Newspaper Page Text
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VOL. 2-NO. 218.
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1866.' n
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juftSi 3 Mill l*.'!qo •,
PBICE* 5 CENTS.
7r
ICDaily N ews an( * Herald.
PUBLIBHKD BY
V. MASON.
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! !’ie News and Herald.
• Advertisements iuserted three times a week
r o- ier day) f<*r a month, or longer period, will
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By Telegraph.
MORNING jaiSPATCMBS,
FROM NEW YORK.
DESTRUCTIVE FIRE.
A Family Perished ia the Flames.
Tini MARKET.
New York, 8ept. 24.—A four-story tenement house,
corner of Avenue A- and Thirteenth street, was d?s-
troyed by fire yusterday^ Om-nelms Dattijori, hurWiflfl
and tWo children Relished, 'two Ee£ leaped trofoteW
fourth story and are not expected to live. Three
others jumped down and caught on beds, and escaped
serious injury. The fire is supposed to be the work of
an incendiary. C *, ? " j ^
Gold, 43%; Sterling, 6 per cent, for 60 dAys. Cotton
firm, with an upward tendency; sales of 1,000 halts
Uplands at 36 %c.; Orleans, 38c. Flour improving.
Wheat 3@5c. better. Pdrtt Behvy at $33. Lard duU,
atl6%@19%c. / *i. L
European Markets.
Liverpool, Sept 22—Noon.—The cotton market
less firm. Middling Uplands I3%d.; estimated sales
to-day, 16,000 bales. The market for Braadatufla
firmer.
London, Sept 22.—Consols 89%. Five-twenties
_
RADI-
THE ITINERANT SOUTHERN
CALS*
One of the Party Becomes Disgusted with
Hi% Associates and Deserts—Revelation
of their Secrets—Immediate Negro Ssf*
^ frage or Negro Insurrection—Their Main
Object to (it n Llvitg Without Moment
Labor, Ac. •
Cleveland, Ohio, Sopt. 19.—H. G. Norton, a dele-
gate to the mean whites’ Convention at Phiia*
Uelphia, and lately one of the company of
itinerant miscegens storied from the gathering*
arrived here today. He states that he hM w$
| ;jr Advertisements inserte-i as special notices win
:i.ir/etl thirty per cent, advance on table rates.
| ir Advertisements of a transient character, not
itic l as to time, will be continued until ordered
and charged accordingly.
| ;r No yearly contracts, except for space at tabic
rites, will be made; and, in cont racts for space, all
s will bo charged dfty cents per square foi
Editorial, local or business notices, for indi
, benefit, will be subject to a charge of fifty
j'.t line, imt uot less man three dollars for each
tf Au transient Advortiseuients mu9t be paid in
tolri-Mly News and Herald
j at $6 per year, or 75 cents per month, and
| Tha Weekly News and Herald
Is issued every Sa. .rduy at $3 per year.
J 012 PRINTING.
" -tr'e. n ativ and promptly done
forced to leave the mixed crowd through disgust
at their designs and repugnance at associating with
negroes upon terms of social equality. He spoke at
Trenton with them a week ago last Monday, and was
with them in Albany on Sunday last. He represents
himself as having been in their full confidence, and
present at their private meetings. Their secret de
signs, he says, startled and disgusted him. Their
main object he declares to be to make an easy living
without honest labor, and to get what money they can
out of the credulous dupes upon whom they can im
pose. In order to successfully carry out this game
they are ready to make their speeches to suit their
audiences, agreeably with their instructions from the
politicians by whom they ore used in the different
localities they visit. But m their meetings among
themselves they make no secret of their determination
after the fan election to incite a negro insurrection.
They say they must have immediate negro suffrage or
negro insurrection. In their confidential conversa
tions they say this is a very good way to get a living
to-day ; but when the elections are over tbeae people
will not want ns, and then our only chance ia to get
the upper hand of the Southern rebels, by the aid of
disfranchisement and negro votes, or to exterminate
them by a negro insurrection and another war, which
would be sure to follow. The discovery of this design,
Mr. Norton says, determined him to break his associa
tion with the adventurers. He was further resolved
upon his course in consequence of their familiar asso
ciation with the negroes. Randolph, the black mis-
cegen, who is one of the party, eating, drinking and
sleeping with Jack Hamilton and the other whites.
The Rev. Hope Baer is represented as being also dis
gusted with the company. He objected a few days
ago to their intimate social intercourse with negroes,
and was told he had better go away.
Indeed, Air. Norton says, nothing but the free feed
ing, free riding, and presents they get keeps the itine
rant miscegens together. He says they do not pay a
cent wherever they go, and have received gifts of
money, clothing, shirts and shoes at several places.
He describes Randolph, the negro, as the smartest of
the band, and says be has collect4‘d a considerable snm
under the pretence of aid to black churches and
schools in the South. Hunnicutt, another of the
sturdy beggars, solicits subscriptions everywhere for
his paper, and contrives to sponge a trifle here and
there out of his dupes. Mr. Norton refutes all Jack
Hamilton's sto ements about the condition of Texas,
and asserts that he is kept away from that State, not
from fear of assassination, but of indictment.
