Newspaper Page Text
Weekly.
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Hor.
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THURSDAY MMUIgWfOCT. JO, ISM.
V^roarmtoto**. : '
JAMES BUCHANAN,
•- , or nmnniiu.
OR.YI0C PBESlDBNTi. .
■ BBEOKINRIDQE
BlMUnbrUulunn Uib.
WILLIAM U. BTILBS^of Ohatham.
IVSB80NL HARRIS, of Baldwin
ALTIKMinS rou TUI STATS AT LAMH.J
HBMR YO. LAMAR, of Blljb.
AUGUSTUS R. WRIGHT, oC Floyd.
:.il A ’>
ommOT si.ii0T0»8.
DL UUttioL TuoiuaJL Foshan, of Gljutt.
M. DUtriot, Saooil Hall, of Hucon. .
M, District, Janes N.IUhsay,,of Harris
tth. District, Loews J. UAniiiLL, of Fulton.
jltourMWiViMiy.
Tb.fifth.bellcUm* Ibddraiaa
THue'e uobloAt oiuplru i, ltd tail.
J 'mbmms#*'
root, tbat were ot Ires uni
n to pit tee. Ami Imho U .
■UAll tbu Coil of Heaven set up*
4<
lUt
upon
breko
kinp
■RR, ■ . „ klnxilom,
■bull break In pieces uml consume ulllbtM
kingdoms, and It shall stand llrm t
It Is but rlglit for us to observe,'.bat our discover
leu In Interpreting eorlptiuo have compelled us to
aMnn tbut.thlad(tb kluiidotn wblob the vlslou-
preeeiita, and which l>.ulel Intenirets, Is uo
other, and can bo no oth r, than the restoration
or Is(ael to nationality; or, In other words, It
Is the United SafgEs ov Amssioa,
Tlib, restoration ot Israel was to bo tbat of
Christian Inraol; and wo will now show that
the Christian Israel,or.etoue spoken of, coin
cides exactly with the United States of AmorP
st|. Now; among uli the epochs, eras and na
tionalities that overuppeared on earth,before
aud since Christianity, none baveeverbran so
repleto with good to man, and happiness
to tho church, as tho opooh aud cm ot the
United States. Tho severance of Church and
nBpPsBon
The majority for Hawkins anil VpryJnM.
ClSjW?jLAM TO° BB W *HAT
area', ip
MM.
[ORB IN-
I CALLED
!’«•“*«<*•
1, <a
houn la glean also upon report, but It Is re
Volusia Is said by the Know Nothing!,'to'
given Walker and Baker thirty thajorlty.
have not Inserted this |ii the table, for the toa-
aon that I do not believe It. tiler wrltw from
Key West giving the vote at Charlotte Harbor,
Ptrry ‘id, Welker 1, Hawkins ‘II, Baker none,
which I add In tho table ,to the figures previ
ously sent by tho same gentleman from Mon.
roe. You make a lingular mistake In the table
published in tho “ Gtorgitin‘\ ynu -give Berry
100 majority IH Santa lima, find llawklns H7—
whereas Walker has a majority of Ik) thore and
Baker 04.
In tho Senate, tho Democrats have 13 mem
bers, tho Know Nothtugs 7, aud ono district
In doubt. I think, however, that HcRobut
Baker, (dooi.), Is elected in It by a few votes.
The House now stands 20 Democrats, 13 Nunw
Nothings, Buvard and Dado to hear from.
Tho table hbrowith is more full than the one
In tho “ Flovidum.
Yours,
C. E. Dtks.
our own.
the only remedy.
SULLY BNDORSE THE RESOLUTIONS,
AND MAT FURTHER SAY THAT I AM
WHAT IB CALLED A STA TE RIGHTS
DEMOCRAT.—John C. Brt. irulidft in re-
openu It Mo nomination fir ihi I'ice Prutdtn-
gu ====
NOTICE.
The members of the Executive Com
mittee pf the Democratic. Party arc no
tified to meet at tie usual place, on this
evening, at half-paat it. o’clock, on busi-
sm of. importance/
By order of
B. WAYNE, Chairman,
Edw’d G. Wilson, Soc’y. oct30
BY TELEGRAPH.
Later from Europe.
Now Yonx, Oct 28.
The steamer Atlantic haa arrived, with three
days’later foreign advices.
Brown A Shipley quote' Cotton market firm,
Salea of three days 30,000 boles. Speculators
and exporters look 10,000.
Floor firm.
Wheat decUned from 1 to 2 pence.
Consols quiet at a decline of j Quotations
»U-
The political news though important, pro-
ssnti no features of apeetal Importance.
Habile Market.
Hobili, Monday.—Tho odvloea by the last
Eerapean steamer stiffened the Mobile market,
Prlcee advanced from 1 to j, Middling ill
-tollj.
New York Harkcte.
Now Yobs, Oct. 29—Tho Cotton market hue
been firm. Sales of the day 1000 bales. Mid.
dling Uplands I2J. Tha, steamer’s news had
no effect upon the market.
The Pernio sailed .today, with a million and
a half laspeojsdtjv. - - >
K I F*W#K‘?Mp|r fptd.! 1 ; !. f,
Puladiltbia, Oot. M.—The Timu, a lead
lag Fremont ffrgan of Pennsylvania, has been
■old.
Combinations In Massachusetts.
There will he strong effort made by the com
bined Democrats, Old Lino Whigs and conser
vative Know Nothings of Massachusetts, to
defeat, at the next election, some of tho Rank-
se’s and Burllngumes, who have lately brought
such disgrace upon that once res] cctable com
monwealth The Boston Post expresses the
hope, and Courier (Whig) cardinally seconds
the motion that “ tho Democrats will leave no
proper means untried to defeat the re-election
of the present members of Congress, and to
iecore a majority of Notional men In oar State
Lsgblatare. Let there he liberal confidence
among ell Unlou men—a cordial concert of ac
tion and the (election of the most popular men
among them for candidates—whetherthey he
Notional Democrats or National Whigs—snd
the Black Republicans will bury their plumes
In the dost.”
VoU at the Unlver.l ty of Virginia.
Univxksittov Viuoinia, Oot. 34.
Mkssia.EniTOBs:—You Via please pardon
me for offering for publication In your valuable
papers harried account of the presidential
election among the Students of tho University
of Virginia. It was held this afternoun and
resulted In a majority for Buck and Break of
seventy-seven (77) out of^bout (330) five hun
dred and thirty votes poUed. A good many of
the students being very busy with their studies,
did not go to the polls, hot If they had aU voted
the majority for Buchanan would no doubt have
been still greeter. Attheelectlonherolastycsr
the Democrats received a smaU majority, bet
prevlocsto that time the Whigs have nearly
always had the majority, I thick our election
this afternoon ihonld,be hailed with joy by the
Democratic parly; slece It icUa so well of the
growth and future power of that party, not only
of Ita growth among the people generally, bet
especially among the educated, whose infioence
always has been, and always wiB be felt where-
•oever ln Ufa they may be placed.
