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POUhTdoLlaKS PER ANNUM. —--Publication Office at No. 11?, Bay Street, near tlie new Custom House.—— 81NOLB COPiESrWti^T
VOLUME I.]
SAVANNAH, MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 18, 1850
[NUMBER 30.
published daily and tri-weekly,
BP JOHN Iff. COOPER.
w.
T. THOMPSON, EDITOR.
terms:
Tho Dnfly iHornlug Nbwh is delivered to City
Subscribers at $4 per annum, payable half yearly tn
advance, or for ten cents a week, payable to the
Carriers. Single copies, TWO CENTS.
The Trl-Weekly Morning News, for the coun-
*rv containing all the news matter and new advertise
ments of the doily, is furnished for three dollars per-
annum, in advance.
Advertisements inserted at the following rates :
I square, 1 insertion, 90,50 i 1 squaro 1 month, 97,00
Kach continuanoe... 50 1 squara 2 months, 12,00
1 square, l week,... 2,50 | 1 square 3 months, 15,00
LkrTwelve lines or less to constitute a square.
Advertisements published every other day, and those
inserted once or twice a week, are charged 60 cents
per square for each insertion.
IsGg&l advertisements inserted at tho nsual rates.
Advertisements from transient persons or strangers,
most be paid in advance. ,
Yearly advertisers will be restricted to their regu
lar bulane'sses; and all other advertisements not pertain-
ing to their regular business us agreed for, will beebarg
‘ed extra. ....
Yearly advertisers exceeding in their advertisements
'■tho average number of linea agreed for, will be charged
U proportional rates.
All advertisements for charitable Institutions and
religious Societies will be charged half price.
Advertisements sent to this office without di
rections as to the number of insertions, will bn pub
lished daily, until ordered to be discontinued, and
charged accordingly.
J AH new advertiesments appear in the Tri-week-
ly News, for the country.
*/ All Letters directed to this office or the Editor,
must be goat paid.
all, has burst forth the trap, the basalt, the
lava, and a thousand volcanoes with
their liquid fires—three hundred of which
are now in active operation! The' half
century which lias demonstrated all this,
must ever be memorable.
Botany and Zoology, aided by com
parative anatomy, have just discovered
the natural affinity) and natural classifica
tion of all their individuals. Ethnography
has shown the real unity of the human
and the close relation of all its
MORNING NEWS.
The Fruits pf the Half Century.
“At the close of this half century the march
of intellect i< indeed a funeral march. What
has been .obtained by genius or by science for
the benefit of mankind f Greater discoveries
have been mode within our memory than ever
were made before. We may with the rapidity
oflightning
‘Speed the intercourse of soul with soul,
And waft a sigh from Indus to the Polo,
Alas! we have little else to waft’"
Such is the equivocal language of
Waller Savage Landor, a famous En
glish liberal, in a recent letter which we
find in yesterday’s Washington Repub
lic, concerning the recent reactionary
E ilitioal movements in Europe, js it just?
et us look at some of the discoveries to
which he refers and their results, by
way qf attaining an answer
The halt century began in troubled
times—in the dashinge of nation against
.nation, and amid revolutions ^nd com-
! mofionsc- It prpajged a new era in the
history of man, and such it has been.
The mighty past, and the still mightier
future, equally draw forth our admiration.
Science, during jts progress, has laid
bare .secret wonders of the grgat crea
tion which seemed beyond mortal know
ledge. The distances of the fixed stars
have been measured, and some of them
weighed! Gravitation has been found to
rule among their binary pairs, linking
their in nature with our own system, and
with ourselves ! An ocean of facts has
been explored and recorded, of their
motions, periodical brightness, and true
positions. Eleven new planets have
been discovered belonging to the system
of the sun, and three new satilites, and
also immense circles of meteoric bodies
The zodiacal light now appears more in
telligible. A new planetary law has
been found, making the whole solar
system a unity, and pointing to a unity of
cause for the origin of all its members
Polarization has shown that light is
but the undulations of a fluid pervading
all space, and in which even the fixed
stars move and have their being. “God
is light,” say the scriptures metaphorical
ly, and science now aids us to form the
idea of his Omnipresence! Heat, elec
tricity, and the cause of chemical and
other attractions, are of a nature similar
to light. Just as there are various metals,
and various gases, so all space seems
pervaded by various imponderable fluids
more spiritual in their nature than any
idea we are able to form of spirit itself!
