Augusta evening dispatch. (Augusta, Ga.) 1857-1861, August 26, 1858, Image 2

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t—BMiam—r——a————— dbctmtg JUspntcj).! ——i«ni« ■— —■ i .Him. «■> AUGUSTA. CtA: Ttaai-sday Evening, Angust W, 1858. j To Correspondents. We decline publishing the communi-: cation from Cuminiug, Forsyth county, 1 signed “Doe Head.” In the first place it is too lengthy, and, in the next, it would be of but little interest to our numerous readers. We will preserve the mafanscript, and would advise the writer to send it to the Crusader. . *••'* Eclectic Mogaalne. We have received from the publishers in York, the September number of this valuable monthly. It is liaud somelvembeliaßsjl with a portrait of Rev.j Chas. KrsO«V£T, and of David GarAick and his wife.. Its contents are: varindtand interesting. HcivP Has the Smith Gained. For ten or fifteen years past, Slavery has been a pervading question in poli tics. All thiHMiticians, of all stripes, have- united-in assuring our people that fcarftil dangers impended, which seem ed about to destroy the eoeiety and subvert the liberties of the slave States. This we believe, to have beep true. Nor do we conceive that these perils! are now less threatening. It is our pur-1 pose to inquire briefly how far thej work of protection has progressed. During the session of ’49-’SO, the country was terribly agitated by the struggle which resulted in what is known as the compijjgniee of 1850. We are at a point of time when, if ever, we ouglit to see some advantage derived to Slavery from the series of measures then adopted. First in order, was the ‘ Fugitive Slave law.*’ Sis tile chief! object of law to prevcA evil; hut so far has that law been ffdta accomplish ing this end, that the escape of slaves j from the border stated, i^'daily on the -increase, and has beeil so perseveringly aided! by the emissaries of abolitionists, that all hope is how relinquished of checking the crime. It is conceded on all hands t^at'no power exists in-the federal government which can put an end to the nefarious business-. The only hope of protection for the owner is in the power of his state government. Put even that power will he invoked in vain unless supported by public opinion in those localities where the evil is most prevalent. Unfortunately those localities are the very ones whore there exists a larger class of population, whosfe sympathies, far from being pro slavery, are on the side of the negro thieves. Thus the efforts of the master to secure his property are thwarted by those very neighbors upon whom he ought to be able to rely for aid. The late difficulties in Maryland, are ample verifications of this assertion ; while it was well said by a late Kentucky paper, that negro stealing is getting to be re spectable on the south side of the Obitfriver. One of the provisious of the I ugitive law prescribed punishment for impe ding or refusing to aid in, the rendition of escaped slaves. In all the cases in which southern men have endeavored to recover their slaves, has anybody ever heard of a single instance in which punishment has been visited upon any of the individuals or mobs that have harbored the runaways and obstructed the process of the law? The law has been totally disregared at the North. j so far as the penalties for disobedience are concerned. It is also wholly worth h-ss to the owner, since no instance has; occurred in wnich the expense of re capture has not far exceeded the value | of the negro. The blindest admirer of; tlie Compromise of 'SO, will admit that j the loss of slaves, through underground railroads, is an injury for which neither the federal law, nor those of the slave states,’ provide the slightest remedy. Can it then be pretended that in this law the South gained an ioto ? No. No-one will pretend that the institu tion gained territory or friends by the j admission of California. Another one of those measures was, the purchase of a region, large enough; for a state, from Texas, at the cost of ten millions of dollars. Had that re gion been retained within the limits of' Texas, it would have remained slave' territory. By its annexation to the Territory of New Mexico, it is now ex- j posed to the growing certainty that, j that territory will be settled by a free-' - soil population. With our recent ex perience in introducing slavery as an institution into Kansas, is there much room for hope that we shall be more for tunatc in New Mexico? With 850,000 foreigners entering the west every year, and with the native increase of popula tion in the free states, twice as great as the increase of whites in the South, can a man be found so extravagant as to de clare it possible that New Mexico will be a slave state ? What then did the South gain by consenting to the pur chase of Texas slave soil to become sub ject to the popular sovereignty by which it is to be freesoilised ? Nothing! It was said by Messrs. Coub, Toombs, Stephens an others, who had a political game to play, that the South were to find their share of good from the Com promise in the peculiar condition of thei Bills, for