Newspaper Page Text
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d-riv-w ’herd a ?nf;r '»r«n, tn? er*re '»* o
t v, fc ,^|’ e :-u cjripWOll' <i tv dUDf 1« . ill h©
worth at. i■ - -red f h-
I;ia dCV-t - CX-IU 1 Vci j ') b© <mpK)VCmC..t ot
Sontborn Ab-cc', " '■ •« » ,rcnct*» sl<l
tidro ■ voortk.iv ■ mci;g ~ ■ 'be dnUre *t;d
lauro»V of t> t lla-cetrdrea". tt d fe. In
•tort t l»t oot kaovrtec'ga t r ev.rj me,
sod c»cr- man’. bo«.k. St* lUc Prasj><.wc» in
aootbor o'Jao.n.
The Urti.# C mrt.r.
A tnl.f>r*phro *l©.ps'<fo receded yc'rrffaj
eveniuff, from Coiu :b a, ■- C#, by '.he Mayor,
fctv in ; Uiat the lio. e Ltd reptile*: tb ft-' ‘ iaal
©es*fo* , aud VC It'd the C; nr: r w? I e Br.J.s iD
thaCiljr Council of An . ■ /a. ' y * x'.-te of 63 to 41.
Tin Mxilh.—Too Charietsto 1 . eUrurui f this
.jnor niig »ij f ‘To .r-.r w- a.eo
tionad t'.at aeli.d
lb w !> .: I'ost iJffl-J Drpar.ment
Mi abo il 1.0 iDiito a enb-c otraet with ’.ha 8 otb
Carolina Uiilroai <1 to carry t v Oreat
Western a- I Kart hern M .a»ii*-ial Oti eir.qe:-
ry, wo find that ueb a ‘Ob coi.tr. .t b-d icon
made, bat that tbr 1' sunn ' r Centra! had dotid
od • bat «■<«', an arra«t(iin«nt was iuadmieh Me, and
OOi •<v i e':rit!y ordered Mr. It. toi hs, 'he
or, *0 convey tiis rna m deify bo w .. C ■ e n
and K rtf'-villc—or M.urtojter, a. t o contract
or may li d in o' adv; r t>l 3in l-ro-A r « carrie
riago ; ... ■, lri-we*lij betwcou Cbarteet.ii ai.d
Otat.gT.otg, in order to t pplyttaoClc; on the
Ilnooi ih .C. Killroad, iit.dArrfyto Anguata
•is K ngtvi’.lo an ! C-.lambla by the sm mode of
convoy a..00. Tbo mot fur .Tara niab will bo cu
veyed from this c ty tri ist.Lly in steamer.., a ton
trac. to 11 ‘at | nrp -rt bt.vii.g bocc effected. The
now trrougc lOtb are to p> into o. iration on tl.o
Ist cl next month and continue out 1 tuo 3;lh f t
Juno."
Til© [.dove, wo beliero, to b. a correct statement
of how the matter now t ’and.*, and wit boat tub r
iag into any dieewtsien le'.ativo to tbs moi.ts of
the c n.troreray, we may be permitted to cipreea
our surprise that the Department -horM have
doomed it proper to forbid Mr, D ent ring
into the eub ocntiact with tbo r.a-lr.a 1 Company,
aspecia lycaitiuvoi eduoad lhi ou.l tip ties to the
Departmet.t, ur.d tv ahi have proved ol va t ad'.an
trgetotbeenlirscommu tiiy. Tbiarolu i.; wo tato
Us l . brewSlt ; 'Tit «t p -rsoaol pitjue, inccmpati
blowiUitlu d gnityol a iy niambrrcl too Cabinet,
and should bo rebuked at once by the f opu'.f.r voice,
and lor that purpo c wo would vga.u reopec'.f.lly
aofgeat that his Honor no Mayor cal! n public
meeting ortuwith.
Fur thi Chronicle dt Sentinel.
** Augusta I'attlis. "
Unuih this itcai', a wtiu-r in the la t Atlanta
JlepaU.cn, under tho i igna'.uro ol “Omoitii*
Faeru., ” makes a feeMe and stupid effort to ae
aail the ooudac'. and ebaraotor of the Augusta
Banin Ho i > o.thor wboiy ignorant of the mb
jeot a pen which ho is endeavoring to ecighten the
people, or there is u wonderful cstrangemoi l be
tween him uud truth—for lie n t rt lest tiuth,
and eupprosbos more, than any v, ritcr I have seen
of equal cupeciy Indeed, I have never seen
suoh a mixture ■ t opidily, ignoiauce und mis
ropresentatlon or .suppression of truth united in a
single oouu.iuuiculiou. aly only surpri-c in, that
any journal, hat ingeiainus to rospe liability, abonid
permit itecolumns to bo occupied wiih such stulf,
much of which, c.ory intell gent man in UioNtule
know., to bo untrue.
Tho Atlanta journals, may perchance, acquire a
little independence when they eksll have euiforod
yet a while longer, from the evils of the currency
that has been iutrodueod into their midst by tho
Wild Cat Bulks and tho State Koa 1. VV ken that
time arrives, Hoy will not only ropndiuto such
stupid ai-tanlts upon tho so jud bunks of the State,
but regret that thv\ delayed eo long tho perlurm
anco of n high umt responsible duty to ihomrelv-H
and tho public.
Whid, 1 n-.lt, enn ho the object ot u renpco'ehle
journal yield.ug Pa columns to stuh av nulls upon
the sound bauking nlions of the State I If
they aro tho n-lvcouti i a round currency, lot
thorn rcpudii.to all such a: lb;'-.. and tnoir authora.
They evidently emirate from men who either
knowingly or ig urantly arc endeavoring to have
tho people robbed by the Wild Cat Xtanka. hor, es
certainly os the Wild fa's got circulation, you will
soon O’or la'er re i tho i ar-tes robbed, while a few
swindlers wilt po.'ket their thousands.
As I bavo m> interest in at y b.nk or corpora
tion, except tho inter -t I l a c in a good cutrcncy,
permit mo to can’ O'l tlte po >p!o against tlcso roo
tlonal op, tilth to llioir piu-sionr, (or or nguinrt
Banka in a y iMtr.ii. .hr locality. Such appeals
are tho re nit ot jgnoruncu or u cunningly dovisod
sys'om to g- in your ooiillJoncoand thou rob you
1 out tb .' advocate and friend of all sound Banks,
and the rptu enoiu} of All WilJCrt Banks. 1,
thoroforo, you do iioa sound currency, refuao to
receive - try i ills but those ot the Bound Banks of
tboSlu'.o. Hour Cotton, Corn a-d other produce
will el Aliys command ff uS 1.. nty, if you rtluso to
taf o all depreciated money. Yon have only thcro
fore to tofu ie tl.e Wild Cut Bdls, and you preserve
tho onrreney scan 1 and forco tho Swindling Shops
to sin*, up. No ptopusltiou in t laiuor cr more sus
ceptible of demonstration.
Do not bodeovived r led rstray by thoir "dtoot/
detcU," whloii thty ro- in owry p .t-1 si I stream.
Buff.r yourselves not to l". imposed on by tho
advortiscir.ftotsof Brokers, who are pui 1 to redeem
tho Wild Cat Bills. This UHie plan thoso swind
liogshcps al»»y I adopt to rob tho pi ople tho moio
auccostfii ly. Broker., cannot Ivo whero tho cur
rency is ound—like tit ■ vai riuu bi ri.l,li l .■ y can only
thrive whero Ibo o is au imp-are c-rcr.s,-. llvme
a vitiatod, debused ourrency is to them what a
carcass i t touliuxi.ird -it is tticir litc f heir sup ptort.
The Wild C t banks first try to got their bills
Into circulation by other moans; if these foil, they
make a oontruot with some broker, wile agrcca to
redeem their bills os long os ho is furnished with
tho means. A' soon as the Banks fail to supply
tho means, tho Broker announces that ho hus no
funds, at d tho people jn t thon discover that liny
aro tohbod.
10- kook outforbrokere'ed vert is me ate about
those times-
ITC K -.;l« t'TOCIBOLDKa.
[C.IXUCMOATFD.]
Sir. llsrbrr and the tYU4 Cate.
I» Mr. Bsiiasb ad rea l my remarks carefully,
and understands the imp r; oi language half r.s
well as ho does the rule, of direennt and premium,
ho would have perceived 'hat I made no toferonco
to him or Ida advertisement. 1 spaiUo of li-okers
with whom funds are depositv 1 to redeem bi'.'s, for
which tliey aro paid a brokerage or commission.
This is ofteu <l. no by tl.o W lid Cat banks in the
northwest, to give credit and circulation to their
bills. To redeem a bauk note, is to give ic ex
change its par value, in c >iu or its e puivaleut—or
In other words, to fulfil its promiso. Mr. Takbsk
does not propose to da this—he advertises to 6*y
(heuses the word redeem improperly) the Wild
Cat bills' discount. This is a very ditf. rent
sud perfcj’ly legitimate business, to which I undo
no allusion whatever. No Bank Stockholdek.
[van a vNicATKO. ]
The I’liilu MAthean lustt'iiie.
Mr. Fditur —Doer Sir: lVrn. tme through the
columns of ycur paper, to call attention to this
leantution, U-catcd in Woodstcek, UprUithorpre
County. Parents who have sot.' to educate, can
not do better than to send them there. The vil-
Ugoisfieo from nil temptations to inebriety end
vice—the instrncticcs given by Rev. Mr Reid and
his son, aro of a high ch. racer, end great interest
is felt in the prosperity a: J usefulness cf this
School, by tho entire neighborhood. Beard can
ba obtained in pleasant and excellent i. milies, at
a reasynabie piricc, and in no cthc- aclrool.can
boys bo better fitted for College, cr for entering
upon the active business of life. A; wo before I
said, those who have tons to educate, wili do well j
to test tho merits of tho Philomsthean Institute,
by sending them there.
Yours, r.sps tfndv, Via von.
Stkaksuat Euza !?cnx —On Iriday last the ,
steamboat situ Ho. 2, whi « on ter d waward
tri(. to this city, struck '. tiwg near Marti u’s Lsnd j
ing and sunk in ?> short time. Toe E'irn had un ’
Board some S’-O bate', cotton, 60 or 70 of which I
(taken on at Ditnonolis) tv-rein the bold and aro
yat under water; the lemut cr wss taken ashore
at Seller’s DuuOhic. 1 t. , gers came
down on the E -ma Wa’i-. The host .ark jn
shallow water and wc aro infcruisd tha> rrrar.ge
mrnis are being made to raise he: i um 1 nt«;v _
Afoi.iv Adr., lit* i«t. 5 '
Dxatb or Mr. N. B. llill—lnformat'on has
been received in this city ol '.ho sadden , evh in
JJew Ywk c W 'ue-d.y. of V,- N U. 1! it, o*
the firm i.fO'N , Ud, and Co. Wo -,re very
oorry to •h-or.tc!#'- s event. .Mr. Hi', native
Os til s Slate, tor some time C-srrie ! . b -su es- ui
Charleston, lie was a man of cr . >-ii: _r tv, di
reot ies. «a 1 oner v of character, ami withal, ct
grout sagacity as a tnoreba-1. —tT. Mercury.
In eonveqrencs of an error liaviug been made
In thotrawnniaeior. of our cypher message of the
New markets s' Wednesday, by r-u operator
St the Waehing'on cff. *, we wore ; ate to as*
that Cotton in New Yoik ou Wednesdav i. j t ;,
ctiued We. per lb. The correct w -.i' .. es'ei
that the Cotloß mark:', wav unsettled.— Ch. C.«r
The Richmond Enq liter save that the money
baa been already forwarded tcKcw Y--rk city, to be
sent by tho next steamer to Etr pe t v meet prout. t
ly the first iustailcreut cii the lute rest about b , n;.
ing due upon the tstate O. hi; au.l ttial the disbur-
Mbc officers cf the eorunonwea di have the meet
ffatteriug prospect ot be ugable toeafieet a sufficient
umount of the public revenues to c .tat once all
the interest, ic., which falls due o> tLa nrst ol
January uexb
Taux Eill sr tke Gband Jrnr.—A specia
Grar.a Jury was empanucled ou yesterday, lb.
14th iuat,, and, a* our paper wa- g. n-gm pr >s.
we learned that they leund a true ag: tasi
Gates and Osgood for grand larceny, for stealing
from t. u etoamur Saihe Syren, at the wharf on lli«
11th in-t., aesrpe; bag btiongieg toC. H N. rcr.an.
containing various papers, memcraada, book* a J
BOtae to the am j-ot ot *£i ,OjO. They were arres
ted Uk this city oa Tnssday, the 13U. iv-t. by offie.i
A. Irwin ot iiohite.—Jf..-i:,-c.raA,-j Jour.
The Weehingtoo e..-rre-po .dont ol the Post
0«f. Step toe a> appointed Governor of li Jih.
Meet - .cy} ’ - .<*• *- ■
THIRTY-THIRD CONORi^,
I SECOSD SESSION'.
IK HKAiE..„, rj.ll.
, ' - M'. L’adtvr p ented tha .re - -o: David
S Kci i f; ' !cct from Nor* ti:c.i.js for six
j eutr, from M- ck 4th, IMS. He api-esred und
, . wav sworn.
f Vaiiou: , i iona were receive .
, , Mr. Atlnrns, of ippi, iatrvfac. -i a Lie "
. ?ee ebtish -r r- fjnnrnlcn! us era iza’io:.' r :
1 j o.'t tl •; c -i:t-:d y-.ates. T’r c bill extend' : c 1
: f nutcrdlxat cn to twenty oneynars, s: .lac pro
! j spettiveiy open those foreigners only who re y :
, ncr the l , SSetciaAerthe pssrrtrecf f .-to .
1 j Be addresso; th -S-uitVe at some reed-
I | ing b ; 1 ten ,- v, ; n atone cf voice which rendered ,
j them almost nmeto!liable ic the gaTierics. He .
j wim unvi.Rv'.o'sl - try-ling tbit :n ne Lui-.i.'e* j
' i y o-b t orn t - .-err inch of the Amt: :.n I
I e-intin ,tt w- ild he req-nred for the t opportol o
II Am .:iran iet pie. he f preetrvst-.on, tten, re
| q-vired thno tndnc.-mantv ..01*1.1 be Leid out to
, j immigration. _ _ .
' He dtn co cny conncc ije with tho Kuow-Iv tq.
i ingsoc ety, cr say politico: regret rociety. H
cit- s tried c.■ cosli 'y to tor*- gnera, end ri u
tfvm some former speech of ii% tbowirg that bo
had no uok.'.d feeiiag ageiust them- But he did
think un nigratton vs drugeroua, in-am'to r.
a- foreigners banded themselves with the abo i
tisaiett. Wncc he heard that a bind of German*
j.-d burned an Americ.n Senator ir. esgy, te de
ter nine! to .ntroduso this hill sc far as r.e nc
dvrst.oi U.e principle- ol V eKcow-Nothing-, he
ar’eed with mem, re- *-r e- they proposed to ex
t ud the term of r.a'.aranation, ood in their pref
eren eof A cr.cac Pro'.eßtints for offices to for
: gne-a cr Ecir an Catholic*.
■\ pen he had con.lunol ihe 0 U was re-.d and !
rtforre I to the udioiary oommitue. I
Mr. Weller offered a rescluiou calling f>r ail ;
the correep jLd jlco itiative to the Treat of the ;
French Cocsul at ban Eri»nc: -co. Adopted.
Mr. Cntse gave notie. ol a bi.l to aboliah the j
franking privilege.
Brcadh ad -epor.ed bark the bill to csta'o- j
b isk e board ot accountants.
ti.e u propriaton bit of tho la3i teaeion for
hoppert ol the Ocean Mail S'uuioers wss taken up. I
The oil! stands in the following position:—The j
liou:>e at the last i-eraicn pssaed the bill conwinu.g j
a clause requiring the Rtvslmaafor Gencal to give j
h-rtice cf an intention of -bacon i iuiig the oca- .
tract The Sena n ameodo l the biii ■>/ ; tl. .ng |
o . rh.- ca nr. The two iiousi-v failed t. agree |
epo tb mattes. .
Mr. Brcadhcst moved now that the i i ! bo re
f-iffed to the committee o-i post roads, iio tho-ght
Lae aifowunce too high, hut wus uawiiii g tc g.ve
tiie notice und take vessels at iheiroppraised vulue.
ii- regarded the steamers u. utterly uselessea war
vessels.
Mr. Hamlin argue! that the matter bo laid over
till at e M-. Rusk ni.ouid arrive.
Mr. liuntcr said ho was willing to wait ti ! that
lime. Ho denied that tne bill could, at this stuge,
be rcforrel.
The Chair decided that the bill did cocao up as
unffeinhed businosa.
Mr. Weller moved to poUpono tho matter one
Mr. Seward moved that it lie on the table.
Agreed to.
The Senate then adjourned.
HOUSE.
Mr. Gingham asked leave to offer a resolution
requesting the President to tender the mediation
Ot the United bta*. a in such a manner as, in lua
j i Igmout, may be must likeiy to load to the paci
Ik* ion of tne c nllict now rag ng between the
ulii -d armies ot England and France and the Czar
ot Hors n
Mr. Hamilton, fro n a sense of doty, objected to
the introduction of the resolution.
M-. Sobers asked whether it would to in order,
to move to lay i. ■ n the table.
The Speaker said it wus: cl yet before ibo House.
Mr. Cliugmuu thon inovod a suspension of tho
rake which was disagreed to—ayes 47, nays not
counted.
