Newspaper Page Text
■i<ui:i urn w.iin le lUy the sot* it) a quar
re I- Oilier ittlinis supposed lli.il liit>
CNN was angrv w.th them for some cause
or oilier and thus had iufnet| hi* fare
■way from them in abhorrence. By fa-t-
Ing lli**y iliink to rei isla|e lhe>ns>rji in
liis favor.’
* Oil, mother, whip nb-iod ideas!—
Hill lIOW i| vj|‘i Co|nil|liii t •’ has
been s limit sioce 1 ry.nl il, dial I Imv>
forgotten |iiy particulars.’
‘He was alone line driven to tlreal j
distress, iq runs tjnenre of the n iiiv- s
refminjr m supply li'pn wiih provision. —
He had sufficient skill in Aslroinini v to |
know that there would soon he an eclipse
of the moon ; so the day before the e
clipse was in lake place, he assemble!, all
llteii chief men together, and told ihem
that the Great Spirit uas rnsplea-ed
With them, for their conduct towards the
Spaniards, and was about to visit them
W*h great vengeance, and as a token
thereof, l|e vyould cause the moon that
very night to withdraw its light and an
pear of a bloody hue, a sure sign of DU
vine wrath.’
* Did they believe him, mother ?’
♦ Some did, and some did not ; but as
•non as the moon began to be darkened,
all were alike struck widt fear.*
* Then I suppose they took him food j
did they not, mother ?’
• Yes, they hastened to (heir homes,
and loading themselves with provisions,
returned instantly to the ship, beseeching
Columbus, who was shut up in the cabin,
to intercede with the Deity for them, that
he would avert the threatened calamity. j
Columbus told them he would do so, and
as soon as the eclipse was about to pas i
off, he came out and told them, that the
Great Spirit had promised to forgive
tliem, and would again restore the moon
to its usual brightness.’
’ I suppose they hud no lack of provis
ions after that.*
‘No; and from flint ii<ne Columbus
was regarded with peculiar awe and re
verence, as one who not only knew wlmi
was passing on earth, lint had intimate
communion with the Dit ty.’
’ Was the darkness which ocrnred at
the crucifixion of Christ ncrnsioiied by
mii erlipse <>l the sun, mother ?’
■* No ; in the first plare, as i have al !
ready told you, a total eclipse of the sun
cannot last more titan three or four min
utes. Now the Bible expressly informs
|is that this darkness lasted from the sixth
to the ninth hour. Now if this was
caused by the mnnn, she must have re
mained motionless in her orbit th r ee
hours, and the earth to have ceased to
revolve on its axis for the same length of
time. Neither of these events could have
taken place without a direct miracle.-
But in addition t > this, unless the earth
W ere d-prived of lit-* attraction of gravl
lotion during that period, it would, with
out a miracle have drawn the moon a
considerable distance towards it. So
that if ve deny the immediate power of
God in causing this darkness, we of ne
cessity are obliged to allow three mira
cles to account for it. Bat this is not all
—instead of its being new moon, sit
which time only an eclipse of tile sun
can take place, the moon was full an i
consequen'lv on the nth r side of the
earth from the sun, which renders'll im
possible for an eclipse to have taken
place.’
• But how do we know it was full noon
mother ?’
•Christ was crucified on the day of
pas*-over, was he not, Clara ?’
• Fes, ma’am.’
•This was kept on the fourteenth day
of the mouth Ni-tvi. Their months be
gan when the new moon was first, visible,
which would of course make the lb irteeii
th about the lime of the full moon. So i
you see it was aimgeilier impossible for a ;
natural eclipse to have taken place at
that time.’
• Do the eclipses tak e place at the
fame time each year, mother ?’
• No; every year is different from
the preceding ; yet after the lapse of the
nineteen years, they will occur again, on
the game month and day, and with little
variation. Tit is the almanac of the
p esent year, w ill he found correct enough
to use for the year 1970.’
A Down Easter down on Railroads.
