Newspaper Page Text
BY WILLIAM S. JONES.
CHRONICLE & SENTINEL*
"“w; tJ- m-
TBS wmui
■. pgkiuiicl
AT VOUi» TEE ASIDE
IX ADVANO*.
CUTM »r INDIVIDUAL*wsodto* aa Ten Dollar.,
*TJS!£ n-'--"'-
lIUM •* l,l# riu „
Mil t'OPIK* ri)B irw POLIVBB,
tne tear »»***• u /**« tatacrißer*’
Hi forvare aa toe nooey.
CHRONICLE At SENTINEL
DAILY A.\D TBI-WKBKI.Y.
AJi-tlai ii’in- 1 ~ ■" fused to aubacribera
m inaMMit, rataa.aaHm:
|»AarP*i«,ifa*atbyiaall.. (T personam.
iHWiMartna, * “ “
f l»« #rm BKTI• 11 «a
Is f m . Berenty-tT* cceiz an aaoare(lo lloea or
foe the Bret tneertioo, aal fifty easts for each aubaa-
DMnt Vaaartioa. r
Ds. JOEL BRANHAM'S CELEBRATED LITEB
AXl> DTdPEPriC MFDICISE.
FOB Ike raMafand aura of Uver Cot), air,t and Dye
s>«S*a, Wttor ?4ervoa • Head-ache, CAtiveae**, Full-
Beta U -eointii in lh« h’.vmacli after eating; Bdk>a»
Cmc. It it a B*f«a».4 geotle parget, ve arid toote, and
k*» tfct •: «rufi proporttov oCacting well on the Liver and
viUrNtt eaoaioc debility, which ia the result of al
tut ,1. atiunn iq j'ii-rine*. It ia a «a-‘e and valuable
■ di' -s»lor i>r«yn«nt women al * age keeping the Uiveia
wai r«*<i'*te4f acting wall on the ak n and kidocy*.
Pr r.i the Una. Aibur/ Hull, iia-t'ptater of the iiotiae of
fteußMHiaUvei, tiUMofOcorg.a:
Ataans, Jane 10,1863.
Al « ramelv far Indigeati n,l have used with singular
**<*«•« Dr. Joet ttran'iam'a Anti*'>>BpepUe MeiJcine, aud
fr»t«r»n wrMKkouAodntn naMalun anddo re
m. ri-c-u-nec ud observation enabtte me fully to
ataur ia the aoeve recommewlsUoD of Mr. Mull.
Geaz. f. MoOor.
frea o. I. McDonald, Ex Oonroor Btate of Georg Ia :
Ndtiarrt, 2tto June, I Sid.
Dnr Vrl l,l>« mq tired >1 the Drug Store* lu tfrii
plaoe f r our eaiaa’> : « l.ivt-f Me udnerr !i.'l and that Hls
n4a|t|l,i'< I Inn found notln of equal to It for ob
snreatme Livor end lod.ferto- 1 enclose yon the money
Ibra paper or It. Please c ulrlee to »et.d It to me in nine
•ay. Foa nil allow me to esy diet you ought to te.e
Mac rains toecqoeini tho public with ns exce icnce u>
I aud > would Also suggest to you, that erhsller
doeesaod less fre-tueutly repouted, would Answer a better
Burptse for «o ne v stients Ihuu the dose recommended in
(be tire ,t, ms. Hut etsch prtient, I should suppose, might
regalste ftr mitur by hie own experience.
V-ryre p--t-tfalty. fours, Cues. J.^McDosaui.
P %tr F, i -e Ooe Do Ur.
H.FI .sXD.It tiotr AGO. Auguste, Ox ;UAVII.ASD
BaHAaI. At •t.,i:ii.rlestn,H C.; HAVILAND. HaJiKAI.
A tliUf, Sew V >rk, Wholesale Agents. Hold by ling
gjsUeu.l >l-1. it.uet.erul.y apH-wly
•1,000 BJSWAED.
TYM. HU NTltiri* celebrated SPECIFIC,for Ihecurt
JLr of Gonorrbte s,Strictures, Gleet end AnalagouaUom
platatsof the Organs of Generation.
(SB* Of allremodiet yeldlsooeeredfor the aboeecom
plaint, this ie the most certain.
y* ft makes a speedy aud permanent ourewithout re-
MrieMon to diet,drink,eiposnre, or change of application
**jgg” It IS perfectly harmless. Gallon! of! I might bt
taken wlthoutinjurlngliie patient.
oTltis pul up In bottles, with full directionsacoom
aaying it, so that persons cau cure themsufeswilhoutre.
•r ting to physician* or others for advice.
One hot uc ia enough to perform a certain enre. Price sl,
Or” It It approved and recommended by the Royal
allege of Physician* and Burgeons of London and has
•Ir aertlteateenoloeed
sold by appoint men tin Atigußta,Ga.,by
W. 11. a 4. TURPIN.
Orders from t b • country promptly attended to. J el
PUKK JfcTHUO CUTION *EKD.
A MtV stl-hn of choice Jetl.roCo-ton so»
J\. «M«, two bii*h«is i'l u riAs'V Price three dollars pe
, aacs. £ idi«t**A r-f the Coin*.. c*.n itn at our o: cc
Jan*9-'l4 % jrlf li A N I . i.\ \(', *> VA*. - * M)
UCTOSTASr TO FLAJTTEBS.
’ fJMIH DtatiHWat lac t.iy (Bid iron I cum ty, Ga ) rou
J ifaiirvt'i nu'juUct iro WOOLKN (Ji.Olti, for N» gr(
at U)t tt-Ltipvryarti—finding every ir.atciiN
c.i , • i < *m I
Tb<*M«» cubing to nr a»I themlclvo* of this opport-iriif t«
, | wro-me U»r i».«:ir K'*ffr«tCß a *u,-orlor oruoie of vt intei
OmduiOT. Inva oi.'y t<» w a h the W«.o- - I nn in cold w .1 r
ami ral It l. the Ka-;l«ry, r s t» Vf-nrs. HOP ANTON
AM>M(IUR AUO.a in Augus.i, vlJi .n«trcrtioni it# to th
3| nmnwotof t loth they wi*h in id. whether heavy or l gh;
If the • ol *• ut bs- dry, half a cut per >»ml will »•
casrged for »a h»t.tf It. Ibirraaro imt onject.onuble, »a v.
BRHi'ht elepro*"i?a f»r r- moving 'him
Wvd it w»m* 0 ml* *1 into hr those alio mitke theii
H#*ro, er other Clwthmw at home.
Sr 4 Tho larrna • o f chewed ar«* n-» i -usonfible ns »o warrant i
aon<ino«*iec k 4 t\< lib --al p iLrc.u.ige Leret rfore extendc<
bj the i*Uat>.;; eommualiy.
thiWo-J R’lnul'lii H-'itHiK on *»ft» r Bheail \f as con
with tins n*mf« the «>« t,?r iJiith cily marked i n
w , • thw tig or Oil-, hat all u* • pair »ia ol tne «staU h .men
miy be acta, itooU'.wf in due hue.
Wool tWT hy any if t : e Unf* of R IlmaH, hi (korgin, oi
South C?Krn It.a, u r by meatubnMt on tho River, dii\c:eii t
mchw»ot.U>A' , '.ry, cire - f tOhtiioMf ravaoua » t •»., wij.
n *Cld«w aiU‘n i .?i, a ul the pjai u-r wi 1 i-Iwija huve hi,.
«rv»» tnad .• f lie ! ini > C t.hanl reteri cd t>
TdA MlbllKd (’AMI PPKV' W.U b ■ p dfornuOL.
WlhLtA&i PCIILfcY, Pnsloent It f\i t .ry.
f*- > A»riit&, IK4. . m»Btf W 4 n
maoroßxxs. ,
FTXBB subacribors would respic'-fully «U jDgn
~ A the attention of lilt ir frica-ls nud the fJ/i^SFXs©
of Rosewood and ') fTff
llaiwgauy PIANO kOKTKfi, from the well J “ “ U <
kaowns’idJajJycolobiu'. d Manufaclorlcsot Bacon A Haven,
HESww a. M. Gale t 00., srd Dubois ASt oburv, New Fork, whicl
••wwarraaMdiu our./ respect, to be at least fully equal to
ha Auyiu2ntmeutsmanr.ra:turedlu this oountry or Europe.
The subscribers would also state thens he Instruments now
So Band are «f the latest patterns tud faehlcn,audfroeh:rox
. the ta&uufnctnrera. For sale at very low prices for caßh or
ally acceptances, at 010. A. OAT FA A OO.'H
my It Fiauo, Book and Music Depot, Broad-st.
vm.LiBK u rorr. ’
BHOLKBAi.K AND RETAIL DIICGGIBT,
Aneuara,
TM B**W 11 lit'HIVI fII a very Mcge and ootopletc
I M.-e-k of OA.OGH, MODlOlNffl. PAIN CH.OILS,GI,ABA
FrityjMt.ay, Biit.uii). dy ; : trorrs. aud vanoi
ARTiCl.es, which he has seloctec. to person, irlthtU
B-sale*' care, trout the largest Imoorwrs and Msuufacto
ri .lc thisc,u itry,and wliish.for ouuutT and ch.annt-.
mrmsti s rc’llwi. 1.0 would vescecttullr invite lbs at
teatioa of Merchants, Plauters aa. PhvticU.u ts hi
abash.
m Ait orders trill bs oxoduted with tbo utmost ncataei:
aad dwtr.'eh. sepT-dkwtf
OSAdS 08*708 SLANTS FOE HEEOIiJO.
M'StaK tilßXli will ofTer f:r d irlng th«
X Fair of th- ** &ml!icra Uentrai AgrlMlßnl bodet*/
.4an GSAlii! ORANQK PLANT*,
•f tr to o ii to tuujrt. uV grew Hi, Eatable for sclliug ©u‘ I
Inj FiiH. The/ w*/ be tel ent foot r.part iu th«
0 'Uv-c •«, evJ wifi nuke r.n imoon :trable aud periuant^'.
» »’• proper care, in Sor 4 /ear*. Panphlets, do
• trihfaf IM rlethal <v? trimming and training the plant#
fjmMudt* t-! , urchA«tn. Tooie dailrou* of 4*rg!\ging
3asj.fi> ta *<ivE ice, will afijrc** D. KSDMoNi).
«rtßt-tf AuxttgU, Ga.
ruosuci DZFOT IN ATLANTA.
Gutf.v:;:*r listridUting point in glorou
rp.’lF 4Ebr .ioc*fi on h*td r
I •iu’nia? of U»»ria and Tcmkmo© PRODUUT
o 1 «M * »la, M* M BACON, LARD* CORN, FLOW
Otti, ft. 1, 4*. 0,000 Udfioß choir© Blfilli > OATC
n .* ii • *ro xai tor ta oot 60e.;>er hathc', rack* included
aI •- d with cash or •aiixlaotor/ ixit
rojior#, m ii be promptl/ filU'J.
BBAGO, ABBOTT A CO.
Ail mu,» *h. \ * 16-w.ly
NOTICE.
rvtilß I4LOBK IIOIM , in UMhlooOffE, bie re
I oru-.l j hooii purclukAetl bj W. (*. t.AWtttNCK &E*\
8 iM, «rh * er • no* re firt.i»hir£ End fitting ii up with in*
erotic J Ik • i:1« of so ae t»atbud ere* j
o of.*, t t«> jih Tnrtllin *nd Uititcna The very »trLt*
•at a Ktnu *n wilt r>e girra to ttie core of Her*?e.
Pu-i; rtwi'luoir o tie tV e mince lo th nrlghMr
Rood, *fi' b* u'euUtl in proeuriog convoyrtncei Ihe
% 4 ..«*■»* »•! »urrou diig* ou-try ia remarkahly ht althy,
tu i off * «!• Mi-im.ta n scenery • f gr* «ttna»rnifl<v unr.
la - Itiiti a to tl)- »oiuUtt o'ihu *, the l T 8. Kraneh Mint
wii* fire pV'»nrt} urd instruct ent" *u« h an nert r hvi the
opp •; jwtjr ol' B>eii g t e proc-e* #f Ouiuin< money.
NoUkor vr pata* will be p*redto g vo uti»uc:ion to
all w o pi ronice T s I awkkycr Hows.
I’ahtua nm G», Mi>Ut HR aylO-wly
SUE UC AL INFaKUAEY FOR NEGRJES.
1 \Uw. 11. F. A »l. I A%tI>IIFLL btviuK op-rvd
LJ tVirn w jAnJt'ommotiiriue SURGICAL INIIUM\UY.
carter of J*vV»o and Fenwick Etteettq jre>u’cd 0
r«-r«ite palirut* from the i<y, or from any part of the
8 tor 8u K*oal operalio e, or for the tree’m-rt cf
Otr .nlc DieeA«««.
TO THE LUMBERING AND MILLING INTE
KKBTA
tuhecribere would reßpcctfkUyloforni all interest
A edm the Mitliu# ieeiurM ih-tt harivg had expert
enew in th.* M eohioe eh I Mifi-Wriybt O’lAiuere, they er»
trepen t to exccat« MI. .UNBUILDING of every dedcrip
oa, >jr contract >r otherwi#e,
dreai«r(taw MlL(JlQna*tmcted on the molt ilmplt
•laii-k, aod aapwHe t»f hflng operitu \ by one hand, will be
mrn.'Urst t. s-ikier >n the m i«t reiMMble term*
>Tf AM KNUHKb, WATER WIIKBIA xSHAFTINm
and t>K vRiNu, t father with »fi kind# «»f IR.»N «'t>Kh
for M its, will be furm-Urd arul put to operation by the
•uVi f l.tr, e< *i*ort onltoo.
L ttorsaiUrtswK l to the tabocrlbors at Aruueta, Ca ,
Wfi rtem wo prompt aUeat oa.
jaß-wisU RICHARDSON A HaRLAN.
•* ■ !
SIOO REWARD
\lT|! I, be paid for the delivery of my biy, NA*HAN,
Ts to me nmy n-iidwßce in ICart county, or for
eoi-Anirc i in fu some. ail, where l can fer him. He w. ig*»t
atMMit 14- or 14** jv* teds, 41m»«4 80 >#yre of age, wears
w fctfvr.', I* strati! mn-i w.U tout, am* qutc Intel ig»nt
• negro, »:<d Ml fiw» UtUe. He fcw been a pilot on the
rir«r fur asm# Ume, mrd he is kuown on the linr *rd in
I by a great many. Tb above reward wiii bo p*io
l#b for h • apprehension or delivery to U. 0. TAVK,
my 14 wgm PViersburg, ► M_ert Oo , 0 a
WANTED.
AT the Augusta Cotwn MUl<,ttfly P wer Loom WRAV
aid eta or eight families of fiur or more OP«£.
luouife at the Factory, of foe t*up«rin-
I endeat, or at foe othce, Broad- street jalb wf
1,000 ERASICAXOB 1,000.
excellent pnyaraiion for the cure of Rbeu-ha
JL turn and other local Ptl'ir, 4c, prepared by J. K
MAti«UA LL,ls foraale by Navtland, Hiaicjr A Co., SI.
0 tske A C W.U.I J. Turpin, D. B» Plumb A Co.
N. H One .bouauid reference*caube giv«.n in this city
In pr of o! us superiority over any other remedy now in
ax. II n't be without it.
