Newspaper Page Text
—V- —'
2-NO. 230.
fpgjly News and Herald.
PUBLISHED BT
\V. MASON.
Savannah, Gao
s.
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SrssET.
usac
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OF advertising.
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c eDti
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>„ PRINTING.
' e ;,t]rsn[i promptly done.
[From De Bow's Review.]
THE SOUTH AUD DIRECT FOKKIOI
TRADE.
J OL
BY WM. ARCHER COCKS.
fgy Telegraph.
Giving dispatches.
from new YORK.
*- r ol
tiBASTOrOL ABANDONED AT
SEA.
R
Tl IV A.VD CREW
RESCUED.
LlERTO STEAMSHIP SANTIAGO
DE CUBA.
L)A[.VGERS AND STUB OF TH1
CHEW LOST. .'
Cotton Dull.
[,[ ss. oa. 8.—Gold, <8J4; Cotton dull at 37®
y, 113; Tens, 99K; Treasuries, 106}£.
r StbaiMd, from Sagua, was abandoned at
5 i» fourth instant. The Captain and crew
wued by ill* steamship Mississippi, from New
, ind broop’it to this port
i,hip Santiago De Cuba, bence on the
Ji -pitmbcr for San Juan, Nicaragua, returned
l -ning experienced a severe gale on the *1
s struck by a heavy sea at 3 P. M., which
iverboared ten passengera and five of the
[ It aim startod her item rudder, and awept
t of till) house on de. It. and caused the abtp
: very badly. The passengers were pat to the
imi remained there until this morning when
abed New York,
FROM EUROPE.
I BY ATLANTIC CABfiB.
Erection among
TANS.
THE CRE-
KINGDOJI OF HANOVER PRO
MULGATED BY PRUSSIA.
l«te. Oct. Tho insurgent movement among
i?aa? is spreading rapidly. The Cabinet of the
lii of ceasing relations with Greece altogether.
s, Prussia, Oct. 7 —The patent taking poa-
a of the recent Kingdom of Hanover rvaa pro
wl by :he Government yesterday, tha 6th. The
7 ?f tho people in all cases is demanded.
| Death of Commodore Stockton,
ernos. S. S., Oct. 8.-^Commodore Stockton
| iu: nu:hr.
Baltimore Market.
fosr, Oct. 9.—Flour Arm; grain very light
i cw firm at $1 08@l 10; seeds steady;
provisions dull; coffee active, Rio flrta;
refining grades 10J*@llc; whiskey dnlL
Die Insurrection In CandU.
c«t airices by Atlantic Cable, bring ns ac-
Jfn^niDary fighting between the Cretan in--
C81n and the Turks, in which the fop.
> ^presented as the victor* *Ph«» foWnwInir
r.fr.aa Constantinople letter of the 4 h nit.,'
readers some interesting information in
Ji!;?8tru-'gle now going on between the Cre-
|ciite.r barbarian oppressors:
•^mary movement has thus far lollowed
aria of that which took place In 1833. I
* the exact population of Crete, but the pro-
11 banun dans to Greeks is very small.
Fen-s nothing has kept the Greeks down
mrison of Turkish or Egyptian troops.
^ titre waaa teueral outbreak on the island,
n tbe utter despair of the people who had
t r-sie 1 and plundered beyond all endurance
^Jan.-sarit*. The people fought with such des-
-a that they utlerlv destroyed two large armies
a destroy them. They held out until 1824, when
I &1 practically gainad their independence; but
Ut-J p .wt rs then stepped in and decided that
Should be p veu to Alehemet Ahli of Egypt.
•a-Ksand the Cretans were equally disgusted
fae arrangements.
F-Euyptun rule lor a time secured good order
v'y’'' rv . in t,|p islan( L hut it soon became as
[rrxhf a < «, a t of the Turks, and in 1633 another
J i place. Mohammedans and the troops
.. T u fortre^sjes, a national assembly
an -ppeal made to the three great
" 7“ tv sC I i ° u ' trs niainfested their tender in-
P- 'Pk* by urging tuem to submit. • They
* “ i0nUiS ’ hut finally yielded -without
T^; Tde leaders were afterward executed.
«'ir.er nerious insurrection broke Oit, and
^G^ntusiifcd them>elve8 for four months,
K '^bloody battles.
“ t j lne to the present there has been coo-
al ! wC f T “» 0,1 t,ie ^ s * aU( i- It baa come back into
Turks, but they have learned noth-
LrJe 1 ? lleo ' There has been nothing' there
a*/:*™ the people have been constantly tm-
^initccc oi emissaries from Greeoe, urging
Ht'iViT , r Ulan - V months they have been
Kifit i • Turkish Government to reduce
I' aadgm.tnem some civil rights. It has j
I,., VaUi - They chose a sort of national ss-
•ihti w their claims. The Turks trisd to
i. has withdrawn to the mountains
i:: ™ Permanent Many, murders havo
Fu-avf ’ . an< * l ^ e Mohansmegan population ,
l::u . = c * n fortresses. ^Fhe Turkish Gov-
ordered to disperse the Rebels, but
■“Unbelt as f-uflmring so severely from the
<• i- -\? LLot ,ake tlle held. The Greek pnbvin-
j :i V; a '‘ !l1 has made a very femperataj but
,lie ^* uro P ej tn powers. There the
• iS 1>orte does not really dare to'take
jaieusures, and the neopls hope to g** 11
actual fighting- I «nda»t»»5.i
X*b^., C1 1 j ,Ia * u ' , that the American Oowsl
.yCwith arms. It is believed by
f.t jk* 1 the island will be again given U)
♦ r FjSJ* 00 ^* now occupying Km isMnd are
a part of tho 1«,000 men loaned to
Pasha of Egypt, at the time when he
J* change the order of iu occasion in favor
“ Job Others think that it will be given up
that it will be aunexed to the King-
My own imuressiou is that it the ln-
pout well, it will retain a nominal con-
LC. 1 *-Turkey, but be made really independent,
L^tlDll tv Vn »knl tho OetinKlen U.iM i.