The descr.er tells a number of hard stones about his
late associates, and says that Hunnicutt, after preach
ing in Troy last Sunday, was iu a very uupreacber-Hke
condition in Albany in the evening. This is all, of
course, the statement of a man w$o, as an luisociate
of such a company, may well be open to criticism, but
his story at least shows enough to prove the real char
acter of the Radical miscegen campaigners to induce
decent men of all parties to avoid association with
them.
! «<rraa tH ay*i4.
C«tl»c4.
|7bi Awful Accident at Niagara Fall..
Tke toll,nviog details of the sad accident
■titich occurred at Niagara Falls on VVednes-
i;t. brief allusion to which was made
pae Herald several days since, is received
4? mai,;
I', seems that on the afternoon of Wednes-
« Mr. Cooper, the postinas'er atChip-
|o vn. on iiic Canada side, two miles atiove
Jijc Falls, started with Frank Leutze, a fer-
■rvuiaa, to cross the river in a small bout.
II."iiatly lacomrse is to pull about two miles
■up the tiver before attempting to cross, but
loo ibis occasion tae uulortunale men seem
To Laic imagined that the heavy wmd blow
| cg up stream would coun'eract tbe force of
oe current, and consequently attempted to
Ictus in a direct .ine: WLen m-ar the centre
} '^stream me f.dly of the hazardous feat
■•ecanie apparent to the occupants of the
I- at. oho. despite the eftortsof the oarsman
uni Hie swin curri n , soon found them-
"o gliding sivilily to the thundering cata-
■i- Jeioiv. Still the terror-stricken boatman
sis o;.rs with frantic energy, while his
acton, ritsi.icg t'rutn side to side ot the
-aad wildly gesiiculating, piteously ap-
s'lslauce from loose on shore,
f course, these honor-stricken
r rvtr -- were uuabte to render. As the boat
[■■» u-.irer uud nearer the mighty cataract,
‘■C-ty with which it was hurried on
•accelerated, until striking the rapids
If- b-at Island, the little craft was tor a
I'-odcaugui in the eddying, circdug cur-
— uii. ,,i widen it, however, soon shot, and
‘Oa aut attrrivards reached the verge of
; : id-bice, over which it plunged with its
|'"-Hi treght iuio the foatuiug abyss tldo#
'- -ftibot persons lined tbe suores and
" ■‘•hd upon Goat Island, mute witnesses
terrible ride 01 death. It is consid-
,~ Vcr .v singular that Leutze, the boatman,
I thu-i® f08se d aud re-crossed a hundred
-nil kiuds of weather, should have
!a - i a;,sjudged the force of the current,
I 1 ot -'-cslimatcd to such a degree the
it the wind. Although diligent
I - -led twieu made tor me bodies ol tbe
—ate nteu, up to latest accounts no
'•1 either had been discovered
(Tram an Octalton.l Coatribator l
Newport, Vt., Sept. 1ft, 186C.
We found Chattanooga tbe same corny
. IbFjt pa ever. We saw little new, excepting
a number of tt n i)dioga erected oe a biH near
the city, and used as barracks and hospitals
for soldiers of the U. 8. A.
A walk of an hour through its streets and
on the banks of tbe lovely Tennessee river
sufficed us, and at 9 P. M. we were again
speeding on onr westward way. Winding
and climbing around *be base of '.‘Lookout
M0*tain,” by moonlight, at a considerable
elevation- above -the river, on a narrow
ledge, barely wide enough for the track,
partook sufficiently of tbe daugelou^. to
heighten* Mir enjoyment. Fbsshg oe,\-Wa
began to ascend the Cumberland Mountains
at the rate of 106 feet to tbe mile for three
miles. The engine labored on his upward
path, until finally plunging through the tun
nel we emerged and descended until at day
light we reached
MASHVILLE, TENNESSEE.
This, tbe capital of Tennessee, ia appro
priately called Rock City, for ita high bills
and rough rocky soil renders walking far
from pleasant away from pavements, and
riding in the city not particularly agreeable.
The sun shone with tearful ardor on Us day
colored streets, and its dust was insufferable.
Perhaps thete impressions were strengthened
by memory’s sad retrospect of past days,
when brave men in a wintry time struggled
and fell, and the remnant of that band
wandered barefoot and w*»y atanng those
surrounding hills, suffering untold ills for
their country Tbe State Capitol, tbe pride
and boast of Tennessee, is built of marble from
thrir own quarries, varied specimens of it
being seea in the interior.
This edifice stands on a high hill, com
manding a charming view oftit 6 surrounding
country from either pf its four ppitigos.
There are some fine churches and residences
in this city. Prominent among the latter is
the mansion of Mrs. Polk, the widow of the
late ex-President James K. Polk—the monu
ment which marks his resting-place being
directly in:!ront of the house, within the
enclosure of the grounds.
The hermitage known as tbe residence and
grave of President Andrew Jackson is twelve
miles distant from Nashville, and is quite a
favored resort, not only of citizens, but also
of strangers and visitors.
But our impressions of Nashville faded, as we
left it at two P. M. for Louisville, Ky., passing
through a most delightful region—now ele
vated high among the hills, where fertility
and luxuriance vied with grandeur, and anon
gliding through peaceful valleys, where fields
crowned with rich harvests of abundant crops
and the lovely hues of the grasses of this
section imparted au unsurpassed richness to
the landscape. Thus we feasted our eyes
until night obscured onr view, and we hnr-
ried on, until abont 11P. M. the whistle of the
engine announced another - day’s journey
over and our arrival at Lonisvillo, Kentucky,
and as here again we rested, so will
Yours, repectfuHy,
Ramtkl.