At the election there wu gqeat excitement
and entheatasm. Msny patriotic speeches were
delivered bythe' students, snathe wnolo coun.
toy, amused, wig VJththe hdzzis of aspiring
youthsand at. sunset, when we wore aU u-
•emhled together, and on hearing Urn melt sf
the aiqetkui announced, gave three ehein for
tho-Dnocracy or our country, Monticcllo
. South stood firmly
to tUold pMp ; wo mircbed to the polls under
11m flgfbf ^Democracy, wboss staff was topped
with a noble 1 pdir ' o f butk horna, tnd cist our
votes. copld only count) for the good
of oor cbantiy. There is one thing remarks
Ue shoot the election ; It to t though there was
great excitement tnd the greatest interest man-
(tested, yet perfect peace and the beat of good
f»Uag existed among us all
a Hoping '’that. the. coming, election in your
, ike Empire 1 State of the South, whore I
hi dear recolUctton'*, may result as our
•lection has, I bid you a pleasant good
Yoon respectfully, U.
heel upon the necks of the crushed.
among Europeans.
■ unit on tiki giouuu upon vruloli I placed my
iu February last,! BSfli ever stydb stood and
ntlll Htuud aud intend Id Btuud.
While 1’ have the greatest regard for Mr.
Killmoru, • ffiff cohttUouce 1 1fi hie ’uprightness
uud patriotism, 1 cuunOt support him or -aby
other mau who is sutlalieU to stand upon
the plultorm by Whioh 1 lblused to abide In
February. * 1
v 1 do not arguo to defend tl\ls position. I laid
my views before tho Amorii’HupartyJn March
lust, uud they hot bplug approved, I; forbore to
reply to uuy uttuuk upon me, becuuso l did not
mean to,become tUefu^ullluit i0(;Mr. FUlmore
or the puHyj'bid.bdt'Mp^.twusVfithout the
tiieuiis of Uoieuce. . • . ,
What tho eouiitry wuuts.u, uot so muehu
cuudidutu who is right, us u party that to so,'
on tlm great duestlou of 'the diy. The: Aiuert*
uuu party North to, iu u.tfreat; uieusureihot',*) \
for in Muiue, Vermout, Connecticut, Fenusyl-
vania, uud otoewhore, it fuse* with tho Black
liepublicaus, aud to uuUug iu coucert with
those who assail tho Constitution and endanger
tho Union. 1 impugn the propriety of no man’s
South are.
Oar rise was the epoch or ugricultu
merce, manufactures, and trade. Laml bad
been tilled from Adam, but cotton raleB the
world; and cotton makes at^ere In the wotld'
prosperity, and with us its Cultivation folly
began.
Our rise was the birth of organised, add de
mocratic liberty. For such an event the na
tions had groaned, bat never hoped to see.
Philosophy had pronounced it impossible;
Kings had scouted It aa on idle conceit; yet it
toroalizedat last. Revolutions are stirred by
it, and every throne trembles on account of it;
feel it, and the people are inspired by it;
religion brightens through it, aud apostate pa
pacy shrinks from its touch. Blot ui from the
worjd, with all the iufluenco we have exerted
upon it,direot!yand indirectly, aud how dark
the globe would be!! Such are the views of
the able S. D. Baldwin, A. M., President of
Soule Female College,. and if you desire his
conclusion, I will send'it to you.
1 A Planter.
Glynn Covnty, Oct. 15.
Boats yo» Flobjim—A fleet of thirty metal
lic boats (says the N. Y. Journal of Commerce)
are boing built at. Francis's establishment at
Greenpoint, design, d to aid the United States
troops in their operations against the Indians
ty Florida this winter, particularly in pene
trating tho Everglades. Thoy ore twenty-two
feet in length, and three feet six inches in
breadth, with lockers at each end for ammuni
tion and provisions. Fifteen of them are al
ready finished, and present a flue appear
ance.
A very large boat, twenty-eight feet in
length, finished in a good style, with heavy
brass oar-locks aud brass tiller, bos just been
finished for the governor of St. Thomas.
' Pennsylvania Politics.
We enjoyed yesterday a very pleasant inter
view with an intelligent gcntleraau formerly
and now (me presume) a IVhig, who has spent
thejast sevaral months in tho interior of Penn
sylvania. He boro tho strongest testimony to
tho courago uml fidelity with which the De
mocrats of that State, amid great discourage
ments and apparently against fearful odds,
fought the battle of the constitution and the
South ilurlug the tot'.' euuvass. He is very tor
from thinking their Victory a triumph over us
and our Institutlpns-as has boon alleged by some
of the Americans of Georgia—ou the contrary
he feels that the South owes the Northern Demo-
crapy a lasting debt of gratitude for the noble
dating with which they have contended against
her, enemies.
This gentlemuu expresses the coufideut
optolou that Buchanan's majority in his own
State will uot be less thun twenty thousand—
Among ills supporters, Whigs in many comities
are to be numbered by hundreds.
Commercial Bankov Brunswick.—It will
be remembered that the last legislature char
tered a bonk with the above name, to be loca
ted in this city. Tho charter is bused upon the
vciy stringent, but safo principles or the South
Carolina banks, so as to reuder the circulation
entirely safe to the community. It was feared
by many that this would be a bar to its going
into operation. For speculative purposes it
would, and was so intended. It ,is, therefore,
with unfeigned pleasure we announce to our
readers that the stock has been taken by a
company of capitalists, prominent among
whom arc the Mew. Philips, Moflitt & Co., of
Columbus, who design putting the bank into
operation us soon as the plates cun be obtained,
and other necessary arrangement* made.—
Brunswick Herald,
1
* 1
4
J
i*
i
5 1
&
$
OOENTIU1 :
D |
A
a
?
n
1.
to
:
:.
X- Uillciul—Alachua
190
3871
189
330
n .
d* t »•
Brevard.....
Calhoun
46
79
Columbia
5U4
414
403
49
it u
Dado
Duval
401?
268
488
210
to .4
Kicaiubla
2W
2f>0|
284
269
4*
Franklin
81
178
lt.8
160
44
Uadsdcu
370
371
398
354
e
IJbcrty
74
07
7*1
93
u- “
Hamiltou
211
106
m
18-1
Hernntido,
8).
12V
87
122
n 4t
Hillttboroug*
16:.
3D;
167
3i8
e, *•
Homes
103
44
119
85
Jackson
Jefferson
466
414
471
407
G .4
• 1611
874
17«
364
1. “
Leou
3UV
4QS
308
401
nf
Levy
Madison
71
67
.79
08
01 44
401
469
636
423
k) (i
Manatee .*....
31
24
sa
24
o “
Marion
2(K
361
267
863
Monroe :....
6f
286 1
02
232
re ,,
Nassau
92
106
91
ion
V*
Uiango
43
60|
46
6-’
r,f “
Putnam
ID
117
20
Santa Rosa
80U
206*
30b
2»7
IS
St. Johns....
07
its
01
198
id
Sumpter....,
67
9 J
81
62
e- a
Volusia
Wulkulla
184
166
104
168
i- ■■
Walton....
