Newspaper Page Text
... v turn >rv*; lit '•£ sac „ il
jJartmeiit has been, or Will l‘ N offered to
KIt.'UVRD M. JoU <SO.V,Oi fV J. ltuc*iv .
When we sfa’e any thins -is :» matter
of ru nor, we wish o re id rto under
stand that we mean to give it no authori
t'qeven where we o«K>etves believe it, as
we indue to believe this.—Nut. int.
Nf.w-Yorx 'I iy 2 1, — Ifi Veal Man
sion.—On Tuesday, this novel ami inter
esting establishiliei it was opened for the
inspection of the public, and a place com
bining more accommodations for the sick
and the valetudinarian can scarcely be
conceived.
Sir. Jacob Lorrillard believing that an
cstabishment of such a nature was much
required lor tins city purchased the old
State Prison building and grounds, located
at the corner of Amos and (Greenwich
streets, in Greenwich village, and has
made such alterations and additions, as
give it more tiie air of a pal ce than its
former occupancy. The main building
contains 29 rooms finished—and the wing
69 which if required can be pat in a -im
ilar condition in a very short time There
are, besides baths either cold, warm or va
pour, a'furnace in the kitchen, which dif
fuses the heat through the roo n bv zinc
formed in the shape of a cornice
running through the whole length of the
builddiug.
Each room during the season can he
warmed to any degree of heat by the
use of two valves which regulate its
admission. The beds are desinged on a
novel construction beeuliarly calculated
for the ease and comfort of the sick. The
roof of the large front portico is formed
into a pro.nen Jc, or place for reclining,
and cominonds a splcuded prospect of the
city, part of Staten Island—the Jersey
shore, .\orth liner, anti all the variety
of life arid being that animates 'hat in
teresting scene. The building is surrounded
by a beautiful garden, laid out in gravel
walks and planted with shrubbery and
evergreens.
The establishment is opened for the
accommodation oftlic sick either resident
of the city or the strangers, who cannot
elsewhere receive the attention of the
medical faculty. It combines all the ad
vantages of a hospital, and a home; for
every patient may call what physician he
chooses, and receive such attention as lie
desires.
An article appeared, asliort time since
in one of the morning papers, stateiug,
that a young man had returned from the
country , and applied 11J doubloons at
the City Bank, which lie had deposited
there previous to tiie late robbery and j
that the Bank WCrO IW* i«<nninn<l r»P tl.o I
Inn nf.fin.id doubloons until they were j
So applied (or. We are now uiiormed !
the Bank denies having received the J
doubloons, and that a suit has been com
m;eed bv their owner, (who has never
been out of the city) for the recovery of
their value. The gentleman who states
that he deposited the money, asserts that
lie has proof that he took it to the Bank,
and that he has identified two of the pier
sons who received it, both of whom say
they know nothing of the matter. We
are requested to make this statement by
way of counteracting the one in relation to
the transaction which has already ap
peared, ami which is undoubted erro
neous—Whether this is correct, of course
remains to be proved,
[:Y. V. Dai. Sent.
[From the. Philadelphia Sentinel .]
Tli * followi lg letter from Mr. Ingham
to a tr end, has been handed to us lor
publication. Tits intense curiosity which
prevailed to ascertain the causes which
produced the breaking tip of the late Cab
inet, renders all authentic matters con
nected with it, of general interest. Mr.
Ingham it seems, distinctly repudiates
the existence of any want of official har
mony among the heads of department.
Washington, Oth May, 1831.
Dear Sir —d learn with some surprise,
from your enquiries, as well as those of
others, that ail impression has been made
on the public mia.l to a considerable ex
tent, that the Cabinet was so much em
barrassed by the dissensions of its mem
bers, as to render it incapable of transac
ting the public business. You may be as
sured, that there is not the slightest truth
in such a rumor. The official intercourse
of the Heads of Departments with each
other and with the President, has never,
to my knowledge, been interrupted, nor
has any difference of opinion as to the
measures of the government divided the
cabinet m a single instance, so far as I
recollect, according to t!. line of separa
tion now so generally ascribed in tiie pub
lic papers.
lam, very respectful!v, vours.
