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FWFBmaU AND FVBLlaniM.
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■ATVaUAYMOaNIItU, OCT. 4, MM
I’OB I’HtWIUBNT:
JAMBS BUCHANAN,
or unkititaiiia.
TOR VIOB PBESIOBNTs
JOHN o. BRECKINRIDGE
or kiktooey.]
MKUra for tho State at liRTge.
.WILLIAM a. STILUS, of Ohitham.
IVRRSONL HARRIS, of ttUUwIn.
' SUIEMATES rou TQK STATE AT 1.01101.)
UBRItV 0. LAMAR, of Dlbb.
AUGUSTUS R. WRIGHT, of Floyd.
DiraUOT ELI0T0E8.
Ut. Ulatnct, Tnoita M. Fokhan, or Uljrun.
14. DUtrict, Saooia Hail, of Macon.
(4. DUtrict, James N. Ramsat, of Harris.
Aik. DUmct, Looms J. Oaktiieu,, of Fulton,
ttk. DUmct, Jon* VV. Lewis, of Csss.
(£ DUmct, James P. Simmons, ofOwinnett
tth. DUmct, Tbomas P. SArroLD.of Morgan,
gth DUtrict. Tops. W. Tbomas, of Elbort.
THE OLDER I GROW. THE MORE IN
CLINED I AM TO BE WHAT IS CALLED
A STATES RIGHTS MAX.—Jam" Buch-
SMS'S MCA on Ms admieeion of Arkaniat, in
1834.
I POLLY ENDORSE TUB RESOLUTIONS,
AND HAY FURTHER SAY THAT I AM
WHAT IS CALLED A STATE RIGHTS
DEMOCRAT.—John C.Brtdumridjet tare-
spacut to hit nomination for the I'ice Prtndm
ty-
ST TSEslIiaXLSLPS
Sew York Markets,
New You, Oct. 3—Cotton market active.
Salts of three days 10,000 bales, mostly on
•pocoUtlon. Middling Uplands 11).
The Float market has declined, and Wheat
boat 3 to 3 cents.
Political.
Gov. Floyd yesterday promised the electoral
vote of Virginia to Fillmore, if necessary to
defeat Fremont.
The Fire Department.
As the charter election approaches, and the
publio mind becomes day by day more excited
It is necessary that the opinions of our oppo
nents shonld be thoroughly understood upon
questions of vital importance. In requiring
thU, fairness and justice indicate that weshould
be equally explicit in stating tho position of onr
own party.
By far the moat interesting question upon
which the citizens of Savannah trill have to do
side, is thepresentorg anlzatlon of the Fire Do.
partment Is it to bo changed or U it to re.
main uitlt? In order ton proper under
standing, by those who have never looked into
the matter, it would be as well for us to give a
snoolnct description of that Institution as it now
exists In Savannah.
The controlling power, or the managing
Committee of tho Fire Department is the “Sa
vannah Fire Company.” This Company holds
its power under an act of the Legislature, de
fined, limited, and more fully organized by va
rious ordinances of Council. It is composed
and limited to 34 members, who are elected by
the body itself, and are approved of by Coun
cil It elects a Chief Firemau and two As
sistants from its members. The Chief Fireman
or bis AssUtaut (in his absence) has supreme
control over the conduct of fires, not unlike
that exercised by a general in limo of war.—
The Mayor himself has no right to Interfere.
In the charge of this body ore all the Engines,
Hose Carts, Fire Pings, So. The formation of
a white company is by petition of n body of
men to the Chief Fireman, for an Engine; tho
others are by the appointment of two or more
members to take charge of an Engine, andai
officers, to enroll a sufficient numberof negroes
for the manual labor required. The Fire De
partment thus constituted, now constats of four
white Fire Companies and a number of the
others.
The Savannah Fire Compauy has no connec
tion whatever with politics; in fact the Chief
Fireman with a half dozen Democrats, are the
only representatives which our party has in
that body. A very proper spirit has been
shown in keeping it free from all such influence
and wo would not have mentioned tbc fact, if
In the recent couflict which occurred between
the Department und the Young America Firs
Company, and the support which was given
by the Democrats of the Board of Aldermen to
the former, persons might not he found who
would consider it someth lug iu which tho wires
of party were at work. The action which was
taken on that occalon was simply predicated
upon the disobedience of the orders of tiie Act
ing Chief Fireman in a time of public peril.
The new Board which is oflered tithe suf
frage of the people of Savannah by the Ameri
can Patty must necessarily bo supposed to fa*
vor the reinstating of the offending company
from many pregnant circumstances. The evi
dent couutenanco given to the Young America
Company by those gentleman who are the re
presentatives of the American Party in tho
present City Government, and the nomination
of Hr. Wtlllnk, the leader of another company,
and one who is said to hold extreme views con
cerning the Fire Department, are not tho least
■IgnlOcant facts, leading us to ibis conclusion
The question, then, upon which the olt Irena
of Bavannah have to decide is, whether the
Savannah Fire Compauy, a body whom no
one will assert was actuated by party spirit,are
to he anstained in tho exerclso of a just author-
Ityf or whether a band of disorderly men
(many of them boys) are to rido over this com
muhlty, and say, wo arc to obey when we
please; we have a Mayor aud Aldermen ut our
backs, and the Chief Fireman may bawl until
he la hoarse, we will follow the bent or our
awn Inclinations? Sueh astute of things
would no truly deplorablo, and ir each compa-
ny were to adopt the samo rule, where would
we ho?
We are distinctly for the organization ns it
standi, and do not believe that our opponents
will be able to deny that they propose eltlrir
acme rsdlcsl change or the countenance and
support Dom party considerations, of disobe
dience, so os utterly to emasculate it.
Latest vsom Kansas—Bt. Louis, Oct. 1.—
Ourndviees, fall and direct, from Lccompton
fK.T.,1 are to tho 20th September. All armed
hands had dispersed, quiet and order reigned In
all narts.’ana citizens and residents were di-
recungtheir'efforts and attentions to private
bustuMS and tdterests, under encouraging pros-
^Governor Geary had Issued warrants or com-
mission to Jones, Springfellow, and other lead-
«Jtato?b f ompanl^ofVblu 0 ntMrs, 0 on°ytobe
MnnarauScra from any quarter.
In the official returnsofthe Iowa state elec -
Mon, Calhoun county stands blank—no returns
rwelved. The Iowa Reporter thus nccpnnts
fbrlti “The citizens of Calhoun county, com-
faction, the Republican reels itself bound to
promulgate whatever declarations may be die.
tatod by the leaders of the Kuow Nothing pap
»J), and wo are therefore prepared to see
Its columns garnished with well digested Wen-
dcre—btindcre contrary to the record, contrary
to the eenlimente of the people of Saoamah.
Upon what facta lathe RqmMieon to base
the following language In Its |asuo or October
1st—namely! that the Democratic party, In
)ts opposition to Mr. Anderson a year ago,
■was found Constituted In great part of those
whose Interests lay in a loose administration of
publio Affaira"? We mourn the unfairness of
such unfoundod declarations; and us tho samo
gontleman now heads the Democratic nomlna-
tlon as in 183S,wedomaud to know whether he
or any other nomineoupon the Democratic tlckot
can be charged with advocating “a loose ad
ministration of public afiklrs" ? His municipal
hlstoiy is blazoned with un exhibition of public
dovotedness to which the Republican can
scarcely find a parallel in the annals of Know
Nothing administration; while certainly the
other gentlemen upon the nomination are men
whose names are guarrantee enough for their
political virtue.
