,2 X Iff V- if: S; i r.r . .. . . 'a s, - - . aviM AMnrs niiP - aiivr t - jvi rriHKUiuriiHiu Hif j iinirff . nn mo t no t i mi i - u- i 5eSU)ENT FILLMORE. IiwSoSid.ii affections :a..d confi. 1 -.vs k,fMV r N,nrih and South bate jtn the fanati- t r;i!mieemt lb have stamped - Itiuelfipoo hit administration: T'hereis e?v fs ident in it, 1nio m,out P" iSUSrHn with the met nt rfcr.t inderjendencer of action.- Thu has been as wei prudent, and a . - J . jt?oiri;nri -ftf conducted Ft- -nr.;. f thi rnuntrv Such will be the H vm.nt of all nariie when party hostility i r f 1 Sneh will be the voice of His- j. js-'ftfrVwm. Mr, Fillmore branded a ?k-ii,SfliUoni8t by bitter political foes: But : if it were the interest of their party, the tame r H M,M tnniinM - him ! as too strongly Southern in hit beanngs, nd with much - , iu'.;MKt.- BullbrMr.Fillmore,none to see that the that he bccupits the saff.middle of national i. a!i& removed .from M 1 ?!u he due and onaswmrng d'gouy 4 Frwnhe"fNaUoca Intelligencer. , , NOTES ON NEW BOOKS. Historical SKTCHBsor North Catolina, from. 1584 io 1851, compile jrom w 'o rW&. official documents, an r diiional -Maiements, - wiU biographical r h,r ilistlnsruiahed ttatesmen, IAm. solikert, divine , rc, oy "John H. Wheeler. Philadelphia, Lip pincoit, Grambo & 06., 1851. The Rev. Mr. Foot e, of Virginia, states it... mill-not hf able in a ivv-Mi. . w. t - . - , , to uhderstantfTiorlhanHin untit mey nave nind ihe'irea'suriei of history and become - ... c L ..... nitfvtuid lainuiu w. r r . r I trt the revolutioi! and during tnai painiw siwele. Then will North uaroima oe re mnttftmA as ch it known. We have oerusea mese usc Wheeler with unalloyed pleasure, He prove? kt .itthm-'ittt anr! nit. accurate map whicn anrna-tha first Volume, that North Carolina line uuici;., .? r.,--- ... . ,.A Ani cfence of the Senator hims. If, under his own was imm oiave upon w,vu ..,, .-6.w r MR."CALHOUN'S ULTIMATUM, i It it within the recollection of att our read er, that in his Speech in the Senate jof the United States, immediately before his de cease, the great South Carolinian suggest; d as a remedy the djiy temedy---tbe n niioi? without which nothing would pro ty prevent a dissolution of the exisung Union an amenamen oi n vhimiv., neceMary, as ihe, i.imated, to place ine of enaal'rtr with the North. The precise chtracter of that amendment he AA nr nartieutarize. In an article ot the National IiiieUigencerof the 25ih of January last, however, u was stated tna mo kui. oronosed ati Execu- Uve to be-liomposed of two members, to be rt.An. rirti :h two mat ieedjsraphical di- visions each to be a checK upon me uuc., and both of them to exercise tne veo power. k. k..nrnrmhnrit((1 tir aUlJiemiC eviuciiv-c. We hate at length what may be considered .v;f.Cm nn nn tha luDieCi; ine cvi tyfV iiiiui The Black Mountain! Yno it? Who among us b a noi dark' brecinit6ail4cloomr nd nmbre hue f.ihe Mr PrDsecottfriaid the Judge, dome, the fa. liqooi t Stirrura is mean enough to make a de any thins diftf I got drunk on Ulhedh. day wytdf and t2e all Slerritt'i tpoons. Rt- prvsonjer. jnr. siunj. 1 adjourn the . ! . tsttr With ltt DeaUUI OUT oiuutru uuu u..- r' ! b?nori; I-. itsnutoeus6initra:nd peakefl. rtoges, ;kniw e Ui Stand 7-B"'u!".T "a",T::i:i ' .nt ratoeeit ana w "r".- . hearv loiiaireaiia iuv uirac....6?-". "hiL.. (..It hP.d aoAhooWeaDoy? any .nimafeU aOPniiice, ihougnof SOrjiniea wwwf A "l-rTn .An,rfe.st of ib ockf,Moiw.t; -y iihue. ' We iootc a long MUweniif tooit UuurM 4uH.-... .... j..1lit, in the ..itana- -y.T-17 j , .. .w.mw.r tti'lteent! and at 4 . " uleoabridge't Life. .umt lit .oa nn- u ind character i wan tains iHrn u owibw"" V ,.T i:.. .hone wa- KOdlataerl; Aoovf ve r: 7n aikwrbed tera nefer reU iU aninruii "l -"-f Rjt7 nii and eonwwsure at n ewv.H v. ri:: ' . .. . .. I.- ...nohoa anil kdum leet? and wftitet w i7aei like " .. . -.L " '.,liiir and BI1D1KBIIT . . . I : ..n.rr in i. in iviiiLa vim ucui I nritti r.nr iw iiavn iuuiul t Tgetoarepasti for which w had onnsnal reMi. WW - Iitrn:.anA'at 12? reached Mr- Stepp'sandpartock oTa nvi8r8orop.nowruc., neTer tel8 g0 at a Uble raced by a handadine, aprigntly jass. ani ftaa elba dadshter of bUr host. At 61 we were ,n which he w seated at oar own table, fatigued, out neugnieu dely ;coinpetitioni the ram . ' . .1.--. h.ianda the ice and jnpws pi vernure, carper .. ; " --- , Si. Sun .nd lastto witnea. its departure, re eeiving tj. hr . . i r vi- no iLin rava. at morn ana e. ami last s....-,-,-- n CONSTRtJCTLyE MILEAGE. Greelet, bf the TKiwrw, holds on to any bob by be- takfes up with the tenacity of a mastiff he hisgnp nntil-he is fairly tired out exhausted himself. Dnrin? the session. was a member of Congress, be was something of " a one idea man," which is any thinelae than a correct characteristic of his rest less, versatile and practical mind, tie was dead setagainst the venality and eovetonsness of Sen. atom whfv claimed and received what is known as constructive mileage, which is nothing mare nor less than pillage of the public crib. Constructive honored and lime worn painarcn iandscapefrom erntef u, rr ;-wh ch frr ; k...ii irarioiv. exieill uu ouwuf-ii r i " rri'ttai .imaased.bf any ar(d set l agoing, anu pnwj ;- f - . i naps, m uimuuwwM -i; "v- r - '-ni. t .- a rttoAA in the aooa 8 oi tne conieuwn; , tin W know, world. T 'ereenpt ro y-read g. fUe State of tSeorgii ins person who nave noi m -.f.foeV:UleccenrfccratUltUl: . ...nkn h.iru not haa eiiinuw"" i r .uJl. mas.ri which the South regards jvsa new ratification : of iu rights and of the 7 n iit.tUn nnA havaT become-laws. - He ..haaaotaiffnetrtlw Cotnromise bl s i protest, after n illostriout democrauc etam : iimlntf thA Wilmo't Proviso. He has ... -fc-.