The Savannah daily republican. (Savannah, Ga.) 1855-1858, November 05, 1855, Image 2

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SAVANNAH RKVl’M.KAN, MONDAY MORNING,NOVEMBER 5, 1855, THE 8AVAHHAH BEMWMN. ruiuuiD bv ALEXANDER &. SNEED. Cllir bb< DtBBir Primer*. m md uoaix> 1>«UV» IB advance.p*r annum $6 00 II not nM In advnuuu *00 Daily, la advenes, toriii month* $ a 00 - “ ■ ' .. 3 00 .. 4 00 .. t 00 WaBklyi(eltth prion,1 lOcopt—lor 15 5® Daily, ib ndvnncn, forsii n IVt* Wnnftly, in advance,per aauum. If not paid in ndvmaoe Weekly, invariably in advanca ... i ----- • naalor >j 8AVANNAH, GA. Monday Morning, Nov- 6. •Y TELEGRAPH FOR THE REPUBLICAN LATER FROM EUROPE. rm«rc Patloy of alio Amerlean Part? So n Ik* The Federal Union, in commenting upon a late arliulo of the Republican upon the above lozt, pro pound* a oeriain queation, with which it ovidonlly tinnka to posxle ua. Ware our political principles, like the Federal Union’s, confined lo the advance ment of party, auch would be the caao, but it aliall be diaappoioted. We anawer then diatinotly, that ahould the Cin cinnati Convention refuae admiaaioo to their do* liberationa froe-aoilera and anti-Nebraska demo crat*, and come out lairly, fully and honestly, in ■upport ql the principle of non-iuterventlon, ita Northern members vote for it. and a candidate bo nominated, pledged, if electod, to mako it a teat of merit in his appointments to offico, and the nomi nee hintacll ho a man whose past history will jus* lily confidence in his fidelity to that principle, nnd * his Ability to administer the government—we any, j il these conditions be complied with, (and South* | ern men ahould mako them an ultimatum,) and | the Amorioan candidate shall not be placed upon a platlortn in ovory reaped equally lavorablo, wo . ahnll adviae our party in Georgia to abandon the latter and support tho former. II neithor party ' ahould bring out a candidate under auch auspices, we shall advocate tho running of a third ticket, ao , constituted that the South, together with sound ; n itional men o! nil sections and parties, may hon- i orably unite in ita support. I la the Federal Union answered ? .1 Will our cotemporariea now allow ua to pro* Tb. B. «o b« arrived. «.ih L.rerpuol d.i.e lu } d , l0 lhcm _ , nd telu[n „. |„„k theMlh October, beinaj-n® week taler. I „„ ,„ tw „ t ,._ Wm lho K.d.r.1 Union plod,. ( amnu rrlnl. ' itself to take the same position aa wo have taken Tho Liverpool cotton market haa declined 1*16t in regard to tho Cincinnati Convention and ita to 1-8. Salesoi the week 54,000 bales, of which' nominee? Will it agreo lor tho delegates from •peculators took 5,000 and exporters 4,000. Fair ^ Georgia to enter that Convention and ait a'tdo-by- dKHirJtL of THE BALTIC. DECLINE oFcOTTON. FINANClAla MATTERS- Firthcr luccesa of the Allien. Set. dec. dec. dec. New York, Nov. 3. Orleans ia quoted at 61-2; Middling at 39 16; Fair Uplands, 5 7 8; Middling 51-4. Money is more stringent. The Bank ol Eng land baa advanced the rate oi interest to 6 per cent, nnd on long billa to 7. Great alarm la felt in com mercial circles, and a panic ia loared. Console for uioney were quoted at 87. The reatrictive measures of ibo Bank of Franc* are tailing upon almost every brancl^of trade. Tho Rothschilds are about to establish an Aus trian Bank of credit, with a capital of $60,000,- #00. Breadstuff* have slightly advanced. Ohio flour was aelling at 45s.; Canal at 42s. AVhito Wheat at 12s. 6d. Red, 12s. White Corn 45a. Yellow, 43s. Provisions unchangod. From the Bent of War. The allied expedition which it waaauppoaed had gone to Odessa, has captured Kinburn, an import ant position at the mouth of the river Dnicpor and lo the rear of Perekop. The Allies were concentrating their lines trom Bupatoria, Kinburn, Kerstch, and the Bnidnr Val ley, with the view ot cutting off tho Russian for ces. Their advanced posts were already within five leagues ol Batchseserai, and tho Russians were retiring. It waabolievod that Liprandi woul.l de fend the line on the Bslbek. A batllo was antici pated on tho 3rd. The North eido ol Sevastopol haa been placed In a state to support a siege. Taman and Phanagora,im the straits of Kcrtclt % have been destroyed by the Allies. From California and Central America. New York, Nov. I. The steamship Star ol the West, with one mil lion dollars in specie, has arrived from Aspinwall. Tito passengers were detained nine days on the Isthmus, in consequence ol political troubles. The war in Central America is assuming n sen- out aspect. Walker attacked and captured Grena da on the 14tlt October. Tho town had previously been almost destroyed. On tho 22d a troaty was formally ratified with Carroll, tho Into Command ant of the Government forces. Tbe Transit Company's steamer Snn Carlos, with passengers for the Star of tho West, was fired in to on the 5tK October, by tho Government forces, when near Lake Nicaragua. A lady and a child were killed, and the boat dantagod. On the 17th tbe Government forces made a murderous attack on returning Californians at Virgin Bay, killing four and wounding eight of them. Sufar Crop of i,oui«initn. New Orleans, Nov. 3, Letters from tho interior of Louisiana report that considerable damage lo the Sugar cane crap baa been done by the recent frost. Planters com sido with the Vun Uuron Irce-aoilers and other anti-slavery democrats at the North, or will it ad vocate the secession of our delegates from the Convention incase such people are admitted 1— Wo hopo to receive an early answer to thesoques' lions, and that in it the Foderal Union will "prove its consistency and sincerity." Finally, in explanation ot * difficulty in th« mind of our cotemporariea in regard to our de mand that "tho platform ahould bo laid down pre vious to the meeting of the Convention," we aim- ply mean to Bay that the Convention ahould he composed only ot such mon as harmonize in sen timent upon this question, nnd who have establish ed tho fact by their past history. We wish to guard the South against being seduced, under a plea of party fidelity, into a Convention like tho last one that assembled at Baltimore, an abomina* I ble conspiracy against the public treasury, a Con- . vention constituted of men holding nothing in I common but a name nnd a dosiro to clutch the ' spoils, and who, after dodging the platform or re** luctantly agreeing to it, deliberately went homo and repudiated and spit upon it in tho face of their constituents. This is what wo mean, and we ui - peal to tho sober judgment of the people of all parties at tho S';uth if wo aro not right. Governor Shannon has addressed a long letter lo tho oditor ot the Herald ot Freedom, in Kansas, in which he reviews and relutt-stho various charges made against him sinco his appointment as Gov ernor of the Territory- Ho repeats hi* denial ol the churge that in hisspoech at Weapon he avowed himsell in favor of establishing slavery in Knnsus. He says that ho made no allusion to the subjoct, but that he expressed the opinion that lho legisli live assembly was a legal body, and that its acts, as far as consistent with tho Constitution and the law organizing the Territory wero valid, and ought tu bo enforced. The Cultivation of Ice.—Nature is a step- mothor to Maasaohuoelts in tho climato she has given hor; yet she has as many crops, and as lato in the season, as nnv State in the Union. She has no soonor housed Iter corn nnd potatoes than she commences tho cultivation of her ice crop. This aquaculture costs no manure, still the soil is not exhausted. Winter after winter Bho reaps abun dant harvests from the san.c spot without rotation, I and frequently several in a season, as uppears trom } the following paragraph : We learn from the Bunker Hill Aurora that a t new plun lor procuring ice early, or when tho non- • son is too mild to freeze over the deep water of » Fresh Pond, has been adopted by Mr. Tudor.—- 1 This is by making an artificial pond, of An equal ' depth, and lotting tho water into it as fust ns it : freezes. Workmen nro now engagod in large mimhen on tho Fresh Fund Meadows in preparing such a pond, ft will covor about twenty-fivo ishB Van Barca the Waahlnf lea Union. In tho courao of a speech at a recent Democrat ic mooting at Albany, John Van Huron said: 14 When 1 wns in Washington lately,! took some E sin* to find out where lho administration wore, ut tt was difficult to nscortnin that front tho Union, and it was not natural lor us to know Hltor. Wo are engaged in an important election to us, and it is annoying to have littlo pooplo who are spinning thoir lops and flying their kilos at a distance, tonsu us. 1 told thorn wo wore busy and had no time to play with tho children. (Great laughtor.) But I wont to work to find out which ticket wns sup- portod by tho administration—whotltor it was a democratic, republican, Hindoo, abolition or Choc taw. I dla tho the same as tho man with tho thim- blos.nnd raiaodoach oiranltor another, but tho lit tle joker was not undor elthor of them. (Runowod laughtor,) But away back in tho cornor 1 found a littlo thimble marked "Itnrd shell." 