Georgia telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1844-1858, April 27, 1858, Image 2

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TUI*: GKOKGIA TELEGRAPH. Nows Summary. In the Hou«<‘, the Kansas motion of Friday, ti consider the vote on postponing the matter, was ta bled by four majority. A motion to postpone it till j 13th May was still before the Houso when they ad journed. • Strmubout Itncc nnct Disaster.—'While I the steamers Ocean Spray and Hannibal City, were MACON, GA., Litter from Europe. Tho Arago, with Liverpool dates to the 8th, arri ved on tho 20th. Cotton had advanced i«3-16d. V It. I ne -ales for two days comprised 24,000 bales, racing near St. Louis, on today last, the latter took of which -peculators took 5,000 and exporters 4,000 tire and was burnt to the water’s edge. Nine lives . Irvine 15 ooo bales of all descriptions to tho were lost, including two ladies and two children un. tnide. The market closod active and firm, UrnTy Horn, was Al, and va wlialo oil freight, *20,000. Tuesday Morning, April 27- Dlsastrous Fire. We are sorry to say that the large Furniture Factory, on Cherry Street, belonging to B. F. Boss, __ Esq., and carried on, we think, by Ross & Mell, I the side of their disgraceful laudations of Mr. Crit [From the Savannah Georgian. The Disgusted ami Disgusting Tel egraph. The Macon “Telegraph” is disgusted that we should have called upon Messrs. Cobh, Toombs and Stephens to answer to a serious charge made against them by sundry Southern Journals, and that several Know frothing papers have published our call by known. The Star of the West carnrht fire from the 2d story of the building, and had made too great totally destroyed by fire this morning (2Gth.) I te "^ 0 n - have noUher tfae time or deposition to reply The fire was discovered about two o clock, in the | if we could discover any point in the disgusting ex hibition afforded to its" readers by the insufferable toadyism of the article fulminated against us. will not yield to tho Telegraph in tho strength attachment personal and political to Messrs, . Toombs and Stephens, nor admit that we have impeached their integrity in any sense. On the other hand we cannot believe that the; fntfecnla of Orleans, on Friday, sal® 8 Ij.ooo at unenang- i surc( j What is still worse, there can belittle doubt I office with which they are clothed grants them any ed prices. Augusta, Saturday, ^es M4 at 9 to 1«|, ftwM the work ofan incen diary. There hud been ATtPAirif.a Tn ^awonnih. Mine dty. U6 oAles tt 11^ - . . , .... * , ,. r , . I politicians, or absolves them fromnstrict accounts* m 101 The nett decrease from last no fiw m thc buiIdln S ? lnce Wednesday, as we tility to their constituencies. to 1-j. Holders finn* ^ n IhnvAVu^n fnltl Ttvaq «. fli pa a fltnrv hriMr AdifipA I Such prominent southern men as the above men Total *435,000. External™ Water Privileges.—The Chatta- Sr I ^^mhe'A^rts toiatest I b*™ been told. It was a three story brick edifice | package, received here yesterday morning, that the ^ is now (Uted at 69,893 bales. Wlth ^ excellent steam engine—a large amount of I .. 8ans peur et Ban3 J. eproc he” and we are of - . • **—— J *” * * ’ — _ . I —i j v; -a—* J —-•*—'opinion that it is no less due to themselves than their friends, that they should be quick to repel any town of Napoleon is fifteen feet under water. I ^ tj-ms of i’h«l" ,1 e , P hia - — The Rev. Dud- C'naiinlty.—Among the numerous casualties re- I Ic y Tyng, whose arm was amputated last week in contly detailed, the following is very melancholyI ooase quenee of injuries received, died on 19th. The •The young man who recently went on a bridal j j^^ed was a son of the Rev. H. S.Tyng, who pre- tools and machinery, stock and matcriaL Advertiseiucuts. charge from a respectable source, involving in any ™»_w- Mr. Weed wishes particular attention to '^TconduS to ourfriend tour with an angel in bookmuslin, has returned with ceded him in the rectorship of the Church of the the Farming Implements, &c., he advertises, ffl.br, remark that the article.of ^Telegraph a termigantin hoops. Epiphany, at Fifteenth and Chestnut-sis. For the I Mr. McEvoy is ready for a very large fau- ,. boot lick” to some great man-than tho language Wlmt n Jlnili-oiul will do.—The Virginia and Ij^gj two years the Rev. Dudley A. Tyng has been ainess in Crockery, Glass-ware, Lamps, &c. I of one accustomed to the management of a respects- Tennessee Railroad is 804 miles In length. «cost ^tor of the Church of the Covenant He took an The Tax Receiver asks a little more promp- blo P ress ’ . v .. about *7,000,000. In i860, the taxable value 01 uie I ac tive part ia the recent union Meetings Philadelphia, I. . - Vj , T , - , ,, , eOTIO The Georgian’s humor is bad, because ms in the counties through which it passes, as taken I ^jd his discourses drew large assemblages. He was titude in making returns. It is hard, he says, Qcnt ^ compelled to admit the general rom the census. tUrt 7tWo years old. and leaves a wife and six * wait three months muileness for the accom- J of ^ urtide be abuses . H e did State assessment makes it 853,917,—j i °r »" « 1 chjdren. ^ phshment of what should better be effected m iff j crease in six years of *20,365,558. This suen- legalized FUlibaslrrs.—The New York Com- a fortnigl't. crease is alone the resutt of an in e p , pany formed for promoting colonization and com- Delegates to Montgomery will see that the which has cost only 8. ,000,00 . I mcrce Central America, have lately obtained from I c w w .. v,.,,,,, Fro... Ycrzucln.-Late advices from Caracas, theNow York Assembly! very liberal chirter ._ S. W. Kail Road Company have made arrange- report that the overthrow of Monugas is complete.