Chronicle & sentinel. (Augusta, Geo.) 1838-1838, October 29, 1838, Image 2

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Th- . \ ..ii.-e, " hat voire i-i that, which the -.! tree-. ITiItIII ■ (r>||jpr'v hat Voice i that -i ■’ ri*■ ' -: ; l.rceec, Borne gtacefufy a u„ ; H’hat strain! are t' <-v. . I, : . . t Hi.-. •., Neath the U hat thrijlir.pi At lh' wt: r.v of. ,t. VJ iMlir V ~, , the I’d ten-tci- i ... ’ r ;;,Min ,■i, I Jf c |„e I hat ha,: t., , , " hli war,' ’ | . ’ i;. t , rj ;I , . ;J j ■ TJiat wov) ■ i tie i .i.-l I )-i,. -Jit > Oil. who would ii..t kkm the tfiit • Duong, Aiul hie I’ I aii'.as.sua* Ik igiu 1 The gcniii i.f jar. y u ~, ,is there A ith v, 1 ■ *;111. and ighi ; AniMhr S]> ah,: In . \ ;il illl% In lh’ pri • sin" cal! unite. Then list tn the minstrel's sweet ■ l voice, lh : men \ notes m» c n • (ill, listen, .*l.l let ns ail ie,oi e In tiit- min t.el - sutle .t Ja\. We (*»me ami onr hearts an I v-i c; i-himc V. iIIi iy ii a -I 'i!> - i trie.- • 'V mo, . 1 the heating 1 t kci ; To the uil, ; t; , . j,, ~ . An-1 the mii; Jr* volec a A jit.gr la night hi the moa v, i:d ac 1 free ; 1 ' 11--' toi l- 1i1,.a - ; v. it!t t 'I in I Ml; the lea ' with ■ |« <• < dinin', us. iin. 0. }’. Q, (trartJ'np-n m ~l I *, I'liliHaiUon. Vam,, Bi n tv.—> There.” e-.ii.l i Benjamin Oil;- muihlli-! to 1,.. , u-,. ri.l.li;; I the hurrtieks, -look ii> (hjt voting -oiili- i. - ’ ’ 11.- v.-i-v the dress of a private of the tenth hussars- h's nge might he tin: - or four mid twenty; hisheight lull mix fret, an.-! ln< wasjust as slight in it was posuthie t , 1,.- without in ju rv t > Lis strength, or the j)erfo.'t muni ne • 0 1 hu wh il ■ pi , I'ithoii Hjine ir- I mil w;, . a-U-- 1 I,red bv the whole re ti-tr-nl ta he ft. nil less, un i moulded ll "' ■' 'r.v. It remimled on- of slreng'li, e.-ti-i I Ii ■' «, Mi , ha-1 mi l ! -in!.- v. T( ; ai.ill, 1.-jd-r ■ I nn.l beautiful. Ine man w 1-. s . a,- usloiu-I l-> nee people atop mill look 111 him. I lull lie mere':;, mile I not nil.- |- edly, but with nn nppeaianee of p.nd nature, joined to v>:n lilt’- .1. ,ee of nr. hn-n-i. S'r il.-n -,1-I"hn e t'le I Hr- man la his shir and I fancied,l.y Ilia deep hia li, l int th" soldier guessed his motive in sp.- ikin - ia him, Nnlu -e for onee in her lae l * c^ roiinoJ '■sh iv the world what a man ou -in to bo, had given the soldier the finoat, full, rich noil lon-ot voice, which could Newell imiiginciL J’<’ coiilvl noit.h-»• ivn.l nor wril.*; yrt cilli.T tlr.A man was nuliirally n gentleman, of his perfect* 1 "'ll 111 V 111,1 N'one Ih-.u-y ( „ r j, i.Tjportjild,. t ■» think him Min li;\ir, wiii. !i iilwolnldy grew in lull nngleli. u-,i.-,,,| the linenl silken ounji «.V ; it WHS not quite black, for them was a ti.-h plow ot dark red liaii brown upon it. Then for ins eyes it was nlm-i h imp V. hid,. (~ ft s-vrl i:n then-exa-t Ir.ih-th.y were ho bright and stag "ke. Ipr mount- 1 them de-idcdlv pu plo, nn 1 was I tug bed lit for my paint,, jilt) there was nothing eqnivo il about the color of bis teeth, two even row a of pearl,s not tie) small. Ilia mouth, around which played tunny a dimple, was Urge enou -di l > add to that manliness of c.vpres aion lor which he was so ee-ehruted. There was n pet-ohm elmrai l**r nhout the uppa. - lip—one inighl li;u- iniip.m-d ilni It (|uivered with (he milar o( some vv.irh.a-romnund. just delivered— but llt-n the under lip was so brightly red and pouting, it on>ht to hive been a woman's, ills ■■■kin uni dI the li'iest and m >si delienlo texture, 'dear and olive-eolored ; lint then be was always blushing. His musta-hio.s, of which he was nil a liltlo pr iu l, wore liko tho It ur of his head. ! here nn* Minch about the i'.i-i- of litis young man vvhi.di n-niiii b ! one ot lord U> ran, lus mii.nii:ii s Dfc.vTti,—One line tnoninig, nhaiil a week after my m Tlin * with the bun.lsonie noldiot, I was a good deal affected bj vvitneßsing liom my window, a fmierul procession which was passing. •• I’h,-re goes a poor soldier la bis in si borne, said my maid, who happened ia be silting with me. It was a stormy (lav, and the wind - watßlled m -urnfnlly nmmig the trees. -He bears it not, p »or fellow, said 11 “ nor wLnd nor weather enn (lislnib him now.” As tiiry passed slowly by ">.v window, I obaerve.l lli.U th ■ funeral was at tended I y - ne ol tile olliecrs of tile tenth hussars, I i win n the dead soldier lead it.-en attached, I looked a ;a-,n. and discovered him to lie sir ih-uia miti; he looked unusually melancholy, and, for my part, though | always ronsidorod this u mourn* till sight, 1 ha 1 never lieeti so all'eeted by a soldier’s luncntl nil'll now. -It is the dull weather which disorders our nerves,” said 1. brushing aw a\ a tear. 1 was going hum the window, when my attention was arrested by a wild, beautiful young female, who ru -hed on toward the coffin. Her li-air was dishevelled, and her eyes swollen with tears. My husband soon returned, and informed me llnit the girl was the betrothed of (be “ handsome young saldie p ,” whom he had just followed to his last homo. Tills man had .-mod before me with nil his godlike bc.m'y but a few days past, and now - h cliiev the tears again rushing to ray eyes, 1 hastily lell th: room. 1 1.-ani -d afterward that he had liei-n id lint In o days with a bruin fever. Hir lieiijainin \is i 1 hna at the ih-ith-l-cd. His late pal check we. now llii. '-wd w ith a bright crimson glow, and l!\-' disorder of his line dark auburn ringlets- ---.i i T si! lo j. n-.i.