1 found that the administration was "hnlf shell," hut did not support tho wholo half altoll ticket hecauso Mr. Agan, who wbb fur State Prison Inspector, wus scratched off. So it Booms that of all tho tickets In the field, tho national administration has not ono. 1 asked tho oditor of tho Washington Union whether ho desirod tho democratic ticket to suc ceed or not. Ho answered that as some of tho democrats supported tho principles advocated by Mr. Van Buron in 1849, it was a manor of iudiflor* onco whether lho ticket was elected. Now, it is not a mailer of indifference to us: but I am sur prised that tho administration ahould nttack tho President. Ho appointed many of tho friends of Mr. Van Buron to offico. Gen. Dix; Mr. Fowler, Postmaster of Now York; Mr. Tnlcott, Collector at Oswego; Mr. Hudson, of Buffalo. All these gentlemen wore firm friends of Mr. Van Buron, and wero known to bo so by lho President when they woro appointed. They accepted offico wiih this un derstanding, and they wero not required to degrade themselves by any abandonment ol thoir principle*; an I now wo aro told by lho organ that the admin istration is opposed to tho policy of Mr. Van Buren. This is tho second or third ttmo that tho udmin- istrution organ has been opposed to the Promdunt. The organ was in favor of tho French Spoliation bill, and the President vetoed it; and so in ono or two other cases. It seems to mo thut tho admin istration is opposed to tho President, because lho administration wanta Mr. Buchanan to bo tho next President. In (act, 1 havo been informed tlmt tho Secretary of War has written to Air. Buchanan, advising him not to put himself into a position to bo doloated in case ho should receive the nomina tion. Now, I havo no objection to Mr. Buchanan —ho would mako nn excellent President. But I can’t see why tho President should be opposed by tho administration merely for Buclinnan. What ever may ho tho result in this case, there cannot bo an administration victory. No earthly results can make an administration victory. Thu organ has said that it is a matter of indiflbreuco. Wo do not believe that. If it wns really a matter of in- difli reuco they would not assail tho platlortn—they would not assail the candidates—they would not nssuil the presses that support us. They desire our defeat, nnd would fie delighted to Hud us in the minority. Therefore, the organ keeps read ing us out ol the party. I will toll you something about this "reading out" business. It has nothing to do wi-h the slavery question. The Charleston Mercury nnd Evening Post have been roud out of the pnrty, and thoir opinions on slavery are ns various us they enn bo ; but they wore both opp -sed lo stealing, and that is tho rea son why tho Union reads them out of the party.— No man who is n«»t in favor of stealing can receive the support of the Union (L tughler and applause.) Even Air. Wise, whoso personal integrity and honesty have never been questioned, in Jackson's time, allhough he barked up the wrong tree dial time—he wus always linrking—he, though con ducting a most niduuus campaign, received no no tice Irom the Union, except the hare announcement of his nomination, until about three or lour weeks before his election. When it hecutno evident that ho wus to ho successful, tho Union was very anxi ous about it. We are thus logo on without the Union and -without tho administration ; and its it is a matter of indifference to them wiint becomes ol us, it is also a matter of perfect ind-fference to ua what becomes of them. (Choere.) This ad ministration expires by its own limitation on tho 4th ol March, 1857. No earthly power can abro gate it before that time. Then it will bo the busi ness of the democracy to deal with it ns it deserves. Now wo have our own business to attend to, and wu shall havo nn overwhelming victory. plain that lho present warm weather prevents tho ; acres of land, with a^tflay bottom,^ and^ no much juice from granulating. This will doluy rucoipts. ' ‘ *• From Havana. New Orleans, Nov. 3. The steamship Cahawha haa arrived from Ha* vans, with dates to the 31st ult. Tho newt is un important. Ax other Ocean Link of Telegraph.—Sinco the partial failure of tho attempt to lay the subma rine telegraph at Toint au Basque, public attention has been directed to the other route proposed, via Greenland, Iceland nnd tho Farce Islands. Mr. Horace B. Tebhet* has obtained the exclusive right from the government ol Denmark, to land cables on the shores of its dependencies, and tho Phila delphia Board of Trade has recently passed u res olution call Ok upon government to send out a sur veying, exploring and sounding expedition, to ex plore tho coasts and waters of the countries above named. Novel Suit.—A person in Mobile, has brought •uit for damage* against a shoemaker, for failing to compljr with a promise, to have a pair ol boots made at a specified time. Fxom Washington.—Washington, November 1.—The Union pf this morning publishes a call for the National Democratic Committee, to meet in Washington on the eigth of January next. The amount in iho United States Treaeuty, sub ject to draft on tho 22d ult., was $22,113,000. Secretaries Davis,Guthrie and McClelland, visit Baltimore to-day,to attend tho Agricultural Fair. Depastures of MissioNARtts.—Tho following persons aailsd from Boston on Saturday, in tho Georgians, Capuiu Crowell, for Smyrna:—Rev Georgs C. Koupp and Mra. Knapp, with ilenrt B’ a Heskell.M. D., destined to the Assyrian miusion ; Rav. O. P. Allen and Mrs. Allen, destined to the Armenian mission; Rev. Edward Arkcu and Mis. Arken, destined tu the Syrian mission. The usual . Inwor than Fresh Pond (tint the water ot tho pond may be lot into it in any quantity dcsirnble As ! thus pond will be very shallow, it will Ircezopver | readily, and it would seem muet secure a crop ol ! ice in thu mildest of our winters. Of courso it • may be cropped as often as it can bo trozun oi suf ficient thickness. The making "I lho pond.it is calculated, will coat about $25,000, or $1,000 pur m re, and tho ncccstiary buildings lor storing too about as much more. Southern Congressional Election.—The fol lowing is the result of the recent election lor Con grusemon in tbe following fivo Southern Statue: Kentucky' Alabama N oth Carolina. Tennessee (It Total.. American. 7 Anti Kentucky. « 2 Alnb-tvm 6 North Carolina 5 Tennessee 4 Georgia 6 General Cabs—A visitor to the reBidcnco of tilts veteran statesman writes: "1 spent a forenoon with Gen. Cass. Tho old man "elill litu-s" in the autumnal ulnricsol a well spent file; is hale, hourly and worth lour millions Hi* career has, indued, been successful. lie epr-nks in foreboding language of our national prospects, nnd is strong in the belief that disunion will yet carry its banners over tho Republic." Death of a Half Century Convict —An aged colored m«n, known by lho namo ol "Old Bob,” who has been nn inmate ol the Maryland Peniten tiary, sinco 1810, died at that institution ol Wed nusday. The history of this man, and the circum stances attending hie conviction mid incarceration have frequently been rehearsed to 1I10 public, nnd weru lira subject ol eontment by Charles Dickens, in Inn "Notes on America," a work published after the gentlemen had returned Irom making th« tour ol this country. He belonged to planter of Charles county, who Wttsarathcr a aevutemaster, and in 180*1 placed hint on board a vessel, with instruc tions to allow no one, not even tho a<>n ol the master, to como on the vessel and if nny attempt was made to hoard tho vessel he should strike them in the head with it handspike. In tho cven- ng following the issuing ol this mundato, the son service* wore hold in the forenoon, Rev. Silas I 0 j |,j s master, in company with two othisusso- Arken, D. D., father of ono of the missionaries, J cintos, approached thu vessel and attempted in officiating on tho occasion. This was tho third | head hqr^ ho wns warned not to cuino on hoard, embarkation of missionaries Board during the week. Southern Mail Failures.