The daily sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1855-1873, February 20, 1856, Image 2

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CO L UM lit: S: \\ rdmadnt Vlnining. Kill, ill, INSO. I.HUiKST CITY ( IRtCLATIOX. See the very attractive hill for Grinp s \the mcMini to-night. Can it fail to difltv amity ti ed ♦ The Circus. The performances this afternoon uul to-night will be a benefit t Madame Louise Toumaire, the unrivalled equestrian. The skill and igilitt of this lady on horseback are really • urprislng, and her feats avo roeeived with ..rent applause. As to-day's performances ,-lose the series in this place, the company will no doubt bring out their full strength and i ••astonish the natives” by the brilliancy of their exercises. Uo early to secure a seat. Georgia Legislature. Ou Saturday, the Senate was engaged nearly ihe whole day upon the bill for the Sale of the Western and Atlantic Railroad. The sum of ?3,500,000 was inserted as the amount of stock to he sold to individuals. Without taking a vote on the passage of the hill, the Senate ad journed, but it was believed that there was a large majority in favor of the hill. In the House, hills were passed to change iho times of'holding the Superior Courts in the Pataula and Chattahoochee Circuits and to add the county of Carroll to the Hit Cougres- i sioual District. Both of these bills had pro- j uously passed the Senate. The bill in refer ence to the I’enitcntiary was considered and passed. (Wo notice it more particularly in another article.) A number of bills were read tho first and second times, and then the llou-e ; adjourned to Monday. ♦ Commercial advices from Culm represent the - iigur crop of the island to he short, the weath er having been very unfavorable to planters ! during the winter. There is every indication | that the present high prices of sugars will he ! maintained. Tho House Committees. We observe in some of the papers (and the I usually correct correspondent of tho Charles ton Standard is prominent in the matter) u j good deal of indirect laudation id’ Speaker ! Banks for his appointment ol’ very able South ern committees. No credit whatever is due i him for this course, because he has in every instance overwhelmed Southern tact and tal ent by a majority ofTrce Soilers on each iui- ■ portant committee. In our opinion the com mittees nro all very black, ami faithfully min or the designs of the sectional fanatic who framed them as well ns the Black Republican party dint sustains him. IVe venture the assertion that now, for the first time in our national his lory, one section of the Union is not only ex cluded from the bend of every committee of the least consequence, hut is also in u minority on every one of them! Never before was sectional feeling carried so far as to deprive either divi sion of the Union of tho chairmanship as well as the majority of overy leading committee. We have often had Southern Speakers of the House, but never was the North so slighted mid insulted by them; never was a seelional biag and design apparent hi their appointments “f committees. The generosity and liberality of Speaker Ranks, indeed! The character of these appointments unmistakably exhibts him as “a political grimalkin, purring over paltry schemes and mousing over sinister designs”— promoting soctiouul strifes, and concocting treason to the constitution and the Union. - - —♦- Tho Vote by States. On the final vote for Speaker of the House ot Representatives, the State* divided as fol lows : For Banks—Maine, Vermont, Massnchu etts, R. Island,Connecticut, N. York, X. Jersey N Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin—l I. For Aiken j Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, N. Carolina, I 8. Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky, California—lß. lowa was equally divided, li will thus he seen that, • o far as the States were concerned, the vote was u sectional one. except that lowa was di vided, and California voted with the South.