-e tin- iu-.mix which could not ea-.ly he disli. l ,tired. As the poor maniac struggled in the nrms oi (lie men who vainly en deavored to confine him, by means of a strait waistcoat, he of-re I some olThe finest models foi lin' statuary art which could well lie conceived. His beauty a • pined n character of more sublimity hom the di- ->r>icr of bis brain, and all that super natural, glowing a d a—that immense bodily strength—t'ae youthful lire of that sweet eounte iuuiit—tlie eye w hich ll.ished sucit wild indignu lion on his l.i.i od tanin-nlors—th* 1 blood rushing tlirougii tl-,e transparent veins—all ll'i-- heemne a mass of cold, seiis.-lcas clay, to mingle with the elodr-ofthe valley before the nest revolving sun, ‘Hmi-tv os t -.-i.s.*—l w.-ll is -lie ! when I fin-', aw lhi vp.v -i, I loolu'-l ailenliti Iv. and turnin ; anevi'round a id eon'o'inplatiu-g live world, true, indeed, th--■ > at ! ‘Beauty soon fade .’ 1 .have seen the blushing rose unfolding it ; lender leaves to meet (he warm care of thr morning sun, and have ul.u >.-.t r;»vi< 1 in my soul tie' volatile gaiety, mid 1 v.-Uy, v ,1 imioecnce of the flower.— But vvln-u 1 . dat evenin'-, and .(topped l-> give a pa-sing loos at the tl.wv . il was pone—some rude hmd had d •1 it t-> t’.c - -.a h and I h-ft it with a si'li exalt.-an- • Beau*, ■> »i fade t.’ 1 have s'—n llio--- vvh. -a >■ ; a ro. - bright in mi tiuelouded lio’ir m. and thwho e path wat sparklin t with hope.-, and anticipations ij'p’,easnr< already |-. —. id, ye ■ the sun waa for ad vonced to\ . idiau, it was veiled will all melon, holy darka- . of midnight. Il vvt .- va n to hope i i la - worii, that lit. things ii i-.v bright mi l !-• lUtiful, should be long so lio, fa ■ from il; the b- f itcst s- em ta be the livs to droop ;-i 1 fad- cA iy. ’j'h -re 1- i len.lencv l decay oil. ■ flat i-, (.ntiii.. A'aturc i courinn .' . ~ ~i.* change by her phenomena o yielding her own beauties to the dejormin-; ham ol art. rhe mount ,ia i siiik!ii< r Ii a level w ill the valley . and th" waves of the ocean are rollin' over v. h-v Win one;* haliitaMe la- i. A-nd yet 1 love th- •cages of decay—they givi « wehin. h»ly ph-atur, swevier than mnsa- of tin B*s frivolity of life, J would rail ,■■ >-n th- uld ’r.ng ruins of i-j.-no as ::;;: v .cA,-, or th. eruuililiag o sain ■ Uu ;e m mument than see then in their p.ou Jeil days. Iha 1 nmeh ratiiev ga/. upon i.: -r.-. ir dr f-. th a %J, V 1.,.,.,, r.i ’ r. n'Vji robe with the fiml wintry blast ol i 1,1. : '» r, than upon the evergreen, that resist tint J ■irvi rst inn h eh’ Boreas. ‘Beauty noon iadcs,’| cml them i.s nothing beautiful that Ve may love, 1 with lli I: no of its continuing —it senna but uay ste de v, lira l I a misted in conveying to the | 'rave •he loxliest infant I over razed upon. It j was lb" fire.t pledge of connubial bliss, but it was I too beautiful for earth, and in the midst of the mo'll vit<hie ! it : eye.a in death. Willi slow and mcliin. holy step we proeerded t'> the grave, and t ihi ";( iie !. t look at what Whs lovely, heard the cold i bids nun! ling up m the collln. The mother ami father wept, mid even 1, who seldom yielded I i sympathy, turned from the scene with a tear in contemplating how soon beauty fades. CHRONICLI-: AMD SF.NTINF.L. . AU GU 8T A . TI’LSOAY MOUMMC, <>< "FOBKR 30. 'l'he Amendments of the Constitution of Penn sylvania, have ’a n adopted by about 2000 ma jority. Thus. Toby, fcißij., lias been recognize] by the P e lidcnl of the 1 hilled stale:, as < 'onsul of T •xna for the port of New Orleans. Switts Consul. I. J■ d lll A. M> . It-, at the sitting of the Helve tian diet oftlic 13th of August, was appointed Con sul from the ISwisa Confederacy to New Orleans. / r /fr. l ysf. :ft ~ > ( MV regret t.i aiinouncc, says the Charleston Mercury ofyattcakv. the death of Dr. I). F. Nar dia editor of the Southern Botanic Journal, of this city. He died of the prevailing f ver, and is the second physician who has fallen a victim to the malady. We believe that both Dr. Scott and Dr. Nar'i-i undertook the diliicult mid dangerous tank of prescribing for themselves. lutcicMing from Canada. The New York I’linl, says : —“We hear from a source we deem respectable, that there is likely to he further trouble on the frontier. A gentleman writes—‘Things arc coming to a head on the fron tier; 1 think by the Ist proximo, we shall have rc iiewal of the Canada war, and if I am not deceived, under an organization and with a reciprocity on the part o( the inhabitants generally, very diflerent from whal characterised hed winter’s and spring’s > I operations.” / The New York (iivzctte states that orders were re vived on the UHli inst. from the Secretary of the Treasury, by Mr. Hale, agent of Fran ids life bouts, to furnish each of the Revenue Cutters from Charleston to Eaatport with one of them. 