The daily sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1855-1873, April 11, 1856, Image 2

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COXTtJM IM S: Friday April 11 I^3o. LARGEST CITA CIRCULATION# No Inter news from (Vntjrnl America. • The Bank of Columbus. \u not to incorporate this llank was ]mseil i.\ mir last Legislatin’! 1 . Tho corporator.* have held*, meetinu In this city,elected# divecton , and adifpted other measures preliminary to the opening: of hoooks of subscription, as will be seen by the following official report of their proceedings : Com Mtu-s, ({., April 7, .1856, In conformity with the provisions of the 3d eet ion of the charter of the above named Hank, t meeting of the corporation was this day held in this city at the office of Hughes \ Daniel. tin motion, .1. K. Itedd was called to the i hair, and John Motiough requested to act as Secretary. An election for nine Directors was then held which resulted in the choice of the following gentlemen: .lolm McGougli, J. T. Hudson, William Rankin, William H. Young. J. Knnis, t'. M. Gnnby, Samuel .1. Hatcher, .1. I’. Illges ,nd,l. N. Harnett. At a meeting of the Hoard of Directors, at a übsequent hour, William H. Youngwas unan imously chosen President, and the first Mon- j day in dune next appointed as the day for opening books for subscription to the capital •tock. J. K. KKPD. Chairman. John Metiouon, Sec’ry. ♦ The Jullien Minstrels. \ an evidence of the popularity of this Southern Troupe in the cities in which they have performed, we copy the following corres pondence from the Savannah papers: Savannah, G.i., April 1. Jullien Minstrels: —Gentlemen: The under signed, anxious to testify their appreciation of your Company as model Minstrels, and also to -how how highly they estimate your desire to advance the cause of the South in Kansas, would he pleased to have you accept a Compli mentary Eenebt on any night which may best suit your convenience. Yours, respectfully, John Boston, Esq., Samuel I‘. Hell. C. A. 1,. Lamar, Dr. H. L. Byrd, lion. Levi S. D’Lyon, Col. James Sullivan, Spencer CdTrell, and 19 other-. Savannah, April 1. Gentlemen :—Your note of this morning is at hand. Allow us to express to you, personally and collectively, our unfeigned gratitude for the honor you have been pleased to confer up on us. Southern boys as wc arc, with a heart and hand in the cause of the lights of our native land, in opposition to Northern fanatical aggression, we ever hope to merit your confi dence and support, as manifested in your com plimentary note of this morning. Thursday night the 3d iust. will suit our j convenience to give you one of our most chaste j performances. Yours very sincerely. Jullien Minstrels. That Everlasting Stock Question, from the proceedings at the last meeting of our City Council (officially published in the Enquirer of yesterday) we learn that the vex ed question of the sale of the city’s stock in the Muscogee Railroad is in a fair way to he settled. The proposition made a few weeks rtnee by Messrs. Patten & Mustian, to submit the question whether the Council was legally or morally bound to carry out the contract, to three legal gentlemen, disinterested and not residents of this city, was substantially adop ted by the Council, by the passage of the fol lowingresolution offered by Aid. Jones—which, however, has to he passed at another meeting before it takes effect : Resolved , That the question of confirming ;he sale of the Muscogee Railroad Stock to gether with the securities offered by Patten & Mustian, be referred to the decision of two ie •-at gentlemen : one to be selected by Patten Mustian, and the other by the Mayor; and if, in the opinion of these gentlemen, there is ny moral or legal obligation resting upon Council, to consummate said sale, then this Council will proceed to do so. That an exem plification of the records of Council, relating lo this sale, up to this time, be made out by ihe Clerk and approved by Council, which aid exemplification shall be the only evidence übmitted to said gentlemen. Provided that ••opies of all the Pionds, Notes, and other doc uments referring to said sale shall be included in said exemplification. And providedfurther, that the gentlemen chosen shall not reside •dther in Columbus, Macon or Savannah.