—'The City Council of New Orleans bavo appointed a Committee to torreapoad on the part of the Common Council o* 1 Now Orleans, with the Department of the Gene ral Poalofiice at Washington, touching the great grievance of repeated failures to transmit tho Uni ted States mails in accordance with tho schedules fixed therefor, ulong tho main line running South through tho States of North Carolina, South Car olina, Georgia and Alabama, ending at New Or leans, and to auggost remedies therefor. A com- niitioe of prominent citizens liavo also been ap pointed to act in concert with th* Council Com mitted. .- aby "Old Bob," who repealed lho instructions ol h ot tho American ( n ; a8U . r# and „ddod that ho would obey tho orders ne had received. The young man regarding the liingungo ol the negro as a jest, malir-d hecdliu-sly forward, and gained a position on the vessel; Inn no Hoonor had he landed than Bob picked up the handspike nnd knocked him in the bond, killing him instantly. Bob was immediately arrosted and lodged in jail. Ho wus triud for murder urn! con victed. Thu cireumstnuci-Hof thucaso under which lho deed hue been pcrpulrnlcd, so lar secured the clemency of the Court iih to coinmolo Ins sentence to imprisonment lor lilo. Hu w«i first placed in tho chain gang, where he continued until the erec tion of iho Penitentiary when ho whs transferred to thnt institution, where ho rurnuinod until his dunth on Wednesday. Thu period ol his confinement was about fifty— three years, and ho was upwards of ono hundred years old ui the liu.o of his death. T. Butler King, Esq., has addresv-d l letter to severnl of the leading more bants of New York on the praclibiluy and importance of tho Pacific Rail road, the groat enterprise ol tho age. " Sojl or the South."—Wo take ploasuro in recommending this excellent Agricultural journal to yur readers of every class, especially to tho till- •rs of ilia soil. Its Agricultural department is •onduued by Messrs. Ja*. M. Sl Wnr. II. Cham bers, practical planters; while the Horticultural and Domcfiic portion of tho work, for which alono every housekeeper should become a subacrilHir, is nnder the charge of Mr. Chaa. A. Peabody. It ie published monthly, at Columbus, Ga., at lho low price of $1 per annum. We fool that w« aro do ing the State some service in recommending auch joomiU u I Boil ol ,h. Huulh," ,„d ,ho ••Komi,. CuhlMkw," of Augoatn, 10 il, u pmron.g. of tba public. The Atlantic sailed from New York Wednes day, for Liverpool, taking out $650,000 specie. Music and Matter —Tbe celebrated! Madame Alboni ia gaming immensely in size and rupuia tion ; a distinguished literary lady recently said of her, that ehe gave her the idea of an elephant that had swallowed a nightingale. Gen. Twiggs waa on a visit to Now Orleans last weak. From thet'riuu-aii Correspondent of tho Lin-lon Times, ’■’lit* Crave yard 011 Catlicurl’N Hill. In limes to como it will he n chosen terminus of Saxon pilgrimage, this Cuihcurt’s Hill. Wh. liter the travollor beholds from its hiimhlo parapet tho lair aspect of the imperial city, guarded by three- told mightier batteries than now, or sits upon the broken wall to gaze upon the. ruins of Suv.tstopol, lie must, it ho has any British blood in bin veins, regard with emotion that littlo spot which enclosu* all that was mortal of some of tho n-.Mest soldiers who ever sprung Irom our warrior race. Ho will see the site ol those tedious trenches wln-ro the fctrong man waxed weak day niter day. and the sanguine became hopelc-*, and where the British soldier fought through a terrihlo winter with piivn- tion, cold, frost, snow, and rain, more tumble mid deadly titan the fire of Iho enoiny. With lho Re dan, lho Malakoff, 1 no Quarries, tho Mnmelon, Gordon's nilack.Cliapmnirs attack, undor liia oyoa, ho will icvivo witn iho nspeul ol thu placed where they stood the memories of this great struggle, and renew the incidents of its history. How many more of our gallant officers this cemetery may hold it is impossible to say ; it ia too full nlroudy. It is a panlluloarmn of 40 yards long by 30 oards broad, lornied by the base of a ruined wall which might in lorniur days have marked tho fines ol a Tartar fort,or have been the first Rm-sinn redoubt to waiclt over the inluncy of Sevastopol. Although many a humble tumulus indicants to tltoeyu of affection the plaeo where soino beloved comrade rents till the last reveille, the enro nnd love ol Irionds hero nnd at homo hnvo loft memorials in solid stone of most of 1 huso whose remains aro rusting hero. The first of tho grnves, towards lho front and west of ihe cemetery, consists of a simple mound of earth. 1 know not who lies below. Tho second is marked by a simple slab, wiih the following in scription : " Sacred to the memory of Lieutenant H. Tryon, Rifle B-igade, killed in action 011 the 20ih November,1854." He was a thorough soldier, brave, cool nnd resolute, nnd in the terrible crisis of Inkorman, he uacd a rifle with more deadly cer tainty and success than any ol his men. In the strugglo for tho '• Ovens” or '• Quarries" on tho 20th November, in which a small body ol the K ilo Brigade dislodged a forcenf the enemy much great er than their own. he displayed such gallantry ere ho fell that General Cantotiertpaid him the rare honor ol a spccinl moniion in the text "general order of the day” for the French army. Next to him repose'he remains of a lamented officer. Tho sione records hi* name ; "Sacred to tho memory ol Brigadier General Thomas L<-igh Goldie, com manding the li-si brigade of the fourih division ol the British army, i/cuteoant Colonel of the loriy- sovenili regiment, who full at Ii.kermanu, Novem ber 5,1854.” No. 4 is a rude cross of stone with out murk or name. Tile filth grave is distinguish ed hy a stone cross at the feet, und at ihu head is a slab with an ornamented top beneath which ia written, " Sacred to thu memory ol Brigadier General Fox Sirungwuys, killed in action N ivem- her 5, 1854." A lew fines in Russian m>k tho Christian forbearance of our enemies alter wo have gone, lor the bones of ono whom they would have admired nnd loved had they known him. No. fi is conspicuous by a large tomb-stone, with nn ornamei.ted cross at the lop, and some simple ef forts ol the chisel at the sides and huso. Como here and rend ! " Here lie the mortal remains ol Captain Edward Stanley, 57ih regiment,killed at the battle of Inkermnn, November 5,1854, to whose memory this stouo ih erected by the men ot his company—'Cast down but not destroy,’2 Corin- iIi'iiiib, tv. 9." Wlm does not look with respect mi these poor soldiers, nnd who docs not leul envy lor the lot of one so honored ? There nro fourteen her graves in the same row, ol which only ono m identified. Sir Georgo Cathcart’s resting plnco is marked by a very fine monument* lor w hich his widow lias expressed her thanks to ilmso who rnisud it to thu memory ol their beloved commander. There is nn inscription upon it coiiiinumorutiug the Gene ral’s services, and thu |aet that he served with the Kuesian armies in one oi llicir most memorable iinpaigns—the date of his untiim-ly nnd glorimiR • on, and an inscription in the Ku.isian Innguago ntmg who and wiint lie was who reposes hciu-iitli. lie second row lo tho East there ure two graves [From the N. Y. Courier A Enquirer/] The ntanstary Panic That thoro exists here, sod consequently.through out tho country, a groat panic in rogaru to our monetary uflii rs, no reasonable inau will deny. And It is very properly esllod a panic. Wo have witnessed u very stringent money market at differ 'em periods of our history; and this toe, from well grounded causes, such us ovor-lrading. joo groat an expansion on tho purl of our banks, the spirit or speculation, nnd oxcossivo importation!. I ho !lo- gitimnto oonsouuoncua of any one of tltosojolltes, aro a strioguut money market and tho Bankruptcy of those who aro not prepared for such a sinto of things. But a Panic is quite a different ullair. Tho very word is significant, becauso it implies an unnooossnry niatm—nn alarm not bused upon a calm exercise of tho reasoning faculties and a de liberate invoti igntion of Iho causes for alarm. It lias been our tnisfortuno to witness several panics! but wo havo no hesitation in saying, that the ono which now pervades this community, is the must senseless, and has less basis toherton to rest, than any ol tho very foolish panics which havo preced ed it in limes past. .... r Looking at our specie basts and the state 01 our country—its abundant produco and tho large prices which it commands—no candid man will protend thnt our Banks aro unroasonbly oxpundod; and with ns little truth can it bo suid, that Iho country lias over-traded during tho last twelvemonth, or thnt tho spirit of speculation has boon excessive.