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f AT A VLI IH ADVAHCX.
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or Weakly ML
8 A V A N NAH ^GaT:
WEDNESDAY MORNING. AUGUST 9. 1854.
Tk* Otor|tan on* tha Oroytown Altai**
Freeh ftoinlhe i*tu*al of Ibe Now York TYitofir
»na Evening Post's denunciation of the conduct or
th« admlulatratlon lu the nutter of the cbaatlMiuent
Of the Sea Jaen oollewe. we Saturday fare ozproa-
•Ion to our Peeling* In * tingle paragraph. We ai«
oorry that the editor of the Republican should hare
oonaldcrtd that paragraph a thrust aimed at him.—
At the tlmo ot penning it we bad not, nor hare we
yet, reed hit •• enlmadreralona.” to which we are
auppoted ts hare replied not from any want of re
aped for that paper, but from the fact that amid the
confusion In Which our offleo has been for months In
volved, owing to the repairs to which it is bci»8 * ub '
jected, the number containing those animadversions
was passed by with a single glance. Wo may re
mark, moreover, that ao Strong at this time Is our
repugnance to controversy, timt a suspicion that an
editorial In either ot our city cotemporarics might
provoke it, would atrougl) dispose us not to go be-
T °As the exprewiooa to which we have alluded has
exposed us to a personal assuult through the editorial
columns of the Republican, we are compelled to say
something in seir defence. The " offensive para-
Ifnph ” will be recognized by our rcadera as the fol
lowing :
The President has communicated to Congress the
official correspondence in relation to the Gioytown
affair. We are sorry that its length is such as to
preclude the re-publication of the whole of it in our , 23*4,
columns. Such portions a* nr hare insetted mil Is- t
found worthy of perusal. Especially would we call
the attention of our renders to the letter ol Mr. Pun
ms- contniniiiff the Inatrucllona under which Coin-
Antw AK» Ntjonr-Six RaiboaDv—The AugoaU
Chronicle ot Um 8th soya the OreeuvlUe h Columbia
Railroad Company havo accepted the amended Char-
tor. allowing thorn to build n Uoad from somo point
on tho Road, weal of the Saluda, to intersoct the
South Carolina Road at or eaat of Aiken, and books
for subscription to tho Stock will b« opened at vari
ous pUc«a on tb* 16th Instant.
Masonic Calendar.
We publish the following an Interesting to the craft
In general. In affixing date* to official Maaoulo doc
uments, Freemasons should always use the calender
familiar to themselves ; the common calender, or vul
gar era. may also bo uho*1 In tho earoo instrument.-
Tho dates vary in the different branches of the Or-
of the York .nJ Freneh rite.. J«te Oo™ *';»
creation of the world, calling it A'lmhucia. which
they abbreviate A.-. L.-., signifying "Ini the year of
l.itrht ” Thua.wItMthem *he present yeai la A. I..
6854 Masons of the York rile begin the year on the
liit of January, but in the French rite it commence*
iu the 1st of March, and Instead of 1 he month* re
ceiving their usual uamoa, tliey are designated num
erically. as first. second, third. Ac. Thus the 1st or
Jnuuarv 1854. would be styled, in a French Masonic
document, the " 1st day ot the lltli Masonic month,
Anno Lucls, 6854." The French, some times, iuslead
or the initials A.*. L.'., use "I/an do lu V.\ L.*.,, or
•• VruieLumlero," that is, “Tear of True Light/
Koval Arch Mason* commence their eia with the
year in which Zcruhbabel begun to build the second
temple, which was 530 years before Christ. Their
style for the year 1854 is, therefore, A. 1 . Inv.\, that
is! Anno luvcntiouia.or,, in the year of tho Discovery,
columns. Such portions as ire have Inserted will la- ;i, find the Royal and Select .Muster
1 t.\i11u u*,,..i.i u*.» i*u11 .\dd loot) to tlm vulgar era. “*
are 2854.
„ 4.
Royal and Select Masters very often make use of
the common Masonic date, Anno Lucis, but proper
ly they shuiiid date from the year in which Solomon’s
Temple was completed ; and their style would then
be. Anno Depositlonis, or. iu the Year of the Deposit
und they would dale the present year us 2854.
Knights Templars use the era of the organization
of their order in Ills. Their style for the present
year is A.*. O. - . Anno Ordlnia, or, iu the year of tho
Order. 730.
UULRs FOR DISCOVKIUSO Tilt? DIPFKHBNT DATES.
1. To find the Annrnt Craft.—Add 4000 to the
vulgar era. Thus, 1854 and 4000 are 5*54.
2. To find the Date <J Royal Arch Masonry.—Add
530 to the vulgar era. Thus, 530 and 1854 aie
D lie.—
Thus, 1000 and 1854
Ths Mortis DaMlMs Blwtltn.
waiaoAtu ron oormhoh—dbmochatio oaih For
TUB UMJ1BLAWRX.
UOLUMBU*. August I.
Tho return* of the election In North Carolina oomo
in very slowly. In seventeen counties that two years
ago gave an overwhelming Democratic majority, tlm
majority for Thomas Uragg.tbe Democratic, candidate
for Governor. 4,814— this shows a Whig gain of 1,010
votes. An ctTl< lal statement gives Alfred Dockery,
tho Whig candIJa'e, 1,816 majority in nineteen conn-
ties.
The democrats have a net gain of three members
of the Legislature, but it la nevertheless believed
that tho legislature will again be under the control
of the whig*.
lion. Win. A. Graham, whig, has been elected to
the State Senate from Orange county.
A whig Senator lias also becu elected from Halifax
county.
Wake. Pumberiaml, New Hanover. Johnston,
Northampton, and Mecklenburg counties return
democratic Senators.
New Hanover, Northampton and Wuko counties
give a majority or 1,443 for Dragg.
RxLKian, N. C. Aug.6.
The electloh returns are coming in Iroiu various
parts of the State, showing very large gains every
where for Mr. Dockery, the Whig Gubernatorial rati
dldate, leaving scarcely a doubt that he has boon elec
ted by a considerable majority, over his dt-mo< ratio
competitor. Two demoi rats and one whig have been
elected to tho Legislature,from IVuke county.
Despatches from F’nyetfeville, Elizabeth City, WIN
iningtnn, and returns from various other pnits of tho
State, show larvo whig gains. There is scarcely a
doubt that the whig* have been triumphant.
Hai ku)ii, Aug- 0.
Tho result is in doubt. The complexion of the leg.
isluture is also certain.
bin containing the instructions under
rounder Hollis*acted. This letter, with that <d Mr.
Marcy. fixes the extent of the responsibility of the
Administration in the matter. That upon the issue
thus made the voice of the American people will sus
tain their government we do not doubt, hut tli.it
there art- now. as at the time of the Hartford Con .
vention.at the time of Gen. J.vi-ksos's dilllailty with i your t ho |Light, A.-,
France, and during the war with Mexico, politicians Masonry.
who will lake side against their own country, nee,
•orprlso no one. The descendants of the Harttord
Convention Fedcrsllris uiv still living—so of not n
fcw of the opponents of General Jackson and Mi
Folk’s administration. If these gentlemen are so
unfortunate as to have furnished to them Tor their
aympathics no better subjects than the Jamuioa free
Degrees and land plraU-s lately doing busiin ss nt
Ban Juan, it is rather their misfortune than fault. It
was to be expected that they would espouse the cause
of any party, whatever Its character or color, in op
position to the administration. If the San Juan out
laws are hard subjects, it must be remembered that
they arc th<- only ones now offered for Northern Abo
lition and Whig sympathy.
The Republican cannot •' see lmw any man not a j
slave could give expression to such sentiments ” it • i
the foregoing. We reply that if never, during
To find the Knights Templars' Date.—Subtract
Ills front the vulgar era. Thus, 1118 from 1854 1
73d.
The following table shows, in one view, the date
of the present year in all the branches of the Or-
odt r :
Year of the Lord, A. P. 1854 —vulgar era.
L.\ 5854—Ancient Crnf
A.*. I-'- 2384-
Arch
Royal
-Royal and
Year of the Discovery
Musourv.
Year of the 'Deposit, A.*. Dep/. 2584
Select Masters.
Year of the Order, A.*. 0.-. 736—Knights Templars.
F'roin the Washington S*i\r. 4th.
JIunIiichh lii Congress Hits Morning.
In tin- small hours nf the morning, tho civil and
diplomatic Irll was duly pus-cd by both Houses. At
b a, ni. both Houses t‘">k u recess—flic Senate until 8
a. m. und the House for an hour longer.
From the Washington Star. 6th.
Tlte Veto
Was sent Into the House, yesterday afternoon, af
ter we went to press. Though, ns nil the Star's rea-
d. rs are aware, it was expected by every member, its
announcement created a very decided seu-ution. and
elicited elmlitions nf temper from more or less gen-
tb-meu friendly to the bill. The Whigs, it stiuck us,
were more anxious for u veto than to have the hill
sinned, under the impression that it cannot fail to
operate very favorably for their cause iu the next
Western and Northwestern elections. They did per
fectly tight in seeking to "smoke out’’ the Demo
crat* who cs-nyed to Unlit off tiuni action «n the lull,
because they desired to relieve their party'* P.evi
dent from the re-uaii-ihility of signing or rejecting it.
It is due to the President tlmt the world should know
that it was well understood iu politit-ul circles here,
tlmt tliis hesitation by no incuu* marked hi* dondiict
with reference to tin* bill; ns lie trccly -aid to sUI—
friends and foes, popiical—with whom lie conversed
on tho subject, that lie could not sign the lull, or, in
deed, any genre i/int-ruul improvement bill, however
cheerfully he might In- inclined to sanction appropri
ations for individuals work* which w re el inly of a
national t’lmraeter. Thus, had the bill fail- d In-l.v
the two Houses, he would have oeciipi il preen
i is present position ol hostility to the system of in
ternal improvement-- hv til-- General Government
which he stands In the veto. Alii r hi- inino r
late declarations upon the subject which, sooner or
later, would have found their way into the uewspu
p-rs, no arguments would have sufficed to client flu-
people of any portion ol the West into flu* b-lief tlmt
upon this great and finpoitaut aop.-tinn, he nceu|
grounds different from t hose of the party •• platform
as interpreted by the mass of the parly in the old
State
.. in. uuu mic uuuu- • an uuu. iu»*v.. It ecenia to be understood here that tlm President
When the latter came- together, the committee of was, indeed, very anxious to have the bill come to
conference reported on the Army appropriation bill. him. in order tb it In- m-glit instantly act on it, and
and the consideration of tlte details ol their repnit) thus disprnv- tie* M:ii»n-i mid imfouiuled allecatin
•inmenced, and disposed of by ten minutes bt*'
fore 10 o’clock.
