Southern recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1820-1872, July 25, 1871, Image 1

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Volume LII. MILLEDGEVILLE, GEORGIA, TUE(,)AY, JULY 25,1871. Number 29. THE fouttmn jScmtlct. BY E. A. HAEBISON, OEMS & CO. Terms, $2.00 Per Annum in Advance. RATES OF ADVERTISING. £ ’■* c ^ 4 r- 1 O e^\ rs m * 1 ^ CO CD ! 3 months. I | C months.l 1 year. i $1.0 0 $2.26 $7.50 $12.00 $20.00 1.75 5.00 12.00 18.00 30.00 1 - ;J0 7.00 16.00 28-00 40.00 1 3.50 9.00 25.00 35.00 50.00 i 4.00 28.00 40.00 00.00 coll 0.00 15.00 34.00 50.00 75.00 co! 1 10.00 25.00 60.00 80.00 120.00 col, 20.00j 50.00 80 00 ! 120.00 160.00 legal adveutising. Ordinary's.—Citations for letters of ad ninistration, guardianship, &c. $ 3 00 estead 2 00 5 00 3 50 5 00 3 00 5 00 1 50 2 50 5 00 H A rdicationtor dism’n from adm’n.. Application for dism’n of guard’ll Application for leave to sell Land Niticeto Debtors and Creditors.... Sales of Land, per square of ten lines gale of personal per sq., ten days Slc-rijfs—Each levy often lines, Mortgage sales of ten lines or less.. Tax Collector’s sales, (2 mouths 5 00 L'/erCs--Foreclosure of mortgage and other monthly’s, per square 1 00 Estray notices,thirty days 3 00 Sales of Laud, by Administrators, Execu- torsor Guardians, are required, by law to be held on the first Tuesday in the month, between the hours of ten in the forenoon and three in the affcjrnoon, at the Court house in the county in which tire property s situated. Notice ofthese sales must be published 40 days previous to the day of sale. Notice for the sale of personal property must be published 10 days previous to sale day. Notice to debtors and creditors, 40 day Notice that application will be made of th; Court of Ordinary for leave to seil laud, 4 weeks. Citations for letters cf Administration, Guarliansbip, &e., must be published 30 lavs—for dismission from Administration, mathly six months, for dismission from guar- i inship, 40 days. Rub'.'; for foreclosure of Mortgages most be published monthly for four months—for “ iablish ng lost papers, for the full space of ‘.tree months—for compelling titles from Ex ecutors or Administrators, where bond has 6'en given by tire deceased, the full space of three months. Application for Homestead to be published twice in the space of ten consecutive days SUBSCRIPTIONS Are respectfully solicited for the erection of a fiiOXUMNT TO THE Confederate Dead of Georgia, And those Soldiers from other Confederate States who were killed or died in this State. THE MONUMENT TO COST $50,000. £The Corner Stone it is proposed shall be laid on the 4th of July, or so soon thereafter as the receipts will permit. For every Five Dollars subscribed, there will be given a certificate of Life Membership to the Monumental Association. This certificate will entitle the owner thereof to an equal inter est in the following property, to bs distributed as soon as requisite number of shares are sold, to-wit: First. Nine Hundred and One Acres of Land in Lincoln county, Georgia, on which are the well known Magruder Gold and Copper Mines, val ued at $150,000 And to Seventeen Hundred and Forty-Four Shares in One Hundred Thousand Dollars of United States Currency; to-wit: Herring’s Champion Safes! THEIR TRIUMPHS IN THE LATE LARGE FIRE! THEY NEVEtt EASE ! BELL & HULL’S LETTER. Savannah, Ga., February 24,1871. Messrs. Herring, Farrel & Sherman, 25 Broadway, New York : Gents.—The large and destructive fire of February 22nd, consumed the building occu pied by us. \Ve were using one of your Her ring’s Patent Champion Safes, made sixteen years ago. It contained Seven Hundred Do! larsin money, our books and valuable papers We were unable to get the safe open until eighteen hours after the fire. We found the contents in excellent condition; the only injury was the binding of the books, drawn by the steam. This test of the fire-proof quality of your safes was a severe one, as all can testify who saw the fire. The amount of combusti ble materials of the building itself, added to the cotton and other goods stored in it, made as hot a lire as often occurs. Respectfully yours; BELL & HULL. W. M. DAVIDSON’S LETTER. Savannah, Ga., February 24, 1871. Messrs. Herring, Farrel A Sherman, 251 Broadway, New York: Gents.