Tnmble Ahead.
Tbe New York Commercial, Bepublican, Radies) aa
it is, sees breakers ahead:
We regret (eaya the editor) to have to confess that
e see nothing but trouble aud evil in the future of
our country. The people, from one eud of the coun
try to the other, shut their eyes to the most palpable
truihs. They have believed that violence could restore
the Uuiup. To attain this cherished object they have
advocated war, and have permitted and applauded the
violation of the most important principles of oar Con
stitution, and of the iutiereut rights of ihe people.
Hen Signs.—Some one has given the fol
lowing signs for distinguishing hens that
either will not lay at all or lay only a lew
eggs iu the spring, and lake a vacation for
the remainder of the year:
Hens that lay are off the roost at tbe first
dawn of the morning, while barren bens
often remain there until the sun is high in
tbe sky, or until tbe laying hens have ample
time to fill their crops Laying beus have a
voracious appetite, while harrea hens are
otieu very indifferent about eating. Heus
that are about to commence layiug, or that
do lay every day or every alternate day, are
as active in obtsining-feed for HfoimfoMfs as
doe having a brood iof n&ugrT tfilckefis is
which th-as principles ehiclded and protected. Taev . _
have been led to believe that the nee of price, cauaef ihiif ent io scratching up and scratching OUl
, daily fluctuating in nw . HS8ftrv feed lor her voting ones.
by the use of a vicious curreucy,
value, and therefore unfit for the purposes of com
merce and industry, augmented their wealth I They
have consented—nay, urged the imposition of the
most oppres-ive, the must costly aud the most vicious
systems of taxation, alter these had been condemned
by every intelligent mind iu Europe, where these sys
tems have been tried aud abandoned. They have been
led to believe that the national debt, which muBMEes
the entire property of the oonntry, aaweU tathSBlture
products of its labor, was a blessing to tbe people and
an addition to their wealth. They have been led to
believe that placing obstructions to the exchanges of
commodities with foreign countries wae beneficial to
tbe industry of the country, and that tbe enlargement
of the powers of the Federal Government at the
aspense of those of Ihe States and of the Individu
al that compose them, was necessary and advanta
geous. Tney overlook the corrupting effect ol jjur
miserable politic:'
eral patronage,
pie deprived
been prosperous and happy,
deception which iudnoee our people to shut their eyes
to these great troths prevents them from profiting by
the dear-bought experience of other nations, and will
feme them to acquire knowledge through the bitter
fruits of the erroneous measures to which they have
resorted to meet present emergencies.
Nothing but a total change In ffcapohog of ou* Gov
ernment can save us from future .evils ofgreat magni
tude. Have we sufficient intelligence in the country
to discover thi3, and sufficient talent and courage to
apply ihe proper remedy ?
overlook roe corrupting uuect u* uur
itical parties, of the vast increase <Kfte4-
e and tile important fact that no spaa-
1 of " indtvIBilhl liberty hare ev*
Over the Bridoe.—Trains passed over tho
nek railroad bridge yesterday, and one
flodtee of vex tion and expense to travellers
and shippers is thus r«*nov»d. Tht hfidge
ii pronounced an excellent ’ and substantial
piece of workmanship.—Columbus Enquirtr.
- iI Tttn duutH Head asu Understand.—
- W. Forney’s latest published speech
<es hie following fiendish threat -.
■,, '• tbu Southern people do not ratify thig
I tj-tJuicut, or if th y defeat it, whattheh?
| ^Andrew Johnson, in his drunken irnagi-
beiievc that he can lead this people
"jollier war? Suppose he does; what
tL; I think I see by the glitter of your
I,':”- "Ld l know I feel it by the throbbing
I “I heart, that if they should ever be
h' -' hf this new infatuation, the war that
I '"•’•* t'Qsue would establish the fact that
*hich has passed was a child's play or
l iS! • i:c t>< that which will come. The army
| Mli then go to the Southern country will
'“ tre to stay; it will apt be an army of
' hut an army of migration; it will
1JJrr 'bare to revenge, but extirpate.
Kr Q ;°*'s remedy will-indeed be tried;
be three columns, the one to kill,
L.^hd to burn, the third to divide the
l^-iwi" 0 " 3 UU10D S men that go down a
T-tt: t l ' me 10 avenge the insulted flag of
I'.v JUDlr y- I see this sublime resolve in-
of your eyes, aud I feel it in the
r C my heart. I feel it every where.
| Ti..' r 11 ss the trumpet voice of destiny.'
j ‘’ball not prevail against these men
IfoJPeei that God is dead. But we will
Itk-’S au d we will prevail so triumphantly
|®0ch J 1 :tw y eare more they will wonder as
Ii .j. f hat they opposed impartial suffrage
Ittr..'? Uuw wouder that they opposed uni-
* Emancipation.”
wooden shoes worn by peasants ol
Jl
THE PUOIB U INDIA.
A Fearfal Pletare of NaWerlBR.
necessary feed lor her young ones.
