Southern federal union. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1861-1862, June 18, 1861, Image 1

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jMtfjlJUV, JflSBJST & BiKAE pujlisiiers anl Proprietors. , V. Borcnros. / _ . il. SiftttnT. S E,,,,or "‘ ibit Soatfjnn fckrnl Slnion /■; published il eek/y, m Millcdgcd'dle, (fa C truer of Hanrock end Wilkinson. Sts. 'opposite Court House.) Al i>2 a fear in Advance, , fasnessIX Adv.v.vce, S3 Pen Ax sum.) bvtks of advkrtimng. Per square of t'reive /liter. , in'- inperf:on #1 OtJ, ami fifty eeut* lor each aubeequei eoutianaiM*. T’.j-v-.- -.-it without I lie specification of the number. As ■ * uuuiriei « ii- 'vi 11 be publifciied till forbid and chtirgi • - nr i'rnfeai'iotial Cards, per year, where tin ,i eX'ieedSlX LlXES - - . £|() ( ni contract trill be made with thane who wish i ,tr by the year, occupying a specified space lev; a lad vektisements. Sal, - of Land and Xegroea, by Ailiniuiatratora, K: e( . u t,.r- or Guardians, arerequired by law to be he „ . find Tuesday in the month; between ihe hours I lin t ie forenoon and three in the afternoon, at t! foart oouse in the county in which the property is si V toe of these sales must be given iu 8 public g , ii • 11 days pretious to the dav ofsaie. \,I err lorthe SH of personal property must begi- u n like manner lil days previous to sale day. ° \o-ires to the debtors and creditors of an esta * » ...I.Colwstl ttl - — „ o. an estate mu fi ’o>be puldishml 4tl days. \ a.■ ■ that application will be made to the Court Or limn !*• !.*avetosell Land or Negroes, must 1 , aliiislie’d for two months. Ctrl ■■ for letters.>f Administration Ounrdianshi ,Vc„ "nnst he published 30 days—for dismission fro : niiiistratlo i. monthly *U month*—for dL-raNgii r.ii irdiaasiiip, 411 days. liaVsf.tr foreclosure of Wortgnge must be publirhi 1 far four months—for establishing lost nape " , of ' months—for compelling tit!. . || t; os itors or administrators^ where bond has be. jiv-ti hy the deceased, the full space of thr. I’a ions will always be continued according I iegal requirements, unless otherwise order. Ihe following RATES: ati nis. ou letters of administration, Ac. disinissory from yidmr’n. “ “ Guardianship, a veto sell Land or Neeroea tice to debtors and creditors. of personal property, ten days, 1 sqr. e *»f land or negroes by Executors, Ac. pr sqr. - ..oin odvei lisine- Ids wife fin advance,) 4! 3 i I i 31- i: a i (; K N T E K A L AI) VE RTIS RM ENTS. J. A.& W. W. TIMER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW Eatonton, Ea# October. fa, !*5!). 21 lv COATES A WOOLFOLK eoLtrtljonsc nnb Commission M RCIIANTS, ARE now open and prepared for the re option f .it it their NEW KIKE PROOF YVAKEHOUSI opposite Hardeman A Sparks. We will endeavor t [rove nit elves worthy of the patronage ofthose wl w favor U- with their business. Liberal advanci made on cotton when desired. M u■<HI On.. Sept. 21, I8.V9. 18 tf. 3?. BOWDOIAT, ATTORNEY AT LAW etTOSTOS, 4; v. Futontnp Oju. Keh. 14, 1^00. Encourage Home Literftttite !! THE 'OUTIIERX FIELD AND FIRESIDE 0 ( VOTED to Li’eruture, Agriculture, and Her' culture, edited by gentlemen of eminent ability ,n their w-v.-ral departments, is published every SATURDAY. at Augusta Georgia. IAPRESSIOYs OF THE PRESS. •It. writers arc the most distinguished in the South.' Delta, Ai re Oi leans. Stands in the very first rank.” J* ‘f .byterin n, Charleston, A paper, indeed,for” .-. utli."—Sews, Savannah. "A most uocceptjL a pap. r.” * Christian Index, Macon. "Equalled by few. surpasoed by none. - ’ 1 " Times, Columbus. ■‘The best investment of two dollais that could b. made ”—Mmsourian, St. Irons. Deserves tne most liberal patronage.” Baptist, Atlanta. “We cordially commend it to 8 mtlierners ’ Enquirer, Richmond. ‘ Its contents are varied and agn eablc.” Chrntain A lrocatr Xeir Orleans. -•(' ilculated, eminently, to improve the soil and tin mill I."—Enquirer Memphis. Killed With tne cboitmt loading matter." Jtnrnal 4" 1/ •ssrngcC Moron, (la. “An excell-nt journal, edited by competent gentlemen.’ Chronicle .y Sentinel, Augusta, (la. - Best Literary journal in the country.*’ Journal Louisville. ‘ A Southern blessing.’’—Argus, Norfolk. _ _ Every reading mr.li n, the country slionld take it.” Republic, Augusta. •Gives full value for,tl.e money.” , Si. uthroe Jarkson Miss. V. ithout a rival—the best that cu es to us." Exp -ess, Virksburgh, Miss. Invaluable to every man of literary ta.-te ." Register, Mobile The best family paper published ” Courier Charles/on. Equal, if not -uperior, in liternry met it», to any journal Jiuhii'lied.”—Elni'dntd, Raleigh. A welcome guest at every fireside Advertiser, Montgomery, Ala. TERMS OK SUIPstlBIPTIOX—PAYABLE AL WAYS IN ADVANCE. Single copy, per annum S* - six copies. “ J« 1 en copies, ■ Twenty copies. “ So ciiucii copies senl gratis. i.u- FIELD AND FIRESIDE will shortly enter utnii its thifd volume, ai.d is now FIRMLY ESIAB 1.1'll El) It is handsomely print, d, in folio form, for ■ mlirg.on fine papei, and w.tli c enrtype. Every cx- crnuii is made to vindicate it' cl im t > lie r.IE FIRST W EEKLY' PAPER IN THE SOUTH JA.tlCK GABBIVEK. Proprietor. Angusta.Oa.. April, 11th, ISfd. mi uIiSODiiVl.LB IRON AND BRA'S FOUNDRY! i \KKKLEY & FEKKOWS would respectfully in- * t form the public that they arc now prepaiedt. execute anv w«»rk in their lii)6 with neatnesn and d<*n |i it.h such its SUtJAU MILL ROLLS, turned or un timed, of nnV'ize. from 20 to 120 dollars per sett. SUGAR KETTLES from 30 to 120gallons -, Saw anc Grist-Mill Machinery: Gin Gear of any size. Fenjins tor House, Harden. Balconies. and Cemeteries, at Eastern Prices. Kch and Clock Weight!, Window Sills and Caps, YK.l'pindles, and Fanning Mil! Irons of all descrip tions. made of the best materials. Hr VVor’< Warranted. Milledgeville. Jan. 2t. 1SA0 ™ ,f AT I NO—SLATING. tV. E. ELLIOTT, RlfTIfAL SLATIR HI) DEALER lYf o ST SLATES, EUENTLY FROM KiCIIMOND, VA., w ready to do any work in his line of bnsi- ,—.Slating, and wnrrau edfiee from Leak- Mtlrndcd to tirs to old Slats Root Promptly. 