'l’hc Edgefield Advertiser, of the 251 h hist, says, “The Cotton crop in this district, is much injured by the heavy rains which have fallen for some days past. Vermont. The attempt to elect a U. S. Senator by the ( Legislature of Vermont, did not succeed the first t day. There were three candidates in the field. ' The Senate voted 10 times, and the House a num her of times, but neither candidate obtaining a 1 majority, both Houses adjourned till the following e ; The French Squad run. The brig Pastora which arrived at New Orleans 1 r on the ‘Mill in four days from Havana, reports „ that at the moment of her departure two brigs and o (wo frigates. French, reached that port from Vera \ Cruz. There cannot, therefore, be more than one corvette and two brigs now blockukding Vera Cruz,, p It was rumored at Havana that the French Heel tl which is to operate against Vera Cruz, was to (1 l v meet at Martinique. I The citizens of St. Louis, held a Hirelin gon the i UHh iust. to consider the expediency ol establish- | ing a line of steamships from some. Atlantic Fort | to St. Louis. The meeting was well attended, and committees appointed to make the necessary in [nines, and collect taels and statistics in relation to the import and export trade of St. Louis, and the necessity of opening a direct trade with Eas tern ports. Fire at Harrisburg. A letter from (he Harrisburg Telegraph, pub lished iu the Philadelphia Inquirer, slates that a lire broke out in Harrisburg, on Sunday afternoon last, in a carpenter’s shop iu Market-street, and was not ‘pi niched until extensive damage war sus tained. The buildings destroyed were a grocery store at the corner of Market and Third streets, kept by Mr. 11 unUnian-a dwelling house belonging to Hol man rV Simoiids, and occupied by the latter—the carpenters sh >p in which tile lire originated— house occupied by Mrs. Shannon, all on Market si reel, mi l the Lutheran church, session and school house on Front street. The loss of pro perl \ is about.s2s,ooo. The church cost $15,000 , j when built, and its organ, with all the interior, cx -1 1 cept the chandeliers, was consumed. A brig and two schooners, deeply' laden with 1 height, and a luge number of passengers, have 1 y i LI I from Augusta, Me., for i’cxaa, — Ah >. trout Belfast. * e■: M Toe Louisville Advertise! : states that live dollar notes of the Bank of Ken i. ] Ui Ay, altered t > tens, payable at the Danville - i Branch, are in circulation. They can be easily ‘ ilctted. The vignette of the lives is the figure . of a horse—no other note -, of the Bank of Ken- • I ] tu.ky have the vignette. Another French Fleet. l'.ipl. Dukehart, at this port yesterday, left Ha vaim 12th iust. and reports, that the French brig t\nu user from live, t : \ era Cruz, had arrived at Havana, the C‘.plain »• which stated thru a targe ie j squadron sailed iu company to reinforce the block o. ladeat Vera t rnr. Tim Prince do Joiuvillc was s' . in command of one of the Corvettes, to j Freights for the I nited States iu demand mid II ; high, and fewer vessels in port than are generally >r ,n fins seasv’ii of the year. Freights for Europe id nominal.—The health of the city unusually good h during tb.c sumiurr. — ilrj/imorc 1 mericun ‘iGt/i ig irmtunt, e "Mi (iu.vcioi—l'nder this curious hood ie ing. lire Ciiicim. iti News slates that there is a e x. i.ion player at Be-ion. whose exquisite touches ;c .. e worth a • p.l -■•■image to Jerusalem." That’s m about the gr« est s train in its line that we have re rea 'in‘a c ■ ■ a ;e’ —(the age of a entail coon, I - “.C ns ■). V *• ■ , /'Vvyuifr, Important (mm South America, i By a ulip frotu the otTi' •• of t!.'- Brunswick Ad- I voeatc, dated October 3.7 th, wc learn that the schr. Olive, ('apt. Ainsworth) 31 days from Cha/rc, no Panama, bound to New York, put in that port in distress—vessel leaking badlv, an 1 crew rick. The Editor of the Advocate has been fur nUh< (1 the (1] >wing in lligcnci Mr. ;11. Harder, tl. American Consul at Panama. w!to •aunts passenger on board the Oiivv. Pana tia, 15th Bep!,, 18118. (5y an arr;v d from Guayaquil, we have rj-rived tlie following intelligence which we extract from h'ltera of authenticity from that pi e c and b'ulta. On tile nedit ol tli- '..:7 th .1 uly. the Bolivian troops, ((•gather with two battalions ol Peruvians, under General Moran, left Lima, and on the tallowing morning, Nieto entered the eitv, ;• 'eonipunicd by Gibegozo and about 2000 in ’n, and declared the (.•institutionof 1835. Orbegoza being named Fro viuionul Director. On the 7tii August, the (Chilian squadron arrived oil'Callao, consisting of 33 ves sels, including ransports, and ten men of war; and on the Bth landed at .Ancon 5000 men. The ('hilians demanded twenty millions of dol lars. an 1 possession ol Callao, until the arrange ment should be concluded. These demands were considered inadmissible. They then advanced and look Callao aial Lima, after an aeti n in wbi.'h it is said 3000 men were killed. Genera! Ganiarm bus been proclaimed President, Tin South still adheres lo the cause of Banta Cruz, who, it is said, wee within three days of Lima, with all army of 8000 men. The dates rom Callao arc up to the '."-'d August* and from Guayaquil to Is' September. ■* Oibcgozo had lied to the mountains. Bchr. Benjamin Gaither, Gonnow r for X. V.. sailed in company with the Olive. The lOndon Gonesputi lent of the .'few York Courier, writing under date of IDthult., furuislies the following information respecting the state of American stocks in that capital: Money Is abundant, but i red it becoming dailv more did’i mil In be obtained—and the general mans ol American securities arc certainly not risin gin value on the Clock Kxeliangc. The principal cause of the depreciation of the Slates and other trans-alkinlie securities, is in the contin ual and unabated influx of new bonds of ail des cription, which arc daily coining forward lo an extent which oppresses the market—and carries down the prices of the best of the trails-all inti slocks. Amongst other securities which have been announced within the bast few days, is a loan on the city of Charleston, called the Fire Loan Ailh which Mr. McDuffie, the Intel overnor of Booth Carolina, has arrived at Liverpool—lint without having yet transmitted the exact particu lars of his mission to any of the parlies on the Loudon slock fix change. The gentleman who lately came charged with