— Should the election of President go the House, however, a protracted and hitter contest may he expected, and the result cannot now he foreseen : os Delaware, Maryland, Tennessee and Kentucky have a majority of Know-Noth ings in their delegations, Missouri is Whig, Texas is equally divided, having a Democratic and Know-Nothing member, and the other states that'voted for Aiken are Democratic. -- Another Revolution in Mexico. The latest arrival front Vera Crux, brings accounts of another rebellion in Mexico. Haro ,\ Tainan';', one of the old Manta Anna party, had “pronounced against the government of Coinonfort, aiyl had obtained possession of Puebla, where, it was said, ho was exercising great cruelty. Comonfort had sent General ViJlarial, with 3,(KH* men, to attack (lie mo lutionists, but the issue was unknown at the latest dates. Should the rebellion make head way, and Santa'Anna he recalled, he will ex hibit in history more vicissitudes of fortune ihaii any ruler of ancient or modern time-. -♦ Georgia Penitentiary. Ou Saturday last the House of I’epro-enta.- tivos passed a bill relative to the Penitentiary of the State, which appropriated $70,000 for i the purchase of a suitable site at the Stone Mountain, in Delvalb county, and the erection •of the necessary buildings. The hill authori zes the Governor to employ a chief architect, and to order to the new location such number of the convicts as he may think proper, under a suitable guard, to work upon the building. Such work as they cannot perform is to ho paid for out of the fund appropriated. - We aro glad to see by the Kufauln and other Alabama papers, that Major ltuford is receiv ing some handsome contributions, from gen tlemen in different parts of the State, to aid his Kansas enterprise. We trust that he may he able to start by the time appointed, and that his company will arrive out in time to he .if essential service to the cause of tho South. ‘ A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing.” \i h meeting held in Henry Ward Bcjeclier* church, week before last, between s3o,t)t)G and St HUM Ml of the stock **f the Kun.sus Knti grant Aid Society \va- snb-cribed for in shares of $2 each. In advocating the subscription, Beecher .-aid, among ntliev things equally flip p.mt and unbecoming, that “ the Sharp rifle wasa aioral uyeut of more power to redeem Kan sas slaveholders than twenty Bibles.” This Henry Ward Beecher is a rather smart specimen of that class of religious demagogues j and imposters nt the North, who have made themselves popular and secured fnt stations by substituting politics or science for religion in their discourses from the pulpit —men who put on the priestly garb and assume the title of ministers of the Gospel, hut whose “sermons” have no more connection with the Bible or religion than the jokes of a, circus clown ! have with the verse of Homer or Milton—who ■ have sold thomsclvex mid their talents to a fashionable aristocracy whose sins have lo he “whitewashed,” and for whose extenuation the stern requirements of the Gospel have to i he ignored or explained away by subtle sopliis- j try, or shoved into the back-ground by some ! worldly “charity” or “principle” which neither requires religious devotion nor ton largely taxes the pockets of the congregation. Reedier him- - seli'is a ‘■preacher” of the theatrical order, and j delivers his discourses from a platform in front ! of the pulpit, with a .small table on which to rest his manuscript while lie “cavort-” upon the stage and tears to tatters the parts of liis harangue intended to he striking or impre sive. Tlie greater portion of Iris ‘•sermon” lie reads from his manuscript witliall the monoto ny of a legislative clerk reading sonic long act of incorporation ; but there are occasional pas sages in which he wishes to make a display,— these he commits to memory, and with all the mock pa - ion of a theatrical Cassius or Hamlet, he lets off the eloquent declamation reserved for the occasion, in thcincnutimc striding from ono end of his platform to theother and throw ing himself into every attitude pictured in a school boy’s “Speaker.” This over, he re sumes liis monotonous reading until another tragic part, calls for extra performance and energy, ilis discourses arc usually mi aboli tion, on some recent striking incident or Ivor- j rihle accident, on manufactures, or politics— anything in fact but Christianity or religion; arid they tally disclose (he character portrayed bv I’ollok, who •'Another fkispul preached (Hun Paul's, Aml one that bad no Saviour in it.” And the “whited sepulchres” who compose his large congregation iu Brooklyn persuade themselves that this is Gospel -worship and genuine Christianity, and vote him SO,OOO or SB,OOO a year for leading them in the way to salvation and eternal life! In reply to a religious paper >T New York city, which censured his remark above quoted about Sharp’s rifle ami the Bible, Beecher de fends his sentiment by asserting that every man will admit that to fell a tree an axe is j more effective than a Bible; when a ship is sinking at sea, the life-boat and not the Bible is most likely to afford safety, ‘&c.,*&c.: mak ing many similar comparisons, but nil of them referring to physical agencies and effects; whereas, iu liis lecture, he commended the rifle as a stronger “moral agent” than twenty Bibles’ This pitiful and shallow attempt to justify his impious assertion is worthy of the politico-religious party to which lie belongs. It is part ami parcel of the casuistry behind which they take shelter when the treason of their “higherlaw” doctrines is exposed, lie j was repeating the base abolition boast that the : Sharp rifles in the hands of the Frecsoilcrs of Lawrence deterred the law and order men from assailing the town, when banc and Robinson made their famous “treaty” w ith Gov. .Shan non ; and lie was urging his pious communicants to withhold their Bible-distribntion contribu j tions fortlie time and invest them in funds for j the purchase of Sharp’s rifle, as a more powerful “moral ageut.” In plain words, Beecher lack ed tho courage and candor to say openly that his bearers should cast aside religion for a while and resort to violence to make Sonth ; enters adopt their standard of morality, and tlicrelore lie skulked behind a comparison of the Bible and the rifle—instituting n nonsensi cal parallel between a moral and a pbi/xieal agent, and. quite reversing the “higher law” rhetoric, ascribed to the latter the superior virtue and power. Counselling treason and violence, he yet wished to invest it with the l garb ot morality and Christianity, and to fur | thcr his malevolent designs ho was willing to | degrade and discard the Gospel and ils teacli j ings. But the abolition crowing over the “moral I agency “ and power of Sharp - rifle, as oxcrop- ! litiedin (lie history ot the Kansas di-uirhuti- j cos. is as shameless and perfidious a reort as was ever adopted by any body of men. With these rifles in their bauds, the Free-oilers at Lawrence quaked with tear of Gov, Shannon and his pai ty, and pledged themselves not only to abstain from resistance to Sheriff Jones and j ether legal officers, hut to assist them in cur rying out the laws. On the faith of these promises, the Governor and hi- posse with drew and left theta unmolested. Now , how have they redeemed their pledge ‘.’ \Ve have be fore us the New York Daily Times (Free.soil sheet) containing a letter from its own “spe cial correspondent,” dated Lawrence, K. T.. January IGtli, and lu mentions and crows over , several acts ot resistance to Sheriff Jones made \ by robber/ whom he attempted to arrest and ; whose capture the citizens would not aid in, hut rather thwarted! Being thus battled in. his efforts to bring offenders to justice, the •Sheriff sent the following note to bane anil Robinson, the Freesoil leaders wlio made the treaty with Gov. Shannon, and received the • reply subjoined. The correspondence needs no comment : Lawrence, Jan. 13, 183 b. tiK.\£EALs Robinsonani>Lank— Gentlemen: Did you or did you not pledge yourselves, nt i a council held at Franklin, on the dav of December last, to assist me, as Sheriff, in the ‘ arrest of any person in Lawrence, against w hom 1 might have a writ, and to furnish me witli a posse to enable me to do -o ? Respectfully, Samvel J. JoxE.q, Sheriff Douglas eountv. K. T. Here is tlie answer: L v ahk.vi i; Urn, Jan. 18, 18,>B. Sir: In answer to your note of yesterday, we state that, at tlie time and place mention ed, we may have said that we would assist any proper officer in the service of tiny legal pro cess in this city : and, also, that no forcible re-.stance would he