Mr. F orcnco asked leave tooifor e, joint re*oln
l oti authorizing tho President to cause au adequate
steamer und transport vessel to be purchased or
chartered and fitted ou», equipped and provisiou
i I, I n the purpose of carrying relief to Cupt.
Kano’s expedition to the Arctic Seas, in s arch of
hir John Jfruoklin ; and to detail sfleh officers and
men irom the avy and accept tho B.rvices ol such
volunteers at bis discretion as may bo required for
tho conduct aud manning thereof; tho expenses to
bo paid out ol the treasury.
Mr. Fior. use said he merely wishes tho resolu
tion rcfeired tc the cammitieo on naval affairs.
Ohj action was ma !o and the House refused to
suspend tho rules.
Mr. Stanton, ot Tennessee, offered a resolution
wi ich was adopted, requesting the President to
communicate information relative to the re-eatab-
Pshm-nt of tho Memphis Navy Yard.
Un motion ol Mr. Saj j., tho special committee
appointed last session on the subject of tho militu
iy sii| vrintendenoo over civil works was contiuncd
in lorco
T'hreo days ot next week was set apart for tho
tons deration •>( busino.-s relating to tho district ol
Colam his.
Mr. Houston, from tho committee of ways aud
means, reports 1 foils making appropriations for
the Ml.i ury Academy, and tor tho support of the
army. lielurrod.
Un motion ot Mr. McDougul, the further con
sideration of the Paciflo Railroad hill was furthor
postponed till tho second Tuesday of January, in
order to receive all tho reports cf engineers who
snrveyod the root-s.
Mr Booock inlrolucod a bill providing for more
cflki nt discipline in tho nuvy. Roferrcd to tho
co iimiltee on naval affairs
The House went into committoo of tl.o wliolo
on the state of the Union on the President’s mes
sage.
Mr. Houston offered a series of resolutions dis
tributing the various branches of it to tho appro
priii’e standing committee".
Mr. Ulddiugs hoped they would not be passed
wiihonl a projror discussion. As to Uroytown, ho
a -ieed wilt the President in all his apologies for
die desire©: ion of tho piano, aDd would bo giad to
wipe out tii .l transaction lrom ttia pi ge of history.
Ho eoiiceivod that the President bus been guilty of
important omissions, and has recoded entirely
from tho groat positions laid down in his inaugu
ral For the first time in twenty-five years the
President is altogether bilc-nt in the mossugo about
slavery. W Imre was tho reference to his former
prinoip.es, as publicly avowed, to obtain Cuba by
war or pure! mho ? The reason for the omivsion is
that the voico of the people, as announced in tho
late elections, has matte bun hesitate before ho at
tempts fuithcr to overthrow the policy of tho
Government pursued for iuc last fitiy yoars. Why
docs ho not speak farther of his sontimen’s and
avow hi* policy I The President has sent a female
Minister to Sun Domingo, and through her wo
loam that our G jverument lias ontered into ncyo
liulions tor obtaining u loctiiold ti.ere; but the
President is si Lout ou the subject. Mr. Giddings
alluded to the re pout ot tho Missouri Compromise,
und to the result of the lato oloctions to show that
iho peculiar frieuds ot tho President outbat issue
were swept ovorb-’urd. ,
Mr. IngeinoH inquired whether the [gentlemen
just elected to Congress in Massachusetts were pe
culiar friends ot ttie President.
Mr. Giddings replied that lio alluded to those
who vo'od for the Nobra-Ita Kaunas bill, und par
ticularly to tho gentlemen who wus übout to retire
to tho shades of priv tie life.
Mr. lugersoll r aid t at no nomination for Con
gress liuvo yet been made in Connecticut, and tho
gentleman from Ohio did not koow that ho (Mr.
lug rsoll) desired to be a candidate.
Mr. Giddings. Y'on never will probably. (Laugh
ter.)
Mr. Ingeraoll. The genthmsn may know more
a- out my district than i de. But 1 cun inform tho
gentleman on the question of popular sovereignty,
as avowed in the Nebraska bill, I can go safely bo
fore my constituents and feel assured they will ap
prove my course.
Mr. Giddings. I cannot say us the obituary
lrotico, tho gentloman’s loss will be my gait*, but
will assort that the going dowu ol very man who
voted tor tho repeal of the Missouri Compromise is
a gain to freedom. In ttie courso ot his remurks
in opposition to slavory, ho asked why the Presi
dent docs not come up to tho support of his
slavery b iends, or recode from his policy as herco
fore avowed! The tecoot elec ions have shown
this administration that the principles of freedom
aro no longer to be triflod with that they must bo
maiutainod.
Mr. W leoler offered an amendment to tho pend
ing resolutions, prefaced by declaring lu offset
ttiut tu the destruction nf'Groytown tho President
has exercised a power violative ol the constitution,
and providing for tho appointment ot a so'ect com
mittee ot thirteen to report tho facts relating .here
to, w th power to scud for persons and papors.
Tho amendment was rejected—ayes 54, noes not
counted.
Tho committee rose und the resolution* referring
the mesengo was adopted.
Tho Mutt Stehinor bill of sossion I
to the po*t office committee. Adjourned.
IN SENATE, Dec. 12.
Numerous petitions were presented.
Mr. Joue.% of Tennessee* gavo notice of a bill,
ox'endinj?, lor throe yeare, tho time for the collec
tion of duties on railroad iron, imported by rail
road companies.
Mr. Shields introduced bills for the improve
ment ot the Illinois river, and for tho improvement
of tho harbors of Waukegan and Chicago. Re
ferred.
Mr. Rutler moved that the bill re-organizing tho
judicial cystem of the United fc:atc-, be made the
special order for J .nuary second. Adopted.
Mr. Seward’s joint res lu .ion provi ling for the
election et Chuplaine of different denominations 1
by the two Houses, was takod up.
Mr. Dodg*, of lowa, moved to strike out the j
words “</ dijftrmU dtnoininatWM.” He looked
upon those wjrds as a blow at the present Chap
lain cf the Son»te and a blow aimed at him be
cause cf his sentiments on that question which
divided the Methodist Church into North and
South doacmiuiiUcuK. Tho Meuse had elected *
Methodic, and to require tho S ; ..a eto dec; airi*
of a different denomination would dispiaco tho
preheat Chaplain.
. Mr. Mason said if the Senator from New York
any object in this ma'.ter he should disc ose it.
Mr Sew»rd disclaimed any each intention.
After further debate Mr. Stuart moved to amend
tbo resolution by providing simply for the elec
tion of Chaplain to the SeLate for the present ses-
Mr. Dodge, of lowa, said tha'. when he fought u 1
! man he did so openly and fairly, with hand to hand
i and eye to eye. He disdained u hidden warfare.
lie knew tho motives dicta:.n£ this wariare on the
i present Chaplain. Mr. Sheer had been denounced
■ oy the abolition press all over the North as a paid
j tool minion and hireling ot the South. He ha
i been denounced because ho had otlered up pray
! ers for the prevervation ot the Union. I: hud been
I industriously circuia ei throughout the North that
| he prayed tor tho passage o! the Compromise ac;s
1 of 1650. He hoped that the wnrture which bad
i originated ou the lioor of the Senate against Mr.
j Sheer would, while carried on here, bo an open
cne.
Mr. Strait’s amendment was adopted.
The Senate thou proceeded to bslio*, when the
| vote resulted as follows ; Rev. Mr. Slicer, ‘-4 . Rev.
Mr. Slaxitou, 2; Rev. Dr. I’yne, 1; Rev. Mr.
Hodge 4,2; Rev. Mr. Sunderiaud, i; Rev. Mr.
! Beecher, $. Mr. Sheer was then declared elected,
and after an Executive session the Senate adjourn
I ed.
HOUSE.
Mr. Peckhtm moved to reconsider the veto by
wh.ch oa yesterday the House resolution*
reterrieg the various puns of the President's nics-
to appropriate standing eemmittees. Ho con
fe&sed thui Lo was m ch surprised at tho very
early disposition of the message when but one
psr&on hud teen heurd regard.ng it. He wished
to make rem rk* on one part of it.
ano reoonsidtratiou vrus opposed' by sovercl
gentlemen, when the motion wss laid ou the table.
Mr. H..c r , trom the committee on commerce,
repor.c*. t~e Su:.ut.e b:.. fer the bet'or preservation
o: nte and prcjterty on the L*tg l.laLd , nd New
Jersey coav.s. If this bi!i, fc e had p£s=ed
a"'* roisiou liandreds of lives would Lave been
saved.
Mr. Smith, of Virgicia, moved the reference of
tbe bid to toecommif.ee of the whole oa Uiesta'o
. I of the Uiiion.
Ytiiier and Ur. Shelton pressed early action
on the ground ct economy and humanity.
wWvs. , said sbon! ff Uka to know
■ vei d t ir.'.'*,? b , l;1 Within the; class of ex
, th o K* , ' b “ : u tb9 Unlive has a read,
1 x dx.t crf r ts Tteri wi
‘ get that Uaoanarlu nf ° lbl * r who se - m » t-’r
aestrejei o“tbJ confoin J ‘l t VCS I ' re » uaas ! y
* lake a;, 1 western £
J coa&t . ls l he bill for that pu?o<£e
• abocKl meet u.b approval. He would rai*«
for Prcwcung human life everywhere, without
aekng wnef er the people tc be benefited ere
fo:e ga‘ rs or native born citixsiis.
r Mr. Campbell eaidhe and the gentleman wcuib
no; differ ebc-t that. He would go os fer ** Mr.
Sse.’on w aid. He wi*hed to koow whether t: -
• gentisjm. woek voted for the Ever a;.U Har
, bor bid, uidependset Os the Prtsideot’e veto.
M r Skelton ropiiftd, b*»p^ r form«l hr- iv hsre
referfocc to ■ be Pr«s’deut‘« -
hj-buS. D*d yoa vote tor ih*.t b ;-
i l&*t week :
, « it *r. tuic ty f- • -e mffssars-,
1 i Mr. C» -J: a.d . the poir.* h* i.e••
tr.; >, "•-•a;' -‘O - in • ; «*
the mighty Mie* * -j : .
r Mr ?kc:«oc rem he kst tension-r * d
f r b'o h* .- on tb:: l-kcs.
‘di . . - • r« itc voTerin U»C f>*-
i fetltr’-r u r * cr Vi boa’s i; fohn tli * p>' c
hr tLu ; - . i:or’f .j u L - ** •
igrc-; jr-. i k- r> tbo-e
pruicq a j.cxe airier.’ : »*
the cxccq * t o ei i. J . c Hitroi.
r.
• pectaho. vv/!..*: ! o me' •? i tor:*.; ’be bill to toe
I iUer o’ the whole oo the ivUte of the Lnioa
I ti-u tho q .otion would *rh»e is to the com>:*tn
• tio:.al power to improve r .\crj, Larbora, -nd
■
woai i l'• vcr*. to me of cc -vney.
lie thoug);: ;he .•ev.ietcuri i.~ i v„- ou cosaift’.crcy
sk an “010 egy,” and t.* .t it wa- dr:vc out ui
i tbe circfo vs p': action a-d-*» -. Ho pro
ceodeito ’. a lti»t by the b ! ii es mordinitry
po a era propc-ed w be oonf-rred on the Sec
re -ory oi tne Yre 'Mi r r{jT*t:: be
cjr>idered in committee.
Mr. bkelton in reply to & remark cf Mr. &cuh
warm y denied that Nev Jersey ever plun
dered the victims of marine dL-a-t'-rs. They wore
not pirates.
Mr. Smith, of Virgin a, hoped the reportra
wou-.d let the genUerD•-;■i , •* constilueQt.s know that
that remark lor * Buncombe/ 7
Mr. Skeltoc. I make! no speeches for “Ban
combe, 77 bat in behalf o: hua ani'-y.
i Mr. Sir.tb, of Virg nis. I made no charge of
j robbery oi piracy, but stated what is treneru.iy
}
‘ tbe ound botches where wreck*' and run - come
1 from the sea, have an extensive celebrity for lasing
| ctre cf them-'elvcß. I o tiie pet pi- ot New
! Jer:x*.y ;l-- not being better than other v- j :c.
Mr. Chandler tgreed wr.b wbut w ■ '--i oy 51r.
C .tnpbtli r jla'ive to th'* pto'.ection ox 1 Ic std pro
i perly on the nor hern lakes and western riVcr ;'’ j
j but he could not preterit', f r-j e.tion on th*3 A - ,
ianiic Csast, which of lately become a wj goth.,
! Mi>d demeud» legislation in behalf ot humanity.
1 Under tne operation of tho fr rdous quaition
♦he biR wu? pa . od— I£G, nays 45. I a ilhor
j iz-.u tne oi t ieTrca-ury to c- addi-
I ttonal '•tatifo-L - along the co-set cl L .ng I* an ! uii-a
Nuvv J raey, und‘:hs«nge other s..- o'm with t;.e J
view cf givingeif;ct to * hi.-. «at. 11l uuwi-0 f>ro
vides for tbo appointment of keepers and a g<>no
era! superintendent.
I Mr. Gre r.wood ofiferoi a solution which was
adopted in.-tr . ting theCommdtue on the Judiciu
ry to report n bill, . t an curly day, providing pun
i*hment for t>ie crime* of forgery and ccpraHat on
on the iuuUh of the United biatta in tho lodia-i
Territory.
The H juso then went into cammitteo on tho In
valid Ren.-iou bill.
Mr. W&lbridgs said if any apology "was necessary
tor calling at this timo tho attention of the House
to tbo resolu’ion lieretoforo ottered by him, cii
rtetirg tho committee ot ways and meai.s tobriitg
in a bill abolishing tho duty ou foreign coal,
be found in the universal demand f>r this com
moil necssity of life, and in the injustice and im
practicability of that pernicious .system ot lcgitln
t on which seeks to board up, by an indirect tux,
moneys not ac u. ly required to carry ou tho Gov
ernment, to the detriment or tho commercial and
bu-inees interests of the country.
It w .s not his present intention to traverse this
subject in its let g;h and breadth, but he ro: pect
fully invited thu attention of tho House to one !
article in which the peoplo ho had the honor to ■
represent ere largely interested, in common with !
tho whole country, und in regard to which the 1
existing tariff shocld be rmm diutely amende.!, i
and that by abolishing tho duty on foreign coal, f
This is now one of tho necvaries of life. It k:a
becomo within the lu?«t li loen or twenty years.
Previously the fuel used in domestic affairs wss
timber, und the employment of coal for machinery
purposes was inc m.-i ierab’e.
Tho advance in the mechanic arts, iu motive
power, by the universal application of stoum on
railways und ccoau and inland nrvigation, has cn
t rely chougoiour relations to this important arti
cle; in fact, ha * revolutionized the rgr in regard
to it. Yet it stands on tbo stutute-fcook of 1848, in
schedule C of the tariff of tha- year, ua subject to
an ad valorem duty of SO pei cent.—equivuient to
45 per cent, (taking into count tho cost of freight
unacharge“) on its value in tho country—and is
therein company with the luxuries of iifo, £, ale
portor, beor, uni articles etubn idtred with gold,
silver, or other mo‘.ul 1”
This enactment continue*, notwithstanding the
annual consumption of caul in the United biutes
bus ro che at this period, about 10,000,000 of
tans, tho present cost of which muy be fairly esti
mated at from $G to f 5 a ton at the place cf con
sumption—showing that the po pb ot tho United
States are paying lor this, one cl the great n*.ces
surii a of lile, between six y and eighty millions of
dollars per annum, under a tarifl* levied upon
them which, as hereinbo ore stated, is full 45 per
cent, protection.
D.ir ng the yoars 1851, ’52, ’53, and ’54, wc have
imported an aggregate of 882 162 tons, valued, ao- !
cording to a Treasury statement in mv possession,
certified November 21st, 1854, at #1,970,179, or, at
a general average of yoars, $2.28 per :ou, and tho
aggregate duty paid on the same is $591,058.70.
The scarcity of fuel, and the demand f r coal,
had undoubtedly thoir full share in influencing’ tbo
amount of importations at several periods
mentioned. This deman for coal is still rapidly |
Hugmenting, having risen, in tho las: fifty years, :
from tis eeu thousand tons per annum to an annual j
consumption of 10,000,000, aud yet being contin- •
allv on tho increase.
With ulmost illimitable resources at homo ho !
could see no good reason for continuing tho pres
ent oxoibitaut duty on coal which, in bis opinion,
should boa frao article, and tho earlier the for
eign coni is brought into competition with our do
mestic the bolt r it will be for tbo consumer. Nor,
in a series ot yoars, will this prove any detriment
to the Amo uan producer, whoso energies will b)
directed to tho proper app.'ioatiou of all tho faoili
ties possible lor the cheapest mining transporta
tion, and its delivery on the most reasonable terms;
while, as a matter of revenue to tho country, it is
noton’y wanted, but absolutely dotrimenta’to
ourgonoral interest. Not a railway is made and
equipped with engines and car*, nor a steamship
const!ucioJ, but iron is required; and, in its man
ufacture, c ai is the material used for the propul
sion of tho requisite machinery. Th© growth of
tho iron manufacture and trade in the United
States,so intimately connected with the coal trade
within tho last forty years, is enormous, keeping
pace, if not in advance of, the strides in every
other department of human industry. In 1810 wo
had 153 furnaces, producing 54 000 tons of pig
iron.