the territorial governments of New Mexico and Utah. “Congression |al Non-Intervention,” with slavery in | the Territories, was to be the great sal vation of the South. We were called i ' upon to rejoice, because Congress had ' not done in those territories what they had no Constitutional authority to do! But here comes in the question, of what advantage will it be to the South, , that freesoil hordes are to he the doers |of that which Congress abstained from! doing? To the material interests of the South, as to the safety of the slavery basis, what imaginable difference is there between a Wilmot Proviso, and an j exclusion of slavery by the Kansas pro-1 cess! Let it l>e granted that one is a constitutional and the other au uncon stitutional method, yet if there could be an advantage to the institution from its extension into a given territory, its exclusion therefrom will be a comtnen ; surate disadvantage, no matter how that exclusion may be brought about. Is there theu a gain to the South, either ! realised or to be realised in any measure iof 1850? We cannot see it. If by ; those measures slavery gained friends : j who are they ? If territory, where is - it? If safety, what is it ? * Editorial Correspondence. Marietta, August 25th, 1858. Dear Dispatch : —The manufacturing enterprises of this vicinity are in a flour ishing condition. Denmead's Flour I Mill is running day and night, turning i | out over 200 barrels of flour per day, j Col. Glover’s Tannery is one of the lar gest and most succesful establishments of the kind in the whole country. He is also a large manufacturer of negro shoes. Mr. McEnfresh is rebuilding his Cabinet Works, burned two years ago, and there are various mills and mechine works in the county, all in vigorous op eration. The health of the vicinity is reraarka-1 bly good this season. The weather for j two days has been unseasonably cool, j ! and two blankets were not uncomforta- : ble last night. The number of visitors in the up- ; country is unusually small this scas-j on. Wheat is stiffening a little in this market, and prime red brings 75 to 78 cents to day. Corn is worth 43 to 45 cents. Dried fruit is coming in freely, and peaches unpealed sell at $l.OO. Pealed brings from wagons $3.00. Yours, A. The Fever in New Orleans. The full returns made by the Board of Health for the week ended 15th inst., at 9 o’clock p. m , show that deaths from yellow fever to he 286. The Cre scent publishes the following table,show ing the increase of fever and the com parative mortality since the fever be gan : Yel. Fever. Other dia. Total . | W’k end'g June 27, 2 128 130 W' k end’g July 4, 8 134 1421 W'k end’g July 11, 9 139 148 W’k end’g July 18, 20 117 137 W’k end’g July 25, 25 162 187 W’k end’g Aug, 1, 70 120 190 W’k eud'g Aug. 8, 140 166 300 W’k end’g Aug. 15, 286 171 457 At the Charity Hospital, for the twen ty four hours ending Monday evening, there were 9 deaths from yellow fever, showing a decrease of 11 from the number of the previous day. Cure for Bronchitis.— One of our cleverest and most reliable friends, says the Holly Springs Herald , informs us that common mullen leaves, smoked in a now pipe— one in which tobacco hasne ver been used—is a sure and.certain cure i foi bronchitis. The remedy is simple and innocent, aud witliiu the reach of ' all. Recollect that this is no retired physician’s remedy, but is given to fls by a citizen of our city, who has tried it himself, and seen it tried on others, ; and lias never known it to fail in effect ing a permanent cure. —— • •••- | (Sf An arrival from Curacoa at New ; York, brings intelligence that political , affairs at Venezuela were quiet. The , French and English fleets were still ly ing at Laguayra. Gen. Gregori Jlona oas died in prison at Maracaibo. Advices received at Curacoa from St. | Domingo, indicate another revolution! in that Republic. Gen. Saxta Anna j being opposed to the nomination for the Presidency. New Crop. —The New Orleans Crescent, - of the 20th, says: “The receipts of cotton are on the increase. We learn! that picking is progressing with some ra- 1 pidity, but at what figures the market I will open in October, we do not conjee- i ture. The talk is that a general resump-1 tion of business cannot be expected be fore that time.” llnncoclt Fair. The Milledgeville Recorder, says j We have been requested by the Corres-; ponding Secretary of the Planters' Club | °f Hancock county to say that the next : Annual Fair of the Club will take place '• at Sparta, on the ‘27th, 28th, 29th and 30th days of October next. The premium j list which has been sent us for publica , tion, in circular form, we notice has the usual number of items calculated to at tract visitors and exhibitors. We will: endeavor to lay some of the most im portant of them shortly before our rea ders. We notice several new features well calculated to give interest to the occasion ; among others. For the fastest trotting horse, $5 00 For the fastest pacing horse, 5 00 For the best riding on horseback, by a lady or girl, 0 00, For the best riding on horseback. by boy or gentleman. 