Daily morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1850-1864, May 10, 1853, Image 1

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    FIVK DOLLARS PER ANNUM, HALF YEARLY IN ADVANCE
VOLUME IV.
rUUMSHKU DAILY AND TRIWEEKLY BY
JOHN M. COOPER.
WILLIAM T. THOMPSON, EDITOR.
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THE DAILY«.
Tho Qnoen’s Dream j
A SEQUEL TO “ UNCLE ToM's CABIN.”
Hcknk.—The emerald drawing room in a Palace
of Freeland, the walla adorned with the portrait
of the philanthropise of all natiune ; alto, with
two remarkable painting a, one ehowing Howard,
the illustrious prison reformer, administering
roneolation to the tenants of a loathsome dun-
neon ; the other, representing John Pound, a
humble cobbler, tfn his habit when he lived, seated
on a three legged stool, teaching the little rag
gedboys and girls to rend, so that they might
better find their way to their Heavenly Father.
Present—The Queen of Freeland, surrounded
by the Ladies of her Court, weeping and sib
ling.
First Lady, who has just finished reading a
novel, called “ Uncle Tom's Cabin."
Can such things be, and overcome ua like a
auiniucr'a dream 1
SECOND LADY.
It almost surpasses belief!
THIRD LADY.
That monster, Legree!
FOURTH LADY.
That sainted martyr, Tom!
FIFTH LADY, hysterically.
That darling Eva!
quKKN, (who ts young and beautiful, and has
a very silvery voice.)
ouch scenes of life are horrible! I would not
be monarch of that realm in its present state
for all the glory of the undisputed sovereignty
of the universe!
sixth lady, old, and supposed to be light
headed.
May not the description have been over*
colored ?
QUEEN, sadly.
I fear not. My archbishops, bishops, minis*
trrs of statu, and privy councillors, all concur
in stating that negro slavery is one of the
great sins of the Western World. But, 1
never knew before that its features where so
utterly repulsive. I wish, my dear Duchess, 1
bad never asked you to read the book.
FIFsT LADY.
Rather rejoice, your majesty : since the in
formation you have obtained will enable you
to protest against tho iniquity.
queen.
No; lam queen only in ray own realm!
And if I were to protest, or evon implore, the
appeal would be useless. The iutercommu-
mcatiou between Slates is fuuuded on expe*
tliency, not souud and moral principle.
SECOND LADY.
Suppose the ladies of your court and empire
were to send a pathetic address on the subject
to the ladies of the West. I have heard tlmi
woman’s voice, whuu raised in the cause of
humanity, rarely falls unheeded on the ears of
even the sternest of the opposite sox; and
surely our sisters will not refuse us
hearing.
FIRST LADY.
I cordially approve of the scheme, and in
tended to have suggested it to your majesty
myself.
ladies, in zephyry chorus.
So do all of us!
QUEEN.
Do as you like—you have my permission!
But be loving and kind in your language; for
if our land be (he blessed abode of liberty and
happiness, we should not forget that the lands
in which ihe negro is held captive have not
hud, like us, tho advantage of (he experience
oj a thousand years of monarchical and Chris
tian rule. [Exeunt Ladies in agitation.
the queen, taking up “ Uncle Tom's
i patient
Cabin
Morning, noon, and night, I am thankful that
the air of Freeland is too pure for a slave. If
1 thought there was one in my dominions, 1
would tear the jewels from my crown to buy
his ransom. But there is not; it is only in
the land of tho West that liberty is profaned
oy traffic in the life that only (loti cuu give,
and only God should use and take.
With this queenly raflnotion her majesty
began to road, untilat length, overpowered by
the emotions the contents of the book had ex
cited, she fell into such a deep study that the
sliudows of the world gathered around her
crowded upon her regal vision. Scores, torn to
ribbons, lay scattered in the railway tunnels,
where they had fallen victims to human cupid
ity. A hundred suddenly borne from their
a methods by an avalanche of water, were hur
ried into eternity, by human negligence. Six
ties in one place, seventies iu another, and
dozens all over the country, the helpless vic
tims of a remorseless element, lay in charred,
and blackened heaps, as sacrifices to human
comfort, convenience, and glory. They had
perished, deep in the bowels of the earth,
while huwiug riches out of grim chuinbers for
the advancement of mankind at large. They
hud warmed the heurths of millions, fed the
engine that works the factory, plows (lie main,
and heaps up the magnificence which
Not Babylon,
Nor groat Aloairo, equalled in all
Their glories.
And they died uuinourned—scarcely remem
bered—by their Qccident-hardencd kith aud
kin. While their requiem is sung in a casual
li. their e!nsv in written in n Inter nml
paragraph, their elegy is written in a later and
mure apalling catastrophe, aud so they are
forgotten. No
Ardennes waves above them her greon leaves,
Dewy with Nature'e tear-drops;
although they died in a nobler cause than any
that ever marshalled armies in
Battle’s magnificently stern array.
Their remains,
In one block burial blent,
are consigned to oblivion ; and the only harps
that hymn their praise are steam-pipes, his
sing aud shrieking over land and sea.
The vision as it deepened in horror, exposed
the bottom of tho sen, strewed with thousands
upon thousands of corpses of true hearted sail
ors. There they lay, in their fathomless grave,
pale, mute evidence of the perils to be encoun
tered in the pursuit of that commerce which
covers the seas with ships, and brings the na
tions of the earth together. The ocean heaves
hugely around them, exulting in its prey; while
the millions who aVe clustered on (he land little
think that the cotton and silk they woar has
cost the life of many a gallant seaman.
Her Majesty, being Queen of the Main,
shed bitter tears'at this sad spectacle, and,
turning her eyes to the broad expanse of the
ocean snread out beforo her gaze, saw it dot
ted with vessels, whoso white sails glistened
in the noon-day sun.
The decks were crowded with human be
ings—men, women, and children—who had
dared the perils of tiio storm, the sharp edges
of unseen rocks, the lightning’s blast, and the
uncertain chances of fortune iu a distant clime,
in search of the daily bread they could not
obtain in their own "dear native land.”
“ Those are emigrants from your domin
ions,” whispered the voice in her ear; “ three
huudred thousand of them annually leave
your shores to enrich that great continent,
now darkened by that slavery which your
majesty so grievously laments, but which, at
uo distant day, will control the destinies of the
world. What Freeland discards ns a surplus,
it receives with the open arms of affection.”