Marsha l's Rfh 4worm and T«tter WAFIT. also for sale
by t. H. A J turpiN, lIAVILAND, rUlly A CO.,
|L CLAfcfcJS A CO., 0. U. PLUMB A CO. nls vty
fUSSCd BURR MILL STONE MANUFACTORY,
00ANB& BROAD AND CUMMING-SIRLhIS,
Aoecsrs, ha,
PJ>HH H takes tots sccasion to Inform
JL his uj ueroiaai mends and the tatsuc generally, that
l«tu .*n» caccd the above biumnanuaer the moat fa*
Para vie »aap»ce», having enwaeed taa services of an ex*
p«n«aeeU and lugMy qualified vortntn. and flatters him*
•eti that hie woefe will oompare wua At other mauaUc
t arerin thcCaited it«a*ea. He atao area to apprise the
foaonmiuatan* public, that ail oraera WHO which he may
••favored.su.Jtbave tua oersoaat asisnnon. prompt eae
i A share of noMie oat ion age is re*
n»waci«.hwu..
S3O REWARD
R ANYWAY from tb« sub er.ber. rceidiav i n
Pulamra county, ue.r MerulL In August u,, $S
’ mj Neg™ ***". »<ank. Beta about J 6 >«»r» old Ajf
fire feet tea toeftis huh, of milium Ml*, ha« Oy
(H,kt impediment In kie apcech, and has lost the tight ot
•auM. »*«-•» aeJtn Virpmu, and h>a two tnGeut
ci> a’lout twe years. The above rv.srd w,ll be paid lot
his drltvery to me, or to any jail»that 1 get Um.
Jstiwtf JOHN A. H AR'-US.
The !b,utbern Recorder trill publish UU forbid, sad for
»jrd acooaotio thi. o®ce for pajrmont.
~ ThS AOODBTA MACHUX WORKS
L T KVlTtitt publlr altemioa to ita extenaire MACBINt
1 bHO» so I POUNDS R, where le contioaed the busiueu
of bu I :io/ it 1 A3d KNGIN Kb, PUMPS, Ac., of *u> rt,airt d
as, aetty, t*,ge her with all kinds of Maciitaerp uecewarp
tw tt.w MUM, Ocioo Mills, Gold Mice-, *c
The Cumpav'e lamlltlee are ruch ae to furnish at short
nouc -, of t>set ta*terial sad workmanship, all kinds d
MIU. ISONA, OA TINGS es any required patfer >j
PB'*G', UWITCU*', Ac., for Railroads; bUAPTING,
PUbl-tlfg, OOU i-H Nob and UANGkSd afaUdimesaioa-;
C»_t lnm WATKK.W..ERLS, of any desired siplo. I»
hd lit on to the Machine shop and Pouixlrf, the Company
A \* ’ded excluively to lha bull'ta*
’ QfSmtrobtPyoeiiy, plight CaKS—for tbo con
• wuocttuu of otoeh it peat ra i eculiar advantages. All
ordenforuM.wthormU. es aid work, promptly at-
l * nUltt, Superintendent.
Weekly Chronicle & Sentinel.
FOR SALE.
VOBiAUL
THB sobserfber ofTer* f <r sate lb#; tract of LAND
on wbl;hbe hundred
ccr. t . more or loss, lying two mil#-* rut of WArrenton, on
tfce oi l BUgc rond l -adioy from Warreaton to Aayuita.—
There ere upon the tract about six hundred acres of heavily
'wimbled pme Land,one hundred and fifty cr two hundred
acres of valuable LWatnp Lana, the l argest portion of which
b»s b*eti cleared and <’rained, and is now in cultivation.
Near the centre of the tract, as well as the plantation, is
the DaePing, wh ch i» very large and commodious, situa
ted immediately upon the public road. Attached to the
p.emuesis an excellent Kitchen and Bmose-houie, new
dtable a d Corn crib, both framed, and all other buildlugs
necvsnary fur a farm In the yard, between the kitchen
aud d«rel iisg, and convenient to both, is a well of good,
pure w*trr. The place has tb-f character of being exceed
ingly healthy. Any perron desirous of purchasing, wll
tiways find the subscriber or h 4 overseer upon the prem
ises, who will show the laid. MADISON D. CODY.
Warreotun, April lfi. 1&4. aplß w6m
FOB BALE. “
A LAlUiHand convenient BRICK STORE, situated
in thecentreof business,in thecity of Rome, now
occupied by Robi Batty, Druggist. This store was fitted
upasaOrug Bto re, without regard to any reasonableex
pense,and with a tittle alteration ceukl be converted into
an elegantly arranged Dry Goods Store. The situation for
thesale of Drugs, Dry Goods,or Groceries can hardly be
equalled in the city. Terms easy. Apply to
GEORGE BATTY,If.D.
Rome, April 4th, 1858. aprfi-tf
FOB BALB.
I NOW OFFF.It for stie my entire River PLANTA
TION, 28 or do miles s >uih cf Columbus, Ga ,In Bar
bour county, Ala.,lyingou theChattnhoo lee river, con
taining 24 i/o Acres ; some 1200 acres in a fine btxte of cul
tivation and sood repair, A good waUr Gin and Ferry
across the Chattahoochee river. The above wiH be for
•ale at any time until old and possession tiven. Terms to
suit purchasers. Jafcl-tf MATUEW AVKttJCTTE.
LINCO LN COUNTY LAND FOB BALB.
DKhl HOVS of oncentr ittn > my farming interest,diM
I offrr f m rale all my LANDS in Lincoln
ootid-ittog of li rec tracts. One tract lies on the Washington
road, three milss above iUy#Vi!le,nnd contains 000 acres,
more of leas, a couiitUfftfeie portion U the c;eared land is
fresh, *f,d in a fine stale of curovation; there i* a large
proporti >a of good W f »od land, the buildings are good, two
•to y dwelli n*, fr.uaed negro houses, barn, gin house and
screw, good orchard, and a w*U the best water. This
place would be very desirable for a good Physician, who
wou d like to do a snug business farming and
mertidn*, as th«r» It now aa openln, fcr a Ph vsicun lo
her tract on Lloyd's Creek, two
mik3fIWMIW , W«S3B™is 1 on th. Un;o'monro»a,oon-
Uininit 530 fam. Thl» land Is very prodoctlyc, lair im
prokcm-dkts.Blantadon In good repair, xoad order .and
an exerlknt we I of wkur.and conslder.ble b Horn land on
the Creek. These p.gces are both healthy, and very con
veniently (Ifate-i. Also, .ne other tract of Pine Lend,
well timbered, containing M 3 acres, lying near Wheat's
Camp Ground.
Persons wlsh'ng lo purchase Land in this section, would
Co well to roll on tie tnhscilber before buy ing elsewhere,
es.bar-slo may be had by applying early. A further
description Is deemed unoec-ssary. Please call and ex
amine for yourselves Terms easy.
The subscriber may be addressed at Raysyllle, Ga
jel w3m JOHN L. PAH 'HAL.
TO THB CITIZRNB 0? MBBIWBTjiBB AND
ADJSOkNT COUNTIES.
Chronic, or Ulisain of Long Blinding.
Dll. Ms H 0(1 Dll IFF, 1 f 0 lu'nbu*, G» , would re
spectfully give u>it!c« Ut all peraous aiiiic’ed with such
uiseitses, of m hutev<rr mtm-, or howev< r complicated and
<!i'ire«»my, that he can be consul ed by them in regard to
the rca*e a* Crawford A Giilispie’s Htore, Whi e Sulphur
pnrig* l* O, Md.iwethcr county, on WEDNEfID % Y and
*Dn«hDAY of every week from this date during the
Bummer.
ur. Woodruff will only say that for ears, he
has practi td extens vely in diseases of this chararter, «nd
could present many certificates of important cores per.
f cnr.ed h him dnr ng that tira-*; in some instances, of
cases coc9idrr«-d entirely hoptle *, but deems it unneces
sary, *» awssaw, f'oru his «*loM0V» prac ice io Wes
tern fiturgi«, that he is well known by character at least
M u** ,« ) vC ullar to Females constitute a large sLa*e of
bis practice.
Feitons unuble to meet him In person, can send the
symptom* o? their disease, when medicine will be sent with
full direction*
N B.—No charge for conauUati mor advice MedUne
per p cksge, from $4 &0 to 05 00, to f e | al«l for on delivery.
M. WO DRUFF, M D.
J ; f C.t) u '•* us, Gmo- jflft
FUhLIC BALA OF LAND AT THOKSON.
0\ MO.VUW , the 10th Ju'y, the Lilertigned wil
»-*» »» f ' Ttorrson, the tract o' Land t Weed by them
J -in lv, l eir-ir , 01 the I'rigtiual Thomson ira-t, contain
n, a ou o- e hun red a'd s xty acres, the Rl l road run
d"*rf through It. Ah >; t s xty acres of the Land is under
tnc«*, i.i.d te- able, the balncco tr.o*tly woods. Ti e etore
’ou-«tr nt T> oil son, now ULdi-r ru.f, is «-n the prt-m sen.
r > o*s'>nv *1 . rfr-g to examine th-i )an *, can do so at any
h.-te p'evjou ■ to ba’.e 1 y cullirg on either of the parties,
'old fcr a UtV.iion. Terms at 0.1 e
j. nr. BTOGKTON.
j lj« r*wßt WM. J. L4N(.BION.
G/KJJJN COUNT/ LAND FOB BALS~ «
F**l< sub erlber « ff-rs 820 acres of ban 1 for s ile, Nos.
3 10 and 27, in the 14 h t-iit. and 8d Hie , situated one
.ii!o from R.;.H»ca halir ad Dep(-t,and six miles from Cal
i"U ~ with an excellent road to botlt pUccs. This Is as
7alu b e I nd as there is in Gordon The locality
'vnliliy. Por**!uoe»s wilt ex mine the premises before
u.vi'K- If r.ot sold a pr.vato sale, will be told by the 1
Hheriffoa th ? fir»tTui-sd..y in N-.Vi uiber, at Calhoun, a
>:ir t .ain ca - now be had. Terms—cash sofli -ieut to pay
.1! suits Inw iua uriny to judgment, tine w)1 be given cd i
be biilat «e For irf-inualiori r«**pect'ng the j• r« mists,
*ddreiij m.v fktlMT, M j. Lea is Zachery, Covington, Ua., »e
l ‘ .tVC come to mis, to t y to m »Uc gol I top iyofl
■ y deb's ; lut Pi d that I have a better gold mine at
ioim* 'lit 1 l fdi«l find in C.il forrki. C«»me ye who went
ivo in the g ml, r,,ot of Ge rg! t- come ex irrne the
r*mlßc-, »i j;iv me, n poor d :*.d, a libtrai bid for my
LanJ, for sell it i mu&«,uud cannot he’p i\
p. ~., r • . f , DIRTUaND ZtOHERYj
DID A Uli& lAT LAI(D FCB HALE.
I''IIK tu H.T li, r ‘C.isD (» j»ere* of LAND for sale in
1 W lon county, 6 1 the roid ea ling fr ra Social Circle
ti M n ■ u -0 ini ej from tlti f -r.n- r. aud I miles from th“
i-ttc p c-v-Wiih-dlo acres*Jearvo and most of I*. fr.**h I
in In g.aid repair it h «-4 h good duelling home, kitchen 1
and tieg.o Gin house nn<! packing s?r,jw. Th -
wo'd ana ii ve y web i sibcred, th-: pn- limber i not i
urp-N e 1 by the timber on.| >ne JanJs. U w u!d he an
Xi i.ib r t rtte'or a B'eatn Paw Mid. I will tak pleasu' e *
n sh- wing t) r premia ** to tiny f cat'email w ho utu\ de- 1
5 * rj-;4?n,j .lO fN I, GKDnUM. 1
t
BALE OF OiTY LDT9. <
I'JIF West Burnt Lompiay will soli at Auction, In the ‘
City ol d'ext l*idut, on the 2d MONDAY IN
•ext, OUuLUI 8, hilf Ru*, cf; L ,ts, and it upwards of One l
I’h
*• hu K leaf Fine, ar.,d etnb aciogthe el.oals on the* River, |
•utfinem for ru uing *: y~u •ut ity ot mu*
hkittiy, inlbva tOhU.t purchasero,*oh the following terms,
/it: 1
One fourth c\*h, oue f urth in C m mil.a. one-fourth ir
•.wvlve m uths an' onc-fo..rth in eighteen mo: tbs.
*itb l tiir»*Bt froiu d >te. a »i'l ol exe'miis^inc'ttling -n*
crest for 6 mom h*, ,v. d pHyable a». the offlec >f the ktcci
(otnerv l surance Ooiup* t-y, will be taken in lieu of U.e
18b payment, I desp I.
Went H.'tn*. Apr h *hM. npS.Vtwswtd
FLANIATJ'jN FOR SALS.
r'H Kei bsoiiber offer* Lr sale hi Tduahle PLANTA
TION, lying on thu UliHtta n cchce rtve*, 13 mile* te
*ow Fori Gain**,contfti..log 2i7sacr«.e About 650 aert*
*rc fli#* r..tu riwr butt .iu, l,UH)ar and biox ry,
♦in I Dune*tareUliXhd nert i‘ neLard*. tOO acre*
re already c eEr«d; trie Dueißkg :s a two-etory fumed
'MiliUUv. iho lwcAtiun iheselD meat It* a high, healthy
And abu. dantly watered oak and j iue r;dg : ‘. Apply to
AIIDEK&OaN F. v RAW FORD.
Blak. ’.y, Ca ,Ju sS, ’BB4. . u3tj
THIS S WAYNE RS:NB,
/ V l..\i;U A4, i Oil Ai\l> FORUAKU*
1' (t MKHOIMNTA OOIj-* over tt-ilroad
• ank, Bav imiah, Ga. The uuder.-ignui have thi* day
emered into e 0 -i**rtne ship to daiefro-j the Ist July
'■ex , ny Ir, »bhi> for tbe traoeaosi nos a (tF.NKUAL
OUAiJulfi. ic>N AXvD FOitVV ARDiN(4 HU.'INK H
THOM A ■* 8. WAYNE,
J tiTA I li *- v a V'NK,
R. ALU.X. WaYN».
Savannah, JWt ♦* 2’, 1004 4.* >.»
FOR SALE.
I TO! H etrond hand I (Hl' lOAUHKS,
1 but tittle worn, aIJ iu flret-rate orde
with Haroee* Apply at WTgy^ir^
myßo J, p. PL MlNG*ri gtible.
D 25 REWARD.
R.As\ AWAY firc-m the utidereigninl on the 2Hh
Noveutbor last in F. ar.kl ; u ctuiy. Ga., my JO
Ncyro S4»n, Tr.RKKL; o.x fe. t hifeh, bl ck
pie ior, 26 year* vd, an ! weixha 18b p. ULd*, walk; -LV
rather kO 1 ck-ftO* id; he ha* pijnsnr.t ecuotenauue, *ud
4>n.veraeer tbtr imeUig>uUly, bus a defect in one eyo,
the left, as wch as I te< o lect; he ia a Bluckstuilh, aud
ia* a 1 retty good u*e of too'#, roth In wood and iron. He
ißMippostd tjpelatk.uß .bout in Fra* kdn c only, if not
ireoytd off b sme white niEU* If etcl.n, 1 wiilgive
4'U“ fort) em pre’ eusiem cf the thief, if ledgefi iu Borne
#a« r e Jail, and 025 fur the boy, in J til, or <Mi*'*r<*d roe,
or tay age:U, WILLIAM•. WILLY, K*q , cjuu*y,
via. Auy iuioimation coucerniug said ooy will he thank
hilly re lived. A.dre»a J. M. HAWKINB.
wlin Bouora P. Q., Go. don t oun y, Ga.