-O - . . . J fftven mem mi Kuiurc,u:va- , fguw i V j 'rtfr nd hB has supported thetn - since with his whole heart Every act of his administration, proves ; this. He has shown Dy ms .ueeas, as w Ha words: his firm and cordiardetermina 1 a Miifain the Fa?itive51ave Law. His ' prompt and decided action in regard to the wm outrages at wuiuuu wji.v. tniand. the admiration and respect pf all men ft who r loyal to ihe Constitution. One of 74-the most stnkihg proofs of his sincere devo- ' tion to the Constitution ortne country, is nis ippowtment of Mrr Curtis, of Boston, to the Uaeaton the bench of the Supreme Court. -', made vacant by the death of Judge Woodbury- VHe might have elevated to that post 'p some lawyer of greater political notoriety and C influence,and whose opinions upon the Com I premise measures were not clear and decided. Botv instead of this, he appointed a gentle X, mh wbo was no politician, who was a great -4 lawyer and who, though long known in ". Boston as the ablest jurist of that city, had bfllf become known to the nation by bis in . Irepid jupportbf the Fugitive Slave Law in T the stronghold of abolition fanaticism. Yet this President is denounced as an abolitionist! f But the country and posterity wiH do him ! justice.' Southern Denocratg, before proscri . i bin this man, should calmly reflect whether f'they do not owe a duty.to the South above e that to party, and whether that duty can be 7 faithfqUv performed by ostracising one who has proved himself so frankly, bravely true vto the constitutional ngnts oi tne aoum. . . .'.i.r. nf Savnn lanrled. in 15a nana, ive copr ine sunjoinwt cjwt.i.. . , ,j , it f on the "Southern Standard" of Monday He appear, to have examined w. h much ! . . r- X"al. industry, and commendable care, eve- on OoTm.nl il Bowb.for. the pobhe. I ' feP . . . - . . . i.ma nirvaa U7f 1 1 i w - . has of coure but just wiued .from the press) an excellent article, corrected and improved, coDied from the National Intelligencer, in which it appeared leas than three weeks ago, on the life of Gov. J. SevieK who wasdistin- Gdiltt, but Dhditk Da Marble' Stort : " M. b fir nf nnr rtad. lVMi and South, who bad the pleasure oi an mileage aimoiy means mat we oenator at ioujs- e, "W . I.,KI will r ;n n A.rtrnna artin ImimIIui Sonata rl,mU iotimattf acquaintance wiia. i :r" . :."7T? 7. f Vi . 7 " . ' SSSSS. tiWCcU .Oi - W H.WI. Bradbury, we believe, once orewu H "".'" T""'" " omnibus Id the Capitol, hasi during that interval i;- THE BECENT ELECTIONS. '-The results of elections in various States U't.:. mrm- ..v. th Rat l! mnK " '" A mpri ran V would seem to indicate a series of triumphs achieved by the Democratic party. But " lrhen the principles are considered which f these triumphs represent, or are supposed to represent, 'it will be found that Democracy caff change its hues like the chameleon, or that it wears a gtnnenl'OijnaA.eao;;1. H-Uw seiC "'mocracy of Berks countyPennsylf ania is rallfid bv the Standins: committee, to be -i v-it aiReadinfrsometen davs hence, for the ' nrnoae of takintr such action upon the ques- SticucXlbodificalic of the tariff oa. iron M Uiey may deem expedient.. The particu Ux reason for . thia tapvement is ''that the ts'z committee have K? .ith regret an attempt '"in some quarters to represent the recent glo- 1 v" noas triumph of the Democracy of the State wnfree-trsde victory 1 iThorwe see that in the county of Berks fand the same may be said of fennsyWama -: generally) the Democracy is in favor of pro- tection. . In Virginia it is known to be utter iv Hostile to protection. A convention was ' recently held, is our readers are aware, in . - the Northwest, in favbr of the oolicv of river : and harbor improvements by - Congress : and ' the Democracy of that region are devoted to ' ' that policy Bui in the South the Democ- - ?rcv holds the entire system in abhorrence. , and cleaves to strict construction as the vt- - ' tal. element of their political laith. It ii l '; Democratic in Pennsylvania to support the . cuoropromise, as Uov. Jjigler has reason to . : 'know ; and we are told that the Democratic r? v Yictory in, that Slate was a. victory ot the c compromise, yvnilst listening to this de ' ' claration, we heard a voice from Ohio an . -' nouncing the re-election of Gov. Wood be- . caseof his hostility to the Compromise, and 1 because of the identity of his Democratic ; principles with those of Mr. Senator Chase anq uis aoomroniBi lactton. At me same 2time we read in the Norfolk Argus, a Dem- , ! ocratic journal, the exulting avowal that the fisnost gratifying result of the Democratic tri. ' t timph in Virginia is, "that every represen vtafiire teabe last Congress who would not jpye in hit adhesion to the odious Corapro 1 raise has been sustained by an increased ma iority of Ihe popular,, suffraee." . Tin.. : iu. r r . a uu ii ! iui wmuwracy is maue to suit all section! and all sorts of opinions. It is a matter of locality and climate ; and, in going L from North to South, it changes its complex ion i it is for the tariff and against it, accor ding to special interests aha convenience ; it denountes the policy of internal improve- ments and upholds the same, with ior with , out much 'noise and confusion ; it is for the Union and aga'inst it ; it is for the Compro vr wise and against it ; it will assrmilaie with v any faction, on occasion, in its bih appreci ation of the virtues of a maioritvv and con. ;t aiders the potfsession of the offices of Govern. meni a aausiaciory proot of the, orthodoxy of me xeinocraiic incumoent. ' Si- '--- Tbb wat to begt It is often easier to obtain favors from the pride than the . chanties of A shrewd preacher, after an eloquent charity ser- v; mon, saiu 10 pis jiearerr: - r uIam afraid from jhe eympatby dismayed in . vour ennntenanee. that iron rn.-vw ino ti rn.,i. . I caanon yoo, therefore, that you should be jast, . juciino tuu iitniCTDua. ana wish voii in iuiiir .V . taad,hatedelsire 9ne who cannot' pa his i. t a. 4i lr Mrn M a a a main. - l. . The ftichmond Enqoirer: learns from a bar jber on Gorernor street, TJiat jfie" Black. Swan . t f Glizi. Grren.l is, 4v iiativeif Bicbmojidt: and ' daughter of Hope Butler, 'tfuondtn famous 1';? JU0tof horses on the He'drico and Chester. :4 field course now residing in' BiuTloe VVbiJe' there; abe was a skillful prima donna of ihe " Af tican CharcL' choir, and changed her' name by marrying a feotored genilemen at the North, ydept Green, - . s . r 1 I I mall a in nrtavn ni lour niinuceu ua"s. wki bound, in line large type, and on good, pa per. AH the booksellers have it for sale at two dollars. The subiect in this work for which we looked most eagerly was the . amendment of the Conttituhon. U is generally known that thu was Mr. Calhoun's- last proposition for the salvation o! the Union