1. E. is Agent for an extensive Manufactory [tailing. Verandah. Ba'cmiies. Iron stairs, ins. Settees, Chairs, Tables, Tree Boxes, &e,&c, and all other Iron Work oi a ,ve cha’actor. .iiig C’cmclcry I.ots will rrcciTC bis par ticular Altcatiou. v E. is Agent for Rti eitensivs Marble . nt Works, likewise lor the Steam Marble Works. gns of all, with prices, can be seen at ins ip stairs, over Morning News office. Bay Savannah, Ga. ecimeioof our work may be seen on the building in Milledgeville. nice—G. W. Adams. Superintendent C. ■ 23dds&wtf. avannah. Blackberry Wine. BULK-BINDING The Subscriber is now pre pared to do Sook-Bind- ing. in all its branches. Old Hocks rebound, &c hound in ths best style BeaSK Books ned to order Prompt attention will be 11 woik ent:usted to me. S. J. KIDD. r in Konthrm Federal l'!i»" ® c, *‘ eville, March 19th, I^Kl 4:1 Have you seen that Bio IlfDtAS i - of this paper boiiling. Roots, Darks . orthe Ciikrokkz Bkkk®*' VOLUME XXXII.] MILLEDGEVILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JUXE 18, 1861. (NUMBER 4. SAftFOMD'S n T n r\ 7 x ' & !E R* invigorator . . l\errr Drl.il./^i— [T IS cnifi»fWM^^ r debilitates. C.fl fi«°.ENTIRELY from OU GUMS dedicine,k,’owTa e n“ D ap?* , ^ liS,,, ' d S,aDdar ' ised it, and is now resor-l •!{in U, , al hav< blithe dUeaBes forwhif ! fiS It e ? ,n *’ 3tn f oI,tl ^enco u £srsafStesF* 1 - ume. ous nussliciteu cer- * tificatcs in , DROPSY CURED! A0 YANKEE HIMfclG! rire vp until you try Broom's Anti- Ilydropic Tincture ! Don t *|MIE undersigned would respectfully call the [From the Field and Fireside.) Jarhaen. onr first .Tlartyr. Nutwheieft.c tattle red Covers with fan e the dead ; Not where the trumpet cal s Vengeance for each tl.at fal a; Not with Lis ecu radesdear Not there, he tell not there. i my possess.oi nent of tlm individual ® ^!° t,l ° ttm pera u< l r^e'd 8 b n the use of the^JUvei K ! li ‘. !e . v< ?' urc Liver Complainti j Invigorator, and it Wil • uflintuin, K1 atulcTnee!(— iJaundiee!Feima'leVtVak y Kan ily Medicine!*' H m j w“lfcu,e sfckHeS"^!" nent r ofX!k K,U8fnl |^“ a t* "commence All wlwj u»e it are giv-' Hvor \Jf jg tgsrt 4**-*• j 1 — i their testimony in it wafer m the * mouth with the In cigorator, and swul/otn both, together. Price one dollar per bottle. —ALSO— SANFORD’S FAMILY" Cathartic Pills, COMPOUNDED FROM Pure Vegetable Extracts, and put up it, Glass Cases, Air Tight, and will keep it. my climate• *lhe 1*aimly Cathartic! iPilli« agentle hut activ* aUiartic, which the pro- [prietor iias used iu in •rarti. e more than twen-1 - :iy years. The constantly incretia*-QQ mg demand from thos* ' [ :o j ,av ® the : j Pills, and tiie satisfactio ' hich all express in re .jrard to their use, has in lured me to place them ^ within the reach of all. The Profession well)** know that different Ca hartieaact on differential portions of the bowels. The Family Catharticj j Pill has, with due refei uce to this well estub j llished tact,been compom ed from a variety of the Q purest Vegetable Ex » ac.t«. which act alike un m every partol thealimen ary canal, ami are goodly .ind safe in all case> vliere a Cathartic isj 1 needed, such as Derangt icnts of the Stomach, £4 Sleepiness, Pains in tin tack and Loins. Costive-1^« ness. Pain and sorenes •ver the whole body, jfrom suddeu cold, whirl requentiy, if neglected end in a long course o ever. Loss of Appetite, c* a Creeping Sensation o Jold over the body. Rest-! llessness. Headache, o veight in the Head, all ^ Infl.nnatory Diseases •Vorms in Children orjq Adults, Rheumatism, i rent Purifier of the j I blood, and many disease) f o ic hi cl flesh isheir\ j to t too numerous to mention iu this advertisement, Dose, J to 3. P r ice Three Dimes. Tne Liver Invigorator and Family Cathartic Pilh ire retailed by IV uggbts generally, and sold wholesah Ov the Trade in h!1 the large towns. S. T W. SANFORD, M I).. 60 Iy. Manufacturer and Proprietor 208, corner of Fulton sf . Broadway, N. Y. DRESS AND UNDRESS MILITARY CAP MANUFACTURER. L>I. at'cniion of the prth'ie to ilieir justly celebra- ed ANTI-HYDROPIC TINCTURE. A fair trial s all we ask to convince the most incteduloua that iirtreament is no humbug. Many who have de- paired of recovery have bid! cvtinly relieved un ier onr.treatinent. We w ould say tu those afflicted •vith that loathsome disease, the Dropsy, to delay in time in giving us a call. Remember the olo • irovetb, “Procraetinstion is the thief of time ” "twill visit patients w hen desired and reasona dy compensated for cur trouble. On the receipt •f ten dollars we wiil forw ard to any Railroad d< iot its value in onr medicine. M. & J. II. BROOM. P. S.—All communications must be addressed o the undersigned to meet with prompt attention, ecan be consult'd bv calling at his office on the North side oi public sip.are. JOfcEPH H. BROOM. Carrollton, Georgia. * CERTI FI CAT FS. Powclton. Hanoi i k c« in iy, Ca.. Jan. Hi, 18511. Joseph II. Broom, Eeq.— lit nr Sir : Tins is to oer- ify that in the year 185fi, I had under n'V care a care f Dropsy, which I directed tube placed under youi reatment. The above case was placed under youi •are and treatment, and in the spare of six or sevei weeks you made a final cure. The above specified ease ias since been under my notice,"but no sign of Dropsy •as since been visible I would therefore dirrot nil win e.ve the Dropsy to give you a trial, for 1 think voui medicine the gieatest ever discovered for Dropsy." Yours respectfnllv, R. F. SEAY, M. D. Sandersville, Oa., Jan. 7, 1S58 Oertlemen : This is to certify that my mother was fflieted with Dropsy for a long time, and that al! he mi diealskill winch could be proemed was exhaust- d, olid her recovery was r gnrded ns hopeless. Mil was induced to test the virlue of Broom’s Anti-Hy loplc Tit etiire, mid found in a few days she grew •etter, and t! rough its use a perfect ctne was effected, nd she lived several veers afterwards. I cheerfully ecnnimend those afflicted with Dropsy to give it a air trial. Respi otfnlly, JNO. YV. RUDIS LLE. Greensboro, Ga., Jan. 30, 1800. Gentlemen : This is to cettify t! nt iu the year 1853. I bad a negro man afflicted with Dropsy. I*gave him Hroom's Anti-IIydrcpic Tirclnre, which 1 heluve ef ected n pei mam lit cure. T1 is tegrnw as treated by >ther physicians. 