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Telesrapli. Sin York. Market. NKW YOUK, May ll.-Cotton firm at 34(55 35 cent?. Gold 29 i. Mobile market. MOBILE, May H.-Salea of cotton to-day 1,200 hale? of middling?, at 326433; sales for the week 3,950 bales, Receipts for tho week 3,045 hales, against 3,114 for hist week. Exporta for the woek i),019. Stock, in market, 43,808. Stock unsold, 35,000. Indictment of Mr. Davis. NORFOLK, May ll.-Judge Underwood I want North last night, taking with him a j copy of the indictment against Jeff. Davis. Late yesterday afternoon the Grand Jury of the United States Circuit Court in Bennion here brought in a true bill against Jeff. Davin for treason, anil adjourned untU the first Tuesday in June, to nect in Richmond. -? ? ? Probat Execution. PHILADELPHIA, May 9.-The death war? rant for tho execution of Antoine Probst on Friday, the 8th of June, was received by the sheriff this morning. The prisoner received the announcement quietly, seem? ing entirely unmoved. He had previously told his confessor that he believed death was the only expiation for his crime and ho v/as willing to suffer. Congressional. WASHINGTON, May ll.-The Senate passed the postal appropriation bill, after striking out the amendment heretofore adopted preventing parties appointed to office during the recess from recovering any pay until confirmed by the Senate. Before the passage of the bill, Mr. Cowan made a speech, declaring those who interposed to prevent tho Southern States from being represented were disuniouists, ami that opposition to restoration was superinduced hy fear of losing political power. Gen. Sickles has been confirmed as Mi? nister to the Hague. Later Foreign IV cw H. The steamer China has arrived at Hali? fax, bringing Liverpool dates to the 29th ult. We extract the following items of in? telligence: The reform bill bas passed the House ot Commons by a majority of five. The papers generally regard the vote on the second reading of the reform hill aa a Government victory only in name, but in reality a defeat. Then" are various specu? lations as to the course the Ministers will adopt. The Tintes says: As Government com? menced the session with au estimated working majority of sixty, the hare ma? jority of five is, in fact, a vote of censure; and no administration will henceforth hope to persuade the House of dominons to con? sider the reform proposals without laying the entire scheme before it. The Morning Herald says: lt is obvious the bill is lost, but whether Government will abide by its pledge and fall with its Lill, we aro to learn on Monday. Thc Morning J'ost says: There can heno doubt, although the Ministry have gained a nominal victory, thev have, in truth, sus? tained fatal defeat. Nothing remains for them but to resign. The Star thinks the small majority bodes ill for the early and tranquil settlement of the reform question, and looks for new de lavs and fresh difficulties and confusion. The scene in the House during the divi? sion is described as one of unparalleled excitement. The cheering was taken up in tho galleries in spite of all rules and orders. Vienna despatches assert that Austria, in her latest note to Prussia, declares her readiness to tako tho initiation in demo? bilizing her troops. The Memphis A vaktnche, in speak? ing of the constant Northern denim ciation of Mr. Calhoun, says thus forcibly: ' 'Malice forever dogs the heels of greatness, and calumny Ls its shadow. We are not, therefore, surprised to see party ghouls and hyenas howling over the grave of John C. Calhoun a man who has made such a grand chapter for history. Mr. Calhoun was the compeer of Clay and Web ster. His private character was spot? less; and while the names of Clay and Webster are cherished as the brightest stars in the galaxy of fame, it is singular that a continual stream of abuse, falsehood and malignity should be vomited upon the noblest, loftiest, greatest son the nation has over producid. We intend to vindi cate the memory of this illustrious statesman, whether the assault comes from Northern radicals or from mis? creants of the South, vile enough to echo every word of abuse, no matter how stupid and foul, every lie, no matter how potent in malignity." Immediately after the bombard? ment of Valparaiso, the English Minister was