Newspaper Page Text
SOUTHERN ENTERPRISE.
Si ® ® o
you ni.
(Enterprise.
i> S | • i ’roprietor. o
t ® ‘ ~w
® Ml B<*f|{||>TlO.\. @ o
£ © fliiKM-S. ®
Thk En-tkui-kisk” is published W.-eklv
.r lu-„ U-M.I M- ;• ■■ .iU ft . advance. It not
l'.iiit 111 til\a:,i o®A ,■ ;ikk L) i.i.Ai -i will invarjfblv bo
charged. ® ,§
* ,| ,i 1,,r tii;-, • Kvrfci: > w J,, 1 |„. ucc"lii|ialitoii®
Wyt.iobASil 1b Wishing tilt- d;r< i®c.f tl.oil- I i-.'j;
’ nungcd will notify us from office ir i> to be trans
lorrea, with the Nemo. (femty and Slat.- phunly written.
® & ■” *-* •
auvi:khsi\,
© „• $ ®
.iiivt akjsemEST3 will* be at Ov t; Dolea%
*’' r s'jiiaro ■ *t” t wol v, 0 I. . f.r t:a- lirr ins* itjoife
lfirT| Cents for each subsequent insertion. Tnose
nut. specified as to tin* time will !..• ®t ! .;isii<-il nutil ®rder
fed out and diarjfcd aicordii.iv. ‘ *
7 fcvv XoTXCKS.Jiot <?.\l coding six lines, will be
tor ele&y twelve printed Mile.- exceeding that number,
fiiiist all longer notices.
- V °Vi\vi sv. ill pleas’ iuttid in t!.a*r favors previ
ous to 10 o’clock on Tuesdays. a> g> ®
® ,® ©
co.mkut ad v kßr i m !•; n i; atm.
* >ur ci'rttracts (Advertisers will be governed bv
‘he to Hr, wing Rules, each square being composed of
twelve solid Minion lines: ®
* To, Hi.t-fil
®i9lx I * | g
® ® o®j -= = 3§>
Length of Advertisements m ®® 7
® v i .2 ; <i i >
® o 1 ®c .2 •= ?
® 1 I * \®* J
•>ne Sjjtiarv. g* $5 Oh $8 00 $lO 00 slToJ?|
Two sfinare#.® 800 il 00 18 fto 20 00 i
Three Squared II) 00 1 16 00 ! 21 On gs<®M> i
Squares i j ®nil7 00 •„*2 00 -,'o 00
Five Squares ,11 00 JO 00 00: Si) l)lf>j
Si#'Squares IS 00 J 4 00! JOT OH 35 00
<ii • Half (.'nluinii w i-j.f'(M) Tl 00’ 35 ft) %) 00
Three Fourths Column ’. 35 On It n® 52 00 00 (aj
Iftr ‘.ill tsiftsM ('\iti® Lforfhe term of'one )•ear, will he
elitirgeiTill pro(jftrtion@t"’ the Spa ® tlley (Occupy, ®t%X r
per Lme, csolid Minion.) ‘ ®
*-* * -
jbEGAL ADVERTIMKIIE,\TM.
All persons having oocasix#? to advertise Legal Sales,
Notices, etc., are law to comply with the
following rules: ® “ ® i
A ditii 11 ■ <.tv:;< l<>i > ‘M. 0 E n< <■■ lOl's Riini'iliiinn: ©
(S> All s;ites of Taunl and Negroes by Administrators,
K.#ciors or Duardians. are BjqniriMt by law to be
hi’ld on the first Tuesday ift the ngjiith, between the
hours o®tei®)'cloek in the forenoon, and three in the
® afternoon, at the ‘Courthouse in the county in which
the property is sifflate. Noises of tliifte sales must
he given in a Gazette Forty Days previous to®
° tile day of sftlc.
Mule I‘er-onal Proflcrtii 0
Notices of the sale of Personal Proparty must he
givfnsiid least Ten Days jUTvious to the day <(£ stile.
Eatalr Debtors and (’reditors: °
Notices to fc)-htors and Creditors of an estate must
be published Forty Days. ® . o p
Court of tFiSlinin v I.ruve to Mcll :
Nr.tice uiiiit application will tie made to the Court
of Ordinary fv.r leave to sell Land or NegroesaOnust
he published wJtly for ‘T\\Mr, .Months.® ®
Adiniiiistratioa anti 4>uardiaiisliip : ® o
Citations for Letters of Administration mill be
s i'uidislii‘3 Thirty DiS’s; for Dismission from
nutuUdy**'"* s ~‘ Mouths: for Disinissio# °
n nilsOuardianship. ■ ®
Eoreclostire of tlortgage: ® „ , ®
Knles for Foa-i Insure of Mortgage mpst be pub- [.
lished nioiithl\>Tor Fourth Bit 1 is. ®
%.•-® ® _ ® i
Ivstablisliing 1.0. t Pnpofs: J
® Notices for esT!#>lishlg # L<ist Papers must be pb-J .
lished fv term of ’Three .Months. m
Puhlictfiions will ifways he according®
to thcuibove rules, unh-si 1 otherwise ordered. ®
1 ’ -o
. ‘.®® LAW CARDS. _
g-
9 J- @ . * * i
Attorney Af law, ® % _
, ® @ ® QUITMAN. 15HOOKS Cy. ,®G A.