100
177
181
108
re
Washington
lUt
161
106
151
ir
5605
0209
6031
5916
le
6606
5631
704
344
\ Pennsylvania Slate KUntion. ,
<Ve give on our first page full official returns
from all the counties in tills State ef the vote at
tho late election for Canal Commissioner, Au
ditpr General, and Surveyor General. It will
be seen that, for the first time in our history,
thq whole vote exceeds four ipradrcd thousand,
reaching tho ex raordinury figure or 422,998.—
The highest vote ever polled before was for
President in 1852^%vhen the total reached 387,-
884. Between this and our preseut total there
to ji difference of 35,114. Such a vote as the
Opposition has polled this year, 210,112, would
by I a large majority. Iu 1854 Pollock received
bat 205,511 for Governor, and yet had near
1,000 majority. The highest Democratic vote
r er polled before was Tor President in 1852,
r.hen it reached 198,508. Now the same party
Os 212,880 votes, a difference of 14,318.
the foregoing to from the Philadelphia Ga~
Mttee r a Fremont organ. It 'fUl .be otyorved
that it makes no charge of fraud ’igaln'Ht v the
Democratic party in connection with their
large vote In Pennsylvania. And according to
our recoUectionthat paper has made no ohargo
of the kind. The natural conclusion to that it
discredits all that its co-laborers have said on
the sntyect.
‘yaorace Greely, in his romance of the Life
of Fremont, says that his heto came very hear
belpj£killed when an tyfant, by thejitotq shots
The Transfer of Texas to Spain.
Somo of our readers familiar with the fact
of the transfer of Texas to Spain simultaneously
with tho acquisition of Florida,may like oursel
ves, have lived in ignorance of the reason of it*
Why was it that Texas, once annexed to the
United States, after the lapse of many years,
had to be re-annexed 7
An interesting explanation to given in a tote
letter from Gen. Jessup, to Senutor Yulee. Wo
quote a portion of the letter :
My Dear Sir.—Agreeably to my promise to
communicate to you, in writtlng, thesubstrnce
of the several conversations I have held with
you on the subject of the trasnfer of Tex<
us to Spain, and of the attempt
by sectional political leaders to restrict ne-
ro slavery iu the Territories of the United
Jtatea west of the Mississippi, I proceed to
give you the following narrative of facts,
with the view which r.entertained at the time
and still entertain; in regard to the attempted
restriction.
As regards Texas, Mr. Mouree, aud some, if
not all, of the members of his cabinet, were
apprehensive, as early as the close of tho first
session of the 15th Congress, that great oppo*
sition would be made to the acquisition of
Florida. If Texas, a part of Lolutona, weie not
surrendered to Spain. The acquisition of Flor*
idawas then a Southern, and the retention of
Texas a Western question; but tho leaders of
a powerful party in thecuntry, chiefly sec-
tioual, hud resolved tbat we should uot have
both. A Northern Sonator, the acknowledged
leader of ono of the groat parties iu the coun«
try, was understood to have declared that the
treaty then being negotiated should not be rati
fied if tho line wero placed u foot beyond the
Sabine ; ho said the South and the West were
taking too rapid a flight, aud it was time to
clip their wiugs. Too negotiations for the
S urchnse ot Florida wero continued with the
pauisli Miuister during tho recess of Cuug*
gross, uml Mr. Monroe, from information from
various sources, became almost certain that the
treaty would not be ratified should he insist on
retaining Texas.
Sometime in'the auttnuu of, 1818, therelore,
the Secretary of State was required to offer, iu
a counter proposition to ouo from the Squish
minister, the lino pretty much as it was after
wards udopted. Mr. Monroo, knowing, how
ever, thut the instructions of the miuister would
justify him iu transferring to us tho Spanish
claim to tho whole territory east of the Rio
Graudc, lioped before the close of the negotia
tions to find our own pcoplo disposed to receive
it; but, after the meeting of Congress, he be
came satisfied that uo treaty retuiniug the
whole, or even a considerable part, of Texas
could be ratified. There were high considera
tions, as well of national interest us of public
policy, which made it not only desirable, but
necessary, that the treaty be ratified.
The South had suffered groatly by tho British
occnpying Florida daring the war of 1H12, and
by their agents remaining there and excitiug
the Iudlans to hostilities subsequent to that
war. The possession of Florida was, therefore,
considered necessary to the peace and security
of the whole South.
The settlements of ..Georgia were, rapidbiy
extending to the Chutluboocbie; and Alabama
was fast rising to the condition of a State.—
Should Florida remain in the hands of Spain
difficulties similar to those iu relation to the
navigation to the Missisuippi, but on a smaller
scale, were foreseen in regurd to the naviga
tion of the Apalachicola, a river formed by the
junction of the Fjint and Cbattahoochhe rivers
at the southern extremity of Georgia and Ala
bama, rumiiiig through Florida, and falling
into the Gulf of Mexico within Us limits.—
These difficulties, it was believed, could be
avoided only by acquiring the territory.
Another , object was to put an endtothe
African slave trade; for it was known to the
administration of Mr. Monroe that persons en
gaged in tbat trade were in the habit of smug
gling African negroes through Florida into the
Creek country, and theuce into Gergto, Ala
bama. Mississippi, and Louisiana; besides, Mr.
Monroe was desirous tbat the independence ot
Mexico and Spanfsh South America should be
acknowledged; but it was deemen important
that the line bet veeu the territories of Sp&hi
and the United bi .tes should first/ be determin
ed, particularly uu the Pacific, as. ou the
acknowledgment i f the independence of Mexi
co tho claims of Spain would become Mexicau,
and it was believed the line could be morn
readily adjusted w' th Spain than with Mexico.
These were some of of the leading considera
tions which Induced the administration of Mr.
Monroe to accept tho treuty with the line which
it established. ^
Atlantic and Gulf Railroad.
By the Governor’s proclamation which ap
pears in another column it will be seen that he
has subscribed 1500,000. iu behalf of the State
to the Attontio and Gulf Railroad. A n election
for nlhe directors will beheld on tho 4th day
of December.
r*41f alone, I
If Mr. Filling
l‘>jje .'elected by. the
i ui men wuu *uhered 'to the prinol-
cuunctoted to the twelfth article ot
Ptoli'orm of June, 1850, I. should
ce; for that would ilempnatrote .that
jority of the people of the union was true
le coustituttoual rights of the South. Bat
^ „ national calamity. Rather ought hto
Southern supporters to cry upon the moun
tains to fail upon them and cover them, fhau
to permit themselves to be crashed under the
mL>L4t* iltnli.Li iiF ili'ii, Iti'od Afl4i.tr, ntlilnL SUCl]
upon
mighty weight of that just odium which
auappareut unholy coatitym would hurl .
them, bringing sure uud swiit damnation upon
hto udministratloU iu udvuncc, rendering it
powerless for good, a'tid iusuriug the imme
diate destruction or the Union. /
And while''Democratic party to, to my view,
right on the! questions Unit grow but of the ex
istence pi slavery, (unless it may in somesed*
tious be jt*.doctrine tlmt the peopteof a Ter
ritory may by, statute exclude slavery, belore
thoy uome to form a State Institution,) yet
there tire other things in its creed and plat
form to which 1 cannot assent, I shall there
fore, not vote for ML Buchanan; but as I
believe thut bo and the Democratic party alone
cau detent Mr. .Fremont and the Republican
party, (if indeed, eveu they cun,) and so delay
for u brief time that fiuperative dissolution of
Union, which mutuul hatred and ill-will, every
day becoming more iuteuse in the North
aud South, must inevitably and soon bring
about, I cannot conscientiously do any act or
say any word that could to the slightest degree
tend to defeat him.
