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About Daily chronicle & sentinel. (Augusta, Ga.) 1837-1876 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1852)
CHRONICLE & SENTINEL. m WILLIAM S, JOMS, uilLlf TRI-WEEKLI AID WEEKLY*. TEEMS: DAILY PAPBR, * <»* Subscriber,, per ««u», hi HATTY PVI’KR, nMuled to the country 1 00 TRI- vVEfckLV PAPER, maitvU »e the country ... 400 vrEEKEY, (.» mammoth dioet) “ ... 200 ClHli nYHTEM. —Iqiiocmv wilt an order for the .taper '>e attended t«, unless accompanied with the Lixhv, and in every instance when the time for which the ■< a-script ion may be paid, expiree before the receipt of fundi t« renew the same, the paper will be diecon tinuod. Fr*m the LaGrange Reporter. Borne reasons wliy we vote fur Webster and Jen* kins. Mr. Elitor A just respect for public opinion is laudable; and no man should take a political po sition unless he feels he has good reasons to sustain him in it. In the Presidential canvass now pend ing a largo number of the Constitutional Union men of Georgia have chosen to support for the Presi lency the Hon. Daniel Webster, the great ex pounder of the Constitution and defender of the recent Congressional Compromise —and for the Vice Presidency the Hon. Charles J. Jenkins, the patriotic and skilful framer of the celebrated plat form of 1850. lam sincerely a member of this In dependent party, and feeling a desire'to have as many of my fellow-citizens vote for the man of our choice as possible, 1 make this appeal to the common sense of Georgians and call upon men of ail parties who desire to give a wholesome rebuke to these National Juntos (which of late years sup ?>ress instead of expressing public opinion) by ral yinar upon the strongest ticket in the field, so far as civil ability and worth is concerned, and uniting with us in the cordial support of Webster and Jenkins. The first great reason why I have embarked up the support of Webster and Jenkins is, that I am a Constitutional Union man, and belie\ethat the election of Gen. Scott would be unsafe to the Re j üb’ic. Let us -ee how it would be unsafe. 1 in the first place then, General Scott accepted the nomination cf tne Baltimore Whig Convention, distinctly announcing that he did not recant any of his previously expressed opinions. New let us look back a few years and see what some of these opinions are; and before I will embark upon this delicate subject, I will premise that I stand by the documents and proof in all 1 say:—Gen. Scott has declared himseli in favor of annexing Canada to this Confederacy; —he has declared that ho is op posed to fraterning or to becoming, in any way, closely connected with the country on onr South and Southwestern borders; —ho lias furthermore declared that he is in tavor of subjecing the Pres idential veto to the will ot a bare majority in Con gress. His opinion upon this subject is, that if a bill Is passed by Congress and vetoed by the President, it should return to that body ana lay upon the ta ble ten days ; then if Congress should take it up and pass it, it should then become a law. Now the Northern portion of the confederacy is the strong est in Congress, and the annexation of Canada would increase that strength, especially if wc were not permitted to have counterbalancing territory admitted from Mexico and our other Southern neighbors. Therefore, if Gen. S’s. view of the veto should obtain general adoption (and I fear it would if it had the influence of the Presidential Chair to commend it ro the public consideration during a period of four years) and Seward and others of like kidney should grow in power as they have been growing for the last few years, is it not easy to perceive that it will be placed in the hands of a reckless majority to dissolve the Confederacy ? This result is plain; for the first insult perpetrated against the South will be the knell of the Union, Union men look to your footsteps. Mind, or yon j will do worse than Esau did who sold his birth right for a mess of potage —you will sell your conn- | try and your principles for the support of a man who is run by a national clique for availibility, to the exclusion of the brightest, purest, most pa triotic, well-tried, honest and devoted civil talent in the country. TnU annexation business, we all know is dangerous; and this growing disposition to make innovations on the Constitution of our forefathers. 1 am decidedly of opinion, is ruinous in its tendency. There is another grave and potent reason why I cannot voe for Gen. Scott:—he believes that our naturalization laws should be so amended as to lengthen the present term of five years tutelage berore citizenship, in accordance with the princi pies of the party calling themselves native Amer - caus, except in case of service under arms, in time of war. In that case he recommends that all per sons s<> serving during the period of one year shall be ouliued to the privilege of citizenship Now the disposition to elevate military chieftains to c>vil power is becoming tar too prevalent in the oo mtry ; and therefore, if this disposition should continue to increase as it has increased for the past few years, and General Scott’s views are adopted, (which may rea-onahly be feared in case he is elected) a system of alien soldiery would be en grafted upon our arms so that in a few years the regular line would be composed of foreigners, and it may be reared that some modern Caesar or sel fisnly, ambitious Napoleon will turn that sword a_*a ost American liberty which should be entirely sheathed in peace, ami only drawn in defence of o-ir country’s honor and the just rights of her hap py citizens. i’ncre are other grave reasons why I am entirely unwilling to vote for Gen. Scott, which ray space wil not permit me to ermtneiate. Where then must I, and those with whom I have the honor of co-operating in the present canvass, go? Who must we vote for? We cannot sustain Franklin Pierce, for he is obnoxious to many of the same objection to which General Scott is subject. He to >, is the creature of availibility and policy. We rejoice that the ballot-box is left us, and that we have the glorious privilege of endorsing the recent administration, with one unqualified admiration, by voting for its Secretary of State for President, and one of its ablest defenders for Vice President. This then, we are determined upon. We will stand by the men of our choice through the can vass, until we are convinced that we are laboring under a mistake and until it is proven to us that the Fillmore administration, of which Daniel Webster was the moving spirit, was a curse to America instead of being a rich blessing as we verily believe, under the blessingsof God, it was. And we call upon all men who admire the admin istration to shake off the weak wires with which political tricksters have sought to fetter the public mind, and to east an honest vote for the men of their choice. It is true that some men have re cently abandoned the flag which they themselves bad a hand in running up in Georg 5 h. And it may be vainly thought that Webster and Jenkins men are intimidated by their inglorious desertion. But let them go in their vacillating and erroneous, but doubtless honest retreat from a noble strife into which they so gallantly led us. The standard is ours, wfthave nailed it to the mast-head ; and we will defend it in ’52 if we fall by it. In ’56, mark the prediction, brilliant success will percii its staff, and the principles now sustained by the Independent party, which casts its vote for Web ster and Jenkins, will be in the ascendant securing the perpetuity of the country by the election of a proper civilian to the Presidential Chair. The supporters of General Scott may claim to be tiie Whigs ; but it is all gammon. The writer of this is AS GOOD A WHIG AS ANY OF ’EM. Slightly Mistaken.