Augusta evening dispatch. (Augusta, Ga.) 1857-1861, March 31, 1858, Image 1

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JUpstn tfimup pisptrg. VOLUME 2. Cimtrag psfatt|. PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY, BY S. A. ATKINSON. DAILY, per aunura $4 OO WEEKLY, “ I 50 List of Registered Voters of the City of Augusta, for the year 1858. A Adam, Jacob W. Atkinson, Robt. B. Arlington, Henry P. Alexander, Cicero N. Ansley, Edwin W. Atkinson, Simeon A. Armstrong, Thomas Aid worth, Richard Aufermau, Charles Antony, Lavoiser L. Anderson, William Adam, George F. Alexander, William W. Allen, Ira Abrahams, Bernard Anderson, James H. Allen, Joseph V. H. Anderson, John S. Alleoud, Marc L. Allen, James P. Ansley, David H. Ashley, Henry Arsley, John U. Archer, William A. Andrews, Isaac N. Adams, John Q. Avret, Joseph B. Ahearne, John Archer, Washington A. Ammons. John « Bridwell, Mast-in Barnes, John A. Butler, Charles G. Brodnax, Benj. H. Blodget, Foster Butler, Nehemiah K. Beard, James A. M. Brodnax, William E. Bartee, John Bethwell, Jamos T. Barnes, George T. Brown, Berry Blodget, Foster, jr. Butler, Phineas Barrett Thomas Bones, Thomas A. Beall, William A. Brodie, Alexander M. Bean, Joseph S. Brown, Enoch W. Butler, N. Kemble, Jr. Brown, James Bennett, James A. Brahe, Frederick A. Bowe, Rob’t. J. Bouchillon, George W. Barrett, Cornelius Bottom, William P. Blount, Gustavus A. Bignon, Bernard Bust in, Edward Baker, Henry Byrd, William H. Broom, Thomas M. Bassett, William Boggs, Archibald P. Bones, James W. Burch, James W. Butt, John D. Bishop, James B. Bassford, Leonard G. Butt, Joshua W. Bartlett, Thomas W. Beall, Albert A. Butler, William Burley, Israel Barro, James Bones, John Brenner, William Bignon, Adolplni3 P. Beers, Augustine P. Battle, Thomas Bartlett, Thomas Burch, Charles Bussey, Charles L. Byrne, John Bateman, Anthony Blassingamo, Benj. F. Beall, William M. Bridges, Theodore C. Brandt, Harman Bresnahan, John Barker, John A. Byrd, Alfred Baker, Charles Bignon, Armand Blalock, Augustus K. Burks, Edward Bohler, William O. Bennett, Thomas Bond, Pembroke P. Brown, Theodore O. Bignon, Henry A. Brislan, John Bartlett, Wesley A. Buskerville, Robert E. Byrd, Talbot Beale, George G. Briquet, Claudius Boyd, Philip Burton, Francis Bowen, William D. Broadhnrst, George W. Brenner, Augustus Burns, Laughlim Betterson, John S. Blount, John Buckley, Daniel Byrd, William Bryan, James A. Bradbury, John Barry, Patrick Brewer, Elijah Boutet, David S. Bignon, Joseph Black, Robert C. Bell, Henry D. Bridges, John Brown, Augustus Buckley, Timothy Blythe, George Blackmon, William Belcher, Warren P. Blanchard, Adicl W. Blackburn, Wiley A. Bridwell, Washington Bouyer, Robert F. Bean, AlpheusC. Brogan, Martin Blomc, Leopold T. Benjamin, Milton M. Bailey, William M. Barrows, Augustus S. Barry, Edward C Camming, William Conley, Beniamin Campbell, Edward F. Courtney, Thomas Cumming, Henry fl. Camptield, Edward Chew, Benj. F., sr, Craig, William Clark, Ralph P. Calvin, James B. Costello, James Craig, John Christian, John A. Clark, Jackson Clearv, John John Clanton, Turner Casey, Luke Croak, James Caflin, Hillary Carmichael, A. W. Coggins, Robert Clark, Mathias Crump, Samuel H. Carpenter, Charles J. Carpenter, David Coskery, John Carpenter, Aarou Cunningham, George Cook, Aaron H. Culpepper, William W. Crane, William H. Callan, Barner Coskery, Samuel Coffin, John G. Cumming, Joseph B. Carter, John B. Corley, William Cartledge, Augustus Cooke, Francis H. Oashin, John Crane, George W. Cumming, Julien Cook, Augustus .1. Creswell, Samuel Crittenden, William Carter, Flournoy Callahan, Patrick Clapp, Horace H. Collier, James G. Coleman, James L. Crawford, Matthew Crane, William H., Jr. Coker, Robert 11. Cashin, John Coombs, Levi B. Churchill, Jordan G. Caswell, Theodore D. Churchill, Chauncey Cooper, George Conner, James Cheeseborough, Wm. B. Cumming, William H. Calhoun, Charles A. Curtis, George F. Clegg, Archibald Calvin, James P. Crump, Phillip D. Campbell, Henry F. Combs, Sterling T. Campbell, Robert, Jr. Cooper, William H. Clarkson, Henrv 0. Carius, Charles Clark, Joseph 8. Chichester, Thomas W. Caplos, Charles Couchlin, Daniel Caples, James Campbell, John B. Coskery, Thomas W. Cason, James Clarke,'James 0. Cook, Samuel Cosgrove, Christopher Cornell, AbrarnS. Crawford, Robert Callahan, William Cavener, John Casbin, Oswald E. Collins, Dennis Clarke, John V. Cnrtis, David L. Cress, John G. Cosgrove, Lawrence Cochran, Peter J. Conlon, Dominick Cook, John S. Cuming, T. Salter Cooney, John Crump, George H. Cross, Richard Chase, Daniel C. Cain, James Cashin, Lawrence D Dwelle, Charles Dugas, Louis A. Dugas, Leon P. Dortic,Jas. A. Davis, Wm. W. Dennis, John Derry, Wm. C. Deming, Leander C. Dye, James M. Davis, Isaac Davis, Andrew J. Dodge, George R. Dwyer, Thos. Denning, David H. Dimick, Benj. C. Dwelle, Lemuel Darby, William Doughty, William H. Datum, George Dawson, James C. Day, Joseph 11. Dugas, L. Charles DeLaigle, Armand Deffee, William Dortic, Germain T. Dunnegan, Thomas Dwelle, Lemuel Jr., DeLaigle, R. Henry Doughty, Ebenozer W Derry, Edgar R. Doscher, John