NOTICE.
r'HIU fc ’ will be gold to th • h gluwt hidde'*, on Thursday,
the 6th t>f JUI Y nvxt, the LOTS at he county *te ot
tlkrtcou ity Giorgi.i. Virus mt.de kuown on day of
*a c. This -2d day of Miy, IS>4.
By older us the Inn ii r C urt.
6 ICAjAIi CARTER, J. I. 0.
CLAYTON 8 WHBR.J f.C.
J AMES V. UICH aKD; ON, J. I. 0.
j 8 wSt IL K.CJUAND .ER.J. 1.0
\T OTlt’l%.—-Cli nts I o rscript* cf the tndcrrfgnMl
i c- .kctv..’* and otherp p.-r* to which copies are at
rehed. are request d to semi oopi« s of th?m to him »»y
nieil, that the oritilnai* ?u»iy be renewed cr established ac
ording to law, a* II of his Note* and other paper* were
destroyed the 1 tr fire. li. li. FOITLE.
Waireuron, May 1864. my 52m
UNIVERSITY OP GEOUIiIA, I
Atmb.ns, Juan 5, 104. )
’s hereby given, t iav ut U:*; Commencement,
LN t o flret week iu August aex , the Tru»t*cs of this
InvUmtion will elec, a I’mietuco. Ms htu it ts and As-
Vroiiotny, to i-egla l-U Uutka ‘mmedi ste y thereafter. Als?,
*> I**o cha ir*'f eli«» l.eUTk* a d Oratory, to bvgln his du
ilrson th‘* Oe* January next.
$ 7<*t« peran ium, payable qnsrterly.
AppH uta may »o-d in ihsir h*»ti jai nials to Ula P.nai*
ihftbloi thv CmversUi, or to
jet %4t ABRURY HUIsIr. 8 c*y U. Q.
NCTi.GR TvJ CONIRACTOitB.
Ij( HOPOaAIxS f v r the eoiire cor rtruction and equip*
1 meat, erf. r t*?e gradst on, bridgiog and masonry,
sbpwmiely,mthsrin who>or in part, of the Mit.isalppi
;m«l leoMcpSuw V'*X'cnui.ig from Mvoiphis to
t^rmaca. about »T railcs,) wilt be received at the
ottoe ot fth-j Company,ln Mempids Oil th?9«tli July next.
I rvj*osdis f rtfce ntire cunstr notion and equ pment cf the
auti Otherwise as UveraMe, via have pnftreuce.
i toru.s and e tiroateso f the first slx*y miles, m y beacon
onji- 'icatto at the i fllce, in Metrphis. Bid
eTidenct,of lhtlr *bility to
toißp.rwli e w.rk. MUiuU ME.UWE'rHkR
_ Chiwi Rpglbaer.
TEACHER WAHTfD
0»n gton hss become vacant
unexpectedly. A Teocber coo realise tot leai t.an
*1.1,0" i’ cr f>b*r. *bi con giva •atiahteuon. None oeid
•It ly whoeona-.t give umtouMed of charscmr
Addreta UKNRY ANDERSON. Jm
SITUATION WANTED
-4 YOI'NU Lasy wwht-e to obtain a situation, either as
Teach.r of Hud*, or of the common and hightr
bra .ches of an Kogli. h education. Baruifaetory rtfereocee
.subeg Vi u. Audits B. 0. L , LctusvtUe, Qa.
jeiS wl*
A FORTUNE, AND NO M r .STASB
LTPOdi ther ceiptoffl, 'Ut be sent Beventy diffjreot
/ Rec.-ipt*, frvm w ich any person can rvahae a to -
tune in a fee months. Prv.ms n.w engaged in the buai
n ? «, are rea iiing several hutdrei dollars per non h. In
addition to the a:>ove, will t<e sent 7 oth. r receipts—these
rtc ipuarei r.Hiblein A<u**, Kheumattsm skald Head,
Huo Altous, crVtht %Ciononhoes,To't -Ache,ind to
remove (Xtus—.BforsU AH letters ica*t be prepaid-
Address W. 8. LYON,
Berger’s btore Yirynla.
COLD IN HOUSTON.
I'HK subscriber ctfen lor sale Fourteen Hundreds^
. Aer- sos tii* be>t Fanu rg Fine LANDS now of-Tl*
sored m U ustun or the aiiyotiiixg c uau« s, . n which ia a
SAW MILL and GIUBT HILL, r-ntieg two haws
aoi tw.i run of Stouts, all in good order. The above
Land ies \b * JU* southeast of Perry and nine md«s west
°f Hawkiusville, ad.oining lands of Hush Lav son and
Stephen brown, end is so situated as to be divided into
three retUetne is if desnrvd, with running wa*er through
e*ch seule-ttnu For fur h r particulars address the sab
• Cl ’ l^ er *t Usya.Tiile, Ucuston c nnty. Ucorgis, or apply
on the place, [myge-aalt] CURTIB LEAEY.
STRAFED
the Dcub’e Branch ?, near August
HULR. Aprii, a dark Bay lUr«^A
bringing her to^LSm
Mr. Allied Domer, 10 miles west ui Oo uiub a C h <«ha
WM s. eu to «b.t mcu.i.) ov m Mv.»tth“'4rl»
• J a ‘ James geartt.
COTTAGE FURNITURE.
TT7R have just received anew supply of those
?V tc»t painte 1 UAtage Ch,tuber BKTTB mSF
rmbradag a great variety iclon snd itoiwi _
together with VI kJaurtuu D1 of < ottuge RED SUB
eiEAlib, CulBS, TOLLLTB, hr AN Ut) ud TAULXe, u um
loweat prxua poaaibic. W« Unite tbaew to want to gtvwua
aC*U. HENRY f SKINNER,
•plt-Sw uadef AugiUU Hotel.
WEEKLY
CIdCU&SENTm
tromikt “ Knidurbocktr Mt^uine.'’
A Urtaxly Bear Beat.
A welcome correspondent nearOiympin, Wash
ington Territory, ou the “Feciflc elope," Bends ns
the annexed graphic description of “A Grizzly
Laxr Hunt,” which will grexUy interest onr Atlan
tic readers. It ia minutely correct, in every nar
tiuclar: r
“Pretty oomfortable ‘ranch’ lor an Oregonian,"
said “Billy” complacently, te he stretched his leg*,
so S 8 to angle in as much as possible of the genial
warmth of the tire.
“And look through the window at grand old
‘Kamier‘Humph !’ aaye Billy,‘shat him oat;’
he looms np too grim and cold in the moonlight:
in Much weather as this, i man wants to look at
volcanoes.”
“A eegar pnt Billy in anch good humor, and the
SDgie of his leg* increased so amazingly that it was
a eight to see, aa I set in my little fireside corner
and heaped on the logs, that threw out the flicker
ing light over the little cabin.
“Now ‘Old Grizzly had a daced eight better
have come down—”
“Bay be be was afraid the canoe woold’nt be
safe tine gusty weather.”
"Afraid!” says Bitiv; “man alive, when one
earns hie name as he did hi*, fear and him are not
very close acquaintances. Let me tell yoa why we
called him so.
“Yon e«e, Lander, as Engineer of Beconnoia
»ance, wee frequently off upon detached duty; and
when wo wore upon the eastern slope of the Rooky
Mountains, near the head of the Marias river, he
took oil from the main camp some seven of us to
aid him.
“We had been five days out from camp, when
one evening we eaw a large moving objeot afar off
Ka the prairie. We had been for days out of
ti meat, and the idea of rich, jnoy buffalo-hump
induced gander, a Wan named Guy, a young
Blackfobt, (whom We bad ah a guide Acroe* the
lilackibot Paae.J-nnd myself, to fide out in pur.
■jtflt. AW,— ...
“We three were all pretty well armed, with re
volvers; and Guy had in addition a double-gun,
loaded with slugs. lamder particularly prided
himself on his horse—en old buffalo hunter—from
whose back he bed a short time previously shot a
‘Lens Bull.’
“Guy was mounted upon a pony wbiob had been
bought a few days before at a camp of Grosven
treV, whose capacities for running wss, if Guy’s
word wse lo be credited, unequalled. The Black
loot was mounted upon s mule, while I had a star
dy fcnilt horse, ‘not good for wear, and not much
for run.’
“When we drew nearer, out ‘supposed buffalo’
wa* seen to be a grissfy liar, of the largest clas* !
He had come down from the mouutaina to dig
roofs; end a* we approeebed, he moved slowly off
to s oovort of low bu*hee.
“Now I’m not particularly cowardly myttl/; bnt
there wa* e certain something in the appearance of
that customer that involuntarily brought to my
mind tbe many atoriea I had heard ot the ferocity
ot this kind when molested; and bia lumbering
motion, ua be went aidewaya over that little prairie,
was suggestive of considerable speed when be
chose to-let himself out.'
“I baited at onoe, and, looking back, saw that I
wa« already in advance of Guy and the Indian,
who *«»rred to have no more stomach for the fray
than I had.
“Lauder, however, shouting for us to come on
dasliod iu the covert after Bruin, the old horse,
true to his leesonsin tbe buffalo-hunt, galloping up
on the right side. The bear awaited no attack, but
came furiously out from his shelter, and oharged,
at racing speed, upon horse and rider. Lander
and tho bear went headlong one way, and Guy, the
Indian, aud I, in about ae nearly an opposite direc
tion n* was poaaible upon so short a notice, until
wo went out upon tho open prairie again. Here,
looking buck, wo could sou Bruin, still in fierce
pursuit of‘Old Buffalo;’ evsry instant getting far
ther from tho covert, and receiving the balls from
Lander’s revolver as ho would turn io his saddle
to tire at him.
“ Again fie shouted for us to come np; but we
could not trust our horses in a trial of speed with
the now maddened animal, and so kupt at a wary
distance. Lander appeared to have exhausted ail
the loads in his revolver, mud yet, rave e limping
motion in his gait, the hear appeared unharmed:
bnt the headlong speed at which ho had gone had
evidently told upon him, and as Lauder galloped
towards us, he slowly turned again toward the
oovart.
“ lie tried to prevail upon Guy to ride up; tell
ing him there was ‘ no danger,’ and that both of
his barrels, loaded with slug*, would certx’niy
kill him. Bnt Guy’s sole answer was:
“Look a-here, {Kernel, you can sock along
fir ter that b’ar jist as long aa you’ve a mind tu,
and here’s my six-shooter, but yon can’t toll vie
up tliar, no how I I don’t triad takin’u turn with
u big black Arkaneaw, but when it comes to hunt
ing qr 'ttUte ou a pony, jist count me out f
“ But nothing could prevail upon Lander to al
low the boar to -sospe; but so, exchanging re
volvers, he again dashed into tho bushes.
“Tho beur, wo could sec, bad laid down in a
tangled spot in tbe covert - nd soemed foawaitt.be
coining of his enemy. Lander, supposing that
most of bis shots bad been fntilo, from thesworv
ing of bis horse, determined to make surer work
tin time, and so rodo down to within twenty feet
of 1 1-0 bear, and taking deliberate aim at bis head,
fired.
“ 111 a boned the berr waaalmost on him, and I
hold my breath and closdd my eyes, but was too
par,ds sad to attempt to render any sasistanco.
“ Gny seemed frozen on his herse; but tho
Bhiokfoot with a wild whoop, charged down in a
oirole, waving his blanket upon his gun, and mak
ing loud outcries to engago the attention of the
bear; but all would have boon fruitless had not -
tho gallant old horso, true to his training, darted
eff to tbo right, and so suddenly that I oould scarce
believe ho bad escaped, when I sew tbe brute,
with 11 mad bowl, fall where they had etoed a mo
ment before.
“ Ono of the etirrnpscaiight in a low buab, and
thn rider wa- thrown backward upon the saddle;
mid 1 found myself wri'hing in my Best as I fan
cied tliut all was lost Bit no; by a violent effort
bo recovered himsolf, and I agsiu breathed more
freely ; but only again lo suspend my breath, as,
a moment lutor, the old horse stnmb'ed over n
grassy mound. The bear was within six feet ot
bint, "-id it aoemed aa if all earth oould not save
the rider.
•• I dashod madly down onl. to have ridden to
my own destruction; but again tbo brave old
licisi redeemed himself nobly; an J though evi
dently much blown, strolohed out across the prai
rie liko the wind, the bear closo behind. Swing
ing along with a rolling gait, his green eyes seem
ed to strike fire; foaming at the mouth, and how
liug with rage and pain, as ever and again Lander
would turn in tho saddle and fire. When they
rcaohsd the open prairie, Old Buffalo gradually
widened the distance be'ween them; and firing
low, the fore-leg of the boar was broken; aud
rolling over on the prario, and groaniug over tho
woundod limb, the air grow frightful with his
howling*. Unco more ‘ backing his horse down,’
Lauder fired the last shot in bis revolver at the
cai’s head, when ‘Old Grizzily,’ roaring upon
his hind logs, stood fol a moment pawiDg the air
fruuiioally, and then fell back— dead !
“ Alicr u man has, upon tho lonely prairie, otood
his watch through the daik hours ot the night
momentarily expecting an atiack from hostile In
di»n», and hi- blood ha- chilled and his flesh
crept, as ho imagined, or roally has soon, the ln'k
ing 100 tbtough the gloom, and yet daro not fir. ,
less ho expose his own person as a target; ufter a
mar. has gono through thie, night after n : ght, ho
may imagine he can realize the meaning of anxiety.
-‘All this I have undergone; bu‘ nevoi btf.ro
lid my heart stand still,as it diddnri: g that half
hour’- combat—knowing as I did that with one
false step of the horse, tho rider’s life was not
worth the purchase ; impressed the moro forcibly
upon me next day, when 1 saw Guy thrown amidst
a herd of Initial ', by his stumbling hon e.
" On taking iff the skin, it was found that eight
revolver bullets had passed into ‘vital parts.' One
had broken a fore leg; one had made a aoep wound
iu tho shoulder; and tho lust shot had given the
death wound in the boad.
“Os twolvo shots frod in tho heat of the con
ost, el-nan had hit the bear, nine of which would
have been death wounds to any thing bnt a grizzly.
Wo estimated him to weigh twelve hundred
pounds.
“Our litfe mule was loaded down with the best
portions of tho meat, and driven into camp by our
Blackwood a ly, singing tho bravo sorgof ids race,
ai d relating botwecu whiles how their warriors
kill the fire- animal.
“ With their imperfect arms,they never attack
tbo be ,r in the summer. It is only when torpid
with cold that they seek his den in the mouutaina:
bolero which, they make a barricade cf logs, and
kindling a huge fire, by its light, riddle the vul
nerable parts of the tear with arrow*.
“ Lander became to onr Indian guides an objeot
great admiration, and was christened by them
•Kay*,’ or Bear of the Mouutain, which we angli
cized by the euphonious oognomen of “ Old Griz
zly.”
