Newspaper Page Text
Poet's Corner.
.ar-""""* T" ’ —*-—-g--- . I 11 rsmj i
Written for Hie Reporter*
He may not Woo ugaln*
If bat a word—a careless word.
In pride or nngor spoken,
Could cut love's chain that bound two hearts’
’Tit well that it is broken-
Mistaken love has pnasrd away,
While the wreck nf pride reniai.i—
’J’he lady'* love is deep and high*
Btitcao’tbo wsoetf again.
No other tare will light lier path—
And grief'bmild wring his heart;
For, when pride is stronger than true lova,
They’d belter be apart.
Thews It her cheek may be paler now,
And hi* bear the marks of pain—
Though llierrsyot may he sorrowful, yet
tic should not woo again.
They meet like strangers—calm and cold—
Rut both must foul the smart;
And none may guest her tranquil mein
Conceals a loving heart.
To him the world may lie a blight,
But still her light remain r
For love is happiness to her—
lie may not woo again.
Alas l true love's no dying flame,,
When onee its hallowed Are
)tas burned upon the altar heart.
It never can expire.
O, weep for those who have not known
Love’s all exalting strain—
And may he learn it, who bus said
lie never will woo again.
Cuthbcrt, Aug. 1856.
From, the Louisville Journal. a
Yea. we miss Thee at Home.
Yes, wo miss thee at home; yos we miss thee
Tho hours glide slowly away;
With, food dreams of thee at thou i on most,
And weary regrets lit thy slay.
The fireside circle is broken,
liucnc pleasure* are mingled with pain,
As ever the past we still linger.
And long for thy presence agaiiu
Yes, we miss thee at home, and how lonely
Tha evenirgs that once were so gay,
The music has lost half its gladness—
The melody gone from the gay.
F.ach heart remembers lire absent—
Is with thee, in joy and care,
In spirit we wander to meet thee—
In spirit thy pilgrimage share.
Yes, we mice thee at home; yes, we miss thee
At morning, at noon, at night—
At morning we waft thee a blessing,
At evening a tender good-night.
And, oh 1. in, thy wandering* far dislant,
Though joyous where’er thou dost roam,
Potli not memory recall.scenesofpleastue
And dreams of the loved one* at homo I
Klucn.
Tlic Faithless Lover.
I will not now recall the hour
When love was all to me ;
And hko the dew upon the flower,
It rested on its chosen bower,
la, sweet security.
We part—snother’s heart receives thee,
But fsr less fond. l"*e true than mine ;
But when that other heart deceives thee.
Then wilt thou think on her who leaves thee;
Whose life, who&e heart and soul wcie thine.
How much I prized thy love, I own,
No other love can e’er efface it ;
But like that dew, too roughly thrown
Far from ita shelter, broken, gone,
And lost, Ob, suy ! who can replace it?
Fair dreams have psised—my task is set.
Careless what fate may soon await me
My brightest days are clouded, yet
Mly heart a prey to fond regret,
Can never quite forgot, or bate thee.
Believe me, no—on memory’s leaf
Are lines the hand of tune slwll spare,
And pausing, mark thy love, the chief.
Tbe dearest s mice of joy and grief.
My heart’s best treasure wasting there.
And think of this—ludall of gloom,
Os darkness, ordespnit been thine,
E'en to the confines of the tumb,
’Mid blighted hopes and wasted, bloom,
Thy fortune bad been mine.
Site Loved Hint.
She loved him, but she knew it not—
Her heart had only room for pride—
All other feelings wi re forgot.
When elm became another's bride.
At from n dream she then awoke,
To realize her lonely state,
And own It was the vow she broke,
That made her drear and de.-olute,
Shu loyed him—but thp slanderer came
With words of hate that all believed ;
A suin thus restaJ on his name,
But he was wronged, and she deceived.