requested to vacate the premises occupied by him, and no one will rent him another house. His name was also stricken from the list bf members of the "Club de la Uniou." Only two lives were lost and eight persons wounded during the bom? bardment, lol Government stores, containing upwards of $K,000,000 worth of foreign merchandize, were destroyed. The bulk of the loss will fall on foreigners. The battle-field of Franklin, Ten ressee, where Hood's men fell by the h unbred and were buried, has been retted by the proprietor to freedmen, ant is about to be given to tho plow. Ev\ry Southern State has its repre? sentatives on"? this field, and their friends are endeavoring to secure means to remove the hollies before the traces of the graves are trampled out. The Manchester (New Hampshire) Mirror says that farm laborers ara plenty this year, and farmers can find all the men they want at from fifteen to twenty dollars per month. It has not been so for five years past. From Washington. The House lias been engaged to? day full blast*upon the Reconstruc? tion Committee's amendments to the Constitution-reeling off the talk in thirty-minute speeches. The on? slaughts made upon the third section by Messrs. Blaine and Garfield indi? cates a mutiny in the radical camp against the dictum of King Thad. It is understood that this is but the be? ginning of the defection, and from present ?appearances the reconstruc? tion platform will have three-qnarters of its planks knocked out ere it leaves the House. Mr. Blaine contended in regard to this amendment, (which debars the late rebels from voting for four years, ) that it was an act of bad faith to dis? franchise those to whom civil rights had been granted by tho amnesty. Mr. Garfield held that there was no propriety in disfranchising the rebels for a specific term of years. I Washington Star, r)th. A movement is on foot here which, if successful, will break up tho prac? tice of making national banks the depositaries of Government funds, and confine these depositaries to theil more legitimate localities, viz: tin sub-treasuries, custom houses ant mints. It is contended that there ii no reason whatever why banks shonlc bc selected to take charge of th? Treasury funds, when there are ( lo verment institutions in all the lead ing cities adapted to that purpose and in which, with proper precau tions, such a thing as loss would b impossible, lt is understood that : bill looking to a change like thu on above mentioned will be proposed ii tho Banking Committee at an earl day. At a previous session of Congress the publication of the military his tory of the rebellion was ordered. I undertaking to give effect to thu enactment, the War Department hu begun on a scale which would ri quire the expenditure of not lei than a million of dollars, a wagoi load of manuscript having airead been furnished. Among the persons on the door ? the House to-day wasFayette McMu len, of Virginia, a member of tl: rebel Congress, and at one time member of the United States Coi gress. This is the first instance i which any rebel official has present? himself in either hull <d' Congre during the session. Special Des/inf, to Philadelphia Ledger, 7th. Nearly all the claimants of tl cotton seized by thc Government Savannah have commenced suits the United States District Court' New York, against. Simeon Drape cotton agent, for the recovery of tl value of the cotton. The suits um ber 122, and a strong array of eon sel hus been retained by the plaintif among w hom are Janies T. Brady, A M. Evarts and others of equal abilit [Washington Cor. .V. Y. Times, 8th irish journals state that it is cale lated that within one week last mon upwards of 4,000 persons left f America, via Queenstown, two-thir of whom are of the middle and fan ing class. The Irish farmers, it w be remembered, were complaini last year of the want of male a female, laborers to gather in thc hi vest; but if tho emigration contim at the present rub', (to put it do' at the lowest figure,) 1,500 a wet the Irish papers say they will c tainly have more cause to comph this year, as those leaving now i mostly of that class. About COO p senge rs were waiting in Qneensto ti) getaway by steamers. GEN. EWELL.--Among the farm in this city tm Menday Last, wo w glad to meet this gentleman, so < tinguished as a soldier, who is no\ resident of "Old Maury,'' and going largely into stock farming. 