Cuthbert reporter. (Cuthbert, Ga.) 1856-????, August 30, 1856, Image 4

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Poet’fi Corner. W ritten fur the Reporter I will Woo again. BY LIZZIE. I will woo, but the brightest gem That ever met these eyes of mine, Shell be the rval diadem— The holy light of love divine. And be this pearl of priceless worth The only jewel of ur> heart, Till earth ahull turn to mother earth, I’ll woo him, never to depart. I'll woo him in the calm of life— i'll woo him in temptation’* storm. Amidst tue tins la of passion’* strife,, I'll woo llim to protect from harm. I'll woo Him in the earthly blight, When I’m of worthy comforts shorn — I'll woo Him in the depths ol’ night, I’ll woo Him in the wake of morn. I’ll woo Him as my only guide To those celestial courts above ; I'll woo no other love beside, For other love might faithless prove. I'll woo Him as my only friend, Who'll be closer Ilian tt brother— Who will be faithful to the cud, I tnay not, will not trust another. I’ll woo Him as the mighty Lord— The Sovereign King of earth and Heav'n, And yield obedience to Ilis wind. And love Him, for we’ve much forgiven. I’d woo Him,yes, with all my soul, With all tny mind, with all my power— Till every part I'm made whole, I’ll woo him to my latest hour. And in anticipations bright, Ambition’s joyful wing won't! soar Up to the brightest realms of light, And much the highest note— that lore Tho praise of Him I love to woo. O, mny Ho over he the gem — The beautiful, the kind the true — My lore, my all, my Diadem. Cuthbcrt, Aug. 1850. Love nnd “Niggers.” Why still, sweet Helen, thus severe: Abate at length those cruel rigors, Thou knowest how I love thee, dear, Thou knowest how I loye thy niggers. Oh ! lift me from this dark abyss Os anguish, dear bewitchihg*railer ! I have r;o other coal but this, I Ituve no credit with my tuilor. My bruins, at times, wild visions scire, Chill fears around my heurt ate flocking, Mv pants grow white about the knees, My hat is absolutely shocking. This feeblo frnmo is wasting Ih-t, For love is strong and hunger stronger ; The bracelet that I tent lliee last Was bought cm tick—they trust no longer. Why tell me that my words are wild ? Why my in.id feelings bid me tutor ? The man that wins thy father's child, Thou knowest, Helen, wilts the ‘pewter.’ ‘Tis vain to talk to Love of rale, The heart is no such docile scholar; 1 love thee, Helen, like n foul. For thou bust tlic almighty dollar. I love thy pouting, cherry lips, Dearer than ever bee loved honey; I love thy rosy finger-tips, Thy laughing eyes, thy ready money. I love thy little fairy feet, So small tho merest child could spun ’em, Tliv checks like peaches fit to eat. Thy hundred cotton bales per annum. 1 love thy glorious golden cm Is That grace thy neck of alabaster; Tliv little ‘itipgei 1 boys and girls; 1 long to Iteut them call me master. Ah ! yes, to sunt tny love for then Would lu, file all the power of figures; Mv heart were flint indeed to sec. Unmoved, that splendid lot of'niggers.’ 1 love tho nlr that plays around Thy brow, thy form, thy habitation ; I worship e’en the very ground Thy footsteps press—’tis thy plantation. E’en win it iii slumber's arms I rest, My spirit still thino image follows ; 1 clasp tliee to my throbbing breast. And find thee—joy I—a sack of dollar*. The vision changes: now I kneel Bolote thee, and a speech bcgitini g, 1 see thee—rapture ! —head to heel Turned to a score of ‘niggers’ grinning. Can dreams so blissful, so divine, Prove cheating I'unri sos a minute? Oh I no: that lilly hand is mi tie — That hand and all the tin that’s in it. Then, then, delights untold Bltall we, sweet Helen, be partakers, Winn bound in one bright chain of gold. We settle on thy father’s acres Thy Pear ItciiKinhort'd Name. Softly, softly, o’er my heart-strings, Sweeps the music of thy name; t And that music, in remembrance I would evermore retain. Like the softened breath of evening. O’er the green and floiver.crown’d hill, !'would have that gentle cadence Linger round toy heart-harp still. O, ’tis thrilling, sweetly, wildly, O’er my spirit’s fluttering chords, Lut tny lips can ne’er express i t By the softest, mildest words Yet as puio as ever star-beam Glistened from the heavenly plain t On my spirit fulls tho music Os thy dear remembered name. Liiietb When morning lifts the veil of night. And spreads o’er earth its blaze of light, I turn and look thy smile to see, But ’lis not here to beam on me. When noon-day comes with all its strife, And nature seems so full of silo. My anxious thoughts run after thee, Toough thou art far away fiom me. When evening’s twilight gently comes, And others seek their happy homes, My heart, dear one, will turn to thee. Though thy fair lace I cannot see. And whpn the hour arrives for rest, “I he thought hes heavy on my breast— Thou art not here !