»J i*-t nw«i»lv j
that, but also endangering the onlv jbond that can •
keep hearts t igether —an unreserved community I
of thought and feeling She will aoon perceive
that something D secretly preying upon \ our mind; ■
and true love will not brook reserve: it feels an- :
dervalaed and outraged, when even the sorrows of |
those it loves are concealed from it.”
“Oh, but my friend! to think what a blow 1 arn
to give io all her future prospects—how 1 am to j
strike her very soul to the earth, by telling her ;
that her husband D a beggar!—that she is to rorego .
all the elegancies of life—all the pleasures of
society—to shrink vv ith me into indigence and ob- '
scurity! To tell that 1 have dragged her down :
from the sphere In which -he might nave continu- 1
ed to move in constant brightness—the light of 1
every eye—the admiration of every heart ! How
can she bear poveity ; She has been the idol of
society. Oh, it will break her heart —it will break
her heart !”
I saw his grief was eloquent, and I let it have
its flow; for sorrow’ relieve- itself by word-. When
his paroxysm had subsided, and he had relapsed
into moody silence, I resumed the subject gently,
and urged him to break his situation at one** to his
wife. He shook his head mournfully, but positive- j
ly. *•
“But how are you to keep il from her Hi,
nece-sary she should know it, that you may take
the steps proper to the alteration of your rircum- -
stances. You must change your style of living—
nay,” observing a pang to pass ario-s his counte
nance, “don't let that afflict you. I am sure you ,
have never placed your happiness in outwaid show
you have yet friends, warm friends, who will |
not tnink the worse of you for being less splendid- 1
]y lodged: and surely it does not require a palace *
to be happy with Mary —■“ ! could be happy with ,
her,” cried he convulsivelv, “in a hovel ? —1 could !
go down vs ith her into poverty and dust ’— 1 could
1 could—God bless her ' —tiod bless her cried
he, bursting into a transport cl grief and tender
ness.
“And believe rne, ray friend,” sard I, stepping
up, and grasping him warmly by the hand, “ be
lieve me, she can be the same with you. Ay, more;
il will be a source of pride and triumph to her—it
will call forth all the latent energies ami fervent :
sympathies of her nature; for she will rejoice to !
prove that she loves you for yourself. 'I here is in
every true woman's heart a spnk of heavenly fire,
which lies dormant in the broad daylight of pros
perity; but which kindles up, and beams and blazes
in tne dark hour of adversity. No man knows
what a ministering angel she is —until he has gone
with her through the fiery trial-of this world. * j
There was something in the earnestness of my \
manner, and the figurative style of my language, 1
that caught the excited imagination of Leslie. 1
knew the auditor I had to deal with ; and follow
ing up the impiession I hid made, 1 finished by
persuading him to go home and unburthen his sad
heart to his wife.
1 must confess, notwithstanding all i had said, 1
felt some little solicitude for the result. Who can
calculate on the fortitude of one whose whole life
has been a round of pleasure- Her gay spirits I
might revolt at the dark downward path of low 1
humility, suddenly pointed our before her, and j
might cling to the bunny regions m which they had
hitherto revelled. Re-ides, min in fashionable 1
life is accompanied by so many galling mortifica
tions, to which, in other ranks, it is a burden. In
short. 1 could not meet Leslie, the next morning, j
without trepidation. He had made the disclosure, j
“ And how did she bear it"”
“Like an angel ’ It seemed rather to lie a relief
to her mind, for she threw her arm- round my neck
and asked me if this was all that had lately made
me unhappy. But, poor gif I," added he, “she r -an ■
not realize the change we must undergo. She has
no idea of poverty but in the abstract; “he has
only read of it in poetry, where it is allied to love.
She feels as yet no privation ; she suffers no loss
of accustomed conveniences nor elegancies. When
we come practically to experience its sordid cares
its paltiy wants. Us petty humiliations —then will
ne the real trial,”
4 But,’ said I, ‘now that you have got over the
severest task, that of breaking it to her, the sooner
vou Ift the world into the secret the better. The
disclosure may be mortifying ; but Mien it i* a
single misery,and soon over ; whereas you other
wise suffer it, in anticipation, every hour in the
day. It is not poverty, so much as pretence, that
harasses a mined man —the struggle between a
proud mind and an empty pur-i —‘he keeping up a
hollow show that must soon come to an end. Have
the courage to appear poor, and you ui ;arm pover
ty of its sharpest sting.’ On this point I found
Leslie perfectly prepared. He had no Ulse pride
himself, and as to his w ife, she was only anxious
to conlorrn to their altered fortunes.
Some days afterwards, he called upon me in the
evening. He had disposed of his dwelling-house
and taken a small cottage in the country, a few
miles from town. He had oeen busied all day, in
sending out furniture. The new establishment
required few article-, and those ol the simplest
kind All the splendid furniture of his late resi
dence hail been sold, excepting his wile’s harp.
'i pal, jie aid, wan too closely associated with the
rd*a nejaelf; il belonged to the little story of
their loves; for norm* of the * wet lest moments of
iheii courtship were those when In* had leaned
over that instrument, and listened to the melting
tones of her voi< e. I could not hut smile a! this
instance of romantic gallantry in a doating hus
band.
He was now going out to the collage, where hi*
wife had been all day, superintending its arrange
ment. Vly feeling* had become strongly interested
fU p}fO progress ot this family story, and as it was a
fiat iyefiiii£, I offered to accompany him.
Hi Va» yeaned with the fatigues of the day,
and as w«* walked out, jfojl into a fit of gloomy mu
sing. /
4 Poor Mary ” at length broke, with a heavy
bijh, from his Jipa
* \nd what ofhei ' asked J,‘has any thing Imp
i pencil to her r *
* V. hat,' said he, darting an impatient glance,‘is
it nothing to be reduced to this paltry situation—
to be caged in a miserable cottage—to be obliged
to foil almost in the menial concerns of her wretch
ed habitatii n ”
* I Ins she then repined at the change ’
‘ Repined ! she ha- been nothing but sweetness
and good humor. Indeed, she seems in belter spi
rit- than 1 have ever known her; she has been to
me a'l love, and tenderness, and eumloit ”
Vdmirabie girl ” exclaimed I. ‘You call your
self poor, my friend; you never were so rich —you
never kpew the boundless treasures of excellence
you possessed in that woman.’
* Oh ? but my friend, il t ns first met ting at the
cottage were over, I think 1 could then be comfor
table? But this ls her first day of real experience:
she has been introduced into a humble dwelling—
she has been employed all day in arranging its
mi-erable equipments —she has for the tirst lime
known the fatigues of dome-tic employment—she
ha- for the firs! time looked around her on a home
destitute of every thing el g.mt * almost of every
thing convenient; and may now he silling down
exhausted and spirilieis, brooding over a prospect
of future poverty.'
There w as a degree ol probability in this picture
that I could not gainsay, so we walked on in si
lent e.
\tter turning from the main road, up a narrow
lane, so thickly shaded by forest trees as to give it
a complete air of seclusion, weeaine in sight ofthe
cottage. It was humble enough in it- appearance
for the most pastoral pool ; and yet it had a pleas
ing rural look. \ wild vine had overrun one end
with a profusion of foliage; a few trees threw their
branches gracefully over it ; and 1 observed sever
al pots of flowers ta-tefnlly disposed about the
door, and on the grass-plot in front. \ small
wicket-gate opened upon a footpath that wound
through some shrubbery to the door. Just as we
approached, we bean! Hie sound of music—Leslie
grasped my arm; we paused and listened. It was
Mary's voice, singing, in a style ofthe most touch
ing simplicity, a little air 1 of which her husband !
was peculiarly fond.
I felt Leslie’s hand tremble on my arm. He
! slopped forward to hear more distinctly. His step
i made a noise on the gravel walk. A blight beau
tiful face glanced out at the window, -and vanished
—a light footstep was heard —and Mary came
tripping forth to meet us. She was in a pretty
rural-dress of while; a few wild flowers were
( twisted in her line hair; a fresh bloom was on her
; cheek ; her whole countenance beamed with smiles
11 had never seen her look so lovely.
4 My dear George,’ cried she, * 1 am so glad you j
I are come ; 1 have been watching and watching lor
j you ; and running down the lane and looking out
i for you. I've set out a table under a beautiful
J tree behind the cottage; and I've been gathering
J some of the most delicious strawberries, for I know
! you are fond of them—and we have such excellent
! cream—and every thing is so sweet and -till here,
j Oh!* said she, putting her arm within his, and
, looking up brightly in his face, 4 Oh, we shall he so
j happy!’
Four Leslie was overcome. He caught her to
! hi- bosom —ho folded his arms tound her —he kiss- !
cd her again and again—he could not speak, but
j the tears gushed into his «*yes ; and lu* has often
! assured me, that though the woild has since gone
i prosperously w ith him, and his life has indeed been
I a happy one, yet never 1 a> he experienced a mo
i ment of more exquisite felicity’.
The liiiiTiMi's Mo is. —The Hoston Cou
rier says:—Over ”0,000 letters, and forty bush
els of newspapers. Ac.. were received at the Bos
ton Post Office on Monday, by the Britania steam
er. The letters for New York, Philadelphia and
HalPmore were despatched by the Stonington
! ears, at 1 K o'clock I'. M. t ami the whole were dis
j trihuled at 10 o'clock P. M., notwithstanding the
! immense amount; and all in addition to the or
dinars- business of the office.
i There are upwards of fifteen thousand pension '
: ers in I treat Britain, who receive 777,550/ per j
annum exclusive of Colonial pensions, grants, *
i allowances, half pay* and supeiannuations for
civil, military and naval services.—Pensions are !
granted for all sorts of service. Almost every !
; high public functionary, on retiring from office j
| enjoys a pension from 4,000/ downward. The
, Duke of W ellington has received successively i
under the title of‘national rewards,’the sum of j
i 700,00(1/.