'J General has a magnificent farm entering upon his new life with accustomed energy and /.eal, and hope and predict for him great s cess. He appears in excellent hot and cheerful spirits. [Ma-wry County ( Tenn.) Herat* They have a radical uewspapei Richmond from which the North radical journals evidently take gi delight to quote. Etjseems, in reg to its editor, that "he was origin a Methodist priest, then a slave-h er, then a negro-driver, next a w key seller, and now editor of arno newspaper." He can descend lower. It is stated in Washington that gotiations are on foot for the ] chase, by leading American cap ists, of nearly the entire of Lc California from thc "Mexican Re] lie, for the purpose of develo] tho rich mineral resources of 1 country. ( Ker a million dollars 1 been advanced to the Mexican M ter in aid of the project. Mrs. Davis is still at fortress l\ roe. No limit is placed upon length of her visit, but she is rest ed in her conversations with her band to the hours between rev and sun-set. Gen. Buger gives Gen. Ro Ransom permission to resume his tics as Marshal of Wil ming tot which Ruger some time ago ki relieved "Bob." The Roman Catholic Orphan lum at Troy, New York, was bu on Saturday, having been lire? one of the inmates. There is a great flood in the U Mississippi. The lower part of buque is entirely under waler. Measures are shortly to be inaugu? rated by the Government to effect the removal from Roanoke Island of a large portion of its negro population, and scatter them over the districts of North Carolina, from whence they originally came. If this determiua i lion and action are to bo likcwiso adopted in reference to other locali ? ties similarly oppressed by an undue i preponderance of color, tho most wholesome consequences will result to both blacks and whites. Thc ne? groes are eminently gregarious, and this feature in their character has been strikingly illustrated wherover islands and peninsulas, with conti? guous water courses, furnish them easy subsistence from tish and oys? ters, without the exercise of steady labor. It is to be regretted that Mr. ('al? vin Pepper should have defeated the very laudable efforts of the Govern? ment officials about Old Point to open up the everglades of Florida to the enterprise of "Afric's dusky sons" who now throng every portion of the peninsula -except the corii fiolds. But Pepper did not want te lose his practice, and was un williup to givo up his clients. We have nevei heard whether he has extricated him self from the little difficulty in whicL Generals Miles and Terry got him 01 not. The "scattering process" should b< liberally exercised by tim Govern ment wherever the negroes are to? thick, either in town or country. Tc thin them out will reduce idleness immorality and crime. And mun than that, it will reduce disease; fo: should the cholera leap into any o these negro pens, this summer, thi destruction of the poor black shoe] w ill be appalling. They are dimin ishing in numbers rapidly enougl now, without the aid of a great cpi demie as a stimulus to perdition. The magnitude of the burden whiel the nation has taken on its shoulder in these "wards," is becoming ever day more alarmingly apparent. Th dead weight which lucie Sam me carries, in his national debt and freeil men, is enough to crush any gen th man of less vigor and buoyancy. Bu we are engaged in tho grand exper ment of showing the world how har it is to kill this nation, and if we d not ilie during the exhibition, w shall crown ourselves with mucheefa I Richmond Times. GREELEY <>N THE RIGHT OK SECEI SION. - Every now and then Greeli brings out an old blunderbuss that 1 keeps in his office and lires a "sece sion gun." His contemporaries i the city of New York are constant charging that he once said Soul Carolina had a right to secede fro the Union. This unceasing repitilb of a damaging charge causes < i reel? to strike once in a while. \s soon he has said his say, he lapses into h lenee, anil, like a clock, waits till tl machinery which his confreres ke< in motion winds him up to the stri ing point once more. We can't i collect how often Gi'eeley has e plained away this charge, but we < know that each explanation has 1? him just where he was before made it. The substance of lus i planation is. that while the ?S/?