The Knickerbocker g ives the following,
as the private opinion publicly expressed,
of on old resident >f one of the ‘ far off |
shore towns ’ on Massachusetts Bay
Said the * far off shore luwn’man—
‘ 1 don’t think much o’ railroads ; they
ain’t no kind o’justice into ’em. Neow, I
what kind o’ justice is it, when railroads
take one man's upland and carts it over
in wheehltarers onto another man’s
nia'sh f VVliat kind ’o ‘commodalion be
they? You can't go when you want to
go { yon got to go when (he bell rings,
pr the blasted noisy whistle blows. I tell
veou its payin’ tew much for the whistle.
Ks you live a leetle ways off the dee-pot,
you got to pay to git to the railroad ; and
es you want l* go nnywhete else Vepl
just to the eend on it, you got to pay to
go-s'ter you git there. What kind o’
- ♦commodalion is that ? Gin’ round the
tew, murderin’ folks, mimin’
‘gltle, sheep and hogs, and settin*
‘lges, and every now and then
jburnin’tip the wood-. Mrs. Rulihlit*.
down 10 Cod p’inif.s iys——and she on in
to know, for s o's it pious vvoitihii. aod
; leloim< 10 llie laiysr church—s)i - 1 l I
me, no iqnggr ag than day ‘i fr<- m ‘
I dav lii it-sue’d ’ be cuss'd if -lie <it-l■■ j
j kno v ilia! th'v sometimes rn vvr rrit j
i ‘rfs ■> |Hirpose#-tfi. y lid a lilyly sh .if
! he il, and iirH't < .is) I ■ ’t.* r.;n< id. v
l ’ , i
j -'as a ‘ CirpOri|li..(), t .ey said. Wii y’i
kind ■>’ luioiiim'laiiitii i-, ihui ? B -ide-:
j “it” I’ve lived tier , cin- to the dee pot.
j sene, the toad started to nut, and
.eeo ‘. in go out and eoiiie in ; but i nev
er eotil I see that they went so and and
•i*t, mulier ”
THE WIFE.
Th“ word i\ ile dms not. in out npin
mii, simply mean, a* Walker lias it, ‘ a
“nm it that li.s a husband,’ for some
women have husbands, and good ones
100, who are not wives according to our
understanding of the term. Wile does
not mean a woman nor a ladv only, nor
a slave nor a mistress, a mother, nor a
nurse, a teacher, nor a companion, nor
a tool, nor a plaything, but she is all
these united together pour unelpour foul,
in one beautiful and harmonious whole,
in society she is a woman, in the parlor
a lady, in the nursery a slave, in the din
ing-room a mistress in her chamber a
mother, ill the sick-room a nurse to her
children a teacher, to her husbmd, a
companion and an equal ; but in no stto
ation'whatever can she lie a politician, a
a preacher, lawyer, physician or philoso
pher, without becoming a literary l>lit,-
slot king, the antipodes of wife and die
most mntemptihle being tin earth.
The office of a wile, therefore, is tin
happiest, yet most humble position that
frail mortality can occupy. Nor is th re
any station on earth to which the 1 Lord
of Creation ’ can aspire, the duties of
which are more responsible, and the fblit
ful or imperfect discti irge of which w dl oe
rewarded with more intensity, than those
of the wife; which we believe to be one
of the consequences of a violation of the
liii>h trust committed to the first wife
iin the garden of Eden, that lie slimihi
j in* * an helpmate to Adam.’
To society she is an indistieusabh
member. To the parlor the most iui
pnrinnt personage, in the nursery tin
most abject slave, in the dining-room
(lie most absolute sovereign, in her cham
ber a guardian angel, in the sick-room
the best physician, to her children the
wisest priest, and to her husband the mo-t
vain ible agent, the and arest and cheapest
counsellor, the most loved and loving
companion ; in a word, ‘ the wife to a
home ’ is every blessing the mortal mind
can conceive or heart desire. Home
without a wife is a ‘ strange land a
head without brains, a heart without a
conscience, a ship without sails, an ocean
without waves, a world without religion,
a hi’iiv<:n without a God.