made to the arrest, by you, of one of the rescuers of Branson, as we de sired to test the validity of the enactment of tiie body that met nt the Mission, called the Kansas - Legislature, by an appeal to the Su preme Court of the United States. Vours respectfully, [**'■‘“l] .. |(. Law. S. J. Jones. Ksq., Present. This reply is characteristic of the l'rcesoil party, and displays at once their treachery and their contempt for law and order. The same day Jones sent them another note, in ■ quiriug whether they did nut acknowledge him as the Sheriff of Douglas county, and wheth er they recognized the Territorial laws and j would aid him in carrying them into effect. To which, says the correspondent of the Times, j (lie answer would probably be returned that ; they did not recognize his right to catechise ’ them ! Alter these manifestations —after this viola tion of pledges and exhibition of treasonable purposes -it ought to be practically proved ’ that hemp also is a moral agent of some- power, i and that Sharp's rifles arc no protection to traitors and law-breakers in this country. < “To thi- complexion it maxi. conic at last.’ Ah wc Expected. The night after Mr. Toombs’ address ou slavery in Boston, the Massachusetts Anti slavery Society held a meeting in the same city and adopted the following resolution : Resolved, That iu the invitation extended, by a professedly anti-slavery committee, to that brazen and shameless advocate of man stealing, Robert Toombs, ol Georgia, to conic to Boston to defend the nefarious practices of the South, after liis insulting boasts that lie would yet marshal liis slaves around tlie base of Bunker Hill monument, and defy Massa chusetts U> liberate oneof them; and in liis dis reputable appearance last evening, in the Tre inont Temple, boldly doing his worst against the sacred rights of man, and to defend “the sum of all villanics,” the world is presented with the climax of effrontery, on the one hand, and of gratuitous folly on the other; audit, clearly indicates how low is the moral condi tion of the metropolis of the commonwealth respecting the most revolting system of op pression know n in the annals of time. Mr. Toombs reasoned calmly ami logically I with these fanatics, ami otnloavored by every word ami sentiment to restore good feeling and courteous relations between the two sec tions. The above resolution attests bow this spirit was met and appreciated, and it should ■ admonish our Senator that in forgetting the dignity of liis State* and going to defend her institutions before a tribunal which had no right to arraign them, he has hut “cast pearls before swine” and incurred for himself aboli tion abuse and villificution only. It is hardly necessary to add that the same meeting passed a resolution favoring a disso lution of the Union, and abused Southern re ligion and morality without stint. — At St. Louis, ou the 15th inst., tlie authori ties were making preparations to blow the ice out of the harbor with gunpowder. The I weather was very cold at that date. - ♦ The Committee of Ways and Means of the House of Representatives is said to be moder ately protectionist in character. The coal and iron interests of Pennsylvania were consulted in its appointment. ♦- Southwestern Railroad. At a meeting of the Board of Directors on the 14th. the president submitted a statement ot the business of the Company for six months ending Ist instant: The earnings of lload for the six months amounted to $105,308 74 Showing an increase of $05,370 23 over the corresponding months of the preceding year. The current expenses, including amount expended for new Gars, wove 84,789 59 | Leavingasnetprolits $110,719 13 The Hoard declared a semi-annual dividend of 4 per cent, amount ing to $ 48,884 00 Paid for interest 10,442 89 i i ~ $60,32(5 89 liie balance ol earnings is appropriated to pay lor 000 Tons Hails now being received, and for additional motive power. At the annual election held on the same day, the following gentlemen were re-elected Presi dent and Directors: 11. K. Guyler, President; Jno. IV. Anderson, NY in. A. Black, Uni. S. Holt, T. M. Furlow, Hubert A. Smith, Directors.