Will practice in the Counties of tin® Southern Circuit,
gjid Colfee, Clince, Ware and Eclftds of the
U i rcuil. ® ® ® <a g
®1- l! Kennet,
Attorney at law, ®
QUITMAN. 11U0<4KS CO , GA.
Will nraftice in Thomas, Lowndes@BrooKs and Berri
en Counties. ih ts
* ® J. It. Alex ail d%*r, ® ® “®®
Attorney at jiaw, © ®
,nh 25-ts ® TIB >.M ASYILLE, GA. @
I. It. Bedford,
Attorney at law, ® a
@ tv AH US IhfHOL GIT, GA. ®
Will practice in the counties#!’ the Brunswick Circuit#
ad in Lgwndes and Berrien Comities ot the Southern
Va-cuit. J® 19
®-
Joint 11. Dyson, . @
• A TTOR¥EY AT L tiwmasv*ii.e, oa.
Office next noor BruM-'s.
$ Kiiarene Hines,
Attorney at law, • ®
je 2ftf _© 3 THOMASVILLE, 9A.
® #L. C. Bryan, ® a ®
Attorney at law,
mh 10 THD.\tAS\ GA_.
® —: ® *
E. C. Morgan, @
Attorney at law,
NASHVILLE, liERIUEN CO., GA.
Will practice in the Comities of the Southern Circuit®
and the Counties \\ orth and Dougherti ot the
Macon; and CotTce, Clinch and 5V lire ot the Bnil?witk
Circuit. Address at Flat CThek Post Office, Oa.
®mhfS ® ®_ ll
11. f. l*eepl|f ®
Attorney at law, ®
NASHVILIB, BERRIEN 0
je 12 . oi ts
® Samuel B. Speiieei®;
gt TTORNEY© AT LAW,
© ® THOJIaSVILLE, GA.
AVill give his entire attention to tin® Practice of Law
in IheoGounties of*the Southern Clfcuit.
Offife mi the second floor of Donald McLean s Brick
gilding. 5 ; © m * mh 18 { !
A. V. JlcCardel*
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE- oa ©
Office at Thomasville, Ga.
Albhnsiness entrusted to him will be attended to prompt
ly and \fith dispatch. • mh 25 ly
S,: ©
Allies* ll* Remington © t
TIfSTICE OF THE PEACE ® ®
>1 Office Oppose the Post Office, ThomasvUle. a
Collections of all kinds taken on liberal terms, either
•iif Justices, Superior oi*lnferior Courts. mh 18 ts
’ 1 1 1 Q-
Schofield's ® ©
itiojST ~sy ORKS,
JOINING* DEPOT,
Macon-..- Georgia, 3
Manufacturers of s>
STPAIt Engines and Boilers, *
Mill and Gin Glaring,
® Cant* Mills and Bans, °
Syrup Boilers,
Shafting and Pulley..
AQL KINDS OF°MACHINERY MADE TO
order at short not if e, ® 0 0
m E.’REMINGTON & SON. ®
jan 14-Iff* ® c Agents, Thomasville, Ga-
Jop) WorlL.
WE A RE PRF.PARED TO DO ALL
kinds of JOB PRINTING, from a Visiting Card to
a large Poster, at the Enterprise office. Try ns. ®
(I> 1,( 4is l'. BRVA >, j
Editor & Proprietor. @ i
MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARDS.
w *
R, [MEDICAL CARD.I
Drs. Bruce A Reed.
Having formed a co partnership in
Bie pi.mtice ot Medicine, otfer nieir services to the
public. ©
. y- Office, the one occupied bygjtruce for many years.
} ‘"'. v opened a HOSPITAL for the convenience
“t those ow#ing >l.ives rcGuiring .Surgical and
I>"or white persons, not able will be treated gratis.
Accotumodations comfortable. ’ g,
* ° ® „ R. J. BRUCE, M D.
;# -I'm” 21, J. R. KEEP. MD.
>r. \. fi~. ll9l>nnald.
IN TENDERING HIS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
to the people of Thomasville and vicinity. Avould in
fortii them that he has been prft in Jetter
-on County, Florida, for live years,faring which time lie
has met and treated most of the diseases which occur in
I this latitude. @® * ®
< IFFICE. nn the side street, near the office formerly
occupicdgiy C ®. Harris. ® ®
©i<LsIDENCE, the house formerly occupied hv E.ftj.®
Anderson. ® 9
©Thomasville, January 7, 186<U ts ,
lOJ Dr, 11. J. Oliveros, ®
Fractitioneu of and Surgery,
jan 1 Glasgow, Thomas Cos., CJa. ly
llr. SmS. Adams. ®
HIU; EBY INFORMS IIIS FRIENDS AND THE
public, that he will continue the practice of medi- i
cine at the old stand and respectfully tenders his services
to the public. A ®
Thomasville, ApriHj, 1800. ® ® ts
w w
[BEKoiaf PRACTICE.] ®
® I>r. I*. S. Bouoi.
OFFERS HIS PROFESSIONAL SERVICES TO
the citizens of Thomasville and vicinity.
Calls at all hoop;, promtply attended mh 18 ts
I)r. Rrandon.
