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the Uedilß times & Sentinel.
BY LOMAX & ELLIS.]
Volume XIII.
THE TIMES SENTINEL.
TENNENT LOMAX & ROSWELL ELLIS,
editors and PROPRIETORS.
the TRMVEEKLY TIMES St SENTINEL
Is pnMisbe.l EVERY (YECATS/i.l Kami FRIDAY MO hX-
Ijtra and SATURDAY EFF.XIXG.
THE WEEKLY TIMES St SENTINEL
is publ'stiM every T VFs I) A V .Wf’ftA'LYO.
Office on Randolph Street, oppoeite the Post Office.
TERMS:
TRI-VVF.F.KI.Y, Five Dom.aks per animal, in advance.
VV H K KI. Y. Two Doi.laßh per annum,in advance.
IT Adveriidementa ooniip'wuoiisly i-nserted ut Onk Dollar
per square, for the first insertion, and fifty cbsts for every sub
sequent .insertion.
Liberal dedurliou will be made for yearly advertisements.
Sales of Land and Negroes, by Administrators, Executors, o
Guurdiaus, are required by law to be held on the first Tuesday
in the month, between the hours of ten In the forenoon and
three in the aHernoon,al the Court House in the county in which
the property is situate. Notices o> these sales nnod be given iu
U !voUce!Tfor'thesale Property must be given at
least ten day* previous to the day of ale.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors of an. Estate must be publish-
that application will be made to the Court of Ordinary
for leave to sell Land or Negroes, must he published weekly for
for Letters of Administration must be published
thirty days— for bismifslon from Administration, monthly *ix
mu nths—\or Dismission from Guardianship forty days.
Rules for Foreclosure oi Mortgage must be published monthly
fur four month*-tor establishing lost papers, for tin full space
of three months— for compelling titles from Executors or Adimn
t-trators, where a bond has been given by the deceased, the full
Publications will always be continued arc .-'riling to these, the
egal requirements,unless otherwise ordered.
COM MISSION M ERC’ H ANTS.
G D. METCALF & CO
Cos M MIS SlO N MERCIIA NT S,
84 PovmiAS Stkekt, New Orleans.
li. D. METCALF,
11. 11. STONF..
REFERENCE*:
U. Patten, Agent of the Marine anti Fire Insurance Company.
John Banks. Agent ol the Augusta Insurance anil it’klng. Cos.
H. 11. F.ppino, Agent of the Rank of Brunswick.
Haul it Dkßloih, T. W. Tai.t.man, R. J.Mosgs.
November t-T —tvt'hAwJl
HOS'I’ON A VILLALONGA,
COTTON FACTORS
AND ,
General Commission Merchants,
No. 196 Bay Street Savannah, Oa.
JOHN BOSTON, JOHN L. VILLA LONGA.
REFERENCES :
John 11. Howard, li. T. Chapman,
A. \V. Chapman, Ruse, Patten &. Cos.
October 11—wA'.twtt
WASHBURN, WILDER & CO.,
FACTORS & COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
114 BAY STREET,
JOSEPH WASHBURN, )
JNO. R. WILDER. 5 Savannah, Ga.
FRANCIS G. DANA. )
Sept. 16—lw6in
C- S. HARRISON.
AUCTION, COMMISSION,
REGfIVINe ANB FORWARDING
Hlei'i itn li t •
NOS 59 and 61 BROAD STREET,
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA.
A. K. AYER, AUCTIONEER AND SALESMAN.
(3*” Liberal advances made on Negroes and Merchandise.
Columbus, Aug. 20, 1853—w&twly
If. r. GREENWOOD, JOSIAH MORRIS, J. I. RIDGWAY
GREENWOOD, MORRIS & RIDGWAY,
FACTORS & COMMISSION MERCHANTS
No. 17 Carondelet Street, New <>rleuiK.
Oct29 —w&twly _ _ _
WM. H. KIMBROUGH,
COMMI SSI O N .U KRCIIANT,
Nov 8 —\v&,twtf *S'g4 VANN AH, GA.
R. LOCKETT, WM. 11. LONG, JOHN 11. DAVIS.
Mil® & m,
C O MMISSION M E R CHAN T S
AND
SHIPPING AGENTS,
SAVANNAH. GEORGIA.
WILL attend to the gelling of all kinds of Produce. Strict
attention given to receiving and forwarding goods, and
selitig orders from the country. Those of our friends who
lidlire to favor us with consignments,can make the neces
sary arrangements through our friends Ruse, Fatten & Cos.
July 9—w&twly
I, H, BURROUGHS: A SIM,
FACTORS AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Sept 24 —w fc.t wHiii
Bounty Land and Pension Agency.
CHARLES C. TICKER,
WASHINGTON, V C.
ATTORNEY ‘or Claimants and Agont for obtaining
Revolutionary, Naval, Invalid and Halt-pay Pensions,
Bounty Land, arrears ol pay, extra pay, &c., for Military
and Naval services.
Bounty Land obtained for the widows and heirs ol vol
unteers of the Texas Revolution of 1836; and extra pay
obtained for services in the U. S. Navy on the coasts of
California and Mexico, from 1846 tu 185*2. Address
CUARLKS TUCK UR,
Nov. *2*3—w3m Washington, 1). C.
R. J. MOSES, JOHN PEABODY,
MOSES & PEABODY,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA.
WILL practice in Muscogee county, Ga., and Russell
county. Ala., and in the Supreme Court of the State of
Georgia. Columbus, Juno 29-wtwtf
Sam. S. Hamilton, Col” mbus Cunningham.
HAMiLTON & CUNSiiNGHAM,*
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
TROY, Pike County, Ala.
April 23, 1853—w&twly.
NICOLAS GACHRT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW ,
Tubkegee, Alabama.
OFFICII OVER PORTER’S BRICK STORE.
WlLLattend the courts of the Ninth Circuit, and Montgomery,
Pike, and Barbour in the Eighth Circuit.
inarch 29—wly
GEO. S. ROBINSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Cut hbert, Georgia.
Rkkkrkncks :—Hons. M. J. Wellborn and Alfred I verso
Columbus. Cuthbert, Nov 2—43wif
TUCKER & BEALL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Lumpkin, Stewart County, Oa.
WILL attend regularly the Superior Courts of Stewart, Marlon-
Sumptcr and Randolph counties: and will give prompt atten
tion to all business entrusted to theircare.
