Savannah daily herald. (Savannah, Ga.) 1865-1866, July 08, 1865, Image 4
The Savannah Daily Herald.
* SATURDAY, JULY 8. 186.1.
FROM ©UR EVENING EDITION
OF YESTERDAY.
AXtBKME.ITB.
Doesticks at Hiltoh Head — Mortimer
Thomson, widely knowu as “Doesticks,’' is
to deliver bis humorous poetical lecture on
“Pluck" to-morrow (Saturday} evening at
the Soldier’s Chapel, Hilton Head. We con
gratulate the Hilton Headers on their op
portunity to listen to the witticisms of this
celebrated humorist fresh from his own lips.
Savannah Theatse. —The Theatre under
the management of Mr. W P. Sweatnam, is
' crowded nightly from pit to dome with de
lighted audiences. Thrilling dramas, melo
dramatic burlesques, snd Ethiopian business,
are the style at present Several new per
formers of considerable merit have recently
appeared. Toe favorite actress Mrs. M. L.
Berrell, appears to-night.
Union Theatre, Hilton He ad.— Miss
Florence La Fond, the popular leading lady
of Mr. Davenport’s Company, takes a benefit
on Saturday evening.
Dinner on Bcahd rhe Phila.dei.fhia.—A
pleasant ie-union of the military and naval
branches of the service, took place on Wed
. nesday evening on board the U. 8. Steamer
Philadelphia, now lying in the River.
Capt. Gillespie of the Philadelphia, extend
ed the hospitalities of his iine steamer to
the officers of the 12th Rcgt., Conn. Vet.
Yois. An elegant dinner was served and a
cordial interchange of courtesies indulged in.
The feetlvitieis of this pleasant occasion were
kept up until a late hour, when the party
separated with renewed harmony of senti
ment
Conflict Between Miutart and Civil
Authorities.—A conflict has taken place in
Philadelphia between the civil and military
authorities in the case of a W. B. Cozens, a
contractor, charged with defrauding the Gov
ernment He was tried before a Military
Commission recently, and released on bail to
await its verdict, which has not yet been
made known. He was arrested on the 29th,
by orders from Washington, when a writ of
- habeas corpus was granted to the counsel,
which the Provost Marshal having Cozens in
charge refused to recogni2e, and the civil au
thorities then Issued a warrant for the arrest
of the military officer.
This collision betwen civil and iqiiitnry
authority has occasioned considerable ex
citement, and the issue is awaited with much
interest-
Bellr Boyd Once More.— Miss Belle
Boyd, or, as we should now call her, Mrs.
Hardiage, obtained reputation of some sort
during trie late American war -as a Southern
heroine and spy. She now publishes a nar
rative of her adventures (“Belie Boyd in
Camp and Prison." Saunders ft, Otley),
adorned with a photograph which we should
say is decidedly unflattering if the piaises of
her friends have done anything like justice
to the young lady’s personal appearance. A
very interesting and exciting book might,
perhaps, have been made out, ol Miss Bovd’s
adventures, but thi3 book is uninteresting
and unexciting. Miss Boyd does her best to
make cut a terrible case of hardship against
the Federal authorities, but fails utterly.—
She once shot a Federal soldier who spoke
rudely to her mother. Was. she hanged,
acourgecv, stabbed ? Not exactly. The Fed
eral officer in command declared that she
was quite justified in the act, and commend
ed her courage. Her oflly ground of com
plaint appeals to have been that, having
made herself a formidable spy, she was not
allowed absolute freedom of action. This is
pushing the theory of women's privileges
rather iar. Rumor once said that this book
was to be edited by Mr. Sala. Oue glance at
the preface will relieve that lively writer of
any such imputation. —London Star.
A Contraband.— A lady in Wash
ington, desiring to secure “help," made ap
plication at the headquarters of the “contra
bands,” on Capitol Hill, when the following
oolloquy ensued between herself and a female
contraband, who had escaped from service in
Virginia:
Lady—Weil, Dinah, you say you want a
place What can you do ? Can you codk ?
Contraband—No, m’m; mammy, she al
ways cooked.
Lady—Are you a good chambermaid ?