The whole science of galvanism, and its
relations to electricity, to magnetism, and
to chemical changes, and its practicalappli
cationsin gilding,plating,telegraphing,and
ether arts, are the oflsprings of the last
halfcentury,—and so are full three-fourths
<jf the wounderfu! facts in the science of
chemistry. We now form pictures, pre
-lit
cise likenesses, with the sunbeam,
erally painting with pencils of light!
But no science during this period has
grown with so astonishing a rapidity as
geology. Its amazing results in disen
tombing the forms of life which flourished
in periods so long ago. and in features
and size so different from those living
now, stimulated curiosity and exertion,
The State of New York alone has spent
Haifa million of dollars in its researches
EvcYy state in the Unions—every slate
Europe has been examined. Private
zeal, often aided by public enterprise, has
carried the pursuit around the golbe. * “
branches. The species of all animated
creation no longer stand separated,- but
are seen to be linked together in one great
brotherhood. What shall we say of the
arts during this period—its hundreds of
triumphs—when three of those triumphs
alone are the steamboat, the railroad, and
the lightning telegraph No former halt
century—we speak with all reverence
for the venerable ages long gone by—can
bring aught, except printing, Tor a com
parison.
Popular rights,the freedom of the many
from the ignorance and despotism of a
few, have made a progress forever to be
remembered. England has thrown aside
her powerful East India Company, and
the Great East is now opened lo the in
tercourse of all. The abolition qj her own
laws, and her navigation laws, opens free
communication still wider. The reform
bill, her Catholic emancipation bill, and
others of a kindred character, have given
her people at home a freedom unlooked
for before. In France, how much more
favorable to human improvement was the
settlement of 1815, to the empire just
preceding; again how much superior was
the constitution of 1830; and again how
great an advance do we behold in 1C JO!
In other nations of Europe, how terribly
did Napoleon march abroad, dashing in
to fragments the remains of leudal tyran-
, anti sowing every where the seeds of
arty and improvement. The institu
tions of 1815 were in all Europe a great
advance upon former progress. From
time to lime they have gained farther
freedom, and now, to our astonishment,
we behold in Austria and Prussia popular
elections, popular representations, and
trial by jury in open courts. Italy has
uttered her first freedom shout, and
Rome, the eternal city, in once taking
her government from the usurping hands
of the Pope, has laid in the hearts of all
Italians a foundalion for future progress
which can never be eradicated. Russia
cannot but feel the spirit of the times, and
we will entertain no surprise when we are
told of a great uprising in St. Petersburg.
Already we hear the murmurings in that
far-off land, which, like thunder on the
distant mountains, foretell a genial and
refreshing change. May the storm be
gentle, and the lightning strokes fall few
and far between!
Turkey, during the last half century,
has adopted Christian civilization in her
very centre, and from her highest authori
ty ; and one by one her outward provinces
are assuming independent Christian
governments;—we allude to Greece,
Servia, Moldavia, Wallachia and others.
Even old Egypt haB again awoke, and
looks around to catch the improvements
of the 19th. century. Persia has felt the
pressure ofEuropean civilization, and the
forcible giving up ot part ot her territory
to Russia indicates a new influence going
over that “land of the sun.” Hindoostan
is becoming moulded into new forms by
British intelligence qnd taste. Even
China has been made to feel the superi
ority of modern arts and enlightenment,
over her ancient rude practices adopted
in the infancy of the race. The immense
regions of Siberia have received their
chief advancements, arid the larger
proportion of their population during the
last 50 years.
