Newspaper Page Text
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■Itft'GHTON & KI SiiET
EDITORS.
B )U i'lTON. NlaBET AND BARNES,
1'uof i'.ietou. and Publishers.
Tebmn.
Cijc jFtlural Sanfon
Is published weekly, in the Darien Bank
Biitdiag; at TWO DOLLARS per Annual, pay
able in advance, TV\ O DOI LARS AND f IF’I Y
CENTS if nut paid within three months, and Three
Doliars il net | i.ifl bel< it ike end of the ) tar
No <ub<icrij>lion will be received Tor less than
a year, nur will my paperOe discontinued until
all arrearages are paid.
f'he paper will not be sentlo anvperson outcl
the State, mil it the subscription money is paid in
aivame. or satisfactory reference given.
\11veRTisEMKNTs conspicuously inserted at the
ns 'al rates. Those sent without a specification of
the number of insertions, will be published until
ordered out, and charged accordingly.
Sales of land and negioes, by Administrators,
Executors, or (iuardians.are required by law to be
held on the First Tuesday in the morilli between
ijie hours of ten in the forenoon and three in th
VOL,. XXIV.]
.VfLL£06£mi,£ GEORGIA, JUE1
■ 853
No. 5.
FINDLAY’S IRON WORKS,
.Macon, ticorjia.
%ITEAM ENGINES and Boilers. Machinery for
3a> {Saw Mills of every description. Iron and Brass
Castings, Millstone*. Ac Ac
R. FINDLAY, Proprietor.
May 17. I8f»3. 50 )y
M I S C E L LANEOCS.
CITY HOTEL,
BAY STREET, Snvannnh,
CONDON St J. B. FOLEY. Proprietors.
Terms. $1 50 Per Dav.
„ , ,, Unsurpassed in Incaiint:, for genllemen eitlipr on bu-
!_ ft ®: r -"°!i!L‘ l™ r .':? ,n ,be C>u '"> in I sines* or pleasure The apartment* a,lotted to ladies
which the property is situated. and families, have undergone, an en ire change, and
No!in« Ol th«'*P sal^s nmwt hp iriYpn in d nuMir* ' i . ...... . r»- «»
e sales must be given in a public ! n ow have a private entrance to the Dinner Room. ,
gazette fort* days previous to the day of sale. thus securing thpir occupants from intrusion from oth
No'ice* tor the -ale of personal property unis! ; pr parts of the building affording all the privacy of
be given in like manner, forty days previous to hump. " ’53 50 Iy
the day lit' sale.
Notices to the debtors and creditors of ancstate
must also he published forty days.
Notice that application will he made to the Court
of Ordinary, for leave to sell l.and or Negroes
most be published foi tiro months
Citations for le!tet« of Administration must be
published thirty uavs—for dismission finin Ad-
minis’ration. monthly sir months—for diviiiissioi from
Guardianship, forty days
Roles for foreclosure of mortgage must he pub
lished monthly for four months—for establishing lost
papers, for the full spare of three months—for com
pelling lilies from Executors or Administrators,
vhere bond has been given by the deceased, the
fit'l spare of thru months.
BEY T AL nOTIt E.
’I he undersigned has removed his
|f >ffiep to ROOMS over Childs Sf Cham-
I ’In rlain’s Jem try i>tore u here lie n ill he
pleased to receive the calls of all who mav require hn
services, as he is now foll> prepart d to perform all i
operations upon the tnn-t atipri ved and skillful man- I
nir. Terms cash, or paid when called for.
J. it. n UK I* It T. I
46—ly Surgeon Dentist,
VAUIETY STOVE WAREIIOTSE!
BARTLETT BENT, JR,
MANUFACTURER & DEALER IN THE MOST APPROVED i
STOVES, RANGES,
Publication* will always he continued accr rding Farmers’ Boilers. Ship Cabooses, Lias Orens. ;
to tliesp. the legal requirements, unless otherwise Charcoal and Har.lroal furnaces. Urm Fronts, S(c. ]
ordetpd.
All business of this kind w ill receive promptat
tenlion at the Fepfral. Union Office.
Letters op business must he post paip to en-
tillp tlipm to attention.
IKON CASTINGS GENERALLY.
238 Water Street. New York
May 3, 1653. 46—3m
BUSINESS CARD S.
FAIRBANKS' PLATFORM SCALES, i
L OMj KNOWN—Severely tented; Always right; i
TIik AckiiowIpffiftcJ Sianderd
CURIOUS DEVELOPMENTS IN PARIS LIFE.
Patis, May IS, 1S53.
One ofthe most remarkable facts to a stran
ger in France, is the security of life and
property which he enjoys. This immunity
is no doubt partly due to the unequalled po
lice system of the country; for the ingenui
ty of the French people in the matter of
murder and of thieving is tmtotious, when
ever they have had a chance to indulge their
talents I recollect well my astonishment
when I first arrived in Paris, and demand
ing ofthe housekeeper, when going out,
what I should do wi'h my key, teceivvdin
reply, "Leave it in the doot, or hang it up
on that nail. We have never lost anything
here, and if anything is stolen I will be re
sponsible for it.” The door opened on a
private s'airway where twenty or thiity
persons, entirely strangers, and constantly
changing, passed and repassed every min
ute to the upper part of the house. Thef’s
aie alrno-t as rare as files. Vet so latge a
city as I’a'ts and so densely crowded, and
where, from the manlier of living, so few
persons are acquainted with each other, it
would indeed be curious if there were not
infiingements of the crim rial law. The
great mass of the Fiench people are, how
ever, eminently honest and kind hearted.
This is paiticulaily tine of the poorer
classes. The promiscuous mingling of the
bouse breaking operations, while from oth- !
er members, they derive other useful infor- j
•nation They are men who have sold |
themselves, soul and body, to the devil, and
they do r,ot hesitate to shed blood, when it j
is necessary to fuither their ends. The j
river Seine, gorged as it is at all times with 1
human bodies.no doubt carries many of I
their victims to the sea.