—A gentleman of Platts burgh, some years ago, when visiting in Canada, was introduced to an elderly English officer, and on the officers learning that he was from Plattsburgh, ho inquired if lie lived there at the time of the b t tlo, and if he knew the name of the officer who stormed the battery on the night of the 10th. The gentleman replied that he was in Plattsburgh at the time of the battle, and that the officer who led the storming party he had mentioned was named Mc- Glassen. “Will you be so good as to tell me what number of men he had with him?’’ “About sixty, 1 believe,” replied the gentleman. The officer looked astonished, and at last said— “ Well sir, I was an officer in command of that battery. 1 would give more to see Mr. McGlassen than any other man in the world. It was the most complete thing,” said he, “1 ever saw or heard tell of; for we were quietly at our position when the words—* charge on the front and rear,’ broke the death like stillness, as if a voice from the a r, screamed the words. My men ran like mad-dogs. I tried my utmost, in the confusion to bring them in order, but without success fur some time, but at last l discovered a body charging in fine stvle. I placed myself ac the head, and anxious to repulse the attack, urged them on with all the energy I possessed; when takings more anxious look at them, to sec what one stood firm, in the surprise, be Hold ! they were a lot of Yankees, who had charged up another way, and I was leading them. “Then,’ said be, “was my time to run. Where ray men had gone to, no one knew. But I rushed pail mell into the woods, over logs, mud and wa ter; then astraddle of some stumps ; (I cn bring ing up against a tree, over stones, and into holes— up and down, sometimes on one end and some times on the other. I arrived in camp, about the worst bruised, the worst scratched, the sorest and most frightful individual you ever saw. “If yon ever said he. shaking the gentleman from Plattsburg by the hands, “meet Mr. McGlassen, give him my compliments, and tell him that was the most gallant thing I ever saw achieved by any man.” Loss of the Tallahassee.— Intelligence lias reached this city of the loss of the Schooner Talla hassee, off St. George’s Island, in the gale on Saturday last. No lives lost. The Tallahassee was one of the regular packets between Si. Marks and New Orleans, and was on her return trip from the latter place when struck with the gale.— flpridmm The Barnwell S. C. Palmetto Sentinel, under etands that £. D. Felder was killed on Saturday morning last by the passenger’s train of cars pes». Imz asroes bis neck and severing has hoed from his I*£dy, near Lowry’* Turn Oaf, 9.0. Our Forelgu Relations— The next Administration, The chief topics upon which the leading orator of the Pierce party hirangue the people are those which relate to the foreign policy of the country, in reference to which they promise some stirring changes if the people w ill be kind enough to elect Mr. Pierce. They do not care to dwell much upon the tariff’ system. If they allude to that subject it is, generally, to boast of the ample reve me pro duced by the tariff of 1845, without me iticning the fact that this ample revenue is derived from an immense mass of imported foreign goods for which the country now stands indebted to a large amount on foreign account, and that our bonds and stocks, National, State, city and ot companies, are held to the extent of two hundred and sixty mill ions of dollars in European hands, as evidences and securities of that large foreign debt. In like manner the leading orators of the Pierce party are disposed to avoid much allusion to the policy of internal improvement, as it respects riv ers and harbors. In some sections of the country where that polioy is warmly sustained they may undertake to claim credit for the passage of the river and harbor bill at the last session of Con gress—omitting, however, to connect that circum stance with Mr. Pierce’s well known opinions and public course in relation to that subject, and omit ting, also, to state that the river and harbor bill of the late session was passed by the great body of the Whigs of Congress, aided oy the junction ot a fragment of the other party. But our foreign policy is the favorite, theme or such distinguished leaders of the Pierce party as Douglas, Soule, Weller and others. It matters not that the present Administration has managed the foreign relations of the Government with wisdom, promptitude, courage and complete success, up holding the national name, exalting the reputation of our flag throughout the world and extending protection to American interests on every sea.— All this will not do for those aspirants who are restlessly anxious tor the possession of the powei and the emoluments of Government. The coun try in general, it is very certain, are quite satis fled with the manner in which Mr, Fillmore lias managed onr foreign affairs, and we believe that most of those whose interests and business rela tions aie connected with commerce, would find much gratification if they could be assured that the same principles which have marked the course of his foreign policy will continue to be preserved. Yet a change in this regard is demanded by such leading orators of the Pierce party as Senator Doug las and Soule. An aggressive policy, a policy of aggrandizement, a policy of war, is called for ; and the people are told that it Mr. Pierce is placed in the Presidency such a policy will be introduced. They do not venture to declare that any just cause of war exists between the United States and Spain, \ct Mr. Douglas announces that Cuba is to be torn from th t power and made a part of the territory of this Republic. He does not say that wo have anv just cause of war with Mexico; yet he pro claims a crusade against that feeble nation for the avowed purpose of destroying its political exist ence ana of absorbing all its territory down to the Isthmus. Such a policy of rapacity is denominated demo- | erotic f and if those who stimulate the passions of the policy by holding out these conquests as the prizes of cupidity or of adventure, can accomplish the puapose they have in view—the attainment of power—what care they for the calamities which may fall upon the interests of the country, or for the discredit that may attach to her name ? We have taken into view here this question of further conquest and war without looking beyond the parlies immediately concerned. Spain is weak; Mexico is weaker still. Saying nothing about the magnanimity ot the thing, we might go to war with one or both of those nations upon the most frivolous pretexts or without any pretext at all, and take the attitude of a bold i ully with little other risk than some depredations upon our com merce. We might do this, if we were willing to stand before the world in tne aspect of an unprin cipled people, regarding no rights held by the ' weak and unprotected, and ready to violate the ! laws of nations without scruple whenever we could | do it witn impunity and hope to gain plunder and spoil by the courage, it is probable, however, that some of the Eu ropean Rowers would think themselves bound to take some notice ot such a system of spoliation and agraudizement as the policy of the Fierce party promises to inaugurate. England might imagine that she saw in the progressive and ag gressive movements towards the South against Cuba and Mexico a warning signal of Northern enroachmeuts upon Canada and her entire North American territory . She would be blind if she did not see it. The new Emperor of France, anx ious to stamp the opening of his imperial career with st mAhing brilliant and striking, might be well di.