jsna the seen- rWr ol the South As many of our readers, who may never see Mr. Calhoun work are no aouot. anx iona to know the precise nature of the A mendment to the Constitution which he bad in view, we lav it before them in his own words, from page 392 of his work, just pub lished : "How the Constitution could he bst modified, mo a to effect Ihe obieet csn only be authorita tively determined .by the amending power. It may bs done in various ways. Among outers, it mi'eht be effected though m rt organization of thm ExecutitM denarimenl : to that it$ power, m dead of being vested; at they now are, in a tingle officer, th mid bs vested in two to be so elected as that the two should be constituted the tp-eial or. gam and rartfnlatwet nf th rttpeetive tectum in the Executive department of the Government, and requiring each to approt aU the acts of Can greet before thty thaU become taws. One might be charged with the administration of mat era connected wi'h the foreign relations of the coun try; and the other of such as were connected with its domestic institutions ; the selection to be de cided by lot It would thus effect, more simply, what was intended by the origins I provisions of the Constitution, in giving to one of the majori-J ties composing the uoverninent a deckled prepon derance in the Electoral College, and to the other majority a still more decided influence in ihe eventual choice in case the College failed to elect a President Jt was intended to effect an equilibrium between the larger and smaller States in this departmeut; but which, in practice, has entirely failed, and by its failure, done much to disturb the whole system, and to bring about the present state of things. Inaeed, it may be doubted whether the framers of me constitution did not commit a great mistake tn constituting a single instead of a plural Execu tive. Nay, it may even be doubted wbctnera single Chief Magistrate, invested with all the powers properly appertaining j to tha Executive Department of the Government, as is the Presi dent, is compatible with the permanence of a pop slar Government, especially in a weahhy and pop ulous community, with a Urge revenue and a numerous body ot officers and employees. Cer tain Uis that there is no instance ot a popular Government, so constituted, which has loner en- I 1 . A . . i F e I i . uurau. bica vura, uius iar, luruiturcs no eviuenc tn its tavor. and.no! - lW a ut for W U the present, disturbed and, dogerous state of things, which threatens the country with immir cby or di&uaioo, may be justly attributed. On the other hand, the two most distinguished constitu- . : . tronal Governments of antiqof ty, both in respect to permanence and power, had a dual Executive. refer to those of Dart a and Home, i he ror.ner had two hereditary and ihe latter two elected chief magistrates. Ii ia true that England, from which ours in ibis respect is copied, has a single beredU tary nead of the Executive department or Uov erninent ; but it is not less true that she has had many an arduous struggle to prevent her chief magistrate from becoming absolute ; and that to guard against it effectually, she was finally com pelled to divest hun substantially of the power of administering the government, by transferring u practically to a cabinet ot responsible- ministers, who, by established custom, cannot hold office unless supported by a majority of the two houses of Parliament- She has thus avoided the dan ger of the chief magistrate becoming absolute, and contrived to unite, substantially, a single with a plural executive, in constituting that department of her Government. We have no such guard, and can have none such, without an entire change in the character of our Government : and her ex ample of course furnishes no evidence in favor of a single chief magistrate in a popular form of bovernmeDt like ours, while the example of for mer times, and our own thus far, furnishes strong evidence against it ! "But it is objected that a plural Executive ne cessarily leads to intrigue and discord among its uicuiurca, auu mat 11 u lacousisieni wuo prompt .1 ..ft. -: . . : 'l i . . t uu nu ;kuicuub. i ins may oe irue when they are all elected by the same const it uencv : and mav be a good reason, where this is the case, for pre- icriiig a single executive, wnn all Us. objections, to a plural executive. But the case is vwv dif. ferent where they are elected by different consti tuencies, having conflicting and hostile interests. 1.1 a. i f . . as wouia oe 'Me tact in me case under cookidera lion. Here the two would have to act concur, ringly in approving the acts of Congress, and separately in the sphere of their respective denart ments. The effect, in the latter case, would be to retain all the advantages of a sniffle executive as far as the administration of the laws was con cerned ; and. in the former, to ensure harmony and concord between the two sections, and, through them, in the Government. For, as no act of Coagress could become a law without the assent of the chief magistrates representing both sections, each, in the elections, would choou; th candidate who, in addition to being faithful to its interests, wpuiu besl command Jtte esteem and confidence of the other section. " And thus the Presidential, elections, instead of dividing the U- mon into hostile geographical parties, the strong er siruggting to enlarge its powers, and the weak er to defend its nghts as is.now.the case would oecome the' means of restoring harmony and con cord to the country and the Govern men:, h would make the Union a union id truth; a bond of mutual affection and brotherhood land not a mere connexion used by tae stronger as the in strdment of dominion and aggrandizement, and sabtnitted to by the weaker only from the linger rngtemams of .'ormer attachment, and ihe farting hope of being able to restore the Government to what it was originally amended to be, a blessing to all. - : . , ; . : ' . 