—and fancy free. My spirit rushes after thee. B; Short of News. Some time ago, rt lady noticing a neigh bor who was not in her seat nt Church one Subbath, called on her return home to inquire what should detain so punctual an attendant. On entering the house, site found the family busy at work. She was surprised when her friend addressed her— “ Why, la ! where have you been to day, dressed up iu your Sunday clothes ?’’ “ To raccting.” “ Why, what day is it ?” “ Subbath day.'’ “ Sal, stop washing in a minute ! Sab bath day ! Well, I did not know, for my husband lias got so plaguy st ngy he won’t take the papers now, and we know nothing. Well, who preached ?” “Mr. ” “ What did he preach about ?’’ “ It was on the death of our Savior.” “Why, is he dead? Well, all Boston might be dead, and we know nothing about it. It won’t do ;we must have the newspaper again, for everything goes wrong without it. Bill has almost lost his reading, and Polly has got quite mo pish again, because she has no poetry and stories to read. Well, if we have to take a cart load of peaches to market, 1 am resolved to have the paper.” [Only $2 a year, in advance ] One hatty heart. —listve you made one happy heart to-day ? Envied privi lege ! How calmly you can seek your pillow ; how sweetly sleep 1 In all this world, there is nothing so sweet as giving comfort to the distressed ; as getting a sun-ray into a gloomy heart. Children of sorrow meet us wherever we turn ; there is not a moment that tears are not sited and sighs uttered. Yet how many of those sighs are caused by our own thoughtlessness? How many a daugh ter wrings the very soul of a fond mother by acts of unkinduess and ingratitude ? llow many husbands, by one little word, make a whole-day of sad hours and un kind thoughts ? How many wives, by recrimination, estrange and embitter lov ing hearts ? How many brothers and sisters meet but to vex and injure each other, making words that no human uit can heal ? Ah !if each one worked upon this maxim day by day—strive to make some heart happy—jealousy, revenge, madness, hate, with their kindred evil as sociates, would forever leave the earth. Waste no Time. —Enjoy life moment by moment Let not an hour pass in which you do not catch one pleasing im pression. See the sunlight lying in guld en shafts upon the carpet at your feet Enjoy its spleudor. Let your mind re vert to the wonder that the sun perforins on its ceaseless round—the movement wanning the heart of the shrouded vege tation that shall spring up to life, giving joy iu its turn to others. A Sweet Sentiment, —There are re fined kinds of sentiment as there are of j sugar ; man, for instance, takes his in the lump—hard, though easily melted with a tear; but with a woman, it is always moist. Gentility. —Gentility is neither in birth, wealth, manner, nor fashion—but in the mind. A high sense of honor, a determination never to take a mean ad vantage of another, an adherence to truth, delicacy, and politeness toward those with whom we have dealings, aro its essential characteristics. ‘Annette, my dear, what country is op posite to ns ou the globe ?’ ‘Don’t know, sir.’ ‘Well, now,’ continued the perplexed teacher, ‘if 1 were to bore a hole through the earth, and you were to go in at this end, where would you come out. at ?’ ‘Out of the hole , sir,’ replied the pupil, with an air of triumph at having solved the great question. Men talk in raptures of youth atul beauty, wit and uprightness ; but after seven years of union, not one of them i* to be compared to good family manage ment, which is seen at every meal, and felt every hour in the husband’s purse. To one who said, ‘I do not believe there is an honest man iu the world,’ another replied, ‘lt is impossible that one man should know all the world, but quite pos sible that one may know himself.’ Iu ancient days the celebrated precept was, ‘know thyself;’ in modem times it lias been supplanted by the more fashion able maxim, ‘know thy neighbor, and ev erything about him.'