— Provided further, that if these gentlemen de sire any further evidence in regard to this transaction, then they shall be allowed to have ueh evidence brought before them as they may deem necessary. Provided further, that in case these gentlemen should fail to agree, in the premises, they shall have the power of calling in a third whose opinion shall be fiuai. fhc third person, if called, is not to reside in cither of the above named places. Putnam’s Magazine for April (which we have not seen) is said to contain a political article beaded “The ileal Question, which is antag onistic to the rights and institutions of the South. We presume that Southern men pat ronize this magazine as a literary and not a party or sectional publication, and they can .cry weli afford to <!■ without it for the future. We notice that som: Southerh book-sellers have already notified the publi.sliecs that they will sell it no longer. Push on the Column ! The Huntsville Democrat states that five hundred young men of the South passed through Nashville last week on their way to Kansas. We observe that the spirit is still alive aud active in Soutli Carolina, Georgia aud Alabama, and many companies arc form ing. Those Sharpe’s rifles are doing the busi ness sure enough. Hurrah for Beecher aud (lillif- man ! The Democratic party of the adjoining Ju dicial District of Alabama (the 9th) have effec ted a party organization to secure success in the approaching election of a Judge. They held a Circuit Convention at La Fayette on Monday last, and nominated Hon. John T. Heflin, of Randolph county, as their candidate. Hon. Robert Dougherty, the present incum bent, is a candidate for re-election, and lie is understood to be a Know Nothing in bis polit ical principles. Jlou. J. Faulkner, of Talla poosa county, refused to submit his claims to the decision of the Democratic Convention, and the presumption is that lie is still in the field as an independent candidate. The Mount Vernon Estate. The refusal of Mr. .lolm \. Washington to sell this estate to the Indies of Virginia, after his previous proposition to the Legislature, and after the progress the ladies hud made towards raising the fund, has elicited some surprise and remark. Last year Mr. Washing ton stated to the Governor of Virginia that lie might Inform the Legislature that he would -ell tint I acres of the estate, embracing the touih of Washington, the mansion, garden, Ac., for the sum of $200,000. to the State of Vir ginia (a proposition, in our opinion, which demonstrates that genero: .tv and a spirit of self-sncritieing patriotism are not always he reditary j. The Legislature failed to make the appropriation, and the Indies set about raising the fund. They are now met by Mr. Wash- ‘ iugtou's curt declaration that the place is not for sale. We notice, however, that one of his neighbors has said that he is willing to sell the land to the State of Virginia, but to no on,. | else. If this he so, could not the ladies pro ceed w ith their work of raising the fund and present it to the Legislature, wherewith to purchase tiie estate ? We presume that both Mr. Washington's dignity and his pecuniary interest would he saved harmless by this ar j rn ugemc nt. A New Artesian Well in Charleston. The authorities of Charleston arc having an other artesian well bored within a few feet of the old one. The diameter of the bore is larg er than that of the well completed last year, i ami it is supposed that this will obviate the j Obstructions to a free flow of water which have I impaired the efficiency of the latter. The well ! lias progressed to the depth of 134 feet: the old one is 1250 feet deep, the old well still | discharges about 25 gallons per minute, with ; occasional interruptions. The accomplished scholar and novelist, Win. Gilmore Simms, of South Carolina, is lcctur- I ing at Augusta ou the early history of the ■South and the first discoveries and settlements of this portion of America. Ilis lectures arc well attended, and the eloquent speaker im ! parts to his subject an interest and attraction that charm aud eugage liis audience. — Last week the police officers in New York turned their attention to the street beggars, with whom the city is infested, aud a large number were arrested. Many of them had babies in their arms, which, on the investiga tion of their cases, were shown to he not their own, hut children that they had borrowed or hired for the purpose of exciting the sympa thies of strangers. They were mostly foreigu i Cl'S. ♦ At Michigan City, ashort time ago, anlrish mau named McDonald was detectcdinentcring, through a window, the railway office in which the mail-bags were deposited on the occasion of the failure of a train to connect. Asa Chi cago maibbag had previously been missed at that station, McDonald’s house was searched, and the bag was there found, stuffed full of opened letters. In a trunk was found SBOO or S9OO in cash and near $4,000 in drafts. ■ s On her last trip from New York to Norfolk, the steamship Roanoke ran into the schooner Asia Minor, cutting her through and causing her to sink immediately. The captain of the schooner went down witli his vessel, but the rest of the crew were saved. The schooner was loaded with marble and coal for New Lon don. The accident occurred off Egg Harbor. The schooner Louisine, which sailed from Savannah for New York on the 22d ult., has been destroyed by fire off Cape Hatteras. The crew escaped in the boats, but had not time even to take their clothing or any water or provisions with them. After floating about thus for two days, they made the shore in safety. The schooner was loaded with 540 bales of cotton. 1083 sacks of flour, and other produce. The Savannah Republican learns that the steamer Isaac Scott has been sunk in the Oc mulgee river, with 300 bales of cotton. No particulars given. Connecticut Election. It is telegraphed that there is no choice of State officers by the people, that the Black Republicans have a majority in the Senate, and that the House of Representatives is closely contested and doubtful. No figures have yet reached us. Productions of Kansas. Gen. Whitfield, Territorial Delegate from Kansas, writes a letter confirming all that has been said of the inducements which that Ter ritory offers to emigrants. We quote as fol lows : In regard to soil, Kansas is unsurpassed, producing from sixty to eighty bushels of corn per acre. The finest oats J have seen grow, arc raised in Kansas. In fact, I have seen nothing j planted in Kansas (except cotton) that does’ not produce more to the acre than oil the best i lands of Tennessee. Besides being a line grail’ aud grass country, it is a part of the hemp region of the United States. Hemp is decidedly the mostprofitablc crop now raised, and the statistics will show that the planters of Western Missouri are ma king more money per hand than is made in any other State in the Union. It is nothing uncommon for farmers to pay three hundred dollars hire for negro men per year. 1 was raised in Tennessee, and have been in nearly every State in the Union, and I say to I you in all candor, that I have never seen any country that possesses as many advantages to new or old settlers us Kansas. Our friends in Wfetcrn Missouri—with similar soil to Kan- ! sas, make from six to eight hundred dollars a hand per annum. This will, 1 have no doubt, seem large to you, hut I assure you it is strict- 1 ly true. The climate of Kansas 1 regal'd as being far better than in Tennessee ; from first .Septem ber until first March wc have but little rain— mostly clear dry weather. The past winter has been, though, colder than ever known be fore. Our country I regard as very healthy ; in some localities chills and lever prevail to some extent—wc have no pulmonary diseases in Kansas. In regard to supplies you can procure anything you may want in Missouri— j if you get to Kansas by May or June you can raise plenty of corn. Our lands are readily cleared—you can make your location one day and commence fanning next. Eoi the Dellv him. Maj. Buford at Glennville. Mn. F.iiitoii : Although at the present mo ment the elements appear inauspicious limitin’ clouds are thick and lowering around me, the whole South in one united prayer should re turn thanks to the Supreme Ruler of the Uni verse I'm this day, so pregnant with the desti nies of our beloved native State. Maj. Buford, the model patriot and whole-souled hero and the gallant embodiment of Southern rights and American chivalry, according to liis proposi tion published sometime ago, left Hufaula this i morning, with the sinoereregretsof liis nunier- j oils friends and acquaintances, and was met when in about one mile of this place by a very j large crowd of citizens, aud welcomed on the part of the village by our townsman, .1. 11. Butt, Esq., in a very neat and appropriate speech, w hich was vecciveil with huzzas and cheers; and when he concluded Maj. Buford came forward aud then addressed Hie crowd, ! thanking the citizens for their hospitality and returning his sincere gratitude for himself and his company. To see that gallant man, who was tiie first to rear aloft the Southern rights banner and has so consistently held his posi tion, leaving home and kindred and the endear ments which bind him to Barbour County, severing all and bidding adieu to all, to go to a far off wilderness to fight in the cause of the South and beard the abolition lion in liis den, was enougli to awaken the dormant patriotism of the most indifferent. If an abolitionist could have been present to-day and witnessed the enthusiasm manifested, lie would have become convinced that the South has at length awakened aud lias determnined to vindicate hev rights “nt nil hazards and to the last extrem ity,” that she at last has become convinced that so long as she will submit the North will aggress and add insult to injury; and they have determined to place themselves under the Constitution and there stand, conscious that they are acting right, and if the abolitionists still encroach they will rear it aloft, and pla ced under its broad folds they can fear no en emy. But we are digressing from our subject.— The large crowd, after Maj. Buford concluded, escorted him to the Mansion House, and l)r. Jones being loudly called for came forward and again bade the company welcome, and bid them God speed in the noble cause which they advocated. Maj. Buford was called out, and gave a sketch of his trials in this undoriakiug : and any one who heard him speak of the coldness thrown on tiie scheme when first proposed by him, would have been forced to admit that lie was acting from con scientious motives, and that he possessed a large heart and a nerve of steel. C'ol. Alpheus Baker, Jr., next came forward and for about half an hour enchained the audience with the most patriotic and Southern rights appeal we have ever been permitted to hear. Eloquently did he describe tile fertile soil of Kansas and the inducements held out for young men there, and the remarks about old Winter and verdant Spring were truly beautiful. After he conclu ded dinner was announced, and the whole company sat down to a large and sumptuous repast. Dinner over, Maj. Buford aud several of his company were again called back to par take of champagne Wine and to give and hear toasts. Altogether it was a day most propi tious for the South, and 1 thank God that I have been able to witness such a sight. The Kansas Emigration is now a fixed fact; the ball has commenced moving, and I think the whole South will unite in the wish that it may continue to roll and gather strength, until it will be able to crush abolitionism and the hell born fanatics who are now disturbing the peace of the Union. Maj. Buford leaves Bar bour with the good Wishes of every citizen in it, who are perfectly satisfied that their rights are iu safe hands and will lie protected, and that he is one who will act up to the sentiment “equality in tiie Union, or independence out of it.” IV. W. S. Glennville, Ala., April 2, 18511. Ho for Kansas! A party of twenty young gentlemen, under the direction of (Japt. Batt Jones, left our city this morning, for Kansas Territory. They are all of the right stamp for such an enterprise, aud whatever station they may occupy in their new home, will be found good citizens, true as steel to the Soutli and her institutions, and willing to meet, if need be, treble their num ber of enemies of the constitution and the country, come they from what quarter they may. Tito party is to be joined at Marietta, by 10 or 12 others, and will proceed directly to Kansas, with all dispatch. AVe wish them success in the various objects of their mission. Capt. Jones promises us a faithful account of tlieir actings and doings, aud a true picture of the situation of affairs, as he finds them. We have no doubt it will be interesting to the pub lic, and the many friends of himself and bis party here.— Atlanta Examiner, 9///. Mr. Soule’s Mission to Spain. The New York Herald understands that Mr. Soule has completed his book, and that it will be issued from the press in season for the great Democratic Convention in Cincinnati. It will create a prodigious sensation, or else we are much mistaken. Mr. Soule lias not put him self to the trouble of writing a book without art intention of making “Rome howl.” Presi dent Pierce will be raked mercilessly, while Secretary Morey may look for such a scathing and searing as lie never experienced before.— Even his tougli hide, supposed to be the tough est in the world, will writhe under the sharp lash of our irate ox-Minustcr. •— Religious (Interest. From the aspect of tlioohurohcs last Sunday, we should judge a lively interest has been awakened in Macon upon the subject of relig ion. The very spacious and elegant Baptist Church, which wc attended in the morning, , was crowded to repletion and some ten or a dozen received the ordinance of Baptism. In j the evening the Methodist Church, quite as 1 large, was so crowded that a seat was difficult to obtain. A most affecting and eloquent dis course was preached by tho Rov. Mr. Evans, the stationed preacher, a good and talented man—an earnest, fluent and well informed pulpit orator—and sonic twenty or thirty pre sented themselves as inquirers.— 1 lamn Tele graph. A fool’s tongue is long enough to cut his ! throat ; a tattler’s long enough to cut half tho ! throat# of a whole neighborhood. Walker and Filtbustordom. Now that the war in the Eiisthas come to an end, uml Goi'tsclutkoff. Todclbcii and l'cHssier have won a, name, for their gallant defence and attack on tichuatopol, and General Simpson is attending to his rliouuiiitisiii, we turn to Gen Walker and Central America, rather than fall back listlessly on the piping times of peace. Very amusing is it to witness the quandary in which certain writers are placed, concern ing the hero of Filibiisterdum. They know i not whether to praise or abuse him. being un eertain whether he wII succeed or no . They arc all afraid of what “Mrs. Grundy will say. ‘’ Like Mr. Marcy, they would he glad enough to recognize Walker, it they could preserve j their gentility at the same time: but they do ! not like their polite cousins on the other side of the Atlantic calling them filibusters, when they are doubtful about the success’ of the ! cause. When that gallant English filibuster, Rajah Brooke, took possession of Borneo, a few years ago, there was no hesitation about recognizing \ him in Great Britain. Messrs, ('olden, Bright ■ and Hume called hint pirate, and many other harsh names, hut they were iu a most woful minority iu the House of Commons, and at last, thought it advisible to bo silent. When that notorious filibuster, Louis Napoleon, gained a foothold on France, the English Ministry ea gerly acknowledged him ; the French war in Algeria was a filibustering affair ; the British conquests in India, and in every other quar- j ter, are filibustering movements; Russia's in vasion of Poland and the Principalities reveal ed the same filibustering spirit : in fact, the three great European powers, England, France and Russia, are incarnate with tiie spirit of 1 Filibnsterdom. The charge of filibustering, when leveled : against Americans, may lie borne very phil osophically. The title Border Ruffians, spite- i fully bestowed on Southern men in Kansas, lost all its sting when they calmly accepted it. So witli filibustcrism, when we admit there | are restless, ambitions men born among us, j who wander forth to seek ml venture and some times profit by it, wc may as well give them a i name. Walker, tiie filibuster, sounds well enough. A man of storn courage, indomitable will, aud wondrous energy, who creates order out of disorder, and a, laud of promise out of Chaos, rises up before us. The rank of Coin mandcr-in-Chicf of the Nicaragua it army, he nobly wins. The government which lie estab lishes is as legitimate as any that preceded it. Fifty revolutions, full of sound and fury, hail gone before it; why should the one and fiftieth be unacknowledged solely because American citizens were connected with it. audit augured better results ? The war which Costa Rica lias declared against Gen. Walker, is caused solely by the jealousy which the Spanish half breeds have against Americans. Walker proffered them friendship, and they returned him insult. Not only this, but they sought to raise an insur rection in Nicaragua by villilving tiie Ameri cans. In the battle that is waging between the Costa Ricans and Gen. Walker aud his lit tle army, we confess that all our sympathies arc with the latter.— Ani/usta. Ohrott. Paper from the Bark of Cotton. Krom llif Suvitmi.il: lltqiillilfrtin. April s. We called attention some months ago to spe cimens of hemp made from the bark stripped from cotton stalks, and left at our office for public inspection. We now learn from the New York Day Book, that specimens ol’ the bark have been exhibted to paper manufactur ers at the North, which is found to he of a fi brous character, and is considered to be well adapted for the manufacture of good paper.— The best period for preparing this cotton hemp will be as soon as practicable after picking of cotton lias been finished. The plants should then he pulled up and dew-rotted like hemp or flax, and afterwards broken up and the hark separated from the wood of the stalk. The specimens of cleaned bark exhibited to experi enced paper makers, was considered equal to good rags worth 0 cents per lb. or about $l2O per ton, and was pronounced the best substi tute for rags of any raw vegetable material known to the trade. The practice with the planters, hitherto, has been after the cotton is gathered to collect the plants into heaps before preparing the ground for another crop, and burn them, so that the hemp which may hereafter be obtained from them will be a clear gain, and add so much additional to the yield of their cotton fields. The importance of an abundant and cheap material as a substitute for rags from which good cheap paper can be made, may be judged of from the fact that, the United .States con sume as much as France and England combin ed. There is no element in the progress of civilization more important than cheap paper. AVitli a plentiful supply of cheap paper, books can be supplied at cheaper rates, newspapers published at lower prices, and correspondence conducted at less cost. For some years the consumption of paper has been gaining on the supply of rags, and fears have been felt that the advance in their cost would ultimately be seriously felt in every department of literature, so that, should the discovery of cotton hemp realize the anticipations of paper makers, it will not only prove valuable to the South but also to the civilized world. The magnitude of the paper business maybe conceived when we take into consideration that there are 750 paper mills iu the United States, employing 3,000 engines, and which produce annually at 10 cents per lb. $27,000,000 worth of paper. To manufacture this amount of’ pa per requires 405,000j000 lbs. of rags, 1] lb. ’ of rags being necessary to produce 1 lb. of pa per. The value of tiie rags nt tiie average of 4 cents per lb. amounts to $10,000,000, to which, if the cost of making them into paper, including Icent to each lb. of paper in labor, with wastage, chemicals, &c., be added, would swell tiie cost to $23,625,000 to produce $27,- 000,000 of paper, leaving nett profits on the total manufacture of $3,375,000. For the year ending the 30th June, 1855, we imported 40,013,516 lbs. of foreign rags from 20 differ ent countries. Os this amount Tuscany in Italy, supplied 14,000,000 lbs., two Sicilys 6,000,000, Austria 4 millions, Egypt 2,406,928, 1 Turkey 2,466,928, England 2,591,178. The total value of the 40,013,516 lbs. imported was $1,225,150. The manufacture of paper lias outstripped tiie supply of materials, and rope cuttings, hemp waste and other articles have been resorted to, but the supplies of all have been insufficient to meet the demand, and prices have been steadily on tho advance. It is possible that the cotton fields of the South ) may furnish an almost inexhaustible supply of ! hemp, so ns hereafter we will reach the great j disideratum iu modem civilization, an iibun- I ilant and cheap supply of paper. Mr. J. Jtruwu, of Hart county, Georgia, who is described us the father of twenty-nine chil dren, bus discovered a rich vein of gold which yields from a small panful of earth a penny weight of gold. The old man and his little ‘• boys, with their mortars and puns, make from five to six dollars per day. dray books, Muted to suit nil the Unit Khiulh, and hound in toll J j j quite Hooke, for elite at thte nftire. at ys r.o “H’ tOK Os T||.. , l,l >luinl>m, i|? b f M 'V KCvfl S.dee ,v'Ktel'dll> lei,r| l „| . ‘ “ *W! l| 1 tnhlevs me H-kinn him ‘"C?B i; "’ CII.tKI.ZKTi*, April 8 1Ti.1... . fl lorllie peel week lllllellut 1,8,,!-; 111 I “ fl, B Ml|,pit 1.. date 4tu.z„:, h,Lh..,’fl hale, lo the ralne dele 1,,,, JAjJ ll “t pa.l week amount t„ a.ostl |,a, ‘ Tl '“ -L*B V.,.:'.t1., hat,-,, and on elitpl W p} * a *'"• k fl The sales ol the week niiimin, , it'aß •” 11 “ret for tiliie t f ‘Wfifl He quote, lor ||,r ,;,riou , ■ M';!: 1 ;"’ *•” “>•**■ Stvtvvui. April s, |.. B -do Mrs, at from 111 11.|,t G" 1 ” h-!„ \ i rived elite,, ‘Jit April, jis/V, (■ hales Sea Island T j,‘W.B l-lamh leavii.o u sleek on keff‘"''"“ltidJß • leered, :>1 14,a.,7 hale, t'plainl Wl 1 hist 4:',.(17 hides t 1d.111,1 )„! V tor,he. time last .vea, vfl An Interest in The Sm, H The business of The Sm, “* mul ” 1 dan do imp,, “ ‘“B interest of one third, or one half m B establishment is one of the , uo . t ’ ! *B well appointed in the .South. I,?!*® -aid to he prepared for all f'B printing. The paper l ms i ‘ ‘“B only seven months, and the ready attained m public Liver. . )fl guarantee of its future t.romJ \ person qualified to emu| Uc , Jfl pertinent with spice, life und aid rtß preferred. For terms Jm ,| I Sun otticc. >r suMi'css JCUOMAS <U ‘> I. areinilhorizscdtoaimMii,, 1,,.! 1.1 Esq., H 8 G uni id iduto fur Oiul„. f . t OGiut us tiie City ol Colmiilm-t, ? Clrrtion ."*d Monday in April, 185 H. Mr \\ K arc* autliorirtud toaniiom,,, \ , H| j K~|.. as a ealelidalel„r.liid::,.„f „„ I tlio City of Columbus. Ido l ion :d .Mouduy in April. Man-fi Vk 18f0. H iiv., W<• ;•(•• Guthorised to announce :> 4YTn\J| i ITT. K.iijr.. as a candidate fur ] ( “Ul t of tin City of Columbus, KJ.rtion no tlicmd Moudsiy in April > x , H Mill'di 21*. ISoti. ■ ♦ WK HuuouncG ,11 NH .< V,j\ Sdivitoi “t tli.-Criniimil Court <'i‘ Vltm. ANT 1-'tKK coinP(j^B \r<” are h. ivhy lleliti, ,| to upper lAB I Itoeni. this i Kri.law In ..i^B o 7’ . nVloek. ill Uniterm. I'erhrjl! By order of tin* Foirmun. Afrit 11. .1. W. SAI'H.VLiMx-j^B .IORDAN 1,. HOWELL, I ■H s-nrK of the t'l'J AND COLLECTOR. 1 >KO.MIT ;ittrillion “iv. n n.th .L tdari and iii my hands. S * Mire at tho Store of Harrison t >5.(,.y. H Columbus:, April 10, H NEW HOOKS. fl 11 KISTJ N E, or Woman s Trials ~r .1 Tnumfl J Laura J. Curtis. ■ Si hun i > land the Circassian War; by .(. \( MujH Harm*st Limvood ; Mr*. Hrnfzs last, “ H Ucrollortions of the Table Talk of Sajiiiitl which is added Porsoiiiaua. H Ciitlinrinc Yalmar. or a Father's Omar Pasha: by C. \Y. M. Reynolds. V Kivin”ton. or tin: Youii” Uansor Unsstvr; graham. Old Dominion. <>r Southampton Ma.-sd i>: M .Tamos. H Appleton's Cyclopodia of Hiojrraphy, tulw/iifi^B of original memoirs of tho most of all times; edited by Francis L.lhbks. Harper's Magazine anddodov's l<ndie<lM;.fori^B Received and for sab- bv GEO. M.MATEH April 30- 1850. U .TAMES J. TODD, fl N". 20 Lust Hide Broad Manufacturer and \V hole sale DttH I \ Tm. Sheet Iron. Hollow Ware. Stove Pip,^B I Kootin.tr. Cutierinjj aud all kimls<if.l.l-Woft(^H i ly attended to and warranted. H April 10, 1850. H XBiz, TEMPERANCE lIAU. H ‘W* THE JULLIEN ‘1 JVC INSTR ELSB 1) ESPKCTFULLY announce, to the t t zonsof bus that they will give three of and fashionable entertainments ;it T>TJWHiO this place, commendnrr on n WEDNESDAY EVENING. YPBlifl Tin* company comprise, the follovviii: lifers: B| A. .M. Hernando'/.. J.K.unpW^^H j C. Harris. lb Mile;, ■ ; .). P. Smith. ,1. 11. Dateji Frank Weston. ff.J.WalW* forming the greatest coiiibiiutfimi of tinted in one company. The Jullicus wiM appear each eveuin.’ in their ordinal performances, in troduc. ear a lion of new Sonars, Duetts, (lleefi and beautiful Dances, sparkling Ron Mot 8 . | lcsqilos, kc. &c. H &rj Doors open ill (piarter past 7 <*'• !• commence at S precisely. Cards of Adniis'iou 50 Cents— I'hiMi - ' 1 half price. Mr. Particular attention paid toM-atir April S. It.W.WWyB (MIX. -'lClmrtiAl.il z. 11 McDOIIUAI.D &. CARITH®’ ■ Attorneys at fl COLUMBUS, GEOWb ■ \l* 11.1. pnutico ill lill threoliuli,- >“*■ yy v*heo Circuit; in the countiw “• Clay, Early, and Kandolph.of the Calhoun and Decatur counties. • f t ln*e'“‘ ll B| cult. H February 28, 1850. ly . . E ASIII ON AItI, E DRESS MISS .VI. K. SKV.MIH’It rr-.lirclfulr dies of Columbus, that she eugf-P™ ness of Dress-mukim;. at the resWcnW''- dall, Oglethorpe street, four doors ‘Lwiß s(|iiare. Tlieir patronage i> respectttilh Mrs. ,S. J. K END ALL, at the same jm tinucK the business of eloaniiiK? 11 dressing Don nets. Ladies may rely “ ! * ■ work done iu p,ood style and with prom)’* 1 ■ Mareli l-‘5,1850. COPARTNERSHIP NOTK k ’ ■ J. H. DANIEL & THOMA&fI UAVK lisinriatril witli ttaul “fl . will continue tiie , |( |H ! Clothing and ut their old stand, under the style of J- . fif ® Ttlry litre tllkn llli.i l.i. tli.nl ..f rrtimmk a lo their numerous friends and CUB , ’ „. ||iep(® liberal patronage extended lo thom u 1 and hope by renewed exertions to W H and favor of the tradijig: l*ubli‘. While tho new linn will spare no ~. ..(Jnjufl tiie wants of their patrous, it is DopcU i _ tlt fl ed will not be uiilllilldful of the*ir ‘ while those indebted lo .1. lb Duuml* ■ are reap eel fully notiiied that tin-’ ■ .lanuur.v 21. ts HAMILTON Attorneys and Counsel^ 1 ’) 1 ■ COLIJVIItb't!, \\ r ILL prjietice in .’Hnsrogecam tlghJß \\ ties in Georgia, and Riissell co Otlti'o over tlm rtori’ of E. WarnnrU.n _ Jil'oad aud K;tnd<dpli streets. fl March 13, 1850. -—■ MARCUS A OIIAFFI 1 If A VK .Inst Received— ■ 1 10 Barrels Apples, ■ New Fresh Jjard, ■ liiirge haud-mudo Houii**>• ■ Kino Havana Cigar**, ■ Sultana KaiHiiiH. Fig** * v< ’- ■ Worcestershire Sanco* ■ Fiohli supplied of Macearo • ■ Dried lleef. 1 March 10. ■