S. D. INGHAM.
Counterfeiters. —Lieutenant Hart of the
City Guard arrested on Friday night last,
another counterfeiter. ILs name is Rob
ert Cunningham: he had on him when ta
ken, fifteen spurious five dollar bills of the
Coiled States B ink, of its branches of
Mobile and Boston; four of which lie was
attempting to pass in the upper fauburg.
-Y. O. Argus.
lit markable l , ossa yn . — The ship Eliza
Dennison, Capt. F. West, left Yew York
for this port on the 29th March.—arrived
her * oa the 29 h—discharged anil took in
cargo,—cleared on the 18th April,—left
Mobile IV.nt on the 29th, and arrived at
New York oil tin* 4th hist. She was but
45 days absent from port, having made
the passage here and hack in 23 days.
Mobile Cum. Reg. May 21.
i'Kocar.ss oi •: he iniran cholkiu ,
From an article we find in the journals j
we take the following particulars respect
ing this terrific plague, whose wide pro
gress is not 1.--- extraordinary than it* |
mortality is great.
Indian or Spasmodic Cholera had j
alw.ivs, till 1817, existed in Hindustan as j
a comparatively mild cl.mate disease, at- ,
, feeling asm til number of persons at cer j
; tian seasons. In the August of that year
! it broke out wi»h unprecedented rnaligni- i
* ty, commencing first anions’ the in hub;- ;
tantfi of Jessore, a town liH) miles N. Ik j
|of Calcutta. la less than a month it trav
i idled along the course of the river to that
\ city. It soon extended acioss Bengal,
| and then retired for some time to the wes
tern bank of the Ganges and .Tuimi; in
Benars, such was its nialiguitv, that, ii
| two months, 1.5,090 persons perished.
Hence it gradually extended north anl
i west to Lucknow, Delhi, Agra, &c. In
the army under the Marquis of Hastings
; consisting of 10,001) troops aiul 80,000
i followers, it destroyed in twelve days
| 9,000 men. At this time the thermouie
| ter ranged from 90 to 100 deg. The air
| was moist and suffocating, and the »t
--! mospherc a dead calm. The Cholc-a
now directed its course along the Deccan
advanceing, in many instances, at the rase
iof fifteen or eighteen miles a day. After
j ravaging many district anl then taking
j the direction of the const, it arrived at
Bombay in \ugust 1818, having crossed
| the western coast of the Indian Penin
sula in twelve mouths from the date of its
appearance in Calcutta. Through the
j country of its birth it had the same char
acteristics which it still retains, having a
! measured rate of progression with oeea-
I sional halts, and a course sometimes di
j root and sometimes devious.
While the interior of Hindostan was
j thus suffering the oestileuce had sbread
. along the coast* of Malabar and Coroman
del reaching Madras the Bth oi October,
j Here it developed anew and alarming,
\ feature, its capability of peiugsiransport
| ed by sea; for it broke out in Catidi, the
capital of Ceylon, in December, 1818,
withcve!i greater violence than on the
Continent. By the loth of September,
I>l9, Mauritius was infected, and in De
| ccmber, the adjacent isle of Borupon.
Dm •ing the last six months of the same j
I vear, the epidemic had invaded the Indo
j Chinese Peninsula siam receiveing more
! than its propotional share of misfortune,
j In Bankoe alone 40,000 individuals died.
Bv the end of April it was annouced in
j Java iu 1820, Cochin China and Tonquiu
were invaded, and in December of that
year it entered China at Canton. Pekin re
ceived the enemy in 1821, and during that
and the next year the mortality was so
ctiormnu--• . • ... ,
cA'icnac of the government.