One of the most curious operations of this
society, was the manner which it adopted |
to gain possession of the persons of females, i
An office was opened in a fa.-hionalde quar- 1
ter ofthe city for the ostensible purpose of,
making marriage contracts—a maniage j
brokerage—but in reality it was conducted
for the purp- se of making money out of j
j male applicants. Persons especially who j
have lived here and know the constitution of
French society, will seize at a glance the j
nature of the operations of this office, so |
conducted, and by such a directorship, j
Two weeks ago, a g< n leman who bad been !
thoroughly fleeced in this place, both of |
money and in a spurious article for a wife,
took such forcible measures against them,
that the police saw fit to make a descent on
the establishment, when horrors weie 1
btought to light which surpassed even the i
imagination. The names of hundreds of |
w omen were f mod regi tered on the books, i
as applicants for maniage, from eveiy rank j
in society, even as high up as t-enators’ i
and Ministers' daughters! Evidences were
tmm
lion, Tang-Tuck, is • descendant of one of
the branches gpf the ancient Chinese, or
Ming dynasty, snd that bis avowed object
is to overthrow the present Ting, or Tartar
dynasty. In fact, he is proclaimed as Em
peror, on the bulletins of his army, so that
his cause has already risen above the dig
nity of a rebellion, and assumes the aspect
of a national war. It is Chinese against
Tartar, and the people are not indifferent
to the issue. Any change can hardly be
for the worse; any kind of agitation is bet
ter than the dead stagnation of Chinese life.
Viewed in all its aspects, this revolution is
«me of the most remarkable of this revolu
tionary age.
Shanghai already feels most sensibly the
VISI i TO THE P\ RAM I D5>. j whenever the engineer, or fireman, or con-
Wm. C. Bryant, Esq., ofthe N. Y Even : ductorshall see fit. all the aforesaid pistons
ing Post is journeying in the east. From ) may be discharged at once, filing up the;
an exceedingly interesting letter publish- ! passengersbigh and d.y into the air. through 1 e fl- ect! , ,' flhe p a ,y|izMion of*trade and in
ed in that paper, we copy the following ! the top of the cars, instead of being drow- ] duslry in , he i llter ior. Business has totally
account of Mr. Bryant’s visit to the Pyra-j ned or dashed to pieces it: them. | ceased. The native merchants have buried
ro! J" . It will he necessary that the top of the 1 their silver, and the foreign residents have
“Ins almost the first business of travel-j car, instead of being covered with boards, barely enough to pay their household ex
lets in Egypt to visit the Pyramids of Ghi- should be covered with thin cloth or canvas, pen9e3> Four or five thousand junks lie
through which any human head of ordinary
thickness, or skull, penetrate with perfect
ease, i would also Miggesr. as a further
improvement that a parachute be placed di
rectly over the head of every passenger, so
that, in being fired up through the top into
zeh, and we made it ours: but do suppose
that l am going to weary you with a descrip
tion of them. We set out «in one of the
glcuious winter days of Egypt, with a one-
eyed drogomau at the head of out little train
brandishing a lung stick, and attbed in
costume, which though considerably the ! the atmosphere, lie will find himself provi-
worse for wear, was very showy at a little ded with one of those convenient little arti-
distance. Three brown Arab boys in blue cles.usedby all balloonists, for discending
shirts, and close fitting dirty white caps, : to the ground from any height at pleasure," |
came trotting and screaming after us to urge I “ __ |XT a
on the donkeys we rode, For two or three CHINA,
miles we kept along the Nile, among trees ! The clearest, as well as one of the latest,
and Gardens, and then crossed to the west i accounts which we have seen cf the state
bank in a boar, manned by three men. one things in China, is found in the follow- |
of whom, a fine looking Arab, in single gar big letter from Bayard Taylor, esq . the ;
in the river, but scarcely a pound of lea
or a yard of silk is brought in. Tho Eng
lish war steamers Hermes and Salamander
and the btig Lily are here, and the French
war steamer Cassini, Sir George Bonham
is on board the Hermes, and the report to
day is, that he will leave immediaely for
Ningpo. The movements of the Susque
hanna are uncertain, but it is rumored that
she will convey Col, Marshall up the Q,ang-
tse-Kiang as far as the imperial camp, in
order to confer with Seu, the imperial com
missioner. She excites great astonishment
here among the natives, being much the
largest steamer that ever ascended the
Woo-sung, and the American residents re
joice to see their country so formidably
represented.
The mail is about to close. I will omit
no opportunity of keeping you infotmed of
the progress of events in this part of the
Chinese empire.
FREEMAN A REASON
M $.2113 0 ft®!!?© 3T 2 ®1F
•V® 12 Cotton .Irentir, .Vlarott, f.n.
EHDIN j Pa Mien and Families furnished
sf M with ptaifi and ornamental Uakes at short
notice and on reasonable terms, for cash.
CHAS. H FISK EM AN. RICH*!* A. BENSON
May 17 tb53 50 Jy
Railroad, Hay, Coal, and Farmers’ SCALES, set j
in any part of the country, at short notice.
