Daily morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1850-1864, May 01, 1850, Image 1

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„ is delivered to City The Rally Morning New* h#lf yeai )y in lubucribers « < 1 P‘ r ; n “ P we V paj^le to the idvance, or tor TEN ck» rM^w^'i-^-f^sssssf'VT.oo 1,quire, 1 insertion, $9,aO jl o months, 12,00 Each continuance,.. 5“ j’ usre 3 months, 15,00 l *^^-ieS«f^-:X-dtho.e j:rr."S* -«*. « cf - fed co cent * oer square for each insertion 1 rate> . «r«ftS^KSSl22*X ar buisnesat'S.Bnd all othe w iH be chart „ e to their regular business as agreeu , ■ed extra. „„.»Ji n sintheir advertisements the average"numbVrof*line, agreed for, will be charged at proportional rates. |iaritab | e Institutions and „^K3-^-C«thoutdi. K as'to X number of insertions, will be pnh IXd da’y undl ordered to be discontinued, and charged apoordingly. appe „ in the Tri week- jjfgr-Allnewi Lettbra directed to this office or the Editor, must be post paid. morning news. More Mysterious Knocking. A REAL CONNECTICUT GHOST STORY. The New York pupersare entertaining their readers with accounts of “mysterious knock ing,,” similar to those at Rochester, which are alleged to have occurred at the house of the Rev. Mr. P. , at Stratford, Ct. The New York .Sun contains the following narration of the mvsterious affuir, derived from the “most respectable and reliable sources.” It is a very plausible story, but we have little doubt that deception is practised by some body : Six weeks ago last Sunday morning, or. their return from the church, the family was alarmed ut finding the out side doors, which they hud looked an hour or two previously, open, and a piece of black crape tied to the bundle of the front door. Supposing the house Imd been broken into for the purpose of robbery, they immediately searched to see if they had missed anything. They found all .. the chamber* mid inner doors, many of which they hud left locked, wide open, but nothing was missing. The next day, on entering the room occupied by the elde-t daughter, they found the window und looking glass covered over by sheets, and on the bed a figure laid out to represent a corpse. Tliis discovery was followed in the course of a few days, by strange noises about the house and by various articles being thrown about, ap parently by invisible hands, most of which seemed directed ut the young lady —She be came very much alarmed and eventually was taken ill, and seized with convulsions, from which, for some period, it was feared she would not recover. Notwithstanding the close guard which was kept over her during her sickness -strings, handkerchiefs, and other articles, were from time to^ime founil tied tightly around hr neck and pillows, from another bed in the room placed over and pressed upon nor face. Many such things occurred, which it wns impossible for her to effect, without attracting the notice of those who were watching by, nod taking care of her. After some days she recovered and »as sent to a neighboring village. A day or itwo after her departure, things began lobe thrown about the house us before. They con sisted chiefly of small articles,such us nails •crews, pebbles, spools of thread,iStc. During the young lady’s sickness, neighbors were railed in, and became eye-witnesses to many of the strange things which were occurring about the house. The nrt clt' which were thrown about hega-i to be of larger dimensions—a spoon, knife, fork, book, or po ker being occasionally moved. The distur bance was neither constant nor regulur. / limes nothing at nil would happen for hour and again a succession of falling, or throwing incidents would occur within a few minutes of each other, and in different parts of the house. The gentleman’s son. a lad of some twelve or fourteen years of age, far from being aWmed, found great amusement in the chasing and pick ing up the m wring articles. One evening |j e thus run into a room adjoin ing thut in which the family was sitting, from whence had proceeded the noise of something failing to the flour, nod immediately uttered a piercing scream. His friends going in found him on the floor, writhing in a fit. He was taken np and cared for, und recovered from it the next day, when he sa d that