—I had one of your Herring’s Patent Champ'on Sates in the fire ef Wednesday night. February 22d. It remained in the rums thirty-six hours before it could be opened. My stock of goods (being a wholesale liquor mer chant) made a very hot fire, thoroughly testing the quality of the safe. It contained some money, my books and papers two gold watches two silver goblets, and other valuables. All of them are preserved in fine order. The covers of the books are drawn by the steam. It was a genuine test, and your Champion Safe has done me excellent service. The fire v.as one cf the hottest that ever took place in this city. Truly yours, W. M. DAVIDSON, New Advertisements- HERRING’S PATENT CHAMPION SAFES. The most Reliable Protection from Fur Now Known. HExtRlNG’S NEW Patent Champion Bankers’ Safes! The best Protection against Burglars' Tools Extant. HERRING, FARREL & SHERMAN, 251 Broadwav, cor Murray St., N. Y. FARREL, HERRING if CO., Philadelphia. HERRING, FARREL & CO-, Chicago. HERRING, FARREL A SHERMAN, New Orleans. PERSE & r May 9, 1871. THOMAS, Agents. SAVANNAH, GA. 18 3m. 1 fbare of $10,000 $10,000 1 “ 5,000 5,000 2 “ 2,500 5,000 10 “ 2,000 20.000 10 “ 1,000 10.000 20 “ 500 10,000 100 “ 100 10,000 200 “ 50 10,000 400 “ 25 10,000 1000 10 10,000 SOUTHERN IONIC, Is new offered by the Pr.,prict jrs as greatly improved by the addition ol a valuable foreign AROMATIC AND INVIUORA TING HER And LUKE RYE WHISKEY. Made expressly for their Bitters. Its I>:l REA SING POPULARITY” and sales is the best proof of its merits HCNDR1- DS of DOZENS SOI D NOW where Tens were previously. C URESDY SPEPSTaT” $100,000 The value of the separate interest to which the holder of each Certificate will be entitled, will be determined by the Commissioners, who will announce to the public the manner, the time and place of distribution. The following gentlemen have consented to act as Commissioners, and will either by a Committee from their own body, or by Specia Trustees, appointed by themselves, receive and take proper charge of the money for the Mon ument, as well as the Real Estate and the U S. Currency offered as inducements for sub scription, and will determine upon the plan for the Monument, the insciption thereon, the site therefor, select an orator for the occasion, and regulate the ceremonies to be observed when he corner-stone'.is laid to-wit: Generals L. McLaws, A. R. Wright, M. A. Stovall, W. M. Gardner, Goode Bryan, Colo- oneis C. Snead, Wm. P. Crawford, Majors Jos. B. Cumming, George T. Jackson, Joseph Ganahi, I. P. Girardey, Hon. R. II. May, Adam Johnston, Jonathan M. Miller, W. H. Good rich, J,D. Butt, Henry Moore, Dr. W.E.Dear- ng The Agents in the respective counties will retain the money received for the sale ol Tickets until the subscription Books are clos ed. In order that the several amounts may be returned to the Shareholders, in case the number of subscriptions will not warraut any further Drocedure the Agents will report to this office weekiy, the result of their sales. If hen a sufficient number of the shares are sold, the Agents will receive notice. They will then forward to this office the amounts received. L & A. II. McLAWS, Gen. Ag’ts. No. 3 Old P. O. Range, McIntosh sts. Augusta, Ga W. C. D. ROBERTS, Agent at Sparta, Ga. L.W. hunt & CO., Agents Milledgeville Georgia. r pM May, 2, 1871- 6m. Creates Appetite. Prevents Chills and Fever. Cures >ervousness. Aids £»! gestion. Delightful to the Taste, Exhilerating to the Body. TO ffT NO IONIC EQUAL <See our Sumter Bitters Almanac for 1871, to be had gratis of Druggists and Grocers everywhere. DOVV1E, M018E A DAVIS, Proprietors and Wholesale Druggists, CHARLESTON, S. C. For sale by L. W. HUNT & CO., Milledge- ville, Ga. For sale by A. H. BIRDSONG & CO. Sparta, Ga. p & r July 1 1871.p 7< r 2b 4t. FOUND AT LAST -1URRWALTEBS i ^ 'f\ Broad St., Augusta, Ga. marble monuments, tomb STONES &C., &C. Marble Mantels and Furniture-Marble of all kinds Furnished to Order. All work for the Country carefully boxed for shipment. Mch 12 ’70 ly. R Feb 1, '71 ly An Antidote for Fever & Amie. Silver Springs near Ocala Fla. March 1st, 1871. Messrs Domic. Moise if Davis, Charleston South Carolina. . Dear Sirs: I have prescribed in my prac tice the Moise’s Fever and Ague Pi"S sent me, in several cases of Chronic Guill and e- ver, both among my white and colored pa tients. with great success, they having enec- ted a Prompt and Permanent Cure in cver J case, where all other medicines have failed. 