Returning to Bombay, we must trace
its route towards Europe. In July, 1821
through the intercourse between Bombay
and Muscat in Arabia, the contagion was
exported to the latter, where it destroyed
60,00(9 persons. Many expired ten min
utes after the accasion. Hence it ex
tended to many parts of the Persian gulf-to
Bahrein, Bushucrand Bassora, at which
latter place 14,'000 persons died in a fort
night. From the Persian Gulf the Cho
lera extended inland in two directions,
following the line of commercial inter
course. On the one hand, it ascended
the Euphrates traversing Mesopotamia
I into Syria, and the Tigris, from Bassora
ito Bagdad. On the other, it made its
wav into Persia. In Shiraz, of which the
I population was 40,000, there died 10,000,
!in the first few days, Ispahan esoaped
in consequenc of the caravans being pro-
I hibited from entering that city. During
i several successive years, the contagion
I invaded new countries, or reappeared in
j those wiliest had previously scourged.—
| Mosul, Acntab, and Aleppo were
| infected, and iso, in the opposite direc
j tion, reached the border ofthe Caspain.
! Finally, in September, 1823, it reached
; the Russian city of Astrae or, at the mouth
|of the Volga. In 1830, it revived in Per
! sia with violence, and, crossing the llus-
frontier, entered T-ffiis, the popula
j tion of which it diminished from 30,099
*o 8,000 by deaths or migration. In pen
etrating the heart of the Russian empire,
it purs iul the coarse of the Volga. Be
tween the Cossacks of the Don and Mos
cow. several d»sfrets were ravaged in suc-
I cession ; in that city the appearance of the
j destroyer was announced on the 28tli of
| Bapteniber, having travelled from Astru-
I can 999 miles in less th ci throe months.
, By the 19th of November, .5,598 cases
were retnrnod, and the deaths amounted
to 2,99®, more than one half. In Juima
] ry, 1831, the malady had greatly declined
j in Moscow, but bad appeared, to a iitni-
I extent, among the troops marching to the
i reduction of Poland. The portion of the
globe with it has ravaged includes seven
itv degt«ss ol latitude, and one hundred
of longitude.
The writer from whom we have bor
rowed these particulars, remarks that, with
j the return of summer,'the Russian troops
will snread th s awful contagion through
Poland, and probably over Europe. He
j culls on the government of Great Britain,
which from irs commerce is very liable to
receive the infection, to take measures
both for excluding it, and learning the
best method of treatment. —Baltimore
Am? lean.
The National Intelligence mentions
several hundred Sturgeon, taken in seines
; aild gill-nets in the Potomac in the course
!of "ie day preecping. The size of them
' -oried from six to nine or ten feet in
length and some of them would have
I weighed two hundred pounds each. The v
| were sold at fifty cents each.
rOttEIGX.
Bit izit.iAX RevJi.t’Tinx. —Revolutions '
are clearly the order of the day in both ,
hemispheres. The Emperor l)o\ Pei.eo, j
of Brazil, has tottered from ins throne.
Ills resignation in favor of his young son
Will lx 1 probably about us much rcsjiectcJ
by the Brazilians as that of (’buries X. m
favor of the chiid of the miracle was by
the French.
Mr. Brown, our Charge d* Affairs at
Brazil, had the chance of presenting li.s
credentials to the Emperor about a fort
night before his abdication.
The report of disturbances at Berlin is
confirmed.
We avail ourselves of the correspond
ence of the Xcir i ork Journal of ( tim
rncrce.
Rio Janerio, April?.
Clevtleme.n: —The Augusta sailing to- !
nu»rr*w, affords me an opportunity of com- i
mutfienting to you, in a brief summary, j
some very important changes in the polite j
csl relations of this country. His May--
tv returned from his tour about the 13th j
ult. alter issuing a proclamation to the j
people of the interior provinces, betraying
every symptom of alarm. 1 pun ins arri
val in this city, preparations were made
for the celebration of the event. During
those celebrations, several parties of Bra
zilians avowed their determination to sup
port the Emperor no longer than lie re
mained Constitutional; and some inisu.-
derstaiiding having taken place between
them and the Portuguese, the question at
once arose whether Portuguese had a
right to interfere in the celebration oi the
return of the Brazilian Emperor, (who is
a native of Portugal.) or the affairs ot
Government. To decide this question,
resort had been had to arms: which utter
many alternate predominances of the par
ties, had resulted in the entire defeat of
Portuguese machinations and intrigues.
