Daily morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1850-1864, March 08, 1850, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

MORflNG NEWS. ¥ JOHN M. COOPEKt W. T. THOMPSONS, EDITOR DAILY PAPER $400 TIU-WKKKLY $0 00 All Now Advertisements appear in both papers. [From tho Ncw-Orleans Picayune, 27th ult.J From Mexico. By this arrival nt !\fbhi1e Point yostcrday of the British stamper Clydo, we hnve reccivod files oT the. MWnflEor'Republican^ from the city ' Mexico, to (ho 13th inst., inclusive, ijews from San Luis Potosl to the 6th inst. I be«n received at the capital, announcing that a portion of the National Guard of that Siate, together with some troops belonging to Tamnulipas, hud appeared before tho rates of Cuidad Victoria, for the purpose of re-establish ing the constituted authpjrities and maintaining the law. ' * The cholera was rdf&ging certain portions of San Luis and Tamaulipas. In Durango them had lately been an irrup tion of the wild Indians, who had robbed un<l murdered several of the inhabitants with im punity. Tho pap*r» of the metropolis jusert that i hhs been a complete fusion of, interests tho. Monarchists and Snntunists, or IE of tho .ex-Dictntor. i'he projectors of thegront rail road between Vera C*uz wnd the city of Mexico, and between the latter and the port of Alcapulco, on tho Pacific, have preseftted n It^fcmouf of the' coir- dittons under which they will oxeente the work to tho Minister of Finance. Gen. Almonte is tho soul of tlie undertaking, as he is also of the batik for aiding private enterprise. From Washington.—-The Washington Cor respondent of the Baltimore Sun in his letter ot Inst, says*!. Mr. Calhoun’s speech is in type, as I learn, and a copy of it has been sent to Now York, v, here it will appear to-morrow morning. Some say th$t it is-well calculated to increase tlie ex- citemont stf4he South. The speech presents new aqd strong .views. I have some additional reasons for thlhking that the project of Sonator Bill will meet with favor in the South, and with the Texas people. Mr. Webster, I am sorry to learn, has aban doned tlie idea of offering any project for a com promise. Ho U»d framed a scheme which the Sou)horn Senators approved of and which could have been carried through. The time to offer it. whs a week ngo, but thero has been since n strong manifestation of opiniqpat tho North in favor of Mr, Clay’s resolutions; and Mr. Hell’s B roject has also pre-occupied the ground. The nion meetings at tho North qre, fin' tife most part, Clay meetings, and aro intended tobecon- verted to political •purposes. They could scarcely have been successful had they not brought to their aid the personal and political popularity of Mr. Clay. Should Mr. Webster now offer to take the lend which the Southern Senators, and the Western Democratic Se nators wished him to do, lfe would he at once placed in antagonism to Mr. Clay and Mr. Clny’s friqpds on thifcsubject, us ho has been on many Iters. If, under these circumstances, he yield- ed an inch more to tho South than Mr. Clay j| does, ho would be politically sacrificed at the ' North, though he might have succeeded here. Mr.fjGaillnrdot, tho Paris correspondent of tlioCourririr dca Etats Uni?, tells an anecdote of the President of the Republic, who on retir ing from a sojroe, discovered thul his hat had been mislaid. An officious person picked n Friday Morning, March 8, 1830. R lAUfllWT CIRCULATION! • Tlie Daily Mobnino News lms bow'M-abo- ity circulation than cither of the othw ufliiy See first pnge for our rates of ndvcrfistng. E y* Advertisements should he handed * n ,. early hour, to insure their nppeurauce in the pap the next morning. ' FlF’ See first pngei An Arrest—Some three weeks ago, Mi. John L. Martin missed from hi* warehouse four hales of cotton. The cotton had disap peared at night—hut there was no evidence that the store hnd been forrifily entered, and Mr. M. was exceedingly puzzled to account for the manner of its abstraction. In order to de tect tho rogue, he pluced a private ir.ork upon his hags. Yesterday morning be missed an other bag, and be accordingly took measures to find out its whereabouts. A search warrant whs procured arid placed in tho hands of offi cers Sheftai.l and Maxwell, with- instruc tions to search the' ! premises cf Joseph W. Phillips, who keeps a kind of warehouse in whnt is known as “ tho Toombs,” near the Ex change. There tho officers discovered a bale of cotton belonging to Mr. Martin, with his private marks on it, being the snn/e which he had missed in tho morning. Phillips was immediately arrested und held to bail, which, failing to procure, he was committed to juil.