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■ . v.
iIOuTHERN SUN.
pub!ioiioci Weekly’oy
;«,]! s 11. MAY ES .
proprietor.
HI i|;li«n :
Wm $2 CO-
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|H AI'VKIMI-EMENTS
BH r,i : i! I lii-fitirl lohs will lie made on
HV - at. ! mariapres will be linked
m i A T E 8-
§ im oM. 3M. CM. 12 M.
I c 4l S 7 ss> $ 14 S2O
” b ! II 14 2" 80
jg|.. u 15 20 20 40
§|f' i.; | 20 20 83 CO
20 82 40 00
i ■;.< :;i 8R 48 70
BP :-s :;7 45 . f 0 8u
K 22 48 52 04 00
j 4o oo 72 100
If’ 1 : ‘ 55 08 B<> 110
ff' ;| iO2 74 80 120
u -- v --- . . j i*
l : *B, lt\ US'* flKiVi'*.
. .iml f "Hrnrt! of Ordinaries,
c;;'.. i- A<liniiii*trati>rx, Gtiar-
H w • ;»!ii>:i-ili the following, (a rule
i., and. i'.t: ini from ;
Bjk . „.i, ( ;mtvd b> law to be pulrliv.il-
-and the charge per levy
88., , j,-, will be 82 00
X . . , tutk., per square, $5.
H . It-'t■ ■.' ei iidiniuistiatlon umiGuar
■ . adruiuistration monthly for
■ ~„s iif leave to sell land, sixty days SG.
■ i sale ot land forty days per
H ;•.!•• prepi tty per square $3.
and e editor's, *ortj days $5.
H.; thirty and iv>, per square S4.
IBk IT I»T^!nsWK>»t
■ '1 HA US.
i; i!V F.vntlSß RYAN.
Ula down eur eyes,
H ,11 t i earth and dry ;
t c,intuit die.
■ i i-#-uta
jH e.u'li tear—sounda in each sigh.
tvf- .i t. it sm if e'er the deep
HevtuA ie iu reif,s Minis !
&. t , who werp
|> .! (lie sea that re>llß
; 'oo ei more ;
e v 'hnut a shore!
Hi that are not wept
i!-di> ■ ver outward fall**—
. . I fin years lias kept
■ are best of all 1
■ a . \r sh ill never know,
■, . i , li.e tears that flow!
Hi i irth’s flowers below,
:down from darkest skies ;
m onl teais of woo
■ l aradise,
a 1 'ii and make more fair
eanvns we jet shall wear.
■' - wav to God
■ a l\ stleaniof tears,
■ » .ding neuth the rod,
Hal.:: : : .le nl our years
H . - I'd! w s lie uis are tossed
- ii-.ns no heart is lost.
-and hear me home !
us ■ ! deeper woe !
|H s. t hit I are tint loam
v . t il will net flow !
rf&’, I ■ .. Ii the shore
i • forevermore !
H ' 'M VON MOLTKE.
V •*' ni ii(c Pi us*unn army,
K ,is lli-llmiitli FirltiCMT \ li
•i \ T;t h' IS ‘liifOUMlftllt |
if:,,! iho G nvut\ N;iff,’ 110 !
26, 1800, and cons.*- |
. * l~i :i t;■ w iiioiiilis of being j
<1 Ur Viol*to no old
k’.onbni'jf. S »on atlor his ;
' \ ■, a military officer, left!
-i •> estate in Holstein. At |
\.>ung M -like, with a ;
io tin* military Acad, my I
. wii > rigid discipline and j
y f and iby foii lid a I ton of
■ ! l c or. in 18*22 he out. red j
i \ ice as a Cornel. 11 s
h.-como impoverished, he
; i f.in himself tor many
f-r.tte pay of his info*-
’ •• i y i!it* practice <>f oconeray
•‘file was enabled to obtain
n* vari-ms modern languages.