“ The spectacle saddens me,” said tho
Queen,for I can read sorrow, deeply blended
with hope, on the countenances of that ocean
bound multitude. The sacrifice of country,
home and friends, is not half redeemed by the
prospect of a brighter future. Their hearts
yearn after the ties they have left behind them,
perhaps forever. There is the husband think
ing ol his wife and little ones, tho lover of
his sweetheart, tho maiden of her numberless
sweet associates, and the lone inan, with the
ivy shadow creeping into every cell of his
heart, is covertly wiping away the tear shod
..... ii.. ...1.. ik!... mu i„r. i.: t
over the only thing in life left him to love—
his country. Sad—oh, frightfully sad—must
be the necessity that drives so many true
hearts away from my empire! Hark! Ihe
strains of music ere watted to my ears! They
come on the sigh-laden air like a requiem for
the banished living. It is
Home, home, sweet home!
and I see the decks aro wet with toars, and
that hearts ure throbbing that uever wished to
throb again!” (
One vessel in that mournful fleet filled her
majesty with vague but shuddering apprehen
sion. She saw the clouds over its track in
the distance had no silver lining. And as her
eye pierced tho dim vault of time, she read its
destiny.
The moon hath twelve times changed her form,
From glowiug orb to creacunt wau,
’Mid skies of culm and scowl of storm.
Since from her port that ship hath gono;
Bat ooeen keeps its seoret well.
And though we know thxt ell is o’er,
No eye hath eeen, no tongue can tell
Her fate: the ne’er woe heard of mure!
e her tale of sorrow known,
lovely head and gently closed her cerulean
’Twere something to the broken lioart:
The pangs of donbt would then be gone—
And fauoy’s endless dreams depart! -
It may not bo:—there is no ray
by which her doom we may explore;
We only know she sail'd away,
And ne'er was seou nor heard of more.
Such was the grief song of friends left be
hind, but to the quoenly gaze the veil of dark
ness was uplifted. Her majesty suw the
doomed emigrant ship, two mouths out ol sight
of land, and her hold was hot and vapory.
The shelf-like couches were occupied by the
raving eick, and
In the dead waist and middle of the night,
a shriek from a fair young girl tella all the
ship that her ahaiue will never smile iu her
fuce again. It has gone, and in the morning
it is cost into the sea, to bo food for the sharks.
Another week out, and the mother is loaned
overboard—more loud fur tho sharks ; and
the ship is swathed up in red, aud from
her depths ascend (he wails of pain and tho
mnddenii>g cries of delirium—more food for
the shurks. No water on board, but abun
dance of fever. The bread mouldy—the beef
and mutton putrid—more food for the shurks—
and the mate bourse with reading the burial
service. A black cloud gathers in the hori
zon, and the vessel plunges slier over a gigan-
eyes. Her cheek fell into the hollow of her
lily hand, and resting ou her elbow, buried in
tho cushions of her side, site slept. While
slumbering, strange sighta, stupendous doings,
awful revelations, crowded upon her soul.
THE DREAM.
“ The air of Freeland is too pure for a
slave!” thought she, as, Heated on her bur
nished throne, she gazed around her in all the
swelling pride and consciousness of august
authority.
“ Queen, boiiold thy people!” sounded a
sonorous voice in her car.
Her large blue eyes opened ns by enchant
ment, and, looking round her, ahe beheld a
glittering throng ol familiar (aces. The proud
est and most beautiful ol the lend swept be-
Jore her in gorgeous array. Costly jewels
blazed on alabaster arm* while diamonds
unshed glory across brows of marble, and
Bh*d splendor on necks majestic in their haugh
ty curvatures. Contempt of all things, low or
little, darted from tho eyes of the moving mass<
■ - v — wi «uo tiiuviug imoii.
I heir very gesture betrayed the innate sense
of power, and exultation over the traditiou of
»n ancestry unsullied by poverty. They were
ol the race
Of th. lofty brow, th’ ImperUl eye,
Tb, patrician lip that feed, on worn.
The reane changed to one of gold. It wns
ell gold. Tho gold wee here, the gold woe
there, the gold we. everywhere. Tho upluali-
ing, railing, tumbling, jingling und ringing of
gold .were terrific. Whichever way the
eye turned we. gold. Tho human beings
tliemaplycB fleetned gold. One, overgorged,
parted in twoin, and behold! hi. heurt was
crusted over with gold.
Howe of ahopa and piiai of warehoueaa ftext
crowded upon her view. They were the
lure, of the riehaaofthe world. The produce
° r »verjr elim« enabled into usefulness by bu*
[nan labor and inventive goniua, were here to
r* hod for money. The greet globe itself had
been ranaacked to fyrmih them. And their
owner, looked plump and comfortable. Aud
well they might, for they were driving a roar-
10 S trade; bod anog invealmenta in aloeki,
railway, .ad mine.; and, at evantida were
warned down to pretty Gothic collagen, over-
Mradowi trior, with latrin pi«4.
, Shallow brook, and riv.ro wM*.
, * re >be middle clooaes. wbo claim
0 J*oM the balance of power between tbe
higher and the low,/!” whispered the voice in
* "jejeety'e ear. R They are lite atrength
■ *} of yoaruation. i'or they are tho moat
adualram., the mast moral, the moot intel-
I- “ moat moi
lecinal of the population 1
h.. “OMrch felt pleased; a smile lit up
countenance—but only for an
C«alB* want, cutth.lr.hadow.b«tor..
datkaoao the
rnoaj2.V re Wb/ Where ere the
mwSIJ•1* "hoee bosom I drew my soldiers,
cuin 1 * 0 ’ l ? Jr * t,| fio.™.my laborers I"
Huteker than a Utah of lightning they
A storm!
'* Make all snug aloft! Ou with the hatch-
i! Let her drive before it!” shouts the cap
tain.
And as the wind howls and the lightniug
glares—
** Five feet of water in the hold !** whispers
the capenter.
“ All hands to tho pumps !” and the mon
passengers labor ami sweat for beings dearer
to them than life, until the flesh drops from
the
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 10. 1853.
reproach, sent up from every corner of the land.
This is a condition of existence as dreadful as
the fabled one ol Tantalus, and every feature of
its wretchedness, every variety of which it is
so susceptible, claims from your majesty that
consideration and affectionate attention which
aro based on the best, the warmest, the holiest
feelings. The wrongs and sins of your empiro
start up in tho gloom like
A forest hug* or ipt&ra
tipped with dark red hre. Behold them, as
they uppoar, before you, in grisly and ghastly
orrqy!"
The scene changed from tho wide realm of
Neptune to that of merry Freeland. Her ma
jesty saw pass before her, iu close columns,
the elite of her industrial population. First,
there came the men of thought, the men of
action, and the throng who, wearing the
S orb of gentlemen, are presumed to be
le mos t successful in tho industrial struggle;
but few were adorned with Ihe coveted
decoration of prosperity, the majority had caro
decoration ot prosperity, the majority had caro
ridden blows, sunken eyes, pallid cheeks, and
(hose pursed up lips, which seem nervously
to hide the contention raging in the prison-
house wilhin. Urged on by hope, or goaded
by despair, they pressed frantically forward,
leaving iu their ieur a dismal traiu of beggars,
maniacs, and suicides.