French Forces.— According to the French \
, papers, the naval force of France will consist, in j
184”, of ”0,000 marines in the seaports and col
onies, and 15,000 afloat, or ready to embark, be- !
i sides the crews of 20 sail of the line, 22 frigates, j
j 20 corvettes, li brigs, iff smaller vessels, and 35 I
| steamboats.
The effective strength ofthe army will be 493,- j
! 741 men, and 110,990 horses. The torlifica- !
j lions of Paris will lead to the fortifications of the ;
J French ports, t )ne million sterling is demand- i
I ed for Cherbourg.
The New Hotel—This establishment was
1 sold, yesterday morning, by Messrs. Gantt &
Mortimer, by virtue of a mortgage to the Bank
of the State, under the “ Act for rebuilding the
City of Charleston,” or lire loan act, and was
purchased by the City Council, for the sum of
584.622, cash.— Charleston Courier of yester
day,
A Ji'st ini' Liberal Opponent.— The sub
joined truly American sentiments, constitute the j
leading editorial in the Fhd.tdelphia American 1
Sentinel of Tuesday. As coming from an op- |
ponent to the succe-sful parly, in the receat can- !
vass, such remark- are truly refreshing :
The many grave and weighty interests now
at stake, domestic and foreign, upon which action
must be ha«l under the administration of (Jen.
Harrison, naturally occasion the most anxious j
| thoughtfulness in regard to the new govern- j
! ment and its measures. It cannot but lie an !
' eventful administration. It begins its reign and
its labors amid difficulties, the satisfactory ad- !
fustment of which will severely lax the sagacity i
and patriotism of its host heads and hearts. If
it has attained to high honors, il has also been
laden with great responsibilities and invested
with perilous trusts. That it may prove itself
adequate to the exigencies of the limes upon
which its fortunes have fallen, is one of our de
voutest hopes; and most heartily shall we re
joice to see the expectations of its supporters
consummated in the growing prosperity at home,
and the brightening glory abroad, of our com
mon country.
One of the first and most perplexing matters
to he settled, is our disturbed relation with Eng
land, growing out of our northern and north-eas
tern controversies. At present we hold without
j a doubt, that our government is right on
both these questions, urging no pretension, the '
! truth and justice of which should not De instant
ly admitted by Great Britain: Thus far vve have
been not only just but patient and forbearing.
We wish to keep in the right, and to sustain our
selves in the patient mood, till patience ceases to
be a virtue and degenerates into pusilanimity.
All the elements of our moral nature recoil when
> war, that direst and most gigantic abomination,
l is talked of, nay even thought of, between two
1 Christian and cognate people; allied and affilia
ted as is England and this Union, by common
origin and speech; by arts, science, commerce;
by incidental sympathies and aims; by all that
cement and blend into one grand power, nations
that are separated by no moral, but only by the
j physical and now insignificant barrier of the
| Atlantic. Our earliest, deepest wishes are lor
1 eternal cordial amity; and in the present instance
we are total unbelievers in the necessity of a rup
ture. Our confidence is entire, that calm, dis
passionate, bloodless negotiation can accomplish
such an adjustment of our pending difficulties
as will at once consist with British dignity and I
American honor.
The rumored appointment of flic Hon. Henry I
day as a diplomatic agent from this government j
1 to St. .lames, on this indicate business, is lull of !
promise.— Few men could be found less likely ;
Ito tail in such a mission. We have differed
with him in local politics; but vve accord to him
: enlarged and lilieral views in great stale ques-
I tions. In great exigencies, he has shown him
| self equal to the crisis. Never more calm, than
amid excitement; never more bland and balmy
in bis counsels than when the; political sea is
vexed with storms; never more sagacious than
when others are perplexed and doubting; be
seems marked by a long career of public life as
•he statesman who hjionld he chosen by the new
administration as the representative at once of
our just claims and our good will at the British
court; and wc shall confess our disappointment
if he who has so often been a pacificator at home
shall fail to Ik; an honorable peace-maker abroad.
From the Halt (more Amerinm.
Washington.—lt is well known that at the
close of the revolutionary war when the urrnv, un
paid and wretchedly provided, was almost in a
slate ol mutiny, the loyal dignity was tendered
to Washington by a committee ol officers. The
country was in an unsettled slate, the confedera
tion almo»i powerless; war had exhausted the
land, and distraction prevailed in the general coun
cils ; the army wa devoted toils general. The
I occasion was one which Hellish ambition would
j have sprung to seize. If the Ivepublic owes much
: to VV ashington, the great and heroic warrior, lor
| achieving her independence, what is the amount
of obligation for which American liberty and hu
| man-freedom all over the world are indebted to
| 1 him for his more than heroic conduct at that rri
! sis! Here is his reply to the proposal which set
. I royally before his eye-—the letter has been lately
. I brought to light by Mr. Sparks, in his collection
■ [ of Washington’s papers;
I “Sir: With a mixture ol great surprise and
1 i astonishment. I have read with attention the sen
* • timents you have submitted to my perusal. Be
’ assured, sir, no occurrence in the course of the
war has given rue more | amfol sensation than
your information of there being uucli ideas exis
. ling in the army, m you have expressed, which
I must view with abhorrence, and reprehend with
1 severity. Fur the present, the communication of
4 them will rest in my own bosom unless some fur
ther agitation of the matter shall make a disclo
* sure necessary.
“ I am much at a loss to conceive what part
y of w.J conduct could have given encouragement
to an address which, to rne aeems big with Ur
greatest mischiefs lHut enu Ireful my country. If
I arn not deceived in the knowledge of myself,
you could not have found u person to whom your
schemes are mor disagreeable.
»<»*•»
44 Lei me conjure you, then, if you have any
rcguid for vour country, concern lor yourself or
posterity, or resect for me, to banish these
thoughts from your mind, and never communi
cate as from yourself, or any one else, u scnli
ment ofthe like nature. I am. Ac.
• George Washington.”
The Mol her.
We believe Unit no other relation m life, no
oilier phase of human nature, presents so perfect
a picture of unmixed, unselfish love and devoted-
i loss, as that of a mother tor her child. If is a
sublimation of ber soul; it is a passion purged of
all earthly dross. We have, even among brutes
wilnes-ed (In* most touching displays of tin*
maternal affection for offspring; and there arc
lew human natures so hardened or depraved us to
escape the control of this universal and potent
law of our being. Wo bavu Keen poverty and
crime in their harshest aspects; we have looked
upon the bereaved widow ju her desolation, and
the still more unhappy wife in he- desertion ; we
have beheld each and all, with tattered garments,
widi hunger-shrivelled visages, with the marks
of disease, the slams of the la/ur-house. the very
hues ».f death upon them, hugging the little liv
ing and starved skeletons to lHeir bosoms, and
feeling no sense of pain but the unutterable ago
ny which rended their hearts as they gazed into
the dim eyes of the goffering and dying child.
We have looked among the fresh Hr-lies ot a con
| llagration, and with the charred and mutilated
form of woman we have found, clasped to her
breast, the remains of infancy; and we have
stood by the solitary scashcfre, when the surf has,
! with the fragments of tearful shipwrecks, cast up
the bodies ot the dead, and the mother and the
child even there clung together, unsevered by the
lury of winds and waves, unparted by the ago
nies of death.
It is an article of our creed, that the American
mother is the bt si mother in the world ; and that
the best elements of the American character, those
which mark us as a pecuher people.ami have most
contributed to make us a great nation, vverefash
j ioned and moulded by the handset Aincri
! can mothers. Such being our faith, we venerate
the virtues ofthe American matron ; ami wo can
neither make orjustity others in making, any
disparaging distinctions between her and the oth
er sex. Any law that makes or sanctions such
a distinction is founded in folly, ami should he
blotted out forever, anti-American in principle,
an as a disgrace to the chode of a humane and
enlightened people.— .{returns.
Anecdotes of old General Scott.
\\ c have had remarkable men m almost every
Slate, whose sayings and doings deserve to be re
membered. and transmitted to future limes; but
which now only exist in the memory of their
acquaintances. We propose to furnish a few
I anecdotes of Gen. Bcott, who,some twenty years
j ago, was Governor of Kentucky.
Scott was a soldier in the revolution. And it
was in that service, we suppose, that he learned
to swear. This was a blemish to his character;
but he always insisted on it to all his friends that
they must not mind his swearing, for he meant
no harm by it.
General Washington reposed great contidenre
in JScolt. \\ hen the fate ofthe American army
was sup iosed to depend on making a successful
retreat from the encampment at Trenton, lie gave
Scott the most dungeious and important post,and
i t.iat was to defend the bridge against live enemy,
I until the. main army should gel off’. Washing
! ton having stationed him with a small detachment
lat the post of danger marched off'as if to join the
i army, but he went hut a lew paces until he turn
jed and sit motionless on his horse. His face
* was turned to Bcotl ami his men; the indication
| of gloomy forebodings seemed to overshadow his
i countenance. He was probably thinking how
much depended ou the prudence and firmness of
i Scott and his men; for the British army were
i now in sight and advancing. Scott, who had
j been perfectly silent while Washington was pre
j sent, when he thought he was gone, turned to
! his men and said—“ Well, boys, you know’ the
j Old Boss has put us here to defend this bridge;
and by it must be done, let whal will come.
i Now I want to tell you one thing. You’re ail
•n the habit of shooting too high. Vou waste
i your powder and lead; and I have cursed you
• about a hundred limes. Now, 1 tell you what it
j is, nothing must be wasted; everv crack must
! count. For that reason, boys, whenever you see
; them fellows first begin to put their feet upon this
; bridge do rot: shin ’em.” At this Washington
did what he was seldom known to do during the
war; he burst into a hearty laugh. Scott looked
round and to his surprise saw the Coinmander
in-Chief still sitting on his horse: they exchan
ged a pleasant glance, and Washington hastened
to join the army. The bridge was successfully
defended, and the American army preserved.
fc*cotl had. we are constrained to acknowledge,
another fault h?sides the one we have just men
tioned. He was given to romancing; but we do
not know that in indulging in this propensity, he
i ever intended to deceive. He visited Kentucky
I when it wm a wilderness,and after he returned
j to A irginia, he told some marvelous tales of the
country. He said you might every where see
! the deer, hundreds in a drove with horns that
would measure seven feet from tip to tip, running
as swill as lightning over the plains, and from
hill to hill. In speaking soon afterward of the
I fertility of the soil, he said the whole country was
| covered with cane, j-o that it was with difficulty
that a rabbit could pass through it.—“ Why, how
under Heaven,’* said one of his auditors, “do
these deer n.ake out to run through at such rale!”
i looked like one caught for a moment, and
then immediately replied :—“ Ah, my good sir.
that s their look-out; it is no concern of mine.”