H. ' t'* sum. recognized. From
* • e was in Turkey and Asia
: en sent there bv the Pius*
at to report on the war with
Alt. r his return, lie rapid
'■•rank of General, with
iv eg the General Stuff. He
■ ls :l lean of great modesty
; *s extremely reserved, and
: •: eof ‘fhc Silent ’ Ilis
' (1 pianitnity are the same on
K, ‘ ‘ 1 11 K * -is in the council.
■ ■•■vcnient of U’’s life is the
' - - against Austria, which
I, ‘ 11 hy him ami executed under
W May, 1806, in con
-1 ! ,iK * nct'fljti of the Bund, Prussia
[ , ‘ * iie old Genyan Confederation
’ admirable skill with which
#** | — mi - , i-U « ...... X
Inaependem Jour.nai—riaVotecl to tii© laterests of Gecrs'a.
1 : 2__ . f»
!»«•*• military preparations had been n.ade
\7;ta evident She was enabled to notify
Saxony. Hanover, and Hesse (Jasso! to rts
duce their minis, and consent to the as**
!-< mblin/ of a German Paliament, and to
demand compliance with these terms in
twenty-four hours. These powers fared
to lesponed, tin; Prussian army nexi day,
crossed into and took possession of the
thr< • h:v£! ? cm*. W ar was declared against
Austii., and the army marched into Buhe**
no a. Ihe Austrians were taken by sur
prise. The Piussiaiis moved in three lines;
the center under the command of P ince
Frederick Charles ; the right wing under
General r on Billenfieid,- and the left wing
under Prince Frederick William,*our Fritz,
who has recen* ly di iven back the right
wing of the French under McMahon. The
declaration ol war was made on the 20th
of June. On the 24’Ji the Prussians entei
ed Bohemia. There were almost'daily
fights by each of the three armies, which
erected a union on the first of Jn y, and on
the 2d c f that tn nth fought the great bats
lie of Sadowa, which destroyed the Aus**
trian army under Benedek, and ended the
wav. The whole campaign, involving a re.
organization of Germany, lasted less than*
three weeks. Ii was maguifioieutly plans
tied, and as brilliantly' execuied.
The same military genius to which Prus
sia owed tin* victory of 18G6, is now direct'
ing the successful operation of the Prussian
armies, which instead of defending Berlin,
as it was proposed they should do by the
French Emperor, are now carrying on the
war on u French soil, and forcing the cam
paign to decisive issue on one of the roads to
Paris. If this war shall terminate in the
triumph of Prussia, the name of Moltke
will stand among the great captains of
the world.
From tlio Atlanta Constitution.
napoleon.
The reverses met by the French forces in
the present great war, g.rrng on in Europe,
between France" and TVussTh, tv'irrant Tn
re-calling to public attention the leading
features to the eventful eareei of Napoleon,
upon whom the responsibility of the war
rests, and whose fortunes are perhaps, in"
volwd to a greater extent in its result
than any and all other of the. parties en*
gaged. .
Napoleon wa* born in Paris, on the 20th
of April. 1808, and is therefore sixty-two
years old. TTis full name is Charles Louis
Napoleon Bonaparte. He is the third son
of Louis Bonaparte, the youngest brother
of the i T eat Napoleon and llortepse Beau
harnais, the only daughter of the Empress
J .sephine, bv libr first husband. His ele*
,-ation to <h(* throne secured (lie discarded
wife of Napoleon I —discarded that lie
might perpetuate his own blood as royal in
the issue of a less un’sterile union—and it
forms one of those curious retributions of
time that mark the history of the world.
Napoleon cast off his lawful spouse in vio*
|atit>n of she laws of God and man, that his
issio’ might keep up his dynasty, and to<
daV the issue of that spouse sits where he
hoped to see the fruit of his own loins.
Poor Josephine has reaped her revenge af"
| ter her and« Ht 1).