5 00' Telegraphic 3lbii.ee in New York.— i The celebration in New York, in honor of the great Telegraphic triumph, on I the first of September, will be a grand ' affair. Extensive preparations, in van-! ous quarters, are going on, to make it worthy of tlic event, and to impress it upon the minds of the rising genera-, j tion. The city authorities will receive Mr. Field and the officers of the Niaga ! ra and Gorgon at the Battery, where a salvo of one hundred gims will be fired, j The procession arranged for the occasion j will then take up its line of march for ' the Crystal Pa'.ace. The Chamber of Commerce, on behalf of the merchants, has agreed to participate, and so highly approves of the enterprise that a com mittee has been appointed to prepare suitable testimonials to be presented to Capt. Hudson and his associates. Mutiny and Murder. The whaieship Junior arrived at New j Bedford, Saturday eveniug, having on | board, as close prisoners, eight of the i mutineers who murdered Capt. Archi- ; j bald Mellf-n, and the second mate of ; ; that ship. The Junior, under anew! : captain, (Gardner.) and other officers, I sailed from Sydney for New Bedford on ■ the 25th of April. Capt. Mullen was 1 shot with a whale gun. National Convention of Germans. We see it stated that extensive prepa rations are making in New Y’ork for a national convention of Gremans in that city, to be composed of delegate from the various German emigration societies throughout the Union—the object being j to urge the enactment of laws for the better protection of emigrants. The convention is to commence on the Ist of October, aud be continued for three or : four days. Ucatli of a Mayor. Gen. W. S.' Pilcher, the Mayor of ! Louisville, who has been ill some time, ;■ , died on Saturday night last. The de- ! | ceased was a native of Virginia, and in j 11841 he ran on the democratic ticket for j ! Lieut. Governor of Kentucky. He sub sequently joined the American party,, and was elected Mayor of Louisville. Males of Molasses. The Savannah Sews of the 20th inst., i says: Sales of New Orleans molasses i j were made at auction yesterday, by j Messrs. Bell, Prentiss & Co., at 38 1-2 cts. for whole barrels, and 39 cts. for , half barrels. A Valuable Work. —The National Intelligencer savs : — “By an act of the late session of Congress the Secretary of the Interior was directed to have a di gest made of the returns of manufac tures and mines,collected and reported in minute details with the returns of the : j seventh census in the year 1860. The i i execution of this work,the Secretary ve ry judiciously, with the approval of the i President, committed to the direction of Joseph C. G. Kenedy, Esq., the en lightened superintendent of the seventh census, and Mr. K. has been for some time past diligently engaged, with hi 6 assistants, in pushing the work forward to completion. The Grain Trade of Chicago. During the fortnight there have been received at Chicago G,141 bbis. flour; 135,568 bushels wheat, 410,137 bushels ~ corn, and 25,800 bushels oats, making j 602,220 bushels of grain. The total re- |l ceipts of the season are now 263,626 < bbis. flour, 6,050,786 bushels wheat, j 4,653,765 bushels corn, and 1,701,987 j bushels oats, making a total of over : , thirteen millions of bushels of grain, 1< namely 13,727,628 bushels. ' J The receipts at this time last year weic ( 145,000 bbis. flour, 2,200,000 bushels ( wheat, 5,300,000 bushels corn and 600,- 1 000 bushels oats, makings total of 8,- ] 825,000 bushels of grain, and showing i au increase in the receipts of this year 1 of 4,902,628 bushels. Corn Crops at the W kst. —According i to the Louisville Courier, the present J ; crop of com throughout Kentucky, Iu- , ! diana, Illinois and Tennessee will be the jl : largest ever grown. The planting was J j rather late, but the summer has been j, unusually favorable, causing the crop j 1 to mature rapidly, with no danger by r early frosts. j, 11 (i W Robert Dale Owen, the American I Minister at Naples, has published a de- ji | nial of the report that he had become a Catholic. Without belonging to any religious body, he holds to the Unita rian doctrine, and is preparing a l work on the subject of religion which ' will disclose his religious views. Jig” The disßa.se commonly called the |i 1 black tongue, which made its appear- !' , ancc in Florida eome months since,then in Alabama, iias at length reached Bay ! St. Louis (La. ) and sweeping away cat tle and deer with a sad mortality. fgr In tlie patent office report of 1855 j we find that Townsend Glover, Esq., who is a scientific man, and who was , employed by the department for that purpose, has made a report of his inves tigations regarding insects. He reports that tiger beetle, the predatory beetle, devil's coach horse, I Icbnuemon fly, Syrphus, lady bird and the lace-wing fly are very beneficial to | the cotton plant, being constantly en gaged in destroying those insectswhich ' feed off the cotton stalk aud its pro -1 duct. A Handsome, Present. —We 'learn from the Hartford Times that Col. Colt I has sent , as a present to the Russian I Court, three cases, each