— Johnson. Palace Discovered under Ground The remains of a magnificent palace have been discoverd under a garden in the Isle of Capri. It must not only have been splendid in structure, but in situation, commanding a view of the bay of Paler mo and Naples. Marble of various colors was used in its construction, and all ap artments, as far as the excavations have proceeded, are of the most spacious and elegant character. The floorway is twelve (eel wide and of w hite matble ami tfie rooms are paved in mosaic, while the walls are painted red, blue, &c. Several j coins of tiie reign ol Augustus and Tibe rius have been found, some of them dis j closing the curious fact that the coins of; one reign were at times recoined in an-’ other. — Boston Journal. The smiles that encourage severity of judgment hide malice and mcinceriiy. j No Cl loom at Home. Above all things thete should be no gloom in the home. The shadows ofdatk discontent and wasting fretfulness should never cross the threshold, throwing their large, black shapes, like funeral palls ovei the happy young spirits gathered there. If you will, your borne shall be heaven and every inmate an angel there. If you will yon shall sit on a throne and be the presiding household deity. O! faithful wife—what privileges, what treasures, greater or purer than thine ? And let the husband siiive to forget his cares, as he w inds around the long, nar row street and beholds the soft light illu mining his little parlor, spreading its pre cious beams on tiie red pave before it.— The night is cold, and cheerless, perhaps, and the December gust battles with the worn skirts of his old overcoat, and snatch es with a rude hand and wailing cry, at the rustv hat that has served him many a j year. He has been harrassed, perplexed, persecuted. He has borne with many a cruel tone, many a cold word, and nerv ! ed himself up to an energy so desperate, i that his frame and spirits are weakened and depressed. Anil now his limbs ache j with weariness; his temples thrub with j tfie pain-beat caused by a too constant ap plication He. scarcely knows how to meet his wile with a pleasant smile, or sit down cheerfully to their little meal which she has provided with so much care. But the door *, opened—the over-coat thrown hastily off. A sweet, singing voice falls upon itis ear, and the tones ate so soft and glad, that Hope, like a winged angel, flies light into his bosom and nest les agirist his lieait. The latch is lilted, and the smiling face ol his wife gives an earnest welcome.— The shining hair is smoothed over her lair brow—indeed she stole a little coquettish glance at the mirror hanging in its nar row frame, just to see il she looked neat and pietty, before she came out Her eye beams w ill) love—her dress is taste ful—aod—what ? Why! tie forgets all the trials of that long, long day; as he folds her in ids arms and imprints a kiss upon her blow. A home where gloom is banished presided over by one who ha- learned to rule herself and her household, Chiislian ity ! —oh ! he is thrice consoled lor all his trials. He cannot be unhappy —that sweetest, best, deaiest solace, is Lis—a cheeiful home. Do you wonder that the man is strengthened anew for to morrow's cares? Future Housekeepers —We often catch ourselves wondeiing flow many of the young ladies whom we meet will), are able topeilonn the part ol housekeepers, when the young men, who now eye them so admiringly, have peisuaded them to become their wives. We listen to those young ladies of whom we speak and hear them not only acknowledging, but boast ing of their ignorance of all household Julies, as if nothing would so lower them in the esteem of their friends, as the co -of an ability to bake bread and pies, or cook a piece of meat, or a dispo sition to engage in any useful employment. Speaking from our own youthful teiollec tion, w e arc tree to say, that taper Sogers and lily-white hands are very pretty to look at with a young man’s eyes, and sometimes we have know n the artless in nocence of practical knowledge displayed by a young miss, to appear rather inte resting than otherwise. But we have liv ed long enough to learn that life is lull of rugged experience, and that the most lov ing. romantic, and delicate people must live on cooked or otherwise prepaied lood and in iio ties kept clean and tidy bv in dustrious hands. And lor all practical purposes of married life, it is geneially found, that for the husband to sit and gaze at a wile's taper fingers and lily hands, or lor a wife to cit and be looked at and ad mired, does not make the pot boil, or put the smallest piece of food in the pot. The Newark Advertiser ridicules the idea of travellin g at this season of the year, for the purpose of keeping cool, and makes these sn rgestions; JO ‘ Our recipe is moral and mental.