L,,u!s Napoleon is the only French so**" \
iMcign ever bom a I Fans, and the fhst Na- |
poluon b«u n under the Empire Ilis 1" (
was greeted with () { cannon over j
entire Franco. H,. was baptised with great
pomp ;,i 1810, at Fontainblieu, by Cardinal
Fei-'Ch, nti-1 Ins sjionsors were Nap de >n ls»,
nnd his second wife, th n Empress Marie
Louise, for whom Josephine was discarded,
nnd whose Empire he now rules,
ITis youth was‘passed in miss >rt tine, and
his earlv manhood in exile. He was wed
educated and a fim* athlete. He took patt
in the R tuan revolt of ISoO. in which oo
displayed fine talent for war. He lived in
j (>sile in Switzerl aid with his mother tor
several years after this, Louis Philippe re
fusing to let him return to France, H>*
published several able works dnr'ng this
period, and won lame as an author. He
here refused the offer of the band of the
young Queen of Portugal.
1 Io 1836. at the age of twenty-eight, he made his
famous effort at St rash tug to ou.-i Louis Phillippe
lr. m the French throne, but tailed, was taken, and
sent to America: but he soon returned to Switzer
land. Upon the French Government threatening
tlmt country with war if Napoleon was not .expel
led, he went, to England ard tried literature again.
j a 1810—thirty years old-lie tried, at Bologne,
to get his throne a second time, tailed, and was
caught, lle-wa- tried, and sent to the dark dun
geons of Ham. After six years of captivity he es
j caped to England.
j In 1848, on the organisation of the French Re
public, he was elected to a seat in the National
Assembly, and returned and entered on his duties.
• lie was soon elected President of the Republic by*a
BAINBRIDGF, GA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1870.
majority of three an t a half million,* of votes. In
1851, he overthrew the Assembly, sectHreu ali.pow
er to himself and was endorsed by the yeopN by
being made President for ten years In 1852 be
was elected Emperor \>y the largest popular. _vote
ever c tst. He married, in 1853, and has one ®on
born .March. 1850
He has raised France to the highest power and
glory she has ever known. He has kmnbled fens*
sin and Austria in successful war. He freed Italy
in 185!> lie has been the leading Monarch of the
world for neorlv twenty years
Perhaps r.o monarc ft has ever occupied bis s'St .
by no strange a tenure. The posionity o! Wing it 1
at any mmuc.it by the caprice of his meicuna! j
Frenciinien, has made his sovereignty a sort of a ,
gambling arrangement, where the least relaxation i
of t<is wirs would be fatal
His las* movement lias begun unfortunately, and
the predictions of his overthrow are plenteous. The
Prussians seem to have whipped from the s art.
'l'he general impression is that Napoleon has
reached a crisis ia his fate, and a few days may sec
him crown lest from defeat, or more tirmiy estab
lished by success.
Teeth Set with Diamond— To what ex
tremes and follies the g"d of fashion can
lead its devotees is show by the following
clipped from the New York Tun:
*A brilliant fashion which has just been
invent'd in this progressive city, bids fair
to outline Palis in ns lustre and extrava
gance. Recently an uptown gentleman
of wealth and fashion conceiving the daZy
z'ing idea of having his front teeth ss>tj
with diamonds, He corifered on the sul>- i
ji ct with two of his friends, one of whom'
is a lady of literary celebrity, and all were
so well ports and with the sparkling novelty,
that they had large and sparkling firstwater
diamonds set into their front teeth, and oil
SundaV afternoon they attepded one of our
most fashionable churches yn Fifth avenue,
attracting considerate attention and di
vi-rling tiie attention of a large number of
the congregation lion; their devotions, by
the lustrous rays of their teeth, On tneir
return home they were followed by a mul
titude whose curiosity had been excited by
the dazzling radiance of the brilliant circle.