containing sam pies of the arms mudehy him, from the largest caliber rifle to a pocket pistol. The first of these cases, which is for the Emperor, is of rosewood, and the arms are gold mounted: The other two are of polished black walnut, the arras silver mounted, and are intended for the Crown Princes, the Grand Dukes Constantine, Michael and Nicholas. A plain walnut case, containing a set of arms for the Russian Minister of War, accompanies those intended for the im perial family. All the cases are lined with red, white and blue velvet. They are intended as a return for the courte sies shown to Col. Colt and Mr. Jarvis ] by the Russian Court, during their visit to Russia, and accompanying a full set of mil'tary arms manufactured to fill an ! order from that Government. During ! the past year, Colonel Colt has sent ov er $200,000 worth of machinery to Rus sia, for use in the gieit military arms I factory now in process of erection in j that country. 1 gp” J. G. Fain, Esq., has vacated the j editorial chair of the Georgia Platform, published at Calhoun, Ga., and the pa per is now under the charge of W. V. Wester, who says, i:i his salutator, ; the Platform , will remain essentially the same it even has been since its founda tion, the uncompromising' and unswer ing advocate of true Democratic prinei- Tes. jje?' Norman, who recently murdered his brother-in-law- at Chattanooga, has I been arrested in Nashville, taken back to Chattanooga, and committed for itrial. • -- Heallli of Savannah. j We are gratified to learn, by our ?a --; vannah exchanges, that that city con. tinucs in the enjoyment of good health, the deaths for the week ending the fifth (inst., being fifteen —ten whites and five blacks. * Death of Jtuige Goodnll. We learn with much regret, says the Nashvill Patriot, that the Hon. Jons L Igoobaix, Judge of the fth Circuit, died on Saturday. He left his home near :Carthage on the loth inst., for Smitli : ville for the purpose of holding Court there, but was taken sick at Beckwith’s ' on the way, where he died. • —— The #vsu at the Virginia Springs. : —The Petersburg InteUigmcer has the fol : lowing extract of a letter from the Rock Alum Spring, dated the 17th instant: “The crowd here is immense. At least one thousand. Stages answer the ; purpose of bedrooms every night. The | ball room has likewise been converted i into a Bleeping apartment for ladies— I fifteen or twenty of whom now occupy 'it. X hear that everybody who goes to the White Sulphur is hard off. The ! Sweet and Little Red Sweet are filled to their utmost capacity; not less than one thousand at the former and five hun dred at tne latter. The Rockbridge Baths have been crowded for more than a fortnight, and many are camping out at the sulphur spring above there. Rust in Cotton. —We learn that the rust is making sad havoc with the cot ton in this county. Large fields which two weeks ago were flatteringly prosper ing, are now almost entirely cut off.— | This blight seems confined tone partic |u!ar locality, but seems to he generally diffused throughout the county. Our .'farmers who, two weeks ago, were san guine of making a fair average crop, [are now apprehensive of a very short crop.— Lumpkin Palladium, 26th inti, The Heallh of the City. The official reports of the yellow fe ver mortality in the city, published daily in our columns, furnish our read ier*, at home and abroad, with reliable data in regard to the actual condition of the health of the city. It will be observed by an examination of them, ttiat an increase of mortality is record ed since Wednesday, though the total number of deaths from this source for the entire week may not much exceed that reported for the week previous. In examining the statistics of previ !ous years, wlmn the fever has prevailed lin our city, this fact recurs so often as (almost to be regarded as data for sound J conclusions in regard to the regimen of [the disease: It has gradually increased (for nine weeks from the date of its first appearance, when it has commenced to decline in nearly the ratio of its previ ous increase. This is the ninth week since the fever made its appearance, and by the rule alluded to—if it can be called a rule—the number of deaths Isbould largely exceed those reported of any previous week. But, after all, so j little is ascertained of the disease, so joften do all calculations fail, that what has occurred repeatedly, and almost ‘regularly in past years, may not occur again. The mortality this season is not as great as it was for the corresponding weeks of 1855. That year was not re garded by our citizens, or by strangers, as one attended with the scenes usual when an epidemic prevails. There is I scarcely a probability that we shall be called upon to record so high a mortali ty as marked that year, and we may hope soon to date the commencement of a return to a normal state of health.— j A'. 0. Picayune, fi 2d inst. | Too Horrid for Belief.