-p >sed lo unite with England for the pro tection of Spain ana Mexico, lie might entertain the belief that his turone would be the more firmly estab.i-hed both at home and in the sympathies of monarchical Europe by a war of defiance and ol resistance against this country which in addition to the crime ot disregarding the laws of nations was guilty also of the political offence of cherish ing republican principle and institutions. in ilie event of Mr. Fierce’s election, the ap pointment of Mr. Douglass to tbe Slate Department is spoken of as a thing understood. The country may know, then, in advance What lo expect in tin matter of our foreign relations if the control of onr foreign policy comes into the hands of tha gentleman. It is an issue made up and avowed; it is openly proclaimed and made the subject ot popular harangues. Let the considerate of all parties take good heed when they come to east their ballots lor the Presidency.— BaU. American. Tile Letter f.uiu Home. Standing in the Fost Office avenue a few days since, 1 saw a young min perusing with a smiling face a letter he had just taken from tiic office. As I glanced at the page, the worda ‘'Dear Brother,” met my eye. Here then was a letter from a “Sis ter !” That smiling lace was indicative of a smi ling heart. “Home, sweet home’’ with all its hal lowed associations, were clustering around the heart, and crowding the memory, and venting I themselves through the sparslmg eye, and aniinu i ted countenance ot that young stranger. He was not the only on that derived pleasure from that letter. Although 1 knew not a syllable it contain ed further than that of “Dear Brother,” yet 1 felt that a kind and gemle influence was diffusing it itself from a sacred page that would tendto warm in- I to new life and action, the love of home and home • joys. Here, thought lis one of the strong bulwarks i that surround and protect the multitude of young men that throng our city, from the snares and temp ■ tatious that everywhere beset them. On the wings i of every mail is borne from every direction the i gentle aamonition and kind greetings ot a virtu f ous sisterhood, backed by the strong warning voice and council of parental love. i I would that these messages of love were multi t plied an hundred fold ; and they would be so mul • tiplied, if all were aware ot the restraining influ ence they have on the minds and morals of young , men. There are hundreds of this class who leave their pleasant homes in the country, where they I have enjoyed from childhood the society of virtu -1 ous females—mothers, aisters, friends—who among , strangers scarcely know the luxury of a smile ol i I recognition from a female. None but those who 5 | have experienced this desolation of heart, and longing tor the hearty greeting of the home circle, r can fully realize the value of the friends they leave ‘ behind. Next to the real enjoyment of home it self, is that of a kind, familiar and constant corres > ; pondence, between its several members. This r : should never be neglected, or its consequence i lightly considered. Let sisters especially, who , have brothers floating on the wide sea of terapta i tion, bear this in mind, that their restraining in -1 fiueuce, when properly directed, is almost botmd i less. How many young men who have wandered 1 from their homes and become rough and uncouth > in their manners for the want ot the refinements o. home, which arc denied them among strangers will ’ speak whh honest pride of their pretty sisters at home. Rough as they are, they would not disgrace ' their sisters by a dishonorable act. : Sisters, cherish your brothers then, as you would your own virtues. Throw around them tin gentle restraining influence of sister affection, and especially when absent from you, cheer them often with tokens of remembrance from your pen, and • by so doing the smiling countenance of your hap pv brother may silently diffuse a ray of sunshine to the heartof an unknown. —Bangor Courier. ' A Novel Mistake.—Quite an amusing scene took place in Hanover-st., last evening, a little be fore dark, which was richly enjoyed by the few who were so fortunate as to witness it. It seem that a young man, clerk in an embroidery store on that street, saw his father riding past in a carriage, and wishing to see him very much rushed out it pursuit of the vehicle. In the course of his run lie accidentally struck with his baud the skirt of a gentleman’s coat. The gentleman thought that his pocket had been picked, and w ithout stopping to ascertain that fact ho immediately ran after tlu supposed thief at a rapid rate. The race was lon*' and nobiy contested, but the clerk reached his fa thcr’s vehicle—got in with him—and drove off . not conscious ofthefiujt that he had been pursued as a supposed pickpocket. The gentleman, baffled in his attempt to catch h s prisoner, was about to depart from the spot, when he happened to put his hand in his coat pocket, where no found his money all safe. He gave one long acclamation on making this discovery, and immediately left amid the boisterous laughs of the bystanders, who | IMcl Boen fbe fun. —Boston Chronicle. A New Ettpiic. —A Fharmacien, at Rome, Sig. , ~a 6 “®r ® » “ as recently succeeded in discovering a ; 'S’?, possessing so extraordinary a power of coag mating blood, that if to a large basm containing this fluid, one drop of the styptic be added, com plete solidification ensues, BO that the basin mat ”u in /n rt • Wlth ? ut causing any blood to be lost. Ihe following is : Take eight ounces of gum benzoin, one pound of alum, and ten pints of w'ater. Bo 1 all together, for the space of eight hours, in an earthenware glazed vessel, frequenth 1 stirring the mess, and adding water sufficient to make up the original quantity of that lost by ebul lition, taking care, however, to add the water so gradually that boiling may not be suspended. The liquid portion of the compound is now to be Btrain •d off, *od pmerved in well corded bottle*. Cjjrmuck & Sentinel AUGUSTA, GEOEQIA. THURSDAY MORNING OCT’B *l^lßß*. IKDEPENDEHT TICKET FOB PRESIDENT, DANIEL WEBSTER, OF MASSACHUSETTS. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, CHARLES J. JENKINS, OF GEORGIA. ELECTORS: FOB THE STATE AT LARGE, H H. GUMMING, of Richmond. EDWARD Y. HILL, of Troup. Ist. Dist.— HAMILTON W. SHARPE, of Thomas. « WM. M. BROWN, of Mnnon. •3d' “ WASHINGTON POE, of Bibb. 4th “ WM. B. FANNIN, of Troup. sth' “ NOAH STRONG, of Forsyth, rtth “ YOUNG L. G. HARRIS, ot Clark. 7th* « JOHN J. FLOYD, of Newton. Bth! « PHILIP S. LEMLE. of Jefferson. _ The Houghton Institute. It affords us sincere pleasure to call the atten tion of the public, especially of the two lower wards, to the advertisement, announcing the opening of the “Houghton Institute.” We sincerely congratulate the citizens of those wards, that their children are so soon about to reap the benefits of the noble charity of John W. Hough ton, a munificence that should, and will hand Ids name down to the latest posterity, as one of the benefactors of his race. We rejoice that it has so soon be made available, and we feel assured that thousands, yet unborn, will learn to revere and bless the name of John W r . Houghton. Pennsylvania and Ohio. The recent elections in these two States, have been looked to with considerable anxiety by all those who feel an interest in the Presidential con test, as an index to the November election. The Whigs no where expected to carry either State in the election just closed, but they now affect to feel great confidence, that both States will go for Scott —an opinion, which we regard as very well found ed. Greeley, the Editor of the New-York Tribune, t a very sagacious, civil calculator, iu election mat- I ters, has been travelling through both States, and the following is the result of his convictions and ob ! servations: “Havingspent the eight days preceding last j Sunday iu Ohio, and since passed through Penn i svlvauia, we have had opportunities to know some i thing of the spirit in wnich their State elections j have been prepared tor and contested, and of the portents of those elections. «• Pennsylvania is naturally one of the best Scott States in the Union —one of the easiest to carry for the Hero of Chippewa by a large majority. It is deeply interested iu the production ol iron, which has been greatly depressed under the tariff of 1846, and though a little better now, is certain to be de pressed again so soon as the iron masters of Great Britain shall be impelled to reduce their prices.— Gen. Scott is personally and widely beloved in Pennsylvania, while Gen. Pierce has not a particle of strength there, but what was given him by his nomination at Baltimore. A full vote and a fair, animated contest insures the State to Scott by a large majority. “ Resting in the consciousness of this strength, his friends have as yet done very little in the way of the organization and concentration of their forces. Tney have gone into the State election split up into half a dozen local factious. Temperance and rum, slavery and anti-slavery, with a dozen other side issues, have served to distract them. They went into this week's contest as thoroughly disorganized as a party could be. Thus, in Pittsburgh, where we spent Sunday and Monday, every body was anxious as to whether l Joe Barker’ shoulder sl.ould not be chosen Sheriff , while nobody seem ed to know or much care as to what would be the resuh as to State officers. Tempcranc- was certain there to injure the Whig Legislative ticket, which was pledged to the Maine law, while the fact that our ticket in Lancaster was against the Maine law', caused it to be cut there badly.— These two counties (Alleghany and Lancaster) will give at least three thousand more majority for Scott than they have given for the Whig tick et. And so it will be throughout the State. “ We passed nearly through the State on the day of election, and everywheie heard the same story—the State functionaries working for dear life on the lines of State canals and railroads, but the Whigs treating the contest as of no national im portance. For instance, in one township a canvass of the voters has been made, and there are just »i.xty-<-ne Pierce men within its borders; and these cast fifty nine votes on Tuesday; while that same township has seventy-five Scott voters who did not go tear the polls. It was much like this through out. » * * There are twenty-five thousand Whig votes in Pennsylvania which have not been poled at this election. “We might have carried Philadelphia county triumphantly, and perhaps saved the State ticket, t»y con-enting to a coalition with the Native Ame rican party. By electing L. C. Levin to Congress, and one or two of their county ticket, we might have taken the rest of the county ticket, saved one or two members of Congress, and sent our State candidates out of Philadelphia several thousands ahead. But if the Whigs had done so, they would have been accused of favoring Nativeistn, and Gen. Scott would have been Field to answer for it. It was better to lose ground now than to risk the alienation of the adopted citizens of the Presiden tial contest. »»»»*« “ Our friends in Ohio, having no hope of the success of their two candidates for offices of , no political importance, made no serious or con ! certed effort in their behalf. * * * “ We never supposed Gen. Scott could be elected without effort, in view of the hnngrynessand des peration of the politicians working against him; we have believed, as we now believe, he will be elected by means of effort, and because his friends will make the needful exertions to se ure his tri r umph.” The Cincinnati Gazette, a journal not accustom ed to bluster about elections, or to bray about the prospects of its party, seems to have acquired great i confidence since the election, and remarks: 1 We think it now settled—a fixed fact—that the 1 twenty-three votes of Ohio wdll be given to Gen. i Scott. His strength is greater in the State—much greater—than that of our State ticket at the late elections. All who voted the Whig ticket at our general election will vote for 6cc*(t electors, and many that voted against us at the recent election will vote with us fur Scott and Graham. Our friends > in Ohio know, and our friends elsewhere may rest assured that Ohio is for Scott and Graham, for the Union, f>r internal improvements, for protection to our own labor, for peace, and the prosperity and I happiness of the people. I Murderous Attempt. —We learn that Dr. Wiohtman, of Lincoln county, while riding along a road in that county, on Monday last, was fired at from behind, by some fiend, and severely wound ed in the back and shoulder. The assassin disap peared so quickly in the thicket, that the Doctor did not even see him. Physicians Visiting List for 1853. This is the title of a neat little book, so arrang ed that a physician need not forget any of his pa ■ients, no matter how numerous they may be, pro vided he follows the directions. It also contains a table of proportionate doses of medicine for all igts and the antidotes for various poisons, and a list of the officers of the American Medical Aesoci ition and the amendments proposed to the As sociation, together with other useful matter— This is a book that every practical physician should have in his pocket. It can be found at the Book Store of J. A. Carrie & Co., to whose polite ness we are indebted for a copy. Pulaski Court. —Judge Hansoll, on account of the unusual amount of sickness prevailing in Pulaski, has postponed Court to the 20th of De cember. Frank Tolland, charged with being an accora plicc of the murder of his father, in Lowndes coun ty, Miss., iu April, 1845, was acquitted at Aber deen on the 25th ult., whither his trial had been moved. He had been convicted once, but had ta ken the case before the Supreme Court, and a new trial was granted. He had been confined in prison upwards of seven years, he not being able to give the necessary bail to release him from prison. Stoves in Turkey.