6 " Such is the disease, and ncb the Character of ine only remedy toAicn can reach it. In conclu sion, there remains to.be considered the practica questionShall it be "applied f JSbatt- the only r"" wit;u cau appiy n oe mvoKeu ior tne pur pose? - --.a --. l.v : ' . r - M The irsponsibiliiy of answering this solemn question rests on the states composing the stron" er section Sie. : : - xal, industry, and commendable care, eve- from some bomUmt t her are nnw'. Ti""- ' ' ... e. I i l Lm anil nvhefn raiSPQ ll ' sanus wnu nc , . ,Uon :i I ... ,nn fennwaslltt eaDOUlU liuui UIIMUl IH W" . f.t kl it ih'BiaK MooHTAias tney tw u . : .U,. .rt.r..' nrl uritlMlUI DeinST Wr ,raimnni the numoer. wiouu u WU1., . "-..!. ! ....Mon.l k irino nriPRT . nuiiricii ut v biwux it w. w i r . y We had for years desired le wipe but one of -twelve hoars,! constructively traveled to and from New Orleans or Little Rock, and is entitled to constructive mileage at the rate of 43 for every 20 miles As for instance,-the 3 1 it Congress -uj Wovwl and respected bf all adiourned on the night wf the 3d March, and an ,S lel professionut he M one fault; . H extra or new session of the Senate was called at '..rm'iianW would lead him, despite his jadg- noon on the 4lhj Donng this short interval a med Brown, was one of the CircQit Judges. He was a man of considerable aoiiity, o iuuio.c menW into frequent excesses, in iraveuiur. ine ; - . ' 1 . 1.HM iMMrtliAIA nl fill I I1H omiahed in the earl v hist srv of North Caro lina. B v the aid of Hon. George Bancroft, late our Envoy in Enandiheauthorhas had access to the colonial records in the offi ces of the Bard of Trade and Plantations in London, and Dresents to us many rare and ncb.records, redolent with patriotism and val or, never before published, illustrative of the earlr times of North Carolina. This of it self renders the work invaluable. . The archives of his own State, which were opened to his examina'ion by an act of ' '. . . . . - . i i tne -.legislature, nave been evisceratea, ana the record of nams which he presents, even to our midd, revives many a long-gone asso ciate, and awakes "thoughts that long nave lept." His materials have been rich and ample. and he has made good use of ihem. His documents, procured from London, a to tbe affairs of the Regulation during the administration orGovernor Tryon.the bloody -wolf of Carolina' prove that in 1771 the first blood of the colonists was spilled in North Carolina by the royal troops of Eng land in defence of liberty. His documents, from the same source, place the Mecklenburg declaration, in May, 1775, beyoundall question or cavil. His portraits of Davie, Macon, Gaston, and others, are true to life, and show that in this quiet and unobtrusive State, "some gems of purest ray serene" have existed; and whose services and virtues deserve eternal record. This work, too, presents an original design by tbe Author, curious and unique. In the second volume is a plate of a tree, on which every county is laid down with legal accu racy and correctness. 1 his alone is worth the price of the work. Its dedication to Hon. George Bancroft, to our neighbor and friend, Co'ooal Peter Force, to Hon. David L Swain. President of the University, and to the yoang men of the State of North Carolina, is in good taste, concise, chaste, and beautiful. - To tbe good old State of North Carolina doubtless the work is most we lcome: for, al though early settled, full of incidents of pat riotism and heroic darinz, rich to mental and njineral wealth, : lsi s know of Wr than of that of any portion of our Republic This work lls this hiatus J a tour national history; - ' Not only to North. Carolinians, but to her sons who have swarmed from the parent hive into tbe verdant valleys of the West, thi work will show the patriotism of theit forefathers, and tbe pure characters of their mothers. ..-..mm? h i I'liuranav. inu akiji Vi v. r ; . - ., :".";,;" tHcaveral friends eraiing Upon bis own boos, tbe geuiieraen oi uie loot ww. .... 1 . 1 ,. .,1,1 attODosititious iourney was performed by Mr Downs, from Washington to Ouachita and back. a distance of 3800 miles, as estimated, for which he received tbe sura of $2240, and Mr. Souls re ceived forth st me telegraphic transit the com fortable Sum oi $2074. The constructive mileage that was paid to Senators for their . supposititious - . a . l I r. -..1,1 AAMA-a1Tir iurn hrul haln hllll. to accompany nntr-t "7 nZ spring Journey trom- VVasbington the.rsevera ivonaes kAinV M llll I a 1 B I AJ IIIWHMtVM WMS uaa TT-J - . - T L. .... "'rVV. ".rriT.7n,ne hornahodfus aq alio u-lU) ajwiitg in company with Mr. A. S. Merrimon,w suuck the winding way,' chiming mi purseiw Away I away, to the mountain brow, Where the streams are gently laving. Awal awayl" fec. VV Uft Ashfvill at 10 o'clock A. M. and with a moderate ride reached the Lodge,' or Mount H.r a lianrtenmo imnrnvimfnt made at ' Wlllla wife a model of a woman in her way in the i old-lashioned, but strung carry-all he journied , somefortv mi es. and reached the vmage wnere the court' was to bt opened next day. It was along in the evehing of Sunday that he arrived at Ihe place, and took up bis quarters with a relation of his better-half. by whom the presence of the official diffnitarv was considered singular honor. After'supper Judge Brown strolled over to, the l "7" 7r....i.. nu.k Mntoin ODir tavern in (niuwu,w.ic.0 m. Ker s ODriiis. on a snur oi ine u - nj i i:i, n,,naoir nn 24 miles from Asheville. having secured on thai J.r'Tt' '---.e--.i i,V..s..J-- h, Way the services of Mr. Jesse Stepp as guide, - In the even in? we nartook of a plain repast, found our thermometer at 34 retiree to reai, ana at half OAst four ff-ot uo and prepared for the as- : D X . cent : startniff at a ouartpr belore ave, we mae " . . ... Those r fir The only B7ZT both ease ami .a- .WOrtejtJi - 5 vvuBii mm. u UIVUCDI1 I O of both Sexes, sod '.H otCn stitation have acqu in m or occupation, or fron, a wewt. I JV.'