1 note particularly my colored patients, because they are more exposed, and less likely to take care of themselves when the Chill leaves them. I regard Moise’s Fever and Ague Pills as a Certain Cure, and a blessing to all living in the Malarious districts of the .South, and par- t.cularly in the everglades of our Elate. Very respectfully, yours, JAS.B. OWENS, M. D. p ft r July 1 1871, p 77 r 26 4t R. R. R. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF CUKES THE WORST PAINS Zn from one to Twenty SZinutes NOT ONE HOUR after reading this advertisement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. Railway's Ready Relief is a Cure for everv PALY. It was the first and is TIIE OYLV PAIY REMEDY that instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays Inflamation, and cures Conges tions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bow els. or other glands or organs by one appli cation. In lrom oue to twenty miuutes, no matter how violent or excruciating the pain the Rheumatic, Bed-ridden, Infirm, Crippled, Nervous, Neuralgic, or prostrated with dis ease may suffer. 1 he application of the Ready Relief to the part or parts where the pain or difficulty exists will afford ease and comfort. Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will in a few moments cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Diarrhcea, Dysentery, Colic, Wind in the Bowels, and all Internal Pains. Travelers should always carry a bottle of Radway's Ready Relief with them. A few drops in water wiii prevent sickness or pains from change of water. It is better than French Brandy or Bitters as a stimulant. FEVER AND AGUE. Fever and Ague cured for fifty cents. There is not a remedial agent in this world that will cure Fevei and Ague, and all other Malarious, Lnious, Scarlet, typhoid, Yellow, and other Fevers (aided by Radway’s Pills) so quick Radway s Ready Relief. Fifty cents a bott SCHOFIELD’S Jr ©m ADJOINING PASSENGER DEPOT, M AOOST, Gr A -:o:- a bottle. HEALTH ! BEAUTY!! Strong and pure rich blood—increase of flesh and weight—clear skin and beautiful complexion secured to all. DR. RADWAY'S SAKSAPAiULLlAiY IIESDLIEAT Las made the most astonishing cures so quick so rapid are the changes the body un- ^ dergoes, under the influence of this tiuly wonder!ul Medicine, that very day an Increase in Flesh and Weight is Seen and Felt. Tim (* TT SISjOOD I'll M H If Me Every drop of the Sarsapariliau Resolvent communicates through the Blood, Sweat Urine, and other fluids and juices of the svs- tem the vigor of life, for it repairs the wastes of the body with new and soud material. Scrof ula, Syphilis, Consumption, Glandular dis ease, Ulcers in ^ the_ throat, Mouth, Tumors, Nodes iu the Glands and other parts of the system, Sore Eyes, Strumorous discharges rom the Ears, an J the worst forms of Skin Steam Engines and Boilers QjF* any required size Saw Mills, Grist Mills, Mill Gearing, Gin Gearing, (ORDINARY, OR GRAHAM’S EXTRA HEAVY,) SUGAR MILLS AND KETTLES, IRON RAILINGS, OF ANY DESIRED STYLE AND AT PRICES LOWER MAN ANYBODY. SECAFTIKTG-, PULLIES. ETC-. All or any Machinery, put up at first-class IRON WORKS, put up in the best style and at prices to suit the times. Give us a call before purchasing. We will sell low for CASH. J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON. Schofield’s Patent Cotton Presses STILL AHEAD. Cancers in the W omb, and all weakening and P iinful discharges, Night Sweats, Loss ot Sperm and all wastes cf the life principle, are within the curative range of this wonder of Modern Chemistry, and a few days use will prove to any person using it for either of these forms of disease its potent power to cure them. Not only does the Sarsaparillian Resolvent excels all known remedial agents in the cure of Chronic, Scrofulous, Constitutional, and Skin diseases; but it is the only positive cure for Kidney and Bladder Complaints, Urinary, and IV omb dist ases, Gravel. Diabetes, Dropsy, Stoppage of Water, Incontinence of -Urine, Bright’s Disease, Albuminuria, and in all ca ses where there are brick du.