the cause of his screaming was. that somebody caught him around the body, just above the hips, and was biting him up, as he feared, through the ceil- ’"g- Of the fit he was not conscious. The ev ening and every evening for some ten days thereafter, at the same hour, and occu- •mnally through the May time, the boy was seiz- w tli similar fits, which would lost one oi mn ~ e hours und then pass off. »oenumerate the articles thrown, nnd the number and appearance of them, and above a 'l the impressions made upon neighbors nod stranger# who frequently were witnesses, would require not only whole columns hut whole news papers. We glinl, have room for but few, and tn selecting them we ahull not refer to what we have already narrated.—They are vouched for m the most unequivocal manner by gentlemen who are in no way connected with the famiiy, and who could not for a moment be suspected °f the least collusion, and are the result of ex aminations made bv them at the request of the family. On one ocrasion t urn gentlemen of our ac- ffuaintance made a thorough examination of 'he upper part of the bouse, leaving the whole ef the family below stairs- Having looked through the different rooms without observing anything unusuul, they were ret iring down stuirs, when a fite-poker, which lh<fy had no ticed hanging on a nail in one of this chambers passed near their heads and stuck into the floor before them, near the foot of the stairs!— They returned and once more re-ex;ontined the premises. Nothing and no person, could be found. The door of the chamber in which the poker had hong wus closed just as they left it, hut the poker was not in its pluc— Moreover the tloer vassosiuated that it could not well be opened without attracting their at tention, until they had passed further down the strain thun they had done when the poker wltizzed by. .A gentleman and his wife who reside in the vicinity, while these strange things were go ing on, found at another time, in a room into which they, us well us the family,were passing and repassing every few minutes, nine figures representing females in u kneeling posture, be fore epcli of which wns a Bible, opened, and a piiasuge therein maraed by the turning down of a leaf to it, or by a small piece of paper laid upon it. These figures wero dressed with great precision, every hook und every button was fully udjusted, und their preparation would be the work of many hours if uttempted by human hands. The dtesses belonged to the young lady und her mother, und were hanging up in closets within a short time of the discov- The passages in Scripture were chiefly inthe prophecies of the Old Testament, and were appropriate to the mystery which appar ently existed in the house. Not the least wonderlul of these things was the discovery, in different parts of the house, generally in the morning, of a specie? ot hie roglyphic characters upon the walls, and or the floor of the piazza, and also on oiled pa per. One of those on paper was of exceed ingly high finish, fully equalling engraving oi steel. Across the top were character in He brew, and below, in up and down column others similar in apnearance to Chinese, lhe Hebrew characters were deciphered by inti ligent ’neighbors, nnd found to be “The Kt to the Mystery.” Of the Chinese, nr other characters, nothing lias yet been discovered, hut they have been, or soon will be, submit ted to gentlemen in this city, who are ac quainted with the Chinese, Arabic, and other lunguuges. Up to the 15th instant these manifestations invariably occurred in the day lime. On the night ot thnt duy they were mantained with increased violence, und without cessation, un til about four o’clock inthe morning. During that time consi lernble damnge was done to rious articles of furniture, und several panes of glass were broken from the windows-—all under the eye of another gentleman from those previously mentioned, who, at the re quest of the ftnilty, WHS endeavoring by all the means and ingenuity ut his command, to aolvo the mystery. The particulars of all the unaccountable things which took place during the night we must pass over, ut least for the present, confining our-olves, ns wo have hitherto done, to the more striking and extra ordinary ones. While