that thi
baa te
kkakir to that of the Danubtan Trtnclpali-
of Orate, nJ
people of
) European Power* th^f
vonia eattefy the
. »)'e agreeable to the _
, It Would prepare the way for Aoal inde-
s -ttliuut bringing op, 'just,now, the ques-
'^taanug the integrity dtthe Turki.h Em-
J5*ted that the way Will tlfbs be prepared all
^-iii Turkey and in all the Mi&ands for the
^ration of the Empirqm No one hopes
y bual cure of the “sick man.” The only
£ *aethcr he shall be allowed to die a na-
; vliciher l»a end t Km11 be hastened by
Pnyeicians.
jJ ton Chop in LouistaiAa—A lady writing
of Avoyelles, Louisiana, to her father
:,dlt «d Sept, lath, 1866. says:
crjL 1 ? “ CW8 on the river, but the low. of the
5ch c*, mo8t important to us. I neve# have
n • ruin as tbe fields present. The
rW-vi* wiUl 1116 aftny worm, and Jou can
loin ™ eating. They leave nothing but the
, 0 ld ts t bolia, and what they leave ii injured
• V i ^niuiued raini. Two weeks ago we
““U make one hundred bales, but now
jiuJI, “ lw;enty-flve bales, if we mdhy that
aui r J.. m “ ke their eipensea this year they
t' b-onM*f 1 VyaHlance, and. perhapa, famine,
L I fa. ljt We ***** had the two firat, and
, ufl r * we are doomed to eufler. But what-
we are in the hands of a Just
krj m . they piay lie tour our good.
■ <lf ^oolelana* f™m which we haw*
•Wermg in the same Way.
rt .cent Pittsburg"Convention there
nv -6ix carriages containing tbe rep-
S i of each of tbe State*. In tbe
e 8al an individwil dressed In wo-
* fa l . u 5 s : ?*' ilh a rope around hi* neck,
!iJ?i be l d by a Te *7 <t*tcrmined-look-
■ ldual - The legand on tbe side of
f.^fi Oldt,
I'-.:
L^riai
n.J e , ^plained tbe matter." Iti
last ride.-
, The habits of the Southern people have been
inimical to their true interest for many year, pre
ceding the war, and they are eo now. The negro has
never had anything to do with it, and never will
have. i
We thought before the termination of the war, that
Southern prosperity depended on narrol slave labor
We era satisfied now that U does notjakd kpcakin
reference to a series of years, we am'Mddliy satisfied
that the wealth of the South does not depend on the
negro at all. We regret to say that the time is not far
distant in the history of the nation, when the negro
will have passed away under the heavy preaanra of
white population, and-onr regretda-for the negro, not
for the white an. Sbe lattsr can take care of him.
•*■: the negro iRs no friend but his former master
who politically'can dqthlm na good, nor can ha long
SESft U ‘ e «—
History proves that two distinct race3 have never
harmonized nnder an equal participancy of p^n»i'-nl
privileges; and the same question la being again
solved. The negro will disappear. It would oetohis
a«*v»nunenk which has destroyad
hie earthly hopes in the Sonth, donld colonise him
somewhere. If that is not done, it will he seen in the
future, that the white man will occupy the land, and
A Distinguished ViarrpR —Gen. Joseph
£. Johnston wras in' rmr' City frn Thursday
Inst, acting, in tbe inlereat* of the Selma &
Dalton Railroad Company. He' is'in fine
health modapitits, hud, weuuderstand, speaks
hopefully in regard to the early completion
be acquainted, with hia:ojnr. But we will ask "Mb the tb **,® rcat ™ r< ^ COflflecKltn. Helelt on
purpose of turning the Mhfr-tn'tMk Thursday night far ttoe^art£ to perfeet the
That the white man can work,and work snccessfnlly
in the ojien fit-ids, beneath a burning -un, and accom
plish feats of industry surpassing anything in the bis-
tofy of negro Slavery, itsgems to ua no well-read
will deny.* We will not fatigbe the intelligent reader
by historical detail, for educated men are supposed to
i luo uuicea mates,
-wsr— 1
outnriT^lhkt section
auiuent civiluatiou?
yf ifemi-tro^fial climi
_ %^Kand #h:
ie olf*civ!l * “
white labor.
The Hebrews, the Persians, the Assyrians, the
Greeks, the Romans, were iU located in warm dli*
mates. The proud cities of Babylon and Balbec,>od
werejected by. white men, und<
whitsrlhnb:
piled .<nnde|Bb#ropii
fieit Stales #hll be liorfed by >d^§esi In
the cotton and rice and sugar plantations, the white
man will stand as much work as the negro can stand.