-- I Capital of the company ia $300,000. They have I roeots to charge fare only m going. His banishment or execution are clamored fori It is |, ieW a preliminary meeting, and aro soon to be or- Day & Maussenet advertise very supe- reported that the American Minister had advised I san i ze( i. They have already established a small co- rior French Mantle Clocks, with which they Monagas to declare the city in a state of siege and lony on the bay of Fonseca, a very commanding si- are j a bope to sup pl ant those of Connecticut himself dictator. I tuation for trade. It is by such agencies that Cen 1 not copy it, for then every intelligent reader would have seen the total inapplicability of the balderdash he employs, and upon which we have no time to throw away. Who con tends that office or position should exempt from criticism ? Not we. The Telegraph as serted the reverse. Our Senators and Repre sentatives in Congress are public agents, and mseit dictator. i luauon ioi iraue. it is uy suca ngeumos mat van- i Ti.clNTriioI.oii Vnvvnicnt.-Theyhaveawood- I tral America is to bo regenerated and Americanized, |" * I should be held to a iust accountability by the Mr* x • 1 lant dsks attention to ins lib— | _ _ _ _ , « people ana by the press, as an exponent ot public opinion. This was said explicitly last week. No one can object to a free and out spoken canvass of the record of any of our public men, whether by friend or foe; that is all well enough. And if their foes choose to go further and lend a willing ear to mere news paper gossip to their prejudice—retail it about —publish it with a flourish of trumpets—de mand explanations, &c., &c.—in short, betray the itching ear, the suspicious mind and the en pavement in Chicago, which is thus described I and we may add * Abolitionized.” It consists of a row of woodenblocks standing end- j Accident on thc Savnnnnh River.—Tho An-1 er M proposition in reference to a patent Car- wise upon a broad flooring. The rows are placed I gusts Constitutionalist of the 25th says: “A serious I riage Shaft Tightener. one inch apart, and the spaces between them are filled I accident to life and property occurred about a week The Messrs. Ellis’ are ready to dispense with a preparation of coal tar and gravel. The a g,, on the river some miles above Augusta. One of I ufe , g gweetg aUh(J i owe3t valuat i on . flooring underneath is well covered with coal tar, on I the pole boats owned by Mr. McCurry, who resides, ] both sides. The ter excludes moisture and prevents | we believe, in Elbert county, and which had been Tile Atlanta Intelligencer, decay, and the whole structure is impenetrable to I employed in conveying cotton and other produce to j t w m he seen t h a t Col. Locbrene has relinquish- frosts. -n i I tbij market > an d Mso for the purpose of transporting C( j y 3 interest ia this able newspaper, and it is now Tcnnc.«»rr. The people o Jenncssee w.l1 be go „ds and merchandise to persons residing on the ssion of CoL Duncani solus _^ fluent wri . called upon to vote on the first Thursday i n Septem- I rfver, was capsized by coming in collision with a 1 * ber next upon the question of calling a convention | ro( k, in a very swift running portion of the stream. " to revise, alter, or amend the constitution of the I a man by the name of Mastiss, and two negro men, State of Tennessee.” I were drowned. Goods to the value of about two The Historical Sooiety of Tennessee wilt celebrate | thousand dollars were lost, the 1st of May proximo, the anniversary of the es. ter—well posted—intelligent—few men can write better or make up a more interesting daily record, if he will bend himself to the task. Success and . patience to him. What with College duties and read V }land to Bt . n . ke ’ that aJso ’ a» things go, is w v r - It is stated that the persons who were drowned I an extensive legal practice, to say nothing of nu- I P ar ^ a poetical enemy, and we will not tablisbment of a provisional government (1780) by I W ere active and expert swimmers, and the only per-1 inernus other demands upon him, literary and po-1 complain of it. But when political friends fol- the first settlers in Middle Tennessee, at “ Robertson 1 30n on the boat whose life was saved waa a man to- Htical, CoL Lochranc is well rid of a daily newspa- low suit and gravely elaborate these bugaboos Station," the present site of Nashville. ta u y unable to swim, but he was fortunate in obtain- L*,. " out 0 f tbc raw ma terial of anonymous Wash- jlnrringr of Toomb.-Tho local editor in g a plank or some other buoyant article and reach- - ~ ington newspaper correspondence, we see no of the Washington States, thus notices the marruge | ed the shore. | _ ,ate C ° o1 " catlicr, Ac. J Qr apdo %y for j t> Now, if the Georgian really entertains seri- The late Cool Weather, Ac. of the daughter of Hoa. Robt. Toomba, of this State, I Xo be Hung.—Radford Crockett, elsewhere no-1 The unseasonably cool temperature prevailing in which occurred in the Federal metropolis last Thurs- | le( j M confessing to a participation in the murder of ptliis region since the squall and hail of lost Tues- . day evening : _ _ I Samuel Landrum, near Atlanta, on the 8th instant, day afternoon, has occasioned, during the week, I ous Aonkts whether Messrs. Ioombs, Stephens Last evening there was a brilliant display of exo- I WM on Saturday last sentenced to be bung on tho considerable anxiety among plantersand gardeners, I and Cobb are friends or enemies of the South, tics, in wreaths and boquels, (fashioned by the New I jgth June next. The Intelligencer says: but probably little or no damage has been done.