— Macon Telegraph. Important from the Fe.iee Islands. TIMITY WITH Tin; Kixu 111 1T..1V.V UVRMSt; or HVK IK.tr. K TOWNS. NNe take the folio wing from the Panama Herald: I he I nited States sloop-of-war John Adams, F.. It. Bout well commander, arrived nt this port early on Sunday morning (3d), from the fe.iee Islands, via Valparaiso. The following interesting particulars have reached its : Tin- I States) fship John Adams left this I'ort in July lust, bound to the Fejee Islands, to impure into ami seek reparation Joe mativ cruelties committed by the natives inhabitin'” ! those Islands, and to demand indemnity for i ,I|C plunder of several American ships trading 1 n<l fishing in the I'ecjeau Archipelago. The obstinate and refractory character of 1 iitese savages demanding the exercises of vd ; orotts and bnvsh measures, the commander of the John Adams deemed it expedient to tench them their obligations to the human race, and ; ‘■*''* s °i” n manner that made some impression i ttpou thorn, and which, it is to he hoped, they will long remember. During the entisings oV the John Adams in the Focjec group of Islands, me sharp engagements took place between her crew and the cannibals of Polynesia, in which American valor was always victorious. live o( their hugest towns were burnt, and ;ui (he house* therein reduced to iiHhc*. We learn that an important treaty has betu ratified between eomuiauder Uoutwdl and Tui \ ite or 1 hokambau, the King of Fee.jee, on behall oi the American Government, the par- Oculars of which have not transpired. The visit ot this sliip to the Feojee Ishmds has resulted in re-establishing order, and re storing the confidence of American citizens residing there. TELEGKATIUC. * t'liAKi.r.s'inx, Feb. 18. The advance on the Gaimda’s news is an eighth to a quarter, with sales for the day of 3,300 bale?. Charleston, Feb..l9 —10 I’. M. Cotton market firm to-day, with sales of fif teen hundred bales. Good Middling 9;{- to 10c. Nf.w Oneeans. Feb. 18. The receipt of the Canada's advices this morning, gave activity to the cotton market, and resulted in sales of 1,.T00 hales tor the day, at fully an eighth advance. ADDITIONAL BY THE CANADA. Commercial Intelligence. The Liverpool cotton market had advanced during the week ending the Tlst ult. Jd. per lb. and closed steady and quiet, the saleshav ing comprised 83,000 bales, of which specu lators took 12,000 and exporters 18,000 bales, leaving 30,000 bales of all descriptions to the trade. On Friday, the Ist inst., 12.000 bales wore -old: and on Saturday, the 2d hist., 10,000, Hie market being firm hut quiet. Fair ; Orleans was quoted atlijjd.; Middling Orleans j at 3 Bi-lIkL; Fair Uplands at Bd., and Mid ! dling Uplands at 3 11-Hid. Tho stockouliand comprised 1)0,000 hides. >/’ which 233.000 were American. The Liverpool Breadstuff market had eon i sidcrably declined, and Western Canal Flour ! was worth 375. and Ohio 40s. per barrel of 100 Ills; White Corn commanded from T7s. Bd. a 89s. and Yellow IBs. per 180 lie. Reef hail de clined tu 114.-. perewt. Fork had declined, ’ and was quiet. Bacon was quiet at 375. per j cwt. Lard was quiet, and bad declined, being quoted at from OOs. to this, per cwt. Sugar had declined Is. perewt. Bice had declined. •State or Tiiaue. —The advices from Man chester were more favorable. The London money market was more strin gent, and Consols closed at from IMLJ a 90jJ. Tito Havre cotton market on the 80th ult. was a trifle lower, In* ordinaire Orleans being quoted at 8!l. General Intelligence. F.verytliing seems to indicate that peace will soon be declared. The peace protocol memo randum was signed on the Ist inst. by the min isters of the five powers, and a short armistice will probably be agreed upon. Despatches re ceived in Vienna from Kussia, confirm the telegraphic announcement of the uncondition al acceptance by the Czar of the propositions of the Allies. Tlie Congress was to have met iu Paris about the 1 1 tli inst., and everything ! will probably lie settled by the 25th inst. Tlie preliminary proceedings, &e., only await the arrival of the Turkish Plenipotentiary, Der bisli Pacin'. Baron Brunow and Count Orloff represent Russia, Lord Clarendon England, DcAzeglio Sardinia, liuol Austria, and Wa le wski France. It is asserted that Prussia refuses to accede to