Transcript
Page 1: A ny in · Nnt 1,t f .n'VtT. thttfiuh on urth w'v t.rtl! the Mobile and Ohio Rail Rod, nenr Citrom-lle-,."til miln from Mndilo, i noted gether and put mux a large trough, and occasionally

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a.-,

ArrfY A4c7

II I II I

t- - i j ti li i s i&i . tilny m ini

1,,BY S. It. ADAMS. PAULDING, MISSISSIPPI, AUGUST .'5, 1850. VOLUME XXII. NO. 48.

EXPATBI.tTlOX AND MTl RAL1ZATI0X.sftlijSffllanwtjs.$tnal bbtrlistmtnts.Jtpl bcitismtnts. regular intervals. tie each week ; andvour hogs should b furnished every Sun-

day morning with of salt, ashes.I'otlty.

Not Lost Forever.T WILLI M I.TH1.

coperas. corn nnu wter, all mixed up to- -Clen lora lor Sul.THIS tiliH-r- , xituntod on

Intaltrnt otlre.at th KUy term. l.W. ofWHERKAS. Court of s,ott County.

MiMiippi, th relate of K. C. Hl'NTKKwaa declared insolvent: now, therefore.

Nnt 1,t f .n'VtT. thttfiuh on urth w'v t.rtl!the Mobile and Ohio RailRod, nenr Citrom-lle- , ."til

miln from Mndilo, i noted

gether and put mux a large trough, andoccasionally mix wih this a small portionof sulphur or pulvepied brimstone, as itis commonly knowr This should be also,occasionally mixed Irith salt given to cat-ti- c.Thv lo not KuiflT. hivIfor the and healtlifulne of ill Kitu- -all prraon haying claim again! aU

Who Hein n' r;iiianr on the further nhoro.

rence til such a calamity are now observed,and one of the sheds con tains apurchased for the exclusive use of thofirm in case of fire, while the buildingsare amply supplied w ith

The Steam Itoow. Tins steam engineof the establishment is also in a basementroom, and is of one hundred horse-powe- r.

It drives all the steam machinery of thevarious buildings, with which its appara-tus is connected. Adjoining is the stcani-lioile- r

room.The Plankinc, Shop for Hats. In this

department the fur hat bodies, formed,but still in the rough state, are subjectedto the scalding operation. Six nets ofplanking kettles were in active operationwhen we entered this subterrene and vap-orous abode of skillful and industrious

tat ar herehy notified to file the amc Btion, Iwing oneof the nnt elevated mnuwith th I'roliat Clerk of aaid County, i aloni? the line of the Rail Road. Alan, for Nt hiit fori'vor! cttv rcntU1 tokenduly pmhated and regmtered according to it Mniiir mid fountainn. It embrace Mil Thut memory win m from the fHrurv,law, within twrlv month from th dt' acn-a- . L ured ith new and Mrong pirket. Shall fill m jn'til. though nil my ti re hroken.

There are not many cases on record, butwhat few we find are uniform and clear,line Alberti, a Frenchman, naturalizedhere, went back and was arrested for anoffense against the military law, whichnone except a French subject, could com-mit ; but he was discharged when his na-tional character as an American citizen wasshown.

A Mr. Amther, a nativeof Bavaiia. afterbeing. naturalized in America, and livinghere lor many years, determined upon re-

turning to his native country and resum-ing his original political status. The Ba-

varian Government, so far from ignoringhis naturalization, expressed a doubtwhether he could be there. ButI he most decisive fact which history re-cords is the. course of the British andAmerican Governments during the war of1M2. The Prince Kegent proclaimed itas his determination that every nativeborn subject of the British Crown takenprisoner while serving in the Americanranks should be tried and executed an atraitor to his lawful sovereign.

This was undoubtedly right according

W itli jv'rwe that newr '"hii t''y.of th rirat publiintion of tin notic. rthey will l harrel.

T. M. rETTY. AJm'r.June 1.1. K.O. V",,

OPINION OFTIIF. ATTORN EV CENERAL.

Washington, July 1. ls."!).Attorney-Genera- l Llack has, in compli-

ance with the request of the President ofthe United States, rendered an opinion inthe case of Christian Krnst, a native ofHanover, and who emigrated to this coun-try in lKjl, when he wasataut lOyeatx ofage.

1 his subject was recently made the ba-sis of a communication to our Minister atlierlin, who was instructed to demand therelease of Mr. Krnst.

It appeai-wjlha- t he was naturalized ListFebruary, and in March, atter procuringa regular pasport. he went back to Han-over on a temporary visit. He hail beenin the village w here he was born aboutthree weeks, when he was arrested, car-ried to the nearest military station, forcedinto the Hanoverian army, and there heis at the present time, unable to returnhome to his family and business, but com-pelled, against his wilL to perform mili-tary " -service.

Not l.mt f- - m Inle .iroiiiitl mi "pi mmi;.the new hlu-- h Hiil )lrtm:

Garden Wogk for August.As already men timed in the number

for July, that and) the present monthmust le considere(a tfenml sprinz. Butfew directions can be given for this monthin addition to those reoommi-nde- for Ju-

ly. True, a failure avif occur, and the sea-son prove so unfavorable as to battle allexertions: still, it rnua at least lie triedto raise a fall crop: 'Jierefore all work

The' lijltnl' -- llaillI.Aittt siitniinT ) irU.

Kloo.l w tlt j.ft nutMllllIH'..ll the4dnilnltrulor' hMle. tr.ui'iiiil mi.

Jt'ltSCANT to a d.x roe of the Trobater ThiTf Wll! ! (''H!HIli.'t If) tin' t.iri. 1,t ourt or avne I ounty. ."lie or ju- - meehanii-s- . (About titty or sixty opera-tives of all kinds are employed in this'I ) :.!t. - .It tiHI .') - t)it'aiMi'ppi. made at the May term. l!.?'.

then-of- . the underignl adniinitrlor of OUllllillg.T ilmc f liii I v nrtufii aikI huppv In lono in the spring, sliadd now be repeat- -nr-- ,

tit lr- mi ihee I he olorino Shop. In this place.W It I f, h..t M.'ihni', h it . i.the.tat of IClA!.r Mrl.Al'dlll.IN, ana will, in ,T"st cases. lurm!i usdereaaed, will, on Salur.Uy CTtll of Au- - Willi vegetalea jjjAj thtj remainder ofNot lost forever! thou h:tU Ihi mur nw

which is in the basement, there were, inall, seven large coloring kettles four ofcopper and three of wood. The largest

and the huibting. in (toot repair, nrt-o- t a; tyle of architecture.For ale on yerv moderate term. Ap-

ply to II. L. KKYNol.s.t IV.MJ.il.; .I '.i.

July 17. KV.. 42 'iii

Mplrndld land lor .Sale.vv THE undersigned oilers frt ovon hunilred and fifty-ni- x

iyy5 acre of the lt land in Newtonjtaa a,, or any of th adjoining eountie.

Kin on the head water of Tnllahalacreek, known a the Ilollamnn, CroK andH.trrell land, a rortion of which i in afair atntoof cultivation, with gitodand com-fortable cabin on it. It i prairie andwamp land. Also, other land in Newton

and ,laper cnuntiea, all of which I willell on favorable term as to price and

tim of payment. Addre,J AS. T. PAYNE.

jrAji.jrti7. .Vi.tJ.

May 2.", 3Mm

ii next. ell at pnt lie auction to theigheat bidder, at th lrte reidrnce of TrtMiis'i ererr f .rtime. ni turiery eliiiie; ni-- year.

Besides the sowine of all kinds of tur- -When arcs rrrf.f.r nntle ni tnrieji t lie-- i

th aaid deeeaaed, alwuit five mile Smth Thoil -- li'ill ii Wtlh me, i. nrtvat, wll the time!

NF.WTON COUNTY,n (A ZVnA.it) Wf ml (Wry.

To Daniel Walton, Mary A. Walton. JohnA. Walton. Jiion II. Walton. Wm. R.Wlton, Margaret 8. Walton, F.noebWalton. George W. Walton, and An.drew Walton; ani Martha Wall amiSamuel Wall, hef husband; F.liiahethDunagin anil Oeorga W, iHinsgin,her husband; and all other interestedin the real and personal estate of JOHNWALTON. decea-e-d:

YOC ar hereby cited to appear beforeProbate Court of the county of

Newton, on lha fourth Monday of Augustiteit, to ihow ran why the petition ofWm. Walton. Administrator of th nUIof John Walton. deceased, praying for asale of th real ami personal etat of lhaairl John Walton, deceased. hiul.l not be

gran ted.By order of th Court.

J AS. A. WARE, r- -.

July - .

Jv TAKFN up by FdmondV--

Y Ivan, thirteen nnloa South", 1 'U'T' ""'"AV KII.I.Y.

AJaXL h,"l ,,,r" y" ol'1,(rauHMt i.t h worth ft T dollan. AU,on BAY MlLF.outtw yir old. ajrraml to worth on hundred dollar.