Did not God put the white roan under the tropics f
DM he pot say that he should ea4n hi# bread by the
sweat of his bsow ? And it it now w to sn infidel
philbsophy to say, that he canifot do*what
Las commanded?
Aqcient history proves, what is now equally sub
stantiated by the history of modern Eurepcv/that
Southern nations have always been in advanewef
those of tho North in every element of eivtUaption,
physical, moral, and inteBectuaL ,.
The people of the South, now living as citiieBa un-
der the laws and Government ot the United States,
are desMnsd to be the most powerfr* -
on this ©oatinehti. - * . 5
Whether iu the United Stales, or out
of territory extending from the Potomac to the Bio
Grande, will bet in all respects, far ahead of any other.
It has a soil and climate that can raise all tha products
thsft-fiww-in the work!, or their substitute* witik as£s
haps, the exception of tt few spices; While beneath ft*
surface lie nearly every mineral. Every auction is
watered by streams that give facilities for working
every kind of machinery that man can invent or de
sire; and besides all this, like all warm olimates, it in
very healthful. If it is not true that warm climates
are the most healthful, why has it slwa^s fcemt Stand,
with the exception of the Southern States, that it haa
boon beyond comparison the most densely populated?
Southern wealth must not halt, nor c#n it depend
on agriculture alone. It must have mamifkcfmiefe
commerce.
We. have then a few suggestions to make to the South
ern people, with a view of getting then out of bad
habits, if those are bad habits which keep a people
poor. To the North we have been hewers of wood
and drawers of water. Our policy has been to pur
chase everything we consume from the North. The
cotton crop will be soon on hand; Instead of spending
at the North every cent realized from iti would it not
be much better to make many articles of consumption
at home, and enrich our own people ? A Southern
tailor or shoemaker can do rh good work am a North
ern one, why not employ him 1 Yet wo know^owna
whore a tailor or shoemaker would starve.- Will wo
be forever oblivious to home industry ?
A most injmious system of trade with the .North
was kept up for years before tbe war, and'fs now be
ing revived. We sell our «x>tton to tbe Yew Yorker,
we pay to him frieght, insurance and generally com
missions, and storage: their expanses are charged to
us. He takes the cotton and sends it to Europe; he
purchases and pays for European goods with it; he
brings the goods to New York in Northern vessels;
be insures in North m houses; he stores them away
and waits for the Southern merchant to purchase their
goods, pay him his_ profit and expenses; and the
Southern merchant pays 10 the North insurance and
freight, and makes all these accumulated expenses
out of the cotton planter. Do you wonder that he is
poor indeed ?
Is it not apparent, if the Southern planter, and the
Southern merchant would encourage a direct trade
with Europe, that the enourmons items of- expense
which we have enumerated would in a*great measure
be saved, and those items not saved, would go i#to
the coffers of Southern Tradesmen ?
What would be the consequence of tbia ? Would
we not soon see commerce enriching our eea-port
towns ; vessels made in Southern dock-yards,
freighted with Southern produce ? Why not enrich
Norfolk, and Charleston, and Savannah, and New
the‘entire <£nnt7 y 76nVfi
ing the poor people of all classes. 1 hey are depen
dent upon the rich; and if we enlarge the trade at our
towns, we give additional employment to every kind
. —— —■■■■■■ ■ t , 11 _ — • —■ 1 . ■ 7 — - - - - ^
SAVANNAH,:'&E0lS8^ ; TUESDAY, OCTOBER S, i866..
. , 1 v.‘ ■ *’»***->* ‘i-j*: ■ - *• fa- . t *■ •MrtasjUft.ii ;a r^a i.- ujajrs**
.. mmeaBgsggg
Georgia Itetns.
. • /t .
Huusa FBaVSMItN to do to Tmkhesssb.—
SeTenJ. geoUemeo lure been In oar cottttritti
nity, icoeotljr, hiring negroe* to go Vo t«a-
aenee or etaewhere to pick cotton. Wepr*-
sume this U air right, yet mart coofeM that
these is a little obacority I'd regard !p gome,
of these arroogemkhta. - For iastance, it is*
alleged that' these freedmen are * an ted tor
plantation work, yet these agents, so-cstM; 1
claim to be entitled to Qo«enuaeot.transi)0*T
iilfion for them. One. of them - showed Osm
Till son's order fo.- transportation for W nn-
lknitednamber, as we understand, of fi'e^,,
<% AUftDtic IvUlfoilufl. WrCilrt eiMlly on—
derstand bow it is. that tbe Government
should take so mnch interest in these private
enterprises. These a^imS are not trying to
get vagrants and those oat of employment,
bat all the aUq-faodjedt bands they cap, find—
including' wonreh; ItrshmaikMS. They have
even paid tbe debts of band9—voluntarily,
in some cases, and hsea forced to ikhcothum
-i-iB order to get them.—Rome Cornier, Oetol
*»■«*• j/./ ; ", t.
arrangemehts to secare the necessary means
to carry on tbe stork.—lb.
Death of a Wble^Xsown Citizen.—Mr.
Wm. H. Cooper, long known to tbe business
S ublic ss a member of the Ann- of Lambs ok
> Cooper, died at hia residence vOiFwhtyvpf
congestive chill. Mr. Cooper possessed
privileges,
and euliglrteued nstimi^ and work oui lor ourselvo a
high and eudurinif posUiou among the people of tbe
earth. * • .