Some idtu may bo formod of tho increasing de
mand lor voal, by even a glanoo at tho multiplied
lie os to which it is applied. Wo have now in opo
tiou 20,000 miles of railway communication at a
cost ot f 600,000,000, and the system is advancing,
stretching its arms, Briareua liko ; far and wide
over tho Union, in the ratio of ho oxpanaion of
population, and the giowth of tho country.
The steam marine of the United States in 1852
was 1,390 vessels, with an aggravate cf 417,226
tous, ol which 9G v.oro ocean steamers, 529 o ;
gngod in tie coast trade, and 765 employed ou in
land navigation. Such has boon the ircrcaso of
our stoam commercial marine within tho lust two
years, that it * ou!d not bo extravagant tocstiinrte
our steam marine for 1354, at 1,8 0 vessfb, with
an aggregate st.am tonnage cf 540, djO tons.
A quarter of a century ego the power of steam
upou land, and upon tho ocean, waa comparatively
unknown, and tho vast and unmeasured matoriul
which waked this power into life slumbered iu our
soil.
But tho use of coal for tho creation of motive
power upon railroads and in stoum navigation,
bo li inland aud ocean, furuisnos but an inadequate
idea of its extensive valao to tho country.
u Coal has boon forcibly described as the indis
pensablo aliment of industry. It is a primary ma
terial, engendering force; giving a poworsuperior
to that nutural agents, such as water, air Ac., pro
cure. It is to industry what oxygen is to the
lungs, water to tho plant, nourishment to the
animal. It is to coal wo owe our steam and gas.
It replaces in tho workshops and domestic hearths
the ok&rccal wkicn had become too oostly under
tho last head; iu our northerly latitude it is des
tined always to acqniro increasing and more gen
eral uso. Tho cm ploy mo lit ot coul will bo hence
forward no other thon n question of cheapness, und
in tho presont c go the first interest of industry is
above all to seo ameliorated the way of communi
cation, to lower tho tolls upon tho routes and
canals.”
In conclusion, ho said, every principle of Justice
demands that the shackles ot this trade, which
tho existing tariff imposes, should bo stricken off,
aud that the traffic of this important article should
bo opened to tho lreeest competition. Tho days
ot this ses'ion wero rapidly diminishing, and the
business cf the country required, in fact demand
ed, brevity in discussion, aud prompriiude of ac
tion.
Mr. Ritchie, of Pennsylvania, took occasion to
deny the truth of iho reports extensively publish
ed in the newspapers that the coal producers in
Pennsylvania have corrbiued to keep up tho price
of that article. Too supply brought to market
over tho Reading Rci rcad wss 25 per cent, higher
this year than last. The high prices are owing to
the increased mining rates and cost cf transpoita
tion cn railroads. He then expressed his views
in oppo. ion to free trade.
Mr.'Wife thought that gcntlemoncii in Penn
ey Nania eng god in the anthracite coal business
have been unjustly charged with a combination
for tho pur pi *-o c keeping up prices. He thought
the c arge should more properly attach to New
Y rkeraat d Eastern men who seek to bring the
price cf co d so low as to prevent miners from
bringing it iuto markeb
Mr. Straub said that Gon. Waibridgo told the
truth relative to raising the price of 'Oul, but for
got to say that every other necessary of life has
b.eu correspondingly increased. [Laughter.]
Mr. Waldbri* 4 ge. Everything except morabrra
of Congress. [Renewed lauglilei.]
Mr. Witto resumed, saying that the abolit ou of
all duty on coal wculd not, under tho present cir
ca m-tancos, affect the price of that art:c’.e.
Mr. Hiester. I movothe committee rise.
Mr. Jones, of Tennessee, [on the oppos te side
o. the hail,] I move the gentlemen have leave to
goto dinner.
The committee then rose, and tho Invalid Pen
sion b’H was passed.
Mr. Robb:ns prosented the memorial of the
American Philosophical Society, a-king an outfit
;o search for Dr. Kane’s Arctic’ expedition. Ad
journed.
IN SEN AT i Dec. 13.
Mr. Seward presented a letter from a convention
cf old coldiers stating there womd be, during
the prescut winter, a convention of all ti.e survi
viug soldiers of the war of 1312 and other wars oi
the United States held m the city of Washington
on January s;b, at which tho attendance was cx
pectcd to be most numerous. The object of the
convention is to urge upou Congress the jus 7 >eeo!
granting 5 hem bounty laud, and tbo immediate ob
ject of this letter is to apprise Congress of this in
tended convention, in order that Congress may at
once take tho uecec-sary steps to provide at t e
public expense for the reception, entertainment,
and accommodation of the members of the con
vention during their stay in Washington. Rster
red to the committee on military affairs.
The Chair laid before the Senate a u essegetrom
the Proident in rciaticn to the bill passed at the
last session for tho rel es of the heirs of Mr. Proi
lean, which had been discovered to have been pre
viously pa.J. Referred.
The It valid Pension appropriation bill was re
ceived from the Hou^e.
Mr. Badger i: troduced a bill increasing the com
pemation oi the Judges of tbe Supreme C».urt,
and the p>er diem allowance of the members of
Congress 50 per cent. He explained that tlio in
crea*e proposed was far preferable to a change ol
the mode of compensation to a salary. He a
at iergth tbe necosity for an increase vt the al
lowance to members of Congress and to the judges
of the s*ucreme Court.
When Mr. Badger concluded the bill wss laid
on the table for the present.
Mr. Stuart reported back tho bill for deepening
the chanuei over the Saint ciair fiats and the fists
ofSaiut Mary.
Mr. Shields gave notice cf a bill establishing a
Marine hespitai at Galena Illino.s,
The b*II lor the relief o: Isaac Swain-was passed.
Mr. Jones, of Tennessee, introduced a biii grant
ing to railroad companies three years in which to
pay duties cn irou imported for railroad purposes.
Referred to the finance committee.
After on executive session tho Senate adjourned.
r HOUSE.
On motion of Mr. Boyce, the committee on the
Juai lary was inatj acted to inquire a* d report as
to the expediency cf repealing the naurv laws,
Rave to report by bill or otherw so.
Mr. Dunbar introduced a joint resolution which
wee pissed, modifying or onaoging tha original
pian tor the construction Gs tho New Orleans cus
tom house.
Mr. laifcstn made report from the oonmiittee on
P-O-t© lauds in lav r of extending ths Ceiiforaii
land commission.
urra 5 l '«wn tne ©ommittee ou printieg r»
F. ‘ ** e - .ti -jt print! rg for the use of tilt
■<-* : the abslreet of the eecstu
returns, comprising important vital statistics ant
'* b?r ir.f reocnUy rea*m*ffe 7 tbe n
periDtodon ofth« ccnfcus.
Mr. Jon«x», oi New York, spoke of the vital sto
tis • fc u~ oeiog of vasi importance to tbe mcd.czl
Mr.Cl: irmar replied— o they woala be, i: thr>
• corrre*. wHc*: was not the cec.e. U.• fctri
cx iue i tie return * made for Maryland and foand
| 'ji&iy ludicrous bl an dors.
' A debate ecsus. !, u which >ome sharp pe-’a
’ . • ccoorrrd between Mature. Jones of Team, arid
I' 1 * of L?l, after which thy resol iff io r « v/as adop
•e? :il cTtopKativjlj «iri:nportaut bills wuie
a- ndibe resolution c*J..: # lb'
, was adopted.
Tho ilj.i3o then wont ino committee and took
ap the Indian appropriation bill.
M\ V.ecc, said he rose not lor the purpose of
3 i.'flaming *.Le | ablic mind, bet not to diecu&s a
: sabjeei of-napcr.ince for the purpose cf brinifi;.#
1 the House and c.untry back to where tre> were
j ; prior to the introduction of th 3 Nebraska and
Kansu ball, to.era; days ago h« gave uotiou cl
] iiittntion to in* reduce a bill prohibiting slavery
1 ; in Nebraska and Kausa-; and do bo us soon
. as opportunity shall offer. It was etragkt-for*
ward, no stump speech in it, and cot* red the
whole g--' nd. Brief end to the pnrpo-o, it i* tbe
» i cxc.t copy of the eighth section of the act of
March 6.h, 182 c, for the admission of Missouri
into the Cnion.
. , In the Nebraska and Kansas aot, there wz.s no
, | mere squatter sovereignty than in the sc admit
j u£ Indianoa, Illinois and Micuigaa—it was a
©Leer and miserable hambng. If Kansas should
I p.s» a law recognizing slavery, Congress would
liu ve & right to rcj ict it, and this would open aLew
j the uia.Ufiaion of the question. For thirty-four
years, ever since the pas age of tbe Missouri com
promise law never did a single request come from
any respectable quartern to number*, demanding
| ol Congress its repeal. Congress in passing the
j & !i “ u - and Nebraska bill had acted as masters ot
; tbe people; and then called on tbe latter as good
! anu loyal subj .cts to acquiescs in tbo r
It i.ioiuoers bhoald now vote in accordance with
J the views ot the people a» expressed in tbe recent
election**, they would vote tor Lis bill, which wai
] to benefit tbe wlio e country.
In tee course of his remarks ho said Kansas
can never come into ihc Union as a slave State.
Mr. O iver, of Missouri, replied to the position
of Mr.. Mace, remarking that the gentleman with
professions of a love of country on .’.is lips, and
deep dtsiro for the peace and welfare of the repub
lic, holds in h.s hand a miiorablc scroll to proirbit
slavery nK ms s and Nebraska, the very thing
which in ]&u > produced strife and contention; and
threatened the safety of the Uuion. Tno gentle
man gaiu *coks to throw iuto Congress the apple
of di-cord.
Mr. O iver ulr*o defended the people of Missouri
from Mr. Mace’s eiurge of their interfering in the
dec ion in Kansas, which r suited in the onoicooi
Mr. Whitfield,sayiug that M». Atchison was iuca
pable ot such couduc', notwithstanding Mr. Mace’s
remark-, which were based on mere newspaper
assertions. Bur, supr. se they did interfere, did
not the e; .torn men up societies to send emi
grants two thohsuuCiluiilts into Kansas to veto
igaiuEt slavery.
Mr. English remarked if ho was not greatly mis
informed, his colleague, Mr. Mace, was one of the
originators of the Anti Slavery Emigrant Society—
one of the piQi.cero. (Laughter.)
Mr. Mace taid ho was one of the vice presidents
1 of the society formed in Washington immediately
I on the f uv-uge of the Nebraska and Kansas bill;
j and not only sent one, but one hundred thousand
I circulars abroad lor the express purpose ot defeat
ing the iniquity cf the repeal of the Missouri ccm
i promise.
Mr. Oliver. Then the gentleman went a wool
: ing&nd got fleeced. [Laughter.] To my aston
isbraent tbe genlldran admits be was vice presi
i done of that wonderful society. I would not have
j bo.isved it from any other quarter. Alter form
1 a society to throw twenty thousand persons
i from the north into Kiusas to defeat slavery the
elect:o. ; came off for a delegatj and he and friends
were overwhelmingly defeated. Now the gentle
man comes here with his little prohibition bill.
[Lunghler.] Tbe motive i-* developed—tbe omi
gr« ion policy having failed t‘ e bill is introduced
to prevent i'<o existence 0! slavery in that territo
ry.
Mr. Washburn, of Maine, iu reply to Mr. Olivo",
said tbe gentleman should not bo surprised to nee
an attempt made to restore the anti slavery ordi
nance. Fair warning was given last session that
an effort for that purpose would be made at the
proper time. It would be done, it not now at the
next Congress. The sentiment of the north, in
his judgment almost unanimously was in favor ol
the early practical poraevoring efforts to restore
the principle of the Missouri compromise which
is repealed in the Nebraska and Kansas bill.
Mr. »Siepheus, of Georgia, obtained the floor and
the committee ro.-e. Adjournod.
IN SENATE Deg. 14.
Mr. Fish presented tno memorial of the Cham
ber of Commerce, in New York, praying an expe
dition lor the relief of Dr. Kane and his expedi
tion in the northern ners. lieferrod.
Mr. Stuart roported a bill increasing the com
miisicu of the registers and reoeiveis of the pub
lic la» ds under the Graduation Act of session.
Passed.
Mr. Dodge, of lowa, reported the House bill
allowing further time to those holding Virgiuia
militftiy lands in Ohio to have tho same surveyed
and patented. Passed.
Mr. Shields introduced a bill providing for a
Murine Hospital at Galena, Illinois.
The House joint resolution modifying the origi
nal plun of the custom house at New Orleans.—
Passed.
Several small bills of no special interest were
passed.
On motion it was ordered that whon tho Senate
adjourned, it ho to Monday.
Mr. Sumner offered a resolution directing in
quiry into the expedionry ot abolishing the tux on
merchant seamen, known as hospital money, and
of alio ring thorn the use of hospitals free of all
tax. Adopted.
After some unimportant business tho Sonato
adjourned.
HOUSE.
Mr. Wheeler presented tho memorial of tho
New York Chamber of Commerce asking Congress
toseud an expedition iu search of Doctor Kane
of the Arctic Ocean expedition. Read and lofer
red to the committee on naval affairs.
Mr. Cutting introduced a joint resolution au
thorizing tho President to adopt measures to pro
cure tho erection of a first class light house at
Capo U‘ic3.
The House then went into committee, and took
up tho Indian appropriation bill.
Mr. Stophens, of Georgia, said it was not his
purpose to reopen discussion on tho merits of tho
Nebraska aud Kansas hill, but us tho gentleman
from Indiana (Mr. Mace) yesterday camo forward
aud formally denounced what ho supposed to bo
tho objects aud purposes of those who supported
that measuro, ho deemed it his duty to reply. He
considered tho question settled thou and now—
revolutions never move backward. Tho passage
of that bill was a grand step in progress. He did
not nree with Mr. Mace that tho results of tho
luto elections in the north demand its repeal.
True those results astonished him end were sur
pricing to men both in and out of power, b it ho
a-ked tho gentleman from Indiana how he drew
his inference that they set the seal of condemna
tion on the friends of tho great popular movement
o' last session. These elections had nothing to do
with the Nebrasku bill. In proof of thi3 he re
ferred to tho fact that from Pennsylvania men
who voted for and agiiust it wero returned to tho
next Congress ; and others of the latter class, in
cluding Mr. Chandler, defeated.
Tho Anti-Nebraska candidate for Governor of
Pennsylvania was elected bv thirty-seven thou
sand majority, while tho cand'datofor Canal Com
sioner entertaining a contrary view received a inu
j >rity of one hnndrod thousand. Look too at
Massachusetts wnoro tho gentlemen who voted
against tho bill were left at home, falling by the
destroying angel who wa3 not Been iu the night.
He took Illinois as a tost whore tho ißsuo was dis
tinctly mafio. There wore bnt three members of
Congress who voted f r the bill, but the peoplo
have returned soar. This shows the measure i*
ponnlar there.
Mr. Washbnrne of Illinois, inquired what was
tho popular vote Congressmen f
Mr. Stephens said, the Nebraska candidate for
State Treasuier was oleeted by threo thousand
majority.
Mr. Washburn corrected his friend, saying that
Mr. Moore’s majority was 18,006; and that Mr.
Miller, who run against him, was not known as a
oandidato in tho southern part of the State and
was not votod foi there. [Laughter.] If Miller had
received Ms party vote in that section, ho would
have been elected by five or six thousand ma
jority.
Mr. Stephens. I am to underetand that tho
Anti-Nebraska caudidute would have received that
majority if he had only been known. [Laughter, j
Mr. Washburn, a candidate, waa regularly nom
inated, but declined, and another was brought out
just before the election.
Mr. Stephens. It shows that he ran bafore tbo
popular demonstration got hold of him. Ho must
have seen tho liana writing on the wall and was
more prudent than the last. [Laughter.]
Mr. R My colleague speaks of his
candidate being defeated because nc was not
known. The facts are agaiu9t my colleague. True
ho got but a few votos, but was voted for in all the
counties, and this shows it was known he was a
oandidate. Tbe first candidate who declined was
nominated as a Ropub’ican and fusion candidate;
and I hesitate not to declare it he had remained
such he would have b?cn defeated by ton thousand
votes. Tho last candidate was a oound radical
Whig voted for by his party and sought to bo run
by tho fusionists.
Mr. S ephens resumed—the popular vote in Illi
nois was ior su>ta ; ning the bill aud that w» a his
point—take New York ; if any State was part cn
larly unsound it was this. After all the mevt -
iugs at Tabernacle and Syracuse and efforts of oin
i ration societies, organized to rule the freemen of
Kttui’r.s. M'. Clarke did not receive more than one
j third o the popu ar vot —t«ke Now Jersey,ltidia
• 11a and oil er S ates, and, either seperately or to
gether, the elections there went for nothing so far j
; as this Nebraska question is concerned. Some '
! said tho Know Nothings effected those wonderful I
results, others tho Anti Nebrasfcaitea —he was in
clined to think with the North Carolina men who
’ | gevetheboyt explanation—ho said general mal
contents—thoso who had been disappointed in ob
taining office; and othets, who thought it wasim
proper to send Soule and Belmont abroad, and
' made the clecticns go as they did—and further,
if any party was euiit'cd to the credir, it was tbe
ram'chacles who seem to be carrying the country.
[Excessive Laughter.]
Mr. Stephens farter replied to Mr. Mace,spying,
the first question which addressed itself to his m ; ni
‘ was, on any question, is the thing right? No
r Southern measure fca* ever been vetoed for the
reason that the Sooth have never eskoJ lor acy
-1 thing ending for a veto. They ask for nothing but
what is right, and submitted to nothing wrong.—
Tcoy had cover a*kea that slavery shall be exten
' ; der 1 , but insist that the*people in every community
! and territory when they form tbeir own institu
tions shall do as they please. Thi* is republican,
American, national doctrine. He defended south
’ ern institutions showing tho prosperity especially
of Georgia.