— Even our importations havo not been unusually heavy in view ol our largo amount of produce; but whether too largo or not, thoy are not tho cauao ol tho prosent panic, becauso tho tinto ol experien cing the bad effects of oxcossive importations un dor ■ Tariff specially designed to benefit lho for- oign nt '.ho nxpcusoo! tho American Munuincturer, has not yot arrived. What then is the cauaot Wo answer unhesitatingly—our very reprehensible sys tem of buying sixty-day bills of credit on England, nnd n want ol norvo on tho part of thoso who con trol our monetary affairs. Tho only earthly valuo of gold to tho commerce of the world, is to equalise trade and mako up lho balanco between nations. When a nation pur chases nto'u than it has to soli, tho balance, what ever it may bo, muBt, of necessity, bo paid in gold or in Bonds or Stocks, or other promises to pay.— But unfortunately, the very moment that gold be gins to discharge its duty, our Financiers hold it to ho tltcir duty to intorposo and provent it accom plishing its legitimate purpose,—that is, tho work is arrested too soon ; and consequently, panic nnd nn unnecessary stringency in tho Money Market, immediately follow. The first duty, thoreloro, of our Monied Institutions, is to look around and to ascertain whether lho exportation ol gold ia tho consequence of tho laws of trndo, or whether it arises Irom fictitious onuses. If tho former, tho curtnilntent in discounts should bo grndual, so as to regulate and not check altogether tho natural flow of tho precious metals to the creditor country; while il the cause ol the export ol gold should prove to be entirely fictitious, the check interposed should ho governed by the prospect of such ficti tious causes continuing. Wo are ol opinion that the present export of gold, is not in conformity with tho laws ot trado, but is produced solely by speculation on both sides of the Atlantic,—which speculation, our ridiculous system of sixty day bills, not only encourages but actually invites. The system had ita origin in tho former tardiness of corrcspqpdenco between the two countries; and it has survived tbe eslablisment ol Ocean Sioaniers.sjlhpry-becauseithndobtnincd a foothold, and it watt not tho business of any par ty in particular, to modify or destroy it. How it may bo madoto operate silently anti yot most mis chievously, n little reflection will prove. VVo liavo in this city three houses, which could readily upon their high credit, sell a hundred thousand sterling by every atoantor. In sixty days wo send lortlt eight steamers to Liverpool, besides three despatched to tho Continent; »nd thus, at lea-t two millions and a hull sterling, ($12,5<iO,(MiO,) may bo sent out of tho country in spociu, without the out ploy.nunt of ono d'diiir of capital until nftor tho expiration of sixty days. Most assuredly, a sys tem which admits of such an abuse, must bo faulty and should not bo allowed to exist. Tho truth is, this very process is now going on in this city, and wo allude lo il in order if possible, by exposure, to correct It. We havo understood from authority which ad mits of no qucs'ion, thnt a Ihkho in this city has ndmitted that it received orders hy the U it steamer, to sell Sixty day Bdh to nny amount for whish it could find a market, and with tho proceeds, to pur chase nnd remit gold! This order, doubtless emannted from sonto sngo speculator in London, who, foolishly calculating upon a continued de mand for gold and the possible suspension of specie payments, is willing to incur a certain small loss in the hopo of realising largo profits. But this is not lho only way in which this sixty-dny bill sys tem is made lo affect us. Wo know tho Jact, that a proposition was made last week, by parties of great wealth, t, another woalthy party, to purchaso my hugely of Erie and Central Railroad stock. Tho operation suggested, required millions, and the party to whom it was made, pleaded want of money. Tho answer wns nt hand. "A. and B. will is*uo their bills on London nt sixty days on depositing with them the stock purchased nnd our guaranty,—wu nllowing thotu a certain commis sion !" Hero then, wo hnvo tho real purpose to which tins system of sixty day bills in prostituted in times like these; and tho tacts we have referred to, exhi bit thn true oiiui-a* why gold is flowing from our country, and in coiiBt-quanco, a stringent money market and a panto produced. Thoro is, we repeat, 110 legitimate cause for alarm, and no good reason why gold should bo exported when our market is overstocked with produce, c> mmnuding unusually large pricos. Tho presont exportation of gold is fictitious und speculative, and will bo cheeked, We hope, by the next news from Europe, which will demonstrate that the pnuic thoro, hnscomparativo- ly conned; but b« the nows what it m«y, thorn can ho no question, that our country is stronger than it ever was in a European monetary crises, and that wo hnvo only to do away with lho speculative, kite flying system of sixty day hills, to pul it out of tho power of any combination of men to injure us.— Lot our merchants and our bnnks, with >ne accord set their faces against a continuance of lho credit lull system—let them'eluso to buy or negotiate any other thnn sight bills—and beyond nil doubt wo shall get rid of ono of the great operating cau ses of panic. Then again, Tut our Financiers have the necessary nerve to look on nnd witness gold performing its legitimate duty witnont too suddenly cheeking it. and panics will bo less fro- quont nnd loss disastrous. Tux Rothschilds—An article ib cuing the r«unds of tho proas stating that tho whole concern of ths Rothswlds is worth $700,000,000 In money capital, boslden $300,000,000 more in rani ssiRio, mine*, Scc. So far from this being the fnot, wo understand llftit tho gonorsl estimate in Europy 1 * to the aggregate woslth of the whole concorn is 200,000,000 francs, or shout $40,000,000. The idea is purely absurd that thoir wealth should umouni lo such an enormous sum as $1,000,000,000, equal nt six per cont. to an annual iucouio ol sixty mil lions of dollars—a sum which, in comparatively a fow years, accumulating in a compound ratio, and doubling it every twolvoj'cars, would concentrate in thoir hands a largo portion <>t tho woaltli and proporty ol all Europo.—[National Iniolligoncor, Oct 39. - FVNUHAl, INVITATION. Tim Friends nnd Acquaintances of Mr. T. I’. IIukb- wood nml Mrs. Juua A. Patterson, aro invitod to attend tho Funeral of thoir MOTH Elt, at tuu o’clock, This Morn ing, from the rcsldunco of Mr. John T. Lltivhcrgor, on Status!. ik.v 5—1* OOMMBROIAli. Total supply and receipts Deduct stock on hand Sept 1 49,003 1,707 Total receipts 47,302 BIVIPBD To Savannah in Sept and Oct 4.605 *• Charleston “ •* 37,394 Total shipments 41,999 STOCK. In Augusta this day In Haiuliurg this day 5,431 1,570 Total stock 7,1110 A Musical Puoihuy.—There is in thi* vicinity a blind negro hoy, only six ymrssdd, tho property of James N. Boiliuno, of the Corner Stono, who exhibits tho moBt wonderful capacity for music mid is able lo play almost any ptcco, oven tho most difficult, 011 the Piano Forte, abor lioaring it once or twice. Ho has never been instructed in music ; bis knowledge of the science is, therefore, instinct ivo. He tins the most intense passion for music nnd exhibits thn grentest emotion during liia per formances. Wo hnvo never seen so wondorlul a musical prodigy before.