Ah ! rash the apt that gaye her hand—
That drove her lover from her side ;
Who hied him to a distant land,
Wbsre, battling for a name, he died;
She loved hip, and his memory now
Was treasured as a thing apart;
The shades of thought were oil her brow,
Tbe seeds of death were in ber heart.
For all tbe world, that thing forlorn,
1 could not. would not be and live ;
That casket with its jewel gone—
A bride w bo hat no heart tughe.
Cittlc or JCoUjiugs.
Receive your thongbt* a guests, ami
treat your desires like children.
You will never find a friend if you seek
one without a fuiliug.
There is many a good wife who cannot
dunce, play on the piano, or sing well.
She will make a good wife who does
not apologise when you fiud her at work
iu the kitchen.
Whenever we drink too deeply of plea
sure, we find a sediment at the bottom
which pollutes and embitters what we re
alized at first.
Sincerity is to speak as we think, to do
as we pretend and profess, to perform
and make good what we promise, and re
ally to be what we would ueem and ap
pear to be.
The secret of old ahe. — To buy an
annuity when you are very isl, and you
are sure to outlive the patience of all
those who have an interest in your death.
Recreation is a second creation, when
weariness lias almost annihilated one’s
spirits. It is the breathing of the soul,
which otherwise would be stifled with
continual business
Opportunity is the flowerof time ; and
as the stalk may remain when the flower
is cut off, so time may remain with us
when opportunity is gone forever.
A Game that doesn't pay.—TJnhnp
py th husband whose wife plays at curds!
for in all such cases it is the woman who
invariably pockets the winnings, and the
poor husband who generally has to pay
for the losses.
A taste for trees, plants and flowers, is
a peculiar attribute of woman, exhibiting
the gentleness and purity of her sex ; und
every husband should encourage it, for
his wife and daughters will prove wiser,
and happier, and better for its cultiva
tion.
A yonng lady being recommended
to exercise for her health, said she would
jump at an offer, and run her own risk.
JKg’* An eminent writer says—lt is my
firm opinion,- dorived from experience,
that the period of courtship cannot be too
short. 1 l ave reason to say that when
you have hooked yonr fish, the sooner
you use your landing act the better.
(tj* Many of the editors are now de
bating whether a wife is a lady. When
they have arrived at a satisfactory con
clusion on the point, we offer thorn as a
subject, for their gigantic intellects, whe
ther a husband is a gentleman.
Fome genius has announced it ns
his belief ihat llieie will be such facilities
for traveling bimeby, that you can go
anywhere for nothing, aud come back for
half-price.
MaT* A beautiful tribute is this, wlsioh
that writer of so many good things, Mr.
Anonymous, pays to the sonar sex :
“As the vine which has long twisted
its graceful foliage about the oak, and
been lifted by it into sunshine, will, when
the hardy plant is razed by the thunder
bolt, cling round it with caressing ten
drils, and bind up its shattered boughs ;
so is it beautifully ordered by Provideuoe
that woman, who is the dependent and
ornament of man in his happier hours,
should be his stay and solace when smit
ten with sudden calamity, winding her
self into the rnggod rocesscs of his na
ture, tenderly supporting the drooping
head, and binding up the broken heart.’’
‘Wiiat Makes a Bushel.—The follow
ing tubie of the number of pouuds of va
rious articles to a bushel, may be of in
terest to out readers :
Corn, shelled, 56 pounds.
Corn, on the cob, 70 pouuds,
Rye, 56 pounds.
Oats, 36 pounds.
Barley, 46 pounds.
Buckwheat, 52 pounds.
Irish potatoes, 60 pounds.
Sw’cet potatoes, 50 pounds,
Onious, 57 pounds.
Beans, 20 pounds.
Bran, 20 pouuds.
Clover seed, 60 pounds.
Timothy seed, 45 pounds.
Flax seed, 45 pounds.
Hemp seed, 45 pounds.
Blue Grass seed, 14 pounds.
Dried Beaches, 33 pounds.