Agt n/s— Phit.brick <Vr Bell, Savannah. Georgia. j
Fairbanks cV Co , SO YY T aler Street, New York. i
May 3. 1853. 48—3.n ;
SADDLERS AND COACH MAKERS
GOODS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
F. II. PI/ATT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Tiottpril/e, Lowndes County, Ga.
June. 7, 1653. 1 — ly
TIIOMA8 7IA« KENZIE A SONS,
No 222. Baltimore Street. BALTIMORE, j
j MPORTERS and Dt-alt-ra in Saddlery. Hardware, \
land Coach Goads—offer tu Sniuliern Dealers goods i
! in dieir line, Mich as Stirrups. Bridle Bits. Konkins, j
Buck-kins, Buckles ol all surls, Well’s patent l.eaih j
er. Axles. Springs l>* lit Fellows. Stalls, Castings. of
all sorts: Tacks Saddlers sewing Silk Serges, patent :
sexes in an unlawful way, seems not to ex- j brought tu light that almost every applicant, ;
ert any influence on their murals in other ] nr at least all such as were attiactive, had |
respects, as it dues in our mutiny. It is j become the victims of the band, instead of I
only at the (daces where foreigners deal that finding a husband and that in some in-;
dishonesty is found to prevail to any extent, j stances private, and of course false marri- i
Go always to stores and other places of ages, bad been resulted to. to effect the ob- |
business patronized by French people only, ject. The whole affair, thus managed, by j
and one will lately make a bad batgain. j a body of twelve men, became as near a!
French policemen generally are no more i self-keeping secet as any secret can be.— !
liberally endowed with detective acuteness : A large box full of letters were found, I
than policemen of other mutinies. In fact, I principally from fernaies, containing appli- !
the great body of the guaid of Tatis, being ! cations for husbands, lovers, or occasional 1
deiived from the cnn.-ciiption and by vol- ; friends, and with the true frankness of
THE COOLIES IN CUBA.
The Diari de le Mmina reports a con-
arant influil of the Orientals into Cuba,
where all the immigrants find immediate
employment. The contractors are suppor-
J. B. CAMP,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Campbei.i.ton, Ga
UliSU\ HMHU1CH
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
JACA'SHN. BUTTS On Ga
J. H. HILLEH,
( Corner St. Julian St. and Mori it ></r.J
42—1 y SAVANNAH. GA.
I Canvais. Ulotl
Oil and Brussel- < :treeling,
; Carriage Bolts niirf Screws, ol all sizes In short, ev-
' cry thing npidrrt by a Saddler. Coach Maker, and
| llninr-ss Makeis.
Being din ct Import) rs. with amide means, we can |
! offer to Southern boxers as good GOODS, at as low
prices, and on as good teim- lo pnnr'iia) costoiueis,
as any oilier similar House in n.e I oiled State-. (lr- i
ders promptlv attended to TKY US. and addiess
THOMAS MACKENZIK *V SONS.
222 Baltimore Street. Baltimore. !
! April 26. 1853. 47—3ui
CHAS. G. CAMPBELL,
AUoviWNj aV Law,
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
Office next door above Masonic Halt.
O F
CARPETS
E V E R Y D K S C It 1 P T I O N
FOR SALE BY
GREENWAY. BROTHER* Co.,
10 Barclay Street and 24 Park Place, New York.
Apii!26. 1S53 47—3m
untceis, never selected, and poorly paiil, is
composed of men of the smallest capacity,
fit only for the very mechanical kind of duly
which lliev ate called upon to petfurm.
All the principal at rests in I aiis are made
through the agency of two bodies of men,
unknown to the public by any badge or pub
lie mnduc, never doing more than trac
ing out the suspected person, and then
oidering him arrested by the guard.—
It is these secret bodies which form the
detective police, searches fm offenders, ;
again-t the criminal law- ; while ’heother, ■
the secret police, dogs the steps from day t<> !
dav "f po itical offenders. 1 hese two bod- !
ies of men are intelligent, speak, in many
languages, and ate to he ;
French women,salting forth their charms,
their faults and their condition, A well
known novelist has sec ured the whole hatch.
1 have seen these letters. ai d if they are
a fair specimen of th ; whole, their publi
cation would give in the world the most
complete exposition of the subterranean cur-
rerir of human nature that has yet appear
ed. One of them says to t he‘director’ that
she i* twenty two yeatsnf age, tall, hand,
some, a'd terribly in need of money; she
rolls him (c nfideritially) that she has had
thtee ’friends’ in her life, hut can well pass
fm never having had any; that if he will find
her an oid or a young fool, (though she
hints the old ones are the greatest fools,)
who can advance one hundred to begin with,
love and fidelity
t T* ILL nttetid promptly to alt business entrusted
to his cure. IV.riit iilar attention paid to col
lecting.
Miflt'dpeville. F« b. 22.1^53 38—t!
Ssivmiiisih Grocery E^tiiblisliinciil.
it. 3. S0L0H05S,
G t KNF.RAL Dealer, in all .lescripii.-i.s of G RO
r CURIES, WINKS. LIQUORS. &c
[yl// Ordets trill meet tntli prompt attention^
instances, severa
found in all public places, unknown to the j she is ready to put he
persons with whom they converse. Among j against the St:ike, &c.
a people so bank as the French, these j An American family, for some time res-
bodies pet form a useful labor to the State. idem in Paris, has been the victim of the
But there is a romance in the heart of ; machinations «>f this club in the most afllic-
French society, exhibiting itself in every , (mg manner in which a familv can be vis-
admi-
p into
J. S. BOYNTON,
iUVoviuy at Law,
MONTI CELLO, GEO.,
NWY/ ILL piadtice hi the. Ocniulgee Circuit, and
'a 4 in Jackson and McDonough ol the Flint
( ircuit.
Jan. I.t. K-53.
Wfl. A. LOFTON,
A TTOI.NE Y A T LA W,
MONTICELI.O, Ga
January 25. 1853. 24—Jy
■ 57 Broughton 8i Next to N !J * H We
rnah. April 13. 1153 46-
■iy
T
5-ly
BOY’S CLOTHING DEPOT!
