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SAVAN^AII, fJlKomjlA, THURSDAY, AUGUST '&£ 186&
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[From the London Times, July 25.]
Precautions against CUolera.
The following memorandum has been prepared br
the medical officer of the Privy Council on the ore-
cautions to be taken against cholera, under the reeu-
lations recently issued by the Lords of the Council
and otherwise:
“1. Asiatic cholera, which for more than a year past
has again been affecting in succession many parts ol
continental Europe, has recently Shown aomedisptM
sitlou to spread in a few parts of England: It isWtbs
bable that henceforth, for some weeks or months to
come, tbe diaeasewUlbe seen, in mb is dr hw. coosid-
erebie groups of cases, in other parts of this country
n is possible that in some such parts, amid predis-
J 8 'Posiag conditions, the disease inay suddenly become
of great local importance. And under these circum
stances tbe Lords of Her Majesty’s Council have seen
at (by Order dated July 34) to put in force the provis
ions of the Prevention Act, 1855..
“2. Also their Lordships have seen fit to tssfid rez-
atinns linripr thn Ant ....
600
r a xjl'AKE is teii measured Hues of Nonpa-
t tlit* News and Hekald.
AJv^itisein-uts inserted three times a week
|ery other day) fur n month, or longer period, will
I charged three-fourths of table rates-,
|r Advertisements twice a week, two-thirds of
Advertisements once a week, one-half of table
"A lvertUements inserted as special notices will
! 'tarry per cent, advance on table rates,
ertisenients of a transient character, not
n to time, will he contimied until ordered
.-‘larged awordiugly.
y. iiiy r.iiuracts, except for space at table
Irnm'lu: an-l, in contracts'for space, all
ml be charged fifty cents per square foi
': ri.P. local or business notices, for indi
•netiT, will bo subject to a charge of fifty
lim*. but not less t han t hree dollars for each
kf A. transient Advertisements mnst be paid in
I# Tri-feekly News and Herald
Hi at «0 per year, or 75 cent* peV month, and
f/ie Weekly News and Herald
hiraml tray Saturday at $3 per year.
J UD PU1NTING,
t jutiy and promptly done.
By Telegraph.
From New York.
ft'ROPEAN NEWS*.
The Rebellion in China.
THE MARKETS. „
F e - Vjbk. August 2>-N.ion.—Gold, 48*; Ex-
; cotton quiet, at 34c. for middling up-
l > ffutn Liverpool, with dates to. the 12th,
Parnved. flei
4 anticipated by the Atlantic
uV «.cs from China through French papers state
- rebels have been dispersed, their eneamp-
^•urnai and leaders killed.
*• coition of Maximilian is regarded as
In France the F,uipress of Mexico denies
Import. : - --t*T
- c ** »ere large arrivals in Fivc-twentlei in Lon-
P r ‘. to the 11th, and considerable Bides ' tot* Gtjr-
•^JHoPaud.
’ c 'f iaal Mutations for cotton on Friday by Bro-
ki'" v Uiar ’ Wtre: ° rlean8 fair » 16*1-5 middlings,
l e J t oln lefair, 15>1<J.; middling, i3^d. Stock in
■ 6J,6..'0 bales, including 36,200 American.
“•hiticed ls.fi^ls. cd. per sack. Wheat’ad-
Fiuc- Uircll; coru easier; beef and pork fiflUf
r a shilling decline; turpentine 37@38s.
FROM EUROPE. v
t'" 1 ’""Jr Between Austria
#ud Prussia.
TKEAT'K op A1.1.1ASCB.
The Markets.' ‘
^ ‘Nol, Aug. 21.—Under news from ih 8 United
Kttua declined about J£d.; middling upland.
• 41 13;;. Breadstuft ace easteR- bat without
Change. Mixed otirar. Us. The provi-
a *'Kct was unchanged, except pork> which was
" JV * Aug. 21.-—Consols closed at 88>£; flve-
tf 5 ' *^ u "- 21.—It is announced vW
«*** Prussia, Austria and Bavaria.
' rt 155 also current that the Czar of Russia has
'^ di 8te P* towards the nugoUa^ion pf a treaty
fc ^tween Russia, France and Austria.
—
From New Urleans,^ f a
a*^ Li:axs * Au 8- 22.—Cotton unchanged; sales
<i t oW » li5 %> !>ank sterling, K. ' H?J •
i_ . ta o clock, yesterday, there were twenty-efeht
i and one death from yellow lever.
Hr?—
otliqr> respecas,
locatnctfon has to be taken against ,
which the interests of the public health require,above
everything, that the action should be taken from bo
foreband. This precautionary action agaiuat cholera
(as against many other diseases) is an object for
which the Nuisances Removal Acts enable local pro
vision to be made. The authorities who haveko ad
minister these Acts are in inat^y places the earoe, bat-
in uxany other places (chiefly wherever there ave towrf
councils, improvement commissioners, or local boards
of health) are not the same, as the authorities who
have to act uuder the Medical Relief Regulations.
The Lords of the Council have no authority to .laaue
regulations or orders tor any purposes of this Nui
sances Removal Acts. But a vear ago, in anticipation.,
of the danger which now threatens the country, thfeir*
Lordships drew the attention of nuisance authorities,'
and of the public generally, to the renewed proMece
of Asiatic cholera in Europe, and Bi|ggeatet| the pre
cautionary proceedings which, under the circiim-
for. It was their Lordships’
hope, that, after this warning, the interval which
might elapse before a reappearance of cholera in
live districts for the contingency which has now
come. The paper which was circulated ou the above
occasion by the Lords of the Council (the General
Memorandum on the proceedings which are advisa*
ble ln places attacked or threatened by epidemic d5s-;
eosjtkis new again qommended by their Lordsbi]
| consideration of nuisance authorities add of the
blfc.' And on the present occasion parts of It pdist
spcCiuHy. insisted on. - « * si
jf sneCiaHy
V*4j Aireh
rehnioh to Asiafic elialeipa.'as nowthtektenki^
us, there are two principal daugers against which ex
treme and exceptional vigilance ought to be used.