.m uS ve couir-rf th. "."""Utet ward, (Round ShouldPw.,11 "1 or di... edw thi ahn. ,lr-. , "'WeBt,,..' p-"u symmetry aud form -Vr frisr wearer, nd also sllowinla ful mJ? H M& action aad expansion of ths LunTv 'fi Compression, .Dd preveotmg therehJ n?! arj Organs from bmiak S 3 PaC u- w VAN Horn I Man.nfactnrps nf n. . nuK r.. Kiuai sMiii amv- "lUtoL tioosPAiiarfeaia. V. VAiN HOKVS ImproTed Elastic Uterine 1. t or frolapis Uteri, ( Falling J Z' . ITWi no ui'iuv I - a . .." a . - . . t. r.i k-AAM Urv yuu una wie iwt uo wc the wuin of thJonly path on under the yountfowea wti , "... -v; . . n- rt ' . ; TheJoss be the barnUiff of -Babcock' ' cotton warehouse at Cahawba ( Ala.) is estimated at over Jiuu.uuu. it is said that 2,3fj6 bales dr cottoR were destroyed, besides other property. T Adversity overcome is tbe brightesrgtory, and wiuingiy undergone, the greatest virtue. Suf.f ferings a e but the trial of valian. spirits. FRESH WATER FROM SEA WATER. To Hon. William A. Graham, Secretary of the Jfavyi The memorial of the undersigned respect fully represents that he is the discoverer o! the natural law by which atmospheric air, in various states of condensation and expansion is associated with neat, and is the inventor of a machine by which this law may be aD plied to the cheap and abundant manufacture of ice,, and, through that process, to the easy .conversion of sea w iter into fiesh water. Your memorialist, .after many years of study and experiment, has thorougly investigated this subject in all its necessary relations, and W now able to demonstrate, through the machine he has ir vented, the availability of the law, for the conversion of salt water into fresh wa er, to any scale of maznrude. Un willing to occupy your valuable time with a detailed explanation of this natural Jaw. or wttn a lull description of the machine bv wmcn 11 is rendered applicable te the object in view, your memotialist will simply state that the former is founded on the known tact that the condensation of air enables it to be' easily divested" of beat, and that its expansion readily admits of its absorbta beat; and that the essential parts of the later are compressed into two force-pumps. in one 01 wntcn tne air is condensed and in the other it is expandedso connected that the mechantqat force of the, expanding air can be applied towards, counterbalancing the rn.n. 1 , . iuii.c vuueumeu in- condensing an; equa volume, me neat aosorbed.or in other words the cold generated in the process of ex pan sion. is applied to the congelation of salt water, and, as it is a law of nature that freer ing divests water not ;only of salt but of al extraneous matters, the ice SO formed must when dissolved.be fresh and pure Water.-1 1 our memorialist contends, as the result alike of theory and experiment, thai his.rhachines constructed upon the thorough knowledge which he claims to possess of the phvsica anu cnemicai taws involved, are Juily capa ble, according tp their size; of making daily in any part of the earth, at the cost of a mal mechanical force, as much fresh water as the crews of vessels can consumeand therefore that they ought to supersede the present bulky, cumbrous, cosilv. and unwhol method orsupplying vessels, and particularly ships, ot war with water. ! ' Believinthat you will take into consid eration tbe many and great advantages that will suggest themselves as derivable from the application of this invention to the public vessels under your superintendence, and in pressed With tbe national importance of its iramedia e introduction, your memorialist respect fully asks that you will direct the at tention ofasuitablfa officer to an examination of his invention, and to the expediency of directmg one-or more of the machines 4o be in J e of ships of Ihe navy; All of which is respectfully submitted. a 1 , , JOHN GORR1E. Apalacbicola, Oct. 20, 1851. important professional business, and who were proper glad to meet him ' Gentlemen, said the iudse hU qaiie along time since we have enjoyed a glass together let teresting figures. us taae a norn an rouna. j course, oii-immu-dressing the: landlord,) yon have belter liquor than stun and back again, between the 3d and 4th days of March last, amounted to some, lorty thousand dollars. J 1 - . ; It is very possible that this kind of scrutiny may be regarded by. toany as rather a small business. Forty thousand dollars, to be sure, is not much for Uncle. Sam to pay, but the principle involved is something, and we have never yet heard any satisfactory -reason given why Senators, more than any other class of public servants, should be paid for serVicef never rendered. , The laborer is wor thy of hw hire, and rurhing more. Tbe editor of the iTribune is riding his hobby with a hearty will, and we get from him some in &c., u This instrument is light and elasti. , without the Stect Spring,, which on accoont of their Chufing the HiJTt,0ll,H them extremely unpleasant to be wor "ttki,l Ladies suffering from tbe aboe der.",; Phlfswiansp.rticularljr. are mZRT a trial, to Drovit Ihoir anu :. . a Tefused toUke their dark foliage of the millions of BdUam trees cover it lite a cloak for mdes, as best we could, now in it and now out ; but 'Excelsior wa- in- cribed on our hearts, and we were determined to reach 'Mitchell's Peak, which is the highest point. by sunrise. . After we made the first Ion? ascent, we gained the main r'tdge. leading to the Potatoe 1 op.' next in height to tne tJtacn mis we sepi tor some distanc and tneo Turned to the lei t, maa inj a direct change lor the mam top, and though the ground was crusted and icy, perspiration Bowed freely ; and o er rock and crag, and earth and moss, on, on. 'onward and upward' we Went, toiling to make the ascent on one side while ihe sun was bursting out from the eye lids of morn ing 1 1 dash with the velocity of lightning his bnl liants upon the-other. Occasionally we gave a blast from our horn, which, though elsewhere clear and shrill, somehow had here lost its voice and h fell powerless as one s breath against a strong wind; we listened in vain for the echo and 11 it ever found a borne, it was in heaven. As our f . vo- rite song says, And again, shall echo in heaven again.' Perhaps it did, but we can't say. At last we were ushered into an open plain, of some four or five acres, perfectly destitute of ev ery thing except grass, and the cold sir struck -us very sensibly while passing through it; into the dark Balaam forest we dashed again, and in two or three momenta, we shouted tuaax a! for we stood upon the highest pinnacle of the high- esynountain in America, and very considerably nearer heaven than we ever expected to be, while editor of a country newspaper, but so it was, and so wamt onc with his brimstone maipstv Che atmosphere was ciear ana oeuuiui, noining to mar the sight, but a long, bite, and variegated cloud, thxt stretched