Dearing, William E. Doughty, Charles W. Davison, John Daufortb, Jacob Dixon, James Davison, William B. Day, Charles B. Drechsei, Christopher Dill, James S. De LaUerbe, Franois Day, Michael Dagnel, John G. Davis, Jacob R. Dale, Samuel G. Dunham, Sumnel Day, Richard B. Dortic, William T. DeLaifi de, Charles Dunham, James Day, William A. Deihl, Albert Dixon, William J. D’Antignac, Harris H. I>unu, Patrick Davidson, Michael Durst, John D’Antignac, John W. Darby, Edward Dillon, William C. Doolittle, William D’Antignac, William M. Dye, James H. Doulan, Leckie Daniel, Wilberforce DeLettre, M. N. Darrow, Julius E Brans, George W. Bve, William J. Rlliol, Char Lee Evans, Anselm L. Bstes, Char let fcaery, Caleb Edwards, William 11. Easterling, James T. Evers, George Eve, Joseph A. Elliott, Robert A. Evans, William A F Fogarty, Thomas P. Frazier, Benj. F. Frazier, Uillery B. Freeman, Joel N. Ford, Nicholas A. Force, John P. Faughuan, Andrew Feagan, James Fargo, Joseph C. Franklin, Benjamin Fay, Patrick J. Frost, Samuel Force, Alfred C. Farmer, James ■ Flynn, Michael Frost, William W. Felder, William L. Ferry, George W. Fickling, Samuel Faughnan, Stephen Finch, William Ford, T. Bartow Freeman, Stokes M. Ford, Edward E. Fulghum, Wiley R. Fickling, Mortimer C. Foster, John Furber, Charles W. Fleming, James Freeman, Washington Faughnan, Michael Frederick, Augustin Fletcher, Anderson Fargo, Gordon Fountain, James Fleming, Robert A. Fletcher, Ezekiel Fox, O’Hara Filz, Godfrey Ford, Lewis D. Fuller, Josiah Ford, Henry W. D. Fleming, Porter a Glasner, George Gould, John P. Green, T. W. Gargan, James Garvin, Ignatius P. Gould, Henry C. Gould, William T. Green, John C. Gould, Artemas Gardiner, Robert 11. Gable, Henry Goodrich, William H. Gorman, Michael Guieu, John B. Green, John E. Gleason, Patrick Gardiner, James T. Griffin, David F. Galvin, John C. Girardey, Isadore P. Ouimarin, John Galvin, Daniel Gibbs, Elihu Gallaher, Patrick Gartrell, Janies M. Gallaher, Michael Gibson, William Gow, James L. Gow, Andrew Gardner, James T. Griffin, Wiley B. Gibbs, George G. Gairdner, Gordon Glover, William Glasscock, Edmund B. Goodwin, Charles J. Gow, John N. Oodby, James Glover, Washington Gibbs, Leonard Y. Glover. Joseph S. Gardner, James Goodrich, Henry C. Gibson, John A. Grenade, Simeon Graham, Andrew Goodman, Samuel M. H Henkell, Edward Hight., William M. Hicks, Joel Hatch, Lucius Hookey, George R Howard, Wm. H. Hubbard, Henry Hififield, William Harper, James Hoops, Henry H. Housley, Wm., Jr. Hannah, Alexander D. Henn, James H. Heard, George W. Hall, Benjamin F. Horton, James W. Heard, Stephen D. Holmes, Willis S. Hatch, Albert Holland, Gilbert G. Hull, John H. Housley, Alexander M. Hall, Charles Huber, Cornelius Henry, Isaac Holliday, Eli Heard, Isaac T. Henry, Barney Heisey, John 11. Hardeman, William Harter, Wiley J. Hewitt, William Harbers, Carson F. Hewitt, John Hemphill, Alexander 11. Harris, John D. Hubert, Hiram Hicks, Newnan Hersey, Charles W. Haines, James W. Henderson, James Hill, James Harrison, William 11. Hicks, Stephen J. Hudson, Charles A. Hickey, Jonn Hatch. Milo Hicks, Henry G. Hollingsworth, Jas. 11. Howard, Allen Hollingsworth, Jno. B. Hope, James Hawley, Samuel B. Henry, Samuel W. Horsey, William Horn, Cullen Hanzo, John B. Hackett, David Hitt, James M. Hallahan, Dennis Hood, Alfred J. Hudson, Richardson B. Hubbard, James C. Honiker, William 11. Hitchcock, Charles W. Harper, John C. Hills, John M. Jlaigh, William Higgiubotham, Jas. E. Hanlon, Daniel Hodge, David Hatton, Joseph Hart, James Harris, Singleton P. Holleyinan, Thomas 11. Hester, Mitchell G. Heney, James Hill, John L. Hill, 'John I Ivey, James A. Iverson, Anten lies, William B. Ives, Adrian C. Ivy, Joseph B. Irvine, James Ivv, John A. J Jones, Henry W. Johnson, Beniamin F. Jennings, Thos. J. Jackson, William K Jones, Wm. S. Jones, Mansfield J. Jones, James A. Johnson, Jacob B. Jones, Thomas B Johnson, Major Jones, Aaron H. Johnson, William H. Jones, Thomas Johnson, James B. Jones, William H. Jessup, Henry Jones, Stephens. Jessup, William C. Jones, James W. Jacobus, J. Julius Jones, Alfred Jordan, Frank M. Jones, William H. Jordan, Henry S. Jones, Nathan Joseph, Joseph Johnson, Whitfield T. John, Enoch Johnston, Joseph K Keenan, Peter Kirkpatrick, John Kelly, Daniel King, William W. Kirkpatrick, Daniel Jr., King, Joshua Kunze, Thos. A. Kilpatrick, John Kendrick, Zachariah W. Knight, James L. Kenny, John Kean, Matthew S. Keener, William Kalbtiaich, John Kahrs, Deiderick, Kimball, Benjamin Keener, William Y. Kent, Jesse H. Keener, Henry C. Krein, Peter Keener, Jacob E. Kilpatrick, Seaborn Keener, Henry Kell, George H. Ker, William V. Keller, Timothy Kerr, Robert C. King, John T. Kearns, John S. Keen, John F. Kilpatrick, William Kalthoff, John C. Kealev, John J Kirscb, John Keirnes, Bartholomew L LaTaste, Andrew G. Leona-d, Uriah L. Levy, Isaac Laßoche, Adrian V. Lowrev, Jacob W. Lovell, Lewis Leon, Henry L. Laventure, John P. Lewis, Christopher F. Lawson, William P. Lyons, David Lass, Jacob W. Lane, Dennis Looney, David Luquire, Hugh Liverman, Wm. J. Lee, William Lathrop, Joseph J. Low, Samuel Loky, John Lund, Thomas