Has removed to the office formerly
(jpccupied by John Miller, Eso., as a Law Office,
flails -promptly attend'd. ®
i Special attention will be given to Surgery and
; Surgical Dwcases.
’ Thomasville, January Is. ts
® I>rs. 11. B. X IL O. Arnold,
j ® Dentists. Thomasville, (fti. ®
HAVE TIIE PRACTICAL ADVANTAGE OF
’ T fifteen years experience in every ? ’
branch of the jirofession. © ’
We can refer to tnanj@vh > have ha (ft lie
benefit of our operations in this County for
the paw six years.®
M e have every isfrilitytfor doing the best ®
© _
NOW KXOIAN’, WHICH iSiSI)EN@MINAT£T)
Continuous Gum Work,
on Platina Pfifte, which is impervious to any of the acids,
even in a concentrated form.
Teeth tilled with pure gold in a superior manner.
& patients favorgpg us \vjth their confidence may rely
upon our utmost exertions'll) perfonn©everv ration in
as perfect pw^hle @ @ *mhlo ts
° firs? R. 11, A IL I. ®
X\-OULD KKSPBTWTLLY THE CITI
g,** izens Thomasville @ at ®
and vicinity, that they are 0 \ D A
fittingujfctlicir ® /L X ‘ I'i /<-/• _
IHeilirnl an.l Den ft. I O '-k/fif®
arrai%cd as not to be moles Xp yA-rJ :s
ted by any business of the Q / j fi'. “ V
Office, and will ll#
. Ki'Ul Njlfidlv Private * ‘-==--^3==
u>r LSdics and GeWtlemen wishing Dental Opgrati<mß.
- And our®patroift in MEDICINE be assuft il that
aS 1 sCromt prescription To Ike same patient will be ad
ministerctMlf any other than © ®
JL 11° tl U OY.
°AS HE (JI AS NO ®CO PA RTN E R IN MEDICINE
° and his Ja nets arc all fresh and correctly labeled.
(A FIUE second iloor east of tb* one foffiierly occiyii
ed, by At I&ton. @ mh lO ts
New Drug Store. ® ® j
BK. PS.%OH lSt lias ofbned a ft,,,#St ore at [
the stand formefl>®bcct#>ied bv PALMER ifc BKO.,
onp#site E. istirepared to furnish
Drugs, Medicinos, iTumery, Inks.'’
© FANCY SOAPS, &.C-, ‘ i
upon fair terms,fto those who may favor him with a call.
To his RcfiAfti friends he would say, that he has on hand
a fresh and of ‘ ® @
, B G T*A I.C •ME Bi C ill a S, @
and will be glad to supply them with such artiedes as
they may need. ®
® ‘ ® ALS®.
Kerosine,®Fine Cigars and Tobacco, Fine Medicinal
Brandies and Wines, kept constantly on hand and for
sale. may 23-ts
B rugs and
®TUST RECEIVED a LARGE AND WELL SELEC
ted stuck of Medicines. Chemicals of all
kinds. _ ® ® ®
Also, Paiifts, Qds, ((friss. Putty, Varnish, Brushes,Dye
Stull's, Patent Medicines, Garden Scfds. Toilet Articles,
i Pcifunfbry. Brushes, &e. Kerosine Oil and Lamps;
Cum phene,ft Uu'uing Fluid and Lamp®
% ® EDWARD SEIXAS, Druggist, ®
Thomasville, May 21, I§><4, © s ts <
® Sew Tailoring Eslablislinient.
(8)
l 3 eter Lindsay,
iIIF.RCIIANT TAILOR, MOULD RESPECTFUL
s At L ly inform the citizens ofr ®
@ Thomasvilte
SURROUNDING® COUNTRY,
that he has a ® |(
; si-ioU . .
Next to Remington & Dekle's u ‘Hfi ® f Pd
* Furniture
he will be pleased@tr> wait [A \
upon those who may favor him ||l p l|| m
§, i W Garments of alfekinds cut £ tj,
and made up in the latest and most
fashionable stvles. . Clothes, Cassimers, and Vestings,
constantly on hand.® •
Patronage solicited. mlr2s ts
John IV Arnold, “
MEf CHANT TAILOR, IS STILL AT HIS OLI®
stand between the large
brick sftires of Remington and, ■’ >■
Hubert, where he is prepare
* @
All o Kinds of Work r
% his line in the best®style and E
He has on hand a good supply If Vft
of fine patterns for @ @® ’ H | Vj
with all the necessary trinuffings, W
a which will be cut and made to
order. Cutting done at all times in the latest fashions
and at the shortest notice. ®
9 -'ftp Call and examine for yourselves. m
© Thomasvi 11 e, Ga., Oct. 30,1859. ftf -
© © ....
Sad<llc o an<l Harness Manufactory.
4 LARQP AND COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
e Harness and Saddles,
Bridles, . . ::: H
■ |T
Kept constantly ‘on lfaiui
an(l for sale, St the Mann
factory of McGLASHAN & LITTLE.
Harness aiffl Saddß: REPAIRING promptly at
tended to. © o ° * • o
Thomasville, Jan. 21, 1860. ® ly
, Soda-Water. 0 0 °
This delightful beverage,ln its per
feation —with choice Syrups—cool and sparkling
commenced Dsawing to-day for the season, at the store
of the undersigned. and
, ICE kept on hand constantly, and for sale by
3 May 1,1860 0 9 JOHN STARK-
THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA,"WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, I860!