— His examination will take plnce this morning at 10 o’clock, before Justico Raiford. , saying replied he* laughing;:’|eeirg the emblems in side, “I am too good a Republican to wear a crown.”’ Tbo.answer reminds the cones pendent of a Wrtnin fox, who once thought the grapes sour. The hat belonging to Lord Nor- The Steamer Ocmuloee.—This steamer, as she now lies, in the inland passage between the St. Johns and St. Marys, with all her ma chinery, tackle, &c., was sold yesterday.before the Exchange, by Messrs. Cohen i£j Fosdick. She brought four thousand dollars, and was purchased by F. A. Tupper, Esq. Mr. Calhoun.—It is stated in'tlie Balti more paporsthat Mr. Calhoun is still very fee ble, having had aslight relapse of his former ut- tnck. Tho Newark Advertiser aliuding to his speech which was delivered in the Senate on Monday last says, it is probably intended to be Mr. Calhoun’s greatest effort—like the dying notes of tho swan, tho loudest and the best. The Cholera.—From the acccoqiits wretch reach us from the sputh-west wo have raason to apprehend that this drondftil.scourg# is about to te-visit us us it did In 1830, tho year ufter its first appearance in this'country. A telegruphic despatch dated Montgomery Ala. March 2d. says— ”The cholera is increasing. At Taylor's seven dcuths occurred within the ‘last fifty hours, Sevep new cases were reported yester day.’’ It is said to be prevailing to an alarming degree among tba emigrants on the Mississip pi. The Nutchez Courier describes it among a party of sevenfumilies from Georgia. They star* ted from Memphis in a stock boat. The chole ra exhibited itself among them Ht Vicksburg and within six days ten were dead from it. The party consisted of forty-eight whitos nhd five negroes. Discord in Virginia.—At a late meeting of the citizens of Loudon county, Va., cornic ed of both political parties,-resolutions were passed refusing to .send do'.eg.ue^ijto the Sciflth era CotjVentieln. !Thu meefjng H&solvhd thajit was opposed to the Wiftno^;Pr»i$3o, $nd alpo to' tho -Abolition ’Af SlaVt-ry in tho District of Columbia, hut held thnt tho pcoplo of Cal ifornia have aright to dOlermino tho slavery question,so fur nsthqy urn coiicqriio$I,.fyr them selves. The.prcss in this section of Virginia, ljas^fffra long time indicated a (one of feeling not altogether loyal to tho South, and difficul- ies hnveon several net:omens arisen among the citizen3, growing out of the promulgation of ab olition sentiments, from the pulpit and t.trough the press, in Accomac and tho adjoinfng dis tricts of Virginia and Marylund. It is to be regretted that such divisions should occur at a time like tho present, when tho northern public are so likely to construe any thing like discord among us into an cviuonc^ ot a want of unanimity of sentiment on the sub ject of controversy bolween the two sections of the Union. Tho opposition of one or more counties in the west of Virginia will not pre vent, though it may embarrass the action of that State. Since :ne Nashville Convention has been determined on by so large a majority of the people of the Southern States, it becomes the friends of.the South a M d of the Union, to pro mote its harmony, ar.d to give it the benefit of their best counsels. The holding of the Convention is unimportant compared with what may ha its action. Let those who feel that there is no necessity for re sistance on tho par* of the South, but who can not prevent the holding of the proposed Con- vention,avoid everything like a seeming opposi tion to it, and when the proper time comes for action they will ho