First, there is tho danger of drinking water which is
in any (efen the slightest) degree tainted by house re
fuse or oftier like kinds oTfilth; is where there is out
flow, leakage, or filtration, from sewers, house drains,
privies, cesspools, foul ditches, or the like, into
streams, apriuge, ofr Wells, from which the supply of
water is drawn, or into the sub-soil in which the wells
are situate; a danger which may exist on a small scale,
as at the pump or dip-well of a private house, or on a
large scale, as in the sources of supply of public water
works. And, secondly, there is the danger of breath-)
ing air which is made foul with effluvia from the same
sorts of inttiprity* Information as to the high degree
in which those two dingers affect the pqhfcQ health in
ordinary tlnid.&nd as to the extreme degree of import
ance which attaches to them at times when any diar-
rhueal disease is epidemic, has now for so inafiy years
been set before the public by this department and
otherwise that the larger works of drainage and water
supply by which the daugers are permanently obvi
ated lor large populations, and also the minor structu
ral improvements by which separate households are
secured agaiust the dangers, ought long ago to have
come into universal use. It is to bo feared that, ou a
very large scale, this wiser course has not been
adopted, and that even yet, in very many instances,
temporary security has to be found in measures of a
palliative kind. So far as such is the case, attention is
most earnestly called to those parts of the general
memorandum which relate to the matters in hand. All
chjet sources of the one danger may be held in check,
as follow's: By immediate thorough removal of every
6ort of hoqse-refqse ant} other filth which is now accu-
Hulated.'by preventing future accumulations of tfcA
same sqrt,- by attention to all defacts in -haiwa-wains
and dints b/ which offensive smells kite ‘let tintd
houses, by thorough washing and lime-whiting of un
cleanly premises, especially of such as are densely oc
cupied, and by disinfection, very frequently employed,
in and round about houses, wherever there is lfith-
sodden porous earth, wherever anything 'elfce in or
under or about tue house tends to make the atmos
phere foul. As provision against the other danger, it
is essential that immediate and searching examination
of sources of water supply should be made in all cases
where the source is in any degree open to the sus
picion of impurity: examination hotfi of private qnd of
public* mi|>fjies;' and where 4>qllatian ; i$ discovered
everything pracncible should be done to prevent tin*
pollution from continuing, or, if this object cannot be
attained, to prevent the water from being drunk.*" Tlie
examination of sources of water supply should it
course extend to all receptacles of water storage, such
as the tanks and reservoirs of public supply, and the
butts and cisterns of private houses.
ive (never
important wjiefe hun*au hual|U is to-be .prqjterved)
are supremely important when the spread of cholera
is to be prevented is & truth which will beat be under
stood when the manner in which cholera spreads is
considered. Uappily for mankind, cholera is so little
contagious, in the sense in which small-pox and ty
phus ore commonly called contagious, that if proper
precautions are taken where it is present there is
scarcely any *is£ that the disease will spread;;,to pet-
aohk'WliO narse^and otherwise closely attdhff np4n> tfie
sick. But cholera hag a certain peculiar contagious
ness of Us own, now to be explained, which, wfiere
sanitary circumstances are bad, can operate with-’ter
rible force, and at considerable distance from the
sick. It appears to be characteristic of cholera—not
only the disease in its developed and alarming form,
but equally of the slightest diarrhoea which the epi
demic influence can produce, that- all matters which
the pationt discharges from, his stomach and bowels
are infective ; that the patient’s power of infecting
olhef persohS is represented almost or quite exclu
sively by those discharges ; that they, however, are
comparatively Tjon lnfective at the moment Sfheu
they are fiiseharged, fiqt, afterwards- wdfile undergo
ing decomposition, acqufro their snuxiwium of infec
tive power; that, if they bo cast away without previ-
disuifectiou, they imparl theix own.infective
excreinefifed matters ‘‘With
Ml
AJU* U
quality to the ex _
inl*gie,4a alth-aedden ikcth - or hi dfcpoi
conduits of filth, and to the effluvia which
cremefihd fflatteps evolve ; that, if til® infective pia-
(erial, by leakage or soakage from drains qr cesspools,
or otherwise, gets access, even in the smallest quan
tity, directly or through porous soil, to we|ls or Other
sources of drinking water, it can infect, in the most
{epoqs manner, very large yolqmea of the water;
the infective influence of choleraic discharges
attaches to whatever bedding, clothing, towels, and
like things have been imbued, with them, and repders
these things, if not disinfected, capable (as tbe cholera
patient himself would be capable, under tho same con
ditions) of spreading the disease in plaoes whither
they are sent for washing or other purposes; that, in
the above described ways, even a single case of dis
ease, perhaps of the slightest degree, and
perhaps quite unsuspected in its neighborhood,
mar, if . jopal pircqmstanccs co-operate, exen
- terribly infective power on considerable
jees or population. ‘If local circumstances
cooperate,* however, is the stated coudition for that,
possibility; and it will be obseryed that the essence of
the sanitary precautions, wURih fiaye Upen rpp-
mended to imp>ance authorities and others is to an-
late those ’local circumstances.’ The choleraic
infection does not seem able largely to injuroapypop-
'ulation unless a filthy state of things bepre-suppoeed.
It u pre-aupposed that the atmosphere or the drink-
lug-water of the population is impure with the most
loiiiHoiue of impurities; that the infective material
has had opportunities of action which decent cleanli
ness would not have afforded it; that, in inefficient
or ® r other like depositories, it has
J”?me to develop its own infective power, and to
Sf7 e : r V 1 t ^f r stagnant filth equally infective With It-
?mr w a [ rom ®Dcli loci ofiarecti.in the
![r ’ J ni clioler
„ as . From Cincinnati.
C 11 ’ Aug ' 22 — Tllore n™ flfty-three death*
reported yesterday iu this city.
From Mobile,. ( J
A “*- 22 —Cotton sales to-’aay 30oTI3lea
11 30(g,a4c. Factor* hold above.. view* of
i t iff,-.