A UK snlscriliers have the most extensive and va
ried us-orlinent of CLOTHING for BOYS Iro:n
4 to 16. ever ntiered for sale in the Union. Orders lor
Gentlemen’s Clothing filled at the shortest notice.—
Persons purchasing Clothing at this Establishment,
have the privilege of changine them if they do not
suit F. A HOYT A Bid,
S W Cor ol Chestnut and IPth Sts.,
45— ly PHILADELPHIA-
1 IL J OiY & WAUiFR,
FACTORS AND
C OMMISSiON MEKCHANTS
No. Tl.Uii) Snoot.
SAVANNAH, Ga.
TemiEK Iht ir services to their friends and the pub
lie generally, in the sale ol CO'l TUN and other Pro
duce. and in hiring Uidirsfor Bagging. Copt and oili
er supplies 'I h»y «ill gixe their S imc i Personal
Attestn>» to all BL S1M-.8S that may he cninimt-
t. d tn llieir care—and no pains will he spired lo give
general satislaetion.
K. 1„ Fulton. J. II. W alker.
Savannah. Oct. 4,1652. 18—tf
A r
LAW! LAW!! LAW’!!!
NAl.YilS and Forms, by Howell Cobb.
Georgia Reports, “ T. K. R. Cobb
Kelley’s Reports,
Hotchkiss do
School and Miscellaneous Books.
For sale by E. J WHITE.
Milledgeville, April 5, 1853. 44—ly
acrfii which they petfurm. a vein "f
ration for exciting deeds tunning de
the French character, which, when directed
by intelligence and ambition. leads them
into the most startling adventures and ex
citing conspiracies. The novelist who so
often seeks Fiench Society for exciting in
cidents. has no ne< d to exetcise the imagin
ation; lo Alexandre Dumas, who knows in
timately French
them is no need
citing tableaux than ihe teal life occurren
ces of which he is cognizant: his iinagina
lion need not be called into requisition,
neither is it; the everyday incidents ..f life
in the deep undeicurrent of the metropolis
furnish him the patallels i f the personages
and his plots. Noveli-ts are beginning to
understand, as more than one remarkable
instance has recently proved, that their pro
ited. The details, which sooner oi later
must by tlm force of circumstances become
public, will expose one ol the most thrlling,
i and at ihe same time atrocious romances in
i real life, xhich ha-' ever seen ihe light. It
, is hoped i hat this band is about to 'be bro-
| ken iip; but in a city like this, it can only
give p'acif) to others of a similar kind.
Four murders have been lately commit-
m this city, near
which have exci
ted a deep intere.-t fiorn the singular cir
cum-tance s attending them. They were all
executed on the public highway, on men
walking iilong the road.and by means of a
hatchet, i >f the same unifiu m size, apparent
ly. Notie of the men were robbed, and all
of them were acquaintances, which has giv
en rise to all sorts of surmises to the cause
f the d'ied. Tliev were murdered at dif-
men! of coarse while linen, handler! the sai! 1 ,,,e corresponding editor of ihe New York
and his two companions the oars As they Tribune:
rowed, one sang, 'God is great ’ to which the ; Suit ess of the Rebels—Nankin besieged and
other responded,'God give me strength,’ j probably taken—Son-Chow threatened. Spe.
Arriving on the other side, we rode through Shanghai. China, Monday, Mar. 2S, 1S53 j
a village where the dogs baikedat us fierce- j 1 reached here last evening in the United !
ly from the tops of the mud-cottages, ! States et-eam fiigate Susquehanna, and avail ;
and the dirty inhabitants was -quailing j myself of a chance which offers to-day of;
by the way, they clamored for Bauhskish, j despatching a letter to Hong-Kong in time
as we appeared, thechiidien running after fir the next mail thence to England,
us. i All the rumors which I mentioned in my -
We passed through a palm grove where j last letter from Hong Kong are confirmed. ;
lurtle doves were flying about, and the hoe- j The rebels have advanced upon Nankin. ; ted and encouraged in the business of trans
poe, a bird of beautiful speckled plumage, j as was anticipated, and that capito] is, in ; portation by the British government,
descended in search of its food close to our all probability, in their hands at this mo- \ Whatever may be the design of the Span-
path, and then struck out upon our fields I ment. It is quite impossible to obtain a j s h authorities in permitting ir, there is no
where the peasant women and children tellable account of their progress, as the
were watching their camels and buffaloes, , Chinese proclamations invariably disguise
tethered and grazing among tho grass and > the truth. The actions of the authorities
nervahelvagrass. Wecamo at length to I are so thoroughly at variance with their
where an ancient canal, now a broad hoi-j public declarations, tha' we are compelled
low with a little water in it, woundalong not to reject the latter entirely. On the other
far from the western edge of the fertile conn- , hand, the rumors afloat change with eve'y
trv. A score of Arabs, Bedouins from a hour. I can only give you what is said on
neghboring village, came about us, prepared ; both sides, without vouching for the cor-
to carry us ovei on rheir shoulders. I could ; redness of any statement, except that of
not but admite the fine figure of these men, ; Nankin being Besieged and sorely pressed,
with their mu-cular, shapely limbs, uniting j if imt already taken.
strength with lightness, and their sinking : The authorities of this place at first
countenances. A sculptor could not find a i denied that the rebels had advanced upon
better model, as it seemed to me. for the | the imperial city. Afterward, they admit
ted that a rebel army of6,000 men was en
camped before the walls Then they an
nounced a victory of the imperial troops, in
xxhich nine thousand of the enemy were |
slain. Then a second victory, in which
twelve thousand were slain; and, finally, a
third victory, with a slaughter of twenty
thousand rebels. They now privately ad - j
mil that the rebel forces amount to 60,000;
but the popular rumor is that they are 200,- j
000 strong. The Taou-Ty of Shanghai has ;
purchased in all haste an English schooner,
to send provisions to the beleaguered im
perfection of the human form. Throwing
off his upper garments, and fastening their
lower ones cmisidi rably above the waist,two
of these strapping fellows lifted me up by
the leg-j, while l supported myself by the
hands «-n their shoulders, and tn this way
waded with us through the mud and water.