— I some of his friends ought to be thinking of a York boquet man,) at tie resi ence o I About nine o’clock, Judge Bull entered the room. The wind probably saved us from one injurious | writ of delunatico. But he entertains no such Toombs in F. street, where hn^accomplished daugh-1 an d Court having been duly opened, the prisoner “ Executive Usurpation. IVe were much astonished to read in the last Journal and Messenger a severe invective a gainst Mr. Buchanan—for what? For using his official power and influence to secure the passage of the Kansas bill! says that paper ‘•No one will pretend to deny that every device has been used, and every appliance bcoughtinto requisi tion to press through Congress the Kansas bill. The Administration resorted to every expedient to do this Members of the Cabinet and federal officials, public, ly and pri vately, on the floors of Congress ana in tho itreets, attempted to force through this rneas_ure—not is a national measure, bnt as an administration party measure. The Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Patriot thus alludes to this outside press, ire." And assuming the charge confessed, onr aeighbor discourses eloquently of executive ty .-anny and usurpation—of contravening “pop ilar legislation,” (which just now, we sup pose, must mean black republican legislation) ind of paralysing the popular will. He com pares James Buchanan to the English James I, in a style which would do credit to any Tope ta print in the country, but which looks itrange enough in the columns of the Journal & Messenger. We fear, on this topic of the Kansas Bill, our neighbor to use an expression of Dean Swift, don’t know what to be at.” Some time ago lie was complaining of the “ temporizing po licy” of the administration. When the first annual message came and relieved him some what of his fears on that head, be thought the whole South should “ unite in sustaining” Mr. Buchanan’s position as affording the best set tiementwe can get of the Kansas troubles.— When the special message came, its views met Lis “ entire approval” and he denounced all pposition. But last month, new light comes rnd he exclaims “ Hands off, we want no Kansas Bills.” In the course of three or four months he has boxed the compass completely. Beginning with charges of temporizing, imbe- ility and vascillation by the President, he vrinds up by characterizing him as a tyrant, usurper and dictator—a James First—brow beating Congress and trampling the popular will under foot. Commencing as a zealous friend of the Kansas Bill, impatient of all op position and a little distressed with doubts whether even Mr. Buchanan is quite enough its friend, in a few weeks he forgets his love— cries hands off—enough—we want no Kansas Bills! We are afraid Mr. Buchanan will never be Mr. Editor.—-I observe in the last Journal & Messenger the protest of Messrs. Anderson, Free man, Jones and Harrison, against the action of tho Mayor, in voting the Stock of the City in the Maeon Gas Light Company, at the recent election for Directors, contrary to a resolution of thc City Council, Instrnetiiig him to vote for certain per sons for Directors. This Resolution had only three affirmative votes in its favor, in a full Board of eight members, ail present; one of the Protestants being one of those whom the Mayor was instruct ed by the resolution to vote for. After reciting the action of Connell on the 9th inst., they say 1st. That the Mayor had “no right or power" to represent the City Stock in said annual meeting of the Gas Company, except in so far as he was au thorized so to do “by the Council of which he is but a single member—that he would have had no right to vote for the City at all, if he had not re ceived authority from the Council, &c. Now thc answer to the above protest, and the authority on which the Mayor acted, can be found in the Telegraph of March 1st, 1853, and I pre sumo every unprejudiced man in the City will say the Mayor was right, after reading the resolutions appended below. At a meeting of the City Council^held February 25th, 1853; Present—Dr. E. L. Strohecker, May or, G. W. Adams, Johnston, Whittle, Clayton, Holt, and 0, F. Adams, Aldermen; Smith absent and one vacancy, Alderman Johnston offered three resolutions in reference to Gas, which were unanimously adopted: 1st. Authorizing the Mayor to subscribe for Stock in the Macon Gas Light Company to the ex tent of §10,000, prescribing conditions, &c. 2d. Authorizing the Mayor to contract with the Gas Company for lighting Sixty Street Lamps, &c. 3d. Resolved, That his Honor the Mayor, and his successors in office, be and they are hereby au thorized, to represent and vote the Stock of the City of Macon in all meetings of the Stockholders of the Macon Gas Light Company. AN ALDERMAN IN 1853. Advantages of notation in Crops 1. Each crop exhausts the soil of certain ele ments. Continuing the same crop for many years consume these elements. The soil will not produce that crop longer. Another crop will consume another order of elements, and will flourish when the first will not grow. 2. Each plant, while growing, throws off certain matters which are not favorable to the growth of successive crops of the same plant. Plants in this respect are somewhat like ani mals, always avoid their own excrements.— Now, other plants may use these matters ter was given in marriage to Mr. DaBose, of Mem- | brought in and took bis seat, with his father phis, Tenn., and the bride cake waa eqjoyed by a se- I his side, immediately in front of the Bench. The lect party of the elite. I poor young man—for he does not seem more than 21 Wealth of the Vniteil Staten.