1 am therefore, content, for the present, to
stand aside and beloug to no party, until the
South, forgetting its distension, shall see how
necessary it is for it to become a unit, in the
assertion of its constitutional rights against
Northern fanaticism and foreign radicalism t
which must a-snredly soon be the cose.
Very respectfully, yours
Albert Pick.
[W.ijjhiti^io., t'urrcspomieui-u of tho Alexandria
Gazett.j
Washington, Oct. 18, 1856.
The ucw Hall of Representatives is 137 ieet
long, 92 ieet wide, aim 30 feet high. It to sur
rounded by a side gallery, capable of seating
1,200 pen ms: 300 separate desks, like Ihose
now used iu the Senate, ure to be arranged out
side the semi-circular railing, for the accommo
dation of those persons admitted to the floor;
and th'Prc will be ample room for more desks
should the House' be. increased. The space
uuder the gallery wiU be enclosed and used
cloak and cual rooms. 1
The celling just finished to of iron, highl, t
ornamented; and suspended from the iron roor,
with proper openings for ventilation, and with
large spaces filled with ground glass. At night
the hall will be lighted by gas lights placed
above the glass of the ceiling, thus excluding
the glare, heat, and smell of the gas, and pre
venting the contamination of tho atmosphere by
the products of. combustiou. The veutilatiou
of the room will be accomplished by using a
fan or other blowing engine to supply the air,
and by warming it as it enters, bv pipes fillet
with moderately heated water. Five doors lead
in the hall from the surroundiug corridors. Two
S rivate staircases lead from the hall itself to
le basement story, which will always afiord
access to the hall, without aunoyance or con -
gwlon in the most crowded state of the Capi-
The reporter’s gallery will occupy one sido
of the hall above the Speaker’s chair, with a
broad corridor behind, fitted with desks and
telegraphic apparatus for the use of tho repor
ter's. . Tho Speaker s room uud two largore-
tiriiig rooms,intruded to be used i'or consulta*
tion by the different parties, open directly iuto
the hull-from either sido. The fionthern portico
is accessible only front the Southern retiring
room, uud to intended lor the use of members.
The present hall of Representatives will be ut
tered by the removal of the galleries, the pro*
sent teuiorary wooden Uoor,andtheelargemeut
of the doors, and used as the rotunda now is,
for the assemblage of the people visiting the
capitol.
The hall of the Senate is arranged upon the
same principles of the House, it is 112 feet
loug by 82 ieet wide. The ceiling to of iron.
The Vice President’s room, Senators’retiring
rooms, and the conference rooms, wUI lead into
the hall. There will be tho same facilities for
easy access into the hail as in the other wiug,
without the aunoyauce of passing through
dense crowds ns is now the case.' The western
und northern porticoes are reserved exclusively
for Senators. ,
The staircases,.corridors, offices, Ac., will be
finished in magnificent style,, worthy of the
great and uuited nation whose capitol it to des«
tined to be, we earnestly hope, for centuries to
come.
rnrasiom,
HiV—f"' ■'*— ■ < ,i_-
r lulr, willy hniiij,
IbM.reltysarrenowM.UT> ■
Hurd you prolix. Iu bliokneu m.
0, lore’. Wreteit banedloUirnl
'Ofiore’O orer.il, bind doUshtl
Hull y. b. for p. no looser,
Wbon ray hair l> luring wiilto I'
Often, onoo, you trued tho uourau.
' or tbo bluo voluK duwu my urio,
As It lay upuu your .boulder,
Wo wore torero—’iwiu oo barm |
rolling .uch doUgblTuiruuloi
All lud uo wl.b to uboob-'t
Wbon ’tl.sbrukoo, you will never
Aik It pul about your nook,
You btro prelood py oyo., my dimples.
Nuy, Urn not vein, I know,
Tbtll bare not uoyooauty—.
. ' only lovocould wo mo so;
Vat 111. put mu boon so bippy,
Tbou woo wort my trl.nd,aod art
Stay tbo rLtxo, ko.|i,Po. blludu.il,
gw me only prougb my bout.
•cored two years before ho was born. John O.
‘res reserved to be killed by tbo report or tbs
Jackson Democratic cannon In 1830.
A Bey. John Lumb.of Mt. Vernon, Ohio, re*
cently preached a sermon la which ho raid,
"any man who will stand upon the Cincinnati
platform, bis race and heart are ns black aa
bell and damnation."
The public lectures at the Bmltbsoaian In
stitute will commence on the 23tb of Decem
ber, Proresior Leconte, of South Carolina,
leadiogoff on the subject of practical geology,
Sir E. B. Lytton otateo that within uia
last three yean the farmers of Crest- Britain
have expended A.e millions'sterling, la the
yurehass of guano, and hare bronghUnto ool-
ilration onb million of fresh seres.
Qoanoikto,
lo Jtho was sleeted
b .hy 3,781 miorlty,
iya Democrat, “IS
Cooper!
Hb -
the man/’ saya the Chicago Times, “ who bore
Jim Lane’s challenge to Douglas. The peo
ple of his Dtotriot did not think Jim Lane’s
second a fit man to represent them.”
Elected hy Negroes.—It is said that Mr.
Lewis D . Campbell, of Ohio, to elected to Com
gress by the vote of negroes! The Cincinnati
Enquirer says:
There is uo doubt that Mr. Vallaudigham
elected by the votes of the legal electors. Mr.
Cumpbcll’8 apparent majority. of. nineteen is
made un by negroes who have no right to vote,
under the State Constitution, itsp ovision being
“white male citizens of the United States.”—
Some forty negroes are known to have voted
for Campbell. Tn plain defiance of the Constitu
tion. In this connection we heard a good
story of Campbell, from Mr. Joaiuh Carnitz, of
this city,' who was yesterday iii a barber shop
at Huniiltou, when Campbell cume in, and a
conversation was held between him and the
negro ocuiipunts, both of whom admitted that
they voted fur him, Campbell. One of the ne
groes remarked that the result showed wbat a
few negroes could do. Campbell thanked them
for their support, and said that be did not de
sire any better votes. We had this from Mr.
Cnrnitz’sown lips.
7
lfrom (lie I'cnnsylvaniau.J
Hoii. Ain'ot Kendall.
The following characteristic letter, just re
ceived from Mr. Kendall, stamps the assertion
that ho is against tho Democratic, party and
James Buchaiiati as a vile falsehood :
Washington, Oot. 22d 1856.