— The Clarks ' ville (Tenn.) Jeffersonian says that on old man named Jesse Elliot, residing on Yellow Creek, in the lower part of Mont gomery county, was committed to jail in that place, on Sunday evening, the 15th instant, for the shocking crime of an attempted violation of his own daughter, a girl of fourteen years. The girl testified upon the examining trial that her father had been importuning her with his incestuous propositions for several years. The health of the country is tolera bly good, considering the unusually dry and hot season. Should there be much rain shortly.we may expect sickness to increase considerably. Chattanooga Ad vertiser, 2.4 th i'itt. THE LATEST NEWS. BY TELEGRAPH. Cnlije Intelligence, Yai-snita, (Irkland) Aug. 25. The London papers announce that a Treaty of Peace has been'concluded with Chi na. England and France are to he in demnified. Dates from Bombay, to the 19th of July, had been received. The mutiny among the Sepoys was being rapidly quieled. The London papers of Teusday con tained a long and interesting report made by Mr. Bright, on the Atlantic Telegraph Company’s enterprise. 'The steamship Asia leaves on Satur day. Cmisnl-Cent .n 1 of Culm, Washington, Aug. 25. —Major Helm, of Kentucky, has been appointed Con sul-General at Havana. » Market. New York, Aug. 25.—The Cotton market was quiet to-day. serial fflotitts. _____ jjs' I? o o k-K eciii u g. Pen man ship, &c.~The third nnd last Course or Lectures and Practical Lessons on Book-Keeping, will commence MONDAY EVENING, SOthinst.. at 8 o'clock. Penmanship, Mercantile Arithmetic and StyLgraphic Cbirograpliy or Card Writing, taught at very reduced rates. Application must be made immediately. WILIIAM M. PF.LOT, Masonic Hall, Principal of the Charleston au2C-dl Mercantile Academy. (f Dyspepsia, Headache, and Indigestion. l»y which all persons are more or less affected, can usually be cured by taking moderate exercise, wholesome food, and a dose of BCERHAVE’B HOLLAND BITTERS, one hour before each meal. au2o-d6*cl fifTNotice.— Mayor’s Office, City of August., August 23d, ,1858.—With a view of preserving the health ol the city, which I am happy to say, is at this time unexceptionable, I call the attention of the people to tho follow ng clause of the Thirty-third Section of the General Ordinance: .. It shall lie the duty of all holders of lots or linds. whether the same be enclosed or unen closed, to keep them clean and dry. They shall permit no sink to contain water, hut shall fill up all low places on said lot? or lands, in such man ner as to pass off tlio water : and shall, every day, except Sundays, remove from -aid lots or lands, all decayed and decaying vegetable and animal substances ; and in general, everything tending to corrupt tlio air, and place the same (in convenient heaps) opposite said lots or lauds, between daylight and 9 o’clock in the morning. ” All occupants of houses having cellars under them, will cause the same to be opened and ven tilated daily. I would recommend the Tree use of lime in all parts of the city. B- CONLEt. atl‘23 Mayor C. A. (IT Dr. 31. J. .Tones lias re moved tils Cilice from Mclntosb-street, to a room over Hollingsworth & Baldwin’s store, on Broad street, three doors above the Union Bank, where he may be found during the day, and at night at the U. St. Hotel. jyil-d6in (C \V e are authorized to announce CLAIBORNE SNEAD, Esq., as u candi date for Attorney General of the Middle District, at the election in January next. J.V— f#* Teeth Extracted with out pain, with F.loctrioity. by my 25 Pr.J7RIOBT._ g*r A u gusta K. Savannah Rnllvoml.—Acswa, ga.. March 11,1858. ■On and after Friday, the 12tli instant, the rate of Freight on Cotton to Savannah will he Ou cent? per hale, untillurlhor notice. mill: F. T. VTII.US. President, (fCnre the Liver.— There is an article celling throughout the country that has attained the widest celebrity ever known a-- a remedy for Liver Complaints. We have refer enre to DR. SANFORD'S INVIGORATOR. OR! LIVER REMEDY,’ that cures ah mu-:t too great to believe, were it not for the un- Uoubted evidence that accompany the tost; iho- ; It is, in truth, the greatest remedy known . for Dyspepsia, Jaundice, or a general debility : that so often bailies the skill of our mo-;t eminent physicians. Dr. Sanford has been for a longtime one of th- ; eminent physicians or New York , and it is said. » most of his cases were treated with the Invigo- f rator with such invariable success that he has been induced to oiler it as a family’ medic'.ne, and , let the world have the benefit of his discovery. | If those who are troubled with debility, head-j ache, languor, or slow, lingering fever, wid try a bottle, we think they might save physicians’: bills, and days, perhaps years, of suffering.— Ohio Siahm-ui. aul;;- :s: ( Educational.— Two yo .nv Ladies, sisters. would hke a situation as Teachers • in some Female Institution, or to engage in a j Select School in some healthy locality. They are thoroughly qualified to teach all the branch - j os of a practical or ornamental education. Refer j to the Editor of the Dispatch. aull-tf SST Ambi otypes for the Million.