The rest were carried over in the sameman-
ner.as were a gentleman and lady who had
come up with us jus’, as we weie about to
cross.
We were soon on the bare sands ascend
ing gradually ro the range of rocks skirting
the desert, ieu ihe brow of which the Pyra-| perialisfs, and an American bargue. the'
sovie'y to its last fibre, | ted about fifteen miles ft
o seatch further for ex the Pal -ce. of Versailles
FLOY
M$LC5@I£ ? titfiSQirjpSU
T. A. GOODWIN. Proprietor.
A. B.IIAKT WELL. Superintendent.
This well known mnl (inpnDr Hotel has been
thoroughly rr paired, and is now open, and super lily
furnished for the rerepiion of Boarders and ihe
Travelling Community- The Proprietor and his
As-istants will spare no pains to make this House
one of the be-l Hotels in the Stale.
A B HARTWELL. H C. CUNNINGHAM.
and S. LANIER will he happy to receive and wel
come their o!<! friends and acquaintances, nod will
use their utmost efforts lo make them comfortable
durinp their stay.
Macon, August 24, 1652. 12tf
S> SIOFStt
o (2rfi>@;
duciiiiris meet with much mure sympathy, ; feient periods within the last twu months,
and are consequently much more popular,: Aftev the second murder, a strange man
wasart e-ted in the mad, not far from where
thernuidet was committed, and or.Iy an
J D. Brown Thus. Griffin
liUOUA aY CiRlFFlN,
.lltoincys at Law and (.cncrai
l.and Agents.
AUS'I IN 11 1 Y, TEXAS.
AX 7 ILL attend to the collection of claims against
V T Ihe Male of Texas lor land and money Also
being wr!l acquainted with ihe public domain of the
State, they w ol locate iand certificates, and hate the
land surveyed and patented One ofthe firm will al
ways be Ionnd at ibeir office in Aii-tm.
the mote faithfully they deal with rh.iiiga of
the human heait. The peculiar constitu
tion of Fiench society as it exists in Palis.
as well as the manner in which the people
live, aids the prosecution of all such en-
terpri-es, no matter how bold, as are based
on the passions and the habits ofthe people.
hour after its commission, with a bloody
lia'chetin bis band, which exactly corre
sponded in size to the cuts in the tlie mur
dered man’s skull. Other circumstances
led this authorities lo believe confidently
Theieist.o public opinion to exert;, -’’ e a ; th a i R p W as the gttilty man. He positively
healthy restraining influence on a man s j refuafld III() continues to refu-e to say one
conduct, because it is all a vast wilderness ]
mtinues It
wind concerning the matter.
He will not
of strangers, completely independent the . ye p j g tiame> p,is residence, or explain
cl. .i i ,o <»anual, 1 - ...
WllHK. Uuder-igncd, resident at Milledgeville,
having formed, liur the purposes of such an
Ati-ncv, a temporary connection with the above firm
x\ ill give any inlorinalion, and prepare and lorwnrd
ail papers neces.-ary for the perieefon of claim*.
Ail persons desimos ol ei.gag ng their seixictsare
requested to call upon him.
( HAS. G CAMPBELL, Att'y at Law.
Milledgeville. April26. lo53. 47
M LANIER
MACON.
ALEX. SCOTT.
Macon, April 12. 1833.
HOUSE.
GA.
\VM DIBBLE.
45—ly
one of the other; there is no ,,rt | wltat. I,e W asi doing wiiti the hatchet, while
eaves-droppers. no personal surveillance ex -
eicised over tiny man by any body, unless j
he be a suspected criminal or politician.
Nowhere in the world can a man enjoy so
r>? FIRE PROOF WARE HOUSE
d ‘ | THE undersigned having associated .Mr.
signed
& I Ovid G. Sparks with him in business—
| Continues to transact the
Warehouse ami l ommission Business.
I n.irr ihe name «mi 8lvle ol IJ-A K I) LM AN Ac
H’AKKS The*r undivided attention will to- given
to all business committed lo their charge. The long
experience of the undersigned a-a tolion aeller, ad-
deit I,, |ijs- de-ire to piease as xxell as to fgithluily serve
llin-e who may Patronize tin new film gives no him
the hope that the liberal patronage lieri-tolore given to
Hardeman * Hamilton, will be continued lo Har-
dexian \ Starks. They w ill risk nothing, either in
pmrhasiiig or by advancing on t otton, ;.s they have
determined In confine themselves to tinsiness with
Piiimers. and to ttiem liheral advances w ill lie made
on t'oiion in sioi„ Family Supplies with Bagging
anil hope., will tu; l.lrinslied our triends ai llie lowest
Macon prices THO?. HARDEMAN.
August 17. 1?52. ]j jy #
LAND FOR SALE.
THE following Lots of Land, to-wil:
No. 71. 10th dist originally Early now Baker,
*• 412. 7th “ •’ Appling,
“ 145, 4th ‘
VV. B. W. DENT.
Newnan, Coweta conntv. Ga.
Oclnhpr 10. 1652 20—if
FOR SALE.
200,000 lbs- prime Bacon.
2tMt Bis. Laid.
100 do Apples.
REYNOLDS * LOFTON.
Coimnis-ion Merchants,
Atlanta. Ga . 1853. 41—ly
AUCTION AND
Ehasmoesc
By Jt >HN' L. HUSON. (late ol Rome Ga.)
Yf WILL sell rpeolarly every Thursday
4l day at 11 o’clo
J. K
TREISH'H A T. IIOFiHANff,
2CCT ICixZiSS.
p=--. HESl’KCTH’LLY inlcrm the
nd Sattir-
k A M . and oi. Wednesday
him! Friday ns r ir* i nnnection with my Auction
Busnies.s. I have t.ikcn chiir^e of the large and com-
modiotH Brick Ware Mouse near the Depot, where
all kinds of Produce can be stowed with perfect
safety, as it is secure from fire I wi!l attend tn fill
ing all orders for produce at the lowest Market prices,
and keep tny friends posted in regard to ihe market* a
at all times, if desired. Yoiir patronage is kindly so
licited.