-t deposits, or the water is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances like the white ot an egg, or threads like white silk, or there is a morbid, dark billious ap pearance. and white bone-dust deposits, and when there is a pricking, burning sensation when passing water, and pain iu the Small of the Back and along the Loins. DR. RADWAY’S TERFEliT PURGATIVE PILLS, perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet gum, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse, and strengthen. R;idway’s Rills, tor the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Head ache, Constipation, Costiveness, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Billiousness, Bilious Fever, In flammation of the Bowels. Piles, and all De rangements of the Internal Viscera. War ranted to effect a positive cure. Purely Veg etable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. Observes the following symptoms resulting from Disorders of the Digestive Organs: A few doses of Radway’s Piils will free the system from all the above named disorders. Price, 25 cents per Box. Sold by Diuggists. Read “False and True.” Send one ic.tter- stamp to Rad way <fc Co., No 87 Maiden Bane, New York. Information worth thousands will be sent you. r July 4 1871. 20 ly. Georgia COTTON PRESS I S NOT AN EXPERIMENT, but has been tested by some of our best planters, and has proved to be an Excellent Press. Plan ters, send for our circular’and price list, as the price is from $20 to $35 less than any other reliable Press. We refer to Col. T. M. Turner, Sparta, Ga., who knows the merits of our Presses. PENDLETON & BOARDMAN. Patentees and Manufacturers. Foundry and Machine Works Augusta, Ga. p r n jy 7th 6m. Our WROUGHT IRON COTTON SCREW PRESS is the only Cotton Press that has stood the test, being used ever since the close of the war, and is in greater and more increasing demand than any other STEREOSCOPE S VIEWS, ALBUMS, CHROMOS, FRAMES. E. & H- T. ANTHONY & CO 591 2ROADW1Y, N 7. Invite the attention of the Trade to their ex tensive assortment of the above goods, of their own publication, manufacture and impor tation. Also, PHOTO LANTERN SLIDES jand GRAPIIOSCOPE NEW VIEWS OF YO SEMITE. 2. & &. T- AlMTSSOXIir Ol CO. 59i Broadway, New York, Opposite Metropolitan Hotel importf.rs and manufactures of PHOTOGRAPHIC MATERIALS. P March 11, 6J Cm. R Mi rah 14,10 6m. Our WATER STEAM POWER PRESS is becoming VERY POPULAR, Being the MOST ECONOMICAL to those having a WATER POWER OR STEA3I EXGISE. It can also be run from the band wheel shaft of gin gear. Our HAND PRESS (indeed, as all of them are) is too well known, and lias established it self as the Planter's Favorite. As there is no comparison between a cast and “Wrought Iron Screw,” we do not recommend “Cast Iron Screws,” though we make them for those want ing a CHEAP Press. Send ns your orders, or send for Circular and Price List. THE WILCOX PATENT HORSE POWER We claim to be SUPERIOR 10 ANY OTHER for Ginning Cotton, and it is tlie only Horse Power made that we know of that can supercede the ordinary Gin Gear. J. S SCHOFIELD 6l SOU, DZacon, (la- Jy 3 r & p p 77 r 26 6m. W. A. HOPSON & CO. f Have received this day a choice variety the Latest styles of LADIES’, MISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S SUITS. of ALSO SWISS OVERSKIRTS, CORSET COVERS, ALSO A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT DRESSING SKIRTS, PIQUE WRAPPERS, OF Block. Re'c Ladies’ TJndergarments. W- A* HOPSON & C0-, 41 Second St, 20 Triangular Macon, Ga. Feb. 14,1871, if. DUET-WOOD. The small-pox is progressing in Lon don. Osceola county, Iowa, lias not a tree within its boundaries. Baltimore is much excited over the W harton poisoning case. Washington city is to have a new Op era House, at the cost of S2.20,000. O'Doniva'n Rossa, the Irish exile, has gone into the insurance business in New York. The Appleton iron furnace, of Wis consin, turns out about seventeen tons of pig iron per day. Tale College graduates ninety-nine students this year. New York consumes one million of eggs daily. Attorney-General Akermau, is slump speaking in North Carolina. The Hibernians attended the funerals of the rioters in New York in full re galia; Over twelve hundred churches were built in the United States last year. King Kamchameha, of the Sand- wich Islands, has his boots made in New York. He wears nines. Five hundred persons ’vent crazyin Paris during the reign of terror. London has a dcw prima donna, M’lle Marimon, who is usurping Nilsson’s throne. In Constantinople, wood, milk, and wirre are sold by weight ; and bread is sold by the Got. The degree of LL. D., has been conferred upon Horace Greely, Paris has had a terrible explosion of a powder magazine. The Mississippi Radicals are splitting into factions over the policy of Gov. Alcoi n. Eleven of the Southern States under Republican rule Lave been plunged into a debt of two hundred millions of dol lars since 1865, The arsenal at Rio Janeiro has been destroyed by fire. The loss to the Bra zilian Government exceeds $300,000. Snow fell in the basket of a balloon that went up from Oswego, N. Y. on the 4th, to the depth of two inches. The party, having on summer clothing, suf fered intensely from the cold. A Missourian has invented a perpetual tobacco pipe. It has a reversible bowl; when one charge ;s nearly burned out, it is reversed and filled again, burning without relighiing. One of Darwins strongest arguments for the descent of man from the monkey is, that the latler animal always parts his hair in the middle. According to London correspondents, Napoleon visits (own every day, and generally strolls along the sunny side of Bond street or haunts the bow windows ot a club house. He is very popular with tho working classes, who cheer him and he is getting very fat. A destructive storm has occurred along the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. The freight train was blown from a switch across the main track, and threw the passenger train off. No lives were lost. _ Governor Palmer, of Illinois, will as sist the Sheriff, with the whole power of the Slate, in ariesting tho persons who lynched Martin Mera—the man who so cruelly murdered his owu son. The sudden arrival of Governor War mouth in New Orloans from Pass Chris tian, created a sensation among politi cians. The Governor at once took charge of the Executive Department. General Cook, with five companies of cavalry, fifty picked Mexicans and a number of the be«t native scouts, has taken the field agaiust the Apacha In dians in Arizona. Iu the United States Court, in Brook lyn, N. Y., the steamer Cleopatra was declared forfeited to the Government for a violation of the neutrality laws. The act of violation consisted in smuggling $4,000 in cigars, by the employees on board. The State of Michigan contains five thousand one hundred and eleven inland lakes, covering an area of eleven hun dred aud fourteen miles, besides a water front on the great lakes of more than eighteen hundred miles. The Pleasonton-Boutwell imbroglio shows no decided phase of settlement. In case of Pleasonton’s resignation or removal, it is thought that Mr. Douglass will succeed him as Commissioner of In ternal Revenue. The coal discovered recently on the line of the Central Pacific Railroad is said to be found in veins 35 feet thick. It is semi-anthracite, containing 72.16 per cent, of carbon, 22 per cent, volatile matter, 3.44 water, and 2.5 ash. It is sold at San Francisco at $13 25 per ton. If the extent of the coal field is not over-estimated, it will have more influ ence than the gold mines upon the fu ture of the Pacific coast. The New York Tribune says that the most violent of the New York rioters were women. So it was in Paris in the day of the Commune. The ‘‘contagious insanity” to which a French writer at tributes the monstrous conduct of the Communists, seems to have crossed the Atlantic. The San Diego Union learD3 that rich deposits have been discovered at some point in Lower California, about 150 miles south of San Diego. Water is found in sufficient quantities to allow the claims to be worked. The Democratic Legislature of New Hampshire is making revelations which show that the Radicals have kept pow er in that State by corrupt usages of the ballot boxes and registry lists. The management of the two-headed girls. Christine and Miiie, who were in Atlanta some months since, is coining money in the Provinces of Great Brit ain. New York State contains 5,123 Snn*. day Schools, with a membership of 574,347. The Methodists lead all other denominations, having 1,391 schools with 122,071 scholars. The Presby terians come next, with 822 schools aud 93,358 scholars. Two