To the Editor of tho Pouusylvanlan
I understand that my name has been publish
ed in some of the interior papers of your State
as one of GeneraF JucksonV'old friends, who
are now supporting Colonel Fremont. If so,
it to tv preposterous fabrication. Without judg
ing tyfe motives of uthers, 1 have to say. for
myself, tyat I could not support Col. Fremont
w ithout the' guilt of treason: upon my oon-
Huicnee. In my. estimation hto eleotion upon
the platform of his supporters, would be along
stride towards the destruction of our govern
ment—And let atticra say what the will, i
hnVe no more doubt than I have of my own ex-
toterioo, that'! 7 tbo bid Hero, whoso motto was
rf!‘ Wj!,ftmsl Unliiil; H.tnnst Wjirewreed"
-W® MffJvlng,he, l wpuld, ; wiUi all tb. seal
of his ardent tuturu,‘sau|rott then oralncei of
th. deiqqqrelW par^R- 1 , .Bu9h,niui and Brock-
enridga. -
11. Ml;;;II Agoa Kxhoall,
What TnuHLOtv WXsn BAYS.—Th. Albany
Statesman learnn, upon the best authority, that
Tbnrioiv Weed, Aim.-, the result In Pennsylvania
has become deanitoly known, haa said that oo
far u Fremont waa concerned, tbo Prcslden.
tlsl question was already decided.
Uorac.CArreley Is Bscomlng Warlike—
lid Heapondi. to- tn. XUrolnttonary
TbreatafUcn. W.bb.
Horace Greeley despairs of success at the
baBot-boxaud Is new looking to an ulterior
remedy. General Webb said when Fremont
was nominated, that If be was not elected he
would draw bis sword snd resort to revolution.
Hr. Greeley Intimates that it msy soon become
necessary tor General Webb to commence mar-
3 g nls forces. "Hon and brethren,” says
1, "nothing can now tare Kansas or oar
icon lustitutions-bat some revolution or
her affairs—sumo help for her irom without—
some overturning of the fraudulent legislation
which bos forced slavery and tyranny upon her
—some restoration of her former freedom, tbat
she may as a State decide her institutions for
herself.-’ “Hen and brethren,” continues Gree
ley, "Fremont is lor, doing something which
alone can save Kansas.” Of course, It would
be agreeable tbat tbat something should be
done peaceably and effectively by the election
of Fremont; but If it cannot be dene peaceably.
It most be done forcibly. “Hen and brethren!”
proceeds Greeley: “It this is not done in this
peaceable manner, then violence will continue,
and oivU war may come; H it is not done at all,
then the destiny oftbia nation as a free repub
lic la forever ended.” Lest this terrible threat
eboaldnot frighten bis "men and brethren"
sufficiently, Mr. Greeley thus caps the climax;
“Felow-citizans! Hen wbo love justice and
your country! vote for Fremont; then liberty
and tbe Union, Kansas and the constitution
your home audyour native land, will be rescue!
ed from a fearlul peril. .
"Pause and consider 1”
Ibis Is the desperation of disappoinment. The
friends of Fremont are cklled upon to avoid
tho fearful peril or tho civil war threatened by
their leaders by working .hard for Fremont’s
election! What now becomes of all tbe
softsolderlngof Speaker Bulks and Bennett
about thoeabmtsefon of t. .r foloweis to tbe
popular will! Southern m ro denounced sh
aisunlonlsts because they » ad tholrnorth-
sm friends of the dangers u. rationalism. But
Greeley now runs up the true disunion flag of
bis party, and points dLtinetly to revolutiuus
the Tearful remedy If Buchanan Is elected. We
Join with him in earnestly appealing to north
ern men to pause and consider.—IVaihinglon
Union.
COAUBXSBIONAL Vail IN PSNNSYLYANIA.—
The Ptnniylvanian shows fom tho vote of
a number of the Congressional Districts that
the Pemooratio majority Is larger on tho Con
gressional tickets than the State ticket. It
gives the official returns Irom the Districts
from one to nloo, inclusive, and adds:
In the above districts the democratic rna
jority on the State ticket wub but 3,100, while
It was 14,216, over fusion. candidatess for Con
gress, or adding tho vote fur black republican
candidates to tbat for thu fusion candidates,
It was 11,763; or with the entire opposition
vote’comblned, it was 4,733. Similar galas on
the congressional vote occur in other districts,
among which are the 13th, 21st, and 22d, and
others.”
(From tbo Philadelphia bulletin.)
Queer litis.
Dodoino a Dun.—
Seme know how to do it, aid can scent a
dun at any distance, and can dodge klmcffec-
tirely. It Is a knack acquired by long expe
rience. If tbo dun, howerer, by bis experi
ence becomes expert, the duoned stands a slim
chance of escape. The dao becomes equally
sensitive In detecting tne debtor, and often are
practised, between tbe two, manceuvrea that
would pale the reputation of even Napoleon
himself
We heard a story tho other day of old Dr. G.
of Portsmouth, which thought uot having any
very great relevancy to the preceding paragraph
la nevertheless to the point os regards amateur
dunning. For there is a wide difference be
tween the amateur und tha professional.
Dr. G. was a man of grant Integrity and worth
and his business habits were on tho square-
exacting everything that was bis own and pay-
ing every man his due. He held n note against
u gentleman of Hampton ,or some considerable
amount, and wherever he met him the Doctor
was ready, note in hand, for the payment of au
instalment. It became at last an agonizing
dread with the debtor about meeting the Doc
tor, particularly at the time when troubled with
a disease known in tinanoial parlance as
“shorts.” Bat whenever be met him, tbe Doc
tor's dun would be anticipated by hia debtor’s
movement for bis pocket book, and frequent
payments were made witbout seeing tbe note
stall, or inquiring as to tho chances of its
eventnal payment. He knew that the Doctor
was honest, and tbat It would be all right, sad
several payments were thus blindly made.
A great dearth of funds made him mere shy
of meeting the Doctor, and as he passed through
tbo town,hia eyee wandered in >11 directions
to catch a glimpse of his dread, and avoid him
if possible. He succeeded admirably for a
while, and out-generaled the old mau several
times: but fate does not always favor tho bravo,
and the Doctor from a distant position saw bis
vtctim tie bis horse to a poet and enter a store.
He made aB the haste he could, and entered
tutors Just aa hia debtor dodged behind a rice
“Didn't 1 see Mr. come in here.'"
asked the Doctor.
’’He did come in here, sir," said the shop
keener, “bat he has gone somewhere now.
The Doctor said ho was not in a hurry, and
could wait os well as hot; hir saw his horse at
the door, and thonght he’weuld be back before
long. The man remained hid, and the old
Doctor waited a long time. At last he weut
out. Shortly after air. himself went
out, and was just stepping upon his wagon,
when the Doctor darted at him' from a door-
way.
"Well. Mr; -—said he, “you necdo’t
dodgo me any more; that nolo bos been paid
up these six months, and 1 have been trying
to see yon that I might pay yon back twenty
dollars that you overpaid me.”