—(Columbus (Ga.) Times & Sentinel. Abolishing the Skcrlt Feature—At n Con vention of thn American putty, In-Id at Ral eigh, N. C., oil thu lUtli of October, 1855, the fol lowing resolution was adopted : " Rosolved, That, as tho esuaen which rendered lho secrecy of tho American organization necessary in its infancy no longer exist, all tho secret cere monials ut tho order, whether of initiation,obliga tions, signs, constitutions, rituals, or passwords, ho abolished ; that wo do constiluto oursolvoa into n publicly organizod party ; that wo do chullonge our opponents to ths public discussion ol our prin ciples; and wo do horchy invite and invoke tho aid and co-operation of all tho citizens of lho Statu, without regard to their former political affiliations, in maintaining and carrying out tho great aims and principles ol thu American party." Still they Come —Tho Nursmhurglt (Germany) Louriur Hulas, under tho head ol Statgnrdt, that ilm corporation ol Buiamgun, in tho province of llorb, liuvn sold their poor-house to tho Jews, and sunt the poor to America. Is there no iiucussity for no Anturicau party I new advertisements. ARMORY HALL. Mechanical EXHIBITION, ol ISO Dlovinii Fiiliim, IN DIFFERENT A1TITUDEH, ARRANGED IN A CURIOUS AND AGRF.KABLK MANNER, Open Thin Evening, Oct. 30, From 7 until ID o’clock. Admission 25 cents. Chi(dren under At years half Price. oct30—lw LAST WEKK OP THE EXHIBITION. Haturday of the present week, and Monday of thn following week for colored pooplo. SAVANNAH iVAIIKET Hatcsdav, November 3, I*. M. COTTON—The sales to-day were 035 bales «t tbe following particulars: 10 at »>tf, 7*at BX, 37 at 8R, 100 at 8 7 10. Ml at 8R, 471 at 8*, 40 at 8^, 13 «l 9. Tho prices remain flriu and unchanged. «it vim null ExporlB, November 3. Per steamship Alabama, New York—0J0 bales of Cot ton, 11 aks Dried Fruit, 3 bales Skins, and sundry boio», pkgs, <kc. Pur brig E P Sweat, Boston—158,415 feet Lnmber and Timber. Per brig Abby Francis, New Orleans—010 casks Kiev*, 50 hair casks do, 20 Corn. 30 balos Domestics, 1 box aud bundles mdse. Per sclir Frank A llall, Philadelphia—525 balu« Cot ton, 2720 sks Wheat, 08 pieces Custlugr, 10 bags Feath ers, auudra pkga and boxes. RKCKIPTB PER CENTRAL RAILROAD. Nov 3—2028 bales Cotton 1180 sacks Wheat, 402 do Corn, 50 do Meal, 27 do Hye, 75 bins Flour amt radio to Dnna v Washburn, J Jones, A 8 llnrlrldge, C A I, La mar, K Parsons tt Co. W Duncan, Hudson. Fleming it », Way At Taylor. Hardwick Ac Cooko, O Cohen, J W ,ntlirop At C-i W llatleraby At Co, Hunter AtCaminell, . p Brooks, Pndulford, Fay It Co, Ruse Davis At Long, Coburn At lleil/., Patten, Hutton At Cp, Brigoem, Kelly At Co, llehn At Foster, Boston At Villulonga, N A ilardue At Co, W It Etheridge, Itubun At riinilh, W C O’llriscoll At Co, A McAlpIn, O II Johnson, A Haywood, M II William*, W It Wylluy, D D Copp, Crane, Wells At Co, l.ynu At Bidder, J lugertol, Ogden, Hiarr It Co, Bell At Prentiss, Miss C E Hudson, W B Cites, Lockett At 8ni-llliig4, C H Cauipfluld, Tisou At Mackuy, C ft K At Uk'g Co. AUCU3TA, NOV 3.—Cotton—Tho Baltic's news, which wns received about doom, put u stop to o|>era- lions. OltlFFIN, NOV 3—Colton—This article was In good demand yesterday und sold readily at prices ranging from 7J4 tv> “Jf. COLUMBUS, NOV 2, P M.—-The non-reception of news pur steamer Hal lie, now past duo, haa checked Iram-aeiloiis iu our Cotton market, and we huvo tore p»rt llinltod tales. Mlddhhg Strict Middling 7jg'; Good Middling 7>jn7; Middling l-’atr 8 cents. ATLANTA, NOV 2, P M.-Cotton—Good demand at 7m7H<-'. t'orn is celling at 45s5I)c. Wheal—lied $1 50; While I 55 per bu-h. Oats 55c, sacked, scatco. Flour $8)4 per bbl—source. Cotton Statement. . Statement »f Cotton fit Augusta and Hamburg, Novem ber i, 1855. Owing to the prevalence of the epidemic last year, we ..ere ui.iible to make up any Binlumeni on the first of November, and therefore cannot Institute any compari son bulwoeu thu two years. RECEIPTS. Hlnck oi! hand Hupt I 1,707 Received in tiupt and Oct 47.3H2 Fare Reduced—fal>lu Passage $20. For AVw York. stbamshiFTnoxvim.f., To Sail Wednesday, Nov. 7, at 5, l\ M. The new and splendid aleninnhlp KNOXVILLE, Capt. C. D. Ludlow, w *t^'nc-IW will sail ns above. xBfiflll PADKLFORD, FAY St CO Cabin Passage $20 Steerage Pnssago $8 N. It.—Shippers nf Cotton by these' steamers, will please take notice, Hint no Cotton will be received at the prusses that is not dist nelly masked onttvedgnof ■ bi ‘ * CENTRAL RAILROAD.. dllANGF; OK HI HI KOI I,I / VN and after Htmday the Mlh October, ii,«iam \ / until furl her notice, the Passenger Trsim, „„ ., Central Railroad, will run aa follows: bbtwkbn savannah and malon. Leave fttvannnh f» a m , nnd 12 |y> Arrive at Macon 2.15 p. m., nnd | Leave Macon 11.15 a. m-. and -i ;v, J Arrive at Havunni-h 10.45 p. m.. and 7.im BKTWKBN SAVANNAH AND AI'OI'ITa. ' Uinvu savannah Arrive at Augusta Leave Augun>a Arrive InVavannah.... BKTWKKN M Leave Macon Arrive nt Augusta Leave Augusta Arrive at Macon HKTWr.AN SAVANNAH, I loiave Huvaniinh Arrive In Milludgevlde. .envo Macon. KItni .12.15 P M.,and!!30r . 8.45 p.m., and 5.3(, J’?’ ; Mtaiid 4.30 ► J I.JOp. m. and 10.45 non AND AfOt'BTA. I • .45 a. >1 , uni tijii. „ 8 45 p. m and :,.3o *' I' M-. and 4.3o » 2 l5r. M ,a-dU J II. I.KDQK VI LI. K AND C *1 ON TON ■ ■ -Si. J Arrive in Eltonlou.. Snvniuinh, Ga.. I2lh f>ct-, 1855. w’w."si."wXjj'uv“' noy & MORI !.K, ocr 30.—Cotton—The lessening stock pro vents operations to uny extent. To-day there wus a good inquiry, but only 700 bales wero sold, the market closing firm nl 8,^c lor M "Idling. NEW ORLEANS, »»CT 31.—Cotton—'There wns .. rather active demand yesterduy, and with easier prices fur the lower qualities, the sales reached lully 0500 bales. Wo quote: NEW ORLEANS CLA8KIPK'ATIl | Middling Fair.. Fair 10 (stlOM ‘Good Fair 10)4@— Inferior .5 @ 0 Ordinary 0)4© 7)4 Middling 8)4 . Good Middling... 7)«© 0)4 , Good uud Fine. — ©— STATEMENT OP COTTON. Slock oil band 1st Sept., ’55 bales. 40,537 Arrived since 301,eM Arrived to-day 7j‘ 312,402 Exported to date.... Exported today 5,093-103,24’ the bale. For I*hiladelphia. To leave Wednesday Oct. 31, nt 111 o'clock, A. M ■M*, J /V The new and splendid steamship state of Georgia, capt. Gar- wZtf&S/Av vin will loave as above. Cabin Passage to Philadclnhla $20 Hletwngc *• “ ? For freight or passage apply to C. A. L. LAMAR, oct 29 GILJIOME A CO»8 l/INE ^ NEW V0RK & SAVANNAH PACKETS. rpHIk NEW LINK Is composed of tbe. following 1 ves-els, ono 01 which will leive Pier Nn. 9 North River, New York, punctually every Thursday: New sebr EDWARD KIDDER, 320 tons,Tyler, Master “ “ RENNET PLANNER, 325 do. Applegltt,do •> “ GEORGE DAVlrt. 310 tons, Smith, do •, “ LOVET PEACOCK. 370 tons. Merry. do o “ WALTER RALEIGH, :<36 tons, Marshall, do These vestels are all of the Aral class, and. having been built during the past year expressly for tbe trade, aro well deserving tho attention of shippers. They are commanded by masters of experience and ability, und shippers can rely upon quick Uispa clt. lud every alien- lion being paid to their convenience. J. K. GILMORE St CO, 154 Water-st., N. Y. HUNTER tt G AMMELL, Agents, Savannah. FOR BOSTON—The ship BOMBAY, Mill master, will have despatch a$ above. For put-sugo, apply on board, ' 1(0 11:11 AM liov 5 BRIGHAM, KELLY St CO. FOR BALTIMORE—The brig JOSEPHUS, _;Terrill insMcr. will have despatch us above. For freight *r passage,apply on board, or to nnv 3 BRIGHAM, KELLY It CO. freight bi KOH KENT. M UNTIL the first November next, a two story Brick Dwelling on Jefferson street, near the cor ner of Liberty , in good repair. Posses-doii given Immediately. Appiy to WM. WRIGHT, liov 5 NT, A lllti: W’S NOITETY. 4 QU ARTKRLY Mecllngp'f the Society will he P held at St. Andrew’s Mull, This (.Monday )Eve- nlng, ut half past 7 o'clock. W. ROGERS, •4 Octave PIANOS. W. D. ZOGBAUM & CO., liAVK .MKT RKCKIV- ED u tine Ubsortnii ut ofMT Stolnwa.v <t Sons’ OuANnrk U Action ’ Pianos of 7'/.;® • ** Newton A Bradbury's, Modard 1 PURE, MUSI , Light* VALUABLE SEA ISLAND PLANTATION Mil -AND MW ,21 A GANG OF 120 NEGROID J 1 AORSAI.B.—TJigt valuable PLANTATION on Tf i BIMON’A INLAND, known as HAMILTON, II; tabling 817 acres of land, of which 510 acres quality hummock are under cultivation. 11 Tldsplanlatlon ts one of thu most henlihy, prr/ <VUr and desirable residences 00 the seuhxard ft (,►,«? nnd having been lor twenty years under a regyi,.},* tern of manuring. Is now In a high state olfert-hij. ' On thu premi'-ee are a dwelling house, nail in lent gin and cottou house, with basements of tabby - % hospital, workshop, corn and n«gro houses,all of uVt» and a stable and other outhouses of wood. ' These tleinHit L Immediately on the baudi of t river of salt water, with a new and substantlil w),trf at which the steamers Irom Florida to 8a»»nn»h ar.d Charleston land, when required; und !.