Mr. Phelps reported, Trim the conference commit-
the Navy appropriation bill, tlmt they could
connection with politic*, to have tuken sides with » j not agree. The House determined iret to dispose of
. . . . ... ..... a tli'u r.-,i.irt iit-tii tliev (-mil,I It-itl-n tin 1 Ni-fiiltt*
foreign government in a controversy witli mir owi
entitle u* to the namo of slave, then we must ben-
the odious ap|»cllution. The action of our govern
ment in avenging tiie Insult offered to its minister n
Grey town, create* «« issue between the United Stale
and every rival nation. There is not a govc-rnmen
in Europe to which our free institutions have mu-
the United State* obnoxious, which is not watchiu
for a pretext upon which t«i base its denunciation
Right or wrong, the conduct of the administration i-i | JVraMr*»i«Aion upon it,
report until they could it-urn wliut the beuutc
Im I done with it.
A n-fiort was next made from the committee of
oontcience c-n tho River und limbor improvement
bill, embracing a settlement of tho questions in issue
between the two IIou-i-s in counictuiii with this bill.
Mr. Orr, stating tlmt he was opposed to that bill
and lu-lii-vcd tlmt it w->uld never become a law, re-
i marked tlmt lie hud concurred in the r< port a- a mem
I her of the conference e -ininilti e only b- cau-c lie con-
-io-d it to be iu accordance with tiie views ol the
•f both House* oil the bill, as manifested in
the Ureytnwn affair, could not be expected t" escap.
the censure ortho monarchists in tiie old world. How
well pleased will these censor* be to find their hiti
tcrest reproaches fortiiiud by statement* conluinn,
in I- ading journals of this country ? So iniicli for tb > j
tribunal of public opinion. Hut there i* somethin-! 1
else involved. This affair wi I probably constitut 11
something more than issue of ojnnion In-tween tli j
the United States and her old enemy, Great Britain, |
Ati angry controversy—possibly war—may grow «„ ,
of it la-tween the two government*. How d- light- |
ed will the English ministry and aristocracy lie
find tlmt a cose has already been made out against j
tho United States, and in favor of Great Britain by !
leading American Journal*! Who doubts but that
the articles of the New York Tribum and Evening j
Post, and kindred presses in relation to this affair will I
find tiieir way throughout Europe and hack across j
tlu- Atlantic in tiie column* of the Loudon Times.—
If it be slavish iu us to refuse to furnish argument*
to our country'* adversaries to be used against her,
then we-plead guilty of slavislmc-ss.
The Republican says:
At 10 a. m. and si-veu minutes, a motion was made
t to lay on tiie table the report of the conference coin-
i mi flee on this tuft ; which was decided by yea* and
| nay a, in the affirmative.
Toe House ri lii'i il to appoint a committee of con*
| fen-nee on the Naval appropriation trill until the Uiv-
; er nud Harbor bill slu-uld b-- ill-posed of.
Tlv-order preserved in both thumb rs Mils morn-
ing was more remaikublc than we cvi-r saw before,
in the two lu.-t hours o a session. Up to lOfc u. m..at
b list, un leirislntiou took place in the House which
win »>-f cb-uriy understood by nil participating iu it.
The Senate, on coming togi ther to day, went into
Ex entice ses-ii-n until half post U o'clock, when
tli. |r doors w« r- opened, and they proceeded to dis-
n-i-e of v.i!
tive »
s apj-foprialK-n bill*, in this FIx-i
-i-iii. about forty nppointineiiLs were confirmed
—of cmi-uis and iio-tni.t.-ter- principally.
The River and Harbor bill being finally passed, the
House voted to insist on tiieir action on tiie Naval
Kb-iiiner bill, rejecting the Seuute’a amendment
thereto.
Mr. Ilivly, of Va., then Induced them to tuke up
the lull to curry out the provisions of the reciprocity
treaty, which was duly passed almost ny acclamation
and sent to the S -nnte,
Mr. Houston next moved to take up the Senate's
resolution to extend tin* existence of the session.
Tills motion gave rise to great confusion innl excite
pose* itself to Hie con temp of all right thinking,
m n, when it attempts to class the opponents ot the
imbi-cilo Adniiuintratiim at Wu-liington witli the
jneniln-rs of the Harlfni'il convention."
And we would remind the Republican that in do-}
nouncing the present administration a* "imbecile’' j
it speaks no worst- of it than did tho Hartford con- i
vention federalists of that of Jamks Madison.
Inqi’est.—Coroner Eden was yesterday railed up- -
on to hold an inquest over tho remains of a negro
man named Edward, belonging to Mrs. B. F. God* i
DAiin, who received a mortal wound in the neck srom I
a pistol In his own hand, when about to use the wen- j
pon iu his own defence against un attack from Uri
ah , a negro man belonging to Mr. A.J.C. Biiaw.
Upon the appearance of these facte, and Hie rendi
tion of the jury, Uriah, with several of his negro
companions, was arrested and hold to hail, to nwait
an examination before Justice Hart, which will take
place to-day.
Hon. A. E. Maxwell.—This gentleman reached
Savannah la the yesterday morning's train, on hi*
way to Florida, and left at 10 o'clock in the steamer
Seminole for Jacksonville. We were grntilied to find
him in the enjoyment of good health. He will bt
fortunate if he preserves it throughout the active
canvass upon which he expects to enter on his arri
val in Florida. IIi* purpose, we believe, is to trav
erse the whole length of the State from east to wc>
during the next six weeks. There can be little doub j
of hi* re-election to Congress by a baud some mu
jority.
The total value of loreign exports of Baltimore for
the weekending on Thursday the 3d, was $107,941.—
The export of breadstuff's for the week comprised 9,
109 barrels of flour, 550 barrels of corn meal, 4,400
bushels of corn, nnd 155 barrels of rye flour.
Appointment* by the IVt-shlent,
BY AND WITH THE ADVICE AND CONSENT OF TIIL'
SENATE.
James Tilton, of Indiana, fo be Surveyor Genera
of the United States for the Territory of Washington.
John Calhoun, of Illinois, to be Surveyor General
of the United Btutea fur the Territories of Kansas and
Nebraska.
William Pelham, of Texas, to be Surveyor General
of the United States for the Territory of New Mexi
co.
George P. Btilos, to be an Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court for the Territory of Utah,’ in the pluco
of John U. H. Underwood declined.
Reuben H. Gibson, of Ohio, to bo Receiver of Pub
lic Moneys at DeHancc, Ohio, vice Wiu. Sheffield re
moved.
Ralph Wilcox, of Oregon, to be Register of the
Land Office for the Territory ol Oregon.
James Guthrie, Jun., of Oregon, to l>e Receiver of
Public Money* for tiie Territory of Oregon.
EU-drich Uplinni. of Wisconsin, to be Register of
the Land Office for the Minolta land district, in the
Territory ot Minnesota.
Lorenzo I). Smith, of Minnesota, to Isr Receiver of
Public Monaya for the Mluona land district, iu the
Territory of Minnesota.
Win. W. Phelps, of Michigan, to he Register of f he
Land Office for tho Redwing land district, in the Ter
ritory of Minnesota.
Christopher Graham, of Indiana, to lie Receiver of
Public Moneys for the lied wing land district, in the
Territory of Minnesota.
H. C. Moseley, of Washington Territory, to be Reg
ister of the Land Office for said Territory.
Ellias Yulec, of Ohio, to ire R reiver of Public Mon
ey* for the Laud Office for Washington Territory.
Naval Court Martini—Fire.
Philadelphia, August 8.
The Naval Court Martial held iu this city agreed
npoti a verdict yesterday, which was transmitted to
Washington la»t night. The members are now wait
ing orders from the department to disperse.
A fire occurred this morning at Taylor's soap fac
tory, corner of North und Wallacc-stracts. Loss
$3,000. Insured.
-a—.Schooner
"We would remind tin- Geor/finn that it only ex-1 ment, Mr. H. urging tl.e propriety of extending Hie
*“"*•■ " r “ ,l rfr-ftlrn to night Ml, «ud Mr. (. umpbcli only until
three, p. m.
The -hooting and di-order was deafi ning, indeed.
The Speaker gave notice that lie should direct the
Si rgeuiit-iit-AriiiH to take into custody any member
who failed to obey his i-all— for the ohservanca of or
der. The movement |noduced u profound stillness in
the hull lor Home time.
A conference committee wns ordered on the disa
greeing vote* on the Naval Mail Steamers appropria
tion bill.
file motion of Mr. Hou-ton to take up the resolu
tion t" extend tiie H--ssi.ni. was then agreed to.
Mr. Houston moved to modify the ie«olntioti so as
to make the session end at N, a. in., to morrow. So
bu-messto be done utter 4, p.lit., to-day.
Mr. t'umpbi-ll moved to uineiid that proposition so
as to make the session end at 8 a. in., on Monday ;
no qu -stimi (except to agree to adjourn) to be put j
after 4. p. m.,to-iiny.
This wa- ucc.-nted by Mr. Houston,nud was agreed j
to without a division.
So the *• anion was virtually extended to 4. p. m.,
to-day, though nominally until Monday morning
next.
The Post Office appropriation bill was next taken
up on the report ol tiie Committee of Conference,
and the points of disagreement in it were debuted
1)3' M«>sr«. Jones, of l cnni‘»*ev, Oid-, and Chandler
for some time, when the amendment increa-ing the
pay of the clerks in the Washington city Post Office
j $250 each, was agreed to.
Mr. Phelps then reported from tho Committee of
I Conference on tho Navy appropriation bill, which
| was agreed to; and tli--n business of littlu or in* pub-
I lie importance was transacted until the hour at which
I We went to press.
Very much the same matters were considered iu
the Senate which occupied the attention of the House
during tiie morning.
In both chain- ers. until we went to press, the good
order and excellent feeling were most remurkubie iu
deed.
Tim adjournment over from f. p. m., to-day, until-
Monday morning m-xt, was instantly agreed to by
the Senate, and U intended only to enable the clerks
in bring up tin* enrolling, so that they cun nil be sign
ed in often session it'the law requires. Otherwise.
Midi a- might full to be so signed would fall, under
the law.
Doings in Conorp.ss, Aug. 5 -In the Senate, yes
terday. alter we went to press, all the public business
of the session was closed up, except (hu ocean mail
steamer appropriation bill, on which no final action
was taken b fore they adjourned. In the course of
till.- d .y, a very large" number of private bills were
passed and otherwise disposed of.
In the HofsE, tin* remaining general appropria
tion bids were finally pissed.exeept the ocean mail
liili, wli'u-h, being li»t in the Semite, could not be
finally acted on the House.
At half mist two, p. in., a m<-s®«ge nns received
from tlm President, vetoing the river und harbor im
provement bill.
Mr. Haven objected to its reading, uulcss action
be taken upon it.
No quorum being present, the mes«ngp wns not
read, the objection of a single tuemlicr being sufficient
then, to prevent it from being read.
Tiie House then adjoin lied.
An article in the l-Milihurg U'-view states flint the
Mormons keep up a pi-rpctual emigration fund,
amounting last year to $34.00(1, to pay tin- outfit ami
pas-age to those converts in foreign lands win. may
tie tumble to pay their own expenses. The addition*
to tho community luivc not been less than 3000 a
year front this source; which, witli tho iiicrea-e of
poniilation among themselves, nnd the results of
proselyti-m in the United Slates, bids fair to create a
powciiul and dangerous element among us. At the
rate of increa-e realized during the Iasi five years,
in live- years mure they will reach 60,000 inhabitants,
the number required to entitle tln-m to admission int<
tli • Union, and to all tlm immunities in reference to
local laws and insulations,ol a sovereign State. The
extent of tiieir missionary operations, ns represented
in the article referred to. is astonishingly great.