JOHN A. TUCK EH, F.. H. BEALL.
Lumpkin, January 18. 1853—3w1y
DOUGLASS & DOUGLASS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Cuthbert, Georgia.
WILL practice in the counties of the Southwestern Circuit
ami in .Stewart county of the Chattahoochee circuit.
EUGENICS 1,. DOUGLASS,
Nov 30—wly MARCEL LI'S DOUGLASS.
S. S. STAFFORD,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Blakely, Gariy C0.,0b.
GEO. COOK ALFORD,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
! WILL practice in the counties of the Ninth Judicial Cir
! cuit— and tho Supreme Court of the State.
Craw lord, Ruß>elco., Ala., Aug. 2, 1853—wly*
W. C. M’IVER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Tuskegee, Macon co., Ala.
Will practice iu the counties of Macon, Montgomery
Tallapoosa, Pike, Barbour and Russel.
January’ 22 —4wJy
DAVID ROSS,
GENERAL BOOKBINDER,
AND
I BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURER,
j No. 72 Broad Street,
j Columbus, Ga., June 21—wtf
J. S. WOODBRIDGE,
; PRACTICAL ARTIST & DAGUERREOTYI’IST
COI.I'M HUS, GEORGIA.
i fCooiiiN over Foster A Purple’s Jewelry Store
Broad Street. Columbus, Jan. s—w
A. BACKER,
IMPORTER AND DEALER IN
BRANDIES, GIN, WTNE,
I SCOTCH ALE & LONDON PORT Id!,
j SEGARS and all kinds of GROCERIES,
No. 10 WHITAKER ST. SAVANNAH, GA.
Brandies and Gins, tinder Custom-House Lock, in bond
and entitled in debenture.
Savannah, Oct. 18, 1853,-wtwly
.-. _ 1
FOR SALE AND TO RENT.
FOR SALE.
THE undersigned offers for sale, his house and lot, on which i
is a comfortable dwelling, a store bouse with nil necessary |
I buildings attached. The'lot contains eleven acres oflaud : or J
j will sell or rent a g>od store house in the same place, and a j
[ dwelling lot with small improvements, separate from the store
I lot. Anj person who wishes to locate in a country villnto’
| would do well toexaraine the premises. A g<od stand lor Dry
i Hoods or a family grocery. K. N. HOWARD.
Bald Hill, Muscogee co., (in.. Nov 22~w3’
FARM FOR SALE.
I AM agent to sell one of the best farms in this region of coun
try, belonging to Mr. E. Bradley; well improved and in a
fine state of cultivation, within ten miles of Oolumbus —Railroad
running through the corner of it—containing one thousand live j
hundred and seventy acres; sold upon good ami accommodating j
terms. There is not, in my opinion, another such place iu mar- J
ket in this section. Those wishing to buy would do well to .it j
me soon. (J. E. THOMAS,
( > •! wm bus, fifOY •-'•J-wfit Agent l-r I!. Bradley.
FOR SALE
r rMIE undersigned offers for sale his residence at Midway, near !
JL Millcdgeville. The lot contains about thirteen acres. Asa j
residence, few situations com one more advantages—health, Ih
cilities for education amt good society are all to be found at ;
Midway. lIERSCIIEL V. JOHNSON.
November 22—wtf
FOR SALE.
plantation in Rdssel county, Ala., eight miles and
_l_ a half from Columbus, Ga., formerly owned by Augus
tus Brown, containing seven hundred and forty acres, 200
of which is in a high state of cultivation and tinder good
fences. There is on the premises a good framed dwelling
with four good rooms,pantry, &c., good out houses oi eve
ry description, gin house and screw ; also, an excellent
spring at water convenient for use, and as healthy a place
as can be found in Eastern Alabama. There is on the
place good Peach and Apple orchards. Any person wish
ing to purchase such a place can get a bargain. For further
particulars apply to JAMES ROUSSEAU.
Columbus, Nov 29—wtf
FOR SALE.
A DELIGHTFUL residence m Wynn ton, situated with
in a mile of the Court house. A comfortable dwelling
good outhouses, every convenience, and beautiful lot con
taining about seven acres.
Also, house, kitchen and garden furniture. Possession
given immediately, or the last of December.
Enquire of the Rev. C. 13. KING,
or if inconvenient to find him, apply at the Enquirer office.
Nov 29—w2t
CHATTAHOOCHEE PLANTATION
AND
CITY PROPERTY FOR SALE
I OFFER FOR SALE, and upon reasonable amt ac
cominixlating terras, the valuable plantation on the river six
miles below the city, containing 937)$ acres—soo acres of which
is first quality river land, the balance oak and hickory, and pine
land, heavily Umbered. The place is well improved in every
particular, and has upon it a very handsome dwelling house, en
tirely new, with new out houses, stables, barnes, &c.
The premises will be shown by mnj. M. H\ Perry, who at pres
ent resides upon them, or by myself.
Wishing to reside in the country, but near tho city, 1 also offer
for sale iny present residence —one of the most convenient and
pleasant locations in the city.
Columbus, sept. 10—tw It At wtf. IIINE.S IIOLT.
Enquirer and ‘ <>rner Stmie e.q.y.
Extensive sale of Town Lots in Bienville,
FORMERLY UNION SPRINGS.
rpHREE hundred lots in Bienville, formerly Union
1 Springs, Macon county, Ala., will be ottered for sale ;
on Thursday, 22d day of December next. Lithographed I
copies of the plan of the Town can lie seen on the spot and j
generally throughout the country, until the day of sale.
Bienville is situated on the Western extremity of Chun- |
nenuggee Ridge, immediately upon the Girard and Mobile |
Railroad, 52 miles from Columbus, Ga., and 175 from
Mobile,and at the point of intersection of the contemplated
Montgomery and Union Springs Railroad.
The reputation ol Chuunenuggee Ridge tor health, good
water ana refined society, is too well established to require
comment.
Surrounded on the North and West by a rich prairie
country, and on the South and East by productive soft
lands, all in a high state of cultivation, and constituting a
body of the choicest farming lands in the South. Bienville
will be one of the most important depots on the Girard
railroad, and a place of uo small commercial importance—
presenting uncommon inducements for profitable invest
ments. J. M. FOSTER & CO.
Bienville, Ala., Nov 2—wtds
Land for Sale.