The recollection of.hldlng behind a rice cask
to avoid being twenty dollars, haunted the
man as long is he lived, ond Among other ad
vice which he gave his children was this, con-
talned in a couplet or domestic poetry, written
in chalk on the old dresser:
"Never run
. When you see a don, ”
Paying tun Pbinteb—
Genteel ReaderThe ponderologleslly over
whelming goyascotanlzlng extract from tho
mtrifle records or antiquity which follows, la if
the Almanac IIS not, an extract from a vene
rable manuaorlpt. found loan antiquated bake-
oven, explaining the origin of the manner in
which printers are generally paid i
“And Skinfllnter, the mighty ruler of tho
Squash-heads, having called his chler officers
to his side, commanded them thus:
“Go yo Into all my domluibns, and command
my peopls to gather together their treasures,
even to a farthing, nnd pay all their debts; even
tho very smallest.'
“The officers did u they were commanded,
and after a certain time, tne rnler called them
again.unto him, and demanded of them how
bb orders hdd been obeyed,
" 'O, mighty Skinfllnter,' they repUed, 'your
commands were heard throughout the land,
and folflBed; for your people are obedient.”
“ 'Andie over* debt paid?"
•••Yea, even tnesmAlleiit.
“ 'Are tho merchant, the manuboturer, the
laborer paid?’
i "AU paid.'
. ‘"Are the tobacco and whlskoy bills Bot
tled? .
‘"All, all!'
I “ 'And have tay people keenprovldentf—
ha«e they laid' tip a sufficiency , to feed their
catw and dog* ?’.
" 'Yes,they hove even done this.’
“ 'Well, my people are worthy. Now, goye
again unto them,' and if there be anythlngloft,
tell thsm to take It and pay tho printer.
HU PORT or BOARD or HEALTH,
Oavjsxix, Oct. 29, lUtr
The Board met. Present, V JBuckner, .Chslr--
win i J M Hhellmao, P LnUoff, D H Galloway, K
Bheppafd,-T-J Naylor; It- Scwlsn, M s Yliu»y,
J IlytD, UA Altew, OO’Boukt, L N raUlaaot, W,
Bwoll, Ur. D O O Beery, <»T 1 qwreece, end
Dr. J M Johmton.
REPORT OK 1NTRRMKNTH IN LAUREL GROVE
CKMOThKY fur tbs week eutUug 28th Ooteber,18A0.
Get. 231 *Juhn Johnson,Shears, Tuberantetla,
fjandwLb tolwds
/ 24th. Thomai H Turuor, A month* lA day*, Paetr
uonla, SandcrdvUle, Ga; 1
28th. EllxAbath Eadru,87 yean, Typhu* Keyer
Germany. , ■
IN LUREL UttOVK HSBREH COMETEUY.
22<1. Abraham Wole*, 22 year*, ,Blllou* Fey*r,
Prussia. . ; f > ;
Blacks and Colors*.
Oot. 24d. Cyrus, 211 ear*,.Con*un)pUou•,,
24th. Iufanl, 9 days, Logic’Jaw*.
23d. Rachel, A year*, Worm Fever.
In taut, O weeks, Thrash.
24th. Infant, 0 day*, Lock-Jaw.
24th. Ben, 12 years, DonlIlly;
26th. Rachel, »7 years, Oauoer iu tbe Womb,
27tb. Infant, 8 dsyw, Spasms.
A. F. ToRLAY, Keeper LOG.
REPURT OF INTERMEN W IN CATHEDRAL CLK
KTBkY for tbo wook ending 28th Ootober. 1IAQ.
Oot. 22d. Alicia Fortune, 87 yean, old age, Ire’
land.
22d. ’John Bowes, 43years, Ireland,.
(J jj^tb. Patrick Lenahau, 84 years, Pleurisy, Ire
- . DANIEL COLE, Keep** O O,
♦Died at thu Poor Hosue and Hospital.
-Whitea., 7
Ulacks aud Colored .8 Total 1A.
. 4. J. BUCKNER, Chairman BH
8. A T. ItAw,KSXCV, Secretary,B H. .
a
8A6.
Alexander Atkldai
Uodgaoh, RcAert
WIlUam Ponder,
Obkp-"* ' '■
Cniiiiiteiml ^nteUignce.
RAVomiah Market* October *di)»
CJTfON—All descriptions or cotton are In good
demaud with an active inquiry. Saloa yesterday
93U balea, at unchanged prices, vis: 10 bales at 10,
60at 11,47 at 11)4, A9aillfc, loiatll^, 306al
11^, 79 at 11J4, and 30» at’2c.
Exports#
NEW YORK—Stoamihlp Augusta--542 bales
upluud cotton, 26 bates demoitlcs, 98 packages
sundries
Port of Snvaimiub October J
Gulf 1
Arrived.
Schr Targes, Furman, Trom New York, with as
sorted cargo to Cnbeus a Hertz.
Schr f/OvutPeaccMik, HuKeady, New York, t
Williams Si Kutciille.
Steamer .swan, Jobusun, Demoros, Ferry—J
Richardson.
Screven’s fiat, from plantation, with 1000 bushela
rough rice, to tv Wood bridge.
Hab rrihitu’H Hat, from plantation, with 1000 hug
rougli i lue, to Habersham & Sou.
Barclay’a Fiat Irom Plantation, 1,000 bushob
Rough Rice—It Habersham At Son.
Judge Kingb flat, from plantation, with 1,600
bus rough rice, to Haborabam A Son.
ma/jvr.
Ship S ?phla, from Slockholm, with iron, Ac.
y Cleared.
Stoarariblp Augusta, I.you, New York—Padelford,
Fay fc Co.
Memoranda.
Bitoton, Oct 25-Old, brig Gauges, Jonoe, Jackson*
Villa.
Bath, Me, Oct 23—Old, ship John Patton, Patten,
Savannah*
Foreign Porte,
Diibiin, Uct 8—Old, Victress, Kenny, .Savannah.
Greenock, uct 3—srlJ, Sarah Plage, Plage, Savan
nah
NewPorl, Oot 4—Arr, Maimlon, Crocker, Da
rien.
Liverpool, Oct 11—Adv'd, Odessa, Barstow, Sa-
vouuah.
Out 0—But for loadlug, Colonist, C'urry, 8&van
nah.
fmivtiim FAUTMlSm'. .
mHI
"“““‘'7. “6Jot other ,o“
-6 BftSStZigt
GSwarU C. 'Aoderioe, wTb 1
Neifoni; Uvl J Koli|Ui,K, iS'
Winhora J. Lewtoa, AITroil if
i**,,.vm^u woatlf K. A. Nlehuti Joel Cr.wfurd*
illRowen, Seeboro Jouu, ltovld J, trailer
ffisriee J. Jeskloe, Jehu MllloUte, Jamos il l:,,'.