Fgpm the Home Journal.
Iftlr the m esdi\g.
® ® nv williayll. keeA. @ s
i© All alone in room, at last; _ #
I wonder how far they have trailed now*!
They’ll be very far when night is past; @
And so would I, if I knew but how.
© How lovely iiie looked in her wreath and dress!
She is queenlier far than the village girls;
Those ftere roses, too, in the wreath, 1 guess-® m
_ Twere they made the*crimson amongst her curls.
@®’ ® &
She's good as beautiful, too. tlrey say a
Her heart is as gentle as any dove's; ®
©She'll be an that she can to him alwav—•
® Dear! lam tearing my new white gloves.
she is with her saint like faee, ®
Jjier eyes are violet—mine areftdue ;
How careless I am with my lace! —
Her hands are whiter, and softer, too.®
* TW ve gone ft> the eiTy beyond the hill, ®
® © ‘liiey must never come IfticS to tliis place again?
Tin almost afraid to be here so still,
® I wish i®would thunder! and lightning! and rain!
Oh, no! for some may not be abed,
Souittel'ew, perhaps* may be out to-night;
I hope tTiat- thifemo%will come instead, @
© And heaven be all starry, and eartlfall light.® ®
<© ® ’ ® ~ ;
’Tis only a summer that she’s been here—
It’s bee#my Rome for sftVenteen vears!—
But her name is a testament far and near.
And the pofir have embalmed it in pgceless tears.
I remember the day when another came— ®
There, at 1 have tied my hair— ®
t) Her curls anu mine were nearly the same,
hers are longer, and mine less fair.
®
aeriss the sea, I know,
Aerostne mean —will that be far?—
Did 1 have my comb a moment ago ?
I seem to forget where my things all are. ®
When ships are wrecked, do the people drown ?
Is there never a boat to save the crew ; ®
Poor ships! If ever my ship goes down,
® I'll want a grave in the ocean, too.
Good-night, gootPnight— it is striking one ! ©
Good-night to bride, and good night to groom. _
The light of my candle is iftmost done,
I wish inv bed was in inotSfer’s room. ®
How calm it looks in the midnight shade — ®
Those curtains were hung there clean to-day:
They're all too white to® me, I’m afraid,
Perhaps I may sconce us white as they. ® ©
Dark ! —all dark —for the light is dead. ®
0 Father iri*heaven, may 1 nave rest ?
ft One hour of sleep for my weary head— ® ®
For this breaking heart in my poor, breast
Fofiliijksweet sake, do I kneel and pray, ©
n Oh, God! protect him from change and i!l;
“ J And render her worthier every way,
The older the purer, the lovelier still. _ ©
@ . ® ©
There.*, I knew I was .going to cry, ©
I have kept the tears in my soul too long; • ©
Oh ! let me say it, or I shall jiie,
As Heaven is witness, I mean no wrong.
He never shall hear from this secret room,
® He never shall know in the after years,
®How seventeen summers of happy bloom
Fell dead, one night, in a moment of tears!
©
I loved him more than she understands—
@ For him I loaded my soul with truth;
o For him lam kneeling, with lifted hands.
To lay at his feeV my shattered youth !® ®
I toye him, I adore him, still the same ! ® ®
More ftian fating*, and motherland life!
<§> My hope of to bear his name— ■
My heaven,of heavens to be his Wife ! „
..© ® ®
His wife—oh, name which the angels breathe,
Bet it not crimson with shame—
’Tis her glory, her word to wreathe
© In the princely heavi from whose blood ft c:Hnc. _
Oh, hush ! again I behold them stand,
® As they stooato night, by the chancel-wall;
I see liiftM bolding ber wliite-gloved liund,
1 hear his voice in a whisper full.
I see tlb?minister’silver liair.® ©
I see him kneel at the altar-st<She,
I see him rise when the prayer is o’er,x, © ® ®
® © He has Uftien their Ittuids and made them on®. © ,
> The fatherland Rotifers are standing tfbar, ©
The friends are stressing to kiss the bride ;
One of ftofc-e kisses had birthplace Sere—
The deW M Her lips has not yet dried. @
Ilis lips have touclftd liers lieforc®to^ught —- 9 ®
* Then 1 have a grain of his to keep !
* blackness is flecked with lij^ht # ° ®
Some angel is singing my soul to sleep,
lie knows full well why many a kngve
So close to ftps slgiuld swim—
® knows that the kiss I gave
\\iiß set in hergiouth gifte to him!
® g, * - * -* ® <§
° From the American Union.
THE DESERTED WIFE. @
BY W. It. H.
lie’s gone —at length the link is broken @
That bound our hearts together— @
® At last the fatal word itfepoken, -
© And now lie’s gone forever.
® J’ar out tfyon the wide world straying,
g, ‘ A sad and lonely stranger ®
He’s left me —yet*l still am praying
That he be saved from danger.
©’Tis hitter cold this selfish world is,
No find door bids us enter;
s Os all the seasigis of the heart, this is,
0, this must be the winter!
© . ©,
The sun shines to-day as pure and bright °
g. As it did when he was nere— ®
Yet, in my sad heart there is rro light— ®
® My soul is filled with fear.
