Madison Daily Courier, Volume 1, Number 178, Madison, Jefferson County, 24 November 1849 — Page 2

DAILY COURIER.

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.T. , Mctcf t-t.-Kntinii t t ' i0Ve;Cher-!i'and TCCl : There is a healing power in our system of . of omIurlS The ,n,U r ,s .xcin.g coaier.P'"'1' Ct U"C,em ,ndl ! IVrhap a more beaut.lui complimenl was ; Government-, muhcaCu-h enables , , ,,,, AB sw ... nf nffh-

iJu;tl, alluded to yesterday, about the void snap," n-;: i in November after a tin til rein, has signally fat'.e.l this time Instead ol the "co'.d snap,"' we have warm we had almost said "balmy, Spring" weather, which has j ut a .-top to all operations in hog. Of beef cattle we have heard of tut one tale of eixty-one head, average weight 500 pound, to T. J. (joiuiiii Son, al per llK) pounds. v. Ikon Fvct. l"h quanuiy of iron of all kinds manufactured in this country i700,000 tons annually, while only about 100,000 tons are imported; in a!!, amounting to bOO. 00?) tons. Now, if the average foreign cost of the a! tide is no more than 10 per ton, the ngrezato increase of price resulting fion duty alone, without calculating the profits of :he importer and retailer incident to the duty, amounts to 9,600,000, which the people have to pay for their iron yearly more than they would if there were r.o duty. And of this tax 100,000 go into thr jocktts f the ironmitten, and only Jsl .'JOO.OOO (the duty on j 100,000 tons) co into the national treasury as revenue. Other articles might be mentioned, such as woolen manufactures, tugar, salt, and various other products, showing results equally strikiiii:; but it is unnecessary. It is the system, eays the Washington Union, which produces such results, which takes one dollar from the pockets of the people and puts it into the treasury for the use of the government, and ten dollars which it puts into the pockets of the manufactui ers and iron-masters, which id called iijroteclion.'" The aggregate amount of this "protection" each year which goes into the pockets of the manufacturers and iron-masters in this country, will exceed $100,000,000 in amount, while the government takes but $:0, 000. 000. What fact can show not only the stu pendous injustice but the unconsututionality of the miscalled "protective" sjHiem in a more striking light? Rumors from Washington. All sorts of rumors are current about diificuUies in the Cabinet, and predictions of its early disruption. One rumor has it that one Secretary is to go out. Another story, recently started and now current is, that Mr. Clayton is to resign at the opening of Congress, and Mr. Clay to take his place. We have reaton to believe and for saying that General Taylor is satisfied with his Cabinet Counsellors, and they are with him and with one another. There is, we aro confident, not the least foundation for these rumors. Cin. Gazette. ?Jore Nepotism. The Aibany (N. V.) Journal, a Whig paper, thus speaks of the Administration appointments, and the spirit of nepotism that ?xists among them: The most important fe Jerd cilices have, in too many cases, been bestowed upon political antediluvians men of a past and obsolete school, without associations or sympathies with those who now teach and guide the political masses. A single example will prove this proposiiion. A unirsaiiy respeciea citizen 01 ,ew torn, w nose Earns, influence, exertions, and means , have been 1 important devoted to the Whig cause, received an impo revenue appointment. That appointment was boi.i proper and popular. But it was the obvious duty of that gentleman to have placed meritorious, hard-working, riemocrntic W higs in the subordinate situations around him. Instead of this, however, thes places have been given to the members of his own family; so that, while it was only intended to reward one worthy, veteran Whig, the effect of bis appointment has been to pension a whole frm.ly. Tins is maniteMly una parahzirig influence over the workine masses 0f IIISI MH 1 I 1111 M. I... Htl.' -Jifrt.-. t il . . . the Whig party. iT'111- VI- - l'ltf hm diplomatit! of lJie &c wl5C WiiS sen: 10 Central . tT- I.' it s: ....... .1. . ... . . Aiutiic l-e..-.uat .11. w .is ti ar.i;quarian lore," has made treaties with the two republics of Nicaragua and Honduras; "a treaty," according to the Cincinnati Gazette. of alliance and pi election to one republic and for the acquisition ot terrstoiy with another,"' Mr. Squier is us rapid in h: movements as if he belonged 10 the piogrfssive party. . . . lUig:o;i CO. respondent of fjT" The Wa the i ;)!;aae.p.i.a .0i ta .-vrnerii-aa state s thai . 1 .,, , ih Prttrrter.(ienera u-i.l ruMm.n.n. Congress live cents as tne on.y rate ot postage on Sirg'e cr ha:i-etir.re letters.