These are plain truths and designed to be phunly
put ; truth delights in simple and sUuquhrnod
apparel, that its power and b eauty may pe felt, and
Been. j
Let it not be said New York has the advantage In
the present monopoly of trade, it is very easy to ch-
vert ite ch»npels. There'is an abuudaaje of money
waiting to flow into the very track we hrinbeen mark
lug out. Money from Kfcroph, Moaeyhfrom New
York, money from the South, that has been seeki&g
aMitr chancel-*, will all flow into the -jUrecfcon of
Southern trade. Let us have no iqore Ml# talk about
the necessity of a great central depot of idodIj and
trade, and that New York is that place. 87 far from
the exigences of commerce demanding this
central head, every interest of society, de'mi _
in uHtpUCfty of central heads, that thk. moQieotfiry in
fluence oi the country mar be spread far and wide,
' ’ n, and
under the influence of grsat espjupidtp. It is better
to increase political centers, as in'"antidote to des
potism. It is better to multiply monentary centers
as an antidote to a concentrated, niopey^f
despotism.
Th* diTiBiun of tliCM moBey cental* ttffiint
ift iSthA.M
capable oi aroUuiiuK large commercial .
diffOM popo ation, will draw out the reaoorce* pf^ I
respective back countries, and develop laoae reao
cea wbich are namraU, dependent npou tbe palering
care of tbe city, aa tb* cityi* upon us, aqp^rtto be
drawn from tbe country. - ■■
F-rr“-T w* liave Norfolk so. situated as to be a great
,,.,..,r/tni depot for Virginia and Norib Carolina,
"i-be^e^tfor'S:
^rab; IrfMfi^^o^fcrgia QiSlEUUunlera
Florida will assert her rights to a true and independ
ent position, and establish one of her sea-port towns
as her own commercial centre. The same is tru^<V
New Orleans, fsd4*y to# kUtolsstopi an# jh# fflf
thnl cfr&ln its immense 'vilwy ;• add rai iswn# ftKtrue
of Galveston, with its gulf cousr, and exhaustless
back cowntry.
Au inspection of the.map will show that (fie parti
of country these towns wipnlv^eqniro commercial
centra*, and Wa eaifi watia IpspBie back country
which it cam itrfy #l#pelt of support. •
In reference to direct trade with Europe, a subject
e Southern patriot will not willingly let die. WA-wlsIi
call attention to tbe facilities now offerspl toe fiouth*
ern plauterhy tho eeveral “Southern exportwad fin-
pi»rt Companies” located at Charleston,. Savannah,
Taflahassee, Jack l tdfrviHe ABd other potnU, A of
which have European wmnoefoiA. They )*re>-«xx)er
competent Tnanagctnentpimd' win ,t «li times tipim
applicants complying with their terms, Ivbieh n ao-
commodating, itrratsh money to partira, or pmsftlar
articlea from England or the Continent Spmt-letfmr ■
r cheaper than we, cainat the NurtlT, tor AU fheac-
Itoufated expeuea we law* meottoMS B* ftved, by
mMkoOttSSCSifelStnieAk' I'ChTUit J .
Ic should also be Dorue in mina aa a pregnant fkot,
that direct trade with Europe on tbe part of tbe Booth
msBemtae^
lumbtu Suji. '
THE Febedmen.—We have more of tkis
may look out for various tbelts to be com
mitted by them. We already he r." complaints
from tbe farmers that they are entering the
fields and stealing their coed. One farmer
in this neighborhood has lost already over a
sharp lookout for them- A tew doses of
leaden pills, rightly administered, would go
far towards preventing the spread of the
A full acpopqt .of thp^ residence of the
Bonapartes in this country would form a
most interesting and valuable page of mod-
era history. As is well known, Joseph, the
tho name ot the Coant de Survilliers, where
he bought sevtenl hood red seres, and laid
them out into a maguificent park called
Point Breeze. On this he built a princely man
sion, with farm and gardeners’ houses, boat
bouse and subterranean passages, and ob
structed a lake, expending' what might tie
considered a fortune, yearly, in keeping up
the. grounds and establishment. Here his
nephew Prince Lucien Mniat also tended,
with his family, and here the present Emperor
of the-French came to visit bis relatives.
Point Breeze has passed into the hands of
Mb English geibtlawakj and t$e rsSidepga ,pf
UutConnt was long ago rsped to'tiw j6opj(il.
Murat’s residence is used for a tenement
house. A building adjoiniagjthe Count’s,
once occupied by his grandson, is still stand
ing in the park, and Mr. Adolph MaiUaad,
the son of the Count’s secretary and confi
dential friend, lives in a handsome vtila" Hfiar
by. Joseph, most benevolent of Bonapartes,
is well remembered by all Bordentouians
of a certain age, and stories of his kindness,
liberality and eccentricity are current in the
igifeorhaciy The fomang* hibtoWB^khe
■ltfisoSB. or - Pstferrtm Banspsttrt fertEll,
own, and the possibility Of Auterici^Tar->
nishing a successor to the throne of Napoi-
leon, has been frequently dU«i*aed.