And thee <§nv baht thou art fatherless, (* ° J
And weak, and luled with hunger;
Yet God does pity thee thy distress,
@ And gives the quiet slumber. ®
® Sleep on mj?darling babe, ii\j* dear one, o P
Tliojjj hast a heav’nly father, ® ‘
Who will not leave thee all alone, <$
Though 800 u lie’ll take thy mother.
5) Father to thee I commit mv child —
® Stay loose tliv cold hand, oh, death! —®
I’m going—my heart beats fast and wild, ®
And grows shorter still my breath.
m ® ® Hark! I think I hear some friendly voice—
-8 It is—some kind hand’s near by !
Take my child —oh, God. I do rejoice—
Thou art safe, my babe—l die !
Beneath the green grass and flowers wilcP
Sleeps the deserted mother,
And oft to the place a little child
Is led by a foster brother,
Who points to the spot within the vale, q
That to be remembered ground,
© And in itocents kind repeats the tale
Os the little babe they found.
® © ®
@ Rowdyism. @ ®
©Rowdyism” appears to be an American in
stitution. In no other country in the world is
the rowdy found as “one of the elements of
society.” There are brigands in Italy, and
users in Spain. But the #rowdy” is not
foutftl outside of American towns and cities. —
The rowdy is a brute wlTo lanocks down decent
people “just for the fun of the®thing.” Jhe
rflwdy places no value@on human life—has no
regard foraagef or sex. The genuine rowdy
would as soon abuse an old man as a boy, wjbile
one of his leading exploits is to knosk down
jWomen. ©The rowdy nsVer works. In New
York, he appears to spend his time in fumigat
ing corner rum holes with lew-priced Begars.~
As the rowdy steals his clothing, he is gener
ally well dressed. He oils his hair with mut
ton tallow, hangs his hat on his left ear,
always finishes a remark with arboath.
The rowdy does not seem to have any home,
but lives around in sp<Jts. He # now and
then on his parents, and always “leaves his @
mark ” either on his fathers nose or mother’s
head. The rowdy has all the ugliness oft the
bull dog, without any of its courage. The row®
dy is, iq reality, a coward, and always® fights
when he has plenty of backers. At such times,
he becomes as cruel as an Indian, and would
oas soon slay his grandfather as a mad dog. The
rowdy is an nuisance. He was
brought into existence by universal suffrage,
and is nursed into brutality by demagogues in
office or in pursuit es office. — Knickerbocker.
®* _ ■ > ■ ’ ■ ®
“ The Auiericßit Pump.” ® s>
About a year since, after an examination of
the we gaveftn our columns a a
fevorable notice it, since which ample time
has been afforded to test its .eal merits, which
we leajp has been successfully done in almost
in every section of the Union. At the@b(iftiti
ful and handsomely unproved residence erec
ted immediately upon the site of old Fort Inde
pendence, South Yorkers, near ©Kingsbridtg;,
built, owned and occupied by IVm. Giles,
Esq. (of the house of Andrews,® Giles & Cos.,
10# Chambers street),|one of these pumps has
lately been put in operation. It is Bgt within
a few yards of the ola house and head quavers
(still staudifbr) of General Montgomery. By
invitatiqn, on Saturday last, in®company with
Mr. Janies M. Edney, we visited the above lo
cality for the purpose est” witnessing
ti#n of this pump. presenf Mr. Edney
ancPMe Giles measg|ed the distatffee from the
sgjri n g®to the house, which was found to be
eight united andasixty two feet, and the per
pendicular elevation wa#one hundred andgfiftv
eight feet. - They then put the pump
tion, and a quarter inch pipe
(which was very mueff the pump, being
too small,) forced over five gallons of water a
minute tloftabyve distance and height, by two
men, or byline man, and> Mr. Edney < %orked
tSe pump alone with Mr. Edney 1
has such confidence in the pump, ‘that he wnl
guarantee that two men wilr elevate water two
hundred and feet and carry it horizontally
thousand or more feel® ®
@3lr. Giles has tried other methods of getting
the water from the spring to the hous%tfhich
have proved to be slow, uncertain, and®xpen-
Nothing has given him half the satisfac
tion of tlffe American pump, and with this he
appears much delighted. have n
tion in pronouncing it one of the most ingeni
ous in the
constructed It cans in all ordinary dep&s, be
worked with the ease by a small boy
and®itl durability, cheapness, and
adaptation for forcing water up to almost any ?
height, gives it a decided advantage over the
majority of other inventions%iade for this pur
pose. For its size and appearance itspower is
most wonderful. A man can put it $1 his
shoulder and carry it almost any distance. -
‘Tfce public have only to witness the operatiqp
of this pump to be convinced too much
can not 8e saidftn commendation of it. Those
;,who have experienced difficulty in getting
water up into high buildings, or to grest eleva
tion*,®orwho wish fO obtain something of a sub
stantial nature, at a trifling expense, (Sisi^ I** 1 **
workld by hand or Ivill sfind in the
American punfp all they need combined, for it
any number of givengjioints, and
tlirows wafer by hose from thirty to forty feet
Bv hand, with isr-eSte ..a .o^.,ir;t y
Edney keep# samples atftiis office, and a work
ings pump at seventy filet, at h' 8 factory, 432
®Teiith street. drawings and prices will be
sent free by addressing Jamei’M.