But to the Rzcono. Istbo “Republican" pre
pared to indicate a precedent against the Dem
ocratic yarty of loose administration? la It pre
pared to assert, for example, that the Savannah
Police was instituted by a Know Nothing ad
ministration, or that the nominees, In whom It
takes such Interest, pride and satisfaction, ever
entertained a thought'nf its establishment ? Is
it prepared to declare that this police, organized
and put into operation under a Democratic
Board, is an instance of “loose administration
of public aflhirs?”
If the Savannah police is loosely administer
ed, we would ask, by whom 7 If it has Iwon
prostituted to political or private purposes, we
would demand, by whom? We would ask, we
would demand the answers. Messrs. Editors of
the "Republican," as members of a party you
have unjustly attacked, and who may find some
thing more serious to do thau the mere rebut
ting of unauthorized accusations.
Democuats,
A charter election was held in Washington
Davis County, Indians, on Tuesday last which
resulted in tue success of the entire Democratic
ticket. In 1834 it gave the Black Republicans
over two hundred majority.
I » | »
Disaster to the Steamer Caledonia,—
Boston, Sept. 20.—The Steamer Caledonia,
from Portland for New York, struck on Horse
Shoe shoal, Nantucket, on Saturday morning.
She got off after discharging part of her cargo,
and was taken into Edgartown.
/ I,-— 4_ L» n «. AL. Ll-J „» a' tv, —.1 . » ”Ulic* HUH UldCUi I IWHOVU W1UI HW WW*
tereatlog to know tho kind or talk which North f 0 f nature and or Uod has fixed a dividing,lino
em Democrats are addressing tq their eoustltu-, between tbom, and I wish uever to sco the duo-
' '» A Il._ .11 ' ,i . M . . . < I (.Inn Minniinl«i,J ll,n Knmmnilllu nf wIiIIa
I
onto, wo’commend to the attention of our read-! trine recognized of the community white and
The Fillmore electoral ticket iu California la
composed of Bailie Peyton, J. S. Pilzer, 11. N.
Wood and 0. C. Hall.
Hon. Alexander De Witt, who represents the
Ninth District of Massachusetts in Congress
has declined a reelection.
Alexander Kayser, Esq., of St. Louis, a Bel
ton Democrat, is out in a long article in the
Missouri Republican in favor of a Fremont
Electoral ticket in Missouri.
Is the fifth district of Now York, the Ameri
can party have nominated Daniel L. Northmp
for Congress over Whitney, the present mem
ber.
The "AieionUt” of the 12th district Pennsyl
vania have nominated E. Smith for Congress
in place of Hon. H. M. Fuller, the present mem
ber.
Parke Godwin, Esq. is spoken of as the Ho
S ublican candidate for Congress in the first
tatrict of New York, and Geo. W. Curtis in
the sixth district.
The sheriff clerk of the court, aud deputy
clerk of Stark county, Ohio, all elected by the
fusionists, have abandoned the disunion party,
and come out boldly and openly for Buchanan
and Breckinridge. About twenty other citi
zens of Canton have also come out in a body
and jciued the Democratic ranks.
At the close of a Fremont mueting in Colum
biana county, Ohio, a few evenings since, at
which the speaker proclaimed disunion senti
ments, tho chairman of the meeting and eleven
others rose and stated that they could no
longer train with the Republican party; hence
forth they should fight under tho Democratic
bunucr.
A correspondent from Edgar oouuty, 111,, it.
forms the Cincinnati Inquirer that the state is
sale for Buchanan by a large majority. He
states that in one township iu Edgar conuty,
which has four hundred votes, there are hut
three Fillmore men, and not a single one for the
negroites! That is near the way all Southern
Illinois will vote next November.
The- Detroit Advertiser (Republican) pub
lishes a list of two hundred names of "promi
nent Democrats'^ of that city, who declare their
determination to give their votes for Col. Fre
mont. To which the Free Press (Democrat)
remarks, as au offsett, that not teu of them have
ever voted the Democratic ticket, that a large
number are not legal voters, and that another
large number arc altogether fictitious,
The magnificent new ship James Buchanan,
owned by our weli known citizen Peter Marcy,
arrived here a few days ago in tho remarkably
short passage of sixteen days from Boston, the
best yet umde this season, and beating hand
somely every other vessel’s time. In Novem
ber, tho great man after whom she has keen
named will perform a similar feat iu the Presi
dential race.—Louisiana Courier, Sept. 21.
In the official returns of the Iowa State elec
tion, Calhoun county stands blank—no returns
received. The Iowa Reporter thus accounts
for it: "Thecitizens of Culhoun county,coming
together to vote, last August, for the first time,
were interrupted before they got at it by a
drove of elk, after which every man, deserting
the polls, gave cluiso, aud never came back to
exercise the election franchise.”
Frost at New Orleans.-- New Orleans,
Oct. 1.—There was a frost hero last night. We
have tho same report Irom Vicksburg, Missis
sippi.
The report that a school master chastised a
boy with a railroad switch is doubted.
There were 431 deaths in New York last week
Later from Cental America,—New York
Oct. 2.—The steamship Tennessee has arrived
from 8an Juan witli accounts to the 21st tilt 1
Wo learn that President Walker’s prospects
have improved considerably, and his army now
shows a muster roll or 1000 American volun
teers and rocruits, in addition to the nativo for
ces. Tho Rivas Government is entirely defunct,
ond the troops of the allied States that had
combined againBt Walker, aroin a deplorablo
strait, from the ravages of c liolcra and from
threatened starvation, as their supplies have
been cut oil. . The Costa Ricans refuse to invade
Nicaragua; President Walker was preparing to
march out against the camp of the enemy.
Mr. E. Booth, the tragedian, h among tho
S oasengora by the lllineis, at New York, from
alifornia.
Education for the West.—Ex-Governor
Slade, of Vermont, passed through Springfield,
Massachusetts, with another detachment of hia
female army of school teachen to invade the
ignorance of the West. There were 25 in the
company, and they swell the total who have
thus gone out under Gov. Slado’s auspices to
450.
Freights and 8*am ex.—There is more stir
in shipping, and large vessels are beginning to
go South, showing a revival of trade la that di
rection. New York, however, is regarded as
affording the best promise of employment, com-
E ared with other ports. The supply of seamon
just about equal to the demand. Men are rea
lly obtained fo * * “
era tho following extract from U. It Is a great
full of wholesome doctrine—however, it
IsVbeUer Constitutional speech, and hotter
Southern Righto speech (because cotuliiuf tonal)
than our readers irc accustomed to hear from
those who in Georgia disgrace themselves by
abuse of its author.
Hero are our extracts, token word for word
from the original. Read them!