Woman. How much the woilJ owes to woman! Wealth, power, religion, intellect

ail il,-t i ron,! n n.l trrp.-ir .ln hn.i,i : ... , i i to her. Whether as a son, a husband, or , nevei pa. a to it-mate cnaracter liian f.iat j rendered by the late John Randolph, of ! Roanoke. When minister to France he said he was kept lVom whirling down the tide of infidelity, which wa.s then carrying everything before it, by the remembrance that, when a child, hi-; dear mother would put his little hands together and teach him to say: "Our Father who art in Heaven!'''' Touching')- beautiful as is this little storv. it is but the history that thousands of oth- i ers miglit relate with equal interest. Then, honor to woman: she has ever been foremost in'every good work. In the language of another: "From the time of the Sabines to Theodora's conquest of Justinian, women ecem to have been at the bottom of all the memorable events of Roman history. Lucretia, Virginia, Vetura, Fabia, the wife of Lucinius, who became at her instigation the first rlebeian Consul, are ilhistnous examples of this; and whatever may have been the changes of manners and opinions, as Hume lias well remarked , ail nations with one accord point, for the ideal of a virtuous matron, to the daughter of Scipio and the mother of the Gracchi." Who, then, will question the inlluence of women! A Thought. What is more beautiful than virtue! It tempers our joy in prosperity, and gives us courage to bear up in adversity. It is the source of delLht to all who practice it. There is no pleasure apart from it. "Beauty shall fade, youth wither into age, And pleasures vanish as diseases rage." Eut virtue is a never-failing solace in the darkest hour, consoling and blessing us through every vicissitude. j jThe Cincinnati Gazette accuses Gov. Ramsey with adopting the "imperious and arbitrary language of L,ocrJucoistn'' in his recent veto message to the Legislature of .Minesota. We think that any veto message by a Whig Governor would be "as extraordinary as it is antagonistic to Whig principles" and Whig professions. 0-?vIr. Rives, the lecently appointed Minister to France, had not been received by the French Government at the latest dates from Europe. Membfrs of the California Convention. From a list of the names, aires, professions, &c, of those composing the Cons titutional Convention.it annar tli ninmlwrj ar t'.itrh'd at follow: From New York, 7 Connecticut, Miryland, .r Vermont, Kentucky, 1 Virginia. Ohio, 3 Massachusetts, 2 New Jersey, 3 t . ni. . i- T-i.i ti i T..,,': ieiuie.iee, iviio.ie i siauu, I en n.-j t auia, i nuiana. Missouri. Maine, each have one. and the re- . . maimer are irom Ca ifornta. Ire and. trance. Vc. In the whole number there are fourteen lawyers and tuo physicians. . , 7.," , . iiiE-iiKs in .ew i ork. i ne i'emocrais have two majority in the House, the Whigs two in the Senate. Here is one it on joint hallo'. The Democrats elect four on the State ticket, the Whitrs four. Here is another tie. The Democritts have now fo- r of the Supreme Judges, the j Whigs four. Here is another tie. The popular vote 13 so even that neither claims a majority. Here is another fe In a tate -ivu,g 400 (H)0 votes this is most remarkable. Another year' the Democrats will u-it f all these matters and unravel Whiirgerv terr.blv. Cleveland Flaindenler. The Round Island Affair. We learned while in Mississippi, that quite a sharp corrspondence had taken place between Governor Matthews and . , . 1 1 the General Government, in relation to the proriP,!iil!rq of Commodore Raiidoloh. in the blockfr " aue 01 u'juuu is.iiuu. vv e were aiso informed 1 1 that the Governor had sent the Attorney General of the State down to Jackson co., to t ike les-tl , 111- ., , ! proceedings against tne legal officers, it they persisted in their ulegul mterterance witn fctate rights. We state these facts entirely on hearsay. Whatever course the Governor of Mississippi mav have taken of this fact we are personally ; cognizant, thht it was the intention 01 Governor I Johnson of this State, to resist with all the power of the State, any attempts on the part of the 11aval authorities to extend their aggressions into the territory of Louisiana. N. O. Deiti. j 0At a meeting of ihe directors f the Dal timoe and Ohio Railroad Company, h-ld at Baltimore on the 14th inst, it was unanimously resolved to putthe whole road u nder contract to the . Ohio river immediately. It is now certain that it w,!i be competed in' two vear, from the rlrsr of ; next June. t - - 1 TJ- 1 he ' IVa. the Pt- an Ct.-. ; j a new parr, gotten up to compete with lhe -Plough, th3 Loom and the Anvil."