Contraband—Sister Sally, aba aiwavs did
the chambers.
Lady—Can you wait in the dining-room
and attend the door ?
Contraband—La, no, m’m ; Jim, that was
hie work.
Lady—Can you wash nod iron ?
Contraband—Well, you see, •tn’in, Aunt
Becky, sbe always washed.
Lady—Can you sew ? t
Contraband —Charity, she always sewed.
Lady—Then what in the worlS did you
do?
Contraband—Why, I always kept the files
off missus I •
Hiring a Baby —A Qcblk Stoky About
the St. Albans Raid.—An incident, not gen
erally known, concerning one ot the Bt. Al
bans raiders, ha3 recently come to light. Im
mediately after his acquittal, one of the raid
ers, haying little faith tu the judge’s decision,
dele? mined to leave the country. It being
unsafe to travel, unless disguised, he be
thought himself for a while. The difficulty
was perplexing, and time was scarce. If he
stopped much longer, he would likely*be ar
rested, and there were few disguises the lynx
eyed officers ot the law had not seen through.
An idea, however, struck him. He hired a
baby, paying S4OO as security for its safe re
turn. He then dressed as a lady and started
lor Halifax with the child, and for a great, part
of the way had for an escort the very officer
detailed to catch him. He, however, gives
tbe detective a wery good recommendation
for gallantry, f6r duriug the trip there was
nothing either himself or the child needed
that the officer of the law did not get for
them. He arrived safely in Halifax and took
a passage for Europe.
Foreign Gossip.
A Paris correspondent of the New York
Times, says:
The Empress Regent Eugenie has governed
the State during the Emperor's absence, and
In this capacity has, it appears, provoked at
least the admiration of the London papers.
Her Majesty has managed to sign a good
many laws and decrees during iier live or six
weeks’ reign, but none of these attracted any
special attention here but the one awarding
the tank of Chevalier cf the Legion of Honor
to Mile. Rosa Bouheur. the admirable pain
ter of animals and landscapes. Her Majesty
even carried the decoration to the house of
Mile. Bonbeur, and bestowed it in persou, an
act w hich the whole nation applauds. But
the question is in every one’s mouth, why did
not Her Majesty go further, and carry also
this nation:’.! compliment to Mine. George
Sand ? What matters it that Mme. Band is
opposed to the empire, and is not a very
good Catholic—her prodigious talent will be
talked of when the beautiful Eugenie is for
gotten. It may be that Mme. Sand, like
Alexandre Dumas, refuses all honors of the
kind ; but Eugenie would gain in the public
esteem if she would make the offer, even if it
were to be refused.
-As for M Dufuas, be appears to have for
gotten his American voyage. Last winter
he obtained permission to deliver lectures,
and these were attended with such a stupen
dous success as to quite turn his head. He
has given himself up entirely to this new
method of entertaining the public, and, after
exeicisiug the charm? of his voice and his
style on the classes, wiio pay $9 and $4 a
seat, he has passed entirely into the ranks of
the poot, and either reads’ before the million
for charitable objects, or at most, for a franc
a head. L ; ke all great artists, he is intoxi
cated by the boisterous acclamations of tbe
masses, and finds in their noisy, but genuine
demonstrations of love, the excitement
which a man of his prodigious activity of
mind aud ardent temperament requires. Last
month alone M. Dumas contributed by his
readings ■5(5,000 to charitable objects—a con
tribution of which any poor man, as he is.
may well be proud. The other evening,
however, be let sfip a word of reference to
M. Victor Hugo and to his state of exile,
and for this the tight to lecture has beon
withdrawn from him ; it is hoped caly tem
porarily. He told the Minister, it is said,
that, if he did not give him back his right to
lecture, he would leave France and go to
America.
A Rowdy EugUtfU Lord Punished.