BgyThe Wisconsin Farmer says that
salt mixed with the yolk of au egg until it
is thick enough to spread a plaster, is a
certain remedy for the bite of a rattle
snake.
(£> “ Have yon ever broken a horse?”
inquired a horse jockey. “No, not ex
actly,” replied Simmons, “ but I have
broken three or four wagons.”
More Territory.—We learn that
Secietary Mucy had sent a proposition
to President Commonlort to purchase
another slice of Mexico. Marcy’s offer,
it is said, was sl* 04)0 000 for ihe thirty*
gist parallel ot latitude for the boundary
line to the Golf of California. According
to the advices President Commonlort r.e
fused to entertain the proposition, i
Character —A miastep may destroy
life. One sin may ruin your chatacler.
Did you ever reflect on the consequence
ot a single indulgence in vice? The best
men have fallen, through the suggestion
of another. How caietul you should be
while in the freshness of yourdays, lest a
blight fall on you forever. If invited to
places ot resott, where it is difficult to de
cide, take the safe course, stay away; and
save your reputation. This is a jewel of
inestimable value—too precious to be put
in jeopardy. No man ever regrets that he
kept aloof fiom temptation, and to the
close of life he expresses his joy that he
was saved from the path ofshatne.by giv
ing a decided negative, when the voice
ot pleasure beckoned him on. Be decided
and you are sate. Yield aud you may be
lost. Watch with diligence, and guard
every avenue through which sin may
reach you. In no other way will you be
sure to overcome the evil of the world.
Love er Flowers.— In all countries
women love flowers; in ail countries they
1 form nosegays of them; but it it only in
the bosom of plenty 1 hat they conceive
the idea of embellishing their dwellings
with them. The cultivation of flowers a
tr.ong the peasantry indicates a revolution
in all their feelings. It is a delicate pleas
ure which makes its way through coarse
organs; it is a creature whose eyes ate
opened; it is a sense of the beautiful, a
faculty of the soul, which is awakened.
Man then understands that there is in the
gilt of natuie a something more than is
necessaty lor existence ; colors, lorms,
odors, are perceived tor the first time and
these chaiming objects have spectators,
Those who have li a veiled in the country
can testify that a rose tiee under a win*
dow, a honey .-suckle around the door ot a
cottage, are always a good omen to the tir
ed traveller. Ihe band which cultivates
flowers is not closed against the supplica
tion* of the poor and the w ants of the
stranger.
The Eleventh Commandment
The ver.eiable Josiah Randall, ol Penn
sylvania who.has known all of the Presi
dents, made a speech at l'ammanv Hall
cn the 4th July, in Ihe couise ot which
he thus remarked : * I come tellow-citi
zens, from a tiee State like your own ; I
never owned or expect to own a slave.
But other men, better than I am and as
good as any who are around me, have
conscientiously held slave*. It is in vain
to attack the motives of a whole commu
nity, when that community is one of the
most civilized aud refined portions of the
inhabited world. (Cries of Good good]
what does the South ask? To be let alone
They do not iutefere with us; they wm't
intelere with us All they a-k is to be
let alone- But we have certain aspirants
for public power and place who wilt not
learn the eleventh commandment “Mind
youi own biasness!
Swords of the Olden Time—Hew
itt, in his work on • Ancien’ Arnioi,”
speaks of a sword named •’ Memun-j, ’
that was (otged by Wel.md, and used by
him in a trial of skill with another cele
brated weapon maker, named Amilias.—
” VVeland,” says Hewitt, “ first made a
sword with winch he cut a thread ol wool
Iving on the water. But not content
with this he re forged the blade, which
then cut through the whole ball of float*
ing wool. Still dissatisfied, he again
passed it through the fire, and at length
produced so keen a weapon ttiat it divided
a whole boodle of wo.ol floating in the
water. Amilias, on his part, lorged a
suit of armor, so much to his own satis
faction that, sitting down on a stool, he
bade VVeland try his weapon upon hi in
VVeland obeyed, and there being no ap
parent effect, asked Amilias i| he felt any
particular sensation. Amilias said he
tell as though cold water had passed
through his bowels. then bade
him shake himself. On dttingso, the ef
lect of the blow was apparent—he fell
dead in two pieces.