—The aggregate I appeared terribly affected by his miserable situation, wealth of the United States amounts to *12,000,000,. He wept most of the time during the delivery of the 000, and the population 24,000,000 souls. The wealth I sentence, and his frame seemed overcome with the divided by the population, gives *500 to each per- I internal agony that was writhing it. •on, young and old-, and counting five persons to j " each family, it would give the handsome little for I To Hie Public, tune of #2,500 to every family of tho Republic, not I From the Atlanta Intelligencer of last Tuesday, excluding the slaves. I The Atlanta Intelligencer will hereafter be owned A Nation at rrnycr.—A gentleman from Ohio | and published by J. W. Duncan,thopartnership here frost, and another actually observable in some lo- doubt, and if any one should orally suggest it calities in town, was too slight to harm vegetation. Thus far, agricultural prospects in this whole re gion never were better. Cotton, grain and fruit have made an unusually promising start, and in re spect to the latter particularly, all are forming ex- I pectations of an abundance. to the Editor in propria persona, in the famil iarity of social intercourse, he would smile at it as absurd! If he should orally suggest such a doubt to the parties he implicates, they would very naturally think it an insult—a great in- lately stated that, by adding his personal observations | jiubUcatio^oft^ Intelligence to those of a friend, he could say that from Omaha j j ncri having been this day dissolved oy m " ‘ "" ‘ "T«* * In turning over our Exchanges to ascertain what I J us ^ cc — a mos ^ gratuitous impeachment of injury, if any, the frost has done elsewhere, we j their fidelity to all the obligations, social and find the following paragraphs in reference to it:— I moral, which can possibly bind a man to patri- Frost.—There was quite a perceptible white frost j otic dut 7? and they would certainly require Saturiv morning. 24th inst. in these parts, inju- (some better justification for it than th eintima- A. Loch encerAExam- I ring to some extent, cotton on the low bottom lantis, i - .. - r . - r „ mutual con- as well as other tender vegetation. We have not | ttons of the Montgomery Mail, or carefully . .U „„„1H r, n a a crowded nraver I CoL Locbrane, of Macon, who has been our part- I f* lcula tt° n s as to its probable effectsupon tbegrow- spend the evening, he could find a crowded prayer | ^ . q buginess for(he lagtgix mon ths, preferring to in « crops.-[CoIumbus Times tc Sentinel. meeting along the entire breadth of our vast repub- j concentrate his energies in the profession of the I such a charge against the Georgian Editor, we raoTi.„ •„ „ t- -a. ■ : .1 • , mistake him if he would not consider it a per- - ... _ , , . „ — . lyThe ram on Friday night in this locality was I 1 lie. There is a great revival throughout Canada, law. of which he is so prommeut a member, has re- attended with a slight fall of hail, which caused a sonal indignity. and at Quebec the most intense religious interest is I tired from all connection with the Press of Atlanta coolness in the atmosphere, and as a further conse- Well then if such a elmrae on Ri.eh a finm- maniferted Uis own »fr aceful announcement of this change will quenco a slight trost was perceptible in the low ’ ’ cnarge on sucu n ioun . _ _ . ... T ,I be found below. We wish him all the success in grounds yesterday morning. The injur}-, however, I dation, orally made, would be rediculous in it The lint*.I Trade .n Bel«.u M .-It is almost , uturej that belongs to his brilliant talents, was triflilig. so far as we Save ascertaihed. A few 1 Incredible to what a degree of importance tins branch I j s connexion with us, though only that of a pro-1 potato© vines and some fow tomato plants show the of t:*ade baiattained in Flanders within the last six or prietor, living at a distance, has ever been pleasant effect of the partial “snap.” ian construction does it become justifiable in •even years. There are fifty thousand skinned car- and Rgrewble, and one that we shall long remember Passengera by the Georgia Railroad cars report print or becoming in the hands of political casiesof these animals exported weekly to England I w,tb B rat, iy* n B emolions. I the frost to have been severer un the anuntrv. If|P ' 1 -"i*,...- ri«m*»— ■—l — u.ir —on— .wwinllp where TO fllC Patl'OUS they find a ready market as articles of food, while it I TELLIGENCER & EXAMINER. I cotton. - However, in a few days. is difficult to sell them in Flanders at twenty-five I I have to-day parted with all proprietary interest I t0 know more fully about the effect. The weather I with thc balderdash which the Georgian ap Tb, pr-pwtioD ...I.. [ ajEgiy *“»<»*"*•- »«'• » »»*«"> »■> akm%gives empoyment.in Ghent alo e, t m et an I T() maintain an organ of the democratic party, no- I a Cold Snap —On Friday ni«ht we had a touch P ur P ose tban gratuitously to wound our public thonwod workmen, and. since the bustoess cessity mado me proprietor of the Atlanta Eximin-I - -- y • ” ‘ ,0 - nc - I •- > -<■ • - - , K . J the frost to have been severer up the country." If I ■ous of the ' XI*»iin I>i I soc h is the fact, we may expect considerable injury I friends, who really place no confidence in its 2NCER A EXAMINER. " truth 1 It Is, iu fact, mere atufi& just on a par Hence a rotation is profitable, because one crop able to satisly the Journal & Messenger long may take up what another throws off. at a time, if that paper continues to travel at 3- Certain crops have certain insects that , „ , , . - . . nrev on them. The cultivation of the same such a gait. He will always be too fast-too P7 ^ t favors thc mu i tip iication slow—too vascillating and timid—or too arbi- of [ bese i nsec ts. Change the crop, and you trary and dictatorial, just as he is viewed from diminish or destroy them, the circumference of the circle in which the 4. Various crops furnish various kinds of