The Savannah daily Georgian. (Savannah, Ga.) 18??-1856, July 30, 1853, Image 2

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-^glYAWNAH," RiTUBPAY MOmWHQ, JDtiT W, TtN eoapteioti which ftn didlj hwrd frtifl Booth* era Whip, of (kn.J'nwn’i No«h«m .ppotatmmU, dins9B$£«s umr WaNrf on. Itnuu fituan-«f «• Tmutu.Ooi.VW—more—(wfl M* «»<* rennet du tire mljbtjr *«!,) taw 0>V «wr hart of Dura, Wnomt w. tn-pow ltaj taw, lor Hauls Ftturau li Unit Idollwd Bi-Pretldtot, Thoku Ooivw, 00. ofth.tbl«tm«mtariofhU CblMt, tod Dunt Wnmowu, la Uoorjli, Uitlr chorea realUtU for the Preddencj, at the Uitou- nn W«U, «• ohalton** th«m to mantlon tba o*me or a tint 1 * whom Pinoa hu appointed to a prominent offloe, who la mom ot a Fro Setter than •itbaroMof thlatrio. Them gnardlana of Southern iiuUtoUooiham voted, or worn only prevented by death, from voting for both Fillxom and Wustbr. Now wa dtiy them to a comparison of tho recorded sentiments of a single one of Piuca’a prominent ap pointees wtth those proclaimed at different times by Messrs. Faucoaa.and Wnam ? Dare they In stitute inch a comparison t ‘We belive not. Oar readers will observe that we mako no attack upon either of them. One haa gone into retirement— the other to the grave. We only refer to them to ex pose the nnbluMng impudence of those who having extolled them to tho aides, now otyeot to the appoint ment by President Pomes, of men, whoee sentiments on slavery, were neither better nor worse than those promulgated by Fiuucorx and Wkbstkk. Bon them Whigs were willing to make a President of either of these distinguished “ Free Boilers," (they were both Free 8oQen, If opposition to the extension of slavery constitutes a Free Boiler,) and yet if P«kc* gives a petty Post ODca or Oolloctorehlp situated In a north- «m State to a Free Boiler, southern Whigs rend the air and oar eire, with their cries. They ought to bo ashamed of themselves. Free Boll Postmasters. Oar oontemporary of ths Georgian bu inch an aptness for ridiculing truth, and can, with to much facility, feign to misunderstand a plain atatsment of bets, or really u so mentally obtuss as not to oompnhsnd a plain argumanL that we have been induced to adopt the Bocratio mode of reasoning, by slmpl) asking him questions. In this we had almost tailed to bring him out. for It took him a month to consider what safe and prudent answers ht should make to certain queetioaa propounded by us, In Jans last. We be gan to (bar, test Hit Mr. Ungley, he had voluntarily made an oath not to answer Interrogatories. After a repetition of our questions, he did file his answer, which we took pleasure In laying before our readers. The editor again affects great ignorance of our remarks on WednesdayTln relation to the facilities which Free Soil Postmasters North, enjoyed, and doubtless would avail themselves of, to circulate their Incendiary publications all over the country against Southern institutions. • e e • e e • The Georgia* attempts to create the Impression that we had charged Gen. Pierce with having appointed Free Soil Postmasters, south of Mason and Dixon’s line! We deny that our article bears any such reference, or can be so con strued. We believed no Ruch thing! Wo said no such thing!—Republican, qf yesterday. Wo admire fair dealing, and intend to practico it— or at least try. There is no reason why wo should at tribute to our neighbor what bo does not say, and does not mean, when what he does say, and must mean furnish so much matter for .criticism. But were we wrong in infering that ho bad fixed the charge of Free Boilism upon one or more Postmasters south of Mason and Dixon’s lino ? What did ho say that called forth onr remarks, and what was the •• occasion" of his saying it? Wo answer that onr neighbor’s text was the following statement from tho Montgomery Journal: u We were shown yesterday, a number of a newipapor published at Washington City—and which has been seut to several Germans in this place and returned by them. It e purpoi German population of the South and West.’* Having quoted this paragraph, tho Republican be gan its comments with the following sentence: “This is one of the first fruits of Gen. Pierce’s appoint ments of rree-sollers and abolitionists as Post Masters." Now does any one doubt that this German newspa per, " published at Washington City," is mailed at Washington? Are not the only Post Masters con cerned in circulating it in the South, Southern Post Masters? If then its reception at Montgomery is “ one of tho first fruits of Gen. Pikucs’s appoint ments of Free Soilera and Abolitionists as Post Mas ters," most It not be that Gen. Pieqcb has appointed one or more Free Boilers or Abolitionists, Post Mas ters south, of Mason and Dixon’s line ? The paper is published sonth of that line, is circulated south of that line, the only Post Masters connected with thto circulation are sonth of that line : if then its circuit tion is dno to Free Soil or Abolition Post Masters, they mast be south of Mason and Dixon’s line. From this conclusion there is no escape. That tho editor of the Republican in penning it, was not aware of the construction which would na turally be given to his language we are willing to ad mit. In bis intense eagerness to find evidence that Piekcs had made improper appointments, bo seized upon the fact stated by tho Montgomery paper, and jumped to a conclusion which involved the charge, that even in the Booth there was to be found in office one or more Free Boilers. The Republican asks if we will deny that Mr. Pirrob has appointed Free Boilers at the North? To this we might content ourselves with the reply of the Washington Union to tho Boston Allot: " It is unqualifiedly false that ‘General Pierce appoint! men to offloe became thoy are known to bo Free Soilera;’ and it ts Impossible that the Boston JUat could have been ignorant or the falsehood when it fabricated it It is, therefore, a deliberate and unmitigated slander. We re peat what we have said before—that General Pierce haa ap pointed no man to offloe knowing or believing him to be a Free Soiler: and he stands pledged to correct any such ap- pointment into which he may have Inadvertently fallen, when the fact of present FreesolUtm ts fixed on any of his appoint##*." But we presume that the answer ranst torn upon tho meaning attached to the term “ Free Soilera.’’— If it signifies men I'rvottd to the extension of slavery, wo think it not unlikely tu»* j[ r> Pjbrce bos appoint ed Free SoUen at the North. W e have believed to be the position of tho whole Whig V arty of the North, and of a large portion of tho Democrats party there. If this belief is correct, it wonld be strange., were it true, that office haa been given to none occupy ing that position. That any of Pzxrob’s northern appointments have increased tbs faculties of Abolltlonlata for circulating tbotv incendiary documents, we do not believe. We tier knew n» «... wheu vitl<UT«ry paper, did not paw through th. nulla i and of no latr anthorirlng Poitmajtcn to prevent their circulation, all tho Iforihan?V^ UW ’' ” w D103 * dangw.ua of all tha Northern liwqoujou,,^ „„ M from ona and of tha Onion w the other „,r first issue. The powers of Postmasters are not qtn*. autocratic. If thoy were, It la not protablo that tho German abolition paper, received In Montgomery, wonld have been Bent forth by tho Poetmutor at Woahlngton—who la, no doubt, a pro-slavery man. That Gen. Pibboi will keep In office, one day after tho fact la establlibed, an incumbent who ovoretepa tho requirement of law, by transmitting Incendiary pauuulona thrnngb the matla, wa do not behove Whenever the RtpMicm wM dm an aurnplo of the kind, we shall not be alow to condemn It. Eucnom nr Council,.—At a aewlon of the oily Council yeeterday, It, D. Wann», Esq., was elected to a seat In that body, mado vacant by tha recent rea. Ignatlon of Dr. Itronaan. Ricnann T. Tuonan, Esq,, waa elected Port Warden, vice C»pt. Jno. Hunren. resigned. Din. J. R. BaussT, P. B. Daman, J. 8. MoaaauL, and Eiavon Yonoa, were elected City Physician* nuder Urn new Dlspenaary Bill, providing medical atlandancaand medicines for the poor. Astluii roa thb Dam inn Dumb-—Tha fourth annual report ortho Bond ofCommlealonerafor the Georgia Asylum for tho Deaf and Dumb, waa preaont- od to the Coventor on the Orst lnat„ and hu been printed \ forming a neat pomphtet or twenty-four pages, t» which la added an abstract of the Tren- anror’n and Superintendent's Deports, and tbotoims of admission Into the Institution, a copy of which Is before m. Wa stall taka early occasion to repub lish snob portions of the pamphlet as we Dud of gen eral pobllo Interest. ZUnc.