— First, you must have a good conscience. We do not commence, as recipes usually do, by saying you must take a good con scii nee. This must be in possession be - you cannot take it, it must come from i pait of honest occupation ‘'“'erein you have intended injury to no Thus a good conscience toward man will be yours; we go no further— the rest belongs to the preacher. You must next give up all anxiety about profit and loss, as well as the great election, till cool weather- Be calm and you will be cool. Let not your bodily appetites tun away with you while the dog-star rages They must be kept in leach. The pas sions must be kept under; they are whips to the blood. Ciioler may bring on cho lic. Anxiety is too often the herald of lever, and an iiritable temper descends into the stomach, and become the cause as well as consequence of dyspepsia.— Preserve the mind serene, the honor clear throw oft’ Hie anxious cupidity of gam, and the depressing fear of lo*s. Du not be lamenting that you are not somewhere except the place wlieie you happen to be Worry not yourself and others about an ideal place, or a means of happiness you will never attain. The sooner you are convinced of this, the better. Ob tain this comfoitable frame of mind, and then you will be in the aeiglibothood ol contentment, which is only another name lor happiness—all that men will ever rea lize.” Rising in the World. Experience continually contradicts the notion that a poor young man cannot rise. If we look over the list of rich men in Philadelpha, we find that nearly all of them began life worth little or nothing.— Giraid was a poor boy, The late Mr. Ridgway came to this city acounlrv lad, almost penniless What is true of Phila delphia is true, also, of New-Yoik and Boston. Astor began with nothing. Ab bott Lawrence had only a pair of stout hands, a willing heart, and a good charac ter, for his original capital. To any per sons familiar with the millionaires of the United States a score of similar examples wiil occur. On the oilier hand, the sous of rich men, who began life with the cap ital which so many pour young men cov et, friquently die beggars. Il would probably not be going too tar to say that a large majority of such moneyed indi viduals either tail out-right or gradually eat up the capital with w hich they com menced their career, And the reas nis plain. Brought up in expensive habit*, they spend entirely too much. Ednc-ted with high notions of personal importance, they will not, as they phrase it, “stoop” to hard work. Is it astonishing theietore, that they are passed in the race ol lile by others with less capital originally but more eneigy, thrift, and industry ? lor these virtues, after all, are worth more than money. They make money, in fact. Nay, alter it is made, they enable the possessor to keep it, which most lich men pronounce to be more difficult than ma king. The young man who begins lile with a resoluiion always to lay by part of hit income is sure, even without extraor dinary ability, gradually to acquire a sufficiency, especially as habits ot econo my, which the resolution renders neces sary, will make that a competence for him which would be quite insufficient for a mote extravagant person. Il is really what we save, even more than what we make, which leads us to fortune. He who enlarge his expanses as last his earn ings increase must always be pour, no matter what his abilities. And co t“nt may be had on comparatively little. It is not in luxurious living that men find real happiness.— Ledger. The Beautiful —We teach our chil dren the Good, but we neglect the Beau tiful. At the mother’s knee, the Sab bath school and the sanctuary, virtue is inculcated—but inculcated alone. Truth and Beauty are twin sisters, and should never be separated. The precedence be longs to Truth, but her Hold upon the youthful mind is weakened by the neg. lect o( her sister. A love of the Beautiful is purifying He whodwells most among the Beautiful, other things being equai will have most regard tor virtue. How i mpoitant, then, that asthelic as well as the moral nature of children should be educated! Do Ibis, and they w ill instinc tively turn hum everything vile, distor ted and vulgar. —Portland Transcrijit. i) arris £oimtij Mule si. STATE OF GEORGIA, ) Harris County, j Court of Ordinary, May Term, 1856. A*7HEItEAS Ashurv F Johnston, cx w ¥ eeutor of the last will Hint testament of James A Gassaway, deceased, applies at this Term of the Court lor Letters of Dismission from the Executorship of said estate. It is therefore ordered by the Court, that all person* concerned show cause (if any they have) on or before the next November j Term of said Court, ivhy said Letters of Dismission should not tie grained. A truo Extract from the Minutes of Har ris Court of Ordinary GEO W MULLINS, Ordinary May 10 little JVlsi. STATE OF GEORGIA. ) Harris County. ) Court of Ordinary, May Term, 1856. WHEREAS, Archer McKee, admin istrator ou the estate of Thomas M McKee, deceased, applies to inn for Letters of Dismission from the administration of said estate. It is therefore oitiered by the Court