-• wu),,a s mi ! M of the town of Brunswick, and 2)4 miles from asek-btub affording an uninterrupted drive of i miles. The health of this plumation has been remnrlttb!? and il enjoys tho advantage- of regular sea brc-eicut,/ an abundant supply of fish and oysters. The gang, widen coat.ilns I2U negroes, it ordfTly.tM) In every respect a very valuable one. With very (►* exceptions, the negroes composing it have been' Uu, on the plstitulinii, und have been accustomed to a firm and mild disc'plino. For terms.apply 10 jy 2tl—lawil J. M cut PER, Darien,Ga. A C’HUICi; PLANTATIBN KiR SALE yx Ry virtue of authority In me vested by -he hi ■T” will and testament of David 8hulion. lu'e of Tat hot county, deceised, I will sell before the' 'ourt Moiiw door in the town ol 'falhoiton, in sunt county, on tin first Tuesday In November neti, within the legal hour* of sale, the vulua do plantation of said decea-ed-i t ioriion ol it being within a half mile of said town,ay, ymg east ol said place In the direction of Centre)be and Hie Tallin; Camp Ground—containing about I.,, ucres, of which about lion are cleared and well ft-octii; son-i-lerahle portions ol which have been recently opts- ed aud a great deal ol which are low grounds. There is upon Hi" premises and within a half a ed'* of the town a splendid dweldug newly and elesan-.y finished, with o.hor convenient and necessary h'nidmp on the premises. The yards, gardens, 61c. are ail taiu ly laid out, neatly and newly paled in. And nt aeon, vciiienl distance and a little removed from the town u a coin lor 1 able building, a suitable residence forth* overseer, near which is a large numb* r of fram' d negro houses, und all other buildings useful to a large planta tion, Uu the place is an extensive orchard wi-h every nn. ety of Irult trees thnt can lie cultivated in this climate. The planiutiou is well arranged, the fields of cnvcnieL nnd suitable size, most of them having runulm: wuz- In them, with strong and substauliul gates entering o each. The noighb irhood is healthy, society good, and (very thing comldni'd makes it one of the most deJigbiful places within iny khowlt dge. Terms liberal and ninde known or. the day wale. EDMUND II. WORK ILL, Kx’r. September 18, 1955. sep20—wtdj. stock on hnnd and on shipboard not cleared.. I'<9,245 Hiifcur nnd Molasses—Thu sulea of Sugar emtiruced about 130 hhds, or which 7tl Fully Futr, Old. nt fij^c, 35 New nt 5)4ii0)4 for good coimnon to mtr, H fully lair nt fiy, 211 prune ut 7kfu7)4, and 31 prime to choice at 7\u 8c. of Molusse-* 141 hid* prime rebolieed sold at 25c. 200 new nt 28:dMt for ordluniy to prime, aud 100 half hbls at 20c per gallon. Flour—Demand fair and prices firm, with sales nf 2000 bills, of which »i0 Unbr.ndcd ul $8 12)4, folio Ohio River ntH 42)j for superfiue. mo Nt Louis ut 8 50, aud 450 fancy, a hukers’ brand, at 8 f>5 per bbl. Rico—We tioiicm) sales of 58 tierces Caroliua at 5J*c, aud 2tn>, lo arrive soon, at 5*<c. Goffee—8ales 1500 bags Rio. Including 100 Fair at 10)4, Sup at I0)a. nml H5U prime ul I to. Hugging-45 hales India, extra heavy, were sold at I4)4c, and I An on private terms. Guny Hugs—'•ales 230 bulea at 18)4, and 3000 acooud hni d l ags, in bundles, ut 14c, cash. Whiskey—1<J0 bbls Reel fled wero taken at 33)4 pur gallon. Freights— ' ship whs tnk*-n for Havre at l)4c for Col ton. and olio for Llveipool at VI. Exchange— Demand moderate at our quotations. Sterling !07®107)<and 108 Frames 5f25®5f 32)4 per dollar New York sixty day Bills Ijga2)4 per ct dis sight Checks 011 New York )4®H dis SHIP PORT UF SAVANNAH. 3NT JEJ "W m. ....... "...NOVEMBER 3. I without nr.y inscription!)on tho atones ; the third is niniknd hy n very handsome circular pillar ol hewn Btone, Hiirnioiintcd hy 11 cross, uud placed up on two horizontal club*. On thu pillar below the cross in front ih ihia inscription : "To Lioitt. Colo nel C. 1-*. Seymour, Scots Fusileor (Sunnis, lulled iu uction, Nov. 5, 185-1bonoalh llieso words nro II cross uciilpturod in thu stone, and lho letters, "1 II. 8;" and there is a Kusaian ioseription oil thu hack to save the tomb Irom desecration. At tho loot ol iho tomb there is an elaborately curved stoiio lozenge, surmounting a slab, and 011 1 ho loz enge ia engraved the croat of'the deceased, with homo horaldnc bird springing from tho Imso ol n coronoi, witlt tho lu^uml, "Kol pour devoir, C. F. S. 2K'. 36." flow many an absent Iri-md would liavo mourned around ibis tomb I Close lit hand is a Imndaomo monument lo Sir John Campbell, than whom no soldier w#b ever moru regretted or more beloved hy those who served trader him, mid not lur apnrt, in another row, j H a magnificent sar cophagus in black Devonshire marble, to t’ra memory ol Sir II. Newman, of the Uronadicr Courds, who uIso lull at Inkermami. With all those memorials of death behind ns, the front wall nt Cathcart’s hill ban over been a lavorito spot lor gosaips and spectators, and savers of jokes, nnd raconteurs ol ban mats, or such jeux li'esprit ns find favor in circles military' It lias now lost thu atiraciion of position, and retains only its graver, more melancholy uud more uuiural interest. Difperknce in the Sf.t of Tiukr.—Professor Dacha notea iho lollowing Bingular dil'eruncr tho motion ol the Ilona in lira Atlantic and I’ucifiu oceans On our own cons', in the Atlantic, they flow from unst to west; on tlio const of Sront Hr tain, from west to east ; and on tho Pneilie their motion ia circular, they sweep round hy Aaiu,iurn and (low back. Sbntknck ok Death.—Frederick Miller, con-1 victed atCiiniliRrlniid, -Mil., o| tho murder ol Di. Ilsdal and llunry (srin-ff, lina linen aomuiiecd i>y Judge Perry lo h. hung. Il is the duty ol Hie Governor to debigiiato tltu day. 1 [From the N. Y. Express 31st till.] All “American** Procraslon broken up nml Blspirkcd by a Hand of Irish men I Tho "Young Americana" hnd n mass meeting Inst evening, at thu junction of the Bowery and Third Avenue. Alter addresses from Gen. Lloyd, Col. May, and other speakers, a torchlight proces sion was lot lin'd. When the procession was turning tho cornor of Li avenue and 13th street, it was suddenly attack ed in lira moetbni'al manner by a numerous gang <-l irishmen, who had evidently linen lying in wait for the purport*. A volley nf stones and brickbats waa ae.nl into tho rnnka.—many of thu lights were wrench'-d from tt"' hands ol the torchbourors, nnd extinguished,—while every tnn°parency on which the rufliaiiB could lay their hands, was summarily destroyed. The American flag was taken from the proces sion and trailed in the dirt,—hut it was subsequent ly re-taken by a party *»I the Young Men’s Ameri can Club. Knives and pistols wero brandished hy tho attack ing party, nnu a number ol parsons w-ero badly beaten in lira melee. Tho Irish came upon tho Americans maidenly,filling the air with groan-* and biases, intermingling witn curses lor tho Know Nothings. # ... „ , The scene, for a while, was ono of tho greatest consternation, and lorn moment it wns loared iliut tho scenes recently exhibited in the streets of Lonihvillo were 10 ho re*cnuQted hero. The forbearance and sell-restraint of the citi zens in tho procession, however, alone saved tho e ty from that calamity,—but nothing was left un tried mi tho purl ol their lerocious opponums to provoke tho catastrophe. The Irish succeeded in what is thought to hnvo been their object in making lira ntinck- TUi'.Y brors UP AND DISl’KItaBDTHE PROCESSION. They are be Moved to belong to a gang of desporudoes com monly known a,* thu "First Avenue Hangers." This assassin-like attack upon n pi-uculul body of citizens, we aro assured by difluront persons who witnessed the scone, was ono of tho most out rageous il is possible to conceive. Thoio wan not -.lie remotest provocation,all accounts agreo, on lira part ol tho procession, which was composed of unoffending American nnd adopted citizens. Thoro was no banner in the procession bonring any in scription for device even which could possibly ho •oustrued as a reflection upon any person or party whatsoever. [Front the Augusta Chronicle &. Soutlnel.] 4-ITIore Nut* for *li«’ K.i»ow Notliings.” "Yesterday the State Hoad paid off twenty-fivo thousand dollars lor Bonds dim 1804. —Atlanta Intelligencer. . ... . As nn offset to tine crowing nf tho foreign party over the business ol lira Hoad, tho writer ol ibis article haa it letter front Ins agent at ono ol lira largest depots on lira Hoad. Irom which tho follow* 1112 extract is made: , "Since lira sale ol lira cars of tho Sinto Kona hy tint Sheriff of Tcmmi-Hoo. nt Chattanooga, tvo nan get off hut littlo grain ; lira depot is crowded, and very littlo carrion off." ... Wo admire this specimen ol Imnnoiomig^ which A It It I VEIL Bliip Undaunted, Fcott, I'eterbuud, in bullast,to Brig ham. Kelly ft Co. Mtlp Bombay, Hill, Hustou, Ut ballast to Brigham, Kelly ft Co. , Hark Rrunotto, Lancaster, Belfast, Me, with Huy Lulii* uud L'lintwr to Curleton At I'ur-oiis. Iturk J-itin llnuo, .Moore, Bellii-l—Muster. Ilrig Joscphurt, Ferrall, Uullmmro—Brigliatn, K Co. M1I/.0 to Minis Johnson, M A Cohen, V. merit Con stantine, llurdwick tt Cooke. Brigbutn. Kelly Ac Co, Duiiu «c V\ ushhuri), L)iin Ac Snider, King Ac .