Chambers street, N. Y.— Express.
Editors copying the above in their reading
© @ 1J p © ® 0
columns and sending marked copy to the above
address, will immediately a splendid
cgpy fi%e of e barge, of Daniel Webster ad
dressing the United
1860. This is one oi the la Eg cst and finest tbi- j
fravings ever issued from the American
twenty-eight by thirty-|lx inches, antFcontains
correct likenesses of one hundred and twenty
two eminent perspn§, assembled on that mem
o
oible occasion, with a key to the whole, just
published. ®
® ©
Rrmnrkable Litcrarr Discovery. ©
Avery interesting literary discovery lias late
ly been untQe public. Gibbon had, long ago, io
his great work,pointed out “as the most authen
tic of relics, @the bronze serpent on which was
placecfethe golden tripod, made by th® Greeks
from the spoils of Xerxes, and dedicated 4-o |Jie
temple of IVpollo, at Delphi, as related Ly
Herodotus, after the®battle This
was carfied to his new capital by the Empergr
Constantine, and though mutilated, by the icon
oclastic zeal of the conqueror, Mohammed 11.,
it still remains erect in the Hippodrome at Con
stantinople® As it was®difficult |o reconcile the
present appearance of the monument with the
descriptions authors, some doubts
been thrown on its authenticity; but during the
recent occupation by the al
lied powers in tjie war, excavations
were made, and the serpent pedestal laid bare
to its base, where, by application of chtftnical
solvents,th% original Hellenic inscriptions, recor
dgig the names of the Greek States who had.
fought against the Persians, waj recovered. Jt
is in the most Archaic sown of Greek writing
well and and %rittes in the bous
trophedon manner, in which the lines ara> read
alternately from right to left. The re appear
ance of a recofd actually seen and acojaed by
the father 0? history, and many centuries later,
by Pausanias, which has been lostla world
eter since, is a remarkable link in the chain
of discoveries which have of late gone so strong
ly to establish the credit of Herodotus as
main feliance in the history of the ancient
world. •„ ©
©
How Gottlieb Broke his Pony.
% ( Chon, you reckermemper dat liddle plack j
Aiony I pyed mid the bedler next veek?” “ Yah,
vt of him?” “Nofings, only 1 gits sheated
burdy pad.” “So?” “Yah. You see, in de
vurst blase, he is®plint<tnit bote legs, unt ferry
lame mit one eye.® Den, ven you gits on him
to rite, he rares up bghint unt kicks up pefore
so vurftbr as a chack mule. I dinlft 1 dake
a rite e unt sooner I gits
straddle his pack he gommence dat vay, shust (
so like a vakin peam on a poatstcam.; unt vet®
hg tone, 1 was so mit ef’ery dinks,
I vints minezelf arount paekyards, mit his dail
in mine hantsover de pridle.” “Well, vot you
going to e do mit him?” “Oh, I vixed him pet
ter as cham up. I hitch him in de cart mit his
dail vere his o het @ ote tope; den I gife him
apout so a tezen cuts hitecow ; he
to go, put so soon he see de cart pefore him
makes paekyards Burd£ soon he sduumbles
pehifid, unt sit town on his hanches, unt
like he veel burty shamed mit himzelf. Don I
dake hims out', hitch* him de rite vay, unt he
go rite off shust so goot aseany pody’s bony.”
For Bril no’ll Ercrft® <g
Tl®} followi ig we clip from the editorial col
umns of the®Philadelphia S< u/hent Monitor,
heretofore a stauifth Democratic jouonal.
every Democrat read and be convinced:
M hilsfc ©there is still a Union of States, it is
incumbent @*n tft ery <§loyal and patriotic citizen
to adhere to a National Party. There is now
ly one such party remaining. ©The Dcngi
cwtic party is ruptured into sectional moieties.
Me step irom a sundered organization to the
of ©‘The Union —the Constitution
—AND ItHE OF THE LAWS,”
M hen this fails us—^w lien this, too, shall be
riven in twaifi—and there no other al
tern ti\^ —we perforte, make be
tween the sections. ® @
We are iife-long Democrats. r?everfbeless
we are willing to enlist under the banner of
Bell and who have®been \) higs and
America rs. 4Ve enlist not as Ame#
ieans, but @ as Constitutional Union solders.
The banner is emblazoned with the motto of
! the CONSTITUTION AND the Unioo, and it
floats on the breeze in every State.® We follow
that banner! Its beaftrs (fro statesmen; re
now(oefl throughout the world —renowned for
they: virtue®, for their commanding intellectual
for their long in pub
slic affairs, and for public services as Gov
ernors, as Senator, as Cabinet Ministers and
® ®@ G
Tilt Northern of the Sectional
Southern Democratic candidate for the Presiden-!
cy, will votsfor Bell and in jtreference
terthe Northern Sectional Democratic Candi
date, and: in the South, the adherents of the
fetter will do the same thing® The party is
torn to pieces by® the dissensions of Unambi
tious leaders, who lnve usurped the powers be
longing of right to thsproplc. But now the
People will be roused, and they will rescue
their priceless heritage from the peril in&
which it Has fallen from a uiisplagpd confidence
in the capacity and fidelity o£ the wstodian to
whom it Had been entrusted. Bell alid
will sweep the Smtfjifyoiftone end to the other;
and if the hitherto conservative people of the
North are not false to the obligations of duty
and patriotism, afid not to every consid
eration of interest—both “national°and individ
ual —they will efrry New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
New York, a®d at least half the New England
B'tates ! “Awake! arise! or be forever fallen .