1 ut to no i fl'ict, and I cheerfully re- •ommend any one who has the Dropsy to tiy Broom’s \ nt i-FIvdropio Tincture. *■> I v j Rosp« ctfnliv, NANCY BICKERS. He grasjis no brother’s hand, lles'ees i.o patriot-band : Darit g, alone, Ihe foe, He strikes, then waits t! e blow ; Counting i.is life notdear. His was no heart to fear! Shout, shout, 1 is deed of glory, Tell it ill SOI p ai d sb iy; Tel! it where soldiers biave Rush fearless to their grave. Tell it—a magic spoil In that great detd shall dwell. Yes! he hath won aname, Death for aye to Kun e. ** Our flag baj lis« d in b!o< d, Away as w nh a flood, Shall swetp thetyiant band, Whose leetpollute our lai d. His Martyr-patriot fall Snail be a tiun.pet call Tocmsli tl e invading ft e, Let not his blood in vain Cry from the soil they slain Tuen freemen, raise the cry As Freemen live or die ! Anti, arm yon for the fight, llis liHin iriu yotn sight. And this your battle-cry— Jack sun and Ticlory ! Augusta, Ga. T. F. York.—The Dr. c, XX. XVZcirAN’S STRENGTHEMAG CORDIAL BI.OOD PURIFIER! The Greatest Remedy In the YYorld. y AXD TIIE DSost Delicious AND De’iglitfnl Cordial EVER taken. Signs of Distress in. i\ New Votk Day Look says : In every rlircctton ‘"tiiis house to let,” ir “store for rent,” “this property lor sale,” “selling off at less tl an cost,” “as signees’ sale,” &c.. &c., staie you in the face—followed by hosts of less important, lint similar announcements. Noraie these offers confined to old nr itifeiior buildings, hut hang, like placards on an effigy, o\ei the door-posts of some of the new est ami most elegant structures on our ptoudest avenue. From the Astor House to the corner of 14ilt street you may this mor ning count one hundred and eighty-nine of these commercial cpi'aplis, and if yon slip quickly into many a handsome esiali lishment w-heie plate glass vies with gild itig for the adornment of happier days, you may be told, in a whisper, that business is dead and the place will soon close. X.ES7TZ, Milledgeville, Ga.. bas i now ou betid, and is prepared ro make, Jb, «i| kinds of the above articles. Also, Swords, [g Epauletts, Plumes. Pompnons. Buttons, and IjT Military furnishing goods generally. Mill.dgeville. April fitli Mil. Jfi tf .1 OIJ3W HOTEIXj ! PLANTER'S HOUSE Cherry Street, Macon Ga, r p*HIS HOITSE is Two Hloekn from the* Kail Koad Depot. IN THE BUS INESS PAKT OF TIIE CITY, and nc*ar the Ware Houses and Wholesale Stores. A Porter will be in attendance >it the Depot. J. O. GOODALE, Proprietor. January *Jli*t. 186J. ‘ij 3m # . BOARDING. M Y' HOUSE will be open for trnnsipnl bir boarders. JAMES E. Milledgeville, Jan. JStli, Ittii. regu HAYGOOI) 35 if. •piioti of MEMBERS TO THE CONVENTION. ALL WHO CALL ON ME will be made comfortable. E S. CANDLER. Milledgeville, January, 4tl., 18fi!. American Agriculturist. Fur the Form Ctnrdcu, nnd SIon.« hold. A ThuRuCgh going, RELIABLE, and PRACTI CAL Journal, devoted to the different departments of SOIL CULTURE, such as growing Field CROPS: oncHAitn and garden FRUITS; garden VEGETABLES and FLOWERS: Trees, Plants, aud Flowers for the LAWN or Y ARD; care of Do mestic Animals. &c , «Vi\, and to Household Labors. It has also an interesting aud instructive department for children and youth. TERMS—INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. One copy, one year SI 10 Six copies, one year 5 lit) Ten or more copies oue year 80 cents each. Ug^Add to the above rates: Postage to Canada 0 cents: to England, France or Germany, 24 cents per annum. Postage anywhere iu the United States and Terri tories most be paid by the subscriber, and is only six cents a year, if paid iu advance, at the office where received. All business and other communications should be ad dressed to the Editor and Proprietor. ORANGE JUDD, 41 Park-Row, New Y’otk City. SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. THE thousand!) upon thou- hkijGs who are daily uaiuK M oLcau'i StrengtlieuujK Cordial, certify that it ie ab- wihitHy an iniailib** remedy for the renovating aud 1 >f-< » t "a VIGORATfNOtlie nliatfcr-1f*__ before takil!2 *'d aud aidtaeed nystem, pu-AIfiCf iQkiJg. living and enriching the Blood—rt&ttiring the sick, unerinp invnlid to II i: A Ir T II AND STRENGTH. THERE IS NO MISTAKE ABOUT IT. IT will cure Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Diarrhoea. Dysentery, Headache, Deprepsit.n nt Spirits, Fevei md Ague, Inward Fever, Bad Breath, or any disease »t* the Liver, Stoiunc*b, or Bowels. GENTLEMEN, do you wish to be Healthy, Stri ng and vigorous.' BT la DIES, do you want the bloom of Health to count to your cheeks again?—then go at once and get llt-l.cnii'M Nlrrnglhrninii Cordial nnd Blood Purifier. Delay not a moment: it is warrantedto give utiafaetion. It will cure any ilisease of the Kidney, ■Vmnb,or Bladder; Fainling, Obstructed Menstrua ion, Falling of the Womb. Barrenness, or any diseasi irising from Chronic or Nervous Debility, it is an Iu- allible Remedy FOR C 11 I 1 D R E X. Do you want your delicate, sickly, puny Children, to .e healthy stroi g and rebust!—then give them icLEAN’S STRENGTHENING CORDIAL, (see ■leduectious ou each bottle) it is delicious to lake. C&-One table-spoontul, taken every morning fast- , . ng, is a sure preventive against Chilisand Fever, Yel- I this most exceLent kind to the oiv Fever, Cholera, or any prevailing disease. CAUTION!—Beware of Druggists or Dealers ,vV(. niay try to palm upon you a bottle of Bitters uirsnpaiilla, iwhieh they can l.uy cheap ! bvsayir.git s ji.st as good There are even men BAsE enough osteal partol my name to dub their Y'lLE deeoc- my lolis. Avoid such ininlm-us PIKAlkSflisl litrir-vil- ainons compounds! Ask lor Dr. J. H. McLean's 'tiengtiiening Cordial and Blood Purifier. Take milli ng else. It is the only remedy that will Purify yout Blood thoroughly, nnd. at the same time, STRENGTH EN and INVIGORATE the whole organization. Itis gut up iu Large Bottles—$1 per bottle, or six bottles tor $■>■ :ooo: Dr. McLean’s Universal Pills. For Liver Complaint Biliousness, Headaoiie, h, There has never been a OATHAR11C medicine, of fered to thepubhe, that has given such entire satisfac tion as MeLEAN’S UN1Y Eli SAL PILLS. Being entirely vegetable, they are pel A ct Iy inno cent and cau he taken by the most tender infant: yet prompt and poweilul in removing all Bilious secretions, Veid or Impure, Feted Matter from the Stomach. In fact, they are the only PILLS that should be used in naiarious districts. They produce no Griping, Sickness or Pain in tin Stomach or Bowels, though very active and searching iu tlieir operation promoting healthy secretions of the Liver atm Kidneys. Who will suffer from Biliousness, Headache and foul Stomach, when so cheap a reme- iv can be obtained! Keep them constantly • n hand; a'single dose, taken in season, may prevent hours, days, and