During these indecisive strifes, the Em
peror has thrice changed his Ministry, to
suit the tone of the party wdiieh ho con
ceived had gained the upper hand. >Biiiy
man! his race is ran. Deserted by bis
soldiery, who have seconded the views of
the mass of the people, he abdicated his
crown this morning, at 3 o’clock, in fa
vor of his son, ‘'Don Pedro the 2d.” a
lad of about 5 years of age, and has em
barked on board the Warspite, a British
ship of the line. We are far from being
quiet yet; and extreme consternation is
depicted in every countenance.
Letter of Abdication. —Exercising the
right which the Constitution gives me, 1
declare that I have voluntarily abdicated
(the throne) in favor of my dear and be
loved sou, Don Pedro D’Alcantara.
Bona Vista 7th April, 1831, and ofln
(Sfgmai)*”” 1 *”
Extract of a letter to a Commercial house
in this City.
Rio nr. Janeiro, April 7.—We have
just received advices from Bahia and Per
nambuco, announcing an improvement in
(lour there. It has iu consequence, im
proved here. American stock is heavy,
hut the most of it is sold, having been here
a long time, and must soon he forced off,
to prevent entire loss, by getting sour and
caked.
Prom llic .Yt.to York Gazette, May 2ti.
The packet ship Napoleon, Captain
Smith, from Liverpool brings tiie gratify
ing tidings nl‘further success ofthe Poles,
in a pitched battle with the Russians be
fore Warsaw. Extracts from our papers
are subjoined.
FURTHER IMPORTANTSUCCESS
OF THE POLES.
From (he ( curit?
w e are happy to state that we have re
ceived official accounts of two new ac
tions between the Russians and the Poles,
in which victory was again on the side of
freedom and justice. We subjoin the of
ficial statements relative to these events.
'Vo the National (rooernment ,
Head Quarters at Siedi.ec, I
April 10, 1831, 9 o’clock A. M. J
I have great satisfaction in announcing
to the government, that the Polish army
obtained a considerable victory yesterday.
\\ e have taken several cannons, and
3,900 or 4,090 prisoners, amongst whom
are nearly 309 officers of different ranks.
—General Prouardyznski, commanding a
separate corps, covered himself with glo
ry. The advanced hour of the evening
does not permit me to give a riiore detail
ed report. •
(Signed) SKRZYNECKI.
Warsaw, April 11,—Another affair
has taken place at Wen grow, under Gen
eral Umiuski, who has passed the river
Liwiec. He took 400 prisoners of Rus
sian Guards, the choicest ofthe armv,and
obtained possession of several valuable
magazines. Bainegotia and Lithuania
have been in a state of revolt since rise
29th of March. An estafette, who arri
ved last night, brings information that a
revolution has also taken place in Volhy
liia.”
Wc have received a private letter from
Warsaw, dated the I Itli inst. but the in
formation it contains is not official, and
wc, therefore, do not give it with such
confidence as the above. ’The letter states
that mi insurrection had broken out at
Berdiezctf, a large town in Volhynia, and
that it had assumed a formidable aspect.
Tbe promoters of this insurrection are
stated to be the Cra/.ilian priests, a sect
who are half Greeks and half Catholics,
These priests appeared resolved to make
a strong resistance and had fortified their
monastery, which is in a very advantage- !
ous position, being situated on a high I
rock. According to this letter, there is
not the least doubt of the reported revolt!- i
tion in Snmogoti* and Lithuania. The
corps of General Dwernicki, which wu*
nt Zamosj, bad entered Voihyu.u with the
intention as the letter says, of joining the
insurgents.