A heu that lays an egg to-day and another
tomorrow has a comb and gills red and
glowing, while the comb and gills of a bar
ren hen will be colorless, pallid end some
times wrinkled and dried up. When s heo
that lays has eaten until her crop appears
disteuded to its utmost capacity, she will
force down a little more, while a barren one
wi.holteu appear as indifferent about eating
good feed'. A denIhmhifold Meggte dm|
and will lay another tO"Rf«pw, fdll go
singing around the yard, while -the Mi that
■ever lays has no more mnsic in her soul
than the wiie .of Socrates. y* -o ; » j
’Kentucky.—The Lel-^
—A full-blooded gent of African extrac
tion has been admitted to the bar in Penn
sylvania. Several years ago he prepared
himself for examination, lint owing to the
prejudices existing agaiast bis color, he was
unable even lo get before a committee. Since
then, however, he has practiced in tbe F. B.
courts in South Carolina, where be waa loud
in his invectives against tbe Southern peo
ple. This record proved his ticket of admis-
“P n - i -,.r. .. 'i ■ U
—A Mrs. Cox, residing in New London,
Conn , was found in her house, on Wednes
day, nearly dead from starvation. It appeal!
her husband left her about a week eioce, with
out means of support, and it is supposed Bhe
became discouraged apd locked benplf into
her house, determined io die. She bad not
eaten any food lor three days.
—^dyices ftorq the panebraite country in
Alabama, Natchez and Texas, in the delta
of Louisiana from parish Avoyells, south of
Red River and Caddo parish on Upper Red
River, all speak of the army worm as in the
field. Little or no cotton is expected to be
gathered. __
_At Fanenil Hail last week Wendell Phil
lips, when called upon for a speech, after
Kmwnlow had dealt ont his usual budgefof
damnation npon the South) modestly re
plied that he coqld only ssy “all hail” and
"amen!” to the Parson’s menaces m»d ■»!•-
dictions.
—-Dana is succeeding in his newspaper pro
ject in New York- If Is c^feped Wfifit
Mr. Greefeyt nose out «f Joink i V-AVj
Cattle Disease in Kentucky.
The ah- j n ^jton (Kentncky) Observer pnblisbes a lel-
terfrom Hon. Green Clay Smith to the Pre
sident of the Kentneky State Agricultural
Society, in which he says :
This section of the country has been mneh
disturbed in the last few weeks, owing to a
frightfhl disease which has made its appear-
an«e among the cattle, killing many, making
some blind, and otherwise affecting a large
number. There was no disease among the
cattle of these interior counties prior to the
introduction of a large lot from Texas by
General B. Gano. It has been asserted, and
believed for a long time, that the Texas cattle
would propagate a peculiar and destructive
disease. Missouri, in consequence, estab
lished a cattle quarantine, and I believe
passed a prohibitory law, hence fotf SoiaJttfM
has not been vjeAfcd with this fttW .imuuftfi
Kentucky has it now, and there can be no
doubt in the minds of those who have been
informed of the foots that it was introduced
by the Texas cattle. * • ‘ “ ' ' ’ “
A cor*#0PO!ifoa 44*** Time*
writing from Calcutta on July gives a
fearful picture of tbe suffering caused by the
famine iu India. He says:
I started from Midnapore, a civil station
about 70 miles southwest of the capital, on
tbe morning of Ihe 25th of Jane, and bad
hardly proceeded some seven miles when
commenced tbe painful sightsi which vary
ing only in intensity, again
returned to this place. Rain had fallen hea
vily during the night, and the palki men
were -trudging sfowfy through the mad,
When ■ little after daybreak I saw two bo
dies under a tree. As there seemed to be a
slight motion *.n ohe, I aftghied, and on going
up to il found, covered under an o'd cloth,
F'Otl just a spark of life 'eft in him, an oil)
IboB slowly dying- from hunger. He ap-
^twred as if" he bad a thin piece of transpa
rent iodia lubber, lightly drawn over bis skel
eton frame, sq emaciated bad be become.
I gave him sonic beef, and he slowly falter
ed out bis isle of woe.. He said that he and
his companion nad left their homes, alter
seemg their families die from the effects
of cholera or famine, and bad got thus far on
their journey toward Midnapore, hoping to
get selief there, when one, Birack by damp
and hunger, dies on the road under a tree, and
the other wakes'to find his friend a corpse, and
himself exhausted and drenched by tbe hea
vy rains that had fallen during the night, un
able to more. The dogs and jackals feast off
the body, white this firing skeleton hot a few
paces off is powerless to prevent them. He
faintly begs nom the passers-by, but in vain.
Hunger is gpawing their vitals also. They
all turn a deaf eartabis cry. The beer seems
to revive Mta.IaM I Went to my palki to get
some biscuits, Imt returned to fiud the poor
sufferer in a state of coma, aud in a few min
utes be was dead- Tbe half-picked body of
his companion attested his tale. I continued
my journey, pasting at intervals the dead as
i bey lay uoburied and in every stage ot de
composition on the side of the road. Some
time# I would seea eirnter together. In one
place therq were twenty-two bodies within
tbe space, of half a mile ; in another six close
together; all more or less mangled and torn
by the jackals, dogs and vultures. Pushing
tuy way through the jungle and over paddy
fields, often obliged to swim sundry streams
swollen by the late floods, in one of which
my-palkf was upset, I traversed one hundred
and twenty miles of country, when I reached
the house of a Mr. Falls, an assistant in
Messrs. Watson & Co.’s indigo concern here.