—A few years ago a Move was unknown in Turkey. Now they are found iu a great majority of the cases in Constantinople and in the dwelling houses of the rich. They ere mostly either American stoves, er made after * 4-merieeu models. 4 Patriarch —Introduction of the Cotton Gin. The following highly interesting communication from the Hon. Garnett Andrews, te the Southern CuUitator, presents some facts connected with the early history oftbe cotton gin in Georgia, that can not fail to be interesting: Meesre Editors —Cotton having become of such vast importance, not only to the producers, but to the world, everything relating to its history is of interest. Therefore, lam induced to give a little information I lately obtained of the great staple. I rode, a few days since, six miles be.ow this place, to see my old friend Thus. Talbot, and hi.- kitchen and barn. Mr. Talbot is eighty-three vears old, in full possession of his faculties and is living where he settled six'y-two years ago. Whit ney, the inventor of the cotton gin, settled a plan tation adjoining him, on which he placed one oi Ins gins, the first that was used in Wilkes county ; perhaps the first in the State. lie and his partner, Durkee, erected a gin house and a largo cotton house—the latter to hold the cotton they expected to receive from customers to gin. The gin house was grated, so that visitors might look through and see the cotton flying from, without seeing the gin He suffered women to go in the gin house to'"set the machinery, not apprehending that they couh betray his secret to builders. Lyon, who lived some eight or ten miles above this place, by dress ing himselt in women’s clothes, procured admit tance,, and came out and made his improvement the saw gin. Mr. Talbot says that Billy McFer ran, a little Irish blacksmith, who died a few years ago in this county, made the saws, the first tha 1 ever were made. Durkee, Whitney’s partner, be ing dissipated and inattentive to business, ho sold out his place, and the gin and cotton house coming into the possession of Mr. Talbot, he moved then, to this place. The former is now his kitchen, and still has its long gratedwindows, as in the time ot M hitney. The cotton house makes a large and commodious barn. Mr. Talbot says that Allison, or Ellison, who had been connected with Whitne> in business, told him that the latter got his first idea of the invention from a gin used to prepare rags for making paper, and which he saw on a wrecked vessel. On the place sold by Whitney, was erected, in 1811, a cotton factory, and, I presume, the first in the State. The prime mover in the enterprise was a Mr. Bolton, of Savannah, a merchant, who spent his summers, then, in Washington. Mr. Talbot had four shares. The factory had one hundred and sixty spindles, cost #I7OO, and made 50 yard;- of cloth a day, which sold from fifty cents to one dollar per yard. The weaving was done by hand > loom weavers, who were obtained from Long<’anc, in South Carolina. The factory proved an unpro fitable affair. In this connection, in maybe interesting to say. that during the war of 1812, cotton was hauled from this country to Baltimore and Philadelphia, and the wagons loaded back again with goods. Wagoners are now living in the country who used to drive the teams engaged in this service. I cannot close this communication without a ! word about my aged and highly respectable friend, | in his character of planter. Some of the land now ; in cultivation by Mr. Talbot, was old when three fourthsof Georgia was in possession of the Indians. Originally of a strong soil, as Wilkes county gene- j rally was, Mr. Talbot, by paying some attention to | improvement, has not only preserved but much ! improved some of his old lands. But that to which I I wish particularly to direct attention, is his regret that he had not commenced hill-side ditching long ago, before the creeks and branches had carried off the best of his soil. Tho walnut, locust and other shade trees in his yard, planted with his own hands, have the appearance of aged trees. His servants, some as old, or older than himself, with their generations of children, grand-children, and I do not know how far to go iu the great-grand- J children, give to the white-headed citizen the ap- J pearance of a patriarch at the head of his tribe. '■ He has had born on his place one bunded and nine | children, but has kept no record of deaths. Garnett Andrews. Washington, Wilke's Co., Ga , August, 1852. A Premium Won.—A democratic editor not long j since, it is said, offered a premium to the man that i would tell the greatest fih on General Pierce. The Hannibal (Mo.) Messenger claims that Col. Rich mond of that place has won the prize. In a Pierce and King speech the other day* the Colonel stated that at one time “the officers in the array, which invaded and conquered Mexico under the command of Scott, held a meeting to take into consideration the propriety* of petitioning for the removal of Scott and the appointment of Pierce in his place, and that Gen. Pierce was by far the most popular of the two among the officers of the army 1” Health of Charleston. Office of Board of Health, ) Tuesday, 9, P. M. i The Board of Health report 11 deaths from Yel low Fever for the past 24 hours. J. L. Dawson, M. D. An Immense Work.— We see by the Cincinnati papers that their great tunnel is advertised for letting. The hills on the north side of the city rise about two hundred feet above the upper plain of the town, obstructing, except in one direction, the free access of railways to the upper part of the town. A company has been formed to tunnel the hill tor the benefit of tho railways approaching from the Ohio side, and doubtless will be immensely useful. This tunnel will be 6,000 feet in length, and will have 2,000 feet of side cuttings. It is in j tended to lay it with four tracks, and thus provide free and safe entrance into the city for six or eight different railways, which will each contribute to 1 its receipts, and thus make it very profitable stock. i * . We clip from the Atlanta Intelligencer, of the i 14th inst., the following strange but true account of a curiosity which visited that place a few days 1 ; ago: What Next?