“ A pleasant journey we had towards tho camp,
the Indian chaonting as we went, ar.d we admir
ing the sublimity of s sunset opuU tbe broad pra
ririe. The sun waa dropping down behind tbe
“Rocky Mountains, which, stretching far to tbe
northward, with here end there a enow crownod
peak uplifted, like giants, eeimed indeed
‘To sentinel enchanted lacd f
There was no speak!i g aloud: awed by the lone
liness and quietude, there was something deeper,
nobler in the very hush of solitude, than earthly
voices speak.
“We maJoour camp by the shore* of a low lake
where myriads of water fowl sported unscared by
tho unwonted presence of white uieu. Under the
shadows of tbe dark pines the water seemed of a
steel-like blackness, contrasting grandly with tbe
silvery s'lcums that were bounded in by the grassy
bonks of the prairie.
“Sitting round onr camp-fire at night, and
watching the fl'ckoring light shining ont upon the
lake, in tho calmness and holiness of the time
when
‘ Tae eating cares of the day
Fo’d up their tenu lira t e Arabs,
Am silently steal away,’
it appeara a sacrilege and a profanity to have taken
life in euoh e spot; and there seemed a nobility in
the courage with which the poor animal fought
tor its life.
“ I tell you, io the quietude of that night, when
the moon poured fourth her rich light over the
slumbering prairie, end lit with a holy glow the
grand mouuUln peeks—”
“ Well, did you kill any more heart, Billy f Be
cease if you did’nt you ueed’nt miud about the
•«c;nery : I can see grander from my oebiu door
•ny day."
“ Humph 1” says Billy, as he angled in all the
fire plaoe. B e. J. A.
54 * *“ r °'’W* a ' iW- T.) Jan surf,
A. Hiatt Appbopiuatiok.— The Washington
Star s»ys the amount Toted on Thursday by the
House to pay for the books ordered to be distribu
ted among the present members ot the body was
87. The amount requisite to pay for the
books to go to the eight pen new members of the
Senate, will swelilhat stun to snag gregaleciiiii,-
IM.
Corns Obi This article is becoming one of
considerable export from thia port. It U brought
by railroad from the upper part of the State in
boxes, and shipped to Northern ports, the most
of it going to Baltimore. There have been up
wards of 6,0**0 boxes sent forward from this place
since the let of Janaary last.— Sit. B*p*b.
Locwnu-x and Namvjlle Baiuoa». — L. L.
Shreve, Keq., has resigned the Presidency of the
Louisville and Nasheilie Kail road Company, in
oonseqnenoe of the expression of strong disaatia
faction by some of the Bosrd of Aldermen of the
city cf Louisville at hie management of the affkirs
of the Company, and of a determination on their
part not to vote for any farther measure of support
for the prosecution of the road, while he conunn
ed 1 resident.
A Convention of stockholder* in the Company
had pre\ lonely adopted a resolution that its busi
ness had been conducted in a aatiafretory manner
under Ml, bhrevo’a supervision.—.'"oMrille jßaa-
1 ■ —————
AUGUSTA, GA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 5,1854.
OUT Alla BY TUB ATLANTIC.
The Earop* arrived at Livslpooi on Sunday
evening, llth, at 10 o’clock. J
, The steamship Indians, 1,850 tone, the fiat ship
I of a new line is advertised to leave Southampton
York. This line is to be esta
blished by Lue General Screw Steam Shippine
Company .nd their steamers will sail every two
tfceag n Crosk8 J 4 Co., Soulhampt Jn, at a
ThxWab—ThxSixox or SiumuA.—The latest
accounts, to June 7th, ot the operations before
bilistris ere decide fly favorable to the Turks.
Full particulars of the several engagements which
took plaoe during the last days of May have not
yet been received, bnt there appears to be no
doubt that on Uay 87th, the Russians m«/i« an _
other fierce attempt to carry tbe place by storm,
in which they were repuised with great loss, and
IhstontbeSOth, the Turks were able toasenuie
the offensive against the besieging army. It wa
stated in London that the English Government
bed received information from Admiral riondas
that the garrison had succaeded in countermining
the lhUHsian euginoere to aucb ao extent that 8 00t>
or 10,001 of the besiegers had been blown up
This last statement wants confirmation. At all
event Siliatria has been defended with great skiU
and bravery, and, as yet, with suocess. Tho Bus
siaus, since tbe commencement of the siege, have
suffered tremendous loss, and it ie fsr from unlike
ly that the fortreae may hold out until relieved.—
As usual there seems to be some delay on the part
of the British. To May 10th only one English di
vision had left Beutari for Varux. Two thousand
English homes were at Coustatinople, but the
transports (sailing ships) were delayed by contrary
wind.; and it was currently reported that the
English oommander would not risk hia forces
against tbe Hussions in the field, until be had a
full complement of cavalry and artillery. Perhaps,
however, tbe French and Omar Pasha’s disposa
ble force may proceed to the relief of the beeeiged
stronghold. 1
Our accounts ot tbe sortie made by the Turks
sey that It took plaoe at 4 o’clock in the morning
ol the 30th May, aud was totally nnexpeoted by
the B'jffiians. A strong force of Turks made a suff
den sally, and after a tearful massacre of the anr
prated Ku"rtians>. thuy reaeiiou tbe works of the,bo
iMogud wb«re they aonpro~cid tbe newly OpenM'
“apprcaohes,” spiked a number of cannon and cur
ried off others into the fortress but msde no pri-
soners.
Omar Pasha was still at Bhumla, on the Ist of
June. Tbe etory of the 90,0U0 Turks having ad
vanced towaidaSiiistria is not correct, neither is
the statement that Paskiewitcb had puaheJ forward
6«,<X>o Bu.-sims on their road to Bliumli. Nothing
had been attempted against Bntschuk.
Movements or the Ecbsixns.— Little transpires
oftheßussisn movements. Tbe o rps of dra
goons are ordered to advance by forced marehes
into Moldavia. The Transylvanian froutior ia
swarming with Cossacks. Gen.Sulnkoffbua tiecn
killed before Bilietrie ; as was also on the Bit U
May, tbe eldest son ot Douut Orioff, and on 2'J.h,
Lieutenant General Sylvan, va no fell bravriy at the
head of hia troops. A Genera!—name not inn
tioued— is to be tried tor oowardiae, displayed
daring tho Bortioof the'lurks on the night of tbe
29th. Gen. Luders continues siok, but retains his
command.
A dispatch from Vienna, published in tho Paris
Momteur, says : “The statement of the removal of
Prince Paakiewitcb’a headquarters to Jassy isojn
flrrnud by all the news from the frontier. The re
port of the concentration in Moldavia, of the Rus
sian corps wno were marching to the Danube, ap
pears to be eqnaTy authentic. These new mea
sures seem to afford an answer to Austria’s move
ments on the frontier of Transylvania. It is stated
as certain, that Prince Gortchakoff will retain the
command in chiof of all the troops on the right
bankofthe Danube.
The Baltic.—'The following is tolcgraphed from
Berlin: “Brahestadt Tornea, on the north ot the
Gulf of Botkina has been cannonaded with suo
eess.”
From Stockholm, June 7th, it is stated that Ad
mirel Napior, with nine screw shipß of tbe-line
was off Bweahorg on the 4th of J une. The rest of
the first was cruising iu (the neighborhood. They
cjuld descry the Russian fleet, about 10 line-ot
baule ships ut anchor behind the batteries. Ad
miral Corry was advancing - ith bis squadron.
A report that the Swedish ambassador hud been
recalled from St. P«to.-sburg is extremely doubt
ful, although reported “on good authority.”
The iie at Archangel broke np on Muy 12th.
A privute letter state* that theßuseian Govern
ment has notified the shipowners cf Finland that
they can suve their ships from capture by taking
out Prussian papers, which will be granted on
appl.cation to Prussian port*.
The Blacx Sea.—A considerable portion of the
combined 11 et has loft their cruising ground off
Sevastopol, and had gone to transport troops from
Constantinople to Varna. A few steamers wore
still on the Circassian coast. Admiral Dundas has
telegraphed to his Government that tho Russian
authorities have voluntarily permitted all Frenoh
and Euglish merotumt ships to leave Odessa.
Captain Giftord, ot the captured English steam
frigate Tiger, died of his wounds, and was buried
by tho Russian* with appropriate honors, od the
2J of June. The crew of tbe Tiger had beeu paid
ttieir wages, thiough the Austrian Consul, and
were ia a few days to bo sent into the interior; the
First Lieutenant to bt. Petersburg, and tho other
officers to Moscow.
Greece.— Gen. Mayran (French) is appointed to
oommaud the Allied Army of occupation, which
consists of the 2Slh French Regiment of tho Line,
23d French Light infantry, a battallion of Frenoh
Marinos, a Reginieiit of Euglish Marines, and de
tachments cf artillery and engineers. Gen. Forey
lolt the Piiasaos, with his division, on May 89th,
and nrrived on the 81st.
Montenigbo.—Bands of Montenegrins continne
to cross tho frontiers, for tbe sake of plunder, bnt
the movement cannot be dignified with the name
of a revolt.
Aele*— Adeieo* are iiapoiUat. On AAny leak,
the ships of the line Charlemagne (Frenoh), Agame
mon, (English), and steam trigates Mogador,
(French), Highflyer and Samson (English), bom
barded tne tortreßs of Redout Kale, whioh they de
stroyed, with the exception of tne quarantine
buildings and the Custom House, whioh latter
contained a quantity of merchandise for Tiflis. —
The ships then returned to Cnourouoksu, where
they embarked 800 Circassians with whom they
again returned to Redout Kale, and landed there,
together with three hundred French and English
marines. The Turkish force thus augmented fell
on tho Russians, who were 8,000 strong, and drove
them back upon Kntsis, which place the Turks
finally gained possession of.
Tbs nurcaesiuus are now masters of all the forts
and fortified places whioh border the coast of their
oonntry. riouchum-Kale, abandoned by the Rus
sians, is now occupied by the Mingrelians. Soha
myl has lately taken possession of Csuighet, an
important fortress garrisoned by 10.000 Russians,
who, after great loss, wore compelled to abandon it
with a vast amount of provisions and munitions
of war. Bcbamyl now marohes with 80,000 men
against Tillis, and be will not then be more than
24 hours distant from the capital of the Russian
possessions in Georgia.
Col. Maudnit, an old offioer of Charles tho
Tenth’s bodyguard, is sent by the Emperor Na
poleon on a speoial mission to Schamvl.
Relations ov tbk Powxm.— From Berlin, under
date 12th, is telegraphed thus: “The results of
the conference between tho sovereign of rnssia
ind Austria, at Tcacbin, are favorable- Austria
and Prussia will aend an answer to tho minor
Sta ej of Germany, extinguishing the hopes of the
Bamberg Conference. Prussia is resolved to con
sider the note sent by Austria to Russia on the 2d
Juno, as tho summation mentioned in the late
treaty, and will send Col. Mameuffel to bt. Peters
burg lo back it
From Constantinople we havo again a revival of
tbo rumor that Russia has indicated to Austria a
desire to evacuate tbe Principalities, on condition
that the Powors will re-establish tbe status quo
antebellum. But it ie not easy to reconcile inis
statement with tho telegraphed report that the
Czar as unconditionally rctused tbe summons of
Austria lo evaouate the Turkish territory.
Another rumo iB that Austria has proposed, on
cor ain conditions, to send troops to the Danube.
And at a dinner given at Constantinople, May
Suth, to the Duke of Cambridge, the Austrian am
bassador in bis speech spoke warmly in favor of
the policy of England and France.
The Austrian Occupation or Albania.— An offi
eial note, addressed to Austria by the Porto has
Just neon published, of date May 25, relative to
the intervention of Austria in Albania and Mon
tenegro. In this note the Porto assents to the
presence of Austrian ships on the coast of Albania
as far as Prevosa. Further, the Porte oensents
l bat Austrian troops may enter directly from the
distriot of Cattaro into Albania, or if not required
there, they may enter Montenegro, should distur
bances arise iu that Principality. Tbe Porte will
give instructions to permit the advance of a suffi
ciant Austrian force into the above named dis
tr cts, and will also explain to the authorities of
the Herzegovina. Bosnia and Servia the nature ol
the movement —but ezpecls that, when tbe disaf
feetiou is suppressed, tho Austrian troops willim
mediately withdraw from Turkish soil.
Finances, arc.—A new description of bond call
ed Seim las been issued to the extent of thirty
millions of piastres. These bends ere issuable to
Mahommedans oaly; they are payable in three
years with 10 per osut. interest, but the death of
the original bolder cancels them. Another finan
cial measure on a larger scale is in preparation.
Letters from St. Pelemburgh say that Russia ia
about to negotiate a loan iu Holland.
There is a rumor that the Emperor Napoleon is
d.satisfied with the lack of discretion exhibited
by Prinoe Napoleon, and that the latter has been
informed that unless he immediate y leaves Con
steutinople and joins the camp he will be recalled.
Marshal Bt. Arnand returned, May StStb, to Gal
lipoli, from his excursion to Varna and Shumla,
with Lord Raglan and the Ssraskier. Tbe Mar
sbal had reviewed Umar Pacha’s army, and openly
expressed his admiration of ito efficiency, and of
the military talent of its leader.
England. —Farb Fitzwilliam, in the House of
Lords, presented a petition prayieg that the Gov
ernor of Venoonver’s Island be appointed by the
crcwn. At the same time he drew the attention
of ths Government to the great importance of that
coloay in its production of ooal. The Duke of
Newcastle assented to the importance ot the colo
ny, not only in respect to its mineral supplies, but
to Its geographical position with reference to the
Russian possessions, aud to Canada. He waa
forced to Bubmit that the Hudson’s Bay Company
had not acted energetically in its attempts to col
onize, but the disadvantage the Company had to
encounter in the attractions of emigrants to Cali
fornia wsa, perhaps, an excuse. The home gov
ernment, however, had the matter under oonsider-
ation.
Id the Hoase of Common?, Sir Ch*r!e» Wood
expressed himself unable to eUte whether or not
there «w any truth in the repott that the Chinese
insurgents, sided by the English end Americans
had driven the Imperialists from Shacghae on
April 4th, as was asserted. A bitter debate then
ensue 1 on the item of voting £660 tor remunera
tion of Koinau Catholic clergymen visiting prison
ers of thatpersuinou. Alter a long discussion
Protestantism carried the day, and the vote wes
rtjoetod by a majority of twenty-t *o.
The H 'use went into Committee on the Stamp
Duties bill. The main feat ares of the debates on
which measure, was a motion by Ur. Hume to
omit the danse imposing a tax on Foreign Bills ot
Exchange. The clause, ares however, retained by
e majority of 178 to 110. The bill will also bring
under discussion the question of retaining the
Kerrs) aper Stamp, and tias consequently brought
out so editorial in the Condon Times in favor of
retaining -.hat impost.
It hep been offinally announced that the Duke
of Newcastle retains the office of Secretary at War,
and relinquishea the Colonies; Sir George Grey
snooeeds ae Secretary tor the Colonies; Lord John
Bnenell becomes Lord President of the Council,
bat will not be raised to the Pee rag. ; Lord Gran
ville, ex-Premdant. retiring to the nominal duties
of the Chancellorship of the Duehy of Lancaster.