JONATHAN ORUIAM.RtJfr, ynrtn ftnt.

Jur V.JM. t r

exk c urn rfs s o tice.!! mf .tlUOatlppl,SOTt CoriTT.

W.i( Cm,r of M.f (m,y .V iy 7m,.1. . I . 0.

la If R William and VJiiaUth William,and all othora inu-rii- d in th Ktatof K I N K Y WIN ST K A I . dwad :

Y I ar hwr.y ritwt to h and prin-all- y

appMtr lfor tha I"tK Court

is capable ot holding, at one time, fivehundred hats ; the smallest seventy-two- .The hats receive, on an average, from sixto ten dips according to the quality or

jiay The follow ing description of agreat manufacturing establishment at theNorth, will, we doubt not, be read withvery general interest. Those w ho wish tounderstand the mlus opcramh of Hat man-

ufacturing, and read an account of thelargest establishment of the kind in theUnited States, will find this article wortha perusal. Wo visited the factory ofMessrs. Di rvft.. J tores & Co., during ourlate trip to New-Yor- and can vouch forthe correctness of what the writer says:

Hats, Caps and Straw Goods.DCkYKK. JAO.UKS & Co.,

Late Rankin, Diiryoe.V 'o.. Manufactur-ers and Wholesale Dealers.

Warehoi e. "JT Chambers Street, N. Y.Fai torv, Heaver Street, Newark, N. ,1.

When we claim lor this extensive hatmanufacturing establishment the creditof iK'ing undoubtedly the oldest and lar-gest in ihu 1'nite.l States, and probablythe largest in the world, w way tathought to incline somewhat to exaggera-tion, by those who are not familiar withthe statistics of the Hat trade, but thosewho are posted up in this particular willconcede with readiness, that our premisesare true. .

The founder of this immense concernwjts Mr. William Ilnnkin, of Newark, N.J., who commenced the business aboutfifty years ago, in Newark, where he stillresides, though, many years since, he re-

tired from active life ; and where he livesin the retirement of a green old age, anunblemished reputation and a vast for-

tune. Mr. Kankin is. we talieve, aooutseventy-liv- e yejirs of age. The manufac-tory has always licen situated in Newark,where originally all the sales were made,but as the excellence of the manufacturesIs came known, the trade so extended asto induce the proprietor to establish hismain store in Maiden Lane, New York.

In I:!') the tianni of the house was.

changed to William Rankin A Co. Inl4d it was again altered to William Ran-kin. Duryee A Co., and in l"iti to theptcsciit title, Duryee. J initios A Co. Inthe cou' se of time the location ol the sale.in New-Yor- k was rmnoved from MaidenLane to the Washington Stores on Wil

Et of Winrheater, on a credit of aixmonth, th following deerriWd nUve.

to the amnion law Ucotrin. . The Jxin&of England had not given hit assent to

t! I enny. a woman aged alnnit Mshade required ; adip lasting half an hour.yean, anil her infant child ; Hum, a loy.

al'out 1'2 year ; Edmund, a loy, about 'JPrm Ir t.ir f -- If. ll.in'rr.year: Alfred, a hoy, aliout 7 yenin : Ju- -

ta about ft year. Said alave will I wild

A black hat require eight or ten hours ofimmersion. In this dingy laboratory areprepared and bestowed those innumera-ble shades and colors which diversify theappearance of the head coverings of man.The hues are indeed countless in this.

the expatriation of those people. If thePrince Kegent had a right to arrest nat-uralized Englishmen, Scotchmen, or Irish-men in Canada (as the King of Hano-ver, arrested Mr. Ernst in his dominions,)and compel them to fight for him, he cer-tainly had a right to hang them for fight-ing againat him. But Mr. Madison de-nied the whole doctrine and all its conse-quences. He immediately issued a coun

nilis. and the setting out of all kinds ofcabbages, sow also English peas, beets,snap In hiis. i if these latter ones the wax-bea-

a late growing, running or jsile va-

riety cannot be too highly recommended,in fact, it is the very finest of all snap-ln-an- s,

and will, wlieii planted now. j ro-du-

abundantly till frost. Radishes,black winter radish, endive, lettuce,should now le planted. It is also yettime, during the tirst week oj August toplant corn for roasting ears. If you haveno tomato plants, set out cutting of them.English ieasas well as Iri-- h potatoes, whenplanted now for a late crop, should bemulched heavily with litter or saw-diis- t.

Melon and cucumbers should be plantedfor pickles and mango-- . The soiia-sh-

ubject to th lien prearrile, by the tat-ut- e,

and th purrh ivr or purrhaer willb reuirel to give bond or liond for theunt or unia bid, with approred aecuritv.

The Attorney-Gener- says that this isa case which makes it necessary for theGovernment of the United States to in-

terfere promptly and decisively, or ac-

knowledge that we have no power to pro-tect naturalized citizens when they returnto their native country under anv circum-stances whatever. What you will domust of course depend upon the law ofour own country as controlled and molli-fied by the law of nations, the Constitu-tion oi' the United States and the acts ofCongress.

The natural rights of every free personwho owes no debts, and is not guilty ofany crime, to leave the country of hisbirth, and in good faith, and for an hon-est purpose the privilege of throwing oil'

Here also we noticed an invention for

payable a anore.F.IWARD V. PAY IS.

A im'ron M t'jWf tf ). Mr l, ,KUn.

July P. !'.). 4"-t-d.

washing hat bodies, adopted and contrivedby one of the members of the firm. Thisvast hat washing apparatus is worked bysteam, and ordinarily washes, in threeclean waters, hot and cold, in twenty-fiv- e

ter prodamatian declaring that if anynaturalized citizen of the United Statesshould be put to death on the pretensethat he was still a British subiect. twoEnglish prisoners should suffer in JikeTo lind llujera.

IMantallon Tor Malr.FIIIE undenigned offer for wle ixI hundred and twenty acre of the lnt

Fwottom and Trairie in the Countyof Jiteer, on mile and a half wot ofMontroo, on the water of TallahalaCreek. There are one hundred and sixtyor seventy acre of on-- land on thepremise, two double log cabins and otherout-hous- (iin House and l'ns put uplat year lesidin there is as gorxl watra the country ran atlord.

A to price, the term will lie made eaxyfor the purchaser. Addre

maiuiwr by way of retaliation. The Princeminutes, titty ilozen hat omiti, and is capa-ble of achieving much more. The waterused i Passaic. An immense water tankoccupies a large part of the coloring shop.

I AM ollcring fr ale my

Plantation Work for August.Since the first of May the seasons have

been so favorable th.U the crops, Isithcorn and cotton, have well nigh, if notentirely recovered from the backset-

from the ir..ici,.. condition of thesoil, by the rains of the latter winter andearly spring. At the lirl of June the cot-

ton ami corn were considered at least tenday backward, the indication now arcthat this is entirely overcome.

Tns Cutto Chop. Whatever work maybe done in such of your cotton v. maynot le locking its limb across the rows,should be done with w inged sweeps run-

ning Very shallow al'Mii; the middle ofthe rows. There i no doubt of th greatvalue ot such work, when you can getthrough the cotton without mangling it,cieciitlly if it be in a healtlitiil growingstate. Work, however, is

thrown away on cotton in the nioith ofAugust, which, from some untoward i nusehits thrown off largely of its young bolls,and may lx taking on the second growth.

begent s proclamation was never enforcedin a single instance. A principle whicht A 1 lantation. containing over a( in one corner, and in another s the Gas our Government successfnllv resisted iin- -

.iv-- J 'ight mile Smth Wtt of Apparatus, by which the firm manufac lersuch circumstances will scarcely besubmitted to now.ture all the gas required in all their build-

ings, supplying three or four hundredlights.