the conditions exacted by t lie Allies prior to admission to the Peace Con ference. and that consequently she will be ex cluded. The Queen's speech was quite meagre, and did not even mention American Affairs. Tlie London Morning Advertiser, however, says that Air. Buchanan and Lord Clarendon had j an interview at the Foreign Office on the 29th ult., and that very angry words were exchang ed in relation to the Central American ques tion. From South Florida. The latest dates from Fort Myers, (found : in the Peninsular,) are to the 3d. The bodies ! of three of the men attacked near Fort Deynaril on the 18th ult., have been found—two others still missing. Lieut. Molinard, with Com. i, returned to j Fort Center, from an expedition to Lake Okee- Cho-Bec, on the 23th Jan. Ife reports having had a very boisterous voyage around the Lake —stiw no Indians nor signs of their having been there. Ft. Mel’ae remains uninjured. Lieut. Molinard, with fifty men of Com. ], is garrisoned at Ft. Center. Brevet Major Arnold’s command is much prostrated by sickness and long-continued and j severe service, and the troops at Fort Myers ! are iu the same discouraging state An Express-rider from Ft. Bernard to Ft. Center was fired on, and. on his return, saw two Indians. Ft. Simon Drum, one of the Forts burned by the Indians, is to be re-built and garrison ed, for tlie purpose of establishing a depot there, to supply troops to operate in the Big Cypress. The surveying companies, for the safety of whom some solicitude has been felt, have all come in safe. Tlie Tampa Peninsular, from which we take the foregoing, speaking of the removal of the savages, says: We have all confidence in the efficiency of t 01. Monroe, but, without increased means, lie can effect but little. —Sarannah Journal. Russia and American Enterprise. A correspondent now in St. Petersburg writes as follows with respect to the opportu nities for American enterprise in Russia: There is in this country a wide field open tor enterprising American merchants and me chanics. The Russians tire getting sick of the English and French monopolies, and are anx ious to cultivate, trade with the United States. Englishmen have done nearly all heretofore, Mr. Wiliams’ being the only ‘American manu facturing establishment in the country, and Mr. Hopes, ol Boston, the only merchant. \t a dinner party, the other dav,‘ at which there were a number of influential gentlemen, I was told, by one too who knows well the feelitms id’ the govetmucut, that it tin American company would locate an American cotton ( raw cotton) house in Russia, extensive nndexelitsive priv ileges could be obtained. There is not a, sin gle cotton house in the country, though there is a large consumption of the article hy the manufacturing establishments. All inul and does come from England. There is nm,ues tionably a wide door open here for a splendid fortune in the sale of raw cotton, ami this J get from the very best authority. Shall tier, the telegraph man', has been here as head of a company for the purpose of nego tiating with the government for the purchase of a large iron establishment, and if they can succeed a large fortune will he made These things arc well worthy the serious considera tion of our enterprising merchants and me chanics. Now is the time to strike, before I!us siuagain gets mixed up with the English and French people. The only interest 1 fed in this matter, is that 1 believe that American energy and en terprise can do more to change the’ face and condition of this country than any other upon the face ot the globe. 1 his is a country of great internal resources, audall it lacks energetic spirits to bring it out. FI,Ol T R. ,wt ' iv “ d tVbruurv 14. JAMES IJUON, COMMERCIAL. OFF ICW F THE DAILY sp\ Col uni bus. Be.. February -Jo. p- Tli’e cotton market yeMoolay. was active buyers, and all arriving cm wagons met with i, ;| i at fill} prices. 33 c liciuil “I'minn* sales at p, c ( i the warehouses, however, but little trim,|iii„| , , t he high asking price* of holders. Dr. C. F. Crane, of New Orleans, lm s | od iu the city, and will deliver n Free Lin j this evening, the commencement ol’ a sevj,. • the subject of the diseases of the throat lungs, by anew and successful system ~, halation. (JUSTS ATMLXTIT CONCERT HALL. WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEU.-ij Last Night but Three ol’ the Season Miss ELIZA LOGAN. Will appear u.- ZP A XT la I 3XT 33 , In Dulwer’s ever popular play. ~f t|„. LADY <*’ LYOUs MR. W. H. CRISP, as CLAUDE MELNOT MRS. W. H. CRISP, AS KATE O’BH.IEn . e- MISS LOUISE REEDER. As SUSAN, in the Farce ot PERPECTIOK CIRCUS! t . *9 ‘-’ • . i v I BALLARD, BAILEY & CO/: FRENCH UQUKSTRIAN COM PAW Including tlie Celebrated TOl RNIAIItE TROUPE : At the request of her many admirers, the coni]., have consented to prolong their stay in Columbus ais j er day, for tlie purpose of giving a BENEFIT TO MADAME TOTJRNIAIRE AFTERMOON AND NIGHT, THIS (Wednesday) EVENING, Feli. it Among tiio new features introduced in the pert": anccs of this company, are the following: A brilli new Entree called tlie CAVALRY OF THE CRIMEA. Also, a novel and dashing display of Managing; Iteming Six Horses, by MADAME LOUISE TOURNIAIRE. while standing upon their unsaddled backs. IVT OUSTS- BENOIT, The unrivalled Trick Rider, from all the principal I ropean Amphitheatres; in liis great act of Light But ing upon Horseback: and likewise with Madame T iiiaire. in the ELEGANT PAS STYRIENNE. The Juvenile French Riders, Masters Ferdinand and Theodore. Will appear as the ROMAN WRESTLERS. M’MSELLE JOSEPHINE, Tho favorite pupil of Madame TOtmiiaire. in a i rs anee of Vaulting Equestrianism. Messrs. W. J. Smith, A. F. Lyming, W Watson, Madame “Watson, T. Hopkins, and the oilier Members of the Troupe, will appear in: several acts and scenes of Equitation and Gymna* Hie Entertainments to conclude with a NEW EQUESTRIAN HURLETTA. Eerlbimalice to commtncc at 2 anil 0 o'clock I'. ‘I Admission 50 cent. Children and Servants 25 cent- FIVE DOLLARS REWARD. I WILL pay the above row ai dto the tinder tS—-J 1 of my POINTER SLIT, strayed or stolen from my yard on the 10th inst. She is about I tnnn! old. white color, with one brown ear. Fell. 2o if J. H. DA MIL GARDEN SEED. Il sT received a fine stock best Harden Seeds. W JAMES LIOOX BACON SIDES AND SHOULDERS. fI'ST received on consignment, 39 boxes (20,000) Ck • I dler & Co.'s very superior Bacon, Siil(*s and ShouM'S JAMES LIGON. DR. CARRIGEK, IS prepared to attend to all Siirsrionl cases committ’ . to his charge. Office as heretofore, in the old St. Mary's Hank I n ing. Residence—Northeast corner of <’rawford ami F syt h streets. Feh. 12 h SHAD! SHAD!! V\ r ‘• are receiving large quantities of * f FRESH SHAD ilaily. All I ri’ei's 5-3- accoinpanieil vvitli tlie can'll, punefiinllr attended to. * B> any point on tlie Rail Roads. February 32. 3w HOGAN &. TEIIG OMNIBUS LINE. J >IIIVATK FAMILIES vyWi names and’ place‘of residence a t tli'* Olgetliori*'orPiti'v Hintscs.®’""’*""’**™ 1 * February 19. GEORGE W. HAYW> FONTAINE WARE HOUSE. HUGHES & DANIEL, T\ arcltoiiKc, Commission, Receiving 111 Forwarding Merchants. flMl.t, mider-ignisl have taken tin* now Fire I'r- A. 33 are House, recently erected in the rear nf 3 ‘ Tlireowits. Holt K Cos., adjoining die Alabama “ J House, and are prepared to attend to all consignin'’ and to receive and stole Cotton. They will do a gw* ConmilsKoß. Storage and Forwarding Bnsiru—. “ eular attention given to the Sale of Cotton and other Produce i he usual facilities will be afforded and care fill att l '"’ •riven to all business entrusted to iboir care. 3 good supply of Hugging, Rope and Salt* ways on band. 3VM. It. Hl'Olh’ October 1855. m m. DANIEL. SITUATION WASTED. 4 CITIZEN competent to transact any re§i>w ,; ’ j.Il business (except hunt labor,) is out of employin’ ‘•nil wuitlit tie glad to Lave it lor a very reasonable 1 peiisutlon. Apply al this oUloe. February Is. DATES. IA HESIt Mate* just, received at s'foVEU.s QQNFKCTIOXHi V SPUESDII) SADDLE HOUSE AT AUCTION. A I. “ o'clock mi AVeduesday next, the 20tli ; “ -* V iUNtaul, wo will sdl in front of our tbc well known pacing Horse T E ivr F E S T . His ituulitics as a Saddle Horse are seldom equalE'l never surpassed. Ito ran bo seen at A'crni'v - til the day of sale. Terms Cash. ALSO At the same time and place, a large lot ot Furi* i,l " f Dry (tnoibi flotlit ng anil Groceries’ HARItIHON A Mod EH If Eohruary IS Auctlun H ’