P^e^vv* 1 * ^ E * D AT A - PPUMATr 05i Court
i iu, VVe ltarn from the Petersburg In-
i-ofthe vllldgeot Aroomat-
Vif -’ fining
r rfieobL "^^ - a MeinOM * 1 Asspcituion
F tr «e ofUa ytng the remsiBsbf Con-
pi “
, *; to
vi«*'nf tho ^ swallowed by the population. In ttia
to »f,KRni*>'nr'i\! qnaUy u Wl11 bB understood ulat!
It) the ahspooe or tliose permanent safe«uards, nn
proaoh to sueh security can i, e ao t wi r hV.^7 :.
cleansings and disiufection,. ttESPS*SS£&
llaup^ainst every possible eoutaiumation of drink-
-6. It is highly important that the public should
not be under any misapprehension as to the course
by which the above-defined sanitary objects (so far as
the law provides for them) may be attained. Tha ad
ministration of the -Nuisances Removal Acte i* a mat
ter of (4*cUisively local jurisdiction. Ov.f ti*- various
nuisance authorities, in whose hands it is vested,
-ntitUirth* Privy Council nor soy other department
of Her Majesty's Government is empowered to exer
cise control, the fiilthoritlfe* in qdeition are eleotive
bodies, qhosen as their constituencies will, and each
constituency, In exercising Its electoral right, nas, in
effect, tho means of deciding for itself whether the
district which it inhabits shall be wholesomely^>r un-
wholesomely kepk The Loffls of the Council have no
other function appointetLloi 1 Jfcuia'fn this matter thsn
to inquire, and after—rAi *^polMk Parliament what,
so far as the public health is concerned, is the work
ing of that system of administration,. IncbientaUy to
the performance of that function, their lordaffiff p^e
before them the result of much former experience, in
this country and elsewhere, as to the circumstance#
by which the spread of cholera is determined* on<L
having this experience, their Lordships have seen fit
that its more important conclusions should be so set
I'??? wUMWittea Urn b«at«*UU
once which this department can supply towardsthe task
of locally dealing with the removable causes bf the dis-
S5I?; tte * r todskipe' power •terminate*.,
l n^rhoremhips can only hope thai nuisance authorities
and sole re8i>r.iiSlbility in the matter
will justify that very ample trust IHiieh the LegisMtiww
in them. A.*d fur the urfud*
tant* MpUean where the. uuieance auihprilies do nqt
of the law, «•* only enggeet ifcet voluntary aaaoci*-
tioas ahould, a* far as practicable, endeavor t(
the defect Where nuisances on private pren
quire to be summarily dealt - wttt. complatut _
laid bjr any inhabitant of tbe parish or plsce before
wny justice of the peace having jurisdiction there;
but complaints addressed to this or sny other Govern
ment oifi® aanaot lead to cOetdre interference, and!
may involve loss of valuable, time. Of course, tep.it
must.he remembered that, however active may be the
authority or any committee acting iff ils “stead, evffry
householder ought at Idas* to be vigOafetias to (he
state of his own premises and water eupply.
‘•7. Personal precautions against cholera consist es
sentially in avoiding th* nnwtiofe*t»»r«iru!upW*ucyq
which have.been described; and where that avoid
ance can be secured there need not b* farther thougirt
on the subject. Even when cholera seems imminent,
thu danger is quite conspicuously one which Ought
not to give occasion to panic. Intelligence and cool
decision are wanted against it The case is no longer-
that of a mysterious pestOSitte ohMing (like the
and but half-
neasaratdo atfeick, against-which dedmte -yracautiqns _
an be takeu with rth-
in two Orders of Council, dated respectively the 2(ith
and the 21st of July) direct the appointed local author
ities to do. in Omir-respective districts, bo far os ne
cessary, certain things, which are chiefly of the na
ture ot medical relief. The authorities who have to
give effect to those medical relief regulations are as
loilows:—First, wiftffn Ae toelropolia, with the excep-
tion of the city oftdudok, tlm Bespective Vestries or
District Boards of the several parishes or districts;
secondly, outside the metropolis, and also in the
three Unions of the city of London, the Boards oft P^ues of P*®* centuries) on ignorant an
Guardians or Overseers of the Pour of tbe several*) aorfiUisft^po^Ihltois^W^ftial caddofk
unions, parishes, and places respectively. The main ^ **
objects foi: which the regulations purport to provide
are onefly, »u»i m the words oi tne statute, as follows:
‘Forihe speedy interment of the dead; for house-to-
house visitation, for the dispensing of medicines,
guarding against tbe spread of disease, and affording
to persons afflicted by or threatened with such epi
demic, endemic or contagious diseases such medical
aid and such accommodation as may he required.’
In order that these objects should be promptly a§)d
adequately fulfilled in auy district where cholera-may
show itself, it is necessary that all authorities who
will be resyonsibledor fulfilling them skoukLbktll
in their yaapektite districts, reccmai#e^ jpijd
range the ihcasnres which, in case Of need, are to be
taken. Therefore the regulations require that in all
cases (not only in cases where cholera is actually
present within the jurisdiction) an immediate mV?
ing of the authority shall be held, and certain prapar<
atory directions be given. But, except to this extent,
no action under the Diseases Prevention Act Is re- w . ...... .......
quijmii of m district, unless cholera be actually wrap* emanating influences of privation, fatigue, exposure,
eiitfckerq. e \ 4 A ^ " Kf. and the like; and, as regards diet, especially to avoid
Cottaa Bewmreea af tMm toatk.
- This is the title of an able article in De
Bow’s Review for August. The- writer, Ed
ward Atkinson, of Massachusetts, states that
he has been engaged in the manuScture of
cotton -goods - for fifteen years, and that he
has paid rihrtjcular attention to the culture
And comSfiree of the Staple. Bfie'ifiattrjcs
afford evidence of his knowledge_pf the sub,
jeefc in many of its relations. His essay may
be divided into three parts—1, As. relates to
the cnltnre; 2, As regards, generally, the
Sources of supply; and 3, In rdation to the
pro^nble amount of the crop of 1866.