a similar mission from the State of Michigan has very prudently gone forward lo Amsterdam and Hamburgh, in order to uncertain the state of the money markets of those cities, and the probability of obtaining better (onns than in London, where the market is so overwhelmed with similar securi ties at the present time. The South Carolina loan, which General Hamil ton ncgocintcd recently here, ocs off, however, very well, at the rale at which it was negociated, and there would he no difficulty in negotiating any fair and average amount of such securities at good pri ces in the London market, if the inundation wore not so excessive, as to throw so decided a damp over the whole mass of transatlantic bonds. The Pennsylvania Rail Road Company have taken up a sum of ,€83,000 sterling on mortgage of the line from Philadelphia to llarrisburg'n and Lan caster— the contractors being the Messrs. Solomon —eminent Hebrew gentlemen in this city—and the contract price being 84. The rate lor this last named sum is obviously so low, and the sacrifice of capita! so large, lo the Company who have bor rowed the money from I lie Messrs. Solomon, that no clearer instance could be found of the impolicy of so excessive tt number of applications from America, which continue to come forward in the face of transactions of a very disheartening kind. Another ease which is frequently alluded to by the brokers—as illustrating the consequences of the excessive supply of American security, is that of the Life & Trust Company, the stock of which, without any distinct cause for the change, other than the general state of the market, has fallen not less than six per cent, within the short period of six months—one gentleman assuring me that the largo sum of £30,000 in one transaction has r oeully hocnolfcred at 87 ; a lepreeiation of even half per cent, beyond even the quotations—ami for no particular reason in the circumstance of the security itself. Under these circumstances, it cannot he impressed too strongly upon the parties requiring money lor the United Slates, and par ticularly the western stales, that the London mar ket is decidedly unfavorable for their purposes at the present time; and that by withholding their applications for a period, the terms will be ulti mately much more favorable—when the pressure may have been found lo have, abated, and the market lighter of transatlantic bonds. From the A . V. Courier .f Knquirer, rs the Important from Washington* We 1 ■ ini from a source which mac be railed on, that on Monday la«t a gentleman of Idglt diame ter, wailed upon the President of the United Stales, and laid before him loiter;. d 'uments. iSa*. &c, which he had received from Francs and v, were intended to prove, that the expedition now titling out in France ostensibly against d/i.c.V;) is in reality intended against the Island of Cuba! The communication is said to have excitedconsid crahle uneasiness nt Washington, but we arc sure unnecessarily. France well knows that such a proceeding would he looked upon as a Declaration of War against the United Blatcs, and Great Britain and treated accordingly,and therefore, can not entertain the idea. After all, is it certain this expedition is intended la act in this hemisphere 1 It is ordered to rendez vous (it Co Uz. A.*w if Vc ra Cruz be its object or any other Mexican port, we should have thought that Guadaloupe or Martinique would be a more mutual place of rendezvous, either being but ;> lew days soil from the contemplated scene ol oj erati n s. At any rate, there they will have to go, should Mexico be the object in view. It is impossible for a large squadron, eompo* ed « f vessels differing in their rate of sailing ami steam ships, to cross the Atlantic and arrive on the battleground in that i order which is necessary toad with ellicacy. They must have some ad jacent place where they can marshall their forces and arrange their plan of at tack. The British expeditions to a distant point always found the observance of this rule ncccßsaiy. Jamaica, it will bo recollected, was the place of I rendezvous for the forces which at vked New Or ■ leans. : And what can France expect to gain from (he 1 most suce> slid operations against Mexico! We ■ of course consider the idea of marching on the - city of Mexico, or erecting a monarchy there under r a French prim e, which we have seen suggested, ns ehemerieat as the idea that the expedition sjio -1 ken of is intended i > take possession of Cuba. Bupposo France possess herself of the Castle of .* Ban Juan do I lion and even of the city of Vera 1 Cruz, she \\ ill !c as far from bringing is’ men who I compose the Government of Mexico to terms us ever, whilst the climate will make fearful havoc . among her forces. (Suppose she lay Tampico in - ashes, the men in power in Mexico will look on i with indilVercnce. The truth is, the weakness of f Mexico is her strength. There bei; gno \iudiiv -j in any part of her system,it is impossible to strike > at a vita! point. li the first instance we believe that Louis Phil lipj"* he* been di rei' ed I y the rep,e-r:ndinr.s of t lit' French Agiin Mexico t.o apt to overrate - the terror inspired by French power and not to es timate sufficiently the obstinacy—stupid enough sometimes—which the Mexicans have inherited ' from tin ir Spanish ancestors. But he is 100 sa -1 gaciou Prince to persevere in error. He cannot v fail to perceive that Ida first demonstrations oi re . sentim nt have not produced the elli ct he was led to expect. He eumiut fail to peiver. e that his new ' system of blocked is about to