months of sickness. Ask for Dr. J. H Me* Lean’s Universal Pills. Take no other. Being coated they are tasteless. Price only 25 cents per box, and can be sent by mail to any part of the United States. Southern Ink —T lie Augusta Chronicle and Sentinel says :—‘’One of the most im portant of small manufactures is Printers' Ink. At a glance it might seem unimpor tant, but not so. Pi inters’ Ink rules the civilized nations. Without it the dark ages would speedily come again—might makes right; and the rational liberty oi the citizens or subject be at the mctcy oi desports everywhere. M he machinery oi government and of society cannot be kept going without Printers’ ii k. It is a neces sity of the age, and as tve cannot now gel it elsewhere, we must make it ourselves We have the mateiial, it cotnes fiom out own soil, and there is nothing to do but to supply capital encigy, and expeiience to the manufacture, and we can have an abundant cheap and good supply of this 1 indispensible. These thoughts occur to us, as our attention is called to the fact that right here, in Augusta, we have com menced the manufactuie of Printer's li.k on a large scale, and the quantity nt which can be judged by looking at tin ( hrinir/e and Sentinel, which has been piinted by this ink for the past six weeks T be proprietors of the Augusta Ink Works are now prepared to furnish ink ol consumer, • and at a price as low as it has heietofoit been furnished from the Noitli. taking into consideration quality and expense of tians- portation, &c. Kow is the time to aid Southern enterprises of all torts and as Printers’ Ink cannot begot North, we feel we aie doing the press service by calling attention to the fact that, in Augusta, Ink can be supplied in any quantity and of supeiior quality. The price of best Newspaper Ink is twenty-five cents pei pound; for Job and Book Inks thirty to thirty-five cents (.’<>lored and Fancy lnk> will also be oft'ered in maiket very soon, though of course at higher prices. Let those in r.eed address Win. 15. Jones, Au gusta, Georgia.” ply of cotton—that great staple so neces sary to her pros) eniy^nnd one of the gieat and the most important of the bases of her manufacturing power. In tlx presence of or engaged in war, Great Biitain cannot afford to have a large por tion of her population uncniplnyed, and iheiefore turbulent, and lier whole coin- tneicial and manufacturing systtm distui- bed—we may say undeimined. 'J he dan ger would he too terrible. Lincoln’s threatened blockade of the mouth of the Mississippi, if enforced at all, we aie con fident wiil le of brief duration. Its mail effect will be to alienate from the Noitli- ern and government people anysjmpa'hv which in Great Britain and on the conti nent of Em ope, still remain for then sii-ce the development of ibeir hostile tar iff policy. t be disintegration ef the Union is not the only result of the eotiise tiie North lias, for mat y years, pursued towards tin f-outh. Bitter fruit as that evidently is to them, it is not the only one. The Norll will, in the futtne. have many othei bit ter fruits of its insane conduct tendered tor its acceptance. Amongother develop ments of which the times are prolific, ft i lie* astounding one to the Northern mind that the South is aliendy independent ot the North for her supply of breadstuff's, and in a great measure, for her supply ol provisions. The wheat fields of Virginia, the Car- olinas, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee ant Missomi, Noith Alabama, North Miss's- ippi, Noith I ouisiana, Arkansas, am above all, fruitful Texas, already furniel more than enough wheat foi iSomhein sup ply. and in a veiy few j ears, limit r tl i impetus of the i.ew oicler of things, tb< hist named Mate, our Youthful neighbor, Texas, will be one of the largest—if not the hugest—wheat glowing Mate ('it this continent, with ti e great advantage, ow ing to her climate, of being able to bavt her crop in market from six w e< ks to two months earlier than the. wheat growing Man s lemaining in the Union. T hen we have the rice fields of the Oar- olinas, Georgia, Flotilla and Louisiana, and corn in luxuriant and increasing abun dance everywhere throughout the South. Starve us out, eh ! That's another Noitli- ern delusion quickly to be dispel ed.— '1 hey forget, moreover, that the in;mens* prairies of r l exas feed innumerable herds of fine beef cattle, and that in Western nnd Noithwestern Louisiana, North Jiis- ^Urom tiie Correspond,pee ot the N. i Y'. Herald.] J on Don, May 18. 1861. This country is alarmed for the first 'ime since the. American war opened.— I here is this week a feeling of alami and anxiety, and tiiis feeling has given rise to plans that are of great interest tu the American government. '1 he Queen’s proclamation has been issued, and in entile good faith all loyal | objects of ber Majesty are enjoined not 0 join either of the belligerents, and they are assured if they do so tlieir government will not inteilete in their Lthalf in the event of their vessels being captured ot lirmselves made prisoners. M> far so good. Now for tlie alarm: If tire war is pro- racted even a twelvemonth, and the ctop • >f cotton put in jeopardy or gieatly cut- ailed, theie will bewailing in Lancashire Several Englishmen of posit on have told me that they believed ir the supply w-as • tie million bales short of the average it would produce such distiess and lead D -uch a convulsion in Manchester that tin very existence of the liiitish Einpiie tun 1 lie throne itself would be in danger.— l his is piobably an exaggeration, l ut n -cant supply of cotton w ill make a financial ciisis, anu a petiod of distress and statva- ion that would tequitea vast government aid, or theie would Le an iiisunection or a i evolution. To avert that, this government are go ingto do every thing possible to throw ob stacles in the way ol I'resident Lincoln; it. tlier words, to force your government t< -top hostilities. Y ou liave seen the papeis nete up to this time, anil bow tin y hav« «ii*alt in “bosh” and wenk aigun.ents .'gainst “coercion,” and iu fact encouiagei; be Miuih in their rebellion. You may be perfectly certain that Great Britain w ill fallow up thiwi'inclaiuatioii am the discussions in I’ailiament by every possible species of inteileicnce, and ii nothing el.