Then tlioro cume a mighty section of the
more mechanical portion of the community.
They wore a stalwart race, wilh naturally in
telligent and cheerful countenances; but
when they glanced at the banner borne before
them, their faces darkened, and they surlily,
sometimes savagely, thrust the weaker out of
their way. On the banner was inscribed the
following instructive and warning suimnary :—
Average wages of a skilled mechanic, 24«.
per week, out of which he must make a decent
appearance abroad, pay rent, buy food for
his family, clothe them, educate his children
—generally Jive in number—and out of the
residue indulge in such luxuries as his con•
cience will allow him.
Thon there came intermediate grades of oin-
ployed mechanics and artisans, until the pano
rama ended in a squalid mob, who belonged to
no particular trade, but hovered on the con
fines of every one, and starved on them all.
Then there burst ou the startled royal vision
countless masses who toiled, from early mom
to dewy eve, for a remuneration so attenua
ted that its recipients, in its distribution, every
day accomplished miracles. The average for
each head of a family, consisting ol a husband,
wife, and flvo children, was 15s. per week ;
out ol which, in addition to being expected to
furnish a satisfactory example ol order and
morality, the following disbursements were
punctually to bo made.—
.s «
Sunday’s jolut
Do. . pot of beer 0 4
Vegetables
getables i o
Tea, sugar, o
Total 10 A
Thus making an excess of expenditure over
income of la. 5d. per week, without takiug in
to consideration such necessaries us clothing
medicines, or such luxuries as books, news
papers, or periodicals; or.such moral duties
self-improvement, or education of childr* n.
r all these there was provided a blank— u
dead, soul-blighting blank.
These lived in towns and cities, and at their
heels came a more squalid array, bearing be
fore them the banner of their social condition,
upun which was inscribed the following tabu
lar statement:—
Rales of woekly wages paid for agricultural
labor throughout “merry” Freeland:
Cheshire 1-4 0
Derby u 0
Nottingham in 11
atafford.................,
Northumberland
.. 9 6 F
...11 U 1
.not
Do. North Riding
**..***’ 7s 6
. 1,WQ
Bucks 8 0
Borks
Sussex 10 0
Hants. 9 0
South Wilts 7 0
... 10 0 Hants.
=- ,....8 0 ‘ ‘
Dorset. 7 6
Averugeof northern counties, lls 6d.; aver
age of southern, 8s. 5d.; average of west, 10»j.
Id.; average of the east, 9s. Id.; average of
the whole, 9s. (3d.
“ How do they manage to exist upon such
piltanco?” was the sovereign's mental query :
and the next instant a country village, infested
by lank and hungry curs came before her, und
she saw
A bold peasantry, ones their country’s pride
at home, with only tho beer shoo for a loung
ing place. Their aspect was defiant, trucu
lent, half bashful, half snvage. Their labor
brought them only a pittance, and in their
hearts they cursed that labor, and the soil upon
which it wns bestowed. The women in this
sweet, rurul spot, were thin and haggard—the
children squalid—the cottages dirty, and as if
to heighten the contrast, mere, right against
the brow of a finely wooded ^hifl, stood
Gracious lady,” a»id the Director of tbe
vision, in solemn, touoliing accents, u it was
womanly and noble in the ladies ol your court
to weep over the wrongs of the negro—such
crystal drops become bright stars in tbe hu
man firmament 5 but I muBt warn vou that
such sympathy is dimmed in the light of an
ull-ruling Providence, when, in your own land
Liberty, the absence of which in another is
deplored, is, in Hs moet God like developemens,
but a name—unless that may be termed liber
ty which, practicallyt >a but vulgar licence t
licence to work from rosy morn to dark mid
night, foi the most scanty pittances 1 licence
to store up wealth in the hands and for "the
benefit of the few ; licence to bellow lustily
for rival politicians; licence to send children
to ragged schools; licence to tot in an ale
houap; licence to grow lumpish and brutal; li
cence to neglect tho offices of religion, to swear,
lie, to blaspbemo ; licence to steal to pander
unchecked to the coarsest appetites, to fawn
and slaver over the little great ones of the
oorlh; licence to creep like u worm through
life, or hound through it like a wi>d beast; and
last and most precious of all—for it is untaxed
—licence to starve, to rot, to die,and be buried
in a foetid pauper’s grave, on which the sweet
smelling flowers sent to strew the pathway of
man and woman with beauty, lovo ami hope,
will refuse to grow, much less bloom.”
CONSIGNEES.
Per brig Josephus, from Baltimore—Claghoru k Can-
ulngbam, 8 E Uothwell A Co, J A Brown, T 8 Wayne.
F Miller, J Bancroft, J Jones, T M Turner k Co, II J
H J Gilbert, A A Solomous A Co, G B Cunttnlikg, How
‘ ind k Co, Scranton, Johnston k Co, J P Collins, Run-
tsk Owen, w Woodnridge, K JU Lsffiteau, Brig^ism,
Islly A Co. O II J6hnton. Morse A Nichols. J J Mu«ric«,
A Haywood, Ti Mclntire, A Fawoelt A Co, R liabur
sham A Son. J DeFord, J A Mayor, J liaebrouok A Co,
The First llnby.
A SKETCH FROM A LADT’s MEMOIRS.
My old schoolmate, Mary Thornley, had
been married nearly two years, when I made
ray first call on bar in tho capacity of a motli-
*P:«1 you over see such a darling?’ she
cried, tossing tho infant up and down in her
arms. * There, baby, that's ma's old iriend,
Jane. Sho knows you already, 1 declare,'
cried the delighted parent, as it smiled at a
bright ring, which 1 held up to it. 1 You
never saw such a quick child. 8he follows
me with her oyes all about the room. No
tice what pretty little feet shn bus : the dar
ling footsey-tootsies end taking both feet in
oue baud tho mother fondly kissed them.
* It certainly i* very pretty,’ said I, trying to
be polite, though 1 could not see that the in
fant was more beautiful than a dozen others
I had seen. ‘It has your eyes exactly,
Mary.'
' Yes, and da-da 1
friend, anostroi
precious?’ and
kisses.
As I walked slowlv homeward, I said to
myself, 1 1 wonder if, wbun I marry, 1 shall
ever be so foolish ? Mary used to be a sensible
girl.’
Navannak Kxporn*.