The henulifut gifl 4t#«f Jernme wooed
and won upon these shores in 1803, and who
was afterward cast off sad dishonored ,by
him at tbe cruel and wicked oomroandof%iB
is"s , £wut'^n%er“ohf U age
the memories of her eventful fife for perma
nent record in book firm-, This lady, whose
sorrows hare attracted file syinpattuef of ail
American*, and whose position iu history is.
so strange, and may possibly prove so impor
tant, has enjoyed an intimate ncIpjafOtaBoe
With veivmgpyTJfTbosewho have attained
prajhinence if both Stirppe and AnatAa dn-
riogthdfest-balt ceatukyu SldJURi«iu>utc
also with the English literati of the last g</u*
ration, byife(JhtuffiSiSIMMfed with By
ron, Moore, and others. A volume coutaiif-
iog any part ot her varied experinccs could
hardly fail to afford great entertaiumeat, bat
teresting would be the narrative. should'
perhaps at Moy rate < kbid kotaethiDg ubontj
that meeting, wbich is said to have taken
baud.
ti*r
rosperi-
BMmhrc Mlliis
Miscellaneous.
FHiNflWd-
f-m
I woo'd inroras ike public that i am
_ Attached to the
andiasde addlOeM
thatiats Mesfeed
l" awacate every deseriptioa of
Job and Card Printius-
Basiness cards, Dray Books, ■
Letter Hcada, Ptogttsnmas, j . ■
i / "'*WfrHUsi*,. . t Baal bin*. .
Ktiveltipea, Pamplilelf,
; .* u ) a w -xt. ; ’
AM jffthijir Kinds of Printing Oort*
. SEAT, CHEAP AND «CICK. , .
GIVE
■ ijhvt
J” I-".
M E A
TTfTirZ /
T HIA L
Totso veteive orffrr# sod have #v#cy
vartety of / -
tiL VNK BOOKS.
9ep21-tf
J. U. BSTILL, ill B*y street, '
News and HenM Oflea.
NEW “STORE.
BOOTS, SHOES,-ttATSHWfl
r.'url
CLOTHING,
“Af:. Whbfesatd and RetaiLi.
' . , .. , BY '. ;; ;
Einsuiin Eckman & Co.,
7j NOl mb CONGRESS STREET. :
are bow recrivla.it. and ready to exhibit out"
it) well aeie.fifed stock W die above taen-
froin tha beat manufacture*), ash put
for UteOeorzla andElovWa trade.
Merchants and Planters
arem»it»l to exam neoor stock before phrehaslng
dsewiiefeL ; orHa
MOUSING GOODS
S UPER Stilish sud Preach Bombazine?,
Supet 3-4 and 6*4 Bloch Mans de Lames,
. Super 3-4 and 6-4 B.'ack Alpacas, -
. fiuper 3-4 aud (J-4 Black Express Cloth,
— torpor 5-4'Block Drape ttf Busse, aew ftyK
Super^4 MactFr^iek »
Engii^v Mrd
iswlv
8-4 ana 1C-4 Bibua ioidoi sdiwis,
8-4 and 16-4 Mournip# Scotch Shawl*.
S1V* Kfiglfrh Crape, Valia, c5llar».
Stu* reoeived and for aale by a
■iV. ‘ OeWITT it MOBOAI, " ;
‘ftfitfi" JTl ConnVagefree
PRICE, 5 GENTS.
Miscellaneous,
Plante, Attention!
J AM CONSTANTLY JUmWUTOML 8ALI8 OP
&KD R0feI4AfH8 UEON '
SOOTHERR *8EAL. £SM.
of Northcrfr cxjfitftl i® now 4#tWi|
^®W#D|bile rijynrtnnlttes tor hlTfitWlt Entk
inarm**#** »
THE 06LCTHCWPE
PURCHASE 40,000 ACRES
OF
COTTON' Ia,9JC$D9
IN
TheGulf States.
nmatonaad others wisbiqg »,diapoe* of, mort
gage, or take partners in wwtlny shslr lakde, are
larUed-toapply feme wtthqat,0*iaij.\ L _ ! ,
pm- commissions moderate. -«
Bostmcss iroaptly completed. " '
D. J. M. A. JEWETT.
Boston, Mass.
REFERENCES.
General Wii. A. AL**Vrai», Trd^-FraftTork.
E»vm> Bice. Beq. Cambridge, Mam.
, Wj« L fauara. bq„ Salem, M*ae.
DtroLrt C. CHAMnLA, Aq , Citrchfoaii^Obto.
C. C. Fillat, Beq., Hew Oriesar, L*.
A- r. D*r*a*vx * Co., Ba*tou, Mass.
JggjW*?,. ■ ...
WM. S. BOGART’S
; fedWSH4.VCU, ENGLISH
SCHOOL,
CHATHAM ACADEMY, MALE DSFAMT-
. “ MEBTT, ■
Will be Rlofemed Mond^e, Oot. Sn-
i paid to CampsaMum ulfo
taught a* oo»ot to* regular
Jhree Tarare of
luunwH .CW.W1, ,n i—wi la $30, OT (Z
per term, according tb adrancement.
Former pupils will aeenra their places, aad new ap-
raport this week for examination.
damation.
studirtt.
The school year is divided
fourteen weeks **&',; Tb* TSI
F"** , The article headed “Notthern Pros]
\^ r % Mr. IVifayth," off HMunar
paper, written from New York, explains tbe
mystery oflhe agricultural pfodifeiious of tjie
NoriU, aud tbe vast yield.