—The days of wonders have not yet passed. On Monday morning lust, a singular ( and mysterious incident turned up in the Council p Chamber. For several days a barrel containing something wrapped in coarse sack-cloth had been observed standing in the corner of the room—no j one knowing from whence it came or how it got . I there. On Monday morning, however, an ex l animation was mail© and its contents brought to | j light. Within the cloth was a large covered tin vessel, carefully wrapped at the top with a hand ! j kerchief, and containing the body of a child with ; two well formed heads, two three legs, j all joined to one body-. The heart and lungs had ; been cut out. The child if alive and entire, would i | weigh about sixteen or seventeen pounds. Wc stepped into the Council Chamber shortly after the discovery was made, and a more wonderful speci- I men of the “ genus homo” we have never beheld. 1 ! Where this singular monstrosity came from re mains a mystery. Popular Vole Tor President Id 1848. The nominations of both the great political par ties of the country for the Presidency and Vioe- Presidencv now being made, the data on which to base calculations as to their success will be of par ticular interest. We therefore hero annex the popular vote at the last Presidential election: SEW-ENGLAND STATES. States. Tayler. Cass. Van Buren. I Maine 35,273 40,195 12,157 New-Hamp?hire 14,781 27,763 7,560 Vermont 98,122 10,948 18,857 Massachusetts 61,072 85,284 88 183 Rhode Island 6,689 8,600 ’7<»s Connecticut 80,314 27,046 5,005 MIDDLE STATUS. New-York 218,551 114,592 120 519 New-Jersey 4 ',009 86,880 849 Pennsylvania 186,113 172,661 11 268 Delaware 6,440 6,910 ’ 80 SOUTHERN STATES. Maryland 37,892 84,523 125 Vi’-ginia 45,124 46,786 9 North Carolina 48,510 34,869 85 South Carolina* _ V, or ' (la 4,539 8,239 _ Alabama 80,482 81 363 Mississippi 25,82 1 26’,555 Louisiana i 5,278 15.850 T«as 8 770 8,765 Arkansas 7,683 9,800 WESTERN STATES!. Tennessee 64,705 58,419 Kentucky 67,141 49 729 ( .> hi °: 188,856 1.54,783 85,494 Michigan 28,940 3 ,687 lo 889 J 52* 0 * 69.907 74,745 8 100 Illinois 58,216 56,629 15*04 Missouri 82,671 40 077 1 i?, wa - •: 10,557 12,151 ! 126 Wisconsin 13,747 15,001 10,413 „ , Totsl 1,862.024 1,222,419 291 678 Taylor over Cass iSo’e 5 Cass and Van Buren over Taylor. .162 078 ♦Presidential Electors chosen by Legislature. Pirates in the Caina Seas.—Extract from a lot- UT from Capt. Palmer, of the New York clipper ship Celestial, from Shanghai, at Livernool „n i n , date of first of October, to his owners in this Sty: .I 1 ,T ltte fl to f mention in my last that I was at tacked by a fleet of nine piratical Junks on the const tl a . ain f n- ? was between the land and the junks, wind light, and the pirates within a quarter of a mile of me, when they all bore down upon the ship, boating their gongs and firing with double-shotted guns. The guns, however, were too heavily jotted and fe fl Bh^rt of U 9> * The breeze providentially freshened, and I soon got , c.ear ofthem; bat tor this, nothing could have M.ved ns, for some of the junks had mounted six- I " een atJ u had from forty to fifty men on board.” This extract shows the necessity of a competent naval force being kept up in that region, for the protection ©four rapidly increasing commerce, and commend* itaelf strongly to the attention of ear, 1 finm-. ( NmL The New York Express supplies the following items; — Important movements are going on at the Brook lyn navy yard, having a direct bearing, as is gene rally supposed, upon the present peculiar aspect of our relations with Cuba and Spain. Our reporter gives a hasty summary of them as follows: I The frigate Powhatan will certainly sail this Fri day afternoon, pursuant to orders from thr Navy Department to have her “fitted out with immedi ite desdatch.” Speculation is rife as to her destin ation, but the conclusion at which the “quid \ uuces” generally arrive is that she is going to Ha vana. But there is a rumor that she is intended to < tid the U.S. Marshal in a certain extensive Cuban •er movement, of which Government, but not the .üblic has recently got wind, off South. So goes he story. 0 1 Orders he ve just been received, to have the sloop of war Marion got ready for sea with all possible lespatch. The phrase “all possible despatch” ex cites the public mind a little, and “Cuba,” “Cu ba,” again is talked of as her destination. To Ha vana she probably will go—but it Is presumed only -o join the Home Squadron, which wo always have in those seas. The razee frigate Macedonian (a name and a ship both historically famous,) it is now settled, will be me of the squadron for the Japan Expedition, tin ier Commodore Perry. She will be commanded by Capt. Mayo. The line of battle ship Vermont, nd tho sloop of war Falmouth, are also to join the Expedition, which will therefore consist of 919 guns, as follows: Vermont, carrying 100 guns; Susquehanna, (steamer) 9 guns; Mississippi, (do.) 10 guns; Princeton, (do.) 10 guns ; Macedonian, (razee) Sn runs; Plymouth, 20 guns; Falmouth, 20 guns; Saratoga, 20 guns. The new commander of the Navy Yard, Captain Charles Board man, entered upon his official duties m Thursday, for the first time. For the Survey of the China Seas, authorized by Congress, we are informed the sloop of war Vm •enhes and brig Porpoise are rapidly getting ready. They will be under the command of Com. Cadwa'l ■ader Ringgold. They have both been fitted with light spar decks, and amply provided with whale boats, while their batteries have been reduced to ! about one-half their ordinary number of guns. Incur ramble about the yard, our eye met the razee Independence on the Dry Dock, undergoing thorough repairs. The frigate Constitution, and store ships Fredo nia and Southampton, have been thoroughly re paired and are now ready for sea service. Rcvenvue cutter Taney, which met with so sad a \ disaster in the bay, some weeks since, is a'.ac on j the dock tor repairs. Brig Washington, lately em- j ployed on the Coast Survey, but now in the Ma- 1 rine service, as revenue cutter left the Yard a day I or two ago, for the Atlantic Dock, where she is now j awaiting her consort, the Taney. There are now’ employed at the Navy Yard some I 105 b mechanics and laborers, and the weekly di»- | Ibursements are said to be larger than they* have been for years before. Com. James T. Gerry has been ordered to the command of the TJ. S. ship Albany, now preparing for sea at the Charlestown Navy Yard. Dr. B. Ticknor has been appointed Surgeon at the rendezvous station :n Boston, in place of Dr. Maulsby the late incumbent. The Washington Republic, of Saturday, has the following annunciation: W T e understand that the steam frigate Powhatan, bearing the broad pennant of Commodore Newton, of the Home Squadron, has orders to proceed forth with from New York to Havana, taking Judge Conklin, the recently appointed Minister to tue Republic of Mexico, to that port, to enable him to meet the British steam packet of the 24th inst., in which the Judge desires to take passage to Vera Cruz. The United States sloop of war Cyane, which left the port of New York a few.