I do uot lutoud here to discuss the question
of slavery. Ueavoit where the Constitution
loaves it. There is safety in no other course—
Possibly there are in it provisions on other sub
jects besides slavery, which are distasteful to
individuals in every State. And the moment
you violate the Constitution on any subject
against which you are prejudiced, you establish
the daugerous precedent,tout will warrant your
neighbor, or a neighboring State to violate it—
in violating it for reasons of his owu. Are there
not in Stato constitutions or .statutes provislous
on other subjects which scores of oitixens view
as restraints on lawful liberty, and au interfer
ence with individual rights t Aud do not the
people of oue State often sou euaotud laws iu
other States, which they deem unconstitutional;
or, if constitutional, an extreme exercise oi
power? Take the question of sale aud manufac
ture ot'ardeut spirits. Laws have been proposed
here, in this Commonwealth, restraining the
traffic in intoxicating liquor.-?. Illinois rejected
such a law. Indiana in favor of it, adopted it,
each acting as they had a right to do. Suppose
now that some ragamuffin, Jim Lane, with a
horde of vagabonds, hud come iu hero at the
time of our eleotion, and said you must enact
this law, and had roused districts throughout
the land to send In their hundreds to determine
the question for you, would you not have risen
to a man, even you who wanted the law, aud
cried to the interloper, "bo off,” uud driveu him
from the State? [Cheers,and cries ‘wo would!’]
Or suppose we had said to Indiana, "yon have
an infamous law, you miserable water-drinking
Hoosiers,” aud sent Suckers there to preach,
and Intermeddle, and agitate, and counsel re
sistance to the law, would not the tce-totallera
and wine-bibbers have united to whip ua from
the State? So with every other question of State
policy: the universal rale must be—no inter
ference whatever trom without. [Cheers.] 1
earned this principle at a very early age—let
every man mind hfs own basilic**, it is appli
cable to communities and States, as well as in
dividuals.
Intermeddlers arc a pest to neighborhoods—
impertinent interference breeds mischief al
ways. The same is true iu reference to this
question of slavery. No good hits ever come of
the unwarrantable interference of tho North
with the institutions of the South. Tncybuvo
not promoted their own designs by it. They
have not diminished tho number of the slaves—
they have made no free State - they have not
mitigated the severity of auy slave laws. Ou
the contrary, they have arrc&ted every move
ment for the removal of slavery Irom States
where thirty years ago events were naturally
tending to such a result. They have provoked
tho free States themselves to pa« more oppres
sive laws restricting the freedom of the black
mau, thau stand on the Statute book of Missou
ri.;, Boasting that they are the friends of the
negro and of the freedom of the slave, they
bavo not bettered his condition—they have in
definitely postponed the day of bis freedom;
and more thau this, while thus utterly failing
iu every point to accomplish their proposed
philanthropic designs, thoy have embittered
the feelings of the North against the South—
they have calumniated every Southern State-
misrepresented and traduced the best men of
tho South—impugned the piety of Southern
Christians—imputed to them cruelty and lust—
rendered inoperative every design of Christian
nbilatitbrupby in behalf of the black mau, and
ineffectual tho efforts of benevolent masters to
give a proper direction.to the improvement of
their slaves, and have ended their career of in
termeddling by bringing the natiou to the
verge or disunion, aud threatening to accom
plish the diabolical treason rather than not suc
ceed iu their designs.
Aud when, as some of them do when re
buked for their course, they ask. what shall we
do ? what would you recommend ?—the only
answer must always be, do nothing—mind
your own business: the more you do, the less
yon accomplish ; with this question of slavery
yon have nothing to do in the world; it is a
local, State affair, aud bclougs not to you.
(Cheers.) What right has Illinois to interfere
iu Kentucky on any subject of her domestic
policy? What right has Kentucky to inter
meddle with us, or to seek in anywise to deter
mine any question of slavery for us? Kentucky
has decided to ret tin the system. Illinois has
made her owu decision,and wisely, too. Whose
busiuess is it but onr own ? Suppose Kentucky
should send a regiment here to force upou us
the blessings of siuvery. We should drive back
the intermeddlers And were we to send a
regiment to South Carolina to miugle at her
polls, disturbing and agitating questions con
cerning her internal policy, who doubts that we
should return genteelly flogged ?
If this prino.ple of nonintervention be ob
served, we shall have entire peace, and tbe re
storation of fraternal feeling to the whole
country, and especially to Kansas, which Iras
been the chief and uufortuualo victim of tills
offkiouauetw of foreign States iii organizing
societies, hands and regiments, to mould her
institutions, iu utter violation of the natural
course of events, or in anticipation of the
time when Kansas, for herself, should dispas
sionately determine whether to have slavery or
no. And I am of opinion that if there is auy
doubt now as to the existence of slavery there,
or concerning the admission of Kaunas as a
State, with or without slavery, the Abolition,
ists of the North have to thank themselves.
(Cheers.)
By their Emigrant Aid Societies, and threats
and hired ageuts, and insolent bearing toward
Missouri' as the border State, thoy provoked
counter organizations and aroused resentments,
and produced a collision on the soil of Kansas,
whore, Iiad emigration gone on in u natural
way, and the husbandman sought tho fertile
f ilains there for a home, instead of turning it
ntoji political battlefield,the question of slavery
would already have been settled there, and the
torch in the Iranda of madmen have been ex
tinguished months ago.
But Abolitionists tell us they can’t nfford to
mind their own business [laughter]; they
couldn’t sleep if they did! Their consciences
won’t nllow It! [loud laughter and cheers,] and
they tell you of tho encroachments of {the slave
power, spreading over the whole country, and
their fears are excited lest Illinois should be
swallowed up by the insatiate monster. But
this slave aggression! what is the history ?—
Judge Douglas here in rapid review, recounted
certain facts—that thirteen slave States achiev
ed American independence—that Bunker Hill
aud Saratoga, and Princeton, were all In slave
States in those proud revolutionary times—
that there was but one free State when the con
stitution was adopted—twelve slave 8tates to
one free; and that changes had gone till now
sixteen free Stutcs existed, and there were only
three more slave States than when the consti
tution was adopted, whiio tho free States have
a majority in both Houses of Congress. This
is aggression indeed! Does that look as if the
slave power wus to bo reproached with un ag
gressive history ? (SomO one hero cried out,
"Judge,will yon tell ua whoso constitution our’s
is? Does it belong to the North or South, or
to each without distinction ?’’) Judge Douglas
said? Homo one asks "whosaxonstitutlon is it?”
I answer mine, my children’s, yonrs and your
offspring’s. (Storms of cheers.) No patriotic
mau has any right to invade a letter or line of
it. It is my birtbrghl and yours, and to he
transmitted to your chiildren and mine;
He then returned to his historical argument,
aud said: Thus you find twelve Slave States
and one Free, who does not see that If tills
"aggressive” power had seen fit to exercise ar
bitrarily its owu powers, slavery could have
bceu entailed forever by the Constitution upon
the Republic ? But the Slave States then had
no such desire to encroach, nor have they now.