A planter with some half dozen agri-
cniuntLsMcbjws for Attowg s«d swing' or
4tuppiug corg, covering n 4c., .cgu do mere
work with six bsods, and. do It baulc 'thin
be could with twenty under the oldayatpm—
THt Foreign Dca^tuad for Oar
The Montgomery Advertiaej says that
well known reaidant <t\ thM city, who baa'
just retunfe4; A"*n E^ttraJ expresses tbe
opinion lhaV Eriglancr kno other truns-At
lanlic nations are carelesa as to Utg. amouas
of cotton raised in the South, otbet button
producing regiooa having been so extensive
ly developed during-tbe late war. Tbe Ad
vertiser .appears to be greatly jfninreased
with Ibis view but tUq Juae. report of tbe
agricultural department'givf a figures that tell
a very deferent (alp. Tbia;
thesmsi" ‘
country
of iMiyeaf. . ,
four bundred dounds each—being i
double that bfoagbt fromTndia »
period and as bitrth ar that lrem sH other
sources ("India incMed) for mefdtfrmouths.
TwTport estimates the cotton sent from
UK
tlx, J
ent*gi
Ifereot lafe. Tbia report spystbat
lot 4f#*W:Potiton «tpqrt4 SomltbU
to Great Britain during four months
was eqhal to 8U6.6S6 Mfea of
d dounds each—being a quantity
i the same
m the present oppre«rv# *
three cents per- pound on all exported cot
ton. Oar cotton is not oaly tbe bast in the
world, but H can be grown here Cheaper than
elsewhere—Richmond Examiner. r "
J. C. Maker & 0o.
i-w.m r «to<v» ft
au now pmwabwp to ss&nsf... i
’ At m’ V*uttq lit 0 j
v;, ,.T1. i cqRN^pF
\ -In ■ \ It -*•
M»A « w* - 1 M •••#»*
it, ui* ' >-ni. t . v.4 4 uH a'i;
——A- FINE ASSORTBEin*
.1
,Jns8 iq3
Fall and Wi.i
ft mi AMitiow wiB ? te--mto Wfi.
.TVbiviiajxsof
£ YBRY STEaMER. '
jol-tf J
i'.-v . ,'nu. a j«r.nrji
"XR-tasr ~°.w;ibiF
. J. TRACY & CO.,
v 1 fttMHm to D. S. Cohen,
UfPOBTnU AND JOBMEXS OF
GOODS.
No. 303 Bro'aduray, corner of Dunne street,
! W>M»o . . . > Axw. Yox .
Plsatelira for - ale.
1
HILLSBOROUGH ...
MILITARY ACADEMY!!
mils EXERCISES of this well known Inatitntios,
X iouuued by the lata Colonel O. C. TB'V, will be
ae.uuicU on the fintdav of October next, nutter tho
direction of O ncral R E. CoLeTuN, a (radsaic,
anrt forSftrenyotlri (op to tha epameaemantotlhe
war) a Professor of lit* Virginia Military Institute,
The course of instruct ion wul be bach as to make ike
Ac-uwinr a great Polytechnic School a school of
theoretical and appl oa t-clence—in which langsapo
aud user, turn wHI a Mo receiasai Halt share of aluo-
imui. The discipline and organization will be a poo A
complete military basis. General Colston relies
Sdcatly upon tbs ntiirouggii .of ^>ia old frioods
brother* la arm* throughout the wbolo Soath. Ap-
' pUeatioo* for admiotas should be made as early as
%jdnle to the iMtperislasdvml, wccaopaaied by tes-
r in foiol* of good tuo al character. Circulars cum-
mini. '« fall lmorntaUaa will be itemd la a law days.
vszndMllur^rrerttou^^to .
o u ^,| nte 'deBV , nii*ho^«h Military xredsmy,
*g£fn5St.>Mi ■ Jimsbtopszb.M.Ct
O N Savaqnah river, twenty (30) rotten from 8avan
nab, oonr-ietin*dr keveutecit hundred amt aixty-
StWfl^S*r atTw of LAND, wRh two secileiaesto, and
srrerr-negTO honau, fomtren hy twentr (taxsopfeet
•0 *j«<i u ltl: ayplen^td stresm fur lumber and grist
onatf. - 4aree Kundrod-ahd twenty fy*) ttewatm open
l-aud, and one thoosaiid (1.000) to he cleared. Facili
ties r«r a stock range, with meat stall in Savannah,
unsurpassed by any locality in the vicinity. AU the
buptltafu IB reod repair. • 1 d
1 Apply to Smith A SoiuUMn, Congrras st/eer, or at
Ibtoatmce.: -■ eeMia H,J. felacOBBS^t.
2 ^ Notice 4 -—Bemovai.
fTUiX SOUTHERN INSDRANCi AND TBC9T
X COM PAN V have this day moved their orto* bunt
thdlletehai>ts r Nallooal Bank to the front room dl-
■veetiyabneerui the saao bmlding. Eutritoce, first.
*mto( the Baak.
oc3-lw.
.Gfgfet IST*"'***
CHnirir ^AJffJLT FLOUR I
FROM HllXiax.
VpHE Savannah Steam-VfeWijgMiU*/sart end
X Brougbloa street) are *9"’.*BPb*S8 OEoeetto
aud Fautiliaa with aa exet
FLOOR, amde IwaaNliW .Wt, •*'
pltdat their residenova, by
orquarter barrel Also, U it
l>y the bushel or half bushel.