But the American continent has wit
nessed tiie greatest transformation. Only
five millions of freemen were in 1800 her
hope and glory V and these all on the
space between the Mississippi and the
Atlantic. France, Spain, Portugal and
England acted the despots over the re
mainder—nineteen-twentieths of the
whole. How changed the picture!
Where in the past do we find a parallel ?
A continent has been disenthralled.
Even the Canadas—nominally depen
dent—are about assuming self-govern
ment. Our Southern neighbors, 'emerg-
sieamboats, electric telegraphs, and in
the multiplication of hooks and the means
for the diffusion of intelligence, and for
promoting general intercourse, we have
already done more that any other people.
Such a development of such a nation in so
short a time is a harbinger of job to the
race. The half century is honored
which numbers it among its trimphs.
And yet, how morbidly impatient arc
some, that the progress is not more vehe
ment. Indeed, at times we all become
impatient. But had we some experi
ence in the great work of world-making,
—had we seen the building up, the carry
ing on, and the full glory, of as many
worlds as shine by night in the clear blue
sky above, we should pQrhaps have a
deeper sense of the philosophy of the
counsel which admonishes us to walk
humbly.
TBELAND AS I SAW IT.—Tbo
A character,
condition and prospects of the
people; by Wm. S. Balch.
Lodge’s Portraits, of Illustrious Personages
of Great Britain, Vol. 2 of Bohn’s Ill. Library.
Auvicular Confession in tho Protestant Epis
copal Church, considered in a series of letters,
by n Protestant Episcopalian.
Tho Fathers of New England, an ora
tion delivered before the Now England Society
ot New York, December 21st, 1849, by Horace
Bushnell
The transactions of the American Medical
Association, Vol. 2.
Turkish Evening Entertainments; the wonders
of remarkable incidents and the varities of
anecdotes, by Ahmed Ibn Hemdem |the Keth-
hodn, called “Sobailee,” translated from
the Turkish, by P. Brown Dradoman, of the U.
S. Legation at Constantinople.
Tho umadlaneona works of Oliver Goldj
smith, including a variety of pieces, now first
collected by James Prior, vol. 2.
Received by JOHN M. COOPER.
feb 16
HOMING NEWS
Book anb .Job printing ©Hitt,
GAUDRY S BUILDING, BULL-ST.
Groceries, Fruits, &o.
fJIHE Subscribers have now on hand and in
J. B. CIIBBEDOE
Printer of the Daily Morning News, re
spectfully informs his friends and the public,
that having made extensive additions to his
well selected assortment of printing materials,
ho is prepnred to execute with despatch every
RINT"—
variety of BOOK and JOB PRINTING, and
on terms as reasonable tts thoso of nny other
establishment in the South. By the employ
ment of the best materials and superior work
men, and giving his personal attention to the
busine&s, he doubts not that he will be able to
give the fullest satisfaction to all who may fa
vor him with tl cir r'ntronage.
E3P Orders may be loft at tho Book Storo
in Congress-street, or at the office of the Daily
Morning Nows, No. 117 Bay-st. jan 17
c%
PARTNERSHIP NOTICE
he subscriber haying this day associated
with him Mr. L. J. GUILMART1N, the busi
ness hereafter ill be conducted (at the old stand
corner of Whitaker and Congress-streets) under
the style of M. PRENDERGA8T & CO.
mar 1 M. PRENDERGAST.
TTANIELABEANS.-Also Meakim’s
T pure concentrated extract
pure concentrated extracts, comprising,
Vanilla, Lemon, Rose, Bitter Almond, Nutmeg,
Cinnamon Ac., for flavoring ices jellies, cus
tards, pastry, syrup, and saucoe. Jusf receiv
ed and for sale by -- .,
G. R. HENDRICKSON, A GO.
fob 11 Gibbons, Building’s.
MUSIC. — Hernuni, Heonani,
Rescue Me; Postillion Polka; The
Moonlight of the Heart, by Strakosch ; ,Chcs-
nut Street Polka, Ac. Just received and for
sale by JOHN M. COOPER,
feb 6
JUST RE O'D, Per steamer Cherokee, a new ss
Tamer's Compound Fluid Extract of Con-
yzn and Stilllngla.