They believed in Stato Rights—subject to the
Constitution—then os now, and lelt to each
State asserted for itself as an uualterabie law.
tue right of each one to rodflel their internal
policy without hindrance from without. And
to seek to meddle now, is to do that, which if
attempted at the organization of the Govern-
black. It is here that we come to the dividing
Hue between Abolitionists and the National
Democracy. God never Intended tho negro for
my equal, or my brother. [Loud erica of "no.
no.”] I am not in favor of negro Jurors, nor or
inducting them into office, nor of that affectio
nate law which allows a negro to marry a
white womau. [Yells.] And yet if you will
listen to any Fremont speaker you will near this
talk about the equality of whito and black.—
Why, my old friend Ab. Lincoln, takes this
ground, and professing to quoto from the De
claration ot Independence, wilt pronounce all
men "free and equal,” or their right to bo.—
Does’nt he talk in that way, [cries of "that’s
as,"]and hones he argues that uny law that de
grades the negro, violates a fundamental prin
ciple of the Constitution! Iiut does he not know
that the word" (toe” is not there where he pro
poses to find it ? I suppose, however, that he Is
like his coadjutor in the cause, Burlingame; he
wants a good abolition constitution. Burlingame
wants an abolition constitution—Bible ana God
too ; and the amazing project of this political
campaign of the Black Republicans is to change
the whole, the Constitution, God and the Bible,
by the eleotion of John 0. Fremont! [Laughter]
And the signs of the times indicate that Greely
is to l*o the apostle aud high priest of this Abo
lition God, and libs paper the Bible and text
book, in lieu of the old fashioned King James’
voraiou we now have ! [Laughter and cheers.1
Iff seoui irreverent iu the terms which I use, I
beg of you to remember that 1 am using the
vety language of Anson G. Burlingame himself.
As I have been led to make a remark con
cernlng tho Bible, I will add onu concerang
tho clergy, This question ui abolition, it is my
deliberate conviction, is rtiuning the country
into infidelity. Infidels, anti-sluvory men, irre
ligious and unchristiuii, are all arrayed against
the Bible and the God of tho Bible ; against
tho Church, the Sabbath, aud the revered ln-
Htitutions of the Christian faith. Through
hypocritical, knavish, and infidel abolitionists,
ministers of the gospel have been corruptee
and perverted from the gospel of Christ. Pro
fessed Christian ministera now, for hire, preach
anti-slavery instead of Bible truth. I speak
not of all ministers. There are two classes of
them—one I respect and revere—laborious,
Christian ministers, who uever lose sight of
the legitimate object of the ministry, reraem-
tering always thut Christ s kingdom is not of
tills world, and tluit its principles are love,
joy, peace aud good will to all, and laboring
always os Christ and his apostles did, iu spirit
ual, religious affaira—1 honor such men, and
humbly accept instruction and receive admoni
tion from their lips. But there is a second
class—of perverters of the ways of Christ
hypocrites 1 must consider them, though tha >
charity which they too generally forget, which
our Bible and Christ’s gospel inculcate, would
suggest that some bf them arc among the
"meek brethren,” whom Paul describes, and
speaks of them in words of coimniascration;
men who turn their pulpits into political ros
trums, from whence they utter falsehoods
against better men than themselves, and most
carefully do it ou tho Lord’s day, and from be
hind tho fortification of a pulpit, lest if they
did it on auy less sacred day, or in auy less
sacred spot, they should be chastised for their
lies.
Instead of preaching what men need to hcar-
"Cbrist and him crucified”—those huckster! of
a political religion forget the fundamental pre
cepts of tbeir professed Master's religion; forget
Him and the mere!fill designs and charitable
spirit of His mission, aud amid lies, und vitupe
ration, and slander, hold up. not the cross, hut
"Douglasand hint damned!” [Cheers, yells
and laughter.] Is this harsh ? Let ine tell you,
no politician, bred iu the very school of bitter
ness and lies, can speak so harshly or so falsely,
as the Abolition preachers of the times. I have
received from them from two thousand to twen
ty-live hundred sermons, filled with blasphemy
hypocrisy and blackguardism, preached by in
fidel, mercenary ministera, against whom the*
accusation must be brought of perverting the
holy Sabbath and Christ's Gospel to political
ends. Aud iu leaving this brunch of the subject
let me say, if you wish to preserveyour religiou
and your morals, nnd your conscience pure,aud
keep the cause of morality and the gospel "
sbun these political preachers. When the
...... tbeir answer is "fifty killed L_
and If not killed (bore, they’ll kill ’em In
the newspapers: why, there's my old friond
Martin Wnito, of Christian county, killed with
seven balls thro’ his body! Charley Hunt got
a letter the week after ho was murdered—be
fore he found out the atrocious manner in
which he had been killed—and in this letter,
Martin White—the murdered man—with seven
balls thro’ hla body, writes that he doesn’t be
lieve they will ever be peace in Kansas till Abo-
litiouists and mioistenare put down! [Roarsof
laughter aud cheers.] In Connecticut, two men
were killed—to order of course—lust before the
election. By some miracle, both men came to
life tho day after. There Is an object in para
ding these manufactured outrages, and to the
leaden* of tho party, it mutters uot whether
Lsuo succeeds or is defeated. If twenty pro-
slavery men are killed, it is heralded us n great
victory for freedom, ir fifty of Lane's mon are
slain, they are boxed up and sont to political
meetings. The one scle design is to lnllnenco
the North against the South.
In closing my remarks upon this occasion
let me ask, what good can come or all this to
any party or Individual in the Und? Will it
bind the Union together ? Does it not all tend
directly and inevitably, and speedily. If not
soon arrested, to civil war? and to Mat dis
ruption of the ties that bind the Union together
which I charged as the design of the Black
Republican party ? cau the Union exist mere
ly iu name without union in interest, without
mutual confidence, and forbearance, and frater
nal consideration on the part of the North
toward the, South, and the South toward the
North.
safe:
Bible
dily obtained for
Liverpool Jrade l
ced as heretofore—N. Y. Jour.
From Chicago, for Liverpool—The sob’r
Dean Richmond, Captain Pierce, from Chicago
via Quebec, bound to Liverpool, was passed off
Point Lynas, on the 17th instant, by theeteamer
Baltic. The D.R.sai!ed from Milwauklh ffnly 19
Montreal Ang. 15, and from Queboc August 22,
WithaqWldJfwestern product.,
ment, wonld havo prevented the formation of
tho Union. Subsequently, within thirty years,
six States, in obedience to this fundamental
rinciple of States rights andiiovereig
-abut iu the all Stateaffalre.abolfihedsiave^ ^ow'wa it
Liverpool trade tbp same difficulty is experien- doue ? By the Wilmot Proviso f By the Mis-
‘ .Com. —*~ **“•'
sour! Crompromise ? Was it by interference of
Congress? Was it not by the freo wifi—by
the independent action of each State for itself?
New York did not ask Congress to abolish the
system within her borders. She asked only her
own sovereign people. - - ’
It is now the soveroigu right of Ifiinoli to es
tablish the system If she pleues. Bat'ws don’t
want slaves; If wf did, we’d haVe, ’em in spite
and God nro dethroned by these men, we shall
become in tills land as France in *1)3.
I have a word or two to say on two or three
other points and I have doue.