WILL be sold on the first Tuesday in December next at the
Market House in tlic city of Columbus to the highest bid
der, one thousand acre's of land in Harris county, better known
as the Randle Jones place, there is a comfortable dwelling house,
gin house and packing screw, with about four or flv< hundred
acres of open land. Any person wishing to purchase can call
on Mr. Lamb on the promises ; for further information The
terms made know on the day. VAN LEON A /<D, agent
N ivetnbei I—wtds. for MRS. E. G. FOSTER.
FOR SALE OR RENT.
MMY Plantation, three miles below Columbus, between
five and six hundred acres, cleared.
JNO. A. JONES.
Oct. 1. wittwtf
PLANTATION FOR SALE OR RENT.
SIXTEEN miles East of Columbus, one hour’s ride by
Railroad, IV miles from the depot, containing 620
IsAul acres,about 400 cleared, 300 acres bottom land, the
JUJLJI balance pine land, lying well. Gin house w ith a press
attached, seven or eight negro cabins, overseers house and oilier
necessary buildings. The situation of this place near the Rail
road gives the ail vantages of a near market without its annoy
ances. Possession given Ist January or sooner, and terms made
easy. August 30—wtf A. G. REDD.
FOR SALE.
M THE House and Lot opposite the Methodist
Church, adjoining the lot ot Col. A. K Ayer, on
the east, and Mr. Geo. A. Norris, on the south.
As the property will soon be disposed of, those who may
wish a beautitul location, with a dwelling of some 10 rooms,
will please apply at once to JOHN SMITH.
Columbus, Sept. 21—tw3m.
HOTEL FOR S± LE.
THE subscriber offers for sale his commodious ami
well finished Hotel, situated on the east side of the
|aoS public square, in the town of Buena Vista, Ha., and
■ known as the‘‘GLOBE HOTEL.” Itisiurnished with
all necessary conveniences, and has pertaining to it, a good
kitchan, smoke house,stable, lot, all in good repair. The
house is conveniently situated, and is favored with a liberal
share of boarding and transient custom. Buena Vista, though
new, is a large and beautiful town. Its schools, and varied
merchatile and mechanic interests, insure its permanency and
and rapid growth. No one need fear depreciation in propelty
/'or many pears.
Persons wishing to purchase such property, would do well to
call a.idiexamine. Reasonable time will be allowed for payment.
For terms apply to the undersigned. Z. WILLIAMS.
orto WILLIAMS Ac OLIVER,
March s—9wtf Buena Vista, Marion co.. Ga.
For Sale.
WILL be sold at Cuthbert, on first Tuesday in Decem
| A ber next (if not sold at private sale before) at public
out-cry, to the highest bidder, seven hundred acres ot
jXj land, with the mills attached, lying on Pataula Creek.
tußandolph countv, and known as Newsoms A/ills.
Persona desirous of purchasing would do well to examine the
it remises, as l urn determined to sell and will give a bargain.
OctSS—wCt DANIEL A. NEW.-O.M.
Land.
1 WILL sell ten settlement?of hnd varying in size
<nHL from eighty to one thousand acres in a body, with sev
iTjmT eral improvements, not more than twenty miles from
Columbus. Titles indisputable. Terras liberal where
! the payments are secure. WM, H*4/AYNoR.
I Kassel co., Ala., November 8, 1858.—wtf
‘■‘THE UNION OF TIIE STATES AND THE SOVEREIGNTY OF THE STATES.”
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 6, 1853.
Valuable Plantation (or Sale,
In Baker County, Georgia.
THE subscriber desirous of removing lroin the State
£SgL of Georgia, offers lor sale his plantation lying on the
waters of the Coolawahee Creek, five miles west of Al-
bany, adjoining lands of Paul Tarver, Dr. XickoU and
others, containing three thousand one hundred and twenty-five
acres, more or less. There are about 800 acres of open cultivat
ed land. Ihe land is so situated that it can be easily divided.
And if two purchasers appear the subscriber will divide so as to
suit both. Anyone desirous of purchasing would do well to
address MOORE &. EDWARDS, or myself at this place; my
agent living on the place will show the lands to any person call
ing for that purpose. JOHN J. RAWLS,
September 3—tw3t&wtf Macon, Georgia.
PLANTATION AND LOT FOR SALE,
ON ACCOMMODATING TERMS.
* will sell my valuable plantation one mile East of
mBL (raw ford. Ala., containing Eight Hundred acres; well
improved, good dwelling and out houses, gin house,
now screw, Ate., &c. There is good creek bottom and
pine land interspersed with Oak and Hickory.
A Iso, a corner one acre lot opposite the hotel in Crawford.
For terms and particulars apply to Messrs. C. 8. Harrison it
Cos., Columbus, Ga.
.Way 211— w.Viwtl C. A.i LOUD.
For Sale.
MY plantation lying on the Chattahoochee rlverin
Russel county, Ala.,twenty miles below Columbus, Ga.,
containing about two thousand five hundred acres in a
body. Also, two detached place-, containing about
eight hundred acres, which will he sold with the main body or
separate.
The plantation is well settled and healthy, and as productive
and tortile as any on the river, and free from freshets.
Persons wishing to examine the plantation will apply to Mes
srs. T. B. & (■. * rowell, or G. \V. Keith, (the overseer) at Dg.
wirhee, Ala., or Jos B. Hill.in Columbus, Ga., who will furnish
all nec.-s-arv information in m\ absence.
JOHN CANTEY,
Augusta—wtf Camden, 8. C.
For Sale.
_jj MY Plantation on the Glennville, (Ala.,) road, s. ven
miles trom Columbus, containing 340 acres,about IGU of
which o cleared and iu a fine state of cultivation.
. The improvements are a frame dwelling with four
rooms, kitchen, cribs and stables conveniently arranged. The
j place has an abundant supply of excell3nt spring water, Is con
j venient to churches, schools and market, is very healthy and in
; an excellent neighborhood—persons wishing lo purchase can
I obtain any desired information by calling on Mr. Whitten, on
the premises,or tlie subscriber in Columbus.
B. F. COLEMAN.
j Columbtis, June *2l—wGm.
For Sale.
#A small farm about one and a half miles from Odum- !
bus. It contains ISW or HiU acres ot land ; about a third i
of which is cleared, and in suitable condition for culliva
______ tion. The remaining portion is well timbered with |
pine.
It is a desirable locution for any person, wishing a small farm j
or summer residence in the vicinity of the city. Apply to
Columbus. March 9—twlf K. T. TAYLOR.