This preparation is a highly Concentrated Ex
tract, containing all the Active Medicinal Prop
erties of the Conyza, (commonly known us Black
Root,) and the Slillingia, oi Queen’s Delight.
These plants have been long since used among
our Southern Negroes and in empyrical practice,
with the happiest results, in cases of Chornio
Rheumatism, Ulcers of longstanding, and Sec
ondary Syphilis. It is much superior to nny pre
parations of Sarsuparilla as an alterative, being
more active and prompt in its operation on the
system. These facts have induced the subscrib
ers to present to the attention of Physicians a
preparation prepared according to strict Chemi
cal and Purmaceutical science, devoid of all the
feculent and inert parts of the roots, not doubt
ing that it will supersede the unscientific and
crude preparations hitherto used.
Price—$1 per bottle, or six bottles for $5.
Prepared and sold bv
TURNER & ODEN,
Monument Squaro, oovannoh, Ga.
nov 6
SCHOOL.
Tho subscriber respoctfully announces that he
haa opened a School in the basement of the
Second Baptist Church, in which will be taught
all the branches of a thorough English Educa
.tion. Particular attention will be given to the
elementary studies.
BERNARD MALLON.
References.—Rev. J. T. Robert, Rev. H.
O.Wyer.
PROSPECTUS OF THE
DAILY MORNING NEWS,
Aii Independent Commercial and News Paper, to be
Published in the City of Savannah.
BY JOHN M COOPER,
EDITED BY W. T. THOMPSON,
Author of “ Major .Tones’ Courtship,” “Chronicles of
Pirteville,’’ “ Sketches of Travel," (fts- he.
the follciwinggoods, purchased in Msw-Yurk the
past Weak, &nd will be «)ld at a small advance
tromcoat for cash or. good credit: Wuolaeya, Sto-
ami Harris’ crushed, ground, loaf and granulated
^{•ts i, Porto Rico and Muscavado dp; freyb Ricei
sugars! Porto Rico and Muscavado dp; fresh Bloat
smoked Halibut;Hyson, Young Hyson and Oolong Tea*,
of superior qualities for family use; Pork Hami (!8o»
lord &. stagg& Shqy’acui'iug, equal to any itfthq city,)
Herring; New-York City Meta Pork; superior SUrCh;
London Brown Stout and Scotch Ala; a superiotar-
ticle bottled cider: Water Pails; smoked tongues,
a few half boxes Bunch ltaisoua, fn layers or excellent
quality; a superior article Meurltus Synip; Judd's
patent Candles, by the box, and at retail; together
with a general assortment of dried Plums, Psthhak,
Zante Currants, Prunes, paper.thelled Almonds, Cit
ron, Capers, ttiitton Ginger, Olive Oil, Fcacgn Npts,
Tapioca Mocardna. Cayenne Pepper, Mustard, prepared
Barley, Farina, Pepper Sauce, Castila 8o»p, Mac it,
Nutmegs, &c., die., on bund and for sUe by '
FORD dt WATTS,
tep 25 6m 9tf| Barnard ytrest.
G uns i- g u w s i-e d w a r p
LOVELL, Manufacturer and Importer
of every description qf Double and Single bar
rel Gunsand Riffles, Dueling, Belt, Hoiater, Pocft-
et and Six-barreled Revolving Pistols, and
every variety of Gun material and Gun mple-
mente, Ac. Flasks, Pouches, Percussion Caps.
Powder Shot, Lead, and every article in tfie
Sportsman’s line, for sule low.
0P'
Guns re-stocked, Flint-locks altered to
percussion, und repair ng done ns usual.
No. 11 Barnard street South side Market
sign of tho Indian. jnlj 16
The ship Anson, Elliot, hecoe, et New York on the
27th inst.