When Scott was a candidate for Governor i 4
Kentucky, he was opposed by Col. Allen, a na
tive Kentuckian, a young man of fine promise
who was afterward killed at the River Raisin.
They were once both together at a general mus
ter where Allen made a most, splendid speech.
Ihe friends ol the old General, knowing that he
was no orator, felt distressed lor him, thinking
that Allen’s eloquence must give him a great
advantage on this occasion over the old soldier.
When Allen had finished, however, Scott moun
t'd the slump, and addressed the company near
ly as follows :
4 * Well, boys, lam sure you all must he well
I pleased with me spee ch you have just heard. It
does my heart good to think we have so smart a
man raised up among us here. He is a native
Kentuckian. I see a good many of you here that
I brought out to this country when it was a
wilderness. At that time wo hardly expected
that we should live to see such smart men raised
up among ourselves. You were with me in those
early times, you Know we had no time /or educa
tion no means of improving from bo *ks. We dared
not then go about our most common affairs with
out our arms in our hands to defend ourselves
against the Indians. But we guarded and protec
ted the country, and now every one can go where
he pleases, and you see whal smart young fellows
are now growing up to do their country honor.
But I think it would he a pity to make this man
a Governor I think it would be better to send him
to Gongress. I don’t think it requires a very
smart man to make a Governor, if he has sense
enough to gather smart men about Him who can
help him on with the business of the Slate. It
would suit an old worn out old-wife of a man like
; myself. But as to this young man, lam very
| proud of him, as much so as any one of his kin,
I if any of them hail been here to-day to listen to
i his speech. M —Scott then descended from the
I slump, and the huzzas for the old soldier made
| tin* welkin ring.
Those from whom we derive this anecdote,
must excuse us furo mining the oaths ofthe hero
and sonic other matters which aiilod to give il
point.
Foreign (loons. — A recent arrival at New
York brought over goods, principally manufac
tures, the freight on which amounted to LIBOO.
Another vessel from France, brought a cargo val
ue! at ffjOO.OOO—a large proportion consisting
of silks. Can we wonder that, under these cir
j curnstances, our country should become crippled
by foreign debt —debt 100, incurred to a consider
able extent, for luxuries ?
There is an admirable lesson contained in the
following extract from Miss Hannah More’s
“•Strictures on the modern system of Female
1 j Education.”
I “Mince, then there is a season when the youtli
i ful must cease to he young, and the beautiful to
excite admiration, to learn to grow old gracefully
is, perhaps, one of the rarest and most valuable
■ arts (hat can be taught to woman. And, it must
he confessed.it is a most severe (rial for those wo
men to lay down beauty who have nothing else
' to take up. It is for this sober season of Ijte that
I education should lay up its rich resources, llow
i ever disregarded hitherto they may have been,
r they will Ik* wanted now. When admirers fall
i away, and flatterers become mute, the mind will
hu driven to retire into itself, and if it find no
> j entertainment at home, il will be driven buck
- ; again upon the world with increased force. Net
1 forgetting this, do we not seem to educate our
r 1 daughters exclusively lor the transient period of
i youth, when it is to mature age we ought to ad
vert 1 Do w<* not educate them lor a crowd, for
i getting they were to live at home 1 for a crowd,
- and not for themselves 1 for show, and not for
p use 1 for lime, and not for eternity 1
p
l*ui vriNii On ice Burnt.— The printing of
fice of the Advertiser, published at Fayette, Miss,
fi has been destroyed by fire, together with all the
h printing materials, books, files, accounts,Ac. The
d proprietor, Mr. William 11. Tcbo, formerly of
r - Baltimore, was sb-eping in the office at the time
the fire occurred, and barely escaped with hi* life.
Mr. T.’a clothing and pocket-hook (containing
rt money j were also destroyed, and owing to (hr
it lohs of his files it will l*r impossible to arrange his
it* accounts for collection.
Exknot 01 Ciiaiiu ritii. — Energy ofcliarar.
ter in iln* pliiloaopin r’w etono of iliik life, and
hlioiiM be engraved upoieeverv heart; it i* that
which huN peopled the temple of tame, that
which hin filled the hintoiic page with great
mimes uiitl (lie civil uml military world ; l but
which lias brought a race from )mrl>ari*m ( drawn
the veil from aciencc, ami develo|ied the won
drous power* ot nature, it make* men great ami
make* men rich. Find «*r hut it bring* aucreaN.
Without it \V dialer would have been a New
Hampshire lawyer, Thomna Ewing a huck eye
salt boiler. Franklin u Journeyman printer.
Without K Deinoalhenea would have Htarnmered
mi to luh grave, and (’incinnalua died a common
Sliiik*j»eare would have been ahot lor
poaching. Pope died nelling tape, Roacoe nulling
beer, ami Napoleon gone out of the world a (’or
sican bully* With it each one hannot only done
much lor his day and generation, toil much lor
the world in the past, the present ami the future.
Energy of character will do the hiiine thing lor
any man in a hiiiiill way that it has done for theae.
( live the lawyer energy of cliaiacler, and lie will
succeed at the bar without talent. It ih the w
erel by which the merchant, the artist, the Hchol
ar ami mechanic arrive at distinction and wealth.
If they fall once, they try again; no •contrary
winds heat them down, or it down, they will not
stay down. The man who has energy of charac
ter will rise in spite of fortune ami in spite of op
position.—(iive a man energy and he i* a made
man, put him where you will.
It is this fact that gives us confidence (hut the
American people will rise from their present de
pressions as soon as (he blast has blown over that
threw him down. In defiance of hank suspen
sion, hail currency,and every other evil that mal
ice and ignorance can ti.v upon them, the people
of this country have energy enough to rise am)
prosper, lie who gives up in despair, and cuts
away the sheets of his canvass because he finds
contrary winds in his passage, is hut a poor
navigator.
Woniif.hiti. Tn ansmoo imle vno*. —A cor
respondent of the N. \. Courier and Fmjimer
says the office holders in the different departments
at Washington are now ail Whigs, They aie
absolutely furious against the expiring Adminis
tration. No doubt the poor fellows ol
a certain Vicar of Bruy, who had a wonderful
altitude in adapting his polities to suit his cir
cumstances.—Sciotu Cmuz.
Life in Cuba. —From an interesting letter
from Ha* anna, in the Commercial Advertiser, we
make the following extracts:
It may he especially said of this place as it has
been said of Italy— ** Here the days are all sun
shine. the nights are all moonlight—love is the
religion and pleasure the law of the land.” The
light-house guides the mariners haik to the long
desired haven of rest—the Morn Castle challen
ges its entrance —while Cas'le Blanco, with its
overhanging einhaUleinents, frowns into snhrnis
sioti and obedience this degraded city,and the oc
cupants of its noble harbor. Every thing is sta
tionary here, and seems to have stood so for ag. s
past.—The march of intellect has tun ed aside
and left undisturbed the p« rtinaciiy oJ the habits
and customs of this place and people. Its form
and fashion ot building is that of the cities of the
earlier ages around the Mediterranean.
Divest it of its wooden materials and living
population, and its remains would stand scarcely
distinguishable from those of Ponipei, as now ex
cavated from its \ csuvjan tomb of eighteen cen
turies. All the houses are of stone, rudely n ade
and coarsely stuccoed over, inside and out, and
are mostly with flat roofs. lam lodged in a prin
cipal hotel, with scarcely a pane of window glass
in it—nor is one required. My room opens on
an upper terrace, from w hich the ocean, the har
bor, the castles, the city and the verdant country,
are all combined in one of the most variegated
delightful views 1 ever beheld.
The island of Cuba is productive, almost be
yond belief in sugar, coffee, tobacco and fruits, and
with a considerable portion of its land not yet
under cultivation. Its colonial blessings are a
governor general as an executive, with 20,000
troops to support his administration. It sustains
the expenses of its own government, and pays
over to Spain annually t le sum of about twelve
millions es dollars, lor the benefit of being held
in subjection. Its population is six hundred thou
sand while inhabitants. The import duly is ten
dollars and sixty-two cents on a barrel of flour.
Compare this with the I'nited * s tales, where a
while population of fourteen millions of inhabi
tants raises a less amount of revenue, other than
its land sales, than this little island. Its progress
in improvements and in labor saving machinery
is best exemplified by the fact, that of several
town clocks there are few iu the city struck by
their own machinery. A slave or a soldier is sta
tioned by the hell, who strikes with a hammer
each hour as it pusses. The plough in use here
is a long unwieldy thing, without shape or mould
board, and is certainly two hundred years behind
the age in agricultural improvements.
A few days past, placards were posted about
the city walls, informing of the bull-fight at 4
0 c!o* k •oro's the hay. Bt< iiiml>o(i|i and row
boats attended at the hour—the populace press- ,
ed toi the sport —a few ..American* joined, and ‘
were borne along with the* crowd. The place
was an amphitheatre, or like a circus. All con •
fortably seated on elevated rows of benches. Tne
seat of the judges and more distinguished per- ;
sons were indicated by curtains. The sport soon 1
began. The bull was let in at a small gate, from I
bis cage, and as lie entered bis head and neck
were stuck lull of barbed arrows and exploding
rocke’s with percussion crackers. The actors in
the arena were two mounted Picadores, and eight
men on fool—all dressed and acting like a clown
at a circus.