Correspondence of the Rtltimore Sun. Washington, Nov. 17th 1:11).

I h r ate ol predictions Settlement ot Hi" Lai iforuii Question A new Oil to be mtrouuceu ! s 4 r t- m,,rnmer &e i us to sustain severe shocks, ana resist nsa.ignani iutluences, which to other systems would be fatal. Whenever we get to a "crisis," something occurs which, in a few weeks, rentiers the "perilous crisis" as stale as a last year's almanac. .Mr. Calhoun's crises have been a matter of amusement for twenty years, aud he bus laughed at them himself. Lut we have get into one now, which I confess, looks a little more than usually perilous ine siaverv quesuou, paruou.au ""l nectedwid, a geographical contest for political j rr-i . l .. .:.. . : 1 t I. . power, as it now i. has always been looked to as the road on which the Union would split. The Union was shaken by the agitation of the Missouri question the. California question will go near to overthrow it. There will be a stern resistance to the admission of California as a Iftate and with the slavery restriction. But, at the very moment when the storm begins to thicken, we are enabled to cry, lan '., iu! a ! compromise, founded on mutual forbearance and J upon constitutional provisions and objects, and j upon the usage of the Government from Us com- j

mencement till this hour, is already projected by j ting convention between the two Republ ics, and j "J r.sPF.CTFrt.t.Y invite the attfr.tion of ( on r -eminent st.utsman Irom Me toutli and West,, that accordingly speedy possession will be ttken , ,e.,t .t Tie i,,..rii, MMiiral. School anl MiM-el'a-

which will, in ail probability, settle the whole , , ., question, and avert the impending danger. I am at liberty to say that on the first day of the session, notice will be given, in the Senate, j of a bill to establish certain Territories: to nro- ! vide for the admission of California: the creation : e ... . . . -. ... ... . I of a new State in Texas; and the adjustment of the boundary between Texas and New Mexico. The bill will provide for the establishment of the Territory of Desert t; a'so, for the Territory of South California; also, for the Territory of California, North of deg. 30 min. The bill will provide that the Territory of North California shall be admitted as a State into the Union; and, at the same time, it will provide that a portion of Texas, South of 3b dig. .'it) min., shall be permitted to form a State Constitution; aud that the question of boundary between Texas and New Mexico shall be submitted to a board of commissioners, &c. Such a scheme w ill conform with the views of all moderate and patriotic statesmen, and w ith the j principles on w hich the Constitution was founded, j and has been hitherto sustained. It cannot be j doubted that the great compromiser, Mr. Ciav, 1 and the defender and expounder, Mr. Webster, I will go for this proposition. Mr. JJeuton is certainly bound to support it, aud Mr. Calhoun and the whole south v id embrace it as a means of saving the Union. ION. ID" The following is an extract from the spteoh of Daniel Webster at the New Hampshire Festival : "We have seen beautiful proof of this wise selfgoverning capacity ol tne American people, in tne j oasis of a htate just planted on the si lores of the 1 aciiic We have seen a mass of A.i.ericins, led o I thither by adventu ous impulse most of them 2 ! starting without thought of any thing beyond 2 each, his individual fortune suddenly awakened , to the consciousness, that as a first neces-ity, they were pioneers of a new society and government, i in n tir ,i.,,.; ...i ,. ; , . ................ ti..t..,, c. u. H , . . ull4 tliey liave turned their oni home princniles ana ' . ii- .i i , ' inieuiguce to tneworK, and tne seen ty and sovernrnent are created. It has been done quickly 1 and quietly, but done upon principles and a basis, which leave none of iis results to the chances of experiment. No one thinks for a mament of questionitig the republicanism or permanence of a society and government org-iiiized by the scarcely lauded adventurers to California. We do not require even to see that ihey have wiilten freedom, order, and justice, upon parchment, aud taken oaths to defend them. We know th spirit of the meu who 1,ave llie' lV0rk in han'!' Vj dauhl that the WOrk wi!' W dolle is to doubt the intelligence, convictions, ana principles of the American people. j "Let Americans, gathered as the Californians 1 have been, from every nook and corner of the j Union, migrate to anv corner of God's earth be ' it rich or barren and liberty, order, iu-tice and .. . , , , " . . prosperity wnl as certainly be the maiiites-tatiohs ' of their script v n nd froverimipnt. asthattliPi-msl-. s " " ..1 ... . .1 . a settlement. v nerever they go, they carry dederations of independence and republican constitutions in their instincts and ideas: in the verv ne- , . . , cessities of their nature. 1 hey can be tru-teu with their social and governmental destiny on : sea-washed isles or "woody continents." They are freemen, and respectors of the freedom of all men, and giving what thev claim, thev resolve . themselves into free government, and intelligent, law abiding society, as naturally as they exist-Self-government, of a higher and nobler cast than kings and emperors have framed, is not only a possibility, but a principle and necessity with the American, wherever trie lot of ruler talis to ids hands." Charge to Naplis. In Phi.a-ehd.ia, a rumor states that lion. James Powers, Pennsylvania i Canal Commissioner, is to be Charge, to Naples, since Col. Webb declines the rost. . , , ,, , :, IT A wag a-is truthfully sa.d, that if some men 0 J I !.t om nut of their n.l r.l th- in I scription on their tomb-stones, they would think thv had ot t-n', the ur0;S -rare.