Mr. Campbell noticed the remark ct Mr. Ste
' phens that the south never asked anything in way
of appropriates from the government. He would
remind the gentleman that in ISOB, we give tweu
-1 ty millions ot diars lor Louisiana. In 1619, af
tcen millions for Florida; and it was notme'ely
money given from the common treasury for the
‘ : pnrchtse of territory bat to extend the ares cf
blavtry. At er the annexation of Texa=, war
■ broke*oat and the north ponred forth, on the bat
'ie fold ot Mexico her purest and best blood. .
‘ Had uie gentleman forgotten so soon that bat a
few months ago a bill was harried thnrgh the
1 House, in the dark as it were, appropriating ten
roihibns of dollars for the purchase of the Mesilla
‘ Valiev. Ncthing obtained for the sonth, forscvth. I
; Was "it not k-iown that ti e south is still grasping j
after $l",0e0,000 more with the view of acquiring :
! Cuba 1 The gentleman from Georgia did not seo '
, in tl o recent elections any demonstration against j
s i the Nebraska bill. Hut was not an opponent of ;
that measure eleoted in the place cf Mr, Chandler, j
’ and the gentlcmau represented Lancaster District, ;
5 Penney vania! lie might allude to ail the States
where elections have been held. As to New York,
5 thirty-two of the thirty-three members elect are 1
opposed o mo repeal of the Missoari compromise. I
• The v ews of the other ere not yet known. He i
could speak of Michigan from personal otserva
•' tion. The pocple there ross in their majesty and i
elected a Governor opposed to the repeal of the
Missouri compromise. He inquired of Mr. Ste- ;
■ | phens whether he believed there was constitution- I
al power to exclude siavery from the territories— .
c in other words, had Congress the power to pass ,
the eighth section of the Missouri compromise i
Mr, Stephens replied that the gentlemen must ;
know this was a question he had never urged here ;
h ; or before his constituents. In hie opinion the
d government cf the territory was not derived from
’* the Constitution, hut it devolves on the general
govenmeut, as a sort Gs resulting power - but,
n while the government »t the territory devolv-e on
is Congress, any such exero.se cf power aa that to
watch the gvniitacan ailaded, was en abuse of
power, tantamount to usurpation,
.e Mr. Campbell wished the gentleman to liriwer '
is yes or no. Ha* Co agrees power to exclude slavery
id 1 everywhere!
1 Mr. Stephen.'. If 3 grass such a bill, it
j would boa usurp. just ai mac las was the
- j taxing of these co • i ; aad, tsL rd Chatham
1 I said, bo would re* ; »* H.
! Gstnpbell, t -r «> B--t *aau,wcr t-> my qa -
r ■ tio i. .
i j Mr. Stephens. It *3 ry » rewer t » the Ce-
I , msn.
■ Mr. CampboH raid h< would assume tor the gen
| tiernau t‘ Cocrro>-h?.3 tho that t
l resolves In the geiitlouisn’M jadgemeiit,
■ I i.ntc a raerfc inn ter oi rp'dianev Ho pro - l ->i
Ito review Mr. P epaev' 'cv trse «u the hV. 0- -
* ! adrn'--*s:o.i fCM ori!?*. and on c.hor mutter-, aul
1 asked c t-.tjl ions of the gentle.nan.
| Mr S; ; r o*2-'. I vril r< piy, sv 1 understand the
: j gentleman i* a c2ndidets tor the presidency.
Mr Ca r p ill. The gentleman mistake*—l am
’ a caudi Ja*e lor no 'flice and I wesajemt he-o against
■, mv t»c r ■■ it deal res the purpose of expos.ug
: ; the inoonii-’ciea of that gentle mm andot’j.r'.
! Mr. •" r --- • Th . geotleman will fled the !a i
bor v.;;i : pay it ho -undertakes to expose my
Mr. Campbell referredto Mr. Stephens’ voto in j
IS 15 or. c Texas annexation ro olutiocs which ‘
ox:iacc -h , "cry f .om somo port on of territory !
herealtcr ' be formed into States. Sworn to sup-!
port the C' .stitation o? the eoontiy, why did he J
vote to u.ke away from tho people iu the terriiory
the right to e=tah!i-h Gheir own institutions in
tho r own. 'ay ? He dto'ared the people of a *ov
creign S* ■' h U not do it.
Mr. S’opb “L*. Did I ever cay it was in violation
of the CcU"tiration to give such a vote.
Mr. Cainpbeil. The gentleman dees not say
anythitg e that point. I tried toget him to put
himself rn the record. I asked him’ whether Con
gress baa powsr to exclude slavery from the terri
tories.
Mr. Stephens- m u feigned voice contemptuous
|y, if the gen'letnan uas .ot got me to say ho,—
whero are my
Mr. Camp ell—in like manner—His inconsis
tencies are marked by hi» declaration hero to day.
Ho is for letting the peop e regulate their own at
ruirs for themselves, bat in 1845 voted aguiu&t it
n tho Texas annexation resolutions.
M r . Stephens. The gentleman said in 1845 I
was against permitting ti e pe-jpio to act for them
selves everywhere. 1 could not then get the north
to egreo to the line 30 deg. 80 min T voced for
the measure not because I thought it right, but lor
tho sake of union uud harmony. I consented to
it as a compromise, but I thought the line ought
to have been extended north as well as aouth.
Mr. Campbell. I regret the gentleman has not
given a bettor explanation. If I believed that un
der the Con-l.tutloti. the people have this rig .1,
and thut noCoag:cH3 should take it from them, no
cjrnpromise to ?ave leu thousand unions should
induce ms to violato my cath.
Mr. {Stephens. Does the gentleman moan to say
or intimate thut I hold thit Congress has the p w
cr to deprive the pcopleofthat right!
Mr. Campbell. No. But 1 hsvo sought for
two or three years to get the opinion of the gentle
man, on this constitutional put upon re
cord.
Ho oouthiucd his remarks on wne an.: j?ct of the
repeal in the Nebraska bill of tho Missouri Com
promise, regard'Ug it as the great wrong, and to
be resisted to the bitter end.
Mr. Washb lrno, of Illinois, wished to disabuse
the gentleman from Georgia, who assumed there
had been a Nebraska triumph in Illinois. He was
right iu stating thit tho issue wos fairly ma ein
thut State on tho Nebraska and Kansas bill, and
Mr. Douglas disoassod it over the State, i i.u u zoaS
worthy 0! a better cau-3e. Bat, inst.ad of the bill
being endorsed by the people ol that State, it was
repudiated by a popular majority of from f urteeu
to sixteen thousand v>tos, taking tbo voto on the
members of Caugresa and by ihe largo anti- Ne
braska m -jarpy in tho Legislature.
Tho anti-Nebreeka majority in kis own district
was 7,000.
The debate was hero c o>o 1 by limitation, whon
the committee rose and the House adjourned.
The Austrian Consol. —It is now said that the
Austrian Consul of Now York, contemplates bring
ing subs for lit*el against all thoso papers i-« d’ffjr
eut parts cf the country, including Philadelphia,
Baltimore aud elsewhere, who recently published
accounts charging him with obtaining $30,0C0
worth of goods under false pretence?, and then
eloping. The charge if alleged to bo without sem
blance cf truth, and the following letter appears
in tho New York Post.
My attention has boon called to a grossly libol
loua uttack iu tho Express c i this morning, upon
Mr. Ckarlos F. Loosoy, tho Austrian consul, in
reference to his departure for Europe.
Mr. Loosey’a intended visit to Austria,*for the
purpose ot laying before tho Emperor plans of
steamers to be built to run between this port and
Tries-e, has long been known to his friends and
others.
I happene d to be on board tho Baltic on Satur
day morning end was conversing with Mr. Boo
soy, whon at eloven o’clock ho sorved with a
aub/cena to attend a» a witness at tea (an k:ur
before) at the Police Court at Jelfarsou Murkot, to
produce sono bills ot lading which, in fact, were
in my (fllie, and notin his possession.
Mr. Loosey’s baggage and models were on board,
aud it was impossible ior him to obey tho sub-
I oeiiu, and sail in tho Baltic. Under those circum
stances, 1 advised him that ho was not legally
bound to attend tho Court.
On Monday one of my partners (Mr. Larocque)
took up to the Court, the bills ot lading which
wero called tor.
L.gal moastr.es are iu progress to bring the
oditors 01 tho Express to justice.
G. R. J. Bowdoin.
Now York, December 13, 1854.
The Storm on tiie Lakes. —From Oswego, from
Buffalo, from Milwaukee a dfrorn Lc ok port, tliere
arc reports of marine disasters in connection with
tho storm cf last week. Tho Oswego T*tnes of Fri
day says:
“Tho storm of tho present week has been the
most terrific aud destructive ol lite aud property
over known upon tho lakes. Thero wero more
vorse's out of port and more properly afloat on the
lakes than over before at so late a po r iod in tho
person. The telegraph is fust toiling whore tho
vesrels are, and, although many of them have been
driven ashore on Lakes On'ario and Erie, wo are
glad to learn that many have also weathered tho
storm and made harbors. A number have not yet
been heard of, and among tho missing some may
never bo hoard of mere, while some of tho
on this lake have probably biado harbors on tbe
other side.”
The Buffalo papors of Friday and Saturday men
tion some eight or ten vessels which were ashore iD
different directions, or had suffered inj ry from the
lute storm.
Fire! Fire!! Fire! !!—On Thu is lay night, 7lh
inst, o.ir Cilizci.s wero aroused by the cry of lire.
On reaching tho spot, we found the blacksmith
shop, wood shop aud carriage repository ol Messrs.
Ca-i 11* & Joiner iu fl tm3s. Tho lire coniinued to
spread, in spite of the untiring exertions of tho
cihz us, until overy hou-e bttcic of tho cast side cf
the square, with tho exception of a now livery sta
blwua burnt to the ground. Tho loss, however,
was comparatively slight, Messrs. C. J. being
probably the heaviost loaors.
Too much praiso can rot be givon to Messrs.
Noarh D. Jones, Maddox, Wmn, Gresham, Thomp
son, E choiburgher, Waters B. Jones, aud cue or
two others, lor their almost supemuncan efforts to
stop the devouring element.
This, aud everal other dißii3irous lires that have
vi.-ited 11s, surely ought to be sufficient to convinco
every one of tho necessity of some kiul ot fire ap
paratus. Had the wind been less favorable on the
night of the lust lire, we cannot toll whero tbo de
struction would have ceased. There uro numbers
of young men willing and anxious to form them
selves iuto a fire company, if the citfzans
them tho means to operate with. A tow dollars
Horn each merchant and property holder iu town,
might bo the means ol saving ton times tno amount
invested.— La Gran e 12 epos ter.
During Robbery.— Several burg!era entered the
btore ot Messrs. I’. M. Turner iSc 00., on Bay-st.,
on Friday night last, who are evidently experi
enced in their proles-iou, and go prepared with
impl moots lor prompt oxection. They entered
the building Iroai tho rear by means of a false key,
and by raising tho bar by which tho door was
doubly secured. They ti cn went to work and
manufactured a dark lantern out of a segar box
which they louud con aining old check?. A slow
match w as also made by wrapping brown paper,
with the necessary quantity ot powder, around a
string. A hole vus drilled in tho irou safe, and
halt pound of powder poured in; and thus they
succeeded in bursting tho sale open, in which
they tound a small sum of moucy, and would havo
found a iurger amount, and been better paid for
their trouble, had not tho cash cr, unintentionally;
left the funds in a drawer ot his desk instead 01
the safe. The canister containing tho powder was
left—it had a brand altogether ur.kowu amongst
dealers in tho anic.o in this city, and was envelop
ed probably in the same pap r in which it was im
ported. The robbers made srcod their escapo. Let
tho public be on the alert.— Sav. Georgian.
Another — L ist night a trusty servant was rob
bed of lo tors ho was taking homo from the Post
office. Having eeeu the b-arer placed them in hia
hat, tho robber relieved him of the semo and fled.
II was pursued with the cry of “stop thief,” but
succeeded iu evading hie pursuers. Thoso who
will commit such daring outrages will apply the
torch, or be guilty cf any other depredations. W e
trust some of these gentry may he arrested and
dealt with according to their deserts. lb.
A letter published ir. tho National Intelligencer
says the Ru siaua will have, in a short time, two
hundred thousand troops concentrated at Sebasto
pol. Private advices from Europe say that 85,000
men had been despatch d from OJo > , and the
Imperial Guard, 25,000 in number, Lad been six
weeks 011 th. ir way to tho seat of wa«\ erd won d
reach Sebastopol before the first of iKcunber.—
Nicholas is certain y send ng tor; urn ic’nforce
| meats rapidly, but wo do net believe that two hun-
I died thousand men can be concentrated at Sebas
-1 topcl in the time stated. If they cm, it. will bo
twice the number the allies can possibly bring in
to tho field, ami would be decisive cf tbe contest,
for the siege won d -oon havo .0 b 3 raisoJ, iftheal |
lies themselves did snstein a disast ousd.fjat. J
Georgia Annual Conference of the M. E.
Chuecii, South —This convened yesterday
morning, at ‘j o’clock, iu the City Hal!, in this
city. Bishop Capeis presiding. A very genera!
attendance of M’nisters, among whom wo noticed
B shop Pierce aud I is venerable father—Dr. Tay
lor, Missionary to China, and I£cv. Mr. Daley, of
the Ilolaton Conference. Quite a number of our
citizens, as well as visitor-* to tbe city, attended !
the opening of Conierenee, and from what we
could see and hear, tho Session pro r ises to be
both interesting and bormonioui. —Atlanta
14'A init
The Martha Washington Case. —The trial cf
Capt. Curnmiug?, at Helen son the charge of mur
der, resulted in his being discharged. The tear
ing of te.-timouy consumed five days, after which
the A torney General *u ered a nolle prosequi.
| Capt. Camming-' was immediately re arrested on
i the charge of arson, and it is presumed bis trial
will take place at tnis term of the court. Toe
trial of Adams Chapin commenced yesterday.—
• Memphis Eig'.t, 9 th inst.
We understand that twh negroes who had :
: I placed a fence rail, or something of the kind,
j across the Georgia Radioed track, not lar fro u |
■ ' MM son, on Friday night last, sea'e 1 themsflves, |
! one at each CDd of tbo rail, with the intention of ,
, i jumpirg off on the appro ich of tho cars, where, :
i j out or harm’s way, they mizbt :oe “ the funl' In i
, J accordance with the asuai habit of the race, bow
over, as soon as they became still, they fc-l asleep,
i I tbe train came thundering along, in the meantime,
. i cutting off tne arm of cue of tne fiends, and break
s I irg the head of the other. It is hoped however,
\ ' that enough vitality V ls been left in each to enable
| the sheriff to oarg them, after proper trial and
t j oonvJctciiL.— Athene Watchman.
f
| The Fibst Shad.—This distingniohed fl‘h psys
i us an annual visit—or rather passes through the
| city annually—and has for several years been quite
a “lion” for a fish. Lest year and the year pro
' visas, the hotel keepers of iLcon paid well for the
i honor of serving him up. Aid this year they
i have paid hotter, F’Jiii/jiu dollars was paid yes
terday to Mosers. Gallagher cs Garine for the first
chad of the reu .on, taken inoarri7er. It was
. forwarded, wo learn, to Messrs, Etis & Son, of
: Macon. Mr. Gallagher took the Sret shad last
year on the tl li of December, and if oar memory
serves ue right was served op at Vie Lsnier Hou-e,
Mecon, at the prijs cf $lO. — iu tan noli Georgian,
j llthirut.
Mxluxobolt Accident. —Five of the workmen
employod ou the Cathedral, on Superior street,
were precipitated to the ground a distance of 6 }
feet by the giving way ct the scaffolding which
bad been incautiously over.oaded with building
material. Oae ot them, named Foster, was in
stantly killed. He wav a stranger in the oily, and
leaves a familv in destitute oireams’anoes m the
state of New York. Tbie ie tte second fatal acci
dent under similar oirenrustenoea which has occur
; red during the work upon this structure.— Chicago
s teunai, Lite. IS.
jjii ©elegrapi).
tng region & I.
j Washington, Dec. IS.—lu > - ate to- ay
Mr. Johnson, of Arkansas, tp r r I r.m was
sworn in. Mr. Shields rep :.l to i crease ]
the efficiency of the arm . The bill in e»t:;bl.>h ;
' a bon* dto adjust private lui ’ rLiu-- -v. r rred j
j
, Mr Barry denounced *ho Ku v Nothings ns cn j
! illegal comb.nation touko- wy tbe rights of c: :-
| zw<. Mr. Banks rejoined, defending the Kn w
; Nothing?, and condemned the c Am of the Roman
j CalLolllh to interfere in - acular affairs.
A Wa-shicg'on Wild . o»
Tho Wush ngtun Globe publifehes t ioDacd cf
T-ust made by John Withers, of the fi»m of Seldcu,
i Withered: Co., directing tho Trustees to apply
j ’‘■he nssois—first, to the expenses ot the trust; te
| ODnd, to the rodempt ou*of tho bond? ot tho Vir
ginia and Tennessee Baiiroad, amount log to oco
hnndrod snd nino'y thcnsiind dol'ars ; tcird, to
the redemptio:; cf tho bii.s o> the Exobarga B..ck
of Washington, a Wild Cat aid fourth,
to ail o.her creditors, including the ti’ete of Vir
ginia, equaily.