The application of these principle toof aaid County, on Monday th .Vh day ofEnterpne, immediately on the I'auldingrow I. in the fork of the I ry and Suandu-b- a

Creek, in JaperCounty. Miiippi. Mrplantation is jwpenoraaa Cotton Farm, andinferior to none in th county for growingCorn. There ar about four hundred acre

fptmh ntt, tohow ru. if any you

bugs and have hithertocaused much annoyance in raising a latecrop of these vegetables. For remedy-se-

another pige of this journal.4 iathi-- r all your ripe garden seeds; it is

a mistaken notion that we cannot saveour own garden seeds ; wj can save mostof the kinds, and ought to do it. There-fore such -- per linens as are remarkable fortheir earliness, size, or other valuablelUalities. -- h..uld have been marked and

saved for seisl. If this is is continued for.several years, gn at improvement will benoticed in our vegetables. The onlytrouble in raisinc our own garden l'cas

any naturalized citizen who returns to hisnative country is simpleand easy enough.

his natural allegiance and substitutinganother allegiance in its place thegeneral right, in one word, of expatria-tion, is incontestible. I know- - that thecommon law of England denies it ; thatthe,judicial decisions of that country areopposed to it, and that some of our owncourts, misled by British authority, haveexpressed (though not very decisively)the same opinion. Hut all this is very-fa-

r

from settling the question.The municipal code of Kngland is rr-- t

one the sources from which we derive ir

A. I'. W KK.,ViniMi', Mi.

July 2i t. I.'i. 41- - tran, why tha Anal count of .l.rh and ither apartments in this building are

iriously known as the Shaving Room,Thorna Winatd, triitori of tha lt Singeing Room, Stiffening Room, Furlry- -will and tonUmrnt of aaid (rotator, now tol Ice.rleare.l anil in cultivation. Afout ix

iie is mine. nKe anyooav else, to be ar-rested for debt or a crime, "but he cannotrightfully be punished for the

of a duty which is supposed togrow out of that allegiance which he has

on lU in thi Court, ahould not then anil HEREBY forewarn all persons fromI trading for two certain fKoMISnRYhundred acre ia of th richet quality ofbottom land, ubjeet to tin overflow.Ther are four Log Cabin, with fourhel Ni OTES. made bv me and payable to Wil

liam Street, and irom there, where theyremained for several years, they removedto the new. spacious and costly ware-house. 27 Chamber Street, where theywere the lirst tenants of the building, and

as it is calleil. or that I seriou-l- v

affected I v the rut : plowing cotton inliam Jnme. Jr., dated and duo as fo-llow: One dated May 2"dh. KV.. and due

room, good negro cabin, aome den innumber, and every other neceaaary outbuilding, including a good new liin

aiijureu ana renounced. If he was a de-serter from the army he may be punishedw hen he goes back, because"desertion is acrime. n the other hand, if he waa notactually in the army at the time of his

knowledge of international law. We takeit from natural reason and justice, fromwriters of known wisdom and from thepractice of civilized nations. All these

ing Room, and the Steaming Room ; andin all of those, as indeed throughout themanufactory, we remarked the adroit,prompt and an fail manner in which thethrongs of artisans performed their cho-sen prrts. We have had the pleasure ofvisiting many large manufactories in dif-ferent parts of the country, and we takepleasure in this opportunity for sayingthat we have never met with a body of ar-

tisans less exceptionable than these, indeportment, or apparently taking more

have remained about five veur. ThisJanuary 1st, ltH. for one hundred andfifty dollars the other Note dated samedate and due January 1st. I ."Mil, for one

thra h allow, and a dr madthron arrorlin!y.

WitnM th ll n. A. W. If.Judil of aaul i'mtatr Court, th lt Mon-

day of May. A. t. HV)."v hrn undrr my hand and aral

MtM.j 2.th. IV.VSnT J. I. JllNFA fTrr.

July r. I ViO. 41-- St

Mry Satire.V TA K EN' up hy II. W. Tar- -

llou and I rea. heanlea a never failingSpring, which fumiahea my family, (seven are opposed to the doctrine of perpetualhundred and forty dollars. The considerty in number.) with aa go.nl water aa the allegiance. It is too injurious to the gen

ation for which said ote were givencounty attord. I refer to mr prvent eral interests of mankind to be tolerated.Justice denies that men should either be

this condition d.ws not pay.iTiiRiij Kiiir.s. There may le

sonic folder to gather yet, and as we de-si- ie

our readers to think on this subject,and give it the proper investigation, weshall devote a paragraph to the subject inthis place. We desire to heditinctly itn-i- l.

rstood in this. Com blades stripped ormowed at the proper period for makinghav, furnish us nutritious fool for st k,as hav from any of the cereal- - whatsoever,l'.nt who thinks of gathering fodder utthat j'r.MT n.riW.' When the tassel of

rowing crop to prove th quality of myfani I. I will alo aell mvatock. including

and bemas for eed is the weevil that willeat tnem up bcf.re next spring. Severalremedies have been lecoinlin tided. I al-

ways found Imiling water the mo-- t etlcc-tua- l,

when applied in the following way :

As soon a jsi.sible, after the pecs orbeans are thoroughly dry. shell th. in out,take a ijuart or tnor- - of them in a bucket,and let soiucliody jsMir n ij'iart or moieoflioiliiig water on them, o as to scald tlo iuwhile you at the same time, shake thebucket for about a minute, or until yensee that the kin is beginning to diaw orshrivel: then pour it all into a straineror sieve, to let off the water, and spreadthe (v d onlv thinly on a sheet till it is

pride in their avocation : they thus evinhaving failed, I will not pay them mile.comilled by law.

WILLIAM IJILY.July 2"th. I1'.'.?. 41-'- w

cing the presence of an rxpritilu roris, whichHore, Mule, Cow. Sheep and Hog, -

confined to their native soil or drivenaway from it against their w ill. A manmay be either exiled or imprisoned for an

w Y tn, fiiurtrrn mil Smith

warehouse is one of a splendid block atthe head of the street, presenting an ironcolumned stone front, and constructed inthe most approved modern style of whole-Si-.l- e

warehouses, comprising long, broad,and lofty apartments, richly and comino-ilious'.- y

finished, and furnished with am-

ple light from both ends, and the mostconvenient modern fixtures, etc. Someidea of the magnitude, of the salesroomsmay be had from the fact that they com-

prise four lofts, one hundred and fifty-on- e

feet long by thirty broad, the lower floorb, ing devoted to counting rooms and avast of specimen the othersbeing crowded with piles of cases and

gether with my farming utenil and Hiecorn and fodder which I may raie thia

Faof Ivratur.on It ROW N

ltNY MARK, atout tlvis indispensable to excellence in any art :

and which generally denotes the posses-sion of that excellence.

actual offense against the law of his coun-

try, but being tarn in it is not a crime foryear.Passing into another building, we found,I invite inv one wialnng a superior ( orn which either punishment can be justly in

upon theami i otton farm, to rail anl examine mv flicted. Among writers on public law the

2.1 Reward!KAN A WAY from the un-

dersigned, near Wiiynelioro,Way ne county, Misniippi, ont he nigh t of the 1Mb of August,irist., a bright Mulatto Imiv,named N I AS ; aged about 21

nremiea. Th aituation i remark.ililyhealthy. Addre,

preponderance in weight of authority, aswell as the majority in number, concurwith Cicero, who declares that the right

the stalk and the silk of the ear are infull bloom and the grains swollen fullwith milky fluid, in which the valuableelements of corn are to be deposited andperfected, which aluable elements, at

dry, alter which it can be packed aw. iv.

r ikst r lour, the tur and silk finishingroom, w ith a tine room adjoining, lor theheating of irons red hot, a fiery successionof which are constantly called for by theas constantly replenished stock of goodsto be finished in this manner.

ind will not suffer anv more from theSAMUEL T. WILLIAMSON.Enlrrttruf, .lfu.

emigration. Put merely liable, like othermembers of the State, to be called on fora share of military duty which he did notperform, because he left the country be-fore the time for its performance ramearound, he cannot justly be molested.Any arrest or detention of him on thataccount ought to be regarded as a graveofTcnse to his adopted country.

What acts are necessary to make himpart of the army ? What constitutes thecrime of military desertion T Whether aperson drafted, conscribed or notified, butnot actually serving, may be called a de-

serter, if he fails to report himself? Theseare questions which need not be discusseduntil they arise.

But it may be said that the Governmentof Hanover has a right to make her ownlaws and execute them in her own way.This is strictly true of all laws which areintended to inlorce the obligations andpunish the offenses other own people.

But a law which operates on the inter-ests and rights of other States or peoples,must be made and executed according tothe law of nations. A sovereign whotramples upon the law of the world can-not excuse himself bv pointing to a pro

of expriation is the firmest foundation of(years; 5 feet 9 inches high;July 27, m. S2,tf human freedom, and withother wholesale packages of finished and

unfinished gds, legitimately pertainingleprcdations of tue weevil.

The R fmxii. lather up all fruits andeed them to the hogs, or let pigs andJioats as well as iKiultrv have acces- - to

who utterly denies that the territory ofTyalyable riantatlon for Sale. Lto the trade of Hat. Caps and Straw State is the prison of her people.Goods of every current variety. In practice, no nation on earth walKs or, Tn i undersigned otrer for salo

hi I'lantation, on mile south ofiiiarlandsville, containing Wl ever did walk bv the rule of the common

weighs 1, il pounds; spare built : rather adown-can- t look: eak very intelligently.I think there ia some w hite person con-nected with him ; he is well dressed : carri-ed away with him a hnnd-axe- . I think thathe is traveling toward Columbia, Marioncounty, Mississippi. I will pay the abovereward for hi delivery tome, or confine-ment in any safe jail where I can get him.

In the second loft is the I'.onnet Depart-ment, where a large number of female op

the fallen fruit, and they will devour in-

sects and maggots by the thousands. Ifyou wish to produce sciilling peaches for

yr ol.t, left 1Inn. I root whit, and a largowhit itrrak. upon hi noa and a war onth right thigh, whit pot on th left aidof th hark. Appraund h worth itty.fir dollar.