in a position to influence its deliberations, and, by their wise and patriotic counsels, to prevent tho evil which they appre hend from its convocation. No one can he more devotedly attached to the Union, nr would deprecate more any measure calculated to endanger its permanen cy, than ourself; nevertheless it is onr settled conviction that, in the present crisis, the safdty of the South and the Union, rests mainly on the unanimity, moderation and unflinphipg firmness of tho people of the slave States. G?" Father Mathew arrived ut Mobile on 2d instant. The Tribune says; ^ Sofia of Temprnncp marched in fall re- inff with banners and a fine four-horse, ;h tolrreive him, but, hoftad |cceivftl or* d?rs ffonrtho Bishop of this fwr.eys to jMiike lififeentry lo ihp city private, tied ip the Sons were not fiermifieii to accord to him the honor they had p epared. U. S- Steamship Susquehanna.—This no ble vctfscl will be launched ffom the Navy Yard atJFhilqdclphia, about the middle of tho cur rent month. Great Fishing Season.—Sixty vessels, manned by about 500 men, have left Gloucester, Muss., for George's Bank—un unusual number for this time of the year. Twenty vessel at enow on the stocks or contracted for, at Essex, for the same port, and will he ready for sea about the 1st of July next. ISP" Wo see it stated that Mr. J. T. Walk er of Washington city, is having constructed in l’hiladelphia a machine, at a coBt of $5,500, for crushing rocks containing particles ot gold, and, by means of quicksilver, rolling out tho auriferous treasure. An extra number of me chanics have been engaged for the construc tion of tho machine, which is to be finished and ready for shipment on the 1st. of April, ensuing. Mr. Walker will go to California to superintend for himself and several others, the working of it. CF" The steamship Northerner has been purchased by the gentlemen who own the Em pire City and Crescent City, now lunuing be tween New-York and Clmgres, for the sum of one hundred and eighty thousand dollars, and, as we understand is to proceed around JCape Horn to Panama, and run from thence to San Francisco, in connection with these fine steamers. This is tho third steamer that has been bought of our southern lines to be remov ed to the Pacific witoin the last two months. ■||« i WTHnr Iff I II The Great Union Meetinq at TammanJ Haul — The grand V*|!y of tho De m " c ' racy, of Newflpn'k, friendly to the Union, pluc/^on Sifilrdsfy, Tfc meeting is descril,. d as having benn one of the largest nil( j mo« en$iu*»a»tic' gatherings that ever to |< plafiA in the c'uyV' l ‘The Sunday Times gj V( ,. the following abstract of the resolutions p,,,, ed on the occasion. The resolutions mre written with gr e «t tyaud moderation, but firmness of purp os . und were received with boundless oniliusiasm' They referred to the union of the slates, tlie stru glos of offr revolutionary lathers, the comnr’ mises of the constitution, and our oWigaif 0 ° to carry'them out fully md fairly as they w ' handed down to us. They declared that t[ , territories belonged to all Ihe slates alike,and that Congress hud no right, expressed orininr ed, to legislate on the subject of. slavery; i| la .' the constituting hud beoii openly and ahatne fully violated in relation to fugitive slaves u,„| ihe time had arrived to vindicate the rights of "the south by carrying oiitthe provisions of th 9 fundamental law in good faith ; that the \Vi|. mot proviso was a scheme of disappointed and corrupt politicians; that it was a heresy in itself and used for the purposo of arraying ono soc-' tion of tho Union against the other. Resolutions approving of the course of Gen. era! Cass and others, deprecating tho conduct itf the suite legislature in adopting resolutions relative to slavery, and condemning Seuuter Seward for presenting to the Senate of the United States, und moving to refer to a com mittee, a petition for the dissolution of tba Union, were adopted.wilhotit division. The Times adds—The meeting was altogeth er u most glorious domonstration in favor of tho Union, the whole Union, and nothing but tho Union.. Royal marriage.