itself like a curtain, across, over, before and behind the hills and mountain peaks below us, which was icained by the burning of the woods on the Swannanoa side. We planted our guns, mounted the highest rock, and had hardly lime to look ail round a moment had not passed in all this timetill the glorious and beautiful son of life morning peered up from tbe dappled east, with a brightness of glory,' a dazzling brilliancy, an indescribable splendor, a fiery flashing of brightness, that baffle all descrip tion, and that we have seen no where else upon esrth or water. We have often watched his rising and setting at sa, we have seen him from hill side, from valley, from mountain and from plain, but never befdredtu we see him, as from the Black Mountain ; never did we behold him literally ' ta king the wings of die morning, and flying to the uttermost parts ol the earth, gt ding with a thou: sand hues tbe whole earth in his dazzling flight ; and though we did not realize that we were ''in the mountain of his' holiness," nor at the city of our Umi, yet we telt that " tne Uod who rules on high'' is a terrible, a mighty God, in his ma jesty, his h..ndiworkand his omnipotence; and we involuntarily exclaimed, Great are Ihy wondrous works." In this instance we did not b?ho;d " his footstops in. the. sea,' nor see him riding on the storm," but we saw him shooting his moral light from hill to hill, from mountain to mountain, and from valley to valley, waking up and calling to action millions of his creatures; under these reflections, we turned and. saw the rays of nis sun dashing from mountain to moun tain ; now here, now there, tipping thia peak, glancing that clitt.yon precipice, that hillside, and anon, as with one blaze, he spread his omnipo tence o'er the whole scene, leaving nothing as far as me eye count see, upon which his rays and his brightness did not fall. Higher and higher he ascended, and now the mists began to clear away in the distance and one ouject anu another in rapid succession presented iLseii, u 11 we Uiought olthe poet when he said : ; "And still new beauties may I see And still increasing light;" and so it was, frr in the east our eyes git need rapid v upon the Blue Ridge. Table Mountain. nawx rsm, urushy Mountain, the Virandlather, Turkey cock, and a multitude of others, apparently rising in the distance, till the back ground became one vast jrfahv; as level: as Woe,, as. beautiful as Hie sea; on the north, the Bald, the Tennessee and the Paint Mountainswere glistening in the sun; on the West, the Craggy; the French Broad range, Ptsgah, Hog Back, Looking-glass, Glassy, &c, stuuuea me picture; on toe onu'b, the highest peas 01 tne Allehanies, the 'Jfinnacles,' Kocky njioo, oiaty, uray oeard, Hear wallow, Sugar loaf, and a hundred others, appeared in the pic ture in every i magma bio hue, and measuring and filling every descriptive height; Fr. m this point may be seen on the East, and immediately under it, the rise of the Toe Riverahd justbeyond, the beautiful Catawba 5 on the north,- Caney River; on the West, Ivy and Laurel ; on the South, the limpid Swannanoa, whose waters help tn swell the mighty Mississippi. 'We niada the ascent from Mount Hor,y a pressing walk; In just 4ft minutes. After feasting oufyeS to mtoxicauon, Vetriade oar wajr back aud astended The Potatoe Top. In making tbe trip upytbeSwannanoa, this mountain stsnda wjnare across in front of the Black, and entirely nides it Ironi sight, and is so called, by-its highest point resembling a buneh of Irisn potatoe tops; the Black derives its name Jrona4b eyejrlasting, black appearance It presents, by being covered with Balaam both winter and summer. Froui the Potatoe Top, a roost pic turesque view is preSbtited; taking in the eastern; southern and western view, including the Ca tawba, Toe River, Swannanoa and;Homony ya li es. Marion, Morgantoo and Bufnsville can be seen from ihe BJack, On ihe Potatoe Top, one may stand in a moment iq the cottntiel of Burke, McDowel, Buncombe isnd Yancayf ail of which corner there. The contrast between the Black and the Craggy, both of wbich lock arms, is strik ingly beamifal. The former ever stands in its Mileage. 0244 00 89 60 608 00 540 Oi 744 80 559 20 864 80 514 40 369 00 448 0 $52 no 1,588 00 620 00 92 00 880 00 264 m 11 40 225 60 104 00 83 60 443 20 288)0 120 00 592 00 The following Senators constructive mileage: Senators : Miles. George E. Badger. N. J. 610 John Bell, Tennessee,1 2.244 John M Berrien, Ga, 1820 Jas. W. Bradbury, Maine, 1,350 Jesse D. Bright. Indiana. . 1.8G2 Andrew P. Butler, S. C. 198 Lewis Cass, Michigan,. . 2,162 S. -P. Chase, Obo, 1,436 John H. Clarke, Rhode Island, 900 Henry Clay, Kentucky, 1,120 Jnhti Dans, Msaabusetts, b0 Jefferson Davis, Mississippi, 3,970 Wi liam C.Dawson, Georgia: -R. M.T. Hunter, Virginia. 230 William R. Kmg, Alabama. 2,200 Willie P. Mangum, N. C. 660 James M. Mason, Virginia, 286 Jacob W. Miller; New Jersey, 664 Jas. A: Pierce, Marylant, 20 Thoa G.Pratt, i da 84 William H. Seward, N. Y. 1108 Truman Smith, Connecticut, 120 Presley Spruance, Delaware, 300 Jose oh R. Undcrwool, Ky. 1408 r . - In all. tmtnty four Senators who have thus declru- edtatake tbe Constructive Mileage. OI these twen ty-iourjCfce axe Whigs and nine Opposition or Southern Rights men. Among them is William R. King, President prottm of tbe Senate. The following comprise so many df the roll of Sen ators who- have taken tbe Constructive Mileage and walked off with it, viz ; Senators David K Atkinson, Mo. Solon Borland, Ark. Jeremiah-Clemens, Aht. James Cooper. Pa-t A l JJodge, Iowa. Henry Dpdee .Wis. Stephen A Douglas, I1L Solomon W Downx. La. Alpheua F'cU, Mich. Henry S. Foote, Miss. William M. Gwin.Cal. J P Hale, N H. (F S.) Hannibal Hamlin, Me. Samuel Houston, Texa. G W Jones. Iowa. Jackson Morton. Fla. Moaes Norm, J r., N. H. R. Barnwell Rhett, S. C. Thos J Rusk, Texas. Win K Sebastian. Ark. J ames Shields, Illinois. Pierre Some, La. WilBani Upham.Vt TajacP Walker, Wis. James Wbitcorab, la. In alL. riy-c -Senators who took this construe tive. onTeage tha whole sum thus taken amounting to thtrrjnthousand seven hundred and nineteen dot oiaics, bit auopieu inein in their the most decided beneBcm! resoli. Iav?" from Professor Woodward, Cindt.,i iw,t unio. tent, daring a practice ef nearly Twewt T ei" a great variety of Spring and Ld iflli"? signed for the relief aud cure of tDe uons 10 wnicu vour instrumnta... . ." for mechanical execution, as well u the.ee aptationof the instruments to their sei.?! ! 