JONATHAN GRAHAM.Hmtfrr, XfWtan i'rvnfy.

July 57. IV.T h t t m t WiVtl I p p I ,

Out; 0i tt.( W, Jty Trrta, 1 .'$.

Mattrr of th petition of Jam Hank,guardian of th minor hrira of JrXSKIt Y R I . derwurdj

hy th Court that ritationORtERF.l Kahrry Ryrd, Judy and'Jraa Hjrrd. minor, and Jam Jtanktheir guardian to Harriet Unk, JohnJ. RoKertaon. huahand of Mary, now do.

ead, all of Orrn County, and that pulelieation hm mad in th Vaatern Clarion,of 1'aul'ling. MiMiiMippi, to Kliiaheth Pat-U- r

and her huxKaml William Hauler, Ih-e- y

William and her hnahand Henjamin

law. All the countries of Kurope have reacre oi wnicn .ti acres is ricuswamp and prairie slough land

eratives are engaged in the manufactureof the riche-- t and most fashionable verier

ceived Rnd adopted and naturalized thecitizens of one another. Thev have allnew varieties, either bury tin- - stones, or.

which is a till tatter way. plant them atM or liHl acres rollinn prairie, and the ties in this department, and where mav encouraged the immigration of foreignersonce out in rows, where vor want them to be seen a large and valuable supply of allbalanc of the tract level and sandy.There are 1.10 acres in good state of culti into their territories, and many ot themgrow ; they will be sure to make their ap-s-- a

ranee by next spring. lave aided the immigration of their ownthe most approved Palis. London, andNew-Yoi- stvles, together with a choice

this time. nWiund merely in the stalk andblades; if, tln n. your fodder be strippedat this time, you have very superior hay(fodder.) but your corn - light and

indeed ruined. We cultivatecorn for the grain, it being the most val-

uable grain the planter can grow. Wemust therefore allow the blades to remainon the stalk till the grain in the ear is

perfected, at which period the bladehave parted with all the valuable elementsthey once possessed, and then, indeed." your t.xbl.-- r is trashy and of little val-

ue!" Much better to appropriate a fewacres giving it the proper land very little)attention, whereon our nativu crab grass,without the trouble or expense of seed-

ing, w ill produce from four to six tons,liiiowcl at the right tune mi l well suvciliof the very best of hay, and allow yourblade to remain on your corn stalks towrfiM-- t the train : Ix catise it is a well as- -

people. I he German Mates have conced1 HE t LOU EX liARHtV. I, lit little IS to ortnient of umbrellas, parasols, trim

A. TA a l.OK.VTayntihnrn, Autf. 21. IMS. 45-t- f

Sea Island Cotton Land.FOR SALE by the underign-J- j

Jed. in Hancock County. Miss.,

ed the existence ot the right by makingbe done here but keei.ing it clear ofming-- , Ac. laws to regulate its exercise, andweeds, tying up the plants, gathering Intere.-te- d 111 obtaining an exact knowl

vation good Dwelling and out-hou- awell of water in the yard, and a very goodorchard on th place. I will also add tothi. if wanted. l' acre of black prairie,all in a good state of cultivation, or 4"0acre of rich prairie and swamp sloughland, acre of which are in a highstate of cultivation, and nearly all frusb.

the Spainish American States have alwavseed ot annuals, l'ruue the ever-libs- , til edge ol the noiln.! niHranai of the hat trade recognized it. Kngland, by a recent stating rises severely and give them a topCJtaiiwncar, or wlioming the lamls ot in all its blanches, we not long since paidColonels t luiborne and Aiulrew lessjng or some li.iuid manure; bv h- -- JmJw'kMtll,

visit to the factory ot Messrs. Hurveeute (7 and h Vic.,) has established a per-manent system of naturalization in theyerv teeth of her common law rule.ing this you will have them to bloom fine

Second Floor. This floor is exclusivelyappropriated for the finishing, and in thisand the other rooms in the building,about sixty workmen are at present en-

gaged.Third Floor. The operation of silk

body ironing is entirely carried on in thisshop, the heated irons furnished from theflue below.

Fin rth Floor. The w hole of the loft issot a part for the pat-kin- and storing ofgoods in .

Crossing over to the middle brick buil-

ding, which is five stories high, we took acursory glance of each section, everywherefinding something novel and interesting,and everywhere becoming impressed withthe number and intricacy of the detailsof the business, and the magnitude of itsamount.

First Floor. Here are two spaciouswool hat finishing rooms, a wool hat dry-ing room, and the machine shop, where isrepaired and built the machinery of thewhole concern.

Second Floor. The curling room forgiving every requisite bend to the hatbrims, is located here: also the inspectingand packing room, the silk cutting room,and a variety of minor store rooms.

Third Floor. Upon this floor there arethree fine trimming rooms, where onehundred and fifty girls are at present en

.Iiique A-- Co., in Newark, and passedTwit. of A U Kama, and F.llnn Loyd an4 IMOO At rfa of Hrn lulnnd otton ly tmtd nrresled frost.Ha Ipafc nam est plaest bss a sjusxt frwns! through nearly every npiirtliieilt in all tl Krnnee has done the same, and besidesher huahand lavid Loyd. of th Stat of inn House, with other nmliling suitable that has declared in the Code Napoleonbuildings it comprises : anil we cm giveno better idea ot the amount and variety (Art. 17) that the equality of a FrenchTi a, and all other peraoni intereated in

aaid Land i

We coj y from the New-Yor- k Ledgera most tuneful carol," entitled

for a plantation. I will aell the threetract together, if wanted, and say thatout of the wltole lot of 92t ai rea, there is

ol the inexhaustible supply ot goods atYou ar hereby notifird to l and pr-- their warehouse in Chambers Street, thanCotton." by the prince of American bal

man will lie lost by naturalization in a

foreign country. There is no Govern-ment in Europe or America which practi- -

vision in his own municipal code. Themunicipal code of each country is theoffspring of its own sovereign's will, andpublic law must be paramount to locallaw in every question where local laws arein conflict. If Hanover would make itlegislative decree forbidding her peopleto emigrate or expatriate themselves ujionpain of death, that would take away theright of expatriation, and any attempt toexecutesuch a law--

upon one who has al-

ready became an American citizen wouldind on. dit to be met by very prompt re-clamation.

11 mover probably has some munici palregulation of berown by which the right ofexpatriation is denied i those of h..-- peo-ple who fail to comply with certain con-ditions. Assuming that such a reL'ula-- ,:, .n..i., 1

The plantation of t'ola. Clailmrne andJackson are now in a full state of cultiva-tion, and have been found to produce wellfor the last five year. These gentlemen,who may lie addressed at Shieldloro',Hancock County, Mis., are referred tofor the character of the land, and itadaptability to the production of this fa

by relating what we saw at the factory.

eertained fact, that whatever may be theper centum of value po-ses- by the fod-

der gathered from the corn, though it bebut 1 per cent., that is lost to the grain.thir is a fine crass country, both in cli

onally appear hefor th Hon. th l'ro-h-at

Court of irn County, next to hholden at tha Court Hon therof in the

not more than fifty acre but what willpay well to cultivate. For further parti-cular refer to myself or R. E. Harper, at

fins establishment is situated on Ik--a cllv denies the right. Here in thever Street, in Newark, and comprise half United States the thought of giving it up

cannot be entertained for a moment.this place.town of Leaketvill, on th narond Mon a dozen large brick buildings, with manvday of Ortoher neit, then and ther to minor ones, the whole covering an area of L'ion that principle this country was pop

J A K K r. 1 ' WATTS.Grlun.tmtU, Mm., July P. 1.W. f

Ijiad for Kale.about three-fourth- s of an acre ot ground ulated. e owe to it out existence as ahow rati why aaid I.and phnuld not h

old, tn-w- it : th Yjmt frartional of frac

mate and soil, and any argument in favorof raising and saving hay would seem tota superfluous. Hut our planters arc ac-

customed to stripping fodder, they havecultivated the corn and grown the blades.

mous cotton. 1 he owner of the tract, w .