On the first of these heads his infonnation
is very-ample-and comprehensive. He shows
conclusively that ss regards natural adapted-
jeness, the United States is the only country
that from soil and climate is peculiarly
m
OOtjBlAS.
j'.ij ^ 'f '«J ’ m »' 11 ife J t; | • - - j, ' ■ - S
.nuisU all ui \li) hua jRufc vi,, . . PEKE,' S'XiylENTSS
bhUKft v-di sooilbffinffi IsslidoA ti/di nl i ~ ~
'' “ ^ jyra r t a o a
precautions is in the _ _
out the coaiitrjr. But inSivklasi kemKUy otenot fa*
promised l
selfish safe
expedient that every man should 'do his utmost to
promote, where be.dwells,' a vigortoa renitary sd-
ministration over the largest possible area. Those
Who know that such an administration is at work
that from soil and climate IS peculiarly
adapted to tbe-cultivation of the plant—that
(Texas could produce an anntjj supply of
10^000,000 bales, twice the snpply of the
United Stated in 1860—that Mctjco, Brazil
and the banks of tha Paraguay and Parana
An Interesting Kemlnlairefeee-Hte 1 «
Aeerant ofthe Mob In Chtc«|e,
Capt J. Madison Cutis,« hfdther-tn-bnref
Stephen A. Douglas,’ has'juili fifirhed," fhotfi th^,'
publishing house of Appleton A Co.,
treatise upon constitutional, and . parly ques
tions and the history of paUHad
he reeeired it from Douglas binm
the hoofc contains nothing that is r fibt gbjae^
rafly known hi relatiop to the career and
Political principles of--the great statesman,
we extract the following descriptive account
of the disgraceful .90^ the aboli
tionists and know-nothings of the city greeted
his return to Chicago, after the passage of
the Nebraska bilT in 1861. If is’given as re
lated by Mr. Douglas himself;
When I Kturned to Chicago T was met at
Buffalo by a Mend, who brought
) to
•i‘t 'fill 1o
Mvtmz
•ithir -p.!-
1 it !jY
•Jqn u ri-. --r • .
kffi--, fl HvdjR'A t/oa fO'jrvKj fi»-
L,tfe limmemsei
IiTTl/- 1 T!l,u1 usm do B3 Wf>i1l3>-.T.
‘d ^r. v .n^vzt rtoup O) l’in tOlB-il- Tid ^
ti Jl ;u«huj»;'M;/■ .,‘j rn.
n;;n (to * yc/rn mjte tjuit ’ -V[ -.!
(! * JJS'rt ijoi Uat unriiai -o si(f-.;,.
-i-.SGUTMEftM-- - ..1 t -
'-t rf.TI 1 ..fill ri'iHS hufii) V/Mtt.v.TIKiSVrt.fill,
sJsi-dKi £!-.,iq Is ^ninsw a tdn neit) v ,
THE. OGLEXMORPU
Insnranoe Comp’y
*V T Of kkVA)«l»AM ■ ^ ‘
ire phtpared to taka
Firt Ms g EsasmMt Tern,
At their CMfice, 117 Bay Street.
'-7U)I.'1
•ir.'fxaToK 317#.1-4
<tjo fi
around them qeed have but kttle apprehension aa ti
thereto Ij" . f-jfyf ^TWj{jlrtH
“8. As to personal precairtibns, In a harrOtVer^sfensi
of the words, only oue general rule can be laid down-
a rule, fiowever. which is most important for persons
who unfortunately finu themselves in toe midst of
local outbreaks of cholera, and which each individual
must apply according to his experience of his own
bodily habits—the rule of living as strictly as possi
ble on that system whiah commonly agrees best with
the health; to ’ guard, aa far as practicable, against all
all acts at intemperance, and all such eating and
drinking os are likely to disturb the stomach, of
very grave responsibility which ia thrown
by the Diseases Prevention ActLs^||iM03 . _
thereunder issued, and will be anxious to acquit them
selves of the responsibility in a manner commensur
ate with its importance. But if unhappily auy par
ticular district should suffer a sudden and extensiff
epidemic, it may be that the authority, though with
every disposition to discharge its duty, Will have diffi
culty. in providing for all requirements of tne case,
and will be in danger of finding (tsolf overtasked. It
is to be hoped thqt in any such crisis, it anywhere it
should arise, voluntary local assistance will not be
wanting to tbe authority.. Amoug the duties which
would have to be discharged some do not require
skilled officers, but may with equal propriety he de
volved on discreet and intelligent persons ; and it
might be of great local service that such persons, in
committees or otherwise, should be ready to co-operate
with the authority. Especially the authority would
then be enabled to extend, beyond limits which would
else b«i|o$sd>le, that system-ot^lionsq>|fr4yjMaeEvfeita-
i. That such precautions as the above (never un- wlfibff in v4fftklaw^ys#Ki^^butk45te^siii^por-
iuainubu^u«m “ 0 . - - - tant oi local agencies fbr stopping the progress of an
epidemic, not only as prayifiiug for the prompt medi
cal treatiqeut of ‘
Jiance on them—that British India will f^il
«>arfr from the socurity of districts; aiuUbr I -to afford, even under the stimulus of high
«PPly- -Old comp«4e
tor fnfi 'tfitiiaary supplies received bon the
UmtqdjjStateg.. His final conclnrion on ^
branch of his subject is, that the Unitecf
States possess a virtual monopoly, from nat
ural causes, -df the articlh-^-fal ■ a vtord. that
Cotton.is still King.
There is not much originality ii this view.
.Mr, King, of Georgia, has exhausted the tub,
ject iu ite.physical aspect—that of soil aoa
climate. He proved that there was a belt of
lahd with each climatic conditions running
across Abe continent of America, which was
noronty psculiarly, but almost exclusively
adapted to the cultivation of cotton. Mr.
Atkinson has entered into some farther de
tails and illustrations of this partot the sub
ject, which confirm the conclusions of Mr.