meet with serious 5 resistance from England and the United States, and li ■ will find, we think, that one half the money which the cont> mpL.ted expedition to Mexico will I cost, expended am.m o;', the men who now hold the i dims of c-'V. rn.iient in .tico, would obtain more from him then any exertion of his power. That power, however; may possibly still be dis ’ played before the Castle of San Juan. Bat before r it attempt to strike, Louis Phillijtpe’s money will . hare obtained enough to satisfy the often abused , terms of French honor and French glory, and there the matter w!U end. This at least appears | to us the most probable solution of the diliiculty. From the New Orleans Courier, of the 24 th. Important from Mexico. On Monday we published an extract of a letter from Mexico, stating that the Federal party had been put down, and some of its principal leaders arro ed. Th: i may he true, as regards the capital; but we have accounts now which shew that the ■ insurgi iits were at lees! masters of one of the prin ' cipal ■,ijior! The following particular:, have been communicated to us. On the Bth of October the garrison of Tampico rose in arms and pronounced in favor of the con stitution of 1824, Lieutenant-colonel Montenegro • was chosen temporary commander of the place. The farmer governor,general Jose dc las Pietros > mid several oilier officers, were taken into custody mid embarked on hoard the Danish brig Adelaide. After getting to sea, these officers were landed at ; the Brasses b't. Jago. The revolutionists count on (ho influence of Don ’ Vital F V ‘minder,, a former governor of the state of i Tainaulipas. They have with them, Don Maguel Nonces, a very popular and influential man, lately chief of Pueblo V iejo. They have 1500 men nu- I der arms, and arc in communication with general Urrca, who began this revolution in the West, , mid is one of the ablest generals in the Mexican , service. On the 11 til or 12th of October, general J’icdros reached Malmnoras, and induced the Mexican general at 1 hut place, to march with 1500 men, lor the purpose of attacking the federal party in Tmmudipas and Tampico. The collector of (his port, lias politely favored us with the sight of a letter from Tampico, con finning the new; of the above revolution, and ad ■ ding that a strong parly in the interior of Mexico will at once second Iho movement. The writer concludes .by expressing a wish that one of our vessels of war may soon appear oil’ Tampico. We have been favored with a copy of a letter from 'Tampico, to a respectable mercantile house in this city, of which the following is a translation: Tampico, Oct. 7. We have (o inform you that last night our gar rison pronounced for the re-establish in cut of the Federal government; and that general Piedras, who was in command here, is going with several oilier ofth ers to your city, in the vessel which car ries this, having been driven oifby the revolution ists. We know not if the revolution lias its ramiflea lions in the interior, but it is thought it has.—ls ties is so, and the troops here arc seconded by oth ers, Iho present government of Mexico must fall, and we shall have an arrangement with France. Every thing has passed oil’ here in the greatest order. We have no vessel lo blockade us > As soon as one appears, the revolutionists intend to let (he captain know what they have done, and beg him not to prevent vessels coming in, as we are now in a slate of rebellion against the general govern ment. From the New York Erpress. Money Market—City News. Wednesday, P. M. The weather lias been sa excessively stormy that all out door sales have been wholly suspen ded, and the Exchange was but thinly attended. The holders of Flour put up the price. 12c cts. on a bbl—but very little was done. Stocks, it will bo seen, have all declined. They have not, however, fallen back quite to the point they stood at three days ago. There is quite a demand to-day for Southern Domestic Exchanges, particularly for New Orleans and Mobile. Exchange on the former will sl’H readily at 2 per cent, discount, and on the latter at only 5 per cent. Mississippi not quite as fresh; sales at (U. On Tennessee the rate stands at SA. There is no improvement on bills oi ihc Bran don Bank, they are selling at all rales, lrom4o to 50 per cent. The Havre packet that was to sail to-day is de tained on account of the weather. We announced that the proprietors of.the Liv erpool Line of Packets had commenced charging tw,cily-fivc cents a letter; since then the price has been altered lo twelve and a half cents. This is a rate as low that no person ought lo object lo it. Neither the London or the Havre Lines, however, made any chat < Notvvitli handing the abundance of money. IStock'i have been running down for the hist two months. Solid Stocks have been less aif'cled Bum any other. The flinch;:-, as they are termed, have all tumbled. Unit'd ;:eles Bank s liarcs were quick in Lon don, and large at 25/. 3s. 6d.—which, with exchaug. added of 9 A per cent., is 1221 percent.; thus paying a profit to the person who remits it of full 2 per cent., as the rate is in this market 120. Notwithstanding the incessant attacks that have been made on this institution for years past, —the charge of insolvency, by the late President, —the suspension of specie payments,—the charge of im mense losses iii llicir cotton speculations,—Mr. Biddle’s want of principle of head and heart— capitalists on both sides of the water still continue to have mulimiiiished confidence in the soundness ■ of (lie institution, and the good management of its ' olliees. The stock advanced higher than any oth er American Security that can he named. A letter from London, dated Sept. 24th, men tion • the sale on that day of POO shares United • States Lank, at 25/. 