Steamboat Dimmer.
The R-cino propeller TT.etmorel nd sunk eigh
teen miles from “Slcoping Bear,’’ by which seven
teen lives were lest.
Charleston Market.
Tuesday, De". 10. —Cottjn.—Sales to-day 1,440
bales at to Stf cont*. The Market is easier,
bnt no actual decdue. Goo 1 Middling, 7% cants.
i.ater from Havana.
New Orleans, Dec. 19.—-Tho s-toarner B ack
Warrior has arrived from Havana with dales to
Dec. 19. She reports the British wartoheomr
Swallow there. Nothing else important.
New York Market.
Monday, Dec 18.—Cotton and Fiour is quiet al
until ngod rates.
New Orleans Market.
Monday, Dec. 18.—Cotton is easier, bu*. rates
not cuotably lower. Sales to-day 8,500 bales.
Wilder, tho prominent Lopez sympathizer, has
been committod for fuTgi t g Laud W arrant-.
Tuesday, Deo. 19.—Cotton is active to day and
unchanged. Sales 6,<»00 bales.
Tho Liuo is down North.
Arrival of Ihe l.'aht.
York, De.. 15.—The NoEtLcrn
Light anchored iu the lower bay at 9 o’c ock .his
morning, w cro sbo Btlll remains on account of
the dens 3 fog. Her papers havo been received by
the Siateu Island Ferry, bat contain few items
lrom California additional to the despatch ro
ceived from New Orleans yo-terday. Slo brirg*
230 passengers auds3‘jo,oou in gold.
Tlio principalcoiiMguets are as follows: Messrs,
Duncan, Sherman & Co. $404,uf10; Aduun- & Co.
f 109,010; Wells, Fargo & Co. $73,000; Vv iiodgo
& Co. $50,000.
The steamer Sierra Nevada arrived upon tho
23d. Tho U. S. steamer Mississippi waa c* peeled
to leave for tha Atlaut cin about ton days. A
Railroad from tho Colorado to Los Angelos waa
contemplated.
Sov ral specimens of gook bituminous coal have
been found in Mud river near Eureka.
A aslt witor lake lias been discovered in the
neighborhood of Koni river, o : ghi miles long and
liv j miles wide.
1* arl and other fisheries are beginning to excite
attention in California.
Ti.g slaughter of an immigrant train by the
Snake Indians took place in tho vicinity of the
fort belonging to tbe Huusou Bay Company. The
fort was in great danger of boiug attacked and as
sistance vias called for. Tho war like attitude of
the Snake Indians it was thought would materially
check overland immigration to O.egon next rea
son.
Notwitbstaudirgthe want of widor at the mines
in California, the news Horn them is cheering.
New diggings are reported between Noaversvillo
and Oregon.
A salute of 21 guns was fired on the 28 l on
the American ship Z mob'.a, at Bun Francisco, iu
honor of tho affair at Fetropaloski mid tholaiiure
of tho allies at Bovastop !. The K 1 si«n consul
and other guests wore ontertainod with a collation
on board, and tho Bus ian fi g was l un up.
Tho English and French shat, with the excep- ■
liou of the Pique, »:ad left B ui Francisco, some lor
Honolulu, and others for South America.
From the Sandwich Islands.—D.ites from Sand
wich islands to the O h ot Ojta-b-T stulo<l that the
treaty of annexation hud not boon c .oisumaiuted. j
The correspondent of tho Herald says that Mr.
Gregg has addressed a lot'.or to the Minister ot
Foreign affairs, insisting upon tho immediate con
clusion of the treaty, olso uil negotiations should ]
termiuute iorthwith. la cousequouce o f this, it J
was said that an urgent message was sent for the
Prince Lipoliohoe,whose signature only was want- ,
iDg. The treaty was looked tor at Stu Francisco
in about a fortnight. Tho U. S. ships St. Marys
und Portsmouth wero still at Honolulu.
Tbo markets wero generally unchanged at San <
Francisco, although tno demand for the country
bad somewhat slackened. >ou:o ardcles slightly
favored buyers in pries. G allego und Uaxa 11 Flour
$12.50 a $L2.75. Adamuutine Candles a s!c.
idiceso 2ti cts. Butter, now, 45 a L 2 cts. M?fs
Beef s2o. Mess Pork $lB. Bacon 16 a
Lackawanna Coal $25 a $27.50.
Boston, Dec. 14.-Mayor Smith, tho Know Nothing
candidate was to day re-elected Mayor of this ci
ty, by a majority of 1,253 votes oven 11 the ippo
sin? candidates, four in number. The wh g> have
probable elected some of the counc'dmen.
At Worcos’tr to day, the entire Know Nothing
ticket for municipal effijers \v s elected.
A largo portion of Know Nothings are paradii g
tho streets to night, giving expression to thoir gra
tification at tho success ot tneir ticket iu the mu
nicipal election to day.
From Worcester the report is that W.
Richardson, Know Nothing, is eloeted Mayor by
nearly 8000 mujoriiy.
iu Roxoury, Ritchie, tho Know Nothing candi
date lor Mayor, has al to been circled over Mr.
dlocpor, formerly the editor of the Boston Journal,
by 800 majority.
Utioa, N. Y., Dec. 10.—A few days since, a pas
seugcr on ouo oi the night trains on tbeOcrural
Railroad lett a box in charge of a porter at th«- 1 1 1-
tion at Amsterdam, staling that he would return ,
for it iu a day cr two, and then continued on Ins
way to tho eastward. N-;t coming back, however, 1
at tho appointed timo, the box was opened, aud it i
was found to cohtain the romairs oi afcu ian bo 1
ing. The body having been partily diFsectcd, could {
not bo recognized. As tho singular disappear
ance of Miss Moore, ot Rochester, has not yet ocen
uccounted for, this fast hue led to the impression
that theso are tho remains id that yo*ucg lady.
New York, Deo. 11.—It U rumored hero that ,
Charles F. Loosoy, tho Avt-drain Consol at this 1
port, sailed hence in the steamer Billie on Bator
day, under mysterious circumstances, ltisallo. ed ,
that police offiiors wore on tho search to arrest t
him on a charge of boiug implicated in uu extou- J
t-ive fraud or larceny.
Louisville, Doc. 11.—A man named Rosenthal,
residing hero, charged w ti obtuiniug goods t j tho
amcuutof $60,000 at Philadelphia, by ful-o pro <
teuces, was arrested to day on a requisition lrom
tho Governor ot Pennsylvania.
Nzw Orleans, Doc.ll.—The house of Ms.-srs ]
Taylor A Cassdby hasßUspondcd. Tiiey wcre»u- ,
volved largely by the failure of Goo. Milae,and
this caused th 3 They have a largo
excess of assets.
Philadelphia, Doc. 12.--A terrib’e conflagration
occurred in th s city last night. Cornelius’s five 1
s'ores, the lamp and gus fixture factory, together
with a number ot dwellings, situated at tho corner
of Bth and Cherry streets, were entirely destroyed.
The factory and stock was valued at $200,000.
By this calamity, four hundred workmon are turn- 1
od out of employment, and fifty families rendered
houseless.
New York, Dec. 11.—Two men and three wo
men have been arrested here os accomplices in
swindling tho Ohio Life and Trust Company,
whose office is located in this city.
Loudyille, Dec. 11.—There has been 179,000
hogs killed around tho falls against 188,000 !aet
year. The river has ful.cn six inches.
Pittsburg, Dec. 11.—River o". a stand with 33
inches water in tho channel. It raiuod yesterday.
Wo itlier to-day warm and cloudy .
Louisville, Die. 12—noon.—Heavy frost last
night. Weather foggy, cloudy aud cold. River
falling slowly.
Pittsburg, Dec. 12—noon.—River unchanged.
Woather clear and cold, no immediate prospect
of tho ice breaking up.
Louisville, Doc. 12.—N0 departures cr arrivals
of steamboats owing to the deneo fog which has
prevailed here during the last 50 houis.
Col. Carpenter, who conducted tho frosecution
in the lato Ward trial, was shot, and fatal!y woun
ded, by Perkin?, ia Covington yesterday. His
wounds are considered fatal.
St. Louis, Dec. 12.—Jackson, who was charged
with tho murder of Ludlow, has b eu acquitted.
A flro occurred list night, which destroyed the
large factory of Goodwin & Stewart.
,0 —insured for $5,000.
St. Louis. Dec. 13.—N0 receipts of Produce.
Flour 7.87. Corn 70 a 71. Mesa pork held at
12.50. Lard 8# a Whi kt y 40.
River on a suud with considerable floating ios.
Weather cleur and mild.
Hartford, Dec. 12.—This morning a fire broke
out in tbekitclenof ihe United Stator. Hotel. The
kitchen ws-a mostly destroyed, but the muin build
ing «aa ouly slightly ir j jrod. Clapps’ large barn
and livery stable adjoir iuing was Blt*o burnt, bat
the horses and carriages wore save j.
Boston, Dec. 12.—Cary’s Cotton Mill at Medway
vi’lage w; s burnt y esterday afternoon.
New York, Dec. 12.—1 tis now rrported here
I that the Austrian Consul, about whom strange
rumors were circulated yesterday, was summoned
I as a witness agoiLS an Austrian named Stephani,
| who was arrested recontiy ednrged with oblainina
$30,000 worth of goods by fa’so pretence. The 1
Consul re used to attend when an att ohment wa*-
issued but he eluded the rffieers who searched the
steamer Baltic for him, jos*. prior to her sailing,
but without success. The effieers otato that the
said Consul i« suspected of bring r 3 .entl» conc3 rn
ed iu the circulation of a quantity of counterfeit
• Thalers in this city.
i There was quite a desperate row in an Irish
; dance house on White street this morning. Four
or five persons were slabbed.
Buffalo. Dec 11.—Tne steam propeller Nisgare,
bound from this port for Chicago, with a full cargo
ol merchandise, sunkinsnoal wa erinthe Presque
Isle harbor, and is frozen with three feet water
in her hold.
Buffalo, Dec. 12.—William Martin started the
provision business at Ontonagon, on Lake Supe
rior, in August last, and pretended that he had
contracts to supp’y the mines in that region, on
thebtrocglh of which lie drew largaly through
j Messrs. A lam <fc Co. on various m no-*, aud ’hen
j decamped to Canada. Forged drafts to the amount
lof over $5),000 have already been discovered,
j Cleveland, Dec. 12. -ive steam propeller 3,
| load© > with 3.000 tons of mirchandiso lor Detroit
are frozen »n here. The propeller Baltic, which
i left this morning, has returned and reports solid
{ ice as far a-> could be so n t'rcm lh* mast head.
; Nlwbubypolt, Dec. 12—Tlio Know Nothings j
werercu ei at tbo Municipal elec.a n Lero yester
j day. Moses Davenport, tho people’s candidate, j
wbg elected Mayor, and also a m-jority of the !
i Counc'i t'cke’
I Washington, Dec. 14.—C01. Stepteo, of the U. S.
j Army, who has been tor some time iu command ot •
i a United Stales forco in Utah, bas been nominated i
|by the President te Governor of that Territory. j
In the U- S. Hciu.se ol Representatives to day, j
1 i the House went into a Committee of ihe Whole on
j ; the Indiau appropriation Bill, when Mr.Stapao/is
. oi Georgia, replield to Mr. Mao?, siting that tbe
, ; results oflho recent election were net indicative of
r | the people being opposed to the Nebraska Bill,
Louisvillb, Dec. 11.—A Jew by the name of
• ! Bosenthai, residing in this city, was arrested to day
5 j on a requisition from the Governor of
l | nia. oharged with obtaining goods in Philadelphia
► | under Jalse pretencea to tbo amount of sixty thou
' 7 Band dollars. He left here ♦his morning in charge
of an officer from Philadelphia;
’ Lowell, Dec. 12.—Tbe entire Know Nothing
’ municipal ticket is elected hero. The v-ite for
Mayer gives Lawrcnca, Know Nothing, 8,651, and
1 ali others only 4€9.
Buffalo, De?. 16.—Our city was visited by quite a
3 destructive fire. It brske out last night in tbe exten
-1 sive Indian var o'y store or Mr. Vincsnncs, a touted
l on Marketst. Tbe flara?*spread wi b great lory and
the entire building with its coutento wer« scon rc
i duced to &she.= . Fire wbs also comtnoi i:ated to
s sevoial adjoining buddings, siores and reside; ce ,
. which were alao, wholly or in part oorearned.—
_ Xhe entire loss is eetimatod at about SBO,OOO upon
0 which there ia a partial insurance is this city and
tn K«w York cgtsciw.
J’inLADELPBIA, * Our ciij .vns vis.t d
i&st ni|tki by n v«r, ... m’.vo fire, which broke
out iu the loart ’o y ol" u baildiug ia Tvhr-.t is
called tho E ’ - . N.:. ISI, Cho-tunt c.,
nearly opposite toe old St..o lions,-.
The flsinea raged with rapidity. Th j iiro
i commenced aouat 10 o’clock in tiro evening, and
1 in r stort time ine entire block was n hedp of
j ruins. Tho walla of the burnt buildings leli in
| ditfjrcnt directions end ootnmuni'-ated flro to the
• property adjoining thoso alreudy burnt,
j Amongst":ho sufferers iu the Ei.n -d’s Block
l '.ro Ussrrs. cenford dr Oakman and W. H.Carlyle,
j i'i.-ir 1.-st is probably $40,000 in aii—partly in
j sored. Mr. Hinkle’s .urnituro store is also des
) troved.
Tho Uames snoou spread to the corner of Fifth
ste, and destroyed tho store of Mr. Walker,
.-cut for Chiokerirg’s pianos ; also, the store of
Me.-rs. Slagmon Cc
i'he lire extended along Fifth street northwsrily
to liiiuor stroet, destroying tho storo of Lacy &
Pi.niips, saddlers ; also, Pennington’s Book Store
at tt-a corner ot Minor street, and several others.
The building kno vn as Jefferson's wigwam was
•ho o.rnsnmed, besides several small establish
ments were burnt out. Dasitord’s B.lliard Saloon,
n-ido Buwltrg alley contiguous were also burnt.—
I'he Are burnt ali night, fortunately, none were
hurt by tbo falling walls. It is rooghiy sta'ed that
the entire loss in building* and goods will be
about $4)0,y00, oa which is a paitia insurance.
A severe tire broke out about S o’clock in tbe
morniDg iu Water street, which consumed seve
ral emigrant boarding houses and other small
buildings. The loss here is also quite heavy.
pHtnsDKLPnu, Doc. 15.—The fire raged all night,
aud the llremen .-re Btlll engaged on it.
The city buildings and the Stato House were
threatoned with with destruction, but were saved
through tbeaciive exortions of the Bremen.
A second fire broke out about two o’clock this
morning in Water street, above Shippou street,
aud raged ferociously until some fire compauier re
paired to the sceLO from tho Chestnut street fire.
Four emigrant and sailor boarding housea were
do tr ycd.
Aa itti a. can be ascertained the occupants of the
m J? arued on Chesuut and Filth streols
- oiui O oa wll ' o,l there ii an ineurranco for
which" ri ‘, a ‘ a t -' xc lusive ol the loss on buildings,
M- \ O??. cx -' oed * w °.»oo. mostly insured
f ‘J °^o ocoupunu havo not yet boeu heard
from, so that tho total lota is not yet known,
ti ~' 0^ oisviLLE, Deo. 14.—ThoTompcranco Convon-
W \vm “ B ‘ on oil > - ’ to dav nominated Geo.
,V* 'V '“‘sms (Whig) of B urbou coouty, for
J, eruor » Jaui«» G. llardy, (Democrut) of
B irron county, lor .Lieutenant Governor.
Louisville, Doc. 14—night.—Pork ia unchanged.
uro oorning in slowly; 1000 sold at 4W cash
—tuw houses aro killing. Total number oi hogs
killed up to d&to 98,000. The weather continues
mild and pleasant.
Pittsburg, Dec. 14.—Tho river rose and fell to
d*rv lrom tne breaking up ol tho ice below. It is
still
!. Cimcin'niTi. Pc'* 14,- Ffirc Act s—l,loo
?olb at A%. Green «*rt * A —hams 6X, sides M,
shoulder.- 8. L'rd for prime iu Darrels.
Lbovidenoe, Dac. i4.—The failure of Messrs.
Hill, Carpenter <& Co., wool dialers, is announced.
Th ir liabilities a e said to amount to $500,000.
Philadelphia, Dec. 14.—1 tis reported that
tv.enty five thousand dollars havo been raised in
this efty and iu New York, among tho Presbyte
rians cud Dentists to procure the pardon of Dr.
U ale, but we are weil satisfied that Gov. Bigler
will net __ urdon him.
Providence, Dec. 14.—Tho liabilities of Messrs.
Hi Carpenter & Co., extensive wool dealers of
tills city, do not exceed, we understand, the sum
of abon. $500,000. Tne Banks hero w ill not prob
ul ly lose a dollar by tho failure, the notes held by
Inin being all protected by endorsers. Tbe Bank
that holds the most of their paper—rav from
sl4*,os»o
capital of over $6 J,t 00. A large portion of their
papsr is hold by men who bought it in thostreot.