TRAVELING.
FOR PHILADELPHIA.
EhiknUlphia S; Savannah Steam Navigation Company, j
r rMIE m\v ami splendid side-wheel Steamships,
I KEY STONE SI ATI , ( apt. Robert (Itamii,
STATE of GEORGIA, Gapl. J. J. Garvin, Ji.
will leave Savannah for Philadelphia every Wednesday. These
Steam-hips are the most o.mtoi table on the coast, and are un
surpassed for -an ti und speed. They wltl leave Savannah as
follows :
Keystone Mate, Wednesday, 28th Sept.
State of Ge “ sth Oct.
Keystone Slate, 12th Oct.
o.state of Georgia, 19th Oct.
Keystone State, “ 26th Oct.
State ot Georgia, “ 2nd Nov.
Keystone State, “ 9th Nov.
Stale of Georgia, “ 16th Nov.
Keystone State, “ 23rd Nov.
State of Georgia, “ 30th Nov.
Keystone State, “ 7th Dec.
■State of Georgia, 44 14th Dec.
and so on.
Cabin pasmge, S2O.
Sterrage 44 $ 8.
C. A. L. LAMAR,
Agent in Savannah*
HERON &. MARTIN,
Sept.2l—tf Agents in Philadelphia
JIARNDENS EXPRESS.
OFFMIcIIC Stl'ttl. Sfefclsj
‘ll7" Erespectfully beg leave to inform the citizensol Columbus
it and its vicinity, that we have concluded our arrangements
with the Central, South-Western and A/uscogee Railroads, and
are now running messengers daily from Columbus to Macon
thence to Savannah.
I Iso, forwarding goods daily over the Muscogee and South-
Western Railroad to Fort Valiev, Oglethorpe and Macon, thence
to Milledgeville Savannah and all intermediate places.
Also, to Montgomery, Ala. We would also say, that our Ex
presses by the steamers to New York and Philadelphia enable us
to forward every description of merchandise and valuables.
Notes, Drafts, and Bills collected in every town in the Northern
ami Eastern States ; also, to California and Europe. go*.
OFFICES AND AGENTS.
E. R. Goulding, Randolph street,Columbus; C. A. F.JIs &Son,
Macon; Mr. Kendrick, Fort Valley; G. R. Clayton, Oglethorpe:
153 Bay street, Savannah; 74 Broadv y, JV'ew York; 43 and
45 South-Third. Philadelphia : 8 Con. street, Boston: Exchange
street. Providence: Montgomery street, -Nan Francisco.
tr Articles to be forwarded, called for at any port of the
city free of expense, ty leaving orders on the slate at the office.
LIVINGSTON, WINCHESTER a. i O.
Columbus, April 13 —twAcw
NOTICE.
A NEW LIVERY STABLE IN GIRARD, ALA.,
By J. B HICKS.
HpHE undersigned lias taking the Livery Stable in Girard, Ala.
I heretofore occupied by V. <’• Kirkland, lor the purpose o
carrying on a general
m - w -3 LIVERY STABLE BUSINESS,
Qrfriay Under the superintendence ol
I). A. GARRETT, £-2L
the proprietor of the City Hotel, Columbus, Georgia.
This stable will be inferior to none in this country in point of
attention to dock and good management.
Persons wishing to hire HORSES and BUGGIES can
find as good in Unsalable as can be found any where. Call and
give me a trial.
N. B. The citizens of Columbus will please bear in mind that
whenever they have to hire a horse or a horse and buggy lor the
transaction of business in Alabama, t hat they can make a saving
of from 25 to 75 cents on the trip by hiring on the other side of
the river. Girard, Ala., July 2—-twGin
United States Mail Line,
THROUGH IN A DAY EACH WAY,
From Columbus, Ga., to Chunnenuggee, Ala.,
(and you may go Jo Savannah the next day, from Columbus,)
via Latnington, Sand Fort,lichee, Creek Stand,Hernando, Elion,
ami Vewart’s Mills.
This line intersects at Chunnenuggee the one to Montgomery
via Cotton Valley, Tuskcgee and Chehaw, also the one leading
in the direction of Tallahassee, Fla., via Five Points, Mount An
drew, Clayton ami Eufaula, Ala.
1 will send forward passengers or freight from Chunnenuggee
to anv of the following places; Union Springs, Aberl'oil, Arbor
vitse, Perote, Missouri, Bug Hall, Edgefield,Troy, and Ridgely.
SCHEDULE:
Leave Columbus Tuesday, Thursday and .Saturday atO A. M.,
arrive at Chunnenuggee same days, at 9 j>. in.
Leave Chunnenuggee Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 4
a. in.; arrive at Columbus same days at 9 p. m.
M:iy2e—lwly APPLETON IIAYGOMI), Contractor._
NKW FIRE PROOF
LrV I: R V STAB LE.
’Silt
r|MI E undersigned return their sincere thanks to their nuiner
-1 ous p itrons and friends for the liberal patronage heretofore
extended to them, ami would respectfully announce to the pub
lic that they have removed to their large and recently finished
FIRE PROOF BRICK STABLE,
WEST SIDE OGLETHORPE STREET,
Adjoining Temperance Hall , and opposite IT. C. Mc-
Kee's Carriage Repository,
where they are prepared to offer facilities and accommodations
unsurpassed in the southern country. Their stables are fitted up
with over
ONE HUNDRED COMMODIOUS STALLS!
Their lots are extensive and secure. Out Saddle Horses, Bug
gles, Carnages and Uockaways, are of the very first order. Our
Drivers, Hostlers and Attendants are sober, careful and courte
ous. Everything connected with our establishment is under
the immediate personal attention of the Proprietors. We have
spared no expense, and are determined to spare no pains which
may be necessary, to render perfect satisfaction to all who may
favor us with their patronage. We hope, therefore, by diligent
and unremitting attention to our business, to merit a liberal
share of public patronage.
FINE HORSES ALWAYS ON HAND FOR SALE.
N. B. Connected with our Livery business, we have two
splendid Omnibuses, with flue teams and careful drivers, which
will always be in readiness, on the arrival and departure of the
ars and Steamboats. Orders left at the H >te ! s, and atourSta
be, promptly attended to. VIiRNOY 6c ECTOR.
CCofumhns. Gn.. July 19, 1853—wly.