28 (id. This is an improve -1 lUCllt, i f '..••tract of a letter from Edisto Ft amt S. C. ' “In my last letter to you, 1 stated that this : Island would average more. Cotton to the acre than it has last year. 1 fee! no hesitation now in with i drawing that opinion, and declaring that ns small • as the crop was of the past year, that the present will not exceed il. 1 plant 249 acres, and have . gathered 21 halts (300 pounds each) and he who f expects more than an equal quantity to that alrca - dy housed, is indulging a hope that will surely dis appoint him, It is the opinion of all with whom ■ I hat e convert I. that the average product will not be more than 7 5 pounds per acre. I know our - friends, the buyers, are very slow of belief in our r statements concerning the growing crops, but I can , discover neither policy or sense in an attempt lo - deceive.” i Some years ago a noted warrior of the Pot i low atomic tribe presented himself lo the Indian 1 agent at Chieag i. as one of the chief men of the s village, observing, with the customary simplicity of ■ the Indians, that he was a very good man, and a i good friend to the Americans, and concluded with i a request for a dram of whiskey.—The agent re s' plied, that it was not his practice lo give whiskev ; to goof/ men—that good men never asked for vvhis e key and never drink it when voluntarily ofl’ered. That it was bad Indian, only who demanded whis • key. “Then.” replied the Imli.n . kb-, in f l.cn El- ••me d—u rascal. - ’ c I'/'oni the (' I trnbin Tele c<jc. [iihpvcral buiTowpil articles, introduced into ou i columns of today lor ;’ie sake of other useful mai i ter, there wdl lie observed occasional sarcastic Him? - at our State and the late Nullification party. W t do not notice these for the purpose of licpreratin - the very sidy charge that we have turned our back ‘ on Nullification, Ibrthr.t is two'silly even for a jest v These passages load us to reflections of more sori s ous atid general interest. When South Carohn ” s a,and unlrlen ted,. but standing on a j st t’ ilous height of dauntless resolutions, and lookinj I only to the line ot Rig/if to steady her eve am > guide her galdy step.-;; when she arrested in hi 1 marauding path a hundred handed giant who seem ■ ed only to want the nerve t > crush her underfoot;— did they laugh at Carolina then ! She returns e frown for frown, retorted threat for threat,and scon 1 for indignation. Did they laugh at Carolina then j I* io.ee Invective and deep denunciation were opei 4 mouthed against her, hut none laughed then.— s fhoso that hated most, yet respected her; thos* more aloof from the struggle if they would no openly assist yet admired her galantry and felt ii their hearts like Dcsdcmonajwhen she wished l4 tha , heaven had made her such a man.” Now she i hacked by a powerful party, a party floating cn i lemming tide ol success. She is smiling will those she defied and mas, hing in ihoir triurapha • -'dn. And now how she stand in the ev 1 ,untr > ! \ m ig ht r new found friendr ' she lakes rank in due proport! ./ n the leannesi o,‘ her vote for the President, in tiio same propor tion she is honored with a place in the inventory ’ of the Administration goods and chattels. For the last eight years she has held the influence of he: ’ vole as but dust in the balance when weigher against the dignity of her political character, ant ' feared to soil the latter by putting them in the same scale. Now that vote is all that is left other her ■ iiagc. Among her late friends her conduct is mat -1 ter of jest and ridicule: her defection is chastised with a sneer, and if a burst of indignation is oc j. casionally heard, it is not against the recreant state, 1 but against him whose arch intrigue has brought her to his lect, a deluded slave, and used her as the tool of his own purposes. These reflections ‘ are to little purpose now, but the thorn which is driven to the quick will fester to the sorrow of ’ those that planted if. i r John C. Calhoun vs. Waudy Thompson. 1 his was so essentially the true issue in the late congressional canvass, that in a part of the district called ilic <• Dark Corner,” no other light than that ol the Hon. electioneering Senator seems to have broke into the gloom. It is said a good handful! ol sub-Treasury votes were lost there by being giv en in for “J. C. Calhoun.”— lb. A fracas occurred yesterday afternoon, at the, Trempnt House, which might have been fatal. As the subject will be made a matter of Police Court primary investigation this afternoon, wo shall not repeat the thousand and one stories which are afloat, nor attempt to make a connected and un substantiated narrative out of them. It must be sufficient, for the present, to say that Mr. J. D. Delano, of New York, and Mr. George P. Tim mins, ot Charleston, IS. C., having fought a light ol words, the latter became so much exasperated that he discharged a bullet-loaded pistol at the for mer, and the ball—happily for both parties—miss ed its object, and buried itself in the wall. To morrow tlio whole story will be reported on the evidence given this afternoon Bouton Transcript of Wednesday. Execution.