*—lf you want a first-rate AMBROT YPE, \ beautifully colored and put in a neat case for j Fifty Cents, go to the original Fifty Cent Gallery.' Post Office corner, opposite the Georgia Railroad Bank. Futrance to the Gallery next door to the j Post Gfik e. <l4 WM. H. CHALMERS, Proprietor, j jf°Poi’trait Painting.- ROBERT BOGGS, Artist, respectfully announces j that he has taken rooms at the Newton House, j Athens, Ga., where he will practice his proses- j sion. Ke would also receive a few pupils in the j Art f Portrait Paint :. aulO-tf fiP Newspaper foe Sale.— Finding that I bave more business on my hands than I can possibly attend to properly, and de siring to concentrate my capital upon the Job Department, 1 now offer the SorTHKR.vKP.for sale. This newspaper has not far from one thousand bona fide subscribers, exclusive of the exchange list, which embraces the principal journals of this and the adjoining States. The printing ma terials are almost altogether new, most of them having been bought within three months past; and the office, excepting those very lew which use machinery run by steam, is believed to be better fitted up with conveniences and facilities than any other in the State. The mechanical ex ecution of the sheet, however, will show* for it self the capacities of the office. The paper is doing an unusually good business, Las a fine run of advertising patronage, and, in fact, could hardly be mismanaged so as not to mak? money. The location is quite healthy, and the prospect* of Rome were never .so bright at any period in her history. A good Democrat, with some little means, has now an opportunity which very seldom occurs, to establish himself in business Address I» : K. MASQN, *ulT-dffitcl Rome. Ga. Jf?"3l r. Editor Please an nounce M. RODGERS as a suitable person for the office of Attorney Genera! of the Middle Crcnit, at,l7 A Vow. Special Itoticcs. fif' Quack i\ostruius.-- nic majority of hair washes, hair dyes, hair tonics, i Hair oils, and the numberless preparations which are now before the public under 80th extrava gant. hyperbolical and fantastic titles as we sec paraded tw show-window cards, and newspeper headings, as hair preparations, are all humbugs of the first water ; their real merit, when they i possess any, is, that they do no hnrm. Hog s lard, whale oil, lard oil, sweet oil, sceutcd and colored, make up, when in beautiful wrappers. ; and white tiiut glass bottles, the costliest charac | ter of tonics, and when thus costly, arc baptised with some tri-syllable term, and caught at by verdant young and old of both sexes. Such - is not the character ol PROFESSOR WOOD’S HAIR RESTO3ATIVE. This gentleman comes before the world wit' out any “high faluttn’’ Xilophlo forium, or any other astounding and startling catch penny term ; he s in ply advertises a Hair Restorative —what it expresses, precisely—and as a Restorative it acts. Buy Prof. Wood’s Hair Restorative, and as you value your scalp, aye, your very brains, apply nothing else : for it may be that you will get some worse substance than perfumed lard oil on your cranium. Remember, Wood’s Hair P.cstoratDe for the hair is the best article extant. aulS 2w HTCure of Diseased Diver. —Honesdalb Co., Penn., Jan. 10, 1850-—Mr. Sktji W. Fowle—Sir : You are at liberty to use the following statement for the benefit ol the af flicted : I was attacked with the Liver Complaint, which apparently brought me to the brink ol the grave. During my sickness 1 was attended by three physicians in our place, but received Ino help. I also tried the various remedies re commended fur such complaints, but they af forded me no relief. As a last resort, I was persuaded to try IPisfar’s liaham of Wild Cherry , and by using four bottles I was restored to better health than I have enjoyed before for ten years. This statement may be relied upon as strictly true. Betsey Perrin . The above certificate was given in the pre sence of Dr. A. Strong, ol Hocesdale, who is well known in his vicinity as a successful practitioner. Setii IV. Fowls & Co., 133 Wasbington-street, Boston. Propr etors. Sold by their Agents everywhere. myfil |g”The Great English Remedy.-—Sir James Clarke’s CELEBRATED FEMALE PILLS. Prepared from a prescription ofSir .T. Clarke, M. P., Physician Extraordinary o.the Queen. This invaluable medicine is unfailing in the cure of all those painful and dangerous diseases to which the female constitution is subject. It moderates all excess and removes all obstruc tions, and u speedy cure may be relied on. TO MARRIED LADIES it is peculiarly suited. It will, in a short time, bring on the monthly period with regularity. Each bottle, price One Dollar, bears the Gov ernment Stamp of Great Britain, to prevent counterfeits. These Pills • hould not be taken by females during the frst three months of Pregnancy, as they ..re sure to bring on Miscarriage, but at any other time they are safe. In all cases of Nervous and Spinal Affections, Pain in the Back and Limbs, Fatigue on slight exertion. Palpitation of the Heart. Hy sterics and Whites, these Pills will effect a cure when all other means have failed, and although a power ful do not contain iron, calomel, anti raony, or anything hurtful to the constitution. Full directions in the pamphlet around each package, which should b^carefully preserved. Sole Agent for the United States and Canada, JUB MOSES, (late I. C. Baldwin &Co.) Rochester, New York. N. B.