Pf.ath by Drowning.—Michael Manning, « ship
blacksmith, aged twenty-two years, who had been
employed at tho establishment of Mr. Jeffords was
drowm-d List evening off Union wharf. Ho had start
ed witli a party of three or four for an excursion in a
small In-at. und fell overboard in endeavoring to rc-
oar tlmt hud been lost. His companions
tlm* dispr
thut he was di-mclim d to meet the le-pon-ibility of
im position. We have >■>•«•» mac hoi the in- and nuts
ol politics, und our experience tenches tlmt the Dunn-
i rats, ns « party, always lose ground with the coun
try whenever any inii'idi-mble inntioii ef them o--
»ay to t'-mpoiiz-Wilh gr nt national qu- stiotis. To
• >'ir mind, the President deserves fiie thanks of hi-
parly nt large, for the promptness with wlileli he
stepped forward tor >cm-“tin; Democracy" from the
imputation nf wavering on this snlij-ei.' His action
may lost- them three nr four incur liars in tho next
House of Representative*, and. perhaps,a Senator
or mi; lint it will in tin-cud htrenutlu ii them every
where. with the respect which is naturally accorded
bv all to consistency and political action on prin
ciple.
Veto ot the Klvcr nnd IlnrlMir Hill—Presi
dent'* .Message.
TothkHocse ui RkI’Iiesentytivks.—I have re
ceived (tie tiiif entitled un act making apnrnpriutiniiH
Im- the repair, preservation ami comph tion of ceil.tin
public works ln.-r<-inl'ort! commenced ondi-r nut imity
of law. It reaches me in the expiring hours of tlie
session, nud time doe- not allow a lull opportunity
ol examining and considering its provi-nms, or of |
•.taring nt length the reasons which forbid me to giv •
it my signature. It la-longs to that clu-sid measures |
which are commonly known a* internal linpiove-
mi nis by ibe General G»ver»inei)t, and which Ir*»n»
a very early period have h en deeun-d ol donbltul
constitutionality and expediency, and have thus ail
i d in obtain tiie approbation of successive Chief Mu-
gi-Arates.
On such an examination of tiie id I ns it has been
in may pow< r to make, I recognize in it certain pro
visions, national in their character.ami which if they
to id alone, it would be compatible with my convic
tion* of pub! c duty to assent to. but at tiie name
lime it embraces otlu-rs which are merely local, and
not. in mv ju Igment. warranted by any s.iic- or true
construction id the t/on-titntinn. To make proper
ami * mud di-crin'in.ili"ii bctwi-n these A n rent pro- j
vision* would ri quire a deliberate iIIsciism n of g.-n-
erul principles, as well as a careful scrutiny id de
tails, for the purpose of rightfully applying those
principles to each separate item of appioptiulinu.
Public opinion witli regard to the value and im-
|ioi t id ice of internal nupiovonients in tin; country is
undivided. Tli-wo i- a disposition on all hand- to |
have them pm-eri.ted with cneigy. and to see the
!» nelits sought to !> attained by tlu in lolly realized.
I In- prnnnm-nt point I difference between those who
have la-en regarded a-the friends of a sv-ti-m ol in
ternal improvement* by the G -nciul Government,
and those itdv r-e to Mich a system, lure been one • f
C m-litutionnl power, though more or le-s connect' d
with iiui slions > i'exp' ili-iicy. My own j idgnp-oi, it
is well known, ha- on both grounds. In-ell nppo«i d In
a general system of intcinul improve.nent* by the
Federal Governnu-nt. 1 have entertained the mo-t
s rious doubt-, from the inherent diffh-i/.tii s of it- up-
plicalioo, as well as Iran past un-ni .-im tory expe
rience by the Gcui-rul Government, a- l i reiolei I-
n-i- ndv intagc-'ii- to 'lie eountry at large, or elleelual
loi the iiccoinp! slunenl ol the object n.ti-mplai il.
I shall coiisiih-r it incniiib'-nl upon nu- t > present
to t’ongress at its next session a matured view nl the
wludi- subject, and so end-avor to di (in-, approx:-
mutely at least, nnd according to my own convu-tno g
wdint appropriations of i .is nature by the Gi-m-i..l
Government llie great interests of tlm I’n.ti-d States
require, und tin- Con-tit'ition will admit nml saneiion
iu cast* no substitute should be devised capable ol re
conciling differences noth of Constitutionality und
expediency.
In the absence of iJ.c rerjnisite means and time for
duly considering the whole subject at the present,
nird discussing siu b possible substitute, it becomes
u-ccs-ury to return the bill to the Unu-i- of Repre-
-.•nlatives in winch it originated, ai d l»r the reasons
tiiu* briefly submitted to tho consideration of Con-
gresH, to withhold from it my approval.
Franklin Pierce.
Washington, D. C., Aug. 4.
From tb* N. O. Crv#c*n». M tnst.
■® The Abusuii.
Th« recant exploration* of the rlvar Amazon nud
It* tributaries, sud or th« flonntrli-s ooutignoas there
to, made by order of the United States Government,
have materially Increased onr stock of knowledge
concerning a highly interesting portion of Mouth
America, and one destined, sooner nr later, to l>e of
great importance to u* and the whole world.
Tlm earliest explorations known to have been un
dertaken on the Amazon duto back a* far as tlm mid
dle of the sixteenth century, and there are still, fn
tho archives of tho Society of Jeans at Quito, some
Imperfect zocoonts of what wts accomplished by tho
earlier members of that order, lint It was not until
ns Into ns 1750-90 that any thing of importance was
done. Hpani*h cnpldlty, stronger than any religion,
led number* of ad venturous men there to penetrate,
In search of Bimini and El Dorado, to points but re
cently n-snught, and mapped ont nnd geographically
desonlied only within the present year.
Tin* country drained by tlm Amazon, nnd which
must eventually pass un immense trade through it*
waters, can hardly, a* yet, be computed. The river
is already navigable to ship* for IhousniulK of miles,
and, with tiie removal of u few bum, could he no to
steamer* for n great additional distance. It ha* trib-l
utani-H flowing in from the North nnd South which
are longer and deeper than Red River or the Missouri,
and which drain regions tlmt, properly cultivated,
Could be made to produce almost an v and everything.
The western slope of the Andes is rich in mineral* :
gold, silver, iron coal, copper nnd quicksilver have
ail boon found there, nnd heed only the appliances of
civilization lobe sought with nu exceeding profit.
The luml, within the two million* of square miles
drained by the river Amazon, i* of unrivalled feitili-
ty—producing nearly every thing essential to the
comfort and well iK-ingof man.
Wheat, rye. tobacco, barley, maize and clover grow
on tho *ide of Hie mountains, w hile immense held*
of sh'-'-p, lames, alpucas and vicuna* feed near by ,
and yield wool ol the lineal and longest stuplc. This
temperate zone lies but n short d^tance from the tm- j
rid. w here products, of an nftogether different kind,
are found in unequuled profusion. Coffee, plantains, ;
sugar cane and cotton grow tin re with u luxuriance j
of which we know nothing. Tlm finest and inn-t III- .
cions fruit is found in any abundance : oranges, lem
ons, banana*, pine apple*, melons, and many others,
of which tin: names are strange nnd unlamifiur to
onr ears. Cocoa and vanilla ate also to be gathered
at certain seasons nf the year. Dyes of various col- |
or* and drugs of the rarest virtue; rice, India rubber, ;
copaiba, gum copal, animal nml vegetable wax, not- j
meg, Tonka beans, ginger, peppi r, arrow-root, tnpio- |
ca and indigo are a few of the nii-celluiieonn product* j
of n region which has not yet one inhabitant to ten
square miles, hot which i* capable ol supporting a
population double that of China or Japan, und with I
less Hum half the labor.
The testimony of the Intest explorers Is, that the
climate is salubrious and the temperature agreeable.)
The direct rays of the sun are said to be tempered
by an almost constant east wind,so that no oik- Mil- |
furs from either heat or cold. Those who once be- ;
cotm- accustomed to the climate are always fond of it,
and mwilllntr fo give it up lor any other Epidemict
—wh'-thi r ol cholera, small-pox or yellow fever-
are unknown. There is a nariow belt of country
not far from the river, troubled by what the native’s
call ninleitas, which are often ol a malignant typo
hut they aie cnnfltn-d to n particular section, am
would doubtless lime much of He ir malignancy anil]
dinger he ore a -ciinlific management. On each
side ol the tributaries of thi* great river are broad
savanna* abounding in herd* of wild cattle nud vn-
rims game, nod beyond them, to the South, are
ranges of mountain* said to be rich in diamonds and
oth r precious stone*.
Ail thi* country i* n w a wilderness untennoted,
oner It i voted and uninhabited; its wealth unsought
I mid its resources undeveloped. The cities or sites oM
[cities at tiie mouth of tiie rivecr and along it* shun
v Th* City oftha Dtsff.
Bsyood the beam whose utmost gUnnuer verge#
On the lon» cliffs which guard the dread unknown,
Whera life drope down on her abysmal surgas,
And awful silanoe drowns her dying moan ;
All exit from thy. voiceless courts denying,
With pallid Isuvch and funeral yew o'erspread,
Thon under God’s unsleeping eye art lying
Apart.' O, glorious City ot lb a Dead !
Thou haare t through thy shadowy gates for ever
Down to thy dust and mystery—their goal,
Wan, blind and eonntlesa like a mighty river,
Earth’s rapid, tlghlug goncratiuus roll.
What foot hath scaled Toll's rough ascent to glory,
What eye hath flashed with s-ul's sublimity,
From Eat til's green youth till now her locks look hoary,
That hath not gone in alienee down to the ?
What tonpue that pierced like light the unborn ages,
What arm ilmt crushed tho tyra.it’s Iron tlituue,
What hand (hot winged with (ire its stormy pages,
But down the wiuiry gulf to thee hath gone ?
They call thee sili-nt. but if Earth rejoices
When from her mould the soft-eyed violets peer,
If leaves and brooks,and solemn night have voices,
Thon thluc within my listening soul I hear.
“ Como where tho good re pose,” that voice Is saying,
-• Come where* tho weary fioni tlu-Jr labor* rest,
No evil dream through the hu riled breast Is straying,
And Faith her waifnre ends, and Hope is blest."
Many are thine on whom the dumb earth presses
With but the burdeu of one weary year ;
Many whose tender eves and lloniiug tressea
Made NUhriiiuo when the latest flowers were here.
Tliey v ho come back in dreams—lost brother, sister,
And she whose pale lid held the glistening tear,
And we bowed our infant heads nud kissed her.
With faint bps murmuring that we could not hear,
He that w hen Autumn leaves were dead, lay dying
For weariness beside life's dusty road,
Witli folili'd liumts in thy dim halls la lying—
The in* eL old man who led us up to God.
Though Night her awful banner o’er thee stretches.
There Faith, the dread Archangel's thunder waits,
God walks Un solitary streets. Christ watches,
And Hope looks upwards from thy pallid gates.