W. Lanear, Hosea Levy, Lewis LaTaste, Lucien Lumpkin, George R. Lodtman, Charles Lawhon, William A. Lannahan, Cornelius Lyerley, John S. Lace, Edward Lawrence, William W. Lyons, Thomas Lumback, Frederick Love, Philip E. Lassiter, Isaac W. Larus, Thomas P. Lassiter, Roderick Landers, John M Mustin, Eli Moore, John B. Medium, Francis L. McCoy, Charles Meriderh, James W. Martin, Charles B. Meyer, Jayaetz Midlam, Francis Miller, John T. McKeon, John C. Meyer, John F. McCarthy, Daniel McCarthy, Patrick Maguire’ John J. filler, Edward T. Moore, Henry Meyer, David Moore, James L. Miller, James McKinzie, Colin Matthews, Ira D. Murphy, Daniel C. McAdam, John McDermot, Michael McGolrick, Hugh McMahon, Aver Mullen, Philip Mulkey, Mackey Maharry, Wm. H.Jr. Miller, Frank 11. Metcalf, Thomas S. Musgrove, Harrison March, Bern. C. Maher, Michael McCarty, Hosea. Moody, Wm. Morris,’ Jeremiah Meredith, James W. jr. March, Benj. F. H. Murphy, Edmund T. Moss, Ephraim Murray, Francis Macmurphy, Gilbert L. Mayer, Isaac Morris, Joseph B Moore, John C. Moffatt, Thomas. Marshall, Beni. S. Macmurphy, Charles. Mann, John H. Moore, St John Morris, Laeioe 0. Moore, Joseph P. Morris, George W. Meere, George t. Marker, Mat-Amw AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, MAKCH 31 UTB Moore, Jacob J. Markey, Francis L. May, Robert H. McKenzie, Alexander May, James A. Miller, John P. R. Mealing, Henry L. Miller, Stephen Mealing, William J. Marks, David W. Moore, Napthali B. Mast, Antony McCarty, George McDermot, Martin Meredith, Henry L. McCall, William J. | McCann, John Magarahan, James Matthews, William McCord, Zachariah j Matthews, John L. Markwalter, Theodore .McCabe, Francis Markwalter, Michael Moffatt, Joseph Markwalter, Joseph McArdle, John Markwalter, William Mustin, Samuel C. Markwalter, Peter Mustin, Milton A. McLaughlin, William Mustin, George McGowan, Joseph K. Maher, Richard Metcalf, Jesse McNally, Thomas McCook, Thomas Macmurphy, John E. Mansfield James D. Macmurphy, David I). McKinney, David Morrison, Ilenry Morgan, Thomas W. McKennon, Beniamin W.Morgan, Evans Munson, Samuel 11. McCalla, Charles P. McArthur, Arthur Jr. McConnell, William A. McGuire, Michael N. McHale, Michael Mountjoy, William Milligan, Lawrence A. N Nelson, George E. W. Newton, George M. Nally, Claon A. Norrell, Wm. O. Nelson, John Newman, George \Y Nees, William Nisbet, James T. Nowland, Alexander J. Nixon, William A. Nagle, John Norffcll, Hansford D. Nehr, Blase L. O O’Conner, Michael D. Odam, John Owens, William J. O’Donnell, Edward O’Donoghue, Dennis Odum, Richard O’Conner, Francis O’Dowd, Michael Otto, Adam O’Neal, Edward 11. Owens, Dennis Oakman, Thaddeus O’Neal, Michael Osborne, Henry J. O’Neal, James Olmstead, George B. O’Conner, Michael, Jr. O’Conner, Eugene O’Conner, William Oliphant, Edward L. O’Conner, Jeremiah, Sr. Oldham, James O’Conner, Jerry Olin, W. Milo Oglesby, Garrett T. Ozment, John J. P Pass, Richard S. Pemble, Charles Pickering, William M. Peay, Henry T. Plumb, Daniel B. Pritchard, William H. Powell, William J. Phinizv, Thos. B. Powell, Jefferson Prouty, William n. Pitcher, Augustus Platt, Jacob B. Preval, Charles P. Parker, Gustavus A. Perry, Benj. F. Pen well, Thomas H. Phillips, Wm. Preskilt, Seaborn A. Page, John W. R. Platt, William L. Parnell, Nelson Platt, Charles A. Pool, James A. Preskitt, Citizen S. Pool, James 11. Philip, Alexander Philip, William Phinizy, John Powell, Carroll Phinizy, Charles n. Powell, Sterling Phinizy, John, Jr. Pruitt, Washington G. Phinizy, Ferdinand Page, William T. Pomeroy, John W. Petchman, Charles Parish, George W. Picquei, Augustus D. Patterson, John F. Picquet, Benjamin Patterson, John G. Picquet, Louis A. Porter, Henry J. Pieice, Edward B. Paul, Jacob Pearce, George W. Peoples, Micaiah T. H. Pbilpot, Henry R. Prevel, Thaddeus Philpot, David A. Poulet, Peter Pritchard, William 11. Q Quein, John C. R Ramsey, William A. Roll, Luther Rhodes, Thos. R. Richards, Edwin Robertson, Abner P. Rodgers, Zachariah J. Rhodes, Weiliam P. Rhodes, James H. Roberts, William J. Reed, Jerry Rossignol, Henry Rossignol, Paul Roath, David L. Rutherford, William A. Rudler, Sebastian Rodgers, Henry Rice, Matthew Rhodes, Charles A. Reynolds, John Riley, Richard Robert, John A. Rooney, Joab Rodgers, James B. Richards, Thomas Reinhart, John C. Robinson, Tira Russell, Benjamin B. Read, Silas C. Ramsay, Joseph B. Read, William H. D. W. Roe, Augustus H. Rowland, Charles A. Rich, William H. Rees, John C. Rich, John Reese, Enoch Rich, Charles T. Ranev, John Roland, John W. Rum ley, Edward Roland, William J. Russell, Thomas Rowland, Samuel H. Russell, Henry F. Reed, Robert M. Reaves, Edward A. Reed, William J. Robbins, Stephen D. Reynolds, Charles S. Reinkl, Gregor Richards, William T. Riley, James Roberts, Thomas H. Richardson, Joseph L. Roberts, George Rollins, Isham Roberts, James M. Itigney, Michael Reagan, Francis W. Rigby, Harlan Rice, Bernard Rappold, George Rice, Patrick Ramsay, James A. Rice, Luke Ramsay, William H. Roden, William Ramey, John D. Rodgers, Samuel T. Robinson, William Rodgers, John H. Robenson, Pulk Rodgers, Timothy Randall, Daniel Rodgers, Alpheus