-e will suffice, find a pretext to declare war against the United Mates to mice them to abandon tlieir piesent ground and acknowledge tiie independence of the c-outb. Gotten must be bad at all buzzards. And in the desite to sustain the South, and to bleak the Union, this government will be seconded by France, who bums to obtain some foothold and interest in Noith Ameticaand the West indies. Schemes are now on foot to get financial aid to the South, though with veiy slim prospects of success, i believe tin sissippi, Noith Alabama, the upper por- j i iumetit, if there weieany possible chauc. Dr McLean’s Volcanic Oil Liniment. Fiuie nkedk for the mouth. YVe liave rune ready for distribution tho following Seeds which will be mailed free to any of onr sub scribers for 18til, who will send us the neeessarj stamps for postage: Cotton tired—Dickson's Improved—1 cz. package; 6 cents. Hire—Premium, from Atlanta Fair—1 oz. package; postuge ti cents. Wheal—Premium white—I oz. package; postage fi CIS. Rye—1 oz. package; postage C cents. Oats—Black and while winter—Premium nt Atlanta Kan — I oz. package; fi ets. postage. [State which kino isiiesired.) Lucerne—l-X oz. pkge; 5 cts. postage. White Clover—do. do. Red Clovet— do. do. Orchard (rrass.do. do. Kentucky Blue.-do. do. Red Top— —do. do. Hungarian Crass seed—I oz. postage. titanford's Wild Grass—1-2 oz postage. Egyptian MiHct— 1 -2 oz. papers; 3 cents postage. The Ileal fCxieruni iu the World for until or Benst* Thousands of human beings have been saved a life of dt erepitude Hint misery, by the use of this invalua ble Liniment- It will relieve PAIN almost instanta- nei Usly, and it will cleanse, purify and heal the foulest 80K E iu an incredible short time. MeLEAN’S VOL CANIC OIL LINIMENT will relieve the most iu- veterate cases ot Rheumatism, Gout or Neuialgia. Kin Paran sis, contracted n useles, stiffness ot weakness in •he Joints, Muscles or I.igi n 11 Is. it will never faih- I'wo applications will cure Sore Throat, Headache or Earache. F. r Burns or Scalds, or any Pain, it is an nfalhble Remedy. Try it. and you will find it nn in- iispen.-ihle remedy. Keep it always ou hand. PLANTERS, FARMERS, or any otiejinving charge package—fi ets. papers: 3 cent of horses, will save money by using McLean> \ ole n- ie Oil Liniment. It is a speedy and infallible cure tor (tails, Sprains. Chafes, Swelling. Lameness. Sweeney, s,ires’, Wounds. Scratches, or any external disease.— Try it, and you will be convinced. ' I)R. J. II. AltLEAN, Sole Proprietor, SAINT LOUIS, Mo. The above prepnrntion, will be manufncturi d in New Orleans, La. Sold by GRIEVE & CLARK, Milledge ville. and by Druggists everywhere. 47 ly STRING AM) SUMMER si a & at. hit ana ’ar i SPRING AM) SUMMER Each subscriber, for ISM, who semis stamp ___ ___ entitled to one or two papers of seed, ns above; and U) A 1—fc jHL those who get up clubs, may draw the same propor- &VAi has on hand a largebeauti- tion for each name sent. ,, , , ... . ; till assortment of Other seeds will be constantly added to tins hst; and we chectfully send then: on the above terms. | We shall have a ’large assortment of vegetable and F lower Seeds, erpecwlly adaptea to the Sion• h . ready tor distribution bv the nnudle of January. These little pm kets of seed, seutteied far aud wide, through remote sections of the 8*outhem States, may e the menus of effecting much good; and will probably save manv readers the expenditure of money to: articles not adapted to tlieii wants. This will be found r. very cheap luodoof testing the value ot the different V eg etables, Grasses, ic , &c.; aud short reports ot either the success or failure ot these experiments will be highly interesting to our readeis. The more widely the Cultivator is circulated, the gtenter will be the distribution of seed and agricultural information; and as the agriculture of the South is the basis oj attpros- iierity, no true patriot (un do his section or people a greater service than by aiding us in successfully car rying out of this enterprize. , The Southern Cultivator is published m Augusta, Ga . at 81 per vear in advance RE art ic 1 :• is YVine, can be had at the;; >re of Grieve V ClnrU. also nt tlic Va- or« ot .:. Ul.v.M A KC.Va’. This Wine venrs old, aud in taste much resembles the | «t Old Port. A few dozen ol this age can be CF* Price fi 25 per botlle. d tf. NEW HARNESS AND SHOE SHOP. cv undersigned respectfully informs the Ci i zens of Milledgeville and vicinity, that he Consisting of all the LATEST aud most desirable styles ot French Hats of every variety. Also, many rich and fancy articles, beauliful Em broidery, elegant Laces and Velvets, Head- Dresses and Dress Caps, Bead Netts, Hair Pins, Bonnet Pius, Fancy Buttons, Lace Veils, Ruches, French and American Flowers, and a very large and well selected stock of HIBBOXS. MARSALAIN SILKS, HOOP SKIRTS. Ac., &c. Call and examine for yourselves before purchas ing. as it will be much to your interest. She is thankful for past favors aud solicits a liberal pa tronage from our city and surrounding couDties Mill**dgpvi!ie. April Ptn. ittii. 4(5 tf SHOES! SHOES! bus opened » vE5S AND sfJOE SHf)p at Hugh Treanor’s old Stand, corner of Hancock and Wayne Streets And solicits a share of public pa.ronaee. Harness made to Order -Repairing ot old Har ness done promptly and on reasonable terms Boots and Shoes made to Order Give him a . .1 L. J. nUuUtj. lll Milledges , ill | *‘ Mav I Ith. 1S61- 61 tf ) UST received a very large lot of - shoes,for Ladies, and Children, to be[ sold cheaper iLuu ever heard of befbie. J. ROSEN FIELD. March 2. 18fil. 41 tf. CHEAP FOR CASH! 50 Saw Cotton Gin lor Sp.le. Hillrdffrville Clothing Store, EOTEI Wo. 1. T IIE Subscribe.