/e South Carolina li as no right 11 > sccet the people of South Carolina have tl right or else the Declaration of 1 dependence is an unmeaning colli tion of "glittering generalities." ? he always takes caiv to add thu majority of her people (meaning, course, to includethe negroes,) nf were in favor of exercising tin- rig and therefore he was justifiable a consistent in sustaining the war in: upon the refractory minority by I General Government. Here is last secession gun: "We hold with Jefferson and i Continental Congress; and il tl were right, and their fuudamei assumption justified the D?clar?t of Independence which they ha: thereon, wo cannot see why a hu number of people inhabiting Southern States (a far larger a than that of the Old Thirteen ) h not the natural, indefeasible righi 'alter or abolish' a lorin of govt ment which they deem prejndicia their rights and safety, and to in tute a new Government, laying foundation on such principles, ; organizing its powers in such fora to them shall seem most likely to el their safety and happiness. I Richmond Dispatci m ? ? MEXICO. A Washington lettet the ?ld says: 1 have seen letters from Paris, v ten by persons there whose positi enable them to speak hy ae'hoi which say that the report mac tc to Emperor Napoleon by liaron ;? hard, upon his return from Mex in relation to affairs in that conn was eminently satisfactory. Ri Sailiiard described the vast iinpr nients which are being made in .\J co, and represented the Governn of Maximilian as working to tin tire satisfaction of the Mexiean pie; of the stability of the Gov ment after the withdrawal of French, he has not the least do Maximilian already has 10,0111) ]\! can volunteers in his army, comm ed by French officers. Major V. Wynne, formerly Forest's stall", has become a candi for Solicitor in Sumner County, ' nessec. Henry Marsh, a State street br in Boston, has absconded after sw ling parties there, to the nmoun $10,000. 0 English. Itcform Hill. The reform, bill submitted by tho Russell-Gladstone ministry to Parlia? ment has at lust scoured the enthu? siastic support of tho English masses, and crowds of excited men now throng thc entrance of the House of Commons, and cheer the*1 friends of that measure and hiss its opponents, after the fashion of "reform mobs" of by-gone days. The new reform bill is, however, a trumpery affair, as it is merely an extension of the right pf franchise to persons with a property qualification income of seven pounds per annum, and will uot add more than 160,000 voters to the present number of English suffragans. 1'or this timid, half-way concession to the clamor of the masses for an extension of the franchise, the English people would not cart; a farthing, had not the landed aristocracy played into the hands of tin; friends of reform by a most violent opposition to tin: mea? sure. That for which, had it been unopposed, the masses would have cared nothing, they now regard as a priceless boon, and Gladstone lilah himself suddenly thc recipient of all those popular honors which used fi be heaped npon O'Connell ami Wilkes. Thc American press, in view of tin sudden outburst ot* british enthu siasm over the reform bill, seem to re gard the proposed extension of th? right of suffrage as likely to product a radical change in the whole eharac ter of Parliament, and of English pc? litical life. As ol ie of the Insults of the triumpl of the reform bill, they claim for th. Progressive party, to which brigit and Mills are a prodigious increase o power. Tory squires and land-own ors, they argue, must now malo- wa for manufacturers, merchants, am democratic self-made men. Neithe the friends nor flic opponents of th proposed extension of the franchis seeiu to entertain sucli opinions of it results; neither do they fear that th extension of the right of suffrage wi bo followed by separation ol' Churc ami State, destruct ion ol' entail, alu lition of law of primogeniture*, fae i I ties for the transfer of real est atti an extension ol' the principle of fr? trad.'. The despotic power of th?; lam owners and capitalist-, does not fe: tho accession of 150,000 operativ, and t.-liants to the list of voters. Tl iron has entered the souls of the I boring classes too de.