'Should this fashion be adopted, jewelers,
lapidaries, and dentists will reap a rich '
harvest, and it will tend to promote good j
nature arid • cleatHTnesa as-t-ke—queen t*f j
fashion, especially those who are thus fixed,
*. ;a .thc.ir.li.’uiii
smiling, if for no other purpose than to j
show their diamonds. I
To Increase the Flow «>f Milk,—A Wri
t%\- who says his cow gives all the milk
that is wanted in a family of eight persduk,
and from which was made two hundred ahd
sixty pounds of butter, in the year, giver,
the following as ins treatment : ‘lf you
desire to get a large yiedd of milk, give
your cow, three times it day, water slightly
warm, slightly salted, in which bran has
been stirred, at the rate of one quart 1c two
gallons of'water. You will find if yon have
not found this by daily practice, that a cow
will gain 25 per cent immediately under
the effect of it, and she will become so at
tached to the diet as to refuse to di ink
clear water unless very thirsty, but this
mess she will drink almost at any ttme, and
ask for rame. I he amount of this drink is
an ordinary water pail full each time, morns
’no, noun and night. Four hundred pounds
of butter are often obtained from good
stock, and instances are nn minded where
the yield was eveu higher.
Wilkie Collins in his excellent tv,yeti'
‘Man and Wife’ thus refers to Sunday evens |
bug, in an English c> uniry house : ‘On j
Sunday evening before the wedding, the j
dullness, as a matter of course, reached its:
climax. But two of tin* occupations which j
people may indulge in on week days area
regarded as harmless on Sunday. It i> ■
not sinful to wrangle in religious centre- !
iroveisy. and it is sinful to slumber over!
a religious book . Ihe ladies at the l aiinj
practiced the pious observance of the even- j
ing on this plan. The seniors of the s< x
O 1 j
wrangled in religious controversy, and thoj
juniors of ‘he st-X .-lumbered over Sunday
books. As for the men, it "is Unnecessary |
It o s av that the young dues smoked wljeu,
they w re not yawning, and yawaed^whqy,
j Giev were no'! smoking. tEvery
house felt the oppression of the B<wr«dilsh-l
| social prohibitions which they badjifilpftW'iM
: upon tin rose vef, and yct’overV t up in tlml
j house would have been scandaozed *f ine
pj a iu question had been put : lou know
liiis is a tyranny of your own making; you
Know you fWt really believe it, yu don't
leallv* like it—why do t. u submit 1 ? The
freest people on the civilized earth are the
people who dare not face that question
The evening dtagged its slow length mi,,
and the welcome time drew nearer cod
I nearer for the oblivion in led.’
C.d umbos is jubilant ovef a three-quarter
pound peach, 56 pound watermelon,
i Business dull.
IJOW TO GET A PRINCELY. MEAL
WHEN YOU HAVEN’T A RED.
A c.ay’ or two ago, an elegantly dressed
gentleman, of about lorty years, entered a
*- :i ® restanraiit, a b'oek or two below Canal
Ktr«ej,-“ He to»*k a tfeat at a table that
commanded a view <jf the street, and or
dered a tui nipt nous (finrer, The finest din
mu - and ihe best jvines were spread before
him, to satisfy his fastidious palate; while
Tic fortunate .waiter, ip vegyir of a rlberH’
recompense for his" pm itenesrs and extra
labors, danped about with marwel ous celer
ity, was exceedingly solicitous about the
gentleman's appetite, and accompanied
every word with a bow The gei.itTeman
was at last done with eating, and culled
for a cup of French coffee to finish tla; res
past and to aid his digestion.
As the coffee tvas placed before hint be
thrust his hand into his breast pockcf, and
pulled forth a large pocket book, old, worn,
but. capacious and well filled. It was an
attractive pocket book, vvit.h a look like an
old. and corpulent stock broker, whe had
seen a deal .of service and had lost some of
hi** good looks, but had nevertheless a very
ehdery appearance, as though the owner
had a 'mint of rnneey to . back him. The
waite.r’s eyes danced iu-'delightful antici
puihyi as lip saw it. The' gentleman pro*
ceeded to open it, but in the very act he
hftlf rose from the table and lopkedjtito the
street, as if he saw something there that
that had attracted' his alien!ion.
‘Dear me f he exclaimed hurriedly, ‘there
goes a friend whom I must catch. Sup
pose you see that nobody tampers with
this pocket book, while I run out for a
moment. I shall return immediately.’