King. The moral and political aspect of the
subject has received fuller attention from
him than from almost any other writer. The
author of this article being then in Georgia,
prepar<;itamljpui>liilMd ife;.1863.a Mrks of
essays in the Savannah Republicio7 entitled
the “Question of Cotton Supply,” in which
its inoral and political phase was fully con
sidered, particularly the question of supply
from British India, which was discussed prin
cipally from two poiuta of view. The ob
stacles presented from the existing ten ore of
land In British India to any large increase of
cultivation? Thelmpediments that existed
to tbe' commerce between that country and
Kurftpe, being circuitous, and not an ex
change of equivalents, bnt of silver mainly
for-cotton, and tbe consequent commercial
derangement by such exchange. Mr. Atkin
son makes casual allaaioa to the former of
these knpediments, but makes no mention.of
the latter. But it is very obvious t ial if Eu
ropean nations, and especially England, are
to pay a frequent balance for the excess of
cotton imported from the East by an expor
tation of silver bulliou, for which tbe is fre
quently compelled to exchange hergold, that
this forms a serious impediment to the exten
sion of the qotton culture io that region, of
the *«rthj! Ou the prababU amcufiiHolUhe
cotton crop of 1866, although the author of
the article makes no specific estimate^ he
rejoices “that the large estimates of the okl
cotton remaining at the end of tbe rebellion
were erroneous, and that with the small crap
of this year there may not be enough to cable
any great redaction of price. ” From this we
inlet it-to be his opinion that cotton wiU not
fall much below its present price.
Now-although we are inclined to give ihe
highest arsmmemlation to Uu. paper as to it a
view of the general sources of supply, and
the intelligent examination in detail of each
country which has been mentioned as afford
ing a portion of such supply, we must dissent
fivin some of his other conclusions.
Ho entertains the notion that the culture
of cotton may be greatly extended by cutting
up the land into, holdings of twenty, thirty,
and fifty acres, and cultivating by a system
of free white labor. He says; “I hope soon
to see scarcity ol labor tending to proper
treatment bf the freedmeu aud to competi
tion for their labor.’’
cho*£cd. For instance, tber© is wo reason to suppose
that fruits and vegetables, of sjich kin ls and iff such
states as would be wholesome in ordinary seasons, are
unwholesome when cholera is t>ra«ent; nor (subject
to what will directly be said about premonitory diar
rhea) is there any reason to believe that persons in
good health ought in cholera times, with a notion of
fortifying themselves against tfie disease, to take
drugs3U4 inns which,$iry^vqjil<| riot ; in {Ordi
nary times. Anythlng. to br wisely’06110 iti tniS di
rection, ought to bo done under the advice of skilled
medical practitioners, and, feicept with such advice,
people ought to be most chary both of drugging them
selves mol offtkking *aefc ’prtteakmk praservottves te
are extensively offered for sale.
“ 9.- In places where cholera is present or threaten
ing, one particular bodily ailment requires exceptional
vigilance. That ailment in diarrhoea. For the most
partita this country cholera begius somewhat gradual
ly ; so that for some hours of even days .before tfie
symptoms become alarming a so-called ‘premonitory
diarrhoea’ may be observed. •' Where cholera Is tend
ing to be epidemic there always exists, side by aide
with it. in the district a large amount.?/ epidemic
diarrhoea, representing in part the earlier stages, in
other part the slighter degrees, of the same insidious
and infectious malady. a^This diarrhoea (painless aud
apparently trivial thofagu it KeJ nii'ay iu auy case sud
denly convert itself into cholera; and, apart from the
very serious sigbifikodeb if Ore -flpaf{k4ui as regards
the patient himself, it musi be remembered tbat every
andh'diarrhoed patient hfayW&fetfl-spHhg of inlhK*
tion to others, it also seems probable that accidental
diarrhoea, originally xnddpendOilt of the epidemic in
fluence, is, of aH known personal conditions, the one
on which the cholera-infection can most easily fix it
self. And thus ou all accounts it is of the most essen
tial importance that no looseness of bowels should be
negffected iu places where cholera, exists. A very im
portant part of their Lordships’ Medical Relief Regu
lations enjoins the inakiug of local arrangements bv
which this obfaft slfclf to OciiMd SJt alP tkfe poorer
inhabitants of infected districts; and other classes of
the population are watnefl tobe also Vigilant for them
selves. In anvq infected district every looseness ol
bowels or sickness of stomach ought, as quickly as
possible, to be brought uuder skilled medical treat
ment; jmAiftfce Wjmptatas' befett a* ati sharply, or if
they (however mild) do not very promptly yield to
treatment, the patient ought invariably to remain in
bed.
“10. Too much impirtaflee capnot bei attache#$6
the duty of thoroughly aisinfernne, without delay,
with chloride of ^Ume or otherwise, all discharges
from the stomach and bowels of persons under the
epidemic influence, as well as all bedding, clothing,
towels, and the like, which etch discharges may have
imbued; and ilTprtviefe 4k<| l|tyi mates to which
such discharges may have access should be kept flood
ed with solution of sulphate of iron, or solution of car
bolic acid., » i.t ; it. j .
“ 11. With reference to the medical care of the sick,
aud to all such other kinds of medical action and or
ganization as the circumstances of iufected district.-*
inevitably killed if I did. li
days, three or four, issued a notice of a speech
to be made by ntein ftdntnf MbfW Market
ball. All tbe newspapers in the city de-
uouaced me, aud published daily Articles en
couraging personal violence, reminding the
people tbat in 1850, on the passage ot the
compromise measures, i had returned and
succeeded in quelling an mithresir againat
those measures, and that this tMfig could not
be done n second time. KdOw Nothingiam
bad, during the Nebraska b(U, been organ
ised in the United States fbr the first time,
aud in Chicago tbe anti-NebraSa men had
organized into Know Nothing lodges and
probably included within those lodges nine-
ton) hs of all the men >n the city. It Was as-.