Ilurds’s Golden Gloss.
nOR THE II Alß.— Among the many preparations for
F the growth of the llair, this Golden Gloss takes the lead.
Three reasons will be given why it is so universally used and
preferred to all others. <?t, Because it has proved the most ef
fectual in Baldness. 2d. Because it imparts a beautiful dark
gloss anil delightful perfume to the hair. 3d, Because the La
dies with fine discrimination, which they all possess, have adop
ted it. Many other reasons could be given why it is a great fa
vorite, but those who want more have only to give it a trial. —
Price 25 cents, in large bottles. For sale by Druggists and Store
keepers everywhere.
W. C. Hurd, Proprietor, 304 Broadway, New York.
Large discount to Merchants.
New York, Nov 22—wfiinins
JttiscellmiGms
Facts aiul Effects of Inter-Emigration.
About one-fourth of our native-born citizens
leave the States of their birth, and settle in oth
er portions ol the Union. V irginia has sent out
335,000: South Carolina, 103,000; North
Carolina, ‘261,000. Among tho Northern
States, Vermont and Connecticut have contri
buted the largest share of their population to
colonize other sections. They have lost about
• 25 per cent on the native population, while
Soutli Carolina has lost 36 per cent.
There are some interesting reflections sug
gested by these statistics, and the historical facts
supplied from general sources with which they
are connected. Our first settlements were along
the Atlantic sea hoard, and upon the rivers
flowing over the eastern slopes that extend from
• lie Vlleghanies. Not only the conveniences of
trade, hut the occupancy of the West by savage
tribes, necessitated the eastward line of early
civilization. If our progress had been confined
to the Atlantic regions, it is very probable that
our commercial centres would have borne south
ward. Norfolk and Charleston would have
grown rapidly. The indication of things prior
to the War of 1812 was strongly in that direc
tion. Alexandria, on the Potomac, k was then the
largest flour market in the country, and Vir
ginia was one of the first of our States in popu
lation, wealth, and influence. But the opening
of the West turned the tide of prosperity. The
tens of thousand that that flocked to the new
States beyond the mountains did not become I
tributary to their mother States, hut the more j
| northerly regions drew their trade and products, j
; There were natural reasons for this result.—
The elevations ot land that interposed their
, harriers between the fertile prairies of the West
| and the tide-water of the East were less farther
| north, and water courses were more available
] for commercial transportation. Massachusetts
I could easily fall hack on Western New York
j for her supplies of wheat and corn, while New ,
S York could as readily lay her hands on the fruit- j
| lul farms of the remoter trans-Alleghany. The j
j consumers, too, were here: the factories, ship- I
yards, and germinal Lowells were here; and j
above all, that active, converting power, which
changes the fruits of the earth into numerous j
forms, was diffused everywhere over northern j
life. Hands that till are doubtless more inde-j
pendent and noble, hut hands that re produce
and re-ship are always more efficient nuclei for |
centralized operations.
But wc are debtors to our Southern brethren
beyond all the computations of arithmetic.—
They are the men to settle new regions. The
great champions of the westward movement
were brave Southerners. The glory of such
pioneers as Boone, Kenton, Ridley, belongs to
the descendants of the Cavaliers and Scotch-
Irish. But for their heroic enterprise, the West
would have longer continued inaccessible to the
Anglo-Saxon race. In the hands of those men
and their compeers, the axe and tho rifle did
wonder, and civilization laid broad foundations
besides noble rives. The shrewd Yankee, fin
gering at his notions and figuring on his slate,
soon followed at their heels, and log-cabins
were boseiged with the entreaties of barter.—
Flat-boats were exchanged for steam-vessels,
and coon-skins for buffalo-robes. And ere long,
hemp, corn, wheat, sought the sea-board, and
vast store-houses were opened in our midst, for
western accomodation. The caravan was
promptly provided with the caravansera, and
ships hoisted sails for the service of the Missis
sippi domain. The star of empire moved west
wardly, hut the sun still rose in the east, and
morning freshness lingered as ever upon our
skv. No doubt, the constitution of northern so
ciety had much to do with this course of things.
Where men are compact, they must struggle.-
Where landed property is limited, ingenuity
must originate inventions; brains must quicken
hands ; and thrift must issue new editions of old
materials. Large farms must provoke large
manufactures, and an agricultural South and ■
West must stimulate a commercial North. But I
physical nature, in the arrangement of this conti
nent, prescribed the termsof mutual aid and bene
faction. Trade has pursued the original pre
scription. And thereby, we have grown neccs
sary to one another—tho various parts knifing
themselves closely together, and by the laws of
commercial and agricultural activity, strength- I
ening and confirming our political institutions. I
We h ave thus reached a point at which the i
strong material forces of earth hind us to Imr- j
inony and union. Mountains, plains, rivers and
lakes, form a constitution not to he violated.— |
State Rights have firmly entwined themselves j
with Slate Interests; and clocks, shoes, iron,
copper, lead, ice, mackerel, cod-fish, cotton and j
sugar, consolidate politics that fill our citizens
are forced to acknowledge by the injunctions of
a vital utilitarianism. It is this coincident ad
vance of our industry and our political science—
this steady blending of Art and Truth—this
happy wedlock of Trade and Brotherhood—
that have carried us so far forward. And now, i
tho Pacific is preparing to repeat the same his- ;
tory. A mighty commercial empire founded !
there, and opening its trade with Asia and Asi- \
atic Islands, will soon biing up the culture of !
distant western regions. The still waters will
forthwith he agitated by the rivalries of com
merce, and Eastern and Western America will
he prosperous enough to feed and clothe the
world.