—For several days past In succession, this region hu boon visited with ooplouo ahowem, until tho ground haa received Its «11—like an overloaded •tomaoh It la beginning to reject further .Cored draughts, though bom tha appearance of tho clouds then are more ootnlng. with a timely clearing op, followed by favorable weather, tha Up of tho haa- bondman eanqot tall of belngabundanUv Med. TaaMntfTOLa—This “bead ofbruddera" giro an entertainment at o'clock this afternoon, to be followed by another In tho erening. Tho afternoon performance U Intended mere eopecUUy for tho ao- commodatlon of ladles and children, who will dnd it much more pleasant than to atUnd In th. evening. DaiTH or Dm. Wmue^-We regrot to turn that Dr. WeUs. of the D. 8. Army, whoTataly arriiS trim FortOll-on, Artaww, dljat hi. realSeS” n thta oily, on Bonduy afternoon. Ho had returned In fee. bio health,on n fbrioagb, but hla death ns hastened by a cold taken whilat on hi. way home. HhllSSiliS were^ronvcjjdtoAnnapolis fix bmbbr-Baltimors and fight under the black banner of Jenkins and tl Alger!no Law. AU tite eflbrte of Bcott and Webstar men combined—ail tb« steufgle« of disappointed offloo-holdera and designing polltldana—cannot save “ that lame'old ooon" from another disastrous root. Even now the forces of this ancient enemy of the rights and liberties of the poople are beginning to scatter. Hill, tho Whig giant of the weal, and one of ' the ablest men or tho party, advises a aurfendor, aud thinks It worse than telly to oppose tho Deuiocratio ekhdidate. Morphy hu declined the raoe against Dent, in the Fourth District, andTrlppe.the Scott and Webster and Union candidate, in this distriot, return ed to his village borne, in Forsyth, disheartened and desponding, after receiving the thuddering congratu lations of his Scott Mends in this oity, a tew days ago. The Citixtn, In its lut issue, gives up the con test, and says, “Johnson must oarry the day: all the algns of the times betoken not only a degrad ing defeat, hot an absolute and final dissolution of what onoo was tho great, hut now is the broken, dis consolate, and dishonored Whig party." But, even amid the breaking up of thoir hopes, and tho sure in dications of a miserable end, it U amusing, perhaps wo ought to say pitablo, to witness tho dying strug gles of aouo of the old Whigs, of the Federal, Blue Light School—ruined themselves—gone beyond all redemption—in their last agonies thoy still strive to bring others down to the same miserable condition. Bnt, abovo and beyond all, there is a deeper dlo of political recklessness and prostitution in the courso of yonr Republican neighbor than all tho rest. Ho it was who first imported “ turning tables ’’ and “ spirit ual rapping’’ into Jefferson county, and then, for sooth, is tho first to charge Judge Johnson with be ing a believer in these insane vagaries. He it waa who started the stale story that Judgo Johnson bad expressed his contempt fur all the ratfmbora In the Convention of 1860, when tho world knows that some of the most intimate end dearest personal friends or Judge Johnson wero members of the Convention— Bnt Johnson is a “spiritual rapper ’’—that appears to bo strong cards from tbo woak hand of the im mortal author of that sickly plagairism entitled “ Spring," which graced tho columns of tbo Repub lican some months ago. Well, Johnson is a “spir itual rapper,” but Just ono of that sort that tho Whig party long deserved but never desired to see. He Is a Democratic “spiritual rapper,’ and has all his life been engaged in the honorable effort to “rap ” ont of the minds of tbo poople the “ Bpirit" of tho black Tariff of ’42—to “ rap ’’ away tho “ Bpirit" of that hydra-headed monster the Bank, which Old Hickory killed, but whose being the Whig witches have been trying to conjure into life again—more, JohnBou has “rapped,” and moat Buccos8fuUytoo, the “ spirit" of “ that same old coon ’’ until Its keeper cannot recogniso his pet. It is in this way that Johnson is “ rapper.” And now eiuco that same Le gion has again mndo thonuolvus homes in tho bodies of men, ho is determined to fulfil tho mission, and con tinue tho "rapping” until all tho Legion of spirits are driven deep iuto the Toombs: so may ho •' rap " forever. With tho blblo in ono hand, and enlighten ed Democratic principles in tho other, and with a head to comprchcud, and a heart and soul to feel and appreciate tho great truths of tbo ono, and tho genial policy of the other, ho will go on in his high mission of pcaco and good-will, until not a vostlgo of Whig- gcry shall bo left in tho land. The truth is, this bomb, which was cost by tho Republican, has been exploded, and in its explosion the killed and wound ed arc all found in tho thinned and shattered ranks of tho Union-Conscrvative-Itepuhlican-Citizeus-Lcgion- of-Devlls-Whig party! Our friends seem to forget that, while they arc throwing tnrf at us, wo lmvo heavy stones to throw at them. With what faco can Mr. JenkinB come be fore tho people of Georgia and ask them for their suf frage, after having put upon record his vote, and re corded conviction, that tho great body of tho people of this State aro not worthy of, and ought not to l>o trusted with, tho sacred right of suflrago ? Will the people of Georgia—I mean the free people—will they vote for a man who says, because a mnn Is poor—be- causo ho has no thousand dollars—that ho cannot vote, that ho is not entitled to have a choice of rulers, that he most tamely submit to the power which money gives, to choose rulers who aro to make or mar his freedom? Strange doctrine—dangerous doctrines— doctrines against which our fathers fought, and through was of blood and long years of suffering, manfully resisted and finally put down. It is well named tho Algerine Law—that Law for which Mr. Jenkins voted, und for which tho people of Klchmoud county refused to permit him to represent them.— Tho Algcrino Law—I say it la well named, for it is, by tho cxerclso of like principles contained in that law, that tho Doy of Algiers koeps his subjects down —makes them slaves when they ought to ho freemen. But, says the Whigs, it was a local measure, only for the cities. Well, I suppose that tiie principle would apply to all cities and Incorporated towns. What do you say, then, poor mon of Savaunah—not poor in heart, in spirit, in intellect, in intelligence, but poor because you have not a thousand hard dollars to have a choico of rulers, an interest and voico in tho laws by which you are to bo governed ? What say you, hard working men of Macon and Columbus, of Ogle thorpe and LaGrango, of Atlanta and Athens, of Ma rietta and Milledgcvillc?—what say you to this law ? And will you cast your votes for Mr. Jenkins, when ho not only voted for this law, bnt amid tho clamor which the outraged freemen of Augusta raised against its authors, had tho boldness to still affirm tho odious principle, and say bo waa opposed to its repeal 7— What say ^rau, freo voters of Georgia ? Let the Oc tober elections write yonr reply. ftfeYPtn _ yrObu. W. Woolley j Taylor, MinbollO* < " ' Boatswain—Edward Carpenter—Wm. Hyda 1 it Burgeon— knap) Act- .men—Jcxm Charles A. Baboook \ . an nor—John Owina: maker—Wm. M. Maho- is flnnwnv. f tha tear pass ago. opd this method to get rid trouble of oxtr tiding from tha Cuitoms’ accumulating fluid, and thoanolout practice almost all other States, in tha year I860, tl rought into greater ootloo by the example of of their imports from, nnd exports to Turki “ Wofford." BInrder by Stubbing—Destructive Fire. Boston, July 21, 1853*— A street fight occurred last night near tbo National theatre, between several young men, and a Mr. George Hall, of Charlestown, during which tho latter was stabbed so badly that lie has sinco died. Two brothers, named Moore, hnve been arrested for tho murdor. Two valuable houses on Concord streot.Just erected, and nearly finished, were Bet on fire last night, and totally destroyed. They belonged to E. A. Raymond, and were valued at $20,000. Three firemen were in jured—one, named Josiah Wheeler, serionsly; Sam- uol D. Ross and William Lovell were 6lightly hurt. A Fxahful Account—Mr. Everett, late Secre tary or State, is generally known os a gentleman of extensive information,and one who will not “speak without book” on important subjects involving satis- Ileal facts. From a computation of bis, it appears that the use of alchohollo bovorages cost the u. S. directly, in ten years, $120,000,000; has burned or olhorwise destroyed >5.000,000 worth of property; haa destroyed 300,000 lives; sent 250,000 to our pri sons, and 100,000 children to the poor houso; caused 1500 rnnrae... s n00 suicides ; and has bonneathod to the couptry, I,um>^no orphan children. The Liverpool Courier thinks time, o, P »,«.♦ n0 sfliblo »aj : td establish tho truth of ita provious 00 ^^^ 0 to us that when ono has notWHS^.l^, is to say nothing. Upon this point, hnwn®-. 1 *. disagree, and tho Courier is fully entitle..... „„„ opinion. Wo seo no necessity, however, for repeat ing onr refutation of its remarks. Tho Cotuicr pro claims its entire impartiality in regard to the rival Lines of steamers. “ All that we wish to insist upon,” it says, “la, that whore both aro good, ours is tho best." That is certainly modest. But suppose, for a moment, that the Courier had been a prejudiced paper;—what more could it have insisted on then ?— Probably, but for its excessive fairness and impartial ity, it would have^ontonded that the Cunard Line is the only Line of Steamers that crossed tho Atlantic at all. We see now the advantages of an unprejudiced Press—N. Y. 