N EW MUSIC STORE.—The subscriber respect
fully informs the public that he will keep on
hand a large stock of Music, of both Foreigti Sad
American publication, of the moetfavorit* composers*
Haying engaged the service* of Mr. 8. Berg in its
•ection, on his recent visit to New York, lovers of Mu
sic will find at, big store all the newest Songs, Duetts,
Waltzes, Polkas, Marches, Ac.; compositions of the
foreign Masters: Beethoven, Mozart, Liszt, ’fhalberg,
Hertz, Beyer, Roiellen, Iluntea. and others; Music
for the Guitar, Flute, Violin, Instruction Books of .all
kinds, Violin and Guitar, Strings, Bridges, Pegs, £a.
He has also madearrangements{with Houses, both in.
Now York and Philadelphia, to receive tha newest pub*
licntiona‘immediately after their issue from the press,
Orders left at his stol-e for Music dot os band, in
quantity or for ft single piece, will be sent on pytbe
first steamer leaving for New York, and rooeivsd on
its return,
oct 16
JOHN M. COOPER.
D
fully a
Bortment of Plain Cashmeres, Delanes, Alpacas,
Lusters, &c., vety pretty and cheap. Also, a few fine
Long Shawls. For sale low, at the Cheap Cash Store,
by JOHN VAN NESS,
nov 6
Zfti
CARD .—The undersigne having re
opened, with an entire New stock ol
DRUGS, CHEMICALS, and FANCY
ARTICLES, at No. 139 : 8outh-side Brough-
ton-street, (formerly Walker’s Marble Yard,)is
now ready to furnish anything in his line, at the
shortest notice. SODA WATER, made in
his own peculiar way, sent to any part of the
city, and always to be had at the store, in the
highest state of perfection.
Prescriptions put up with care and de
spatch.
The subsriber having served the public long
and faithfully, respectfully solicits a share ol
patronage.
July 16 THOS. RYERSON.
All
the continents and islaftde, except some
barbarous interiors, have been explored.
There are no considefablo masses of rocks
or of soils whose origins are doubtful!
The structure of the external crust qf the
great globe—its rock-ribbed frame,
gigantic and vast—stands revealed! Its
interior is “fervent heat.” Around this
heat is enveloped the granite—a great
foundation rock, on which all others are
«id. Their strata, spread one upon an-,
other, tell fhe order Of otjaair formation,
r rom below the ; granit up-throUgh them
ing from the darkness and colonial im
becility of Spain, and untaught by ex
perience, are beginning to learn, even
sooner than might have been excepted,
how to use, and how to enjoy, their new
born freedom.
When the half century began, our own
country was weak. Spain, for instance,
m her European Peninsula, had double
the population of the United Slates. Now
we nave double the population of Spain!
So rapid is our growth, that out increase
alone duriiur the last ten years, has been
more than our entire number in 1800!
Our territory is now more than three times
larger than it was then. We then owned
no part of the coast on the Gulf of Mexi
co ; now we possess more than the half
—We (hen were bounded on the west by
the Mississippi river; nqw by the great
Pacific, on whose broad .waters we are
tjecWedly the perdotjnipant power, in
social, commercial, and military points
of view. In the constrinion of rafiro&ds,
rUIHE PEER’S DAUGHTER—By Lady
A Lytton Buhver, author of Cheyciey.-
Mury Moreton, or the Broken Promise; by
T. S. Arthur.
Life and Correspondence of Robert Southed
edited by bis Son.
Memorials of George Bertram and Humphrey
Marshall; by William Darlington, M. D., L. L.
D,; with Illustrations.
Part 4 Iconographic. Encyclopaedia.
The Revellers, Ac-1 by Rev. Edward Monro,
author of the.Combatants, Dark River, Ac.
The Mercy-Seat; thoughts suggested by the
Lord’s Prayer; by"Gardner Spring. D. D.
History of Spanish Literature; by George.
Ticknor: yds. 2 and 3 complete.
Confessions of Cor Cregan the Irish Gil Bias;
by Chas. Lever,
The Chain of Destiny, or the Adventures of a
Vagabond.
New Poems, bv Mias Hannah M. Gould
The Seaside and the Fireside; by Henry W.