IMrORTAXT rROM HON DURAS MORE I , ..,, i Ell III TORY .Mil- tQL ILk.

. e ,, - t . . n L , A correspondent of the N. . 1 nbune gives .he ; fohowinf statement in reference to the tr-atv ne- ; ,, s flie writer says: This treaty rendersevery port of Honduras perfectv ree ag f ar as the United ijtes is concerned

and with a view to tec u re these privileges cedes to ; -fr r,al V' tty. ic .Uirougaoutttic tut .f Inus for the time beiug the island of Tigre, in the ; tittic. No. 7 Main C:oss street, over J.lm Lowe's eh. Gulf of Fouseca This island commands the Gulf 1 3 a'P- MJ'!1 ,n't"tn N v ''"

i end indeed h whcle coast. It has been or i 1 I . , , & , , speeii,y tQ be taken posS!e6siott of byan American naval force. This is a great disappointment to the English, who bd lonjhad their eve nPon the Isaml have berU intending to "seize it, under the pretence of indemnifying themselvs for debts due British subjects. As Mr. Squier's circular , has excited a good deal of attention here among foreigners, I subjoin a copy of it: CIRCULAR. LeaHo i of the U. Stile', in Ctn'raf lm erica,) Lum dc JS'iC irait. , Sept. 2s, 1-4'J. $ To : Sir: I have the honor to inform vou that the island of Tbre. in the Gulf of Fon..eca has been ceded to the United States of North America by the Republic of Honduras, for the time pending constitutional action upon an exis0f the same, upon behalf of the United States, ' 'ppe existing port and other regulations of the inland will be continued until otherwise ordered. I Klve also the honor to add that the United States ua irH ii.fer.. in t!.. V,a iJa,J n, ' 1 ' the coast of Honduras, which will not permit her to look with indihvrence upon any measures which shall affect die present order of things in that quarter. Iam, sir, with high conslderaton your obt ' ' r - serv't, (Signed) E. Gto. Suuier. O" France plays an unfortunate part in diplomacy th is year. She has put her foot in an uglv trap at Rome; she has been rebufF-d in the . , , , . t, ii person ot her ambassador, by Kussia; she has, for the time, been ambassadorially repulsed from . the United States; her consul has been ejected, . i. . , ..:......! .: ir r .1.., wich Islands, and she either refused to iicknowledge, or is refused an acknowledgment at the court of the imitator of her imperiality, Faustin of Ilayti. Jn the Napoleon's day these fini.r pas j of diplomacy would have roused imperial rage, and sent armies and fleets to and fro, ravaging and frightening the nations, but now Li li lie France pockets indignity, rebuke, and irritation, or vents her chagrin in biting her own thumbs. Modern France must learn a quick-st-p, if she would be more fortunate an I n ore respected. H she had sent an army into Hungary, instead of a tlet to the Dardanelles, the Emperor of Russia I ,-,..i!.t T.ui-r In,,-.. ,int.l lirwow luolllii l;:,vn won glory, instead of loMiig it. If she had sent an army to aid Mazzini, instead of crush--i r n tl i ill tag tne Koman uepuonc, sue wouni nave secured the bleing of Italy instead of its curse. I 'vhe may seize the. wooden lorts ol Honolulu, and 'e fleet of Hawaii, but she cannot push her bran- , dy to a better market in the Sandwich Islands As to her relations Willi Ilayti, she nan m-uer embrace bis sab.e majesty ana De cone wiut , for the Haytien Empire is a thing of her own ! creation ami examnle. and when in future she ( . ' , , i '"--' i ril3 ro.,lih!ifi'.n AP lllWV UL' i 1 I lirifn 1 it t li J ; j "' Ieav- '- ' Ull. A Model Citv. The city of Uiica, says the Herald, does 1 not owea single cent of public debt, , and has money m Bank, besides taxes due and collectable. Siie has an abundant supply of pure j and wholesome water brought into the bouses of her citizens, fresh from the mountain springs. ' She is lighted by gas of pure and excellent qual j i ty ; his the best appointed and most effective Fire 1 Department of any city of her size in America ; 1 alli is the 0lll' Cll' hl lhe Ute which wboly es" : caped the ravages of the cholera last summer- ; W e challenge any City in ttie L nion to beat this. if "time is money," some people take plenty of it "to pav their dbt. lui'oitr.v.M to io!ijutivi:s. TP't- M pv hina-e a.Hm i i t.y t'orpian juiiniaV atnl 11 I -L eat it 'swia n. mat of !; the rn:e,tP- ( use,! tor the pure of ciiiimptii'it, that of t ! I" Illp'H : ''iv,'r ' tlr s ipP'C !p any. An mm pet .fi,i- ; fan in London, rpiiiirk, '-tfi-.i ; hp l.a;latni' r. an 1 'hp j , u.hvuttuit ot Mi.-huu ii'ion-, takri; utt itua.ty. ami ; JStiZ'rZ.r na't fSrruZ i " ' ti'.cfey :' t i. .!ic:iu pn-p-rtip , fi-t t p- onm i oevp.i.ppo. ena it w ni pro no 1 p re jsr. Pil a. itt iin,y j te'-an. rpmp.l f.rrMt rtr-..ir-i ,s 4 a;, c..n.-mi.ption. 1 uu-i.. , 1 i "v -J4 M.TiFN -. ! ; ' , 1 . 1' U U I E, S A I I L. E . qj trl'.vksc iLin.-r:ss ZYVtY i n z .a U Si WI'i-.I.nsAf.rc AMi R TAir, EEALr.RlNSntftllcry, Hardware :nu! I'oacli 'i 1 in; min-. ll n S: re- ', .V-ft'O", NOTiCC TO TUfiNT'IKC CONTRACTORS : F. A 1 .P.! vt i r e r, r-- v , v , ;i ..,,. I L.'J ?' '.!":, V.'.,: fyKr n: .--n a Mv iani:r.i. t'-m t...i of n,. vrc. .., ! H..r..i. tx.u w.n.-t. the cv bm F..r fu-.-i-r r,.r1 .... .. a ... . . - . . ' ' r - 1 se' J- a,s i-u fi..ti.-w a; I'ip Maji.f t Ricp. J. VV. Ill MM,