1 ask what excuse have tho Fremonters for
all this strife between North and South ? They
tell us, "There Is bloody work In Kansas.” But
wiiat caused the o .t rages there ? Did the Kan-
sas-Nebraska bill occusion them ? No, of course
we must answer, for tho same law prevails in
Nebraska ns In Kansas, and is there any dis
turbance iu Nebraska ? All is prosperous and
secure there. How is there peace iu oue aud
civil war in the other? in Nebraska the people
by natural, spontaneous emigration, .settled the
Territory, as Illinois was settled, as Wisconsin,
by men seeking peaceful homes—men with fa
milies, uot political agitators—not crusaders in
the cause of unprincipled managers of political
schemes—not hired boys and young men, hired
as emigrants to go to Kansas to vote at the polls
rather than till the soil—not by such emigrants
but by bonajide settlers, such ns have peopled
nil those growing and already mighty States of
the Northwest. The settlement of Kansas—how
was it? You all kuow. There was tiutkiug spon
taneous—nothing natural about it. It never was
paralelled by any previous emigration in this
country. Read the papers—examine tbeir own
disclosures of their own designs, uud you will
see thut the animus of the whole was an Aboli
tion idea—a political scheme, that men were
sent mi primarily to vote, to compel Kansas to
become a tree State. Recull to mind the manner
or tbeir emigration—their boasts—their defiant
>!< durations thut thoy would make Kansas free
"to of Misasourl uud the South-tneircrowds
witli badges upon their hats, and arms
m tbeir hands, and tueir ceasciess agitation and
loud talk of the slavery question as tlioy tra.
v ora*‘d our rivers, and passed up tho Missouri,
ml you will be at no loss to know what occa-
ioned aud fostered excitement in Kansas, until
t becamo strife and bloodshed und civil war.
I say that those shipments of political emi
grants was wrong—it was the had seed of ail
the evil fruit which lias been i*orue in Kansas
since, and it was a trampling upon the provi
sions of tho Kansas act—it was impertinent and
unlawful, intermeddling with nfiiiirs where the
people should he left free from foreign influence
of every kind. It was nil wrong. Every het
of interference there bus been wrong, whether
instigated by New England or Missouri. Mas
sachusetts aud Missouri both have violated
there the fundamental principle of the right of
the people to manage their own uflairs. But
there is this difference between New England
and Missouri: tho former began tho intermed
dling. and tho latter retaliated. In Nebraska,
the bill to wbicli those evils are ascribed, had
fair play and all is well. In Kansas, foreign
interference subverted the principles of the
bill,und nothing but ruin lias bceu the conse
quence.
But 1 have another poiut to which 1 must
call your attontiou. A few weeks ngo^ill was
peace in Kansas, through the interposition of
the President aud bis orders to Col. Sumner,
who drovo out the Georgians aud then the
New Englanders, there in armed force, aud re
stored peace and quiet to the Territory. What
was the consequence? Why, tho Now York
Tribune announced that because of this happy
peace and quiet, Fremont would be beaten tor
tho race for the Presidency! (Cries of "that’s
it!”) Accordingly a committee of Abolition
ist and political agitators was called to meet
at Buffalo. Reeder presided, und the conclu
sion was that they must have an army to drive
out pro-slavery men, and raise one hundred
thousand dollars a month to be supplied till
after the Presidential election. Now, mark
closely all the facts of this nicely concocted
scheme. Reeder, iu reply to Uerritt Smith,
urged that tho convention should not make
their plans too public—that they should pre
pare to strike their blow at a time when South*
era meu would not know it. An army of vol
unteers was raised in Illinois nnd Iowu; money
was supplied by the faithrul throughout the
land, and Jim Lane took charge of the mer
cenaries who hired themselves out to the con
spirators against the peace of the Union. He
S ot into Nebraska and encamped with his mur-
crous crew lor three weeks. Why ? The time
bad not come. Abolitionists had auxiliary
work to do elaowherc. first. Lane’s confeder
ates were consplrlug iu Cougress to defeat tho
Army bill. They succeeded until the 16th of
Auguiit, and the prospect scorned fixed that
the army was to be withontsupplies. The very
day the news reached Ijuuo, of this, ho took up
his line of maroh and invaded Kansas, attack
ing settlements, sacking towns, imrningliousea,
driving off colonies, and murdering everyman,
woman and child, who did not escape in the
darkness of the night. Do you not see through
the whole of this? It was got up as a politioal
movement, jnst as much os Fruimmt meetings
are. Bloodshed and civil wur were planned
for political purposes; and they will last as
long m Tramwlf and others desire It to last,
Proceedings of Connell.
Savannah, Oct. 2, 1850.
Council met—Present hh„Honor Edward C.
Anderson, Mayor; Aldermau Allen. Walker
Posey and Arnold.
The minutes of the lost regular meeting of
Council were read and confirmed.
The Information and fino dockets wore read
and confirmed.
reports.
Alderman Allen made a verbal report in the
matter of water standing in Whitaker street
near the Baptist Church, aud suggested a sur
vey and cost of a sewer running west—was
authorized to have the same done,
ORDINANCES.
An Ordinance to amend the Fire Ordinance,
was referred back to the Committee on Fire
Department.
An Ordinance to be eutitled an Ordinance to
amend the Ordinances now lo force, regulating
the market, was read tbc flrat time and ordered
to be published.
RESOLUTIONS HEAD AND PABSKD.
By Alderman Walker, seconded by Aldermau
Arnold :
ttetolved, That an election for Mayor and
twelve Aldermen, for the city of Savannah and
hamlets thereof, be held on Monday, the 13th
instant, under tho proper superintendance, and
that tho City Treasurer attend with his Tax
Digest—That the City Sheriff, his Deputy, aud
tho City Police attend to preserve order.
Retolved, That the Justices of the Inferior
Court be requested to preside at said election.
COMMUNICATIONS AND MISCELLANEOUS MATTER.
Read a Communication from the Uourd of
Health recommending that Council appropri
ate tho sum of three hundred dollars as com
pensation to Dr. Sam’l A. T. Lawrence for bis
services as Secretary and Treasurer of the
Board of Health for tue current year; also, the
sum oi fifty dollars, as extra pay to the Mes
senger of Couucil for his attendance on the
Board of Health. On motion of Alderman Ar
nold, seconded by Alderman Walker, the said
recommendation was granted.
2d Lieut. Waring Russell, of tiie Police, of
fered his resignation, which was accepted, and
the Mayor authorized to fill the vacancy until
tho next meeting of Council—and that the
Clerk advertise an election at the next meeting
of Connell to fill said vacaucy.
The Mayor reported to Council that there
were no thuds in the Treasury lor the current
expeuses of the City and suggested that an
unexpended balance arriving from the sale of
River bonds, for improvements on the knoll be
used for the present amouut to be kept as a eep-
erate account aud repaid when required-agreed
to by the Board.
Tue Corporation Attorney made a statement
in reference to alleged trespass upon the land
belonging to the State of Georgia, at Lazeretto
Point, for which the Governor had appointed
the city agent—and recommended that the
Board should take some action in the mat
ter.
Alderman Arnold offered the following,
seconded by Aid. Walker and passed.
Retolved, That the County Surveyor be and
he is hereby directed to survey and define the
lines of the land on Tybee Island, belonging
to the State of Georgia, and under the care of
the city, situated on Tybee Island nnd known
us tho Old Quarantine.
ACCOUNTS.