Lord John Keweli, if re-elected, still retain the
leadership of the Hoase of Commons, bat in the
meantime must go through the formality of vaca
ting his seat. Mr Ctqohart, of lectareship noto
riety, has come torward on the radical interest to
contest Lord John’s return, bnt he will scarcely
carry the electors of London. In the meantime
the Earl of Abetdoen his announced that the Act
of vtoeeoe Anne, which forbids more than two
SecretorMi of State to sit in the Hoase of Com
mons, will not at present be repealed, es it so hap
pens the' only two of these reeentiy appointed—
namely, Lord John Kuseell and Sir George Grey
are members of the lower Boose.
On the loth, the new •gjgal Palace at Syden
ham, near London, wa* ftuftotoopened by Queen
Victoria and her Court, Mfilfpraaecce of 40,000
spectators. The LondottQjfsprita chronicle with
uinch unction tbe addreMi and the “gracious
replies ” of Her Majesty, *| “the other inter
esting incidents of th* «*»«- »° Ri
pened on the occasion, atMEW P—ed °« welt.—
The King of Portugal, thggpjpltc of Oporto, the
British Cabinet Minis onfoe»» of State,
<fec., were present in the soytßDf the Queen.
On the 12th, Kossuth Vi«hlic meet
inf tt Nottingham, on tiit |jE*Qao of FoUnd and
Hungary.
Dr. Neville Greville, DtaEjlf. Winaor, died on
the 10th, aged 66. r
One ol the London pag-jJs-the Times proba
bly—offers anonymously a taJCM J of £IOOO ster
ling, for the discovery witWa a year, of s substi
tute for linen and cotton txgy ahr paper .makers
use. ,
A woman named Mary Am Brough, formerly
nnrse of the Prince of WakMfc W»t the throats of
her six children, and then b*e awn. Ths cause of
the horrible act was the dis*Tsry,by her husband
of her infidelity. The murftflto was not uead,
at last accounts. •.■SP:.., . ,
Aocou nts from the manuflMpnng districts show,
for tbe most part, a maiuteneqee of the reoent im
provement. At Manchester kjsiMeae baa not beeu
large recently, bnt prices were Inn. At Birming
ham, owing to the constantly Increasing demand
for niannfactnred iron, some |MM had announ
ced a rise of 20 shillings per to*—amovoment con
sidered precipitate. Tne genera! trade of Birming
ham continued active, especially for agricultural
implements. The suapensiMl of Mr. —— God
dard, an Ameriean shipper, m mentioned. The
report from Nottingham describee dullness, tho
market being mainly supported.by American buy
ers. In tlie woolen districtslflßn ia unchang
ed, and a feeling of confidencemul prevails, ai
thongh tbe high rates of discoNMpbad caused two
or t hree firm* to break down. ISL *
France.—The embarkation oftlroope and mili
tary stores, from Marseilles ft* tbe Kset has re
commonoed with vigor. A filth division of .the
army of the East is being organized under the
command of General Charles IjQjSdllaut. m
honor* doe to a Marshal of France, and Napoleon
had sent an autograph letter of oondolei.ee to
Charles Baudin, the deceased's eon. A Vivien,
ex Minister of Justice and ofPublio Works, in
1848, died at Paris on the Ith. M. Manguin. who
played a leading port in the revolution of 1880, is
also dead.
India and China.— Dates from Bombay are to
10th May, Oaloutta 29th, and Hong Kong April
22d. Advioas from Burmah to Apnl 20th. were,
on the whole, more satisfactory, although brigan
dags a.ill existed to a great extent. From Calcutta
and Madras we have no neva of interest. The
defences of Bombay are bring strengthened.—
When last heard of the Rnaeian squadron was
near Signapore. There was an unceasing tight
ness in ths Indian money market, while in the
general market a good deal of business had been
forced at nnremnnerative, if not losing rates. Ad
vices are not, on the whole, unfavorable. The
general newß by the arrival tend* to oonfirm tho
diEcreiit attached to tho assertion! es Dost Maho
med having committed himself to an alliance with
Ra**ia.
From China the accounts show no improvement,
and the tendency of tbe rate of Exohange gives no
proepeot of a cessation of the drain of silver from
England.
From Foo-chow-foo the loss of the clipper ship
Oriental ia confirmed. Sho struck on a rook at
the Kinpage pass on 25th March and went down
in two hours. AU hands were saved, but tier
cargo of 10,u00 to 12,000 chests of tea waa lost.
Both ship and oargo were insured. At latest ad
vices, 27th, she waa sank in deep water, her
maits only projecting, but otherwise s total wreck.
Tbe battle between the European and Imperial
troop* beforeShanghae is time accounted for. The
European and American residents being oontiun
al ly insulted end robbed by the Imperialists who
were beseiging the city, formed a corps of 800 vo
lunteer*. with four piece* of oannon, and accom
panied the insurgent garrison in making a sortie.
After a lively oombxt tbe Imperialists were de
feated and fled, leaving the victors possession of
their camp, artillery and an immense booty.
Accounts differ as to the other oiroumetanco* of
the war. Borne tty that Pekin was quite safe ;
otheia that it must speedily fall, and that tbe Ern
>eror of China had fled with an escort of 2,000
lorsemen.
The insurrection against the Spanish rale in
Manilla was beooming serious.
The latest.
Paris —Bourse, Tuesday Evening, 18 June.—
Closing prices.—Our funds closed a shade better
than yesterday,namely, Ponr-and a-Holf Per Cont.
Rentes, 97f. 80c ; Three Per Cent. Rentes, 71f. 960.;
Bank Shares, 8,920 f.
Vienna, June 14. —Nothing later from Baltic,
Black Bea, er Turkey. No important intelligence
ia expected until end of June.
The Moniteur contain* a despatch from Admiral
Hamolio, dated May 23d, respecting Oiroosßiun
operations: Anapie had not been captured.
Vienna Correspondence of the London Tunes.
The War.—lt is now universally acknowledged
that tbe Russians have recently Buffered a teriea of
defeats, and some of them are attributed solely to
tbe blunders of their commanding offictr*. A
few days since you learned that the Russians had
been totally defeated at a place called 8.-anboveni,
on the right bank of tho Alutu, halt way belweeu
K-rakaland Slatina, and we now have eomi de
tails of what occurred there. Tbe rising of tho
river so mnoh impeded the retrest of General Li
pruudi’s corps from Little Wallaohia, that tbe
reur-guard of six battalions, fonr squadrons, and
twelve guns, was obliged to march up from Kara
kal byway of Retska towards Blatina, where there
is, or rather was, a wooden bridge. During the
night or the 28!h of May, while this oojrpa was
as- Glee*, Htt»-(«iarob«d'w!riP
übgut 4.U00 men from Kraiova to a place about
seven English miles from Braukoveni, where he
placed his men in an advantageous position.—
When the Russians came Up on tho 28th, a furious
attack was made on their left flank. Instead of
taming boidly on their enemy the Bassians fought
as they retreated, and the consequence was that
their loss, was very great. On roaching Slatina
they lost no time in destroying the Alula bridge
behind them. It is supposed that hardly a Rus
sian would have escaped if the Turks had not been
much wearied by their long maroh during the
preoeding night. By the foregoing you will seo
that the bailies of Karakul aud Braukoveni, of
which the Austrian papers have recently spoken,
were in reality one and the same affair. Wo now
come to tLe battle fought on the 27th of May be
tween Turns aud Simuitu, in whicn only three
Russian squadrons were said to have boon enga
ged. On the 25th the Russians, after having ae I
etroyod their field-works, quitted Turau and
marched down stream. As Soli Pasha, tbe com
mander of Nioopolis, made no preparations for
taking possession ol Turuu, the Russians thought
themselves porfeotly secure, and marched at their
ease along tho left bank of the Danube, toward
Bimnitxa. Bali Pasha had, however, not been idle.
He had sent a corps of 1,000 men along the road
from Nioopolis to Sistow, and orderel np 2,000
men from that place to meet them; be then dis
patched a detachment of 1,000 men. drawn from
Islaas, to a place called Woganza. When the Rub
si ms were abiut midway between Turnu, and
Bimnitxt the two first mentioned Turkish detach
meats crossed tbe river rttacked the enemy in
front. Bhortly after the engagement had began
the 1,000 men who had cresred the rivor from
Woganzucume up, and look the Russians iu flank
and rear. A most sanguinary and obstinate con
flict ensued, and although between two fires tho
Russians long displayed great courage. The Jager
battalions, called Alexopolaki snd Krementscbav,
were out to pieces, snd the rest of the detachment
•only escaped a similar fate by a disorderly flight.
The Black Sea. —The following interesting nar
rative from an officer in the English Blade Bea
Fleet is published in the London Times :
“Mat 18.—On nearing Suohnm Kaleh we per
ceived the wails were eovered with men in the
Circassian dress, eight of them bearing flags of all
devices and oolois, bnt nearly sll having upon
them the star and orescent. A beautiful bay,
thickly wooded around, forms the entrance toSn
chum ; in the center of this we found 70 fathoms
of water. Tbe wind blew lrom the shore, and
brought with it a delicious perfume of flowers,
and from the appearance of handsome detaobed
houses, scattered around one sees that Bassians
and Georgisns have lived together on friendly
terms. Aboat two miles from the town rises a
small bill, eovered with buildings and farms, well
constructed in every respect. 1 began exploring
Sucham yesterday at 10 o’olook. On the one flank
is a battery of gabions and fascines, having eight
guns toward the sea, (six ofthem remaining there,
though jammed up with shot.) In the center is a
furnace of brick, bniit with tbe amiable intention
of beatiDg shot tor our reception, for our prisoners
tell ns that the whole of the sea defenses have
been reoently constructed. At the other flank is
the old GenoeßO castle, surrounded by a thick wail
of great strength and extent. Here are ail the Go
vernment stores ; 12 or 14 guns ranging from 18 to
80 pounders, (the latter are handsome end ser
viceable pieces of ordinance,) repose upon tbe
walls unspiked. Large stores of flour and wheat
were still burning with a horrible smell; and shot
and shell of all descriptions are strewed over the
ground. Between these two porta ie along street,
containing shops and houses of wood and atone ;
from the center of this street s spacious road Jeada
to the country. It ia well planted.aiith tiers upon
the walks on either aide, behind which aroootteges
botlt in excellent taste, and covered with roees end
jessamine. W e visited tbe General's houses; bis
crscb-hooseß, stablesand kitchens excited oar ad
miration. A little beyond are botanical gardens.
I never saw roses in suoh profusion as here ; the
hedges sre formed entirely of them, and they are
iu foil flower; their scent fills tfie whole place.
After nearly all the ships had foraged enormous
bouquets, we climbed up to tbe houses on tho hill,
I spoke of; these proved to be an enormous hos
pital, beds still remainining there- We sat under
neath large trees in front of the building and emp
tied our pocket-flasks with much gusto, for the
heat was tropical. Here I sketched a Circassian,
and gave him the performance which caused roars
of laughter and '‘JfaehaUaht /” We soon got to
know how it happened thattbc town bad not been
destroyed like the neighboring places. It seems
the Koseiana marched from the town overland to
jiin the army in Asia; but, being too weak in
themselves to make the journey, obtained a large
csoort of Georgians, the price of their service being
the town of Sucbum the Georgians having stipula
ted that nothing should ba destroyed, except mili
tary store*. Their terms were accented, and a
Georgian detachment remained behind to take
Oire of the place until tbeir brethren should re
turn; bnt our friend Shamyl had also kept his
eyes open ; and immediately upon the evacuation
of the town by the Kuseians and Georgians, sent
a lieutenant witha body of Circassians, i -ome say
500, others 3,000) to take possession. In conse
quence disputes ran high between Georgians and
Circassians (the former Christians) at Suohum
Kaleh; the one party say tbey mhsU occupy the
place and keep it, and the other that they have
earned it; the returning Georgians, however, are
but one day’s march from the Men* diaaenaion.
and most likely Bucfum Kaleh »iU be aprixe well
fought for. Bh»myl'a lieutenant had left for Ba
toum to communicate with the Turks. On leaviug
Suohum Kaleh, we made acquaintance with the
highest peaks of the Caucasus, which ran inland,
and wereleft behind before approaching Kedut
Kaleh. We have been fortunate in the clear at
mosphere, hot as i*. has been. This morning the
view of the wildest parts of the Caucasus w»s
££d7n the extreme. The higheet peek (S.ouo
feet) was in sight, its surrounding neighbors form
ing with its magnificent enow landscape, which I
shall never forget. .
“We had been t Id that Bedrt Kaleh mm de
serted by the Boseiana. On arming at the place,
the Admiral boiated a large Turk** ensign, bnt
no notice was taken from the shore, not even a
red pocket-handkerchief wee shown in our honor,
and people were seen riding about on shore, carry
ing lances of a meet anapieioas > C O, ! a ? c ..f. appear
ance. The fleet proceeded to Hikotat, (fihef lentil)
where we anchored, and the Admiral went on
shore, and after a conference there* we got under
wey again, and are now aniAaxed at Zuluk Zse,
where there is a large Tnikiah emp, whence we
are to take a body Turkish soldiers to oooupy and
take Kedut Kaleh, whiob, to *• wmpeeted, is still
in the bands of the Kuseians; the marines end
marine artillery of lbs fleet ere Wit-red to land
with the Turks to attack the fort by land. The
ships have been buey In bringing of the Turks, to
htaaiiibWfifltOW, TfcetowWitoMMweUenl.
ly armed with French muskets ; their elothing is
not good, being both patched aud in holes, and
they are heavily laden with large knapsacks, but,
notwithstanding their having been encamped for
some months iu a most unhealthy place, they are
generally heariy and strong, thick-set follows, snd
of capita! flgbtiug materia!; Theirotficer* are very
bo-bo, and'treat tbeir men harshly. Zulak Zee
boasts a barziar, a long narrow street filled with
dirty little shops. There are great numbers sick
in the hospital, for here, as at Bochum, fever, aguo
and consumption do their worst.
“ Mat 22.—And now to give you an acoount of
our adventures at Redut Kaleh. We reached that
ptaco at about 4 o’clock, and before doing so, saw
hosts of Georgians mounted, snd intermingled
with Cossacks, and riding hard along the beach
into tne town; and, standing about tbe parapet
oi the fort, could distinguish eight or nine Russian
officers by their uniform. The Admiral immedi
ately eent a flag of trnoe, requiring the immediate
evacuation of the place. The officer in oommami I
replied that the Prince was two inil9s distant, and
it was necessary to communicate with him on the
subject. Upon this the boat waited lor a quarter
of au hour, (line minutes longor than agreed up
on.) then shoved off) and, making signal to the
*“ v “ *.mv •vw VU| saxivay urauiug Digital ttj l LIU
Admiral ‘Have received no answer,’ palled out.