All had small flags, at which the infuriated an
imal, frantic with the barbs ami crackers, made
furious battle, under the boisterous shouts of a
delighted populace. The whole scene was too
savage and loathsome to describe. Five bulls in
succession were thus worried, exhausted and kill
ed. One horse was gored unto death by the ani
mal. Two others overthrown with their rides,
and rescued by the flags held in front to distract
the fury of the creature. At each death, three
horses entered in full harness, and fantastically
dressed, and drew out the dead carcases, with
trumpets—a full hand of martial music, and the
loud shouts of a delighted populace, cheering the
horses, with the riders’ whips, into a full leap, j
1 his is one of the weekly amusements of this
city. A single exhibition has satisfied me for
ever.
Thk Tariff ami the South. —A W ashing
ton correspondent of the Boston Atlas, writes m
a late letter ;
"On the subject, too, of a pi o tec live Tariff, it
is held a mailer of doubt whether there is not, in
reality, a stronger feeling in its favour at the
fcouth than the North. There has, on this point,
evidently been, within a few years past, an extra
ordinary change, both of interests and opinions.
At all events, the anti-tariff feeling at the North
has evidently very much increased, while at the
South there has grown up, in certain parts, a de
sire tor protective duties on certain articles of im
portation. This latter feeling is the strongest,
perhaps, at the South West, but it is not want
ing in certain parts of North and South Carolina
and Georgia, to protect their new cotton manu
factures, and exists still more among the tobacco
growers, who desire retaliatory duties upon im
ports from France. This lasl'feeling prevails to
a great extent in Maryland, and in nearly the
whole of Virginia. In the latter State, the dis
tricts of Messrs. W ise and Mallory, being whol
ly commercial, and therefore of antagonist m
leiesl to those ot the tobacco-growers, none ot
this article beiag raised there, are exceptions.
The slate of feeling on this subject, which is rap
idly increasing in strength anc extent, does riot
ppprar to he fully appreciated at the North.”
Missouri IjEOislati nr..—The speaker intro
duced into the Legislature of Missouri, a series
ot resolutions, in relation to the course taken by
the Governor of New Vorji in regard to runaway
slaves, stigmatizing the reason of the Governor as
frivolous mid unstutesmanlike, and concludes with
ihf following—
Hrsnlvftl, 1 lint hikhlh in tlio Itiiiul, of nior
cliantH in Missouri, manufactured in ,\rw York,
or brought from pay n excise
limn is levied on other goods, save that such dis
crimination shall not apply to goods imported al
New York into the I 'nited Stales, mid lirouglit
here in their original eases or packages.
, The speaker introduced these resolutions by a
speech, in which ho dwelt upon the advantages
likely to follow the diversion of the trade from
the eastern cities to New Orleans.
Eoi i ation. —There is something beautiful in
the following extract from an Illinois paper, ad
' dressed to the principal mistress of a female Aca
demy :
•• Imagine, for a moment, that the Is-aiililnl di
amond is placed in your hand, on whirh you are
requested to engrave a sentiment, whirh must he
read at the great day of account, in the present
of listening angels and assembled worlds’ What
cure would you exercise, what industry would
1 you use, to select from the vast commonwealth of
1 letters a sentence, purr, chaste, refined, and holy '
No cost —no pinna—no efforts would he bil k
ing ! Permit me, then, to say to you, that this
is your present situation. I'reeious, innocent
1 hearts, in all the purity ol rhilhooit'a delightful
bloom, are placed in your keeping, and the duly,
• of engraving principles, there, which will outlive
. the son, and live—and still live—and live lorev
r er, devolved on you
/■V itrn thr Mohilr Chrimivlr .
Htxxmf.ii Him.oia si.u —A letter from
i. ('apt, 11. It Johnston, of the steamer Hhylock. to
p one of thr Insurance Offices of this city, received
a yesterday, stales that the Hhyloek was snagged
f and »nnk in the Tomhigby river, a short distance
r above Pirkensville. She was on her downward
'• passage, amt had on hoard 7o I hates id ( utlun
It consigned to Merchants m tin, city,
e Opt. I. thinks the Oolton will all lie saved with
s hut little damage, hut the Uoat will he a total
lull*.
The (Mil Farm Onle.
Whi le, w here i- tin gate dial once uvcil la divide
Tin* wl«) inlet) lane from tin* grainy road tide'
I like not Ihi*gate so guy and *«» bnghl.
With its glittering latch and it* trellis of white.
It ih pretty, 1 own, yet ob,dearer by far,
Wax tfle red misted hinge, and the wither waip
ed bar.
Here are l:t«bion and form of a modernized dale.
Hut I’d rather have looked on that old farm gate.
Twa« there, where my viitei* would gather to
play
In (be shadow* of twilight, •*» sunny mid-day,
How we’d laugh and run wild mid those hilloi k*
of sand,
Where temptations existed no child could with
al and ;
Hutto swing on tin* gtlerail*. to clamber and rid. 4 ,
Was the utmost of pleasure, of glory and pride.
And (he car of the victor or carnage of state
Never carried such hearts a* the old fairn gale.
(Hi fan is the harrier taking its place.
Hut it darkens a pn lute my soul lunged to trace
I sigh to behold the rough staple and lu»p
And the railk (hat in y glow ing hand scarcely could
clasp.
(lb how strangely the warm spirit grudges to part
With the commonest relic once linked to the heart 1
And the brightest of fortune, the kindliest fate.
Would not banish my love fur the old farm gate.
l*Aimr.« in tiik House of Commons. Al
ter tlio lasi general election, observes the Liver
pool Mercury, “ we gave a tabular statement, cal
culating the majority of minuter* at twenty-two,
the lest lieicg, where applicable, (he votes of
iin*ml»erß on the Irish Church and Corporation
questions. We find that since then there have
been 91 vacancies or changes occasioned in the
following nmiier; I ‘.I by the death of members, 26
by resignation, 12 by accessions to the peerage
and creations, 25 by acceptance of office, and
IH by tin* derision of committees. We find,
moreover, that in ten instances 'lories have been
succeeded by Reformers —in fifteen. Reformers
by Tories; thus reducing the Mmisletial majority
to 17. How this may be alfeclrd by the coming
elections, it would be idle al prenem to Maculate.”
M A URIEL.
In Columbia County on the 25th February by
the Rev. A. L. Kennedy, Mr. Edward Hakdek
wav, of Wantn County, to Miw J. Fi r.»i-
MINO.
1) I E I).
In this city, on the Ist instant, in the 56th year
ol his age, Petek i f.nmoi ii, a na*ive ol Galloway,
Scotland, and a resident of Augusta for 3b year*,
during which time he was extensively known as
one of our most upright and intelligent merchants.
Few men were more useful in their day—few
more esteemed —and none moie regretted. S,
QUIT i; A R v .
Died at lus residence, on the evening of 26th
, Febiuary, Mr. Houcki Pim.ir, aged 6b years, a
native ol Scotland, and upwards ot 20 years a ie
atdeni of this city.
commercial.
i I Attest date* from Liverpool, Fihruary 3
lAitest dates from Havre, February I
AUGUSTA MARKET.
Monday Evening, March I.
Cotton —Saturday evening we received advices
from Liverpool to 4th ult., per steamer Bnltania
armed at Huston, showring an advance in this ar
-1 tide. Our market to-day,inconsequence, has been
veiy unsettled, caused in pan by holders keeping
back their storks, and purchasers showing every
disposition not to advance former higher rate*. We
observe however, from the few small parcels which
have changed hands, an advance of £ to 4 cent has
been paid. Extremes 10 (a 111 cents—now and
again a few bags at 9$ cents for very inferior.
Our River is on the rise and fiee for heavy
I freights dull, to Savannah 7,7 cent",
•iud to Charleston >1 ** bale foi Cotton by- steam
boats.
Statement of Cotton in Augusta and Hamburg.
Ist March, 4841.
Augusta. Hamburg.
Stock on band Oct. 1, IMO 2,762 Don
Receipt from Oct 1, to Feb. 1.. 36,67.5 22,11.7
Do. fiom Feb. 1, to March 1. 9,077
j Total supply, 45,494 2h.T.7|
Exported since Ist Oct.,n-}
I eluding all on board Boats not > 34,496 21,030
cleared March l*t 3
Stuck on hand * 13,996 7,721
Stock in Augusta 13,096
Total stock in Augusta and
Hamburg, 21,717
Receipts since Oct. 1 47,732 27,7^3
Receipts in Augusta.... 4.7 732
d otal receipts in Augusta .. .
and Hamburg, y
Against 142.600 bales «Trr» i trm*» !a«t y»*nr.
Wi DNtqiAi kivFMN- , March 3.
t nftun —(»ur ( otton markc: <ince our review of
. * ,l< ‘ Lt instant, has been very animated,showing to
i the clu**c ol the day an established advance of *. ct.
j D lb. on a!l descriptions since the receipt of the
i late Liverpool accounts to the 4lh ult. The prm-
I cipal operators are our merchants fur remittances,
1 and but a small number of bold speculators ’l ime
only wili t» H the result of present unwarranted
prices lor our great staple ; but when we re fleet on
the now deranged slate of our currency, and the
extravagant and ruinous high rate of Exchanges on
all points, it is to be expected out market will keep
above all others under existing circumstances.
Extreme quotations ]0 fa 11$ cents—chief sales
10J fa 11 $ cents.
Georgia Kail Road money more in favor to-day.
Our river on the rise—no change in freights.
