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About Daily morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1850-1864 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1853)
. vwsu-w* FIVE DOLLARS PER ANNUM. HALF YEARLY IN ADVANCE SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 27, 1853. TWELVE CENTS A WEEK-—SINGLE COPIES THREE Cl - ... j .ITfAfiti! BUSINESS CAROS. WM. A. THOMAS, “ PRACTICAL HOUSE AND SHIP PLUMBER, N«. 148 Broiifrhton-nt., Snv M Ga. ’ OOLlClTd the utteiUlon of the public to the fol- O lo wlag named artlelee, vli i Hot and Cold Showor Baths, Load and Copper Bath Tabs, Fanoy and Plain u v Marble Wash Stands, Patent Pan Water Closets, Braes J and Copper LIU and Force Pumps, Lead Pipe, Sheet r . Load. Block Tin, HydrauUo Room* and Kitohen Ran ges or the most Improvod patent* for aalo. Silver Pla ted and Bras* work of every deaoriptlon constantly on hand. 1- N. B.—W. A. T. plodgoa hlmeelf to do all werk en trusted to hie oare. in the moat eoonomioal manner, and A equal to any praotiood in tho Northern cities. Orders from the country promptly attendod to. oct 17 8 moe* THOIflAS M. HO SIS, IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OP d r S E G A R S , d WUOLKSALX AMD HXTAIL LEALKR IN SMOKING AND CHEWING TOBACCO, SNUFF, Ao., m No. 87 Bau-et , one door %oetl </ Abercorn, HAVANNAII, GEORGIA. Lockett, Long A Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND , SHIPPING AGENTS, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA* j Will attend to eolling all kinds of PRODUCE, tl «ar Striot attention given to tho Reoolving and For- 0 warding Qoods, and fllling orders from the oountry. r *. LOCKETT, WM. R. LOMO, JO'.Mt U. DAVIS. “ r jy 28 lj IVjlly A ITIominollln, d GENERAL COMMISSION AGENTS, t-UR THE Pnrehnae and Hale of Steeka, Bead*, I* Konl and Pcreotml Estate, dec. dec* el Office Corner of Bay Lane and Bull Street, fi rear of tke Poet Office. P. 8. Having numerous order* we wish to put -hose h 100 Necrose, either single or in Tamillcs, for \;hieh wo 7 are wifllng to pay highest cash prioos. jy20—ly S. B. Frnlton, ATTORNEY A V L A' W, 0 8ANDKKSVII.LE, QEO. "Will attend to bnsineaa lo Waahlngton, Jefferson Laurens, Wilkinson, and Emanaol Counties. ; RK7BR to—N. A. Hnrdee, Franklin A Brantly, and 8. E. Both well A Co., Savannah. jy 7’6m JOSEPH GANAHL, d ATTOKNKY AT LAW, COnKBRorBAY AND WH1T4KBK-BT5. j* 26 ly b Paetorage aud Cotuntlseion ■ BUH1NENH. '* T WILL continue the Fnctoragu and Coraraieeion 1 Buslnow. on my own ««MUUt. Offioo on Bay-st., _ Foot of Montgomery Street. 8 may 9 it J. F. PELOT. Ktnclilcy A Thomas. 5; COMMISSION MERCHANTS. t* No* 7S Bny-*t«, Hnvnonnh, Ga* B. r. RIMCMLBY. A. THORAX. Z. TH. Winkler, cs COMMISSION MERCHANT, Williameon’e Buildings, Bay-street. Hnvnunak, Ga. *P>‘ 18 WELLS A DUHII, , Faetori and Commtuion Merchant*, k sop 21 82 BAY-STREET, SAVANNAH. ly ' 8. 8. SIBLEY, Wholesale aud Retail Bookseller auil StaUoner, No. 136 Congreee-et.. opposite Monom«-nt-#q. mar 191 8AVANNAU, GEO. [U • C1IA8. 11. PICKETT, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER, t II AVINU rueuinud hie business, I* now pre- ■ XJLrared to oontroot for Buildings, or Jobbing work ol anydoeoriptlon, in hie line. Stairs exeouted with neat ness and dlepatoh. A share of the pubUo patronage ll most respectfully soUoited. Carpenter 8bopootner of Walnut and Ilarrtaon-et*., - ssoo- -troot west of Brown and Harris's Stable*.* fob» ly i B. D. Evhiir, ■ ATTORNEY AT LAW, d Saundbrovillb, Wabuinoton Coumtt, Ga., Will praotioo in the Courts of th* Middle Circuit. All business committed t*. hi* oare will be excooted with • promptness and dispatch. , „ „ ; lixrxuxMCK*.—hlessrs. Bo thw ell A Smith, and Dr. II. ■ L. Byrd, Savannah. ly Jan 27 JOHN POOLE, * WHOLKBAI.K AND RXTAIL DBA LB R » PAINTS, OILS, TURPENTINE AND VARNISHES trench and American Window-GUut. Paint. Varnish and White-wash Brushes, Babel and Camel llair Penails, Badger and Camel liaix Blenders, Groining Combe, Artist*' • Brushes, do. ko. Paper Hanging*, Border*, and tire-Board Prints. N. lJ.—House, Sign and Ship Painting, Gilding, Grain ing and Olaxlng, done on reasonable terms by JOHN POOLE, 11 Whitaker-*!, mar 20 Nearly opposite Swift, Denelow k Co. Henry K. Washburn, SHIPPING AND C&MMIsftoN MERCHANT, • Jy21 HAVANNAII* GEORGIA. ly i lUanguin A Vox, ! ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Atlantn* Georgia* IWilloolleet Debts In the following qptratiec Do Kolb, Fayette. Heard, Cass. Murray, Cherokee a Newton, Coweta, Campbell, Gordon, Walker, Henry . Merriwether, Carroll, Floyd, Dad*, Spaulding, Troup 3 Cobb, Whitfield, Forsyth, Gwinnett. Jle/erence*— E. B. Stoddard fc Co., Charleston, Boutl Carolina; WUllamsfcBrother,Augusta,Georgia; Plan Brothers, and O. W. Choat. New-York. Nat. Makoum. [mar 17 If J Thowas N. Cox. V. A. L. LAM AH, General Commission Merchant, ly] Hawaanah, Georgia* [uov M BRXRY R. PORT. V. K. DURHAM. FORT A DUNHAM, FACTORS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS. oot7 SAVANNAH, OA. 1 j Julian Hartrldge, ATTORNEY AT L A II Office comer Whitaker-*i. and Bay Lane, nov 10 HawaDnnfc. ROWLAND * CO., OERERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS No* 1711 Bay-ntreet* Hnvniumh. JOHN T. BOWfcAYD. UU 21 JOHN T. ROWLAND, J■ James McHenry, INSURANCE BROKER & NOTARY PUBLIC. Marino Protest* Noted and Extended, Average* ad- jo* ted, Charter Parties and Average Bondi drawn, Pa pers prepared whereby to recover losses from Amerioan or British Underwriters, and attention given to all matters oonneoiod with shipping and Insurance. Of fice No. 118 Bay street, opposite th* front *f tho Cus tom House. |y nov 8 Dying and Renovating Kitablinhment, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, 73 York-Mf rcct.ppnr of the Court House ESTABLISHED IN 1832. T ADIE8' Bilk and Woolen Dresses, Shawls. Ta I j ble Covers, Tto., oleaned, and dyed various ooior*, Ladle*’ Bonnet* bleached and pressed In a fashionable style; Kid Gloves oleaned, and Gontlemen’s Garmonts oleaned, renovated or dyed, ag may be required. All done in th* same style whioh has gonerallv so mnob pleaeod my patron* and friend*. Term* moderate. Persona sending parcels by Harnden'e Express, Rail road, or steamboat* aro requested to write per mail, so that I may know where to oall for them, and which way to send them back. Cost of freight each way, for email paroele, will be about 26 cent*. All orders punctually “ijr'"'”' 1, ALEXANDER GALLOWAY 0 8. 