A letter from Honolulu, Sandwich Islands,
states tliatAte English war steamer Clio ar
rived thenv Ml 15, and during her stay her
officers behs ipi themselves very badly when
on shore in aLmmitting numerous little mid
night depreciations, such as removing sign
boards,. barbers’ poles, ft c., which no doubt
were looked upon by the depredators in the
light of innocent amusements. but which
were very annoying to those on whom they
were inflicted Among them it appears«was
one Lord Charles Beresford, a nephew of the
late Marquis of Waterford, an Irish noble
man. whose rowydisms in England, Sweden
and in this country were matters of notoriety
at the time they took place. This youth, it
appears, had the same penchant for the dis
orderly style of amusement, and one night,
while the Clio was in port, he and his asso
ciates took the spread eagle from the gate
way of the United States Legation, sewed it
up in a bag and look it on board the ship,
doubtless intending to take it ’ome, ns a
bloody trophy But the parties tq this silly
proceeding were detected by the native boat
men, and the missing eagle was found in
Beresford’s berth on board the Cite. The
punishment of the theft is thus described :
“The American .residents were indignant,
of coarse, and so was the Minister. Several
documents weiP exchanged between the lat
ter and Captain Tumour, of the OJio, and
finally the latter gentleman left the punish
ment of the offender to lie named by Mr. .Mc-
Bride himself, who decided that if Beresford,
was made to replace the eagle in open day,
and .apologize for its removal, he would let
the matter drop. This was agreed to, and at
ten o’clock the next day the scion appeared
on the ground, accompanied by his accom
plices and the ship’s carpenter. The latter
of whom was proceeding to mount, the bird
in its place, when the Minister stopped’him.
That wouldn’t do. It must be replaced by
him who had removed it. Ho his noble
“nibs." hammer in hand, was obliged to
moupt the ladder and do the job himself.
He then acquitted himself of his apology,
thanking Mack for hisextrenan leniency, Ac.,
aud was ordered by his Captain to go and
apologize to his own Commissioner, and then
go aboard."
The foreign news per the Cuba, arrived at
New York on Tuesday evening, says that
the English Government have added an offi
cial apology for the conduct of Captain
Beresford.
, From the Voice of the Fair,]
Gen. Grant Kissed by the Ladies at the
Chjcaoo Fair.— On Monday, at 9 o'clock,
the General performed toe greatest military
movement of his life. He perlormed a suc
cessful flank* movement on th’e people of
Chicago, and visited Union Hall in quiet aDd
peace, remaining there till 10 o’clock. There
were were present a large number of the
most beautiful “aids,” and the Geneird was
instantly surrounded by the volunteer staff.
Here a most laughable’incident occurred.
Mrs. Livermore said to him, “Gen. Grant,
these girls are dying to kiss you—but they
don't dare to do it." “Weil," said the gal
lant General, “if they want to kiss me, why
don't they ? No one has offered to since
I have been here." Instantly about a .hun
dred fairies pounced upon him. He attempt
ed to retreat, but iu vain ■, he essayed to
1 break through the rosy ranks, without auc
! cess. Then, for the first time, he confessed
| himself vanquished, and calmly awaited the
j event. Never was such a man subjected to
; such an ordeal. On came the maidens by
; squads, in file, or singly ; they hit him on
the fos*: head; pelted him on the nose;
smacked him on the cheek, chin or neck.
There must,be dozens ol kisses lying around
loose hidden- iu the General’s whiskers.—
During this terrible ordeal, the hero of a hun
dred battle-fields b.ushed till his face became
almost purple. At last the girls were partly
appeased in their “noble rage,” and he es
caped.
Model Speech.— In tbe summer of 1863,
while Gen. Ashboth was in command at
Columbus, Ky., some of his friends presented
him with a horse. The able Hungarian was
highly elated, and replied to the presentation
speech as follows :
“Fell’Sorihirs and Shentlemans: I tanks
you for dis hoss ! De boss, shentlemans, is
de noblest animal of mankind ! Again, i says, I
I tanks you for dis fine hoss ’ j
Mexico.
A Gloomy Picture—Maximilian and his Policy —
The Confederates in Mexico, sr.
(.Correspondence of the New Orleans Times. \
. Vera Cruz, June 1.
The Emperor is still on his travels, stuff
ing birds and shooting deer, while the Em
press is at a stand-still awaiting his return to
the capital. The last news from the interior
is of a serious nature. Count Pettier has
been defeated by the Liberals in the State of
Michoacan, the. count wounded and his
troops badly beaten, though he, of course, i
claims a victory, ouly retreating for want of
water, when he says in the first part of the
report that the fight occurred by a lake, and
during two hours rain.