-ons, \V P Yonge, Brantley Ac Co, Grenville Ac Co, McMulu n Ac Du) ir, Crane, Wells Ac Co. Rabun Ac Smith, G II Jobn*uu, Chaffer Ac Co. J P Collins,.! D Jesse, J Jones, Ihdcomlie. Johnson Ac t'n, Fawcett Sc Co, AS DaUridge, Ruse, Davis fc t.iiug. 111 iihi-ii. tVelister Ac Pnlmes, A II Solo mons Ac t o, N It Ac II t\ eeit, Bo-lon Ac Vllliiliuigu, I) D Copp, A Huy wood, J 8ii!li( I, A lion-hurt, Bolin Ac l-’os- le r ,J Barron. C It Bateson, Locket Ac duelling*, Young, l-Hltun. I i ui ton Ac Co. Wyatt 4c Co. Brig Phillip l.urrubeo, Auld, BosUgi—Brigham, Kelly Ac Co. 9chr Abbott Deveruux, Alcliorn, Havana, wilb Fruit to J A Brown. Fclir L 11’Donnell, Hopkins, Oueechec, with G4ii0 bushels Rough Rice to R llutiersbam Ac Bon. t.tnamur Gordon, Burden. Charleston—J P‘'rooks.— Mdze toC It R, Flu Bout, Harden Ac Co, Minis Ac John son. Pullen, Hutton Ac Co, Mrs Freeland. Brown Ac Co, II liviiemun, Holcombe, Johnson Ac Co, L Solomons, Ogileti, BlsrrAc Co. Ruse, Duv s Ac Long, ('ruger Ac Wade, .1 Canter, Hulmii Ac Brnitti, II Boifel lett, M Moli na, W Henry, Habersham Ac Bon, 8 -M Luffi'eau, J Mo noy, Weber At Bro, J Richurdboii, E J Purse, McM C King, Cohens Ac Hertz. Biaumer Semin..Ie,>tiuw, Pulalka, Acc—8 M l.nfflleau. 4!) bales 8 I Colton uud mdze to Buslou Ac Co, Lawton Ac Co. Order. Bleumer Planter. McNulty, Ceittreviilago, Acc—Crane, Wells Ac Cu. 105 bills Itoslii, 3fi tinles B I Cotton, 124 Cow Hidesnnd mdze to Cooper Ac Giililaml, lli.ston A. Villulonga, Hubershnm Ac Son. V Wouluy, King Ac Buns, aud others. CLEAR I l». stoumihip Alabama, 8cbeiick, New York—Padelford, Fay Ac Co. Brig E P Sweat, Daulon, Boston—Beets, Thompson Ac Co. Brig Abby Francis, Gurdner, Now Orleans— llrlgham, Kelly Ac Co. Sclir Frank Hall, Cain, Philadelphia—llrighnm, Kelly Ac Co. rtchr Louisiue, IlmlMon, New York—Ogden, 8tarr Ac They are distinguished for EVENNESS-’. PURE. Ml SI CA EQUALITY OF TONE, AND SUPERFINE ELA81IC A< vocai* and piano forte music. Tlie latest of American ami Foreign Publications, ns also a handsome collection of FRENCH ENGRAVINGS AND LITHOGRAPHS, with Frames. We whald; therefore,cordially invite our friend* and the public gfncrullv. especially tlios<* wishing to purchase it SUPERIOR PLANO, to call and examine our Stock, embracing nil kiuds of Musical Instruments. TV. D. ZOGBAUM k CO., nov 6 Nos. 107 Brvau und 04 81. .fritinn WHO’LL SMOKE P JUST RECEIVED. T ^HE SUBSCRIBER hasjust returned to tlie city with . a fine selection of the following llramls of t'egnni: DELIGHTFULLY FRAGRANT Pina do Oro (l/Jtidros,) Rio Hondo (Londres,) Ln ll.diitna (MUiilreH, 1 Rio Hondo Githtues, ltio Hondo Millar, Ojas do oro, Consui-lo Tmburos, Lit Mnnolu, Esmeralda, Flor Finn, (Esmeralda,1 El Crisol, Reiicurel Millar, Columbia, Lgii'-s. nov 5 M. MOLIN A, cor. Congress uud Bull sts. CO-PARTNERSHIP NOTICE. ..... „ 1 IIAVK 'THIS DAY iuied with me. .-AMLLL H. IIAHMAW nn.l rilANCIS.I.CHAMI-Iil.V Tli.l'ira- n"«* will hereafter be conducted under tho mime nnd style of HARMAN VS k CHAMPION. Mivanimli. G.i „Nov. 1, i860. nov 6 Coal aud Wood Yard. J. T. THOM AN, orreRrt for kalk AT THE UNION FERRY WHAltF, A Sl'PPLT OF Red Asl» C’onl nnd Fire Wood of nil kinds. ( v)NSL'MKRS can depend upon being pr.-mptly sup plied with a good article. Strict attention given to fair nu asuromeut. Boxes for orders are placed nt Hu* stores or Messrs. J. M. Cooper A Co.. TV. G. Dickson, XS. W. Lincoln, nt the office of tbe Morning News, and at my residence iu Join s Nt. T< rms rnsln net 8—um NOTICE. OFFICE COMMISSIONERS M ATER WORKS, ) Savannah, Nov. 3, 1865. ( A N ELECTION of a Secretary of this Hoard, w||f lie field on Saturday, the lOlh iustaut. Salary $800.— Bond, with ono or more securities, $5,000. At same time, an election of an Assistant Engineer will take place. Salary $000. No Load. Applications, naming securities, may be left nt the Commissioner’s Office. JAS. 1*. SCREVEN, Cli’n. nov fi—0 NOTICE. To THE HEIRS OF TIM>S. WALLER Y\Tlir.REAS Tims. Waller, of Jefferson county, Ky. Tt deported thirlifoon the2eth 1 f January, 1 -54. and the uuder.-igueii was uoiiduatud nnd has qualified sa executor ol his last wifi wild le-iunu-nt- Among fin legatees mentioned In -uld will are the heirs of Jon» than Waller and ''aJali Wal er wlm married Mg V\ alter. ‘J’lie above Aunt: per-ons moved from 4larj land 'o ihe Stnie of Georgia in about the year I71W <• ’O-.l. At that time they consisted of Prectll-*, widow- Jonathen Waller, with her two children (William r.c: James. 1 and 8„rah Wnlle-', who married Win. VVolle-. with their children. The ’ust heard from them or the.* desccudunti they resided in Httucock county, Georn They will hereby take notice that by tho provision, of tho will they must, within four years from the deaih'f the testator, come forward, uud, by sstiBfectory iro-U establish their IndenUly,uud the legacies will then U< paid to them. VV. II. FREDERICK, Ex'rofThos. Waller, deceased, Louisville,Jefferson co.. Kv..—w3in sepi. II NOTICE. P ROPOSALS Will bo received for building n NEW MARKET llUl’SE on the same site as that now oc cupied. Plans and specifications.with all information necessary, may be had nt the Office of the City Surveyor. Contractors must hand in thoir estimutes by or before tho 15tli of tho present month. A. N. MILLER, R. A. ALLEN, J. N. LEWIS, nov ft Commissioners. NOTICE.' A LL PERSONS concerned uru hereby notified. Hint two months after dnte, 1 shall apply to tin- Court of Ordinary of Ellingluim County, for leave’to sell all Limb and Negroes belonging to Hie estate of the late Robert II, Rur>inin. dec’ll, for division among Hie heirs of suid de- c. used. MOSELLE ZETTLEIt, Adm’x. Springfield, Ga., Nov. 6. NOTICE^ OFFICE SAVANNAH, ALBANY A GULF R. It. CO. ] Savannah, Nov. 3,1855. ( ri^HE THIRD Instalm- iu of 10 per cent, on llie cap!- 1 tal slock of this Company, is retpiircd to Ik- paid at this oltico, on Monday, the Till day of January next. Hy order. C’HAS. GRANT, Sec y and Trens. nov ft—entonJan 7 C OAL.—A superior article of Clover Hill Coal, land ing and for sale by SPENCER CUHHEL1. & CO. | it ARI.E.RDDIED Negro Men to work 1 1 u «w huurtl steamship Isabel. Apply 1 nov 5 COHENS D TO IIIHE* 11s coal-passers \n It HERTZ. COOK WANTED. A GOOD Cm Hi, (colored,) Washer nml Iroiier, lor 1Y vlrain liberal wages will be paid. Apply lit this office. nov 5-2 I ■'ASTERN li A Y.—200 bales F.nstsrn liny, for snlelow from wharf. m»v5 L\NN tt t*NIDE" $ IO It E WARD. S TOLEN by Mr. Warner's negro, Solomon, on Friday Evening last, between Hie hours of 7 ant II P. M., (rout tbe Dressing lleom of the Athei ieum, a 4 Inch Cob Repealer, ivory stock nnu engraved mounting.— All persn 8 nro hereby rnmioned against purclissiug tho same; uud wtnuver w ill give Mich inforiuailon us will lean to the recovery oftlra urtlelo to Mr. J.C. Frede ricks, City Hotel, until Saturday Evening nsxt, or nficr, forward tt to me at Augusta, care or W. II. Crisp, shall reccivo lira above reward. J. C. FREDERICKS, nov 2- ti* Just Published, by the HOWARD ASSOCIATION, I’lllLA R eport on spermatorrhoea, or seminal Weakness, Impotence, the Vice of Onanlim, Masturbatlou. or Self-Abuse, and oilier Disease* 01 the Sexual Oigaus, with an account of tho errors and da ceplmnsni Quacks, and valuable Advice to the Afflict- I, tiy Geo. It Calhoun, M. D.. consulting Surgeon of io If..ward Associutioi). 1’iiilndelphin, Pa., a benevo lent Institullou established hy special endowment, lor Hu- lelielol the sick nml distressed,affl*cicd with‘•Vir ulent and Epidemic Direnscs.” A copy of the above Report will be sent by mail, (in a sealed envelope), ftrt of charge, on the receipt ot Two stiamps for Pnoinir- AddreasDR. GKO. R. CALHOUN, No 2 South NINTH ^Philadelphia, Pm oct 16—ernlBni CITY COURT OF SAVANNAH. July T«vm, 1855. W HEREAS, Jacob Ellison, Antonio Ponce, trj William F. Rrnntly, Talesmen, suinrooun/j# Grand Jurors, made default for the Term, and V<vtt.i. Cohen, Grand Juror, made default on the third Lj o[ the Term, It is ordered that Jacob Ellison, Amkm Poneo aud William F. Rrautley, be fined Fort) [x>!-tn each, and that Moses A.Cohen bo fined Ten D-liin, unless good aud sufficient cause of excuse be filed on before the first day of the next term of this Court. And win reus, William Henderson, Georges. Nichols, Frederick into, John L. Grayson,Cope llamrpt, "m. J-Bee. John E. Stillwell, James Dickson, «nd Ihti-.t MeQuinn, summoned as Petit Jurors made default fir the Term. It Is ordered Hint thoy be fined Twenty l- lar? each, unless good and sufficient cause of exeunt* filed on or beibre the Hist day of tho next term of t)* Court. Extract from .the Minutes, WM. II. BULLOCH, Clerk. Or-I ’he next Court, first Monday iu November. Savannah, Oct. 10—2nwtlnov NOW IN VOI R TIME. A LARGE nnd bcamirul Mule for salo, perfect’’ sound, fiue from all faults, uud lias been drlvtutt n buggv f»r tho post 1 months. Termsetsh. Apply*' this otfice. no? 3-lf NOTICE. A LI, PERSONS are hereby cautioned not toenail uny oiiu ou account of the Sclir EMMA JULIA, without a written order trout myself or iiiv son IV. II, Dickerson. nov 3-3* _ II. J, DICKERSON. A rrival < if the “brio r. m. charltox- Frult for Ihe Savannah Fruit Emporium—:w.d00 Sweet Ornngcs, 2iKi choice Runclics Humtims, 50 d»zen ohoic.) Pibe Apples, and a lot of Plan tut ns. .VI th# above have been selected expressly for me. by Captain l.ighthniirne, and will be sold at the Savannah Fruit Emporium. nov 3 J. A. BROWN. A Ro.il ATICSU!!NAPPS«.