8. DULLER & J. D. FERGUSON, “ WHEELWRIGHTS & BLACKSMITHS, f CORNKR or Broughton a fid Montgomery Street*, SAVANNAH, GA. I Carriages. Wagons, Certs and Drays manufactured. * Black smithing, including Iron Railing and Gratae for Buildings, fce. done et the ehortest notice, aug 19—6m • T. J. ROBERTS, (LATE OF BURKE COUNTY,} COMMISSION MERCHANT, No* 03 Bity-ntrcet* SAVANNAH, OA. 7 Will give hi* personal attention to all business en trusted to him. 6mo k*u(i GILBERT BIITLER, 9 MASTER BUILDER, ? DEALER IN WHITE PINE LUMBER m tor k-e ir t et, Oglethorpe Sq., n fan 28 Savannah* p Beils! Bells I I Beil* M! “ f PHE Subscriber*'manufacture and keep constnn 1 oo 1 ly on band all sixes of Cbnreh, Faotory, Steamboat, * Jerry, Looo motive, Scho>l House, and Plantation Bolls. Hi These Bolls are hung with tbs pateat iron yoke* with moveable arm*. They can be turned around so that 8 th# clapper will strike in a new plaoo, whioh is desire 05 bio after* bell ho*been mug a tew years. Springe are affixed in a new way topre vent the clapper from resting a* the Boll, thereby prolonging the sound. Thoe*Belle are manufactured from the beet stock and aro oast ta iron eatings. At this Foundry these wer* grot used 7 and are found to bo a great improvement. Wo giv* a > written warrantee that if (Lurch Belle break within tit one year from data of purchase, with fair usage, w* will recast without charge. Tho tone of all Boll* i* , warranted. Nearly 9000 Bolls have been oast and sold - from this Foundry, which 1* tho boat *videbo* of th*h 1 superiority. We have 16 gold and 8iiv*r Medals. J awarded tron* tho various Fain “ for th* host Bolls for sonorousness and parity of ton*.’* W* pay oarticular =s attanUon ta getting np Pool* or Chimes, and oan refer 1 to those furnished by ns. Our Foundry is within a fo w rods of tho Hudson lUvor, Erie Caual. and Railroads ruddiii. Id ..nr dirocUon. A, thi, la th. l.r,Ml Ea t ubllahm.ntof the kind In thoU.S. nnd hsa the ttvgal r ...ortutfrit </ Relit, ordara Mn bn filled with ,ronL 'll- ii petoh. We o.n refer to Bella in an, of the fitntoe— Old BeTle taken in exchange for new onee. Level* » Coinpaieet, Ac. Mnnttatljon hud. Ad,Irate f JfiM ly-dAtw • B A «pV rwo l p'uHLISHliD DAILY AND TRi-WKEELY BY JOHN M. COOPER. WILLIAM T.THOMPSON. EDITOR. .FERM8: ThE -DAILT MoAnino New** is delirereu ta Cftv iTrrihorfat VIVE DOLLAR* per annum, pajmbl* half- 11 L iHADVANCE.or for twelve cent* a week, to the Carriers. Single copies, them cert*. "Tri-Wkkkly Morning New.," (for the 1 n f r ; . rontaininf all the now matter and new ad dlement*of the Daily, is furnished for three rr in« dot auuum, in advance.; -Advertilenionts inserted at the following ratesJ r0 R ONE 8UOAR1 or ten links, one ‘ D, ® r , UoD ;;;;;v;;;;;4i 0 o5‘ ^ ” One Tear JO 00 l* 0 r advertisement* not OKeoedlnf five line*, threo- f.artJu of the above rates wiU be ehargod, i. eu " tor one insertion - 46 cent*. k one w.ek...:r.:r.r:rjii &o, ko.*e. ..Ji Advertisement* inserted at the usual rate*. Advertisement* from transient pereons or strangers * v'aerlyadvortl*ere°oioeeding in their advertisement* Ihe arerage number of lines agreed for, will be oharged 11 -jr 'AlMiOttere directed to this office or the Edit D ust be postpaid. II DM NEWS. BY MAGNETIC TELEGRAPH. Destruction by Fire of (he Fori Hamilton Hotel* Baltimore, Oct.25. A dispatch from New York states that the Fort Hamilton Hotel was consumed on Mon* day by fire, and that the loss in estimated at $30,000. The Northern Light nt Norfolk. Baltimore, Oct. 25. The steamship Northern Light has put into Norfolk short of coal. She has on board 700 passengers, and >1,500,000 in gold. Her ad vices Irani San Franoiaco, aro to the 1st inst., but they are not important. Tho markets were dull. New .York Cotton.Market* Baltimore Oct. 25. In New York, on tyonday, 4,750 bales of eolton changed hands at an advance of an eighth of a cent, principally on (air qualities. The Florida Subscription of $800,000* Some doubts having been expressed in re gard to the bona fide chaiacterof the subscrip tion recently made to the stock of the Florida am 1 . Georgia Railroad, by the citizens of Middle Florida, the Floridian of Saturday lust con tains an editorial on the subject, from which we make the following extract. It will he teen that the stock was taken by the friends of the connection with Savannah, with a view to Rcureand control the Florida charter, and that the subscription is a bona fide one, to bo made good by the friends of tho connection in in Hamilton county, who are subscribing lib erally to the stock. This action on the part of our Florida friends, while it shows their earnest zeal in the enterprise, determines the direction of our branch road to Florida.— However much, we might prefer a nioro wes terly route, we are pledged to meet the people oftFlorida in Hamilton county : The article in tho Watchman enmo under our notico too late to make any remarks upon it lust week. The editor has a keen scent af ter "bogus subscriptions.'" l’erhapii lie Hvob iua tainted atmosphere. Wo hope there has been no bogusing in building Railroads to Thornasville. Possibly he has been troubled with dreams of playing bogus himself, since his late visit to Tallahassee, when he found out how easily one man, even such an one as himself, could hove subscribed the whole re maining stock hero, and no provision in the charter to hinder him. The fuel is, our broth er typo Inst a glorious opportunity of inimor- ulizine himself by making such a subscrip tion. It would have been a very pretty inovtf in the Railroad game now contested between Brunswick and Savannah, and must have put the latter in check, or forced her to aban don the notion o( entering Florida as far Hast as Hamilton County, and so have itcured Thornasville on the direct route to Pensacola. There were various consid eration* prompting this bold movo. Savan nah has declared Inis to be on or near hor pre ferred route.—Brunswick had courted hor to unite in adopting it, and thia move would have furnished a sufficient excuse for her vio lating her pledge to Florida, or rather would iave effectually put it out of our power to fulfil our pledge to Savannah. He know the editor alls us, that u the act granting this charter, hough if was not so expressed by the mover of he bill, contemplated a road from Pensacola lay to the Georgia line at Chattahooche. We have,” continued the editor, "conversed with a gentleman of Florida who wasu member of Ihe Legislature at the time of its passage, and learn from him that that was the intention of the bill. It seems, however, that no definite point was fixed upon where the road should strike Georgia, and our friends in Florida in tend to possess themselves of the broad con struction of the act, and make the point in Hamilton County. By thia they will be enable to build a part of their Gulf Central Road. The Havunnah and Horida Road wus scarcely thought of when this charter was granted.