M. Rearden, John A. Russell, Wallace N. S Sibley, William C. Shackleford, James Silcoi, John Snefling, James M. Symmons, Eleazar L. Slack, Uriah Sledge, John G. Sayre, R. Stokes Sherman, Francis Scarborough, Hiram Schley, William Sykes, William H. Spears, Madison L. Shear, William Spears, Joseph H. Stovall, Joseph n. Schaub, John Swain, William C. Smith, John D. Spelman, Richard P., jr. Simmons, Sterling B. Spires, Curtis Sherman, William L. Snead, Claiborne Salisbury, William A. Spivey, Lee Sibley, Josiah Smith, Thomas B. Stark, William FI. Seitz, Andrew Sikes, William E. Skinner, Lucius C. Storey, Albert H. Small, John Stevens, Andrew Stovall, Massillon P. Scott, Pinkney Snowdon, Thomas Smith, William F. Simpson, James R. Sharkey, Patrick Slater, Ge« ree Simmons, Greenville Spivey, Tapley B. Simmons, James S. Stoughton, Jasper B. Simmons, Thomas M. Sauter, Silver Singleton, William Schmer, George M. Sharp, Edwin V. Stalmcker, Washington Sharp, Tilman Stalnicker, Joseph W. Stoy, Thaddeus S. Stallings, William H. Spears, William E. Scofield, Ephraim B. Sams, William J. Shanahan, John Speatb, Charles Smars, Andrew J. Staples, John S. Slemmons, Johu Sweeney, Thomas Sego, William Snead, Garland A. Seago, Levi F. Stallings, James H. Spinks, William W. StalliDgs, Herbert Shaw, James Scully, Jeremiah Storey, Samuel G. Scully, Michael Sherlock, William F. Stoffel, Henry Scranton, Philemon A. Sheahan, Patrick Sarling, Isaac Sheahan, Owen Spalding, Eli Sheehan, Daniel Stanley, James J. Sheehan, Patrick Sifley, Lewis G. Sheron, Charles Steiner, Henry H. Sheron, Matthew Scarborough, Kelly Sheron, Peter Smalley, Chapley Stafford, Thomas H. Shackelford, Geo. W. Sibley, Samuel H. Setze, Alphonse i. Sibley, Edward A. Setze, John Sibley, Henry J. Sistrunk, Jacob Straub, Peter Service, John H. Stovall, John W. L. Simpson, James M. Stovall, Thomas P. Stelling, Deiderick Stovall, Bolling A. Smith, William B. Speed, Raymond Smith, Isaac SweariDgen, Rice Smythe, James M. Singer, Frederick S. Smythe, Samnel M. Sul H ran, John Bummemll, Jacob Sullivan, Patrick Jack*** ?. ***«, Jehu hi Tuit, William H. Tice, William J. i Thew, George M. Tucker, George W. Terrel, Edward Tice, Henry Timmerman, William T.Tompkins, James L. Tankersley, George Tankersley, Edwin Thompson, Daniel B. Tankersley, Robert Thompson, Darling E. Tong, Robert Thompson, William K. Town, Henry D. Thompson, John 11. Taylor, Charles Thompson, Isham Truitt, Jabez C. , Thompson, Lewis B. Townson, Nathaniel F. , Thompson, William Tankersley, Griffin Thomas, George Tankersley, James E. Thomas, Henry J. Tankersley, William IL Tindall, John Tant, John G. Tarver, Thomas F. Tant, William R. Thayer, Henry R. Taliaferro, John W. Tucker, Isaac Tuttle, William U Usher, Aylmer, Urquhart, Robert F. V Verdery, Samuel A. Yolger, Gustave Van Pelt, John Vincent, David Vaughn, William 11. Vance, Andrew , Van Winkle, Jacob A. Virtue, Edward VV niton, William A. Wright, David R. -Welch, James Wheeler, Joseph Warren, Benjamin H. Whitehead, Francis C. Walker, James W. Welch, John Wunbern Simeon Whitaker, Henry j Walker, James B. Widener, Isaac ! Walker, John Walfolk Walker, Clarence V. j Wilson, James E. Whidby, William G. i Weaver, William A. Wihdby, Lemuel i Wingard, Elisha D. Weathershy, William 11. ! Wright, John S. Wagnon, Edwin A. j Watkins, Thomas Winberg, John W. I Welch, David Williams, Augustus D. I | Weeks, Seaman Wyman GeorgeM. | Woodstock, William G. Williams, Charles A. j Whitlock, Frederick Walton, Robert, Jr., I Whitlock, Adouiram J. Walton, Anderson W. | Wells, William B. Watson, William J. : Wimberly, Lewis Wilkinson, Thomas C Williams, Daniel Wright, Charles M. | Williams, Thos. L. Weigel, George A. Warren, William H. Walker, John Watkins j Warren, Thomas J. Walker, Edward J. ; Warren, James C. Ward, John j Wray, John N. Wightman. John W | Wheeler, William li. Whyte, Thomas i Wilson, Edward White, Solomon C. j Wilkins, Leroy H. Whitehead, Bartley F. Woodfield, William W Wright, Darwin S. ; Walker, William W. Willis, Uerinon B. | Wray, Samuel West, Loren 1 Weems, John B. Weller, DeWitt C. f Ward, Michael Walters, Michael Watkins, Robert A. Walters, John 0. Whitman, Samuel P. Warner, Charles U. Wise, William R. Y Youngblood, Shimuel N. Young, Allen C Youngblood, George W. Young Robert F. Z ! Zimmerman, Thomas Zimmerman, Richard P. I The above is a correct list of registered voters j up to the time of closing. A. D. Hill, Registry Clerk. March 22, 1858. From “The Bench and Bar of Georgia llichard Henry Wilde. The mission to which Mr. Wilde addressed his faculties and gave years of toil in Europe was not in harmony with his relative duties to mankind and with that position which his eminent taleuts and finished cultivation had secured from the world, He was qualified for extensive practical usefulness as a jurist, scholar, and statesman. That he should retire for a short period from his own country foi relaxation amid the cities, establishments, and rel ics of the Old World, was not surprising or extraor i dinary. All men of liberal views would do the same, other considerations pernnting. But to re main seven