With this lie threw the pocket book on
the-table, and leaving his coffee as it stood
rushed out of the door. The waiter stood
guardover the pocket book fur fifteen min
utes. His honor.bad ''■!).£eft touched by tbe
confidence which the stranger had placed
in hini, and for worlds would not tamper
with his charge.
T!i" Coff>~ .#iiM bowatvei’-,
NrwiijptTjgffEer became tired of wailing,
and veiTHifstrustful. With the pocket
book in Ids hand n'e went to the door and
looked up the street, but the stranger was
nowhere to bo seen. He finally consulted
the proprief6‘r’cf 'the restaurant, and ‘be-
IWeek hi they concluded to open the
pocket book. They did so, carefully, and
found it full, crammed—with fragments of
a popular even ing journal. —New York Sun
1 -—■
VICTOR HUGO TO THE WOMEN.
The following characteristic letter from
Victor Hugo, is addressed to the women off
Guernsy: . •
Haustevilde House, July 22d, 1870.
A few men have condemned a considera
ble portion of the human race to the most
fearful war struggle ever inaugurated.
This war is neither waged for liberty nor
for right, but simply to satisfy a wVorn, a
caprice. At the beck and cad of prin
ces; two people are to slaughter one anoth"
ei. Whilst thinkeyx aVe striving to perfect
civilization, kings are perfecting war. This
ona bids fair to be .the most awful on re-
Cord. They say there is a gun. capable of
killing twelve men,'and a cannon that can
slay its thousands ! Do you know what is
i <goiug to Slow by the Rhine i It will not
tie the pure, clear alpine waters, but the
■ reeking blood of men. Mothers, wives and
i daughters will pour out their hearts in
j tears- Let uieiaddfess A- prayer, then, to.
;to you: Since these Idiirtl people forget
; t»;ey an* all biTfsherS, act as sisters toward
| them, and prepare alb tire lint you can.
‘ Take ail the old lioUseli 'ld linen in vour
i homes; here it is compiuatively worthless,
i there it'mav save tlie lives of the wounded.
Let every woman in tiie cotiniry apply
i herself to the task. Since men arc hager
to ii.fß ct all the w'nunds ih**y can, do you,
j.Lhe. wpnwni, help to heal af! id jtffir power,
j and if rn iiiU" carlii they act as w mid fiends
*do van *he tbe-augi ii*. wi ' ! bhh*>
•£ jifrtfrt ti edniig.bijtvAitiQt an ampkr
! k f AVe will then divide our
'f". * h “"
b* Prussia.
TANARUS.:: llugo.V. r
Yestcoday fine horse, at
' tenTjiting-trr tump tlfe.piciwtk fence floating
lija house, whs, ipr a m'ommft, H:>
belly was ripped open and the
■s>r. J fi-.-m th« 'mr : ng w-mnd. After
im.mngMut 1(H) yards, Kfs feet became
entangled among
. causing Wfe io plural* *n* IM He dyd
m » short time thereafter.— ISortk Ga
’ tsen, - r. "
A ROMAN TIC INCIDENT OF THE WAR
In the blooming, beautiful, balmy May of
1863, one of those dread battle-stained
years never to be forgotten, Gen- Tilgh
-111:111 fell, shot dead at the battle of Cham"
piou Hill, gallantly struggling in defence
of cherished principles. Hia noble life eb
bed away upon the sp A where he fell, and
the sad earth drank his blood with greedy
thirstiness. But upon that immediate spot
grew a peach Vee that reached maturity
while its roots steeped themselves in the
martyrs blood, Singular to relate, the
leaves and fruit of this tree abe A blood red
color. The tree was transplanted ancf ia
now in the orchard of Dr. John L. Hebron,
this county. The propagations from the
same are also of the same peculiar color.
There is certainly something remarkable
about this. We have seen the leaves, and
must confess they do look and eveu (to us)
smell Ikq blood. The fact c'an be witness"
ed by any one taking the trouble.
[ Vicksturg Herald.