that all persons roncerned show cause (if any they have.) ou or before the next November Term of said Court, why Letters of Dis : tnis-ion should not lie granted A true extract Irora the Minutes of Hatris I Court of < irdioary- GEO W MULLINS, Ordinary ! May 10 STATE OF GEORGIA, > Harris County ) 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, on or before the next January Term of this court, why said letters should not be grant ad. A true extract front (he Minutes of said court This 7 h day of July 1856 GEO W MULLINS, Ordinary July 12 Aim E. Coleman, ] vs. | Libel* for Divorce, Edwin D Coleman. I iu Harris Superior Albert Donaldson, j Court. vs. J Mary Donaldson. ) rl’ appearing to the Court from the re turn of the Sheriff, that the defendents in the above stated cases are not to be sou ud. It is ordered that service be perfected by publishing ibis Rule once a month for thiee months. . RAMSEY & KING, Attys. A true Extract from the Minutes of Har ris Superior Court Dec IL* ot, N. 11. BARDEN, Cl’k Dr. McLANE’S CELEBRATED VERMIFUGE AND LITER I’H.I.S. Two of tiie best Preparations of tbe Age* i hey 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, &c. Purchasers will please be particular to ask for Dr. C. McLane’s Cele brated Vermifuge and Liver Pills, prepared by sole proprietors, Pitts burgh, Pa., and take no other, as there are various other preparations .now befoVe the public, pur porting to be Vermifuge and Liver Pills. All others, in comparison ] with Dr. McLane’s, arc worthless. The genuine McLane’s Vermifuge and Liver Pills can now be had at all respectable Drug Stores. FLEMING ERO’S, CO Wood St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Sole Proprietors. SCOVIL & ME AD. New Orleans, Gen eral Wholesale Agents for the Southern States, to whom all orders must he ad dressed. SOLI! nl* Hood & Rodins n. Hamilton, Ga. J. TANARUS, Ree*e, Greenville, “ j Finch“r &. DaUis. Mounlville, “ | J. A. Haul &. Cos., \\ hiti vide, *• Josiah Ilnidfh hl, West I’oi t, “ Br.idfield &II ringtail. La Grange, *• I Danfnrih & Nagle, Columbus, “ Brook & Chapman, *• “ Robert A. Ware, “ *• David Young. “ “ January. 26, 1856. — n46yl little JSisi. Georgia. Harris County. > Court of Ordinary, March Term. 56. y WHEREAS, William A. Pruett, ad mini sura tor on the estate of Bird Pruett, deceased, applies to me for Letters of dismission therefrom. It is therefore ordered by the Court that all persons concerned he anil appear at the next September Term of said Court next ensuing, then and there to show cause if any they have, why said Letters should uol he granted. A true extraei from the Minutes of Harris Court of Ordinary GEO W. MULLINS, March 8-6 m Ordinary. Order .Visi. Georgia, Harris county, ) Court of Ordinary, April Term, 1856 j WHEREAS. Reuben L. & William Philiips, Execuiors ofthe last Will &. Testament of A Phillips, dec’d, applies to me for letters of Dismitsiuu fiom Execu torship of said estate. It is therefore, ordered by the court that all persons concerned, be, and appear at the uext October term of said court, then, and there to show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not he grained. A true extract from the minutes of Harris Court of Ordinary, GEO. W, MULLINS, Ordiuary, GEORGIA , Harris Counti/. Court of Ordinary—July Term, 1856 WHEREAS, 'Matthew C. Farley Administrator ou the estate of Moses G. Jones, deceased, applies at this term of die court for letters of dismission from the administration of said estate. It is ordered that all persons concerned, show cause, (if any they have) on or before the next Jan’ry Term of this Court, why said letters should not he granted. A True Extract from the Minutes of said court. This 7dl dav ofjnlv, 1856. GEU W MULLINS, THE HOME JOURNALfI FOB 1856. H NEW AND BRILLIANT -FRIES. j ‘S’, II r firs! number of the New ‘■'erbj Si the Home Journal for 1856, will issued next weik. in anew dres* and wA M new attrai-iious. the principal one of n 1)1 H will be chapter one of PAUL F \NF. M Bl OR P A KT* OF A LIKE KI*E t'VTOLD^^H A JVovel in Serial JVumhers. v i:v N P. (AILLIS. V This, as a return of the author's pen tn(V field which be has tried with somesueceVß in other days, but which he abandoned fol the stronger attractions of fact and nature—l the field of romance—may not be uninter-S esting to the class of readers who have kind*! j!v followed him in both His longer expeJ rience and better knowledge of the world! will, of course, give him greater advantages! than liefor. . for truth-tike portrayal in f,c-B lion. He ha-, be-ides, a large store of per-m soual observation and incident which has! been kept apart from Itis available mateii-l al while confined to actual description, anti! n