In our grocery market, business has somewha’
improved, but the deranged slate of the currency
causes much trouble to our mfrenants, so much so,
that some ot oor wholesale dealers have two
pi ices, one for the currency, the other fur what is
called the *•better currency ’* (bills of specie pay ing
j banks.)
Ha-on. —Several loads have been >old thi* week
al s cents < ash.
Molasses. —Sales have teen made from the
wharf in lots of 10 hhds or more, at 25 cents, 90
days.
Sugar. —The receipts this week have been heavy,
particularly of New Orleans.
EXCHANGE TABLE.
Corrected by John (J. Winter, .Vo. 24S Droad-st.
Augusta Notes,
Mechanics’ Bank par.
Agency* Brunswick Bank “
Hank of Augusta 4 *
Augusta Ins. & Banking Company. "
Branch Georgia Railroad “
Branch State of Georgia “
Savannah Notes.
State Bank I (d 2 dis’nl.
Marine & Eire Insurance Hank.... I (d 2 *
Central Railroad Bank I
Planters* Hank I rfa 2 “
Country Notts
Branches State Bank 3 (d 5$ dr-’nt.
Hank Columbus 3 fa 5\
Chattahoochee K. R. \ Hking C0..4 (fa 7 “
Brunswick Hank 3 “
St. Mary’s Hank 3 “
Branch Central K.R. Hank, Mamu.3 (fa 5A “
Branch Mar. &: Fire Ins. Bank 3 (fa 5$ *•
Insurance K’k of Columbus, Macon. 2$ fa ■* ~
Commercial Hank, Macon 2*. fa .* “
Planters & Mec’s. H’k Columbus. . 4 fa u “
Mi Hedge villc Hank 3 fa 5$ “
Hunk of liawktnsville - fa “
Western Hank of Georgia sfa 10 **
Ormulge«» Hank 4 fat ••
Rurkersvillc Bank 5 fa 10 “
Georgia Railroad Hank, Athens... to fa 12$ ••
Farmers Bank of Chattahoochee.. 10 fa 12$ “
Central Bank j;,
Monroe Railroad Hank
Bank of Darien & Brunches
South Carolina Notes p ar .
Checks
On Now York, S days I ~f 14 ~r cln.
On Charleston fa t •*
On Savannah $ fa 2 dis’ut.
On Richmond, Va p ar
1 hiladelphia par (if .$ dis’nl.
Baltimore par fi? I ••
Lexington j fa *1 ••
Silver » ir>
Gold
We have hern obliged to give a wide range to
out quotations, owing to the fiequent l)u« tuation*
in the market and the dillneiue which, owing to
tins uncertainty, is made by out money dealers,
between buying and selling.
It will be observed that we have altered the
basis of our quotations from pu|M’i to specie. This
is an experiment, made at the earnest solicita
tions of many of out friends. In (he abstract, spe
cie in (he only real basis, but practically, wr ap
prehend tlut nothing will be found *0 intelligible
an the description of currency which is commonly
used by the banks and merchants, which is now.
as lo|piei Iy, the notes of the Georgia Rail Road
Bank, payable a| Athens.
Money Market —We regret (hat it is not in our
power to note any nnpioveiueut in our exchange
and money milk el They remain in the same de
ranged uml unsettled condition, whnh if ha< t een
out painful dm3 10 record for tfie past foitnight.
Kso-li day the bet lei and the be-* currency are be
coming moie scarce, by being • anied home to the
Banks which issued it, lor redemption, leaving ns
almost nothing to transact business uj*m but Geo.
R. Road notes, which at present an inedeemabie
currency. I hi* operates veiy oneiously upon 001
merchants, as many of them are I creed Gy then
debtor lo leceive them at par, and by then credi
tors to sell them for the better currency at 10 ct.
discount. fins is a most uufoitunate state of
things, but there is no help for it, but to await an
othei crop, by which lime the Bank will be able to
lelire a vejy considerable j»Oition ol its liabilities.
In (be mean time those who are able t-> wait, can
receive interest on tbeipclairns bv <lrj»o , *iiiiig their
notes with the Branch al tin* place, and receiving
ceilihi ate of deposit beating intetf t Iron, date, if
the amount be allowed lo remain ovei 9 1 days.
'Plus course, while it rstablidies conclusivelyJhe
good Gilb ol the Bank toward it-- 'oil holders, and
the sincere wish of the director * to proto t them
against lo*s, will, it 1* hoped, have a very material
(•fieri in appieculuig the value of Its notes. It
may not be amiss here to stale, that the public
may place the most unbounded confidence in the
solvency of tin* institution, and all it needs is time
to extricate it e!f from embarrassment, which we
in a great measure attribute to an unjustifiable re
liance upon a ciedit which m a certain region was
unbounded. Our t ily Banks continue to pay srie
eie to all who present their notes, but, with tfie
exception of the Mechanics* Hank, to pay their
depositors in Georgia Rail Road notes. The tatter
pay* depositors in the better currency. In many in
stances, depositors object to receiving Georgia Rail
Road notes as current notes, but it rs Hobson’s
choice, that or nothing. A novel practice has been
lately introduced, by some of our Banks, ol ex
changing these notes for drafts on Savannah a t
iiileiesf off, which at maturity may be p:u 1 in the
same currency, less 1p ct for Exchange. By this
proves* the notes aie made aln active capital to the
Bank, at Hie rate of about 13 p cl. per annum.
New York. Febiuary 26.
( otton. — Yesterday about 2U‘Hr bales rhaigel
bands. —'i hi rimming there 1* a gieat demand and
sales to some extent a:e made. In prices there u
no change.
Hour. —A belter demand has s-pmng up. and
sales to some extent have been made at f 4,75, fox
city use and export to Eastern domestic ports,
lb* market is quite turn—have been of
fend for several thousand bands for foreign ex
poit and refusi'd.
Baltimore, Feb. 26.
Coffee. —The sales 0 f the week, pul-lie and pri
vate, are over 3,000 bag-*. At auction on Wednes
day a large parcel cf Rio was offend and 2,600
bags sold at 10;' a Il£ cents p lb. when the sale
was stopped. The prices obtained are considered
a* good us those of the two preceding auction sales.
Bv privatecooLact, sales of Rio are making at l!4
lit llj; of St. iToriuiigu at 9$ cent*; and La
guayra ai 11 $ cent*.
rlour —Howard slieet Flour —A decline ha*
taken place in me *tore and wagon prices of
Howard street Flour irue this day week. l#n
Saturday lasi and in the early purl of the present
week a lew limited -ales of good common braids
W’eie made al 7 I 375, although boidris geiierally
were firm at f 4 44. Within the la,t two or three
days ‘ales have been more general at f 4 375, and
about 3,000 barrels have been l iken at that price,
and the aitide 1* now freely offered at the same
rale. V\ e quote the receipt pine now at it 25,
City Mills Flour. —Mock exceedingly light.—
We continue to quote standard quality at £4 625,
and extra at £4 v 7s.
Molasses. —At auction on Tuesday, 20 hhds.
new ciop Trinidad were sold at 26 a 26$ els. We
arc at. vised of sales by private contract of two
cargoes of Gul-a, comprising 400 hud* at 22 it 23
cents, and of 10<» bane!* New (»ili un* at 2 s cents.
New Orleans rn hhds 1* dull at 26 cent*, and re
tail sales only aie making.
Provisions. —The transactions have been small
except in two or three instance*. We quote Bal
timore cured Ham* at 10$ ct«. with *»l«*s ; >ide* al
>4 els.; Frederick county cured at 7 4 to 7.; els. for
aborted; Western assorted al 7 a 7$ cent*; hair.*
at 9 a 10 cents; and Sides at 7 $ cents. There is a
very heavy stock of Wostein Bacon in market. —
Several p*icels, comprising between 200,000 and
300,000 lbs. were sold this week at 7 cents.—
The stock of other desciiptions of Bacon 1* also
laige and very ditficlut of sale. In the early part
of the week sales of several hundred keg*> No I
Western Lard were made at 7$ cents 4 months,
and since sales to a considerable extent wete made
at 7 J fa 7'j cent*, and we note a *ale to-day of U u
kegt of the same quality at S cents, with the dis
count olf for cash. W»• note *ale* al*u of 125 bar
rels of the same description in handsome order at
7 cents on time.
Sugars. —At auction «m Tuesday’the cargo of
the biig Frances Jane from Lorto Rico, consisting
of 196 hhds. wa* ottered, but only 75 hhds. were
Sold at $7,35 .if »,75. \\ e note a sale ! y private
contraet of 3(f hhds. good New-Orlcans at
I The sales of \ew-t»rlean* «re limited, and range
from >6,75 a
Whiskey. —We now quote hhd*. at 21 cent* and
barrels at 23 cents. I'lie wagon price of barrel*
1* I s s exclusive of the barrel. — American.
Al Gl STA I'KICIiS (I 1C ll I! NT.
Thursday, March 4, I>4l.