Journal moves. I manures, which are found profitable on a farm. — . , . ,, . it I He who wants this variety will find a rotation But leaving our neighbor to measure Mr. ", uu , ‘ . * „„„„„„ ,v , , b , , . . ,. the simplest easiest way to secure it. Buchanan s course and claims from his own ^ rotation in crops results in some great shifting stand points of observation, we will soc j a ( advantages. Among these are the fol- t dd that it is really one of the most unfavora- lowing: A community which pursues a good lile political symptoms, that for years any I rotation will be more independent of foreign thing fair, equitable and tolerable which has tble Is suflFering^Tts formers’wSl been extorted from Congress, has been due, m be more intelligenl, because their experience great part, to Executive Influence. The com- will be more varied. Their prosperity, too, promise of 1850 would have failed without it I will not depend on the ups and downs of a sin- —the' Wilrnot Proviso would have been adop- | S* e crop. Am. Agriculturist ted without it, and the Kansas Nebraska bill Wine Making in MissourT^ Among the receipts iu our citv K,- i' ciSc Railroad, afew daysago, and gallons of Catawba Wme from" tt ' ou '- This wine has been bought bv\ T urtnan a. of Cincinnati,to be manufactured intosS? b ’ Catawba, and was on its way to th ,t r, ' kll: - price paid for this wine at Hermann w« 2o per gallon, and the shipment«» t u worth $10,000. 34 therefore The annual grape yield in Missouri W. found liable to great fluctuations On M mit in Hermann (M. Poeschel) found one year from his vineyard to he pr< * ,n <* dred gallons; the year following h han " one hundred gallons. That isolated° aIy look discouraging, but it is found^tfc d markable a falling off only ocom-mri 80 r2 ‘ i» and that fhe «ve47.%°ST the acre of grapes, pr«2serves as great rZ!f ‘.° ty through a senes of yeai-s as is show„ g other crop m this climate and latitude 7 ^ - v It may be calculated to startle those tin of the soil who know nothing of <r ra n» in the West, to learn thatM^ P<S,. C 0 Uhure yard,at Hermann, Missouri, has yielded j‘" e " the past ten years anaverageof four and twenty-five gallons of wme per acre Der^^ and that this wme has been sold at frn ^ to two dollars per gallon. It requires bat\°- n : figuring to ascertain that M. Poeschel h, aiizea over five hundred dollars per acre re ' anum from the grape culture. Wm a brother of the above, cultivating a sman' vineyard, had even a greater yield. Thai, ter received annually one hundred and cf' dollars worth of wine from two hundred ’I fifty vines planted six by eight feet apart • his average yield per annum per acre hundred dollars per acre. If we take the, al crops of wheat, corn, oats, ortobacco -w in Missouri, it will be found tlxat at ieit o° Wn in ten years there will happen as near a un failure as has happened with the grape cr 3 so that, by the actual showing of esperien nothing can be deduced to the prejudice ^ grape-growing as compared with other cro™ for certainty of yield ; while as to profitahl ness and the lessened labor and ’ ' antness arising from thc small compass r oversight required, the odds are incalculable in favor of grape growing- ' There has never failed to be ready sale f all the wine produced in Missouri. Inf oria °' years it was sold mainly to Cincinnati mm facturers, but in 1853 three of the most enter prising citizens of St. Louis—Wm. Gl«w»" Jr., A. Vallee, and A. II. Glasby-foS ’ partnership for the manufacture of Wines m St. Louis. After oneyearof operation a char- ter was obtained, and the enterprise was mer^ ed in the “Missouri Wine Company.” About twenty stockholders form this Company, ss j under the intelligent management of Mr. Glas gow as President, the Company has gone on to establish a reputation for Missouri wines ij. ferior to none in the United States; and with many of the best judges the Missouri wine stands at the head.—St. Louis Aacs, 27th ul timo. would have failed without it. The whole pow er of the Executive, necessarily enlisted on the side of the South—necessarily, because it is the side of the Constitution and of plain sec- Slock of Teas in China. It was a point with the English merchants I to know—first, whether the Canton merchants were prepared to trade, and if so, secondly, what stock they had on hand. After a long Fongrroa to ThurMlny.—On Tuesday, in the Senate, Mr. Honston introduced and advocated. In a , ' I party spirit never sacrificed its love of truth, virtue long epeech, his resolution to assume a protectorate I Jln( j w ; s( )om, that it never puffed men for party sake, over Mexico, and it was referred to a select commit- that its principles were honest, if they were wrong. » done than is necessary and proper I —(Atlanta Intelligencer of the 25th. | The Georgian talks of “ insufferable toady- ‘boot-licks,” and so on, and we will not Cily Delegates. | ,sm ’ lw TlrT _ r _ J , „ wmnm- ^ c °l ):icrve in the Journal & Messenger, that the I fl uarre ^ hint for groping in the mud or bo th© vote postponing the Pacific Rail Road bill to next 11® 8 ?