'rimes. A Frightful Hcenb—Yesterday afternoon, seve ral cart, unaccompanied by either locomotive or horses, came Sown the railroad track in Howard street, and when near Centre street, the switch lead ing into the coal yard of Messrs. Hamilton A Slack being out of place, the care turned off the main track into tho switch, and came in contact with an omni bus standing near, In which wore sevoral passengers. The omnibus was cangbt sideways by tho front car and dragged anmo distance. At ono limo it was thought tho omnlbns wonld ho broken te pieces, and those in tho inside cither killed or dreadfnlly Injured. Tho driver was thrown from his seat, and tho strap attached to tho door drawn so tightly that it could not bo opened. Fortanatcly. however, the omnihos was strong enough to offer sufficient resistance to the cars to throw them off the track, and tho passengers and driver escaped unhurt, Tho front car pawed tbrougli the fence of the coal yard, and two others were turned topsy-turvy, aud were more or less dam aged—Baltimore Clipper, 26th. Swindling Railroad Opxrativbs—A man cal ling himself Charles P. Geen, having induced ten i® 0 * 111 ®*™ “fi a number of other persons ca- paw# of performing duty as conductors, brakesmen, ana firemen to accept service on a Western railroad, persuaded them at Pitfeburg to let him exchange their monev at an oxobange office, by which means cv* «Mtta prieeof confided to him their raoisj he i a hat. When thoy decamped, and hu not since been heard ofYieir emYlojS'ent on tbo road proved to ba equally fhbulous. Shocxino Murder—Nrw Havi^Jnly 25—The wife ofBarzUlal Bradley, a respectable citizen of New Haven, was murdered VMtordayln her boose while her family were absent at church. Sho was stabbed and cut in the most savage manner. An Irishman named Michael Jennings, formerly in Bradloy’s em ploy, baa been orn ited on suspicion. Hezoldah C. Seymour, Esq., late Engineer of this BUte, died at bis residence at Pierpont, last evening, between 8 and 0 o’clock. His Uimm bad been or •oms duration—JV. Y. Times, 25th. nov t Captain's Clerk-Jam is Conway. . .Tha Jobn AdamS'Wsa pot In oommiaskm at this port, Jane 19Ui, 1849, and sailed under command of Commander Levina 1 MoPowWl’.'Jbna 80, for tha Bra sil station, where she remained until December 7, or that yoar. whon she wm ordered te ioln the squadron on tuo West Coast of Africa., Off the lfith October, 1850, she sailed from Port Praya for Norfolk, with tho officers and crew ot the U. 8. ship Yorktown, wrecked on the Isis of Mayo. Here sho was paid off, ro-officerod, manned, ami sailed for the coast of Africa again, April 24,1B51, thus compluting a four years’ Commission, during wbloh time she has sailed sixty- nino thousand one hundred and forty-four miles— While on tho ooast of Africa, sho lost but tbreo men by death, one by tall lug from aloft, and two from onronio diseases of the heart and lungs. Bho also brought homo three of tbo crew of the American brig Bea Mew, of New York, which waa wrecked in tho bay of Yor, West Coast of Africa, Oo- tober 10,1862. Alao.flftcon of the crew of the Ameri can whaling barque Franklin, which was cast away oa tha late of Sal, March 31,1859; also eight luvalUfe from tho U. S. ship Constitution, tho only American vessel in port when the J. A. left Port Praya, June 22.1853 ' At Port Praya, May 8, U. B. brig Bainhridgo, Com. Mahnlng, all well. Tho U. 8. brig Perry arrlvod at Port Praya, May 18, from tho coast. She would sail on tbo Dtn of June for Madeira. The U. 8. ship Marion was expected at Port Praya in Juno, from tho coast. —Boston Courier, 25th inst. Boropei Tho Arctio brings nows of additional complications in the Turkisli question. On the one hand, tbo Em peror of Russia expressly and formally disclaims ail Ideas or territorial aggrandlzomont In entering the Datiubian principalities. On the other Uand, Frauce nnd England have oilbred thoir mediation to settle tho difficulty. At the same timo, Austria has de manded of Turkey five millions of piasters, or two hundred thousand dollars, by way of Indemnity to sundry Austrian subjects who bavo been damaged by Turkish officials and mobs, and with this tho cession or Kleck aud Battorina on tho Adriatic. These de mands are reported to have been granted, which we doubt greatly. At any rate, tbo bringing of it for ward at the present moment indicates anything bnt a friondly disposition toward tho Bultan on tbo part of Austria. Though tho Russians hnvo crossed tho Prutb, tbo French and English fleets bavo not been sammoned to Constantinople, tho Porto having left them undisturbed at tho special request of tho Am bassadors of these nations. The meaning of all this scums to bo tho peaceful. The probability is strong that the good offices of France and England will be accepted by tho Czar; they will draw np a note which will, ostensibly at least, answer tho demands of Russia upon tho Porte, and will mako the latter Hlgn it; and then tho Rus sian armies will march back to thuir own country, nnd the matter will bo settled for the present, and to the advantage of Russia alone, for it will have stood forth as the only power ready and able to sustain its policy by foreo of arms. Whether this will bo better for Turkoy than an immediate war may be a question, just as it may bo a question in certain diseases aud circumstances whether rapid decease is not better than protracted agony. This we say is the possible upshot of present facta. But it is not tho only possibility. It may w that Franco and 'England may fall in finding any alternative, which will satisfy the Czar and fall within tho limits of their own timidity, and that they may havo to fight after all. Deuce, however, is tho more likely; for af ter having quietly allowed tho Principalities to bo invaded, thoy wilt allow almost anything else for tho suko of peace. Tho French nre engaged in conspiracies for the destruction of their Emperor. No very umtuturnl en terprise. The rater who extinguishes liberty must tuko care or ho will bo extinguished himself in turn. The Empress is again in an interesting situation. In Spain another change of Ministry is on font, olthor from differences among themselves or from trouble with the Queen, the Cortes not being in ses sion. Mr. Calderon do la Barca will have to hurry homo if ho wauta to mako sure of his Ministerial port folio. The Catholic question in Holland is in the why of amicable settlement— Tribune. - , The Smyrna Riots. It is gratifying to find our Navy exhibiting symp toms of life. Commodore Stringbam, of tho Medi terranean squadron, has made himself heard at Athens, und talked in tho manliest nnd friendliest way with tho Hultan. We cannot praise too warmly the guarded, yet sufficiently explicit language of sympathy uddressed to AbdulMedjld.the defender of Kussuth, and the courageous antagonist of the Czar, it was well done of Commodore Stringbam. In sneb troublesome momenta it is satisfactory to know that our snug little licet iu those waters is in tbo right, -bands. The frigate referred to, we understand to bo the filoop-of-war 8t. Louis, commanded by Captain D. H. Ingraham, nnd carrying the usual armament of ves sels of that size, twcuty guns. Captain Iugra- 1mm, the later accounts inform us, bad satisfied him self of the rights of M. Da Costa as an Americun citi zen, aud placing his vessel alongside the Austrian war-brig, had declared his resolution to prevent the prisoner from licing transported to Trieste—in other words, transferred from Turkish to Austrian custody. Taking it for granted that Captain Ingraham nnd the Consul are right upon the matter of citizenship, there can be no doubt nbnnt the propriety of their ac tion. Tho case is perfectly clear. Tho man is to be forcibly sclzod nnd bundled off upon a vague clinrgo of acting as a spy—not in Austria, whose subordi nates lay bauds on him and claim him as their prison er, but in Asia, in a provincial town, nnd entirely out of reach or diplomatic or military operations. It must certainly perplex tho accusers to locate tho of fence so as to bring It within the rench of Austrian law. Perhaps, to place the man, oven forcibly, in Trieste, and so establish n constructive allegation of espial, may consist with Austrian precedents. Com mander Ingralmm is not prepared to take any such view of tho business ; nnd we trust tho two vessels will not have parted company until M. Da Costa is placed under the American flag. The spirited lan guage of tiie luauguralls doiugits work.—New York ’Times. Additional by the Northern Light, Nkw York, July 25. Tho steamer Northom Light, from Ban Juan, ar rived early this morning, bringing San Francisco dates of July 1st., 500 passengers anu $389,000 in gold brought down by tho Sierra Nevada. The Northom Light was struck by lightning on tho 10th near Cape St. Antonio. Her mainmast was rfplit, bnt none of hor passengers were injured.— Among her passengers aro Patrick O’Donohue, the IiIhIi Exile, who escaped from Van Dleman’s Land. At midnight, on July Oth,off'Acapulco,Dr. CarrolL a passenger in tho Sierra Nevada, fell overboard and was drowned. The steamer Oregon, which left San Francisco July 1st. took out $1,650,000 in gold. Deaths In California.