—One Dollar and six Postage Stamps en closed to any authorized Agent, will insure a bottle containing over fifty pills, by return mail For sale by HA VILA Nil, CHICHESTER & CO. Wholesale and Retail Agents for the State o Georgia. fifol -y 6?T T !i e Great P r o Mem Solved !— W.. HORSE’S INVIGORATING COR DIAL.—The dyspeptic patient, whose stomach has lost the power of duly converting food into a life-sustaining element, is reliev ed by a single course of this extraordinary tonic. The gastric fluid re acquires its solvent power, and the crude nutriment, which was a load and a burthen to the sufferer, while his digestive organization was paralyzed and unstrung, becomes, under the wholesome revolution created in the system, the basis of activity, strength and health. The nervous sufferer, while tormented by the acute, physical agony or Neuralgia. Tic-doloreux or ordinary headache, alJlieted with vague ter rors, wakened by periodical fits, threatened with paralysis, borne down and dispirited by that terrible lassitude whicli proceeds from a lack o! nervous energy, or experiencing any other pain or disability arising from the unnatural condition of the wonderful machinery which connects ev ery member with the source of sensation, mo tion and thought—derives immediate benefit from the use of this Cordial, which at once calms, invigorates and regulates the shattered nervous organization. Females who have tried it are unanimous ir, declaring the Elixir to be the greatest boon that woman ha 3 ever received from the ha<-ds of medical men. Morse’s Invigorating Elixir has a direct, im mediate and astonishing effect upon the appetite While it renews the strength of the digestive powers it creates a desire for the solid material which is to be subjected to their action. As at appetiser it has no equal in the Pharmacopia. If long life and the vigor necessary to its en joyment are desirable, this medicine is indeed ot precious worth Its beneficial effects are not confined to either sex or to any age. The feeble girl, the ailing wife, the listless, enervated youth, the overworn man of business, the victim of nervous depres sion, the individual suffering from general de bility or from the weakness of a single organ willatl find immediateand permanent relief from the use of this incomparable renovator. To those who have a predisposition to paralysis it will prove a complete ami unfailing safe guard against that terrible mitady. There are many perhaps who have so trifled with their constitu tion that they think themselves beyond the reach of medicine. Let not even those despair. The Elixir deals wsth disease as it exists, without re* erence to the causes, and will not only remove the di-.order itself, but rebuild the broken con stitution LOS 6 OF MEMORY, confusion, giddiness, rush of blood to the head, melancholy, mental debil ity, hysteria, wretchedness, thoughts of self-de s-ruction, fear of insanity, hypochondriasis, dys pepsia, general prostration, irritability, nervous ness, inability to sleep, distaste incident to fe males, decay of the propagating functions, hy teria, monomania, vague terrors, palpitation of the heart, impotency, constipation, etc., from whatever cause arising, it is. if there is any reli ance to be placed on human testimony,absolute ly infallible. ' CAUTION.—Dr. Morse’s Invigorating Cordial has been counterfeited by some unprincipled persons. In future, all the genuine Cordial will have the proprietor’s sac simile pasted over the cork of each bottle, and the following words blown in glass : Dr. Morse’s Invigorating Cor dial C. H. RING, proprietor, N. Y. This cordial is put up highly concentrated in pint bottles : $3 per bottle ; two lor $6 ; six for sl2. C H. RING, proprietor, 192 Broadway, N York. Sold by Druggists throughout the United States, Canadas and the West Indies. Also, by HAVIUND, CHICHESTER & CO., and PLUMB k LEITNER, Augusta. febl9-3m gTGeorgia Railroad, Au gusta, July 20tb, 1858.—Double Daily Service of Mail Trains, on Main Line, will be resumed on and after SUNDAY, July 25th. jy22 GEO. YONGE, GonTSup’t. fsT* Wanted.—A House, not more than half a mile from the Post Office, with six rooms. Possession wanted first of October. Enquire at this office. jes-tf Hcto Stotrttsmmts. For Kent, A CONVENIENT DWELLING, with five route. an I all rw-fc' out tete. buildings, with i, good lot and garden at- . ' j!,| t rbed- opposite the Carolina BepH, "u ‘ylHr Reynnbi street, and first liouso bjii Ur. Carter’s. Rentiow. Apply wise. A. Uarnss , Jr., or to au26-eodC IVM. E. BARNES. AUGISTA FtITORI. A NEWLY formrfd association, wh'iili will be known as/the AUGUSTA FACTORY, having purchased jjfio Mills. Machinery, kc.., cf the Augusta Company, and ap pointed the unvrsigned their General Agent, he begs leave to jguuounce that he is now prepared, to furnish STANDARD 4-4 and 7-8 SHEETINGS and SHIRT INGB, 'ill(l 7 8 DRILLS and OSNABURGS at the lowest market figure, desiring to compete with Northern prices, and is prepared to give prompt attention to orders, determined to merit the reputation of the old Company, and to make it, the interest of Southern Merchants to pur chase these Goods at home. au2tf <Uc3m W. E. JACKSON, Gen. Ag’L Cow an«l Calf for Sale. A Fine MILCH COW, with her CALF,, is offered lor sale. Apply to au'. 