Nkw York—Bohr L«Roy—432 balsa Cotton, 139 box-
1 Copper Oro, 173 Hides, 8 pkgs Mdse, 100 ompty bbls.
8ohr riaodoiao—493 bales Upland and 107 do Sea
Island Cotton, 300 pkgs Mdse, and 5 bales Wool.
a-tin’s mouth end chin,’ said my
opbizing the child, ' hasn’t it
d ahe almost smothered it wilh
lu a fortnight I called on my friend again.
‘How baby grows,’<^|e said. ‘Don’t yoi
iheir hands, and their hair whitens like the
house tops on a moonless winter’s night. The
loug drawn cry of the agony of helpless wo
men and children, suffocating below, rises
above the storm, and aa tbe wnirling eloude
and rolliug sea blend their wrath, the wind
and waves became wilder aud wilder, madder
and madder. One shout—one tromendous ex
plosion of horror—shoots up to tho starless
firmament, and the emigrant ship has plunged,
bows foromost, into the dark, deep, raging
“ Where ore ray people ?” shrieked
Queen, horror struck and appalled.
“Queen !” whispered the genius at hor
side, “ you shall seo them, and in a guise in
which subjects were never yet presented to a
monarch ; but to nerve your woman's courage
for ihe presentation, let me tell you that al
though the world wo live in has its bright and
glorious aspects-although kindly feelings,
pure desires, and holy passions march wilh ui
to our deiftiny, und heaven's gracious sunshine
falls on all alike—there are those among us
with bruised hearts, blighted hopes, and per
verted instincts, whose way of life is eiihe« a
curse ora crime. The stately building, the
pomp and insignia of wealth, the regal mag
nificence of power, the landscapes glittering iu
their almost garden beauty, and the waving
fields ot God’s food that surround us on every
side, contrast so hideously with this awful
oonditfon, that you must be informed tb«t there
ie a world wiihiu that which meets the dazzled
eye of prosperity, of. which no one knows
aught, save those whom capricious fortuno has
doomed its inhabitants. This world ia a
froicn continont.
Dark and wild, boat with perpetual storms
Of whirlwind and dire hafi-
wherein the tossed and troubled aoul bewails
the hour of he birth in the bitter language of
despair. Those born in more genial social
clitnee know nothing of this dreary existence.
They never foil ihe pung that corrodes tho
heart, or the bitter woe that fires the brain aa
with a red hot Iron, or he^ so deplore the lose
of a knowledge of tbe pure or true, or struggle
with a life made up of fretful anguish, wounded
delicacy, bruised sentiment, and that gnawing
and unceasing, though hopeless craving for
those blessings which the human mind, in its
lowest degratMfion, instinctively reels to be Its
heritage on «*nh. Believe it, most gracious
queen, that there are shadows deep and broad
the brow ol a finely wooded .hill, stood a
stately mansion—it was)ihc landlord's! Some
milas down the valley, cloft by a stagnuni,
putrid ditch, stood a glaring brick edifice—It
was tho Union House, which opeued its dis
mal doors to receive the rustic swain, the vil-
luge belle, the humble field laborer, the hun
gry, wrinkled wife, and children that never
were rosy, to pinch, sturve, snub, crush, and
dehumanise.
The ghastly panorama then extended to one
of those hives of industry which have mode
Freeland famous throughout ihe universe. The
sky wns obscured by the stuck* of hundreds
of small chimneys, and vast edifice>>, stretched
in lines, for miles and miles. Tho latter were
crowded wilh women and children, young jn
years, but withered ill form and feature. Tho
countenances of,the men were as colorless os
the white fabric in their Iooidb. Their eyes
sparkled with intelligence, but it was chiefly
the intelligence fof suffering, of privation, of
keen sense of wrong, of inability to bo better,
of rankling hatred against existing institutions,
and a furtive wish that some hideous calamity
would bury them all iu one common, undis-
tinguishable ruin.
“ A rn I tli
^|0 said. ‘ Don't you
see it 7 I never knew a child to grow so last.
Grandma says it's the healthiest iufanl sho
ever koew.*
To me it seemed that the baby had not
f rown an inch; and to avoid a contradiction
changed the theme. But in a moment, tho
mother wqs back to her infaut again.
* 1 do believe it’a beginning to cut its teeth,’
•he said, nutting her finger into the little one’s
mouth. 'Just feel how hard the gum is there.
Surely that’s a tooth coining through. Grand
mother will be here to-day, aud I'll ask her il
it isn’t so.’
I laughed ns I replied, ' I am entirely igno
rant of such mutters; but your child really
seems a very fine one.’
‘Oh! yes, everybody says that. Pretty,
pretty dear.’ And she tossed it up and down
till 1 thought the child would be shaken to
pieces; but the little crcnture seemed to like the
process mightily. * It ia crowing at its moth
er? It's laughing, ia it? Tiny, uiny, little
dear; what a sweot precious it is,’ and ■■ at
tho last ioterview, she finished by almost de
vouring it with kisses.
When I next called, baby was still further
udvnucsd.
'Only think,’ said my friend, when I had
made iny way to the nursery , whero she now
kept herself from morning till night, ' baby
begins to eat. 1 gave it a piece of meat to-day
—a bit of real broiled beefsteak.’
* What, ’ said 1, in my ignorance, for this
did look wonderful,' the child eating beefsteak
already ?’
‘Oh!’ laughed my friend,seeing my mis
take, ‘ what a sad dunco you are, Jane ! Rut
wait till you have babies of your own. (She
says you eat beefsteak, darling,' added the
proud mother addressing the infant, ‘ when
you only suck the juice. You don’t want to
choke yourself, do you, baby 1 Eat a beefsteak !
funny, baby, isu’t it ? And again ahe laughed,
laughing all the more because the child, sym
pathetically, crowed in return.’
It was not many weeks before the long ex
pected teeth really made tbeir appearance.
'Jane, Jane, baby has three teeth,’ trium
phantly cried the mother, as I entered tho
nursery. 4 Three teeth, and lie’s only threo
months old. Did you ever hem of the like 7 ’
I coufessed that I had not. Tho whole tiling,
in fact, was out of my range of knowledge.
I knew all about Dante in the original, and a
dozen other fine lady accomplishments, but
nothing about babies teeihmg.
‘Just look at tho little pcar'.s,’ exclaimed mv
friend, or she opened the child’s mouth,' ain't
(hey beautiful ( You never snvr auy thing so
r iretty—confess that you didn’t. Precious dar
ing,' continued the mother, rapturously hug
ging and kissiug the chiltL^* it is worth its
weight in gold.’ m
But (ho crowning miracle of all was when
' baby’ began to walk. Its learning !o creep
had been duly heralded to me. 80 also had
its being able to stand alone, though this meant,
I found, standing with the support of a chair.