years, with no engagements more solid than glancing over antiquated documents from which no principles or systems could be educed beneficial to mankind, was a sacrifice of himself much regretted by many ofhis partial countrymen, it was, indeed, a transition from the open air, where mountain and lake, and forest and river, and rich harvests and fragrant verdure were ever lend ing variety to the landscape and a sweet moral tone to the imagination—it was a step from these purifying elements of nature to the gilded halls of luxury, where exclusiveness and mock civilities prevailed, and where music and laughter and wine and much frivolous chat constituted the round of enjoyments with which he was more or less identified. True, there was poetry in all this—too much of it. There was delight to the sense, but mildew to the heart. The voluptuary, the man of fashion, the idler, were gratified; but the moral hero, the public benefactor, the man of enterprise, and the scholar of a just ambition, desirous to leave a record of popular utility, would turn with generous self-denial from such enchantments. No reproach on the memory of Mr. Wilde is in tended by this picture. Tasso, Byron, and other men of sublime gifts yielded to the attraction. The error, if any, was sanctified by the rare companion ship. We know that genius has moods of its own, rarely prudent, and ever prone to extremes. But that a dozen volumes or more should be written by the biographers of a poet, mostly filled with specu lations on the good fortune of one of “three high born dames” to be the ideal of his nurse, is an ex penditure of time and abilities utterly dispropor tioned to the intrinsic value of the subject. The task, with whatever success performed by Mr. Wilde, was below the merit which should have sus tained itself in a better field—at the forum, in the walks of political economy, in commerce, in con stitutional law, or in the analysis of government, all of which admitted the classic beauties of style. The love of Tasso is childish, his madness excites sympathy, and his imprisonment raises a question whether*it was caused by the rage of a tyrant or the pity of a friend. The final consequence is lo gically deduced. There have been examples besides that of Tasso where love induced madness, and a prison was the remedy, the preservation of the individual; yet who ever deemed the catastro phe of such vital concern as to devote several of the best years of a truly eminent life to the in vestigation, to the sentimental details, to the fantasies of insanity, and that, too, not for the benefit of medical jurisprudence? The attack having been made, the vindication follows by the same hand—a cheerful defense, a grateful reply to seeming objections. In the case of Mr. Wilde there was much to extenuate, if not wholly justifv, his self-expatriation and the indul gence ofhis literary taste in a channel whose crys tal current bore him imperceptibly into “ dream land,” where poetic natures love to dwell amid creations of their own, society of their own form ing, and delights peculiar to themselves. He had known hardship in his youth ; his moral courage and intellectual superiority had opeued a path to renown. He had figured in Congress as an ac knowledged luminary, without a rival in elegance of style and facility of imagination uuder the con trol of a sound, dignified judgment. The press bad teemed with compliments to his genius at home and abroad. His society was courted in the leading circles of fashion and intelligence, and he was the most finished gentleman in them all. He was courtly in address, yet engaging and familiar with his friends. After the defeat of the ticket for Congress on which he was nominated in 1934, his spint chafed under a sense of injustic. He was too conspicuous is public estimation to be thus neglected at the ballot box without becoming an object of remark in contrast with his former tri umphs. For the first time he realised desertion— i loneliness. His sensitive mind turned upon itself for support. It may be asked, perhaps doubtfully, what con sideration bound him to a further struggle with the rough gales of life. Had he not given abundant proofs of capacity of the highest order? What problem had he yet to solve to procure the recogni tion of his genius and learning ? He had toiled am bitiously and successfully for improvement; his fame was established, and he was remitted to pri vate life. Under these circumstances, where was uapcoprietjr ofhis ’Snropeaa towr and residence? Yu it not commendable? Mr. Wilde had a relish ! for lialiau literature; hissoul had been touched by i the song of Italian bards, and by the richness and beauty of their language. He resolved to drink at J the same fountain. Easy in his fortune, his < relieved from public cares and domestic anxieties, I < he applied himself with that gentle industry and ] soothing leisure which his situation afforded to • ' master the depths of a classic sea, of which Italy : < was the enchanted basin, in his reveries. lie se- ( 1 lected Florence as his head quarters and Tasso as ' ] his theme. The result is before the world. The