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their way to the Moxiw.ii frontier. had arrived
here by (lie ton o'clock cars, and .stopped S* the
purpose of laying in supplies. Au. They!
did verv essential wrrioe, both officers awl
bxert ing tbenlSolvr’ to Hudr niter St : and ii is
Uirouglit their exertions mainly, that a huge per- ;
(ion of main street west was saved from dcsdrne
tion. The eity is umle* targe debt of gratitude j
to them
None of the rail-road building*! fir read were
injured, nor did the fire rres3 Hill street to the
stored opposite, although the wind set in that
direction; thanks to the wisdom of cn. Hr#i .
in making the streets of the r*ly of coolly width.
It is impossible to give any eiiimate at this
time of the prohah’. c •". Mr. TlumVis Hicks
perhaps is the gn a.est sufferer. In a'dditior to i
the loss of his house and More, and content?, vc
understand that about half the e-tton in Messrs,
tjaillden & Ferrell's ware-houie \4iS owned by
him. Mr. Brewer also owned a large proportion
of the cotton consumed. The lo? |in nil was bit
“'or sevcKßTTnilcs.^
Mr. Wright. Mr. McNeil-, White & .bduimn,
Wooten, Leak, Shulmau, Martin. Shackelford,
Lewis, Burr, and Cherry, have all lost largely, ,
some their entire all, unload insured. Mr. Lewis, j
wc understand was insured mi his stock at KUbm
dollars, and the storehouse was also insured. The j
masonic hall premises and Mr Wooten, were also
insured. We know of no other Insurances.
Messrs. Stern, Black, Dorsay & Knott, Hill,!
Brewer, White & Ilieks, Wood. Murray ami
others, suffered considerably by the damage to
their goods by removal.
We regret that tho office oftlie American whig
hy inexperienced handling in the removal, has
been considerably pied and damaged, and we are
requested to state that it may be a fortnight be
fore that paper w ill appear again. Mr. Murray
will use his best exertions to set matters right
again in the shortest time possible.
POPULATION OF IRELAND IN 1885.
Roman Catholics, 6,427, 1 12
Protestants, 852,004.
Other Religions, 604,104.
Total, 7,943,940
W hen the famine commenced in 1840, Ireland
had a population of NINE MILLIONS, living
on the small space of 48,000 square miles
| 11 99 9
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M : liy Mill'll’ ill \Y;i -!: ill L"( I in.
IBHFiit “tii. it “f \rmy or N"vy. but it ’’.<
HBt” confidence.’
wiiliVgoT’to prove a direct intention ‘
lon the part of Mr. M rcy to treat Gen. Taylor
■with disrespect, a view confirmed by Mr. Polk’s !
■•reviim- ‘” :'h-c< to honor hint with even a notidb ‘
In liia message.
I The Union. m reply, evades directly respond- .
Ing to these qveries, and does not deny the
■orrcctin ss of the Intelligencer's information.
W hy will it not gratify public cariosity by the i
Bublication of these letters—the people want to j
H ‘them, and the In inn surely might jndulge
Wera after •> liberally ‘lndulging its: own vanity
By the publication of enough private letters to
■is iiiarlyiizcd self, to make, if collected, an in
-1“ complete Letter Writer.” Mr. Polk and Mr.
I.Marcy really should not be so selfish or so mod
est. as to keep old Zachary's compliments to \
tin mselves.— Savannah Uejmhlican.
“Our contemporary of the Augusta Chronicle 1
isc Sentinel, has devoled several editorial columns ;
in eulogy of Mr. Clay. It is all just, and wiF
be in s’ heartily responded to bv the Whig party
IV. ni Maine to Texas, as it certainly is by our
selves. Pair! tism inn's be dead and surriou
when the heart of the natiop dees not hound at
the inifne of Henry Cloy. Ami believe that the i
heart of this great and Magnanimous man, is j
now swelling with j itrb tic exultation, at the !
inani'Vstats-i of tlm naiiuual will, in regard to ‘
the ill if; iroii'.’j hero of Iho Kio Grande. Who !
known not that all his aspirations are for;
his ee’ ititry, lint for h:. i.self, and who but must .
know that in tin assn nil success if General j
Tuylnr, Il.iry Cluy will rejoice in the assuled j
welfare (■ f Ids eou'ntrv ‘? There can be no rivalry j
here. Mr. Clay would in no ease allow his name ;
to he plnec.l before the country, in .‘ojineetiori
*TjTIi dfie e, hut bv llu . pontai.eous voice of the ■
people, demanding,the sacrifice on his part.—'-
Much less would he ever sonsent that Iris name •
should lie thus placed, when the evidence is so
eonelusive, that the wishes of the people, we
may say the whole people, have for the time so
distinctly settled on another; and that other,
li'is friend, his supporter, identified in personal
fooling and in public views. No, there can be j
no clashing here. The Nominee of the country
will find no warmer advocate and supporter than
in the illustious patriot of Ashland. His heart
Ifns ever V>on lis cun try’s, and that heart will
bound witmiiy oigeerd joy, at the elevation of a
tried friend\ win sc success brings with it the
assurance of the restoration of his country to the
paths of iiuf Vn.il fafetc. pinsperity and happi
ness.” —'Southern Recorder
STL.VfJNO Till'NDKlt.
The Millcdgevillc • orrespondent of the Macon
■ Journal iV Messenger.!’ writes ns follows :
” The preft renee of the Democracy in this dig
i gins for General Taylor, as I’reNident seem to bo
1 growing stronger mid riper. Tudecd you must
not he siiVpi ised if the Democratic gubernatorial
ci •event ion. to meet at Milledgeville indune next,
should formally iioiiiiiiale “ Old lb ngti and
Heady” for the Vrcsidency ! Now wouldn’t that
furnish rare sport ? Since Mr. Polk stele poor
Tyler's annexation thunder, “thunder stealing”
has been considered a mere vena) sin. The Dem
ocratic fuglemen and field marshals are inclined
io regard every move of the Whigs as nothing
but political thunder. In this they have a shrewd
rule by which they measure their opponents; and
as in the aneicnlißemocr.ioy of Greece theft was
inculcated as a virtue, mi the principle that adroit
reddens W-.M-’ <sf’ -efficient warriors—so in
modern progressive Democracy, it may become a
political tenet, that io forage on tho enemy” is
the surest, test ol patriotism. If. in the. present
instance, they sbonM be deterred from indulging
’ a favorite propensity, they may possibly be ia
tlueileed bv motiicf similar to tlmse of Mercury
a primitive ’.bunder stealer, one ol Jupiter s
Ij'lioys—who, it is said, would have stolen his
papa’s thunder,jf he bad not feared it would burn
! him.”
“Our Democratic friends, .vhoSo strongly oh- j
ject to his nomination as a whig candidate, ihust i
j not Suppose us so very ignorant of the movements j
among the wire pullers, to bring him out as i
a Dentoi ratio candidate —of the extensive corres
pondence all over die country, having this object
| j,, view—nor of the letter? with which General
Taylor is inundated at, this time on the subject.
Who has not hoard leading Democrats of fids
city announce the intention to Whig him out as
their nominee? and is not a portion of the press
here, even now proclaiming him a Democrat?
How useful it would have been to have sent him
through the country, as a democratic nominee
with a view to have'the prestige of his name for
Congressional elections, which are to take place
during the summer and fall, and thus to have es
tablished a connection with t heir parly for that
object alone, oven if they could subsequently be
obliged to relinquish it, in consequence of his not
1 ting imbued with their political creed.
|Hp> rresvondir.ee of the. Sew York Tribune.
BwWA REDEEMED— NO MISTAKE THIS
f TIME.
Galena, Illinois, April 12, 1847.
Our little sister on the other side of the ‘ Father
of Waters’ lias come out of the contest, which
took place on the sth instant, covered all over
with glory. The election was for Judges of the
District Courts and ‘ Superintendent of Public
Schools,’ the last being the only officer voted by
the whole State. Party lines were distinctly
drawn anti the (flection was the most excited
ever known there. Jtidge‘Charles Mason, a mail j
ut'high standing arid character, and late Chief
.1 ustiee of the Territory, was the regular leoo-
Foeo candidate, and Jarites ‘i far! 'in, Esq., was I
the whig nominee. Loco-Focoism had th r*W
aiineil to justify, at this election, its tnise ible
pretext for not going into an election of Sem tors
and Judges, by the Legislature hist winter; but
the People seised, it as the first opporti ity
! to rebuke the reckless abandonment of oath And
: duty by the Loco Foeo members of thfe Le’ Aa
| Cure. And well and nobly have they done i„Bnd
placed young lowa in the galaxy of whig SiiP‘B !
i L learn by a gentleman just from Burlingtonpbat
j returns lmVe been received sufficient to mail • it
’ certain that Harlan‘is elgukd by a
least six hundred 1 And this glorious victory *
achieved in spite of every advantage whj h Judge
1 Mason had over Mr. Harlan, in regard to being
known by the people. The Judge had been in
the Territory and on the Bench from its first es- j
tablisbment, while Mr. Harlan, was a new-comer j
in the State, and only known as the whig candi
’ date.
The whigs there fought under the banner of
‘Rough and Ready*’ In August next, they have
another election lor members of Congress in pla 6
of Lcffler and Hastings, and mark it, by the suite,
sign they have conquered at the late election 1
; they will again triumph. * Yours truly,
GENERAL TAYLOII AND THE SOUTH.
One reason why tlie South should, and probably,
will, sustain (I on. Taylor for tlie Presidency with
! great unanimity, is because his nomination affords l
us a final and unlooked for chance of electing a
Southern man to that office. Now when it is
| considered that both the great parties at the north
court tlie anti-slavery faction; they both are op-;
j.o.'cl to the extension of slavery; and that both
• exhibited in the late Congress a settled deter
mination to disfranchise the South —the import
auoe of placing at the head of the Government
one Who from birth, association and conviction is
identified with the Smith, and who will fearlessly j
uphold her rights and guard her from oppression, j
i cAnnot fh.il to strike every candid mind. In this \
’ view, his election becomes a matter of vital im
portance to the slaveholding portion of the con
f'-leraey.
This opinion, we pciceive. is shared liy norths
ern journals and conspicuously by the NRk Yov#
i Courier and Enquirer—lt pres* that, whatever |
it'r*l •.* iI- .■ i I'yv-. M | U'i .WJJ -V'. f.s entn Ph;
to southern gratitude its hold, holiest, undev
; iating and consistent Miiintonaisie of our rights.
In the course of an lysiended article on the chobio
of General Taylor as flic people’s candidate, the
1 Courier and Eie/airer says that there is another
aid v ital question which the election of (leu. Tay
lor will allay—tin; interference of the North with
the peculiar institutions of the south. Nineteen
| twentieths of the whole population ofthe northern
i States are anxious to have the question of
! slavery to be disposed of exrlusively by the
States where it exists. . ‘Yet,’ continues that
journal, ‘ such has been the course of events—
Midi that tho influence of demagogues and expe
diency politicians-—thtit- small as is tjie Abolition j
; party, they have acquired a balance of power in j
j certain secti.'tts of the country, which lias induced
j unprincipled politicians—these who seek power I
I and office—to court thorn even at tlie expense of
the Union itself. Hence the M ILMOT ntovisd
I In-ought forward liy the Locofocos! lienee the
determination of both parties not to run a man
j from the shifeholdittg States for tlie Presidency j
in 18JS ! Now, thank God— and from our hearts j
do we thrnilc him for his timely interposition in
i our behalf—the great events which in his Provi
dence he has permitted, and which lias given
General Taylor a sufficient hold upon tlie grati
tude of his countrymen to insure his election to
the Presidency almost by acclamation, at once
and forever crush the hydra-headed monster
! abolition in its bud, and will preserve to us that ;
Union which AMPfiington, in his farewell address, i
; so earnestly impressed upon his covntrymeti the
| neces-Jy of guarding and protecting—that Union
i which is S blessing to alt who may claim its
protection, and which renfvrshonor mid dignity,
upon the t wenty miilioßS of people who live |
beneath its stars and stripes.
Can tlie South require a stronger argument to
urge them to (lie support of Taylor than is
furnished by the catholic and patriotic hngnage
~fa nortlicrri)>ress. - /Vrtf drlcani.
THE FIRE) SPREADING.
The signs of the timcScamiotbe misunderstood;
; every where the count ri is rising for Zachary Tay
lor as the next President of these United States, :
and whatever the party wire pullers may do, the j
: people will take upon themselves the labor—a j
veritable labor of love—of selecting their own
i chief magistrate to succeed the present incum
| bent of the Presidential chair.
What n contrast hMivcon the two! Zachary
| Taylor and James ivll’olk! Hyperion to a Sa
tyr! The uewspapcrArall parts of the country
! arc raising the Taylortflag, and among those
, which came to us in tridays mail, with the name
of Zachary Taylor at llieir mast heads, are two
of the most successful and prominent journals of
tho west—the Louis-pllo Courier and the St.
Louis New Era.
The speeches of J essrs. Clay and Prentiss at
New Orleans, are p; sighed at length in the Irish
papers.
GEN. TAYLOR.
The despatches, character and eonduct of
Jeueral Taylor, are thus spoken of by tho Cour- ,
; er des Etats Unis: —“The despatches of Gen- i
i ral Taylor bear ihe same impress in modesty
i ud simplicity, which heretofore have marked all
the acts and words of this General. The answer
ißde by him to Santa Anna’s summons to sur
tftnder at discretion, is worthy of a place in the
ijiilitary annals of allpeoplo, as a model ofgrau
ifeur and courtesy. These three lines so simple,
*> polite, should suffice to render illustrious the
j life of him who wrote them. The sublime
Ininiility is much finer, much grander, than a
[/parody of a saying, ‘the Guard dies and does
not surrender,’ as was tho report of the first
statements after the battle.”
After reporting the anecdotes of General Tay
lor’s personal behavior, his careless self-exposure
during the fight, the interest with which he
watched and filially cheered the success of the
Kentucky regiment, his humanity in seeking to
spare the detachment of Mexicans separated from
the main body, and finally, his sending back tho
two foreign deserters from our army, instead of
hanging them up as by the laws of war he might
have done, —referring especially to this Isstinci
ijjept, the Gemrirr exclaims: con
tempt! magnificent clemency! These traits
arid a thousand others throw such a charm, and
so much of poetry over a character where good
ness is allied to heroic firmness, arid where the
warrior is cut out of the granite of the man of
j worth, that the popularity of the victor of lduena
Vista has become so immense that he will be
elected President by acclamation, if no untoward
accident shall befall to change the current of
universal sympathy now flowing on all sides
towards him.”
MR. CLAY.
Mr. Clay has written a pleasing reply to the ;
letter of Sylvester Schenck, Esq., of Auburn, in 1
this State, accompanying the gift by several j
\\ liigs of that place of an elegant office chair arid
■uniting appendages, a notice of which we pub -
lished a few weeks ago. The letter of Mr. S., j
and the reply are both in the Auburn llaiiy Ad- i
vertiser o.i the 17th. After thanking the givers, j
in his nsnal courteous manner, the sago of Ash
land goes on to allude to the regret expressed in I
their letter as to the result of the last Presiden- j
rial election, and says: “ I ought to fed none for j
myself, personally. Besides being relieved from a •
vast responsibility itjfirriiished the occasion ofthe .
exhibition of testimonials, and the outpouring of 1
( the affection from flic hearts of try friends, arid ;
! countrymen, of which I had no .previous concept- j
Hon that I could be the honored object. Their
spontaneous and dishitercste 1 manifestations are !
worth far more than tiie Presidency itself.”—
And in an allirsiori to the existing sa, the clo- 1
ripieiity write#, -bhr—“The brilliant achieve- 1
incuts, and the glorious laurels acquired, during
its prosecution, gratifying ‘ah they are to our na J
‘tonal pride ami character, can never compensate
for the exceptionable maimer in which it was
begun, the brave and patriotic lives which have
been sacrificed, and the fearful isrues which, I
tremble in contemplating, may grow out of its
termination. Hut 1 have not now a heart to
dwell on this painful theme. 1 turn from it with
hope end dutiful submission to Him, whose, no
doubt, wise but inscrutable dispensation has per
mitted this awful calamity to visit our beloved
country. —-V. Y. Express.
LETTER FROM HENRY CLAY.
The following letter is published in the Lou
i-ville Demo rat. It will explain itself, and will
j b read with painful interest*
Ashland, April 12, 1847.
G kstlemkn —I received this day your official
j liter addressed by you, as the people of Louis- ]
1 *iile, to me, in which, after adverting to the res- j
adopted by them, at a public meeting i
expressing their feelings arising out of “tho
mournful, but glorious intelligence’ of the battle
|of llucna Vista, and of their desire to have
j brought back to this State the remains of the j
brave officers and soldiers from Louisville, wiio
died on that day in the service of the nation,
you conclude by requesting my permission to
bring back to bis native State the body of my
son, Lieut. Col. 11. Clay, Jr„ “ to administer, the
hifii sacred rights of sepulture, and afterwards to
erect a monument to commemorate his virtues
and perpetuate his deeds.”
I yield, gentlemen, readily, the permission
requested. Louisville now contains, the remains |
of his beloved wife, and was the place of his own j
residence at the time pf his death. There is, j
therefore, a particular fitness, that those who in \
| life were united together bjuthei strongest laws |
of affection, should sleep together in death. j
For the kind and friendly interest which the ]
people of Louisville have taken on an occasion
so distressing to mo, and for tho generous sym
pathy manifested by you in yous obliging letter,
f tender an expression of my profound gratitude
and thanks.
I am, gentlenfcn, with the highest respect,
Your friend and obedient .servant,
11. CLAY.
Messrs. Win. Preston, Nathaniel Wolf, Isaac
j Everett, John W. Tvlcr, David L. Beatte.
JOHN SERGEANT AND GEN. TAYLOR.
In the course of the remarks made at the great
town meeting held in the Independence .square
(Philadelphia) on Saturday evening last, by the ;
Hoii. John Sergeant, he said:
‘ Thus in eleven months General Taylor has
become a historical iidiaraeter; and with an uu
conscious modesty, he has with his sword and his
pen, written his own history—so that it forms ,
one of the brightest episodes in the annals of th
United States since the days of Washington.
A Chance for Historians.— Valuable docu
relalive to the political history of Mexico, were
1 found in the castle at I’ra Cm
I AMERICAN SYMPATHY IN IRELAND- -
THE FAMINE.
I While English Statesmen are devising dai“
I plans fur the increase and protection of pauper
ism in this long-royal and long-suffering Province I
of Ireland, American Statesmen, regarding this
country as, even in its wreck, worth being saved,
; are accumulating their voluntary tributes for the]
relief of our necessities. While the chief jour
nals of the English capital are daily teeming
with invectives against our people, high and low,
American journals, from Houston down to East
port, are reviving reininiscences of Irish merit, ‘
in order to hasten the kindly interference of their !
etmntry in behalf of oufr. While the popular j
divines of England can site in pestilence and fa- :
mine, oifly judgements from an angered Deity,,
smiting Iretaiic! on both cheeks for her idolatry, ‘
the favorite preaehei sos Air. Crick perceive but an i
opportunity for the exercise ofTnftfw •charity.
This nation’s position reatrinbles that of the
man in the Gospel who went down from Jerusa- ;
lem to Jerico. America is our Samaritan.—■”
When our wounds arc lmnd up. and we are
able to go our destined way, we will know to
whom our gratitude is due. •“ A certain Levito”
shall also be remembered.
Gut of'this famine will Some muuy results,
one of the greatest of which may lie, if we desire
it, the establishment of “a cordial understand
ing” between its And ‘the Uifited States of Amer
ica.
I’t is an axiom of the closed observers ofhu- i
rilaif nature, that conferring benefits on any ob- !
ject endears that object to tho benefactor: so in j
domestic life, adopted children are usually the ;
dearest. And at this hour, America, like the
Grecian daughter, feeds from the warm bosom of ]
her youth, the aged, and alas! shaeklecd nation, !
to which her infancy owed protection and sup-I
port. Never, indeed, did tho world behold a j
finer spectacle. Sentence of death had gone)
forth from Babylon on millions of oir- people, j
The European Continent was dumb, except j
where, riefir the extreme South, the Pontiff Lib- i
orator of Rome searched in l.'s hollow coffers af- ;
ter a mite for Ireland. France was silent, Aus
ria was silent. Russia did not cry out “ shame!” I
A diplomatist rules in Paris ; arid the ancient j
friendship between the countries of Sursficldand ‘
Count Saxe, of llochc, arid of Tone, has withered ;
beneath his rule. A diplomatist rules at Vienna,
anil the V'rvicsof our great soldiers at Austria—
our Kavanaghs, Maes air'. G Reilleys—never j
weighed a feather on tlie power balancing brain
of Metiernicli. Even the Rear of the Pole has :
turned diplomatist, and grumbles in caitcls.— .
Italy, except Rome, and all Spain lie's the help- |
less and bleeding prey of this sam:: accursed di- 1
plonmcy, From Continental Europe, then, we |
could gi.iii i,o aid .against England; for Europe
is ruled by heads: not hearts —by profits, not j
principles—liy ‘the laws of nations, ’ not ‘the
laws of God.’
Rut America, happily, thus far has escaped ‘
the incubus; and America, in a national sense,
lias become Ireland’s friend —her chief friend
among the nations.
Now England, our governor, alternately hates
and fears America; and America retu.'ns hatred
for hatred, and scorn for scorn, but feels no fear
of my earthly power.
Let us follow thr three nations mio the future,
as far as human sense eau see. To begin ;
England, in tlie years 1810 and 1847, hid the |
government of Ireland in her own hands. In i
those years 2,000,0M0 of tho Irish people died j
for want of.food, while there was plenty of money |
and credit in England; and plenty of feud for
the fetching beyond seas. j
America, in the Spring of 1847, hearing of I
Ireland’s distress, made a magnanimous effort to j
j save her, and succeeded m preserving nearly j
| 1,000,000 of Irish lives, by assistance ,rendered j
J in Ireland, or to Irish emigrants in America.
All ye who may survive this English famine,
note down in the new leaf of your memories this
contrast.
Lot us speculate a little farther;
Suppose, in the year of our Lord 1850, that
Ireland, with a population reduced to 5,000,000,
begins to recover from this awful ordeal-—that
j her peasants till the land again, and bar artisans
resume their labors. Suppose this done, under a
policy among Irishmen, and less injurious j
imperial laws, this island will, even then, he a
power in Europe, though still a province. Rut J
suppose it then being, or about to be, a free na- ;
! tion, governing itself by certain moral and nation- ,
| al laws, having and cultivating certain foreign j
| relations, what will he i's position in regard to !
America? Why, this:—
I America, needs Europe, and our re- i
j lations have always been of a friendly kind ; hut
(mm this year forth ho Irishintf will willingly
I draw a trigger, against her. Our harbors are
I nearer to America than England's, and more ac
cessible. The merchants of New York and
New Orleans alone have lost millions of dollars
in Saint George’s Channel, because they follow
; ed the arbitrary current of British commerce,
1 flowing into that sink of the old slave-trade. Liv-
erpOol. Until the late abolition of the corn, laws, !
J Great Britian could, in a measure, control Amor- |
ica’s commerce; but now America, the great
i producer at once of the materials of manufacture j
and the food of the manufacturer, can turn, not
only her own, but British commeVce, into such
channels as she pleases. Moreover, America!
must be, before many years, the intermediate j
i agent between Asia and Europe. From London j
to Canton, round Cape ilorn, is more than 0,000 j
miles —from the same place to the same, by Pan- j
! ama or Oregon, less than 5,000. America will
then, more and more, require an ally and a depot 1
1 on the west of Europe; and we hereby, after full,
deliberation, advertise Ireland as a candidate for ]
that employment, whose qualifications excel 1
those of all others.
One object in this speculation is to keep the
Irish in Ireland. If wo are starved, colonised, 1
r otherwise swindled out of m, the English will*
quietly remove here their g.jierinental and otbot/.-
machinery, even as the of olil removed’
io Carthage, or Duke William and bis vaseefc
from Normanily to England , and they will be
! oo*e to Europe all that wu rnighli have been.
| The Irish name and nature will fade from the
i facte of the earth, and the island of our
become the bofiie of a uew people, ruling anil en
joying where we have starved and dic’d .
Good Providence, to think of this! To think
that our oppression is to end only in banishment,
; and our struggles to cease but in death. To
j think of this lagd, sprinkled all over witjj the
: holy bhxcl Crf freedom’s martyrs —gemmed with
fields of glory Ijke au Dmperor’s shield—mouu
inented, sainted, Song-famed throifgh the world,
given up, at last. !o ‘T.en one sympathy
for it in their hearts, or one fact about it iu-their
memories! (
Tradesmen, tenant-league, landlords, clergy
men —Irishmen! must this hyil-r-Dublin Na
tion. >
MARRIED. ,
‘On the evening ofthe 22 April, by thq Rev. II.M
W Sharp.', CHARLES S. ROCWELLYEiiq...
Nil lit only (laiyzU l of vYil&bufl
Smith Em'|. of TwmpviHr OftMgili „
On Ili,- ‘lSih in-t., - by
MATHEW B. HAWKINS, of Columbia cjuuiy,™
East U'lT.ia, to Miss ANN O. daughter of Mr.
Mordecai Alexander, formerly of this city,., ,
fi ll ‘ - ‘’ • \
NOTICE.
‘'lt IIE A? .hi nisi razor’s Sale, ofthe Estate, of
‘ A Thomas i’erjy, is postponed until Saturday the
: lfilh in-lain, at lOo’cloek A. M.
F. O. WELCH, Adm’r.
May S. IS 17. 11l tds.
<TM [E I’eivs in the Raptist Church will be rented
this morning aiJl* o'clock, A. M.
.May 8, 1847-lt
SPHERE will be a meeting of the Agricultural
i *• Soci ihy this morning at half-past 1(1 o’clock 1
A. NI. At 12oVlti( k,, an address will be deliv
-1 cied lu< J)r. R. <1 Dickinson.
: May 8,1847-0 _____
I’ATIIIOTS ATTEND!
o a ’fllE Governor of Geprgij having! by
! :, Froclamaiion,cal odfor a Battalion
jra'l of Volunteers, to defend the rights
TO|I and sustain the honor gs the AsfEpi-
cam Fi.ki, it is proposed to raise a
I Company I'out the Codnlics of Bgkcr,
I iul Randolph, Early, , Decatur, Irwin,
f I Dooly. Sumter, 1 ,ee, , Thomas, and
I A I ‘Otcli other counties af .vill join in the
jIJ eliort to raise the company.
BH The Volunteer wilf be entitled to
• monthly pay and tatlops, and if he
serve to ihcatcl of the war ojr be honorably dis
: charged b.'lot ■ that time, ICO acres of such land as
i#!. may select, not alieady entered, or one hundred
I dollars in money, at his option.