—James Donpherty, of Baltimore, Sarah A. Fagan, of Philadelphia, George Mullonennd R.D Whitney, of Baltimore, Julia In- vnnlsky ami G. Waters, ot Washington. The steamer John L. Stephens arrived at San Fran cisco Juno 18th. The U. B. transport Frcdonia, Lt. Cbatard, arrived on the 19th from New York with two companies of the 4th Infantry. Col. Collier, formerly Collector of San Francisco, has been indicted for felony whilo iu office. The crops throughout the State are very premia- Sold has been fonnd on theBantaaln river. editorial Retirement* In the Clipper of yostorday morning Mr. Samuel Barnes announces his retirement from editorial llfo, after an experience of more than forty years in that vocation, the last twelve of which have been spent in contributing to the editorial columns of the Clipper. As a private citizen, Mr. Barnes has well won for himself the high consideration that properly flows from the correct discharge of ail the moral and sociul obligations of a long nnd well-spent Ufo. In tho re- Uio-ymt which he now seeks amid the shades of his conntryreoMonce.and in tho enjoyment of tho com petence ho has He*..ro,| ( tho oherishod reinombraneos of many friends will liAtow him, and mingle in kind ’visliea for a lengthened continuance of lire, health and lmpirtmogs. Mr. Tbomaso Connolly, a gentleman who lias here tofore been connected with tho Washington press, and who sustains a high clmrncter for taleuta and in dustry, succeeds to tho editorial control of tho Clip- per—JJatt. Amer. ,26/A. New Trial to Kissanb.—Yesterday Judgo Fllnn granted a now trial to Kissane. He made no decision nn tho points made in tho argument, on whioh ho had held tho caso under advisement. The Counsel pre sented the Court a certificate from tho Executive of Now York, to tho effect that tho pardon granted in that State to Millard, tho accomplice, admitted to testify on tiie trial, was a special one, and did not restore hte competency as a witness'. This has been S rocured since the motion was submitted to the udgo, and held under advisoment. When present ed, tbo Judge allowed tbo now trial, on the ground of this newly discovervd evidence! He made no deci sion on any point nrguod before him! His bail was fixed in $10,000; hut whether *thls embraces tho two other indictments for forgery, wo do not know. A Deputy Marshal also appeared with a bail-piece from tho United States Court, and claimed the custody of Klssano on that. Wo are not informed how thoy fixed tho matter .—Cincinnati Gazette, July 18. Singular Curb for RiiittruATiftif*—A lady writing from Cape Island, New Jersey, to a relative in this city, says that a man there, suffering with acute rheumatism, was but into a deep hole nnd covered up to his neck with sand : and, after remaining thus harried for half an honr, was dng out, and then soused in tho water.—Washington Republic. A Law wnion Satibpibs Evkrybodt*—It Is rare that legislatures pass any reformatory measure which satis fies everybody. The legislature of Rbodo Island have done so. A waggish member of that body says the liqnor law is a compromise to which both sides aro agreed:“ The temperance men have got tho Maine Law. which is whst they want—and everybody else haa plenty of rum, whioh iaoll thoy want." Patrick O’Donaghue, whose trial waa to have taken placo this week in CoortUnd county, N. Y., for the murder of Mrs. Kinney and daughter, attempted to commit suicide a few days ago. His throat is severe ly, though not dangerously cut. Ilia trial will be postponed. Two slaves, who ran off from the citato of the late Win. Teft, of Parkersburg, Va., about two years ago. and went to Ohio, bavo recently voluntarily returned to slavery, on the ground that they were suffering for food, aud were unable to procure work. Three other*, who ran away at tbo same time, wen pro* vented from returning by the aboiiUooUU forcibly detaining their cbRdnhr wm broughtTnto'noater notloo by the exampl. .. the illustrious statesman. Tba olaoiate theory, that tbo anterior sorfkoeof the eyeball becomes flattened as age advanoea, wm again revived, and it beoitne a bualnoek to advertise Instructions for kneading tho organ into ahapa with th#flngeraI • . It oannot be expeoted that operation! founded on a folse theory can be safe lnpraetloe. lt ia untrue that the outer aurfkce bf the eye become* flatter with ad vancing ago, and therefore manipulations to restore what is not wanting, in an organ so delicate in struc ture that a rude push may be followed by perpetual darkness, sboulffbe avoldod. The principal ions of tho eya is situated behind tbe pupil, aud kept In proper position by membranu :lnor than tho finest goldbeater's skin. Thcso deli cate membrane* are liable to bo ruptured by blows, falis, or other causes, and the lens, wbloh la natural ly clear as crystal, become* white and obaque. Opa city of the lens, or what is called cataract, may bo producod without laceration of the morabrnnes, by merely Interfering with tho circulation of tho vessels which supply It. The writer was lately to visit an aged feamele who had been suffering called acutely for months, after submitting, while in health, to the manlp ulatlans of a rejuvenating itinerant. The lens was dislocated and pressed on the sensitive nerves at tho margin of the pupU. Tbe pain occasioned by pres sure of this kind may be compaied to that produced by pressing the exposed nerve of tooth with a tooth, Pick, but in the former cose tho pain is contineous- and not so easily removed os in tho latter. Other cases ofiqjury attributed to manipulation, such as cross eyes, doublo vision, Ac., have como under the writers notice. Lost month,in presenco of the editor, he operated for cataract in tho case of tho lady, whoso vision, with tho aid of spectacles, was perfect until she was Induced by plauslblo advertisements to pay for a course of lessons. After the third lesson, vlson bccafne indistinct, and blindness uutimately followed. Beer was called to exainiuo a gentleman who had always enjoyed excellent sight, until it was lost in a moment :—The patient had been at a party of friends, whon a parson stopped suddently behind hint, aud covering both eyes with the hands, wished him guess who it was. The former, without speaking a word, endeavored to esoapo from the pressure, atiu whon the eyelids were openod, he was entirely bo reft of sight. Although there was not the least ap pearance of ipjury, tbe sufferer remained houpelessly blind. From this meleacholy example, Beer con cludes that tho eyes ore iiablo to injury even from modorate pressure. There is a poaular notion, sanctioned by medical men who ought to know better, that the eyes are pro- served byoponing them every morning in basin of cold water. Some of tho worst cases of petergium of film on the aurfneo of tbo eye have been witnessed in those who boasted of this practice. When a drop of water gets into tho wiimpipo, the nostril, or tho ear, Irritation is produced, and wbcu tho eyes are opened under water, tiie sensation is anythiug but agreeable. Tbe eye is lubricated by a section ad mirably adapted to facilitate the motions of the lid over its surface, and as this socration Is partially not able in water, it is as incousistent with common senso to wash it away, as it Is to removo tho oil from tbo wheels of machinery. It is unquestionably im portant that tbe cleanliness of>the organ be maintain' fed; yet this may be accomplished- iu tbu usual man- nor, without oponing tho lubricatngsurfaces. When tho fluids aro mixed, a white precipitate of cholora- of lead falls to the bottom of tbo gloss. When eye waters containing lead ore permitted to pass to the surface of the eye, tbo tcarsiurnish common salt,aud tho lead is precipitated. Thu transparent portion of tho oyo is sometimes extensively ;tatocd witli this white leaden powder, aud vision becomes indistinct, or even destroyed. When the general health Is robust, it is astonishing what nn amount of labor the organs of vision will en dure ; yet when it is depressed, especially by meutial disturbance during a periodical function, they are ciudy deranged by too close application to business When thoy have become weak, much ol tliuir preser vation deponds on the proper management of tho light to which thoy aro exposed. When the light is iu excess, it should be diminiiishcd; and when it is deficient, lalior should bu discontinued. Tho light biuo of the sky and the verdure of thu fields are the colors to which the oregan of vision in nnturely adapt ed, and which lt will endure with most case. Tiie llnino of a good oil lamp is more regular than that of gas nr candles, and is, therefore, to ho preferred.— Tho intermitting flickering of gas is particularly in jurious,as it produces constant contractions and dila tations of tho pi) nil and undue excerclse of tho whole organ. By placing a shado of light biuo tissue paper over tbe lamp, tbo light is ameliorated ; for artificial light contains a superabundance of the yellow and red rays, but is dolicient in tho violet. By allowing it to pass through the bluish medium, it approaches nearer to tho light of day, nnd is better adapted for continued application of the organs of vision. Tho gist of tho whole matter is just this:—I>Jt your eyes nlono, aud they may serve you all your days. Should they become out of order,apply to that very important personage, your family jihysioRn, nnd lie will instruct you how to' Mind your eyes.'—iV. V’. Scalped. JUNG, JULY 30, 18(fo .the amount ■ ■ | ,'urkuy and its dopendanoies, tbo result* of which aro as follow*: Imports from Turkey. Exports to Turkey. England 29,908,773 20.806,100 Austria 22,068,600 France.. ;...... 