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ITT axt situation in rrat8 rP. bv a W W ur man who ttirou.bl v uioWriaitd., ihp husmes: or a farther to so tit tlip ln hnsoie g, of good

tiio-as aiia ira 1 naoiu-i. pu rpr- in tii- iuipii. Th bet ()f re.VrPncP AddfeslS tox 4; M!iw umnpd'ateiy. 11 Indiana Collcnd Kcal Estate Agency. C. i:. WALKEI5, COrXCrLLOR AM AT'I'OUXLV AT LA W, A.M J. I. WALK Kit, I I A V C A-'OrliU i ir.cMH- !vf nr the puno-p of a"e ) n a to the Collection .if tie . ts: the jmn lif.-", . or 5 -i fhawh.-A new sui.l t.f new sty MlA i'ia-U Loiii .i-.w!. verv han. Si.in. i;ist receiv eJ II. V l' SYV R M- r Kl T 4-1(1. WATCHMAKER, Silversmith and Jeweler, TJ N 1) E R THE A TOLL O S A L O O N m vi nioss stui:i:t, MADISON, 1 A. II. S. A- J. APPLllGATE, -! l i I.SSOR S T l kt. t ii.M I IN.1 BOOKSELLERS, rUELlSIIEKS, STATIONERS, AND KLAK BOOK VI A M I AV T I II LKS, ti'J Main strut, Wet side. I piow ( 'nmnit.ia. Cl.MCJNNA'J'l, OHIO. i "' " Ma'i"niry, &., w turn ilSbe sold on the i nioHt literal term, ! Pr.DI,AUS " " hiviiM t. ea-nine ..rk rrru-l rjprowiy i for ourt-at I tl'.'"-'!'1 ,fva'" ,;,s r"- !.. At A , iMil.lh-h srveral valuable stan.lard works; an iti ir whir 'i are, K )l'iii's AtH ieiit flistory. romi.ipte works of Jojptm, Mc'"aijlry s 1 1 isi ry i f Khimkii-I. A 'I'liPv liiffl 'i in i'rp-is. I'liMP, i,FE WORKS I OF 'I I!' is. I ' K. I . . I. I pt vpii viiiii... ; Thin p-l n.ni w!,'l cm t on the laipt rpv;i.ms nf th c'ir. i ."'''"''f.'"', "-I '',"y l,e th c.pa,.PM. I ,,i .t,e IpsI Pill lull i II 1 he I iiitr d Svaii s n,lv I? miv I" I'l r.ii ii:i ton ruin livi:k on.. ! 1 ECEIVFn at "Wa Idesi'" a lanr suwly of i ,, cplehrau,! rt,p...U. in IW.Yi,. Tt,...n , a , aKrl ',nl rpnpiy '" "p curp ..f 'linmT KhPMiMti-ni sVrofu- ; 11 "d 'niisii'ii itMii, Athina uml l.ivi r l imiji aiut. bi..I j a i disp.i-ps ot ih- l h-f . J'his inp-in-inr ui .