The liberals, under Negrete, still hold
Monterey, Saltillo, and all the country bor
dering CD the Rio Grande, and though -the
attack on Matamoras failed, they have been
able to |old all the rest. The State of Ta
manlipas, with the exception of the ports of
Matamqras and Tampico, are entirely held
by the Liberals. Everywhere in the’ coun
try the people seem to be rising against the
French. The only part of the country really
held bv fbe Imperalistg is the environs of the
capital and the road to Vera Cruz.
In the capital things continue the same as
ever; there is no accord between the French
commander and the imperial government.
Nothing has been done to recuperate the
financesot the oountry, though the news by
tha last jieamer seems’ to indicate that the
great project of the imperial loan lottery
will meet with success. If an individual
tried to raise the wind by such means he
would be indicted for swindling. Imagine
for bonis, whose face shows 500 francs.—
They bsar six per cent, interest. Every 3,-
000,£hM) are to he rattled and prizes drawn
varying from half a million to twenty-five
thousand for the benefit of bondholders! Be
sides, alter fifty years, their capital is to be
doubled ; that is to say, thev receive one
thousand francs with the interest payable
setni-annualiy in Paris. The French gov
ernment keeps the first amount paid jn to
cover the prizes and pay itself, the Maximil
ian only gets abont two million In one
year he ha? spent and is no near
er pacifying the county than he was six
months ago. It is true he has in his cabinet
some Liberals, hut the patty will have none
Oi Lim. ’
The Confederates still continue to flock to
Mexico. There is no doubt Dr. Gwin will
get his project through. It only await? the
signature of Maximilian to become a law.
He goes out as Director General of Emigra
tion for the States of Sonora, Chihuahua,
Durango and Tamaulipas, with extraordina
ry powers and eight thousand French troops
to back him. The emigration is be strictly
Southern or Confederate. Ten thousand Con
federates are to be armed and paid by the
Empire, but kept in the above mentioned
States as protection to the emigrants. Strate
gical points are to be fortified, and garrisoned
on the frontier. Dr. Gwin s son has applied for
and will get an exclusive privilege for ail the
railroads in Sonora. The southerners are
elated, and golden visions float before them.
The last news from the states has caused a
pauir, and every mail is anxiously expected.
The Yankee invasion they consider as cer
tain, but hug themselves with the idea
that France, Austria and Belgium will not
allow the United States to invade the empire.
Napoleon has sent out a director of police to
Maximilian, Cappo d’istri, who lately re
turned from organizing the police of the Ce
lestial Empire. Persecutions immediately
began, ala French. The lw.o first imprison
ments have caused great sensation. '
A Few New York Millionaires.— New
York numbers millionaires by the score.—
Let me name a few. William B. Astor,
worth abont fitly millions, owns about two
thousand stores and dwellings, and has the
reputation- of being a good and lenient land
lord. He is a well-preserved old gentleman,
on the cloudy Side of sixty’; industrious,
reticent and punctual. He 'seldom shows
his face at a public gathering, rarely makes
himself conspicuous in the newspapers, nnd
seems to be devoted almost entirely to the
task of taking care of his immense ’ fortune.
H e Is tnll, straight, spare, gray and grave.
A. T. Stewart is reported to he worth thirty
millions. Though au active business man,
he finds time to look after the interests of
the city, aud he has made himself prominent
in his patriotic endeavors to put down the
rebellion. He is a tail, tbiu man, of ner
vous-sanguine temperament. He is about
sixty years of age, quiet and, dignified in
his deportment, and charitably disposed
when appeals reach him. In this city and
elsewhere, many of the currents of charity are
dammed at the desks of jprivate secretaries.
Commodore Vanderbilt Is a tall,white-haired,
red-cheeked, handsome olff man of seventy,
and fast. He drives a sass horse, sails a fast
boat, and sometimes associates with fast
men. He is worth at least twenty (some say
forty) millions He is very liberal to the
government and generous to the poor.—
August Belmont is a German Jew, short,
stout, coarse and fifty, with the unmistakeable
phiz of a Jew- He is the principal owner of
the World and its editors. Ex-Mavor Qpe
dyke is a pleasant gentleman, of fifty, but fie
looks younger. Jame 9 Gordon Bennett, who
has lately turned a loyal coiner, and who
now stands squarely by the government, is
about seventy years of age, tall, erect, and
gentlemanly in his manner. He has a Scotch
face and brogue, and among his neighbors
he has a reputation for charity to the poor.