New York, Doc. 15.—Our city, harbor and bay
havo been veiled iu a thick cloud ot fog tho entire
d«y. No eastern boats have either arrived or lett
here, and there aio a number of steamers and other
vessels detained in tho lower bay, waiting for an
of port" nity to coma up. r'o thick and dense has
been tli3 fog in tho harbor that numerous col iaious
havo occurred between tho ferry boats and other
crafi; running about. The Government schoou r,
Ann* lying at tho barge office dock witn a full car
go of provisions lor Governor’s Island, was stove
by a terry boat and filled. The cargo is badly
damaged.
MARRIED
]nVta ri y on the 19 h ins ,by the ltev. J. G. B tn v,
Mr Al EXiNDER ROB J , of Midway, Ala., an l Miss
-All VH LOUISA ENGLISH, of this City.
On the evening of the 12th fust., by Re7. J. D. Echols,
JAMES J. LAWKKNOK, Etq , ot lfancork cc-unty, and
Miss MARY L!ZZ.E, daughter of Mr. Kinchen Little of
iutnnm cunty.
Constitutionalist Jk Republic and Eclectic and
Home Greene please copy.
On the 14 h inst, by Thos.T. Brandon, Eeq., OORNE
LIU a. REDD ana SAUAII T. Mob AD E, al ofßictmond
ccurty.
City papers p’eaie coj y.
Oa ft e evening of 11-e 6th Dst., by the Rev. W. P. Steed,
Mr. I LIAM it. bTOUY and Mus SAMANTHA R.
LAZENIiY, all of W’arre i county.
On the 3t)th November, by the Rev. W. J. Cotter, at the
radlcnce of he- father. N-than Gunnos, Etq , Mr.
JOH » J J. SHifiPirAßDand Miss M. E GUNNELS.
On the sth inst., by Judge James McNair, Mr. ROBERT
S. KOd aud Miis REBECCA U. HUcD.allof Li:hmoud
county.
On the sth lest., tn Richmond county, by the Rev. Joa. ,
Pclhill. Mr. rLWI-V W. of ColumtU oouQty,
and Mbs SUSAN E BRANDON, of the former place.
On the 18th inst., in Kiohuond coun y, by the iame,
Mr. CHS »HGE S. wEBB,of .Savannah, aud Miss NANOIE
TARVER, of the former place,
fit/" Index pltasecoi-y.
OaWcdne d y, 13. h Inst., by the Rev. J. G. Blnney.
Mr PETER F. ik ISCLaIR nd Mrs. SARAH OARIER.
OBITUARY. ~
Died at kia residence ia this county, on 12ih inst.,
Cl) AUL-..S t . OLARKK, iu thesJth year of his age.
No rriog iu the c.maiuni y ii which he lived,
has f r rn xuy years a iddeue l so many hearts as the death
of nis uptigut m maud useful ciussn. Hib name unher
u d-'d by pjrnp or power, may not be co extens ve with
h d Wurth, but in his c rcums.ribed sphere cf acticn, he
wi 1 i e long remembered us one in whom there was no
gu I*. Por t>venty-tivo ye trs a follower cf the meek and
luwlyjssus, he pursue i the noiseless tener cf his way,
with the ooura o of u brave man, to do ligh —only t mU
whoa doubt hrroo td by the way. No enterprise deterred,
no d flicuity impeded, if oeneit to religion or his folicw
niau vui involved, an i i,c f hi* time and his goedi,
all that was deiLaadeu or the propagation oi morality, or
the r l.tf j distress; lor thooga his means were not large,
■if hirity was gieat. He departtd while yet n the p.-ime
cf
livii g, he uad aire dy meitd oui tne full sum of a more
prj'.ou>* icx btenc). CLi.dless himself, y t oj p .an tsars
tl iwed i"i.cc araani hs dying bed for his lose, who had
see lo h m ali taat a lathir could be. L ij de uh was
to place n seal Uj ou i*ia approt at on, wh.ch
iiviug, huhudgaiueiol all ue.i. lie gave net one 1 ngenug
t oiji-t to life, ue was too happy in tne coattuipiadan of
ds.t.’, wli h tohun is 1 e cleidal.
.ib icav d wuow andu laige cirole of re'atives and
rieacfl inj.ra iLeirioss, whi e t.iey rejoice at his gain.
Mr. YOUNG G’LL, a Rivolutijairy soldier, abort
Ssyc’trd,d pa-te i ih s Leon tuadiy mo.-uiug, l7ih inst.,
t t i j reii-iejCc of ins d lugh’.t r,uea. Uncial Lirole, Waitou
cduu >,'Ja T.e WdS a uati e o Vi giuia, and one of the
lew turvi ors of ihe uisait.om battle oi Uniuiiei.
Dei arted this life In Warren:on, cn Saturday, the 9th i
,j 3 y J D-icenber, JlE.dLTaiUo Li UKaI-Di hOtiEtt-,
s ui of Mrs. Martha Ditkerton, aged 6 years 9 months and
U 1 J “ Leaves have their lime to fall,
And fljwrrs t > wit. er at the north wind’s breath;
Bjt a.l—th u hast ail season! for thins own,G, Death 1”
I*l,o Sli.l bm ill voice that calls away lbs 1 .ved member
cf he domebtu c rcle, is at a I times bffl.ci ng and sad,
.u when one in tne t-pring line cf life, With it) kdessoms
enfolding to ihe j y o the parent wit»eraand dies by the
col i touch of Deatn, no words of tolace can calm the aching
breast. The su'i.e.t o; th-» notice, li»t«u ano prized as tbe
ce itre cf parent 1 i fltc ijn, was matched away with but
u s.iort piem jni.icn of h s approichmg en«; but yester
dt> the rose co or oi hea th aui i ncceuoe dwelt upon his
cou iieu tu :e ; to-day those hues vannh, and pallor rests
upon iibc .eelc, and nothing is lelt for the fond parent, but
ior her hoart
‘ To w ;ur its beautiful image, all undimmed within it, to
to tic last.” h.
Diet in Burie c >unty, oa the ?oth Novomber, RUTH
VERNuN, iu’a t daughter ts Jamna W. and Jane A.
Tucker, aged 7 moatus .md 19 dayy. She wa-i too pure for
earth,anu Goc* hue h.rtoa happier clime.
So fades the 1 ivtly, blooming flower,
Era I, amilii g * i-.ee of an hour;
So tom cur tran iea' comforts fly,
And pleasures on y b!o. m to die.
Is there no kind, no healing art,
To soothe the anguLh of the heart?
Bji rit be ever t.igh:
Tby comfoits are not tcads to die.
Let gentle pa‘ : ecce rm le cn pain,
'ii 1 dying hope re • ives again :
Hope wps the tear fro a sorrow's eye,
And faith points upward to tbe sky.
Os Typhus Fever, on the S h inst, at the residence of
the lati Dr. H. J Smith, In Oilumbfo county, HENRY
NaTHAN EL, only child of Samuel and Emm 4 Bel y.
1855! THE 1855!
SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR
A MOJUHLV JOIBIVAL,
DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY TO THE IMPROVEMENT OF
Southern Agriculture, Horticulture , Slock
Breeding , Poultry, Bees, General
Farm Economy 6;c.
Illustrated witU Numerous Elegant Engravings.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR IN ADVANCE
DANIEL LEE, M. D., EDITOR;
D. REDMOND, Correspondiog Editor.
The Thirteenth Volume will commence in
January, 1855.
The Cultivator is a large Octavo of Thirty
two pages, forming a volume of 384 pages in the
year. It contains a much greater amount of
reading matter than any Agricultural Journal in
the .South—embracing, in addition to all the cur
rent Agricultural topics of the day, VALUABLE
ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTIONS from many
[ of the most intelligent und practical Planters,
Farmers, and Horticulturists in every section of
the South and Southwest.
TERMS OF THE CULTIVATOR
ONE copy, one year, ::::::: f 1.00
SIX copies, .00
fVV EN TV-FI VE copies, :::::: 20. 0
ONE HUNDREDcopioB,: : : : : : 75.0 c
The Cash System will be rigidly adhered to,
and in no instance will the paper be sent unless the
money accompanies the order. The bills of all
specie-paying Banks received at par. All money
remitted by mail postage paid, will be at the risk
of the publisher. Address
w.n. S. JONES, Augusta, Ga.
l Persons who will act as Agents and obtain
Subscribers will be furnished with the Paper at
club prices.
IT 18 AN INFALLiBbB REMEDY.
IAMiI AhK esnuct express the value o’ “ WIL
j LlAlio' COMPOUND PULMONIC BALSAM OF
WILD ObERKY aNU WOCD NAPTHA,” in dts aaei of
;Lun a. It Dot tn’y cure, them effectu.lly, but li gives
; imoedUte evidence of its ability to do so; for in a few mo
[ meets f.ertfe firstdaw 1m be:n taken, the pattern feels
I that A } eterfui agent ti in hia system, strongly versing
to ll - good. It! o[eratioo» are never del.yed; it at
tn-efl ea to and attaeki to* rce' of the diaeaae with an
e-e gy tDtcova ?.n -Per mtt-klres; am that disease
j mtu'. t—deep yac itei infeed which can resist its unri
,a M j inaue-c.. lienee, it has freqvelitij cured a p inful
ourh 1. a day, which has defied otner popular remedies
tor a month. and hat ramoved d fflrul’y ol breathing and
I pain In th - throii and chest in a few minutes, by the sur
t pasting aetg? cfds acton.
3or full de crintions of Its merits, virtues, 4c., see
pamphle s, to be nad of the agents.
For ta e by all Druggists throughout the United States.
Sold In Augusta, <Va., by W. H. AJ. TCBPIN and D. B.
1 PLUMB a Co., Wb-.lesale and Ketaii UruggilU. Price tl
i per bottle, nr A bottles for tb. dk.tm
BIBLEYS CJMPOjKJ EXTRACT OF BCCHTJ,
ig & cctnbiration cf the mo t effiieat remedies known
to y. for the relit* and cure of those
i j tUTic oisc'.mp alnt of the Urinary Organs conrequunt
upo iLlitmat.on cr ulc rat.cn of the Kldne.vs, U aider
aud Ureti.:*. X'. is prepare.] by ?x* experenc.d chemist
acotr i - 1- to % formula approved by ihe Medic*l JCacul y,
ami s worthy tne confidence of ail who msy be Buffering
• | fr n Pain and Weakness in the small of the £a;k, btop-
P i age and P*ia in \o ding Urine, D «r Excess cf
» Urine, -trangury, Gravel, liloet, Leucorr: cea, Ac.
UloLEY’d bCC JU i* a rei»-ble ani standard popular
re;u[ iir tit an diseases of iha Urinary Organs, fls«*<ned to
i ai piace tbe bgh priced and irresponjt>.» oestrums wnicn
' are fo.cel u ;on tbe no l:e and O'iau’l y of sufferers, li
ii ru up nlarge fotUri. at ♦*
LAND, h oi rt A CO, Au;u-t«; HAVILAND, UANU «
, , CO. Ch fiti.ui, Ahd by tiAVILAbP, HaBBAL * KL
LKY, New Votß. dlWl»»«.
- TJACOS -So.lhUlb. rlu Bkrsaleoy
j I > ( ,27 D Via, HOLD A FANWINQ.
I I At b w iXkib—ln bbls, and" kegs, of choice q lallty.and
jN fur is|. tow. [dlT-gwJ J. 4- ANBLtI.
ij p■i JU ’IAL.
i Wi-ekly ; ori i tieaJay ,P. St.
3 COTTON.—Wo have so report a i-c 1 u : r" marketa'n e
' our last Weekly review, owicg to t'l. very cnfivorubla
J tenor cf advices from Lv.rpojl per rociflo, atdth. fai:-
. | ing offin prc:s 'n all the markfa in ihit c jjtry. At no
period during !he TTock hid Ultra beta any animation ex
: j hibited, vh e i'ae aland t*k< n 5 y many Planters in with
drawing Cotton fiom rale, h»s ktpithe offering stock
Itnßtd, and not more than equa' ta the demand. Iho
mirket doste with a moe’eraia demand at the fallowing
quotations :
Very Icferior and Ordinary
Low Miid iag to Middling.
Good Middling 7 fo~t%
Quotation! above Good Midding a: e In no supply, and
their value consequently nominal.
RECEIPTS TO LATEST DATKB.
iss4 r^r
New Orleans, Dec. 12. j 416, 1 SI 37 a ,"44
Mobile, Dec 15 78,874 7*4 2
Florida, I •». 1 18,817 2*y» 8
Texas, Dee 3 12,747 19,'?4
davannak, Dec. 14 GY4g 9 , 8j
Charleston, DeC. 14 144,427 110,18
North Carolina, Dvf 2 B.JCS 7*6
Virginia, Doc. 1 5,«8u 2,P4i»
Total 735,7i5 €97 7 2
Increase 82,• 14
STOCKS IN SOUTH KKN PO K 18.
New Orleans, Dec. 12 .7 ~ i7?,Y1l iO'i 54 >
Mobile, Lee. 15 43,V51
Florida, Dec 1 ! lus 7 14,487
Texas, De:. 9 » 8,<*93 , », 01
Savannah, Do.-. 14 j SO S6S i 4 ,16
Charleston, Dec. 14 £3,886 1 42,85
North Carolina, D.c. 2 | 5 0 85u
Virginia, Dec. 1 6*,0 ; 600
TotalinSouthern Ports 826,‘'re 856,f05
New York, Dtc. 12 | £4,6r8 | 20 997
EXPORTS, I
To Great Britain 27?,69. 19$, 78)
** France 75,099 4?, 1 y!
OtherForeignPorts 89,054 | 4-,654
Total Foreign Exports P 95 SIS 290,5:5
To Northern Ports 154 il4 | 175,660
GROCERIES.—The op»ra lens in the Grcc ry muikit
con 1 ico extensive ai-d de tiers have baen very actiVe’y
trggad throughout the week. La prices vj too no
eh -ngo in aDy let.ding article, and wtuld refer to quett
tioas.
PROVISIONS.—The cupplytf Baron ccntnues largo
and prices are barely ma trained, as the d?m&nl fs not
active or ex entlve. The Fkur market is active and fl m.
Our quo tail m w II afford a 'air ladix tu the market.
G RAIN.—The tramtctlo. a in Coin ar. limited a'd
prices have undergone so ohacg! during ih; vrosk. The
• ipp'y In sick.- »■* U» u \ Vi ' ZIJ~ '«■
»wt .'VjT sdasuped. We quote: White
, f 1.75 to £2.00, ana l/bd >1.30 to f l£o $ bu-hjl.
£XCii ANGK —-Ch:c':s on the No tharo not very abun
dant. They are sold at % $ cent. pram.
FREIGHTS.—The River continues low, though still
n&vlgible fur light draught Steamers w.ih small freight.
T„e ratio for freight have under*oro no chrcgo.
NEW ORLEANS, Pec. 12 —Cotton. —Arrive! since the
Sth inst., of Lou s.ani and M-rs s.ippi 16 544 b»le«, Ten
nessee t 54, Arkan as 908, Mrbileßfi, >1 ./fra IfC, i«xas
129; t gether Y5 t * 70 lal a Oe*red s ues th? 8 u inst.
for Live;pool 9186 oafre, Havre JC62,
jrebastian (Hor.in > 488, Genov lul> New York 4SO ; le
gether 14.C8T ba es. Stock in Prr s s, ard on shipboard
LOtclearsdcnt ie >2th inst n v ., 178 211 bales.
Our las report cl s*d upon <h \ ’ *rge t week’s huslresi "
of he season, Out the a >vau a e in t rices w.isonttie sice
of buyers, With a very lrr gulsr mvrket. On Fatmdiy r
the luopean advic.a by the l non, four dvjsKwr. w ie
reoeive*, reporting a dtcl neor an Hd in the L Vcrpoo' «
Cot'on rairket,aud cur ovu market >«s i e »vy, h sata d
( f that d y belt g ooi find to ab.iut froo b;l at v«ry n- p
p g vLr pnoes, toxe of thesali s (uadi» f■r hr nceif t f i
h unfavorable a vices ov th-Union tin ie;* ing a fi?th i
de liueof an 11). on Monday u ere w*s a U
better a t tjbcanu. ui buy ir, au i t e sale wrre about 7<Miti
b les, with stl imu h lneg Urity In ) r'c s,and with the v
i ,-still ou he tldei f ouyers, ih care •y to tv
the exteut indiciud by some of ihi silts cf baiuidiy
Y<»*t* rday t'-eie »ere fur h :r teler effec ed to the exitnt
olatout 7500 hales ; ahl.h vould makf-atota' f>r t'le M
th'tedsyior 19,5t0 balcc, ta»en pnmlpallv f r Greet
biita ij, with sem i parali f< r Fratce, f'e n iient h: U
the North. With reaps t lo priett, wj hav • io remark
that trebave re dom ki own a more iri- guiar maikat, a d
s;rlo ly ac urate q o ation- are quite out. f th? question. tu
Ou Cgure', however, wb ch are further rrdu.-el au % Dl
cent, reprtssnt the pn.val.iug rat go for Li Verio KlaSsi- -F
fleathn. tw
Amerg th ‘s-iLs r f ihe past few d«y i was a lot cf f f
b iio-, r«;e vjd from Wilcox »ouuiy, Alabama, xth li wi- Ul
g own from ihe •**.«! i »<ed," andg nned un oi
'O Ur i*in. Thes a,ie was .aid to be very pup ii r, ai-d kl
the tree obtained fr it was 16 ten's \ orr.d,
Thj re eip sat this port tlnoe Is bept m er (exc’uslv*-
of the orr val f om Mcbi e, t or.da and T xn, are 41G iBl
bale , agiiust 818,>54. b*l 6to lime Ohtc bstjeir; and /
theiuor.atom the receipts at ail ths ports, up o the lut st X
d ites as com ar.d with hit y i a r , i> 4 • 2»JI t a es. In the w
exports f m the Uu*ttd bUtesto fr . igu o >unt ies a T
ooirpar.d withihesime data Kit year, the™ han lu *'
eieaaoof 60,184 balei io threat B>l aio, and'fßl.i 5 tj dt
Frauc , and a of 7760 to oiner Foreign l'o.ts.