clergymen, late editors of the Ministerial Union—a Christian paper which appeared for four consecutive weeks iu Chicago—valedictoried as foL lows : “Chicago is a good place for a religious paper, provided that three pa ges serve Satan and the other one is mixed.” Father Hyacinthe in a recent letter says the bloody acts of the Communists ’n Paris were the result of the nega tion of God by the people. The Vulcan Iron Works of St. Louis, turns out a rail 39 feet long every min ute, or enough iron for a mile of double track, with eight swithes incladed, ev- five hours and a half. General Butler is described by the Boston Transcript as a great admirer of the Paris Commune, and it asks when elected Governor of Massachusetts, “will he stigmatize his inaugural by blowing up the Slate House or pulling down Bunker Hill Monument ?” The former, of course, as his “vocation,” like that of Falsiaff, is “blowing.” | “Senator Simon Cameron declines the Radical nomination for tho Vice Presidency,” says an exchange. This is premature in Senator Simon Came*, ron. We are not informed that the opportunity to decline the nomination has yet been held out to him. Brooklyn, New York, on account of highway robberies and assaults, is be coming an unsafe place after dark. This place has just had an exciting whisky riot. King Louis, of Bavaria has convoked all the great actors of Shakspearian plays throughout the world to meet in MuHich, in Janury, 1872, where he in tends to give the most perfect represen tation of Shakspeara’ plays ever attemp ted. Hon. Andrew Proudfit is said- to be the comiug man for the Democratic nom ination for Governor of Wisconsin. He is one of the old school. The Chicago Times has a word to say to the thousands of young men just graduated from colieges which, des pite it satirical flavor, is sensible advice. This is the point of it: “But as a further preparation for an honorable career, his first duty is to quit being a college graduate. When the floral tributes that applauding maid ens flung at his feet on that imposing commencement occasion have withered lei him address himstif to this task. Let him conceal as far as possible from those around him the fact that he is the wisest man of his time; let him postpone his elevation to the Presidency as long as he thinks the pressing demands of his fellow-citizens will permit, and with an air of well-affected meekness, let him go to work at his chosen avoca tion.” FOREIGN NOTES. Dispatches report a riut between ti e Sociables and Ultramontaines, at Vien na. Many people were injured. The police were powerless. The militaiy suppressed the erneute. The magazine of the Grecian war steamer Eumonia exploded recently in the Grecian Archipelago. The crew, forty in number, were nearly all killed. Tbe balance were hurt. The vessel wa3 destroyed. A telegram from Hong Kong to Lloyds, announces that a typhoon visited Hiago, Japan. Seven steamers went ashore or sunk. The place was inundated. The Czar has made the Crown Prince of Saxony an honorary Field Marshal. The Emperor William of Germrny has issued an order for a medal to te struck in commemoration of the war. The committee of the French Assem bly, having in charge the subject of a reorganization of the army, have adopt ed the principle of compulsory service. The future Emperor and Empress of Germany were snubbed by tbe Queen on their recent visit to England. Her Majesty refused to take them in at any of^her palaces, and they were obliged to lodge with the Common Ambassador. It is reported that Washburn, the A- meiican Minister assured the French Government that no person convicted of criminal acts iu Paris against the Na tional Government during the reign of the Commune, will be permitted tore- side in the United States. In the Upper Chamber of the Parlia ment, the Netherlands,'by a vote of 16 to 15, postponed, indefinitely, a further consideration of a treaty for cession to England. In consequence of the explosion of a pistol, the only son of tLe Saltan of Turkey has lost one of his eyes. Private citizens of Hamburg, in Ger many, support fifty Protestant missiona ries in Africa aud Australia. Three hundred and forty-nine ladie3 in Germany have received medals of honor from the Emperor William I., for valuable services rendered in the milita* ry hospitals during the war.