-,i.s i,o mio- ! ev. as expe-iem-p ha- f..:iy te l' cuu I qua it p-. ! I aniph els acrompativ earh I'nitip ronta iiiniTiir (rt1JW'' !'mhii pmiricnt turn, as well j Miroas rtmwe to I ' " lr.i. JAI.T Ii:TIti:. 'jnu lis superior rrliiiPil FnU k. ."V Vf. ip. -n iahip fir I'urk ami I.pp'' Pnrki. iimt i. ceiv- U, ami for n by eiDUALL, KKEVEp'A, ,o. j "'JV "FsPtPN A Jl 'LKS HAITI'S F Li! FI'M I.- y I ol etie . Tooth Pas'r. Ac 4c . 1 ft Jat rpn- vpil ami lor sa'p hv nov IT IsJ'l SI l 'It ALT,. RF.KVF.St rn. O. I. I O A i II U IJ, GROCER. Main-Cross Street .Madison, Indiana. 1"1V I li i;i:.v! waui:. 1 V. -F'VT.I, rom tl.e I'l.'tpru s in r,n2'amt. a lot of .t fi HWl iiPtv s:v!f i'i"fi,.'waro, in irr y nrw in ; l.i'-i I . . ... i, ami hi ii it v- 1 1 r iii nitu i ar i ti rer iirics v ; l"r 'hi inarnrt. a- ii w I' hp solil v-ry 'ojv. Pnrrh.-.-Prs j wi'iiiil ilo wll to m l an. I pj-.ihiiip rt;y n nrk. a I ain riei tP'n inPit to s as low as shpy can hp parchc-pil in the i 'AVvt. rioir 15 O, K. I '11'E. - IMI.VI i:i III t Iii;XS A.M XTISs. ' ZVJ :-, . .. T,,. zinc Wnj-hxjaf dt-; f irsat"low hv O K D )N iIU'E. ; iV " " s- hy II. K. M)OflUR. , - ; J 4 f; f'y Ui XlJ j i;r Hoinif't 1 onn1?, k in M .m i;. l"lltllt ItlKV ' N -it vi-ar out tJ m.p v.itt,n tiy win i -..l.l i..w .v i ll"V O K. ImivoIU'G. i t Mi I I I O I I 0 Alt.-'. Moon Haas Co'U.n Van , an il i iiiiiIk rs, lor sa'e hy O. K.I) jNoiU E. ! '"v i." i-4 'ri:j Ti: A .! ii packa.'P-of Te- tor raip v j ' -K Io.H!K J XttHAt'l O. j rV-Xr.s.1 lb tump, extra t'.ne Virjii ! ,"i ri(t 5 Mi1',', inia T'acro. do irl do -ll io ll (in !( I" 1o Coiiiiiion 9" r kiii do ilo do O: K. TiOSolirE i For ... uy 'i I I'j 1 Ailf ; I ll'dfo uriVZ Til rfV TH11H1I' m. vmB-v Mn'.nii. Nnv 14 )-" t: ;. u i-rrrv ai:v ;ooi)s. C sliWVV KOTil F.K arp n w rprp.va u !:' ad ' 1" to t h' ir former clock, wiiirti will li"-ke lhf ir a--o-Mi Piit i'PtiPr ti.an any tn ii-p hi tn- rl y. Finl.raeir2 all th tpw and dp-ira'-p fiv'p of I.ai:ip" Iipfjooii. Koie-fi St Reaitv Io.iiipi. jenn v l.n.i SNawl.