S. Hoyett. may be addressed at Alto, I... Cherokee County, Texas ; or address

Iin- - tirm are the largest real estate owntional Kertton 2i, in T. 5. N of R. 6 W ei's in the citv 01 .Newark, inev give

nation, hver since our independence wehave upheld and maintained it by everyform of words and acts. We have con

I X )V offer fir sale. 4 W acre ofAlso th Wt part of fractional Sartion I, employment, in the various departmentsLA.M). the tract on which I now and to allow them to dry up on the stalks.I their mammoth establishment, to about stantly promised full and complete protecreside, 12 mile Smth of Dei-atu-

six liunibeil male unit artisans in am, assuming alsothat it was violated by Mr. Ernst when he

they say, " looks like a waste. ell itmay, under such circumstances, lis.k like

D. BARTON,(tronrlr, Ala.

May 1 1. 1 S ",9. :2-- tf

, I ,M ofTering for sale, on reas- -

tion to all persons w ho should come hereand seek it by renouncing their natural

lad writers. General Morris has a widecircle of friends and admireis at the.Smth. and this last inspiration of his musewill be particularly acceptable to them.Melodious voices will it breath" tomany a Southern home. vVe cordiallyreciprocate the sentiments of the Ledgerwhen it says that General Mourns is con-

fessedly liest oiig-writ- of hi timea most rare and honorable distinction,

for as yet the world has produced but few

g.iod song-writer- To be able to write agood song, one that will live and that the

toiY thy, a man must possess thoserare power which enable him to pourforth his emotions in melodious verse,musical as the warbling of birds. In allthis General Morris excels. He hits that

and we are assured that theirs U theonly gaged in the delicate finishing depart came away, the question will then arisein Newton County. Thi tract i one mileSmth of the Southern Rail Koad, and cm-bra-

the best of pine, oak, hickory, and

in T. 4 .. of K. Weat.A tru copy from th minute,

WM. C. IKNMARK. Clnk.July 2 ir.'.. 41-- T.t

T hilinri 'orilaalaalppl.Joytj Curiyy.

a waste, and at the same tune not is- - so.illegiance and transfering their fealty toments ol lining, banding, tipping and bind-

ing hats.reullv. Though It mav not look like a place in the country where the nianufac-tur-e

of hats irith the fn jittnin.j ; thatis where the fur is first taken from thewaste." tacmie we do not see the injuryonable terms, MiO Ari ra of us. w e stand piengeu to 11 in tne nice

of the whole world. Upon the faith ofroiRTii 1 1.00R. Here is a spacious strawreeil brake laivt. fifty acres of w hich is un-

der fence, and forty in cultivation, goodcabins, water and orchard. The improve

lone the grain by stripping oil" the bladesuati' iJind, 7 mile north of Paul- - skins of the animals the beaver: the nua Frakut (Smrl . (y, Jmly Trrm, from tin- - stalk, ere it tthe grain I he ripe.ding, near the old Missionaryhat room, at certain seasons crowded withvarious descriptions of straw hat and capgoods; a cap room, and a

that pledge, millions of persons havestaked their most important interests. Ifwe repudiate it now, or spare one atom of

1 W. it is nevertheless, as the most carefullyments are all new. All th stock, withthe growing crop of corn, if desired.

tria (an amphibious. South American ani-mal, closely resembling the beaver, andthe fur of which is finer, and next in

whether the unlawfulness of his emigra-tion makes his act of naturalization voidas against the King of Hanover. I an-swer no ; certainly not. He is an Ameri-can citizen by our law. If he violatedthe law of Hanover which forbade himto transfer his allegiance to us. then thelaws of the two countries are in conflict,and the law- - of nations steps in to decidethe question upon principles and rules ofits own.

conducted experiment have proved. Iie- - A.room, in which are used four printing ma the power which may tie necessary to reAlso, 2 f acre of Willi land, eight mile

To Thilin William and Meldreil Williamhi wit, and other pron intretl inth tat of ASA WALTKR.S, d.H-eaa- -

yond doubt, a iiiucli greater waste than chines of various sorts. deem it, we shall be guilty of perfidy so

SiMimn. The land comprise prairie, san-

dy and tattom land, not subject to over-flow. There are comfortable buildimr onthe place, and about Ll' acres open land,nearly all fresh. It is a healthy location,well watered by springs, and a fine well

have been the drying up ol the Fifth Floor. Here is an immense woolmerit to that of the beaver and ea otter) ;

the sea otter ; sheep, from all parts of theworld Spain. Saxony, South America.

south of Iecatur, on l'ottochitto Creek,one mile from said Rail Road. This tractembrace HO ai res of the U-s- t of bottom

d blades. gross that no American can witness it with-out a feeling of intolerable shame.l'REPAR AVION-

- EoR filTTON I'll KINIi. hen dyeing room, lined with racks from floorto ceiling, laden with the soft, warm, and"XTOl ar herehy riteil to h and apar Cape of Good Hope, Australia, etc., and Expatriation includes not only emigraland, together with pine, oak and hickory1 befor th rrohat tiu-- t of aaid coun vou have gotten through with the work indescribable gilt winch enables its jsi- -of water in the yard. For further partic light material; and at hand are two vast By the public law of the t,lan.t.ty, at th nit term thereof, toh holden if vour fodder, and vou have ilone all torulars, apply to the undersigned on the sessor to throw a halo of taauty and water tanks, provided in case of fire onFor term, apply to me on the aboveat th Courthouae of aaid county, on the your cotton that work in it can accomthis tliwr.splendor around the most common, every -premise. K. F HAND.

June 8. l..V. XVtfarond Monday of September next, to plish, it will lie necessary to turn your at

tion out of one 8 natural country, butnaturalization in the country adopted as afurture residence. When we prove theright of a man to expatriate himself, weestablish the lawful authority of thecoun-tr- y

in which he settles to naturalize him.

premises, or R. Stonb, Esq.. near tny resi-dence. A. R. WOOPHAM.

the undoubted right to naturalize a for-eigner, whether his natural sovereign con-sented to Ins emigration or not. In mvopinion the Hanoverian Government can

The next and last of the building whichlay things."tention to the preparation for pickinghow ran, if any you run, whj th final

account of laham and It. 1. Waller, ex- - we entered for inspection, was the frontcotton such as making your building, a five-stor- y brick structure likeAVw.a Co.. July 27. 1;C9. 42-3-

Tor sale at Laatlcutor of tha laat will and teatament of sacks, and cleaning out the pin house lurWins thi Latum Cass In. Runce

and Suer's farms adjoined each other. Sierhad an unruly sheep which was in the

the last.aid tmtator. now on lit in thia Court,not justiiy tne arrest of Mr. Ernst byshowing that he emigrated contrary to thelaws of that country, unless it can'also beTHAT tnot desirable and First Floor. This comprises the genhould not then and ther h allow! and

if the Government pleases. hat, then,is naturalization? '1'li.erc is no disputeabout the meaning of it. The derivationof the word nlone makes it plain. All

habit of getting into r.itnee's field. lUincethe reception of the new cotton. That

you mav have nice and clean cotton, class-

ing "giod fair." you must give carefuland prompt attention to the-- e preliniina- -

beautiful RESIDENCE and fineIf... eral packing room of the whole factory,a He,-r- ma.1.1 awlingly. expostulated with Suer several tunes, and and from hence continually pour a HoodWitneaa, th Hon. Wm. ILvnI, Judg FARM ground attached, situa-ted on the Mobile and Ohio

proven tnai me original right of expa-triation depends on the consent of thenatural sovereign. This last proposition Iam sure no man can establish.

of packages destined for the warehouse inthen told him if he did not keep his sheepat home, he would fix him so he wouldn'tof aaid Pro Kale t'onrt, th 2nd Monday of

Railroad, one hundred mile from Mobile, .New 1 ork, and ultimately for all parts otJuly. A. P. l.vj. jump any more fenee. Rut Hunce oon

atter being, by chemical and other means,removed Irom the skins, is put throughall the various processes which eventuatein the production of multifarious cover-

ings for the fastidious head of man.Passing up the yard, from lleaver Street,

we entered a five story brick building,throughout which we observed numerousgroups of men and tays, busily plyingtheir trade amid clouds of vamr and dust,and the deafening whirl and racket andjar of various machinery.

First Floor. This was the formingroom for hat, and contained two furforming machines, driven by the l'HIhorse-powe- r steam engine, which drivesall the machinery of the Factory, nnd at-

tended by some ten men and boys.Second Floor. This is called the wool

department, and in it are engaged atauteighteen men. Large pile of wool hatbullies, and no less than five wool form-

ing machines were the characteristic ofthis room.

Thirii Floor. Three fur blowing ma

and midway between the station of Shu- - this country and tor distant foreign parts

rn-s- . If any ot our reieiers intenu (annwe hope many of them do.) to coni telor the A labs 111 State Agricultural Socie-

ty's tine plate, as ollcred for the bet lotsof cotton exhibited on the Fair grounds

(inen under my hand andI E4I1"1 of ofTn- -, July th lth. found the sheep back again ; so he caught

him, and with a knife sevcri! the cuticlebutaand leSoto, fmir mile from each. Second r i.oor. tutting and storing The Horrors of Solff.rinvi n 1 irknown a Beard's Store, and seen by thou rooms with two roomy and commodious

lexicographers and all jurists define it oneway. In its popular etymological and law-

ful sense it signifies the act of adopting aforeigner and clothing him with all theprivileges of a native citizen or subject.