dedication ofhis volumes to John W. Wilde, I I Esq., is alike honorable to the two brothers. It is j' dated Florence, sth of November, 1840; My Dear Brother : An affection like ours rarely j' shows itself in words ; and, if I now allow it utter- ' ance, it is rather in homage to truth than in com- i pliment to you. If I knew any one more worthy ! of ray esteem and regard than yourself, I might 1 spare you the pain of a dedication; but in all that tries the heart you only have always withstood the 1 proof, and to you my first work must be inscribed, that liattery or falsehood may not stain the inscrip tion. ! A more beautiful and tender piece of composi-1 tion than this fraternal tribute is not to be found ; anywhere. It is incorporated in this memoir as an act of justice and as an ornament. The refined ; taste of Mr. Wilde and the harmony of his diction ; appear in every line from his pen. His work on j Tasso eviuces great labor and erudition. The an- j, j thorities referred to in his notes are numerous, and ' ‘ many of them rare. The translations show his ] ■ proficiency in the Italian language. Taken as a j mere literary performance, it is sufficient to rank ' j Mr. Wilde among the ripest belles lettres scholars , lof the age. True, there is much that is extrava- ■ |gant in feeling, and much that is imbued with ro- i | mance : still, the gratification is not the less pure, j 1 Ours would be a hard condition, a barren world, if! we poor mortals had to see and endure things di- j ! vested of the ideal drapery of life. Wc should sink under the burden without any angel to lift us j up. The illusion is sweet; we trust it, though we know it to be an illusion. It is one of the angels that constantly fill the air, ministering to all who ; are in trouble. Instead of blame or indifference, i let us award to the scholars and painters of lively | impressions—of wild fancies, if you please—the I 1 gratitude we owe them for the rich feasting we have enjoyed at their hands. In this relation Mr. Wilde is a benefactor to his fellow-man. There !is no evidence that in his retirement, or in the prosecution of his researches respecting Tasso, Dante, or other subjects in Italy, he departed in the least degree from that level which commanded ! the best society of Europe. His presence was felt \ and gracefully acknowledged wherever his lot was i cast. Additional by the Niagara. In the House of Commons, of England, Mr. DTs raeli further said: were any further papers on the subject which could , be laid before the House. , Mr. D’lsraeli said there was no doubt that the case of these unfortunate men was very distress ing, and that it had justly excited the sympathy of the country. He had himself the strongest lm , pression that the men were not guilty, but their innocence must be demonstrated by a judicial in vestigation. There had been no neglect on the part of the government in attending to the case. B It had been submitted to the investigation and de t cision of the officers of the crown, and the goyern j rnent had acted upon their opinion. The jurisdic j tion of the Neopolitan government having been I acknowledged, it seemed to him that they were a precluded from opening the question, and they (j could only take the most efficient steps to obtain , r j for their unfortunate countrymen prompt justice, l_ and to take care that the investigation should be I full and impartial. e | This question was one of the very first to which . government had given their attention, and Lord j Malmesbury had directed a competent gentleman 1 j to proceed to Naples, to ensure a fair trial, and as -1 ford every assistance. Lord Malmesbury, in his f dispatch, also, strongly protested against any fur ther delay. Government had done all they coulu, j and he believed their exertions would be success j ful in restoring the men to Eugland. The subject was further debated by various mem- 1 1 , bers, and Lord Palmerston said that the case had , »I occupied the anxious attention of the late goveru j rnent, and he assured the House, that if they could ; have found any grounds for claiming from Naples^ I the liberation of these men, they should have don/ i so, but during the whole course of the negotiation | they had been guided by the opinion of othj/s on ; international law. / Mr. Roebuck characterised the language of the ■ Chancellor of the Exchequer as unworthy of an English Minister. The British government ought, whether the men had been seized in Neapolitan waters or not, to have demanded their/release. The subject then dropped. The army and navy estimates were then moved, four months on account, and the motions were agreed to. The House then adjourned till Monday. There had been some rioting in Dublin between the police and the College studeute ; five of the latter are said to be dangerously injured. The English funds had been dull during the week, and were unfavorably affected to a slight ex tent by the French pamphlet. Money was in moderate demand, at about pre vious rates. The Bank of England had made no change in its charges. Consols closed firm under the renort of favorable advices from India, but