-5bdoz8ciieldum Aromatic Schnapps, In qts and pis, lor sale by nov 3 J. V. CONNER AT tt ClL_ \YFHITK BEANS, M ACC A ROM AND VF.RMICrL vv LI—in boxes Mnccnrnni, lodo Vermicelli, iu bbls White Beans, for sa'o by nov 3 J. V. CONNERATa; CO. D ried fru it, pickels and uathup-25 boxes assorted catsup, 50 do Pickles, qts and pts; also Almniiils, Brazil Nuts and new Rutslus, for sale by nov 3 _ J. V. CONNER AT St CO- I IQU't iRs AN I) W I N KS—ui half pipes Utard and j other French Brandies, 15 eighth cueksof very o'd French Brandies, 50 qr casks 51alag’»,25 do do Madeiu Bine.ti pipes Holland Gin, 2 puncheon? Jamaica and Saint Croix Rum, 60 boxes Hi Jttllcn Claret, 5 qi casks Sherry Wine, 100 bbls Domestic Gin, Rum sod Brandy, for ealo by J. V. CONNERAT tt cO. tt«v 2 I ROUND R|1)E—10 boxes superior quality frcuh ' 1 Ground Rice Flour, 5 keg? superior Ground Rice, in store aud for salo by JOHN INGER80LL. dors,a very superior nrlielo and fresh, in store aK for sale at New York prices by nov 3 JOHN 1NGBR90M* Supcrfiiie Flour; 2tl(l sacks Etowah Mills Huperlliu Flour, In store and for sale by nov 3 JOHN INGERSOl.L. DECK i KI IGIIT WANTED. A DECK LOAD of Cotton Is wanted for Brig L. t PALMER, bound lor Boston. Apply to >v 2 COIIKN8 h HERTZ. DI-’.l'A It'I’F.D. steamer 8t Johns. Freeborn Palnikn.&c. titenmer Gordon, Burden, Churlt-slon. PANNENGEIkN. Per sleamsblp Alabama, lor New York—J M Fond, Capt It J Morse, II Melrose, Mrs IVuits, Miss Vender. Vese, and fi Meeragu' Per steamer Gordon, from Charleston—R 11 Rlndf, R It Knelt,Jr, II Wolf, 8 Y Lovy.J C Levy, M ( ss Hunter, Mr Jones, lady nml 2 children, .1 D Langluune, Mrs Mtuwurl, J Kelly, lady and eliild, J Roksubatigh. J R Hull, H G incersol 1, l avis. D Angelin, II Wise,8 0 ttullivuli, D K Ki-e.'es, M Molina, Dublin, U Anderson, J U Wilkins, O If Irvin, Mies 1.rimer, Miss MeNelty,nml 17 deck. Per steamer 80 mi not*, from rululka, fcc—Miss Nich ols. Mi*s A II Cooper, A W Cooper, EGause. K West, u R Fairbanks, \\ PhUhps, VV Nichols, 1:Cowart,u VV Yovng, J C HoweP, A a Atkiuson nml son, J D Kunph, Deli rose, Mrs Cary. C Sterling nnd lady, Dr Waldo, J If Gniiby, M Thornton, II .Smith. VV IHpkc, Ktllpatrlck, J Cowley, M lleuuoti, Wnmlersoii, T D llnwkinr, Win Russell, J Hellers, and 15 deck. Per siruimir PLihter, from t 'ealrevtUnge, kc—Mr Mn'- •o r y, lady uud elilbl, Miss Mum ford, Hon J II Hrowo, Col U VV Flournoy. 1*1 F..7IOU AN DA. New Yolk, Oct 31— Cltl, sclir J Smith, Savannah.— Nov I—Ar, brig Excel, Tnllmnn, Sava- nah. Boston, Oo- 3u—Ar, brig Mnllulc. Diuleu, "ct 31 — Cld, burk Warren, Suruimali; brig Whitaker, Jackson, villu. Newport, Oct 30—Ar,brig Orinoco, Boston, for J;.ck. sotivlllc. Portland, "ct 20—Sid, brig Swan, Savannah. Warren, Oct 30—Hark Warden, anchored at mouth of thu river, watliog wind to sail lor Savautinh. Holmes’ Hole, Oct 30—Ar, brig M Y Davis, from Sa vannah, for Boston. 3Ih»—Ar, brig Mary Ann (of Sa vannah,) llngan, from Georgetown, S C. lor lloslon, ran paye oil dolus nine yours beloro duo, and at tlio same I11110 allows un execution oi $*,600 to ho levied upon lho property ol tlio Hoad, and thus not only paralyzes tlm husinoss ol tho Road, hut soTumsly nlVoutinu lira Gwttti" lu 'd Western Hoad?, and involving n grout pocuniary loss to hundreds ol iiulividuiilrt. 'l ira writer of this nrlielo has now a rucoipt lor a (iniuility ol grain in ono ol tho depots on lira Sinto Road, with tlio following grutilying oiidoraenmni on ns laco, niftdo liy tlio agent ol lho Houd: " I u he shipped when cars can he hud." Wo think this littlo behind ’1ml nranmrahlo loan taken hy lira Stiilo ntaovon per cent., und traits* I'oriud to her citizous at mix por coni. Wo corn* | asliero la.t niglu neur VVest i'hop. Will probahly have mend the "cracking ol these uute" lo lho .IoIiiihoii 1 to dUuluugo part of hor eargo, Inmher, to he got off. organs. I*i.antkii. New York, "ut 31—Cld, sclir Jonas Smith, Furman, It s Hinted tlmt iho second v«iltinra of Mr. Hen* "Thirty Yeats' View" will Ira ready in April Huvnnnuh. | I’ltiliidulphln, "cl3l , viiiimtlt. ltiilliiuore,"ct.3l—Cld, sclir Joint vmiiiab. • fid, sclir J Furmnii, Baker, Sa Price, Sa U AY, I.ATIIS, Itc—1611 bales prime Eastern Huv, Hitt M l.ulhs, Hi M l\ VVlilie Pino Lumber, 50 bbls Apples. 25 bbls Potatoes, UuuUog from bark BrmtcUo this day, and lor sale by nov 5 CARLETON it PARSON8. I.ONDDN PIHENIX IIIIE OIT'ICE. r |''l I IS Company lakes Flip Risks in tills city, and in JL snres Rents and Leases, out 23 ltdllT HABERSHAM St SON.Auents. H AY, APPI.i-.S AND "NI"N8.--20O Rales prime North Itiver Hay. 8tl bbl? Apple? in good order 4? I)l)'s union? In good order.— l.amt.ug fivm t-clir Al exander M,frotn New York,and tbr?nle bv ' 4, lj,T WAVERS CONSTANTINE. J IMF.—In store and for suit- by j «ol!H_ RAYNARD k ROWLAND. EAL.—50 llagn fresh Meal, lor sale by ocl 30 M / I IN NY CLtiTII arrive, by pA fry HUNTER St GAMMF.l.l -fin Rales oct 6 iiov 2 J.V.CON Pl.lt NTFA3ll.il AI.AIIA71A RIU.S choice Apples. Phuraix. Bell, Flowors, Spltzhurg, 2ti m Pippin? Ac. Also. SOtlrvcnhiKs, Spltzhurg, 2« oz Pipni. ..... Now La)er Raisins, lluckwhtnt. Cabbages, Potatoe . "nious, Cranberries, Smoked Tongues, do Beef, Pig Sides, do Shoulders, Bologna Snussages, Cln-pse and Butter. For salo at tho Savannah Fruit Emporium. J. A. BROWN, oct 31 No.27 Whitaker street. ~SJ K .' is 1. a N IUV,TT"N IIAGGI Nt 5- Tucker, t ’mipor P & Co's,brand. Instore amt lor sale by ocl 31 BAVN ARD fc UtOVLAND. r l*AI.MAS,MANTILLAS AND"I."AKS.—NEVITT, 1 I.ATHR"P tt ROGERS have opened this liny, a splendid assorlmenl of Lad)’? Velvet Salt 11 Moire An tique and Cloth Talmas R»d Cloaks, the richest g oods -rinl Hits sennon. oct 30 a C IIUII'K lll-TTKIl AND OUKKiUi.—Jn.‘> 1H«. Ulmto-no.l.,1- ."“•w;.» [i , SfS* % , T l Srr»t •atehy uovS J - V. CONNER H AGGINIt. . . bark Itiidtniil, from Boston 001 20 f 1KNTHAL R \IL lt"AD S1’"CK.-2I l ‘ above stock fi fry heavy Itacumg. landing Irom . For sale by T. R. fc J.G. MILLS. hares ot (lie sale tit applied for immc'Ramiy) oct 20 WM. WRIGHT M anufactured tor vuco-iiu tmxe? h. 6ao4 l It) Lump Tobacco, 50 boxes Rougti and Readji uud other Hue kind?, tor rale hy nov 2 J. V. CONNFllAT Sl 00. •r»ir. ( IIEHBHEE r.EOllGlAfi- ri'xiiE only paper In tlio cHy of Marietta. Ilavmgs 1. largo circulation In Ihe Northern part of Georgi* amt Alntinma. t? an excellent advertising mediant tt: Savannah Merchants. 8. A. ATKINSON. n„v 2— I m Publish*^ nIav fmnt rou in <giiitn a .tiuai* A lso KICK FLOUR—made from New hn* at the Mill In Indian treet. Families rvguii’J supplied by semlluK tliclr name and place of.rrsltiec** I'.iironuge respectfully sol'clted. nov2—3 GEO. G FAttfrf- a 1 ; KI.7IOYAI.. ,, ,v. HENRY MILLER havo removetl0> office No I, over Rodgers & Norris', cornerMj and Lincoln streets. TO HUNT, . tBB riMIK WHARF east of and adjoining “«.ti«v , s‘'™ 1 Steamboat Company’s Wharf,’’ «l present . cc pied by Thomas Purse, Possession given t»t 1 comber uext. Apply to J. BRYAN, Itrekrr, nov 2- IS ll7Bny*twrt-. AVY BREAD.—75bbls PilotsmlNs'f ‘ 1 low, by ., JOHN INGKKM'l-b' 1 >ll.t )T AND N._ Bread ln store, and for sulo low, by nov 2 _ JOHN t ( 1 R"UND sPK.ES.—A full assortment of 1 spices from the Hudson M IBs, Nsw York, l« ,u ’ ,c ’ ’ ™Vs“"“ N " ''‘"""'"j.M’N |NOK«»M.U t v AN A I,'COAL.—50* toil* superior Cnnal Cos* * lH sale, to arrive por ship Chaos. Apply nov 2 DANA A WASHItUR^ S IGHT EXCHANGE on New York, lor rate. , nov 3-3 IL HABERSHAM St H 1 ™, O ATS, 0 MS,—Lauding from schr C. S Pew*''* Irom llnltimore. Also fri store; Prime North rive Ha), Flour. Outs, Brans und Shorts. For rale bv sept 25 WAVER w CONSTANTINE^ M uscogee railroad siock tor snto bv n H IV lor oiwo „ nov t C. A. L LAMAR;.. I AOU SAl.fe—Salt tnlols to suit jiurclraser*. APP 1 ) i to oct2J WILLIAM HATl’ERHBY o ALT -t.tvcrpoot Salt tn slow avul for ssie by O opt 31 HA VNA RD St Rt >** l.AWJb. RANGES—^25.00ii, J not’received fret) front II*'* 0 ** O 111 store and fm sale clunp, ■>> M. fll A •essor to Champion St Watts, No. 4 Honiara