PA G(U\G — Hemp, yard 20 fa 25
Tou\ " 14 a 2u
HALF ROPE *>R>. s a 12$
PACO\ —Hog round... • 7$ fa >
Harm, !(• a 12$
Shoulder «, “ 7 n Jo
Sides , 7 ,7 1(7
BUTTER—(Wen p lb. 20 25
Sorth Carolina , U 15 fa 20
Country, ** I*' a 25
COFFEE —Green prime Cuba, fa* 14 4 j 1.7
Ordinary to good, “ 11 a It
St. Domingo, 10 ifa 14
Brazil, “ fa
Ixiguira , “ 14 15
Porto Hico, “ 14 fa 15
Java, “ 16 if 1>
Mocha , '* I s it 20
COTTOX —Ordmnryto mid'g,." 10 ,7 D \
hair, “ 1 j «7 l‘»s
(mod fair, ** 10j ? fa 11
Prime, . “ 11 fa 11 4
CAS DLLS — Spermaceti, “ 'fa 50
Tallow, “ 20 (fa 22
CHEESE — American, “ 10 (fa 12$
English, ** 4(7 fa 50
CIDER — Sorthem, bid. 900 (it |(Mm»
In boxes, doz. 350 it 450
( TGARS—Spanish, -• M. \5 (H7 fa *2O (H7
American, “ 5 (70 fa |2 0(7,
COUX — bushel 50 fa 50
FISH —Herrings N»x I 25 fa 1 62$
Mackerel So. ! • none
“ “ 3 “ > (\7 fa 900
FLOUR — Canal, .‘.ft/. 750 it >SO
Baltimore “ none fa
Western, “ none
Country, “ 500 a 6 .7(7
FEA THERS — /ft. 37$ fa 45
GI.SCER— “ 10 fa 12$
GUNPOWDER— keg 600 fa 700
Blasting, “ 4 (H7 fa 450
GLASS —10 >. 12, box 4 (Hi fa 4 .70
A>,\{) “ 3 25 4«H>
IUOS — Russia, l(H>/ft ♦>(»(• fa 600
Swedes, assorted,. . . .* v 600 fa 6 IH7
Hi*>p, “ 9(H) fa 10 (H)
Sheet, ** 8 iH7 fa 10 (H)
Sail Rods, “ 700 ,1 > t>o
LEAD—Bar “ 7 fa 8
LEATHER—SoIe, /ft 2> fa 30
Upper side \ 7.7 fa 200
Calf Skins, doz 30 <1 36 00
LARD— . /ft > <1 10
MOLASSES —.V. i trim ns,. . gal 30 .7 40
Havana, “ 23 <it' 3(7
English Island. “ non.* ‘fa
SAILS— lb *•; .r >
OILS —L imp, gal \ .70 I7 »
Linseed, ** 120 .11 2 *
Tanners, “ 60 fa 7v7
OATS— ftusft 50 fa 75
PEAS — “ 50 fa 62$
PA I STS — Red Isad /ft 15
White Had, keg 3 tH> fa 350
Spitni<h Brown /ft 4 fa
Yellow Ochre “ 5 fa s
PEPPER -Black 11 fa 12$
PORTER —London doz 350 fa 4 5o
and Ale, American,..ld)l 300 fa 350
R A ISIS’S —Malaga box 3 (H7 fa 325
Muscatel, ** 2 70 fa 253
Bloom, “ none
RlCE—Prime 100 /ft TOO fa 500
Inferior to gooti,. . ..** 3 *0 fa 4 50
SUGAR —Sew Orleans, /ft s fa 10
Havana, white, “ 13 fa 15
44 brown,,....** s fa 9
Muscovado, 44 > ui 10
St. Croix 44 10 fa 12 $
Porto Rico 44 s fa II
Lump, 41 It fa 16
lah\( 15 fa 20
Double r*j\nett 44 20
SPICE— " 10 fa 12$
SOAP — Atnrrican, So. 1,.... s «i' 8$
44 .Vo. 2 a fa >
SALT — I.iverpool ground, bush 37$ •» /h7
'Turk's Island 44
STEEL — German, lb 15 O' 16
Blisteteii, 44 8 fa 12$
SHOT All sizes bag I7 • fa 2(H)'
SPIRH'S-+\)gnae, Ath prf .gal \ .'*o .» 2 .*0
Peach " I (H7 (rs )50
Apple, ** 45 fa 60
Gin, Holland " 1 20 fa 155
44 American 44 t»S fa (»S
Rum, Jamaica 44 I 25 fa 17 »
•• Sew England,." 4(7 t s 5(7
Whiy-key, Northern,." 4(7 fa .'*7
44 HVr/rrn,..* 4 ,'H7 fa 75
4 * Mononga ." 75 fa 100
44 Irish, 44 200 fa 300
TOSACCO—S.i arolina,. lb S fa |5
Virginia •• 15 fa 40
TWINE— - 30 (,»* 37$
TEA — Bohea, •• fa 7ft
Souchong, ** 6(7 fa 7ft
Hyson,. . 44 7ft ,1# ) 2ft
Gunpowder, 44 1 (H) fa 125
WlNE—Madeira, gat sh> fa 350
Sicily Madeira,....* 1 25 fa 1 7.*
Nfterr v, “ • (70 fa 350
Tenenffr " 7ft ‘fa I 2.*
Sweet M-iiaga, 44 4(7 fa 60
Porte , " 7ft fa JiH7
Claret 4 *
44 in bottles, ..Jos 3 lH» i<t? 6 i\7
* 4 ft 00 fa 12 00
JOB PRINTING,
i
In all it* variou* hr an/ he*. neatly and *Tpeiiti-/v*J j
exet utrrt nt the ojjue of the
CII Klf N I C I, K hi. S K N I I N E L .
( lICVI,4IK, liBAV lUfM-fi,
1 (a Mint, Koi'ioAOdu.
Him. lii AiM, I'AMfUuTi,
liu.iior Ladiho, HotrrM,
H AMiiui it, I irur»-
Label*, Hoi k im,
Notch, Walom fctr cim.
I Mtl UK,
BLANKS
Os every variety, and of super o? < 4 - * I»tv to any
heirtolore not 4 n» Him *«ly, Loth 4- rcga.d- paper
ami typ<>)(U|itiiCil Mwiifwn, will be k*, t »-.f
, ktantiy on hand,or mu !<e printed to oi >i at *nnrt
notice. feb l>
AU KKI) A. OV ICKTON,
a rroush y at i.a it,
(an 16>w3in Moigaa r «»,,<«»
H11,1,U.U >l. >MVrOMI,
ATIOUShY AT I. I II'.
Ifh 12 w-lt Kllrf-llof. l.rn
JOHN M. AMI I ICS'J ,
A TrOn S/. I /I 7 /. /I IF ,
jan 12~ 1> rn Eaton ton, Geo.
* ft. <.% AM KV,
A T 7 O /< JV LEA /• I. A W ,
Hamburg, S. f .
Will attend to profn>iiDai tu*me» in the lo*-
tricn of Kd/Hji-l-J, Abbeville, arid Ham we II , utt!
al't» in the ( uurO A AujjuiU, Mi.
, I*. s . All Iji.Mii*-'- appertain m/ to I#. office of
Justin- of the (Quorum, will iikcwi-e be attended *
to. f#-f> '4 3m
i>a\ n> i . m: %i M
A T T i It JV R y A r !. A IT ,
.
feb 2' 1 y Wcturnpka, Aia.
1 IttUIN Al WINN,
A TTOK NEV S A I L AW.
i David Ihvvi?*, Marietta,(.a.
William I Wmir, Cai ... .< Ga. u2S
t K. I*. TUIITK,
A Tr<) H \ F i A I I. 4 W ,
• j J b llf-wht Forsyth, Monroe county, f#a,
John ij,
ATT OH SKY AT L A W .
jan Iff-3m Hamilton, Harris C>onti . (ia.
»M>KKH J. li l\M 1,1.,
, A TTORXF Y AT LAW,
nov 25- if Ha)ohne^a,(»a.
1 HOLT A GRIMES,
A TT O U V A K.S A 7’ /. A If',
Katont.m, fia.
The undersigned have thcrnseivea .n
the practice of the LAW, in the <»<muige * ( uroit,
and the adjoining counties.
Pulaski >. Hoi.t,
’ dec 28 w6vr Grucoc >. (.himes.
I sti;piii:.\s a hi hi ii,
• a rt o n a k i .s a r /. a w ,
( raw foi «. .. 11 •
I Will practn ein the counties of I aliafeno,« >re< i«
• Hancock, Oglethorpe, Wilkes; Worren r. beit and
Lincoln.
Alexander 11. Stefii- ns,
i KubEßr S. Bitrch. jan 14-lv
i
' Is. PENNEY,
M I \I AT I UK TAJ \ TER,
i Masomr Hall. j
Specimens may be seen at his room, or at tne it. * j
More of 11. A. HirLrnon I. nov I^-trwtf
% I (.1 M I s j t EE s.
A 7 TORNEY AT LA IT ,
. j fcepts-ly Madi-son Morgan county , Ca.
KOUEUT NiMIM.AN.
A T T II n X £ Y AT LA If.
Rurkei«viile, Kiberl Count}*, Ca.
J ln 13 w’m*
J. A. « IM.riEI.II,
A TTORXEY A T LA
’ j . Ilatonton. c.a.
■ | Will practice in the counties of .iemuliee Circuit.
1 ! Hancock of the Northern, and Newton of the Hint ’
1 Circuit. jan 7-trwSiwtM\lo !
i i
John it. stamoki),
1 I ATTOHXKY AT LAW,
i I f'iarkewiUe, Ga.
(< EORGI \ N \NK£KNS —A ■ slant sops y
..W of (GeorgiaNar keens of the very h»-*t ,j-j 4 ’.
. | in In and 31l yai.l piete.. I, r .a:e ! v
, j feh 27-'lm“ SIBLK7
IW. —The undersigned practices nt el ru
A of Edgefield and Barnwell Districts, . s . C.
Heturn Hay for lalgefield i- the oth Mar. h.
l : Return Day for .‘.arnwell is tte l:;th Maic;..
j j _ feb 27 JAMES T. GRAY.
> TO K A 11--ROA 1> P VSSK.V.Hs.
fISHB passengers on the Georgia Haii-iuad are
1 i M. ri fiectfolly not Bed . ..
s I run on and after the 20th inst.fio , ftbe
Bail—road to the Amen. f: :< ~ ~hi a I r.p
: | proprietor is leinciant y compelled t.< adopt this
j coarse in self-defence, a- the a get is ..... f
j the coaches that go out to meet the
cave passengers at this Hotel, when requeued ; v
j the passengers themselves.
Travellers and others desirous to patronizi
| American Hotel, will plca-c cn arnvn.g at the j
I ; head of trie Road, a*k for mv flmnihus.
JuSKI’H .M. KV \N<.