—Tito crown prince ofSwc- den is about to marry the Princess Louisa of tho Netherlands. North Carolina Central Rail Road. We learn from the Rnletgh Spirit of the age,that all the stock of the contemplated Central Knil- manby, his initial was surmounted., with the I t -oa.l has been taken und tho charter secured. crown ef England. Death or Captain May.—The fit. Louis Union, of the 19 th ult. contains an account of l hc life and death of this young officer, who won tl|c£ earliest laurels that were gathered in the late Mexican war. Be died, says the Union, in Ran Francisco, after a short illness from scurvy and bronchitis, produced by a long and very. Re agreeable passage from New York to that place, by the course ofTlupo Horn. At the period of his death he was about twenty- seven years of age, and in the very prime of his manhood and hopes The Baltimore Sun doubts this report. The editor.says that ^oj. jVUr, wn# last ^rtjcyed .to Santa Fe, and that if he had reached San Francisco it must have been across the Plains. If ho had died at the letter place, tlie intelli gence would certainly have reached us by the last steamer. It is to bo hoped that the state ment is untrue, though it is possible tint his death might have taken place at Santa Fe, in which ease the news would he most likely to rt a;h us by way of St. Louis. IW At New Ybrlc there aro about 50 vessel* up For California, of which 20 ai^ ships, Restored to His Rank.—Tho Senate has decided in favor of Lieut. Schaumboreh, restor ing him to his rank in the American servief, tho restoration carrying withjt back #pny amount ing, perhaps, to$30,00Q. A Washington letter writer alluding $o this statement expreoes his doubts of its trql.h. he siys that the Proiddont and tho Secretary ofWar were opposed to the measure; and that the President will not carry it into effect. Who i« Lieut-Schaumburgh.and for wliat was he suspended? 13r A vessel has arrived in Marseilles which glides through the water by an unseen agency, No wheels—no smoke-pipe—no masts—no any thing to show that she is a steam vessel. The propelling power is by a simple lever, but how worked is unknown as yet. Hero is another revolution in steam. » Terrible Storm and Loss of Life in Austria. Alotter from Vionna, dated Jan. 30. says: “A sad accident happened in tlie neighborhood of Wuselburg seme days since. About 108 urtil- lery men received orders to march from Nick- olsdorf to Parendorf. Wiieij, on the roud which leads across a great heath, they were surprised by such a terrific, snow storm that they soon completely last tiieir way, and many of thdta were frozen to death. A few, after suffer ing inexpressibly, managed to reach some of the neighboring villages, and scut out the prsts- nntry in search of their unfortunate comrades ; but alas 1 tho twenty or twenty-five first found, among whom was the captain of the company, were already deud. Tho latter was on his knees. Tha rost have since been brought in either dead or so frozen that there is bat little hope of their recovery.” A New Rumor.—The Washington corres pondent of the New York Daily Advertiser, speaking of the Southern question, says: Rumor says that English influence is secret ly ot work in this matter. America is the great r jy B l 0 f Great Britain in the chief markets of the world. Whut ehe cannot do bv open jjnd fair competition, therefore, ghe will bo sure to attempt by secret efforts. A Southern Confed eracy would be the delight of the English Cot- would pet it more fondly than the.Edo»%<jUeen pets her seventh baby. Anything to destroy the Union of the Slates—- tttirtrt ^nf the cotton fields iff the S.&*)th, and the'golf and quieksihser'field* ot'tiie West—is tho.p,1l';y of Or«at%AuiL.; p One hundred thousand dollars worth of stock was taken by Governor Morkhead, mid ten other gentlemen. \ A Convention is to he held at Salisbury in April,,for the purpose of organizing the Com pany, electing a Board of Directors, &c., and stepsure to ho taken for an immediate survey of the route. This road will complete an important link in the great chain of railroad communica tion between the North and South, and will lead though tho most populous and highly cultivated portion of the State, avoiding the necessity for the steambpating on the present lino between Wilmington and Charleston. EjP Tho Socrelary of the State of Now Y'mk has Brticjusf of association filed ih his of fice, which eontomplnto the construction of 2000 miles of plank road, tho cost of w hich will bo about $3,000,000. Pensacola Railroad.