- days ago, has or ders to report at Pensacola, where she will remain tor the present. The United Stales and Cuba. The New York Express publishes the following telegraphic despatch from Washington, which we give for what it is worth : . The Government is informed that there are en rolled iu New York 2,000 men and boys for a new foray upon Cuba, whose haunts are well known and places of rendezvous, and ot whose movements • and intentions the Goveanment is well informed. Dispatches have gone on frem this city to the of ficers of the Government in New York, for a com plete and effectual execution of the neutrality laws, ’ and for obvdieuce to all our treaty obligations, and j to the law of nations. The collector of the port and the United States District Attorney must have such despathes by mail to-morrow morning. The movements of our United States ship-01-war in New York have reference to the execution of our own law, as well as the enforcement of treaties with Cuba. The President will do his duty, and Ins whole duty,inflexibly—just as he did before— without fear "or favor. The United States army and navy forces in New York will probably be put under the order of the U. S. District Attorney, if they are deemed necessary for the enforcement of our laws, Yours, M. Postscript. —Tho owners of the Crescent City, it is certain, will not remove Purser Smith, amt the Government will not permit the mails to be inter fered with. The owners have made representations to the Government, showing that this is not the first time the Cuban authorities have interfered with them wrongfully. The Lobos quarrel is un | changed. The Peruvian Minister has made no i concessions. Curious Phenomenon. —The wreck oftheAtlau- I tic on Lake Erie has not yet been ra sed. The Os wego Journal says that Mr. Green is now conslruct i ing, in Buffalo, a new sub-marine armor, which | will enable him, if necessary, to remain under wa ; ter two hours, at the depth of the wreck, feet, which will avoid the repetition of frequent ascents. The same paper adds the following inte resting facts; Mons. Maillefert has made some curious ex periments to ascertain the pressure of the water at the depth of 160 feet. An empty junk bottle, corked and sealed air tight, sunk beneath the surface at the above depth lor seven minutes, takes in, by some phenomenon unexplained a large quantity of water. A piece of iron attached to a scale by a niece of wire, weighing 18 lbs., gunk at the same depth, loses 8 lbs. and 1 oz. One may judge from this the pressure sustained by a human oeing at the same depth. Mr. G. is sanguine that he can attach fastenings to the wreck by which it can be raised. The diving of feet below the surface is the greatest performance on record by 86 j feet. A New Propeller. —Tho last files of the Syd ’ ney Morning Herald contain account of a new pro peller invented by Sir Thomas Mitchell, the Sur veyor General of New South Wales, a trial of which iu a small steamer at that port had excited : great interest. It is called tho Boraerang propeller I and is constructed on tke principle of the weapon | of that name used by the natives to kill game.— ; Although tho experiment was only on a small and imperfect scale, a speed of 12 knots an hour against a head wind is stated to have been obtained. The instrument is described to combine great strength and simplicity, while it has only the advantage that, its motion iu the water causes but a compara tively slight agitation, so that it is capable of being adopted to canal boats to the other vessels. At the conclusion of the trial Sir Thomas Mitchell ex pressed his conviction “that the weapon of the earliest inhabitants of Australia has now led to the determination, mathematically of the true form, by which alone on the screw principle, high speed on water can be obtained.” A private letter says : “Sir Thomas Mitchell has been testing his new in vention—the Bomerang propeller for steamers in lieu of tho screw. He has tried it on a steamer here, and it has answered very well. Sir Thomas says he will be able to got 20 knots an hour out of it.' It will be the very thing for ocean steam ships. Ho has taken out a patent, and wishes to go home to bring it out.” Survey of our Rivers. —Capt. J. M. Scarritt., U. S. A., has been ordered by Gen. Totten to make a survey of the Chattahoochee and Flint Rivers, for the purpose of reporting in time to secure an ap propriation by the next Congress, for the naviga tion of these rivers. We have been informed that the removal of a few of the worst snugs would greatly lessen the danger of navigating the Chattahoochee, and that tho cost of removing them by snag-boats, such as are used on tho western rivers, would be very in considerable compared with the benefit to he de rived from such an application of a small portion of the money paid into the National Treasury bv this section of the Union. M ill Pierce veto a'l such bills or will ho act with the Democratic majority in Congress? —Columbus Enquirer. Albany, Oct. 16. — General Scott arrived at Al bany at 20 minutes past 5 o’clock, on Saturday evening. A Committee was in railing from Troy to invito him to visit that city. General Scott ex plained to the Committee that he did not deem himself at^ liberty to deviate from his direct route, and therefore declined the invitation. He was welcomed to Albany by the Hon. John C. Spencer in a brief but beautiful speech. Gen. Scott s reply was most enthusiastically received. He was escorted to his hotel by an immense .as semblage, and will leave on Monday morning for his residence near West Point. Utica, N. Y., Oct. 16. — General Scott arrived here at 10 o’clock this morning in charge of the Committee who had left in the morning to meet “'. rr ?* At a.l joints of the route he was welcomed with demonstrations of enthusiasm and respect. lie was received here by an immense concourse and a civic anci military procession formed to escort him to his quarters. On arriving at the hotel he was addressed by J. A. Spencer, Esq., to which ne briefly responded, returning thanks for the nonor conferred on him, retired, and received the calls ot a large number of citizens. He afterwards visited his friend O. B. Matterson, Esq., and on j j the cars for his departure made a short, address to the assembled concourse. Bp jßognrtif Cftfflrap^. Gen. Scott lu PUiadelpbls. October 20. —Gen.Scott arrived in Philadelphia to-day and was reeceived with great demonstra tions of enthusiasm. He goes to the State hair at Lancaster to-morrow. Sailing of the Aaia. Naur York, Got. 20.—The steamer Asia sailed to-day ior Europe, with 50 passengers and $400,- 000 in specie. Pennsylvania Election. The Democratic majority in Pennsylvania ia about 18,000. The vote it» 60,000 short. New York Market. Wednesday, Oct. I. —Cotton.— Sales to-day of 1,800 bales—market unchanged. Charleston Market. Wednesday, Oct. 20.— Cotton. —The sales to-day reached 750 bales, at B>£ to 10>tf cents. Prices un changed. From the Charleston Courier —By Telegraph. . Baltimore, Oct. 12. —The U. S. Mail steam ship Crescent Citv, Capt. Porter, has arrived at New York from Havana. She was allowed to enter the port, but not to communicate with the shore. The acting U. 8. Consul came alongside the Crescent City, and Capt. Porter handed him a protest against the conduct of the Cuban authorities, and put to sea. As he passed Moro Castle he hoisted the stars and stripes, and fired a gnn. Baltimore, Oct. 19. —Advices from Boston state that Mr. Webster’s health is improving, and that the report that he had withdrawn his name as a Presidential candidate, has been contradicted. Sixty-five counties of Ohio have been heard from, and the returns show that the Whigs have sained so lar the State Senate. The Democratic majority in the State will hardly exceed st>oo. Baltimore, Oct. 19.