The laws of Inter-Emigration suggest seve
ral other trains of thought. So far as we have
been able to learn from the most intelligent old
men of the Southern Stutes, the original emi
grants from that section of our country were
usually disposed to follow westwardly the same
line of latitude. Virginia sent thousands into
Kentucky; Georgia distributed her population
over Alabama and Mississippi; North Carolina
moved over into Tennessee, and Maryland for
warded large colonies to the YY'est. South Caro
lina planters setttled mainly on the rich bottom
lands of the extreme Southern and Southwes
tern States. The Northern States, devoted to
mechanical and mercantile objects, observod
neither longitude nor latitude. Wherever wants
had to he supplied by localized or traveling trade,
they were sure to be found; and how much of
sharpened wit they owed to contact with Geor
gians and Tennesseeans, and how much of bet
ter manners they brought home from the grace
ful intercourse of Virginia and the Carolinas,
the future researches of Deßovv and Hunt may
settle. But this outspreading of the people has
produced great changes in national sentiment,
solar as that sentiment is modified by local cir
cumstances. Find Virginia blood i>* the Wes
tern States, and the high-toned family pride, that
once delighted in reminiscences, wins conside
ration and renown by deeds of personal gran
deur. The same .warm Scotch-1 lish blood,
educated and controlled by the presence of or
ganic ideas and abstract sentiments, that mark
the statesmanship of Calhoun, and give it, in
| sight of friends and foes, such a majestic moral
j bearing, takes a heroic shape in Jackson, and
lends a magical terror to Kentucky Riflemen on
j the field ol battle. Georgia grows rich on less
capital, builds more railroads with smaller means,
and raises more female colleges than any other
State, while her scattered sons push Alabama
forward to the front rank of the cotton States,
and line the Gulf Coast with lumber mills for
Cuban trade. The drovers of Tennessee, and
the wealthy planters from the rice regions, meet
in the far Southwest, strike the difference, and
exchange characteristics. The small farmer from
Western V irginia goes Northwest and turns
Free-Soiler; and the rabid Y ankee—death at
home for free labor—becomes, by Southern set
tlement, a more inveterate advocate for Slavery
than a Carolinian. Maidens from the South,
j fair and beautiful, marry Northern husbands,
; and suddenly turn Abolitionists; and the Yau-
I kee girls, that go South as teachers and stay
! as wives, find plantation life to he the perl'ec-
I tion of home and religion. Quakers keep root
j od in the primevial soil, and Pennsylvania Dutch
hold fast to the limestone lands; hut all else
| float as the currents move—meeting and ming
ling as circumstances govern. Impulse is
checked by steady habits, and instinct by cul
tivated intelligence. The man of hooks lives
with the man of trees ami forests; the clock
maker sets the machinery of a Southern village
in motion; the peddler is transformed into a
prince; the aristocratic Southernor proves the
most agreeable and trust worthy Democrat, and
the men of Lawrence and Lowell are capital
bedfellows for sugar planters in Louisiana.—
! And so—“ E Pluribwt Unum,” written for a
! political creed, and hallowed in popular love,
! registers its simple and sublime motto from
j Canada snows to Equatorial plains, and re
ceives the homage of Agriculture, Manufactures,
and Commerce.—JV. Y. Daily Times.
[From the South Carolinian.l
The Agricultural Association of the Slaveholding States.
TO THE VEOCI.F. OF TUB SOUTH.
Thursday, the Ist day of December, has been
fixed fertile meeting of this Association at Col
| umhia, South Carolina. A large number of the
j most intelligent planters and scientific men of
| the South may be expected. A meeting of such
varied interest as will he then presented has
j never before occurred in the Southern States,
| and every assurance may be given that it wilt
J prove eminently successful in the grand objects
j which form the basis of its organization. The
! elevation, protection and improvement of the
j rural affairs ol the Southern States is certainly
j praiseworthy, and should receive tho sanction
| and encouragement of all our citizens. We,
therefore, most cordially invite and desire tho
participation of the whole South. The Secret
ary of the Association, Dr. Cloud, of Alabama,
makes the following ad interim announcement:
“The Executive Council of the Association
have made arrangements with gentlemen of high
distinction in the various departments of Agri
cultural science and practice to address the As
sociation during its assemblage. We have also
assurances that the meeting will ho iu every way
highly acceptihle to the people of the Palmetto
State, and also to the citizens of Columbia.
Addresses have been promised by, and may
he expected from, the following gentlemen :
South Carolina—John Bachman, D. D., LL.
D., Hon. J. B. O’Neall, Hon. W. 11. Gist, Prof.
F.S. Holmes, Hon. R. F. W. Allston, H. W.
Ravenel, Esq., Prof. R. T. Brumby.
Mississippi—Dr. H. A. Swasey, Thomas Af
fleck, Esq.
Georgia—Dr. W. C. Daniell, J. Van Huron,
Esq., R. J. Hardwick, Esq.
Alabama—Col. Isaac Croom, Absalom Jack
son, Esq., Dr. A, A. Lipscomb, Col. Wm. De-
Forrest Holly.
District of Columbia—J. D. B. Deßow, Esq,
“In addition to the gentlemen above named,
several have partially promised to address the
meeting or send an essay. There are also some
gentlemen that have been addressed yet to hear
from.”
The meeting will continue for a session of
several days, and due arrangements will he
made for the accommodation of a large audi
ence.
On behalf of the Executive Council of the As
sociation. A’ G. Summer.
Mr. Toombs Resolution's.
It will not he improper to call these Mr.
Toomb’s Resolutions, introduced into tlie Sen
ate by Mr. Pope of Wilkes,and into the House
of Representatives by Mr. Irwin of Wilkes.—
They are doubtles designed for Mr. Toombs’es
pecial benefit, and have hadjthe intended effect of
distracting the attention of the Legislature, and
diverting censure from Mr. Toombs’ short com
ings and wrong doings. These Toombs’reso
lutions, attack President Pierce on the old and
stale charges of frecsoil appointments and the
Pacific Railroad. They attempt to drag the
New Y ork quarrel into the Georgia Legislature
and declare that the movers of them “heartily
sympathize with the Hon. Daniel S. Dickinson,
of New York, and his noble associates in their
efforts to purge the National Democratic party
of its freesoil elements, and that we hereby ten
der them our heartfelt gratitude for their patri
otic devotion to the Union and the Constitution.’’
Anew thing under the sun, and highly credita
ble to the Whigs of Georgia it is, to feel such
patriotic interest in the purity of the National
Democratic party! They themselves are mo
ving heaven and earth to crush and destroy that
party —a party to which they swore implacable
hostility, under any and all circumstances, pure
or corrupt, with or without freesoil elements.—
Yet they can, without a blush for the hypocri
sy of the thing, tender sympathy to men whom
they cheer on in what they call the good cause
of purging the National Democratic party,
whilst striving to use those very men as tools
for the destruction and not the elevation of that
party . —Marietta Adeocate.