That gentleman informed me that a woman
Dad died by the road side, and Umt a living
chilJftvas R>€| ^ulhit^breatt. He stfffi
out his serVanD, who 'Tetrirhed saying that
they had. found the corpse and the child, but
the mother's arm clasped the latter so tight
that iu bending it back, stiff and cold, it broke.
They say that the living and the dead-had
been thus linked together for two days ; at
any rale, the poor little infant, exhausted by
exposureaud want, died as it was being re
leased. Tbe above gentleman and myself
were travelling through a dense jangle.
Miles away from auy human habitation we
perceived a famished native of the Sonthal
tribe, Wing on the ground ; he had thrown
himself down to meet a certain death; but a
tittle brandy rekindles the vital spark, and,
ioth to leave him lo be a prey for the jackal
and leopard, we bare him placed on the
roof of a palki. The palki bearers, however,
refuse to budge an inch, saying that their
caste would be.gone. "Suaviter in modo” is
tried, but “no go;’’ “fortiter in re” then came
into play. They mnmnred, looked at the
palki, asked for a bottle of B rog, apd then
trudged along with their tipsy bniden. Tbe
brandy had been too strong for him. I aim
glad to add that in twenly-fonr hours after
Ahis the burden wos walking about. The
misery entailed by the. famine has brought
ont all the worst qualities of tbe lower class
ofna ives. As a rule, affectionate and food
of -their homes, they have in too many
instances fled, leaving their wives and
families to starve; but, as an eye witness in
two cases where nobler feelings he’d their
sway, I here'record them: A woman, with
her three young children, crawls up. to a
planter's house just as lEncbeon was being
carried from the tfcbie; she begs for the 'fe-
mainder of the curry and rice, which are at
once taken ont into the verandah aod placed
before ber. Without attempting to eat, she
quickly seats tbe three children round the
dish, who io a lew minutes demolish its con
tents, and although the mother is wasted to
a skeleton, yet, mumbling her thanks, she
turns away grateful that her offspring have
been fed, even while she herselt still bnnger-
eth. In another village we met a little girl
and ber mother, lying under a mango tree.
Both were faint from hunger; they had
been trying to keep fife together by feeding
on snails pitkpd out of ponds, berriMMtU Jjrf/J
lizards, whyi« ihqy cdnld dbtain then*,?Rtf (5?rf
daily feeling weaker, they had sank down ft-
under a tree, awaiting a lingering death.
We got some boiled rice and put it before
them. Tbe younger is the stranger, the
HMfier is too weak to raise herself. Al
though the child’s big eyes flashed with s
hungry gleam, yet ber little hands, well
~ " ‘ first seek tbe mother’s mouth, and not
alt the rice is thus gone does she ber-
k It is impossible to judge of the
numbers that have died from actual want, S5‘
no Returns are kept; but taking the three
districts of Balasore, Cuttack and Midna-
poro, I should say quite 1,200 a day. Ilf
Balasore large plague pits have bad to bo
dug pear the towns to receive tbe bodies of
those found'dead near their precincts, but in
too many instances the bodies are left to rot
on the roadside.
HERRING’S
IHEE PROOF SAFES
tenant** foreele on reasonable terms; alee; the
satire crop ot Corn, Cotton. Cane, PuUtoea, ec-,
^tSSSSSiSSSS&as: sns'fto,
eon Court Hoiie#, a, anj Mb nutoa fifimt Cheery
iAEeCnurch, wttra ifisrs *»> 'po«W'.acStwl»o«kJn
successful operation. The fertllltj of the s 11 and
neaUhfulne9e of the place, and the nigh moral tone of
the neighborhood, make it one of tbe moat desirable
plucre in the 8tate.
The lano is well watered with leges end running
branches, that have never failed in the most pnv
Jgtgutl dr nghts, and ine uncleared lamia are cov-
5*e<l with LRaU'l#* oak, Ajcfc -* “
■ftij pUatagmAtmw imAncc
4>Hi acres pinReiffn long staple
produce at least 200 bales; 27« acres in corn, which
will pro mee 4,* tv bnahets corn.
The land* on tho entile place ere composed
2.5 9 acres—1,000 acres cleared and under gc
fences.
I will also sell eighty head - f hogs, foarteen good
mnles, well broke, two heroes, three plantation wag-
oua, farming uteueits to ran twenty ploughs, black
smith and carptnter'e tools, one McCarthy Get ton Girt,
bumebold au I kitchen inrnitnre, and everything else
on the place.
There is an uufat ing well or water on the flaw,
good dwelling mate and cabins sufficient to accom
modate all the laborers necessary to woi k the plan
tation successfully.
P applied for early, the purchaser will get a bar
gain.
Address me at Madison C. U., Fla.
aalO-dtl Ji.HN L. TOOK
Tammany Hall for Sale.—The New York
Herald of yesterday says :
For some weeks pa3t there have been va
rious rumors afloat abbot She sale-of Tain-
tunny Raft to the Adams Express Company,
the Park Bonk and other institutions, which
have no fbandatiup in fact Old Tammany
has not as yet been sold, but is going to be ;
metaphorically she ban been several tunes.
Tbe warriors bare held a meeting, and they
have resolved that Tammany Hail. is no
longer a good place lo meet in; that a tnraer,
better, and more suitable place can be found
up town, and that tbe building, which has
been the honored landmark for so many
years of (ho hsrdifisted Democracy, shall be
mid to tbe highest bidder.