The French Government are about re
moustrating with Don Miguel alter a ii.au- ;
tier inure effectual than they have employ- 1
ed in negotiating with other courts, ’i lay
insist on the Jini n s who co ..Vumcd *thc
unfortunate Frenchman in Lisbon being |
dismissed, and tiie illegality of the sen-i
teuce acknowledged in tiie Lisbon Ga- j
zette. These requests must be complied !
| " ,th ' , J
It was reported that tl.c Emperor ot j
Russia lias declared to the Swiss Cantons {
| that if they did not disarm immediately he |
; would regard their conduct as a violation j
of the general neutrality; and that the
lustrum troops, upon withdrawing from
Italy, had been ordered into Poland. A
! Congress upon tiie Affairs of Europe,
I was talked of, to take place at Tradpuu,
! iu Silesia; hut many places have been j
j mentioned as likclv to be the scene of
| some notable conference.
Tiie Belgian Congress have refused to
| fix a day I-.•their dissolution; and though
tranquility lias hi cm restored—the people
c hi a very unsettled state.
liie report is again circulated that
Prince Leopold, married to a daughter ot
the King of trie French, is about to he
made King of Belgium. The proposition
it is know n, would not be unpopular, gen
erally speaking, in Belgium: but its exe
cution is regarded upon ail bauds, as very
improbable.—The respectable hotly of the
, people wish for the establishment oi some
settled order of tilings. But it is thought
| that under the cover of this scheme, some
; other restoratives of anew kind to the dis
: tractions of the country are in a state of
preparation. The cause of the Prince
jof Orange seems to be given up oa ail
i hands as utterly hopeless.
An order arrived at < 'asset on the 2d
| inst. lor the march of 4,(Hid Hessian
| troops, and 12 pieces of camion, on (he
15th of May, for Luxemburg. The
troops of Nassau are to join them, and
both to be commanded by a Hessian
j General. 3099 Hanoverians are also to
| march at die same time for Lux cm
bourgh.
Gen. Diebitseh, after his late defeat,
I is said to have retreated rapidly across
the Hug, and that, probably, “with a
flea in tiis ear.”
Ahernethy the celebrated surgeon, di
ed on tiie 3lst April.
FRANCE.
On Wednesday, April 22d, the King
set out on horseback from tiie Palais
Royal, in military uniform, ami sur
rounded by marshals, to the Chamber
of Deputies, when he met, by deputa
tion, both Houses of Parliament. He
took liis seat on the throne with the
Dukes of < Means ami Nemours at each
; tiie prorogiition. He reminded the Par
j iiameiit that eight months had passed,
j since they, as organs ofthe nation, call-
J oil him to pronounce vows of solemn
importance to govern justly, and aceor
j ding to the charter, these vows have
j since been the rule of Ids conduct. He
i gave a history of the period, of the
! growth of the national guards and of
j tiie army, both of w hich, he said, excei
! led in spirit and equipment those of any
| former period. lie spoke his gratitude
j and that of France to the Deputies for
j d*ur patriotic work, which next session
j would continue complete. He spoke
tof the crisis which followed, and said
I the country approved of the suppress
| ion of such disorders. Pence with Eu
rope led him to liopo for n speedy dimi
| notion of tiie army, but tili treaties were
j ratified, France would preserve her at
i titude. ile explained that the refusal
iof tiie Belgic crown was dictated by
j the w elfare of France. He had no fear
| of any event during the recess which
j patriots would not he ready to meet.
The speech was followed with long
j shouts of “Vive le Roi.” and she King,
in Ids progress to and from 'die Ciiam
! her, was most loyally greeted. In the
; ( hamber of Peers, on Tuesday, tiie
j debate on the perpetual exclusion ofthe
| Bourbons, led to a three hour’s speech
j from the Duke of Fitz James, which
I was repeatedly interrupted by ministers
j and encouraged by several Peers.