—The Montgomery Journal of the 28th ult. says:—By letters re ceived here yestcrdnv morning from a reliable sourch in Pensucoln, we learn that $200,000 have just been subscribed in.that city towards the building of the Railroad from that point to this. EF" The Theatre at Petersburg, Virginia was' entirely consumed by tire on Sunday last. The fire was tho work of an incendiary. This is the second theutre that ha^: been burnt in Virginia within the past two years. Tennessee Historical Societt.—The Leg islature of i’ennessee,which has just adjourned, passed an act incorporating a Society lately es tablished at Nashville for tho collection of facts, documents, and materials relating to the Nat ural, Civil, and Aboriginal History of tho State of Tennessee. E-F” The judiciary committee of the Massa chusetts Legislature have reported against all the anti-capital punishment petitions. ^ The Wilmot Proviso.—In the United Suites’ Senate, on Wednesday, the Hon. Tho- mas H. Bouton, spokpjupop tjso compromise res olutions recently submitted by the Hon. Henry Olay. Ho Concluded his remarks wi’fli the. fol lowing allusion to the Wilmot Proviso : “the proviso^ of which we have heard so much is of up force whatever—unnecssury in any point of view—and of no 4 more affect, if passed, than a piece of blank paper pasted on tho statute book.” Poisening.—Mr. .1. N. Trook, (residing near Washington city,) and his family, consisting of his wife und four children, tho eldest fifteen vears old, were poisoned omthe 1st inst., arse nic or corrosive sublimate huving been put in their coffee. It is suspected that the, ser vant gill put the poispn into the coffee, al. though she herself was slightly sick, perhaps hav&ig tasted the liquid to 'ascertain.'whether the taste was changed by the addition of the bane. There isreason to hope soys tlio corres pondent of the Baltimore Clipper, that this amiubla family will escape the threatened dan ger, and that the negress will receive the pun ishment she so recently deserves. Medical College of Georgia.—Thecom mencement exercises of the Medical College of Georgin, ut Augusta, took place on Tuesday, the 6th inst. The report; of the Fuculty repre sented the Institution to be in a highly pros perous condition. Tho degree of M. D. was conferred upon forty-four young gentlemen comprising the graduating class of the session jqst closed. The Honorary Degree ofDoetor of Medicine was conferred upon Dudley W. Hamilton, and Dr. Malthus A. Ward* was udmilted ad eundem gradum. More IIomcepathic Doctors.—The com mencement of the Homoepathic Medical Ool lege of Philadelphia, took place on Saturday last, when 20 young gentlemen |h'om . diffeiimt parts of the country received the diploma? of the college. Hon. A. V. Parsons is President of tho institution. A Scamp.—The Warsaw (Ml); Signal ax po ses a scamp named Win. Thompson, who, un* der a disguise of a Scotch Presbyterian minis ter won tho band of a widow, married her, and then decamped with her carriage, horses, &c. He is represented as a man of pleasing hildreas and commanding ligure, and usn good speaker. Deserved Compliment—The City Council of Augusta lmve voted to Ool. H. Gumming, President of tho Board of Commissioners of tho Augusta Canal, u service of silver plate of the value of $1000 as u testimonial of the esteem in which tho citizens of Augusta hold his a vices‘‘in tho inception and building of tho Augusta Canal, where by the prosperity of tho City has been so greatly promoted, and the general welfare of all its citizens so highly ad vanced.” Tho city Council Could not have paid tho compliment, to a worthier citizen or to one who has done more for the advancement of the host interests of the city. El Paso.