Long-fellow. Received by
jan. 15 JOHN M. COOPER
Experience has proven both the practicability and
usefulness of the penny PresB. Within the few years
past all the Northern and Eastern cities, as well as
most of those South*and West of us, have been sup
plied with papers of this description, whose small di
mensions enable their publishers to issue them at a
price so low as to place them within the reaeh of all,
and thus to make them the bestmedlams for the gen
eral diffusion of information on all subjects bearing
upon the interests of community. By cheapening the
Press, all have been participants in its benefits, w hile
the publishers and conductors, by a greatly Increased
patronage,have been made amply remunerated ior their
expenditure of capital and labor.
Believing that the growing prosperity of Savannah
authorizes, and that her interests demand the eztab-
lisiimeut of a choap commercial and news medium,
we have determined to publish the Daily Morning
News as nearly as possible upon the plan of the penny
Press of the Northern cities.
Thr Morning News will be emphatically a Com
mercial Netcspapcr, devoted to the diffusion of useful
information on all subjects of popular interest, and to
the advancement of City and State interests, gener
ally ; preserving at all times a strictly neutral and
independent position in regaid to Politics and Parties.
Arrangements have been madefor giving the paper all
the facilities enjoyed by the best Daily Papers, and
no pains will be spared to make it satisfactory in all its
departments, and to give it the character of a res
pectable, useful, and reliable Journal.
In view of the great advantages which must result
to the citizens and business man from the establishment
of such a paper in Savannah, we feel that we may aak
and safely count upon a liberal support.
Terms.—The Daily Morning News will bo issued
and served to subscribers at 94, per annum, payable
half yearly, in advance ; or,10 Cents porweek, pay
able to the Carriers.
TVT EW BOOKS.—The Feet’s Daughter; by
-L1 Lady Lytton Bulwpr,
Confessions of Concregan, the Irish Gil Bias;
by Chas. Lever, author of Charley O’Malley, &c.
Also, new supplies of Agnes Grey; Shirley;
Edmond Dantes; Heart* and Homes, complete;
Norwood, or Life on the Prairies, Ac- &c. For
sale by
J. B. CUBBEPGE, Congress-street
-jan 15
ABSEBYATIOSS
V-I ry of Georgia.—:A furib
by
on Stevens’ Histo-
fyr;her supply received
nov 29
J. M. COOPER.
mUBFENTINE.-rlO Bbls City Di«
A tilled fpr s(U e by
July ^1 J. G. FALLIGANT
riEN.T’,S..iai> GAOJraS.T^t'
\jr ceived; a .good, assortment of white ar
.good, assortment of white and
colored-Kid-Gloves; Silk do. For sale low for
cub, bv J-1- MAGILL,
nov 29 -SivM|»hrG*»h-iKto*e.
AGUEBBIAN SKYLIGHT
GALLERY.—The Subscribes respoet-
ully announoos to the Citizens of Savanrab and
its vicinity, that ho has taken the room* over
Zogbaums A Co’sMusic Store, comer of St.
Julian-str.qetand Market-square, for the purpose
of tokihfe DAGUERRIAN LIKENESSES,
beautifully Colored, if required, and put up in
Splendid Morocco Cases, Lockets, Breast-Pin*,
Medallions, and Finger.Rihg*; arid venturesto
assert, that he will furnish as good, if not a bet*
ter Likeness than any other person over located
In Savannah He feels himself justified in tha
above assertion from a practice of several years
Jn Boston, assisted by all the mogt recent im-
.provemeRts in tho art.
4
“Surpassed by none, and equaled butby faw, ‘
This is my mntto, and my pictures prove it true;” ’
The Subscriber has, at great expense, firte$
up his appartments so as to secure light directly
from above, which is considered one of the great
est additions in taking perfect Daguerrian Liliq-
nesses. The Citizens of Savannah are respect
fully invited to Call at bis rooms and examine
specimens. Pictures taken at reduced prices.
W. V frentjM,
Permanently located.