But when it really walked alone, the important
fact was announced to me in a note, for my
friend could not wait till I called. Of course
I lost no time in hastening to Mary..
* Stand there,' she said 10 me, in an exulting
voice. ‘ No stoop, I mean: bow can you bo
so stupid ?’ and, as I obeyed, she took her sta
tion obout a yard off, holding the little fellow by
ailher arm. 1 Now, see him,’ she cried, as he
toddled towards me, and fiually succeeded in
gaining my arms, though, oncoor twice I fan-
Per atoamsr D L Adams, from Augatta—254 bales
Cotton and Mdse, to Starko A Bryson, J 8 Snider, Rob
erto A Co, Aikin A Barns, M J Solomons, W Parsons, O
II Johnson, 8 Solomons, Behn A Foster, F B Baker, J G
Falligant.
PASSENGERS.
Por stoamer Planter, from Centrevillago, Ae —Mrs
Waldbarg and servant, Miss Waldburg, Miss Johnsoi
Waldbure and servant, Miss Waldburg. Miss Johnson,
R Kiug, J Ml*i'll, A Soott, P Q Camming, A MeDooald
and ssrvt, and 2 deck.
COMMERCIAL.
LATBST DATES.
Liverpool. April 231 Havre,April 201 Havana, April 22
Savanuah Market, May 10.
COTTON—8ales yesterday only 40 bales, vis: 17 et
10, and 23 at lO^o.
Correspondence of the Morning News.
HAVANA, APRIL 28, 1853.
Since oar report of the 7th Instant, a lively de
mand was manifested for Sugar, and purchasers showed
good deal of eagerness, owing to. which, and rather
lower Freights, planters were enabled to obtain an ad
vance of to >■ rial above oar last quotations, bring
ing the tangs of prlcss about as follows: Whites 8^ to
10 rials, choice florets 10J{ to 102f, yellows 6>i to 7, line
yellows to 7superior florstos 73« to 8, browns 6*f
to 6, oucuruohoe to 5}( rials. Within the last few
days, however, the direct English steamer brought lees
favorable oooounts from Europe, which oeoaeloned a
slackness in the inquiry, and although no absolute de
cline has yet taken place, buyers are offering lower
rates. We may add that white Sugars are very scarce.
Musoovadoes are dull at4){ to 6 rials.
Molasses is maintained in value, at2>* rials hers and
in the (Utports. w
The businsss in Coffee continues moderate, at $7& to
8K per quintal.
There was rain lately In some parts of the country,
whereby grinding was partially interfered with, but
it does not appear to have been general as yet.
IMPORTS—^Two parcels of Carolina Rice arrived,
amounting to 300 casks, and the sales e^ prised some
what more than 500 oasks, chiefly ..j small lots, at
from 12 to 12){ rials, for good .ty, It being difficult
to find bu)«rs for info-' except at very low rates.—
There wore sold be' ... 1100 begs Spanish at 9 and 8K
rials, and Man! of inferior description at ]ow figures.
The stook in flr»t hands Is rather more than 1800 casks
Carolina. About 500,000 fset W P Lumber from Maine
realised $26 to 28>£ tor narrow and wide, Ineluding 20,-
000 feet at $30 ; n cargo from Nova Scotia was token at
$26% and 28%, and ono from New Brunswick at $27 ;
leaving two paroels afloat, for disposal, amounting to
140,000 feet. Of Pitch Pins, two eargoes Wilmington
River brought $28 and 26, tho first being a very extra
prloo for that sort; one of steam sawed from Jackson
ville changed hands at $29, one of Scantling and Tim
ber from Savannah at $27 all round, one of steam saw
ed from Wilmington, was at $28 under oontraot, one of
Boards, Plank and Scantling from Charleston realised
$30, and one from Mobile came on oontract. Several
lots of Empty Caskswers also disposedof, the last sales
being at $3 for good qua Uy.
FaxtuuTS —The last charters for Cowes and
ports wero at £2 12s. 6 for vessels of largo else, and a
■mallor one at £2 10s 3 5 also at £2 12a 0 tor hhd Sugar
from outporto to London. T» the U. States we quoto 0
to $6% per hhd ot 8ugar, $1% per box and $2% to 3 for
Molasses.
Exciiarob—The last transactions on London were at
9%p-g premium, but now higher rates are asked ; N.
York and Boston 2 p-% discount. J. C. B. A Co.
I 'HE undersigned have now for safe a largo bow
■took of .
reu, Home-keeping- and Plantation
DKY GOODS,
Th.t ... ..In, Kid .0 VERY CHEAP FOR CASH,
that they distance competition In Savannah.
Iu our stock are the best qualities of
Printed Challjr Cloths and Tissues,
— Bareges and Barege de Lalnes,
Frenoh Printed Mnsllns,
Foulard Bilks,
Embroidered Robes and Ginghams,
Plain Blaok and High Colored Bareges,
Mourning Dress Goods for Summer.
Embroidered and lace goods,
IN IMMENSE VARIETY.
HOSIERY.
ladies' Bilk, Gauss and Lisle Undervests,
Gent's Silk, Marino, Gauss and Lisle Undershirts and
Drawers,
English Hose and Half-Hose, in every siscand quality,
Gloves and Mitts, of every kind.
Mull, Nainsook, Jaconet. Cambric, and 8wlss Mnsllns,
in Plaid, Striped and Figured, and in every quality.
Bishop's nod Victoria Lawns.
LINEN GOODS.
Our store is the Depot for tbe best Linen Goods, (all
pure flax.) which we retail u cheap as the other mer
chants here pay for the sains goods, vis £
Linen Sheetings,
In every width and quality.
Shirting Linens, Hand-Sunn and Undressed,
Pillow-Case Linens and Apron Linens,
Bird's-Eye Di*ners and 8cotob Diapers,
Iluokabuok Bathing Towels,
Linen Dowlas and Huokabuoks,.
Table Llncun,
of every kind, very eheap.
Dam ns k Napkins nnd Doylies,
Table Covers and Toilet Covers,
Quilts and Counterpanes, very cheap.
Furniture Dimities und Furniture Chlutxes,
English Furniture Chintoos. very ohesp.
Stoat Lace for Window Curtains,
yards wide,
Moeqnlto Laos and Nettings,
Linen Drillings and Cottonodtis,
Silk Warp Black Alpaeas,very cheap,
Blaok Silks,of
w Cases, Ao.,1
— do
Our stook is replete In almost every artlole needed
Cotton do
fot cottonojInaburgs,
, incImJin
VERY CUEAP.