Curtained that they secretly determined and
bound themselves by their oaths nottb' allow
me to speak; and it was known 'tbat one ot
these'30 or 40 lodges ordered by telegraph,
aqd. received by express from New York, the
aieht before I was to speak, 250 df Colt's re
volvers. : ■ It i-r ntend no c-- 5i ■
When tlie (lay arrived thedld^a wen hang;
at half-mast on tbe shipping m < the harbor,
and for several hours before the time ap
pointed ait the church bells in the city Were
tolled, at which aigael the mob assembled in
a ibrce of about lo.ooo. . I had focty. or.^fly
men who pretended to be with me privately,
hut not half a dozen were so' opehly;' they
wefTAtr afraid, m ThTTHaKHinwi mwr i
repaired tothfe fneetiu^ ana went ti^on the
stand,bind was greeted by that unearthly
yell tanght and practiced In the Know-
nothing lodges—a howl ho mAh can imitate.
I stood and looked at themoirtmtll the howl
ing ceased. When they erased! commeooed
by saying, “I appear before you to-nighfefer
the pur|iose of vindicating-the Knnsns-Ne-
braska act.” Before the sentence was ended
the bowl began again. When it censed, I
would begiu, and a* soon as I coramenced.it
was renewed. At times I appealed to their
pride, as the champions of tree’ speeqlu for a
bearing; the howling was renewed. At
>r!l ic r.'i.rn
:’/i -.fil lo DOW')t ,i4i If, (i.v
' " ,f 't I’ Mlt-iH.llllI loH'.t.f.' ,1>
IBOCKER
im'ifi.-. n .',d sijij it.an y.n.-i j.,n it
i ni frifl .noiJaSvflft'J Oi-firfAsinv .
KMefrer
O. Attmdee .
A
A. o. irartrMffe
l. Penet ■
L Morgan
. fianait
• T-Tbomas
V. Refitthart
. F. L. fiae
H. A. Orane
A. A. SolAmoea
M. UsmiiUHi
W. wTooSon
m?Ut . t
H U»J\ . J,*>!»/.•
Directors:
: ’ •“ ' ‘ 1: -
J. Unii .! f,.7i -v ,
' D tt/ftnSs- *
’ J
’ I--.* UAsMli
F.W.i
O. Rirt
'h ‘ft.laoUli
. f.& c te.te ts -.
.^H&^nmhus
UK Mlii CO., g. B. HARRISGTON.
ad;
•'iitTnfft v/ji
i',f i - .13
i tee siok* but equally aa spreading ip-
formation and exercising influence against condiment
which may be want!
supplement any inaction ol
E.iK-s's:’Ss 1 'a&“'S , *w:
fiber skillfql diroctioo,. water in qnonutiss
ments for medical relief have to be told an^ explained:
the proper use of disinfectants has to he taught and
enforced; many othei* sorts of useful information have
to he pi^en; i^nreasonable-, alarm has to ba quieted;
ful for their safety, 'the larger the staff of competent
visitors who can be employed in any infected district,
the easier will be the task. And auy educated person
who would wish to take part in it can easily qualify
JOHNSIMON.
mna m
cal ^ dangerous
organic impurity, it ought at least to be boiled before
ittauaed '
_ ...
medical qr other akillfi^ ^ . T1TJT ..
auff^egent for oqe 4ay’e drki king in the-house may bp
disinfected hj a very osrelul us« of Condy T s red Alisui-
fiecUnt ffnid. Th‘ 8 *bo«Ui ha added to the water (fril^i
stirring or shaking) in such number of drupe that the
water an hour afterward# «hoU have the faintest pink
color which the-eye«an distinctly perceive. ■ .Filtering
of the ordinary kind cannot by itself be trasted to pu
rify water, but iaa good addition to either bf the obovei
processes. It osnfte* be teo distipctly understood V
dangerpus qualities of wata| ore. not obviated by
addition of wine or spirits,
t Precautions against capgtag
fereteUil2SSN|^^^OD
tioq knows the hafflts of his own
totecoh|f ccx^dan^, within, .certain,
hahivS himself no occaaidfi pf sth
from personal pecnffaritlee (where _ _ „ .
iidge fbr bUffflW* Uw oWh Mhftcra of, diet appear to
ie as follows:—-Firstly, in those; mere excesses of diet
which (especially under oirctiinstances of fatigue}'ppeb-
nion sickness to tbe stomach, or an increased l%Mt of
digestions secondly, in taking food, solid or flul
fwb^^yl^me pr^ss^c
. tteat and^ganMrd,
longer fresh and not completely coakea, fish and shell
ftsh in any state but the most perfect freshness, fruit
or vegetables long gstheV^U' 'or badly kepi, and tlie
like; thirdly, in the excessive or unseasonable use of
frigmnt drinks of ice; fvurthlf Jn partaking largely
ttipsa ortictes bf 4Ut kkhltu ^
of imperfect cooking, pass unchange
testinal canal; and fifthly, in th«
gat ive iqe^ipiQes, or iq finking my article of c
w likelytaprohueeffwsffiqBeltecl.: ^ it
.ji ■■ -in i 'i' 1 *; 1 * t'f 1 *' t? Miff
CfotfD.—Thoi’Naw Orieaw Oresoeot has
been shqwu, by Mr. Francis Bowraiu. bf
that oity, a itoveftoyCfifloq cajiie^,‘T^e jlbs-
quito Scarer.”, lt is a liquid. with, an aro
matic perfume, - which is eaid to bo peculiarly
obnoxious to alt Intects, ■partUMiaHy iuos-
quitoes. The editoi opened the bottle and
spilled a few fqjtd4 !( WH »»d in a mo
ment or two could see tbe mosquitoes le»v J
>ng in disgust, wjlh ttaeir pocket baodker-
chle6 at thefr noses, ft is S greatifiVention,
most assuredly.
-An old miulSeir, ,Uys the BnJIgtOTS H$-
aid, enforced the .dWereuce of opirnoa by
argument: “Now, if everybody had been of
my epinioi.-they-weald all. have wauted nay
old woman.*’ On? of the deaeoA' Wbe St
just behind him, responded: “Yes, and if
everybody wqs of rqy opinion, nobody would
have fiad her,"
‘The moat dense negro population in any
State is in Maryland, not in South Carolina.
And now that slavery has ceAsed to repel a
free white population, it will, by emigration,
increase much more rapidly than the black,
wifufeaehtty tho negro will cease to. boa
disturbing element, by being swamped iu a
dense population of whites.”