N. B.—Instructions given in tho art on mode
rate terms, corner of St. J ulian-sucet and Mar
ket-square- (UpStairs.) jan 17
Savannah, January, 1850.
300 SPLENDID
ENGLISH and GERMAN
Double and single barrelled
Guns, of every variety and
price.
100 pair belt ar.d pocket
Pistols. 4 cases’ rifles. 4 do super plantation
Muskets.
300.0.00 Walker’s, Westly’s, Richard’s, Stark-
ncy’s and Ely’s Waterproof Percussion Cups,
1 case of Gd. percussion caps.
200,000 Walker’s, Starkney’s, Joyces and
Ely’s Wads.
50,000 Musket and Rifle Flints, a splendid
assortment of Dixon’s Powder Flasks, Belts
and Pouches.
“Allen’s” and “Colt’s" Revolvers, “Drink”
Flasks and Cups, common and fine Game Bags,
also, every article in the sporting trade.
200 kegs “American sporting” and Dupont’s
Powder, in whole, halves and quarter kegs, also,
in 1 lb. Canistes.
500 Bags Drop Shot, 200 Bags “Patent
compressed” Buck Shot. Just received nud for
sale very low by E. LOVELL,
No. 11 Barnard-st., sign of the Indian.
N. B.—I will receive in a few days a lot of ve
ry fine double and single Guns from one of the
best Gun-maker* in England, also, 2 dozen don-
bln Guns for boys. Merchants, Factors and Pur
chasers are respectfully ipvited to call and look
as above. oct 6
Harmonic Institute.
Corner of St. Julian-st. and Market-Square.
T HE subscribers respectfully annuunce that
they linve opened a complete
MUSICAL ESTABLISHMENT,
as above, and hope that in so doing they will
the wishes and wants ’of the musical public.
From its intimate connection' with the Har
monic Institute of Charleston; the same sources
and facilities will be equally enjoyed. *
Piano Fortes by .1. B. Dunham, Adam Stod-
ard, Win. Hall A 8. i, J. Pirsson and others.
Military Instrume'ts, of every variety,includ
ing the latest improved Sax Horrik—complete
Bands furnished at New York prices.
Violins, by the -ii ten or single. Country
Merchants and deale • are invited to inspect tlie
qualities and prices.
Also, Violoncellos, Doub!a Basses, Flutes,
Guitars, French and German Accnrdeons, FlUti-
nas, Harmonicas, Violin Bows, Bridges, Screws,
Rosin. Ilairfor Sows, Mutes, Capn d’astraa, Mu
sic Desks, Tuning Hammers and Forks, and in
fineevery article pertaining to tho line.
All of the above being directly imported by F.
Zogbaum, at Charleston, are offered Wholesale
or Retail, at New York Prices.
Merchants and others who have been purebas
ing at the North are invited to test this asser
tion by a visit.
Instruction books for all instruments, fifheet
Music, Ac., including all the new and standard
publications. ' ,
The best of 8trings for all instniments.
dec 20 F- ZOGBAUM A Co.
ti JACO*#,' SUGAR AND TOBAC-
if* CO SfORE, No.. 27 Bull Street, (Sign
of the Indian near Moaument Squaro) Savannah,
G*n.
N. B.—Keeps constantly on hand, Spanish,
Half Spanish and American Segattt, Whole
sale and. Retail. Alto Chewing Tobacco,
Snuff, Ac.
DBEASTPIM -FOUND.—A plain,
JLJ Gold Box Pin, containing a lock of lsair-
witli “Mery to Christopher,” and a Site fa
scribed on the bock. The
e owner can have it by
calling at the Book Store of John M. CoonsR,
and paying for this advertisement. feb 6
STOVES AND 6’OOKINGRAN
GES.—The undersig
hand and for sale, at
the lageust and best as*o;
Stoves and Ranges ever qi ,
city. They will be sold and
satisfaction. They may be
New Buildings, South wide of Mi
augl McART*’"'
fng tran
in Paris, durir,
vel, author of ‘
Received by
jan 19
y > -v