“The desecration ofthe emblems of tiie
late sovereignty would,” he said, “be
| followed by a devotion to their cause
j which”—“which” said (’assinter Perri
i er, in great indignation, “we shall coin
! hat.” The agitation was extreme. The
: law was carried by 71 to 15.
TURKEY.
A combination against the Sultan,
i formidable and dangerous, is, it appears I
in progress. The Silesian Gazette
slates that Mustapha Pacha had sum
moned all the principal inhabitants of
Scutari, and asked them whether they
would as men yield to the Grand Vizier, \
or prepare to tight for their liberty? I
They determined on the latter alterna- j
rive, and are now actively preparing |
for the impending invasion.
Letters ol the 23d til,, have been re-1
reived from Constantinople by way of i
Marseilles. It is said in them that aj
conspiracy had just been discovered, i
the object of which was to overthrow j
the Nizam Gerdid, and re-establish the
corps of Janissaries on its former foot- j
ing. The plan was supposed to have
extensive ramifications, and this is in I
fact partly proved by the insurrection- j
ary movements which took place, near- !
!y at the time of its discovery, in some j
of the European provinces of Turkey.
The usual expeditious mode wasresor- j
ted to by the Sultan on tiie discovery of I
the conspiracy, and between 7 and
heads were immediately disposed of to
serve as a warning to his discontented
subjects generally. At tiie date of these
letters the executions had not yet ecus j
ed; but it “hoped” that this suin
-3 ary mode of silencing the disaffected,
and the renewed vigilance of the police,
would insure the preservation of tran
quility. Nothing seems to have been
yet known in the capital of the general
insurrection in Romelia.
NETHERLANDS.
On Tuesday, in (’oiigrt— <•, th.- pro; o.
sal to declare war on i'i. d.uid w .ts ieSu
ded by passing to the order ol' die day.
It was resolved’to piccced to the ot -
gaaiv.alioij irt't-oe jmy, and line to '.I -'
oliices ol the press. The quet; ,on cf a
disohition of Congress was postponed.
On Wednesday it was .vsoi\a<i to pro
ceed with the uuinilcsto on ine mm-t of
the revolution. On Tuesday M.Lc
heau repeated his confidence m Frsije •
as the active friend ol Belgium; her ifi,
ditatiou in London, he said, vi.it strong,
and she had signed the protocols only ns
a ground for more friendly uego.-iationr .
Hu condemned the late speech ol’jll.
Hahaalx, against France. The Belgian
Envoy at London was ordered to return
immediately, if not otticiuliy received.
The London Atlas of ihe 24ih.April,
the latest paper, has the following :
Up to the moment of going to press,
we have not heard any thing from the
continent, which can add to l e inipc.
taiit intelligence under our regular
heads. The Polish \ ictoi y is confirm
ed heyondajue’ tion. Prussia is suspected
of an intention to join the Autocrat a
j gainst the reviving hopes of Poland.
This intelligence, we arc happy lo say.
is doubtful. The troops ofthe confed
eration pan-* in their advance on Lux
embourg. Paris is still more tranqu 1
j Austria and the Poye rule over the
j necks of the insurgent Italians. Every
j eye is on England now.
LONDON, April 24.
I THE PROPAGATION OF PARLIA
j MEAT BY THE KING IN PERSON.