at the supportable the previous eve ning, he was uniuzed more than once ut the falling upon the table of a knife, or fufk, or spoon, apparently from the ceiling over-need ; mid whilst seated near the fire, alter tea, bunks, daguerreotype cases, (all from tallies and shelves which were distant six to ten feet from any person in _ the room mid other articles, w ould it out and examined it thoroughly, boon af ter a cessation of these things occurre .1, he left he room, hut hardly had he done so when, on hearing another notse, and breaking of wood, he run hack, und found pieces of the little- drawer, previously examined by him, (filling upon the floor from the bed, und the front pieces of it falling Iroml the window, where a pane of glass hud evidently been broken tiy it. The occurrence, whatever it wus,/frightened the young lady so that she hud left hier bed, and was running into her pHroms room. She after wards stuted t'.taitthe drawer had beuten itself, or been heuten, against the headword of her bed until it was completely biokeit in pieces ; and the indentations in the headboard and the scattered fi ugme nts were cumilusive proof thut such was the fact. Shortly after this the chamber occupied by the parents became the scene of ktwckings similar to those which have liken described as having occurred at Rochester, f hey seemed to come from the bead-board of tlie bed. The gentleman was culled in there, and with the closest scrutiny he could make, was fairly bothered. At his'request the occupants of the bed moved us far from the head-hoard us pus sible, hut still ho heard the gentle rap, rap rap, now on this side and tiow on that, and again directly under his nose. Having stud ic'd the accounts of the Rochester knocking?, he set about endeavoring to Open a communi cation with the spirit in the way pursued til that place. In tliis he was partially successful The revelations made were, however, strictly of a family nature, and for their benefit, nnd among them many by-gone (acts staled, and also some things the truth or falsity of winch the lapse of a short time will determine. The next day more stuffed figures were found ia another room, and several lit the neighbors were called in to look at them.—— While there, one of those present, a gentleman, received a blow from the top ot u candle stick, on the back pait of his head, in a way which could not be explained by himself, or any one else. Subsequently the same gentleman while walk ing up stairs, with thy hoy above spoken of, suddenly found him choking by his side—the effect of a handkerchief tied tightly around his throat. Front tint tie and from its tight ness he was convinced lhe boy did not do it himself, and no one else was near them. It seems to have been effected instantaneously, while the gentleman's eyes were ior an instant, averted. At other times the boy’s clothes have been lon't almost off from him, and he tumbled into a cistern near the house, while it was full ol water; books thrown from a book case about the hous 11 . flat-irons and other household im plements thrown id her and thither about the house, of which it was intpd&ible .to give any connected account. The iafbily have, .has ins, rendered every possible facility to those who have undertaken to examine the subject, and in that have offered most convincing proofs that thev were not parties to ahy attempt at decep tion. We have not yet told the lilfilf of whet we are fully satisfied is' true upon the heat authority and nut connected with the family in any way, but for every thing which we have named above we have the most reliable, und tojjjA, undoubted and undoubtable testimony. We fire as per fectly satisfied with the truth of wliat we have repeated, us though we ourselves had witness ed it. J. B. CUBBEDGE, Printer of the Daily M orning Nliwa, respectful ly informs his friends at td the public, that naving made extensive additions to his well selected assort ment of printing materials. he is prepared to excecute with despatch every vsriety of BOOK and JOB PRINTING, and on tonus ns reasonable ns those of any other establishment in the South. By the em ployment of the best materials mid superior work men, and giving his pcrsorial attention to the business, he doubts not that he wilt be able to give tlio tullest satisfaction to all who may favor him with their pa tronage. , STgr" Orders may be left at the Book Store in Con- cress street, or at tlio office oi the Daily Morning News. No. 117 Bay-street. mnr 25 |?1NE SPONGE for sale by A_mar 30 LaROCHE A GODFREY. AYRES* CHERRY PECTORAL, JUlt fe- **■ ceived uiul for Bale by LaROCHE fi GODFREY, Gaudry's Building. HOPS, HOPS.