Poetry.— What could be more beauti
lul than the following from the pen ol
George Prentice, who bimsell blends more
of the pathos and fire of poetry, than any
other living writer; —’’ What is Poetry ?
A smile, a tear, a glory, a longing after
the things of Eternity. It lives in all
created existence—in man and every ob
ject that surrounds him. There is poetry
in the gentle influences of love and afflic
lion, in the quiet broodings of the soul o*
ver the memories of early years, and in
the thoughts of glory that chain our spirits
to the gates of Paradise. There is poetry
in the harmonies of Nature. It glitters
in the wave, the rainbow, the lightning,
am] the stai-—its cadence is heard in the
thunder and in the cataract-—its softer
tones gurgle sweetly up (rom the thous
and voice-harps of wind, and rivulet, and
lorest—the cloud and the sky go floating
over us to the music ot its melodies—and
it ministers to Heaven from the moun
tains ot the earth, and the untrodden
shrines of Ocean.
“There's not a moonlight ray that comes
down upon stream or hit), not a becze
calling from its blue air-throne to the birds
of the summer valleys, or sounding thro’
midnight rains its low and mournlul
diige over the perishing flower of Spring,
not a cloud bathing itself like art Angel
j vision in the rosy gushes of Autumn twi
I light, nor a rock glowing in the yellow
: starlight as if dreaming of the beautiful
| influences of Poetry. Earth and Heaven
j are quickened by its spirits, and the heav
ings of the great deep in tempest and
| calm, are but its secret and mysterious
j breathing!.”
Women and Ladies.
In the days of our fathers there were
such things to be met with as men and
women; but now they are all gone, and
in their places a race ol genllemen and
ladies—or, lobe still more refined, a race
of “ladies and gentlemen”—has sprung
up. Women and girls are among Ihe
things that were, but “ladies ” are loond
eveiy where. Miss Maitineao, wishing to
see the women wards in a ptison in Ten
nessee, wat answered by the warden,
“ We have no ladies here at piesent mad
am. ’’ Now, go lar as the ladies were
concerned, it was very well that none of
them were in prison; but then it sounds a
little odd—ladies in prison ! It would
sepm bad enough lor women to go to such
places.
A lecturer, discoursing upon the char
acteristics of women, illustrated thus —
■Who were first at the sepulchre? Ladies.’
On the modern improvement, we have
heard ot but one thing that beats the a
hovp. It was the finishing touch to a
marriage ceremony, performed by an ex
quisite divine up to all modern refine
ments. When lie had thrown the
chain of Hymen around the happy cou
ple, he concluded by saying, “I now pro
nounce you husband and lady ” The
audience stuffed their handkerchiefs in
their mouths, and got out of tfie room as
quickly as possible to take breath.
The most Beautiful Hand.—Two
charming women w ere di*cus-mgone day
what is it which constitutes beauty in the
hand. They differed iu opinion as much
as iu the shape of the beanlilul member
whose merits they weie discussing. A
gentleman friend presented himself, and
by common consent, the question was
refcired to him. It wa a delkate mat
ter. He thought of Paris and the three j
goddesses. Glancing from one to tbeoth- j
er of the beautiful white hands presented
to him, which, by the way he had the cun
ning to hold lot sometime in his own tor
the purpose of examinaiion, he replied at
lasi: “1 give it up; the question is too hard
tor me; hut ask the pom and they will tell i
you that the most beaulilul hand in the
world is the hand which give#.”