no Indian news had reached Liverpool when the Niagara sailed. France. —lt is said that Pietri will cease to be Prefect of Police after the execution of Orsini and his accomplices, and that his successor will proba bly be a general officer. The monthly return of the Bank of France shows a gain in specie of forty millions of francs in Paris, and nearly sixteen million in the country branches. A dispatch from Paris, of the 11th, says that the appeal of Orsini aud his accomplices to the Court of Cassation was that day rejected. The Moniteur of the 11th says that on the 24th ult., arrests were made in various parts of France, which defeated culpable projects, and led to the i discovery and seizure of arms, ammunition, and compromising correspondence. The arrests, how ever, have been exaggerated. They are limited to fifty principal ringleaders at Paris, twenty at Lyons, twelve at Marseilles, and four on au average iu forty other departments. In spite of this pre caution, a gathering took place in Paris on the night of the sth of March, but firm and vigilant measures caused it to prove abortive, and led to twenty new arrests. The* affray which took place at Chalons was in disputably part of theplan of systematic agitation. The Patrie gives further details of the revolu i tionarv attempt at Chalons, showing that the mob • took the infantry post by surprise, and seized near • ly all the arms. The rioters were subsequently - subdued by a strong military detachmeut, and i many arrests were made. t Tlie Three per cents, closed on Friday at sixty » nine francs forty centimes. » Switzerland.— The dispatch from France to the ; Swiss government in regard to refugees is pub • lished. The removal from the frontiers of Swit t zerland of Italian and other questionable refugees , is demanded in strong and menacing terms, and » the Swiss government is told that if they refuse i they will incur a grave responsibility, and will i have to attribute to themselves the consequences - which may be entailed. Spain. —The news from Spain is of little in f terest. The Senate had again rejected Espartero’s request to be disencumbered of his rank as Spanish ■ Senator. The statement that General Concha was to be removed from Cuba has been contradicted on good , authority. Austria— A Vienna dispatch says that an excel lent understanding has already been established between the Derby Ministry and the Austrian government. Buaeia.— A Central Committee has beer, appoint ed at B*. Petersburg t* examine preject ffee NUMBEK 380 I emancipation of the serfs sent in by the Provincial j committees. The committee consists of thirteen 1 members, and the Emperor is President. Latest* — London, Saturday Morn ing. —The TUner city article of Friday evening, says: “ Consol* opened this morning with great dullness at th# price to which they receded last evening after reg- . ular hours, and subsequently experienced a d#* cline. Better quotations from Paris thep. tafised a recovery, and the market was then sup ported by a report which, bowevmpfwas not con firmed by anything received atftue India house, that a dispatch had arrived announcing the taking of Lucknow. The throughoit the day were unimportant. Applications for dis count at the bank to-day slightly increased, but still continue moderate. Ninety-six thousand j pounds in gold was withdrawn from the bank to day for the continent. The specie by the Sea i Breeze, nine-five thousand six hundred pounds, has also been takeu to send abroad. These remit tances are said not to have been for purchases of silver, but on some exceptional account—possibly : for a further payment by the Credit Mobilier for j the Austrian railways. “ The correspondence which has passed between the governments of France and England will not be laid before both Houses of Parliament, but the Times of this morning gives the following synop sis of it: The last of the series of dispatches only arrived yesterday afternoon. Both Lord Malmes bury and Count Walewski, it is affirmed, have throughout shown great judgment and discretion. In reply to Lord Malmesbury’s request for an ex planation of those passages which have so much offended the House of Commons, Count Walewski very frankly reminds the country of the undoubted proofs given by the Emperor of the value he at tached to our alliance by his concessions to our views, both during the Crimean war and since tha | conclusion of the Treaty of Peace. He proceeds to i observe, that after the Emperor had been many I times exposed to and escaped many attacks made I by assassins, who were proved to have concocted their plans in England, he thought it no presump tion to appeal to the friendly feeling and justice #f our nation to prevent, if possible, a recurrence of such crimes. Count Walewski repudiates, in the Emperor’i name, any idea of wishing to include Englishmen iu the category of refugees to which he alluded, or of a desire to change our laws, or of an inten tion to condemn them. But now regretting the misconstruction placed on his intention, he re quests that the correspondence may cease and the alliance continue.” The Tuns* states, but