17 *021,420 Kuaala; 6,454,418 Belgium 208,880 Netherlands 671,360 Greece 1,312,600 United 8tates 1,861.661 Hamburg, 604.040 Bremen 70.601 Portugal 0,040 22,616.033 ws 1,036,633 468.000 888,000 311,600 67,106 6,036 y Ball r ■■■ or the Autisfi. pertaining thereto. At the tfiffo or roV ooivlng this appointment he was Superintendent of the Ililnchi ancf Wisconsin Railroad, which he resign* ed to accept this more important posltlon-Da/L American. ■ It is now said that by tho vordlct in tho cose of Dr. O. S. Busted va. Vanderbilt, tbe Nicaragua Transit Company aro not liable for any damages-tlie Judge having granted a nonsuit in fovor of the company,— Tbo Judgment to against O. Vanderbilt, os ownor of North An fliitaoio^-Mr. Cm. W. roily Superintendent of — Railroad, has been tem' of tho Central Ohio RaUro^, and will outer at once on the TI»o Cost of Warn The following comments on the cost of a war with Russia, are from tiie London limes. Though intend ed more particularly to represent the great stake that Englund has in maintaining peace iu Europe, if she cun do so consistently with her national honor and safety, the comments also havo a general application, nnd will suit this quarter nearly as well as England. It is all very well to talk of tiie glory of war, but the cost of war is a consideration of infinitely greater im portance, though its consideration with the multi tude is generally left till tho cost has been incurred, and its magnitude forces it upon the pulilln attention. By way of set-off against tho novelty, tho excite ment, tho enterprise, tho popularity, aud the possible glory of a war with RushIu, let us just sit down aud count tho cost. We could stiut up the naval power of Russia in tho Black (Sea and tbe Baltic by costly licets at both stations—stenin always up, wind and water always having thuir way. We could easily en able Turky to niuke a desperate tight by enormous subsidies. We could protect our commerce from Yankee privateers andothor free and easy gentlemen who could take out letteiu-of-marque from Russia, by a recurrence to the old system of merchantmen sail ing liko wild geeso in flights, with a frigate or two leading the way. Wo could suspend the whole for eign commerce of Russia, by a prouss wliicbewonld double the price of our corn, hemp and tallow. Wo could engage half tho Continent on our Hide of tho quarrel, by surrendering every other question of hon or, duty or interest wo happon to have with each soparute State. We could prolong tho wur indefin itely by another national debt. We could stop it at our pleasure by allowing Russia to take all sho wants, with a little over for demurrage. With proportionate bribes wo could secure tbo concurrence of other na tions. On tho other hand, all the nations of Europe would bo bankrupt, their principal creditors being in this metropolis. Thoir manufactures and commerce would bo ruined, to tho injury of those who consnine wlmt they make and make for them in return. We are all so bound together, that it is bard to say whether in material consequeuces we should suffer more by vic tory or by defeat. It is our unhappiness to havo tho largest stake In peace of all nations, on tho face of the earth, and so long ns we stick to that game, we are suro to win. The most orthodox war ever fought, is only an Irishman’s row, a game of cracked skulls and bloody nosea, very amusing to those whose clothing is of little value, aud whoso natural integument is rather hard, but far from amusing to a gentleman who has paid five guineas for his coat, and whoso face is susceptible of contmdons. There U not a point in which that immense glass house, which we call the British Empire, is not liable to damage. “ A man that hath children,” says Bacon, “hath given pledges to fortune.” Wo havo children—we have colonics, we have dependencies, wc havo ships, we have in vestments, loans, railways, private debts, all over the world. By dint of hard peacc-mukiug, we manage to keon our creditors in tolerablo order. Tncy pay, os an omnibus horse does Its work, by tho momentum of its misery, by being kept in har ness, well up, and continually Hogged. Once give them tbo opportunity of war, and that general disso lution of morals, that is sure to ensue,and every quar ter day will add to your defaulters. All this, of course, is very extraneous to the real merits of tho present question. Those merits we do nut here discuss. But you huvo known people who iu private life went to law, or rather, resisted actions, when the right was most clearly on thoir side, and whon tho verdict was given accordingly, bnt who, nevertheless, losttherc- by both in parse and in famo, having to suffer much annoyance, to pay large costa, and to itiuttr also tho reputation of being litigious and troublosomo fellows. That which happens in tho regular nnd gonial at mosphere of English socioty, and under tho pure nnd impecoahle administration of English justice,may easi ly nappon in tho society and forum and arena of na tions, viz : that the prosecution of tho justest quarrel may obloaav and cross. The Low of Rotary Motion* 7b the Editor of the N. Y. Tribune, Bin : When any body of matter is moved In a cir cle or ellipse, tho outside moves through a greater spaco in making » revolnUon than tho Inside, conse quently tWbuulde moves faster than tho inside ; therefore, according to a well known law of mechan ics, the momentum of the outaidc is greater than the momentum of tho inside, and when the body is freely suspended, tho greater momentum of thu outaidc has a tendency to cause tho body to rovolvo on its axis. I havo tried tho experiment of giving a circular or elliptical motion to a freely suspended body in a va riety of ways, and found the theory to hold truo in every instanco ; I have suspended it on a fine steel point, and on giving it a steady circular motion by inachlnury it revolved on its axis ; bnt tho simplest experiment Is by means of Water. Take a small tin pall threo quarters filled with it, suspend this by an annealed wire of some few foot in length. On giving the pail any circnlor or elliptical, tho water will be otaorveri to rotate as Boon as tho movoraont becomes a little atady. The essential conditions of these experiments ap ply to the planets and to bodies moving through tbe air of onr globe, and as in tbo experiments stated, tho axial revolution is undoubtedly a mere mechanical fact, I presumo it to perfectly legitimate to say that tho axial revolution of the earth itself is produced by similar means, via : by the momontum of tbe ootalde in its elliptical course, being greater than tiie momen tum of the inatdo in proportion to its diameter: no that tho power of this momentum oxpends itself, in cansing ft to turn on its axis. O. Dowcsn. Newark, N. J., July 24,1853. Prussian tbslore 78.728,807 70,877,819 The Customs’ accounts of other countries do not afford anything like exact informatinn, but as the port or Leghorn alone imports from Turkoy to tbe amount ot about 4.000,000 thalers, it may be assum ed that, with tho addition of the trade toSpain.Italy, the Barbary States, and to tho Coast of tho lied Sea, tho total imports of Turkey and the Danubian Prin cipalities, must amonut to 90,000 Prussian thalers, (£13,600,000,) nnd the exports to 100,000,000 of tha lers (£16,000,000.) Tho considerable amonnt whioh here figures under tbe head of Austria la due, tu a great measure, to her being the carrier and forwarding agent for the rest of Germany as well as herself. The amonnt which stands under tiie head of Bremen and Ham burg is probably a very Rmall portion of tbo nmuunt. of business dono by tho Zollvcrein with Turkey. Of tho great powers we sco that England's share In the Turkish trade is 37JS per cent; Austria’s, 29.5; France’s, 18.6; and Russia’s, 8A In the struggle of commercial interests it Is clear, thus, that Russia has tho most to win and tho least to loso ; for, whonever she possesses Constantinople, or even her influence is preponderant there, there will bo no time lost in reversing the above proportions.—Correspondence London Times. Death Is Silent. In tho city, whilo men are brawling in tho crowd ed streets, death is entering tiie secret chambers, and friends sit pallid by the couches of the breathless, for love to driuking iu thu sigh which bears tbu soul to heaven. Death is silont; thoso whose every look spoke to us iu life, pass from our sight as tho shadow from tho dial, and the music of their words becomes sad echoes in tho distance of our memory. Death is silent. Living hatred thunders in tho strife of war, bnt when tbo contest is over, dentil, grim and speech less, la monarch of tho field. Death is silent I Tem pests Bhrick madly upon tho ocean, and many are they who sink with this requiem iuto their fathomless grave; hut from tho depths of that sublimo sepul chre no sound comes back to tell of thoso who perish. Death is Bilcnt, yet not so entirely; silent it is to the ear, but not always to tho heart. Our brethren are still bound to us, and tbo’ dead, thoy have not ceased to bo; there is much to be felt and learned where they rest. Humanity has instruction fro^j the prond man’s monument nnd contentment a lesson from the vanity that overlies Ids clay. There to pathos in tho solitudo where tbo stranger sleeps; there to mute elo quence in his unlettered grave; there is beauty in tho poorronn’s epitaph inscribed honestly by affec tion ; there is sublimity in tho rude sepnlcliro of the peasant's tomb, when it is an effort to symbolize an immortal faith. And lt is such faith which takeH ter ror from the power of death, and despair from tho silcnco of tiie grave. That which belongs to earth must go to earth,and when earth claims and gets back ltd atoms, Gad gathers up aud calls Ids spirit homo. Persevere. Carry a thing through. Persevere ; don’t do