- having just returned from the North. is now prepared to furnish his old friends and cus tomers (to their advantage) Cl.lhii| of aay Dcacriptiaa, ONE of WATSON S best 50 Saw Cotton Gins, , , a very large assortment of the best quality ever is offered for sale. This Gin is new, and is equal j, r00fr ht to this City. All made to order, and the work to any in use. Sold for no fault, the present ow ners having no use for it. Any planter wanting a good Gin, can have a chance to get one at a re duction on the regular price. Apply at this office, , i ot N. Tift, or J. H. Watson, at Albany. warranted. . . , I can give you as good a bargain for cash a* any other establishment, but not as low down either in price "Milledgeville, November 5, I860. ’ a/tf C From the New Orleans Picayune Soulitfrn Crops und Provision*. The accounts nfihe condition and pros pects of tiie cotton, corn, wheat and othei crops, from all parts <-f the Gonfedeiate Mates and those which are rapidly pre paring to unite their fortunes with outs h\ becoming members of the distinguished and prosperous Southern family of Confederate sovereign States, are of the most cheering and assuring character. From all points in the cotton growing region, wc have glowing reports of the growing crop of our great staple. In some localities the heavy tains have some what injured the crop, but evert there the injury is not irremediable, and where ie planting has been neces'sat y, the woik has been energetically uiidertak*-n,' and ac comphshed without delay. From ail we can gather in regard to the grow it g ctop, we teel confident that with a favorable season henceforth until it is gathered, the cotton crop of 1861 will be as laige, oi neatly so, as that of last year, wliile in quality, the increasing cate in the choice of seed, and the continual improvements in preparing the staple for matket, assnte the consumer that it will be fully equal, if not supeiior, to any of its piede- c* s ois. Of corn, flte accounts from every part of the South are. piegnant with piomiseofbj far the largest ctop ever garnered. r J he reports of the condition and prospects ol the w heat crop are also of the most cheer ing character. So also of all other crops including fruit, of w hich theie is proinse of unequalled abundance. From all paitsof the sugar growing re gion of Louisiana, we have very good ac counts of the growing cane, and with a favorable season until sugar-making time, there is reason to anticipate that the x ielft the present j ear w ill be large, and so tar to compensate tlie plantets lor the deficien cies of the last two years. Favored by a kind Providence, the South can afford to laugh at the insane threats of the Northern fanatics, that they I will starve us into submission. They j cannot obstruct our cotton on its way to maiket. All Europe is interested deeply | in the matter ot an unobsti ucted supply of ! the gieat Southern staple, especially Gieat j Britain aud France. ’J he stoppage ot the i supply would soon cause gieat distress I and suffering among the operatives in the j British factories, and consequent riots and i tumults of an alarming chaiacter, w hile it would reduce many manufacturers to tiie i vetge of ruin, paraly ze commerce general- ; ly, and probably lead to revolutions and : scenes of anarchy aud bloodshed dreadful to think upon. Biitish statesmen know the peril, and are not blind to the proba ble consequences, and we teel assured that they will avert the danger by energetic measures witbont delay. In the present disturbed state of Europe, and with the prospect of a general war. British state- men have additional pressing inducements to remove all obstructions to the free sup- tions of Geoigia and the < arolinas, and the w ide range embracing 'Virginia, Kentucky. Tennessee. Missouri and Atkansas, im mense numbers of beef cuttle, to say noth ing of sheep, are raised. starve its out, eh! The Northerners have only succeeded hi depriving them- sehesofa profitable maiket. VVe can antj ly supply ourselves, and have an oveiplus for others, as they will find out by and by. Enough for the piesent. Niiimiig ihe Nnuth. A correspondent of the Baltimore Sun makes ihe, following interesting cempati son i etween the productive power of each section, c< mpiled Irom the statistics of 1550. We commend it to those North enters who are continually harping oil the poverty of the South : of doing it, would today advance ten millions to the bout hern Contedeiai-y.it by so doing they could see their way cleai to either a separation of the Union, a close of the war, or a full supply of cotton foi the next two years. Now , you may ntaik my words, and yon will fit.d tin in tine, just as ceitain as t.he stui continues to shine on jou, if Mr Lin coln’s government, sustained as it is bv ilie twenty millions of Northern people, does iiot make a forced match light thiougl secession within lour or five months, com pletely tegardless ol climate, season and all other eiicumstaiices, then John linlI will have a linger in the pie, and the Frenchmen, too, and you will have thiei wars on vour hands instead of one. A Napoleonic stroke—a campaign like I will select, first, South Carolina to j tl,at w ‘''S 1 ' «J ln,il '* l, «* at Marengo—a sud den stnking: into the hea't ot the enemy .- you have got rtin the parallel with, for several reasons. , - , . the chief of which are, that she has been \ « onn !0 ~ 1! > '*•« M,l, y supposed to produce t otliing hut cotton and rice, and she is the most detided and contemned of all the slaveholding States. Not many persons ate aware that this Slate alone pioduces five-sixths nearly of all the rice giown; but the seventh census of 1850 sliow-s that to he the fact Besides neatly all the lice, she produces wheat to within 3,000 bushels ot all pro duced by the six New England Mates to gether. Hie produces almost as mncl to conquer a peace and keep out loreigi intei tei once. 'J he overheating nation has had a hand in every national quanel m Europe for hundieds of} ears, and now that tin l liited Mates have begun to assume a posi tion among the Bowers of the earth, tin interference must he begun on that side 1 gieatl} hope J am mistaken in my sur mises, and w ould be loth to sav one wok to encoutage the South in the Lelief that corn as the Stateof Ni w Yotk, and 6,000- ; art ‘' receive aid and assistance iron 000 of bushels of that grain more than I ,his hide : kutthereisfixedandlulldeter- all the New England Mates together, for j 1111,13110,1 here—aud the piess aie dra- she produced upwaids of 16,000,000 of ! d mto >*— to lLl0W eveiy species ot ■ - ridicule, cold water, and mateiial ob stacle in the way of your government in crushing the rebellion. Jt is notaltogethei Dent jealousy of jour growing power, oi ove of interference, or a wbh to break uj bushels. She produced more oats than Maine, more by 1,000,('00 of bushels than Massa chusetts; more than 1,000.000 bushels of potatoes over and above wl.at Mail e pro duced ; more beans and peas by 180,000 bushels than a ! l the Northern States to gether, except New Yeik ; more berf cat tle than J’ennsjlvania by 1740, and al most as many as all the New England Mates together ; more sheep than Iowa and Wisconsin by 10,699; more begs rban New Yotk by 47,251 ; mote than Penn sylvania l:y 25,137, and 86,000 more thart all the New England States, with New Jeisey. Michigan, M isconsin and Califor nia in the bargain ; more horses and mules by JO.OOOihan Maine, New Hamp shire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island to gether; besides all which, she pioduces hugely of oxen, C"ws, and a vaiiety of products of the smaller kinds. Virginia and North Carol na produced jointly 13,363 000 bushels of wheat, or 241.000 bushels more than the gieat wheat Stale of New Y’oik, or a quantity equal to the whole product of the six New Li g- the Union, or to secure a cotton supp)}, hut they all have their influence. 