*" w ith all this knowledge of our intentions in Horida, and of the strong inducements for jhomasville to take the step, the only wonder u that it was not taken on the very first day °ur books were opened. It did not require the Payment of a dollar. The charter could not be forfeited for non-user under five years, that beia 8 the time allowed to begin the work, •hue twenty years more arc grantod to finish ”• Thus might the redoubtable editor have ''ad all conflicting and rival interests at his le *h which, thanks to his want of nerve, have leaped such a dilemma. io our judgment, Florida, and especially the •Middle District, is greatly indebted to those of 'w citizens who promptly stepped forward to all future danger of such a catastrophe, were in error the other day in saving that the stock to make up the $800,000 was taken by citizens of Leon. lt ( was foreseen Months ago that a necessity might occur to j^vethe charter from falling into improper jiande, and being used in a way hostilo to the Badroad interests of Florida, and authority *° 8 given to those on the spot to use other n »fne8 besides their own in pledging the re quired amount of stock. There is no bogus, , 0 decagon, no speculation practiced or in tended by the movement. The pledge is made ur themselves and their associates, by those no have tosted public sentiment sufficiently o bo *atisfied that the mass of their fellow- 'ozena are prepared to austniu them. They i serv .° ®nd enjoy as high character for honor, n <egrity and sound judgment as any in our wiQiunity, and wo risk nothing in saying that luff W i' 8U8 t a *nod. They will find r*. i . " OMociates.” The subscription is [jp ar v “dvancing. That in Leon now num- n J _ r *n. e r ono hundred names, und has received Wf ll,on #22*200 to the stock within the of e , » aQ d we repeat that not half the citizens y * . bounty have been applied to, while very ’ p' n( ked decline subscribing. Jar® 10 -"* ac .cdstomed to the prompt action of ann*- C,, ' e8 *P 8Uc h u * tttt era, may think this *rinV n 4-!£ rt *' ne88 evidence 0 f opposition, or of p ear indifference, when it simply arrises from n't? 1 many of our citizeni who are ternr* y e ?P ec i®d to take a lead in public en- whn . . ve keen absent all summer, and I, on y l0lr return, find much to keep them at D | B * 18 the busiest season with all our cron.’ l i° 8U P cr 'nl°nd the housing of their ,1, ® n “ pteparing them for market, and * ,a * baen no public excitement to asaem- ro for ° P ° ,0 K e, b«r. Measures are taken al- in ivr ,,ocee ding now to receivo subscriptions I I'ulielv rao . n I.^“ tl ‘ 80D a,lt * Hamilton—a thing Th* ».“®l* rr ®d for the reason above elated. I era oo, Madison and Hamilton—a thing l Vs <o deferred for the reason above elated. r,j in iT»* however, has been much discuss- and ii? 1118 understood in those Counties, .'there ° B0 W i^° best know the state of feeling will 1,81 . e ‘ r aggregate subscription fian d dollars 060 lhrC ° f ° Ur ,,UD( * rc< * l,Km ‘ But ration convinces us that there is a spirit aroused which wit! not be baffled by either ridicule or trickery, and we call on tho peoplo of Leon and the whole Middle District to bus- JJ 1 ® «• 1 bo puny warfare urged against it wa think has ever done good to the cause it was intended to assail. The citizens of Savannah are assured that they may act with the fullest confidence that Florida will stand up to the square in the honest fulfillment other pledgee, and that they will very aoon be called on to re deem tbeir's. The Island of Giiba* necessity or HER revolution preceuuin AN HONORABLE ANNEXATION. Letter from the Secretary of the Cuban Junta in New• York. to the editor of the new-York herald. Doer Sir—I regret to find that a man calling himself a Cuban should prefer the purchase of the island by the United States, to revolu tion, as the means of our incorporation into this great republic. The "Cuban Planter," whoso article appeared in your paper of the lGth, and who differs from my views expressed in the Herald of September 12, may bo in good faith, and I would, then, respect his opinion; but I entertain doubt about the S muinenean of his representatiou, and suspect at under the name of a Cuban, he only seta forth tho ideas aud sentiments of a teal Span iard. It is a well known and established fact, that Spain, from her pride and ignorauce of her best interests never will sell Cuba. To advise the purchaso and to foretell the horrors of the revolution, and that it would have no oilier result than ruin and ashes, is to adopt the impossible against the eventual is to roject ; the only moans left us to shako off for over the yoke of Spain; and it is to give up the victory to the dovooiic efforts of the Spanish Govern ment and her supporters, such os tho “ Cuban Planter" may iu reality be. In the philosophical point of viow I am agaioat revolutions; but necessitus non habet legem. Tyranny is the worst ol moral ills. No divino nor moral law commands us to endure it, but, on the contrary, we should regard it as an obstacle to human happiness, and endeavor to get rid of it. That a revolution once established in the isl and would blot it out forever front the list of civilized countries, is a gratuitous assumption an error already examined anu dismissed by the Cubans. There was a time—at the begin ning of the revolutionary conflagration of Spanish America—when tho four prevailed among some classes, and, notwithstanding, attempts were made for revolution. From 1848, after tho example of Texas, and when the island had grown to population, iu wealth, in civilization and in experience, from other lessons, we looked toward the United States as the country and people where all the difficulties of our special position could be removed. Here we found, as wo expected, those sympathies and that protection with which every Atnercian heart responds to the uppealn of liberty. Sinco then, all feaxs and apprehensions have disappeared of the revolution turning in favor of tho blacks.