Lord Palmerston on National Fasts. —The
presbytery of Edinburgh have received with
mingled astonishment anil grief a letter from
Lord Palmerston, In reply to an inquiry wheth
er a national fast, on account of the visitation
of cholera, was to he appointed. His lordship
after referring to the laws of nature, concludes,
“Lork Palmerston would, thorefore, suggest that
the best course which the people of this coun
try can pursue to deserve that the further pro
gress of the cholera should be stayed, will he
to employ the interval that will elapse between
the present time and the beginning of the next
spring in planning and executing measures by
which those portions of their towns and cities
which are inhabited by the poorest classes, and
which from the nature of things, must most
need purification and improvement, may be freed
from tiiose causes and sources of contagion
which if allowed to remain will infallibly breed
pestilence, and be fruitful in death, iu spite of
all the prayers and fastings of a united hut inac
tive nation. When man has done his utmost
for his own safety, then is the time. to invoke
the blessings of Heaven to give effect to his ex
ertions.”
From China.—The Rev. E. C. Bridgman
lias written a letter to the Boston Recorder,
dated “Shanghai, Aug. 6, from which we take
the following extracts:
“During the last month, the insurgents have,
according to all the reports that have reached
us here, steadily extended their lines, and had,
a month ago, possession of a large walled city,
Fung-Yang, within 500 miles of Pekin, on
which they seemed strongly bent, determined to
kill or drive out the Muncbus.
If Pekin falls, the old government will, in all
probability, go too ; and then will come anarchv,
unless the insurgents have wisdom and strength
to extend their own government, now in its third
year, apparently well organized, with consider
able resources, and army sixty or eighty thou
sand strong.
What will our friends of the Bible Societies
and Tract Societies think and say, when they
know that these rebels are printing and circula
ting both the Scriptures and tracts ‘?
The Rev. Chas. Taylor is now on his third
trip to their camp, and the Rev, L. T. Roberts is
in company with him, hoping to reach the chief,
who was once Mr. R.’s catechumen ami guest at
Canton.
It would seem that this chief gained his first
religious knowledge—his first knowledge of
Christianity—from a tract entitled God’s Word
to Admonish the Age, or some similar one many
years ago, while a student at Canton ; and that
for Laving embraced the new doctrines, he was
ejected from his place as a school-teacher.-
Friendless and pennyless, he came to Mr. Rob
erts, with whom he remained some months in
the spring or summer of 1817. Subsequently,
he and his fellows were persecuted, and two of
them put to death. The others, this chief among
the rest, were driven to make resistance. Hence
apparently, the origin of this great movement.’’
T From the London Times. 1
The Last Hope Gone.
Commander M’Clnre can send us no news
of Sir John Franklin’s expedition. The opin
ion among the most distinguished and Polar
worthies now is that Sir John Franklin, after j
leaving the winter quarters where his traces !
were found, proceeded to carry out the Admi- j
rality instructions, steering first westerly for J
Melville Island, and then shaping a course—as
far as the configuration of the scene of action
permitted—southerly and westerly for Behering’s
Straits. It is supuosed that, in endeavoring to
carry this purpose into effect, the Erebus and
Terror were hopelessly frozen up or destroyed
years ago iu in some of the multitudinous chan
nels which are known or supposed to exist
there.
Tins we find to bo the opinion of the princi
pal Arctic navigators, and it comes before us
recommended by its extreme probability. Cer
tainly, Sir John Franklin was not an officer to
leave unattempted any duty which he had been
ordered to perform, and therefore it is probable
that he would not have deviated from the letter
of his instructions without excellent cause;
had he so deviated, it is all hut certain that he
would have left behind him, at Beecliy Island,
or elsewhere, some record of his changed in
tention.
it then, Commander McClure lias been unable
to find any trace of the lost expedition between
Behering’s Straits and the point from which he
wrote his dispatches, it would appear that our
best reliance lias been exhausted. The public
have a right to expect that we have now seen the |
Arctic expeditions. Even Sir John Barrow,!
had ho been yet alive, would now have entreat
ed the Adrnirnlity to hold their hand.
Savannah and Charleston —A Compromise.
A correspondent of the Savannah Courier no
tices the two projects ol Railroad connection
between Georgia and South Carolina, viz: a
Road direct from Charlesten to Savannah, and
a Road from the latter to Branchville ; and on
the supposition that the first of these is exclu
sively a Charleston interest, as the latter is man
ifestly an interest of Savannah at the expense of i
Charleston, he proposes what he is pleased to I
call a compromise, to harmonize them. It is
that Georgia should allow these Roads to cross
the river by a bridge in common, on condition
that South Carolina shall give charters to both
of them. We are somewhat accustomed now
a-days to compromises, in which one party gets |
all, on condition that they shall not demand more !
than all the matters in dispute, hut this proposi j
tion from Savannah goes even beyond the im- I
pudence of tho North at Washington. We had j
supposed that it was as much the interest of I
Savannah as of Charleston, that there should he
a direct and cheap communication between
them. We had no idea that they would ask us
to buy the right of crossing the river and erect
ing a depot in their city. We had not. supposed
that the soil of Georgia was so very sacred that
it could not he touched without paying an enor-!
mous price for the privilege ; and for our part
we certainly shall not advise the ratification of
any such self conceited notion. If people can
not go to Savannah without paying ransom, they
can at least stay away.
But since this matter of compromise of inter
ests between the two cities has been broached,
we take leave to propose what we think is a
compromise having really two sides to it. Sa
vannah wishes a communication with the North
by the directest line, viz: by a road to Branch
ville, which would carry ali her travel and bu- 1
siness far away from Charleston. On the other
hand, the latter wants a connection by the short
est route with Macon, Columbus, Montgomery,
and all that region. Let Savannah have her
road to Branchville, on condition that Charles
ton shall he allowed to have a connection with
the Central Railroad at its great bend, which
would he iu a direct line with Macon Os course
it is understood that each city shall build its
own road—that by which it is to he benefitted
at the expense of the other. This we call a fail
compromise. What says Savannah ( and if
Savannah is mute, what says Macon, and what
says the State of Georgia? —Charleston Mer
cury.
Courtesy in Railroad Cars.— The New Y ork
tSji 4 discourses upon courtesy in railroad cars
and gives the following hint to.the ladies:
“We venture to say, that if the ladies would
only condescend to speak or smile a grateful
acknowledgment when gentlemen abandon their
seats to them, all thought of the company's in
terests would he forgotten, and a lady’s entrance
in a crowded car ho welcomed as a gleam of
sunshine in a cloudy day. The truth is, too
many women are like spoiled children who
snatch a favor with a frown, and the other sex
will get tired of allowing them to have their
own way. When a smile makes women invinci
ble, why should they rob man-kind of so much
happiness by assuming manners that provoke
and annoy.”