Pied, of foVor. at Ibo reside co of bis brother, In
WaUhourvilla, Liberty county, Uoorgin, on tho bt
Hoptembor, Mr. SOLOMON MJUKETF, li»tlio illst'
year of hi* *ge.. The doceatiod wu born In Craw-
lord county, where his file was chiefly passed, until
quite recently, when he removed to Liberty county.
lie has lefts bereaved mother, Tour brothers and
a e Ir tor, together wbh a large circle of reUtivs and
friends, who deeply mourn hla early doom. Tho
writer oflbli humble tribute to the memory or a
friend, knew Solomon from a boy, and has often re
marked the many tine traits of character that (flus
tered arouud hla moieUand rotiriug dUpodton, as
diamonds that surround some less glowing getu, to
reveal its beauty., in Ua ret pc ted light,
Doing bravo, honorable, gentrou* and. just, b»
vr*i popular with;tho young,.re#i-ccted by (he oM,
and nearly beloved and cbcrUhed by who
knew ldiu mtimatei).
Just entering upon Ilfo, surrounded by fafllucpw?
aud devoted frieuds, Ids luture W4« gilded vuifi ;|i«
brighteai promises of earthly huccosk and lupptup.-*;
but lo I the Epoi lor claimed a spotless ibtcnUce,
he became tboobogen victim, llis death hrtx created
a void Umecan uever close; aud eyes will weep, uud
hearts will mourn..until, iu tUlr uru, they chad
be atUl In death, over the memory of tbead’ectionatu
uud dutiful sou, the manly aim devoted brother,
and Ibo unthueblug and lahhful friend. Language
I- pro feeble to do Justice to a noble* und virtuou*
character, and panegyric is bushed Ur tho dee.,
emotions of overpowering grief. In tears we leave
thee, Solomon,*iu the den* slumber of the grave.
‘’Bright bo tho piece efthy soul!
No lovelier spirit than thine
K*«r burst from It* mortal voutrol,
lu the orbs of the blessed to shlue.
****** «
Light bo tbc tin for tby tomb!
lli.y its verdure Nice emeralds bo ;
'iheru should uot bo the shadow of gloom
in aught that reminds.» oftbeo."
. A Fill EM’.
P
restaurant
hla RmTAURANT for tile ,
T.G. Vblck, wlio*ero|,uu«.,uM»!if tU!4
cleat guarantee that every thing wunf"
please tbo most fstlldiouK td to * be dt *iestJ
octl—lw * , . '
A. ii. Lto
YOUR HOUSE,"
KG. 144 BIIVAX 8TIU2^^ I
WRrr ot nu: makkpt, * I
savannah, okoiujia ’ i
T HE FU^rmiBKR would inter* U frl/k ,
ti*.j jiubl'c generally, that ho I V' 01 I
irom Ids Old Stand to HKYaN .siv.trr I
u P l, ie above Houtn ut a am erior mV ■hi'! 8ae ' I
;)V"J.uam™o>:,„^ |AASD!sw
HE.VBY bUBj.
Amount of accounts passed $2(173 26.
Council adjourned.
# EDWARD G. WILSON.
Clerk of Council.
NEW GROCERY
Provision Store.
rftiih uuuerdgucn subscribers wouiu mlorm ihoir
X friends and the publio generally, that they
nave refitted tho store on Whitaker atreot, recently
occupied by John Duly, Esq , ami they now offer
themselves as candidates lor tbo patronage of this
city and its vicinity.
Tbeir stock is now and large, constating in part
of tbo following—
BACON HIUEa,
HAMS ANDSHCUUIKIUL
BKOWN, CRASHED, CLARIFIED
AND POWDERED SUGARS.
Every description ot Coffees and Teas, Butter, Urd,
Flour, Cheese, Crackers, Pickles, Catsups,
Sauces, Soap, Candlos, Segars,
Tobacco,
And Iu fact everything ususually kept in a Family
Grocery Store.
ALSO,
Wo will keep coiistaully on hand a choice supply oi
fresli Fruits of every description
We have perfected a system ot business that will
onable us torecoiveby almost every vessel from
New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore und Boston,
fresh mul new supplies to our stock.
We would rc8poctlully suggest to one and til, to
give us a call before purchasing'elsewhere, and
wo promise to dispose of our articles at the most
reasonable prices, for cash or city acceptance.
It, II. WATSON A CO.
Ag-Rcpubllcnn pleaso copy. [eep27]
FOIL SALE, * r ’“
Six Tracts of Land, 600 aciei each. 3 or
miles Irom tho city of Savannah ou tueB.
and Gull Rail Road, well adapted to th.- growth
Rico, Cotton and Corn, and Wood enough to pay
t ten times over. Apply to
fob 27 tf G. A. CLOUD
TbOLOti
X> by
oct 1
"WSi
JhflPE.
T EAS AND SUGARS—Just received 20 half chests
choice (loose) Oolong Tea; 10 do In fo and
H fo packs; 6 do Hyson Tea, looso, and iu X packs;
‘JO bbls Crashed and Powdered Sugar*, and 3 Ubds
Porto Rico Sugar, In store aud for salo by
DAVID O’CONNOR,
oct 2 corner Broughton and Drayton ate.
F LOUR.—100 bbls. Oakloy Flour, Just received
und for salo hr
sopt 20
HO LCOMBK. JOHNSON k 00.
I > OPE—700 coils Rope, various brands, sU
II of good quality, in store and for sale by
apr29 BB1QHAM. KEU.Y k CO.
H AMS—15 casks sugar "cumY*Hams; *' r
pur steamship Keystone State and tor ralehy
septtS WEBSTER k PALMES.
F OR SALE—to shares Gas Company .stock, by
aug8 BARKMAN k BU1XOCH
P EACH BRANDY—1,000 gallons pure old Peach
Bran ‘y, for sale by
YOUNG & WYATT.
oct 2
ljuoar£^
O 160 bbls. A, B unit CChrlUed Sugar
50 “ Crushed and Pulverized Sugar
25 half boxes Stuart's Loaf "
10 bbd* choice I’orto Rico
In store aud (hr sate by
oct 2 HOLCOMBE, JOHNSON k CO.
r ARD— ~
Yj 26 burrels No. 1 taaf lard
100 kegs « -‘ -‘
In store and for sale by
oct 2 HOLCOM
HOLCOMBE, JOHNSON k CO. _
/HANDLES. STARCH, SOAP, Ac.—
V/ 60 boxea Sperm and Patent Sperm Candles
560 boxos and half boxes Pearl Starch
160 " Colgate's No. 1 Soap *"
60 •• BetOol, Hmirt i; CoIg»te’» family and
Pole Soap
200 " Adamantlno and Tallow Cand lea
60 «• Pipes and Pipe Hoads
Inatorcand for sale b;
oct 3
for sale by
HOLCOMBE, JOHNSON k CPi
F LOUR—600 blue, extra and superfine Floor, as
sorted brands.
600tocki extra and superfine Flour, ui’dteuti.
loubteextr
sacks double extra,
‘nb\oext_
YOUNG k WTATT.
160quarter ........
160 bbls. GoodletvlU* double extra
eotfi ‘
tamminl Miipe.
Savant inti Market, October 4.
The transactions yesterday was the largest of tbc
Reason. Since our,layt weekly review ortho mar.
ket there has been a heavy advanco. aud at the
closo of business lad evening the market was un
quotable, aud very excited. Tbe total sales of tbe
day is 1,104 biles, os follows: 2 at 11, lo at ll>,', U
at 11 at 11«, W ut 12,22 atl2X, 107 at 12*.
160 at 12^, 313 at 12Jj, 246 at t>« at 12V
Export*.
VtttutucMtUA—Per uvltr Fauulo—JM» boles uploud
cotton, 30,0t>0 feet sawed lumber, 60 balos cotton
wusto, 116 tons old iron and sundry indze.