B/own Cotton Sheetings,
Colored Homespuns, for women's drosses,
Cottonades for men's wear,
Linen Osnsbargs,
Farmers' Drills, all Linen, Ac., Ae.
tors Drills, au Linen, *c., so.
MATTING,
▼ RRY OMKAP.
sughly filled up (
LARGEST ASSORTMENT, and it is fixed for sale at
prioes SO UNIFORMLY VERY CHEAP, that pnr-
ohusers ofa Urge assortment, in small and large qnin-
tities, can be salted In a greater number of articles, and
thoreby effect a greater saving, than in any ether store
the uoimoV'm:?
attend the Buperit
JNO. II. MOW*
CO-PARTNERSHIP
npJIK undersigned ha* this Any
1 " ENHY C KING, of C
I Mr. HENRY C UNO,
whom he will continue the Fa-
Business in this oity, under _
. , IJNO. H. HULL, No. 81$Boy
s. s. eiBuKV,
WtwI.MT***
Bookseller « '
CIS AS. SI. Pli
CONTRACTOR AND BUI,
I A VINO resinned his bastettO,
. id to contrast for Buildings, or J<
esoription, in his line. Stairt exoeu
dispatch. A sharu of the pnbli
jefs and dupatoh. A share c
•wona^street west of Brow
B. D. Enina,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
SAOKDxxflviuut, Washington County. Qa., a
WiU practice in the Courts of the Middle circuit. All -»
business committed to his ears will b« executed with
promptness end dispatch. -U « . •
RxraRKjicKS.—Messrs. Bcthwell* Smith, and Dv H.
L. Byrd, Savannah. '* j*sjl
BBOWN t HARRIS,
S, Mvety,
AND SALK 8TABLX,
WEST BBOAD-8TREKT,
rw. jy »—ly jtnxia w. ■ Alans
TWOS. A. ■ MOWN,
▲ NEW runt.
' ““ilAHBIS&c'o:
FORWARDING AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
And Dialers fa Drain and Orocsries,
9ft Bny-Ntreet, Hnv«nm»hi.
nov 30 IM
COLOKED DAGUERREOTYPEA.
V. H. CAREY
VyOULD raspectfully give notice that
reopened hie Gallery,
et square, where L *
tares in hie muoh admi
rainy or fair weather.
_ , —, ***71 dorwr Bryan street im
Instructions given in the art and aU the apmrataa
furnished. Also, a large let of nates, Oases, Cbe mi
nis, to., for sale 6m bo If '
_ it a greater Mviug. man fa »*»,t • JN
in Savannah. Buyers are invited to inspect onr whole
stock, as we rely on the patronage of the greatest
ber of purchasers (by our diffusing the greatest reoipro-
Ml Inttiresu) for
111 Congress street, next to Bull street,
apr 4 and opposite the Pulaski House.
DIBBLE A CAREY
CLOTHIERS
AND
MERCHANT TAILORS,
Wine room
JOHN POOLE,
WBOUBSALB AND KOTAIL MAtSS
’AINT8. OILS, TURPENTINE /
French and Amtrittm Wit
Paint, Varnish and White-wash Broshe* !
Camel flair Penoils, Badger and Camel Halt
fileaderaGrainingOowbi, Artiste*
log and Gfitting, dene on reasonable terms by
JOHN POOLE, 11 Wbiteker-et
r 10 Nsarly opposite Swift, Denslew 4 (
If. E. Comer of Whitaker and Broughton-ets.
Hnvnnnah.
milE Subscribers, in announcing to their nunier-
MARINE INTELLIGENCE.
PORT OF SAVaNNAH....^.m MAY 10
ARRIVED.
Stoamer D L Adams. Hubbard, Augusta,*wlU» boats 3
And 9,
Are lthese the people?” groaned the
queen, us the cold damp ol more than mortal
agony moistened her marble forehead.
“ Not all of them !” sounded the voice in
her ear so sharply that her raitijeoty looked up
eagerly, and saw written, iu fetters of fire, on
the palace wull:—
1. Every twelfth person in your dominions
a pauper, daily receiving parochial re
lief.
on lh« ground we tread j end the children of ^ ,,
when they pursue their thousand ttfe Yiee chuckled nod
kya, ire too ept to forget Ibev ar« ed, leered aad wall
on the funeral noil of e multitude, **
were never intended to beat only
to Hie dirge of their owu aorrowa and miseries
-*lo the wild, sad notes, breathing eloquent
U. Every twentieth person in your domin
ions is a destitute wanderer, with no roof but
the sky—no home but a prison. They are
the Ishmaelites of modern society : every
one's hand is against them, and their hands
are against every one.
3. There are in Freeland 10,743,747 fe
males : divide that number by 500,000, and
you will find that nearly every twentieth wo
man in your dominions is—oh ! horror, piled
on horror !—a harlot!
At this moment a thrilling episode occurred
in tho royal vision. The noblest of the rivers
of Freeland, dotted with vessels from every
clime v and spanned by bridges of magnificent
proportions, came slowly on the scene. On
oue of the most splendid of the bridges, at the
dead hour of midnight,*fi fair girl stood with
her face turned upwards to the sky. She was
very beautiful, but there was a slimo in her
loveliness: her once glowing cheeks were
pale, aud her eyes dim and lustreless. One
prayer, one couvulfllte sob of rvgrvt fot the
past, aud
Sheer o'ur tho battlements
she hurled herself into the muddy depths be
low. But little time had the sovereign for
womanly sympathy, or to ask—
Who woo her father f
Who was her mother 7
for the solemn drama before her widened and
deepened in horror. Behind tbe gorgeous
splendor of the materia! greatness of Freeland,
wora the abode# of privation, fettering depravity
tod crime. Mint and fogs crept upon the
tceoe, but they wreathed themselves into ap
palling shapes. There was ignorance, lump-
job, stolid nod stupid, but active for evil.
Thera were fever end pestilence swathing up
the homos of the industrious in clouds of
blended red and Mask. Death hung on tbair
rear, rattling bit boost aad
Grinning ghostly a horrible smlla j
, SSMS? t Wra M*?Wer, more hellish than
- mpktradAkiev-
abominatioo. ao uabbled tmF paddfed*ioTuth,
that a mereifol angel in httivenfe? foil a cur-
tain, and tbe moaaltr wiv hidden from lire
qwerty gait.
cied ho wuuld foil—a contingency from which
he was protected, however, by hie mother
holding her hands on either aide.of him, an inch
or iwoofl'. * There, did you oversee anything
so extraordinary ? Jle’a not a year old, either!’
By this time I begau to be considerably
interested in 4 baby ’myself. He had learned
to know ine, and would begin to crow whenever
I entered the nursery ; and I was, therefore, al
most as delighted as my friend, when, for the
first time, he pronounced mv name,
‘Djane !’ lie said, * Djane !’