There can lie no doubt that naturaliza-tion does, pro farto, place the native andadopted citizen in precisely the same re-lations with the Government under whichthey live, except so far as the express and

or skin just tayond the gsinbriel joint,and between the main cord and tane, thensand ing on the ear, are now offered

S A. I. H' i.I. M. SHOWS, Clerk.

July CO, 150. ' 4Utcounting offices embrace the whole of this

in Hrap, .' Th Quirk and the head all hud-dled TyetherTwrhing Story of two Bs.1 he plain of Guidizznio is really horrible

section.thrust the other hind leg through thethis f.ill. they mav find it neccrsary togive attention to the,- - preparatory meas-

ures. We should commence the pickingas soon as the cotton ojs'ii it is to the

KINO COTTON.

st dioiiii r. ioirm.I

OH f'nttnn i km. In shsW tli hi In. k. s.' i' an-- white!

He si, ine sln'.nc hiiis--s k.- s -- tsr :

AikI Ins i iti,. ! nirht,Hi.v...f riirbt.

And In - thi- - si'i;rr if njrhl '

II.iM I the kiriir. n. cur.-- .

Nn iiie.-ii- . iin le-i-r lo Ins tlipilie.No 'us tii'iinplis i sti.irc

Il- - rill.. Ins di'iiuniHii- - .il'ilii',lt--

He rules Ins li.m;ni"lis al'Hif '

III.oi l ..C...I-- . ihc nvirv i l l Is'v

I. k Slll'ik- - I'li'lll ti- - - in IliS Til 'lltll.lbs vimi" jiti'l. hw.it tn tiiir ".Al'lii'lii-- . in tli s'urni s;ain south.

B"). thr S"iitli.At li"tne. .11 the m.irin siiimj Smith!

IV.HH 'ittfin will pl. s.anilv re L'n

W i I'llii-- kmi: pmftill fill.Ami ari't pver rtMiinn

1 t nuiTiiir.-- of all.

l:..ys i.fall.Hip ni:l,!is iii.iiwri-- of ill

V.

for sale, in land comprise 11 acre onth east, and 70 acre on the wet side ofsaid lUilroad 2.VI acre in all, the main

Third Floor. The apartments associaand then put the sheep backA4nalaltr)lr'a Halo.over the fence, which went off hobbling ted on this loft are a trimming room for

wool hats, and a smaller one for silks.XY ordr of th froUt Court of Smith portion of which ia black sandy, hammock interest of ;lie planter in many resieets.on three leg. iiositive law of the country lias made aJ) County, at th .luly term thereof. oil. and th other part i reed-brsk- aa t 'iimnsT M ni r. I hi opportunity, be

to look upon. Even so late as yesterdaythe dead were not all buried. Thev wereto be seen in groups of twenty and thirty,huddled together in one spot, where ashell had exploited or the Chasseurs d'Af-nqu- e

had passed. All still maintained the

broadcloths, and other requisite fiieiHi'.), I will ell befor th door of thCourt Hou In WilliamaUurg. (Vivington

Suicrsoon afteruiscovered the sad plighthi sheep wa in, and he knew very wellwho was the cause of it, but he concluded

goods used in making caps, trimmings,goo. I as can be found anywhere, and couldbe put in cultivation at very little ex

tween the working or "laying by' ot thecrop and the picking season., affords a fa

distinction in favor of one or the other.In some countries immigration has beenso encouraged by giving to adopted citibindings, tips, etc.

County, on th Lith day of Anguat next, vorable tune tor making manure. ,etto take things coolly, and await ome suita roi RTii - loor. 11ns is used solely as a zens certain immunities and privileges(on Saturday,) on a credit of twelvpense. There ar H5 acre cleared and incultivation, which produce cotton, cornand potatoes in quantities e)ual to any

attitude in which death had struck themdown.ble optrfwtunitv to revenge himself. chines nre here kept in operation for the wholesale store room for full packages ofmonth, to th hight bidder, th follow

Presently. Kum-e'- s old sow broke into Here was one with uplifted arm to ward

the litter of our stock lots ta carefullygathered together in pens under shelter,and mixed in with lime, when to be hadcheap, and convenient, or marl, or swamp

purpose ol separating the hairs (which nnisiieu goons.ing rlM-nh- IJin l. vii- - Th F h of th Siier's field, when he caught her, and withnot enjoyed by natives. In most, how-

ever, political favors have gone the otherway. Here, none but a native can bePresident. In some of our Slates foreign

laml in thi portion of the Mate. 1 heaid tract of land i well timbered with oil" the blow which had sni!t onen hisare stiff and worthless) from the fur. Fiftij Floor. Immense piles of hugeE. See. i4, and th S. W. ) of 8. E. and a shurp knife cut her mouth almost from About two ounces of hair is separated bales of wool encumbering this apartmentth S. f.. I of H. W. I Sec. 11. an.l th N CeUr. Cypreea and Oak. The farm is a muck, or anv vegetable matter.car to car. and turneil her PacK. from every pound of fur

skull, and splashed his brains far and near.Close by was another, with his hand uponhis breast shivered and rent bv the grape.ii . 1 . , . .

favonte one with all who have seen it. andK. I of N. F. I Se T. 9, N K. H W. born citizens are ineligible to the office ofdenote it to be the great wool storing rxmilying waste'' in low. damp place-- , about I'iu rtii Floor. This comprises theand tha S. W. I of N. W. I. Sn. P. T. 0,When Runce discovered this, he went

to Siier's in great rage, and demanded 01 tne factory.the plantation. In this way a large quanits value and advantages are not vet onehalf developed, th owner being limited wool picking room, and contains two inN., R. l, Wontainin( .120 acre, lying

Governor, and in one ot them they can-not even vote for two years after they arenaturalized. But if these restrictions had

From a perusal of what we have thutity of valuable compost manure may taof him what he did that for. Suer genioiis machines for that purpose, andto oe smiling, aa it in

mockery of the grim warrior's approach.Some were lying upon their backs, within mean to clear and bring Into cultiva iienneit ami nan 111 reai lines tor yourIn Covington County, Mi. Said Lands

art iituated within aom (lv or ix mil said," Upon my word neightar Uunce, I noted down, the reader may gather a goodconception of the giant trade carried onid o another for dressing the wool. Ation more of it at thin time. An excellent

Tli-- 'i hiT.- i tn .11 ( oti .11. !!. kmi:!IP- - true suii'-t- s sr

We II an-- l ll'l'intl anil we'llA jelly e. 1. h- -.

Itvs. is hr.Aji.lly ol.lMl. 1. h.-- '

A Iivori rn Win a Servant in hfrIIisiiand's Faahit A gentleman living

next crop. I he lot', thus cleaned off not expressly made by positive enact-ment, thev certainly would not have exisdid not do anv such thing. 1 "t ' w rear apartment on tiiis floor is termed the

by the house of urvee, .laoues it Co,should ta filled in with pine straw andmill-sea- t on the land, and a good (reamof water.

of th rwrrm,! hn of th tiulf ant ShipI. land Railroad AW Hmk j-- II.X

iiu-e- s mrnea towards heaven, and prayerstill seeming to linger upon their lips.poiin nig room, where a pouncing ma ted.Oak, and other leaves from the forest. Chamber street. Their operations, natulf fmtr . ovurti.w .St'tnliirIn regard to the protection of our citiUpon these lots, thus littered, jt is imiorim L'Hcm iitti improvement on

aid lnd. though not much of th tract inchine serves the purpose of powdering,and w here a large beaver machine is cmployed in dressing the beaver fur.

zens in their right at home and abroad, westtaTPcrson wishing to purchase can

addre, or call tion th undersigned atIe.Soto, (lark County, Mis.

MARcTS F. BEARD.

OtRiaLHl. The Scotch are claiming have no law which divides them into classcultivation.

rally are not so unrestrained as usual, ow-

ing to the yet unrostored fullness of thetides of trade : but their staunch and longrenowned establishment is still steadilyconducted upon a plan of great magnitude,

tant. to niiike 7'O-- r muinut, that you haveyour stock cnned every night, and wellled. Mny of our friends tell us, from

Garibaldi as a descendant of old Scotland

runner on. mere was a Hungarian, whohad thrust his clothes into a ghastly woundnear the heart. At hia left was a Tyrolese,with the unused witridge between histeeth. To the right, a Croat had his headcut off" by a ball, and the head was bv his. :t- - 1 , , . -

irm ri.isiR. In this Put. which is re es. or makes any dill'crence w hatever beX m4 rtT.l mmfy will b reiiiirelfor th rurrhaa money.

in this city, and well-to-do- . married 11 boutten year' ago. and alter living with hiswife "some five years, he concluded to get

of the iinliappiiiessa divorce, on accountof their domestic relations. The wife as-

sented, and he applied to the Courts and

served for drying wool, are some tweiuybut their cluini will hardly weigh, wethink, against that ol the 'Jones'," asset tween them. A native and a naturalizedtime to time, that the compost they make

larger inn ol black and white wool, unAny pron wishing to niak personal American mav, therefore, go forth withwitji unabated credit, and still sustainsin tins way is not so good a they e.vpeeforth in the retersburg. (Va.) Kxpress. dergoing tin- - drying process, and also Biue, uu ins uorrioie eves, c arina nnrleuual security over every sea and throunhtamination of the I .amis. Iiefor th ted it to ta; we have, however, found.It av ; leering, as it seemed, at the d ismemberArl

rOR R4I.K ALSO.My tendency, lately, has been

, dire, ted toward the SouthernJ Railroad, in Newton County,

day of tale, by railing on m. I will ac every land under heaven, including theWiH successful. A year passen. aim neupon inouiry in all such cases, that thThis heroic man, who is now carryingthat undoubting confidence in the mindsof the monetary and commercial commu-nity, which w as early acquired by thehon-ore- d

founder of their house, and whichbody.country in which the latter was bornconcluded to venture om-- more in thetock were penned on the lots, but notcompany them, and how said lnd.