Close where t he beam of her sweet eye Is falling
On the cold walls, one little nook for me :
And when 1 hear the hollow whisper calling,
1 will go calmly down to reit in thee.
difference how oTEJL 0 * c R*Wif 1
now so universally known
msny thousand* who htv e lone bera
b... ...torn, t„ bilirys* “
manufacturing arrsneement* aa.lll . J: Tb* sx
Bposa—«aWa couflnad to small lot* at unchanged price*,
gj**^*. IM bbU prim* r*boiled at 11X* V*
Flock—Tb* sales smbrsced son* 1.200 bbla Bt. Ixwls.
Including COO In msny lot* at M 87X^8 00. 300 al M 76,
220 at tft 87X and 40 90. sod 5) at $7 r*r obi.
Oksht—IVa noticed sslc* of hare Jy 2.600 sacks of Ora,
of which 220 Inferior at 40, 660 Ordinary nt 60,200 Yellow
at 62. 100 at 65. 800 Mix* I at M. 160 Whit* at 68, 860 In i ,
three lot# at CtM per bushel Nothing doing In OaU. <»f i., ^ » rt 'J , 'KM n rate ae also «
Bran. 1,300 sacks sold In severalloU at 86raOO« pef 100 **? ^ "ho may be a(Tli c , eil
pounds. • •" make '*• *«> ‘hem. the caxsran
Fxovisroxs.-rork was Arm. and 100 bbl* Mess, psrt an. ’ , .“** t T nl Ute d ”‘«tmil^
Inspected, were sold at ZI2 jwr btd. Bacon Side* were held i .u-. JT, , „? r 'T, to TORn: ’"'iLaxs ln k^
at 7v per lb Tor prime. Or Items. 20 tierce* Hufflrid’s 8u- i wll,ch theagente will sell it | n future. ^ ^ itl
gar-cured brought per lb Tiie prlncli al eslcs or I ”'***^S.* t’O.. i ‘I
l-erd were 100 tierces prime at 104,and 1500 keg* Nn. 1 at - ,„,. A so, -°MONS& CO ) Agent,g, |
10Vt per lh. . ln Wv'bwpe. '>? I’embeiton 4 o Hl . u ^ I
Con-nt.—Active demand. Hales of Rio about 3.200 bags, yji •:£?* d ,, 1,1 ; M i lWg , -»Hl,.ll;} l S«>ll
'.uSt.'pS'lb " 1 *'•* b10 *» 4 o/TSNS.
Candijm.—Hale* 600 boxes SUr at 22^ t*sr lb. ' *" <1 ^“""inzham. Cjdc Co ; „ .1,;,^?
..E'"'" - "' ”°"“ 4 “ ,J 'ItiiTlUnd. H.rreii» ol, J ,", '» ■ '
■' . '«>l
F rarre-e . .6f i< |w;r dollar
New \„rk Hxty day Hill- 1 Mm 2 per rent disc. 1
bight Checks on New York y t („ 1 per cent prem
] ovuri. a"-.., iq,
■I i.e above are else agents for tbs r*|, ,.
tireuarntlon. al-cs-ly ,o extensively a n * * '*%
by Luudred* of thousand, thromri.n,,.
! AUGUSTA. AUGUST 7—Torrox—There Is some more tn-
I 0 , )’ , ‘y to day, with* her sales. «t prices about the same as
| last week
thousands tbrongUt ttt\ljjg|
MOHTlMOItK-s
BITTER CORDIAL AND Briuii, pT-orr—t,
Tho Imuietree sale of |J,i. O'r'iial . rl . K "!FR
yeart. and tb- univer-ul eatiefacttoi, it h, r ,T ,h * l Wh|l
|n<''..1'.... I,,....1 ..ui. #iC ,t . . —a Clven I... HI
Imlu'ting hundre-da of the m-st' re.r-Juif , * D 'ri:,L
thioughout the country—proves it the , •i 6 -"'-.!
t-rativ- and Blood l'uiitler ever known ?
.. II .11,— ... "It. lor ths I....,
marine INTELLIGENCE.' _.
...... — ,if *‘ 11 diseases arising tram ladlgeriion ,
.ALGIST9. tSf'4. the Liver, or iinpuritie* of the Wood ^f^* 0 ®4ltit,
AltmVEI) SIM E m-K LAST. }in 0 .fvfl W not e hin^*bl , .n , r e, . U sJdtafc
Dreg Sarah VMflume. Burke. New York. Hay. to C E
k*-ltr A: r rf " Ct ', V '"irinle.'.-even with the fesb|«! G(|
__ blneMaT /“ , -' n ' p,C ’T et producfo * ths in:!'.'^ J
CLEARED.
Brig Boswell. Hobbs. St. John. X It —F. A SoulloreL
1 PORT OF 3 A VANS AH..
Carleto
Ste.i
Steamer Seminol
*. AS an
i.nt the -an.- tin,*- rei.leoiiwlj'o^B
' ''’* 1L, «e
% • .ti-v t" th- Hi , .1 .
i' ' -.1 throughout i ierr ; o-^r r, ITl
........ I m... • 1 -prr CtltDLt „ .
(lEPAHTKI).
. B1 mken-hip. I’ulntku. &c.
n-wlv electrui«i inmugucii! eterr n-oiwe -k. *'
I" - the I. I" r ek»no»|., t ,J
He invljjoi ntee nml Heslorei (h. i
nml UebllltuieG
and thus, not only removing di*-a.,. butfnrtlfti«..v
t-ni again -t it-, attacks, aud prod icing snd
of ll-alth and IVautv r,.,... ■ v ., n ‘
r K nfeet-iet
““iatAit^,
This Cor'inl and Wiioil'urili-re'ihouW btk.M.
family and used hv overv Individual ■■ it
- hundreds nf dollars. ' »»»*«•-
MEMORANDA.
New York, August 3—Arrived, bark Peter Demill. Hooy,
from Apalachicola.
"hSL,.. 4—CtMred, «„ Foot,, for J.ck-
Kl " u '“ of our wholesale agents, as abov-. al our
" " —OOWXINi. /,■ i,
UONSIUNKKH I'KII CK.VTHAI, KAII.ItO VJ). So. J Barelar street. New York
Cltnred, brig Jugulu, Siooe, fo, s». p rlr , ,,, ,,„ tu ,
■Maws,
1 ■ hroprirv
; AUGUST 7.—90 bales Cotton, and Merchandise, to H .1 I-ouisville, Kentucky, orders insj beaddnm.ll
Gilbert.Char eston Steamboat Co. Craiiu k Rodgers. Wash- P 11 *^-
burn. Wilder fc Co. I) J Dilh-o. VV II Kiiubrnugli. Cruger k
Wade, E RadclilTo. C A Jones, W II Stine, nnd E Wiiner. i
tm;*
Discovery
Of a Shoal off New Point Coinlort, acd description of York
Spit. Chesapeake Buy. Published by authority of the
Treasury Departnieut.
Coast K’Rvky Omcx. July 16th. 1854. j
Slit: luaren-nt C'louiunicutii'i) Lieut CoinmaudiRgJ J,
. Almy. U. 8. N , a- i-tant in the C«aat Survey, reports in
lion, anil Gm prosecution <•: lh- n : . ..re-grtf by of the Ciu-kupeake off
iHficv nml tl "‘ t ' ut " ,,,c -' **f M' (’. •• » Bay. the discovery of a slum! with j
sixteen feet wall r on It. S. L. from New Point Comfort light :
hou>e. whieli he pH po-e» lo call - New Point Shoal.'' |
lollowing extracts from his letter give the partieu- I
11 nd «)>» a description of York 8pil, '
Boston, Aug 3.
Advice received hero this morning stutc that the
schooner Fllleu hu* been hi ized ut Miruiuiclii, lor u
viulution of Hie flshery reRulallous.
Accident to the Steamer Sen }l)tii-.U<uvy
Gale nt Ahsecom.
I’m I. aUKi.i'ii i a , Aog. 3.
A letter received this inoruiiiK from Absocom
Beuch state* that the steamer Ken Bud, from New
York bound for Norfolk, on a CridI trio, met with no
accident, und put into Absecom Harbor. Wliile
crossiiiff tiie bur she was struck by u hurricune.
Which caused her to csri-en nud nearly capsize. Tin
steamer was more or less damaged, but she succeed
ed iu reaching the harbor in safety, where the dnin
nge was repaired; und hor trip was resumed this
morning.
The heaviest blow that has been experienced nl
Absecom for severs) year*, occurred yesterday, but
fortunately, beyond neveral boats being driven high
and dry upon the beach, no darnogo was ausUined.
threw out an our for him, and made other exertion*
to save him hut without mice,ess. The body Ims not,
as fur as we can learn, been yet recovered.—Charles
ton Courier,7th.
The Mexican Fund.—The New York Tribune,
of yesterday, say* :
H’e understand that Ocn. Almonte has called in
nil tin: Mexican fund loaned to our Brinks, giving the
required ten days’ notice. This makes tho three
inilliniiH payable on tin- 13th Inst. The future action
of the Gi-ut-ral is kept secret; but us far as wc can
u-ic -rlaiii the money is to be deposited with one or
two leading commercial houses, to be remitted grad
ually. This is a maiden change of intention, and the
calling io of this large amount of money may cause
a temporary tightening nr the market. It was sun-
nosed that nearly all this money would remain in
Bank sixty or ninety days.
Francis Hall,tiie venerable editor of the N. York
Commercial Advertiser, ho* received tho degree of
Doctor of Ijiws by the Trustee* of tho Wesleyan col
lege of Middletown, Connecticut.
■The nffid.il
miry Depart-
U. S. Rf.ceuts and Expenditure
statement of the Register of the Ti
ment shows that tin* rec-ipts into the l'. S.’ Tren'-t
I t the quarter ending June 30. amounted to $l*i,-
8*4.73.9.80, and the expenditures during I ho smne
P'riod amounted to (23.745.102.31. The— exp- ndi-
tores amounted to (23.745 104.34. Them* expendi
tures were made und' r the lollowing hea ls :
• ' vil. Mi»c-lla non us no'l foreign interc•lU^^H ('1.642 for. 70
Vf-xicnii treat v 7 11001 0 '.no
War ' :t o;.i :■ 1 g;
Dr. Craeroft. Po-tma-ter of Wheeling. Vn., bus
t red suit against E. If. Bui tU-sou, proprietor of
Times and Gazette, lor libel, laying the damage at
((5,000.
The susnension bridge a ross the Mississippi river
nt St. Anthony's Fall i* nearly comph ted. The two
tower* arc linished, and the wires are about being
hung.
Operations of the Mint.—The statement of the
operations of the mint in Jnlv show* tin- total bul
lion deposited to have auiounteu t" $4,250,000, con-
-i'.ling of f3.940,000 io gold (all from I'uiijoruia
exeept (30,00(1) ami $310,000 in silver. Tiie whole
iimonut of c linage executed nmouoted in value to
$3,587,850 02. > inbiaeing 1,404,450 pieces, ns
lows; Gold coinage, 54,643 pieces—$3,400,331
silver, 1,248.060 pi* os—(180,000; Cojiper cents, lot,-
816 pieces—$1,018 16.
Tlu- Sole of Sltkn.
It is stated by the Newport News, and its knmv]
edge is supposed to have been derived Irmn the Rus
sian minister ail interim, who is a guest nt Newport,
that the rumored proposition of Russm, io sell Sitka
to tlm United States, is altogether Incorrect.
A'net says, " tlmt such n suggestion was neither
made nor thought of by tlm Russian legation in this
country; and well informed persons consider it wa«n
imax invented io England, and readily swallowed by
the press of America. We doubt if this matter was
for 11 moment seriously considered in St. Peterehiirg.
ns it is wholly contrary to tiie character ol the Rus
sian government und that of the Czar. Such a ces
sion of territory made by him would bo an avowal of
n despairing condition of affairs on his side, a condi
tion to which until yet he is not driven, as shown by
the last necount* from Europe. Once more, what
ever may lie said to the contrary. Hie whole affair is
a pare invention, and soon the public will lind it so
likewise.
Tho President nns u-cognisod Johan Luppier 0* the
Prussian Consol to resident Philadelphia.
Gapt. Lovett, of Hie clipper ship White Swallow,
died of cholera on board bis vessel, ut Bostuu, 011
Thursday.
The shipments of innniifnctured nml leaf tobacco
from Lyiiibburg, Vn., for the first seven months of
lids year have been ns follows: Manufactured 3.735.-
053 lbs.: Leaf, 4.425,219 lbs.—showing a dccrcu-m, as
compared witli the same period of last year, in maii-
ulactured tobacco of 4,088.249 lbs., and un increase
Iu leaf tot-aecco of 2,410,373 lb*.
The prospect in the counties of Virginia, surround
ing Richmond, lias seldom, if ever been better for a
large corn crop. In Fauquier county and some other
portions of the State there wifi be almost an cnlirc
iuilure.
The Common Council of Detroit havo passed a re-
solution forbidding the sale in the city market, for
Hie present, of cabbage, cucumbers, lettuce, green
fruit, fresh pork, veal aud fish.
lars of hl» discin' _ r
m 1 licli will lie UM'tiil to uavigatorN :
1. While (imsi'cuUng the smiuilmgs off the SU. and Fd. of '
N\ w Point 1 oiiilort light-house. 1 discovered a shoal with !
16. 17 sud III ,i et upon it. This is the only lUtached shoal, 1
it I uiv i vi-,1 iln- • Inner Middle,’' wltUwhicb I luiveiin t 1
anywhere t«-.. w Windmi 1 Point.or below the widest part
ol i.'iirsapeake i , , 11,i, -in,ill re of ii mile long and ), ;
„ of a mile wide, extend n* in an K N E. nnd W 8 W di- 1
arc but sites and give no pro-pect of growth. 1 he rectlon. and the Io b et si,..,: part lies due southeast from |
niightv Hginiy of commerce most In- invoked In-loro | New Point Uoml-nt lipht-hnuee a distance of four nautical 1
the country can be settled, it* resources developed,
nnd it-* cities built up.
When that day comes—nml come it will shortly—
Para will Im- the Niw York of South America, and
new cities will spring tip in the interior, beating mh-Ii
a relation to that country us Cincinnati.St. Loni* and
Pittsburg do to this. Then more will Ire added to
tin- wenlth of tin* world Ilian was by the ntiii' k on
China oe tin* mission to Japan, and our own adv-n-
tiirmis citizens will find a means in wealth «s direct
ns California and infinitely more pleasant. We shall
then see a river
— Whose breast of water* broadly dwi ll*
Between the banks that bear the vine :
And bills all rich with blossmui'.J trees.
And keels tlint promDe corn and wine,
Wi'li scaitered ri'ie« crownir:' these.
Wliose fair white wall* along tbvui rhino.”
miles from ft
rhoiri and the li^lil-lu
where thi* *|iohI Ii. a.
I propiree to cull it - New Point Shoal." as an appropri
ate iiiiiuu by who'll navigators could eari'v call to mind its
locality. Niue-1 hate•ii-corered mid mentionci) it to peo
ple heie. one of th" •>! 1 |. sident* n-members that some 15
or 20 year* 1 ■ ‘«-s-j ly loailt-d *hip *truck and thumped
hard in that lor .i.n
•J York 8| .1 1- miu know, one of th** greatest dangers
to iiiiv|gulur« in thre part nf Clx sapwike Bay. It is a nar
row -pit or Imr I..ing between the entrance into Mobjnck
Huy uml the entrance into York River, varying in width
'ron, a quart' r to half a mile, and extending out from the
Undt>', nautii',.1. equal to 7,*i statute miles, where it com
tiience* to de pen beyond thret fulhoms. A distance nf 6
nautical miles friun the land there I*, a* I found, only 14
feet of w ater.
I would respectfully request authority to publish tho
foregoing.
Very respectfully, sours,
(Signed) A. I) ftACHE. Superintendent.
Hon James Gctiiiur, Secretary of the Treasury.
CUN Bin N »•; KB.
Per schr Woo lbridge. renin Baltimore—N A Hardee k Co,
L S Bennett .V Co. r It Mills. S Stripling. Swift k Co. (la.--
horn &Cuunlngli<m. S M Laffiteau. D O’l'onnor. Rowland
Cc. D R Dill m. Agt Steamer Fashion. <'It R Agent. Ruse.
Davis A I^riig, Hrigemn. Ki lly k f'o. Wushburn Wilder k
Co. Jus Mclntire. A Fiwc-ls A Co. Wibon A Zittrower. T S
Wayne, SI A Cohen. 11 uri-i n. Fleming A Co, P I, Cunstnn-
tine. G W Gnrinany A Co and Order.
UOARD OP I1BALTJL
A regular meeting of (he Hoard of Health
this day. at 12 o’clock
wards and report
nugft Secretary B. If.
GIIEVILI.E Ai CO.,
forwarding and commission merchants,
Xuivimbrir. Git .
Keep an office at Chattanooga fenn . and will give dispatch
nt that point t" allg "" - for North Alabama. Tennessee, "•
Mississippi or Western Virginia, and collect ship and oth
er expense bills front our Tennessee office. atigS
AYER’S PILLS.
A r
ea-e*—ci ►ti'<n,-*.mdig v «v. t ’.’I
sy. jsuu ‘ic rhevin.tba. , I
gout h-ini' T., trenou.ee,, V._ |
hiLty. 11,11 1 I
breast Mde. ua-k sr.1 limbs
“•'he. fetuttre compbinu, n c 1
iml-d. very few *re the dim*
which A purgative mediclot
tru re or lest required, and much Mckue*. sd i »l
might be prevented, if a hnrtnless but eff-ctusl tiPaml
were m»re freelv it-ed. No person can Del
Costive habit of body prevails; bi -i tei it tons 1
, ,, ,, , ,,, , , serious and often fatal di>-e«fes. which might I wl
u 51 Mcrolwr. will exnnunc tb.lr ,,„ Wc . d by lin.vU «i>,l ju.liot.,,..
8. A. T. LAWRENCE. , five. Tins re alike true of colds, feveri«i> triuMno, ,V|I
lyuipumn t ,
bilious deraiigeiuent'- They nil tend to becomtor r,,,^.
the deep seated and fnimidable dislein|er> »Uth UCh,
he-rsesull over the land. Ilencv a rehsblefsmi.r |hnJ
Is "f the Ur.-’ importance to the public heariti.andtti/ttI
ha« been per Jetted with consuminnte rkill V> »r«rtUt[
nran.l. An extrusive trial of its virtue* by phys.cisa. o
I patient'-, ha* shown le-ulls -ur'ivajj ui
thing hitherto known of any tnediciue. CamUnhi.
effected beyond belief, were they not substantiitnl ft m!|
11 u - of such "xslied position and character at toforhjth
suspicion c.t untruth
Among it •• msiiv eminent gentlemen who hart toys
In favor nf tlre-vc Pills, we may mentiuii :
I'r A. A. Hayes. Analytical Chemist of IMtoo.toiS'^
A-sayer rd Ma«-nchusetts. whose high prefeMiuotleuar
I.ivm Disfasr.—Carter’s Npnnish Mixture.as a remedy
for liver disease, nnd the number of formidable evils cou
rier ted with a disorganized stale of that organ, I* unri
valled.
Hundreds of certificates, from the highest sources, of
persons living in tire city of Richmond. Va.. might he giv
en of cure* effected by 1 liter's Spanish Mixture. We have
dv room to re'er to il.epxtrnor Unary cure of Parous) M.
| Drinker. Esq., of the
: l.ichmond Va..
| >pani»li Mixtm
A Mnrr *. IJiM.k-ellcrs.
.r.-! by two bottles of I'urt.-r s
ee vars suffering from dlwntfil
•n the |.| | i- wonderful, b-ltcr
had ever tukrn. and cheerfully
The Bnlu of Sltkn.
The arival of Dr. Tims. Cottinun, by the stonmer
Indiana. I* announced uitlijm-nt flourish in the Nnv
York paper-, which report him to be charged with
dc-sfiat' hts from Rire*ia, which lie has already lor-
urird’ il to tVasiiington, offering to sell .Sitka to the
United Stiles. The term*, it 1* said, arc very advan
tageous. Dr.Cnttnian. it a|)peitrs,iH an Aiticric.m, 11
cili/.en of Louisiana : but lie lure been lor koiiu- time
in St. I’etei-burgh. and, it is said, is held in high con-
sid' ration Ly the Czar. One would infer so from the
inl| it'- l account lie gives of his own conM-qucnce, for
he |in t -nds not only to give the Czar'* uttered opin
ion* upon ili**.o«t every subject connected witli the
Ea-tern qoarrel, the growth and gri-atnes* of the
United .Slates, hut evt-n his piivutc views upon the
snhjeetH which even the wiliest diplomatists of Eu
rope < on hi not draw Iruin him.
But lei
to unfold tli
to 1). sold. Sitka lie- near the coa t in front of the I COI.N. Savnnnnh. K. s. si RoKCKI-'K. Macon,
Ru-sian settlernenta in North America. It i* one o!' a I gists and Country Merchants every where,
group nl islands known heretofore as King George the | jyJ®—i |,lni
Third'* Archipelago. Tho population in 1853 amount- i , "
ed to 807 per-ons, of'whom 134 weie A (cutes und lT snor «» » K K.vwtr.v—rorlf (s strictly frae
Knhreks, 397 the d-scendi'lits ol Europeans and nu- —Gist indigent ion is the parent >ffn large proportion of the
live women, nnd the residue Europeans—chiefly Rns- fatal diseases. Dysentery, diariha-a. cholera morbus, liver
nintre. Tiie harbor is good, hot yet h r 120 days, | cmnplulnt. and many other diseases enumerated iti the city
mined there incessantly, and lor 180 other day s il , iwfKCl0r ., weekly ntshvne »f deaths .are ceneritte.l by
siniwi-ni were frequent. 1 he whole coast is huinid ,, , .
and sul,ject to tlt« h-nrh-nt foe-. wM. I, lirnod ..v«f " d « e '/ / ">-I np’.c-1 Ib.nk »f
. 1 .... , .. 1 it Mil nhu tnTi.
■\T1NEGAR — 30 bbh White Wine and Cider Vinegar.
V sale by Je14 HYLAND k O’NEILL
pKUIUHA FLOUR,—40 bbl aud60 'arks, lor sate uy
V.T jel4 HYLAND ft O’NEILL. , . . - .
ter i« endm-"J I'v 1 lie—
O RANGES. LEMONS. ItriTER AND CHEESE—Received Hon. Edward Kv-r-tt. Senator ot tire Potted $utn
l*er "t'nnier Alabama. ' "tes I-einnn*. 10 boxes Hr !(„bert (' Wintlirop. F.x ppeakeri f tire lluuMof Ktw.
ranges.6 keg* cliolr.u new Butter, extra. 6 kegs good new sentatives. ’
Butter nt 26 cents per p. i (" Xe* new IM110 Apple Cheese. ( Ablvot Lawrence. Minister Plen to Kndsrd.
extra, 8 boxes new Western Cheese and for sale by ' f l„hn H I ilzpalrick. Catholic IMshep .>f B^lca ;
j' 1 21 J. D JESSE. | jir. J. R. Chilton, Practical Cbumiit of Nue Yoricn
C HOICE LIQUORS.—no hair pIpeYoiurd. Dupuy A Co. endorsed by
Brandr. pale and dark, our own Importation, vintages Hon L Marry. Ferretary of state,
from 184»JtoiS5J; )n pipe-. Mea-'er Swan Gin-20 qr ca*k* Wm. B. Astor. the richest man in America.
Madeira Wine. In do 00 Port do 16 d-'n, j.,ire old Fcheldam ) s Leland A Co., proprietors of the MetropoliUsBet
Gin. demlioned in 1845. in -tor... and for - le by ' and others.
jv9 HTU\T'>N. JiH.NSToN A CO. I I id space permit, we could ;tvetnvny hundred eertitn:
! trom all parts when-the Pills hsvetnren Uff', but
*t t-v.-n more convincing than tie- • xj • liei.cvi.f einintwiti
N * ] lie mou h f ■ ind in their effect* ui - '
Ham*. 50 bbh la-af Lard. Received_m».) t»r sail hr _ , Ilie-e I'Cl- the re>ult nf .'..ri^ un-
itdle as the be-t n'
•SCRANTON. JOHNSTON A CO.
\TS —300 bushels Oats, landing and for sale by
O
ICg
^Ail K-s —20 bhds pri
tli" present
cinpounde
Icinal virtui
In,! process
such a man 1
of roinpo'it
M ackerel.—io whole and 6 half obi* No. 1
Mackerel, just-received and for sale by
id 4
HYLAND A o-NFILI. compasiti-
than nil lh"
J recommend!
Principal Depofs «t M. WARD. CLOSE A CO., No.
| Miden lane. New York.
ItKNNKTT A RLKIiS. No. 125 Maio-'t .. Richmond. Va
, iii , , , ,■ | "'--'‘"-o « io ..i.' iVUIIU--1 . ivicmnonii. \ it.
lcav.ng the Doitor nml hi* iloRpnlches for tune And lor -a I- by iiiumas m riKMl: .v cm. jami>
dd their purport, let ih nee what is propn-cd .tf CARTER. A. A suf.oMO.Vs a Co., and W. W f f.V-
nd by Drug-
Grain cannot he cultivated
island. A few ve-recl-* ar>- laiilt there, but the chief
iiilo-.tr>' i.s thfiuring offish, for which ralt j*al«i..in-
cd from tin: Sandwich Iriunds. The town i* u im iu
ireseinlilag'- of wooden liotrees. with that usual uppen-
dago of Riisriitn towns, a I'ortr r*. From thence the
Fur Company directs it* trade with IDre-dii pr-'per,
nod af-o to a t.maR extent with China and the- Mar-
qni'S-a Island*.
Ol Lit-)ears ice has Irtscn sent from there to Cali
fornia. It* whole trade does in t exceed halt a mil-
b in o| dollars a year, and is rated by many at a inti' h
lo\vi i figure. As a harbor lor wliali r« the island
mi.'ht possess some advantages to tlmt tiade; lint
being -i-pniut'd from our own present possessions by
the whole ol Brilreh Amerii-n, it- Dfditical or com-
iii H'iiil advantages to the United States <)•. not up-
pear to he very important. Tlu- New York J tirnnl
ol ( niiimeree gives the following a* a go-id rea-on
ttgauret tiie purcha-e:
The porcha-e of Sitki from Russia in the present
stale of money affairs, would he an act nf f•>))>•
which cnniiot m- exported front a prudent Govern
ment. Tin- whole object of the purchase at any lime,
i* 111" supposed iH-iielii to aiisu from it to the com
merce I Hie United States. That commerce would
he ne re crippled iu a year hv the abstraction nf' ti
cnirei lerahle amount Irom tiie industry of th** coun
try to lie implied to the piirchu-e of an island lying
in the Pacific, eight hundred mile* north of the mu tli
line of the United States, than could he compensat- d
fur in the tree of the island for half ft century.—Phil
adelphia Ledger, 4tli.
The Garpineii Money—Judge Purcell, of the
Court of Probate, Washington city, has delivered bis
opinion in the Doctor Gardiner case, •• appointing the
Treasurer nr tlm Unit*-1 States tiie administrator, on
the ground that the Government re. p> ima fat ic the
largest creditor—to the amount of $40<UM)0. This is
adverse fo the application of Messrs. Bradley ninlCnr-
lisle, who claim to t>e creditors on the said estate.—
Tire Judge remarked that the Treasurer might be le-
gaidi-d as one of the trustees nf the Tieirenry to pro
tect its right-. M'-ssrs. Bradley and Carlisle have
appealed to the Circuit Court."
Governor for Nebraska—It is undarstood that
Mr. Francis Burt, of South Carolina, at present
third auditor of the Treasury, lias been nominated
by tiie President as Governor of Nebraska.
Heavy Robbery—On Moudny evening. Mr. Nicho
las Malone, a contractor on tiie Pannsytvania Rail-
mud. was robbed at the American Hotel, of a carpet
bag containing $4,000. Mr. Malone went to the liotej
nnd hft I he carpet hag lying in the public room down
{•trails. A genteelv dre-sed man. who was, or pre
tended to he partly intoxicated, directed the servant
to bring the hag up to his room. The fellow went
up staire. nnd the waiter without suspecting any
thing. followed with the hag and left it witli the
sharper in a room the latter had just engaged. In a
short time the fellow came down stairs bringing tire-
hag with him, and giving the key of the room to the
servant, made some remark about going some wiu-re
else. Hu then di-npire-arcd with Mr. Malone's proper
ty, and neither lire* thief nor his plunder have since
been beard of.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Anticipatory Use of trie Cross.
It is strange, yet well authenticated, and has given
rise to many theories, that the symbol of the Cross
was already known to the Indian* before the arrival
of Cortez. In the Island of Cozumel, near Yucatan,
there were several j and in Yucatan itself, there was
a stone cross. And there an Indian, considered a
prophet among his countrymen, had declared that a
nut Pm, bearing the same as a symbol, should arrive
from a distant country! More extraordinary still
was a Temple dedicated to the Holy Cross by the
Toitec nation Iu the city of Clmlnla. Near Tula irehi-
go, there is also a cross engraved on a rock with va
rious characters, which the Indians, by tradition, as
cribe to the Apostle St. Thomas. In Oajuca, also,
there existed a cross, which the Indians, from time |
imim-morinl. had been accustomed to consider ns a
divine sj nihol. Dy order ol the liishop Clvantcs, it
wire placed in a sumptuous chapel in the cathedral.
Information concerning its discovery, together with
a small cup, cut out of it* wood, was sent lo Rome to
Paul V., who received it on his knees, singing Hie
hymn “ Vexilla regi*." etc. Life in Mexico, by Ma
dam Calderon dc la llaica.
Colonel Charles Carroll has recently expended a
large ammnt from hi* own private purse to enlarge
and richly embellish the church ntCnrrol'ton in which
his honored ancestor Charles Carroll, of Carrollton,
worshipped for so many years, nnd which was erect
ed by him. He has nl-o erected a splendid monu
ment to tho memory of bis grandfather, und greatly
improved the surrounding grounds.
Canonical Sect*.—NVe lately spoke of tho old
lady who triumphantly pointed out the "Epistle to
the Roman*,'' and ire bed where one could he found
addi'i'Msed to the Pn.trduals f Tire-Catholic Mirror
happily retorts by telling us of a negro Baptist at the
South, who said to his Methodist master: “You’ve
read tin- Bible, I s’pose?" “Yes/’ "Well, you've
read in it of John tin- Baptist, hasn't you?" "Yes.”
"Well you never saw nothing about John tho Metho
dist, did you !” "No." “Well,den yon see. dare’s
Baptist* in the Bible, hut d< re aint no Mctliodret. mid
de Bil»lo’s on my side.” We leave our good brethren
of these sects to settle this knotty poiut among them-
aelvcB.—Banner of the Cron.
it all who suffi-r Irani tlDordered *t<imar)i*. and If von i
willing to be guided by advice, founded upon experience,
resort at once (don’t delay a day) to Hwfbind’s German
Bitters, prepared by Dr C. M Jackson, which, as an alter-
curative, an 1 invigornnt. stands alone and nnap
preached. General depot. 120 Arch street. Wc have tried
Bitters, nud know that they aro excellent fur the
es specific ‘ above. end2wl—nugS
-
NOTICE.—The steanrehip ISABEL will discon-
tin ne her regular trips for Key West nnd ||h- |
viina. until furl her notice. Tire- mails for the above places |
will be closed at this post oflu'e at half-past 6 o'clock. I*. I
M .on the 131 Ii and Both Inst., nnd on the 13th nnd 29th j
September, to he cuuvcyed by sailing vessels from Charles- I
ion. »ug6 COHENS A HERTZ, Agents.
Ni'TICI;—In pursuance of an older of Hie In- 1
v*v-j2* ferior Court. July Term, the ( |erk will receive, at '
hi« office, until the -J.'.th d iy of .September next. Plans of a !
COUNTY JAIL l" he "rooted in the City ol Savannah.
• h.e hundred d dints will be paid for an approved plan of
the same. By order of the Jirefices.
iuis'2 ' J'i||N I GUM.MARTIN. Clerk I c C c
r|i,\R1 ,| ~TiiN~AND SAVANNAH RAILROAD
COMPANY. JCl.T ‘Jtitli. 1854 —The hooks of sub
scription to the rapilal stock of the Chariest >n nnd Snvnn I
null Railroad, wilt be opened on the 26lh of September next
at the following pieces.to wit :
Charleston. Siilth etcher,
H ams—1> tiercs Cassard'B Hams, lunding from brig Jo
sephus. and for sale by
je21 COHEN A FQ3P1CK.
T IQfOHS. Ac —3 half; tpe* .1 .1 Dupuv ACo’s Uhl UtnVd
\.J Itiaodv. :t ilo Rochelle do. 3 do S.-ignette do. .'( pipes
M'-der Swan Gin. 10 cn«ks p.. r t Wine. 1" do Madeira do. 10
do Malaga do. 1 cask fine old Scotch Wui-kv. 1 do Jamaica
Rom. 1 do Si Croix d-. hbls Vlneg , r . 00 boxes n-soru-d
('ari'Iv. 26 cases Pickled Isibster. 26 do (tried Fruit, for sole
by julylfl MCMAHON A DOYLE.
"ITAI'dN AND LARI'—uflhlids pi Inn-ll.icoii Seles. 20 do
14 do do Shoulders. 60 tierces choice Mignr Cured Ham*
5o bids and 60 keg* prime la-<1 l.a-d. land'ng aud for sale
by j 21 SCRANTON. .IriflNSTfiV A CO.
FASHION AND FA.MINE,
I i Y .Mrs Anna S. Slepei,- in one v,l.
• > The fuikish Empire—Its hUh-rv. political nnd rell
gimre condition, its manners, customs. Ac., by E, Joy Mor
ris, late Charge at Naples.
Agatha Beaufort, or Family Pride, by the author of the
I’icke.
Lieber on Civil Liberty and seir Government. 2 vol.
The Pnlipbcr Pap-.s anew supply,
1 ly pit t in. >r New Foes wilt Old Faces, by C. King-ley.
author of Alton laick.
lim pet '* Magazine and Putnam’s, for August.
Godov's Ladies Book for Augest.
Westminister for July
Bluckwood's Magazine for Julv.
aug4 W THORNE WILLIAMS.
NOTICE TO FOUTVAItDING 31 Kit CHANTS
AND aLL OTHERS INIEltEalED.
rpiiE following reduced rules for freight destined for Mont
trial
nation and study
ii"*( moqilete »
«o u(l"t.l Th«r
lot nl the drugs them-.in-i. hut of 6,/
only ol Yegetjldeyetn diesevtrscleiilitrh**
1 a sl/rie of puntr. AnlctuHtit'l Pfe0.fru
i ns to insure the be-t re.oitl- This wi fj
i f.-. lire Heines ha- , n f'.und In the lh
'"s l-"ili. in pn«lue>- ,i mere ofBc'ent n
lilhert" been obtain, i l v suv prartn
rtlv ibvIi 'i? \VItil i'\ lire oM mid
•very insiliclne is bur l-ned wnli muitui -s
acrimonious qualiiies. by tbi- eneh ioiUviiJail v'
only that i- di sired for the curative effect i. pruent.
the inert and <)''ii"Xi"iis qualities of each suhnsnee tt-
ployed are left behind, the curative virtue* "'ih bfin; ,-t-
taioed. I ("lire it is -elfevidcul th" effect* ahrei.1-1 ptt-r» ** I
tliey have proved more purely remedial, nn ! ih* )
surer, more powerful antidote to disease than soy
medicine known to the world.
A* it is frequently expedient that mv ine<Vcin*« fh'.iill
b" taken mi er the counsel of an (it(ending PJiyddit
n* he could noi properly judge ot a remedy w itlmotkot
it mpo« t "ti 1 Ii iVcsu plied the acrurn'r V'r-B.l
which both my Pectoral and Pill* are mole loth* '
bo iy of Pr.ieiilioners in the United State* sri k
American Province* If however there »ii"ul) Git
■vho ha* no; received them, they will be puuaptlyfer
ed. ay mail t" Id* request.
of all the Patent Medicines that are nffettd. hoi
would he taken if their composition ws« ktio*n! Tbtii
lilt- consist* in their mystery. I have no niy*t-rn
lhecompo-itii.il of my prepar I'l- n* i* is'! <|--.'0|
men and eh who are cunia-tent t" ju''g" "a !!•*.'<
freely ackn •»ledge their ctravidioi.- InririalnU' z ;
Perioral was p
to he J
e b« o
inh.
Po
c.tlitr
Edislo Island. Gillisnnvllle,
Adam's Run. Beaufort.
Walterboro’, Gnihntn villa,
Ashcpnn, Hlnfflon.
nnd to he kept open until further n
CHARLES H HANCHEL.
jy30—Inn 10 Secretary and Trensun
Robertville,
Whippy Swamp
M usier Grouud,
Purysburg.
Ir.wtonville,
Blue House,
AVaNNAll ALBANY AND GULF It. It. CO.
An instalment "f ten per cent on the capital
stock of the "kit'iinn.'iti. Albany and Gulf Railroad Compa
ny is called by resolnti'n of the Board of Directors, paya
ble nt t lie Company's office. OR Jtsr -street. on the 2d day of
October next jy '29—law JAS. P. SCREVEN. Prts't.
MR. it A RROOKS. Historical Painter of the
Natii.nal Gnllerv. I ondon.havlngretiirned to Sa
vannah after nn atisenc- of twenty years, respectfully of-
f**r» hi* services »'• the rliizen*. and the public ('■ nerally, In
Portrait and Historical Painting, and restoring old pictures
Mr. Brooks furnishes and regilds every description of pic
turefran.es. Hi* collection Is on view in Stewsrt-street
Robert sville.
Orders left at his residence, or at Mr, John Poop*, wi)) be
punctually attended to. tf—ap23
J-'-jfS:,' 8 AVAN '.Ml AND CHARLESTON STEAMPAUK-
ETS.—Nmirr —After the 16th Inst . the steamers
GORDON and CALHOUN will leave Savatinah seml-weeklv.
on every Wednes< ay and Saturday evening, at 7o’clock,
and Charleston everv Monday and Friday evening.
ap7 S M. LAFFITEAU. Agent.
SOUTH CAKOLIiNA AND CENTRAL (GA.)
RAILROAD COMPANIES.
Mat 1. 1854.
NoMce is hereby given that on and after the first day ol
July next the South Carolina Railroad Company, Charles
ton, and the Central Railroad Company. Savannah, will
discontinue the free forwarding business heretofore trans
acted by them. Freighters will please cease on and afte
tho said first day of July to consign tiieir Merchandise to
the Railroad Agents respectively, as heretofore practised
R R. CTYLER,
President Central Railroad Company
JNO C ri.DWEI L.
mavll—3m President s C. Railroad Company
NOTICE TO VESSELS.
All Pilots nnd Captains of Vessels, arriving here from
foreign ports, infected with small dox or other diseases of a
contagious or malignant character, are required to bring
their vessels to anchor at the quarantine ground, opposite
Fort Jackson, there to remain, without communication
with the city or adjacent counties, until 1 am notified, and
vessels visited by me R. C. MACK ALL. M p.,
*' Health Officer.
It A AGE OP THE T1IEIIIUOIUETKU,
At the Book Store of S. S. Sibley. 135 Congress Street.
10o'clock. 2 o'clock. 6 o’clock
Monday. August 7. (-6 68 80
CO.UMEKCIAI.
Anvminnli Exports. August S.
FT. JOHN, (N II.)—llrig Roswell—101,947 fcetP P Tim
ber, nud 40.634 do Plank.
Snvniinnli Marlin. August O.
COTTON—No transaction" yesterday.
NEW ORLEANS, AUGUST 4.—Cotton—There was consid
erable inquiry yesterday, especially for the lower qualities,
and nearly 2,000 bales changed hands. Prices were easier
for the higher grades, and wo slightly modify our quota*
lions :
NEW ORLFANP CtAWirtCATlOX.
Inferior 6 (n't’ii I Middling Fair... 9%fo)—
Ordinary 6 (S’*4 1 Fair —(a)—
Middling 754076*. Good Fair —67-
Good Middling 8J4(S)t'«4 I Oood and Fine., —(a)—
COTTON STATED EXT.
Cotton—hales.
10.672
1.426377
1,600—1.427.037
1.437.609
1,385.110
360—1.385.460
yesterday..
Exported to date
*• yesterday
Stock on hand not cleared..
null, to Montgomery, over lire- Central, Macon and West
ern. Atlanta nml Lagrim-o-.aiid Montgomery aud West Point
Railroads. Goods iuteuded lor this line, should be marked.
•• via Atlanta.”
1st class measurement goods, per foot. 25 cents.
2d •• per 100 founds $1 40.
No wagoning o» tin* route, and good* Jiave quick despatch
Macon. Aug, 2,1854. EMERSON FiiOTF.
aug4—Im Superintendent M. k W R. R.
ALDERMAMC ELECTION.
New * Tu VOTERS.
REGISTRY Cl.OS'S OS THE l lli-r UoSOAV IS SECTEUUCR SFXT
S ECTION 2—He.it furVirr enacted by the autho.ily of the ' JJ°' S c
s.ime. That from nnd after the pas-a^e of this net. nil I
persons shall be qualilied to V"U-.it elrrlioim for Mayorand ■
Aldermen nf the city ofnvanmili ami the li i.nlt-t* thereof. '
who ureci'iz ns of the United State*. • uve resided In tiie ,
Flute of Geoigu. for one yeni iminedia'' ly preceding tiie | *»j*V>*"itl i^iT
election and within the corporate limiis of Favnnuali for | ,. ..p,,,.
f I'hy-b-i/tfi* have dc'-lnred the s.itnt thtfd
e\en more confidently, and "•* wikii.
t nni'c'pations were more than r*uiirilj
1 on tii A.
hv tiieir powerful influence on the iotrnil
vlieera lo purify the blnod and stimulate it lot" hf-.'.ht
action—reiiu ve th" nh*tructions of tire «'onac!i.
liver, and other organs of the boily. ipitorliig tlittrlmp-
t.ir action t» h-nlth. and by corroc'irg. «lrer*r»r they tv
i«t iu- li deranri-inent* ns are the lir-t oriK'.n nf direiw
Prepared hv JaMIH C. ATEK. Practical sad AnsMial
Chemist. LoweD. Ma*«.
Price 25 cents per box. Five boxes for $1. Sold by
W. W. LINCOLN. Savannah.
HWILANP. HARRKLI. k CO.. Chsrleiton.
jy8—eodVwlam And by Dnicgistsg.-D'Mur
tfnnv eniiti' i
nre Pills, and
t!'\ that tt.*-
their effec-- '
LIVER COMPLAINT, HYSIMOPSI A, JAO-
DICE. CHRONIC OR NEItVi.l S DLUlLlfY.
D ISEASE of the Kidn-y*. and all dreeaws arisingfrema
disordered Liver or stomach; *uch a* con*nm|'!;M.
Inward pi). «. fulines* of blood tu Ibe head, acidity • U»
stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust for food, lailntuct
weight in the stomach, sour eructati"ii. sinking or flu - .*'
ing nt tho p‘- "f tho stomach, swimming of tire Wife:
ried und di:'., ill breathing, fluttei ng »' tl.» h»»rl cl.'
ing or Miff.- 'ing sensation* when iu a !)'•'< pstirs.'i
ne-s of vi- • ■ ■. dotsiir wehbs before Ihe *igbt. frw
>1. deficiency o. ,
nl tiie skin M'-d i >c» paiii in the side. bar*. cb**t. li#"-
Are sudden flush*** nf heat, burning in tire fle*ti
agimng* .: evil, snl gieat depression of spirits.esa^
i- -tumIIn r ued by ()r. HoiirtAXP’.* Cf.'f.EltRATFf'fiL'-
prepared bv Dr. C. M Jaiiuox, 120Alt*-
«• .'uvunuttii mr | . „. ,, . 1,1.1.
uuu month immediately precedinff their registration, and' :* *’I" 1, ... |1
eon,In u, .In M, t ol nl-otfo.'.l,., h.., I 1 h ! ' P™" '™ J*" "ifuS.o
tiifned the age of twenti-oue \ ears, have paid all taxes nr 'Jl” n L b) anj ther p p .... .s,:«o» bsl
1,„. In im7 n»n right .uffltirnt r.nl ..l.ie tn »ny 1 i 1 '.'.' 1,1 *SW*»“
fnllr-1.
fSf* S* U ";™- *ln'h..ein..]. j - j,,,,, „„ »„ rth , n( ... .
- -ing great virtues in the rectification of d'wsre* <>•
:-r and le*-ei clan t«. exercising tire ni"-t sesrrhiDpi^*-
* in weakness and affecUun* rd tt ■ igesllveori»n-.t«J
e, withal, safe, certain and pb
nil returns required hr tire oidinance* of the city, and have I
been leui.ti red according t" the provi i- n* of this act.—
Ext tare from the lleui try t.u passed Jan. 22.1852.
AB p- r-. ii* r-ufill J !• \ t" 't* . in-.: u-of v..(fng at f he I
next elect ■ n f-.r Mayor and Aldermen • ! the city ofSavnn. j
null and hamlet* thereof, nn- required by law to call at my v v . . “ ." \ ilonflxnA'a celchrs-
othce before 2 o'clock. P M . on the Hr*t Monday in Septem. , ^?. w ' ork ” rn ”'" \,. r \ n Th A-
her next, and register the'r names, else they will be debar. ] l e '. l e .[ na i?. "_i‘'' ( , , -r , „
red the right of voting Ihemit. and w 11 be compelled to 1 .T "‘ on - * wr , . ', i / , k ,i 0f )tui
pay tlreir j oil tax and co-t ot tax execution 1 I JHuori- " n « v ‘’ u ' ’ ’ > r ' '' ' ... marfi
aug5 EDWARD Wilts', ’lerk of Council^ I il ]Z?vC Tmys!Y VlU" 30.18.M,.«W:
NEW AND AYONDKItrUL MACHINE. careful oh*ervntien. 1 nm convince' tlist v.u,rH«-B* M
WILLIAM ?r-.iDDARD. PATENTEE. i German Bitt-r*is a hotter article than R—-‘■•‘rT ;
HnilE subscriber having purchased tire right of the State j W’ 'a. R Ac. Gnegentlem.in. troubles •
l of Georgia in the only Machine now iuventeu for Rift-I pepsin, who has purchased hall a dozen oi tn
ing and Shaving Fhiugles. Barrel Mending. &o.. i* prepared sirs: "It is the only article he lias found "i*‘® „
to sell the right of countie* or single machines, nt pricesauf. ed him relief Now he is in a fair way of rec'iv /
ficiently low to make it an inducement for purchaser*. I Bud long -Y Fannders. Buffalo N> • *' rc * • '
The machine being simple in its construction, and not 'W* know from exp-rience. (>mi g u‘C' t ., j
liable to get out of ord"r. i* i-aiiable of splitting nnd sh*v-' fatnilie*.) that I'r. Ih-olland s t.erinau HJ cr
ing two thousand shingles per hour, better than made by 1 more than they are recommendedI to •
hand. It is portable, nn i can he worked by hand, horse or i E D. Baker, jr . Fundy Hit - N > ■ <j* n 1 • . lt ,
it power. Ten io Hfteen days wo.k of a machine will ' Every one who uses the German Hitter*
make couugh shingles to pay the price asked lor a single highest term* of It." .,M - - Yost
one. ; K. W. Fox.Pulaski. N Y. March 10^ B| . *•' 'M ?nc «
This Machine ran be seen in operation during the next Bitters are now well introduc' d 1 '.lcfulor*- io
week in-Ids city. All communication* after that time, in it a* a renredv.and shall seek teeularg
must be directed to the iiiidei signed at Augusta this community ” v rah 25 1M1.
jelO—eod'Jm TIIOF. P. STOVALL. ! a n.ir... A FnwUr I’mnrtiUeonsie. A. *
NEW BlJOKSl
R ECEIVED June 2. th. by F S. Sibley —The Iron Cousin,
or Mutual Influence—by Mary Cowden Clarke.
Iz-cturo* on the True, the Beautiful. nnd the Good—by
M. V Cousin, increased hy nn appendix on French Art,
translated with ths approbation of Al. Cousin, by O. W.
Wright-
The Pilgrim* of Walringham.a romance of the Middle
thi* community
A mini- k Fowler. I’nughkeCDsie. >
said : " The *nle nf your Hooflan-I hitler- bs- ttto J
rapid rf late It In'* obtained gre.' O-W 'J
They arc entirely vegetal..- ant :. • tlCB
ill' nt and nil Injure u* mere I ent- , **
tliev strengthen the svsiem ner. r i •''.* • •• . e.iL.
For sale in Savannah by Ll>*' * - • ,,, ,orf JC
0MOSS k CIV. T. M.TUI1SFJ1 t CO., J » »*»*
CO., and J H. CARTER k CU enmvvj
nvF Hi’YnREnnOLLARSRFWAUD—l or °7 ,
Age*, from the accomplished pen of Agnes Ftriekland.— fAj noston and hi* deliverv to me. or eon ®"*? 2 , '-»
Apart from it* superior merit, the wo.k itself is oneof /ft anv j fl || N o th*st lean ^ t ,,,m . .L frtU
marked - Iginality. No hooMn the broad range of modern about the first of June. 1852 be i* 6
Indeed, it be thefar-famecD-Arabian Night*” |„ c hes high, very black, high forehead, punj ™, #rM
fiction—unle _ ^ m , U mv».
—v.ill in any degree compare with it. From beginning to wPleVpa'cebeuVeenh?* upper front teeth m "VcumbT
end it is a volume of fascination hia feet rather out. he hu»a wile at Mr. ^ fChi
1.1 II IH n y,.mine Ui iaar.in.il mil hi* feet rather out, he hut a wile nl -ir. \„ f nur-
Gulley's L,dv’sIlo"k for Jul ; Gleason's Pletnrlal. Fur {jlribch cou »lv. fi«. near Stntesburo. by the
sale nt No. 135. Congre*».*treeL Je28 i« v . K..ran»ed to Jefferson B°y»'. n “ u , u
D UPONT’S GUNPOWDER.— Dupont’s Gunpowder con.
ati • ‘
I tv ; she formerly belonged to Jefferson f'lro b* **•
Bobbin. Scrlven county. Ga. When h ”l, ni a,|Mla>td
about Boyd's. 1 have heard he „ D j it'd
|ro*'s to Savannah pretty often
stonily for oak- at inanufoctorere.’ price*, by
COHEN k Ft IF DICK.
sp28—istf Agents for Dupont de Nemours .V Co
It is likely Ire ha* a pass an '
D
bsTilteS htoJJ*
snnsb »nd'J
v-v—nu /Ifjyin* I.'l ....uuu. - "" - ' . , *'"*
KSn.ST-vSWnu.i.M.
W
a,,29 HENRY W, VERSflLLE. !
FT*DWARO H. KEJfl'TON having purchased the entire
Jli Stock. Notes and Open Accounts of the late firm of
Kempton A Verstllle. will continue the luisinesann his owu
account at the old stand, and respectfully solicit* a con-
tinuauceof the patronage ol his friends aud the public at
larye ap3>
fnilE Subscriber having sold out his entire interest I n quarter cask* lu*. !»••"*« . ni * f 0 r «*■« •/
J tiie firm of Keinptnn \ Verstllle. to E. S. Kempton Wine; 10 do do Sherry wina.j *y* qis'N'KHAT k (l j.
and down the river nnd about Mr.
he will soon be caught. . _ nistrict ^ 0 '* 1
My address is Four Mile Branch. Barnwell re
Carolina.
nov2 wtf
/■INFS' BRANDIES, ke—3 ball pi[« ivt
' Reserve ” Madeira Wine; : 5 jODbaAO*
»..e. pure juice; 50 cases auparmr • n . ^ h|)f , r j
Hei.lsieck nnd Hungarian Jon ' Bf , n ^e* .
quarter pipes (third. Jean , n , rio j 0
HE.VRY IV. VKRFTN.LE.
lid respectfully solicit, iu hi* behalf, a continunnco of
that favor so liberally bestowed on the late firm
ap30! IIPVUV w vei
N OTICE.—AH persons indebted to the late firm of M.
I’hkndkrosst k Co . either by note or open account,
will pkase make immediate payment to either nf the un
deraigned. M. PRENDF.RGAFT,
ap20 L. J. GCUMAHTIS - - -
piGARS-20.000 No 1 U Norija Cigar-, just receive.! a'nd ’vV'Ruin. 00 IloTJatero Whi.ky.20do oM
Lr«r. by _ .H HVLAXD k O’NT.11,1 ■
TWENTY DOL'.ARF REWARD.—Runaway tram Roadi ll’s Tallow ilo. 30 bids and fi ' 1 no's k ISlVlL
the substriber. on lh« JOtli of August.a negro man for sale by mn.v31 M' j— •—
panted TOM. about forty yenrsold. stout and chunky jN pElSED aN R CLARIFIED Fl'GAR
July®
4J L'NDRlFF —20 ea*k* cinder llacon side-.A* • K ,
O *,..200 1.1,1, SVI.
Coll... 00 I'A... orm.n.j'b'. ,° n ‘“ 1 '.' dioi" I* 1
S'i»»L',k'V''.5VuW.iiw A.
Pea 11 Ftar. li <■»<I" Trea ’well's
ui*io,-<i noon i on o jr*'" ■ i KH V KII AND ( I. Alt IT ir.i' .'i ....
built, and has a mark resembling a feather or arrow N ' ' nr0 ppi, ctewart's A R A C Cla r, ®*l s 3*^* 1
onctnir at ttis hsos nf Ills nose and running UD th* I'riHlir'i Slid I'osdcrtll Su((tr, I*- (’it'll ' u
Sugnr. for sale by j V OOXNERAT
l >rckwm:A 1—In bids, half btdiTWex* snj' top- JU
JJ coived per steamer AUbaoa.and fyr»«(. ^ ffA rf9
eommonclng at the base nf the nose and running up th#
forehead, lie will probably try to get to Savannah, where
he hns spent several rears of runaway life, and was an in
mate of Savannah jail a good port of tho year 1840.
WILLIAM GERMANY.
I/»nn county. Florida, Fept 12.1653 seplB—dfcwtf
IqVriRS— loo'hbis priuT.rs'O Whl-ky. 60 bbl* fine and
CHAMPION k
i.J choice old Monongahid* Whisky, fid bbla Phelps’Gin,
40 do P & U do, SO do Brandy, for sale *
jjr7
UodifW***
WEBSTER k PALMES-
C ORN.—800 hail superior wbRaiCoro-
^..opbu., r.orn , CO