His mother almost devoured him with kisses,
in return fur this wonderful triumph of the
vocal organs, and when she had finished, I, in
turn, smothered him withcarresses.
I uever after that smiled, even to myself, et
the extravagance of my friend’s affection for
her baby. The little one had twined himself
around my own hcait-strings. How could I ?
And now that I am a mother myself, I feel
less inclination still to laugh, as others may do,
over that mystery of mysteries ■ a mother’s
love for her infant!
Gold Dollar Test.—Dr. Gideon B. Smith
has invented a very ingenious contrivance for
detecting spurious coin
loinofthe gold dollar stamp,
It is a oiuaii box with a slit in tbe lid, which
will admit the genuine coiuonly. If a spurious
coin passes through the slit, it will not sink,
because it is resisted by a weight inside, supe
rior to the leverage by which the Uue coin
overpoises the weight. And li the spurious
coin is mode bo large that its weight equals Ute
true coin, it will not passthrough the aperture.
The article might be made to sell at a low
prteg, anri ttms com? into general use.
The Largest Gypsum Field in The
World.—Dr. Geo. G. Shumard, of Arkansas,
receutly delivered a speech upon railroad mat
ters at Jtofi Smith, Ark. during which he mads
known the very important fact that tbs I
Gypsum fluid In the world lies about
hundred miles west of Forth Smith, (Ark.) in
the plains explored by Cape. Morey loot your,
extending over an area of throa hundred miles
North and South, East and Weal.—Tha atrfita
in some places is twenty feet thick, of the pu
rest kind, white, and in some instances trans
parent. Ha says that there is a sufficient quan
tity of U to supply tbe whole world, sod would
employ a railroad in its trsaspotration ode hun
dred year*.
G II Johnsoo.
rPli ’ *
Lockett A Co,
htoxiuer Plantor, Corb, Controvlllsge, to Kinchlt/,
Sc hr l’landome, Brown, New York—Rowland 4 Co.
DEPARTED.
Stoamer Gordon, King, Charleston.
LYON’S KATHAIRON!
For tbe Growth and Embellishment of
the Hair, to Prevent lt« Palling
Oil' and Turning Gray.
Awarded the highest premiums by Iks States sf
New-York, Maryland and Michigan, at thsir
Annual Fairs of 1851.
ri'HE KATHAIRON neutralizes the effect of die-
JL ease, climate, and old age, in preeerving and re
storing tbe human Hair even after a baldness of twenty
years; oleauses tbe scalp from Scurf and Dandruff;
(he Nervous Headache, Scald Head, Eryaiue-
" “ 'islrable
Ua, Discuss of the Skin, Ao., and is tbe m
TOILET AUTIC.’I.K,
For Ladioa' or Gentlemen's use, in the world. Its per
fume equals Lubin s Choicest Extracts, and being ft-ee
from all offensive oil or coloring properties, it gives the
Hair that clean, bright, soft, lively appearance, secured
^Tho use J the Kxthairon ia adopted by the first phy-
sioians in Europe aud America, and hu a patronage
... America, and hu a patronage
and sale unprecedented in the history of the mtteria
msdica. But words are superfluous, a trial only 0
attest ito real virtuo. u millions certify. To be h
throughout North and South America, Europe and t
Islands of the Quean, in luge bottles, for 25 oento.
Sold (n Savannah by T. M. TURNER 4 CO.
doo 11 tot Bay-street.
Lyon’s Extract
PURE JAMAICA QINOER,
l?OK Dyspepsia, Cholic, Cholera Morbus, Choto-
JP ra, Dlxsiness, Fever and Acne, Sommer Com
plaints, Nervous and General Debility, Ao. A pure ar
ticle, and administered with positive effect in the above
complaints. Also used u a beverage and for culinary
oomplalate. Also used
purposes. Sold every 1
Sold in Savannah by
deo 11 on
Heed Cane!
THE Undersigned ie prepared to 1
■ CANE *
X for REED CiNE. in, auy quantity, for shipment,
at short notioe. Also, keeps constantly on baud a large
stock of Oak, Ash, Black Jack, Pine and Light
WOOD!
For sale by the boat load and retail. Consumers ean de
pend upon being promptly enpplied with a good article.
Strict attention given tv fair meatureaunt.
Boxes for orders are placed at the stores ot Messrs. J,
Murchison, W. W. Lincoln, J. M. Cooper 4 Co., offioe
of Morning News, and at the residenoe of JOHN T.
THOMAS, Jonee-etreet. D. REMB11AHT,
jc21 Wood Yard, Ferry Wharf.
wood: wood: wood:
rpUE Subscriber has now aud keeps constantly
I on hand a large supply of the best quality of High
Land Oak, Hickory, and Pino WOOD, which he offers
TTV- - --- 1 Wood Yard
near the Railroad Bridge, ffob 19-3mJ WHITE'
W^OD!
WOODS
rPHE Subscriber will keep constantly on hand
1_ at his WOOD YARD, at the Canal Bridge, a full
supply, at all Masons, or OAK and HICKORY WOOD.
All order* left at J. D. Jesse's, Broughton-etreet, will
be promptly attended jo.
Wood Sold Low For Casli. JY)
jlsl tf J.M. BUTLER.
A JjK—ALE—ALE*—50 bbls Albauy Croaui
Ale, brewed exprsMlf for me, and superior to any
iti Ute mark.'I, landing thu day from schooner Empire.
For sale at tho Albany Ale Depot by
W. M. DAVIDSON.
A FULLS, OlLANUKfo. d:c.-By the Flo-
/V rlda. IU barrels Apples; 10 boxes Oranges and
Lemons; 1 tot of Fresh llama.
JOHN DAILY.
vuti£S7
Tl carry on th
heretofore, under
Co.
mar 19
EsfettSi
. the Lumber atm tlsJUs -buHftCST fiS
under the smote ana style of J. Roberts 4
J. ROBERTS,
AUI
orrbe Chamber of Common* cf Now
York bars chosen Peieiiah Poirit, tbeir Presi
dent for tbe ensuing; year, and Caleb Benton
Esq., Vice President. »
sar The C«||K.|M!. Of PanlMuL hire
paid ,10,W0 for « piece of Uad aD wbclh to
build • C.tbedrel* ''. .
_ customers and the public, tho arrival and
opening of tbeir
H prtn k Stock,
felicitate themeelvos on the advantage! which thelrro-
cent purchases enable them to offer all who deetre to
select their Clothing fount an extensive assortment of
tbe choioest goods, made ia the moat
Fashionable Style.