Imports.
Cmirr, (Waua)— Per ship Parliament—1,100
tons ruilroau iron.
AUGUSTA, Oct 2.—Cdt. n.—flic Cot.ou tn.rket
coutin ;es firm, nnd all offered meets with i eudy,
sale. Fair UK to Wk ; Good Mlduliog to Mid
dling Fair 12 cents. Not much detnaud fur the
lower grades,
STOCK uv COITOX OX IM.ND IX AVGUSTA RXD lUMUfEO
UUTOflEU 1, 1*56.
Iu Augus'a 0,041
Iu Hamburg I,ul6
.JI'IPMKI TS or IWTTOX TO MlAUUfcTUX AX» S WAXXAU,
IX SKPTRMHKR, I860.
To Obarlotitou, by Railroad 3,265
“ from Hamburg 2,352
Savannah, by Railroad 2,Uul
•• by Steamboats none
Through Cotton to CharlestonW
total HwaariB.
Slock on ha* d, September 1 1,781
Shipped in S ptember 8,618
Stock on bnnd, October 1 7,W»0
10,174
Deduct stock, September 1 1,781
Receipts in September 14,3^3
Through cotton t 781
COLUMBIA, Oct. 2 —t otto-—There was au active
demand for Cotton yesterday at full aud steadily
advancing prices, ome 250 bales were fcoid at
pricoa ranging from lOKall 0 *100 extremes.
NEW YORK, Hept. **9—Uotteu—Tbe market is
Orm at Saturda) ’s advance, and & moderate de
mand prevails. The steunur’s new.- has not pro
duced the slightest ebang . fcwtvn of l 000 bnies.
Wo quote:
MKW YORK CLASSIFICATION
Upland. Florida. Mobile. N.OfcTx
Ordinary lutf 10)* 10>j lotf
Middling H* W)i 11« IU*
Middling Fair... 12* 12% 13 13.^
Fair.. 12 13 13# 13#
Flour—Tbe arrivals are quite large, but as tbe
stock Is Ug. t the trade purchase freely at an ad
vance of 16a2Uc. tSeutburu Hour is belter, aud
with moderate arrivals priceB fltlll tend upward,
sales of 2,390 bbls. at $7 lba7 45 for m xed to gone
standard brands; $-6(108 for favorite, fancy aud
ex to brands.
Ktco continues, with a smalt supply, firm; a mod
erate demand prevails; sales oflUUtes at 4a4>{c,
as to quality.
srpt 29—tf«Ct
nlsh 0Y.1T.hs iiataSfW'""
to m 1 kklcu In ''Hi
pur* b ASUJ;
ready t-* be shipped.
0,:,l jiusw
srs-,''sjftii
a - ft;
NO'J'iCIt
T IE UNDERSIGNED h.TTll'.i? this Ha.
themselves together for
lug the Whole.* Grocery huffi®
J AS. 0. UObGERs
•1A>. A. NORHlF '
GKO. H JOHNSTON.
•IN0, V uii-nj
davaoiroh. Juno 2d, lc5r;
T HF. Arm o[ Rodger. 1’orris h IT tna IV. «
been dissolved by the above wwBmli}*
partner will use tbc name or tho Urn |'i iM*
Savannah, Juno 2d. lssr. ' ’ ’ ‘
NOTICE, .
O NE MONTH alter till, duo apii'lcatian < i I
made to the Bank ot the bm, a £«,* J
toe payment or a twenty Mint bid. ti„ SuS
of which has bien Iom. * 1 I
OreonvHlo, Ala., 1st Pel.,jiff** 1, I
HACK AND LliERYlTAn^
COKXKK tV j
BROUGHTON AND BARNARD STRKEls.
7 ^ |} le ,lrra "f Stevoci 4 Q&l I
was dissolved on the 1st d,r tf
October by mutual consent. 'IHt ?M*S F. fcirvnv
will continue tho business :»t his o;j Suu, * 1
oct 2
Snvnmioh, Oct. fit, pjo.
T HECO-PARmitiUiP her-teforo extdiwte I
tween the .-ubsevibers, under the ime « j 1
V. CONNERAT it CO , wu t!,|. day dK el t,
mutual consent. .Mr. Joseph V. Cuunersi *ti J
tend te the settlement of the affair* ofth«uldt*iL
.1. v. ( un.verat, 1
J. 1.AMA.
{Snvniumlt, Oct. l*t, 1158,
THE UNDERSIGNED having bought out the it 1
tercst of Jonx Lama, will herejft r continue tii 1
wholesale GRuCHtY AND PUObl’CK HlflXEsj f
in bis own name and fur his "\vn ew'UiA.su'd rt L
spectfully solicits from the friends of the late flrnu I
coutlnuauce of tti-lr tavors. 1
onto .1 Y OiNNYRiT,
NEW BOOKS—sm U00KS7
RECEIVED BY WARN DIE & b\VU.
WEDNESDAY, oCT. lrt, 1S5C.
T HE ILils of ■ lie .’ihatemucl by the author of ti« I
Wide,.Wide World.
Lortlmer Utttegoud— a young goml'mia tL I
wished to see lllo, aud saw it nccordiogiy. Pr
Frank Smedley. Esq.
Chips from Undo .Sam's Jack Knilo. Over fit-
hundred illustrations.
How to Dress with Taste, Now to Woo, ar.d Ht*
to Win.
Bridal Ettiquette; How to Behave.
Mrs. Stephen's Illu-tratei Monthly Dr Ot
her.
Dickens Household Words for October.
Puteams’s Monthly “ ••
also mohr or
The American House i arpenter.
Terry’s Expedition to Jnj-an and tbo tku I
Seas.
For sale at 169 Congress-street.
T«
flipping Unfelliprt.
Port of Savannah October V.
Arrived.
Steamer Uot dun, Brooks, from; Charleston, via
Beaufort. Hilton Head and BlufftoQ—to .1V lirouka,
Cleared.
Scbr Faunte, Beaston, Philadelphia— C A Grenier.
Departed.
Steamer Swan, Johnson, Dome res Ferry.
Memoranda.
Baltimore, Oct 1—Cld, steamer City'ofS&vuuuab,
Pascal, Savannah.
New York, Sept. 29.—Arr, solirLGilmore, Tyler,
Savannah. Sept 39th—Arr.schr Mauhassct; f-we-
zey, Savannah. Cid, Boreas, Rodgers, Savunuah.
PimaDKLPiJtA. Sept. 30—Cld, tebr C G Walerbury,
Cook, Savunuah.
Passenger*.
Per xteamer Gonlon, trora Charleston—W H Hick
man, RL Nelson, J C Fairy, W B IaswuIIou, D
0’I.oary, T llooney. Capt My at 1 , J Malsrh, A Brj an,
und 3 servants, W Harrison, Col short, und 9 dock.
MASblK SC iUJCJL,
HIS School will b.- <iyuliiztd re VirfUiiiy j
October bill, i inter the charge < f hr Ml
ion, as Principal; who win be aittetl ty i«n|ti>ti
assistants. The lrovse wi.l ec<on m<»ato IW|«
pits; ZOO of whom will be rmivtd irte cl duip,
and 100 will pay tuitn n.