— The Cubans, assisted by the invincible Yan kee, will surely overcome the strong forces of the Spanish government of Cuba. Why, then, could they not keep under discipline tho poor miserable negroes, who are destitute of every thiog, without any notions |of political liberty, scattered, isolated, closely watched by the con stant vigilance of their owners, without arms, leaders, or any means to carry on any plans of revolution. Tho threat of Africanizing Cuba is nothing but a Spanish humbug—a mere phantom to intimidate Cubans like children. As loug as the Captain General can entertain the hope of checking the revolution, be sure ho will not be the suicide of hie cause. When all hope is lost for him, the opportunity for the adoption of the meoaure will bo past; the liberator* will occupy the country. In tho meanwhile it is tho interest of both partioa to nut slavery out of view, and keep it in good order. If, contrary to these well grounded hopes! the Spanish government should anticipate that moment, then the 500,000 Cubans, and all the Spaniards, fiom the poorest pulpero (retail dealer,) to the richest merchant and planter, will rise as one man, to thwart that general senionco of death, and to impeach and remove a destructive power, and its barbarous execu tioners. The free colored man of Cuba in case of war, will make common cause with us —first, because lie is a native Cuban, and feels as the white man the love of country, family and property ; secondly, because there is in our community a special bond of kindness and beuevolenco between that class and ours, which begins in the earliest days of life, and grows stronger by the reciprocal necessities and services of the patron and client; thirdly, because there is in the breast of the free color ed class a volcono of revenge against the Sputiisli rulers for the outrages and atrocious treatment thoy have received on various occa _ sions and times, but particularly and most re * cenily during the administration of Genera O’Donnell. Let the (Spanish government in cite tho alavos against their masters, and w-? will be free in a few days. And what will tho people of the United States do? And what will the administration do from tho beginning of the troubles in Cuba, warned as it is before* hand of Ihe savage intentions ol tho Spanish government? The first will go in masses, and the second will prevent the accomplishment of such a misfortune by sending to the ports of tho island forces of observation. Cuba not only belong to the v Cubans, but to America; and she will attain tho destinies which Providence has reserved for her in the future ol this con tinent, by placing her in the very crater of the great American movement. Your correspondent finds a revolution very impolitic, even if the whole population were white ; because "a people debased by oppres sion and tyranny, accustomed to see and prac tice corruption in every department of govern ment, know not and appreciate not liberty." And lie further affirms " that no people can form a republic without some precedents of a liberal government. And even supposing a revolution should be successful, we should only be changiug masters; for the people, who, with blit few exceptions, are ignorant and corrupt ed, would becurae but mere tools in tho hands' of ambitious men." Here we have, on a general thesis, flatly de niod the rights of an oppressed peoplo to shake off tho yoke oj tyranny, by the only possible means, of revolution. Tho most bigoted sup porters of tho principle of authority ; the moat zoaloua despots, the tyrants and oppressors of humanity, could not in belter terms than your correspondent defend the principles of their governments. VVe, on Ihe contrary, sustain that overy people who are deprived by force of thoso rights with whioh Almighty God has en dowed ell men, and who have been reduced to the condition of beasts of burden, have the incontestible right of rising and conquering, by force, all and every right of which they have been deprived. If they have not had the pre cedents of a free government, the better their right to have it, because the longer they have been deprived of the benefit and enjoyment thereof, in common with the rest of humanity, the more necessity there is for their acquiring it. To require precedents of a liberal govern ment from people who live uuder tyranny and, oppression, that they may become a free people is a perfect absurdity; it is to deny the right of emancipation from despotism. How can free precedents ho established under an oppres sive power, interested in checking not only the rights of the people and all precedents of liberty, but even the thought of such aspira tions, precisely because they exist as if by intuition in the human nature? The doctrine of your corresponpcnt would condemn Italy, Hungary, Boland, Cuba, and every othor^peo- pie in the same circumstances, to live under tlie lash of their tyrants, because they " have not had some precedents of a liberal govern ment." When ancient Romo shook off the yoke of the Tarquins, the people had not been previously free. France had not a liberal gov ernment previous to 1789. Even the people of Eogland did not obtain the rights granted by the Magna Charts through the effects of precedents of liberal government. Spain had no precedent of a liberal government before tho constitution of 1812. Before any people have precedents of a free government all men have rightB to liberty. The instance adduced of the government of the Unitsil Krara- is special in the world, and to produce it as the only mould on which all other republics, pres ent and future, should bo cast, is contrary to the law of nature—the law that opposes the absolute identity of beings, whether in the moral or physical order. Cuba has a right to be free, from the very oppression under whieh she groans. If she em J l . Wa had no intention of extending our i W88 ,n ®d® ft 8 ^ 8Te * ® n d *• k®P* • 8 l**®i 8 he has ii 10 tbi8 ,en K th v ’hen we begun, and we »° other means of attaining her independence c iua m by eaymg that evorv day’s obeer- ** urmie—the means employed by the United Stat*a, approved by human reasons and confirmed by the history of the nation, that have preceded her in the paths of liberty. The communication of a Cuban Planter tuis represents the tendencies of my ideas publish ed in vour paper of the 12th. 1 have said there that the independence of Cuba ouce at tained through the revolution, the people of Cuba, freely constituted, will dispose of their destinies aa thoy please. If the will of the majority be thon to ask for annexation to the United States, as may be conjectured from the opinione which transpire in spite of the Span ish tyranny,tlieti there will be no fear of con vulsions, no troubles which are the conse quence of a change of government so very contrary in principles to the pre-existing one, and not the eflbct of igoorauco and corruption, the Cuban Planter supposes, in a peoplo from whom he is supposed to be born. Tho annexation by purchase, says tho Cu ban Planter, will bring honor and glory to Cuba. Glory and honor in the purchase of oivilized freemen! What a degradation!— What a stupid objection of human dignity !— How much are we worth, on an average, por hoad ? About $200. Why, the negroes im ported from Africa by Spanish kidnappers, are sold at higher prices nn our shores. Tho Cuban Plantar says that "we would submit to present imposts, and taxes, &c., until we paid lor our freedom." This is not at all true.