These goods have been purchased under the personal
inspection of one of the proprietors; and availing them-
Mives of favorable clrouuutanoee, they are enabled
not only to warrant them la quality, but to offer them
LOW PRICES,
as must distance all competition in their trade.
The following enumeration is mado for the benefit of
Gentlemen in the country, whose orders will meet
prompt attention, aad who, when in the oity, are re
spect/iilly invited to an examination of onr Goods.
GENTLEMEN’* CLOTHING.
FROCK AND DRESS Coats of every quality.
•• ** •• *• in Black, Bloc, Brown,
Green and Olive Colors.
BUSINESS COATS, iu great variety, vl*: Linen. Rue-
sla Duok, Drab Date, Alpaoha, Caxhmeret, Frock and
Sack buaineso Coats. ...
PANTALOONS.—Black Doeskin at a great variety of
Brk'aud Fancy Cassimeros, at a great variety of prices.
" Drab Data
White and Fancy Linen Drills, “ “ '*
Fanoy Marseilles, ** *'
VESTS.—Black Silk and Satin Vesta.
Fancy Silk "
White Bilk, for Party
White, Buff aud Fanoy
Marseilles * l
White and BntfDnok
and Lipen **
FURNISHING GOODS.
Furnishing Goods cf every description for Gcntle-
> ties, spring stocks, merino shirts
n do., suspenders, half boss, gloves—
llty patent yoke shirts, a fine ae-
aad drawers, cotton —
all kinde, best quality patent yoke shirts,
sortment of
DRESSING GOWNS
Umbrellas, Cause, Perfumery, Combe, Brushes, Port-
HATS.
An extensive assortment of the latest and most fash
ionable styles.
Boys’ Clothing.
Comprising th* largest assortment ever offs run in this
city, consisting of Frocks, Sacks, Polka Sacks, Jackuts.
Vests and Panto, la every varietj of style and material
suitable for the season.
MERCHANT TAILORING.
“Th* favorable and tong established reputation which
their establishment has enjoyed and still maintains for
tbe style and finish of lto garment* mads io order, as
woll as for the superior quality of their cloths, dura
bility of color and substantial workmanship, it shall be
the constant effort of th* proprietors Still to contluue.—
They invite the special attention of both old ana new
customers to tho following, from whiob they are pre
pared to furnish garments, which they will warani to
be ne vlut ultra in both fit and fashion.
BIUONI’S 4 DIOLLY'8 beat Blue. Blaok, Brows,
Mulberry, Green, Adelaide, Bronse, Corobo and Olive
Cloths.
Blaok Doeskin, Blaok. Caseimere, and a large aesert-
mentof Colored and Fancy Tweeds.
LINEN GOODS.—White, Bnff aud fonoy Linen
D VJE8TMG8.—'Whit# Silk and Satin, for Party Veits.
Black an<2 feeey Silk and Hatius. White, Buff and
Orange Caseluieroe. A forge variety of White, Buff and
f..., surra.
For Volnnteer Companies in th* city and throughout
the State, made and famished at th* shortest notioe
and in the beet manner. DIBBLE 4 CAREY,
apr 4 ly
New Watcli, Clock, Jewelry
AND FANCY STOKK,
BROUQUTON-STHEST, Ne. H0.
M R. FRANCIS STCIN, Manufacturer of Chro-
nometors, Clocks, Town Clooks, Watches, 4c. 4c.,
respectfully inform* hto customers and the public gene-
illy that he has fitted up the Store 148 Broughton-et..
m here he Intends to make a permanent locatiou. and
carry on the Jewelry business in lto various branches.
Watches, Cloeke, Town Clocks. Chronometers, Jewel
ry, 4c., 4c., cleaned and repaired with dispatch, and
warranted. New fashion Jewelry and Fsnoy Goods
of rli descriptions sold at the lowest prioes possible.
N. B.—Any Watch, Clock, 4c., 4o., that eannokt* re
paired by otnar watchmakers, 1 pledge myeeU shall be
repaired by mo to satisfaction, and warranted.
>2 7 ly FRANCIS STEIN.
Shawls, Collars, Ac
S UPER, and common Crape Shawla, plain and
embroidered,
Vandyke collar., bmvwu good
Faraaols, assorted.
Ladies’ Green,Brown and Bl&cl
P ALM LEAF FANS, lauding and for »nfo by
gpr St KUruft FLORANCJB.
Henry K. Wndtonra,
SHIPPING AND C&MMISillON MERCHANT,
Jy«l MAVANNAH, OXOMoifA. Ij
A. B. bUUN,
OOTTON FAOT
n». 74 smisiiTj
00. IU -
O R .
uhmiii'.
UEOKUE J. enunri
FACTOR, COMMISSION IKBO
Aad General 4
NC; 168 BAY-STREET, SAVA
T. IB. Home,
CIGAR, SNUFF, AND TOBACCO STORE,
n«. lartosyV
(At the Blue Sign, oue dear
MHT Orders JTom the
IA TT
Manama * Cox,
ORNEY
B AT LAW,
Tewton, Coweta, Carai
Merriwether, Carroll,
Cobb, Whitfield,
References— K. _. w
Carolinaj Williams 4 Bi .
Brothers, and O. W. CbooA ]
r. MAjrooa. [mar 17
C. A. Met
General Commission:
ly] Snvnnuah, Georgia*
umhy *. rows.
FACTORS AND >m ».aN BtRCHANTl
Juliau UartrMge,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
qyte* corner WMiaicrst. and Bay Lans,
nov 10 Satmm
BUNKLB * OGDEN,
SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS'
»p i NO. au UAV-STREKT, qAVANNAH. I,
P. Jacob.’
OIOAS AMS TOBACCO STOUl
•A1 Hull-ut., Hl«a oftfceV. ~
Nw llsuuiu Suture, Sat*
K..p* rnuuiit m hud . uum i.
2K.'iaL w 5Sr#ySlHSMl
June. McHenry,
INSURANCE BROKER & NOTARY
>. Eimttuv.
KJncliIey, Loci
COAWIEBION HE
No. 70 Bayret,
HOWLAND
GENERAL COMMISSION
Na. milhjrilml,
jo»« t. uowufj. un <»>>. munt»»
GILBERT BVTXJBH,
MABTKK BUILDKH,
DEALER IN WHITE PINE LUMBER
Tor k~ $ trait, Ofl.ld.ry, f,
D. W.Miscaiiy,
SHIP END 8BNE1AL DLACISVIfff,
Opposite Laokr’i CMMiPI
EASTERN WHARF, SAVANNAH, Ol
Steamboat and Mill Work, and every .dj
Blackamithisg execute! with ncatnsw aid d
mar $ ..
i
W**