any thing else. If you once fairly, soundly, wide-awake- ly begin a thing, let it lie curried through, though it cost you your best comfort, time, energies, and all that you can command. Wo heartily abominate this turning backward, tills wearying aud faiuting of soul nnd purpose. It speaks imbecility of miud, want of character, courage und true manliness. Carry a thing through. Don’t begin it till you nre fully prepared for ltoaccomplishment. Think, study, dig, till you know your ground, sec your way. This done, branch out with nil your soul, heart and fire ; turn neither to tho right or left. Push on giganticly —push on os it crentiou had been waiting through all timo for your especial hand and spirit. Thou you’ll do something worthy of yourself and kind. Carry a thing through. Don't leap and daily from ono to another. No man ever did anything that way. You can’t. Be strong-minded. Be hopeful stern and manly. Don't disgrace yourself by being on this thlug to day, on that tiling to-morrow, nnd on another thing next day. We don't care if yon are the most active mortal living—we don’t care if you labor day and night, in scuson and out; be sure the cud of your life will show nothing, if you perpetually chatigo from object to object. Fortune, success, fame, position, are never gained but by seriously, determinedly, bravely sticking, growing, living to a thing till it is fairly accomplish ed. In abort,you must carry a tiling through if you want to be anybody or anything. No matter if it docs cost you the pleasure, ihe society, tbo thousand pearly gratifications of life. No matter for these.— Stick to the tiling and carry it through. Bcllevo you wero made for the matter, aud that no one elso can do it. l*ut forth your whole eucrgiea. Stir, wuke, electrify yourself, and go forth to the task. Only once leurn to carry a thing through in all its completeness and proportion,and you will become a hero. You will think better of yourself—others will think better of you. Ot course they will; The world in its very heart admires the stem, de termined doer. It Hees in him its Lest sight, its brightest object, its richest treasure. Drive right along, then, m whatever you undertake. Consider yourself amply mifileinnt tor tho deed. Yon’ll be suc cessful. Never fear. .. .r P * . ••rtniuo* v/. t niiucruiit, a tbo Nortn Atnorioa.—N. Y. Commercial, The Invalid, angering the pang* of Rheumatfam, looka forward with renewed hope whon MoimHoKX'a Kuiumatic CoxrouND Axn Blood Puamxn la Introduced, which, even In cairn of long standing and obstinacy,haa nover been known to Ml aa a remedial agent, Tho thousand! of testhnouIivU of IU medical efficacy ahould convince the moat akeptlcal. CANDIDATE FOR JUDOEHHIP-We are authorited to announoe the Hon. LEVY S. D'LYON aa a candidate for the Judgejhlp or the 8upertor Court, of the Eaetem Dtatrtet of Georgia. jyj Missus. Editors You will pleaae announce the lion- CHARLES 8. HENRY aa a candidate fur the Judgiblpof tho Superior Court of thoEaitern Circuit, and oblige. J un *2I MANY VOTERS. We are authoriied to announce the Hon. W. B. FLEM INO a* a candidate for Superior Court Judge In this DIs tilct. junelB Mrwrs. Editors—House announce Mr. JOHN A. STA LKY. a candidate for tbe office of Sheriff or Chatham coun ty. at the ensuing election in January next. Jyl4 MANY VOTERS. Poisoning. Thoux&nds of Parents who uh Vermifuge compoaed of Castor Oil, Calomel, Ac., are not aware that, while they ap* |H>nr to benefit the patient, thoy are actually laying the foundations for a eurien of tliaennea, such aa aalivatlun, loea of sight, weaknoii* of limbs, he. iliibenrack’a Medicine*, to which we auk the attention of nil directly interested in their own aa well an their chil dren’s health, an beyond all doubt the bent medicine now in uno. In IJver Coroplaiuta nnd nil dtnuniern nrining from thane of a bilious type, nhould mnke use of tho only genuine uiudlclno, Ilobonnacx’n Liver I'llln. '• He not deceived,” but link for Hobennaek'n Worm Byrup nnd IJver Pills, and observe that each hnn the signature of the Proprietor, J. N. Houevhack. as none else are genuine. mavlO—6m Professor Alexander C. Barry'sTrlcopherous, or Modicated Compound, for preserving, fastening, softening and promoting the growth of the hair, cleansing the head, and curing diseases 9t tho skin, and external cuts, bruises, Ac. The common consent of all who have used Harry’s TrL copherus. whether for the improvement andlnvlgoratlnn of the hair, or for eruptions, cuts, bruises.&c., places it at the head all preparations intended for the like purposes. This is no ill-considered assertion. Figures nnd facts boar It out. The sales average a million of bottles a year: the receipts, in cash, $100,000, This year the business will exceed that amount. The number of orders which dally nrrive at tho depot and manufactory, 137 Broadway, Now York, address ed to Profeswor Harry, enclosing cash, and requiring imme diate attention, would scarcely bo believed. The wholesale demand is from 2.000 to 3,000 bottles a day. probably ex- eroding that of all the other hair preparations conjoined. The popularity of the article everywhere, and tho liberal terms to dealers, combine to Increase its sales with 'great rapidity ; nnd Improvements in its composition, made at considerable expense, adds to Its reputation as well as in trinsic value. For sale, wholesale and retail by the princl- cl pa I merchants nnd druggists throughout the United .Stntea nnd Canada, Mexico, West Indies, Great (lritain nnd Franco, and by Mourn h Hendrickson nnd A. A. Solomons.Savannah. Hold In large bottles. Price 26 cents. may 10—6m JulTa’* 1 jySoCKTjo BIRD uiaorti.r—a man 26 years ti I*. -k_ A » , r <• “E a/’ L'UH SALt-A U nu, SJTT^S® 10 - r cook. Appi, to ’ oU '" >»« «mira yU-VMlom,m. n n. ■ iro.l Ufl fc.. ———^_'' 1 be w-arrantedasdescribed. AddIvL, “ w - vffl J!*m wTbv “5iStSffijJ HAWr No , r ‘ horn I,a T‘ XX-P.n, Huston, by ROW® Foreign UQuoKa-2o hnin^hs^^L X 1 Co’s Dark and Pale Brandy. Vintigei tSS? of out own importation; 6 pipe. M^hr^wlnru ,lM *' Hor article ; 1.Puncheon Old Jamaica Hum Yd» V. 1 * Croix do.; 1 do. Old Scotch Whisky.. ItacehedSi ^ * by July 26 SCRANTON. JOlix^H^ ftACpX. T 2° hhds clean Sides, a clinic ^Geo^lalimd for t Md”by , * m *' ,an '" n8fr " mrte4 “"^»k W _I10immR JOHNSON k CD. F OR 8ALK—20 shares Chatham MutualTW^^S' tion stock; also, *W shares of Savannah uom s..ld In lots of 6 shares nr upward. M. PREkWiiWAJT TCTLISHMUfffARD—A very superior article of r-Jv Aj Mustard. In large ami small cans. al«o in Wii., received and Tor sale by \y. W. l.lvS 'i v JuU - jfwwnent&aMt B AREGES nnd Grenadines, organdie and Scotch and French gin-foams, lawns *nd Xh ^T ones, figured and plain SwIm muslins, phid ja!5 DaWITT A HOItGAY KEMITON k VERSTOLE. P IG HAMS AND SMOKED iraF^TblTHsiffirr! 3 do Smoked Beef, for sale by ° B *' 444 Tbo death of John Price Wcthcrill, Esq., announc ed under our tetegrapbio head yesterdny, is the occa sion of great regret, if we may jndgo by the expres sions of sorrow eallcd oat by tho occaeion from the Philadelphia press. Ho was one of tho largest and most celebrated manufacturing chemists iu the conn- try, and engaged liberally and zealously in the tiro- motion of every publio undertaking calculated to farther the prosperity of bis nativo city. At tha time of hto decease ha was President of tbe Select CoaooU, Vice President of the Academy of Natural Sdonoes, and so officer and member or nrioos oth* AUCTION SALKS THIS DAY. By PniLimiCK ti nxiu at 11 o’clock. In front of store. FURSIG'S BOOK AND Jon PRINTING OFFICE, A'o. 6 n’hitakrr street. Over Mr. R. Matsu.Wine Merchant,Snvnnnah. Ga. HOUTil-WlfiSTKKN RAILROAD UOMD'Y.l MacoS, May 14th, 1853. J On and after Monday, tho lfith instant, the trains on the South-western and Muscogee Railroads, will run through uninterruptedly between Macon nnd Columbus, leaving Macon at half-post 6, A. M., and arriving at Columbus at ten minutes past 2 o’clock, P. M. Leaving Columbus at 8, A. M.. and arriving at Macon at half-paat 3 o'clock, P. M. nil5 GEORGE W. ADAMS, Superintendent. A. IWN’AIH. TpRkiW LOHSTER AND SALMON—Juit receivoTIojoiw J? per atuumor Alabama, and fur sale ly °* 8 A. DON'Ani. R are chance for invi>TMKVT^w^r b vr7- tenement three story brick buiMing<i. situated on T» lor-stroct. (Calhoun Ward.) are afford for n\l buildings havo all tho advantages of water, in, *. 11 For particulars apply to ' K? 23 WY1J.Y k MONTimiJJx H ay.- per july23 -100 bales prime Northern Il.iy. daiirTJ^i schooner Quern Esther, for mle. to arrive b, JJItllillAM. KELLY Veil, B AREGES, Tissues, Barege de lauei.snd Other isW goods, selling at cost, by Jy2t P*‘>VITT k MORGAN. VESSELS WANTFJ).—One or two Vessels wan- ted to load with sawed Lumber fur Montivedeo or Huonos Ayrea. Also, one to load with Timber for Hath. Maino. jy 20 BRIGHAM. KELLY & CO. Of- DOCTOR WILDMAN haring settled permanent- ly In Savannah, respectfully olfors to its citizens his sorvices in tho practice of Medicine awl Surgery. Residence and Office, No. 20 Abercom, ornrr of Sonth nmad-street. Hours of consultation, from 8 till 10, A. 51., and from 3 till 5. P.M. nolO thnrno Strain Saw Mill. nppusUr tire city. .... lrin ,. A; c ;'n»|dyJo Junu4 k w. ih khi C 111AMPAGNE—60baski'l«Miiiiim'*K*'rmuvcbiiniif*f t pints nnd nunrts; 50 do I/me Star do. of .'lire.-* tntion. n very choice article. In store and f.