Marketst. Chattanooga. Tenn., 'lay 7. 1853. 49 tf
much personal liberty, be s.» entirely fiee
from curious, ami betraying tor.gups. as in
Paris, so long as he keeps cleat fiom the
suspicions just mentioned; His immunity
is perfect.
A cettain club of a most dangemus char
acter has been known to exist in Paiis tor
some time past, but which owing to the char
acter of the men composing its members,
has managed to elude artest. T his society
has exi.-ted for many yea is, and if the truth
of certain revelations recently made can be
lelied on, its unpublished deeds of horrors
and wicked ingenuity would amply fill a
volume as startling as the memorable me
moirs of Vidocq. If numbers twelve mem-
bets, to which it is limited, the club wisely
supposing that any greater number of
Frenchmen in possession of their secret
would much weaken the security of the
whole. It is composed of men who move
in the very first tanks of society, and who
ate distinguished for their ability. Per
sons are watched, scrutinized, and kept in
training for months an.) years, by this club,
unknown to themselves, in older to have
suitable candidate for admis-ioti when a
the Gentle* j
men of Milledgeville imd vicinity, that they
bine ink' n Ihe 6hop Imply occupied by Mr.
ID in hart and me now prepared to Man- 1
ufneinie BOOTS ill the nio-l la-hinnahle i
*1} le. of the best materials, and xxmranl a i One third of
good fit A liberal patronage is solic
ited U'ork executed with di-paich.
HFPA'RING of all kinds done up
at siior-i notice Just give ns a trial, and xve feel con
fident of your pnlrom-ge
Terms liberal (Shop next door to C. H. Wright's
Grocery Store J
Milledgeville. May 10, 1853. 4!>—ly
notice.
HE Subscriber at IWilledgex i!|p Georgia, offers
irniiE Snbf
for Sale the following LOW COUNTRY
LANDS TO-WIT
jOt N o. 304. 15th Dist .Decatur County.
he maintains ihe most haughty and self con
fident air.
Tuesday is market day in Versailles,
wh en two or three thousand persons from
thii country around collect in the market
palaces. The judge ordered the prisoner to
be: ituned. and to be led by two cotds in the
midst of an escort of gend-armes. around all
the rr.at ket places, m the fit st market day
p.fier his confinement, to 9ee if any one
would recognise him. The prisoner, du
ring the two horns which was occupied in
this march, carried a high head matched
with a fii'iri step, appeared to respire the
free air with gteat pleasure, and th ew on
the immense crowd that followed him
glances ol sarcasm and disdain.
While passing along the avenue Saint
Cloud, before the booths of some mounte
bank-, travelling jugglers, Hercules, &c.,
suddenly a little girl belonging to ihe troupe
ctied out. pointing her finger to the prison
er, ''Alois muman, e'ist M —. qni venait
si sourttd ehez nous!" ('But mother, that’s
Mr. , who comes so often to our house!’)
The old gipsev whom the child addressed
as mother, turned fiercely around, and
Ettuck her such a powerful blow on the
side of the head as to knock her down. A
suspicion at once arose in the orowd, and
the fact xvas immediately earned to the
l judge, who ordered the xvln.le houpe of
mids are placed. Of course, we climbed to.the
top ofthe great pyramid. ‘If vou no go up
what for you come to pyramids’asked one
of the Arabs, w ho spoke a little English, and
the question seeming to ine a very pertinent
otto. From the summit of this vast pile of
hewn stones, which would coverall Wash
ington Patk with its base, we looked over
the green Delta, stretching forth, with datk
groves spotting it with hro id shadows of
clouds. To the West of us was the Libian
desert, a waste of rocky hill tops anil sandy
hollows, to the Not th rose the summits of
pyramid after pyramid, and Eastward
lay Cario, below the pinacles of the
Mosque of Mehemit Ali, and beyond
w hich gleams the white edge of another^ de
sert.
As I stood amidst the pyramids, where all
around, the skirts of the desert are one vast
cemetery, full of tombs and mummy pits,and
remains of pyramids of small size, I could
Science, hes been chartered by Sau-qua, a
native merchant, to carry stores to Chin-
Iveang-f.io, near Nanking, which is sup- .
posed to be still in possession of the gov
ernment troops. The English consul—act
ing, as is supposed, under the advice of Sir
George Bonham—refused to permit the
the schooner to be sold to the Chinese au-
dntiht that the anti-slavery feeling of Eng
land is profoundly interested in the meas
ure, and that hope is indulged of a gradual
substitution of hired for involunfaty servi
tude. In these hopes we must confess our
own participation a year ago. The devel
opments of a year have, however, modifi
ed our trust considerably; and we shall be
surprised if the hi-tory of the coolies prove
not. three years hence, as lamentable as
that ofthe emancipados. The circumstan
ces of their apprenticeship will not be es
sentially different—eight years of labor,
where the interest ofthe master is to extort
the large-t amount of labor possible within
the period, regardless of the health and
longevity ofthe setf. None of the cousin
derations which prompt tenderness towards
the slave, and moderation in the assign
ment of tasks, act in favor of the coolie.
He may exert his less durable energies to
the top of their bent without obtaining the
least indulgence. The beneficent laws of
Spain, inoperative as they are for the pro
tection nf the slave, do not extend to the
coolie, whose eight dollars a month would
enable him to apply them to some practical
purpose. There is. indeed, no earthly rea
son to anticipate a different treatment in-
thecase ofthe apprenticed Asatic than in
that of the apprenticed African, There is
nothing in the Spanish character to pledge
ir, nothing in the laws to forbid it; nothing
in the interests of the parties to prevent it.