ET “W'hen is a goat not a goat?” When
1 he’s a button (hutting.)
[TERMS, $2 00 IN ADVANCE.
Prospects |af the Cotton Market.
Hunt’s Merchants Magazine, in an extended
article on Cotton has the following upon the
Market prospects for the ensuing year:
“The markets for the coming crop we con
ceive to be of a favorable character, for the con
sumption is likely to he adequate to the absorp
tion of any probable extent of production. This
would seem to be evident from the course of the
past two years ; tor within that period we have
seen two suecessivd crops—the last the largest
ever produced, and the combined exceeding any
two previous crops by the important amount of
nearly a million and a quarter of bales, (the
crops ol 1851 and 1852 together amount to
about 0,210,000 hales) we have seen these two
large crops more readily disposed of than any
previous ones,and at prices which not only pre
sent a satisfactory average throughout hut which
show a gradual though steady improvement
(with some collateral causes) until the closing
rates for the crop of 1852, are nearly fifty per
cent higher than the opening ones lor that of
1851. VVe have already shown that ratio of
consumption in Great Britain for the first six
months of the current year has exceeded some
what the ratio of 1852; and should the political
questions which now agitate Europe be amica
bly arranged, and the world remain at peace
such is the general prosperity of the great con
suming countries, that a very ample crop is like
ly to meet a ready market, at satisfactory prices.
A t the same time the increased facilities for its
disposal, to which we have made reference in
our opening remarks, all of which will enure to
the advantages of the planter.
Caleb Gushing.
W e cannot conceive the motives which prompt
our Whig brethren to assail General Cushing
in the vile manner which we have witnessed in
some of the journals of that party. On Friday
last, the New Orleans Bulletin quoted the fol
j hitting paragraph, without a word of disappro
hation. It is extracted from a letter written by
j the Postmaster of Worcester, Mass., in relation
j to Gen. Gushing’s address, lately published, in
, which he deprecates a coalition between the
I Democrats ol -Massachusetts and the Freesoil
| ers. Just read tho dirty language transferred
by the editor ot the Bulletin to his columnsjwith
out a word of dissent, ami with apparent satis
faction :
Ihe writer (Gen Cushing) is an enormous
hypocrite and scoundrel, und the person he writes
to is a paltry, peddling, huckstering knave.—
* * * But this interference with State legisla
tion is a matter which must be immediately cor
rected, or there is no independence likely to he
lelt. \\ e are ready to co-operate with Slave
holders and Abolitionists, Hards, and Softs,
anybody and everybody to get rid of such a
monstrous as this. * ” But Cushing
is a hypocrite as well as a tyrant . There is not
a Democrat iu the .State more deeply implicated
in the coalition with Freesoilers than he is.
He broke with the Hunkers on this very
ground.”
We call upon every man wno has the least
regard for the decencies and proprieties of life, to
trowii upon and discountenance this disgraceful
ribaldry and atrocious scurrility, aimed one
ol tiie high officers ot the Government—a man
of profound erudition and brilliant genius, whose
attainments inscience and literature and polit
ical lore are not snpassed by any those of indi
! vidua! now living in this country, or in any
j other. 1 his is the same Caleb Cushing who ex
pended large sums ol money from his private
purse to clothe and equip the New England Re
giment of V olunteers, previously to its embark
ation lor Vera Cruz, during the late war with
Mexico. The Whig Legislature of Massachu
setts, then sitting in Boston, had refused to ap
propriate a single dollar for that patriotic object
Gushing is possessed ot an ample fortune, and
his regard for the welfare and glory of his coun
try, prompted him to do that which the men un
worthy to he styled the representatives of Mas
sachusetts had refused to do.
We are at a loss to know what fault Generaj
Cushing has committed to merit the savage ob
loquy and hideous abuse, lavished upon him by
the Whig freesoil newspapers. His private
character is entirely stainless; his public life is
distinguished by the great ability, integrity and
uselulness which have characterized it in what
ever scenes lie has been called upon to act.—
He has lately issued a production of Ids pen,
intended, as he says, to assist in crushing the ef
lorts ot freesoilers and abolitionists to over
throw the federal constitution and dissolve the
Union. Surely this masterly essay, volunteer
ed in defence of our national institutions and
of Southern interests in particular, deserves
not to he abused and villified (as we see it is)
with a dirty blackguardism that would not be
tolerated in the disputes of a decent forecastle.
What doe the_ editor of the Bulletin and his
Whig coadjutors expect to gain for themselves
and their party by this war of slander and cal
umny upon the favorites of the Democracy, the
first and ablest statesmen of the country? How
and by what act or word has Mr. Cushing de
served the epithet “scoundrel,” re-echoed by the
Bulletin from some vile source in the North?—
He is a scoundrel because he served his country
in the Mexican war; lie is a scoundrel because
at his own expense lie supplied the New Eng- t
land regiment with equipments and warm cloth
ing on the eve of its departure for Vera Cruz at
an inclement season, after the Whig Legisla
ture of Massachusetts had shown the brave fel
lows the cold shoulder and the back of their
hands; because at the nick of time, previously
to the last Presidential election, he manfully
stood up for the rights and interests of the South;
because he has lately issued a most elequent and
masterly address calling upon the people of New
England to crush the unnatural faction of free
soilers and abolitionists, and beseeching the De
mocracy to shun all junction or coalition with
them. These are the offences which Cushing
has committed against the peace and dignitv of
Whigdom. We know of no offences of his, and
never heard a man accuse him of any, against
the proprieties of life or the tranquility and honor
of his country.— Loitisina, Courier.
llabics. —lt strikes us that more fibs are told
about babies than anything else in the world.—
VVe all say they are sweet, yet every body who
can smell knows that they are sour ; we all say
they are lovely,yet nine babies in ten have no
more pretension to beauty than a pup dog; we
praise their expressive eyes,yet all babies squint;
we call them doves, though one of them makes
more noise than a colony of screech owls. The
fellow who wrote this has left for Kamskatka.
The women were all after him with broom
sticks.
O” The great annual Regatta between the
North and South, is announced to come off at
Charleston S. C„ on the 25th inst., for prizes
amounting to upwards of $30,000.
Number 49,