M idison. Ha.. Feb. 13,18*1. trwsiwdw
STODIHHI), lIOHCKSTER. \M>
HI Ml A M'S PIANO FORTES.
(1 PL AFT k Co. having the age no v
• f the mßnufactuirrs, have qgt re
ceived an a«so:tmrnt of their Mip-eno. VIANV*
FORTKS. which, with om former •'.ctk. v»o cai;
saleiy defy ail comjietitmn Tt* excel in sweetne" !
ot tone or duiabiiitv. Their instruments certainly
are superior, and all person* dcsiiousof purrhasing
good instruments, will find it greatly to their ad
vantage to call and examine. If ariy instrument
shou.d prove contrary to the recommendation giv
en, it may be returned and all charges paid.
All oruer* lor the above msirumr; !** will he
promptly attended to, and furnished ak as It w
prices as any other establishment m the cit\.
mh 4
PIANO FORTES,
AT MANrrAC TVRE R S ’ TRim.
nPARS( INS offers fors .
• ( MIC KLRING MAC K\ \ ’>. . | |.. . •
R.M NNS.n \KK fi(\v ai i SIoUARh.WoK
( ESFER Al'l N h am. of New York,al Um w -
es: Factory Trices, adding freight and exchange
only.
(•rder* will be received for instruments on the
same terms, and no advance required until the in
strument is received and approved tf-dec 11
IKON STO RK ,
Siirvtnnah, Ga.
j subscrihcn inform then friends und the
1 public generally, that thev luVc oi«ncd th.
i above named siorv, in tin. ertv. w hnc tnev w .
; constantly keep on hand.a full and com; .etc a--.ii
; incut ot Iron. Nmi Korn, Nvtis. s T i- ri ~
I kinds, Cart and Waook Boxes, Ac., i
oiler lot sale on accommodating terms. \ u :
Hi Tons Swcods Iron,
30 •• English
30 “ American “
‘2 “ Sheet •*
‘2 •• Hoorler “
*0 Bundles Hoop «
*0 •• Hand <•
30 - Nail Bods,
. ‘2O •• Shai»es,
Amencan, Hetman, last and Spang She! Tv.t
ami \\ a icon Ht»xrs.
bOu Kcij* Nails. 2<sortrd
HIN n.Nt; TO\, UIUI.HI' .V. n>
\ amiub. iVc 21
TIIF A1.1.1t. VT'OK MM .
For Mnbil, , rf.i. JViimc.sj. h :
1' 111 successlul o|wr>l on foi I allalu... \ ,U
--lacbicola, Quincy, st, Joseph*, and Bvnsarol*. 1 te :
' “ '.teens; OtOUgh, I , , , Mi,,
Hlonntsv ille and t linton to Macon, I. a \t \;
0 connects wnh the Mage to t olum‘ , V. :
j gomeiy ; also with the Montue Ua.i-ioadt-t •
s vlh and Harness rile. Frwn Koisvt . t . a i
111-weekly line tor Indian Springs. I', . k b
**■ Al Bariu-sville the Batlrv.ad connects with a j
li i-u eekly line lor Zebu lon. I,.ig,ai,.c, \\ , -t I . .111,
i Hternnlle. I.al iyettr. Dadeville. and Dudley .. .
j elmnpka and Montgoinei v . \1»,
l.raves Hieensboiougb Sunday. Wednrs.Uo.
and J a Jay 1. on the arrival ot the 1 ais tio.n \n
gusta. Fot seat- apply at the t.lobe Hotel, ti;,u
la, and at the Bail-rosd Hotel, lliren-; ,10
f lob l!» -2m J. .1. k K1.1.V . \gent
W IIOI.FSAI.K mil UMMN.
(4 \B\l\ A HUNKS. No 23i, HiuadMieet,
I arc const an tiy receiving lir*h *up, ..c* fi
I‘iup, 1 iluts, HiU, i'll", y\t. .MlO 11.1 vtrii'ivi
a"or<inrntol liru»he«. Toilet and M niPk
Trrlumny, Ac, of domestic and bin,- manuta*-
tures, selevle*! by thru agrn(«; «Wo a u« • > supply ‘ ,l
Fnglivn («ai\irn >i*rd. iountiy mcivhcul* and
l\>iiuani air invited to call and rxaniu c out
UtlH'k.
}*.\ libnal diacount made for ca>h. ocl 14
(1 Al I li '\. -Stolen frvmi a trunk »u» the .'l*t *u
or 4W ultimo, tvlwecn M«hed»r»»Gr at d
( harloton, *r\cial piiute*l Blank Ni» ITS. • ilk
m\ naire Mgnrd to each » a> ala*', oil** i
lali.ahle paj»rn am! letter. The 'awl punted
note'are ol a dlfleienl km«! livm an\ « hwh m»
name n Nigned. Ihe> being the only one* ’i.»m ;
a new Blank Ni*te ii*K>k. which wh> Uut a'isle
being notltied ot tbe at<o\e lo't blank*. \U
aona are heieb> \* a rued from rn«ivtii|; any tuck
deadibed Note* filled up. a* the blank* one liaud
ulrntly obtained, am) I will not t«\ them. k ira-
Kmable reward will be guru, «( they are ivatorrd
lonic. J.I'OWLES.
Macao, Frbiuary 19. IS4I. Sw
A ,r r.~~ H\ Jf.i. i>%t> i • •
in o.ir 11A.NL i > ia\* l ( »N. L
mh 3 !v |
Hl* \»f T A ri:«AIsK \<
i P|*HIS 1•. Itinn *UI open „
| in Januiry, IHH. ..ndertlM- ■ , ~
I-I Mr. and Mrs. IVon i»c, . ~i. • m
J Misintiii, Ihe «t te*l i'n"T,ia ....
j (.renenff-d *rf th* .■ • i;.a ‘i - . »«- ,r ■ . , ~
1 i*> »*hed rii f»u< r* and vra. . »m S: , •r.,. T ,|.' ,
iikJ *■ ate. *r.*-exp. nen* ♦. J,. w< . .
<»led in Kn_- m!, ■ it ' rve laugh* In, man y y tJ ,
ill thi* enmi*. , . Mr W. p:« enl-. j: n* -/-♦* r.
letter* frorr. 'l,e { ■.* £ * J i I
* dJHour. ;P; - f \h' J:, 1 *: . * *i ■
Lev. f>r. V. 4 Un I .a;. I ,■ '•
<»rrenha«:? ( its ‘ . j.. , !r j , *
< nlumJ.-n* (,% , and the I• , • < ,f t ,
Atatiemy, where ;.e taught l jr 1:
forme rn Ms , .4 „ ,»»■ k A
- l/ef; >,• ? - Mat#
Jhe i'. ;-e r,f t n.’>* a. , e • < •
m the Infitnt»r*n I
Seitim Ii s etr.,**r » !>-/*/ M . * ir;d ~
■ I'irdi i;-; ;.h, I • I.*'n. ,
nnalff* f.2h i erm . /uttm
J< ■ iOf ■ , . - f
J
I.in.'ua/* , ' - * 4
J/A) \a- i term
• ffrurnent ■ i,;*.;.rhe extra
M —1 i
I ough J - ' t** te:’!,.
hia-Aiu, Ter»pr<t. .e aiA T*.: * f.
term.
A *rna!i *-xti2 a. be * >
the u •* of ? e l.'i-.tiumr. •
f.v p i a. / . * i;,»f <: .*■ I : ’ti , »
redu-ed the pr. . •/> tne . aril ;a** * y.»
h ard’-th* of the f i:r l r
I: ini fin • u.:.* ... *;.e . »..a/e r. s
hie U I rri*, IJ‘. y!0 pf touts'!i •■■if I . Was .. (
WM. H. "AkRK,
11. i. A \ NN,
il l \i\NmiLh. /it '*■*•
I . ■ I I
K. ttOSbTU, J
V S. I'jj ..i-trl at ibe eapart# 4 '
| each term. «-t ,
Sparta,Jacuary '*, 1-11,
I Ol Nil I.J M. \< \ J>l. U \ .
rpu»
•• ured t,e »«■: , # ; *.'• I ;r . • . .-
year, ''tf ’* ** a . '• ; - . >. ♦
V.< i 1 **♦.-<!, t ■ 1- . «'V . , J.' ; '
*
j next.
'i lie • e tjf rr. , L. ■ tj* »
!cm-. ax e the ■r a : •> • . * •• • -
for aCu ii-Kiu iu' c:.e t .r • •..*
! ol our n .* jy.
Nothin ..Itte 5* - ti' ** . t ue •* -v *
v VlVill eji-latinr. at la i -d4 .. axz. ..i, f.r
inertial inuenl and in. ■.. «. * ,rA<* « -
corn pi I# h »hl k 0 <f t L K' ep! ' -* #-•
duiir g l.*ie \>*> a. • •;! re *x . '.
cunOuct. L' , of the •* . a:. . U* ■■ *■
uir read once a month es i.# '•»<• •• , >♦ *
dent*. \n : ar. art.*. :*-.*■ ‘ ; t • , -v
--ptOticiei:' .wt, - .of e- ■ , ■ a
•esi*. e s uai:* :v * •i• .a. • * ■ . ...
i»u j.' ! i rcurri.M .. x . * • ' •
to whici
will be in ■:
At the r;*.•#■ [ • e ,pror. I ey.a*r a
thrill be awaided such a* -'u , IttUi-ita;*
■eT.es id thei: :*■ ;e. t. .e • * • . •
kc., I’.i, appear .n a - .•* ’. <
;ia{en • f The nty el A z . ’»
i No stndcDl wr'l be a.n-.*. < : f.r a • rtf -
Van three rr.on" and r.■ ir • : a • . .
| ictice,ur! i-. ' f * Ane-.-.