— Ho feigns to he ignorant, or he may really not know, that Cuba onco annexed, would bo sub ject to tho general financial system of the Uni ted States, and the Spanish contributions would bo done away with. Tho purchaso money would come out of the treasury of the U. S., where all the federal contributions of the State of Cuba would go, just in tho same manner as those of the other States, to provido for all the attentions of tho confederation, of which we form a part. The purchase, if made, would be made by the United States, and wo would never pay the purchase money. Our condi tion aa free Americans would eternally bear the seal of our primitive slavery, and we would bo much like unto the libertini (freedom) of the Romans, who, though allowed to be citi zens, wero always marked by nubile opinion with tho stigma of slavery. Public opinion in this country would consider us ao; and I fear much, indeed, that the daring Yankee would see in the land of Cuba Ilia property, acquired by the aaino means, employed for everything we wish to enjoy, notwithstanding the opposi tion of the American institutions, which would in the end triumph. This never could happen if Cuba, independent and free, would dieposo of herself, enter into the Union by her own spontaneous will; and there would be honor and glory for her, which are the prize of noble and great actions, but never of the degenera tion of what is good. Between the purchase and the revolution of Cuba thore is only an acceptable'medium, namely That Spain, treating with the Cu bans, constituted in a manner that they could express their free will, would emancipate them on conditions of a fair remuneration, guaran tied by ihe United Stntrs. Our indopecd nee, thon, would be acquired in a lawful manner, as a fact sanctioned by tho right of a free pact. We, then, our own masters, ard with the free voto of the people, might ask INi 1 annexation, and it would be honoiable and opportune. But why look for means ol sucli transaction in our present situation? The Spanish gov ernment will assuredly noitlior sell Cuba uor emancipate her now, or ever. Thia ia vain hope and lost of time, or a mere stratagem to divide public opinion, to client the Cubans and the Americans, to check our labors and exer tions for .our emancipation, to skilfully pass away the present time and lucky circumstan ces, until another time may come, when, by the divisions in the democratic party, the pow er of the government may fall in the hands of some other Mr. Fillmore ; or that, by the com binations of the polioy of Europe engaged in checking the progress and expansion of the American liberty, Cuba may ho thrown as a prey to one or other class of Africans, either thoso who inhabit the coast of Congo and Lo- align, or those who compose the counsels of the (lueen of Spain. Our situation demands immediate action and solution; it is a necessity of the tinio acknowledged by all. No solution can bo attained by the concurrence of Spain. The American government cannot declare war; she has no motive nor pretext, and .fsho found one, Spain would evado it. What then is to be done to satisfy the imperious exigency of the circumstances, the destinies of America the liberty of Cuba? The revolution,nothing short of too revolution. I cannot conclude without demanding of the Cuflan Plantar tho title by which he is author ized to represent five hundred Cubans, and re questing him to give his name, so that we may know if ho be a deserter from the good cause of Cuba, or ifho has been baptized in the wa ters of Iberia. P. Valjknbe hallucination. No one not predetermined to sea them can find any novelties in these moral inculcations. Wnatover is good in them is stolen, bodily, out of current moral and re ligious writings. The commonplaces of Chris tianity—tho doctrines of brotherly luvo, of un selfish charity, of upright conduct, of faith in the future—are bodily put forward, tricked off in tho diluted jargon of the * circle," as new rovelatious just made, through Dexter A. Co., by their familiar spirits. Judge Edmonds is guilty of the folly—to use no harsher term—of aaying that the doctrine of the soul’s immor tality is now, for the first time, put beyond doubt. We havo read hia book with all rt- sonable euro; and we defy Judge Edmonds to point out, in these pretended revelations of Bacon, (Swedenborg, and the rest, a single thought or doctrine now first revealed, or ad ding anything substantial and useful to the sum of human knowlodgo. The wholo collec tion is a jumble of common-places, puerilities, and absurdities; and tho olaim that they coine from the men to whom they ore ascribed ia on attoinpt on popular credulity loo audacious for the most comprehensive charity. "Throughout this tarrago of revelations there is one thread which unites them into a systematic whole, and that is their steady hos tility to tho essential elements of the Christian faith. Bin is simply misfortune-the result of circumstances. The doctrine of the redemp tion is expressly donied. The claims of a Christian revelation aro scouted. And so, throughout, every distinctive article of the Christian faith is negatived by (huso pretended revelations; and for them is substituted simply the belief that the next world is only a prolon gation, on an ascending scale, of tho present. The tendency of tho whole thing—of all these stories of spirit rappiuga, published ao.widely in certain quarters, even where they do not command full credit—is to creato doubt and skeptical distrust, and undermine ell religious faith." . BP* ft is one of the most dillicnlt things in the world to divest great men of llieir great- ....... Who can credit the statement that Go- is once a littlo boy, that Methusnleh wore jackets and trousers, or that 8t. Paul played leap-frog ? Washington, doubtless, at somo period of his life, made dirt pies iu a sand heap, and " ployed store," with ac&ies made of clam shells, and weights fashioned out of broken china; he waa once, no doubt, " somo" on the alley-lore, and Iiob unnues- tiouubly seen tho day wlieu ho has cried by the hour to stay home from aoliool, or begged for a piece of giugoibread, or a cunt’s worth of “ hard bake’— these things are, doubtless, true, and yet what man can credit them i Thoy seem as much out of character ns n inarino hornpipe would iu a Quaker meeting- hotfte. RECEIPTS OF COTTON, Ao.-Oct. 26. Fer Central Ilnilroad—Ml bales Cotton end Aides., to Wiu Woodbridge, W W Garrard, W Wildor A Co, Cherloiton Stoam Bust Co, N A Usrdoe A Co, Lockett, Long A Co, Drighfttn, Kelly A Co, Hunter A (lemtnell, K llabemham A Bon, ltabtin A Whitelioad, Boa ton «0 Vlllalonga, Hardwick <1- Cook, Welle «t- Durr, Cruger cf Wade, Lawton its Godfrey, C II Duryoe, Holcomb «C Johnston, Foot <1- Dunham. 