CniNA and tiie United StaTTis.—We have
read with great pleasure the graphic and
interesting description of the
Chin ese embodied in this book—dim more
e 6 from the fact that we know the author'
to be more thoroughly conversant vfrifh the
condition, language, and manners, and cus
toms of the Celestials than anv other
American ; arid we arc convinced that he
has done bis sulyect -full justice,
lit; holds up tliis peculiar race before the
mirror in a clear and truthful light exhibit
ing great fairness in lfis conclusions and
giving a comprehensive and lucid view of
the whole theme. We comtheud the book
to all.— N: Y. Independent,
The Best Yet'.' —George E. Ferine, the
best ejigraver on Steel this country ever
produced, luts peeh a long time engaged-on
a 19x25 Potciat on steel of M. M. (‘Brick’)
Pom toy, which will be* the best and must
troriri ft AII OI l life RTfKJ H VI! i -~r> 1 t
in America. It will be primed on heavy
plate paper for framing, and will rank with
tho choicest Art works of the world. The
It rice of the engr iviug will .be. s2’o0 —vciy
low for bo fine a Work. (J P. Sykes, P. 0.
Box 5217, New York City, Publisher of
Pomeroy’s Democrat, offers one, of these
beautiful Pictures as a premium for three
new subscriptions to that paper, at regular
rates, ($2.50) received at the office in New
York City, before the first day in December,
wheu the engraving will be ready to send
out, by mail, wrapped on a roller, prepaid.
We shall soon sec how looks the mdn
who Writer, Sense and Nonsense ; Political
and descriptive articles, and those stanges
y beautiful Saturday Night Chapters,
Richies. —Many a man is ricli without
money. Thousands of men with nothing
in their pockets, sre rich. A man born with
a good heart and good limbs, and a pretty
good head-piece, is rich. Good bones are
better than gold, tough muscles than silver
and nerves that flash fire and carry energy
to every function, are better than houses of
land. It is better than landed estates to
have bad the right jjind of a father and
mother. Good breeds and badjbreeds exist
among men ab really as among herds and
horses. Education may do much to check
the evil tendencies, or to develop good ones,
but it is a fine thing to inherit the right
proportion of faculties to start.
Lens Sn.tr.p a? Your Five Dollar Bills.—
Avery ingenuous trick ha£-recently come to
light, by which ten five dollar bids are man
ufactured out of diner with but one pasting
to each of the manufactured notes and that
in different parts of each note and each note
minus one-tenth of itself. This loss is hardy
iy perceptible to a casual glanfee and it i$
said large numbers of these mutilated
i are in circulation. Be care la The Pepar-t
--; moot redeem a bill that bears, <evp»
| dence on its face that it has been tampered
i with. ‘ •#*,
A Wisconsin paper complains that the
school mistresses in that State will' get
married, and wonders whether general in
crease of salaries would not work a reform.
The innocence of the suggestion is one of
the most reassufiflg signs of these wicked
• times. ' * ;'
j 7-- , v * ■. vA „ , : ~ h . ‘ ; i
| The fuHowijrgepitaph is from a grave
stone out West :
{.. ‘"Herd lies Fas J>odf of Aqd»ew Recr,
1 Whose month did stretch irnbj ear to car;
Reader, stead Mgtitly o'er hia head,
Tot U he gaj** hy JoVe, joU're dead !
* r
A Beautiful Idea.— Far away among the
Alleglianies, there is a spring so small that
a single ox in a summer's day could* draifl
k dry. It steals its unobtrusive way among
the hills until itepreads into a beautiful Ohio
Thence it stretches away a thousand miles*
leaving on its banks more than a httndted
villages and cities and many a cultivated
farm and bearing half a thousand steam'*
boats. Then joining the Mississippi; ii
sTretches away and away some twelve hun<
dred miles more, till it falls into the em
blem of eternity. It is one Cf the greatest
tributaries of the ocean, which obedient to
God only, shall roll and roar till the angel
with one foot on the sea and the other oil
the laud, shall lift up his hand and swear
that time shall be no longer. So with im*
mortal influence. It is a rill—a river—an
ocean—as bouudless aud fatbomleße as
eternity.