They were ordered back, however, by sigual, to
remain anotber quarter of an boar; but, upon
again reaching the shore no one was to be seen—
officers, Georgians and Cossacks all having disap
peared as if by magic. On this being made known,
the Agamemnon immediately opened fire, the
Tarks were got into the boats, and assembled near
the Bampsou, with a tew ganboals to cover them,
and wailed until ordered to approach, but, as tbe
first shot was fired, a thick mass of smoke began
to rise from the town, and soon afterward I count
ed ten such ascending straight into the clouds— in
short, the Russians had fired the town, and right
well had they commenoed their work. The old
Caucasus, who shone against the sky with all his
snow peaks wilhont cloud, eoboed loudly tbe can
nonade of the Agamemnon and Charlemagne; and
the gunboats and Turks advanced and disemt ark
ed, having had bnt one gun fired at them from the
Fort. Tbo Turks formed upon the beach, the
Baahi Bazooka nenstrxtingthe wood ou their riwht
ai.u examining the bouses and forts in front, as
skirmishers. The Turks prooeedsd by tho banks
of the fine bread rivsr toward the burning town,
and fonnd that pnrsnit of the Russians waa cutoff ;
by ths destruction of bridges of boats. Two riv- ;
era, one from the south snd one from the east, ,
have their confluenoe hero. A Turk swam across i
one with a line In his month to form a oommnnica- -
tion, bat the measures of th* enemy had been tak- i
en too well, and but a few shots were fired at the i
last of them. Meanwhile the ships’ boats were re
called, and thefTurks left in quiet posaeßsionjof thie t
side of tho rivers; the rest wasatromondousoon- t
flagration; houses and trees burnt together furious- i
ly curing tbe whole of tho Alight, and fleroe flames ,
aud illuminated Bincke rendered our docks a.most .
fight. Aa I was looking through a glass, down ]
Oauie ths stcoplo of a oburob, moat beautifully ,
covered with flame. Fortunately tbo wind did
not permit of its spreading more to tho west, or r
the Turks would have beeu burnt out.
All tfie mon in tbe ship were ready at their guns
during the firing, aud tne artillery and marines
were ready to land if neoesßary. Redut Kaleh was
the moat imporlaut point ot tho Russians, connect
ing Teflis and the interior of Georgia with tho f
Blaok Sea; and it waa from that place eomiimnioa '
Qona were made between the other poeta ana the S
army in Asia. Flume and smoke were also seen in c
the direction of Poti, which most probably bus c
abared a similar fats; so that now .he iiussiaua are 1
completely shut out in Georgia from tbe Biack Bea. c
They had evidently retained Redut aa long as S
possible, owing to its importance, but wore pro- t
pared to destroy it upon an emergency, and I have
ns doubt but everything waa msdo ready to fire
it ou oar first appearance off the place when we
hoisted the Tutkish ensign. Redut is now the 1
most important position in the bands of the Tarks, c
and they require more men and guns there as c
soon as possible, as now ihey have but 7,000 mon c
to hold live positions. We are now off to Binopc, f
and afterward to join Admiral Dundas, loaving the '
Bampson to help to take oaro of Redut Ka)eb.”
Gmamteville Manufacturing Compant. —This
flourishing establishment has declared a half year
ly dividend of five per oent., being at tbo rate cf
10 per oent. per annum. Every patriotio citizen,
whotho interested in this or other similar institu
tions, or not, cannot but rejuica in tho knowledge
that prosperity attends their labors?.
W u subjoin an oztract from tbe report made to
the Company by their intellegout and indotatigable
President:— CA. Cour.
“it affords me great pleasure to be able to present
you so favorable a report of our operations for tho
past year.
“It ought tc , afford conclusive evidence, that
Granite ville is destined to afford ample remunera
tion to its founders, and thus infuse a spirit of
progress in this species of enterprise, bo much
needed in South Carolina. Half of onr overseers
and sll of the operatives are Carolinians, well or
ganized, indnstrions, happy and ooutented; such
a working force, as any New England establish
ment would bo prond of; for productive capacity,
not surpassed by a similar numbor of workers in
uny country. With these fauls before ns, can wo
eutertuin a doubt of the permanent thriftand pros
perity ot Graniteville or that of any similarly or
ganized establishment in the Btate i Bofure of
fering you the Treasurer's Report, permit me to
reiterate an earnest appeal to yon and all of onr
absent Htockhoideru, to make it a point to be pre
sent at our annual meetings—W ofluesday after tho
aeooud Monday in March. It affords great encour
agement and pleasure to those who have flzed
their destiny at Graniteville. to see aeeemblod, at
least once a year, the individual owners of an es
tablishment, which gives remunerating employ
ment, home aud comfort to themselves, and edu
cation und religious instruction to their children.
■” THE'fNQcraTArrF.B FiLmuarEß*.— The New Or
leans Picayune of the 25th says, “The search after
'filibustering’ expeditions, or a filibustering or
ganization iu New Orleans, ia likely to turn out a
complete failure. The Grand Jury have been oc
cupied four or five days under the stringent charge
of a zealous Judge, and with the aid of a very
capable District Attorney, and evidently have
found nothing. From all present indications, tho
only result to be expected is the patting of one or
two suspected persons under bonds. This has
been intimated by the Judge, but wo do cot un
dersiund him as having positively decided ou that
coarse. He haa it nnder consideration. We have
no idea what sort of bonds will be exacted;
whether for appearanoe merely hereafter to an
swor, if uny evidence should be yet gathered, or
to keep the peace towards Spain in particular aud
all foreign nations in general, or not to go oat of
the United Btates with any revolutionary thoughts,
or stay in it with any expressed purpose of giving
active aid to any movement of independence
whioh may ever arise in Cuba. There Is eomo
speculation afloat as towbat will be the shape and
legal obligation of these ‘ Cuban bonds,’ if they
should ever be ismed. At ail events, it is given
np that Court, District Attorney aud Grand J ury,
have not been able to ditcover the trace* of any
military expedition, or even of auy illegal organi
zation, within the scope of the law, as laid down
with anch excessive rigor by Judge Campbell.”
Tax Dioist of Chatham Countt.—We are in
indebted to Barnard E. Bee, Esq , Receiver, for
the following abstract of the Tax Digest of Chat
ham county -.—Hep.
fja tux Ria 1658.
1800 Folia; 92 Professions; 264 free persons of color,
between the ages of 18 and 50, 16,£91 acres first
qua’i y Laud; 41,642 acres or r. qual'ty Land;
185,986 acres thirdqiality Land; 169,110 seres Fine
Land, »a ued at (2,879,255
City roperiy taxed 6,817,*87
11,695 Slavee 4,427,625
Amount of money at intcrettand solvent dobts 5,011,019
Amount of Merchandise 1 ,f 02,712
“ shipping.,. 633,875
“ Stock., Manufactori v, Ac 132,000
“ Furniture 821 487
AU other property 284,164
Total (19,953,864
FOX 1851.
1811 Polls; T 5 Professions; 288 Ires persons of oolor bs
t earn the ages of 18 and 50; 20,841 acres Ist quality land;
268.642 acre- 21 quality lacd ; 15,116 acres 8a qeslity do;
68,100 seres Pine land, valued at (9,517,245
City Property... - 6,985,20!>
12,070 Ela res 4 869,560
Amount of Money and Solvent Debts 6,8-8.945
“ »i erchandise 1,767,140
“ (hipping 807,726
“ Stocks, Manufactories, Ac 196,000
“ Furniture 86-> t 6tio
“ All ether Property 867,165
Total *28,128,490
Man. Facilities.—Gen. HarL'ee, the President
ot tbe Wilmington and Mnuohes.er Railroad, and
Mr. Caldwell, the President of the South Carolina
Road, reoently went on to Washington, to en
deavor to make an arrangement with the Post
Master General, to run two daily mail trains on
their Roads, but without success. They demand
for the service S3OO per mile, the *»ual compensa
tion ; but Mr. Campbell wonld pay but (-187.60
per mile, which waa declined. In oonseqnecoe,
one of the mails is detained her* some twelve
hours os heretofore, snd th- people *ontb of rs
are deprived of these facilities which they have
every right to enjoy. The Post Master General
alleges that tho Department does not pay expenses,
that it ia in debt, will become a charge upon the
Government, that Railroads receive now too much
com -ensation, and that their pay will be cut down
hereafter, ss their contraota expire. The Presi
dent* of the Manchester and South Carolina
Roads, say, on the other hand, that they are will
ing to do the service for the same amonut paid to
their neighbors, and that even then the profit will
be small, while there is a probablityrt incurring
heavy losses.
Tho detention of the mails at this point is a very
serious inconvenience to the whole South-Western
country; aud we question very mnch whether tbe
same considerations of economy so readily urged
by Mr. Campbell in this case, would apply to a
more Northern locality. The Sonth has been so
inadequately furnished with Mail facilities hereto
fore,! bat any improvement in tLis regard, would
astonish the long settled policy of the Department,
and awaken fears of a general crash in its funds.
The matter ought to be rectified.— WUmington
Herald.
Thx Dxmocbacy ox Malax.—On tho 7th instant
a Democratic State Convention was held in Port
land which nominated Anson P. Morrill for Go
vernor and made a full organization lor the Sep
tember election. This Convention passed resolu
tions in favor of the “ Maine Law” and strongly
denunciatory es the Nebraska act.
On the 15th instant another Democratic State
Convention was held in Portland, which nomina
ted Sbeperd Carey, formerly a member of Con
gress, lor Governor. Mr. C. is a leader of what
are called “ Wild Cats” in that State, and will be
supported, it is said, by the opponents of tbe
Maine Law end by the Nebraska men. The Con
vention made a lull organisation for tbe coming
election.
On the Slst instant the remains of tbe old De
mocratic party, called the “Regulars” or “Hack
ers,” also held a State Convention in Portland and
nominated Albion K- Parris tor Governor. This
is represented to have been tbe largest and most
respectable Convention, composed as it was of
nearly six hundred Delegates. It adjourned with
out adopting or endorsing any platform, and with
out venturing an expression of opinion in regard
to any pnbhc question. When the Chairman of
the Committee on BesclntioDe was asked for a 10-
port, he said that no resolutions were necessary,
and presented the following:
JietoUed, That this Convention do now adjonrn
to meet their follow Democrats at tbe polls and
elect Hon. Albion K. Parris Governor of this
State for the ensuing year.
This resolution was received and adopted with
cheers, and In a few minutes afterwards the Con
vention dissolved.— Xatxmal InUUigtactr.
Ohio abd Mneisairpi Kailboad. —The Bt. Louis
Intelligencer says that this road is completed and
operating for forty milu east of tho city. The
road is graded and ready for the rails for near one
hundred and forty miles ; end the rails are going
down as fast as they can be laid. By tbe first of
Augaet the road will be complet'd to the Illinois
Central. The Illinois Central baa only twenty miles
unfinished between Cairo end the intersection of
tha O. &M. By the time we intersect, they will
have that gap closed, and we can go by rail to
Cairo I Think of that I Only the Ist ot August I
Bolt. Amor.
9 Survey* of Hirer* la Georgia.
1 By »□ act making appropriates tor the itn
i provement ofcertainnarboraand rivers,approved
r August 80th 1852, ten thoaland dollars were ap
-3 propriated “for the examination and survey of the
1 rivers Savannah, from the city of Savannah aßhigh
' up aa the oity of Augusts, the Ocmulgee up to Macon
3 and the Flint up to Albany, andAhe Chatahooehe*
1 up to Columbus, in the State of Georgia, and to
t report to Congress the amount of money which
> may be necessary to remove any to
navigation.”
1 By the terms of the Aot, these surveys were to
be made under the superintendence of the Secre
■ tary of Mar, and as the examination of four rivers
i in this State was designed, the Engineer Depart
ment assigned one ffiurth of the ffiim appropria
ted, or twenty live hundred dollars to eaob. The
labor of making the survey of the upper Savannah
was givon to the charge of Cage. J. F. Gilmer,
Engineers, who completed ali the field work dur
ing the past year, ana more recently detailed Maps
or Char s, have been finished under his direction,
giving full information touching the obstructions
to navigation, between this city and Augusta;
such as bars, shoals, rafts of logs, brush wood and
snags. These maps have been sent to |)rV ashing
ton, accompanied with a report, giving a full de
scription of every matter necessary to a perfect un
derstanding as to the oharaoter of the river, the
nature of the improvements needed, and their ap
proximate coat.
Till most serious obstructions mot with, were
the numerous sand bars, and aB these occur where
the river bas an unusual width, deeper ohannels
can be made by oondning the flow of the water to
narrower limits, and this can be done by the con
struction of crib-work jettees, built out alternately
from the right and left banks. As the country
bordering the river is well timbered, such works
can bo oonstruoted at. a comparatively moderate
cost. The rafts of the Umber and brush wood,
lodged in the “bights,” or deep bends of the river,
also offer serious impediments to the navigation,
but these can be removed by the aid of a snag
boat, provided with the neoessary cutting maebi- I
neivVandthe same motive power may bo applied
rent proves insufficient to removo the shoals.
At ilerseman’s Lake, a very large portion of the
water is drawn ffom the navigable ohannel
through Kiug’B Creek, causing many bars to form
in this part of the river. The desired improve
ment here can be mode, by excavating two ehort
carals, which will have the effect of straightening
the navigable ohannel, and at the same time they
will serve to unite again the waters that flow
through the Creek and main river, giving perma
nence to the improvement.
To make the river between this oity and Augus
ta snoh as it should be tor the aooommodation of
thbincreasing trade, It is estimated by the Engi
neer that the following would be the approximate
ooßt, viz:
Construction of jettees and otherworks... .$28,70U 1
Excavation of Canals 14,600
Snag Boat, with Catting and dredging Ma- I
chinory 20,000 ’
To work the boat and Machinery for one (
year 5,800 <
Total estimated cost $70,000 <
Seventy thousand dollars must be considered a
small sum for onr Government to expend upon a *
work of improvement which would rtsnlt in Buch 1
great advantages to s large section of tbe southern !
country. The freights on bulky aud heavy urti
oles of trade must always be.cheaper by water than
by land. If our upper Savannah river, therefore,
can be so far improved as to furnish a good navi- 1
gation for the greater part of the year, a large por- !
t on of merchandise bought in Boston, New York,
Philadelphia and Blatimore, aud destined to sup
ply upper Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, &c., will
be carried by water up to Augusta, thus avoiding
to that point, the more expensive transportation 1
on Railroads. Cotton, corn, baoon, flour aud 1
other prodnetiona of the South and West, can be j
carriod between Augustaand Savannah at oheaper
rate* by the wry of the river than in any other
way. .
The surveys of the Ocmulgee, Flint and Chatta
hoooheo rivers, provided for by the same appro
priation, have been made nnder the direction of
iho United Btates Eoginoer Department; the first
was assigned to the ohargo of Lieut. Jno. Newton,
Engiueois, theeffioer who is temporarily superin
tending tho works now iu progress for the im
provement of onr river ; and the latter, (Flint and
-Ihattaboochee) to Cupt. J. M. Soarritt of thesame
oorps. The results of their examinations have
been reported to the War Department, but whether
they were suoh aa to enoonrage the nndertaking of
works by tho Government, for the improvement
of theso rivors, we aro not advised.
The following are the distanoes from Savannah
and Augusta to tho intermediate landings and
other pomt> on tbe Savannah river, as determined
by the reoent survey. They were kindly furnish
ed us by Capt. Gilmer, and will bo found of
great advantage to Bteamboat captains and others.
Savh.liep.
Fames of places on the Savannah Itioor and the ZHe
tm.ee of thesame from the Cities of Savannah and
Auousta.
Mile* from Miles from
Savannah Augusta.
To Savannah (Exchange) 248
Mulber.-y Grove ICJf 28 i\
Knexboro’ Creek 18 280
Abercorn Creek 16JK 226 K
Glover’s Point 91 % 221 £
Lad? Washington's Point 22)4 220)4
Purysbnrg 26\ 217)4
Beck’s Ferry Landing 21)4 811)4
T)*vis’ Landing 84 80*
Collie*’ Creek...' 86X *06)4
Ehenaser Landing 40)4 202)4
Dine Bluff 4634 196 X
Lower Red Bluff 46)4 196)4
Sisters’Ferry Bar 64)4 18SJ4
Porter’s Landing 66)4 186)4 ,
Sisters' Ferry. 68)4 184)4
Old Sisters’Ferry 60)4 182)4
Goldvire’sßluff, oid Landing. 74V 168?