—-C. A. Hoppix, Esq., of Mobile who is now located at El Paso, writes under date of .Jan 15:— The preside of Eleasario is a small place built up around very extensive barracks, ami partly in ruins, formerly occupied by Ameri can trobps. Here aro quartered two compv tries of the 3d Infantry. Another oompany i» posted some twenty miles above, oppesito the town of El Paso. This and the neighboring villages ol Socorro ond Islcta, contain some 1800 or 2000 inhabitants. Of the Valley of El.Paso, it would be n tame expression to cull it lovely or pretty. Imagine it a Gu den of Eden, and you will not he far wrong, though I would not pretend to say its occupants display the industry aad taste of ou* first parents in adorning and dressing it. The soil is exceedingly fertile and in the hands of Y’ankcos would blossom as the roet and produce abundantly. But these people are too lazy to do nny thing but raise a little corn a few peas and “propagate.” Around every ‘'Jacob" you may count at least a dozen children. 5 The Friends and Acquaintance of Dr. MOSES SHEFTAI-L, Mr. Isaac Cohen, Mr. L. Solomons and their Friends, are invited to attend thcFunerulof the fortner, from h.is itite residence, Broughton-ntm’t this afternoon, at half past 3 o’clock. tnnr 8 tF“ The number of foreign emigrants nt New York, last mdjrtb, was only S.UOS—less than during the satiifvperiod last year by 5,615. Ninety Days of Sleighing.—A Pittsfield, Mass, letter to the N. Y. Cusnniercial 'Adver- ttser says there has beon uninterrupted slrigh- ing during the whole vviutci—the snow at no time exceoding ouo foot in detph, and, fi<r a great proportion of the time, less than -six inches.* An entire calendar winter, from the firatday of December to the last day of Februa ry, wiriiuut one severe slurm, ope heavy fall of snow, ono extreme degree of cold, ono break ing up of the ground, with its ftttet.dnnt of mud arid slush ; or one night w hen flic sleigh bells -have not made music. Later from California.—Tho steamer Alabama arrived at New Orleans, on riio28th instant, tYom Panama bringing passengers and dates from San Francfso to the 24th of January. The Alabama brings four hundred and fifty thtiOsand dollars worth of 'gold dust on freight and belonging to passengers. A terrible and destructive inundation hnd taken place at. Sacramento City, caused by tho overflow of the river—a thing that has notjhap- pened before to so great un extent for many years. Nearly the entire cily wns covered with vratqr. Large numbers of Cuttle ond oth er property have been swept away—loss is very heuvy, estimated in all at over one million of dollurs. Although this calamity has proved exceedingly distressing to tins citizens, yet it has been beneficiul in other respects. The overflowing of the water has washed out im mense quantities of gold trom the earth where it had before remained undiscovered. At the mines uenr Stockton, tho Chilians made quite a fierce attack upon the Americans working there. Several of tins assailants were killed und a number wounded on both,sides, and n.uny nf tho Chilians taken prisoners. It is believed that thi* outrage will so incense the Americans .that -hey will not rest until the of fender* are driven entirely out ot the country, t’hoexcit'-infint hud become intense. M *. Fremont lui* recovered h -r health, and helve f and husband are about dvpuiting from Panama. for ; the . United States. Tuey vyiri doonths* leave «>y the i ext step -tier. The New Y'ork Sun says there have beon eighty cases of cholera at Ward’s Island and twenty-five cases in the city. It is timb for the authorities of the city to act. • '? \ -T ■ / \ Plank Roads.