J. f. W. M'CKWORTII. terror to toe hearts ot the Austrian, is Two young lads of certainlyEither of them may be taken up under aAim rut At Eftl at E. . Irlnrrtk, drr'J. ssjid to ta a descendant of Mr. John John-

son Jones, who died at hi residence infed, or but scantily. None but fed Hiii-ma- ls

make good manure, and those that debt contracted, or a crime commited bvby their manufactures and their bargains.

pressing machine foe the compact pack-ing of bivlies of hats. The black-dye- d

American wool is for a coarse kind of felthats.

In a shed littaehed to the ground floorof the building, is the g

room, w here a hardening machine is usedfor pounding the bodies, which are previ

KaUigh. .Smith Co., July 2 K'.'J. 41-- St

than sixteen, were lying in each other'sarms. Death had surprised them in thatattitude ; or, perhaps, feeling themselves

himself : but both are absolutely free fromtlicy have won and enioved themselves.are fed on pens well littered, pay for theirI'.iaii'iiorn. aoout tne yeur tin,. 111 a

matrimonial market, and see it he couldnot find one who would make hi homehappier than the first. In this he was

successful, and a short time after his di-

vorced wife applied to him lor work inhis 'amilv in the capacity of a servant

fact well attested bv documents now in leed, in good, rich, compost manure. all political obligations to every countrybut their own. They arc both of themr.fritri' otlre. aoout to die, thev had clunir together in .The Tirnip Crop. Let nothing deterpossession of an aged citizen, that a taau- - Melted to I)fath. .Tames IVivle, a American citizens, and their exclusive al"ITTHF.BF.AS Utter Testamentary of last embrace, and had fallen thus never to

rise again. Upon the body of a Bohemiyou from the necessary preparation of atiful young daughter of tin Mrs. Jones, blacksmith by trade, died in Chicago lastIt th last will and testament of API- -good large crop ot this valuable stock legiance is due to the Government of the

United States. One of them never didrriday week, under the following circumJ A II 0 AN PY. deoeaaed. wer grantel to vegetable. If you have your land deeply-- an officer we noticed a dog, waiting ap-

parently for his master to get up!W'e had not the heart In call off theth undersigned at th last July term of stances: He was anextreniely athletic per-

son in appearance, and was considered byowe fealty elsewhere, and the otherplowed and highly fertilized with oneat the time of his naturalization solemnly

eiopea irom 1 ctersnurg snout the year17.jJ. with an Italian tight-rop- e dancerGaribaldi, who having amassed an immensefortune in this country returned to hisdear native Italy, where a large family andunalloyed felicity blessed the union be

thousand bushels of good compost ma

ously placed in steam boxes, and steameilthrough. Adjoining is a wool-washin- g

room, w here are cleansed piles of wool asit is taken from the sheep. Here also wenoticed a steam pump and well for sup-plying this building with water.

(in passing, through several of the out-

buildings, we noticed the "plank shop"for wool hats, a laboratory in which were

th I'robat Court of Wayn ( onnty. Sutof Mississippi : now all pentona havingclaim againt th tat of aaid decedent

his fellow workmen as possessing a re-

markable degree of strength and bodilyand rightfully, in pursuance of public law

- . 1 . .1nure per acre, or three to five hundrediMHinds (if pood guano, you should sow anil municipal regulation, inrew on, re-

nounced and abjured forever all alleciancear hereby required to exhibit th tame, tween himself and hi taautiful young your Kut.i ragas initneiiiateiv. ine nr vigor. Cm 1 hursday he worked in theshop as usual until six o'clock, when hewent to supper in as good health as usual. to every foreign Prince, potentate, Stateand hav them rgisterl, in th manner. wanuioru nrnu. .ilr. Oarilialdi corres week in August. Listen to no inie tory

s' where I own a tract of !Xl re

Jof good bottom and hill land,wiii. u ia theonly inducement that promptsme to offer the above described residenceand farm land for sale. I offer for sale,also, a portion of my 9i3 acre tract in New-

ton, situated lit mile northwest of Enter-prise, and at ou t 3 miles weat of MeridianJunction in Lauderdale County. A Iepotia about to b esUhluhed on this tract.This is excellent land.

The Chiekasahay I'lantation of bottomand upland, can tie bought, (lately ta-lon gin g to Levi Stimrull, Sr., deceased.) atreasonable term, which comprises aboutC'O acre, joining the tirst described resi-dence and plantation. Thi plantation isurrounded by every advantage.

Lands are selling in the neighborhoodat and from $12 to $J) per acre. The ti-

tle to the lands that I offer for sale areperfectly good. The time is not far dis-tant when thia tract of land will bring $40to $) per acre. This plantation has asplendid outlet, fine river range, andgood water.

Ttxii. Tha payment required will beone half cash, and the other half on time,

faithful animal by a word or gesture, forwe felt sure that God would reward thedevotion of this poor dumb creature, so

touchingly shown amidst the carnagewhich man had waged against his fellowman.

On every side it was the same. Death,in his most horrible and ghastly form,

glared at us, no matter where we gazed.

girl. The situation was given her. andshe now does the work, in the house ofwhich she was once mistress, and tahnldthe endearments lavished uiKin another,which were once bestowed upon her.

Thehusband daily takeshis evening ridewith his second wile, while the first takescare of the children during their absence.How the husband can endure to see hisformer wife thus humiliated, and the wifetaar up under it. is to us an enigma.( Tnnf- -

WVi.l ai lMckt is the Morninu. Suchwas the exclamation of a dying child, saysthe Newark M.r.-rt- , as the red rays ofthe sunset streann-- 011 him through the

and within th tim precrild by law, or and sovereignty whatever, and speciallyponded with her father until the day of Afier supper he complained ot extremeseven large kettles, where a number ofthat you can't grow this tine vegatablc tothe highest tierfection here. Twenty-liv- e to that sovereignty whose subject he hadthe latter s death ; and letter subsequent previously been. II this did not work a dis

they will b foryr liarred.JOHN L. HANDY.ART1ICR fiANDY,

bum nil bushel may be grown on anheat, and contincdtocomplain until twelveo'clock, when he went to bed. At threeo'clock in the morning his room-mat- e

iv sent over hy the children of Mrs. u..workmen were engaged at that taanch ofthe business. Here were also three pa-tent sizing machines, and one unpatent

solution oi every tiolitical tie which boundacre easily, and sustaining theiiiclvleave but little doubt of the fact that thesound ami good through our hardest win awoke and found him breathing his last. him to his native country, then our natur-

alization laws area bitter moekerv iuwarrior Garibaldi, now in Italy, is a direct ed, besides a blocking kettle, etcJuly 20th. !.'.!. 4l-o- w descendant of the Jones family, so well ters, remain firm and tree from pith or

Adjacent is the wool hat drying room. the oath w e administer to foreigners is aand favorably known in Rlandford during sjwinginess. to the spring. our commonoccupied by long rows of hat-rack- where

A post mortem examination revealed nounusual appearance of the body, except aremarkable and unsual quantity of adiposematter. By overwork and the heat of

for Hal. tieiusiun ami a snare,ti 1 - 1. 1white turnips slioul.l PC tun in ny ine 'mithe first half of the past century. hundreds of hats were undergoing theinst.. though thev may ilo very well later ue ueeii aim are now personsof a very high reputation who hold that adrying process, which is performed bybut thev are more certain to do well sowed the dav he was literally mrlttd down. TheTniCoTiTCTiojAi.Coivr.Tioi or Kax

a. The bill of rifht retxwted by a com gradual heat, the carpenters shop isclose at hand, as also the blacksmith's naturalized citizen ought to be protected. - 1.coroner's jury found this to be the cause ofat that time. If you put your turnip on

old land, (the best decidedly, when well

1VT. auUeriber wishing to concentraterapital in th Commiion busi-nea- a,

offers for ! a Urge tract of LA N D,in Jaapr County, Miaa., ronUining 2OC0acr. and lying on IjuaUlah and Talla-hala Crks Th Pne will b low to apurchaser of th whole or It n..M k

his death.mittee of thi body, numtars twenty-thre- e

shop and the stables, where are stalleinine or ten horses belonging to theestalsections, and according to the ew 1 ork

Time, is in substance as follows: lishuient, used for draw ing loads of goodsprepared.) plow well, sub soil deejily, midmanure highly, broadcasting your manure.The quantity of seed necessary for anacre, is one pint many per-on- s put more

or property in or near Mobile, or negroes. from the factory to the warehouse 111 theIt sets out with the declaration that nilrw .lilies I newer is inherent in the people ; city, and tor conveying supplies of coal toill be taken for the remainder.