Antiquity of Gunpowder.—The
first Englishman w ho mentioned gunpow- j
der was Roger Bacon, who, about the
year 1374, described it as then in enm-i
mnn use all over the world for making 1
squibs to amuse children. It is mention
ed by Phiiostratu*. 800 behue Christ ;i
and iu the code of Hindoo laws it is re
ferred to a period coincident wiih the:
time of Moses. Ihe military u-e of rock
ets in tlie armies of India teaches tea
period beyond record.
‘A rolling stone gathers no moss,’ a ve
ry doubtful udage. We- have just seen,
iu a country paper, the marriage of Pelcg
Ilowlinstone to MiSs Ophelia .Morse.
fjatm Counts
iiisle Nisi.
STATE OF GEORGIA. )
Harris County. )
Court of Ordinary, May Term, 1556.
WHEREAS Asliury K Johnston, ex
ecutor of the last will alul testament
of Jam** A Gassaway. deceased, applies
at ibis Term of the Court for Letter* <>f
Dismissiou from the Executorship of said
estate.
It is thcrefoie ordered by the Court, that
all persons concerned show cause ( I any
they have) on or before ‘hv next November
Term of said Court, why said Letters of
Dismission should not be grained.
A true. Extract from ihe Minutes of liar
ris Court of Ordinary
GEO W MULLINS, Ordinary
May Itl
Hide .Vim,
STATE OF GEORGIA, )
Harris County. )
Court of Ordinary, May Term, 1856.
iMTHEREAS, Archer McKee. ad;nin
® ¥ istrator on the estate of Thomas M
McKee, deceased, app'ius to mo for Letters
of Di-mission from ttie administration of
sai l estae.
It is therefore oi-lered by the Court that
all persons tor.cerned show cause (if any
they have.) on or before the next November
Term of said i'ourt, why Letters of Dis*
mis-ion should not be granted
A true exiraci Irom Ule .Minutes of Hat ris
Cqurl of Ordinary.
GEO W MULLINS. Ordinary
May 10
STATE OF GEORGIA, )
Harris County j
WHEREAS, P. J. Phillips adminis
trator ou the estate of Thomas J,
Street, deceased, applies at this term of the
court for letters of dismission from the ad
ministration of said estate,
it is therefore ordered that all persons
concerned shew cause, if any they have,
oil or before the next January Term of thjs
court, why said letters should not be grant
ad. A true extract from the Minutes of
said court This 7.h dav of July 1356
GEO W MULLINS, Ordinary
July 12
Ann E. Cplcmau, ]
vs. | Libels for Divorce,
Edwin I) Coleman. ( iu Barria Superior
Albert Duualdson, [ Court.
vs. J
Mary Donaldson. J
IT appearing to the Court from the re
turn, of the Sheriff, that the defendants
in the above stated cases are not to be found.
It is ordered that service he perfected by
publishing this Rule once a ipnnth for three
mouths. RAMSEY & KfNG. Attys.
A true Extract from the Minutes of Har
ris Superior Court,
, Dec ID-3t N. H. BARDEN, Cl’k
Dr. McLANE’S
CELEBRATED
VERMIFUGE
LIVER* PILLS*
Two of tho best Preparations of ths Age.
They are not recom
mended as Universal
Cure-alls, but simply for
what their name pur
ports.
The Vermifuge, for
expelling Worms from
the human system, has
also been administered
with the most satisfactory
results to various animals
subject to Worms.
The Liver Pills, for
the cure of Liver Com
plaint, all Bilious De
rangements, Sick Head
ache, See.
Purchasers will please
be particular to ask for
Dr. C. McLane’s Cele
brated Vermifuge and
Liver Pills, prepared by
lE\c,y
sole proprietors, Pitts
burgh, Pa., and take no
other, as there are various
other preparations .now
before the public, pur
porting to be Vermifuge
and Liver Pills. All
others, in comparison
with Dr. McLane’s, are
worthless.
The genuine McLane’s
Vermifuge and Liver
Pills can now be had at
all respectable Drug
Stores.
FLEMING BRO’S,
60 “Wood St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Sole Proprietors.