—The Charlottesville (Va.) Advo cate of the fld instant, states that the two negroes, Lucinda and Andrew, lately convicted in Path county, of the murder of Mr. Mayse’s children, were executed, agreeably to their sentence, at the M arm Springs, on the 24th ultimo, A gentleman who was present states that they persisted to the last, in denying all agency in (be murders. It is also stated, that the girl, on whose testimony chiefly those slaves were convicted has since her acquittal confessed that she alone committed the murders— but if this bo the fact, it is presumed but little reli ance could be placed in such confession, as from her size and tender age, there is little probability that she could have perpetrated the horrid acts— besides there was abundant other circumstantial evidence to warrant the conviction, independent of the girl’s statement on the trial. The Mormons.— From all we can gather from the St. Louis papers, it seems that a bloody busi ness with the Mormons seems inevitable. An express had been received in that city, and it was thought the military would bo called out by the Governor. The Republican of the 13th states, that on the Tuesday preceding, when (he steam boat Pirate arrived near Dewit, the Anti-Mormons were still in lorcc in the neighborhood of that place. The Pirate lay at Greenville, seven miles about! Dcwit, on Tuesday night. At that time information had come in, that the Anti-Mormons bad given their opponents notice that they must take up their line of march next ntornin at 8 o’clock. This the Mormons refused to do. wan reported also, that the Anti-Mormons had sent word to the Mormons, that if they w ould colled their women end children in one house that house should not be fired on. As the Pirate d down on W Ini rdnj morning, by Dewtt, a flag was seen flying over one of fire lorgaist bouses there. From all appearances, there is reason to believe that a conflict took place on that day, V- ; ’n : d iv, tl e 10th.— N. 0, Picayu i; . 1 The Philadelphia Gazette, in mentioning the 1 death in fling Sing prison of Walter F. Osgood, • late a lawyer of lhe city of New York, says— This prisoner, if wc mistake not, was relative by marriage, of the family of Dc Witt Clinton.— The shock of his crime among his kindred was, overwhelming. It plunged them all into the ■ deepest affliction. Shortly after his trial and sentence, his sister, slung with his disgrace, and mourning for his fate, killed herself, and laid her ’ bruised and broken heart in the grave, .before he ’ went to prison. Such arc the evil fruits that spring from the overweening hunger and thirst for gold,—which ’ mal-e not only misers and overrcachers, but ' criminals of every degree. Loved unduly, that “slave of the dark and dusty mine” empties more plagues upon the paths of men, than were em braced in all the vials of the Apocalypse. - i ■ : ■ - . COMMLIItCTAL. Havre, September 25. t Colton. —The sales in Cotton yesterday amounted to 900 tales. Our stock is decreasing, and the greater 3 part of which is in the hands of the Bank agents, . who as well as other importers, are determined to keep up prices, j -p.yastrw* w v/» ' MARI INTELLIGENCE. r —— ——— i Charleston, October 29. 1 trrirn! on Saturday —Schr Middlesex, Jeffrey, Jacksonville ; steam packet Georgia, Rollins, Balti more 50 hours; steam packet .North Carolina, Davis, . WimiingUci, NC. , In the ofi'i" —Hr barque Ganges, Corkcn, Liver pool. Arrived yederday —Schr Edward Livingston, 1 Hess, Back River. i Clear.-,’ —Line brig Gen Marion, Delano, Balti i more; schr Sarah Lavinia, Rurtcll, Providence, R 1; . schr Lenity, “orners, Wilmington, XC. Went to ■ i da] —Line ship Saluda, Morris. New York; C L brig Calvin, Gardner, do; schr Sarah Luvina. Hartwell, Hartford, Conn; steam • packet North Carolina, Davis, Wilmington, NC. Il'ent to sc,i uederday —Line brig Kentucky, Hatch, M ; ,Gon Marion, I iano, Ba 1- timoro; schr Lenity, Somers, Wilpuugton, N C. MARRIED, ur " Hie Church, on Sunday evening ■S _i ® ■; 1 ’• l °p«a i bepmuck, all of Mils <.|^' ® r . ’DIED, n ' . O’l Saturday morning, the 27th inst.,after a :;i f ; !l , “ 0 f ot M <lays,Mrs. Mary F. Ne v ,.a N ?t t.. rlie 20ih year ol her age. She has left a husbam •i- an infant * out 10 months old, with numerous re ■a. Lons and Inends to mourn her loss. tg Augusta Benevolent Society. ‘ =5S j id , ;; ;i ' Committees for the ensuing month are as Ri. . 10W3 J-~ — VL Division No. I.—Mr. J. W. Meredith Mr tv - L^!: ;,ian ’ Jr " Mn - F - Mc:tdith ’ Miss 'in h! _ JJiasion Ail. 2. —Mr. Wm. E. Jackson, Mr Wm •ji ri juries, Mrs. rrumbley, Mr. Douglass. 1 Division .Vo. 3. —Mr. M. Wilcox, Mr. E Heard Airs. A. Whitlock, Mrs. Heard. earJ _ _‘L cl ~ 9 C. F. STTRGES, Soc’ry. sc W ‘['/'V'' received, a fine assortment of of .• , llk . s i.? nslstin S 1,1 of Plain and Figured a < n, (k ?'■' ,h I C H!ack Sllk ’ Piain and Figured Colored 1 Silks, Figured Fatm 1 aghone, a new and beautiful . article for dresses ; also, Fancy Silk Hdkfs. Shawls is and Scarfs. G. H. NOBLE k Co. “ . oct 30 opposite the Planters’ Hotel, \rOTICE.