Tne tern.- of t.. . » . eax : <-.1.7
For the ;-wf; £ i-': , -
Geotrrap'.y an . \:.f.n*eia; . . . •
H.gt’icr t ranche- jt L...* . a: . - * •
Any inf : t.atior t . *. .• * •; -o* ' . '-
taioed, t-y a•. #.t ** • • • *:
Board can rc* bad r *_ert u.n. tr. * - " -
I- ■ - :
.yv We are au ;.o:./‘ . ' .Xl*‘ c . *
Mitckfi i. w. . tawe 4 a ■*, > • —j *
•
>v- ; .n i.’di ; in.
HARRIS* N %I; M.ntiVi:.
jAMh' i»AKLJN(i. Hr.-'
TH« M v> sKLN xER,
CHA W . M. HILL, j
2S
I \ u D»SSOLI i lon.
r|V:
| SIM I-* -N. F« i . if vM \K >
s l l A. a' An* ■■..* . s Li - *. .*■ e> 2i'- ■ • .
! rr.* tuai con-eiit,
MARCLS JoHN<T»»N a. . c ;r .e • ; . •
! Law m the Norther, t.; . a *.
attend ta ail Lu-. • u ;* r. . . e t * .»:: .
j nim. <>fS ez* tia.
February !‘i, l"i!. 4 -
\\
f ▼ I e nan ..a t-a : _•* • r
tne Engii*.*; . r*:.- .• > . - - a-j .1 c
ar; tt.e : .jr *. m: he- - * .*i*r • *' >
>ati-fa tor> teftirr. >r.ia >.: c;.a.:a. '• : -- ;e
--icncy wii; be furni*l*€ :. j ,
Addre— (po-t pari, Ed.:.; -«. .. V -
nel, Aupi>ta, (.t.
Damei-vnle, i.»c*c. 3. IsL*. wtf j •
LAM) FOR s %EE.
r j n
I
j \ : tnal •a. j:-. it tras! to w. • ,
j Utracg 13-- ...i s *.‘.f • 4 -. i.. *
•
.ind tree* i».w » . •-:• .. e r- c* - . :.r.
La
• oii'isting f oak ; k■;i . ; t a.. a .< ....
The ciea.cd last ui-siei a_• d fence T- ;s
--| duction cannot e :*\ any ' .
• ..
j venient and a c I , ‘e- ♦ - 4
. H ■'use. Scn w. a . new, a:... . : r*. -•« . • -
| cc'-arv so. a countr* ic-iCeoce aci farm. 1 :»c
. :n ic*cat<-.i on ar. eeva'c-i : . ar.
rvrnaikahl* health*, w .in cf :;,e pn»»>'
| water scattered throui::v. ut the r rcm.-e- i
I i< al*o on the preoii>e>. or * .i :~e -:ie* :o. •
j mill or tr.i.li or factory •nene 4> ir. the up c. u .
« and its contiu -.ty : - : .. ver w :Ii ~ aae .. -t rt
I valuille. As the purchaser wi : da *f.\ eu.-nuf .
the premiers prev . .•* : : .a- . j *.he -...- a<*. . ;
would be needles foe me to any fartb<
icnptxn of tnc prerr .ses j I
■ • . -
triet, ifCkaiu; o.mty, in :. > \
Also, 2A* l a<-i’es j U N . in sft «h**t;ct it
Baker countttin* .vr.e.
WM, B, C ANTELt W
Lmco’n count* , Be- r ; . l'-4 w
N r OTICE.— \V ,«c sin* mN . u*d to r>e e**ax» i
of E. Letter, deceased, are rc-quest« :lo :r.ak- 1 . .
{ immediate payment. : ss c--
tate i* moe! ted. w».: pr«'t nl to.c.r r -. us. ■ .
. s • the l . - 4|t law
J W. C \RSW ELL, Aim :.
Ff - . 2-.\ 1" ‘ 1
• ———— j
the estate f Joseph Jan'*; , dcee w. i J f
present them for set Dement, a.i . the-t ink; tel I
-s > -\ '
le c ononet : **•-:/. .« r t -ot- V
tie tne rotate ML I- .oMA K v ;. A
V\ a* i o-: . \ "\l. '*
N r • * rfCE. — A KKOBs rdc.ted t :c * -*.• ~
■ ; . • s. Coi
I ake ira < jie ;* \ menl to r<. ..
.. t I
du.\ authentic-*te»!, u ’he tin e p-t
.aw . A. \N . RlU»l>E>, ks - ■ .
January 11, IS4!. wbt
X^OTiTK. — > - incebtei to the e*tat* } w
.ike «.■•. a> \ i _ ■*-••••' *
arc hrrel’i r.-'t.: t n i tben a.cn - j
ticate . Witiun t. oHn • , .v-0.. * i . i *
Ji UN >. 1 lii'.' '.dr
January I», IS4I. 1 (
K—AH pc CMS at mg . t
t'lCCN'ato ol Tetri M t. *<\ .cor,-. v
! I ;kc cou '.. a:e :v\, :o r* ■ o t •*
» attC'tot.u : f-c time pre-v. « t> m
r; .{ tho-c f t»d >a,d otate. Is- uakc im:m j
a:e par:no. :
' WAA ATH.
* »> kTH m. r. MILT V \
January 19. !>4l.
\’ *>Vl ‘ —MI p* -. I.' *\a\ ■j. .to-'-.a:.-- t, -• .
tne c'tate v -ra“. V. . . H.. ke evki ■•* . *
th- a-ed. u e .*-quoted to reuuci the n.. .! >
itlf'ted. v% T . t’-r t.:n» p.«*'C • . \ aw .a; -•
j th. <c inicMist to <a , .‘. e'tate to make immediate
lurv.f: ! I" VVn I. Hr.A IN, V.. u*i
*. JS4I
N' *>rKK V i ;<r-o *in vie. to the r.aW
o! Joseph " K«\: ate . i H.uke o. . .;t* . k
o. « 4'« s ; .. 2 « tfiju '‘IS; I-- tr.akc l Wnl.l’4 . av-
I nent. ami tho*e «l ' hair !*• naad' Xi.a- 'tfc 1
s ‘ es’* 4-. arc .- ’ ed tv' •* them i* . r aw
\V • S M > ' N - -
\v v LEYS S s
Fcru*r* ll >4l 1 J
!x' (Tin %
i c■ l W. \N N
j ta . :.t\. sir* ea'» ■. x\v ivq;se*t«ed to ,v;:d» . then* *
* > . .»
1 an! Iruve in.‘c! ted t • *>i ! C't t, ur »•
ir VILLI AM sN \ ** v
r's xmas * J s . I s I V ‘
1 . I le
4!o' KKU V il* * T'. N .. ;.,a*. the
iwM I!*! -
( \/ \ ..' AVi " • o . i ta
-
N*».l, to I d,oj V*d I .'Hit Hoi.** a. a' la .
\
t!»e Noise oil
The man «** v! o- . . ’* ie»n c. .\ e .-
pet s es i *
iVTOl'lCifrh ' *a*M ban, •* d • a.i on a o '■ 4 i f . : -
n*.r t WT.il f\il , I*l* dress •! tv . o «s (t
Hie Hot*f w»* sgrv> pace: L* ban. - ' , a
M| v
j -**i jvait of ffi* bivi'l thcic * a \%x\ u i.ii
u n d *i*3k or hollow
Vtie *N*« c reward w i*. e *;11 « r U-i t'. de - -. *« * I’'
{.* me of the man and hoi-*e,v»t hits J.- I; *l. . tor w
horse alone VN I VKK
■ T 1 hr i aro i:uan It Co’uni?' i a; • \ Ac t:»c:
at u g-elsr;.!, will puba'b the a".v*r twice at foi
want iheii ircounU. trb trw.’w
t.roixui* f olumbm cottmv :
HENJ AMIN HL\N* li\RT.o( Lspt
Ik hn 1 n's- c N di*.. .. t N.’ ■.* -oS c hi
ni«‘ 4 ".. i v hk-;«e kll I. K , >*%' a: '
«Kl next v i,n -A MiM •I I ■ki ' i■>
b* lime* Luke, senior, and Jsme* F oa.tu* to V
*i\ti dollar'.
i.uen uudei ms hand, thi* I «th Febrvars. l H il |
\\ 11.1 I \ M H. LI KE, J K. L
A true extract from the F*t«a» Bcv k. be
PAMU NARJUS.i leiY ,
February 19. 1541.
\l • J n 1 A % EEI» M HKffl
. 'f N " KK. I >** ryp
I- ’U-’ .V.ai,
0./i
A -♦' 1 ' • f I'* ptO
i.o
*:r
. L . • n.e,
VV urt/el. Rye
"•ed. tr \r.
A•• • ‘ Bo*ei, swi^B
t / o- N - LEI*. f* iudetaleaH4^m
■ \ t . ’ *■•* t »'«mtrr»eDt of fre*R
T»t*, Rea i*<, a
\ 1 sr ;4 . • i(i#ttci, Ju*. Ae.
■dmtftl of Flower seed,
T Hyifi , a;.; Tuhp«. For taie
s ’ V GARVIN A KaHt
i»mi M' r;: i i mkh*
| | .n M»j w*j f vtflfj
> f a* U>» r « ! *#» r* uty ©f I]
' <,L
•t M .
•'**- '» ’ **ierr
A&TER
March 3,1- jJ. .» jHH
mr|a:
s.-
.rid*, ted
4> , **■;#• Ur fray i .* *\ ue
K -i. J 'H' HATCHER, jH
_ »Du*;sTi: iTiie'i - % ul
U-* -irar. hi- j.r‘i I
» “* i• j I
g
» * e eA »«id
ii N Hk I HER.
HI KKI MIKHIFFHt >AEeH
\\ 1 "e '‘Sir? te>i*e Jfzorl U
• >'?■ ■ * . th* iega: hfl
* » • h, •
" a * 'he *» 4 jJ
fa-J
«' ' 4 fi 4 if >1
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