SCOVIL & MEAD. New Orleans. Gen
eral Wholesale Agents for the Southern
Slates, to whom all orders must lie ad
dressed.
SOWjD Bl*
Hood A Robins’ n. H tuition, Gn.
J. TANARUS, Reese.. Greenville, ’*
Finch-r & Dallis, M■ tinivil'e, **
J. A. 11 it lit A Cos.. \\ liiieville, *•
Jtisiah Rradfield, West I’oi t. ••
Bradfield & Haringtoii, l.a Grunge, “
Dal'nrih A Nagle, Columbus,
Brook & Chapman, *•
Robert A. Ware, “ *•
Dkviil Young, “ “
January. 26, 1856. n46yl
Kill f .1 1hi.
Glottal.. Harris County, )
Court of Ordinary, March Teim. 56. y
WHERE A?L William A• Pruett, ad
ministrator on tlie estate of Bird
Rruett. deceased, applies to hie for Letters
of dismission therefrom.
It is therefore o-dered by ihe Court that
all persons concerned he and appear at the
next September Teim of said Court next
ensuing, then and there to show pause if
any they have, wby said Letters should not
be granted,
A true extract from the Minutes of Harris
Court of Ordinary
GEO W, MULLENS.
March 8-6 m Ordinary.
Order Nisi.
Georgia. Hams counlv, )
Court of Ordinary, Apnl Term, 1856 J
WHEREAS. Reuben L. A Wi liam
Philiips, Executors of th 6 last Will
& Testament of A l’hiliips. dee’d, applies
to me for letters of Dismitsiou from Execu
torship of said estate. m
It is therefore, ordered hy the court that
all personsrouceitied, be, nnd appear at the
next Qeiober terfp of said court, then, and
there to shots pause, j.f any they have, why
said letters should not he granted.
A true extract from the minutes of Harris
Court of Ordinarv,
GJSO. \V. MULLINS. Ordinary,
GEORCUA, fJArris County.
Court of Ordif*ry—July Tcrrp, 1856
WHEREAS. 'Matthew O. Farlkt
Administrator on the estate of
Most-s G. Jones, deceased, appljes at thjs
term of the court for letters of dismission
from the of said estate.
It is ordered that all persons concerned,
shot? cause, (if any they have) on or before
the negt Jriu’ry Tprm of this Court, why
said letters shonld not be granted,
A True Extract from tho Minutes of said
court* This 7th dav ofJulv, 1856.
GEO \V MULLINS,
THE HOME JOURNAL
FOR 1856,
NEW AND BRILLIANT SERIES.
THE first number of the New Series of
the Home JVmrual for 1856, will be
issued next weik, in anew dress nnd with
new Hitrai'iinna, the principal one of which
will be chapter one of
Paul sane.
OR PtRT* OF A LIFE F.l.'K UNTOLD.
A Novel in Serial Numbers.
BT 2f. P. WILLIS.
This, as a return of the author's pen to a
field which he has tried with some sueresr
in other days, but which be abandoned for
the stronger attractions of fact and nature—
the field of romance—may not be uninter
esting to the cta*s of reader* who have kind
ly followed him in both His longer expe
rience nnd hotter knowledge of the world
will, of course, give him greater advantages
than before, for truth-like portrayal in fic
tion. He has, be-ides, a large store of per.
snnal observation and incident which has
been kept apart from his available mateii--
a! while routined to actual description, aaiti •
which can nnlv be used through the dis-io-s
dividnaMziug process of romance.
In addi'iou to thi* new feature, a series of
original sketches, songs and ballads by G.
P. Morris, and an original *(/( tie. in- <
verse, founded upon fact, called, The
.Story of a Star,*’ by J M. Field, witl be
published in the course f the year.