^'Xes in Belgium are purchased at from —Tue United States has sevouty-tWO iroo-
l<) seven cents a pair and never wear clads, France torty-two, and the ruler of tke
I wave, England, only tweoty-ons. ■ ' J f. <-
—The Leesburg (Va.) Mirror says: “ A
negro tournament came off near Idoooin, io
this county, on Saturday last, it wo* we
understand, largely attended by 'indies add
gentlemen’ of African scent, and, with the
exception of a few incidental knock-downs,
the affair passed off quietly. Tbe first honor
WM awarded to the ‘ Knight of HUltbo.
rough,’ who crowned • sable maid flrom Unit
wgion as qaeea of low, >nd beaoty."
—It is estimated that one thousand persons
hov« arrived at Gatveatoa aad Houston,
Texas, to escape the persecutions of gner-
rflias in tbe interior, who rob and murder-on
3th rides htiterimiutalr, for pljndm.
Affair* forouEhiotftfeSi* are^4^ft«
worm instead of better, end inname-
ntrie oatrsgee are homiff recorded.''
Terrible-Affair—A Snake-charmer Bit-
-wcn—Lockjaw Supervenes.—On Tuesday
last Costello, the well-known “snake-ebarm-
erygave an exhibition ot bis singular power
over these dangerous reptiles on tbe stage of
tbe American TUeai re. He bandied care
lessly, but with tbe utmost impunity, a large
number of freshly caught aod venumons rat
tlesnakes of a ve'y forge size, twjatiog them
around bis arms and body, placing a number
ot them in his bosom and around his neck,
and giring undoubted evidence that they
were, under ofdinary circumstances, perfectly
St hii command. Tbe performance being
over, Costello was descending the stairs lesd-
iaii from tbe theatre to the saloon, with a
number of snakes inside hris shirt sad around
bis person, being pressed 0t» B jostled
by ihe crowd, some of whom, it is to toe
hoped, tbougbtleasly struck the paakes wlrieb
were around Mm. This excited their ire;
be suddenly cried out that he was bitten, rad
entering the saloon, took off hi# shut, when
it was discovered that the venom of the
snake had taken effect in his right shoulder
^ismasasisr'
mouth
A physician w*r tamediataly sent for, and
whs at once In attendance; the flesh around
the wound wm cut out, and prompt remedi-
at measures employed, and the immediate
effects of the poison overcome. About two
hours afterward tbe virulence of tbe venom
manifested-imelf in a very strange msnnw.
The man's mind became disordered, be
threw his arms wildly about, and wan con
stantly siugine wild Matches of “
whiflb had refeMneb to the snakes. This
continued umfidta was completely exhaust
ed. whenba aaffik into an «
Last night lopEJaw supervened, but we learn
t^stlw is ref>mi«ad t«l>W lb
Miscellaneous.
AND %
Fairbanks’ .
mm mm mm*
atr
BELL, WYLLY & CHRISTIAN
H aving BURN AGENTS fur the above Mm
ami Scales (or tue last fifteen years, are mow
receiving forge consignments of
Safe* and Scales.
IIKRRING S PATENT CHAMPION PIRN PM00P
SAFES, with pa ent CrysuI.Zod Iron Burglar Proof.
ALSO,
A forgo snl complete assortment Of FAIRBANKS'
PATENT PLATFORM SCALES, from 3,500 pounds
dormant down to 4«o pounds.
PLATFORM AND UNION,
GROCEBV, COUNTER, AND
) L t f\ EVEN BALANCE.
The above Safes and Sesle* are too welt known to
reqsre any comments, smew onstnnUy oa nsad
an I |nH at Manufylnrer’sCurd Pr fw. senlO
VALUABLE PLANTATION
For Sale.
fT*HE subscriber offers his plantation and appar-
1 f ' ' " “
• 14l-i:,iuq H
Policies Written at the Branch
Office and Losses Prompt
ly Paid.i ■
• : ... ;i, iiq - }iaq li ..»• w*
iTWTt .
* gfip
good
STEAM ENGINE AND SAW HILL
FOR 8ALE.
PIRST CLASS Si-KCIWKN STEAM ENGINE
and Saw Mill, m.iauiactared to order at the Ful
ton Works, Ne York. Consists of an enrine or 40
horse power, return fine boiler, with sU Uie conve
nience!* complete; iron frame, 4 » feet carriage; 56
4uck saw; patent self-settinK bend blocks; Io6 feet
lojj chain, with pulleys nnrl first class belting for tbe
mill complete. The whole to perfectly new find
be purch ised low <»n application to
aa.H) tf LAKoCng. WSST k DANIELS.
I can
NEW ’DRUG STARE. 1 '
BUTTE. 8TRKRT.
DR. JOHN A. MATER, Agent,
Respectm ly informs the Physicians that be la pie
pared to put up prescriptions at all times. A light
will lie kepi burning during the night at the door,
whore a Ml will be found. nn20-lf
CLASSICAL TEACHER WANTED
•IV) SUPERINTEND TBE EDUCATION of several
A "bois, for advanced. Tbe texcher will leslile
bojs. for advanced,
with Ihe fnniiv. In a pleasant country hems, aad
coapenemlon will he tlb -rat The beet refereure*
repaired. A idr.-ss box 314, Savaunah P. O.
sept3-4m
Notice.' rio °*
JJSnStSfiSJR
Cn. Il'the Dry Goods business, i
. l ttS Dry Goods business, at the old stand ol
iu HENRY LATHROP A OO
FOR SALE,
:ui a
^ 8ERVICKABLE DRAFT HORiE.