Iluau, cileries speldleg, Uiorlee J. Musooilm ‘
'i'hoiuaa U«nUlon~N. rf. Collier sod J.iTX'
Res, sudeuoh other person, es might lhtr.»ii cr i*
sseoclsted with them sad their suece-aor. w.»
ooaeUluttd . body, cor||<ii.to for UneotieiJuou™
of Held Kullrosd; sod whereas .laid |Mrjuii»ur aav
Ilf ror more of them, wire, hy iho esld aa amhor le.
si to open boose of aubaunphuu st earlalu
lh.rola named, whioh dolyihev have perliSf-
■ad Wberou, l Is orovldwl In lliu eecnnd
wWSot. that, lr Iha aamof . is hundred Wtffij
dnllarashall have heeb'houa flueeubecrihud it. i
sold ceminLsIon.rs, or Soy llva or uuro w it,„
Who may be aotuelly eaxugeu in takas suhra/n 1
tie s, are required lo reluru a 11.1 nl Uiu aubaorl '
hers tod tbo nmouut suhaurihnd hy «ah uiih,
eert'lloatelhat the auhscrlphuiu us hona Idi ui
hhldlnj, and that each iwr.011, Urio or cormiriu a
(In the mSDlonofsaid coimnaaloncra) win be in.:7’
able to pay op the sums subscribed by tha
Which return tnd cerlUcuta .hall bo uud.r
and when received, shall bn UluelI sway Iu ib cS
Iruller Unneral's office; end whersns h UiurLb?.
provided In iald secona etcllun 01 the add ....
that IT laid return and ccrhllcna .hall bant,,
factory lo the Uoveroor of Una. ula. lor die c
beloff. U shall then bo his duly losu^crlbS mSS
name of the SUE. pf Uuurgla, ;or stock to Ui B J!
tent of five hundred thuiutmu doliaraiimd wuh
Edwaty 0 Audvwn,Char lea s?pnldlug,E* R. YoQLV
the acl aterciiaid, did, ou the m or uu
month, submittu.me as Guvernurpl ihii
sneh.a llstorsuuacjtbera, shuwmg hUbiurijiioLBio
the amount 01 Six Hundred Thom aud Loi|»r,, ,, 1U
the amount subeoribed by each, togeUicr with 'audj
a certifluate under oath; Aud whuruRa inu Laid j e -
turn and ceruucaU are kamiaciury m auu
whureaa by virtue of lUe autitumy v«M»te ( i i„ uu
under thedct atbreualit, 1 Uavo subacribad iu ins
name ot the ^tate of Georgia, for hlvo XbuusujiU
!e h ?. ra# y*S? eB,wskwr lUo tluU Atlantie and bun
Railroad Company, iho uttino b.iug iu me extent of
“ uodr ^ ’H»ouaaud Dollars, which, tugedicr
’rtth thesubacripliuiis •ubmiued andcurliiita iu ,.s
aTorosala. make iho sgxreguU’dum of uno Miliioii
and One Hundred Thuusand Dollars or clock sun
iiorlbed; whereupon It la made uiy duty, by tbe
third section or the act atom aid, to order unike-
Uon for nine Directors, to bo held iu MdlwlgewiW
under the dlrectlou of said CoumiiBBionerri, *r m,y
bveor more or them, after uoi lu&a than Urn ty day*
Tnerefore, U is ordered thut au ulecilou for uiud
Direoiersofthe Aitantlo uud Gull Railroad Com.
pany be held m MilledgovU.e uu ihurdday, mu -ij,
day of December next, and, that Ibu fcWkliuiduro
du appear iu per*#u or by prbvy lor that purpose •
And wUereoit Edward Z. hill, of tbe Cuuntv J
Troup, hwiah T. Irwin, uftuo County or Ui.ki- ain.i
A. J. Lawrion, of the County or Burke, wweV
pointed by Ltgislaiivo Kcamvc/to cnat.tDu vuiu {•
winch the btale of Georgia Will bu emit c-d ns u
Stockholder or the «aid AlauUo uua cull Kiiirond
Company. It ia further ordered, that Uie> aud
each or them, altond at the j lieu, aud ou tbe Cuv
herein spociHed, to oast the vote to which the SUte
aa a Stockholder, may be ontitUid lutlae
tionoi'Dirccioia.
«-lven under my hohd and Seal or the Lxecut.ve
Departmental the Capitol iu Mtllc-at^-villu, tlieday
and year aforoaaid.
By tbo Govoruor*
HEKrtitJ. v Jorssun.
L. W. Briscos, 8. E. D.
VFederal I uiou, Bainbiidgu Argun, Thonui*.
will** Watchman, Bavauuuh Kupubiiuuu, imbiUh
twice—weekly.
Consignees*
Per Bchr Peacock, from Now York—^Williams At
Ratclifto, J M Selkirk, S M Lafflteau, Brigham, Kel
ly * Co, M A Cuhon, Patten, Hutton k Co, McKee
U Benuett. Haber*ham k Son, 0 Coheu, Bell k
Prei t sa, W Warner. A Bonaud, Clnghorn k .Cun
uiugliam, 8U mous «lo,Crone, Welts & Co; Palm
er k Jjou, Cooper k Co, D D Copp, Bothwcli k
Whitehead,8 Goodoll, A Havwood, Wayne A Son, E
Parflona k Co, D O’Counor, and others.
Per steamer 8wau, from Demero’a Ferry—860
bales cotton, and mdse, to Bchn Ac Foster, Boston &
Vlllalonga, E C Wade, J P Brooks, E Johnson, liar-
deo & Co, J Rioharddon, L J Davant, Chas’u Bt and
othord.
Passengers.
Per Bteumdbip KmoxvIHo, from New York—J M
Dow, Maitur D w, J L Ripley, MUs Hood, A 8 For-
rodi. V VanWagnou aud lady, C Viepieg, and 6 iu
steerage.
Per steamer Swan, from Domero’a Ferry—RC
Howlctt, Mrn and UUa Hewlett, D W Erwin, 2 Mas
ter irwind, J V Martin, B Marlin, L Bostick Rev W
A I.awiou, Mi-ui lAwtou, 8 8 Davison, J Rmsblnb, W
F Slan r, Mia Alauer uud svt, Master I«awton, W 1*
Gray. J UBilling, Mrs aud Miss Buckner, MUs Rob.
ortd, J Lawton, .1M Lu vton, W Eekii ner, J J Wil-
-on, N J Uudhlug, J M Poo. K U i fits, W D Fllht aud
lady, E G Wellmgbam. A a C-illins, J MLawlon, Jr,
Mra Black* 2 Missed aud Ma«tcr Black, Mrs Koslg*
tio), child und svt.
— ■ — *"1, —
Receipts Per Central Railroad*
Oct. 29 —2050 bales cotton, 20 do dom67 can*
lard, .1186 hides snd radzo* to BrJghsm, Kelly k Co,
Paitun. Hutton k Co, Battorslty k Co, Iaockett k
Saollingd. Way k Tayior, Hardwick At Cooke, JW
Lathrop k Co, Pudolibra, Fay & Co, Ruse, Davis 4;
Long, A 8 Hartridge, Hudson, Fleming k Oo, Co-
bou.H k Hurts, Chuever, Situs k Co. Huntor k Gam-
moll, Dana At Washburn, IlardeoAtOo, Franklin It
Brautly, R U agt, Garmany At Champion, Duncan*
and others.
Worms I Worms’ll
Various theories havo been start ed relative to
the origin or intestinal, worms, and yet tbo question
is t-til i u vexed one among medical authorities. Of
uno fact, howover, all are informed, aud In which
all agree—the fatal nature of thu influence they ex
ert on children. At this season of tbe year, the at
tacks ofwormi ure most frequont as well as most
dangerous. Wo take great pleasure in directing
tho uttoutiou of parents to Ute Vermifuge of Dr.