Inauraijoe Qomp
OF SAVANMAH
bfs paapEMRl tAtalrth t, r* I'.y.i --i
FIR lifiJ A
AtthofrOOca,
W 9 LnKak,
(Law of Georgia,)
Eew York,
.cwrsLL,
AHantA ^ 1
^A-nstell & Inman, ,
Att«b CMl fsaSaalsalhE Hvekasla, •
a la S» Wall afreet, ' . *
REST TOIUv.
rE are feirt prepared to make-litoral cash aAr
vkaevresht* «o eotufenmantD Ir.m Uer(baaU
Phmtmm bulb rtUila place and at our agencies
u U ,,.nghoot the Smith. Our Mr ’Amrten.. f Atlanta,
win arrange atlvanremcnt") there. Cotton and mac- *
chand FdtnT be "fol WSTdedtOor wna-diapaWi hr
wsssBKajsswuiswiaaa
•ou promote the interest, of our Iwtronr
Cous'gnmenta from oar uonthern friends respect-
hgy auBcited.
A Whalnab
" DBAS.
A V. Itotre I*.
Tot,
IT bay Street. ' ' ^
PlrsetoA:
"f. • i'-ML8. Oabaa ■-
■ 1 " ^
X UgBss
m ROlatoa. Angaata
tE-firysr
The Empire State
IJISURINCB C0MP1NY,
' » f rOtX* Irv;.
Wtivh
AUG C ST A, GA
C. F. McKAY. President,
ASiSTS ON FIBS* OF APRIL, IMA
is .rawm:., ,
SSSBSm
Q. 9. MoOAT. 1 DIMM €1800X8,
. . J. A fflCOAROS- . ,
The underafgned, having been appointed Agent of
to above named o>aapnay,-da prepare* to take Eire
Staks pa reasonable few. - _ .,
71 W. W. Rltun,
“ Scent
sYuansm
~ V "<K iTf.l »!>• .
' i,
• -• • • ! I S ) J. itei* «•. *1
CVEBY VARIETY OF
FDRN
Hay Brain and Produce.
u MEAL,.FEED, BRAN, OIL
CORN, Oa., ^ SALT,
CAKE, Flhc.
• ROPE, use.,' ' .
poiaTAN 'LT MCUVING, wad for vale it Xa
U lowest wUul< aale rale*: n
Agent 8*vannannah Flour Mills,
t5& Bay Street. Savannah,
' OOklW
Volks Calender
• wm 1887.
PRICE—~-K Cains.
For trie Itf
oa
E8mx * no.
MARTIN J. FOkO,
ATTORNEY . AT X.A.W,
OWriCK. He. 78 IRTAC ITR8ET,
JyiT-Am
SAVANNAH, GA-
Notice
Co., Mad 1*0*. Fla., have been dieeolved by the deart
0t U.y. Uetngrtos. one of the partneri.
A. i, M)LLZRarill give bla .attention to the bask
la^Sayi juuUi, and 8. R THOMAS to the bualnea
A. J. MILLER,
' R B. THOMAS,
Surviving Partners.
The aabe rfeera will contlnne the Grocery SndObto-
tomai IkMaarain Shvsuwh, fin, at the store act
raided by the late firm, ou Bay street.
August. IKS; MH.LSR A BBOTEHL
The subscriber solicits for the new a eoaUnomace
of the patronage extended to the late firm.
miW Kim
rrtBE DNHER8IGNED bee this day asxoctated with
X himself Mr. SAMUEL C.CATHBH
DELu. CATHBRWOQD, tor the
'Purpose at carry tog oa the Wholesale and Set e*
Dreg and Prescription Business. 1
knowg^under the name and style of
Tl'RSER rt CO.
The firm win ha
THOMAS M. TURN Bit.
RaVaZmau. August 13,1846. anM-tf
FOR RENT,
1
Os reasonable terms, FOUR COUNTING
ROOMS *nd TWO LARGE HALLS In the
brick tmUdlnxoatbe corner of Bay sad Lin
coln Street*. Pose nation given immediately
EDWARD FADELFQBD.
Thoxnaston Lime.
Ry Of NEW
Families tap.
tb*' carrel, half barrel,
Uh sad MEAL,
rpHE und
A crshlp,
NOTICE.
tve entered into s limited ptrt-
the Srm name of A • M SOAK-
HiiDOHM. tor tbe buying aad selling of marchiadivA
Irnth on their owp account and on comflsalun In the
city of Savannah. A. M. 8CARBROOSR ofaareanah.
tribe general partner, ard AMMAM A IMW8TT of
den y City, State of -New dentar, STEPHEN D.
HARRISON, of bergeo, State of New lerfsy, aad
CriRNELlU-) D.VANW ADORN, —
York, are the *
tributes to the
bnudred aad thlri)-three dollars and thirty-four
oentf (*3.333 3AI aud the raid 8tephe« tt Barrhon
and Cora owns If. Van Wagenew contribute each three
tiw—sratsehzimwaiad amj-ihius *
, or^heeHyef New
e apactol partners, Abram 8. Jewell eon-
hcTAmmun etotk-twee thousand ikrep
mar
thirty-three.eenu (AA3S3 33) This rartnerahlp la to
commence on fee hit Of
Uoaeforeneyeur.to-wItrunlR the l-.lof October,
1867. . A. M. SCARBROUGH.
AhBAMS. JEWELL.
bTEPBOt 1*. HARRISON. *
. OOMBMII9 U VAN WARMER
oclAW , ,
. SHBRffV. : . /
’ AND MADEIRA;
HARVEST bourdon, • •
WHEAT, NUTRIENT,
fnadutuon toMpMudorn of eeinng Winee^etc.
la original packages, and iu wder A* taeree tolcou-
eumrra Fore Liquor* to-a eompuct ami convenient
~'»rto; areeemmenced the euterprtoeof hetUto* and
warded our efforts has - . . .