-ply for them turn upon their masters. They ha been, we fear, "hereditary boin! men" too long to venture upon ai radical change iu the establish? onler ol' things iu England. The English masses are I hoi*? ?ugh understood In the ineii who draft, the reform bill. They know that t I democratic sentiments and disco tent of the disfranchised Engli operatives eau be cured by thu pi posed extension ol' the franchis They are simply going forth anio the scowling, discontented labori classes to reeruit 150.000 support? of the land-owners and capitalist -. An American writer, in a leadi English journal, very ably conten? "Forget the prodigious ?lilVi*relict! all the characteristic . ireuinstaiices the two countries theil" social a 1 political traditions, their proscript usages, their moral ntniosphc While in this country all is shtfti and changing, in England all is il\ and almost immutable, lu this coi try a measureless extent of nnowi or abandone.I territory forbid- t attachment toan ancestral home a weakens the course of hereditary socintions. Perhaps not ??ne fain in a hundred belonging to the Nor ern States ha - lived on the pro pc which was owned by its grandsi Not one American artisan or ->n farmer has known what it is to horn nuder the shadow of an unei family mansion and to feel an her? tar\ interest in its inmates. '! people who occupy old mansions Vermoni, Connecticut or New.1er.? know very little of the men win. b them ami gave iiam?*s to them; small proprietors or mechanics in neighborhood know still Less. Tl: is no family history, no tradition associati ni, i xc. pt in th?* South States, which links the name of wealthy American family with tin forests'and fortunes? of his Count; District. Thol'e is nothing ill position as a proprietor to inthit the votes or politics of his poor n< boi s. They ar.' Republicans or nioerats, as the eas,- may be, mana ami moulded by the local Ltepuhli Or Democrat caucus, ipiite hide* den thy of him. In a country w lier?' the fee sin of land is as cheap as a least-hold b rest is in langland, there is m. I; lord's influence. The voters f<> the guidance of politicians, and politician's trade is iud one of most respectable, lt must, ?ml be a wild sort of reform which tr fers to England tlie peeuliaritit American elections, or annihilate influence of the landed aristoci lt is barely possible that b\ dis) chising all the counties and s boroughs, and enfranchising all < pants of all houses iu bondon the great centres of man tl fact U industry, an approximation inigh made to tin- American standard. lt is quite possible that the reform bill may substitute liere there a wealthy merchant, mani tnrer or contractor for a squire baronet. lint the mosl obscqi toadies am! Hunkies"**d' the u>>l are these very men. Ex peri shows that ii seat in Parliament lilies the most radical disposit Self-made manufacturers and mer? chants lose much of their one-sided? ness by contact with squires and em? bryo pears, and their liberalism may bc warranted not to degenerate into republicanism. Tn fact, the soil and the atmosphere of England have too anti-democratic a flavor to admit of the "Americanizing process." So long as there are large land-owners with local influence, great manufac? turers and merchants, with numerous dependents and local connections, and a middle class with much to lose so long will the ranks of Parliament be mainly recruited from nion who have little sympathy with republican, and still loss sympathy with socialist theories. No facilitation of the pur? chase of land will add one acre to the purchaseable land of England; and as for robbing one class to enrich another, that is as odious to the poor as to the rich. The infusion of new blood into the constituencies will doubtless have some influence on fu? ture Parliaments, but the influence will probably be neither so sudden nor so sweeping as our American eon temporaries expect. -Richmond Times. Tin- Salisbury North State learns that a riot took pace at Morganton a few days ago, which resulted in the United States Regular Troops sta? tioned there driving some returned negro soldiers from the town. The negroes, who went off with General Stoneman at the time of his raid into Western North Carolina, and joined the Federal army, itseems, have been mustered ont of service recently and have just returned