Jim Fisk is said to be driving the PmHk
dtnt to the verge of madness by a series of
petty persecutions at Long Branch. Mr.
Fisk drives Ids six"it)"hat)d furiously past
his Excellency on the beach, filling the Freff*
dentiaJ heart with chagriri, nnd the Presi
dential ayes with dust. And the -prince is
said to be fn the habit of holding U»S noso,
as. if ho smelled something when HiS iEx
qellepcy saunfera bv r fhi* is
It is-said that the head of the nation cannot
take a quiet promenade without being
ing treated as if he were a night cart by a
Yankee peddler, but really we don 1 ! see
what we are going to do about,it. Mr,
Fisk’s nose is his,own, and cat> 'any ono
blame Lira for holding his own * i
An observing dog attacked
had entered a dry goods store Iff ftn
tern town the otiief day, bit offits lift!, an&
then seized It by the bar tUid led It shriek
ing back to ifs quarters Iff Mtr}- He
then returned to the store, flicked Wip the
tall, carried it out to thopigl aud‘tbei*’With
drew from tho scene ---4
A Pet Stalk ok gentiann nos
Alabama writes to’afirrtl in SelrtiA, about In’S
pet cotton stalk : Aly “pet” stifllt cotton
has this thofning two hundred and fifty-six
bolls, tweniy.-fonr white bloomS> Ahd three
hundred And twenty four squares; ftihking
in all, six htindred and four (604) bollS,
squares and blooms. The Malk looks us
luxuriant as when yott SaW it: '-I
1 ') '111—» ..I m> I* II ' mi lift
The Moscow Gazette very sffifmfldahtiy
says : “A time must corhe wftdn RussiA
will get rid of the fettc+h iWhdedd upon her;
and wiihe-establish her Hearty
purclvUsed in the East; It is’iftoUdhfcfWe that
she should remain foreVef in the cpndittbntf
which have been presdnbecl tcfjfe. by the
treaty of Paris —with empty tiai Dos?, with
towns unprotected from the* smallest gun
boat of Turkey, ail along tlfo r siiores o*
the Black Sea. A great power disarmed
in its own waters; a power victorious at
C lies me over the Turks is hoW uifde fended
against them !—can any one o.elfeve id
such a thing ? Can it be tide ? dkti his
tory stop at such a fact ? Rtlss'ttl njtiSt r<S
establish her power, iii tlie iMfiif Sek; and
she will reestablish it; Os lltlS one
doubts, not even her cbcmieil/Wh'o exert
their best effects only to pdstpdhStllc decU
sive day as far as they cari. ' r
American commerce, it is sta{e<i <t is i>e
ginning to feel the effects of the withdraw
al of the German vessels from thq seas, sS
the list of clearinqes from P re%
sent the names of many ships of American
origin; Recently a bark Bos<
ton wilira cargo of flour and produce M
London, being, it is alleg'd,Abe first Amci - -
iCanves&cl tiial has .cJ cared, fr#m that port
for the last four yearjp,, j
—?Hnui
Death of AntnuL* FA»RAatrTrrrfodr did-
4ltis tnorwhrglkmioiWkMjp.4fie deatU
lif AdtulVdf at
o’clock.*
ffis death uot<*ittc*£efttotl: N f#9 for Sev
er::! dii j-M 'breV wtom aHikoftheii A# refcoce
ft had
Dofeeased Stdtititi,
Kmo* errunty, TfTmbartflr <'(w
lt*r«.d the’ tutvi. whdH>dM»if^|i)J#S r eaf'S old;
and when ttvetro frobod
ed, the only 6d
years service! f served
with gallantry g»T«lpwar, *n4
after its termiuutl©r»ii)<» rcd tb thie'
commanJ of the .E*r»pwMMiluadroD. Jd
the death of F*rrag»«< fn4*i| ceut, y &
Dahlgrcn, the Ame rw! kilp ,<>6t
of its brigbte&t
wer. -*» *-• / “f *. r.-bWI «#
. VfeU i ■ • Mt --- -■■
m 17.