M’Laiie, proparod by Fleming Bros., .Pittsburg. It
nne of the most extraordinary medicines ever In
roduepd to the public, and lids never failed of Suc
cess when tried. ,
89“ Purchasers wifi be careful to ask for Dr.
M’Iauo’b Celebrated Vermifuge, manufactured by
Fleming Bros,, or Pittsburg, Pa. All other Ver
mifuges in comparison are worthless. Dr. M’Lane’s
genuine Vermifuge, also hto celebrated Liver.Pilla,
can now.be had at all rospoctablo Drug Stores.
Noue gunuiue witboutlbe signature of T .
oct23 (11) FLEMING BRW.
Dancing academy.
MONSIEUR A. BON AUD-respectfully in
forms his patrons that be will open his Acad
,emy at Armory Hall, on Saturday, Novem.
her * 6th, ut 4 o’clock. V. M.
All his former puplto aro respectfully invited to
attend. The German Band Is engagoa for tbe oc
casion. oct29
A*
uak«
FOR CHARLESTON.
_ The steamer GORDON having io-
ABiHbtmrnud from Florida, will reanme
her regular tries to Charleston, leaving here on
Saturday, Nov. 1st,at 6 o’clock I’.M.
oot29-6t J- P. BROOKS, Ag’t,
C HOICE Mercer Potatoes.—Flvo hundred bushs.
Choice Mercer Potatoes for sale, to arrive
per schooner Ida, from Philadelphia.
OC129 CHA8. A. GREINER,
PRIVATE BOARDING.
A FEW Mingle gentlemen cat obtain good Board
and*Lodging at tbe So. West, corner St.
in and price Street’s.
* 2w
G. BROWN * CO*»
Wholesale nnd Retail Dealers In For
eign and Domestic Dry Goods.
B EG leavoto say they have removed to their
large new store,
176 BROUGHTON STREET,
whero their ample room will eoable them to keep a
complete stock in every department.
Alto, n fall line or
PLANTATION GOOD8,
of the best Southern manufacture. Combined with
the above they keep a complete stock of l adies
Dress Trimmings/ Ribbons, Etnbrcidorlen, Lacos,
und Lad(t< rid Gents fnrn filling Goods, to salt tho
city as well as the Coi.-ury Buyers, at tbe lowsst
Cash prices. Q. BROWN A OO.,
oot29 176 Broughton it
ATTENTION PUBLIC.
*7
i\E\V HACK, SALE
AN1»
Livery Stables,
NO. 225
BAT STREET, \
FREEMAN, HENDBKSON & CO.
PROPRIETORS.
T IB mbrorlbert would Inform tbo public tbat
they ha- e oi enod a Stable in tho Brick Bal’d
teg o» Bay street, between Montgomery and Jfflri*
son streets, and have added to their already I./RGE
STOCK several well broke NORTHERN liORSE?.
bcHidei new DUGGlbS an1 CARRIAGE?, ud are
now able to supply ail orders in their lino. They
Will have OMN1BUS8ES and HACKS on the mini
and departure of the Cars nnd Steamers And oko
-HACKS for PRIVATE ACCOMMODATION.
Their establishment in all Its departments, tier
aro determined SHALL NOT BE EXCE1J.ED IS THE
SOUTHERN COUNTRY. _
FREEMAN, HENDERSON & CO.
octao-tr
Witt sail on Saturday next, Nov. 1, at 10K o'cktV,
A. M„ precisely.
The steamship AUGUSTA, Captain
Lyon, will leavo as above.
CebluPoxeego $M
Steerage Passage 8
fT y Shippers of Cotton by these 8teamshli« will
please take notice, that no Ootton will be receivedil
tbe presses that is not diattnotly.markedon the edga
of (be bale. ocfiHl
FRESH FRUIT
AND
»B KTKAMF.B AIIODSTi,
At
the Savannah Grocery anil
FRUIT DEPET.
BBl&.ot the Choicest* Eating Apples.
OUi Uo Fine Quinces.
8 Fra Is Bates.
10 Boxes lemons.
New Figs, layer nnd Bunch UnisinH. do
Currants, Citrons, Ato., *u.
NEW BUCKWHEAT AMD BYE FL0UH.
New No. 1 Mackerel, Salmon tad Codlffb.
1 Crate Extra Bunch Uu ious.
1. do do Cabbages.
Pigs Feet and Pigs Heads In I’ ckle.
Bath Brick-Curno.Powder.
Sup. Sago Cheese,
Cornstarch,
Fresh Biscuit, lifloea dliferanl kinds.
Stuart’s Syrup.
AL80 REOBIVBP,
30 Bunches Bananas.
10K)9 Nassau and Havana Orange*.
All :o: fialo on the mr*t reasonable terms, by
OctSO . WM. II. FARRELI..
DA11IEN, Oct. 27lb, lsM;
r t Co-perlnerehlp bomnloro cele os
tbo seme or PAIlKHCKST 4 Alans, M'f;
solved by the death ot Mr. John R. Adams, all inn.®
indebted to the late firm nre repuesied to n»J
Immediate payment. Mr. Convew 1 nrkhurel, wj
attend to the settlement or Iho aflairs ot th* *•*
Arm, C. PARERUg
Republican copy. 3»n
r IE subscriber has removed on the Bay*
door tPlhe Republican efflee, whore lie J J®
opening a splendid assortment or Fail and " •"‘{J
goods, which ho will soil by iho pattern or w«o
to order In the most nwhlonableslylo ;uUo, Hwoy
made Clothing from tbo celebrated houae cf Jaroa
Wilde, Jr., A Co., New York. Thankful forprt
favors* he hopes by strict application to menu ■
continuance of the same. .
N. B.-^Cutting. Altering snd Repairing don®«
the shortest notice. • Just received a lot ofvnii®
and colored shirts. . , •
pet 30 JOHN W- KEL1*»*
GROCERIES.
OrYJ-Y^oxe* Choice Tebecco, ‘'verloiubmoJ.’
2SUU 100 boaeCbolce Rio CblTce,
60 bbla Sugar Bircuit, Buitor do,
do, PU»t do. , „ „ ,
60 boxes assorted Cordial?,
10 <• “ Candle?.
25 “ Adamantine Csndlw,
26 “ Tallow
26 “ Assorted Pickles,
20 “ Ground Coffee, , ...
60 “ Colgates’ Family, I’alo. & ho.
18 °* P ' 26 Jars French Papeo, 26 do Jlacokoy
Snuff,
20 nests Tubs.
Ysswiria - «—
30 •• Oer.1 Wine,
1(« “* Pipes, .Morlcil also*.,
30 cboate Bb.STea,verloiili quellUe*.
10 qr doHjei'Ddo,euperior,
ire. red MM4J^ , m
26 boxes
26 do Vermicelli,
iSwi!!HE'S**"**”'
“rlTb? 0 b0I - &,d Tr«NN“B!r'
F o£S£.iU • ' N0.162B*y»itfW^
HABPKB FOB NOVEMBER.
H
aRPEB’S Nsw
„.w Monthly Msgaslnj
Rsoelved sadfor wde by
ie for Novem-