pvpr 1 ru b t'.oin,er Ki .ti.in, Velv t Trihimititf. Vi.'f- at-1 V Ipisli i toruip, t :otti a-:d 1 'a-iitiPre-: totfOriPr won pverv ar-

; tir.p in the lo v (.iv-A iiiiP. For sa'p verv low. no 7 14 Parmer r. dicw3l fi. s-nAw A PR". tnM; i ri...Li.s, ac .Ml pts i.p-v fatli f'rt; i n Kpd ptiow a tul whi'p F!arrip': JU ' Keiiluciy Jpai.s. ju t nrn'J r.! !"r "a rhpfii.h G SHAW Ic BfiO. 1 'iv 14 P.an--pr copy r4.w Nil A V I! MI.VU !-:! MIA I.!!! J f - I '. ' ! B a-k I 'ulti Sriaw.s. oiiv V P a .1 1! kPt a .-(l-. do; ii : C (;. ?tIKW s- PRO. 1 '. v l.i .1 .V' T'.'i'i Pt Siln F- "1 rp PriiitPit Ca-htiiP'P a'p r h- a'i. i.tii:nx-; .oii. I f f,a" now a'"f ipira- i'r i. ' 5 -a e 'Pi--K : .) I' '- M II Mi'il-I. :! i i . w a ; v! ct tlf.f TIkjC Pit ar .t P.-o , -i ir ,' f . , y j. It kh. I ' , V ailil aii-l Ha. ' ;i '. j - pp.vpiI. tn I ..r -a e i..w f.y n v U i. a i.-re.t,y ( : -HA W it PR". 0 tnVi;ks7o.s i V 'Hi: I Kol't.K Vi t "H il a- tir Pauh:Pr' Imm f ii w, I rf . i i K Tn'If t fP-'-ii, - !! P Ft !' . I : .' w ,-ii .hp i ; i r ;;' '. 1 e.-av ui t. Pi Ii. in two il -ro i.rPii row-." -I -pa- wife -.'. ia thp pil that "'i 'un:. 'f I"''1 t- a ret; '! v not unnpowii to t no-. And MkMi t ripa hv muji on' i t !.!' T. H !i'." Wirptatjip Rop T- n Pa-tp " J! I.F- II t.P. p..-.: a. I i.-.-vir: i . rfi, f'l I &re''hia. ; dv T For a -. in Mad-son t-y f f-umz, Agent.

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