Tbe assumption all along of the writer is
that slavery has repressed the growth of cot-
tauaawijll aa checked tbe increase of the
black population, and that by proper encotrr-
ageiueut the emigration of whites, particu
larly from Germany, will swamp the negroes,
in other words, that the negroes wit! not be
able to withstand tbe competition of the
whites. Now If the census is consulted, it
will be found tbat tbe qegroes have a ag
ue tiled much more rapidly than tbe whites,
tbat the cotton crop has more than Corres
pondency increased, and if, in the end, the
poor negro is to be swamped, we cannot ap
plaud such a system for improving the agri
culture of the South by extending the culture
of cotton. ’
‘ This writer speaks of the system of far In-
iug as contradistinguished from the system
ot culture by plantation, or the cultivation
ef limited portions of food as meet favorable
to an increase of produce, as.if it was one of
assured certrfaSf lfiBt**do( oae of mere ex
periment. He amides to the'upland i
foods of the West and South (fo at foex
foie-fertility and unquestioned heal thin
(two qualities uat generally associated), yet,
he dcum not scruple to affirm that, although
they were “the abode of terrible fevera until
by the use of rain water, stored in cisterns,
in winter the malignant types of fever were
banished, but the intermittent fever still
prevails.” This would not be an inviting
prospect for a large German emigration. It
seems to «a pare hypothesis to say that emi
gration from Europe could be stimulated by
any motive less patent than the eu|ayment
of health, tbal the hope of profit would In
duce that Class of men who seek their for
tunes in Vie Western world to prefer the Up
land prairies bf the Southwest to the more
healthy regie* of tbe Northwest. In short,
tliefc is an adaption of climate to population
fri agrioalture, in spite of theory sad specu-
rieo. The plantation system is best adapted
to the South, as farming is best suited to tfie
North. y. «l- N. OJ
A Romance u« Rkal Lit*—About four
years ago a young married man, residing, in
tbe vicinity of Hampstead, MA-i about fifteen
mites from Abie place. eulWed in the Union
army and left tea wife and home to try the
hardships of W»r. The dirincm to which be
belonged R«tn« attached to McClellan’s com-
mauChe teomne engaged in tbe severely
contested batae of AmteUm. Assong the
reported as having been killed, his witefound
tin* niinip ol her hufiband. .True toiler plighted
the widow's weeds and contracted another
matrimonial alliance, laboring under the im
pression that she had reAly buried her first
husband. Strange tossy, a few weeks ago,
he returned, hale and hearty. What waa now
*ffi3®K?cr
derated woman, she clung to her. firet love
and resolved to live with her first husband.
Tbifi tpfar has really brought finth main:
gular incidents. An occurrence of the
character look place some
where the woman made a sttsiiat o«
but.not before the two husbands bad a very
•BVfif#' fiaticufiL —Hanover (i 5 ®-) wtefti
—A fetter from. ^asMogtan aayB thfiltixe
Attorney General has already engaged oom-
petent phonographere to attend ihe Davis
trial early in October, to take notes for the
Government.
ftSsSe'
rein Ohio,
me
armed—afraid to hear tbe truth ‘spoken, lest
there might be some honest men among
teen mionies, aud was evidently making nn
impression upon the crowd, when there
marclied iu from the outside a body of 300 or
400 men with red shirts.- dressed as stiiinr*.
and thoroughly armed, who moved through
the crowd immediately in tront, and pe
remptorily ordered me to leave. I stood and
i^sS8!SS^iatBf«6Kg
and dared them to shoot at an unarmed mao.
The pistols began to fire all around tbe out
side ofthe crowd, evidentlyiutp tbe air;eggs
and stones were thrown at tire stand, several
of them bitting men who were near me, and
for several hours this wild confusion con
tinued. The wouder Is tbat amid (hat vast
excited crowd no one was so for ex
cited or maddened as to fire aball atme.
The stand was crowded with my enemies,
reporters, and newspaper men, and this was
undoubtedly my best protection. I stood
in the evening until a quarter past twelve at
night, when i suddenly drew my watch from
my pocket, looked at it in front ot the crowd,
and in a distinct tone of voice said at an in
terval of. silence : “It in now Sunday morn
ing—I’ll , go to church and you map go to
hell!” and I retired amid the uproar, got
into my earringe and code to my hofoL The
crowd followed tbe carriage, and came near
thru wing it off the bridge, into the river as we
crossed ; they had seized it for that purpose,
over them, and went to the Tremont House,
where I retired to my room. The mob, at
least five thousand, followed, and commenced
their howls in Bake street,' fronting my room.
The landlord begged me to' leave thh house,
fearing they would burn it hp, Whfirmpon I
raised my window, walked out n{xte the bal
cony, took a good look at them, and told
them that the day would come when they
would hear me, and then hade them good
night;
j ; — uiS
Interview Between the South Caro
lina Akbttitii^usiMBtfL£teaA‘‘p e r-
ley,” in his dispatch jfom Philadelphia to the
Boston Journal, speifctogofthe visit paid by
the delegates from South" CaroRna ld" the
Massachusetts delpgflitjri^iqjfa.: '”
TheuGenerRl (?Hiter-aiijfo ,«p, ,«n4 jiaa
introduced to General. McCowam of theCon-
fedeiate army. ( Alter cordially shaking
bands, Custer aaids , “General, we have
been looking aLeach other often during, the
war through fiphl-glasses and amla ihe smoke
of batlfo. If we (i^g how shake hands, these
civilians who have stayed at their homes in
aafatymfo ahewldi’’ ■ .
tffjmt Ybfk;
~ J) vrt?ar»iv> i;fi y.i f., ', .
EESIDEWIOHI ffFTOECTtlSS.
'i ■ ! ievn has -arutvjR r,v. * - ;•
i .i - ..41 _iol ---q- f
'-lias - '.rl» t
•• • •'» lit! tCitl tj.il an ft * U .
Policies Written in every Form
• ' 1 \ ntm arm i . ■ ■ •
Besiwd.