hirh can onlv he used through the rliiid al -zing prxv ess of romance. H lnadrli'ion ‘o thi* lien feature, a series on origins I sketches, songs anti ballads hi G-l P. Morris, and an original novelette, it I verse, founded upon fact, called, *• The .Story of a Star,’ by J M. Field, will be published in the course of the year. Besides the contiibutions am l labors rs the editors, the Home Journal will contain the Foreign and Domestic Correspondence of a large list of contributors—+he spice the European Magazines—the selections ol the most interesting publications of the day the brief nove's—the piquant storie*—the |-p rkiing wit and amusing anecdote— tfie netvg and gossip of tho Parisian papers , the personal sketches of public chaiuo ters— ! the stirring scene-of the world tie liv- in . —the chronicles of the news for the I dies— I the fashions—the laets and outlines of news I —the pick of English inf. rmatiot—the wit. humor and pathos of the time*—tin essays ou life, literature, society and nonnl*, and the usual variety of c- refill choosings trout the wilderness of English periodical litera„ lure, criticism, poetty, etc. \\ e need not remind our readers that tve have a'so one or two unsurpassed correspondent- in lh fasti* 1 ioiiublc soci'tij of Ait v York, who it i t give us early news of evert nett fe >ture < f style ! and elegance among the leaders of the gay w otld. TERMS, For one ropy, $2; for R copies ss—or one copy for three years, ss—always in ad vance. Address MORRIS &. WILLIS, Editor* and Proprietors, 107 Fulton street, Netv York. A'ow is the time to subscribe PIMM IlAiaZlMv, A Monthly Periodical of Literature, Art, and Fashion. Edited by Mr*, Ann S. Stfpkns, Charles J. Peterson. Peterson’s 1.-idic-’ N . ional M gsizine contains I'ruiii eight hundred to a thousand pages yearly, about lin ysi I I plati- fill’ over four hundred Illustration* eug aved wood Its Thru.ling Original Stories. No other Periodical publishes such thrill ing tales or such copilot storie* of real life. Mrs. Ann S. Stephens, the celebrated n> thor of Fashion and Famine.’ is one of the editors; and -be is as-i*ted by all the best female authors of America. All the -lories publi hed are original, which cannot be said of any cotemporary. Morality and virtue are always inculcated. The newspaper press and the ladies unite to pronounce it he most readable ■ f the Magazines. I I S SUPERB MEZZOTINTS, And other steel en ravings, are the be*t published aiiytt here; are executed for it bv the first artists: and at ihe end of each year, are alone worth the subscription. IT- C L< RED FA-HIOK PLATES Are the only reliable ones pu;dished in America; and are as eh gant ns they are correct, being magnificently engraved steel plates, Ihe Paris, London, Philadelphia, and New York Fashions are described, at length each month. It i* the textbook of Fashion in Boston, New Yojk, and Phila delphia. Its departments of iVetr Receipts crotchet work , Embroidery Netting, horticulture, acting cnarades, knitting, and female equestrianism, are al ways well filled, profusely illustrated, and rich with the latest novelties. It isthe best Ladies’ Magazine in tbe world, try it for one year. TERMS, ALWAYS IN ADVANCE. One copy for one year, §2, three copies for one year. §5 ; five copies for one year, 87 50; eight copies for one year, $10; six teen copies for one year, S2O. PREMIUMS FOR GETTING CP CLUBS. To every person gd ing op a club, our ‘Pori Folio of art for 1856. containing fii.y * sted engravings will he giveu gratis. For a club of sixteen, an extra copy of the iVag azine for 1856 will lie sent in addition. Address, CIIA’S J. PETERSON. No. 102 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. . Ihe Volumes begin with numbers for Januaiy and July, blit sul scribers may commence with any other month they please. Back numbers furnished if de-ired Slide .Vos/, Georgia, Harris County. > Court of Ordinary, March ’Perm, ’56. £ %¥7 HE REAS, Natliaoiel Black, Exee v T utor of the estate of Mary Ross, dc ceased, applies to me lor letters of dismis sion Irom executorship of *aid estate. And w hereas Nathaniel Black, executor of the estate of William Turner, deceased, applies to me for letters of dismission from executorship of said estate. And whereas, Nathaniel Black, adminis trator on the estate of Susannah Turner, deceased, applies to me for leders of dis mission therefrom. It is therefore ordered by the Court that u|l persous concerned be and appear at the; next September Term of said Court, then and there to show cause (if any the\ have), ivhy said Letters should not ‘ e grautrd. A true Extract from tbe Minutes of Har ris Court ol Ordinary. GEO. W. MULLINS, Match B6m Oidiuaiy.