His employees are treated with considera--
tion and respect, and are well paid for their
work; his assistant editors and reporters are
recognized as gentlemen, and not subjected
to the stultifying and humiliating process
which unfits the literary man for his task.—
New York Letter.
Tfee American Character—The Military
Stnicc as a 'rraiaing-Scltooi.
The American? have long labored under
the accusation oi a certain lawlessness ol
character, a want of sufficient respect for
authority, which 3hovved itself in domestic
lil'e and general manners, as well as in the
public relations ot the citizen.
The charge was absurd in many of its
points and tearing?, but it is quite true that
it hiiu an application to classes of the people
and to phases of life and action. So far as
these are concerned, the influence of service
iu the army, upon the two million of .young
men.- north and South, who have been in it,
has teen altogether favorable. Respect for
legitimate authority, obedience to orders,
regularity, promptitude and self-possession,
are *a essential parts of the military life as
courage apd patriotism. One, two, three or
tour years ol service under these conditions
would produce a permanent influence upon
the habits of the individual, and a permanent
effect upon the national character; and this*
\ will undoubtedly make itgelf apparent here
after. ~
Gen. Sherman touched upon this subject
|in a recent public speech in Chicago. Re
[ lerring to the growth and development of the
i couptry, and addressing the soldiers before
| nica. he remarked: ,
“ You are the men to direct that patience
aud industry. You are able to do it You
have system,, discipline, organization drilled
in the mind, which is far more, my boys, than
battalion drills, with which you have been
badgered so much. You have the discipline
twhich Is more importaut in life than your
double formations. If I have been
instrumental in teaching you this—in main
taining discipline, order and good govern
ment iu the army which I had the honor to
command, I will feel more honored in future
than in gaining battles and winning cities;
for in discipline aud system, in tbe high tone
of honor which pervades your mind, must
be built rp the empire ot America.”— New
York Times.
[From th;: I too ton Traveller.]
BRITISH ANXIETY
concerning ibe tote of the rebel chiefs of
the extinct Southern Confederacy con
tinues to he very strong, and that feeling
finds expression iu suong language. We are
warned against cruelty aud bloodshed, and
against the impolicy ot converting fallen foes
into martyrs. This may be well meant, but
we confess that we should be better inclined
i to receive tbe homilies in behalf ot mercy
I that conv* from Britain if they had proceeded
| from a country which had been distinguished
by a forgiving spirit when it? own authority
had bec-n unsuccessfully disputed. England
has no title to the part of a merciful monitor.
She has been harsh, vindictive, and cruel,
whenever she has had to deal with vanquish
ed rebels. After the Restoration, her gov
ernment was not content with hanging, dis
embowelling, aud quartering traitors whom
it caught alive, but it caused the bodies of
dead men to be dug up, and suspended them
to gibbets. Not even the grave was a place
of rest for men so great as Cromwell and Ire
ton. After Monmouth’s invasion, the hang
man was the busiest functionary in England,
his victims being numbered by hundreds;
and stiii greater number of rebels were sold
' into tropical slavery. After the Jacobites
were beaten, in 1714-’l6, their leaders were
beheaded or hanged by the dozen, while
humbler offenders were’ sold into slavery.
Still severer were the measures adopted after
Culloden, in 1746. Fourscore men suffered
by the axe or by the cord, one of them
under a sentence that had been pronounced
thirty years before. Military execution was
visited upon a large part of Scotland, where
Cumberland’s name became as odious as that
of Jeffreys in the West of England. The
whole system of life in the Highlands was
forcibly changed, loyal dans being subjected
to the same harsh 1.-tws as those which were
enacted for the subjugation of clans that had
S been in rebellion. The most rigorous tests
were provide§--for the annoyance of Scottish
Episcopalian Clergymen These things were
done so near to our time that there are many
persons now living who have known some ot
the sufferers who managed to escape with
their lives. The Irish rebellion of 1798 was
a short, sharp and sudden affair, and it raged
But in a small part of Ireland; yet the exe-,
cutions to which it led were very numerous.