—New crop, just received and for 11 “ale by LaROCHE & GODFREY, r "" ,rm Gaudrys Building. rpo THE RADIES.—Just received from the North, a very fine and large assortment of Bon nets—Pearl, Chain, White, Albino, Fluted and Lace, with a splendid assorftnentof Parasols, Misses Albino, and Laces, Jenny Lind, Flats und Riding Huts, Ac., which ure offered at low prices by W1CHMANN A LICHTE, 139 Broughton st., opposite J. Dixon A Co’s. Con fectionery. mar 11 SANDS’ SARSAPARILLA. For sale by 10 LA ROCHE A GODFREY, fob 26 Gaudry’s Building. 'T'lIOMPSONIAN MEDI CINE S.—A fresh * supply of tlie following articles: Composition Lobelia Ginseng, Spice Bitters, Hore. hound, Thyme. Afr. Cayenne, Poplar Burk, Golde Seal, Comirey Hoot, Blood Root, Ac. For sole by JOHN A MAYER. Druggist, 156Broughton-st. JOHN A MAYER, Druggist, 156Broughton-: Next door to Lilhbridge’s now Building. J UST RECEIVED, per Bark Vernon, Twenty Boxes Mucenu Oranges, Ten bble Apples, by mar 29 J* D. JDSfcE. In the same way a pair of candle snuffeis which were on the mantel piece, and which the gentleman we speak of hud just examined, (they being of curious workmanship) leemed to jump from the st.elf and fall to the floor near his feet ; he being, the while, the omy per son near them. He retired, with the family, soon after ten o’clock, and just as he was getting into bed he heard a Inuif'clal'er and scream. Slipping on u portion of his clothing and running into the luiil he found it came from the young lady s room. He called to her to know wliat was the matter. She told him the noise was in the cluset.ii) her room, and requested him to come in. He went in,and the noiso and screaming onnliMped at intervals. I’he young lady was in bed' and the closet door shut. A light was Inirninglin that, as also in the other rooms of the house. The noise seemed to be a series of knocks upon the door, os though withu person s knuckles, from the inside, succeeded by h blow like a kick against the bottom of the door, lie could distinctly See the door vibrate, as he ran to it. On opening it nothing likely to pr*- duce a noise was to be found ! 1 he chamber spoken of wns located similar to the usual second story hall bedrooms in our city dwel lings. The door to the hall whs locked. Al ter his unsatisfactory search in the closer, the gentleman stationed himself in the domwny lending to the large chamber, the door being wfide open, and the door from thut chamber to the hall being shut tight. The scream had ceased, and the knocking in the closet stopped. Presently the door from the hall to the chamber wns knocked upon in a similar manner to thutot the closet, from the side in the hull—» succession of raps and then a kick near the bottom, li" went to it, and taking the knob in his hand, awaited a repetition of the knock: it came, and opening the door instantly, (there being a also in the hull,) he sav\ -nothing mo e disconcerted than before. Considerably amazed at his discomfiture, but more determined than ever »o ascertain its origin, h“ again took his position in t ie doorway. The knocking ceased, and lie was on the point of retiring again when he dis tinctly saw the broken leg of a stand »huh had been lying mfa bureau in the ym.ng lauv s mom, fly. as it were, across the room ai.d stuff the window, braking two panes of glass and then failing to tho floor. On being made ac quainted with this, the mother came in toas-ist ?he gentleman in covering 'he hrokea^.ndo^ on account of the old air, with ablator, and while sodoing, he saw a hair brush which lmd also been upon the bureau coming *"**'£• he' and finally strike upon her head. A 1 this » me the young lady remained m the bed, and no less than six feet from the bureau. Having seen, or fancied he nnd seen, the rriiddle of three small drawers it) the top of the bureau move in and out, the gentleman took TO BUSINESS MEN., ilishcrs of the “CHATTANOOGA GA- OPIRIT GAS LAMPS ,—Just received, a ct plete assortment of Lamps, for burning Gns Fluid. The light is much more brilliant than oil or candles, l'ur superior in point of cleunliuess and are more economical. Also, constantly on hund, the best quality of Fluid for burning in tlie lamps. For sale by mar 15 COLLINS A BULKLEY, 10U Brran st. IVORY TABLE CUTLERY.