Sound ‘llie trumpet —beat the drum—ring the
bellr-and rally the masses, Ntft'th and Souths
East and West, the rescue of the Union, in
>(the sacred names of Washington and Con
stitution. (g ® ©
© ■■ . ®
To c ,VVh and Anirricnns.
The Question is no lenger s^,choice E hetween
and a l)eni®crat —but Between gßell
ana joncotn. me Uonstitutfrinal L nstrh ticket
is now ©the only qne in the field winch will bfe
supported in all sections the Union. It will
contest evg*y Southern State, carry a number,
and possibly Adi of tbei®. if the Whig®
ands Americans of the Norlh o support
and* elect him, the3e trill he hefitseforth, hat one
party in “fhc Soft th. We ady;oCate a Union
Ticket —but one set of Electors in e&ch®
State against Lincoln.® Let all peters opposed
to Lincoln inscribe the name of the me®©thcy
prefer on their and deposit them in the a
same boxes. cifrry halß the North
ern and Northwestern States. Quite as ma#y
disgusted Democrats would vote for Bell, as
lYh igs for Douglas, or any otln®- Democrat 9 . Iri
this State, for instance, if Bell gets more votes
gthan any ]ie jvlll be entitled to the
Electoral vote — a pro-rata profiortion, and
chances of election will be as *good as any
man’s. © @
By the Lincoln AljolitiotP Piatform it is ad
veftised to all foreigners to come and get 160
%cres, and gojd mines and silver mines for noth
ing. Our father was wounded in battle, and
his widow gq£ 160 acres for it.® ®W^Pask if the
son of the foreign enemy who shottiiin shall
have the adjoining 160 acres! Will Ameri
ca M desert Bell and support Eve
rett is in fifcvor of industry
—Hamlin is a free trader. Will Northern
Whigs go fbr ilamlin ?—Southern Monitor.
® a Coinbiiiatioiia^
When the oead-lock occurred last winter,
some ninety Democratic members of Congress
combined Whigs and Americans in
the effort to elect an American Speaker. The
object li as to defeat Sherman, who had endbfsed
Helper’s book. @ Afid ,jvhy should not Dfftno-
ow combine with the Union and Consti
tutional men on Bell and Ev@rett,®to defeat
Lincoln, who endorses Summner’s speech?—
Let us save country first, and quarrel after
wards. The inauguration of a@ sectional ad
ministration would be the inauguration of civil
war and anarchy. Soutjgeiffi man would be
permitted office under it, apd no rev
enue ®ould be collegted in the Southern ports..
The business and prosperity of the country
woul4®be destycjKd. Lef®the manufacturers
and merchants North come forward bold
ly%nd zealously, and there will be such a re
sponse £rom®quarters hitherto little thought of,
that the whole nation will soon be in a blaze of
#nthifciasm. Thftre will be hell ringings in
every will as a raar
sriage bell.” —Southern Monitor.
0 ® ©
©■ **•*'■ ©
© ® ® “ Niggled It.” @ ®
The Seceders from the
tion at Baltimore, as a Mississippi boatman
would say, “ Nifrgled it witth a
when thev Douglas and nomkiated
Breckenridge. ® ©
@ The point they made upon and©he
grounds of their objection to him, was nis squat
tePsovereignty notions —he holdings the doc
trine that’ the ep'eoplo of a® territory through
terriforial legislature, have the right to
exclude slaveryby yufriendly legislation. @
Now, it is known to all who have kept them
selves posted, that in the canvass for Governor
last fall in Kentucky where Aft. Breckinridge
resides, Joslftia F. Bell, the opposition candi
date for Governor made this point upon®
Beriah Maggffin, the Democratic candidate;
but Magoffin and the Derdbcratic fyirty of
Kentucky, with Mr. Breckeflridge as one of
the leaders, supported Magoffin and elected
him Governor on t he same principles tfiatlDoug
’ las noiiP advocates, in opposition to Joshua F.
@ © ©
a© ®
t ‘FISRMS, TWO DOLLARS, )
c 111 Advance. S
Bell, who took the same position that thesece
der% now avow. And the Legislature of Ken-
in the same &nvafs, a#d on the
same ticket with Mr. Elected Mr.
U. S. Senator, showing conclu
sively that* Mr. Breckenridge to-day occupies
the same positfrn on@the territorial question
that Stephen @A.T)ouglas does. There is to-
i da y n®t a whit of difference between Brecken
ridge and Douglas, on the very point tli&y made
upon Douglas, ‘Snd for which they refused to
support him inion.
Truth* for the People.
It is a trusi—That the lion. Jojin Bell hgs
served his country for last Thirty years in
ethe councils of the nation.