1 W Morrell <f Co, Frank lin <PBr*&lley, Hudson, Flemming it- Co, C Usrtridge, Webttor it Palmes, Alloa «t- Ball, J II L'nrronghs «f Son, CAL Lamar, and Bothwcll »t Smith. Per steamer Welaka, from Palatka, Ao—11 hales S I Cotton, 4 do Moss, and Mdto., to Anderson* A Co, N B A it Weed, Mrs W W Gate. J Roan, S Solomons, Boston A Villalonga, U A Palmer, J V ConporatACo, S M Rond, [nnlnghi _ . ___ relt A Co, W Warner, N B Knapp A Co, M J Reilly, Will* A Durr, J G Falligaut, S M Laflitcau, J Doyle, J M Cooper A Co, J II Carter A Co, G Butler, J Poole, J Sullivan, T Ford, E Partoni A Co, J A Brown, A Bee ler, C Van Horn, Bchn A Foster. T J Walsh, T J Nay lor, Cohen A Tarvor, Snidor, Lnthrop A Nevitt, U La th rop A Co, MoMahon A Doyle. J M llaywood, J Lipp- tnan, G Uankinan, G A MoCluikey, O Johnson A Co, W Duuoan, J M Simpson, Roeenbotm A llurnoU, Haiti A Co, W W Lincoln, W H (iuyon, J II Burroughs A 8on. W M Wadloy, J C Ferrill, S 8 Sibley, II 3 Gilbort, 1) Blallett A Cu. Crane A Itodgore, J DickionA Co, An- dereoue A Co, W Hall, A A Solomons fc Co, I) O'Con ner, W E Fitsgerale, W II May A Co, Franklin A Rrantley, R Habersham A Son, J Shatter, Morse A Nichols, Cubbcdge A Bro.'J Uaebrouck A Co, N B A II Wood, Mrs Telfair, Mrs Hodgson, F W Cornwell, M J Solomons, T Prondergaet, F Marshall A Co, J Daily, and order. For steamer Metamora, from Cha leiton—C R Road, Fla Boat, Cruger cfc Wade, C B 1’uUomon, S M I.afft- tosu, J A Drown, P Jacobs, aud Kompton <t- Vcritille. •ung, I o, M . Judge KdmonU* on ftplritunlfstii* Judge Edmonds, of Now York, declines be in£ a candidate for re-election, aud frankly ad inits that the opposition to his peculiar views on spiritualism is ao strong that his friends are justifiable in desiring his decline. Ho adheres, however, himself, with growing pcriinacy, to his spiritual views, and makes it fc matter of conscience to sacrifice official station rather than his religious convictions. Ho has pub lished a book on the subject of his delusion, which we hsve not Been, but which is under stood to acknowledge that bis action as a judge —his method of arriving at results in regard to legal rights and penalties—has been influ enced, and sometimes controlled, by commu nications from the spirit-land. The New York Times makes the following remarks upon tho the Judge’s book: "Judge Edmonds, in the book referred to, puts forward tho inostauthoritative statement of the claims of spiritualism yet isssued. No one can read it without pronouncing it one of the shallowest impositions ever practised on hu man credulity. It is boldly nut forth as a new religion—superseding that of Christ as his did that of Moses, and destined to effect, what Christianity has failed to accomplish, the re demption and regeneration of the world. It pretends to reveal the state,occupations, habiis and thoughts of spirits after death; and to de rive its knowledge directly from the statements of the spirits themselves. Its evidences are of three kinds: first, the fact ofeertain movements of tablus, &.c., inexplicable, it is assumed, on any other theory than that of their being pro duced by spirits—a uiodo of reasoning as illog ical as that of those who assert that the moon is made of green cheese, because nobody can prove beyond all possibility of doubt tlrat it is made of unything else; second, the asserted fact that future events are foretold by this mode with such accuracy ns proves tho knowl edge to be superhuman—an assertion of which, os yet, wo hove never seen half as much evi dence as any fortune-telling -old woman can muster in support of her prophetic skill; and, third, the intrinsic evidence of the things re vealed. Judge Edmonds appeals mainly to tho last. He has filled a thick book with sen tences written down by one Dr. Dexter, and himself, at the dictation mainly of Sweden borg and Lord Bacon—though communica tions aro also made by Clay, Webster, Frank lin, and Calhoun!—and alleged that they are ao unliko each other—that each bears so un rnistakcably the marks of its imputed author, aa to vindicate the spiritual origin claimed for ir. Wa have rend the book through, aud our judgment upon it is that no juggler ever at tempted a bolder experiment on public credul ity than is involved in this pretence. The al leged differences in stylo, thought and senti ment do not exist: occasionally there is an a wkward attempt to vary the forma of expres sion, but it ia nut kept up: tho whole troop of spirits all talk just alike, in Englisii equally had, in style equally affected and equally stuffed with attempts at poetic finery; they all talk about the same thing in the same way; aud uot one of them utters a sentence which any man of ordinary brains and literary practice could not shape, or of which the great men to whom they are ascribed, even in the flesh, could possibly have been guilty. Thia part of the sehsnie is the least skilful of all attempts at imposture. Ireland's forgery ofHhnkspcare, aud tlie Rejected Addresses, were infinitely better imitations than any of these pretended originals.^ Any man who can read what Judge Edmonds has here deliberately set down as the words of Bacon, of Swedenborg, of Webster, or of Clay, and not iuatantly de tect the forgery, is fair game for Feter Funk or the thimble-rigger of the race-course. "Great force, by way of argument, is claim ed for the substance of those revelations.— J udgo Edmonds is struck with their beauty, their sublimity, the elevated morality they in culcate, the doctrines they reveal, and the mo tives they furnish for upright and holy living. In these^‘features fresh and conclusive evidence ia found of their spiritual origin, and of their (ranecendto! imporlapce. This is the merest PASSENGERS. Per steamship Alabama, for Now York—Geo M Grif- tto, Mrs U Burt, M ss E Wentworth, J Tichonor, Thoe A Holloway, and 15 stoorago. Per steamer Welaka, from Palatka. Ao—Mrs Manor and 2 children, 2 Miee Yongee, D W Pouel, T P Kelly. Mr Livingston. R Papot, Mrs Timanua, It Spalding and «vt, R Pierce, II Pcndarvne, E Reilly, Mr Alberty, J II McIntosh, W Bird, Mrs Sprawl, fttr Godwin, Uarri- eoa' Sir Crawford, Mr Martin, Mr Helen, Mr Goodwin, and 6 deck. Pereteamor Metamora,from Chatiaeton—O Johnson, T Frink, J U Diamond, J Bakor and lady, P M Martin, it Broom, A Guorard. W Burnutt, K Burnett, W T Small, J K Kennedy, Aire E Armstrong, E Mulgar, J E Broom, W Hanna, F Stacoy, W Diukrson, E C Wodo, and It dock. COMMERCIAL. LATEST DATES. Liverpool, Oct. 8. | Harr*, Oct. 61 Havana, Oct. 22. Hnvannnh Mierket* Oct. tttf* COTTON.—The market yoeterday wa* eott, with sale of 208 bales, vis : 18 at ft, 17 at 71*. 7C at 016-10, 25 at l)>4,04 at 9X, and 8 Jethro at 12 cente. Havnnnnh Exports. Nxw York—Steamship Alabama—826 bales Upland Cotton, 67 do Sea Island do, 20 do Moes, 10 do Domes tics, and 158 pkgs Mdse. ' Nt.w York—Schr Jae G King—103,000 feet Lumber, aud 10 tone Iron. CHARLESTON, OCT. 26— Cotton — On Monday, with a fair Inquiry, near 8000 bales chtnged hand*, prices somewhat more settled and regular then on Sat urday, hut novertheleu continuing in favor of buyers. The market yesterday continued unchanged—the de mand moderate, and prioee similar to thoso on Monday, the enqniry principally for lower grades, extremes from 7»l»*«o, the transaction* of tho day amounting to some 700 bales-making the aggregate sales or the woek near 5,600 bales. We give asth* nearest oritori- on of the market towards bad at tho close, os follows Inforior to good ordinary 7a—, Middling 8Ma9>4, Good middling to middling fair 91(09^, fair to rally fair oka 10c. The market for Long Cottons remains closed; holdore boing unwilling to meet the views of buyers in regard to rricee. Rice—wo havo no change to report since our last. Tho demand, although but moderately fair, did not re sult in a falling off of priees-oonioque * * receipts. Tho arrivals of about 600 tie nosed of at from $3/£ $4,‘s—the bulk from $4a$4,t a '. Tho export* or the week amount to 223 tee ; and on shipboard, uot cleartd, 140 toe. Freights—To Liverpool have advanced. 17-1 dC, paid to All up. and 0-!6d for now engagement*. To New York 'Mo per 100 lbs for Cotton-to Boston 37>ic. Rice, nominal, tbsr*J<eing so little offering. AUGUSTA, (O. A.) OCT. 24, F. M.—Thore is i moderate demand for Cotton, but os factors are not gen erally willing to sell at tlie prices, the transactions aro limited. Middling Fair to FairOaO.^o, strict classifica tion. There i* more doing to-day than on Saturday. COLUMBUSTOCT. 84.—Our market ha* boon very unsettled throughout the w eek, and prioee fluctuated from 8 tohJT for Middling, according to the anxiety of bnycra. It Is impoesible to give correct quotations in tho present unsettled state of the market. The price* have ranged from 7 to ctnU. NEW ORLEANS, OCT. 22.—Cotto.t.—Yesterday, •gain, the demaud was actire, and the sale* embraced 6000 bales, at our advanced quotations. The bu.inese of the entiro week thus earns up a total of 16,000 bales. The reoolptsof the week are 29,677 balsa, and the to tal since the let of September havo been 90,302 bales, against 236,086 to the same date last year. New Orleans Classification. Inferior - | Middling Fair....l0^@10>*' Ordinary 7>4@8 , i I Fair;.-... Middling 8J?S9»2 I Good lair Good Middling. OH&IU I Uood * nd ®ne COTTON STATEMENT, Stock on hand Sept. 1, 1863. Received since 1 yesterday t hand not cleared 74,884 iits.—The market haa bocu firm, and we have noticed four or fire engsgomonta during the week }id for Cotton to Liverpool, Itfo to Havre, ’ * — Breinon, end ltfo to Trieste. Cotton to " bacco at $6, and Flour to Havre $1,60. HARING INTELLIGENCE. Yonr oy savannaU oct. 17, SuBlUMieu ISmIHutiSHanh.miafiiiih wu.tih.40a A Thomas. Steamer 6! fltcau. ford, Fay A Co. Bohr Jae Q Kin Bunker. Steamer Calhoun. Brooks, Charleston. MEMORANDA. The Mtir P C Fortinon, Rob.ru, from Baltimore, tUv.nn.h, arrived u Georgetown, B. O, on tho 1 Inst, with loss of part dock load and foretopmast s jibboom. Dry Goods, Clothing, ho. ACKNOWLEDGMENT. S. CUHKELL, Agent, PUBLIC generally, to one of the most extensive and 1 stookf cror offered for inspection ia Savannah. These Goods, which are offored for sale at acquaintance with tllV BhllUUU UiMKVb. HO I* UUMUICU tO SlOtC OUUfidCI “ that tho advantages ho is now prepared to offer to Purchasers of Dry Cloods, oennot he oxoelled by any house in the city. Tho following enumeration will oonvoy — ,a — - extent and variety of tho Goods i Korney*! “ ”■ f v offored, vis; Kentucky Greys, Three Cord Double and Twisted: Georgia Kersey, Heavy Striped Kersey; Blanket*. Plaid Horse Blankets; Heavy Twilled do,; Aewrt oolors do.; Heavy Mackinaw do.; DuflU do.; 10-4, 11- . 12-4 Whitney do.; 11-4 Bath; Ribbon-Bound Crib do. ('nNsImoreE, Clottin and Hntlnvts. every variety of ooior. Colored Canton do. Print** Fro nob, English and Amerioan Prints, tho target ■took ever brought to this market, varying in prloc from 6„ ( 4 to 60 cents a yard. GlaghamR. Manchester, Lancaster, English and Scotch UL hams, from l'Jt, to 37)£ cents a yard. DeLnlnes nnd UnnlimorcM. Plain and Figured DoLaine*, from 12)k to $t i yard ; Handsome Fluid DoLaine*. entirely now; Bli aud Colored Cashmere*. Theso Goods are of the lat Paris design, aud comprise the moat magnificent p terns ever offered ia any markoL Alpacas* bi.vivivrv, to roaiiio the exqulslto beauty o sty 1 on and tho chaste tnagnifloonoe of tfioi onsen‘,lal that they should bo ooou to he approbated. Mantilla*qnd 4'loalin. Ladies' Black Bilk Mantillas; do. Colored do.; u* Watered Silk Cloaks; do. Bieuohed Cloth Cloaks, Em Hose; do. Groy Lamb's Wool do.; do. Colored Cash* mere do.; do. Fancy Cashmere do. Roy's White, M‘ - J and Fanoy >4 do,; do. Lamb'* Wool & do., do. F. Cashmere ao. Ladioe' Whito Cauton Hor.', from to $1 a pair; do. Slato, Mixed und Moravian do. Ulaok Hour HUk (Und) do.: tin Colored do. (Unti) do. DliiaE Italian da.; do. Merino do.; do. Caehm do. Mon'* Whito and Brown do.; do. IMixod >4 do. 8uperfino French Brown do.; do. Ribbed do.; Fan oy Htrino U do.; do. High Colored do.; Grey Lai Woof do.; ao. White do; do Merino do. Glove*. Ladies' Aloxamtre Kid Gloves; Thibet do; Colo. VM Cat Naptdo; Taffeta Silk do; Wool Mitt*; Cashmere MiUs. Men's Wool Gloves; do Thibet do; do Coelrmere do Lind Ucrlindo; do Drab Douilo; do Cloth do; Taffltado; do Aloxandre Kid do ; do Flush (an en uow artioie) do. Boys and Misses Gloves of every •eriptlou. Handkerchiefs* Ladlce L C hdkfs from cents up; do lie do uo; do Emb'd do d Ladies I.ambs Wool Vests dodo; Ladies Emb'd SoarfS; do Plal do Printed Cashmere do: do Erab'u ao; ao sanev Nook Ties; Elastics, Buffalo Combs, India Rubber Couibs, Tooth end Nail Brushes, Hair Brushes, “ fiinicry, Fancy Soaps, Ac., Ao., together with an tensive assortment of lionise Keeping Goods. . apMpnni axoluaively appropriated to Jobbing Irade has boon fitted up, whore country 1 *0 oarry on tho Dress Making and II A V ordf ” »&ha*eh ith wiU be promptly attended te. Mre.8. wifi open h 7 ,r .took oYWe4>*6d*y, 1 OI (MtOMT. millinery and Fancy MUST BJ.UMKNZWKIO, N*. 1494 0*ngre**.pi'r«cl, — T.k.1 thi, Method of lalbnal., tho I*dM of Bevutuh end vlotntt,. thw oh. had aatud tho Store No. I4»U OoogroM-otnot, 0.1.4ms to Moun. Stutoi. k ICohMu. ohm oho «m hoop ooMtutly 0. hano, inn .utal, of MILUNXRYQOOOS, Oo Tt.nr.day, pet. -JOt*. MKS. T O S I roULD ra.jMetralljr Invito tho oltMtUoa rf Him .... •—C* 1 h.Tfcoo.h to tho oponing of ho, 1*11 Wintor .took of Mllllporj, to-morrow (Thorite;) II D.W ..LbUohm.ilt. No. 1)4 Broaghton-atrool. .. Ijr oppoitto Bt. A.drow'o U.U. Il.rlBg fitted op In bendoome itjle, n mitt of .put- A aente In every w.j adopt., to Uio reeeptlon ul no. — **- -- pe. M nhavr ' SSRJTd** Dress Mnltinf, In this department of her business ornply with tue tastes and wishes of ho fullest and promptest manner. •he I* prepared to of her austomars^ia MOBILE, OCT. 22.—Cotton.—The now* by the Asia ..xd no influence upon our market, the sales of the two days being very small, and wo closed on yoeterday dull and quiet at oar quotations ^ MVEKfOOL CLASSIFICATIONS. Middling Good Middling... Middling Fair.... Fair >9* 9' lO^a - nominal. • only 1100 bales. The sales of the woek amount purchased entirely for our northern ports. The vroatherooutinuce very favorable for the eottou crop, and should frost ke*r off fora fortnight longer, v* shall look with confidence for a very fair, if not a larger yield. 8took «_ Received thi* week.. Received previously........ J9,4<W— 20,822 2tM»2 866 7,412 8,278 8took on hand and on shipboard not cleared ..20,114 DIBBLE &CA11EY CLOTHIERS AND MERCHANT TAILORS, Ware room opening of their Fall und Winter Stock, folioltato themselves on the advantages whieh tbelri oent pnrohasoe enable them to offor all who desire •elect their Clothing from an extensive OMortmenl tho oholocet goods, made in tho most Fashionable Style. at euoh LOW PRICES, as must distance all competition in their tra The following enumeration ia made for the Gentlemen in the eoantry, whose orders wl prompt attention, and who, when in the oity, aro •peotfully invited to an examination of our Good*. QENTLEIREN’H CJLOTII1N4 FROCK AND-DRESS Cost* of overy quality. " '* " " in Blaok* Blue, Bros Greon and Olive Colors. BUSINESS COATS, in great rarlety, vis Two Cloth and Caeeimere, Frock and Uusineee Coats. PANTALOONS.—Black Doeskin at a groat variety prices. Bl’k and Fancy Caulmeree, at a great variety of price* *• Drab Date “ v ~ White and Fanoy Linen Drill*, Fancy Marseille*, VESTS.—Black Silk and Satin Veit*. Fanoy Silk White 8ilk, for Party FVUNISIUNG GOODS. Furnishing Good* oi ovary description for Gentle- all kinds, beat quality patent yoke shirt*, a’n •ortmoat of DRESSING GOWNS, monies, etc., oto. IIATS. MERCHANT TAILORING. The favorable and long established reputation whioh their oetabliahmeut has enjoyed and still maintains for tho stylo and finish of its garment* made to order, a* wallas for the euporior quality of their olot*^ * bility of ooior and substantial workmanship, 1 tho oonstaut effort of tho proprietors aiill to et They Invite the special attention of both old ana new customers to the following, from whioh they are pre- C ared to furnish garmonts, whioh they will waraat to 3 ns plus ultra in both fit and fashion. SIMONl'SA BIOLLY’8 boat Blue, BlaoL, Mulberry, Green, Adelaide, Bronx*, Corobo and Olive Cloth*. Blaok Doeakln, Blaok, Ca*elmrro, and a large auort- mentof Colored and Fanoy Tweed*. LINEN GOODS.—-Wnito, Buff and tanoj Linen Vi^TINOS.-White Silk and Satin, for Party Vest*. Blaok and fanoy Silk and 8atin*. White, Buff and Orange Cossimeres. UNIFORM SUITS. For Volunteer Companies in the oity and throughout tho State, rnado aud furnished at tho ehortoet notioe and in the beat manner. DIBBLE A CAREY. —*8 lj ansa Louisa 8. SrsNUxa, English branch**, 0*r* xan and Italian, Miss Mart a. PniLLirs, English Branches. Miss AtiKLiNC A. Coukut, i Vocal and instrumental Miss Adklink Bunn, / JHuaio. Mies Luo.niA B. lioorxn, Drawing, Painting, X«« The 86th Term of thi* iuKitnta will eommanoo a* o 13th of Ootobor, and extend to tho Seoond Monday A Prospeotua and any information may b« had by kpplloation to the Secretary and Treasurer. A* t£a lumber of Pupil* i* limited, it i* important that aarlp application should bo made. ^ W. S. WILLIFORD, Sect'/and Traas'F. [From Bishop Elliot's Annual AddreaelT** ^ " With the consent of the fcire of Trusted* Iplawd tie Institute under the otuuge of a lady, well tried and oil knowu, Miss M. M. Basil, and invited the Rev. lafue M. White, who had just at that moment resign* i the charge ol St. John's Uiurch, to accept the Bee* irshipof the lnetitute. These appointments, together ith ute ooutinuauc * of the Rev. Ms. Bragg atone is* itute, should give parents every confidence thee **«* • the school has heretofore been, each will ft be hare* Tier. 1 commend it most heartily to the Pleases, aw* jring it that the School bee never been in finer ooa- itlou and praying it to neo every exertion not to peiw, ill an lueututiou to go down whioh ha* boon built *p (the expense of so much saertfloe and suffering." *'pt26 tw tlN * JNEW BONNETS* NEW TRIMMINGS, nnd a general avert- ment of iancy Bilk Good* and Toys, receive* per Steamer ai the Trimming and General i«»y Store, J3V BROUGHTON SlREKT, a* an il ve and bhdloe stock of Fall and Winter jJillineiy minings end other Fanoy Goods, consisting of Rio* :, batiuaud straw Trimmed Ueaaets; Boy* Mat* Misses Flat*; atraw Trimmings; Exhibition Rib- AMttla; Tafetta aud Plal were; So ! W: ■■■■■ & , Corded and other Bonaet silks and Balia*! Dress, Opera and Morning Cau«: Cblidrsa'* W.ts: Tabs; H-lrOarjV, AaftawSS II Crying Dolls; Kid Doll*; Chinn. ng Floes a Hoped Vel eeleta; s with m TUB LAST UNRIVALLED PRODUCTION I A New Cook Stove, ALI,KD “ THE NHW WORLD Far Burning Won* nr Coni. The 8ubocrlb.ro her. Jml made unin uocb nilh Moure. Abbott A L.»r.»ro, gtf Makers, of Philadelphia, for tho udai/vf aala of this excellent nSflt T^SSwWlt ” offoriBf it to the pubUo fbr lit also cornea very highly ret t ore now nsir- *• -=* - - a abort timo i them in opei r any Stove, for eithor roasting, •loco In thi* oily, and those Who u can <•» twice the heat in th* sow In nee. W# are now re- !!.».« - “-"^Mlib , r»u'd*Bu?; «Sr*^ moahthoh a co.. Store No. 13 Btracrd-lt. To Ennd Owners. »«»n, uhh, guvs!**, j/eeaiur. hey wish to soil tho same. I will 1 report the tree value ill the same on Commission, orlapfc ------ WHIGBt Lomphla, Stowage cm. On. Plantation For Sale. a Situated on the Augusta and Wayne*- MM loro' Bull read, adjoining town iandahffli Waynesboro', and containing eight hwn-aSCm yneohoro’, Ga. TANNKK8’ Oil*. 1 (I 3RL8. just received and for sale by lUau29 J. B. MOORE A CO., Gibbon*'* Bu ROWLAND A CO. 40 do Irwin's 60 do Anderson's do do do. 30 quarter boxes Ward's 6s Tobacco. 89 boxes Ids do do. 20 M superior Plantation Segxrs. 40 M varioas brands do. landing and for sale by iept£ SCRiNTON, JOHNSTON A CO, MONTGOMERY, At.A. ioe delivered at the Faotory 2,600 dolUn, jaflx 00 additional will defray the freight toSaraa- Charleston or New Orleans. ^ >[nation of these Mills Is alone rsqplr^jog^|jK • of Engintiand Mill Work fkmlshed aA . fully warranted. Add res* P jy 6 6m J. 8. WINTER, Aft. W.L Works jfar Charleston Courier plea*roopy. - ARNOLD'S 7 id Patent Metallic Indcetnetibu SARCOPHAGUS, * ■ £ TT~~ , Xjg unted ^— corviNt N; HAKWJ. M. D, IO.'w 'Tw 1 “• D ” IP. M. Koixonn B. Lacmukui. Mwblcbn. _ 3TKF LADUUNb. CIMbto Hwooo, Tonit • Stands, 8ew Horses, Tubt, Wash ” J — * LAUNCH AND GKttMANCOWMUi: Jt; 20 dosen, for sale by A. BONAUD. mV’, rr. - — CL AG U OR W fc CUNNINGHAM. S TA1K It O D8*-—KouadTo val Md Flat Suir JJAY-jm bale*; for uie J. P. COLLINS. . MW Cider, . W. M. DAVIDSON.