—Just received * n**r Soi per Southerner, n full supply of Ivory and Buck Horn Cutlery, also. Pocket Knives Nut Pickers.Nut- Crackers, Lamp Scissors, Ac. For sale by mar 4 COLLINS A BULKLEY. VANILLA BEANS, at 61 cents; also, Extracts ' for flavoring Ices, Jellies Ax. at reduced prices. Received and for sale by G. R. HENDRICKSON A CO. mar 4 Gibbons' Building. SW & TOWNSEND’S SARSAPAR1L- ^ LA .’,n or 8a e by i LaROCHE A GODFREY, Gaudry's Building, CANAL FLOUR.—50 bbls. »uperffne Genesee ^ Flour, landing from brig Augusta. For ralehv or 1<J CHAS. A. GREINER. with an entire New stock oi' DRU^c&FM. 1CALS, and FANCY ARTICLES, at No 139 South-side Broughton-»trect, (.formerly Wal ker's Marble Yard) is now ready to furnish Mivthine in his line, at the shortest notice. SODA WATER, mode in ills own peculiar way, sent to any part of the city, and always to be had at the store, in the heigh- est 6tate of perfection. * PiiEscniFTioNS put up with care and despatch. The subscriber having served the public long and faithfully, respectfully solicits a share of patroiiuge mar87 • THOS. RYERSQN. R ECEIVED per shipHartford, 10 boxes Oranges; It) bbls. choice Mercer Potatoes; 5 firkins Goshen Butter; fine Cheese; 100 lbs. Smoked Salmon; 1 bbl, Cranberries; Parsnips, Beets und Carrots, mar 29 JNO. D. JESSE. T> ECE1VED per schooner Ocean, from i J.V mot e. Fifty superior Hama, Ten bbls Flour, J. D. JESSE, bbls Dried Apples, by mar 29 Balti- Five TJOUSEKEEPEIiS’ BRUSHES Dun 1 A and Floor Brushes ; Scrub nnd Hearth lirurl.„, Popc9 Head, nnd Furniture Brushes; Whitewash Brushes; Pointers' ami Shoe Brushes; Crumb, Flesh, and Tooth Brushes ; Bed Bug Brushes, for erndieut- ing bed bugs; Plate and Bottle Brushes. The above Brushes are of superior quality, and are for sab at low prices. COLLINS & BULKLEY, mar 27 100 Bryamstreet D R. McMUNN’S ELIXIR OF OPIUM.- Thie is tlie essential Extract from tho nativa Drug. It contains all tlie valuable qualities of. Opi um, without its deleterious and undoes principle# For sale by G. li. HENDRICKSON & CO, mnr 27 GibLulla' Buildings. MOURNING DRESS GOODS.—Blk Barrages ivA Blk Silk Warp Alpacas; Blk Lawns; Blk audWht Muslin?; Blk nnd Wht Plain Ginghams, &c. for sale mnr 2 by LATHROP & FOOTE. igr TO THE LADIES! ^ FANCY AND TRIMMING STORE OF W TCHMANN & LICHTE.—Just received another large assortment of BONNETS, as Jenny Lmd and Hungarian, new styles, Sicilian, Neapolitan Lace, Spanish, Diamond, Pamila, French, and Misses riers orevFrv irdsCHpmnr—The ladies are - -respectful- y invited to call and see at 139 BROUGHTON-Sl, R ECE1VED per brig Wilson Fuller five barrels fresh Soda Biscuit, 5 barrels fresh Butter Crackers, 5 “ " Pilot Bread, 5 Firkins choice Goshen Butter, 5 boxes Cheese; 20 bbls.' Mercer Potatoes, a choice nrticle: and a choice article of Green nnd Black Teas. • JOHN D. JESSE, mar 21 TTOWELL, 157 Congress-street, nas just ll received a very fine lot of Note Pnper and En velopes, Pearl Card Cases, Flower Vases, Segar Cases, Jtc. ' mar — M emoirs of the life and writ- iug? of Thomas Chalmers, D. D., LL, D. By rTf HE Publishers __ .... ... . JL ZETTE” offer their paper to the business men of the Southern cities as one ot the best Advertising Mediums in tile South-West. Our Mr. Danfobth, late Publisher in Athens, Ala., brings to the‘ Gazette several hundred new subscribers trom the Elk River country, which addition gives our paper a very ex tensive circulation among Planters, Farmers, lead ers, Merchautc, nnd others. Advertisements hand- somely displayed, and ‘^WaPARHAM. Chattanooga, March, 1850. ^PEPTIC AND Anti- TTAKDV’I- ANTI-DYSPEP li Billions Elixir. GODFREY, feb 26 Guudry’s Buildin C* ANTON CHAPE SfCARFS.—A lew Canton ^ Crape Shawls, Mantles Scarfs. &c. Just reciei- ed, snd for sale by LaROCHE, BOW.N^ CO. mar 4 opililT GAfi OR BURNING FLUID.