Pulaski RoassStaMes.
aaSO-tf
-:h .
G. Mot;INLY,
T HE Bonds ot the City .(Savannah, authorised to
be issued by the ordinance i of January 34th,
ISA for the purpose of fowling iu coupons not here
tofore redeemed, are now wady. They areaf the con
venient denominations Of $100, Shoe, SMO, And hoffi*
era ofever-dne cosj— nrw laytruto niwsrsu —
to he exchanged for thessIMfo v" * -
All Bonds for wUefe Ooupsoa are Auifted p
to May 1st, ISOS, will «r»w lnforest {row fot,
■arylnstr
ns
of JsS-
-PHENIX STEAM
EASTERN WHABF r SAVUtoAB.4
have con-
-, sad will
rpU nndersigned, having cami
X GANG SAW MILL, know
STEAM SAW MfW would
their friends anarahwaUla get
now prepared to flllocden for,'
titfripid of any siacawU '
nected with our Mill an
give psrtlcnlar attention to orders for planed and
toogue and grooved lumber. ■■ .
orders left at tbwMdk oral J. k A JC BAiBfhan'
office, corner Ray aad A hereof a streets, will rseeiv
prompt attention.
-A share of public patronage Ik risnee»folly so
aos-tf
: Godey’s, for October.
PETERSON S, for October.
PmBOWS REVIEW, lor September,
fas GALAXY, No. 111.
‘' BLACKWOOD’S, for August.
AMRWrtff fAvPW ^, y.
For sale by . H h k BROTnER. ' ‘
, Ball street, next to Feet Office,
ieplT tf f . . , , (ftoTU
To Newspaper Publishers
A NY ONE fo want of a PRESSMAN well ac
quainted with all kinds of Rotary and Cylinder
” 'can be soppliad. on liberal terms, by —
AN,” raw ' “
—A repeal letfor s^tos that Chicago ia re-
valihg io a Aral Mims nowsatioa- A Praratan
named Boaenqnist, the other dh^.
ensed of stealing money, le^ed om God to
oGitf. him dead if he waa guilty—and he tm-
meffiately feU aad expired. Th® dootora at
divinity
ara at odds abont the
cause—the one effifeuing that it was a special
Providepoe, the other* that it waa merely
caa# of heart disease. . . ;n. :
ing - PRESSMAN,
svanhah. Oa.
bittraneoh iil
KJ11CXEB ROCKER
. t, 1.-. ■» 'i fit BI'A » i." «
LIFE INSURANCE C0 M
.•*t_: j-» .ibl*4tf. m 1 i]'>xffw .-i^
ll el-off.
. O hi : !<* 3fl
. . i r anil ui if.
Of KTaw Y«rk.
i m-'t- Itib ate: w .. j 11
!':• >; i '^uJ Slit J mi ,«
7i .1 i (>dT A^ir ti hll l.i!
fli' • -q (i-r i_ •; tj u r
• ■ • • -: Iq •{ j in i lua -..i) all
•< .
H"i‘l
i*. I
SOUTHERN
.1 l.,a t .
BBAHCH OFFICE
■ ■* • •• d
? •• fl O •' ^
89 BAY STREjET..
•ill ui i 1 - > ' .
>dl >diinui ate hkjoe i i.
VR-hUSTAH, GrA..
• • -.1 1-, .-.--'I -j t :i«r . I- >J
Cl >ii
i.-o -*v«lI ,.iU *H-jru4‘'
resideit mm. or ibbtobs.
•; ’.1 linli.- 'J -jr I
l-
50 Per Cent Credit ^jOiven,
S,:. . .j , ' 1 :
1 WHEN DESIRED.
I nr w.f i
DIVIDENDS
PAID IN GASH, ADDED ; fO POLICY,
LIED PAYMENT
OF NOTES.
Non-Ferfeitare*
End o w ment
AND *
z^lfe Polioiera WrAttem
- io, - ,.,1 a t nit
' Call and get a Otrculsi' sstdng forth rates.
Wc have oae rate of £remlam for every part
sf the United States. No limits of travel within the
civillni.'d sattlenuats. T^Js foatdre Is eapedsHy f»-
vorable to Soathera enstomera, aa am Compsnle,
are In the habit of charring extra raiies for tbe privi
lege of reaUIng South during summer atpeths-
■n.a4AnWv>.-n.^>. v C-«^ •
w * - -
A.WlLBUB,O«H0ral V&n|ger.
WM.A BOVbv V Agffint.
. ABNOLDjCoisbHw PitsmaB.
IK EASTON YONGE, Exaollljtejf PhyriCifii.
” rv wpit-tr ;
’Snigrants Supplied
WITHIN TEN* BAYS:
rpiIE aWtawRtfijM stei ffiithiWI to sh^WyWantem
and aUrastahflteo who may be towaatot^WHITE
4-^ a fo E ^ fforth MrfflW-
Laborers, Wooffeomt-Mj Mewmiilcs; etc:, wttbtn Ten
or Twelve days froatf badap the rsdss Is pi ana hate.