® It is a truth —Thathe has shown himself, on *
all occasions, a st&tesman. a patriot afd conser
vative. „ ®
It is a trtith—-That lie is a Southern man by
birth?) education and interest; and has ever
looked to the honor, interest and welfare of tho
South. (o ®
fe is a truth—That he is a slaveholder, and
defends the institution of slavery as joist and
right; as best foAhe slave and the slaveholder*
See speech, 6th July, 1850.
It is a truth—That to the doctrine
that property in slaves .in the Territories are
entitled to the protection of the laws and the
Constitution of the United States. See speech,
6th, July, 1850.
is a truth—That he i.-$n favor of the poli
cy of a diffusion and extension o f slavery in *
any new Territory adapted to its condition, as
humanity to the siave, no less than justice to
the master. See speech, 6th July, 1850.
It is a truth—That he attributes the present
prosperity of the whole country to the institution
(if slavery. S#e sf&ecli, 6th July, 1850.
It is a truth—That he voted against the
Kansas bill, because he understood from Mr.
Douglas, tliayt contained the doctrine of Popu
lar (Squatter)Sovereignty. See speech, 18th
March, 1858.
9 lt is a truth maintains the doctrfiio
of non-intervention, as understood by Mr. Cal
houn. That is : That a Territory cannot leg
islate for or againgt slavery, except when itf’
conies to form a
speech, Mv 24, 1854.
It is a truth —That he voted against thesße
compton because he proved
beyond contradiction, in the United States
Senate, that it was conceived and brought fc#th
in fraud. See Mafch, 1858.
It is a truth® l —That, he is for the admission
kito the Union gs all States, whether free or
slhvß, that fairly forms a Constitution. ° If a
free State, he Would adiuit it promptly; (f re
cognizing he would insist upou its ad
mission.” S&e >tuieh, I§oß.
It is a truth—That lie voted against®the re
ception ot Abolition petitions in 18d6.
It a truth—Thayt he would not vote with
the Democracy wtni they tried to dodge the
true isftie, and resorted to padiafnentary tactics
Jo evade th#dfreet question. See Niles’ Bl
ister fqr 1836.
It is a truth—That he voted against allowing
urfnaturalized) foreigners voting in Kansas, as
recognid In tha( bilk See Congressional
Globe, March 2d, 1854. ® §, ® s
It is a truth—That h|, in all of his yokes
during the exciting times IBoU, was fouml
voting on the side of the South. See Congress
ional°Globe of 18J>0.® . ° ®
It if a hat we can prove the above
truths Irom Mr. Bell's record, gs given above.
v °J,t is a truth hat ifehas ever been the poli
cy of the Defnocracy to endeavor to brand with
abolition?lin or frcesoilisfh every candidate op
posed to their the Presidency,
whether from the South ‘hr the North; as in
the cyse of Clay, Taylor, Fillmore, Scott, and
now 8011. ®
It is a truth—That t(ipre are thousands who
speak lightly of Mr. Bell, who arc perfectly
ignorant of his political record.
It is®a truth—4hat as soon as Mr. Bell is
better known to the honest masses, he will poll
a vote that will astonish (§fhe Democracy and
Black Republicans^ —Southern Recorder. ®
GymuaHinuiN. ©
The following extract on tie subject °of
■ Gymnasiums we take from Hall’s Journalof
Health for May^:
@ Jt is reported thatF 1 arrangements*are in pro
gress for gymnasiums for students,
and members of Young Men’s Associations.
Are our embryo doctors, and lawyers, and cler
gymen, going to m;ife Tom Ilyers and Bill
Pooles and Yankee Sullivans of thnselves? •
Does the ability of a jurflt depend the
Shiount o%beef he carries'® Is a physician s
skill to be determined by the hardness of the
muscles? Is a clergyman’s efficiency measured
by the agility of bis monkey eagers, by his
dexterity of hanging on to a beam by his hind
leg, and swinging up to touch his nose agaiflst
the big toe of “tother foot?”
A man’s intellectuality does not depend on
the amount of brute force he possesses It
does not require a giant’s strength to write a
sermon, or make bqpk, or “clear” a thief, or
fee! a pulse. Os an assembly of French sav
ans, on a certaiif occasion, Humboldt being pres
ent, was found by an accurate ot meas
urement, to have the least muscular strength of
the whole company, <SF vghich he was th@ great
est and the oldest. Small men, fragile men,
®inen of little muscular vigor, may have good
bodily health, and among,such are found a vast
excess in number of the (Jpppsite class, aud in
all ages and countrieg, who are the brightest of
the world's bright stars.® Asa very general
it holds good—the bigger the man the
bigger fool he is. ®
(§) * • • • r
The Secrq£ of Respectability-dies in the strict
observance of the following three rules:—Live
within your means, always tell the truth, ajid
keep good qpmpany. The neglect of one'or
the ether ensures a loss of character, whether
its @ owner be a peer or a peasant. Riches 0 are
as much®apart from respectability as health is
independent of beauty. ° ®
Reckd —According to Edmard Ever
ett, the use of alboholic beverages costs the l nitod
Stated diractly, in ten years, ;?12<>,00yj *• , has
burnt 9r otherwise destroyed $5,000,000 worth o
property; destroyed 300, >ooives; sent _oo,o oto
prison, and 100,000 children to the poor-house; caus
ed 15.000 murders and 5.000 suicide; and
ed to the country 1,000,000 orphan children.
NO- 14: