Newspaper Page Text
•ATVRDAT MORN1WO, JVltY
••iMdrlptlon Price! of Iftvammh Paper
Of common understnnillug, the proprietors and
publishers ol tho tliroo 'paper* Issued lu Savannah,
bare adopted the following unir rm rates of sub-
Mrtptlon, lo Uko this day; ,
Dally I’apor, |>or annum, in atlvnuno $0 00
Tri-Weekly “ “ 4 oo
Weekly, single copy, iu advance S 00
Weokly, five copies, lo ono add row 8 00
Weekly, eight “ 10 oo
Weekly, ten “ “ 12 00
Weekly, twenty “ “ “ 20 00
When not paid within ono mouth from the time
of subscribing the elurgo for the iVitly will bo mvm
dollars, and for the Trl-Weekly Jtw.
The Weokly will bo sent only to those who pay in
advance.
Tho plipor will luvarlahly ho dlscontlnod upon
tho expiration of tho time for which it has boon
paid.
Tho above rates to take effect frem and after thl
dato.
AUBCAKDKR k 8NKKD, R^ubUcan,
R. R. HU.TON k CO., Georgian if Journal,
THOMPSON k WnUlNQTON, Sews.
Savannah, July 1, i860.
FOR PRESIDENT:
JAMES BUCHANAN,
OP PENNSYLVANIA.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT:
JOHN O. BRECKINRIDGE,
OP KENTUCKY.
Electors for Use State at Large,
WILLIAM U. STILES, of Chatham.
IVERSON L. HARRIS, of Baldwin.
ALTERNATES FOR THE STATE AT LARGE.
IIENBY O. LAMAR, of Bibb.
AUGUSTUS R. WRIGnT, of Floyd.
DISTRICT ELECTORS.
1st District, Thomas M. Forman, of Glynn.
2d. District, Samuel Hall, of Macon.
3d. District, James N. Ramsay, of Harris.
4th. District, Lucius J. Gautrkll, of Fulton.
6th. District, John W. Lewis, of Cass.
6th. District, James P. Simmons, of Gwinnett
7th. District, Thomas P. Sapfold,of Morgan.
8th District, A. C. Walker, of Richmond.
alternates.
1st District, W. M. Nichols, of Clinch.
2d. District, Tucker, of Stewart. 1
3d. District, E. J. McGeiikr, of Houston.
4th District, J. F. Johnson, of Fayette.
6th District, L. W. Crook, of Whitfield.
8th District, R. McMillan, of Habersham.
7th District, J. S. Hook, of Washington.
8th. District, .
THE OLDER I GROW, THE MORE IN
CLINED I AM TO BE WHAT IS CALLED
A STATES RIGHTS MAN.—Jam™ U it ch
an an'i speech on the admission of Arkansas, in
1836.
I FULLY ENDORSE THE RESOLUTIONS,
•AND MAY FURTHER SAY THAT I AM
WHAT IS CALLED A STATE RIGHTS
DEMOCRAT•—John V. Breckinridge in re
sponse to his nomination for the Vice Presulcn-
cy.
Job Printing Promptly, Neatly ami
Cheaply,. Done.
The public in general, and our .Democratic
frionds iu particular, will remember that there
is connected with the Georgian Jounxul es
tablishment one of tho most thoroughly equip
ped job offices in this section of the Union. If
we arc correctly advised, some of tho most
beautiful specimens of job work overdone in
Savannah have lately passed from under em
presses. Give us a trial.
Our facilities enable us lo execute every 'de
scription of letter press work from a mammoth
poster to tho smallest curd, and from a book to
a circular, with ueatness and dispatch, upon
the most satisfactory terms.
Orders from ail parts of the country will re
celve prompt attention.
-ii-iLLi— 1 .* ,i f*-.",. 1 *. ■. ■.iji
SST Subscribers who maybe neglected by
our carriers are requested promptly to give no
tice at the oflic e.
BY TBXiBG-RABBC
Nomination tor Governor
New York, July 25.—The American Con
vention has re-nominated Governor Gardiner
for Governor of Massachusetts.
The Convention was in session nil night, and
great excitement prevailed.
still later.
The Americans of Massachusetts, have re-nomi
nated all the present State officers. One hun
dred and fifty I’illinoreites withdrew from the
Convention which sat all night. The Coroner’s
Jury which had under consideration the
deaths by the accident on the North Pennsyl
vania Railroad, denounce Hoppel the Conduc
tor, and censure the Company. An Important
Commercial Treaty has been concluded with
Venezuela. The New York Whig .State Con.
vention have endorsed Fillmore.
Herbert Acquitted.
Washington, July 24.—The Jury in the
ease of Herbert have just returned with a ver
dict of acquittal.
NcW York Market.
New York, July 25.—The cotton mail.et is
dull, with prices iu favor of the buyer. The
flour market has advanced Oil.
Apologetic.—A brief editorial notice of
the case of tho Young America Fire Company
is necessarily laid over until our afternoon edi
tion. So of other matters.
Mr. Potts, of Havnden’a Express*, has our
thanks for a copy of tho New York Herald in
advance of the mail.
Tho Republican promises that if we se
riously doubt that J. C. Culhoun, applied tho
terms “rogues and royalists” t* the Democrat*
ic party, it “will go to work and hunt up the
document.” Well, gentlemen, onr doubts are
seriousyou can therefore commence at
once,your explorations. And while engaged
In them, it will i\ot be . amiss to secure mate
rials to fortify several oilier positions, taken by
Mr. Batfow in his letter.
For example : though he does not deny hav
ing in his speech designated the Cincinnati
Convention us a “gathering of political trick
sters and gamesters,” he attempts lo avoid the
force of our objections to language so unjust
and discourteous, by saying that lie hud no re
ference at all to individuals. While this, n H
regurds his personal relations to the delegates
may be held as suflicicut disclaimer, in other
aspects it amounts to very little. What was
thut Convention but a collection or Individuals,
a congregation of units? If a “gathering or
political tricksters and gamesters,” it must
havo been because the individual members
who composed it were (with whatever excep
tions) tricksters and gamesters. And unex
plained, this language abroad will be held to
bear with peculiar 1'orco upon tho representa
tives from Georgia. The natural conclusion
will be, that though, as regards others, the
speaker's charge could bo but a sweeping asser
tion, made without reference to any facts In Ids
possession, as regards Georgia’s dcleguies ho
must have had something upon which to base
bin denunciation. As explained, these gentle
men are, of course, in somesort relieved.
Mr. Bartow however still thinks “that politi
cal management, party spirit, and Holtlsb
schemes had great ascendancy in that body”—
m?ffie a ^“ch5iS«3ll
umonysuddenly infuwed lntoita opinions be
fore so discordant! for tto. wjmdUtfouofMr.
Pierce and Mr. Douglaa/whlle embracing their
principles and proclaiming ^at least In the
South an issue on these' principles paramount
to tdl others. I cannot reconollo the high
sounding slavery resolutions, with tho selection
of Mr. iiuchanau.who in 1848, believe Ir. the
power of Congress to proh It shivery in tho
territories, and in 1860 gives In his adherence
to tho doctrine of Squatter Sovereignty, who
expressed Free-Soil opinions concerulug Texas,
end did not before lus nomination give eveu
bis approval to tho Kansas bill,
It will require a somewhat tedious “hunt”
to discover documents that prove all that is hero
asserted. As for the inconistencies of the Coil'
veutlon—wc, ut least, are ignorant of them.
True it nominated Mr. Buchanan and not Mr.
Pierco nr Mr. Douglas. It could not nominate
them all. But t he principles proclaimed were
no nioro those of the candidates “repudiat
ed” tlrnu of tho candidate nominated. In re
gard tathe “harmony suddenly Infused into
its opinions,”—we assert that upon the great
question ut Issue beforo the country, there was
from first to last, nothing but harmony of opin
ion—unanimity iu the committee on resolu
tions, uuauimity iu the Convention, unauiuiity
sublime and unparalled—from begiun'ng to
cud. Against the Nebraska bill, tho fugitive
slavo act or any ono of the constitutional
rights of the South not ono voice was
raised, True, delegates had their prefer
ences ns to men :--prefereuees which ns
patriots they were bound to surrender, and did
surrender, when overruled by tho requisite ma
jority.
But Mr. Bartow cannot reconcile the selec
tion of Mr. Uuehanau, with tho high soundiug
Slavery resolutions.—Mr. CulUouu couhl were lie
alive. lie asserted,years since, that “Mr. Buc-
hnuan had habitually indicated correct feelings
ou this question.” Iu IS IS ho opposed, with
all his might, the.prohibition of Slavery hi tho
Territories by Congress—at .a tirao when
Mr. Bartow’s favorite and all his Northern sup
porters were the friends of the Wilmot 1’ro-
vLso ! Thut helms in 1S56 given in his ad
herence to Sqntter Sovreignty.we utterly deny,
as we do that he “expressed fre.*soil sent iments
cimcerniig Texas.” Though, like thousands
of men who have lived and died in tho South
not an advocate of Slavery iu the abstract, ho
contended that the South had a right to bo
protected by tho Federal Government in her
domestic Institutions, and believing that “Tex
as would become a dependency of England,
unless it should bo annexed to the United States;
nud that, through the agency Jof English abo
litionists, a servile war would be lighted, en
dangering the existence of the Southern States,”
lo was warmly iu favor of bringing Lor jnto
the Union, notwitstanding her domestic in
stitutions. Mr. Fillmore’s position was that Ac
would never consent to her admission until she
abolished slavery.—Yet his friends havo now
tho sublime audacity to criticise the course of
Mr. Buchanan, who both spoke and voted iu
favor of that measure.
“Mr. Bucliauan did not, before his nomina
tion, even give his approval of the Nebraska
bilk” Unfortunately, Mr. FUJiporo gave it his
approval neither before nor after his qomina
lion. On the contrary, he condemned it before*
he was nominated, nud he condemned it since
ho was nominated. But is this last quoted as
sertion correct ? We trow not. What says
the record ?
Speaking of tho rcsosolutions of tho Demo
cratic Convention of Pennsylvania, Mr. Bu
chanan said, in a letter written May 8th (four
weeks Irafore his nomination): “They (the res
olutions) met my cordial approval from the
moment when 1 first perused them on the other
side of the Atlantic.” One of them was in
these words:
“Resolved, That in the repeal of the act known
as tiie Missouri Compromise uet, and tho pas
sage of the act organizing the Territories of
Kansas and Nebraska, free from unconstitution
al restrictions, the last Congress performed a
work of patriotic sacrifice in meeting the de
mands of sectional excitement, by unsjiaken
adherence to the fundamental law.”
Tliis resolution, with Mu Buchanan’s endorse
ment dated May 8th, shows that he did ap
prove the Kansas act before his nomination.
Mr. Bartow was, therefore, mistaken in regard
to this, us in regard to nearly all t he other facts
involved in his censure of the Cincinnati Con.
vention and its action, Nor can he seriously
believe thut its nominee “has no other recom
mendation for tho Presidency than his
patixnnshi.p” He knows, wus/ know*
that Mr. Buchanan is a statesman of
superior intellect, of varied, and distinguished'
public services—a devoted friend of tho Union
—through, long years the .South’s unflinching
defenderngaiufit the assaults of her enemies.
He knows, and must know, llmt Mr. Buchanan
alone call save the South from the humliintion
of a Black Republican triumph, and tho deg
radation of Black Republican rule over her.
In view of all this, and more, we demand from
Mr. Bartow that he descend from preaching to
practice, that he exemplify his lofty superiority
to party, by tho support of one who merits
the'anilrages of Southern men, irrespective of
party—-that he make one of the noble band of
Dixons and Benjamins, and Kerrs, and Jenkin
ses,—the very elite of the Whig leaders of oth
er and palmier day,—who with hosts of others
are now battling, not for honor, not for office,
but for the Union and their rights under the
Democratic flag. Will lie do this? We fear
not. And why ? Because we believe that
without knowing it, without dreaming of jti
lie is laboring under a delusion.
We suspect that without imagining it, lie is
one of the veriest of partisans, lie is opposed
to political conventions; Imt it is to conven
tions which meet ut Cincinnati and Milledge-
viile, not at Philadelphia and Macon. In tho
lust named he was a prominent actor. He would
not have the country subjected to party rule;
but it is tho party rule of Democrats, not of
Whigs or “Americans.” He is averse to party
nominees for the Presidency;—that is to say,
when they are the nominees of tho Democratic
party, chosen at Cincinnati,and happen tube
Buchanan and Breckinridge. When nominated
at Philadelphia, they turn out. to be Fillmore
and Donelson, the ease Is altered. And so the
difference is world-wide whether tho party rule
and party Presidency are tho.se of the Ameri
can or of the Democratic party.
Wan Mr. Bartow ever known, in apolitical
election, to support other than a party candi
date ? Perhaps he will say yes—iu tho case of
Mr. Cobb. But is he suVo that his /cal was not
inflamed by the fact that a majority of the
Democrats of the State were then in opposition
to that gentleman, lie last year supported
Judge Andrews, an old Democrat. Would he,
had the Judge been tiie Democratic nominee ?
Yet we doubt not Mr. Bartow honestly sup
plies himself far above thu Jullucueo of party.
Others Judge more wisely—and, may wo not say
more generously. For how can opposition to
Mr. Buchanan, under all tho existing circum
stances, be justified unless on tho ground of in
vincible partisan prejudices. Ou this ground
alone wo excuse him, mid n multitude ol'othcrs
whoso patriotism is above Impeachment/
A joint stock conpany has boon organized in
Paris, to facilitate gambling. The Directors
stale that, having found by experience that
Bourse speculation on a. largo scalo only cuu
succeed, they are desirous of extending tho as
sociative principle to small capitalists, dorks,
tradesmen,widows, Ac. They represent that
during tho lust five mouths they have distribu
ted among their shareholders the enormous
dividend of 27 per cent., over and above!) per
cent, for expenses of mnuagcinent. Thoy pro-
pose increasing their capital from 4,000,000f. to
25,000,OiHJf., by tho iiimio of shams ut 250f. each,
so that now is tho time—if wo believe them—
to realize great gains with no labor or risk.
ProccMllng« ot CiimII.
Savannab, July 24,1866.
Council met: Pmepl, Hii Honor. Edward C. An
dcr*ou, Mayor; Aldcrmou Alloa, Champion, DatVn-
ger,"I.acUUson, Cohon, Posey, nud Arnold.
Tl uituutes of the hut regular »utl epuclul meet-
of Couuoll wonrroiui and eunUruied.
t’ho Infill inatiou and Fine Dockets ware read and
cc nUrntu
HBIMRntU HY OKUINANIS.
Alderman Arnold, oi the timuUl Cuuuultteu to
report ou the petition ot thu Heultli Ofllefe relative
to uhuruos, Jso., reported by ordiuunce.
Ilia Honor, the Mayor, Chairman or tho Sped a"
Committee to report relative to the embarkation
Trout thU port ol‘ u eg roes lor Llberlu, reported by
ordinauce.
KMUK1U MAD AND ADOI'IKU
The Committee on Public Sales aud City Lois, to
whom was referred tho petition or K. It. Bacon,
report:
It appears that lot No. 4, New Frank!,lu ward,
was purchased by petitioner ut aheritl ’s sales, us
tho proporty of lira Itto Johu Doyle, who held the
satuo under lease, which will expire iu May uext.
Thore Is a lur go amount duo for ground rent, and lor
which the lot has been re onto. ed. This rent must
be paid by Mr. Uauou, or the lot Must bo sold. The
petitioner desires a renewal or his lease, or per
mission to remove Uls dwellings, or lu lutvu lus same
valued and bought by tho city.
Council has no pewor to renew tho lease—(see
ordinance passed January, 1851, fur disposing or
tho city lute in New FraukBb ward, p gee 122 and
123.) The lot, thorufnre, must bs »uiu at thu ex
piration of the leaso, iu the manner prescribed by
said ordiutucu.
Thu Committee cao fled no w.iitun loasu, uud
thereiore they do not know whether the buildings
uro the property of the oily or of the lessee. Un
der this doubt they thereiore recommend Uul Mr.
Bacon have tun days allowed him to remove his
buildings on the oxpIraUou of his lease, aud tho lot
bo then sold under tho provisions of the nbovo
mentioned ordinance.
B'JtOMUN CoilEN, Ubairmii
Tho Committee on Public rales uud City lots to
whom was referred tho petition of Frederick Alex-
under Fiuk, praying u separate tiiraTor his half part
of lots muuberu I 3d 40 Eibert Ward, bugge I leave
to report.
It uppuirs thut-Abram ShuUull puruluuud lot 40
Elbert Ward, on which u ground real is due oi
$36|pur* nun. uud tliatllauuuli aud Judith Bla-flall
purchased thu uUjoiug let No. lu on which there Is
payable an uuutiulground rent or $30, that these
two lots were lu July 1825, (ace records iu Clerk
Superior Court, book H. U. It. pages 51) and 61,)
divided between the then owners by a lino running
cost uud wort, uud Judith and Hannah shultull
became tiie owners of tho northern half—ouch hav
ing forty live feet lrout on Joll'erstm stropt, uud
ruuuing thence ono huudrud uud twenty to the eas
teru lino of lot No, 88 Klbort WarJ-—theso lots
thus divided are now owned us follows: Thouorth-
sru half by Frederick Alexander Fiuk, aud thu
rioytjip.i'A half by Mrs. YirgiuiuShertall
four Co//;uiiitoe'Ueemlug this ease within the ordl
milieu reuumuiim4 j.ljut separate titles do issue lo
Frederick AloxauUwr Fink, ayd Mrs. Virginia Shef-
tall, for their respective i>ortibi»s.
Thu Coiumltloe on Public Salos and City U4s lo
whom was referred tho potitlon of Miss Mary E.
Demure, praying Council for a Icu-u of lot No. 14
Fibers \yun| p nt au annual rent of $200 thut be
ing the stim at ^limit said lot was rented in 1835,
bug leave to report: Tbn) the facts of Urn ease—
tho incrwisod value of city*prQperiy-^aml thu action
of a previous Coillicfl—all pye.clade £iiy ityerfer-
unco by tho present Hoard pf'Aldormeu.
It appears thut iu December 1SA4, flio jtoljllouor
presented her pctiliuu on tills subject, and pjj tho
28th of the month, the Committee on Public ^atos
und City J*ols, reported that she could have said
lot for one year, frem 6th July 1855, provided sho
ucn.oplod tho terms on or before 1st of May 1865.
Your Ccmjieltteo can sou un reason to revorsu thu
decision bf liiu Jutn Council, and recommend thut
Miss Demero be pbrmi^gd to remain the lessee of
the city ut an uuiiuuV rent' *1(10. payable quar
terly. your CemmlUoooarubsfiy'deioriJ to com
ply' with .lh'» of ll| o petltloitor, Gilt toll
themselves yostryjii/td b}' the fuels of t1iu elis6, dud
the doi'Diou of our jwodecesw*’.
sOl.oSlON flDJJKN, ftolrroan.
The Commlttoo on Public F$los and $,ty fo
whom was referred the puli dim of johu Cass pay
ing a renewut of his lease on lot No 16, Now Frank-
lin Ward, respectfully report, thut Council hag jio
power to grant thu prayer of tho petitioner. Coun
cil In January 1661 (seo ordinances passages 122-123)
pac?od itu ordinance, which is still in jorco, by
which all Il;e leased property in Now Franklin
Ward was lo Be s$Jd .ou tho expiration of the loose.
The committee cannot S.*vj .the original lease, und
therefore do not know to wlid/n tho improvements
belong; and therefore rocoinmeudthiiflliey.'.e re-
gtr<fp(J ns tho property of tho lessee, and that*he
have until fhe 16th day of November next to re-
move the same , w 1 that tlm Marshal advertise und
sell said lot ou tho \ir»i tyvbduy in November next
upou ilio terms sot forth iu .tue ^b/q/u ordinance.
The jea.se expired .ot) Jim Ad'May J.3f>d, a»d your
committee rwvdHimmd lho,t the Marshal bj direct-
ed to collect tho mil. upiwdiug to Uio terms ortho
leaso (now expired) from fifcsajd .'{i) day or May.'
The Committee ou the Yo'ing Aujerjdff'jrg Com
pany read thu following report—viz i
MAJOIUTV RKI'OUT.
The undersigned, a majority ortho commlttoo lo
whom was referred tho memorial of the Young
America KI/@ Company, hog leave to report us fol
lows :
The Legislature oi having conferred upon
the Mayor »nd Aldermoh .of .faj/agmiJi tho power
to establish an “Knglno Company^’ in ili^j cjty.
“subject to such ruloa «ml regtilatioua ‘/or ilieir
government and conduct as shuif bo prescribed ' by
the said corporation,’’ they did establish und or
ganize such a company, by the ordinace of 1626.
under tho name of the ‘-Savannah Fire Company,’’
To make the organ!zdtiou complete and elfective,
the ordinance proceeded to make lawful certain
things before unlawful, and tho coutrary. And bu-
on use tho apparatus necessary to tho pcrlbrancoof
its dutios was to bu kro’/idvd at tho expense of the
city, paoper regulations 'wefc y;adato preserve it
from abuse und decay, and onsiiro its' rhftuiocr.a to
meet every emergency. ' :
II was obvious that the city authorities, from the
very naturo of their constitution, would be unable
to concenlrate their energies and resources amid
the confusion unused by un alarm of flro. It was
necossury to eye*.to gu ugout, in whom should bo
vested tiio whole authority o.I'Uih city, lor tho pur
peso of accomplishing tl)d end of i|s appointment.
It was necessary, too, that th'o powers pf this
ugont should he plmiary, and free from »ll hijert.er-
eticc on the part of thu priucipal, until restrained or
revoked. Otherwise Its appointment would have
boon nugatory. Where the principal uttompt* to
control the agent iu tho exorcise of tho discretion
given, ho deieats his own object, exclusive pow-
or3 cannot he, at tho samo time both Uoligntod and
reserved
It plainly appears, ny an J imped ion of the ordi-
nanceofl62ft, that tiio Couacif wlflob passod it,
acted on such Ideas. For it was curefu/, uqf. only
to permit many things to the members of 'the V-a-
vanuah Fire Company, in their oltiuial capacity, at
i Urea, which on any other occasion uo person could
do without, violating the laws, und to prohibit
many things to all other persons, which, on any
otlior occasion, oyorj* one was at liberty to do; but
expressly to turbid dvun the Mayur aud Aldermon
tliemselives to “interfere in any upm^nr with the
said firemen hi tho exerciso of tho I'unctlons ws'gii-
ed to them.” (ord. p. 187.) Aud it is made lueir
duty” to assemble ultiio place of said tiro to enfoveo
the provisions of tills ordinance,” (p. 187,) by pre
serving order, ip/if rendering to the firemen all thu
: assistance they can. J.ndto inuknlt still clearer
that no power was reserved in tfiy regular city gov
ernment, it lsordaiiiod"-- , that lu ,uaxu /,*f fire, the
Chief Fireman shall have tiie supremo aud absolute
conuuund of tiie firemen, of all persons connected
willi tiio F;ra Department, and tiie entire appara
tus tlmt may bo deployed for the extinguishment
of Urcs; aud in tho iibsn;mp of tho suid Chief Fire
men, Die above supreme authority .shall dovolvo on
sonm other llrumai) or firemen, , uccoriJ T l j I ’g to such
urrutigemonl us shall havo been previously proyjd-
c«* by thu Fire Company for such omergoucy,’’ (p.
183.)
it mnybocujd tlial what prucodes, applies ouly
to cases of actual Uni; ijnd Unit, in those casos, the
supremacy of tho Company Js ijof douled. Lotus
see if it stops there.
The same motives which iuducod the IpmoUoft
of the Fire Company, uud the delegation of such
absolute supremacy iu times oi'omorgoucy,' would
seem to require that jt should bo iu u condition to
act always with efficiency. R would have boon
utterly Inconsistent uud inconvenient fq entrust it
with such unlimited command, uud to resume con
trol ns scon as each particular occasion might ter
minute. The apparatus might have passed Into
iiuiids unaccustomed i<> the cure of it, und might
thus havo become unlit for use wbuii moat wanted.
It wus evident that those especially Interested to
keep it in order wore tiio proper persons to buvo it
in continual care. Therefore the 7th section of tiio
ordinance declares “tlmt tho said cotnpauy shall ha
empowered to take charge of and to have the
care und management of all tho engine-
houses, engines, bucket*, fire-hunks, fire-host, lad
ders, ami oilier implements fur extinguishing
(Ires tlmt now belong ta or may liereafier be provi
dud by Council.” (p 183.) In tlmt suction there
is no reservation. And the grant of power Is com
pleted by tiie 40,1 Hoctiou, (p 182) which authorizes
the Company “to make and establish u system of
by-laws, which they inav ulior qr amend at pleas
ure, for the miiimgeinuiii und direction of said Com
pany, provided Hindi by-laws shall not be contrary
to Die provisions of this or any MheV nrdhmm.o.“ •
Thus, if wJl bo been, thu .Savannah Fire Company
was In vested willj Rju most uinplu iiuwera to'aitalu
the two-fold object ofiis existence, viz: to uxtin
guisli fires, mid to kenji Dm i*ppj|fal.ns in good or
dor. it might not only dictate in phut mininur the
apparatus should Im used ut fires, and by'wljujp,
Imt how itHhoidd lie disposed di al oilier thmii. In>
word, tliero was nothing which It might nut do with
tiio apparatus, at utiy limn or place, within the
limits of (he city, consistent wyb t|iu trufct roposOU
in it. Nor have (huso |Ki\ycrs until ruce;;Dv houu
drawn in question. The Company, guthuriug its
members f rom among our most yaluubjo and re
spected citizens, bgs goim op from year to year, al
ways Justifying (lie hopes entertained of it. it lias
proved Urn wisdom of the ordjimmm pj' and
the Hitloiy with which sa «in«h authority apd/m-
Hpoiisildliiy might he . coniiihnl lo limn uiixious on
ly for llm public good, and imrowanltHi save by
tho pla'.dils oflhelr follows.
A<lon|! s llm material of Die dupurtmotit was
homogeneous, It wus heard of only wlieu engaged
in pvdtev.tipg property. But the Introduction ot' a
new element hyw ;jmdo it a bourou of coustuiit
xolicitmlo. WUhln.a few years, voluuteer Flro Com
|iaiiies have Jtaeii formed .fid fucorpunted,
and provided with unghms «l Ihy oxiiepsupl' the
City.
Tho Oglutlmrpo ami Was hi listen Flro Comjqmjv’s.
; propared, It la to bo pM
By D imrt^cUtura 4 thwaro'ckarlymAdj?iiobordl-
nnto totho&ivannah FfroOompany, by the clause,
the urns verbatim, In etch charter—-which
declaroe that the Company to in incorporated “shall
faithfully perform 4hi duties of flramau and be sub*
Juctcd to the dlreetion or the Chief Fireman
of the Savannah Fire Company, of which company
the first two officers shall be cx-officis additional
members, and HUbJect to all Its rules aud regula
tions; and nothing in this act shall be so construed
as to make “tho company so Incorporated, “Inde
pendent oftho City Council of Savannah, but that It
shall bo subject to such ordinances of said Council
as now are, or horoaftor may be made.”
[Oglethorpe Fire Company charter Fain. Laws,
1847, p. 118. Washington Flro Company charter,
council is not cane a upon to
petition any* further. Neverthelus
E stitloners insist 'that they havo i
earing, we recommend to the Co
Pam. laws, 1641 ’60, p,185.]
It thus appears from tho vory charters asked aud
obtalnod oftho Legislature by these two companies,
that they voluntarily placed themselves lu tbesame
relation to tho .Savannah Fire Company, as Is sus
tained by tho rospoctivo branches of that company,
and subjected thu apparatus, with wblok they were
supplied, to Its discretion and control, ir, theu, the
Savannah Fire Company might dispose, at its owu
pleasuro, of tho properly of tho city not .n tho
hands of tho uew companies, (as wo have soon it
could, under tho ordinances,) why might It uot
equally! dispose of that In their bauds, belli boing
held under tho same laws? The ceaduslon is In
evitable.
But wo aro not left to tho ordinances alone for our
luroruiation on this subject, Wbeu the Ogtothorpe
and Washington Firo Companies applied to Council
for cuginos, they were referred to thu Savannah
Flro Company. That body grautod tho peti
tions on certain conditions, which may bo found
on pages oleveuaud twelve of tholr printed by laws
and regulations. One condition is as follows: •'that
lu case of any act of Insubordination, or violation
or the rules, or firo ordinances, the engine Khali bo
taken from thechurgu oftho petitioners or their
successors.” Not until thosoderms were accepted
did either of (he new Companies receive its eugino.
And being mado upou tho rcferenco by Council,
they hud, of course, the implied Hauctlou of Coun
cil. But with or without tlmt sanction, they were
oalld by vlrluo of tho 7th section oftho ordinance
of 1825, and by tho osseut or the petitionoers, and
they wero bound by thorn. Bound too, to accept
tho Savutumh Fire Company lor tholr Judge; for no
authority or tribuuul heiug designated in the con
tract, to decidn when it has hoeu violated, It follows
that the Savannah Flro Company Is, at leaut In tho
first lustauce. the only Judge.
As might uavu been anticipated, the freo and
fearless spirit or the whito firemen brought them,
after u lime, lu collistou with the department. In
their inomeuts oi excitement thoy forgot tho neces
sity of implicit obedience, uud the fact tlmt they
wero but voluuteers upou a general system, whose
rules they had promised to observe, If their organ
ization should bo recognized.
Thu |}rat instance of collision took place in 1853.
The Oglethorpe FJrjr Cpmpatiy was deprived of Its
otigluo by tho Savaunah J’ire Company. They coin-
plulued lo Council that they had llttf hail a proper
heurlng. Council then sent the cosu hack to the
Savannah Firo Company,“with directions to give tiio
defendants a lair uud impartial trial for theoQ’ounes
charged ugtuiil thorn.” That was done, und thu first
■entuuce ropeatoJ. At u subsequent meeting of
Cquuoll, a petltioi was proseutod by tho Oglethorpe
Fird"Comyauy, 11 asking an investigation elore
Council,” \c. ' Unfier flrne circumstances, tho po
titlen was referred to a spfcotai tamnpuee. Alder-
muu Arnold, its Olmirmau, Kubmillo'd bu ubro re
port, which coutuius the following passage :
“ U will thus be seen that tho Savunuuh Fire
Caoinpuy has'full and exclusive authority in the
p'fcintscs, aud jljat Council could not interfere iu
any matter of mcio qispjplin?. As It is not alleged
UiM*py of ‘“.0 provlll.vi/s ty"uny qrityuiiM ip-p vl-
oUta.j |H ll|0 miUer complainea df, tt navlng peeu
a Dial lor aisobpgipg prdprs. yo'tir CJhthlitted are
of opluion that llloy 7ms-t» »ifl mrisjj.ctjoh $ h. ’? *
And <u pursuance of tlm fiumufA, flji] grdinauce
of 1853 was iiassed; (Ord.. p. 215,; by th(j $q op
tion of which it is ordained :
“ That no cistern, engine house, engine, fire-plug,
ladder, fire-hooks, uuckelp, uxfls, nor any other pu
perly or upparutus used for uxtliigul)-hi|)g Ures, be
ta tq»o»g to tho city of i.uvunnah, shall bu utetl at
any life, Ly yuv person or persons, exceptuudor
thu direction, inanage;neut aud control oi the Na-
vannah'Fire* Oottiiiluiy^ through its acting Chief;
aj|tl all ordors given ti» any*IliMbcofnpaiiy, phroogh
sifid anlilia' thief, or any motoberaf tbe.fc'Abairtmh
Fire Company, toiling ]*y his orderrf, Khali be obey
ed by all fire e.bmpapi^s, vHinDmr noting first or se-
Pl)Jeers be urpsoiu o)>i' n^'.V“‘ ' • ' '
the memorial.
For the** r^Mooi wo are of opinion that
Council la not called upon to cotuldor this
. - - ■*- - ^feyertholMAj -hccauao tile
o not had a fair
_ r w , Council to follow
the precedent made by tho Board of 1853, and
refer tiio potitlon ,to tho Savannah Flro Company,
that tho Young Atnorlcu Firo Company nuiy have
another investigation according to iha by-laws of
tho Iftpartment'juid that the englno aud apparatus
remain In tho poeeceslon oTthe Savaunah Fire Com
pany, to await their decision.
Wo add In conclusion, lhattho rase of the Ogle-
therpo Hre Company has been referred to only by
way onilustratlon. Tlmt Company now owns Us
engine, and cannot be deprived ofit.
wo add further, that wo have not eonsldered the
coiporate rights and powers, either of the Savan-
uah.orof the Young Amor lea Fire Company, be-
cause we cannot k perceive such consideration to
havo any connection with tho quostlon before us.
The Tormor derives Its authority,not from any char
ter grouted by the Legislature, but from tho Mjyor
and Aldermen, through tho ordinances of 1825 and
1863. The latter, while made subordinate by the
very ternu or its chartor, can nover bo deprivod nr
its cuporate existence, nave by 'decision of a court
of Justico,
Trusting tbat the importance of the subject
matter will be a sufficient apology for the length ef
this report, it is rospectfully submitted
, WM. 8. BASING EH,
SOLOMON COHEN,
HOBT. LACHI.1SON.
July 24, 186U.
[T<> UK UOM’LL’nXII.]
Vavnnnnlx Market, July HO.
COTTON.—No transactions to re|K)rt in this article
yesterday. $'
MEMPHIS, July 21Currox—The tlmlted receipts
and stocks prevented any transactions of imtu, and
tho few sales made rangofrom 6Jj lo 10‘,'c.
Wbkat.— But little arriving, und.huyera are offer
ing IftaOOc for fair und 06atl ror strictly choice.
Some contracts for limned into delivery bay,e. been
made within tho past lew doy' at 90c.
piping JiilcUigcuce.
Furl of Ssvammh JULY 26
Trouble in Ireland.—There wan u serious
outbreak among the Tipperary Militia on the
6th, owing to the allcdged bad faith of the gov
ernment iu discharging them und taking away
their arms aud clothing. One thousand troops of
the lino were immediately telegraphed for, who
quelled the riot after killing three and wound
ing twelve. AU was quiet by last accounts from
Ireland.
UiMhattiiii Association.
AU parsons in favor of James lluchauun aud
John 0. Breckinridge for-President und Vice
President of tho United States, are requested
to meet at St. Andrew’s Hall nt 1ml f-paat eight
o’clock on Monday evening, 28th Inst., for the
purpose of organizing a Buchanan and Brack-
inridge Association for Chatham county. Col,
A. R. Lawton, and Hon. John E. Ward, will ad
dress the meeting.
By order of the Executive Committee of the
Democratic Party.
Arrived.
gteeumur Win gcubrook, Pock, Chuih/Uon, toSP
Brook*-.
Steamer Darlington, Brook, Palatka, to Clughnrn
k CiiKiiinghum.
Memoranda.
New, York, July 22—CM. schr tie** Stockholm,
Hill. Jacksonville.
Passenger*.
|*«r .Steamer Win Soubrook, from Charleston—
K J Purse, E J Plrvre. Mrs Porryatlno, child uud
svt, II M .Stuart, W 0 Won and lady, Or Biscrlino
aud M’t, Mr-- Haupt.
Per steamer Darlington, from Pulutka—A Tiioott.
W U Cha-e, jb»l-*» Brennan. Duvl.i. W Prico. 8 Ncoil,
11 A Palmer, H 1. Harris, W C Wdkimon, A M far-
gyle. J McCmiii, <« W Young, J T How land, Parry. y
Cojlius, T< lljcrt, it 11 Kh.tt, iudy and svt, M Dibble
und ludy. Mrs I) Adams, child and svt. lira McDon
ald, child and svt, Miss R Roberts, uud 10 dork.
Consignee*.
Per Steamer Win 3oabio"k, Irotn Charleston—
Oeutrel Railroad, Steamer M .hdins, Brigham, Kel
ly JtCo. A A Solomons k < *•, Spencor k Co, Crane,
Wells A Co, W W Llncotu, .1 W Audarsmi. Rodgers,
Norris k Co, J J Merlin, I* Hoywood, W W Smith,
R It Hilton k Co, Webster x Pahnca. E J Purse, T
S Wayne. R Habersham ft Hon.
Per steamer t’urllugtou, trout Picolata— Einstein
k Fckmau, f lighorn k Cunningham, ltostdn & Vil-
laPinga, A TiiomnH k Oo, Rrmshart k Son.
emd Pi
Tho eiixjct uf ilf/s section \viis lo gj.ro ^lidmonal
sanction to all former urdipineps rtlu^ug Jo tho
Department uud Council having |o micr-
I'oru iu tho case cited, iu any otlior maimer than by
a referonce to tho Department; this ordinance ef-
iuetually prevents any praetluai result from similar
couiplaUiLs. For il u Ftro Company may not use its
inglna .^tsi’ro, without leave of thu Huvaunah
Firo CoinpaM>T 4’hy •* Vuvo ouo ut ull? And
the only tuducuumiil |o‘fpay(r r n ssesslon t
being removed, and ilieir only motive k.ewpjug
It iu good order thus ceasing, why nut place ft
where it would be cured lor by tho iiersons reully
reop»>tihible r
aqd lUo prdiaueea referred
e^lstepcP, dflUuJng its rights,' and prescribing its
duties, thi wig'ifa tj/ui la,f romkins of force, jtb*»so
riglius and Uuljes must ponjiniip. If the 'nerlhr-
inauce of tho.-u duties beroiue > alueje.ia,' aud' the
exorcise of those rights iiicouveident pi i)Vu pub
lic, let tho law bo ultcred or repealed. Uul as H'u
find ilummig tliu ordinances of the oily, wo can
give it no other construcUuu than is here assigned
w i|-
IJavinv linn o.iqulred iulv the legal rights of the
Hnvahfhih'T’h'H ^knupguyto deprive a volunteer
company'qrittf'ongijff?, uudor/je/ taiudreumstaneos,
wo eoura lo the cvushleFiUfi/iror the cosh pryafiited
to us by thu memorial of’ the Yolilly' America Fire
Compnuy. '** ’ "
TIih uiomsrial sets out the preumble and reso
lution of tho Savannah Fire Computy adept-
ed at its regular monthly meeting ou tho
4th of Jaly, I860, which declares that certain
persons attached to the Youug America Firo Corn-
pj|uy,«^. i, at a lire, on tho night of tho first of
/uly, wed/Vcfus*) [o obey the legal uud posllivo
orders of tun command jnx FJrzinau of tho city of
Savuuuah, and wero guilty op Ju'silJv'TrdiR^ou and
conduct subversive of good order ’qnd desD’ueTjve •
of the authority and diclpllne of tJjy ^lopartmenL , ’
And thereiore “that tho said Youug Auiorieg Firo
Company, No.,5, be deprived of its engine, boss
cart, hose, and all other fire upparutus, now iu
|bpir possession, belonging to the city of Savaunah;
and Ifye L'ltiuf Fireman is hereby directed to taku
possession .QftiipFatppi and place (he sumo iu the
Fjremun’s Ra)l subjocjifQtbt) lurllicr order aud dia-
posjtjoi) of Hie Savannah flro Company. And 111*
said Youug America Firo Company, No. l),'i£.s oc
curs und members, are hurehy prohibited aud for
bidden, from and after tills Rule, from using af guy
lire iu this city, any cistern, eugino house, eugiue,
hose cart, fire plug, hose, ladder, fire hooks, or any
other properly, or apparatus, used fur extmguish-
injf fji'ps, belonging to the city ef Savaunah.
"■“•VudfU pursuance of tho abovu rosolutien, the
Chief l-'ir^ttuii is i^r^bv dircctodtu servo a notice
ortho above prohibition upon ibe Foremau of the
Young America Fire Company'No.'6.'.
That tho Young Ainorlca Flro Coiupauy sUnus^u .
the tuino relutiou to tho Savuunuh Flro Company as
the Oglethorpe ami Washington, appears in throe
ways :
jvt. From its churter, which is, verbatim, the
aamo wlih^a»voont* pvcdccesfcova. (l'urn. Laws
of 1853 ’64, p o76L
2*1. From tho fact tlmt it aovep^o.d Ms englno from
tiie Savunnuli Flro Company upou cohdidoi;; piml
lar itt tliose imposed upou its predecessors, to \Wt,
“That iu case of any Insurbordiuullon, or any con
duct subversive of good order, or duugurous to the
peace upd welfare of tho city, thoy shall bo brought
beforo thu 'Savannah FireCompauy, and if guilty,
to bo iiaprived oTdfetv uigjn.*?.” So read the re
cords oftho Havuunuh Firo f*«a»qu.n/.
•Id. From the ordlimnco of 1853, whleli apples
ua well to companies Ibrmod siuco its passage, us
to tho.-e thon exialing.
'J’,>r‘.’lbro, if tiie views herelubeforo expressod
bu rorradt, liw Savaunah Firo Company had
tho tight to probood L: this matter. Aud we
are couilrihei hi this’Iin^ftislun by a caroful
perusal of tho report aboVu referred to,' made iu
tho Council ori853, by Alderman Arnold and others,
which arrives at a similar conclusion, and wa*
ad >pU.L Indeed tho riglit wus uot donlodbylho
petitioners; ,qn fl;o contrary, they avor tlmt “in-
struefious wore given lq Jho members of Young
America Firo (’othpatij 1 , in the "br.tjs,«j|icp of tho se
cond l.blefof tho Department, to opoti the buildtng,
qjjl} ^Jl'ord every facility to the otllcers lu carrying
out the lotfar pf'tho resolutions.”
Tiio riglit lio*ng Bpisrotjlod, tho next Hiibjcctof
Inquiry is, whether tho iqung Amprifu Fire Com
pany shows on tho face ol tlioir iqoiqoriql, auy
roason why Council should interfere.
Tho preamble uud resolutions of thut Company,
adopted July Till, I860, which form the main piirt
of tiio memorial, tin uot dopy thu truth of anything
contained in thorn oftho Savannah Fire Company.
Thoy limy, therefore, be taken as true. Tho only
new fact stated Is tlmt some norsnu, not u member
of llm Company, was taken before tho Mayor, anti
Hood. That huuo oouuectlou with tills matter,
for the ruusou given the memorialists thomsolvos,
tlmt lie was not a member of tholr body. It was
not tho miscouduclol'that person, b t ot membors
of thu Young AmoiUm, which tho Department gives
as the reason of its resolution.
Nor dous tiio memorial show that iu tiio action
of tho Savanuah Firo Company, there wus.
aiiyjlpug unusual; any departure from Us ordi
nary ^ourUb of ^morouro iu such casos; on the
contrary, It Is oX|!W»srty tlmt such
ahliou wiis had at • the tegular" inm»;hL<
meeting of the Suvummh Fi o Company, <ff which
thu first two officers of the Youug America Coiupa
uy wore • ex oilkio memberK,” by llm vory terms
oi their charter, ai.d therefore, like every oilier
member, bmnidso'pe prosoul at its monthly meet
ings'. Indeed, il'seauiK to lutyp buuu nothing mure
than a rosumplioii by thu Department j,f entire
control over one uftlie engines-or the city, entrusted
Jo tiie Young America Fire Comp uiv upon certain
conditions, which aro said lo ImC'u buoudisregarxl-
od. The oouraii udnntod liy Uio gavanimh > ire Com
pany' was its onlw modu /J'reaclilug tho Yuiiug
America Coluputiy Ustdf A inert oxi.iilshn'pftho
/Jrsf twootficors would ImvwatlUrded notiduqimie
roiqoiiy fu|' t/;e breach of thv'rtMidllhms on whii'b
the epgiuu \varfgiuutcd, ‘ '
Wliatoyor ipny fptyo poop tpo jpaunvr in wl;lch
ipo fjijpf Flivpiun carried',oujL fpo ,qrd»f ql Ufa Ity-
puHmont, iIkmijW f'j/l’u sp nq .cause
the Young Amuiiua v'tti) f;«iHjrtf»y. flw*
house and its couleals were thu PfPpPft/ °t HI 0
city, entrusted to the euro of the savumfab hvu
Comimuy by tho 7lh section ofiho ordinance of
1825. Ami its chief uxocullvo olllcer had tho right
to outor thoru at uny uud all times, whether uccu-
|>l9«l by tbn Young America Company or uot. If
FOB PHILADELPHIA.
TWat’Z mumv,Jmidid. qrDpJM\ T. m.
The Pnitpii states Miul sjcWsiup
KEYSTONk STATE, C'npL HpriUo,
will loavo as above. For freight or
passage npply to
C. A. GREINER, Agent
Cabin Passugo 20 00
Stoorugo Passngo 7 (JO
I'uHsungora by tills ship for Baltimore aud Wush-
lugUm 17)11 be latulod at. Now Castle, Delawuru, ir
desired, from wifiy/i |?k“JO wirs Btart three limes
daily for tho 'above "tffUoa, a*.*; njher Southorn
points. ' ’ ^ Jy’42
■ FOR SBW YOiiK.
7b sail Saturday, July al 3 o'clock,
il' Bf.mnililfi Ft
/, i/wy kum. uro n cima. J/.
Tiio steainSfdp FLORIDA, Cuptain
wbudhuB;- Mil 'leave* us abovo.
_
lorilis not sec.ufoa urttif paid fot*. 1 “ '
T^iJii I'flasaco...;. m
Htoarago Vt&uiigi.,'.7.8
4®- Shippers of Cotton by’tiiftiji’stfj.ijjjjsliips .wi)l
pleaso lako notice, that uo Colton will uo FCceivo;J ut
ho presses tlmt Is nut distinctly tnarkod on the odge
of the halo, Jy23
Niagara Falls, the Lakes & Canada
SHORTEST AND CHEAPEST ROUTE.
Per Sfeaihsldj) jfeustone State, via Philadelphia
DB/.P'A
Mo.
T HIS Line connects ut Phiiuiiitimid Mill (lie
Grout Nsrlh Western RMitroud Route, ihrough
to Magma Fills ami Utlll'a|o. lu sixteen hours from
I'hiiudelj.hl...
Tl<rough 'llckets, with the privilege ofslopplug at
PlillitdolpljV, *il< l i"bi>mediale |K*int*, for Hale by
tiio Agent . ‘U'.u -
Fare to Niagara Fulls or Hutlato ,
“ Elmira -....<
“ Canandaigua 28
CHARLES A. GREINER, Agent.
J2J • Savaiumb, Goergia,
FOR FREIGHT Off CDApSa'.^ijj flue
-fi^g-sclir 1*LAN1X»MF, wipt llrowu, Will rooilte
frkjgiu fir charter for a Nortlwrn juilt. A|>ply to
" JOHN T. ROWLAND,
jylli " *‘ 71 Bity street.
H AY—260 bxles Hay, fn Ktore and lor sale by
tyx ’l-b.4NB, frjjug i-W
Y AUNS AND OSN.VBtfttuS-.-Tlmjijq8lbu Factory
X-trus und Osual'crgs, for sale by
CRANE, WELL
-S k CO.
Jy2ft
I AN DING AN'D l.V TURK—
^ 3000 lbs extra canvassed bag Hums
i.* JOfa) ftg stigar cured do
* --' - : Mtj'h--
A suporlor quulif\~-.p|..T4u».uaset; Hues, small
size for family use. at 12W cents‘pi/r Mound
25 bbls Crushed Nugar ~
20 do B Clarified do
20 do 0 do do
25 do Powdered (i»
10 do St Croix do
5 hhds extra Porto Rico Sugar
6 b’/.la do Smart’s Syrup
3 into» y.c JJacon Sides
" ’’ ♦
RroOfiD, Pftjls, Basket M^tWtifs, 5CfU.b
Brushes, Fleur Palls, - kG-, Ipr sale by
G OLD PENS—Persons desirous or obtaining
goood Gold i'en, uro iuvited to call aud in
spect a new lot which wo have just received, and
Which wo can rocominond.
Jj'Jij _ D. B. NICHOLS .V CO.
THE HAVANA PL-tiY
More Prizes than Blanks,
1,767 PRIZES ! I !
6
,000.
Only 15,000 Numbel*!!!
.1 ,A^idemy
BY AUTHORITY OF THE STATE OF (lEORGIA.
CLASS P,
To bn drawn August lfttli, 1860, at Concert Hall,
Macon, Ga., under the sworn sui>orinteudeuce of
Col, Jyirefl M. Logan and James A. Nisbct, Esq.
Patrons will ploasu tiSittimn6 Ibis S.7.heme careful
ly, compare it with any other, and If IV is not the
best ov«r otl’ered, and tiio chances to obtaiu capi
tals fur bettor, don’t purchase Uckots.
C A AITAL, $1T,000.
1 Brize of. $15,680 is $15,000
1 “ ..' 3,000 is... • 3,000
1 “ 2,000 is. ; 2,MO
4 “ 1,090 are... 4,000
10 “ 600 are 5,000
60 “ 100 aro 5,000
20 Apprwx'm’s of $50 to $15,000 prize aro $1,000
50 ‘ “ " 2fi Pj 3.000 “ are 1,260
50 20 to 2,’000 2 re 1,P00
80 “ of $12>4 to each of tho capitals
of $1,000 aro 1.000
7500 prizus of 8}{ are 03,760
7707 prizes friqquqljijg Jo,., ; . $102,000
Tickets $10, Halves $6, Quarters $2 50,
l’rlzcs payuhlo without dedir tiop.
The 7,500 prizus of $8nro determined by tho
immb or which draws the $16,000; if tlmtumuber
should bo an odd number, Ujou oyqry odd nambey
ticket in tho scheme will he entitled $8 50; jf 4)1
oven uumber, then ovory oven number ticket will
bo entitled lo $8 50, in uddilion to any othor prUo
which may be drawn.
Piirchisors buying an equal quantity of odd and
uven uumber tickets willi be certain of drawing
nearly one half thu cost of tho samo, with clmucos
of obtaining other prizes
All those tickets ending with 0, 2, 4, 0,8; nro
even; all thoso ending with 1,3, 5, 7,0, are odd.
Persons sending money by mull nood uot fear its
buing’lost. Orders particularly attonded to. Com
munications confidential. Bank uotos of sound
bunks taken ut pur.
Those wishing particular nuinhors should ordef
Immediately.
Address, JAMES F. WINTER,
J^llj Manager, Macon, Ga.
FIIKNCH CHINA, Will TIC GRANITB.
AND <ILA1& WARN. “ ,
146 MKKIIXU STHW>*r, CIUKLieTfUSf, SOUtH lUMOMNA.^
Tho suhscrlliers respectfully solicit
from tho traveling public,'an inspection!
of their stock uf> Freuch and English
China, In plain white,- gold hand, und __
duoorabtd diimnr,'desert, breakfimt, tea, toilet, toto-a*
WtcsetH aud vusus. Alsu;-Cii|u uni fetuucurs, Ac., ol
tiie colobratod «evres Cltiiiu. Whito Granite of tho
best muiml'ucturoru. Rich culFruueb, KngUsh aud
llolmmiau Glass, •• • -
Tljtiy have a variety of ornamoutN lu Parian.**
Ware, Basis ol'Cii1!i6uu, Clay, •WollsU^r, aud otliors,
aud SUitnctes’ oi’fTiu Gi'eek Hl^ye, Vonlis do Mudicls,
fcc.. ki!. M * ‘
Tudy havo also abcauliruj, duraJdo anil c.lionp aril*
do lift L'inn s and RuiirUd,' $ ■ *
wtd
Their ftqcg tiuipg y,oi
uud linpprt.ed qire,cj,vlwri. rf;T _..
as well as Lmiaes, to pW'
the lowed rates for cash.
;; |f|fH
WEBB A 8AGK, ImimrterB,
ccessors to C'amurou, Wohb k Co.
Boctlpti per Central Uni I road.
July 26—280 hales Cotton, 08 boxes Copper Ore.
73U sacka Wheat, Obales Yarn, ami Mdze.. to Ruse,
IlavD k 1/uig, W Dtiucuu, Briglmm, Kelly Ac Co, W
M Wadly, Pehn & Fu.-ter, Wayne IcSou.J Lippmau.
Hudson, Fleming & Co, Cooper k Glll'bud, King k
fc'onj, J I) Jesse, Crane, Wells 1c Co, J Iugersoll. Co-
hens & Hertz, K Parsons k Co, Dana & Wasl burn,
and order.
HOWE’S COTTON HARVESTED.
* -fhe gn-st desidoratum of Platitors is Ijnal-
W ly ob|ained ju jlio Vnceessrtd liiventibii of
Howe’s i’oilon Iljjrvofte'r. with whirl) otto hand can
pick as much ootiou as five iu the ordiuary yay.
beslijes saving an Immense amount of labor. Wliut
Wliilney’s. ottonGin is iu its alter stage, Howe’s
Ilarve.-tor is in picking.
For further Information, hpply to
A. WILBUR, 111 Bay street,
Agent f<»r the States of Georgia aid Hirida.
jy20
OFFICE OF The |JpAHl> OF COM-
MUSloNKrtA'OF 14IK BAVmI ’WATER WOR^V,
! SanaN'X»iil, Jiily'23d.'
Tho Board of Commissioners tiie .’.Savan
nah Water Works, will elect a Seeretaiy ou
Ifonduy^tiio 4th day of August next, at'4 o’clock,
I. M., to fill vacancO iKU-asiuned by tho reslgimtiim
of the unnfcr.•^iglled. , Si.lary $Si'o—Hoinl $5,000 Bv
orddr.’ " 1 WM. WARING ll.VUERNlIAM, ’ ‘
\Jy24—10 Sec’i v .Sav'h Wa^er-Works.
IfOTff 15 .’
O NE inopil) alter ilaH’, ajip'jration \vdl he made
Oi thu Hunk oftho State of Georgia.tor the n iv-
uieut or two one hundred do lar bills of tho Brunch
at , tho right hand halves of which have been
lost iu the mails.
Jy21 BOSTON .k VII.LAl.ONGA.
NOTICE.
S YE months after date, uppikatioti will he made
r hh rbt'v’Mt.s Dp'.to of Georgia, for the pay
nt * f;tlire<? 'tw(ejity do)lar mils u f Qiw Bran , .ji at
Align?ta, thu light hand Halvcfiof whlt’U have.been
lo.it lu' the mall. ' 1
•jylLi^V ’ ROSJ’ON k VII.LAI.ONGA.
OSUGARj-BOAP-AND-Sl’AltCH-*- •
1^ ’4) liljiU Muscq'vqij ay dp l'/djo Rp 1/ r'ugar
30 Obis A, It and CJ df)
160 boxes Pule and Family Sup
50 do t'a-tilu (In
250 do Frft.-er's, Colgate’s und Oswego 8tai rh
received und for sale by
JlrMAlloN & DOYI.F,
Jyzo ”C* aii-1207 Bay
C AN'D I, LS AND COFFEWimMiOYCfl Bponu. ‘fal-
loir. Adamuutliie Caudles
;. 250 bags Rio CoifrO .
25 boxes fresh ground CollVe
60 mats Java do, received and fur
aalony v. M0MAII0N & DOYLE,*
' ’ " _ 1 1*^ ami 107 Bay street,
1' IQUOllS AND BACON— 1
JU bbls Wliiskt. VariU' .s brands
~ HP’ ’ - ’ ’
100 do New England Hum ‘
'll 7/,»'3 n r'." ,d ?
26 hluls Bacon
ed ami for salu by
Jy20
v%iiSL-
T ‘ Sides
and Shoulders, receiv-
McMUJon k DJJYLK, ' ’
2115 und 207 Bay sheet.
MEDICAL COLLEGE OP GEORGIA.
ArofsTA, .Ttdv 1850.
ripUK TWE^TY-Virm Course of Lectures in this
•Jt'^nstitaiiou whl coii.i.'.cu e *lio First Monday in
MW/iber fleA. ’' t'c , t
o .. .. FACn.fVL
G. M. Nkwto*, m, u., Aimlomy,
L. A. IH’qas, m. a, Surgery.
L. F. OAHVI.v, )t. » , Mutcria Medico, lherapeutii’s
and Medical Jurispruduuco.
J. A. Kvk, si. a. obstetric.- aud Diseases of Wo
men aud lulunts.
i„H. V. It. Mt.'Jitt. m. <>.. Physiology and Patiudygl-
tal Afiatwmy.-1 < » 0 ,
’Aflac. Mk-a.vs, it. a, protesscr pr Cpemlsiry.
Jf |L poftj).' Sj.‘ p Institutes'and j'nu-tioe of Medi
clue.
H. F. CAMniMLL si. a, Surgical, Comparative and
Microscopic Anatomy.
R. Casicuku.. si. a. l>. nmii«trator of Anatomy.
*. B Sisi si.fxw, si ii.. Asdsmtmt Demon ^t rat or.
Clinical lectures will lie delivered logulmly at
tiie City Htispiial aud ample opportunities will be
afoird'ed for tjjc s}iplv t**‘ Pradintl Anatomy.
Ipes for tho puliro Cnutso’...'..! $105 00
Matriculation Ticket (to ho taken once).,'... ' 6 00
Fur for further particulars, apply to
jul2~2w G. M. NEWTON, Dean.
"MATIUMONY MADE EAMVV
{XR HOW TO WIN A LEVOR.-TI10 easy
Principle of Love, interspersed with Directions
for tho Preservation nud Exaltutlou of
Peraonnl IIentity and Loveliness,
nut' for prolonging human lire healthily aud happily
to tiio'very longest rorbul of human existence.—
Spleuditily ongravJil Wit sieei,-
The slnglo. married, nntl the married happy.—
What is iovey—with instructions for courting, in or-
d«r to win the alfecthms of tho opposite sax. Tiie
Lights und Shades of Married Life.
Tiie Reproductive tIrgans of Females handsomely
engraved : nud tho Infirmities of Youth and Maturi
ty, iyjth tliulr rctneilics.
MHiasAyfjy ii.j i sTiuntn sv im.atr*,
at dtilbroiit stages oi* gt*s\atimi^how u> tlijonphia
whett it exists—how to prevent pregtianoy, and
with a locluro on l/»ve tt» married ladies aud gentle-
men.
Price 60 cents per copy. On tho receipt of the
money through nail, (post-paid,) one cupy uf the
book 12**11 be sent by mail to any purl of tho United
State*. Published
CHARLES WALKER,
No. 88 South 8d st.. Philadelphia, Pa.
Also, 1)K. LaCROLWS PHILOSOPHICAL VIEW Ul
MARtL. GE.
A popular treatise on he secret infirmities o.
yn.utli f;ttd,.maturity arising from gcniial dLseuses in
both se<t«s_ wltU'upvynrds of one hundred and nven*
ty-flvo lBhographs •'nnf! uigraviugs Illustrating the
auutomv, piij'siology, dud diseases of the sexual or-
gaus, thoir structure, uses ’mill funbtUins, together
with plain directions for the perfect euro' of syphilis,
gleet, stricture, etc.
Prico 60 copja per single copy. Published by
CHARLES WAITER,
N’o. 38 tjquth 3il st., Philadelphia, Pa,,
to >yhoi|^all orders iqust bo scu|. ' apll2—tl
WOOLEN MACHINERY.
C 4 L. GODDARD, New York, only Mamifao-
J% turor ol tho Original Stool Ring and Tooth
Burring Machines and Feed Roils, to be attached to
First aud nlso Second Breakers anti Finishers of
Wooloit Girding Machines. Tho atUehmont to Sec
ond Breakers uud Finishers is very important
Those machines are iu successful operation, on
First Breakers, tn most of the principal Woolen Fac
tories in the United States, Canada anti Mexieo, mid
arc deemed by experienced manufacturers as the
most perfect machines usod, ami fudispeiisnhlo to
tho economical amt successful manufacture of wool.
Thoy nro in fact tho ouly strong, durable and suc
cessfully operating machines in use. No carding
machine should run un hunt without them.
The,Feed Rolls aro strong nud durable, and wor
thy nfatlonliou.
Circulars explaining Ihefe MarLinos uud Roll,and
rvtoruiiccs to Splto having litem in use. may be had
by nddrwsHRig.t i- HOWURI),
. No. 3 BowlingGrooii, NtlwiYork,
to whom orders should iM-addressed. , ;
septlU—ily\y ■
too DOLL A US REWARD.
r I 'HE above reward will be paid to any person
X who will furnish prttof to convict I on of (lie per
son or prrsinis, who attempted lo blow up my
houseion Friday night list, by exploding a quantity
of gunpowder kiUdet it V I 1
- lylfi—0 I EMMA Wool).
•ptri’ASH—K) eases Rectified Pota’sU,"in tin cans.
,L» for family use; In-na-iks Potash, just received
imd lor sfilohy • *
H .ly1|’ '• NORRIS k t:o
BY 1.AST nx;ht ’smauTT
Aftklr of-Honor Btlwm Ool. Brook.
mid. SIr,Barlliig»tn«.
Got Brook, publidio. a lull atatement of tiie
fantafolatliig to tho dflHcntty hetweeii hlm«lf
and Ur- Burlingame. He say.: t
to ilia ri-HLic. ’ ' ,
It I. with eatroue relueUoce that 1 am urn
Htrainad to traiinfer a private uuarrel rromlt,'
legitimate Held Into the public prem tl!
fault, however, doe. not properly rest with mV
a. au impartial public will decide after r«adtaa
the following curd from Auum Barliumm.
member of (Jongrt.su Irora Mammchusetts'-T 1
[We omit tho curd a. It ha. already apwar
ed iu our column!) Having given It, B rook ,
proceeds.]
This curd[ wav tint published in the Intelll.
gencei on Monduy, the 21.1 in-t., though | .
Gated July 19. B u
A* 1 could procure a friend-..which
wua lu loss thau two hours alter 1 Bral »iff
card r llio follow ing meMo wusTnUo M.
linrlingaiiie
V\ f ASUIMill)X, July 'l\,
Sir-Will you do me the kindness to iodU lto
aomo plate, outside of this district ,
will lie convenient to yon to negotiate i» m
fereneo to tiio diffeience klwceu iu>. ^
Very itspactfuliy, Ac.,
Hon. A. Iturliugamo. ’
.Apjirehendlng an nricst Iron, ih, odlcloe,
interference ol Mr. Burlingame’s friends I
knew no Irlenil of mine would lodge infom,'
tiou-at nightfall {left my oiu^SiTd
weuttn Hie house of a friend for gn-ntir J!r,
rity. At about |2o'clock (Jen. lame ealleiS
delivered Mr. BurHngume-s reply u>mml
which read us follows: > ’
... WaaiiisoTOK, !>. C., duly 21, lgsa
Sin—Your not,; or this dale was oiared'n,
my hauds l,v Ueu. Une this alteruoou. In re
ply, [ have to say that I will he at the Clifton
House, ou the Canada side of Niagara i’alL. J
Saturday negt, at Vi o'clock, 1|„ to “argot?
ate in reference to auy “difference betwesn
ua which, In your Jugment, may remiire set
tlement “outside of this district. ■ 1 ''
I have the honor to he,
Your obedient servaut,
ci „ „• A. BURUNtUMK.
Hon. 1'. S. Ukooks.
After recapitulating the hiitory of the pre
vious settlement, Mr. Brooks proceeds as fol
(otys |
He requires nie to meet him in Unnada, a dh
tuncc of-negr seyen hunred itiiles by the mill
route—a route rumiing throiigh the enemv'i
country, and tlnough which uo man knowsfe|.
ter than Mr. Burlingame that I could not saw
without running tho gauntlet of mobs and J
sassitw, prisons and penitentiaries, bailfth end
constables. Ho knew that I could never get lo
Canada, and Hint were I to do so, and lie were
lo lull, that I never would get back. He might
as Well huyo desigimtpj) Boston Common. Hh
proposition iS'Ol so )irc|*istel'Oua a characlw
that the pul,lie will apiircclato It without chd
mont from inc. j ....
Wien lie repudiated the memorandum which
fl-uS l)Vf;pa|»‘t] liy liis friend and deliv'eredinkU
«wu pr.Rseu.ee, r l felt some sympathy fohhS
agony ol' a jhotid inHu driven to doing wVca/
that • he might ‘retrieve tho homn* or a Steti
whifli lutjl bepn Jariijshed fjy unwbilliy repr^
reiiturivp.s, Rut Ri-j jus{ cbmlRiop b u-prii
than the former, nnd J deliver him to that cob*
denitration which honorable men in every com.
infinity will sternly iullict. I have no further
demands upon him, but should he be screwed
I npto the point of muklug demands upon me,
1 1 will yet treat him as a gentleman, and meet
j'im at any convenient and accessablo poiut up-
WMin\\ termn.,
I respdcftdly ask that the subjoined letter
from Lea. Luiie nray Ira read, and submit my
condiip^ tp tjrp mtciligent and spirited peima
ol PTO »!* Jibe Pfilon, ’ i 1 >
P- Brooch,
Wasulsgton City, July 22,
Dkah Sir—I have deemed it proper and Just
to make the following statement;
, At your request I caUed?yesterday. at near 3
o dock, as your Irieud, upon lion. .Mr. Burlin
game, that being.the first opportunity I hod of
meeting hiui, and of delivering your’uote. Af
ter he had fend it,1 Rifortned him that I wit
requested by. you to , nice tiiat a rncetjr?a
should lake plaira at the earliest practicable ro<fc
jnent, suggesting that afternoon, or this morn
ing at 4 o’clock, and hoped that it would eui t
his convenience. 1 i’prtbpr sjatsd that you had
supposed that'all 4‘fleivuces- jjttw‘eeii yod
himself had bccn'adjuste'd; that-he (Mr: Burl
game) [jhad re opened the fmatter, a« “
supposed, for'a personal ^ifUculty, and i
j-ou'weVe un^ioua’to jjaye it ended'witlidjit
lie replied, ’'That is thefcciingof a gall
man, and Brooks is a bravo wap \\m
would have to look onU’ora friepd,andl
none iu his mind ut that time, aud perhaps
could not he ready for a meeting at as early
hour as you expected.
I also impressed upou him the necessity
entire • epiwy, save, with his friend, i
further requested that he or hist frii
would communicnle with me at my seat wl
the House was in session, or at my room a!
its adjournment; nnd as ho had the rich
selecting the place for the meeting, onus!
<4her arrangements as are usual upon such
cations, that, he wonjd have the kindness
let mo ivnow.al as early a day as was eojiv
tent wlibn imtV where iful what it tfoiijd tei
Lust eVOhllk>-.‘'nKnnt-1 Vn’olnnl- »l,n nnnlnJ
u. u.crampnraL fae pi?
ol meeting designated in said note is so far d
tant and would subject you to so many bazar
of arrest, nnd also to a jurisdiction without tl
limits of the United Stales, that, as, yo
IViond, 1 adytsc you, without hesitation, tots
no further notk'p nr the maitpr. ’
1 am. sir, very respectfully,
your obedient servant,
.fFSEPH T.AXE.
Hon. 1*. s. llitoohs.
I OPE.—pH) coils Uot it- ‘to urrlve per fehr Alba
L jy 19 ’; *V‘ rATl'KN. 1 HifrnLV'A co. p
7 XI'RA tihpit e - GiolieiVilnttur, a Vresh -supply,
|i'tT i'liJJjpJlir fljiiixvljlc', lor sole fjv
4- |L
VALUABLE RICE PLANTATION
FOR SALF,
WntUXtKS MU K> OS IUK OTV OS SAY A.S.SAM.
O N tiie first t'nesilay in Decctabcr uext, will
sold hcTuro'tho Court House in tl.e city of Si
vaimali, tiio 1 lantatinn oil the Faviunmh river, tto
miles l'ri'iu the city, known us Mulberry Grove, be
longing to the estate ol tiie late H)lliii>L’lnipr, cou-
tabling six hundred ami eighty-seven acre?, N
which thore are two hundred acres of first quality
tide rice kind, and une hundred anti fifty-five acrw
under gooti hunks aud in a fine state for cultlva-
lira). Also, seventy five neres of high land multi'
cultivation; Oil the place tiro u good dwelling liuuit*,
ovoi>eerV house, lmrns, uegro houses uud • iber
outbuildings, all in a good slate of repair. I'erfwA
desiring to purchase will call upon the umiorslgned,
who resides within four .miles of tiio Grove. Teruw
of sale made known ou the day of sale, ties-*#
siou not given until the first or January:
jyl7-td H. K. HARRLSON, Ex’or.
JiijF The Charleston Mercury will publish once»
week nutil the day of sale*. : 1 1
LAND AgENC> .
T HE limit r8igned Will, for five dollars per J°p
examine jmy huuls hi tho counties ot' Aiuuiolt
Wuyue, Ware or C’oilee. and report to the owlierW
to their pi iv-ont value, the prospect for their
fcofttiug inorO vuliiaiih) in tiuHiro, ami wlietiior H'
Dot there is being Any trespass cpipniitM ^Ucrgpp.
Invariahly pledgilR himself pi give (i tr»c find st
reet account, for which all -remittances WH* bpw*
peeled in udvauce. .
Ho wifi ulsosell nnd remit when ro«Juostmi,
as directed, tin* sovep per cept. . .1
l|e will also promptly attend to all jiroliWflon*'
business entrusted to his euro.
VERNON C. McbtuN'lHJN.
my 13 Attorney at law. lioniesvillc. <lg ^
M imaki*, fa*.—loo boxes Mustard; 1W do
pure l’eppcr; lOo .lo Starch; received «ua
sale bv Mo.MAHON k DOYLE.
June in 2US nud 237 Bay sireot^
B XsiTcthTBASKElS!-Wc would call*b»
attention of tiib indies lo our stock of worsi
Traveling and fine Fancy Basket-*, the largest assoro
meut m 1 he city, at (lie House Furnishing Store, •*'
Broughton t-tract M ,, odk -
inar2l HORACE
4 L(-:. i.aRii, \c.—2U bbls~Prime l-iwdjJ 0 J®
Taylor .v Sou’s Ale; 50 do sugar, sodaiuni
•or Rtamiit; rac.elved and for sale by
MoMAHON k DOYLE,
ro5 miti 257 [Uy vtnwL.
FLUMKING. **
IjhUWIBNLi. ifinl|i^ voriotw hrouchejg
1. inudfid t*»- at the Almftest uMliW*. lutd-il
style. Also, may bo found Shower Hatiui,1
u.l Iron, Tin .anti Leaded Hath .Tuba; t’Ofqwr U« ,
1-i.loul I’m, VVati'i' 010411b,, l«d Ill'Mfb
Brass uml i'luted L’oi'ks^ Force i’lmqjs, India n
llorio. For sain al llm IIouhh FurnUh Store, .>■»•
Rrought'iii Airrt O
•uarl9
HtlH'fT IP’MHK
Glynn, Waytm, Gauideu, Charlton, A|'l ,l, ug»
Cofioe, (Mine’ll, hiWudos and fhoniks. Urtic .
atte|ifiouKjypupjTqjta[|hg l *““ M ’*‘’*’ ,t,,, * nl ‘ ,1TOn h •’
low U’lojs tir lira town
' ' 1 f Ml
Dr lUTdliirti MW 50 ^!