1 have it from direct sources ih.nt tin T imes and the Morning Post have got their cue tri m Lord Palmerston, and the} are to act accordingly. Very direct hints have been held cut to the Confederate States of Ameiiea that if the old repudi ated debts of Honda. Mississippi and Ar kansas would Le acknowledged, and the inteiest paid, they should have more money. J belfave the sums that could be borrowed liete if this weie done would be small, hut it is a pnit of the plan, and gives encouragement to the Southerners. Now. if your Northern itilegtal portion of the country has any militnty stiength, any right and any endurance, with tin ability to cany on a tiemendous campaign w ith ctlibbing force, vigor and success, the} have no time to lose. You have got to talk of fifty and a hundred million d< l.ars at a time instead of tens of millions, and hundred thousand men in It is tiie land States, with New Jersey, Michigan. Iowa and Wisconsin all put together.— G<iir and five Vitg'iiia, North Catolina and Tennessee I s fa af ^ a hundred thousand, produced 115,471.593 bushels of coin, a ; snblimest struggle of modern times, and quantity exceeding by 300.000 bushels i on e >n which your very existence as a the joint product ot New Yotk, Pennsyl- o r< ’ at na, *on is staked, vania. Uliio, New Jersey, Connecticut, I Let the South break off, either with or Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Veimont j without foreign aid, and where is youi and Maine. Tennessee alone produced 16.500 more hogs than all the six New England Mates, with New Yotk, Pennsylvania, New-Jer sey, Iowa and Michigan, for that State produced 3.101,800 hogs, while the eleven Northern States named produced but 3,- 088.394. Most people have thought that tlie North was really tlie hog producing section, hut such is by no means the fact— the whole number of hogs produced in 1850, was 30 316.608—of which the shut-holding States tninished 20,770,730, or mote than two thirds of the whole swine production. It will doubtless surprise many persons to be told that tbe seven Gulf, or Cotton States of South Carolina, Georgia, Ala- Lama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, pioduced 45 187 ntote beef cattle titan t lie six Northern States, New Yotk, Penns} lvania, Uliio, New Jersey, Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin, altogether but buclt is the fact, for tiie census of 1850 tells us that these seven Cotton States pioduced 3.257.4S9 beef-cattle, while the thirteen Northern States named produced but 3,312,327. A single glance at the live stock col umns of tlie seventh census will prove to the inquirer that the slaveholding States produced more beet cattle than the uon- slaveiiolding 1-y 1,782,587. 'I hat while the North produced 1.541,121 cows, the South pioduced 2.829,810. 'I hat the Northern States produced 869,397 work oxen, against 820,340 pioduced by the Southern States. r J hat while the North produced 2,310,961 horses and mules, the South produced 259,358 more, for the Southern production was 2,570,320. future national greatness! A respectable nation, certainly, hut not the one that could grow up between the great lakes and the Gulf Mexico. Six months will cer tainly decide this question, and you may as well believe it. If you have virtual!} conquered in that time, well and good; but if }ou have not, then you will find new complications and infernal interfeience. Yon may say their publicly avowed posi tion is the very way to give encouiage- ment to the tebeliious 5 out It to continue tlieir resistance, looking to tlit* hope of foieigu inteiferenee. But still, you know that tbe great Lulk of this nation ate so much opposed to war, and mere vvar bur dens, that it would he impossible to get up a war, particulaily with America, without a show of a cause, and that pietext cannot be found immediately. But let some Biitish sailors be found privateering and hanged, let a blundering English skipper try to run a blockade and get captuied, or let a British Admital, ap- |>aieiitly by a blunder, but teally inten tionally, get into a scrape with some Yan kee cruiser, and exchange shots, and then send a false statement home about being “fired into,” and the cockadoodle news papers could set the corn tiy in ablaze on tiie subject of Yankee impudence, aud a peremptory demand could be made fora cessation of hostilities, or, in ease of a te- fusal. a declaration of war—and all on tlie bare-faced false plea that it was done for humanity’s sake. You may depend that the British government will let no possible opportunity slip to get some chance to interfere in your warlike affairs. -Every hundred thousand men enrolled, will be worth double tbe amount after that thee; and it the United States of North Ameiiea are ever going to be the first nation in the world, you have got one tiemend* us cam paign to catry on during tLe next six months. You had better have a dictator, n Kirg or an Emperoi, and have the country un der martial law Irom one end to the other for one or two yeais. and cttish }out et e- tnics out, thauget beaten Ly foreign inter ference ami I'litisli s}nj-athy. ^ our affairs ate now in } our own hands: tnwix months they may not he. Pit women cultivate the fit ids, high loin 1 dies learn how to be military tailois anil act as nurses, and let i-hilda-n lie ke| t home from school to do all kinds e.f woik, and save jonr nation fo nt the danger that threatens it from within ai.dwithiut; fi r } our affaiis never looked so setiousas they xlo at present. A SoldarN Lfe. A. M. Croi.ghen, of Somerset count*■» Md., w lio is a gunner at Eoit Nnifidk.iii a letter to the editor ot the S<ineiMt Union, furnishes some imeiestiag details ot tlie* defence about Norfolk and gives us a glimpse of a soldier’s l.le. He suvs:— Theie are betwen 25 Out) and oi).060 troops here and 200 Indians from the South; they nre encamped all around Nor folk—Georgia and Alabama are pietty stiongly repiesented. r J luce com.) antes of Georgians are encamped just back • f our rampaits, each 100 strong. (fac of these companies, the Macon Yolnnt<ets, ate as fine a Im-kitg a corps as 1 have ever seen. One company is in Georg a homespun, and fiercer looking men 1 never saw—ieal half ltoise and halt alligutoi in eveiy sense of the woid. 1 never was treated with more clever ness in my life, both by officers and lien than 1 have l een since I e: trie here. Y< it need not he surpiisid when J tell y»n that 1 am an officet—captain <4 a pin.oi in other words a gunner. NI ii e is No. 6 on thepatapet—}<m may talk about guns I tit she is one of tlnn.