—Tho president, of-in eastern plunk road in answer to some questions as to tho weight allowed to he carried on their road, answeis that no limit is given, the only difficulty being to have wagons built strong enough to carry ti e weight, that two horses can dp 4 '*- One pair of horses hauled, as an experiment, ten cords of wood for several miles. OUITUAHY. Our citizens will regret to learn that Da. MOSES 8HEFTALL, of this city, died in Charleston, jetter- day morning nt 7 o'clock. There are few men in out community better known, ond there are none wno possessed warmer sympathies or more generous feel ings. At the lied of Hie sick or afflicted, he was ever ready to lend his aid. It may truly be Eiudofniro, that he had not (in enemy. He wns a member of us “ Republican Blues ” for fifteen years. Some (tap previous to thp departure of that corps l'qr Charlee toll he went thither, but in consequence ot iiulisp» sl _ tion seldom paraded with his corps, and before tnfj lelt was confined to his bed, from which he neve arose. » PASSENGERS. Per steamer Metntnora. from Charleston— Weils, Miss Livingston, Miss Thompson, MrsDewev. Mrs Clarke, Mrs Hteedman. W A Lane, J Stanley. - G Stanley, C A Cuthbort, H II Armstrong, J T u° n , mnn, F Dewey, .1 B Clarke, T Garretty, G Blnkei), J K Mayor, A Roaengarter, A H Johnson J T Jennicf- W Wagner, II W Edwards, G Shoetbrd, L wli'“' man, W Lanmles, T Sargent, ' “ ' '* 1 n W C 'Wilson, J 8 Puleeon, Lt. John H. Heck, U. S. A., 3d artillery was married in Goldsboro, a few weeks since to Miss Mary Anders. The Wilmington Com mercial of the first inst., contains a card from James Matthews, stating that said Heck has a wife and children now in East Florida. The Easton Md. Star of Tuesday relates the following incident: It appears that a young man, who resided in Easton a few years ago, by the name of F*** and afterwards removed to the ■ village of R a few miles from C . became enamoured of a young lady in tho neighborhood, the duuglitcr of a widow C •, to whom ho afterwards be came engaged to be married, but from opposi tion on the part of the purents ; both of whom were then living; or some other cause, the con* sumation of their “plighted vows” was defer red. Thus matters stood until a few weeks n- go, wlien the wily^njqtber jpnt- the qonfiding/irid upBUspectiug daughter on a short visit to 0(--“— rfnd during her absentee drove into town in dashing style ip company witty Mr, F. and ac tually—married him herself'. The astounding news.'of her mother’s marrin<»e threy the poor girl into spasms, and at onVtirne 1-er life was despaired of, so overpowering wa&’the shefek that fell upon her young and rortfiding heart. Her mother is said to,be nbjiutJbrtyyitie years of Hg*v und has been n wulowrijftly ubiutt six. months. ^Strange world tl* '. Sturdivant, G W Davenport, ....... —, - _ Per steamer, St Matthews, from Pnlntka—E B -j' ' ner, H Lyon, E Martin, M Power, Dr Harrison, J - ' Liunon, Dr F E Hill, VV E Hill, J W Taylor, Dr W" Lemont,'Miss Burch, Miss Van Cott, Mrs VjinJ- - Mrs Flemming, S II Wiutz, Mr McKey, M Fees®®" Mrs Fessenden, M'Perley, MissPerley. A HAnaer*™ R J Morrison, A II Anderson, Jr, J Williams, »” liums. M Heckey, J F Scimmona, W Bnrkagton, ’ ; Otaway. Mj-s C Sayles, and 1 on deck. _ ,,. Per steamer Oregon from Augusta—* Mrs Hone, W How, J Green, F Miller. 2 Misses 0U« r and 5 on deck. Per steamer DeKnlb, from’Augusts—Mrs Bcna child and *vt, Mrs Trout, C Van Horn, It H Bennett, John Moore, Col,A S Jones, J L Grant, ^ - C Hanknson, W Brown, J L Green, Mr Strobar, - deck. CONSIGNEES. Per steamer Metamora, from Charleston—Ih 00 *^ & Tupper, Yonge &. Gimmick O Johnson & ' Ensteln, J Anderson & Co, Dewitt & Morgan, ^ j, ilton & Hardeman, J Lippmun, Cherry « to, Williams, P H Behn, JM Ot-oper. J-C Hunter, K". erehmn & Son, F Kendrick, I)r W C b'anieO, McNelty, Franklin & Brnutly, M A Cohen, j, u , c, A II Johnson, T S Wayne, Steamer DcKulb, am Dents. . i0 halrt Per steamer St Matthews, from Pnlntka S I Cotton, 5 bbls Molasses, 24 bbls Sugar, “ fcTup- and Mdz, to Boston & Gunhy, A Mack, brook , lon) per, J II Burroughs, Way & King, Wood, o & Pet steamer DeKidb, from A-uguata—t®i balesj^ ton, to Brooks & Tupper, P H Behn, N C 8 Solomons. ' 4 o-v, hales Cot Per steamer Oregon, from Augusta—23 > D . [ „. v , ton and Mdz, G W Gnrmnny & Co, J L W W Stark, and others. „ 097 bff* Per steamer T S Metcalf, from H Cotton and Mdz, F T Wfflis & Co, fi Molynen (;c F Waring, P II Behn. Geo Retd. G W Per steamer Sam Jones, from Tlftwliin it ^ ^ bales Cotton, to C Hartridgq, G N Neil, Jo»c« J L Stfinney, N A Hardee <t Co.