The Mas.de School 1' strict itnliuks it at patent I
the city lying east oi Whmd or ft. Allcl i.di«tr«-
sldlngtn this district are \ ntltlwuo a pints to Ut
School.
Applications must be made to either ol the Cto
mlaslonera, or to the Princiiml.
A. ftiRTf.P,
J. ?T«'l IiiM»,
S COlH N,
CuiuQiizf l« tea
Savannah, Sept. 8th, JSSO. sij t 8-1b
fi0. Morning News and Republican t»i$ »
month.
Coiirilgnce*.
Ter steamer Gordon, from Charleston—C11 Road;
Florida Boat; Olaglioru k Cunniugbam; J B Cub-
bedgo; S M lafUtvau;J A Brown; A Haywood; .1
Do Dio; John Davis; F W Bailey; P Jacobs; E Purse.
Receipt* Per tte iitim Railroad.
Onr. 3—1,039 bales cotton 49-* fAcks wheat; 220
sacks flour: t'4 bins flour; 24 buics domestics atm
mdze, to W Duncan; F K cihuckouord; J W Lothrop
k Co; Way & Taylor, Hudson, Fleming k Co; Brig*
bam, Kelly k Co; uuse, Davis k Long; Franklin k
Brantley; fc Parsons k Co; Hardwlcke k Cooke;
Rabun *amltb;Danu k Washburn; 8 M Lafllteau
R Habersham &fc!ou; E O Collius; J Howard; Johu
F Tucker; A Haywood; Lockett k Bnellings; Rems*
hart A 8on;G HCampblold; John logersoll; D D
Copp: Young At Wyatt; Young * Frieson; Cohens k
Hertz; J11 Selkirk; Putton, Hutton k Co;ii Allinger;
E 0 Wado; W Waters; N * Hardee A Co; AS Hart,
ridge; W Woodbridgo; Bothwell A Whitehead; W
H Burroughs.
KIiW AX)V15KTI6EM tjs.
SAVANNAH, ALBANY & GULF RAIL
ROAD.
O N AND AFTER WEDNESDAY, the Ifith instant,
there will be oxx dally Passenger nod Freight
Tralu on the Savannah, Albany amt Gulf R*md.
Running as follows:
Leave Bavannah, 9, a. u
Arrive at Ways, 10.30, a. x.
RKTVfUlXO.
Leave Ways, 2, r.
‘“'•at Bar
ivannah, 8.30, e. u.
EDGAR J
Alttvs-. ’ EIXiAR t. IIERIOT,
oct 4 Chief Engineer.
F ~ RANK LESJJE'S Gazette or Fashion and the
Beau Mond, for October. ^Received and for
zaie by
oct 4
WARNOCK k DAVIS,
169 Congress street.
T HE OIL PAINTINGB Will oe Rallied at tbe Book
Store, under the Marshall House, THIS EVEN
ING. All chance* not paid will of course be paid
at that time. oct 4
mcTMoritomamx wnwir.
A RECENT GRADUATE of a Now Fngland Col
lege desire* a situation os Teaotior. Has had
auuto experience la teaching. Has received a
thorough Eaglish and Classical education, and can
produce satisfactory testimonials to scholarship
and character. Please address, with foil partlcu-
lars, F; B. NORWOOD, 197 Chestnut street, Phlla-
dolphls, Pto. oct 4^-eodat
H AM3, Pig Pork and Corned Beef, A°.—Just re
ceived 100 Reynold’ii Family Hamsj lO bijf
barrels Pig Pork: 10 half bbts Cornedi Beefo 3 bbls
Pig Heads; 10 bbls Wliito Vin^jar^ 85 bbi» ^go.ar,
'for sale by OAVlD ORUNNER,
corner.Broughton and Drayton sU.
PI BLlC iCllUOL. f
ritllE Publio nubiioi wt.l b«* re <i;tncd m Wcut*?-
X duy, tic tuber lot, ender Mr W. 11 Baker»
-riiudpal. , .
one buntlrcd and IIIty pupils will bererf.w:
flt>y of whom will pay tuition. Un rd.uol fowl
inclutlcsthav imrtluu ot the city ly ug wcfioilin
ker street.
No children lit ing ea.n of this street cau cbtu
places in thhs School.
Applications mu 4 ho made to either of tue fow-
mlsaiouers, or lo Ujo Prlncii hI.
J. WRIEB,
J.. TurDARO.
S. i OHZN.
C tniuxt to td-
Pavannah, Sept, etb, If66. jrj’tWw
Morning Newn and P.t?puhiicau cofi
mouth.
ac. P001E, _ r , .
No. 11, Whittaker Street, (two doors from urju-l
WHOLESALE AND BETAlL PEALEK W l
.rea. Blinds, Donra, Pnlnl*. Oils. » er
tilthes, Wlmlovv Gln»>, Putty, L
~ . Painters', Graincrs’ and Artist.-' I
Whitewash Heads and Dusters. TO®?
it— 1 Mixed Paints of every description, Atw |
colors in tubes, Prepared Cmivass. Ac. .
PATER BANGINGS. BUlti »ERS AM > Vm
PA'l TERNS. ,
Rooms prepared with neatness and derif |(B ~
House, Sign and Ship Palming, (illdiug. GraW W
Glazing done In the best style and si W™ 1 ’*
l^lSl'ordera Irom iho couniry
■WOCOJ—'v\ood.
UW Olmileslon Wtalt n lull fop, J »f'J* JjJ
or boatoil Black Jack, Oak. Uiclorj.
tc., So. All in waat arc roapocrtu.ly InWrt H
Marshall Housu will be promptly attended to.
sept 30
DISSOLUTION. „ j, |
T HE Co-partnership of F. t It AMj’ION A ^ I
this day dissolved by nu.t'ial cc, r f .? l ( |, itf .
buslno8sot tbo lato Arm will ieseiiiedlyr- w
pion, who will continue the Grocer) hi 6ln
bU own account. CHAMPION.
K. J.
Savannah, October 1, i860. se,,t 3 —
ASSIZE OP BIlhAD. .
QnrTW*«w«* , 1 gp J
Pavannah, Uctohcr tel. »»• J
fflHE avorage prico of rfwr thela-1 J,*.
JL $3 per barrel, bread must trelgb as«
10 cent Loaf must weigh 1 „
oct i JAVRt s, WIHJIXS at)JSSSnu.
CANDV
TAAVID H. olalOJVAy, | 1 »y 1 "* bl i‘',tflieW
I'ectlonarles, Dried Fruita, Nuts *e t •*«“ tJt yet;
tabllshod Hand recently ocuuplra * WoD md
combo, Rico & Fitzgerald, corner w illW
Whitoker streets, tfavanuah, Ga-, where ^ ^
pleased to accommodate and fijjj* Antd-
promptness and dispatch, to JJJJJ*
cons, aud tbo « dear people Candy
This Is tho placo where tbo genuine c g
** Sough sold. Terms cash. So charged P*
ihg or shipping.
mg 26—3m, —
TjlLOUK.-aw) lacks two 5®^ “
Jj^noar, JiBlrrertTo^d^aMir.
A M10N9.—10 bill, of Sen Or.loof 1«
(J florIJa. recrtroA *»A lor “ l0 j J p. nSJE,
ongtt —
. Ha a* NO. 2* •*» 1
Mi?