to their old homes with lofty notions of their rights. They showed some insolen."e. it is s:iid. at other places, but at Morgan ton it was resented by the soldiers, who drove the negroes off. ? . The strike of the ship carpenters, joiners and caulkers, of New York and vicinity, which was inaugurated live Weeks ago. to put into force the eight hour system of labor, still con? tinues, with very little prospect of a satisfactory understanding between the maehanies and their employers. < OM SI l-l IC* ! Al, AM? l'l\A\tlAL. I . . CHARLESTON, May ll. The price of cot? ton 'lunn;; the past week has been re I markably well sustained ni tbi> market, and on Saturda> last, owing to the light I stock, bo?tiers succeeded in getting an im? provement ol about Iceni per pound on ! th.- betti class of cotton, which advance has since been kept up. The sales of the ? w< el; amount to about 1.200 bale.*, with re? ceipts of J..;?..: bales. The market closed \' r\ lniii yesterday, and those wishing the better class ni cotton had topav full prices. 1 We quote: ( hdinarv ... . 24?26 i Low Middling . . <&28 1 Middling. .. 20(330 Strict Middling @31 i iood Middling 32($ Tin o eeipts '.(' Sea Isl.nul cotton are ex tr? nu ly light, and there being no sales we .i re without rpi? >t at ions. e.M roS si tTEMKN'T. I N. / ./. Cp d Steel, .?!! hand Sept. I, 1865 .. :;:'.J 1,610 Ueceipts from Sept. I, I8(i ., to Ma> -\ lsr.f. . - 4,668 81,622 lb ci ?pts from Mav :i t.. Ma\ I 9, isf.6. " '.. ll? 2,353 f?tal receipt.- 5,040 85,585 i EXPORTS. Exerts. >". /"./. ?'pU Exports from Sept. * I. 1865, t.. Mav :t. lsr.6. .1.578 78.308 From Ma\ I to Max IO, I8i;r. _>si; i.eir, Total i sports 4,864-79.923 On hand and shipboard 176 5,062 The reci ipis and stock of rice are very light, with prices without alteration. Clean Carolina selling at Iltf?l2c. per lb. The receipts of naval simes amount to 617 barrels rosin and turpentine. The rosin, .-.insisting of pale and No. 1. Spii it - ! urpeitt ?ne, as thev i un, at 80c. per gallon. Th. arrivals of North Uiver hay continue large, and wc learn of sales of about 800 bales ?it -I.V. per bun.b. d. 200 bal. s do. at $1.511 p. r hundred. The receipts of corn since our hist have amounted to some 20,000 bushels, but in consequence of buyers holding mit tm-a il. cline, the transactions have been limit? ed. We quote sl.io'-iSI.15 per bushel Weight, W il bout bags. dal ?. are ?II full supply with only a limit ed inquiry. We quote 6(V{?65e. per bushel. Flour has been in only limited demand. Sn|" rs have sold during the week at is.37 f<??s.5o, and extras at S9.50@$9.75. The supply of har.m for seine tim.- hav? ing been limited, the stock on hand has been getting light, which bas imparted a firm feeling t i the market. Wc hear of sales at l?c.fh I7*c, with an upward ten? dency. Tl.dy transaction of the week in salt that we have learned was an auction sule of 600 sacks Liverpool, at 51.12?@S1.17? per sack. (?old is dull the brokers buying al --!7 and selling at 28. Li. i itpooi., April ">.'. Sai. s of cotton to da\ ...ooo hales, including I.OOOto specu? lators and ? xporters. Market dull and -li-JitU derlii .ng. Middling uplands about .1 f>i I ?tl. breads tuffs dull. Provis ons flat! LOM'ON, April 2s. Consols close at 86^ '-'.si,,. United States fivc-twonties, 69J(?? 7i?.'.. BALTIMORE, May !.. Flour buoyant high grades advanced 50c. Wheat nrm. ('..in steadv, selling at 8Oe.f<0.S5e. Oats dull, at 56c." NIA V'OCK, May 9. Flour has advanced 20c. AlWSTA, Mav III. Some sales of good middling cotton" wen1 made to-day at 2*.ic. The demand was a little more active, hut prices remain thc same as on yesterday, ranging from 26tV.29c. for middling to good middling. Gold market quiet. Brokers buying at 26 and selling at t'^7 ami lJs. SIIII? NEWS. li Hil' OF CHARLESTON, MAY 10. ARK:VED YESTERD .V. Steamship Cumberland, tteed, Baltimore, british bug I lone Star, tint is, Liverpool. ' WEM' TO si A VESTERDAV. Steamship Fmily B. Souder, Sew V'ork. Sehr.I. B. Clayton, Philadelphia. Sehr Time, Geoghegan, Baltimore. SAILED FOR CHARLESTON. Steamship Kalorama, Baltimore. MK. BANCHO* r AND EARI, RUSSELL. It -will be remembered that Mr. Ban? croft's allusion to England, in Iiis commemorative oration, in February last, on President Lincoln's death, called forth a good deal of comment. lt so