: K- m-.anv4n 'ill mat w.-rt
DHALBR IN
EVERY VAfcjEtYtdP
-^t eal/ i,. j;-Ta-jv t
v •-• ‘ -:i;i: --rit ttno'-G Mitz !t»M r. ; ■
FXRTiCrijiR ATtterrtoN id camje#to thk
1 «• «».('idJ ni won *i! tin r.-sniJn-.r.: r. -.
tem teiK
flm t;i trfaLrt *7
ENnoWkESi-POLIUES,
?jloot t-mi .fi-JoantJcnoo Jo jr**> annnii
by white plan tew* jWtek*)* 0 fffpfogure-afier two
taunnlfrerehMMhait.liecfe-haM.. :; . r f
-rr J7-i !tnr-i -.rfl .jiaot rr.v : -.-
- o i .1 • (^L-if'i^oA * • '
■ i! ■ a titonv 9tx> tfdl ttwn
FiUciesTritfeii fflofrei PfomtHy Paid
AT T HCP1 OFlrlOIi 1 ,
No- . Q8i . iS^y', Street.
Call «od recsivs s .C^rcdter* with free ex-
:*• •••ir.mnl Y, - **vn • •-: .
A. WILBffRy CFBfierral Manager.
1 • : rr WlJKr. Bojuym/i : . • °
WW. R. BOYD, Agent.
ao1t.tr' t' 1 n:: Mvtf-in-j. •• •
tB mm, mmm
v;n-a t m
be said, “is dead, and ia no one’s govern
ment; but the Go^rnment of the United
kW-aaBigJMftBflr
Even the' XenXA ' TorchHgtt, that jabid
its membm, Sukltri covew /op »s>bill for the!
soldiers. Hear how the man assails one of
! the immaculate Thirty-ninth‘Congress; J '^ '
“The vote tjy lyhich Congress increased
the salary of its members, wits a disgustingly
mean and cowardly performance. The bid
for the equalization of bounties and the pro
position for this increase of salaries were
bath defeated and ehasedroff i to tho-very end
of the session. Then, in the last rash of
bbiiiiess, botlrvMiW taenff tfoak afobadfatehto
to the civil appropriation bill, and, with it,
forced through'. * 8b" that the-' member who
voted against the increase of his own salary
had by the same acflo vbte iagainst the;
eijualizatkm of, bounties. It was a bumness
unworthy a pack bf steamboat blacklegs; and
—Somebody has been making curious
eolations about the large wheat crop of Eli-
aobfin 18GA, and fioda thifo :if-made Into
johnny-cake it would Uje popuiaiioB of
the world two days; and font to JMM* tbe
wheat wouitl require a crib eight foe thighby
eight feet wide, allowing two pud a half fort
to a bushel^ 3,276 miles in teagih. weiring
from Patiwmaquoddy bay to San Francisco,
and a good share of the' cBatafioe back: ,r
mmmosmsvE
■ ‘ :-:tj -it vtT4t:f <* !• n -
: OPJIl’ANY,: / ;
' v :!1 ■■Mte-rfm V;
A TICKET fOR ONE DAY,
*i —nj'-t nrifrcH *aj I
, IS SELLING GOODS
'•u - • ' ■ ■■■ ■)•
Lower Than Any Other House
IN SAVANNAH.
HOTELS ANO SfEAMBOATS
FTTKNISHED.;
PARLOK SETS, extra weH upholstered. I -.,
FINE BED. ROOM SETS. Walnut aqd’^-.
hogaoy. .. . .. . . V ''i.,.
COTTAGE BED ROOM SETS, of every'
-variety.
it f t; ‘ a»s ".
DINING ROOM and LIBRARY SETS. .
MATTRESSES, ROISTERS and PILLOWS
’ of all kinds. : ts
t n
i 7* -ijbj; j7 -.ftr
-tv- -'.y-tl-'l rt.u
t fctir.7!) 7* 'J
KITTLE’S FOLDUTO^SHrtNG BED& and
MATTRESSES, the be§t Bed.W use!
and WARRANTED SUPERIOR ,to : all
_ Accident, and $25
caosed try AeCldent,
ij : -ir ri- '-’-rfc
De noI^rayel^Ubout One.
• 1 b.-sroUi; ad o$ cv* hariqaN. "
rl;: -r nrio rt-rii To slc-.d--^ rt <— -
it; ' - H
"dJ Tu
snr.ihtr.r:) t.-- j
No Persofl Should Meglect k.
'•■( 3"- ■ ''II ri.-.tiL t i -Adt I :ir foi,-? •• -1-
r am ted sms (Meater,». ■,»/ /■
9 |U To jj-vn-n jy
WMt ft. SQiVHb • Agsata
wanr.''/-'>;' jr Sa r WAV
asaft-lffisas BARGAINSlNDBr GOODS
meant the ConfederdteOMernmeat. “That,” - T iudH Mn\t t filr-jrol .i -r
,,n ■„
jtivirrovisEY,
c aBj'awwhrrrifcfiiipa'toHMt, •»«•(
tefctJriiwen
8*LEor'Atril ! ')^ifekiti' srrockOFSTAPLH
iKTSfiBWl' ’ !
»■ aaufogwf toimrWr mfo»ce<yimBi, ■
ir - d bluow tMWMVNSfPrit’ii i |
swell. Table Damask, Diaper, i
Irish I' '
MUmteri forinari wferi mlalfe tfll
-SSSaSEB^T’;---" '■
racasi20ftr.,ri»
gas~ 1
CrttofoHUtap* Mfowic," 1 ttt:->’■ r. ■ ■
Berege, Lenoes,Percales,Heriaoes
Ooborgs aad Flannels, Mosquito Nettings,
Shawls, VensrHSaaSCrcMels, coitus,
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Hats sad Shaken, Nancy Soaps, - - • "
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Nearly Onwsile SI. itirewT Ett.
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LOW PRICES !
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to be found In thii’icity, and .whjchje^ dWr'it
LOWER PRICKS thin they efit'Sh hOokfet tar A*«£y
other huuse.caniisUngJn.pMt of ...jj
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