-r h r r J. ROl&EAU. LILLIS’ COMPOUND KYIt'lfpSAlw.ti’AUlI.iX-nd^. J_d erntrated syrup Isfmnid (•> lir n safe sad nimbi, on. •*dinl ugrnt. alterative In lls rffi rls. nnd imrifrine in iU«,. ture. nnd may hr u*rd with advantagr in llir'curri fi!„,. matiam. uterra. scnifula. teller, and ••tlirr iUmwmw ari-m, from nn impure slate of the blow!, just rvcrivcdsmlferul* by Jnnel2 W. W, UNTni.y G t EOIUIIA—Chatham Crninlg.—To nil whom it nur ew. T com: Whereas. William J. llulh'di. KvrcutrrVf tbe estate of Mary Neufvill. deceased, will apply to thrCwt of Ordinary for letters dlsmissory on the said estate; These aro. therefore, to cite and admonish all aod slnga- lar the kindred and creditors of raid deceased, to l«ui apprnrat the office of John 51. Millen, Ordinary, wltkia tho time prescribed by law. and show cause (if'any lb»r have) why said letters should not be granted. Witness. Joseph Ganshl. Deputy Ordinary for CTutiin county, this 1st day of August. 1853. July 29 JOSEPH UAKAIIL. Dtp. o. c. c. TRIBUTE OP RJSSPICCT* JerrntsoxTUX, Camden county, Ga., July 4th, 1853. With emotions of the doepcst sorrow nnd regret, the *• Chasseurs” havo assembled together to pay a tribute to tho memory of Capt. Jonx H. Delwokth, nn officer of this corps from its organization, aud very receutly its com mander : Ite it therefore. Rewired. That in token of tho high re spect with whioh we cherish his memory, the officers and members of tho “ Chasseurs" will wear the usual badge of mourning, and clothe the colors of tbe corps with crape for the space of thirty days. Rewind, That these proceedings be entered upon the minute tHMik. and published in tho Snvnnnnh nnd Georgian,and that a copy or the same bo forwarded to the family of tho deceased. Julv Mat. Secretay. GEORGE LANG, Chairman. Southern Methodist Church. The eighth annual report of the Secretary of the Missionary Society of tho Methodist Episcopal Church has beon published, aud from it we glean tho follow ing particulars: The Society havo at presont under their pastoral care: 1. In the Destitute portions of their Regular Work —122 Missions; 104 Missionaries; 23,020 white, 1,412 colored members, with 02 churches; 84 Sabbath schools, and 2,000 scholars. 2. Among tiie People of Color—120 Missions; 102 Missionaries; 24,047 colored members, with fifty-eight churches, nnd 10,057 children under religious instruc tion. 3. Among the Germans—9 Missions; 8.Missionaries; 378 Members; 5 churches; 5 sabbath schools, aud 263 scholars. 4. Among tho Indian Tribes—30 Missions; 27 Mis sionaries ; 4,232 members ; 39 churches; 34 Sabbath schools, and 2,254 scholars; 9 manual labor schools, and 490 pupils. * General Aggregate—Missions, 303 ; Missionaries, 264; churches. 103 ; church members. 62,081 ; Sab bath schools, 122; children under religious instruc tion, 20,489; with 9 manual labor schools, and 490 pupils. Several interesting letters tathe Secretary, from Methodist Indian Missionaries, are published. It seems that in North Carolina there is a community of 710 Ghcrokocs, who own 17,000 acres. This does not embrace half of their land, the other portion be ing left out by reason of the deeds not being record ed. They have 1,440 acres improved, which, at the State price, is worth $8,640. They own 83 horses, 105 milch cows, 45 working oxen, 135 other cattle, 416 sheep, 510 swino. Their farming utensils nre valued at $573. They produce annually 15.360 bush els of corn, 349 bushels of beans, 343 bushels of Irish potatoes, 1,000 bushels of sweet potatoes. This set tlement of Indians also bos $27,860 of money at interest. The receipts of the Society for tho year ending April 19, 1853, amounted to $100,901. Of South Carolina Conference, $22.21G ; of Alal-ama, $21,100; Georgia, $18,587 ; Memphis, $1,481: Louisville, $3,- 520 ; Kentucky , $3,101; from U. S. Government, $26,030; American Bible Society, $1,000. Tho Louis iana Conference reports over $11,000 raised for mis sions the patt year, counting the subscription of H. R. W. Hill, of New Orleans, at $5,000. This consists of 20 lota in arid near Louisville. * Tiie man who affirrls. is not a wiso man; or, in plainer language, is a fool; for ho attempt* that which he is not able to accomplish in such a manner, that ho renders tho impiuribility loss possible. We com pare him lo a penniless fop who would appear to he rich, and instead of winning tho flattering observation ho plays for, hto only portion to a scorulul neglect. A person of moderate circumstances, by attending to the vocation he has chosen, can improve his means, and a man of medium intellect, by a just estimate ot himself, and a proper attention to improvement by observation and otherwise, can acauire, with case, that which an affected fellow would spend a whole life-time vainly eudeavoring to attain. Affectation in anything to most despicable, it resembles thatun- nrinclple spirit of living upon tbo property of anoth- i* D 'rrjr-'««> .nnasc88C3 some good point,and that alone will arrest the observation^ u «»* u.* m n r acquaintance. Affectation in aiming at other nuali- ties, not ouly mta its mark, but destroys the little its victim may already possess. Thus, when wo see a man affected, wo may Justly consider him as having bnt precious little sense. The Overflow of the Treasury.— 1 There is now a surplus of within a fraction of $22,000,000 in the Treasury, notwithstanding tho Secretary is redeem ing United States stocks and otherwise paying the public debt as fast as the law to that end will allow him. Thus it appears that the Government’s reven ues nre increasing so rapidly as that the public debt is being fast extinguished without materially increasing tho amount of cash on hand. What will Congress do with this surplus 7—Not. Int. Man and Woman.—Man to tho creature of interest and ambition. Hto nature leads him forth into the struggle and hustle of thejworld. Love to but tho embel lishment of hto early life, or a song piped in the in terviils of tiie acta. He seeks for fame, fora place in the world’s thought, and dominion over his fellow men. But a woman’s whole life to a history of the af fections. The heart to her world; it is there her avarice scukH for hidden treasures. She sends forth her sympathies on adventure ; she embarks her whole soul in tbe traffic of affection : and if ship wrecked. her case ia hopeless—for it to bankruptcy of of tho heart. Extensive Fire.—At Auburn, N. Y., on the 25th instant, a machine shop, engine lionso, and sovcral care, belonging to tho Rochester and Syracuse Rail road Company, wero destroyed by Are. Low un known. Supposed to have been tbo work of an in- ceudlary. Mr. E. D. Culver, whose mysterious disappearance from Williamsburgh was noticed the other day, ha9 “ turned up." Too Tribune says lie returned to his family on Tuesday. Mr. Fay, Representative of tho United States, in Switzerland,arrived at Berne nn the 29th nit, and de livered his credentials to tbo Federal Council. Dr. Thomas Dnnn English, antbor of “ Ben Bolt." ii .engsgedjn maWng ^te^^pforat^. for COMMERCIAL. Snvnnnah Market. July 30. COTTON—Tlio ealea yesterday were 6 balea, at ^ Ifc. NEW YORK. JULY 25.—Hour—Sales of 10.500 bbl.< at ♦5 for State. 12>4 for Western, anil $5.37>*^3)5,02)* fur Southern. The ateamor’a now* lias depro**ed the mar ket. Wheat—wile* <>f 18,000 buahela at 133$ for Gene*ee white, and 127$ for Southern. Corn—sale* of 30,000 bu*h- el* at 70$ for mixed, and 73$ for yellow. Whfxkv—sale* of 550 bid* at 24$. Fork—sale* of 1500 bhl* at *15.87 M for Men and *13 fur Prime. Reef—*ale* nf 160 bbl* 5Ie** at *12.75. lard—fales of 450 bbl* at 11144. Cotton quiet. Code*—sale* of 660 baga atll)( fur Java and 10$ for Rio. Sugar— 1 Kale* of 300 bhda Cuba at iMtaltXi. 51ola**ei<— Mile* of 300 bbl* Orleans at 28 K4. Rico—*ale* of 100 tea at *4.44. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. PORT OF SAVANNAH. JULY 3(L_1 ARRIVED SINCE OUR LAST. Bark Cbaa William, Hawae, Doiton, to Brigham, Kelly & Co. CLEARED. Rrlg Augnata, Stone. New York—Washburn. Wilder A Co. US)I steam-packet Metamora Peck, Charleston—S 51 Laffitcuu. DEPARTED. UH M steampackot 51ctamora. Peck, Charleston. MEMORANDA. Liverpool. July 7—Arrived, bark Rhodes, Rosa. Sav’h. New York, July 25—Cleared,brig Industry, Jewett, Jack sonville. Arrived, achr Marla L Davis. Davis, Jacksonville. Boston, July 25—Arrived, schr Ermlna, HolTord, Savan nah; Iyimartine, Thorndike, St. 5Iarys,Ga. Baltimore* July 25—Arrived, schr E L H Wales, Little, Pensacola, Fia. CONSIGNEES PER CENTRAL RAILROAD. JULY28—101 hale* Cotton, and Merchandise, to Charles llartridge, and TS Wayne. CONSIGNEES. Per hark Chas William, from Boston—W M Wadley. H J Gilbert. J G Falllgant. W Hale. T K Mills, Connerat A Co, K F Wood A Co T S Wayne. Brigham, Kelly h Co, O Johnson k Co. I’hllhrlck k Boll. NHkll Weed. 51 A Cohen. Gnghorn k Cunningham. I W Morrell A Co, G 11 Clark, John Savago, Cohen* k Hertz, and Order. ATIIENA2UM. THE HARMONIC" MINSTRELLS, OF SAVANNAH, Under tho direction of J. MclIKAN, Return tlicir sincere thanks for the patronage no liberally bestowed upon them at their first appearanco In Harannah, and respectfully announce that they will giro throo 5Iusi- cnl Entertainments at tho Athonicutn. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, July UH, 140 and 30. Tickets Fifty Cents—Children and Servant* half-price. Door* open at half-past 7, performance to commence at half pa*t 8 o’clock. For particular# ace programmes. W* ttnuMu.a-y -'wwonij a CONCERT will be given by particular request, for the acoomraodauuu vr Children. l»oors open at half-paat 2, performance to commence at half-past 3 o’clock. __ _______ DISSOLUTION OF COPARTNERSHIP. I tllK f •'partnership heretofore existing li'twoon the sub scriber*, under tho firm of Viiuloxua k ArnOT*, I* this day dRsolvod by mutual consent. Mr. I). C. Amur* will coiiHuue tbs buftlnessaa before, and is authorized to scttln all Amounts due said firm. J. I,. VILLALOXGA. D. O. ACOSTA. CK.TraKVH.unx, Oa., July 11,1853. July 20—2w HARPER FOR AUGUST. B LACKWOODS’ MAOA7.INK, for July; Ismdor. Art Jour nal. for July; Bouvier’e law Dictionary, new edition; McClelland A Young’s Exchequer Report*; KabelaU’ Works, translated. 2 vols.; Cooks’ Voyages, London edition.2 large volumes, with majia and engravings ; Thackeray’s lectures on tli" English llumorlata. new supply; Cooper’s Dictionary of Surgery; Fchoolcrafl* History of the Indian Tribes, Unto Quarto, with numerous plate*, rol. 3rd ; Brodies’ Sur gical Work* ; What to observe at th# Be<l*lde: Willlama’ Principle* of Pathology ; Wilson’* Human Anatomy; Dlck< son’* IVnctice of Medicine s Tovrne’a Chemistry for StU' dents; Gross’ Pathological Auatoinv ____ „„ July 28 w. Thorne williams. 'WESTERN- MILITARY INSTITUTE. Dreiinoit Springs, Henry County, Kentucky. T HE First Terra of the Sevauth Annual Session of this College commences the Sbcuxd Monday In September, 1853, and tho Second Term on the FIRST MosPZY In the fol lowing February. Tim Faculty consists of nine Professor*. The number of Cadet* iu attendance last vaar waa 227. The course of studios embraces the scientific course of the U.S. 5lilitarr Academy, and thorough instructions in History. English Liter*ture, and the Greek and Latin Languages. Student* arc admitted to » select course, inclu 'log Civil hnginueer- ing. Modern languages, Book-keeping with commercial prac tice, and other branches at their option. The Military feature is not Introduced merely to diffuse military knowledge, but to promote discipline, health ana pl cS“\J fortultionl'boarding. rooms, fuel, linht. washing, servants’ attendance, field music, and nee of furniture and arms, *00 ner term. tJurceon'a fee. Z3 per term. Foe fur- th.r lalbmiMoitanSi O, Bntth.jS-a. uUrfll^ K,., —urine-street New Orleans, or It JOHNB0N, Sttperinteodcnt , 8m ithk Job naon, 67 Jtoguh G EORUIA—Chatham County.—Tn oti whom it nm ti cent: Where**. Mary A. Rousseau will a|>j'ly at ht Court of Ordinary for letters of administration on tbe i- tale of Jutiu* Rousseau : Thoso are. therefore, toclte nnd admonish nil whomllnu; oonccrn to bo nnd appear liefore said Court to make obj«- tion (if any they have) on or before the find lion lit ia September next, otherwise said letter* will be grant"!. Witness, Joseph Gsnnhl. Deputy "nilnary for Clutlua county, this 1st day of August. 1853. July 29 JOSKI'H (1ANAH1.. nrr o r r. A 1.UA IT .V WAl’.l', A -Tlfc*THlT'K Ft lit HII.VKlt.-Uif It. tentlon of the j ub le i* respectfully called to the abuts named ware, ns beiup a mbtitute. which for nv* i« »*rr»r.t- ed to be equally a* good. It i* a harder metal thin silver, consequently will bear rougher usage. It I* a ewnbinjlie# of perfectly pure mutals. nnd i* a* free from corrosion n silver. Every article will bu warranted tn retain il« origin al color. It'consists in part of tho following: table and dessert forks, tea. tablo amt dessert spami, As. juitrs- •ivci ..a ta, sate by may7 J. P. CPU .IN?. 100 Btjaa*twe t_ TO TIIE CONSUMERS OF MANUFACTUR ED SAWED LU5lllF.lt. T HE Subscriber* nro now prepared In rrefite trim for Flooring nnd other descriptions "f Plained Unil*r tt the Savannah Plaining Machine, situate! «?u the anil, it the western extremity of the city of t***ann*h. Utii»s Zubly and Margarct-strects. Order* f»r nil dwcriptlfttcf Plained Lumber furnished at the shortest possible nntJce, nnd manufactured In a superior stylo, which cannot (til a please tho consumer. Work done by their msthinf r.3 compare with that of any now In use Thf -uteenten have succeeded in arranging for a constant supjJy tl «• looted spammed Lumber, by which no dlsapp"intm«t tl builders need bo apprehended. Every facility willl* ti- tended in obtaining material for all fart* of a buildirg. Thu Saw Mill, now being completed In the «am» bciV'.tj. will be in operation In the course of one month.*!>«■' ders for every description of Sawed Lumber sill ted with despatch. Apply to It. A. AI.I.KN' k <b„ or jy26—eoditn WILLIAM KINK. Apei_ $500 Challenge. HORENSACK'S WORM SYRUP. A N article founded upon scientific |irlncipl!*.cunij*w ed with purely vogotable substance*, being rertatj safe when taken, and has never beon known to fall In cunng the must obstinate case*. Worm* can never nid «« this remedy U once used, from the fact that it not «mlv «• ■troys them but removes all the slime anl mucaivba may remain. The Tape Worm. This worm I* tbo must difficult to destroy of antnit »• habit tho human body, it grows to nn almost In-iUjW length, and becoming so coiled and fa-teued In the mte« tines and stomach as to produce Fits. St. Vitas' I’anre. *e• which is the causo of many going tu the grave, md wav ing that those complaints have their origin from Iwup worm ; consequently they du not u<e the proper fur their disease. To thoso who nre afflicted sllh tliut" ful foe to health. I recommend the use of my Wona sjaf and Liver Pills; the Syrup to betakenindowseft*-te hie spoonful* three times a day. th*m take from f* eight of mv Liver ITUs, to dislodge nnd p*»* tji* «"”»• ■ strictly following these directions, tho most obstinate e* of tape worm can be speedily cured. Round or Stomach Wonu. This worm is usually fouud in the small luteifinf* "’ 1 * the worm most common lo children, jet Il ls n ft t ** f confined to them, as adults have frequently l **. n suffer with them. The symptoms most prominent » ,» affected with this worm, aro hardness and belly, slimy stools, looseness of the bowel*. j nose, a bluelsh streak under the eye*. k«- K T‘ m - 0 V * your children have any of the above sympton*-n sack’s Worm Syrup can safely be dei-ended "P' l ° -. . It you havo a certain, safe and speedy cur ' : using it according tn tho directions the petl*" .. stored to health, and tho worms thoroughly eradicate , the system, you can rest assured there 1* no row* 1 . the grave, a* fur fail, there ia no such wiird a* those who use my Worm J'yrup AMnrlil.i, oi- Nm .ill TUf. in* "“'.“V, „ These worms, to which Him human syb'ia 1 ! „,.„n most troublesome of all other*. Th".v arc gvui •. found in tire rectum, and if allowed l» remamj citation they produce, lay lire f.iund*ti«ii mr ■• .. ff dor*, such uh infiaiouiutiun ol the bowel . rangenieuU of Die stomach. Tire tre-lawl»» . (ll , that can be used is llolMinsuck’s Worm -J’up- • astonishing |«»weror my mcliciue* «rer A* S| 1 defy any nn« tu prrelucu n case wlrere my n and I Jvcr Pill* are recommended tu grt wi- cure. All that i* necessary is tn use the ‘J P f (Jl ance with dlrectionx nn each bottle; awl . tbq purgative Is required In order to allay t |,V, n ,. e *| l ,o>M lirMuce. lha liter 1111*. bv tl."ir am. ficltliy njiantioo upon Uio bin.b. U lli« medicine that can be taken. HORENSACIC’S LlVF.il tbe No part or I he system la more Hablo to diseaMj^^ ^ liver. It being supplied with numerous W 1 ^ |bre i nerves, nnd if diseased, the bhmd of e fatodk'. all parts of the bo.ly. pro-luces liver complaint, j bilious affections, dyspepsia. Are I*attended withcfiffls%irI?l8R* the region of the liver, vomiting hitter t**te> |, |,. tongue, imlse full aud bounding, ths nain i■«^ b /^ u , u u 1 creau-ml by pressure, should the left Aryce*^ ' | psin i* generally in th«lelt*hoiiI ter, with a ,ti ,u» U the skin lieeoining uf a asllow appeanw ■ " q* day colored, llii* disease can Ire cun I t * |||(| |fl , ^ bctiaack’s liver Pills, ns they act dinrell) ijfj* t , |(J „. tho disease, and then operating 'ip <in pel all the corrupt and vitiated mvter from the *;* Uyapcpsln. ,.,A\xa*tu* The symptoms or Dyspepsia, awl H* dizziness tn tho hea.I.hearlhiiru.epi ( ,.sre meats,sourness arising from tfoi»Wf’t.ihbilfl times general languor of the whole b«.. be seen that the disease owes .J^HIki* state of the IJver and Stomach. Hob< w<afh ^ the very medicine to effect a P* r { ni ‘“ , c ti'«* as they act by changing the cerUln mor™ • Wood port system Into a healthy action, and rendering to and healthy. To Female*. ^tj Yon will find these Pills an complaints to vhieli yoa amatdcct laoMnw total or partial.they other fit In restoring and purifying he blomin” feBlI( te aa to cure all complaints which mar »n inin u>*iWjt regularities.aa headache.dlinnessoMf^ bad;. 4c. These Villa are the only a™ f w^voui*^ dv to cure the following ° 0 «W"‘j: C SuI OB ,tiim.**' Melancholy, Sick Hea-laohe^■ OMdtoWk W flhl * treaslng Dreams, Dirauesiof Right-•’J J L?ver Impurity ^ eases fliat aria# from affection* of th* urer - the Bl- od.or eonstipalion of the Boweiu Medical Ewldence b# ^ We. the unuderslgned $ |a*p«t |on -?L' of their manufacture wuUtnittesl to m*to that the ingnaiienU of whtchtheyar# lo* them tho best rill iu uie for all 01 puritioie the Blod, Ac. ’ WOOD, R- *’• p CBOW LEY- M "• lk)WF.N. M. D- __ purchase none hut those haring fo* N H()BK.NRA('K.”ss all others are w" h wfahlnj* 4 kSSSSSaS m»y2i--ltw4roly <