Pork Pack in"; in Tennessee-
The Knoxville Plebeian “('the 3d in-t.
sa vs —
Col. Temple of Green county, and
one or two of our citizens lt*ve been em
ployed in this business to a limited extent,
in our town, for a couple of months past.
Their operations h ive been conducted
quietly, hut with great success, and with
much more ease and facility than was to
have been expected, in the commence
ment of anew business for our people.—
We think we see in litis undertaking the
germ of a profitable business for our
twon, and we predict that next winter
will greatly extend the operations of the
gentlemen already thus engaged, and
will also bring from the adjacent counties
divers enterprising citizens to engage at
this point, in a branch of trade, which
can, must, and will be most lucrative.
There is no reason in the world, th it
we can see, why Knoxville may not be
come the packing-point, for those south
ern Slates bordering upon the Atlantic,
and with which the railroads now in pros
cess of completion, will place us in rea
dy and easy communication. Our cli
mate is finely adapted to the business, we
are situated in a corn-producing country,
nearer to a large portion of the hng-rais
ing district of Kentucky than either
Louisville or Cincinnati, and equally as
accessible ; in addition to all this the
southern market which we would supply
lias for years past and will in all proba
bility for years to come continue to pay
better prices, (handle farmers ran ner
hope to realize on the river.
The Chattanooga Advertiser of the
7th inst. says—
Mr. Joseph Ramsey’s slaughtering
establishment—situated about one mile
out of town —i-now in successful oper
ation, and the well fed porkers nre yield
in'; up their last accounts at the rate of
100 to 150 pec day. Mr. Ramsey does
op the killing anti parking business in a
style quite ala Cincinnati. He will
i -laughter this season at lea-t 3,000 hogs.
j CT* A Bill wots introduced in the State
Senate of Texas, On the 17'll till, to •***
j (oldish the New Means, Tex ts and Pa
-1 rifle Railway Company, and for the ex
teii-ion of the New Orleans, Elders and
Opelontn* Rail RoatJ through.
THE SOUTH-WEST GEORGIAN,
0. B. YOUNGBLOOD, EDITOR.
OGLETHORPE Jah. ffttH, 185$.
Agents for the South-West Georgian.
Spencer Caldwell, Fori Gaines, Ga
Jeter A. Hogue , near Americus, do.
Col. Wm. T. Perkins, Cuthbert, do.
G. Caiutiiers, Esq. ’ vthbert , do.
Gilbert M. Stokes, Slade, Lie co. do.
Dr. V\ ). M. Stokes, Dooly co. do.
M. L. Holman, Brouksnille, Slem'rtdo.
A. A. Blakely, Griffin, Pike co. do.
John VV. Giuefin, Grffin, do.
J. TANARUS, May, Francitcille, do.
VV. J. Parker, Ckenuba. Lee Cos., do.
A. J. Williams, Agent for Sumter co.
Cullen Webb. Traveler's Rest do.
French Haggard, Athens do.
Kcdncitoii in the terms otllte
South-West Georgian.
After tin first day a) October the Geor
gian trill be furnished to subscribers
ul the following rules :
$ 1,00 far 6 iiionllis, if paid in advance,
125 “ “ if not paid in advance.
2,0') fur 12 munilis if paid in advance,
2,50 “ “ if uni paid in advance,
liidticeineiits to Clubs.
Five Copies 6 months for $4,00 m advanre,
Ten Copies “ “ “ 7,00 “
Five Copies 12 mofiths “ 8,00 “
Ten Copies “ “ 15,00 ••
Fifteen Copies 12 mo. “ 20,00 “
We Irave been induced In offer the above
terms in order to increase tli- circulation of
our paper, and for that purpose we earnslly
solicit die co-operation of out fiends. If
we meet with snffu ient eiiriiragenient, we
intend getting new material in a few months
and enlarging our paper.
Single Packet Si uscuieers—We
have on our mail bonks scores el what
are technically called, in the office, sin
gle packets, that is, where only one pa
per goes to a post office. Tfiese ‘ pack
ets have the name of the sub-criber, with’
that of the post-office, written upon thej
wrapper, and not on the paper. Thej
wrappers are directed first, to save time,
and tlie papers pm into them afterwards.
Whenever, therefore, a subscriber gets a
paper with his na ne wiitten not on thej
paper, but on the wrapper; his is a sin-;
gle pnrkei. Wlmi we want to be at is*
ihi- .* we would like to have all our sin
gle packets doubled, tribled, quadrupled,
or more, if it mitzhi be. 7( is trouble
some to -end out these single packets—
mo troublesome to proportion ihe gains.
We t ail fix up two or three papers for
the nail ne trly us soon as we can one.—
Besides, we always realize a feeling of
anxiety in regard to these little packets,
in sending one paper aw ay by itself so
far. We feel for them in their lor.ely and
uncertain journey. As to the larger
packets, the very bulk will command
some respect for them from post-offire
clerks. But these solitary little fellows,
in their seeming insignificance, ntav
probalv be kicked into some corner, or
miss their way and lie lost among the
hill* and hollow s. A -mall package does
not arrive so certainly at its destination
as a large one. We have a remedy to
propose for this state of things. Let
each subscriber who gel- a single packet,
obtain another subscriber or two, whose
paper may go along with his for compa
ny. 1 1 is a nilv to have one paper lake
such, long journevs, .s some do, • solitary
and ahme.’’ Give them company, and
they will travel more swiftly and reach
their destination more surely.
tt?” The new County of Polk just
formed by our Legislature, was formed
by a singular coincidence—the vote for
its formation was 54, 40 !
• The Georgia Horae Gazette.
We are ill receipt of this valuable pa
per weekly, a prospectus of which will
be found in our Advertising Columns to
day. It is a beautiful sheet, and we
think well deserves dye most liberal pat
ronage which could be bestowed upon it
by the public. It is vastly superior to
litany of the Noithern Weeklies which
receive an unlimited,support. We should
therefore he pleased to see it well sustain
ed. As ‘ Charily begins al Home,’
home publications should always have
the preference.
05*’ Thursday, the 224 inst. is the day
recommended by the rammitte appoint
etl l*y the Legislature to select a day fur
the djournmeut ol that body.
Tlie Mail Steamer Magnolia ply
ing between Sayaiinali and Florida, has
recently blown up, killing some eight or
ten of her crew and two passengers.
Cold Weather.
The present is certainly the coldest
w inter that we have had in Georgia, since
the long to be remembered winter of
1835. lithe cold is nit so severe as it
was in 1835 it makes up the deficiency
in uniform continuance. No doubt but
nany of the more lender shrubs and fruit
trees have been materially injured if
not entirely destroyed. On Monday i
night w e had n real snow which covered
the earth to the depth of about two inches.
On Tuesday it was intensely cold, and
our citizens were shivering about the
streets more like Greenlanders than
natives of the ‘Sunny South.’ This
intense cold will in all probability be a
benefit to fruit as it will prevent the
blooming Os fruit-trees until after the
Spring Irosts.
Our readers we suppose, are all anx-;
intis to learn the fate of the Bill intro*
duced in the Legislature by Mr. Clarke
f>r an appropriation ol 300,000 dollars
to extend the S. VV. Rail Road. We
have not seen any thing in regard to it
since the account of Its being lost; but re
considered. We have beard it rumored,
however, that it has again been brought
forward and lost by a much larger vote
than the first. How true this is we are
unable to say. but we presume we shall
know the truth or lalacy, by our next is- j
sue.
There was a drawn battle, so
says the Natliez Courier, at the late elec
tion in the Hanover and Henrico senato
rial district, in Virginia, w hich had finally
to be decided by lot. The Sheriffs of
the two counties met to compare the polls,
when it appeared that Parkhill, dew, had
seventy-nine majority io Hanover County
and Winslow, Whig, seyerHynine major
ity in Henrico. The Hanover sheriff
volet 1 foi Parkhill; the Hen’ ico Sheriff lor !
Winslow—still a lie. The last legal cer- j
emnny was to draw lots, and Winslow,
Whig, was the lucky man.
C/“ For the benefit of oor fair readers
who are in w ant of husbands, we w ould
infoi in them, if they have not yet noticed
the lo t, that lliis is Leap Year, and ac
cording to ancient custom, they have
right to make love to the bashful beaux
pop the question and—and—marry of
i-oflrse. I
, The advantages of patronizing
Home Manufactures.
Our issue this week is printed on pa
iper manufactured by Messrs. Chase &
Linton near Athens Ga. By sending
to this establishment we save $1,20 on
each bundle that we use. In the course
of the year, this saving* will amount to a
I considerable sum. We would therefore
recommend to our brethren press
the importance of w ithdraw ing their pat
ronage from foreign mills, and turning,
their attention to home Manufactories,.
V
House oj Representatives, )
Miltedgev/le Jan. 10. y
The House agreed to a resolution
providing for the appointment of a Joint
Committee from both branches of the
General Assembly, to ascertain and re
port the lime of njournment sine die.
On motion of Mr. Dawson, of Greene
liie reconsidered bill for tite pardon of
K. P. Boon, in the Penitentiary (or life,
for the crime of murder, was taken up
and passed by a vote of yeas 52, nays
50.
The bill to amend the claim laws of
this State, was taken up, and on motion !
of Mr. Thurmond, postponed indefiuite
lv.
BILLS PASSED.
\ bill to appropriate money for nec
essary repairs and the erection of build
ings, etc, for the Lunatic Asylum—ap
propriating $24,800 therefore—yeas &5,
nay- 53. j
A bill to change the time and place of 1
holding the Supreme Court in the second ,
Supreme Court Judicial District.
A hill to incorporate tlie Columbus
and West Point Railroad Company.
A bill to incorporate the Talbotton
Bailroad Company.
Senate Chamber, >
Milledgeville Jan. 12, 1852, )
A joiul resolution was adoped this
morning, appointing a committe to fix
the day of adjournment, /’think it will
turn out as did the investigation and re
port of a former committee, w hich fixed
the 3rd inst. as the time when tlie legisla
ture could adjourn. The truth is, no
man can tell, at this time, the precise day
and hour, when the legislature will see j
* day light’ on this point, it seems the
nearer they gel to the lime, the further it
recede*.
The committee on the Penitentiary
made a report this morning, /twill be I
printed, and | will send you a copy.— \
They ask for an appropriation of of S3O,
000 to pay the del* and repair the insii--
tmion.
The appropriation bill was taken up—
several amendments have been made to
it—among them, $23,000 for the Peni
tentiary—on appropriation of $5,000 to
the Slate University—was lost.
House of Representatives . >
Miltedgeviile Jan 12. y
This morning has been consumed for
the most part with discussions on tlie'res
olutions offered by Mr- Floyd, a copy of
which appeared in your Inst.
Messrs. Floyd and Merriwether were
in favor of; and Messrs. Till, Bartow
and Henry against them :
In this argument Mr. Merriwether
submitted detailed estimates of the liabil
| ities and ass-ts of the fiscal year’s 1852
and ’53, showing, with the addition of
appropritions made by the present leg
islature, a probable deficit,’ and then
moved, on accdunt ol the unknown a
niotini of appropriations likely to he m-i.de
before the end of the session, to postpone
the resolutions for ttie present.
The motion prevailed—the subject,
1 however, will be up again for action in a
fev days. .j
The bill to prohibit the importation j
&c., ol slaves into the Slate, being next I
in order, lias given rise to n cousideable
discussion on questions of order and pre
liminary (notions. The House adjourn
ed at 10 o,clock without taking, any ac
tion thereon.
Monday Evening Jan. lit.
The special order of-the day—a bill to
be entitled an act the more effectually to pro
vide for the Education of the poor—was ta
ken up and amended. The bill, so far ns a
mended, authorises that 1800 shares of the
Capital Stock of the Bank of the State of
Georgia, 890 shares of the Capital stock of
the Bank of Augusta, and 186 shares of the
Georgia Rail Road and Banking Company,
beset apart as a permanent fund for the Ed
ucation of the poor. To this fund is added
all other monies remaining in the Treasury
after appropriations arc paid and the expen
sesof government, &.c. The House was en
gaged upon the amendments of the hill when
the motion for adjournment was put and car
ried.
Later From Europe!
I ADVANCE IN CO I TON! !
Improved, Condition ol’ Adairs SI!
r lli* steamship ( ambria ariived at
New York on the 7di ilist. with Liver
pool dates to the 17ili ultimo.
A; Liverpool -he sales ol Colton f>r
the week were 34.000 hales, of wltiili
Specularors took 2000 and Exporiers
2000. P lives Imre advanced an the
improvement being principally fell on
qualities below Fair. The quotations
J are lor Fair Uplands, 5 ; Fair Orleans
‘Trade in the Maiiofuturiog Districts
was brisk—Consuls closed at 97£.
The Havre Cottod market was more
active and prices had advanced l£ Irani*.
Lord Palmerston has resigned his seal
indie Biiti-h Cabinet and has been suc
ceeded by Lord Greenville. Tlie re
signation was caused by dissensions in
die Cabinet, produced by tlie language
used by Palmerston to Kossuth, which
was considered not complimentary to
the depots of Europe.
France was peaceful. Napoleon had
Ween sustained by an immense u.ajoiitv.
in eighty-one department, the vote in his
favor nine millions and eleven thousand,
and the negatives seven liudred and nine
thousand. Napoleon is to vailed Re
gent.
The Queen of Spain has given birth
to a robust Princess.
r Negroes for California. ■
The strong feeling lately exhibited in
the mining districts of California in favor
of introducing slave labor into that por
tion of our territory on the Pacific, lias,
we perceive, had its effect on many vili
lens on the yjilamic ioa-t who, well a
ware of (tie innumerable advantages (hat
would accrue to them were they permit
ted to employ that particular description
of property in the gold regions, nre dally
making arrangements for the transporta
tion of themselves and slaves to that sec
tion of our possessions, and that fine
I steam ship the Isabel, lias on several oc
-1 casinos had on board some pas-engers
with their servants en route for the Pa
| rifle. On her last trip, she took out a
large number, amongst w hom, as we
learn from the Yorkville Remedy were
twenty young men with as many ne
groes, from Burke and Catawba Coun
ties, North Carolina—some, says the
Remedy, hard looking fellows, who
seemed bent to have their share of the
gold dust, if hard work or hard knocks
can bring it.
We understand, likewise, that several
other parties from North Carolina, are
about starting with their slaves, and that
the agent in this city, for the Isabel, has
. several applications for passage, and we
have little doubt their labors will be at
i tended with such success as to induce a
a very large emigration from the slaxe
hnld States, during the next year, as from
all accounts there are there certain sea
sons, as in tlie Southern States, w hen ne
; gro labor is alone available with safety’ to
! health in damp and marshy localities.—
Charleston Courier,
The new French Constituliou.—A
Paris correspondent of the Commeicial
Advertiser, writing under date of the
lwih ultimo, says;
•* Tlie new Constitution to be granted
by the President after his election is aL i
mly shadowed forth. According to
well informed parties, it is likely to be
as follows :
A Cauncil of Slate, to be named by
the President and thirty-nine by the
Council General, from a list of candid
ates made out by ti e President.
A legislative Chamber of two hundred
and fitly. Each commune is to name an
elector by universal suffrage. The nunt*
her of these eleators will be 86,000.
They are then to name five hundred
representatives. From this list of five
hundred the President will select two
hundred and fifty, who are to form a
Chann bcr. , ... . f' : -
The President to be eleted for ten
venrs, with the title of Regent of the
Repuhlm. He shall be responsible un
less ihtflcommunal electors shall, three
limes consecutively, return a body of
j representatives out of whom the President
j shall be unable to select a Chamber in his
; favor, when, if they refuse the budget,
lie is to retire.