If a iliicigut number of men arc enrolled in time,
i the squad will be at the Superior Courts of Dqpli ,
Sumter, Lee, and j.aker, at Which places names will
he taken as metnbgrs of the Cppipapy,
Alt ollice will fie. opened a; Albany, where all
1 members who .desire it wijl be supported lice of
j ftiarg,., until tlie Company is made up and organ
j ‘ PcrsH.,.-- in adjoining counties who- are d,is
j posed to assist in .aisijig tit Compariy, can” address
•E. II Platt, Esq. A.! q:ty'T ! . • county. ,t
Ci'.l/.Liu. af ‘ :-r/.rrws —rn
selves! Let it not be said titat wc are untyoinig to
hatilc for onr country; but organiz* “t Gompanv,
and in the Halls of the Montezuma*, revei ill.tie
honors of victory, ot court an honorable death upon
the altar of patriotism.
Albany, Ga., May 8, 1817. 10—ts.
in t alur SlicrMF’s Sale.
ILL be sold Ivfore the Court House Door in
” * the town ofßa in bridge, Decatur copnly with
in the usual horirs of sale, on the first Tuesday in
JUrie next, the following property, to wit ■ •
Solomon Bk-'. art’s interest in lot of land,No. 18(5,
! in tlie 1 lth District of Decatur county,levied on
; as tlie property of said Solomon Stewart, to safisl;.
a ft-fa in favor of Augustus Cargile vs said Stewait
I —property pointed out by defendant.
james Griffin, and. Sh’ir.
May 1, 1847,-tds
Sale.
AtTI LL be sold on the 10th day of July nc.xt, at
! ’ * the late icsidfiice of N alhari Maples, late
; of said county deceased, all ..th'e perishable prop
j erty of said estate; ,aH f lie .cattle that are gath-
I crcd—also, the mark and brand. .
i Terms made known oil thf da' r of rale.
, ISRAEL MAPLES, AdmT.
TEMPERANCE MAPLES,Adrn'x.
• May 8,1847. io. it) -!.
From, the Saturday Courier.
A NATIONAL WORK.
Gen. Taylor's Life, flatties and Despatches,,
INCLUDING A LARGE NU.VIREU OF HIGH
LY IKPORTAXT LETTERS from the Presi
j dent of the United States, the Secretary of War,
General Taylor, General Scott, Commodore Perry,
j and the Mexican Authorities. Full and Official
accounts of thq Battles of Palo Alto, Resaca de la
! Raima, Monterey, Buena Vista and Vera Cruz.
! Illustrated With .Maps and Plans of the Batle
| fields, t itles, and Portrait's of the Principal
j One of which, (Gen. TAYLOR,) given in this paper,
.is only correct likeness yet published., This is
i one oV the most interesting arid cheap worfcrof Jim
age. SEVENTY-TWO large roreBBMBBMBb
: , -"'".III. ‘ ■ 8
...
i- . j' ".i?*.
M:i” >. I."!'.
’ NOT ,
THOSE yn riant of Dwtgs,_ Medicines, Paints,!
Oil, Dv ‘V.ttis and PcrfuiifcKy, will jdease call
at WELCH A NELSON’S I)RUG‘-S?T'ORE'Ai.iia
xv Gvo., v here a good assortment of the abovfa- ar
i tides can always be found, and will be sold on rea
i soliabl’: terms.
WELCH .V NELSON, Druggists.
May S. 1847. Hi—ly.
Ml KEENER ¥ & MANTUA MAKING.
MIIS. GARDNERS would respectfully inform
the citizens of Albany, ami vicinity, that they
arc prepared to execute any work iu the above..busi
ltess.
Also. Gentlemen’s Leghorn and Panama Hats
bleached and dressed.
They may be found a* their residence on Wash
ington street, south Os the Methodist Episcopal
Church.
April 10, lS474sd>f
i Georgia Lee, County.
j “%*/TIEREAS Mb Elizabeth Jeffers applies to’
w ¥ for letters of administrationbn the es
; mte of Ebenezer C. Jeil'ersTatc of Lee county, de
fcitsvl. ,
| These are therefore f rf cite mid admonish all and
i singular, the kindred and creditors of said dec’d., to
be and appear at my office, within the time prescrib
ed by law, to shew cause (if any. they have) why
! said letters should not be granted.
Given under mv hand, a! office, this 23 day of
! April; 1847. ‘ E. W. WARREN, e. c. o.
! Mav. Ist 1817. P—6m.