touched, it seems, the sensitive? ness of Earl Russell that he wrote Mr. Adams a letter, pleading not guilty of Mr. Bancroft's impeachment of him? self. ' The letter was sent, by his re? quest, to Mr. Bancroft, who replied, quoting Earl Russell's letters and the speech referred to by him in justifi? cation of the assertions of the oration. The sum and substance of the corres? pondence is that Mr. Bancroft assert? ed that at tho commencement of the late civil war the British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs made haste to send word through the palaces of Europe that the great Republic was in its agony; that the Republie was no more; that a head-stone was all that remained due by the lawful nations to "thc late Union.'' Earl Russell, in his reply, says: "Soon after the nows of the. resistance in arms of the South? ern States to the Government of the Union arrived in this country, a mem? ber of the House of Commons stated in his place that the bubble of Repub? licanism had burst. I replied, in the same debate, that the bubble of Re? publicanism hud not burst, and that if tho curse of slavery still hung about j the United States, it was England that had made them the gift of the poisoned garment which was now their torment, lu fact, I have never had any doubt that whether tho United States consented to separation or pursued the war tv) extremity, the great Western Republic would re? main, happily for the world, a power? ful and independent Republic." 'G<>vEUN>rENT STOCK.-The United States Government owns 8200,OOO worth of stock in the Dismal Swam]) Canal. 8400,000 in the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, 81,000,000 in the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, and 8300,000 in the Alexandria Canal Companies. Auction Sales, Commissioner's Sale. RICHLAND-IN EQUITY. LEVIN A- PKIXOTTO, Auctioneers. David Jacobs vs. M. Goodwin. Adm's, Kate Goodwin ft al. IN pursuance of the order <>f the Court m the above stated ease, I will sell, be? fore the Court House at Columbia, on tho FIRST MONDAY in .Tun..- next, all that lot of LAND, with the buildings thereon, in the city of Columbia, containing one-half aere, more or less, situated on Richland street, and bounded on the North by J. C. Dial's lot, East by Dr. Cuthbert. South by Richland street and West by a lot of Celia Mane or Hen. Delane. Terms of sale cash. Purchasers to pay for papers. D. ii. DESAUSSURE. C. E. R. D. May S *9 SUPERIOR MOUNTAIN RUTTER at 50 cents per pound, to supply our re t iii customers. For sale by HARDY "SOLOMON, Assemblv street, near New Market. May 12 Peas! Peas! ! ~f\ BUSHELS CONY PEAS. .JV/ 20 bushels TABLE PEAS. Just received and for sale bv T. J. GIBSON, Corner North Old Citv Hotel. May 12 ii Ul I" A Y PPf NOW opening a superior lot of impor? ted FRENCH BON-BONS, among which are some specialties in that line not before in thin market-together wah a se? lect assortment, viz: Glazed Fruits, Chry? ta?zed Brochette, Decorated Paste, Portu? guese Almonds, Raspberry Rails, Cream Dates, Nougat. Cordial Vegetable.-*, Choco? late Creams, Jt-llv Cakes, Fancy Cream Drops, Imitation Fruits in Cream. Jenny Lino Dragees, Chocolate Almonds, Ac., .tc. at MCKENZIES CANDY MANUFAC? TORY. Plain street, below the Shiver House. May 12 6 IT RECEIVE?, PER EXPRESS, VJfrALNUT CRACKERS. W Lemon. Egg and butter BISCUITS. Fkncv, Pic-Nic and Mdk BISCUITS. Maryland Refined SUGAR. LO Ohls. C. Sugar. Barrels Crushed Sugar. Powdered Sugar. SWEITZER CHEESE. 500 pounds HOLD DUST SMOKING TOBACCO. LorrilandT. Leaf Tobacco. HUSH POTATOES. LEMONS. No. I MACKEREL PICKLED GHERKINS by th. dozon. Sugar-Cured HAMS. Clear Sides BACON. 10 boxes Extra Cheese. lo Bags RIO COFFEE. Adamantine and Sperm CANDLES. May 12 ' J. C. SEEGERS. THE COKCERT Monday Evening, May 14, AT THK HALL OF A TCKERSON'SHOTEL. I>RICE of admission: Single tickets. $2: two tickets, ii; Tour tickets, ?j. Tick? ets to he had at the stores of Messrs. Muller A- Senn, R. Bryce, C. H. Miot, Shiver A beckham, Tolleson A .binney, J. McKen? zie. J. Heise, the book-stores, and at tho office of Nick?sou's Hotel. ?-The Ticket office on the night of the Concert will bo at the side entrance of the It is requested bv the Managars of the Concert that as far as possible tickets will be bought at tho various depositaries. Mav 12 1