without vouching for the I accuracy of the report, that as one of the results of • the diplomatic difficulty between France and Eng land, Count Persigny will not continue to repre sent France at this Lourt. The Daily News city article of Friday evening, says: “The drooping tendency with which the Stock markets opened gave way, owing to the buoyancy on the Paris Bourse. A reduction of on# quarter to three-eights per cent, in Consols was I only temporary, ana the final prices were the same , as yesterday, with a firm market. Ninety-#ix ' j thousand pounds in gold was to be taken from th# j Bank to-day for exportation. It is said to be om account.” Cuba. The special Washington correspondent of the . New York Tribune telegraphs to that paper, under date of the 26th instant: i- “ The President has a war with Spain—Cuba— > seizing message ready to be sent in on the passage » of Lecompton.” ® We have no doubt that Mr. Buchanan, in sbap y ing his foreign policy, will keep Cuba and the fol n lowing resolutions Cincinnati platform ia “* view: L ‘ “ Resolved, That our geographical and political position with reference to other States of this ] continent, no less than the interest of our com * merce, and the development of our growing power, f requires that we should hold as sacred the princi ‘ pies involved m the Monroe doctrine ; their bearing ?l and import admit of no misconstruction; they ’j should be applied with unbending rigidity. I I “ Resolved, That the Democratic party will ex ' pect of the next Administration that every proper j effort will be made to secure our ascendancy in th# i Gulf of nermanent pro- I tection tq. -tfregreat outlets through which ar# tenmifcainto its waters the products raised out of til*' soil, and the commodities created by try of the people of our western valleys anV*h# Union at large.” Small Talk. But of all the expedients to make the heart lean, the brain gauzy, and to thin life down into the con sistent of a cambrick handkerchief, the most successful is the little talk and tattle which, in some charmed circles, is courteously styled con versation. How human beings can live on such meagre fare—how continue existence in such a famine of topics and on such a short allowance of sense—is a great question, if philosophy #o#dd only search it out. All we know is, that such m#a and women there are, who will go on from iifte«a to fourscore, and never hint on their tombstone#, that they died at last of consumption of the head and marasmus of the heart! The whole univeree i of God, spreading out its splendors and terror®, pleading for their attention, and they wonder “where Mrs. Somebody got that divine ribbon ta her bonnet?” The whole world of literature through its thousand trumps of fame, adjuring them to regard its garnered stores of emotion and thought, audthey think: “It’s high time, if Johi intends to marry Sarah, for him to pop the que» tion!” When, to be sure, this frippery is spiced with a little envy and malice, and prepares ill I 1 small dishesofscandle and nice bits of detraction, it becomes endowed with aalight venomous vitality, which does pretty well in the absence of soul, te I carry on the machinery of living, if not the realito of liie.-r-f E. P. Whipple. I Race. . - .~ The Louisvillet**uri*r of Friday morning say# : The Result. — Raltic Ahead. —Th©.Baltic, in chars# •of Capt. Frank Carter, the fastest Captain of tl# age, arrived at Borland last night at half past fcm where she took on board a falls pilot and came up over the falls, and landed at the city wharf a few minutes after eleven o’clock. To b#r officers we are indebted for New Orleans papers ts Saturday, March 20th, and the accompanying me morandum, by which it will be seen that her tim# from port to port was five days six hours and twen ty-two minutes—the quickest of the season. The Baltic left New Orleans, March 20th, at four o’clock. In port for Louisville, T. C. Twichelh Met Fairchild at Tunica Island; R. J. Ward at Fairchild’s Island ; Woodford in Georgetown Bend ; passed Belfast at sixty-six ; Aleck Scott at sixty-two and sixty-three; left Antelope at Mem phis ; met Pacific at Plum Point; Fanny Bullitt at Little Cham; passed Moses McLellan and met Southerner at Ford’s Ferry ; met John Raine at Caseyville ; passed Empress at Uniontown, and Chancellor at Little Cypress ; met David Whit# at Grand View ; Montgomery at Wolf Creek Point, and reached Portland at 10:22, P. M., 25th. TIME FROM NSW ORLEANS TO LOUI3VILLI. Days. Hoars. Baltic made Natchez, 23 “ “ Vicksburg, 1 9 38 u “ Napoleon, 2 4 40 “ 41 Memphis, 2 28 48 44 44 Cairo, S 21 Os 44 44 Paducah, 4 00 58 s 44 “ Evansville, 4 IS 17 44 14 Portland, 5 6 21 This run was made under serious disadvantages. The three first nights were very dark and cloudy after the moon went down, with shifting fogs fe# fore daylight We encountered a stroDg rise the Arkansas river, which was succeeded byaa extraordinary swell from the Mississippi, J* J heavy drift; and the Ohio rising all the way m Louisville. A widow once saidtohlr daughter, fWtag are of my age, you will be bud.” num%” replied the th.iffcra tl. i*d*. “ftr fee** 4 ***•'