- It acknowledged no leader but the judgment I Mayor has appointed the following delegates from I nea th it for his figures of speech. Every one December was re considered. abitity^whUe^iu^waYl^t't^the^servi^of the the city t0 thc Southern Commercial Convention, to his taste and inclinations. But it so hap- ——, , wrong, tee of seven. The deficiency bill was discussed, and | and Us editorials unporchased, if they were value- In tho noose the bill known as the Government I national democracy. Its test for all men, was fideli-1 which meets at Montgomery next Monday : Police bill was laid on the table, and the appropria- ty to State rights and Sonthern rights. Such was tion for West Point was discussed. I ">e Press during my short connection with it, until Tii ,.mnc T! I i 18 union with Uie “Intelligeuccr.” What it has since Tho Hon. Thomas B. Florence, of Pennsylvania been> confen bonor onJy ^ pon i, a managers I have gave notice of his intention to introduce a bill to, I not been in any way responsible for its articles, or establish five mail routes to Europe, on the same I its editorials, and cannot share Ibe credit which tho basis as inland contracts—the steamers to start from I puhycmay attach to either. n 1 ertnmam NtwYork, Philadelphia, New Orleans and Norfolk. I On the same day it waa understood that the Kan- HOW Uiey Go It. Conference committeo agreed on a substitute to | A writer in an Eastern paper thus takes off the Senate bill, brought forward in committee by I the slang phrases said tobo used by “fast young Mr. English, a democrat of Indiana. It proposes to I ladies in” New England. If so,they are certain- submit the Leeompton Constitution with a modified I ly a good deal ahead of even our “fastest.” Miss land ordinance to a vote of the people of Kansas, to I Phancy with a toss of the head exclaims, if you be taken under the direction of the Governor, Socro- I wish to bean “A No. 1” woman, you have got tary, Attorney General and the two Speakers, ariff if I to “toe thc mark” and be less “highfalutin.” Chas. Campbell, E. Kirll .ua, W. W. Parker, | J. Knowles, P. E. Bowdre, F. S. Bloom, II. Monbainier, I A. H. Wycbe. L. F. W. Andrews, I Asher Ayres, E. C. Rowland, E.C. Greer, I Geo. W. Itoss, Dr. C. Williamson, A. B. Adams, Joseph Clisby, J. A. Ralston, Robert A. Smith, \V, S. Lightfoot, Isaac Scott, J. B. Boss, J. U. It. Washington, W. S. Holt, Nathan Weed, E. H. Carhart, George T. Rogers, Col. Nathan Bass. The Ocean Mail Bill. We find the following synopsis of -Mr. Flor- pens that the Telegraph is almost a stranger to all our public men, and has nothing to ask or expect of them in any way. If there is a press in Georgia altogether independent of mere partisan and personal considerations, it is thc Telegraph. We simply speak to what is right and proper in itself; and if the Democrats of Georgia wish to build up a party which will be of service to the State, they must not be on thc watch to assail and undermine their own public agents. They must be willing to accord a fair construction—a measureof justice which they themselves would demand, and leave thc lional equity—seems indispensable to extort a timespentin questioningandanswering.in dis- tcagre, slow and unwilling justice from the cussing sponge cakes and sweetmeats, and par- tands of the majority; and we can therefore W amour, a list was produced of the teas in , , j . * ‘ stock, and making allowance for the somewhat but too plainly see the inevitable result, when- elj|8tic quantit y 0 f a Chinese “chop we,” es- ever the Executive power and influence shall timated the amount at 21 milliors of pounds, even be neutral and permit the Northern ma-1 all, as we were assured, good, sound teas, ready jority to work its way. We may theorise as I for immediate delivery. There is a still lar- vre please about Executive dictation and Con- ^^euJJ.tre 3 'n£t l^fy^verStimato gressional equality; whenever we lose the na- tfae extento f their stock in hand: but, upon tional, conservative, liberalizing influence of talking this matter over with the English mer- thc Executive, the story will soon be ended, I chhBts, they appear inclined to disbelieve both ii our judgment. We must make up 0 ur I the amount and the quality of the stock in hand; . . ~ .. . . ... , they say that what teas the Chinese have are minds to quit, or to submit to any w,ld excess ^ q{ preyl0U3 3easons . i am at all v/hich a Congressional majority may perpe-1 j; mcs un willing to state facts which may influ- trate, under the impulse and outside pressure ence present markets, for these are subjects on cf an unreasoning fanaticism which scorns all I which I am peculiarly liable to be misinformed, compromise and prudential considerations as I and am without that knowledge of the details . .. - D . of Chinese commerce which would enable me so many temptations of Satan to sacrifice pnn- « ^ eel e 0n3dence iu deciding between conflic- ciple to policy. ting statements. I confine myself, therefore, Wlie Georgia Delegation on the | re P°^ tin 5 the ; asserti ° as °« cit j^ r side - — ENGLISH COMPROMISE. The Washington correspondent of the Times & Sentinel, writing on the 20th, says:— Canton Correspondence of London Times. accented the State to come in nnder it. If negatived “You may bet your head on that.” You may cnce ’ 8 biI1 in {be Constitutionalist of thc 25th, enemy to ransack gossip for the occasion of im- . ... . ... M ft . I* 11.1? A .99 1 :1 M MA .. A K. 1 _ It I AM J .4 1 aaI. .. JV. % _ — — J .4aL1 a T A T - A A _ ? 1 I 1 - - - T ilftA AAM.-.1A T \ AM. A amaI? A C\ — A. Kansas is not to be admittad nntil an official c«nsu g I sing “alightually” “like a martingale,” you I and it looks fair and equitable. It is certainly shall show 93,340 inhabitants— the number entitled I may spin street yarns” at tho rate of ten knots discreditable to the country, that its Mail trans- ton representative in Congress. I an hour, you may “talk like a book,” you may I portation should be done in foreign bottoms, On Wednesday, in the Senate, four resolutions dance as if you were on a “regular break I A-dthat is likelv tobe the case with most if not -> • re reported, including one relative to the outrage I down” you may “turn up your nose at com-I ,, . ^ . c ' by Paraguay upon American vessels, and proposing mon folks,” and play the piano “mighty fine,” a11 of ,t ’ unlcss 8ome satisfactory provision can that power