—she is a ten inch I 'all green, w ill do execuiii n 3 n ilcs ni d requites 10 lbs. i f powder ami 42 lbs. < f shot or shell lorn cliatge. ’With twelve of these no tinted at d lour life., six pound* is and side imuis in abundance our battel} is pupated to give old Ale’s men a vvann tect J tit'll at Port Not folk. Besides this theie is a battery at the Hospital of 18 guns and 2 furnaces for heating shot and 4 field pieces, and on C'rancy Island they haven battery of 10 guns mounted. Ju fact they have every place fortified front the capes to Norfolk, and the city and woods around ate full of soldiers—every man you meet is aimed. Morning ami evening } eu can scnici ly hear your ears for drums and files, brass lands, bugles and trumpets— O! who would not he a soldier. We have all the fun we want — in the evenings the n.en congregate in the tents or under trees and t<-ll v m fir which the Foutheri ers aie get low spitited the Captain lucht i t Ids men. heats to qnnitcis and tells gnat yarns about an attaik aud wains all n> I o lead}—at other tin es he feigns to hear signals and the sergeant tf the guard tells the sentry to 1 e on the look oni—then all ate on the aleit. at d } ou n ay judge v. hat the hoys will do w hen 1 tell } on that tht-ie is not one fiom the gunner to the pi vvder boy w-ho would not give Lis Led nnd blanket for a ctack at the ent eniy. I sleep on a bed of pine slints, at d theie ate men here quite as good as I am who do the same thing. We cut down a pine and plmket it —1 fill my bed oft' the sail e Dee with a planter and merchant 'tom Mac* n, Ga., whom I afterwards leaned weie worth fiom $50,O' 0 to 875.000 oath. Bir, 1 am conscious that 1 am among as btave a people as tlu-ie is on the face ot the gh 1 e anti if 1 die in their defense it is as much glory as J want. # * # 1 have wiitten you plain facts wit bout exaggeration, at tl believe if a N'onhein army comes Leie theie will Le scaicely one left to tell its fate. French Volunteer*for the American Il’cr. The P aris conespondent of the New Yoik Expiess writes: Hundreds of applications have beer made to Mr. Faulkner, by officers of toe Fiem h at my, to enter ihe set vice of the I lined and the Contedeiate Mutes, accnrdit g to tlieir opinions of the justice oft he quanel. Many of the sippbcants ate <-t stjetior lank in the Eiemh army ai d theie has been scaicely one unable to exhibit ciosm s and decorations, earned in the campaigns of AliK-a, the Crimea and Italy. Mi. Faulk ner has, of course, replied, whenever the offer was made in person, that he lias no authority whatever to accept the services of foreign volunteus in hi half of the gov ernment he repieseuts nt the Court of Fiame, and cettainly he holds none fi« m t Le seceded Mutes. So constant and mul tiplied have these demands l ecome, that the Minister of the United Mutes bus at length been compelled to issue a circular, for tinnsniission to military applicants, in w hich he states his it.ability to entertain their piopobitions, addii g that li e wide diffusion of military education throughout the United States, Noith and South, would rent er any foicignaid uni t cessaty, ilu nld so gnat a calamity as civil war l.i ipn iu the country. Y he applications contin ue to pour in. Meantime, Mi. Faulkner is pieparit g to take leai e of the Emperor, and teiuin to iiis hi me in Viiginia, im mediately after the arrival of the gentle man appointed to succeed him. Printers’ errors are sometimes laughable. A young clergyman piloted asetmon, the sulject of which was the necessity fur mooi-rate and lational recreation in which occuned the passag*, “Men should woik and play, too ” 'J he want of a stroke ruined it rnd the religious world was scan dalized by reading,. “Men should woik ami play loo.” Something new and Seat.—Wo obser ved, } ester-day afternoon, Capt. Waid’s little daughter. Miss Annie Kate, with a bonnet on the crown i f which was a piece of Line satin with stais in tl e circle, aid beneath it alternate folds of ted and white satin, the whole foutiing a Confedeiacv ting, nnd making a very i.eut tiimniii g far a child's bonnet. Miss Annie was seated in a small catriage. dtawn by a gi at, and was quite an object of attraction, as well the interesting little giil might he. Constitutionalist ~)th. General Directions for Cake Alai ing.— Have flour and sugar v, atm and devoid of lumps. Beat the. while and }olks of eggs sepaiately. Wash curianfs in a hair sieve, rub well in a coaise table-cloth, dry in a heated room, and dust them with fiiiir be fore they ate used, remove the stems and seeds fi< in raisins, chop them aid dust with flout; cut citron into small pieces; use ground spices; butler pans well, r.nd place a vv liite paper ov er, if the top of the oven is hotter than the bottom. }onr cake mill 1 e heavy. Open the oven door no oitem r than is necessaiy to turn the pan round; dissolve sub-car bonate of soda in Lot water, and mix cieam tattar thpriighly thnigh the flour; heat cake with a wout.eii spoon < r spade ; melt butter by pitting it in an earthen bow l, and slai.du g in a vent 1 < f hot water; never mix s* ur and sweet rod! - , by dissolving soda in it. When your cate is nicely browned, pierce it in themidide with a proom splint, and ifnothing adLeien it is done. A tin Imx or can is pteletaLle to wooden ones for keeping cakes. Much has been given up and abandon-' ed forever that could have been actor.- pluhed by a little more perseverance.