KEW O C ABSIFIC TIPI.
(AUimilatinu to t/uit j L verp ol.)
Itfcrtv 4 IGodMu dI! g.. $% a
Ordinary '• ddling Fair... 9*
Go d Ord p ry....7 ui*i3a j Fa.r 10 -
Lew Midi ling '•%<&% I Good Fair ncini a*. ,
Middling | Hood und Fin j. . n« in nal. i
Noth.—lt should be borne in mir dt at ih* citssiOoition *
towhi h our figure-ar 3 iniend d t* tpp’y. is an as mi a-
lien to that <f L verpool Ih; io: sos Fra re, J
t pam,'he Nor h, 4c , call f>r b'g er urader, ai.d ituse. of
couts-,c mman il ighfr pricss. h
———
AU6UBTA PIUCKB CIJUKBNT.
WHOLESALE PRICES.
BAGGING.—Gunny yard © 10
Kentucky yard none. u
Dundee # yard 12« (7h 18 ..
BACON.—Hams $ 1b... 8 (& 12 ,
Shoulders *i 8 (gi 8
Clear Bides V 9# 10 t
Kibed Bidts 1b... 9 (ft. 934 c
■ Hog Round to 1b... 9 (Qv 9%
BUTTER.—Go.hen 1b... 28 © Bft*
Country.... $ 14 (2* 20
BRICKS $ 1000 6 00 8 60 .
OHEEHE—Northern $ 1b... H <& 16
English Dairy 1b... 18 18
COFFEE.—Rio V
Laguira V »••• l*>tf ® 1»
Java V 1b... 16 17
DOMt STIC GOODS. —Yarns 75 (& 81
X Shirting $ yard- 5 (f 5 6
Zi Shirting yard C <Bk 7Jtf
1 chirting $ yard 8 (& 9^
5- whirling V yard 10
6- Shirting $ yard 11 (so ]4
Osnaburgs yard ifo 9
FEATHERS % 1b... 8734 © 40
FlSH.—Mackerel, No. 1 V bbl. .19 00 (so ?0 00
No. 2 y bbl. .17 (M) (so 19 00
No. 8 bbl.. 850 (so 9t 0
No. 4 $ bbl.. 610 (so 700
Her. in $1 bb.. (so 100
FLOUR.—Country bbl.. 80) (so 950
Tennessee V bbl... 700 (so 960 1
Oanal ty bbl. 800 ©lO 00
Baltimore $1 bbl.. none (so
Hiram Smith s bb1..14 00
Cl y Mills to bbl.. 900 so ll 00 1
Denrn-adf to **bl..lo 00 (so 12 (0
GRAIN —Com Sacks, indu'd, to bush HU ] (Hi
Wheat—wh'te to bush. 175 so 21 0
Wheat—Red to bUBh. ISO so 1 611
Oa:s to bush. 65 so 70
Rye to bush, 1 so .
Peas to bush. 100 so 125
GUNPOWDER—
Dupont’s to keg. 520 © 550 ~
Uata d to keg. 526 © 660 h
IRON.—Swe es to *••• 5 X so 6)4 u
English to 4 so 6 .
LABD to »... 0 so 11 J
LlME.—Country to box. none. a
Nor 1 hern to bbl.. 800 so 225
LUMBER to 1000 10 00 ©l4 00 -
MOLASSES.—Cuba to «al.. 26 © 23
0r1ean5....... to 6k1.. 80 © 82
NAILS V «>■•• f# so CE
OILS. —Sperm, prime to K<*l.. 190 © 200 .
Lamp to gal.. 110 © 125 ,
Train to 6*1.. 70 © 95 ‘
Linaeod »gal.. 108 a1 10 >
RICE V ll*ro« t>)( Q 6
ROPE.—Kcntuoky fll 18... lit & IS H
Manilla V ’»■■■ 1» © 40
RAISINS V be*. 870 © *M <
SPIRITS. —Northern Gin to K*L • 66 © 70
Rum to 8*1»> 0) © 0) i
N. C. Whsbey to 0) © Oi 1
Peach Brvr.dy ml gal.. none. t
Apple Brandy V gal.> none.
Ho.land Gin to B*l 160 © 175 >
Cognac Brandy to B*l •• 80C © 600 i
SUGARS.—N. Orleans to t 0... 6 © 1U
Porio Rico t 0... 7 so 8
Muscovado to t 0... 6 © 7
Loaf to t 0.... 11 © 12
Crushed « t 0.... 10* © 11
Powdered to t 0... 10J4 so 11 *
Smart’d Kef ltd A to t 0... 9 © 9* o
Smart’s Refined B to &>.... b>4 so 9 1
Btuart’s Relined C 8 © c
SALT. to bunh 00 © 00 L
*» to sack 187 © 200 c
Blown • to »ack 2UO © 250 c
SOAP.—YeII-w to t 0... 634 so 9 <
SHOT V bag.. 225 © 287
TWINE.—Hemp Bagging....* t 0... 22 © 25
Cotton Wrapping to t 0... 15 © 25
pr it la proper to remark that these are the enrr nl
rates at wholesale from store—of courße at retail prices *te ,
a shade higher, and from the Wharf or Depots, in large
quantities, a shade lower.
THE PECTOHAL EL7XOI
For Coughs, OU Ja, Asthma, find a l Di.taau of the
Lungs and T hroa ..
THIS Compound cannot be too highly recimm'intfed
tor Pectoral Unease*. I s effect i* prompt, re'Uv rg
almost always in *h Prst dose. In Cases of Cr u, ,it
aots most powerfully, ass rding relie' in a very short • me.
T> ose who are tom 1 d with loug- r, Bren.hair, A thm<*,
Ac., may rely upou with the Utmost ForSile
by WM 11. TUIT, Autuv.a,
dl9-dkw*f TU IT * i‘* L BI lEit L bt rg.
LiXI-vOrON, GA.
TU Kexercises cf ib.s Acadjmy will be resumed on ih)
fi; St MONDAY iu January uex‘. The a* le a*d
eflßciuct Tea hers in ta h department 1 lecon inu'd or
a* other year. Board c<m be ob.a ne.i iu tie 'll go on
reasoi able terms. t_E). it OUj v l£s,
d2O-w m Chairman i oar < of I rustees,
AD.MI.M VI HATOU ’6 bALK.- WM be sold, on the !
Crs- in FEBRUARY n rxt, btf ne the Uour t ,
bouse door la k*u olpb crunty, ;u J 4 acres of L..nl,
known by No. £9l,sth uls. oi ori ,maiiy Lee now Kandoiph
county. <
ALSO,
On tie same day, before the Cou. t hous: door in Stewart
rouutj will be sold, 20 % acres Lund, mown as No. il,
iu th-? 26*h cis original y Lee no# tMewart county. Both
the above Lots sold by order ts ihe Court of Ordinary of
Elbert county as tie property of th estate of Charles W.
Christian, Sr., deceased. Te. m» cas.i
WabHINGToaS CHuISTIAN, I k , twn , rm
WM. P. OH.UBIIAN, JA'Jmr..
December 20,18-4
Xl Blacxwtll late of Emert county, ieceasr-, are re
quested to make immediate payment; sou (note hav
ing demands against said decea&ed, are requested to
preset i tneinf r payment, properly authenticated as the
uw d.rects. EL ZABaTH ULaCKWEuL, Kx'trix
Dec. 2n, 1854. JvMta J. fcLVCK *VELL, ta*/.
r p\VO MOATHb as .er date application will be mad*
1 to the Court of-yrc inary of dicrimond county for leav.
to sell ail tbe Real Estate of James Love!, late of sail
county, deceased B. CRAM FORD, Ex’r.
Dec- inbsr YU, 18T4.
COLLMBI i COL’A TV, HA.—Whereas, tbe estate
of James and Nancy Lovell, late of said county, de
ceased, is unrepresented:
Thrse aie therefore to cite and admonish all and sin
gular the kndred and creditors of sad deceased to ap
ply at my offloe for letter* ol administrat on on cr be o e
the second Munday n February next, or the adm uistra*
tion will devolve oa the Clerk of the Superior Court.
UiVvti under my hand at office Appiiog.
December iO, 1051. S. CKAWruRD, Ordinary.
C COLUMBIA COUNTV y UA. —Whereas John Foster.
J aaminUtraior on the eatate o f John Gwne.t, late ol
said county deceased, sppius to me for letters oi Diaaxii
sion :
These are therefore to cite and admoul -h all and s ngu
lar the kindred and creditors of Slid deceased, to be an j
appear at my ot£b«, wi .nia the time pre cribed ty Uw, to
I sho« cause, if any have, wny letters of administra
tion should not be grantee.
Given und .r my hand at office in Appling.
Dql2U, 1654, ri. OkaWFuKD, Ord’y.
J. M. EHEEKAN dt CO,
WATCHES, JEWELRY AND SILVER WARE.
THU subscribers, having tafcen the store so
maty years occupied by Thcs W. Kresrran
continue the W-aTCH AND JEWELRY BUrl>Ei
in all its branches,and invite tbs public and p. k u
thela’e T. W. Freeman, to their ta'ne y res stock of
WaTCHKB, JEWELRY, eilver aud Hated WAbE, wr. ch
they offer for cash os .ow,or lower tb&u can te purchased
elsewhere.
Parti ular attention g vea to REPAIRING Wat rhea
and Jewelry. [dr2-dswßm] J. N. FREEVf AN A CO
TO HIKE,
AM'MUKH of SERVANT?, among xb m are several
Mithani f, Labcrers, U u iu»t*H*rvADt‘, <’ooks. v a h
ers and Iroosrs. Apply to [dlß] E. U. TiNSI EY .
T?HTbH IMPOHTAT IUX-HAVAX Y BKGAM
X 83, 00 T. M. BE3AR9,
48.000 O. K. da;
76 4 00 Low-priced o-i., s'meofthem very s’
Jq*t received fy [d>6] -KIN»KR.
i a UOXKH Seda BISCUIT ;
40 10 “ do;
l»> 9 Bug cr do ;
6) Ki’s No. 1 and Mtss MAQJKER'L ;
8 * half*' acre’s No. 1 ar.d 8 do;
20 Fb’s No 8 do ;
20 “ NercbernßUM. Jmt ■ eo'iv dby
dIC «t DvW>QV BKrvNVR-
Wife DOM, U(TA>O UHIM4 of Dt-tngulsHjd
Anc tot Theosophers ; by Joseph Banvard, A. M.
Ids Norman, or Tr als and the r Uses ; tr Mrs Lincoln
Phelps Caro lae—A Franconia fltory ; by the ?u.noror
the Bolin Eoiks ; also, “Agaes, ' by the same
BAM by (dI6J THUS. RICHARDS A SON,
I '.I i SOF.-iXAN KO US.
JiMEJ ?■
i Tiv isaVAi UW, Ora»ft>rH»v H«, Q<»-. »**•
A.- ~,‘i ti .e cone t..« of ■iaiura.'to, Han-
Vk *, r- u aL J VCiIXtS.
. r I „ ... U 3 owing t of J. TAYL'IR A CO.,
\ dto ok). .iUJ tl> All 111-. «
" t ,”. t a \maa&- .» ly wll be pWaH 1,1; ‘‘
" ill ' j ( ' " ll '~ C ' :oa ’ _J. TAILOR « CO.? - j
7>T< U- oTo HI KirP’S HVI.M.—Wib be •»>'*-
It « “be o, S tlu-.-J IJ <n JANUAIIY »e*t, a* Ih. £'*•
«, Mweelliouee, n iU:oU> «f AUjU.ia, .j am l ibJ
nou-.0t.-a., tuc lol.o#iug pro..enj, >l*.
p.,ca o iiAua ,u «”m’.
Z 'J ‘ Lu iTeco ‘eomaTul"; ih/“b uU eJ au4;Wrty
oTl‘°\ “ISlia ebi Me. fcir.-.l~d;
N» !!•,.>• I ud 10 nurly uo to J,’.Tu! r ’J
uul uuw to i l loiog ,111 log- an., U.st, J 1“' “J '
land, .ud to.ib, .J lltr.d luaoiug [MU a J. IO
e.wee . ill., l .01 a..d ilia Mrs UI p ».e. ‘“ »’ *'*“*
i cad run* it ag ■, aud ii -u iu a stra , In. *u* m
ruad toosluU i l.ai , aud ilia pJ t*ou of 1 nU U .-s r ‘
new gic ioi aa-.a .my place li sou the No't. s
saiuao dby the be l p a o and mvid :vr iigui llaV, i»r t»a
isLSi btUg r.s*iV*«j w.th bL*. lla tpi-os, LV id oa
uu era h t«. tsued frou* lhe Suv;«iioi Ou.t oi adi
«v uu.y,lu favor Ui Jwha J Byrd, uu iw o Bugi-nia Is.
u«.i*ruiai U, rd fgaL.t Joim t. King ,Ld Vni-iaoi F.
Dearn ou , Exrcuu,is cf jiartha k ury, Usceased, *s *•*
u.ouerty oiMaitha LU-y.
—ALSO—
A'l that tract or par sits iu RI 'hinood county, ton*
ti lu i g BiXty- ojr Acres, mo eoil ss *.uuis l u h aui
A eel oy land* oWaSJ i / tdoiau l Faincr ; i'd th vjr .a »u
ofvv.g Nj.is, aud fc.a«h by a diowueity arauiiia Ual
son ; l ivied ou as ih -• pro trty of Robert i hotnas, io s .uS*
t, ail fi. issiei from .hr euperiw Uour of iuu amu
coua.y, 11 lavar oi ih B nkoi Augus.a vs. Robert »ujtn»
t , ior ills use of iota, lx .h ui s _ -
December Y, 18' 4. y»M i>OVl E, D »h ff. B.U».
i >l4 ItMUHU ellnltDFs B.vLE.-mll l»i ull,
It oa ihe hisl Tuesday iu JANUARY n xt,a: tl o L w -.r
Miiket ll use in tbs city of Augu* a, wuhiu me legal
o rsols 1 , theMtowlug propsrti, v s: caUrpaOU, >iu ,
Jv hu tiuil, T. m, i oi-ey, l. La ic, 4. ut. i»y,
eb Adam lUta tLVe , HU i ill ill a femsttt
lutes. All/ ElxMU.es 4 bor.ei, 8 lICIV 1 ul OsUle, 1
ei»rry- og. I liO'tU \V»,t n, 1 low wheeled W.kiu, I <«o
--horiw.g .odg one lii.se Ca.l. • bo, all *»« "«**«.
11l e 1.11 I u.iere .Ol Junius L. Colo . » 'bo •••'* , *•
~nli, ndjo n.u . the buutj Ml b, li.iiotili owi.u.g J.S.
I. CXI mau.sa l the Brick 2 ar~of r. »».W a run , men u m
i .uated iu he Ai' K u»ti Oatt tl, 1* Kchucni county,
ml liaviux uoher psr.iculai Lou d«, u X l ere cettuiU.
lcv ed oi- a lhe pro* er yol Jauus L Uolemun 10 m I «F
t a ft. ii»u: 1 iroui ihe Su,* ilor <.ouit o. nUniuoud coju
yin a»or of cieog; 1a l'w ggs a.alust James L. U./U
--, thl* 2 1 Uty 1 DeceUib'", *at4
pJcMidi r b, isf> . w U. Ot D m.U.D Bh’if.
JfUiJLtU bALE.
WII.V. bi fold, at the r sl l hoc of the 1 .te D*. XI. J.
hin.ib, CJo umbia county, o Tuesday, 59 h tiny of
"FOb Misl R, the en Iro B Oi« <f Uo 8i», M l «, Oowp,
Uo»r,oii(pp; also,the Coru anJFud u , UtU eh«M «di
aitihan Fun Lure, a.., btl aging so ill te o. >u d da-
Av j X'MZ uav UdCA.-J6Aik.TZS
AND TAN NEILS.
'pHK puhscrJb’r waLtj a TO )T and SUCH
X MAKER w O can CU' cut, make uud lluish Lac en
Gentian e eetr td and pegged Boots, sh o.*s, Ac ,
as cu toiusrs wci k ALSO,
A shoe maker for Men and Wcmvn’s Oo.rrc Pegged
Work, to wiOJi good wages aa. co..s.ant cm loy uvnt
wid be g Tea.
ALSO,
A Tanner and Currier wiu umler.itard3 maklrg Sole,
TT I per ui d ti&rne*s 1 ta Ler an 1 t .nung C’a f, Lear un i
Sfieep Bkim with «ak ark, and who will wji k la iho > urd
anu Currying i ousc, lake charge i f uny o h rtiai.cli cm
{.loyw ', a u keep t e bout s. None but.. .v.i o* ,ste. d; and
ndusiri. us man need appl/. A bn.g.c tuuu will tu (r
--eriod, p n.cu.arly if iioni the Nortl.em au<i Wentjrn
.'tat a. Adi less Ci e luUcrihcr, pvkt j .ui, at Ca kavrlie.
' eriya l>L9-*HIJ J ■!«W K. H 1 Ni*\>Hl*.