6-2* COHNE & LEVY. MSPEPsirs m. NOTICE TO PATRONS AND THE PUB LIC GENERALLY. ■\rriO have now on hand one sross of VY o>« -rxFALL/nr.F. nr.m’ vrsptr TIC REMEDY /” and having effected a more complete arrangement for a supply hereafter, will be able to furnish all who may desire this valuable Remedy , None genuine without our written signature. Price two dolors — and can be sent to ary part of the country bv mail. SPEARS & HIUHT, au2s Foie Agents. Wanted, riTWO THOUSAND bushels PEACHES, i cut and dried, for which the highest market price will be paid. W. B. GRIFFIN, au2s-diclm Commission Merchant. A RNOLD’S Machine COPYING INK. J\_ —We have just received a fresh supply of Arnold’s COPYING INK. For sale by an2s THOS. RICHARDS k SON. MANUAL OF PYSCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE, containing the History. Nosol ogy, Description, Statistics, Diagnosis,Patholo y. and treatment of Insanity, with an appendix ct Cases, by John diaries Buckuell, M. D., London, and by i aniel H. Take, M. D. Just received, and for sale by au2s THOS. RICHARDS k SON. HADJI IN SYRIA, or Three Years in ■ Jerusalem, by Mrs. Sarah Barclay John eon. For sale by au2s THOS. RICHARDS -k SON. To Reilly AVERY pleasant PRICK DWEL LING, on Green street, nearly op po-ute the St . James (Methodist) Church. J;*| For particulars apply on the premises. Kffijil or to J. W. BROW N, au24-6 at S. C. Mustin’s Store. Sugar ami Coffee. ONE HUNDRED and fifty hhls. lie flnnd SUtt Ui, A. B ami C ; 25 bbls. Crushed and Powdered SUGARS ; 60 hhds. Muscovado SUGAR ; 300 bags good and p line Itlo COFFF.E : 20 bags Java COFFEE : 20 bags Laguayra COFFEE. For sale by au24 ' DANIEL H. WILCOX. Magging and Rope. mwo HUNDRED bales heavy Gunny _L CI.OTII ; 3(>o rolls patched RAGGING ; 500 coils choice bandspun ROPE : 200 coils Machine ROPE. For -ale low. by au24 DANIEL H. WILCOX. Segars and Tol'acco. ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND SE GABS, of various brands ; 200 boxes good and common TOBACCO ; 20 boxes tine TOBACCO. For sale low j au24 DANIEL 11. WILCOX. Sundries* TEN THOUSAND sacks Liverpool SALT ; 2000 lbs. nr UE STONE : 4000 lbs. COPPERAS ; 150 boxes Star CANDLES : 50 boxes SUP. CARR. SODA ; 50 boxes PEARL STARCH ; 25 bags PEPPER ; 10 bags SPICE ; 10 sacks Ashton SALT. For sale low, by au24 DANIEL H. WILCOX. BACON! BACON!— 30,000 lbs. prime Clear Bacon SIDES, cu consignment, and now in store, for sale by au24 M. W. WOODRUFF. Ribbed bacon sides.— 30,000 pounds prime Clear Ribbed Bacc a SIDES,on consignment, and now in store, for snle by au24 M. W. WOO RUFF. Bacon shoulders.— 20,000 pounds prime Bacon SHOULDERS (consignment No. 4) on consignment, and now in s tore, and for sale by au24 ‘ M. W. WOODRUFF. Family bacon hams.— 15,000 pounds Eclips’ Sugar Cured Family HAMS, of extra quality and flavor, on consign mem, in store, and for sale by au24 M. \Y. WOODRUFF. /CONSIGNMENT NO. 4. ui 10,000 \h-:. Fowel, McKwing & Co s Madison, Indiana, Family iIAMS, on consignment, and in store, for sale by au24 M. \V. WOODRUFF. W'OOD k CO.’S FAMILY LARD.— 10 barrels of the best Family LARD, m store, and for sale by au24 M. W. WOODRUFF. UNDBIES.— A cdbstant supply of CORN MEAL, from carefully selected White Corn : Unbolted GRITS troth the same ; COW PE AS, PEA MEAL. HAY, WHEAT BRAN, and FLOUR, of various brands, and all for .sale at the lowest market price, by au24 M. W. '"OODHCFF. 'VTORE LIGHT!— JLtJL 10') boxes Theim k Co’s best Adamantine CANDLES, on Consignment, and for sale iow, t > close consignment, by au24 ' M. W. WOODRUFF. Hams and SHoulders. TEN THOUSAND lbs. prime Tennes see hams and SHOULDER '-, on consign ment, ami lor sale by __ air 3 _ ANFLEY & SON. Sunday ififtQOh CABPS «c.—We have just received a large assort meot.of Sunday Fcliool Books, which we offer att very low prices. A few Sunday School Libraries of 75 volumes each, at $5 per sett. For sale by aul9 THOS. RICHARDS k SON. Gimsmitliiiia;. HAYING ljcated permanently in-Au gusta, I will resume the GUNSMITHING BUSINESS, in al! its branches, associated with Mr. W. J). BOWEN, on tho first of September next, tn the building B next below the State Bank, where we will have a full supply of Goods. 1 will be* happy to serve my old customers to the best of my ability. [aull-tSepll E. H. ROGERS. A. P. BEERS, PRODUCE AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, it his old stand , opposite the Planters* Hotel r Augusta, Ga. ITJTLL continue to give his entire at y\ teation to the sale of BACON, LARD,, FI,OUR, GRAIN, FEATHERS, DRIED FRUIT and other articles Country Produce and Manufacture. Having extensive and safe Btorage for Grain, Ha con, Ac., solicits Consignments of the same to hi- care. CASH ADVANCES made upon Produce wie* requested, and sales rendered punctually.