Resides the contributions and labors r-f
the editors, the Home Journal will contain 1
the Foreign and Domestic Coriespondeii.e
of a large list of routrihutois—the spice of
the European Mag; zincs—the selections of
the most interesting publications of the day
—the brief Move's—the piquant stories—the
sp rkliug wit and amusing anecdote—the
news and gos.ip of the Parisian papers
the personal sketches of public cliara. ters—
the sirring scene- of the world we live in .
‘he chronicles of the news for the ladies— ‘
the fashions—ti e facts and outlines of news
—the pick of English information —the w it,
humor and pathos of the times—the essays
on life, literature, society and mn.nl-. and
the usual variety of c- refill choosings Irmn <
the wi!tlerue*s of English periodical liteia„
lure, criticism, poetiy, etc. We need not
remind our readers that we havß also one or
two unsurpassed correspondent* if* fash
ionable sociity of Snv York, who will givo
us early news of everv new feature of stylo
ami elegance among the leaders us the gay
world,
TERMS.
For one copy, §2; for 3 copies. ss nr
one copy for three years, $5 —always in ad*
vaoce. Address
MOP.I! IS Ac WII LIB,
Editors nod Proprietors,
l(i7 Fulton -treet. Non Yiok.
.Voter is the time to subscribe
imilM MAGAZINE,
A Mouthly Periodical of Literaime, Art,
and Fashion.
Edited hy Mr-. Ann S. Stepens,
( hari.es J. Peterson
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Its Thru.lino Original Stories.
No other Periodical publishes uch thrill-
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female authors of Ao erica. All the stories
pobli bed are original, which cannot be said
of any cntrntpnrary. Morality anti virtue
are always inculcated. The newspaper
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rr c L’ tit it fa lino plates
Are the only reliable ones put lished in
\mefirn; and are as fit gain ns they are
correct, being magnificently engraved steel
plates, ‘I he Paris. London. Philadelphia,
and New York Fashions are described, at
length each month. It i* the text hook of
Fashion to 80-100, New York, and Phila
delphia. Its dt (tat tnif Ills of
NfJC Reteipts crotchet work. Embroidery
Netting. hoi'Mcnl or . acting cnaraues,
knitting, and female equestrianism, ate al •
ways tv. II fil ed, profusely illustrated, nod
rich with the latest nuveliit s. It is the be-t
Ladies’ Mag: ziue iu the world, try it for
one year.
TERMS. ALWAYS IN ADVANCE
One copy for one year. $2, tinge fopiex
for one year. $5 ; five copies for one year,
87 50; eight copies for one year. $lO ; six
teen copies for one year, S2O.
PREMIUMS FOR OITTINU t'F GLUBH.s
To every per-ou get ing up a club, our
• Port Folio of art lor 1856. coutaittiug fitly
sled engravings will be given gratis, for
a club of -ixtfen, an extra copy of the IVtag.
ezine for 1856 will he scut iu addition.
Address. CHA’S J. PETERSON. w
No. ll)2 Chestnut street, Philadelphia*
for Januaiv and July, but su! scribers may
commence with any other mouth they
plea-e. Bat k numbers furnished iftle-irei(
Hide Nisi.
Georgia. Harris Cou.ntt. )
Couft of Ordinary, March Term, ‘56. y
W HER EAB, Nathapiel Black, F.jee*
qtpr of the estate of Mary Ross, dr*
ceased, applies to me foe letters of tlismis*.
sion Irom executorship of said estate.
And whereas Nathapiel Black, executor
of the estate of W illiam Turner, deceased,
applies ip me for letters of dismissiou from,
executorship ot said etjare.
And whereas, Nathaniel Black, adminis
trator on the estate of Busanuah Turner,
deceased, applies to me for letters of dis*
mission therefcom.
It is therefore ordered by the Court that
u|Lpersons cnuceaned he and appear at the
next September Term of aaid Court, then*
and there to show cause (if- any they have)
why said Letters should noil e granted.
A true Extract from the Minutes of Har*
ris Court ol Ordinary.
GEO W. MULLINS, %
March 8.6 m Ordiuary.