The fact is to be regretted, because the re
sult of the Otiental expeiiment upon the
culture ol cane and tobacco in Cuba must
thorities; a palpable blunder, which was affect more er less sensibly the industrial
ovetcome by selling her to an American
merchant, who immediately sold her to San-
qua. The Ametican representatives intend
to presetve the strictest neutrality in the
matter, hut the English seem inclined to !
overstep the matk, and indirectly encour
age the revolution. Nevertheless, the last
British mail steamer from Hong-Kong, the
Ganges, brought up one hundred cannon,'
which were immediately purchased by the
Taou-Ty, i f his agents The sympathies
ofthe foreign merchants here appear to bo
with the insurgents, who are everywhere
interests of the south. Failure cannot Ire
otherwise than prejudical.—N. V. Times.
not but wonder that there should ever have I popular among the natives.
arisen any doubt as to the design of those irn
mpnse structures. They were meant as
monuments of the dead, and. in my opinion,
nothing more. They are the same in shape
as some of the smaller monuments, and no
more exceed them in size than the kings to
whose bones they were erected, excelled in
This popalarity no doubt gives rnther too
favorable a color to the rumors which reach
us. It has been reported several times that
Nanking has already fallen. One account
states that the besiegers undermintd the
wall x in seven places, and effected an en-
The imperial Viceroy
Marriage and Debts—Formerly a man
who married a wife became responsable
for all her debts and of ten fould his ‘‘re
sponsibilities” (not alxvays “little” ones)
considerably extended by wedlock, even
during the honeymoon. In 1S4S our le
gislature passed an act exempting the pro
perty of a wife from execution to satisfy
her husband’s ante nuptial debts, though all
the husband’s property waa still hidden for
the debts contracted by the wife during her
previous maiden or wido whood. Our
present legislature has redressed the ine
quality hy enacting that the husband shall
no longer be respousable for his wife’s ante
nuptial debts. Thus one obstacle to mat
rimony on the part of prudent bachelors is
removed; and if the next legislatuie will
trance into the city.
power and tiches the most distinguished of { committed suicide in despair, and all the enact that matrimony shall henceforth be
their subjects. | troops fell into the hands ofthe victors, held a full liquidation of all the outstanding
A day oi two after wards we visited the ! Another report is that the imperial troops, ; de bts of both husband and wife, we shall
pyramids of Sakkara, lying to the north of
those of Ghizeh. We had a letter to M. Ma
rietta, who is here, employed by the French
Government making excavations among the
tombs and other remains of the ancient cem
etery of Memphis. He received us very
politely, and ordered the tomb of Apis to lie
lighted up (or us. We descended into the
rock by an inclined passage leading from a
portal graven with numerous hieroglyphics.
A gallery of about four hundred feet in
length lay before us, regularly atched over
sorely pressed, shut up in the city, without
sufficient provisions, had themselves broken j
out into open rebellion, while the entire
fleet ol transports and war-junks on the ;
Yang-tse-Kiang, conveying supplies and |
reinforcements, had been cap'uted by the
rebels We are in hourly expectation of I liberal divorce law, allowing people to un«
hearing that the great city of Son Chow, on ; marry themselves at pleasure, without re
doubtless have an increase of marriagn to
the signal advantage of popular clergymen
and other practitioners of the gentle art
of tying silken noo?e9. tending perhaps to
the purification rif public morals and the in
crease of human happiness. Then add a
the imperial canal, the capitul of the silk-
growing distiirt, has been invested. Soo-
Chow is only fifty miles from this place, and
the consequence of its capture would prob-
head, with chambers, at intervals, on each j ably be a march hitherward. The inhabi- ;
side of the gallery. Each of these chambers j lants of the city ate in the greatest alarm, |
contained its sarcophagus of black or gray ; an( ! all business, except the mere local com !
granite exquisitely polished, about twelre ' merce in the necessaries of life, is at an end. j
feet it: length, ten in height and seven in I I 16 principal merchants have removed and j
width. They were covered with hiero- j secreted their money and stores, and the j
gylyphic characters. On each lay a massive province, which i9 very populous, will;
lid ofthe same materiai, weighing tons, soon feel keenly the cessation ofthe trade.
marry themselves at pleasure,
vivingthe deles that had been nullified by
marriage, and we shall doubtless have a
brisk business done in marrying and un-
marrying for the next few years—N. Y.
Tribune,
same materiai, wetghin
which had been shoved a little aside by iron
levers, the marks of which are yet visible,
giving us an opportunity ofh>oking into tbe
interior. It was empty. ‘This,’ said Ma
rietta, ‘was done by the Persians, by the
order of the King Carnbyses, to show
bis contempt for (he worship of the Egyp
tians.’
of
in which depends the very existence
thousands of the laboring poor.
However, the course of the rebels, wher
ever t hey have been victorious, has hither-!
to been most polite and humane. The peo- j
pie have not been disturbed in their era- j
ployments, oiivate property has been res- i
pected, and the internal commerce inlet-1
One of the great sarcophagi was found • with as little as possible. Only against
member dies. All the members ate neces
sarily men of the fiist order of intellect, for
none others are admitted, some of them t'fveH.ng players thrown into prison
are already very wealthy, and havesucced- where lhe y > et rema ’ n ' v “hout the devel-
ed in gaining titles opment of any new fact as far as they are
concerned. But the most bewildering part
One third of ‘
ALLEN’S
L1S1HEHT,
L. J U ill l h. Millerigpviile. Ga . lias just receive
a lot nf Alim's Indian Liniment—for the relief and
cure iff Rheumatism. Sprains. Ijimpue**. Stiffness
Joints. Soreness of muscles. Bums Scalds A c.