— to S0] Spirit Gas Lamps. Foraoje by M4 y ER mar ifi No. 154 Broughton-street. (H LARK'S MATCHE For sule by LA ROCHE Sr GODFREY, Gaudry’s Building PLAIN AND BLACK BAREGES ceived and for sale low. mnr 6 J ust re J. S. MAGILL. TEA C CULTIVATION IN THE V. STATES. fNG received a small supply ol IRA NUTS, * H A cofliTcte'd at'great expensiMd money and labor, gEBIIING’S RESTORATIVE CORDIAL, tor nervous affections and riyspepsia. For s ale by LaROCHE Sr GODFREY, mur 9 Gaudry’s Building. CLARIFIED SUGAR.—25 barrels landing per v barque Exact, and for sale by mar7 JASI A. NORRIS. WRAPPING P \PEIt.—For sale by ? ’ fell 25 J, B. CUBB FOOT OIL. mar 1 For sale by ]\T £>. SUGAR,—5Q hh<l» 1 ’ * stpre and for sale by feb 28 PADELFORD, FAY Si CO. J. G. FALLIGANT. N. OtvSugwFin flOBEY’S MAGAZINE for.Mareh, received by - mar 2 * J. B. CUBBEDGE. PANCV DRESS GOODS.—Colored Barrages; French Printed Cambrics; French Lawns; Fou lard Silks ; Ginghams ; Fancy Muslins, &c &c. just received by LATHROP & FOOTE- mnr 2 PRINTS.—Spring Prints; English do ; French Cambrics, for sale by mar 2 LATHROP & FOOTE. pEN KNIVES.—A lino assortment of Pen * _ Pocket knives, jn?t recrivea by feb 27 J. B. CUBBEDGE, Market-square. glu He uus in the middle district? of Chinn, from the most cele brated Tea Plantations of the Empire, I am prepared to fulfil my engagements by accommodating the pub lic with a share of the Nuts received. My main-ob ject is to plant and cultivate; but as I am quite cer tain that 1 have obtained, after tlie labor ot three years, tho best quality of 1 en Nuts, I tun disposed to meet the wishes of the public, and to share them with others.—Tea Nuts gathered in the neighborhood of Canton are scarcely worth cultivating, on account of the Inferior quality ol the Ton. It is obviously the interest of the planter to submit to an increased ex pense, to secure a superior quality oi Fen Nut, in es- tiililifhing a Ten Plantation, whether large or small. In prosecuting this arduous undertaking, I am in fact acting ns an agent for the benefit of the public. Neither the State, the public, or any individual, has ever extended to me the aid of a single cent. For convenience and security, the Nuts will he packed in tin boxes, nnd forwarded ‘com Greenville, S. C„ by such conveyance and to such address as the purchaser may direct, to any part pt the U. States. TEA PLANTS—now on th»ur passage from Chuja, selected with a single eye to quality, by a gentleman cl large experience in horticultural pursuits, and pr- haps better acquainted with tlie character ot the Ten Plant, than any person in Europe or America—will also be shared with those desirous ox. obtaining a bl *A specification of the soil beetad H pted to the growth of the plant, the mode of planting, cultivating, &c. Sic., will accompany each parcel. Application should be made (post-paid) to the 6ub- senber. JUNlu g SMITH, Greenville, S. C. P S Essays on the Cultivation of the Tea Plant, for ’sale at the Book Store of J, M. Cooff.k. * * Savannah Republican, copy three times weekly and* send bill to this office. . april 18 Ids son-in-law, the Reverend William Hanna, LL. D. Vol. 1. Cosmos: A sketch of a physical description ol tlie Universe. By Alexander Von Humbolt. Women in America : Her work nnd her reward. By Maria J. McIntosh, author of “Charms nnd Coun ter Charms," Sic. The Wilmingtons: A Novel. By the author ot “Norman's Bridge," "Angela," &c. Sketches of Minnesota, the New' Eneiand ot the Wert, with Incidents of Travel in thnt Territory dur ing tlie Summer of 1849. Ily E. S. Seymour. The Life and Correspondence ot Robert Southey. 1 Historical and Descriptive Sketches of the Women of the Bible. By P. C. Headley. The Genius of Scotland. By Rev. Rol.it. Turnbull. Dictionary of Mechanics, Engine-work and Eugi- H^ienmirs of the Rev. John Williams, Missionary to Polynesia. By Ebenezer l’ront, of Halstead. First American Edition. ..... Memoirs of tlie Rev. Walter M.Lowne. Missionary to China. Edited by his Father. Egypt und the Books ot Moses, Translated trom the 'German. By R. D. C. Robbins. CnpncFS. ., . .. Tlie practice of Surgery and the application ol Dressings, etc. By John Hustings, M.D., U. S. N„ with Illustrations. . , ... , ... A Theoretical nnd Practical Trentiee on Midwife ry By P. Cnzeaux. Translated from the second French Edition by Robert P. Thomas, M. D. A Modern History, from the Time of Luther to the Fall of Napoleon. By John Lord, A. M. Daily Bible Illustrations: Being Original Readings for a Year. By John Kitto, D. D„ F\ S. A. A Grammar of the Latin Language. By C. G. ^ The'physical Atlas of Natural Phenomena. By Al exander Keith Johnson, F. R. G. tb, T. G. 8. PERRY DAVIS’ l’AIN KILLER. Justr x ceived and ior sale by LaROCHE Si GODFREY, Gnudrey’s Building. feb 25 CJPERM AND SOLAR OIL.