i The defaut ol iiiiiiisislers on Tuesday
| and i iiursday nights led ihe pui.hc io
| expect that a devolution of Parliament
j would immediately l<n»e place, or that
j ministers would resign. The obvious
I course was the. latter. On Wednesday
the ministers tendered their resignation,
I and it was declined. 11l consequence,
j however, of what occurred ou Thursday
I mg a;, they waited ou Ins Majesty yes
terday morning iu a body, amt declared
their inability to carry on tat* govern
ment ofthe countrv, unless he couched
anew Parliament in person. This re-v
olution was taken at 12 o’clock, and
such was the determination, that there
w as not su.iicient time to make arrange
ments usual ou such occasions. His
Maje s tysjjoiia met eristic expression i»
to be, “If the cartage cannot be got
ready I will go in u jarvey.” This
however, we would be understood to
gives aa an idle rumor, generated in the
zeal ofthe moment. Another version
makes Ids Majesty exclaim, “If the
long boat can t be got ready man the
| gig 1” which is, at ail events, more ap-
I propriato to the humor of u “sailor
j King.” Such was the rapidity with
i which tins derison was carried into
j etlect, that the guards winch were ap
pointed to receive his Majesty at the
doors of Parliament, hardly arrived iu
• liineJo save appearances. None of the
I troops nao r 'sumcient notices to
! enable them, as ordinarly, to line tiie
streets; and even the royal cortege was
deficient in many of its statu appoint
ments.
At the House of Peers all was confu
sion. SSome of their lordships appeared
in their robe, others in plain clothes.
■I The galleries and the lobbies of the
! House of Commons were crowded to
| excess. The utmost anxiety prevailed
11. rongout toe neighborhood. For the
} first li?»K* in our day, and, perhaps, in u
j more daring spirit than any of which
i our annals present an example, the
House of Peers assumed the appear
j mice of a disorganized popular 'assem
bly, Ui the most unsettled periods of
our history, there can hardly be found
such an instance of extraordinary and
sudden abandonment ofthe deliberative
character.
The courtesies of society were violated
on all sides, and personalities, amounting
almost to rude inodes ot expression, pass
ed amongst the lords during the clamor.
Instances ol opprobious language have
been communicated to us, winch’ howev
er, wo decline publishing. The confu
s.crn, clamor, and dismay that filled the
House ol Commons, were equally remar
kable i but there we are more accustomed
to meet the uminbellislied rellection of
vulgar reality; while iu the House of
Peers we are used to see poor humanity
tricketed out so daintily, that a deviation
on the part of their lordships from the
lashionable into the every-day nature, u
wakeus in us a still greater degree of ad
miration.
I * l * * JI * 1 *** inwrjf t i : ai-T t-vw*
HEKR Y B. MERStiWr,
-- „ ATTORNEY AT LAW.
jt J. AS located himself in Talliotton, A
will prac icc Law in the neigUbiJrinjj conn
ri® s ; , w3m.
I a,uotton, May I I 1 11.
fl l IFK.—J. T. Camp and John
* I Schley, ha ve associated thoißsolves logcthcr
in the practice of law. in Columbus. One of them
will attend all the Courts iu the Cliulahoocho
circuit I otb rs upon business will be addressed
to C.ini> ,V Schi.kv— J. T. Camp will continue
to practice law in the courts of A'abama in con
ncctioit wha David GoligUly Ksq.
J T. CAMP
T . , , JOHN SCIILEY.
Fob. 12th, ISM. it! t s
J 011N TA V ! <7l?. ~~
ATTORNEY AT LAM”,
\y i!l practice in the several eo'unbesof Mas
* v c, ’K ee >. I’andolph, Stewart, Lee Marion,
I alliot, Harris, Me ri west her, and Tronp, in the
Cliatahoochoe Circ it: anl ill the Counties of
Thomas, Decatur. Early, Baker, and Dooly, in
the Southern O remit.
I!c inav bo found, when not in attendance on
the nircui!, at his room at Mr. Dil'aid’s Tavern
in Coin minis. Feb Pith NolStfo.
JOHN TAYLOR &. LEMUEL MERREL,
A TTORXE VS AT LAW ,
\ \ , k‘b practice in pintnorship at the Appn
lach icola Bay. Mr. Merrel will attend
rnguiarly lo the biiMncys oi* their office, at thi)
Boy. when not nocessarily absent
F« b’y 12<h. 16—T- o
>IATIIE3I ATiCAL INSTBIDIENTB
For sale by
L. J. DAVIES & Cos.
March 19. pp (j-