The Laborers are to oe received by
on arrival Of the summer here, and
the points wtifcre the* tin wanted at Bmptoycrs’
expense, aad the Hmptyia rwvn fortasr to pay s
Emigrants from the Hffib 4b tthtait:
The rate at which harm tag Labossse saa be so-
cored will amndeahoatipo per yens, the Eaploy-
For farther
||| otn
QMdQflf IflMflfJiABflidJiMflL
Jackson * La
J<
ous, campy
A: Gee. A. Caviar. I
w. c.r "— ■
Johns
Brigham, Baldwfo A Ob., 8
Wavsnnaa BnrtsaslBnwh, l
m3
ULL!
»S naderslgaed. haytag l)efgiBe proprietors of
CM property kagwa ap ta» ‘j |A>WRR 8AVANMAil
MC«BILL."iatfn4AMffig»FnttillE.fe Afirawnnd
t iwtitamty machinery for aymfcfi. g, FtfBT-OLAhS
RICE FOUNDUffi IULL. JtophlM.wiu bn sparad
to ksvs Kke tbaranxh* -ckegyed tad JNffiiarmf for
market, and to ths ?lnnterp agd Factors wtoylvs as
‘t* !r petraaatn we pramira lau r*—“ir to
Uteirlaterapts.
- T —f‘—
and Factors ean ship at any Ifomjhilhe MUl to salt
•Hrivtiffhor for
Lloyd a^addbu.
WILL1A1A M, TUMNO.
ROBE A aREWRWRT,
Baring taken satire charge oftasi
A LUMBER BASIN, fronting M0 fast ol
iljvuut river, oppostto Lachfla a*s
oa tan 8«-
Hhop and ffimadry. Terms ssny.
ssfstratffiSs
lntGesc haatd apse no* «SW 1
and sap url ante In that llna
to i, pmwrasraarte. wraa^„kr_^ :
Corner of Bay and WaffiJlBoad ateonts.
oeplt-U ,,, „ Bnda.ffisri.wy.
Insurance.
THE NEW YORK"
Life Insurance Company.
■ V 0ver $5,000,000<
«S*"
Assets, -
00
Wm. H. bran, Actuary.
SAVANNAH BRANCH OFFICE:
• lam Ihusni comer Day aad Ball steosts.
LOCAL BOARD OF RRFERENCI:
J. W. Inthrop * Co. Miller A Brothe-.
Sorrel Bro hers. DeWitt A Morgan.
Wilkinson, WUsoo * Co.
MEDICAL EXAMINERS:
W. a. foittorh, M. D. J. G. Thomas, M. D.
This Company is strictly mataaL tbe poBcy hoMma
recririag the eatlis pi oflta.
HENRY HARNEY,
(Lateof the “Bank of Richmond,” Ys.,1
septa sodtf General Agent for Geavgts.
THE OGLETHORPE
Insurance Cemp’y
OF SAVANNAH
Arc prepared tn take
Fire Ms on Beaunalle Tern,
At their Office, UI Bay 8tnet.
H. W. MERCER, PrmUraf,
CHAS. 8. HARDEE,' Vice President.
J. T. Tsoua, Set.
N. W. Meiesr
OJf. Barfles
William Heater
ttjsr*
a
J. T. Thomas
W.Rsraahart
F. Leas
H. A. Crane
A. A. Ho loan
t Hamilton
. W. Oon
oyT-tf
Directors: A . .
M. 8. Cohen
J.Lnmm
J. W. Strut
D G. Fans
A. FallartoB
J. McMahon
L. J. Guitmartln
F.W. aims
d. Batler
B. Laehlison
E P. Clntoa. AngflaU
F.W Knott,Macon
B. F. Rosa, Maeaa
W. H. Young, Oofomba;
S. B. HABRIN6T0H.
DEALER Of
EVERY VARIETY OF
FURNITURE
IS SELLING GOODS
Lower Than Any Other House
IN SAVANNAH.
HOTELS AMD STEAMBOATS
VUBNISHED.
PARLOR SETS, extra well upholstered.
FINS BED ROOM SETS, Wriavtaadlfra
hogany.
COTTAGE BED ROOM SETS, of every
variety.
DINING ROOM end LIBRARY SETS.
MATTRESSES, BOLSTERS and PILLOWS
of all kinds.
KITTLES FOLDING SPRING BEDS aad
MATTRESSES, the best Bed ia one,
aad WARRANTED SUPERIOR to all
others.
LACE AMD GAUZE MOSQUITO CANO
PIES, and CANOPY FRAMES.
*
WAREROOMS,
178 Broughton Street,
nearly Omsife 51. Aiimr’s M
JelMffi
BACON! BACON!
Fifty
Shudders and Sides,
i kaadasate order, |ra» roerirnd and lor rate hr
W. H. Whitney A Ca*
llHH
X net
slon. Lumber and Timber
Winbora Lawton
Yopge 4 co„
HlBpmbsrtak. 13SX.
raiuFE»man..-. w
f "‘'A. 9 *
Gmmy Olo^x.
ninriwrrtT .
DUE A SPARHAWK,
or «f rilHH eomplsttoa ri Ihe Uva Oak
iassAar*
w eauulNiiM ra«*h
'nw ths stdaat pajar hr
3bn..mH, ypd Mroniitai ta d»
.^TrliGf