The stock of cattle and hoe about 50 prohibits slavery in the Slate ; proclaims

Opposition State im GtOR- -

lt The Opposition in Georgia held aState Convention at Macon last week. Itadopted on its platform a resolution in fa-

vor ofpreserving the Union : a rather vaguedeclaration in favor of Congressional in-

tervention to protect slavery in the Terri-tories, and resolutions denouncing the al-

leged extravagance of the present Admin-istration and its recommendation to Con-gress last session to confer upon it powersto use the Army and N'avy for certainpurposes. Resolutions both "in favor ofmd against the African SlaveTrade were presented ; but they wereboth laid on the table. The nominationof a candidate for Governor was post-poned, and the Convention adjournedwith the recommendation of a Mass Con-- 'vention to be held at Atlanta on the sec-- '

ond Wednesday in August.

the coal yard from the citv

uy wie vtovernment ot his adopted coun-try everywhere except in the country oihis birth ; but if he goes there, or is

caughtwithin the powcrof his native sov-

ereign, his act of naturalization mav be

treated as a mere nullitv. and he will im-

mediately the rights ot ancease to haveAmerican citizen. This cannot be true.

forest upon (andIt has no foundationdo not pretend that it has any

which demos altogetherthe docmatblT.1 of expatriation w.thout the con

but they are troubled in thinning themout, which is hardly ever done, and thecrop is therefore injured.religious toleration ; defends th sound

divide,!, if desired.JOS. BORPF.N.

Mobile, Ala.Pfl.lt. . 0- -tf

T Latnal llayera

head of each can be bought quite low. We next visited a three-stor- y brickness of the writ of AuAr.u nrrtt; protectsvigemer wun the present growing crop, at

casement. "ttiMHi nye, papa, pmxl bye:Mamma has come for me to night ; don'tcry, papa! we'll all meet again in themorning!" It n!l!t f an angel had sjkken to that father, and his heart grewlighter under the burden, for somethingassured him that his little one had goneto Mini who said "Suffer little children-t-

conic unto me. for of such is the kingdomof heaven." There is something cheer-ful and inspiring to all who are in troublein this. "We'll nil meet again in themorning." It roues up the fainting soullike a truinct 1'hist, and frightens awayforever the dark shades thronging the av-

enues of purer life. Clouds may gatherupon our paths disappointments gatheraround us like an arjny with banners, butall this cannot destroy the hope within us.if we have this motto upon our lips, "Allwill ta-- right in the tiorniug."

building, the basement of which contained the.1... r,.,..l..,T. f legislative debate: fortmlsnanuvuon nrt nacrilieit. I can be

the transportation from the State of anylounil at leSto, Clarke County, Mis., or Fi r Vaii.t. This is a subterranean

I'evth in .1 ah. or a Son of Rev. John-X- .

Maffit. A few days ago, a forgery toa small amount wit perpetrated on thebanking house of W. II. Barksdale k Co.,of this city, and three persons were sus-pected of participating in the crime.Among the number was Francis A. Maffit.who is said to be. and who acknowledcedhimself a son of John Newland Maffitthe eloquent preacher, who flourished inthe est some years ago. After the for-gery was discovered, young Maffit wasfound on the other side of the river, andwas coax.ed across in order to be arrested.He declared himself innocent of the alle

THKunderaigued, a agent f... .n nil,. nee committed within'for Koaiir CaRsoN, offer for apartment, appropriated exclusively for

the storage of Furs, of all kinds used inikih, lour miles south.

I have other land fir sale in Smith,Jones, and this County.I. S. The above d I ,l 1...1. i;t,

sal a valuable tract of LAN I , native sovereign-a- nrt that isof hissentuntenable, as I think 1 have already

Sute limits; prohibit imprisonment for

debt ; insure to naturalized cituen thefull privilege accorded to natives; and,l....i;.,. il.at no citizen of the Mate shall

in Jasper County, tituated' the making of hats. It is a large fire-

proof cavern; and is valued as a place forabout avn m.le from Paulding, andShNe"her is this view supported bythe g of this important part of the

sav01 me muni. 1 iieeu notabout thirteen Suth West f Enterpriieon th Mobil and Ohio Rail Koad. Thtract contain twelv hundred acre, abont

ta held to appear the SupremeCourt of the United SttV on an apijeaf,.,m the M.,reme Court of the State ; but

the stock ol the factory, which not verylong ago suffered a heavy loss by fire. The Ji.at our naturalization laws are opposed

The Stih k of the Plantation. Theseclaim our attention, and our particular at-

tention. The range is no longer to be re-

lied on, and even where there is any openwood land, the grass there at this seasonis as unlit for cattle or hogs, a is thegrown up. tough asparagus, for man. Tolie valuable at all, our animals, cows andhogs, must receive the same attention : ifwe exjicct our cows to furnish our chil-dren with pood rich milk and butter, wemust furnish them with good rich food ;

and so with our hogs and other domesticanimals. A few well kept are worth infi-

nitely more than a full of oor, rick-

ety, ilUliapeil hungry creature:taing well fed our cattle and hogs shouldhave free access to good water not'a mud-puddl- e,

but good, clean well, spring orbranch water. They should have salt at

on thousand of which i usceptible of greatest precautions against the recur.1... .n..l are taken on questions gations, but as lie had been living a ratherauccemful cultivation. Abmit half the ..r :.,,- - they shall only tatract is prairie and dough land, the ba through or from, the Ihstrict Court of Wv'ssimiHllr in till article tho nnmls--r of

we shw 111 tlir shiips ia . It ahonia h..

all other good lands along the line of anyRailroad, will inrreaae in value to $;i).40. $.s. and finally to $1I0 per acre, andeven more. U is one of the few first rate: UUn "!. nw the line ofthe Railroad, on the west side of the riverThe natural richness of the soil, and the

advantage of thia tract of land, will, hyditching and other improvement, in a fewyear, iocreaee its value to $100 per acre.These results are certain. All capable ofjudging will conclude thi on looking atthe premises. M. F. ft.

iVfcte, AttM., June 1, 1859. 34-- tf

A Sad Case. A young married womanwho had tacn deserU-- by her husband,drowned herself and child a few days agoin a creek at Jamaica. Long Island."

the I'nited State. mull rstissl. Iniwrrsr. that nnlinanlj full ilonhlfi thatlance swamp and post oak lime land. ThiaInd for fertility ! nof surpassed by nfin th Flrn part of the Stat. It will

to it in their whole spirit as well as in theirexpress words. The States of Europe arealso practically committed against it. NoGovernment would allow one of its ownsubjects to divide his allegiance betweenit and another sovereign, for they allknow that no man can serve two masters.In Europe, as well aa here, the allegiancedemanded as a naturalized resident musthave been always understood as exclusive.

Mr.Bcchaxan roRTiurRMiDiscr. TheP.ttsburg Post, the leading Democraticorgan in Western Pennsylvania, run upthe name of Mr Buchanan as a candidatefor and takes the ground thathe is the only candidate whose nomina-tion by the Charleston Convention can re-concile the differences between the North-ern and Southern Democracies. MotiURegister,

iiumis r are eninioyen; ann mat. nutwiilistandingt trim rsrv ahHtrtnrnt in thst n hr uu..v. 2( Three negroc on

iasi ana dissipated life on the river,St. Louis and New t rleans, his pro-

testations were not received with a greatdegree of credence. His examination,with that of his companions, was to navecome oft in a day or two. but on Siut'laynight, in his cell, he ,t1"' rt?apopletic nl died ' 9 dockl-Lmd- s

Republican,

Imrvee. JaquM Co. transact hy far the largest tiiisinossiu thi-i- r Imp in the l'nnrl Si!. Ni.. . n.t.i.i'.. .t,.l Missouri, yesterday, forbe sold on accommodating terms, both a

At the present time there are one I has heen of the lamp numh., fm..l.. raiwt. were forcibly takenthe ."I1" reoIT eonsun't employment from thiafrom the iail by a mob, who tmrneu oneto price and tune of payment.

SHAN SON A8TRF.ET.rmtJvy. July 27, 42 it

hundred and sevety convicts inMississippi penitentiary. r.,,.,,,,,,,, ,m w,lo uutc uie inaienala and work

I and hung the other two

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