“ « New Landing 77)4 166)4
J. Jackson's Landing 85 168
Hudson’s Ferry .' 86 157
Tiger Leap 86)4 166)4
Jacob's Jump Landing. 89)4 158)4
Willow Osk BpriDg 90)4 169)4
Maitin’s Landing 92 15t
Big Corn House ake 96)4 146)4
Poor Robin's Blnff Landing 100)4 142)4
McCall’s Landing 108)4 189)4
Hager Blager 118)4 129)4
Brier Creek Landing 116 127
Mathew’s Blnff 198)4 119)4
McCoy's Bluff L&Dding 124)4 118)4
Paxton’s Landing 127)4 115)4
Red Bluff Landing. 129 114
Furgnson’s Lake Landing 180)4 112J4
A. G. Black’s Landing 181)4 111)4
Valley Bluff Landing 182)4 110)4
Green Log Point 188* 109)4
Green’s Landing 18 if 108)4
Lower Month of King’s Creek 186)4 107)4
Herseman’s Landing 187 108
llersman’sLake 189 104
Upper Mouth of King’s Creek 141 102
Burton’s l anding h Burton’s Ferry.. .149 101
Burton’s Bar 142)4 100)4
Rocky Creek 145 98
Estee’s Landing 147)4 *B)4
Wring-Jaws Cut 148)4 *4)4
Johnson’s Landing 149)4 98)4
Erwin’s Landing 151)4 90)4
Rooky Point 155 88
Lower Three Runs 156 87
Lower Prescott Bar 166)4 86)4
W. W. Starke’s Landing D6K 86)4
Uppe- Prescott's Retcb Bar 15T)4 86)4
S one's Lindlngand Brown’s Ferry - .169)4 88)4
Stony Biuff Landing 160)4 82)4
Li tie Hell Landing 166 80
Sweet Water Greek 168)4 T4X
Steel Creek Landing 17i )4 12)4
Odum's Landing 174 f 9
Brisham’s Lar ding and Bar 175 69
Griffin’s Landing 180 68
Telfair’s Hill Creek 180)4 69)4
Lower Shell Blnff 184)4
Hanco- k’s Landing 186)4 s*)<
Dog Ferry Landing 187 56
Flower Gap... 191 61
Durbar’s Lancing 194 4*
Upper Three Runs 194)4 48)4
Haynes’ Oat 196 48
Demeres Ferry 198)4 44)4
Shell Blnff *00)4 4*X
McßeanOreek 218 49
Buzzard Bar 206)4
Talemecco Landing 2(9)4 84)4
Brown’s Landing 218 80
Silver Bluff Bar .214 29
Ten Mile Bar 2)0)4 28
Spirit Oieek 228)4 19)4
Twigga’ Lower Bar 22 y 17)4
Twiggs’ Upper Bar 226)4 16X
New Savannah 2’7X 16X
Irdian Mounds... fit 14
KID) Cot Bar 282 11
Canoe Cutßar 288 X *X
Blse House Bar 285 X IX
Sand Bar Ferry 288 5
Big Harse Creek 240 8
Augusta .............248
Illinob Cintral Railroad.—' This road, it i* *t»-
led, will be completed next Spring. It* career
prevent* an unexampled inetanoe ot good fortune
and a*tnto financial management. According to
the New York Tribune, its resource* were origin
ally 2,600,000 acres of land, whioh were put into
the hand* of a company of gentlemen, who had
subscribed to tho capital of tho Company $17,000,-
COO. The land was estimated to be worth $27,-
000,000. Thns the means es tbe Company were
$89,600,000 to start with. The last estimates made
t.ie entire coat of tho road completed $17,000,000.
It wan determined to issue thi* amount of bonds,
secured ou tbo land, in such a manner that the
land oould not bo sold without cancelling the
bonds. The first thing done was to buy the iron
for tho whole road, at (45 per ton for bonds at par.
In six months after tho purchase the value of lion
doubled, by which tho C'ompany saved $1,500,010.
The high character of the Company and the rapid
progress of tbe rosd commanded confidence, so
that the Company was enabled to sell the whole of
the $17,000,000 at par, with the exception of the
February issue. The sales were made payable in
instalments which will be complete in July next.
As th se have fallen due the moraiy market has
tightened, and there who took more than it wo*
ooevouientto carry have sold to meet instalment*,
and the prioe has fallen to 75. In tho meantime
thu Company has gone on uninterruptedly until
tfie rood Jupproaches completion. Tbe tightness in
•he market generally by stopping other railroads
increased tho supply of laborers at lower wages.—
In the meantime the failnre of tbe harvests abroad
havo excited the markets for breadstaffs, made
farming lucrative, and caused a great demand for
lilinioa lands. At tbie juncture tbe Company ad
vertised its lands, snd in a week had application
for 69,000 acre*, which at the minimum price of
$8 will give $480,000, tor wh ch bonds must be
cancelled, and this at tbe moment when the bonds
are at tbe lowest.
Thus the Company bought iron at the lowest
Erice ; rising speculations enabled it to eel) ail its
onds at par; re action gave it labor at reduced
prioes: excitement in farm prodnee sells its lands
at the best rates at the moment when the bonds
can be got book on tbe beet terms with tbe pro
ceeds of land sales. Tbe $17,000,000 of bonds
thus negotiated will, it is believed, suffice, witbont
borrowing in XDy other shape or iasning any oth
er paper, to complete tbe road 670 mile«, aud pro
bably close the construction acoount. —Baltimore
American.
Philadklphia Begoabs. —The Pennsylvania
Journal of Prison Discipline makes tbe following
statement:
‘•Wo shon’d bo alow to confide in any estimate
that pats the number of regular systematic pro
fessional street beggars in Philadelphia at lass than
700, or the number of vagrant begging children at
less than 1,800. In the former we include all step
eitters, and the corner sunders, and the music
grinders, and all others who solicit alma in tha
street or at the doors or gates of dwellings. In
tbe latter we include all the boys and girls who go
about with baskets or bags picking up chips and
bits of wood from the pavement and from bosrd
yarrla, searching ash-barrels for coal, and trying
tbe latches of back-doors and gates upon pretence
of begging for cold victuals. Though not strictly
beggars, all the children who go about peddling
sboe-lac a, matches, toothpicks, frnit, <fec., mart
for oar present purpose be classed with the rest.
In some i aspects their exposure to the contraction
of Vicious habits is far greater than of the regular
begging group."
A Case or Stabbisg iii Niwuebbt.—Dr. Gun
ter was stabbed at a Picnic in Newberry District,
on last Friday, by tbe same Mr. Scurry, who some
time ego, killed Mr. Williams. Tha Wound was
thought to be mortal, the knife having passed in
the direction of the heart. We cannot apeak of
the origin of the difficulty with any degree or ac
curacy, and therefore forbear for the present, to
say more.— S<mth*m BtfUt ddoooatr.
VOL* LXVUL— NEW SERIES VOL. XVIII.—NO. 27.
From the St. Louie Republican, 17 th Mil.
Indian Attack Upon the Kmlgruta
The lateatest Western mail brought us x some
what disconnected letter from J. G. James, givino
an acoount of depredations oommitted by the In
dams on the property of parties migrating to Cali#
forma. The letter ie datedLoup Fork of the Platte
K TB^Li Jun ? *’ an ?* ®aya: “To-day a company ol
men belonging to Howard county, Mo., came back
to us for assistance. They had boon driven from
their wagons by a party of Pawnee Indian*. They
had two wagona drawn by cattle, aad 2,000 vheeD
and a number of horses. This company wuaomn’
mauded by Humphrey Cooper, who was
ot the property. On the 29th of May, 93 mile*
from Bt. Marys, at the Loup Fork, they were met
by three Indians. They stayed in camp all night,
and called themselves Bioux. They loft the train
and went ahoad about nine miles, when the nm
■grants reached that point, they were mot
part, of Indian Warriors, the otieTol whom /a
standing by roe roadside. When Captain Cooper
was near him, he advanced with rifle and lanoe te
hand, apparently to shake hands, but Cooper saw
his movements, and told him to keep off, druwinc
st the same time, a revolver. The chief gate wav®
the signal waa given to his men, und they com’
menced firing at the whites with rifles. Thev hid
made a breastwork of x hill, about forty yards off
and fired from this poeitiom Oapt. Cooper tried
to get the wagonß ofl, but tho Indians shot down
the animals, and kept up a continual firing at them
One of the men (French Woods) waa killed, and a
horse was shot dead from under another man. A
ball passed through Capt. Cooper’s coat tail, and
bis horso was badly wounded. They were forced
to save themselves by flight, leaving all their pro
perty behind them. They came to us for assistance
and we are preparing to go. Capt. J. 8. Mont
gomery, of Ralls county, Is iu command of our
company, and when united with the other party,
we number 25 men. Capt. Cooper’s loss is be
tween $5,000 and 6,000. There are but few emi
grants on the route, snd the Indians think they
isve as in their power."
.
Narrow >e«iP* of the Steamship Sarah Sands.
—A few days ago the steamship Ssrah Bands ar
rived st Quebeo from Liverpool, sfter having had
a narrow escape from ehipwrock In the Straits of
Belle Isle, on the ooast of Newfoundland. It ap
pears that previously she had been detained three
days in the iee, and pasaed near an ioeberg 250
feet high, whioh bore tracks of a poplar bear,
while another shot np to the height of aboat 600
feet. Os the sooident whioh ooearred during a fog,
and in tho midat of floating loe, a passenger
writes:
We had composed oureelves to sleep, when, a
little after midnight, we were Btartlea by s loud
ory on deok of “Port, hsrd a port,” whioh wss fol
lowed by a orasb, and many of us then peroeivrd
that we were on the rooks and not on ioe. There
was little confusion or alarm among the naaren
gers, few of them knowing exaotly what had oc
curred. We harried up on deck and a corner of
the “eil of fog having just raised itself, land was
deeoribed closo aboard of us on tbe port eido.
After a tew oonvnlsive efforts to freo herself, the
good ship stuck fast, occasionally lifting on a swell
and then ooming down with a blow whioh must
soon have stove in a weaker vessel. Fortunately
tor ns the plaoe where wo ran ashore was a small
bay, tolerably well sheltered from all winds oioopt
the northwest, so that we were comparatively well
off. Not an hour after our mishap the fogs cleared
completely away, the moon and stare lighted np
tho Beene and revealed a low rooky lodge on whioh
the waves wore breaking.
Tbe next morning a large number of paesengere
were set on shore, where they bniit fires and
ereoted temporary huts. As the ship waa threat
ened with immediate destruction, .he captain or
dered a por ion ot the cargo to bo thrown ovei
board in order to lighten her, and after a deten
tion of two days she' was finally got afloat, without
dnmago to tho hull, to the great joy of all ou board,
who labored day and night to roeouo her from tier
perilous position.
The Swedenhokoian luba of Maiuuaoe.— Slnoe
the late Bwedenborgian wodding nt Rnvcnswood,
near Now York, took place, s grout deal of news
paper talk about “eoDjugial” and “conjugal'' love
has been entertaining the pnblio there. A follow
er of Emanuel Swedenborg comes out in the Post,
there, snd says that that writer holds these doc
trines on the state of oonsorts after doath:
t. Tho laws of the sex remain with every man
after death suoh as it was in his interior will and
thought in the world.
2. The samo 1b true of ooujugial love.
3. Two consorts most commonly meet after death,
know eaeh other, again associate, and for some
time live together. Thiß takes place in the
first state, while they are in extornuls, as in the
world.
4. As they successively put off their externals
and enter into their internals, they perceive in
what love and inclination towards each other they
had mntnally beeu, and consequently whether
they can live together or not.
5. If they can live together, they remain oon-
Horts; but if they cannot,they separate themselves,
sometimes the man from the wife, and sometimes
the wife from the man, and sometimes each from
the other.
6. Then there is given to the man a suitable wife,
and to the wife a man n like manner.
7. That oonsorts rnjoy similar Intercourse with
each other os in tho world, bnt more pleasant and
blessed ; yet without prolifloatiou, in the place of
whioh they have spiritual prolitlcation, whioh is
of love and wisdom.
B. Suoh is the oase with those who go into Hea
ven, bnt otherwise with thoee who go into i^ell.
But suppose the owe of a person who has been
ofJtS;
as given by him in reply to “ certain of the Sad
noees'” iu St. Luke’s Goepel, ohuptor xx., vs. 28
and 86. _
Look Before You Kick A minister in one of
onr orthodox efiurohes, while op his way to preaob
a funeral sermon in the country, called to see one
of hie members, and old widow lady, who-lived
near the road he was travelling. Tbo old lady had
just been making sausages, and she felt proud of
thorn, tbey were so plump, round snd street. Os
oourso she isolated on her minister taking aome of
the links home to bis family. He objeot od, on ao
connt of not haviflg bis portmanteau along. This
objection was soon overrnled, and tho oid lady,
after wrapping them in a rag, carefully plaoed a
bundle in either pocket of the preaaher’s capacious
coat. Thns equipped he started for the funeral.
While attending at the solemn ceremonies of
the grave, some hungry dogs scented the sausages
and were not long in tracking them to the pockets
of the good man’s overooat. Os oourso this was a
great annoyanoe, and be was several times under
the necessity of kicking these whelps away. Tbe
obsequies at the grave completed, the minister and
the congregation repaired to the ohurch, where the
fnneral discourse was to be preached.
After the sermon was fin'shod, the minister
halted to make some remarks to his congregation,
when a brother, who wished to have an appoint
ment given out, ascended the steps of the pulpit
and gave the minister’s ooat a hitch, to get his at
tention. The divine thinking it a dog having a
design upon his pocket, raised hiß foot, gave a
sudden kick, and sent the good brother sprawling
down the steps.
“Yoa will excuse me, brethren and sisteis!"
said the minister, confused, snd without looking
at the work he had just done, “ for 1 could not
avoid it. 1 have sausages in my pocket, snd Ibst
dog has been trying to grab them ever since l
came upon the premises!”
Yonr readers may jndge of the effect such an an
nouncement would have ut a funeral.— Cennuntown
(Fa.) Emporium.
Tin Cincinnati Slav* Cask.—The Fueurvit*
Remanded.— Tho Cincinnati Enqnirer says:
The entire sfternoon of yesterday was occupied
by conned in arguing this ease and by Commis
sioner Newhall iu rendering his docision. The
criminal court contained a larger ooneouissof Ihe
populace than on any previous day during the
trial, and among whom the ooiored poo pin were
largely represented. The most intense interest,
but unaccompanied with uuduo excitement, pre
vailed during the whole course of tho argument,
aud, during the rendering of tho decisiofi by the
Commissioner, tbe utmost decorum and good or
der pro oiled. After an able review of the testi
mony, thi fugitives were remanded to the oustody
of their .. or*, and being placed In an omnibus,
were dr v -n tothe Kentucky shore and lodged in
the Covin lon jail, where thoy remain subject to
tbe demvi ot theirowuer*.
Tbe co nsel for tho defendants, we have been
informed, made three applications, hut without
effect, for a writ of habeas corpus yosterdoy. As
tbe omnibus containing the fugitives wa* driven
to tbe ferry-boat some thousand* of persons ac
companied it, but no excitemeut wa* manifested.
The only remark wo heard was made by a fat
negro woman, who, a* she saw the approaching
crowd, said—“ Who says nigger no ’count! I’d
like to see a ’bus fall of white trash ’tract so much
’tontioD.” _
Cab Ventilator and Heater. —TLo following is
a description of an ingenious device, of which
Messrs. Tool snd Alien, of Buffalo, are the inven
tors and proprietors i
On the top of the oar at the centre are placed
sheet iron bonnets (one on each side,) so arranged
as to receive the sir when tho cars are running in
either direction, deflecting it downwards through
air chambers (placed wi'bin and on each side of
the car) into a box and tank snepeoded beueath
the floor ; from which it ia conducted hy air tube*
opening np into tbe car through grates in several
places along tbe i isle, thence out again through
openings in tbe top. The tank is of sufficient
depth to bold a barrel or more of water—allowing
a free passage of air above it. In connection with
this water, are pipes leading to a small rotary
pump attached to the truck frame (which is driven
by a belt pissing round the exle of tbe oar wheel,)
tbou back again to the tank and air chambers,
whereby a »:mple arrangement of diffusers tbe
water in its pi »age is scattered into a fine spray
falling into the tank to be used over again. When
the cars sre in motion the air rashes in with great
force, pc sing through the spray of water which
wa»hee down all duet, smoko, eindere, aud other
impurities, ooming np into the oar as pore a* a
summer’s atmosphere after a shower, aud very
much cooled. The water is changed daily when
the roads are dusty. The smonnt of air re
ceived is easily regulated by a valve in each air
chamber.
Daring winter instead of water a stove is plaoed
in tbe tank below tbe floor which beats tbe air in
it* pas-age, thereby ventilating and warming all
parts of the car alike, and that too without the
loss of auy seats, which iu other car* sre removed
io make room for a stove.
Riles roa Bxdconu Ash es to Hquarb Miles
Cut otf three figures Irom tbs right, and increase
the remainder by per tent, thus—l6,ooo
square acres—cut off 8, 1 he remainder is 18. Add
8, which is 50 per cent., the sum is 24. Again
add 1, which is 1 18, or 6 V per cent., the sum is
25, (square miles.) Proof—2ski 640=16,000.
This rule is very convenient for reading Con
gressional and other talk about acres or large
amount, when one wishes merely an approxlma
tion to the more intelligible denomination of
square mile. For this purpose the per cent
may be omitted. Thus, in Congress it was pro
posed to give the Pacitto Railroad Company alter
nate sections of land amounting to 40,t00,000
square acres. Most newspaper readers have no
practical comprehension of that surfhce thus ex
pressed. But to 40,000 add 20,000, making 60,000
square miles, and every boy knows it is a surface
just about as large as the btate of Georgia, or
Missouri, or Illinois. If he is “very particular 1
he may stop reading the article and cypher out the
sixteenth, which m the case supposed is 2,500
square miles. —Boston Trawler.
We would simply -str occasion hoie to say
that it is unLeoessary for Georgians to go abroad
and ransack the courts of Kentucky forlnstanoes
• of contempt for the rights and security of society.
, The Kentucky jury is bad enough in all conscience,
i yet we do not consider itoue whit more criminal
i than the majority of the last Geogia Legislature
i who turned loose upon the community a fiendish
f wretch, whose hands were reeking with the blood
-of murder, and whose crime, in all its details of
> blackness, was without extenuration or apology.—
W\Uw
OerrtspondenctJV. Y. Omrkr db Angwfewr.
Important K.v.nue Suililln.
W ▲sQiNOToit. Jane 26.
J*?e J«' 1* appromh.uit * CiCmo, and it*
I ruoH* begin to bo apparent. The receipts from
g* o ®* l * tho of Msy and the first ton
days ol June were as lollows:
Fm. June Fm. June
~ .... . tat to June lit to June
10, 1864. 11,1.58.
Sf* To,k |5,'75,000 »J9(S,iioo 6.4,6G6 1,850,000
■SJJffvv, «8-»«0 091,000 878,0(10 ST6 000
i h ledelphla... 800,000 80,'>00 7b,'00 187,000
BalUmore 87,000 65,0.0 81,000 M>X>B
Charleafn 81,000 ..... o!u00 .....
savannah 14.U00 . ...
New Orleans... 817,000 886,000 100,000 84,000
8, -ho«« 60,000 16,000 8,000
84,652,100 84,184,»00
Add for omissions 4^,000
84,178,000
The Increase of receipts from Customs 'or May
1854 over May 1858, is $878,000. In referonoo to
the return for the first 11 days of last June in New
» ort, I think there is some mistake. I therefore
make no aooount of tho very large falling off at
that port wbioh the figures wou.d indicate. At all
t “S,P°r t ®. t ! ,ero t 10 '* been » oonßidetable increase.
i«> iiu to jecoipm for the fiioal year ending July
Ist, 1854, will be nearly as ioilqws:
■ „ l*tQr. 9dQr. 8d Qr. 4th Qr. Eat.
Vcnm pa«tomßsl9 TlßAl«|lß.ftß7, 891116,896,794 00
InHsiS?' - " I, w?W a >' iJ, . ol ß »,oH,Bii9 8,0(10,000
is w
“ 1866. 41 ’into' 000
Increaae of ryceipti for the present year 818 X 6 861
The balance set year ou the lat July was.... 821, 012'992
It may be estimated at the aame date tala 1
yaarat. 88,Ogp,pop
lucre M of meaca at the beginning of the Steal
year 1855 810,087,106
The amount of pubtlo debt paid off will have
bepn about $2>,000,000. The revenue onllected
has bsen, therefore, about $80,000,000 more than
the current wants of government havo required.
Os this entire revenue, the existing tariff has pro
duced $68,000,000, and tbe pnblloland $7,700,000.
The tariff might bo reduced so as to yield only
$40,000,000, instead of $98,000,000. Whether it
will be rednood at all depends upon tho Lxioutivo
and his projects.
Medical Ccluok.—ln aocordtooe with the aot
of incorporation granted by the last Legislature,
for the establishment of a Medical College in tills
city, tho Board of Truatoea, after having reoeivod
numerous applications for professorships, Lave
made oleotiou ot the following poisons to consti
tute tho faculty cf the institution:
Horace Ntlson, M. 1)., of New York, Professor
of Anatomy.
John W. Jones, M. D., Auburn, Alabama,
Professor of Theory and Prnotioe of Medicine.
Willla F. Westmoreland, formerly of this Stem,
but for some time past resident at Paris, Franco,
Professor of Surgery.
James M. (Jordon, M. D., of Savannah Georgia,
Professor of Surgery.
John S. Duvul, of Texas, M. D., Professor of
Jhomlstry.
B. A. T. Bidley. M. D., Lagrange, Georgia,
Professor of Physiology and Pathologies! Anato
ny.
John G. Wostmoroland, M. D., Atlanta Georgia,
Professor of Materia Medics.
J. B. Calhoun, M. D., Newnan, Georgia, Profos
>or of Surgical Anatomy and Medicul Jurispru
ienco.
In tbe above selection of a board of Professors,
l is the opinion of disinterested persons generally,
.list tbe Trustees have made a wise and judicious
ihoice—one well calculated to insure success to
ho institution. We aro happy in being able to
itule that the prospects of the College aro In all
rospeots of the most promising kind. It has not
yet been decided, we understand, whother tho
regular eoursoa of lectures wi 1 take plaoo in the
mmiiicr or wintor seasons. In case the latter la
lecidod iipou, the first coarse will probably com
mence next tall. —Atlanta IntMigtnetr.
Bbautiititl Afobtuofhktotue Bible.— We would
be pleased to know the author of the following
moat eloquent apostrophe to the Bible. It appear*
to hare been addressed to young men. W e have
seldom read anything finer:
“Study now to be wise; and in all your gettings
get understanding. And especially would I urge
upon jour heart bound, noul-wrapt attention, that
Book upon which all feelings are concentrated, all
opinions; whloh enlightens tho judgement, whilo
it enlists the sentiments, and soothos tho imagina
tion In songs upon tho harp of the “sweet sorgntor
of Isrnol.’’ Tliut Book whioh gives yon a faithful
insight into your heart, and oonsoeratus its char
acter in
“Shrines
Such as the knecn tooth of Time can never touch.”
Would you know the effect of that Book upon
tho heart ? It pnrifios its thoughts uudsanoti ties its
joys; it nerves and strengthens it for sorrows and
mishaps of life; and when these sbull have ended,
and the twilightof death in spreading its dew damp
upon llio wasting features, it breaks upon tire last
glad throb the bright and streaming light of Eter
nity’s morning. Oh 1 have yon ever stood beside
the couch of a dying B&int, when
“Without a liph,
A change of feature or a shaded smile,
Ue gave bli hand to the item meteeuger.
And as a glad child seek i hie f itter’e arms,
Went home.”
Then, you have seen the eonoentred influence of
thia Book. Wouid you know iu name 3 It is the
it be the first upon the shelves of your library, and
first in the afflictions of your heart. Search the
Scriptures for in them ye think ye have eternal
lift, and they are they whioh testify of me. Oh t
if there be sublimity in the contemplation of God
—if there be grandeur in the displays of Eternity
—if there bo anything ennobling and purifying in
the revelation of man’s salvation, search the Scrip
tures, for they aro they whioh testify of these
things.”
Anoiukk Cab Manufactory. —ln onr rapidl
growing citjjfhardly a week pwuieg in which noma
new enterprise of consider able conseqaonoe does
not come under our notice. The last enterprise
particularly worthy of notioe, ia that of Meaara
Strong, Gilbert <fc Co., who are now having an ex
tensive establishment erected, between Marietta
Stieetand the State Koad, a abort distance beyond
Winahip’a Iron Foundry, for a Steam Car Manu
factory and Plaining .Villi. All themachlpery nec
essary • for tho establishment has already beon
ordered and will be hero by the time the building
ia ready forit reception. This Will be the second
manufactory of the kind ih Atlanta .—MlaU
InteUigenoer.
Tobaooo.—We have always been aware of the
importance, attached to this product of our Sout
hern Helds, in the British customs duties, but were
nevertheless, utterly amazed on reading, recoßtly,
the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s war budget
speech,in the House of Commons, to find the
sum raised upon that one artiole rated at nearly a
tenth of the whole revenue of Great Britain. The
Chancellor of the Exchequer, after reviewing u
list of articles which might appear objeola for in
creased taxation during the Eastern war, remarked
ns follows:
W ith regard to the tobaooo duty, it ia impossible
for us wisely to propose any change. The tobacoi
dnty is ' wonderful achievement. We raise *tve
millions upon an article with a rate of duty of
something like IXOO per oent. and that revet":* is
progressively improving from year to year | cheer*. J
That is a wonderful state of things, and 1 think it
one of those ensos to whioh to apply the doctrine
of let well alone [hear, hear.] Were we to tamper
with it, I do not think we should get a very large
sum. We might break down the revenno alto
gether, and enable the smuggler to have the up
perhaitd.
A rovonue of five n illlone of pounds eterling—
soma twenty-five millions of doflara—upon so ap
parently insignificant, and almost unnecessary nit
article as tobacoo 1 Woll might the Chancellor of
the Exchequer call it a wonderful achievement—
“a wondertul state of things.’’— Journal <f Com
merce.
Tiik Snip Camiu.cs.—‘ The steamer Governor
Dudley arrived yesterday from the ship Camilla*,
ashore on Oorucoke Beach. The ship wss aban
doned o . Wednesday last, having bilged, and the
tide flowing into her. She was oomplotoly strip-
Ked— the sails, anchors and ohsins. being taken to
lew York by the schooner Excefsio, and a large
quantity of her furniture has been brought to this
port in the Dudley. The steam pumps were
placed on board the ship after muoh difficulty, but
booame disabled before they were worked to any
extent. In consequonoeof the gas thrown out by
the wet hay on hoard, the men were nnable to
work in the hold. Captain Westendorff and crew
arrived in the Dudloy.— Charluton Mercury.
Tna Tory Far room or MAssAOßrsjms.— John
Adams, in writing to Patrick Henry, in Junel77A,
sends these consolatory reflections on the downfall
of the great tory families:
Toe dons, the bashaws, the grandees, tha
patricians, tho sachems, the nabobs, call LWu. kw
wtiat name you plooso, sigh and groan and fret,
and sometimes stamp and foam ana curae, but all
in vain. The decree ia gona forth, and it cannot
bo recallod, that a more eqnal liberty than baa
prevailed in other parts of the earth, most be es
tablished in America. That exuberance of prida
which has p-oducod an insolent domination in a
lew, a very few, opulent, monopolizing fsmlliea,
will bo brought down nearer to the confines of
reason and moderation, than they have been used
to. This is all the ovil which they theinaeives will
endure. It will do them good in this world, and
in every other. For pride was not made for man,
only as a tormentor.
A Nixblb Swallowiu and Extbaotko^—Some
time in December last, a yoong lady swallowed
what at the time aho supposed to be a pin. She
soon after suifered aevere pains in the region of
the stomach, bnt did not then attribute tlie cause
to the supposed pin. Yesterday, while standing,
she was suddenly seized with an acute pain in one
of her limbs, just above the knee, and soon faint
ed. A physician was immediately called, and he
atonoe discovered and extracted from the limb a
medium size needle, which bad worked nearly to
the skin, the eye being foremost. The needle was
muoh corroded, and the point nearly as much blun
ted as the bead. The yosng lady is getting along
Without difficulty. —Uocheeter Union.
Fbofitbt It.— 1 “Iam rich enough,” said Pops
to Swift, “andean afford to give away a hundred
pounds a year. 1 would not crawl upon the earth
without doing a little good. I will erjoy the
pleasure of giving what I give, by giving it alive,
and seeking another enjoy it.” “When I die,*’ ba
added, “1 should be ashamed to leave enough for
a mounumout, there was a friend above ground.”
Dxruorr, June 23.—Fatal Kailboaij Accident.—
This morning the lightning train going West on
the Michigan Central Railroad, when three miles
from Wayne ran into a carriage containing a
wealthy furmeß his wife and child, killing them
all instantly. The train was thrown off the track,
and the locomotive and several ears were brokon.
No one on the train was killed, bnt the Engineer,
Fireman, and ten or twelve passengers were niors
or less injured.
Tub Cohmihox oy Fbanoe. —The Director-Gene
ral of the Customs has just published the table of
the priuoipal results of the commoroe and naviga
tion of Franos with bar Colonies and toreign
powers daring 1851, ’SS-’6B. For general com
merce, as far as regards imports, the offloisl valua
amounts for 1858, to 680,000,000 tranos. whicn la
an increase of 102,000,000 franco on the total of
1852; and of 478,000. 000 francs on thMoflMl.
As to exports, they hsve produced ljftfld.OWjOW
francs, or 185,000,000 f. more th«n in 1852; and
287,000,000 frsnoe more ti>»J
aaa A/ifr fames more ss compered with 1851* Tflt
wl l»m oun tof the exports Is 1,862,000,00“ francs,
wblib “an inorssse of 12»,000,000tramw OTK lM*
and of 1 franc* over 1801.