be given to the President for obtaining but “I tell you” you “can’t come to tea.” be made by government, for the compensation redress. The Deficiency bill was discussed. I “You may be handsome but you can’t come in.” I and encouragement of our own lines. Amer In the house a select committee reported a biU es- You might just as well “cave in,” fust as last, ican Ocean Steam Navigation is already pro tablishing a Printing Bureau. The West Point ap- and “absquatulate,” for you can’t “put it noun ccd a failure bv the Emriish nrcss • propriation bill was passed. through,” “any way you can fix ft." Ifyouima- Washington An HI mss On Thursday. Mr. Seward, of New York, present- gine that you may “go it while you arc young, Mr . Florence, of Pa., lias given nott"eofhis inien- ed the reply of the American Telegraph Company to for when you get old you can’t,” you don’t” I tion to introduce a bill to establish certain post the recent memorial of Mr. A KendolL The reply I “come it,” “by a long chalk.” “Own up,” I routes between the United States and Europe, and refutes the allegations against the American Compa- I now and “do the straight thing,” and I’ll “set I regulate the transportation of the mails thereon, „y. ,„d denirethat any monopoly exist. The mat- y 0U down as one of the women we read of.” If “rhe ?e\mresof eh^contemplst^'.ct wo peculiar, ter was referred to the Judiciary Committee. you can’t “come up to the scratch,” whylmust Tho operation of it is generalin its nature, totally ig The memorial of the American Telegraph Compa- | «] e t you slide.” But if you liave a “sneaking I n°ring private contracts, and will, if it becomes a no represents that such a law as petitioned for by notion” for being a “regular brick,” there is >»". place our ocean mail service on the same basis Amos Kendall will conflict with post State legisla- I.... a.i.a, ,i. dti, „.. .... I » s the Inland service: and the ultimatum of the lull connection witti tne Kewiounaiaua company such as has been universal among telegraph lines in the United 8tates. And that while the Atlantic company lisa been highly favored in being permitted the use of ship* of the Navy to lay the Atlantic cable, it ia proper that it should be known that no money aid has as yet been received from any government. connection with the Newfoundland company is ly 0Ur bonnet," or “mind your eye,” or “bit Route No. one,Philadelphia to Southampton. *im again” or take me away,” or “dry up, H J£“ ,e No ’ two ’ Ne,rYork - via Southampton to now,” or “draw your sled,” or “cut stick,” or Route No. three, New York to Qluckstadt via give him particular fits,” he would pretty ccr- I Plymouth, Havre and Rotterdam, tainly “evaporate.” I R° ute No. four, New Orleans via Havana, Bermu J 1 da, Fayal, Santander to Bordeaux. H , Chinese Coolies is Cuba.—Four cargoes of coo-1 S? ut u-?? £ ye,Norf 9^ . The relations between this country and Paragua I lies, comprising nearly three thousand individuals, I , The bill further provides that the compensation to were discussed. I recently arrived at Havana, where they met with a A bill was introduced to authorise the construe- hun^edandre'venty-five doUws’eachl'accordi^to I “ l tl *° thousand tons, and the speed not less than ten tion of a telegraph line from Memphis to San Fran- their sanitary condition on arrival. Other large "“ le , 8 P er , h j ) “ n There is afro a provision for the in shipments are known to be on the way, and it is I 5*°^ on of fines andI penaltire for failures to depart stated that orders have been sent to China for ten I , , m > a °d al T! ve .^ir 0 time designated in the sche- thousaud to be shipped this year. An Havana letter I ^ u , e hy the 1 ost Office Department.' writer sa_ys it is astonishing to see how these Celea- . Itprov.des also, that all letters going out orcom- tiala get bold of different branches -of trade formerly I in 8 into the United States, shall pass through the monopolized by Catalans. In the vicinity of Carde- post office, and.regular rates of postage to becharg- * - 1 en thereon, and that the postages as collected shall he ocean mail service. get-1 auo cun unci pay per nnnam to the five lines will ting wives, and"large numbers have consented to be I *? e eight hundred and eighty-one thousand three bun cisco. The consideration of tho deficiency bill was rc sutned, but no action was taken. In the House, a bill was passed donating five mil lion acres of tho public lands for tno benefit of agri cultural and mechanical colleges—tho donation to bo allotted pro rata to the several States. Mr. English, from the Kansas compromise com H | o | .. _ mittco, announced that the committeo would be I baptized mainly on this account; otherwise the d red * U( l seventy-six dollars. The estimated receipts ready to report to-morrow. would not grant them the necessary license. ffigdiAn^Tand nZy-uinTTo^- The old-soldiers’ bill was discussed. I -p HE Fisheries.—The catch of fish on the Poto- I an d eight hundred and fiity dollars—and it ia consid- Cotigros.—In the Senate, on the 93d, a message mao is increasing. On Saturday, a cargo of 10,000 | ered beyond a doubt that there will bo a gradual ln- sreceived from the President, In answer te an en- I ^j^^adriiu^irem'wihit^Polint.'and 1L000 Tierrfngs . ^ qulry In relation to the alave and Coohe trade, and I and <t 0 r eoo shad from Stony Point. Besides these, I ^Destruction or the Pioneer PapeRjMiLL.