TtlFBtanKur sr repards qtiatlty, - xtrorln-
ittmmgBKZtrf.
^;Ry;ytrtCr : „
^‘«ai JIjomfBeA^DraegletA^roeera^elt. ” ■’
HSSSi'BwSy
Notice-
Iw
Lh« partners..
*.**itrH Jr. Jt *i -‘A *>■ j* • •. 1
:Jtbr ihrelanassf tha tats ,8m
mherlrer,
D. one'St
SAMUEL E. BOTH* ELL,
IWjjf BOTH WELL-Al8
%«Mt. ‘A f’j *.o isC U*
Jum* kCrdrto8aj -«i
Stoddard 1 * tppmttaot*—
sale tow to dove
a Praia. Sir
diWFKNG * HD.. *8 and SOConrtlaBdt etraat,
WAWf Verb,'Maustactnrers and Dealers in
AOWCIILTPRALJMFLEMEMTS, HiCIglM
d
BACON f Bi€0K!
SWers iad Site,
W. IL Whitney A Co.,
@i‘0O 1
XteMSteiEdSsaL , »
^Muwialjm Savaa—h. Smiiiuhu ffoalmi F.
lsbrUSA
lro» Bands and Arrow Ties. -
tie*»
eadnasNeWvsfL
.o-j 8 '. 5 o i
ANDREW LOW * GO-
Lower Than Any*
Other House
Iff SATAWICAH.
- v 4I.-J 1 -
HOTELS AND STEAMBOATS
FURNISHED.
PAHLOR SETS, extra wall opbolsfeted.
FINE BED BOOlji teW, Walnut find Ma
bqgany. '
OOTTAOX BSBl ROOM SKTS, of every
variety. “*»* Mfiriiilfg.
i rtoiq viri j ?ti . i * - ■ . . . .
DUONQ BQOM md.UBSakKX BSTO.
MATTRESSES, aiffTlLLOWfi
Dfaukto*:..;
Ji.l-i '■! f’dJ I.r.I { .'>.1.1
tiflir . jV-li* ti 5 rut ,ri*j c:.
•-■ti -i- •• il l! L i.f-f ' . lit. J»- - ;*
' 1'vj .t -, r*' ’ Ir- Sjii- t • y •■. ■ -
v fa-. S 1£ ''..u .,..
,.jY- ir. .I .U ^ f fat '
xrrn^ft^unNusPRiNSRfcw tod
” %■ vc,
tcA VAWUUnXU Rffpyfljpp to all
GttHMU" > *L**a.Ki‘i ,»3v 0.: -:;.a:,jt.
LACE A^D GAU^E MOS^UttD. CANO-
Jm sMflANQBj
..•fio »:• h{ -ffifitret ,r
I OFFER for aale toy Residence, wife its
extehaive arptnida, Mtuatod la the toqrtd^
.jtsaaw&dsa&’spsst -
rat; tne Gardens large, paodoctfrunad ktofAdf
arranged; U* Orchard cos taiga many varlattoa of *x-
celieiitirntt and tha Vineyard three varfeMeart
mm. The water to abnaGtot sad excellent
Tne plaoe eontatob 88 seres, the whole buNsMe tor
tote, musts ore already laid off aa* homes
- -W0fe.g-& c a | *
foiatnph.
wpfo-lto
NOTlt,.
my»
- ^ mi
and tor the remmsr ao. ' .
Pe at Florida wharf.
9. M. MTBBLL.
WAREROQMS, ‘
>f r fra • is fiijrjn .,.i .1 ■ . v
I tto'J piM.'
•r. ejjil
.A. mj-.: L*'
ItutfSHttklL fetraf'iM
< --i t zueiodm *
Co-fartnarskip kotio«.
T H aSSS8^J^^ D ^ 7 .SSSl*(SS2 ~Zm • ' v -'; ^ -, wr:
etifciim-fau-Sale.
RHODES’
Soper PksplialtofLime
THI STANDARD MANURE,
AT HI M FfI riar, dm.
slMf WILLtR. THOMAS A O0c
NOTICE.
B Y THE ORDINANCE PASSED ST THE fTTff
Ceoacil on tha 37th day at Doormbcr, USA the
Taxes upon grass sales of every deacriptton ofiaer-
ssOTOTiKnusanss
as^.s?tsxs&&£ r r* ndto
■ l dOHN WHXUM80H,
ocl . . . city Tff ma
MACHINERY MATERIALS, 1C..
AJf.TiBCB state works,
ffl0EERmcX;xc.,
5 "AH ’■ «».,I V tiU r. -Jt.-gti
' »fr»s ifrt.m*Lt
Gtmuur and under *tea>, sure r fra nrwteote pMu,
(.froto dtoe. res to bo acoSed wlfh appeeeed sura-
B.T: -y.' » ••• . . » ft j GJMfr 1
> NtVAMftH flA
Eastern
SSfA'SSSi‘^St l sSi^t
• lets Jar ytoMW sad
ga^'MWRBs
rererttorefr, * *. »i toii«vu.
Eastern Hay.
300
i by- ; u..
'I hi sp ate!-SJ
»*P»1-R Ne, i