The press to be ftee; but not to rail
in question religion the rights of pro*
party, or the existing social organization.”
Cotton ft!itrlifts.
Colton Statement, Jan, 16th. 1852.
Rece’d at Oglethorpe lor the
week, eliding Jail. 16th, 1,765 hales
Ship'll per S. VV. Kail Road, 1,359 “
Balance on hand, 406
Total receipts up to this time, 23- 767 “
Total shipments “ 16,799 •*
Total balance on han I, 6,968 “
Oglethorpe Jnn. 16ili. 1852.
Tlfe market is active, 5 J to 7 J ex
tremes, oi ist siles, 7 J to 7
Savannah J.m. 15.
Cotton 6£ a B£.
Charleston Jnn. 14.
Cotton 6 a S§.
New Orleans, Jan. 14.
Cotton, 7 a 7.J. ‘
COLUMBUS, Jan. 14.
Colton. 6 a 7.
Another scientific wonder ! important
to Dyspepties. — Dr. J. S. Houghton's
pep'in, The True Digestive Fluid, or
Gastric Juice, prepared from Rennet, or
i\w Jourfh Stomach of the ox, after direc
tions of Baron Liebig the great Physio
logiial Chemist, by J. S. Houghton,
.M. D., Philadelphia. This is truly a
wonderful remedy for Indigestion Dys\
pepsia,jaundice, liver Complaint, consti
pation and debility. curing alter nature's
■■ wn method, by Mature's own Agent ,
die Gastric juice. Pamphlets, contain
ing Scientific evidence of its value, fur
nished by agents gratis. See notice
among the medical advertisements.
Oglethorpe Prices Current
CORRECTED WEEKLY.
BACON, slams, per lb. . . 15 cts.
Sides, clean “ . . . 14
Shoulders, “ . . 13 a 14
BUTTER, Goshen “ . . 25 a 30
Country “ . . 12 als
BAGGING, gunny yds. ... 16
Mail’d gunny “ . . . 15
ROrE 9
COFFEE, per Ihs. . . 12 a 12J
CANDLES, Sperm “ . . 40 aSO
Adamantine, “ . . 35 a4O
Tallow, •• . . 15 a2O
FLOUR, per bbl. . .7,00 u 7,50
MACKEREL, No. 1. . . . 14,00
“ “ 2. “ . . . 12,00
“ 3. “ 9 50
CORN, per bushel, . 1,00 a 1,25
MEAL “ . . . 1,00 a 1,25
LARD, per lb 14 a 10
LEAD, “ 10 a 12
MOL A SSES, per gallon . 35 a 45
SYRUP, N. O. . . 50 a 55
Clarified “ . „ 90 a 1,00
Ol L, Linseed, “ . .1,25 a 1.50
TURPENTINE “ . . 1,00 a 1,25
SUGAR, “ . . 8 a 10
TALLOW, per lb. . . 8 a JO
BEES’ WAX, “ . , 20 a 25
NAILS, . . 4 a 5
RICE, “ . . 5 a 5^
SALT per sack . . . 1,90
IsT&D. MILLER,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
OGLETHORPE, GEORGIA,
HAVE Removed from Lanier, and will
Practice in the Superior Courts of the
Counties of Macon, Sumter, Marion, Dooly,
Houston, Crawford, Bibb and Twigs, and
in the Supreme Court at the city of Macon.
STEPHEN S. MILLER, DANIEL W. MILLER.
January 16, 1852. 99-ls.
GEORGIA —Macon Connty.
WHEREAS Bohemia Wamack
applies to me for letters of Ad
ministration on the estate of Thomas Wam
ack deceased:
These are therefore to cite and admonish
all and singular, the kindred and credilors of
said deceased to be and appear at my office
within the time prescribed by law, to show
cause, if any they can, why said letters should
not be granted. Given under my liamTof
ficially, Jan. 14th 1852.
jan.'l6,-lm. W. W, CORBITT, c. c.o.
wanted] r
A No. 1 Milch Cow, for which a fair
price will be paid.
i Apply at this office. Jan 8, —3t.