—A great fire occurred at Ogdensburg, New York, to-day, which destroyed half the business portion ol the town, causing a heavy loss of properly. Baltimore, Oot. 18.—The steamship Isabel, Capt. William Rollins, will leave Baltimore on Tuesday fur Charleston, so as to arrive there in time to sail from thence, as adveriisod, for Havana via Key West, on Friday, the 22d inst. Baltimore, Oct. 19.—1500 bales of Cotton were sold in New York to day, Tuesday at cents for M iddling Uplands and 10>i for Middling Or leans. The market was easy. Fro™, the Baltimore American. —By Telegraph. Farther by the Arctic. Liverpool, Oct. Bth.—Cotton, during Saturday and Monday, was firm, with an upward tendency ; but the Europe's advices depressed the market.— Sales of the three days 88,000 bales, of which spec ulators took 950 C and exporters 2500 bales. The sales comprise 28,000 bales American, and 6,250 Egyptian, Brazil and Surat. The imports of the last three days were 11,500 bales. The quotations are : Fair Orleans, ; Middling 5%; Fair Mobile Middling 5%d. Fair Upland fid; Middling 5%d. The sales to-day will reach 6,000 bales at steady rates. Corn and Flour are in good request at firm rates. Sales of Canal Flour at 20s, 6d; Philadelphia 21s. 3d; Ohio 21s. 6d. Sales of yellow corn in retail lots at 81s. 6d. Ccnsols closed 99% a 100. Commercial advices from India are favorable, llayke, Oot. 2d.—Cotton is firm—sales to-day of 1000 bales at steady rates, England. —The ship Mobile, of Bath, Captain Tarbox, which left Liverpool on the 29th for N. Orleans, with 63 passengers and a crew of 23, was totally lost on the night of the 80th, on Arklow Bank, on the Irish Coast, by the careless steering of the 2d mate. All hands, except 9 perished, and the ship went to pieces. Kossuth wss living privately at Brcmpton Lon don. Lemmy, his ex-Secretary had been expelled from Malta. The brig Darling, of New York, forLondonhad been abandoned at sea. The crow were saved. Mr. Bowers, the correspondent of the London > Daily News, had killed Mr. Morton, the Paris cor respondent of the Morning Advertiser, for impro per intimacy with his wife. It was rumored that Lord Fitz Roy Somerset, had been appointed Governor of India. } The Potato crop in Ireland was an average one. ; Walter, Logan Co., a London house engaged j in the South American trade, had suspended. , France.—Count Cara Equia had arrived in Paris t on a secret mission. r Great activity prevailed in the dock yards at , Brest. 1 it was rumored that the French Ministry had split upon the question of immediately proclaim ing the Empire. The Portress at Turin had blown up, severely ■ damaging the city. • Austria and the Continent. —There had been a panic on the Vienna Exchange, in consequence of the vast expenditure for the army. The Austrian camp near Pesth had gone into winter quarters. The I;. S. sloop St. Louia had arrived at Gibral tar, in 22 days from Norfolk. India.—Disturbances were apprehended on the Western frontiers of Hindoostan. Severe shocks of earthquake had been expe rienced in Bengal. Stria and Egypt.—The Druses ia Syrin were arming and an insurrection in Palestine was feared. The export of corn had been prohibited in Egypt, ; fears being felt of a scarcity. Zucchi, the Egyptian chemist, had discovered a | process for making oil from cotton seed. New York, Oct. 17.—Robert J. Walker, and ’ brother, hearer es despatches, are among the pas sengers in the Arctic. Capt. Williams of the ship American Congress, at London, reports that on the Ist of September, he rescued Capt. Honniwell and crew, of the bark Baltic, of Philadelphia, from Leghorn, with a car go of marble, and says that the Baltic was in a sinking condition. Liverpool, Oct. 6.—Messrs. Richardson <fe Co’s. Circular quotes the sales of cotton since the sailing of the America at 42,000 bales, including 6,000 bales to-day. The Honse es Baring & Bro. had presented $50,- . 000 to the Boston City Library, t The British steamer Darient had arrived from St. Thomas for repairs. She reports that on Sept. SOth, Porto Rico and the adjacent Islands were ’ visited with a terrible hurricane, by which several vessels were lost and many damaged. She left the brig Boyce and sohr. Ridgeway, bound for Balti more. [The bark Baltic, mentioned above as lost, be longed to Bishop, Simons & Co., of Philadelphia and was insured there for $12,000. The cargo was insured in London.] Louisville, Oct. 16.—A party arrived yesterday at Independence, Mo., from the plains—pan ar riving from Salt Lake and part from California. They bring no news of special interest. Business was improving and a brisk trade springing up. All was quiet at Fort Laramie. Major Fnzpairick was daily expected there, and large bands of Indians were arriving at the fort, awaiting the distribution of annuities from the Government. S Captain Thomas and the Peublo Indians are at Indianpolis, and Capt. Westport was to leave for Santa Fe on the 10th or 12th. New Yore, Oct. 17.—The Black Warrior arrived this morning from Mobile and Havana, with dates from the latter port to the 12th. The Warrior carried the Crescent City’s mail* and passengers to Havana. Her officers were treated with marked respect by the authorities. A Spanish vessel of war was cruising outside the Moro, to prevent the Crescent City from entering the harbor. Twenty creoles, from Voelta Abajo. had been arrested and brought to Havana on the charge of cotnspiring against the Government. Otherwise all was quiet. Quebec, Oct. 16, — The House has passed a reso lution and an address to the Queen, asking her to impose, on the produce of foreign nations entering English ports, duties equivalent to those such nations impose on the produce of England and the Colonies. Also, to repeal all the laws confer ring on American vessels advantages which the Canadian vessels do not enjoy in American waters. HARRIET) ~ In this City, on the 14th inst... by the Rev. Mr. Connor, Dr. WM. JOHNSON, of Stone Mountain, DeKalb county and Miss ANN WISE, es Augusta. EXTEA FAMILY FLOUB. I AM obliged to my friends for the most unexpected de mand they have made upon the Granite Mills for F our Meal and H >roiny. A superior article of Superfine FLOUR, may be considered Extra, is now being sent from the Mills to the Store. Five Hundred bushels of the purest Gene see white Wheat, for Extra Family Flour , is expected to arrive from New York this week, when, having the Miller an (the Mills, I hope to show my friends that they can well afford to encourage the Granite Mills, oil JAMES L. COLEMAN. WANTED TO HIRE, A SMART, active BOY, from 15 to 18 years of age. .A. HENRY k SKINNER, o!5 Broad Street, above the Mechanics’ Bant. SADDLES, BRIDLES, LEATHER, &C. aa CASE'S Women’s Men’s and Boy's SADDLES; oil 8 casts Wagen Do.; 25dos. Wagon BRIDLES; 10 « Riding BRIDLES and MARTINSALIS; 1500 lbs. Oak Tan and Hemlock LEATHER; 80 doa. Kip SKINS; f 5 “ Calf Do.; —ALSO— -40 sets Wagon AXLES, all sites; 800 “ heat Ground Wagon Boxes 500 “ Tung STAYS and Btretoaer frftatNfl; In Stere and for sale by 016 LCTrORD, BEALL k CO. VTORTHEHN CHH&B.-K boxee fresh Norths* rtrSS EB ® m ”°* ni