—Landing from brig Excel and for sale by LaROCHE & GODFREY, fob 97 Gnudrv’s Building. MISCELLANIES, by J THeadly; TheRedRov er, A Talc, by tlie author of “The ~ . . . . Spy," “The Pilot," &c—being vol. 3 of Putnam’s new edition of Cooper’s Novel?. Historical Studies, by George W Greene, late United States Consul at. Rome. Manual of .Commercial Correspondence, English id French, liv n Merohimt tl...i,..1.1 liv OOPER. nnd French, by n Merchant. Received by mar 9 JOHN M. C< SPRING BONNETS.—Just received a beauti- iul assortment of Ladies’ Bonnets, such os Span ish Lace, Gimp and Lace, French Lace, Open Gimp Lace and Pearl Straw. Also, Mistes Open Pearl Straw, White Lace, Lake and Braid, French Lace and French Chip Bonnets, Jenny Lind, Uipsey and Leg horn Hats. J. S. MAGILL, Savannah Cash Store. UULLS’ CINNAMON SOAP. For sale by LA ROCHE Si ( GODFREY. Gaudry’s Building. F rench rose, orange-flower and Peach Waters, for side by L. J. MYERS, n 11 *- h Smets’ Building. Received by mar 27 JOHN M. COOPER. S ARATOGA WATER, in pint bottles, sales by L. J. MYERS, For Smets’ Building. I RUIN’S EXTRACTS, as Jenny Lind, etc., J Jules Hnuel's Enu lustriil, Lavender Wnter, “A hi clochc d’or. M mar 27 For sale by L. J. MYERS, Smetp’ Building. C tOME AND SEE.—A very rich assortment of J Bags, Purses, Pt.'tmonaies, Card Cases, Pnper Cutters/ &c., at HOWELL’S, mar 22 157 Congress-street fine assortment Plain and Col’d Fcnther Dusters, lor dusting Furniture. Just received, nnd for sale by COLLINS & BULKLEY mar 20 No. 100 Bryun street. TIRESfi GOODS, <fcc.—Per Steamer Southern- ■*'' er.- Barages, Ginghams, Prints, Muslins and Lawns, Black Lace Shawls and Scarfs, For sale by mar 16 LATIIROP bone, Sic. OTE. E ssences pok flavoring ice creams, a &c.—Preston’s pure concentrated Extract of OUR GUARDIAN, A novel by Mrs McKenzie a- 8 Daniel, author of My Sister Minnie, &c. Hands not Hearts, a nove. by Janet W. Wilkinson. Tiie Fencing Master, or 18 months at St. Peters burg, by Alexander Dumas. Fanny Hervey, or the Mother’s Choice. New supplies of Dark Scenes in History, by G. P. R. James* New York by Gas Light. fob 25 . B. CUBBEDGE. I Cgf-TO CONFECTIONERS.^J ARE till Coriander Seed, for sale liy < L. J. MYERS, apl 3 Smets^Building, ROWLAND’S LOTION, for improving and u beautifying the complexion and rendering the skin tfiir soft, and transparent Received and for sale bv G. R. HENDRICKSON & CO. sale by mar 14 Gibbons' Building*. An assortment of choice fresh &arden Seeds, just received nnd for sale by ap ril 5 LaROCHE & GODFREY. QARDEN SEEDS T IQUU1D JLi april 5 ADHESIVE PLASTER, for sale by LaROCHE & GODFREY. XltrniGIIT’S Pure Concentrated EATIIACX ol fV LEMON, lor flavoring Ice Creams, Jellies, Ac F °april 5 b7 LaROCHE Sc GODFREY Lemon; Essence Vanilla; Essence Bitter Almonds; Essence Rose; Essence Jamaica Ginger; Essence Nut megs; Essence Wintorgr.een. For sale by L. J. MYERS, mar 23 Smets'Building. S ARATOGA WATER.—100 dozen pint and qt bottles ot Saratoga Wnter. Just received from tlie Springs, and for sale bv G. U. HENDRICKSON & CO., mar 26 Gibbons’ Building. IJltESei GOODS'.—Tissues, Foulard Silks. Ba rages, Albanums. &c. A lorge assortment rec’d per Isaac Mead. For sale by mar 26 LA LATHROP A FOOTE /"ABIES.—Alaree assortment of Back Gammon VJ Boards and Extra Men. Chess Men and Chest Board?, Dice, Dominoes f»pd Dice Boxes. Jus4 rceiv ed and for sale by G R.HENDRICKSON A Ctx, f„h 25 Gibbons’ Building* beoutiiuJ assortment of Diy. - 1 "• g—8i)k Mtisli part of the following- Plain, ’Col’d. and Printed Bareges,! Muslins and Gingham-, feilk Also, French worked Mwltfi mourning do. Children’s Neeflle f and Caps, Muslin Bauds, s Cambric Hhdkfs, Ribbons and) "or sale low by LAROCHE, BOWNE & OO.