1 have never seen any .that has 8in CHARLES WOODWAUD, M D" Professor of Obstetzi. and diseateaof VV'.o iiiuirrn hi ru iith i inciinna 1 . . Banda.es fbV FalT. ters for Weakness. ed that every thing was right, and "so they went to work. It is unnecessary to enlarge upon aarinx ing bout in a country tavern -It will quite answer our purpose to 'state that somewhere in the region of midnight the Judge v ended his very devious way towards his temporary home. About the time he was leaving, however, some-young barris ters, fond of a 'practical joke,' and not much afraid of the bench, transferred nil the silver spoons of Sterritt to the Judge's pocket. It waa eiorht o'clock on Monday morn in? that the Judge rose. Having indulged in the process of ablution and abttvrsion, and partaken bf a cheerful and refreshing breakfast, he went to his room to prepare himself lor the duties of the day. WelL Polly, said he to his wife, I feel much better than I' expected to feel after that frolic of last night. ' Ah, Judge, said she, reproachfully, you are getting too old you ought to leave off that busi ness now. ' Ah, Polly, what's the use of talking. ' It was at this precise instant of time that the Judge, having' put on his overcoat, was proceed ing, according fo his usual cuitom, to gnre nis wife a parting kiss, that he happened, in thrust ing his hand' into his pocket, 10 lay bold of Ster ritt's spoons. He pulled them out. With an expression of horror almost indescribable, he ex- claimed " My God ! Polly Wba en earth's themattsr, Judge ? Just toot at these spoons. . Lroarme,Wherrd'yoa get them ? ' uet them"? . Don't vou.se the initials on them? extending them towards her I stole ihein! Stole them, Judge? Yes, stole them ! ' My dear hnsband, it san't be possible from whom? -From Sterritt, over inert his name is on them.. . ' Good heavens t bow could it happen? ' I know very welW Polly I was yery drank when i came borne, wasn't I ? . Why, Judge,-yon know your old habit when you get among those lawyers. 4 But I was very drunk ? Yes, you was. W as I remarkably so when I got home, Mm Brown? Yes, Judge, drunk as a fool, and forty times as stupid.' I thought so, said the Judge dropping inU a chair in extreme despondencv-f-knew k would come to that at last. I ;liaye always Thought that j hu and; eighty cents, drawn from the Treasury as Miles MTeage. 4240 $1,690 00 20 1 8080 2699; 1,040 00 4Of 14 00 S600 1,440 00 S1 I 584 00 27Nf" L9S4 00 5600 ; 2,240 00 243 896 80 6160 . 2,060 00 10Q2d 4,008 00 1134 453 60 1476 40i 40 6240 - 2,496 0 40to i,mio oO 8340 1,336 00 1180 474 00 1280 512 00 5868 9 347 29 8800 1,540 00 3354. t4l 60 5186 2014 40 1300 . 520 00 3960 1,584 00 2032 812 80 untinn Debilitv AR. T' ' descriptions for Hrrnia, Instrumtnu for iJf knees, Clab foM Bow legs, duiocaua , oiau, spinal instr umenls for Cumture of the ipj and also for all derangements reqairiug the oie.f Baudiige?, for restontion C. W. VAN HORN It CO pw, October 6t h, 135 1 . r State of ft orili CarolinaWliiC mr Court of Pleas and dnarter SeaiioM, ki cast Term, 1851. At Charles Dewey, Cashier, w. Charles C. R;botea Original attachment Itvitdon personal prtptrt, U spuesrinir to the satisfaction of th. the Defendaot.ChftrlesC. Raboteau.hmji. von J the limits of this State, or o concel hiuf w oraintry process or Law canDot be itnti ftpon him : It is therefore ordereJ. that iU of this court make advertisement, in th R.i.i.v Kegister" a newspaper published in Raleigh, for lit weeks, successively, notifying the said dtfioditt to be and appear at our next Court of Pleas ui Quarter Sessions, to be held for the eoqntref Writ, nt the Court House in the City of Raleigh n n 3rd Monday of November neit, and theoind thin replevy and plead ; otherwise judgment bj ddmlt final will be granted against him. And Ike propr. ty levied ou oondemued to satisfy the PlaiabTi debt. Wii ness,JamesT. Marriott Clerk of uidContj atomae. tne ra monuay ot Aoguii, JAMES T. MAKKI0TT, Clerk October 3rd. 1851. v l something would happen to m'o-riiai i should Jo something very wrong kilt somebody .in a mo ment of passion, perhaps but 1 never imagined that I sh old be mean enough to be guilty of de liberate laroeny. ' But there may bs some mistake. Judge ! 'No mistake, Polly. I know very well how it came about. That fellow, Sterritt, keeps .the meanest sort of liquor, and always did- iiquor mean enough lb make a man do any sort of a mean thing. I have always said it was mean enough to make a man steal, and now! have a practical illu-traiion of the fact burst into tears. Don't be a child, said his wife, wiping away the tears, go, (ike a man, over to Sterritt, tell him it was a little bit of a frolic pass it off as a ioke go and open court, and nobody will ever think ot it again. A little of ihe soothing system operated npon the Judge, as such things usually dohis extreme mortification ' was finally ubdued, and over to Sterritt's he went, with a tolerable face. Of course he had but little . difficulty in settling with bim j for aside from the fact that the Judge's-integrity was unquestionable, he had an inkling of the joke that had been played. - - Judge'Bruwn proceeded tn coort, and to k bis seat; but spoons and bad liquor bad liqu r and spoons liquor, spoons, drunk, larceny, and Judge Brown,: was s mixed tip; in bis 'worship's be wildered bead, that hefefj; awful vote, il "he 'did not look so. .In fact, the Judge fett cut jdown , and hU. usual self possessed mrnner of disposing of basinets, his diction and decisions were, not wnat Judge crown bad been noted for. . , Several days had passed away, and the busi ness of thecpurt was drawing towards a" close wben one.morning, rough looking sort of a cua'. tomer was a rra gped on a charge of stealing, AJV the clerk had read the indictment to him, he put the usual question: Guilty oi npt guilty t "r - ? ' Guilty, but drunk answered the prisoner.' W hat's that , plea T eiclaimed t he Judge, who waaMia t dozing upon the bench. . p He plead guilty, but says he was drunk, re