Two thousand of the insurgents were hanged
or transported, and the general conduct of
the victors was cruel beyond all compar
ison. Many of the persons who were
hanged for being leaders were able to show
that they had been forced, much against their
wish, to assume commands, and that they
had used the authority they had sought to
avoid to save the lives of loyalists,
but that made no difference. If they
had not.become leaders, the Irish would have
hanged them; as they did become leaders,
the English hanged them, giving them no
other trials than such as could be furnished
by drumhead courts-martial. A few years
later occurred that trifling entente in which
Robert Emmet took part. Was not Robert
Emmet as good a man as Jefferson Davis ?
Yet the English hanged Robert Emmet,
though his action had not in the least dis
turbed their ascendency, and they could have
suffered nothing had they banished him.—
They hanged him, and now they whine and
cant about the wrong and cruelty there
would be in hanging Jefferson Davis, whose
labors came so near destroying a great na
tion, and who headed a revolt in wnich half
a million of men lost their lives ! It is but
eight years since the Sepoys revolted against
the English in India. That revolt was put
down after the most merciless manner. One
General hanged all tfie men on whom
he could lay his hands as fie marched
t i'om Allahabap. Major Ilodson shot two
princes of the House of Tamerlane, with hi&
own hand, which was the act of an assassin,
they being his prisoners, and utterly help
less. Mr. Russell, who was in India as cor
respondent of the London Times, wrote,
“here there is no such thing as cold
blood at the sight of a rehel.” On
one occasion the English had forty
Hindoos to butcher, and they blew them
from the mouths of cannon. As they had
hut ten guns, the prisoners, to use a term of
the Terror-time in France, were brought up
in “batches" of ten, and so disposed of—one
hatch following another, until the whole
forty were Mown into air, save two, who
were thrown on the ground and their brains
blown out with musket balls. Such, O Bull,
were your mercies toward rebels! and now
vou have the coolness to preach jjnevey to us
in the case of Mr. Davis and his associates!
We shall soon be called upefo to listen
to sermons from the Ring of the
Cannibal Islands -in behalf cf the
superiority of a vegetable diet ; and
the King of Dahomey will treat us
to an address in support of the sacredness
of human life. The English are like the Ro
mans, who looked upon all their enemies in
war as rebels, and treated thejn accordingly;
but they cannot imagine the existence ot re
bellion out of the British Empire. To rebel
against British supremacy is the unpardona
ble sin; but there can be no such thing as
treason elsewhere. We are fffr from saym*
that English cruelty would be any justifica
tion of cruelty here. U p should btj quite
content to see no g-ehel executed; and we
could receive the news of Mr. Davis’s escape
with unruffled calmness. But we must sav
that we consider these English lay sermons
on the quality of mercy as the most perfect
exhibitions of studied impudence that, ever
proceeded from that combination of ignor
and egotism—the True-Born Englishman
—The Lagrange American says the pros
pect for a crop of wheat in that section is
exceedingly slim. Most farmers will not
realize seed from their planting, not even
upon the Mississippi bottoms, where wheat
seldom fails.
COMMISSION AND SHIPPING MERCHANTS,
Bat Street, Opposite Mariners' Church,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Refer to Hears. G. M. Barnard & Cos., Messrs. Wm
B. Reynolds & Cos., Messrs. Under & Meyer, all of
Boston. jn2P eodtf
QHARLES L. COLBY A CO #
SHIPPING, COMMISSION AND FORWARDING
MERCHANTS.
JONES BLOCK, CORNER BAT AND AMRCORN STREETS*
SAVANNAH. GA.
LIBERAL CASH ADVANCES
Made on Consignments to the firm of Chas. L. Cowl,
of New York, or to our friends in Boston.
MAUDE & WRIGHT, Agents at Aagusta, G*.
references;
Messrs. Dabney, Morgan A Cos , New Yotk.
Jarivs Slade, Esq., New York.