This preparation, is superior to any Liniment
known. Prepared hy S^ J Dickinson. Albany Ga.,
Mav 2.1. 1653.
do
Baker
do
Dooly
do
do
Early
Clinch
Randolph
JAMES S. GHOLSTON
48—8m
280, i4th
104. 1st
60. 10th
92. 6th
221 J 4 ill
168. I3ih
275 27th
70. Kith
54. 4th
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
#2000.
FI HE Subscriber is authorized, to purchase all the
0TI
J ^ land that he can. in the cuunues of Baker,
Thomas. Decatur. Irwin. Dooly and eveiy other
county, in ^onlh and West Georpia All persons
owning loxv Comity Lands, can sell tliPin to me at
& nd sold by nearly ail Druggists and Merchants in j fair prices, for the Cash. Address me at Griffin. Ga
this and the adjoining States. j VV. R.. MOSELEY.
Price 5U cents per bolfle. 10—1 v ! June 20. 1853.
3—tf
gaming
The objects of this society are, political
preferment, the amassing of wealth, and se
duction. They are all men who move in
tbe fust circles, are one or more present at
every gay assembly in the capital, belong to
every club or coterie of importance, have
all the information and all the appliances
necessary to place themselves at once in
connection with any person or persons
whom they wislt to victimize, and they al
ways play into each other’s hands and then
divide the spoils equally. Each member
i ofthe drama is, that since this event the
I two other murders have been committed.
I and apparently by the very same hatchet!
So tlie matter tests at present.
Infallible Recipefor Colds.—In the sea
son ofcolds and coughs, the following re
cipe from the Northern Farmer will be of
some benefit to the afflicted. The Farmer
says:
which had escaped the general desecration.
M. Mariette had ordered it to be opened,
and its contents were lying on the lid when
I saw it. There were the bones of the sa
cred bu 11 of the ancient Egyptians, the Apis
for which the tomb was designed. Every
one of these enormous chests of stone had
formerly contained similar remains, which
thousands of years since, haJ been drag
ged forth, and scattered, and tramp
led upon by a foreign soldiery from the
north.
Novel and Great Invention.—A corres
pondent, says the Boston Bee, sends the fol
lowing account of a safety car, the result of
his ingenuity, which is published for the ap
proval of the public.
“The seats on which the passengers sil
are to rest on pistons, which pistons are to
_ It w as prescribed for us when we were
belongs to a different profession in life, in j auffenng bom a cough, audit seemed as if play into cylinders, which cylinders ate to
order to further the designs. From the ' vve vv ® re on l ^ ie of consumption, no ()e c i, ar g ed w j,h gunpowder, which gun-
and minister, they become I cessation or rest, day or night. We took j »p owder j s { 0 be touched off with percussion
it and were cured in three days:
lawyer, doctor
possed of secrets by which they levy black
mail: from bankers and merchants they
keep cognizant of the condition of certain
persons whom they may wish to pick, eith
er by stock-jobbing, gambling, forging, or
Recipe.— One table spoonful of molasses, I
two tea spoonfuls castor oil, one do. pare- j
gone, one do. spirits camphor, mix and |
take oftoo. !
caps and hammers, which caps and ham
mers are to be all united by rods, which
rods are to be so connected to the engine
aud cars, that whenever any collision, ob
stacle, switch, or drawbridge occurs, or
the Tartar mandarins and their defenders
have the insurgents adopted a sanguinary
course. It is rumored that, if successful,
they will observe a most liberal policy to
wards f. reigners. but this can hardly be
more than surmise. Another report says
that the leader. Ting Tuk-Whang, has
some knowledge of English. It is not
doubted that two of his generals must have
been pupils of the late Missionary Gutzilaff
—as is evident from certain exptessions
used in their “religious proclamation,” in
which they openly avow the doctrines of
Christianity.
In some quarters the rebels are accused
of murdering the priests, and destroying the
ancestral tombs and temples of the Chi
nese. This is believed to be incorrect,
except in one nr two instances, where they
have done so iri tetaliation of similar out
rages on the part of the imperial command
ers. It is cert ain, however, that they des
troy all the Buddhist temples in their march,
and they are said to have anihilated a col
lege of 200 priests in a city in the vicinity
of Nankin.
I do not remember whether I have al
ready stated that the leader of the revolt*-
Horrible Developments.—A most terrible
circumstance lias been recently brought to
light in Cincinnati.
A few days sienre a stranger arrived in
this city aud took lodgings at the William
Tell, a well known restaurant on Fifth
street, kept by a man of the name of Dis-
crn9. During the night the cook of the es
tablishment, either trom imaginary offence
or from the hope oi lucre, procured a hatch
et and going to where the stranger was ly
ing, struck him a blow with the sharp edge
across the neck, nearly dissevering the head
from the body. Horiified with what he had
done, and not knowing how to conceal from
the world the knowledge of this bloody act,
he hit upon the expedient of cutting the
body up into pieces, and, dreadful to relate,
actually made soup of the fragments, which
was served up to the customers? The cook,
as yet, has not been arrested.
Since writing the above, our reportor has
ascertained the murdered individual’s name
to beC. Turile, and that he has a large fam
ily some where in the Atlantic ocean. The
assaa>sin, we learn from the local paper*, is
supposed also tobe the murderer of W,
Chuck. The Sheriff ’s posse is after him.—
Cleveland Plaindeoler.
A Simple Invaluable Cough Remtdy.—
A friend gives us the following recipe fora
very common complaint in our midst, which
he and many others have tried and found a
certain cure for coughs: Take a handful
of green, or three papers of dry hourhound,
and steep it in a quart of water, to a strong
tea; remove the dregs; boil down tu a pint,
then add a tia-cup-full each ol brown sugar
and honey, a table-spoonful each of laid and
tar, and boil the whole toe candy. Dose,
a small piece about the size of a pea^m> be
taken whenever disposed to cough