plied tliff el6rk. . v . ' . Wbat'sthe charge against the Tman ? . He is indicted for grand faroeny. . -Vyuti the:ca8e1 ';- f May it please v our honor, said the Drosechtin? I attorney, thetnan is regularly indicted for stealing sum iivmi lucvviuuiuua ixoicl,, - compensation for journeys never made, by chosen men to guard tne public msney from embezzlement sua peculation. - The editor then proceed 4 to" show that the charge for constructive mileage, as claimed by ihe aoove suriierons senators, ww not oalv unau . thorized by low, but also unsanctioned by pre- cedent .' , . .. ,- - - - Tliej process by which these mileage accounts uave.upeu auaitea oniy goes to snow tnat" grave ana reyerena oenaiors are as much nnder the umenijinuuence oi ine annimiv aoriar. as everv And the old man! other j:lass of operatives who work for their days' wagesianaare ready to stickle for a settlement, and cayil to tlie Jitntn part of a. hair." Patriotism has rts-;fariff of value as well as any ,other Venal commodity. We quote th following ingenious operation oi geutng a voucher : "Mr! Filtmore, now Preayent, was Vice President V.. . . -- . w -.. wueu vousirucnve mileage was Charged lor tne se cond lime m 1849. He was dead agams- it; aqd Would have crashed it if the ODDOrturntv tiad- tmea afforded him; But Secretary Dickens, havhiff- first . ?' ,!. r " f. ...... .? nttveriameu nis opiuion iniormany, neia boat tn ac counts j until Mr., Fillmore Jiad vacated ibe chabi nf the Satiate, to PIVM tknt hmt a iKnv. in .hswuka n j -... tka IrA Mnndar of Au?''t T, I . . . . . . 1 T ... . I resilient, nra Itm-lSO innl. th ltornmant vmiUf nnf be left j without a legat head in case of the death of fcotb the elected Proaklent and Vice PresidentYwhnn Mr. At' chison bf Missouri was chosen President ore rem. and atpco put Jbroughthe accounts. Constructive MW- ngemtauuea, merepy construing 5510 so into bis own pockety ' The axcjpwfS were hot thus held back when ueoTge Ja .uaiitts tvss vice JTesKlent," U Thel followingexamples strikingly illustrate the operation of this svatem: Hon. Wm. M. Gwisi Senator froth California, was paid Ms $8 uaynu iuuo mileage ior attenuin g ie late regular session f Congress, and $8 per day Tike ,wise for his Attendance on the short Executive aession which followed.. He bere pockets $4008 more C!anstritrjini mitoacrA in at otSrl inrr tkio P'va. cutivei session, ihuugh he did not travel one mile I lot tnte pnruose. That S4008 is edual to the 1 average earnings twelve energetic, industrious mechanics through a whole vear. ' ' r Ue is, eh ? and he pleads He pleads guilty, but drunk. The Ju lge was now fully aroused. ' ' uuuty, purdrunlt ! That is a most extraor dinary piea. Young man, are you cerJain you were drtmk? ' - . , , . A va 1 f ; Where. did you get your liquor V 'At Sterriti's. C, Did you get none nowhere pIsp? Not a drop, sir! "l v- I Yon got drunk on bis liquor, and afterwards stole his money ? Yes, sir, J l3 CouiiTr. Court of Pleas and Quarter 8enicu Auguit Term, lSl. '- Eldridye Smith, -. v. Chas- C. Raboteaa. Original Attachment levied tn perrmal prtperti. . It appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, tut the Defendant, Charles C. Kaboteaa, bu remorri beyond lUe hnuU of this State, or to couoetu i self, that the ordinary process of law cinnot buer ved upon him: It is therefore ordered, ll Clerk of this Court make advertisement ii & h Raleigh Register' a newspaper publiehed ia M city of Kaleigh, for six weeks tuceeMireiy, m- fying the said defendant to be and appett it nrl rMrr t:ourt nfPUm and Onnrter SessioM. to H held for the County of Wake, at the Court Hon in the city of Raleigh, on the 3rd Mondaj of No vember next, and then and there replevy ml plM ; otherwise judgment by default final will be pH ed against him, aud the property ievieu on "- nod tn aatUftf tha PluintiiTa debt. Witneas. James T. Marriott. Clark of mi M at office, the 3rd Mond y of Aogogt, . ' JAMES T. MAKR10TT, Clirt October 3rd, 1851. Jl ITATB OF NOBTH CAR0LlNA-H CooaTT Court of fleas and Q.wtM August Term, 1851. Wm.T Wotnble, Vi. - ri..rl. 1 Rfthoteaa . Original attachment levied tn prWr1 It appearing to the satisfaction of the Cwrt , e Defendant, Chaa C. Raboteaa, l'"'"'0'! nrf the limits of this State, or so conceal mwJ Lthat the ordiusry process of Uw cannot M r upon him : It is therefore orderea, i - . j of this Court mnke advert isemeot in m m n Register,, newsp per, Risked I in M" jjjgj wetjas sucoesaiTcij, uuinjiu6 - p 10 be ana appear at our nex vw" f.kf Quarter Sessions, to be held forthe CosnJ 1 at the Court House in the city of R'el11 d fkJ 3rd Monday of November neai, - - d,fj8j reDlevy and plead, otherwise Ut final will be eranted Beainst hi""."' ",1. aA levied on, condemned to satisfy M wil Wituess. James T. Marriott, V'f"'. 1 Mhe 3rd Monday ot auvl, JAMES T. MARRIOTT. October 3rd, 1851. , TOSAItWWEONESM-f,!1"' STEAM SHIP IABbU The IS fTTlHAT a Dividend of threw do.fars per - share ot U ihe Capital Mtock ot the Wiltmnaion nd Ra). eigtv Kail Road Company, fully iaid in, will be man to Shareholders, or their Jeg al representative.", ds- and alter the louVdsy ef November next . by or der. " fe . JAMES S. GREEN Secretary. Oct! 34, 18M . j . 86 : t!5N Notice to Heirs and Creditors. A lit persons who nay be interesteeMn the dis" j Jribnt'ion of the Estate of EUzabrthriekels, laui pf Oglethorpe County, Georgia, deceased, wm requested to"c6m forward arid present tlteir claims eufficlenpj tWi4;nd aH persons bating demands against the EsUteiare quire4"t presenS' them within'the time preacribed.by taw.' --. -A ! WILLIAM LAN DRUM. Adm'r. Change of day of tailing of the SU J o -Wn n BACH HO1 TO SAIL O if THE CTH TV' Shit, M The United Slate Ma w v between Charleston and Hv f vannah and Key WW I .sea Steam 14 BEL ' ,.aa Lurthea, comna" CHARLESTON oa jain. 224. month, WMnmeooiag oa and willleave ... .icflso HAVANA os t ''" ,f,T;MAH connect at Havana, gjpotfl Sh,p Coayow' tbrwjaf ,'s Bltd thetr Ship to NEW ORLEANS. vaNa, Ticket, for KEY WEST HA.B.ppl( ORLEANS and CHAUKca, . .- Can be bad from b rsC,B0 -.asve ana jtf2" Oet 5i3, isat. "fifl SAVAGE & Caw"1 A-r.n-ivTf. 17 August 9tb, 1851- ngton, Ga., Nov. 1st, 185.L - 88 w6vr ;.-v :L

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view