Ft ti 8i LE
r p:.»K fuhsorit-er eff-re I r sale i lIIHE PLAN '*A- jtfPk
X TlONdint cfilust of D yc.ua.jr, m.rTT*
couti laicg l,tUu a;re» —i,UUD<ur s op .uiau
dwelljgand all u C n ary Luidu.s »or Fltu at ou pur
p ato. h • other coatuii i>g 1,400 acres -0 0 acr« s »«a
•aud, with g) d tiwu linn an 1 all u ic *. iy u, 1u l in 1
ihe .a’i con iii* ng 69 l uo es u i proved, 'iho tiovo
Lai dr are am ng uk cdoio s*. Uuttctv La dt iu i>mg ,«rvy
Joun-y, a: d -Mlmu s X unlo 1 cf Ulc 0 >. t tup a 1 d OuU t>
•V biera u l road The two urs. i iiT.u .wu .jun, ;U 1
wh Le iOld s p M . atcly or cs iu yLu dc, isi.
.aim liberal. J iluslß O J.KO.
He ir tu W. W. Chetver, Albany, Gea., er Jo «pii«on<' t
Mac rr, Geo. d 9-. Oiu
ADMIMBI’iIATOUB bAifi.-Uit'u) first Tues
day luiß RUaKY u xt, vil ba sod, OcXre ihe
wouit h <usc uoor,i 1 tio.* 0 uaty.a tr.ut «i Louu con
la niug 600 acr. »,ao ecr 1 .as, s.iuatsd in Vai n' Yuliuy,
Dclongiu. to ttio estate of Ja .*• a Wa»e t Ut: if aid eouu
y, d.c HBed roll far liu benelt« f vhe lia:rs uad o*eoi
„\j s it 9ii 1 dece scd. Tnu tiu 11 ts «l*i Ui t >.u conre of
the Va ny, is wcm t a ured, uud a one ut c-u iu c du>ira
ole farm *»u it. Ih re arc ao u. 975 ucves ia <ih gh n to
yfc Livat on, w Ui al the mcesoa y'ouil. lags auu g>oi
ippio and p a.h o Ciurds. The 1 la:e ir regarded eery
he ti iiy. Aurius, 12 myuils cr.d t
DfC.mbn 19, icb4. M. WARE, Atm’r.
ADMIMbIIIATUK’h HALE—Agre able t» an
older of the lout to! Od'uary of Kic-uiuud ccuruy,
w.nietoiJai ilia Ma k 1 hoUie ia tha city of
wuhiu the lei-at h u s of ale, ou iho tir*. Tui»uuy iu
tE .hUauv next,iiiuud owiug 0 uv.t: rurati
aged 6 > >e*r*,tt go d coo*, Anihei auu l*oicr; Mary
Low, aged 23 jean, agorU Hcuit fie v lUtaLd scm,hue.>a;
Marga.tt Lo-,ag»d *J y vaib.a good H rvaut; also,
ter ou Jji u, aj 1 d aboui 2 years, bold us the property
b on ing to Hit* etta e ofjoim Lew, Uot Hi h uoird
10 • l>, utceiß d, fjr the uun li. ts the cr d.tuis h »j,ac.
cf saiu ..seta cd. L.vMii£.iH llußlilN.'. A m r.
Dei ei b r 19, IB£4.
AoMI 'unl it « tOii r) (sALh.—Agreet.be t> an
cr-cr *.f ti e voua cf Ordiuary cf Co u obi* oouny,
w. 1 be sold, i-ehr • lie U u t uocse door iu * id «oa ty,
w.t'iin the kgtl hours ot sale, on t .e fir-i l uco ay m
FEiIRUAUY Ltxt, tbe Ne t jrotsbeioQaing 10 the «s ate of
Joi nJ. U ciirau, ueo.aa*. ,coo i tiugol Mho, v\oneu aud
Uhiitir.r. bold n r tuc ol aisut u 1 n arnoi g me
hers uud hg.luiS. 'iciuisiuauc kuo«u on ti.e day of
iftlo D. • it *.EN, ad u*r ,
i/tcm-d 17. tsl wih he w. 1 , iltl x *d.
LAND iOH fiAiK, OH ltEhT
Illli Farm, lujwu as barn id if »\v« , «»n a j Wa h’n •
ton Row , * iui.es wove augu.ta, n.s L ud ope 1 .„ u * i
u-der ;cncu »o won sev.-ial Laud*,ojut lung n .1 m
a’tes. Wil be ttvdd low f>r CAiliyOr cash aid naif at
r 2 ui jLtna. 47 an acre.
n not to.d b 1 ore the litTi ej Ja> iu J-.nuvry ae*t, will
bo route Jat the Lo er M *ik.i Huu e, August , ou iLat
day, for lha ye.r ibi.s. LEjN v. iUU.td
t .staa euiary T us'.ee ler darah Auauxlo
AoOd FOR a 11 E,
12) acrt sLand, mos'.iy woilb, 8 tutes from Augua'a
f rmcry lauds of Wj.il?, ai'juu ijg Dr Ford, Maxwell*
Uoibdair aud Hopkics, oa t o r*a < leadiog 10 >i>o.gc
Fcblay’b, iE iN B. DUG i»,
di<;-d.tw* vtJa2 Ag j nt for Jam rail, uoui'y.
4(jOD cKAJFTAiJ Atl'LLd TKfcEJ XOti
i HU gru tugof ana’ive G.o.gia -,at my Nursery, iwy
X m tes Iro .1 MeDuUigh, UeLr/Couutr, G T e trues
areoloae aud two auiuiLu o’giuwtw, aud cmkraus ; f.,®u
'•■lioicu kiiide, tii i.*. r pau irorn Uald.u«uu tio so ru ,ime
in October, i witi mars each si id, rfo t eiu up iu
truer,pn. straw audclo’h a 0 ud the rco s, and dr i .er
them ttiuAit outo tue Ai con and VVcst.ru R jtd, 80
mi!e» a-ove Macov,orou tne Kai.rou i, 14) oiilo
ut ove Aug ij J, at i> 0 p r huidr<.d trees, e'tlier ol tils one
o.* Uu buumi r>', O' ..n ate age its.—Uie trees b ii'g
smaller t .ail Util I for their age Ilia/ arc design ou by
ibe uauud 01 idowJuuu Red Juue, ar o ot July,
u orec, - arg..* Q ic-cn, fivg’, or Ma g.jum , Gi scr p, r
raa.u , ked N-JW-Y rk t qv u, l.ady t i..ge., Lugiuh Ci ■ o.
Foot uo iuu, Liiib.r-iw- 0 , au.oau.ces, Laay \>a h u_jtoa»
i. av. 8a iXujj fun g ala, at Yft cm> Uica.
ti ud in jgo d <je Ts* nr romll 0 rj.ica rno-ey, ut my
lias, py mi l, aLd i wi.l ss-d ycu 1 .e H a s.
Ql i-n 4.» dudN DA Lvy.
PLINTATI JN FOB SALE
X IIK sub.cribai oil is for sale h : oi
. IliCiilie l«i ..111 -lie LU lIJCiU;. jr.i.ut .c A tiu ,
Bra ich ol tile Gvo giu Rni.ro U, ii a.o.c Ln 0 t
*Ol lit it o..utalus a u acre*, more ov lei , uuuut i\ 0
HCi eS Wci. IIIU 'M red oak an<i pu J laud 1. u I j tin j n
B od -epairtnd wtliiu pleiwttw.tr, « couitj t b'a
*“ K“ J a >““•« •[«»' u tturucly
lledllhy- Ad.ouug tia 1, so »0 18. Biiijli c uu
pure aed 10j of-lii.h are *ei. mu oico. Any iu to 1
d siroui of, urihaniig, uu i ui a n iriui*
sc, .ruudrea. mo«i..vl Xj/o Jr. u,
Hj- | ■!» ... j u. Muelm,. *
holies.
8 f 01.h.V from the ttsb ou ui. .at.srlber, nemr Daa
b r.h. Whs,s touuij, Si, ou the u gut or ibe l.t
Lecember, a • arx nay M u.b, medium oeignth and 1 iu*
L hiud to.it whit , i.ai about v t a p 1 e. ; aiuu. i 1 cr ili
yett-o 01 age, wry .-pui ed, ai d aorks well in na-uchs.
Frotn tli6 JS’aw-OrleviiH Picayune, Lepi. 28 i, 1834.
UIVrL E. GINEEiUIf j.
rxiflK und. rogue i will undartske to make the surveys,
X le/e.s, plaLo, specitiiat our, es unnej, • ntracts, Au ,
iiqarod lor Cairn s. Tluub, tr K.l ouuh, an . f . tory
i u .u.ngM , uud would uhe cousiruoiiju ol t..u
tame,ii required.
luuiviuum. or CcmpaLics, desirem ofobta nirg the Ber*
veejofau Eng n*er, tocomuie .te cpcraiijLS about ut
Ist of January, win o ease add re s
WILLIAM FfilLL PS, Clvi’. Erg n ar,
dls wst / u josku, ui.
Ali.Vf IMolitA loii’n hu.fc.- gee.be 10 ar.
older 01 the Caurt cf Q uinary GtlatUjr,,e county,
will te told, b I jre the o irt-houne «.oor in ol m.r . um
on tie first Tues ay in FEjuUaRV n»-xt, tnj fl.’oung
tract of Land, N o 1 8 in ilia 2 l se . nud On Uu. if o limr
county, cunt ining itto acrec, ba tha same mne .rim,
be oug ng to tire eskaie f Ghad 8 Moor**, laieuf wgicii.o p«*
coumy, cUcoabcd. ccld fjr the ocnent of c 0 heirs uud
cre utois o! sa d deceased, ierrui m*de kuowu ou ii>
diy 01 ta e. ELIJauO MMINg, 1 . . ,
December 14,1854. F. Q 0 am FELL, J Adm r%,
A UMI:\ISTitAIUU'B hkl.if.-Ag eeablu t*, on
X. 1 order • f tne Uour*. cf Ordinary cf Ugi ill »rpe c u ity
w 11 be so d, btiore ihe Cou* t h Uiuioorij'ih ujiac-uu’
ty, on the d'St lueiday in Ft JRUAkY nos*, No. ti, ©ip,
ti strict .liglu* ly lr*iuuov *homst«jao*.y J coataiii4g..9i
aC be Hie lame mo re or leu, oeliDfclig loth# c iat: ts
James R. t uff, deaeate 1 Bull as lu piupsrty ot full
• ece oe i for ihe benefit or the »• 1 s if said deceased.
Terns made ku wn on i.lO day il s la.
D i*e n'er 14, 'BSV. <> A 'lAll - t'FVR *«, A*l n V
ADM 1 Mb'!’ it AT. H»- ha L v.—Wii* be sol ),cn if 0
tr«t Tuesday in JANUARY nex , i 1 App: na, O .u i -
bi i t oliniy. bt t Aeen the U.-ukl hours cf tu c, Eighty- ve
and » ha;f A.r *s, mo eor c*», s»ij>ni g nuu o Atr*n»
Ho n* mbrek c rid othe.s. A so, two N.-graej, L u, a ooy
25 ye* aof age Mly.a ji 1 4 .eas or a'« b.i*»ng ng
tota ab Gil* t , deceased, .-01. f>r ti*e bsuefi: <fir olk in,
hu J ie i orb f saul decaasei. lerms iuj e kioan on
tue ray Os mis. ROUT. H. CL.EIT, Aurn’r.
rrco ub r H, 1854 »
L'Xl Ct'l Olt’6 HA —/giecable to tu order ol the
XL Lour of end oa-y cl Ugl. t. rpe couuy, wi| r e
it! ret oto rt-h. use e’eor m Mon>ce H alien com.iy
on u e first " undiy iu FEBRUARY* ntrx , ihe so o*i u g
pr petty, to wit; OueN.gro *Vomau t>y sue uam*.-• f U »u»
uoh. te cng ng to the heir* «f Joel 1 rlbble, d «oa Id. Mold
as the prop.ny of a‘d deceaied f r ihe
of **ai • U.c ssed Term# made kr ovu tn Uie day cf .ale
Dacem er Ift, 1 64. D*V D «v Vi * MAN, Kx r. .
n|">WO MO.VTHH alter date applioatiou wi*i be made
X 10the Lour lof O diuary of Oglethurp ccuuiy for
eive o sci so 14', 9.:i oi». und 6 n hq:. taro, cou-ty
(outaiumg it>/>4 acies Aso for 1 uve to se.l No Vo, ifi
dis 8d tto 100 county, coutami 6 4u aerco, belob .ng
to tbe esuta ol Da id Duuu,de * b**d
De < mbeijfi, IbOi. .1 MIY F DfTN.N , Adm x.
NO TICK-—A>l persons indebted tq the c:ia eof
Join Baui.hu, de.eated, l*te of tgir tb rpe c uu
ty, are r greeter to rnaka luim*U*ilc pa/m nt, a d
iliute having deurauds -gams, stake w ir pro rent
Uiwm iu kcruis ol the law,
NANCY BAUGHV t Fx’tix.,
Dtc 15, HU it aIM J aCRRuN, Ex’r.
'■PWO after date - ppluia ion wl. be made
1 X io the Court of Urdmary of Columbia co.nty lor
le.ve sellail iheßaal Ejcateof rarali Garnet:, Jala of
said county, ovcea ed. A. M.CAAVtF.UD, Adiu’r.
Jt tuiD- r 4,183 J.
I'UO MO.M'HH after date applicant n wdi be mode
to the au-iof Qrdiuary ol Co tumoia county for ogve
IO seil lhe Lw.ds oelonging to ih*: estuc of a,mud F«yn«.
lale of »ad county, cecea.td *
l ercmb 1 14, -864 A M. CRAM FORD, At» (xi > r .
A DdlMVIKATim’b HALK.—Agrerf bis to an
Vk r ’V, ’V" I °' ' r “" ,a I' f "*U „uru cu t ,
. ill b. auld .n.fiia Uc u. cr -‘i u,« o, r 1U •
y, ou rtr.l luu,i«y ia K 111 U,ii m«fi* a
l-l g a •U wittW.au.il" ia ‘ m '..rtr.it *,
" bl*.-lu< ' u l.u,Ur a .till , h ‘ .
in iu rlc s.b l rging to tl.u a atj o uo <r. luU ...
B*.ed boiilor Uu i.utlii.[-I.u r.,.. o; sai I Uj-ulhu.
Tu msiu de < owo ■n t d. yof• a i
U-uuiq wr 14,1 81 jj.ut II UOFf Ai/tu *.
1 BMis sritAioii'b back—Will bt .0a b r
vifiuu or au order <f ihi UuU tlf 'iiiiuaryu OO'
iumbik oourr'y, at / p.rl n.", "n t'le fir*. Ta ;*d *. m Fid.
i.U Alt Y u X', be w ,-u u.e ler .1 h u sos t* o, a N«
A’tßin an 1 four hi!dr t n } <’o igmg 10 the eu u'R cf
B *>ia**K»t JU, dnccaattu*, fi >id for ci >t i) Voq. Te Hi oscli,
D; cn. cr 14. lt»Vt HURT r„ Wpi.p Ng A..m r.
*
l\ ortitr <f he H‘coratle Ccurt ol Q d ary whist
ling icr crdiuny pu pj.u.will tseod,. fra thpOocri*
hue door 11 the 1w j My wl ,1c iv u cuu-iiy, oi
t ofl st Tuesday i t FEBRUARY' uext, e w* er. {tie e<al
n .urs of sd* Tw.. t tUJHLd iLrehicd- U uqj w U y.
r v 2t2'J)C)f l ud b- o'»K'lgU» ts ee a eofTios,
F. L .ut’, .• u ,
»u-d*y 11 seta urai«i oant ,a« J nog lams 1 f T. b. Bat.
tr, 1 i v r. a L Vutt, 8 U. 1 lit U Ul, A. r. Jju* , Wl
■ >', m JUeiutf". aetaie buds cf J. mas lg e‘ es, cstat ;,nds
1 John F. Icv tt, Willi.m ■ amoeit, U ary F. M||, and
W il Ud u Ry, A| 0 1 no lbs a eve d-sc ifinl isidi
1 ovgaro . for.a.e uwtLiug house, w.th ail othq.- ntc-csiaiy
out-hooses.
AL3C,
At same tire pUa**, * ill I o*ol L Tocr
1 and wv q y-sou. (L 4, a*ai«s of B if.tf**’?
S'°h*“ , K*b” ,HU . nit. SCVJI.. Il CO-...., '...a
y IJ J l .!u^' h ILV It A I of.lt ..U. v . ... u..ult I-. th«
u 57,. .1 .’i'.r* »»««"►'”' fs,d r*
orll'O. 'lotos to 111 ,!ytf.,le.
ib. ur« to i>»y 01 j , llh LuVji.r.i d .
litAiir r. iitt-Li-, / rl
rw. mb;r 9 I 3 _
. rikiiV'HTK Vl'UK’d BALK.—WiVifce sold,before
houwdoor.n W-rrriUja, vv« r ren «oun
a rl r.' Sa/in FEBRUARY n xi,
!?,*an order of »huOu tof Ordinary 1 c u tty, the
»o an or * number, helor gng 10 the «*t»te of ku us
wfh+m ’do ea9 '“' * a<S N * tiC * uro ali y oUD * auti
t! I • erss ■
1 ulc nim 1 k.v » r«u s>vy r .
A CAD
pOUULAIN, JBSm»UB 4» CO., Argisia, Geo.,
X Grocers and Oom nksion Me ohaots.
Agfcrws rouixaiN, j iacuas J. JsAXUua, j Tn l*t %
f pg