— The partnership heretofore ex is tine al j. N between the undersigned and Noah Smith d P . ■<• erased, under the firm of F. LAMBACK Co. k s, dissolved. All persons indebted to said firm are re- JS Quested to make payment to Frederick Lamback j. only ,v.ho v. ill pay all legal demands against it F. lamback, ’ y o. K. METCALF, ■° surviving partner of N. (Smith y r„ •r Augusta, October24,lS3S. d A]l Persons indebted to the late firm of F. Vam c Ijaek Sr <o. are requested to make immediate pay. nient to the subscriber, who will continue to transact business at the old stand. F. LAMBACK > Augusta, October 30, 1838. lw d ]VT 01 P f <p) hereby revoke a power of attor ■ x N ncy 1 gave Gen. V. Walker and the Hon. Jnu Schly, some months since, to make titles to certain it parts of my real estate in the county of Richmond, s My letters of instructions accompanying said power s el attorney are also revoked. s . „ DAVID TAYLOR, Jr. j. Augusta, October 30, 183 S. r„ Charleston Insurance' Trust Torn pa iTy, C apital One Million Dollars—nil paid in, AGEICCV, AVGUSTA. • [ rgMIE subscriber is prepared to take Fire and Ma -3 rino risks at the current rates of premium t Robert McDonald, ’ t oct SO Sin* Agent C. 1. kT. Co. 1 _ JAILOR’S NOTICE. ke so ’’ l llt t,le lower market house in this V V city, on the first Tuesday in December next, (by order of Council,) a negro man who calls himself ( John, says he belongs to William Daniel, and that he'\ * • runaway from him at Greensboro, Alabama ; he is j forty-two or three years of age, five feet seven inches f high, dark complected, and to be sold to pay expenses t &c. W. LAWSON, Jailor. Augusta, October 30, 1838. td W tltllEH SSI!■:RIFF’S S !,lf. ■ be sold at the court house door in said VV county, on the first Tuesday in January next, between the usual hours of sale, the following prop erty, vis: three Negroes, Dick, a man fifty years of age; Raymond, a boy 11 years old, and Bartley, a boy 10 years old, levied on as the property of Haynes S. Ryan, to satisfy one mortgage li. fa. in ’ favor of Thomas Gibson, administrator on the estate of Dennis L. Ryan, deceased. JAMES HALL, Dcp’y, Sh’fT. 1 October 30, 1838. td ■unu... Oeorvrin, Scriven county : Jolm Williams applies for letters of v 7 administration do bonis non, with the will annexed, on the estate of Henry Magee, deceased : These are therefore to cite, summon and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said deceased, to be and appear at my office within the time prescribed by law, to show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal at office, this 26U\ October, 1838. * JOSHUA PERRY, clerk, oct 30 fleorsria, City of Augusta : (AOURT OF COMMON PLEAS.—To whom it J may coscern —take notice that the last day of entering suit for the November Term of said Court will he Friday, the second day of November next. By order of the Judge, HENRY IIOBERT, Clerk. October 30, IS3S. It H. CRANE lias just received the v v balance of his fall and winter supply of fancy and staple DRY GOODS, which makes his 1 assortment as good as any in tills city—among those recently received are the following: i Fine Challey and Muslin De Lanes; embroidered ; and Challey Merino ; fine English prints; Welch . and Thibet Flannels ; Furniture and Cambric Dimity; Turkey red prints ; superior dotted Swiss Muslin; 1 brocha Merino Muslin de Lane ; Thibet and raw silk Shawls; silk cotton worsted and cashmere Hose; Rose and Duffel Blankets; 10-4 and 12-4 Whitney Blankets ; figured Poplin; Woollen Gloves; black Lasting ; embroidered Belts ; plaid Ribbons; brown Linen Crum Cloths; gentlemen's green gro grain Scarfs; and a good assortment of Stocks ; white and colored Furniture Fringe ; Corsets, from No. 1 to 10; Morhair Caps ; worked Comforters. 1 oct 29 1 FjIV.VKNTV DOLLARS REWARD.—StoIen from g my dwelling house, next door above the Moth , odist Church, on Saturday night, 27th inst., a double cased silver lever WATCH, No. (140, Gibbin & Wallace, Belfast, makers, with a gold fob chain ' attached to it, dial somewhat disfigured. Also, 40 or $5O in bills, one twenty dollar bill on the bank of ; St. Marys, one five and one ton dollar bill, and a few change bills. The above reward will be paid for the apprehension of the thief or recovery of the pro perty. JOHN FINN, oct 29 2t 7vj OBEUT \ r . HARRIS, Attorney at Law, will ' a55 practice in the counties of Burke, Richmond and Columbia. Office lower wing of Reid’s building. Broad street. d&wlm oct 29 ADVANCES ON COTTON. J I BEHAI, advances made on shipments to Savan j nah, Charleston, Liverpool, and Havre, bv oct 29 JOHN G. WINTER. C'4 ARRETING, &e. —Ingrain and Vcnitian Carpot- J ing. Printed Floor Cloth, and Docking Baize, 1 just received and for sale by WM. 11. CRANE. 'oct 29 '| r S VIE AUGUSTA BOOK STORE is removed to 0 No. 208, throe doors below its late stand, on Broad street, where the subscriber has just received an additional supply of Theological, Medical, Scien ' title, and Literary works, together with an assort . ment of School Books, Blank Books, Paper, Quills, &c. which will be disposed of on reasonable terms, oct 29 3t WM. J. HOBBY. 3 IST RECEIVED at the Augusta Book store, hy ' ®| WM. J. HOBBY, The Gift, for 1839, elegantly bound The Violet, or Juvenile Souvenir, edited hy Miss 1 Leslie r Bulwcr’s Lelia, with fifteen illustrations , Homeward Round; Kate Leslie i Kemble’s Christian Year The Woman of the World Damascus and Palmyra Joanna Baillie’s Poetical Works Charcoal Sketches, with illustrations Travelling Bachelor; Royston Gower Miss Leslie’s Complete Cookery Young Husband’s Book ; Young Wife’s Book Life of Scott, kc.,kc. ’ Alin —Almanacs by the gross, dozen or single. . . oct 29 3t A WATCH STOLEN. STOLEN from the Planters’ Hotel,on Sunday the 14th instant, a Gold Watch, with gold face— j makers, Lecoutrc & Francois, a Geneva, No. 18,763. When stolen the crystal was broken out —applica- ■ tion for a new glass may lead to the discovery.—• > Twenty dollars will be given for the recovery of the Watch, by applying to Mr. Hale. 3t oct 27 r SPLENDID BLACK SILKS. i C 1 NOW DEN ic SHEAR have received this day from New York, a large supply of superior . Black Silks for Ladies dresses of the richest lustre, - to which they respectfully invite the attention_ol ■ the Ladies. * ' oct