Hon. J. Wileg Edmands, Boston.
Gardner Colby, Esq., Boston. jelS—ti
QO-PARTNERBHIP.
The undersigned have this day formed a Copartner
ship. under the firm name of Bell & Christian, for the
tran-artiOn of a General Auction and Coiomif-sioii
Business, at our old stand, on Bay street, foot of
Whitaker, where every exertion will be made to give
satisfaction to our friends and patrons.
'A reAi.cmUile -hare ot patronage is respectfully so
licited.
SAMUEL T BELL,
HENRY R. CBRISTIAN.
Savannah, Jnlyl, ISSfi. jyl tw
ROSENFELD U CO..
B INKERS,
No. 8 BROAD STREET,
New Yeas.
Wc draw at sight, and at sixty days, on London,
Paws, Frankfort, and ali other principal cities of
Europe
Parties opeuifig current accounts, may depoeit and
draw at their convenience, the same ns with the Csn
Banks, and will be allowed interest on nil balances
over One TbsovSAWD DoLtAsa, at tbe rate of pour pen
cent per annum, Orders for the purchase or sole of
various issues of Government and other Stocks, Bonds
and Gold, executed on Commission
,jes-3tawSm
JgHtWIN & HARDEE,
FACTORS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
DAT 6T an EX,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Roi.nn Erwin, Chas. S. n.ura,
may3l-cod2m
"jyjAUDE & WRIGHT,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
AUGUSTA, GA,
Consignments Solicited Merchandise Bought and
Sola
Ja.n;rs L. Maude Taoav-S T. Wuobx.
sr.rF.it to
Hon. Simeon Draper, New York.
Messrs. Lee & Waller. l '
Messrs. H. B. Clcflin & Cos, New York,
Giiaden A Williams, Boston.
Hovey & Cos., «
Smith, Wood & Cos.. St. Lcais
Appleton, Noya <£ Cos, ••
R MrCreadv & Cos, Cincinnati ..
Charles L. Coibv & Cos., Savannah, Ga
Tiros. Metcalf, Esq., Augusta, Ga.
Robert Campbell, Esq., “
jui> eod4w
MEDICINES AND CHEMICALS.
A choice selection of
DRUGS,
MEDICINES,
CHEMICALS
r.VTKNT MEDICINES
and TRUSSES,
just landed rnow new tots,
Apothecaries, Planters, ap.d tractors from the interi
or, cau be supplied at the shortest notice.
I can warrant every article being pure.
A large quantity ot European LEECHES, Sacal
quality.
All the Patent Medicines extant on hand.
One hundred easee Jacob#* Dysenteric Cordial
AH. WILL EE SOLD LOW FOR CA3B
WIIOiISAtt AND BET At A
AT APOTHECARIES' HALL,-
Corner Broughton and Barnard street*.
N, B.—Fresh Garden Seeds..
W. M WALSB,
-i.?. 1 . 0, Pgrprietor.
Q A.RHART, WHITf#PJ> & CO., *
MAN UFACTURERS WHOLESALE DEALERS
I7V
READY made CIOTDJSfI,
S3l and 333 Bboaiwav oob. Wo«tb
NEW YOR K.
I h>: ‘' ,3T Sbavkh,
WM. fl. wU.ITO3B, ! A. T. tern
J. C. VAS WAIiENEIf.
Office ol Payan & Carnart Lu liquidation.
__ . Sm
-
SUTLERS AND MERCHANTS
W/rutSad. fc. f ° r BaiS * 4
THEIR ENTIRE STOCK.
1 pffisssssasss
Bags, Wrapping Paper, Station art- ni varies- iT,
\ ank«e Notions, Hardwire, Tin“are,’ '
'These good# will be sold without regard to coat.'
>Y ny send your orders-to New Yaiv -*■ _
buy cheaper at home Tors when youOia
THE ADAMS' EPXRESB COMPANY,
tVeWhfc^ y x. are now to becoive nnd ship
t and Money to Augusta, Macon, Atlanta, nnd
ali intermediate points. Also, to aii point* North.
East and West.
Omen Conwnt Bar rum BfcArrow Stotts.
I. P. TUNISON,
J ? 4 „ Agent.