-Tho French apprenticeship system. The message was I there were several other arrivals of shad and her- Augusta Chronicle of yesterday says • “ w * i“«™ referred. ring, though not in such large quantities from the I from passengers by the Georgia Railr The deficiency bill was discussed. otherlandings. I morning, that the "Pioneer Paper Mill." near Athens, The report of the Kansas Conference Committee I A new dish for epicures was presented at a was presented and is still under debate. I dinner table in Philadelphia, a few days since In the House, by a vote of 108 to 105, the action on I—eggs fried in butter with their shells tliy report of the Kansas C - in:--rence Committee was The dish was invented by a young lady from postponed until the ,-eoond Monday in .May. a mo-1 areland, who said she “could do anything, and nto reconsider this vote is pending, and a spirited 11 dale besides.” pcachment. Let the Georgia Democratic Con gressman feel that he has a just and generous constituency behind him—friends, who will not be the first to give ear to. and circulate rumors to his prejudice—thc first to demand explana tions and defences. So feeling, ho can go on to strengthen himself for the work of assailing a common enemy, vindicating common princi ples and contributing to the common defence- A fair, just and generous construction and support from his own party at home, is what he has a right to ask and what ought to bo ac corded ; and no matter if the Georgian says or thinks to the contrary, any party unwilling to accord it will come to naught, however strong it may think itself presently to be With these views, conceived and expressed in no unkindness or disrespect to the Georgian, which is a paper we admire, and in the main concur with—we dismiss the subject. News from Cuba. The steamer Black Warrior, which arrived at New York on the 19tli, from Havana, brings intelligence from that port to tho 14th inst.: Reports from Havana are to tho effect that eigh teen British gun-boats are stationed around the is land, on coast survey and to prevent the landing of negroes ; that American vessels trading about the island have been boarded and searched in the most insolent manner by them, withoutany ground of sus picion of their being in the slave trade, and have >ood cause to complain against such detensions and nsults. The ball on board of the ship-of-the-lino Isabel II, on the night of the 11th, was a magnillicent jam. The illumination of the vessel from deck to the main-top, and of the navy-yard, with tho continuous arched ways leading to the ship, was perfect—the decora tious gorgeous and profuse—and the company em bracing nil the wealth and beauty wo can boast. The value of the diamonds blazing in the jrowd was im mense—said to bo counted by millions of dollars.— The only fault was tho impossibility of seeing, or individualizing. You could not approach a friend except by casualty in the moving muss, or reacli any particular object of attraction except floated to it mid lace and brilliants. All the vessels- of-war in the vicinity wore illuminated, and tho show upon the bay and shore was a brilliant confusion—decoration and light realizing all the fancy of eastern legends and story—a night scene of poetry, without a rival the world. contest Is anticipated to-ir On Sstur-lny, the Senate passed the Deficiency lHU as reported by tho Committee with tho amend- - ■ that future U. S. contracts be submitted to Congress. “Jolin," said a gentleman to Iiis butler, either you or I must quit thc house.” “Very well, sir, said John ; where will your Honor 1 he after going to?” Tumid Things.—Crinolines appeared to have been so generally adopted hy ladies with a view of acquiring the title, hitherto engross ed hy dandies of the stronger sex,of Extensive Swells. Colquitt. ■•The Georgia delegation, I understand, will vote I „ We visited the county site of the young and for it. They could do so consistently—as the con- I nourishing county or Miilcr on the inst., tingency provided for in their platform has not aris- the Superior Court being in session, Judge e t nudjinay be averted by this course That this David Kiddoo presiding, and it being proba- bl e ft.«w.,h<Sldtodm M yrf , h. 6 »d ati- from Georgia in Washington I fesl assured. Indeed, I zens of the county in attendance, ine site one of your Representatives only regrets, if 1 inter- was named in honor of the statesman and pat- preted his words correctly, thatthismode of settling r ; ot Hon> Walter T. Colquitt, of blessed mem- tile Kansas question, will deprive him of all chance, , j. .- : i..j : r>„ l at this time at least, to prove his fidelity to the or y» whose distinguished services ou the Benc^Ii, pledges of that platform. There will be a serious I in the Senate and House or Representatives of opposition to such a compromise report on the part the United States in Congress will be remem- oi'the Black Republicans. They are moving heaven | bered while the name of many of the prominent and earth against it." men of his day will have faded from tho re cords and their acts be forgotten. The Court was sitting in the new Court House, which is conveniently arranged and The Crevasse. Work has been pressed at the crevasse to day but with moderate success. The pile driv-1 „ - * , , T . • l . - , , er is with difficulty brought to hear upon the uea . tl /- ) c n °^ str l uc ^ d " } l “ ° f w0 .^’ and spot desired, on account of the rapidity of the “ st $ 2 - 900 ’ but is not yet fully completed.— current, and whilo the work of closing tho I goods stores here, owned breach is incomplete, the water is gradually by Dr. J. D. Smith and 1 Cs ers & '- ie e d, wearing away the levee and enlarging the one drugstore, kept by Dr. M. V.-Jordan, :and width of the crevasse. The contractor! still hree groceries. Three physicians and three feel confident of success in their movement,,, bwy«« are permanently located in this place, tut to the unitiated their progress seems slow Th e™ are 8everal neat dwellings completed, and thc result uncertain. When the rows of ? nd ° ther ? “ cour ? c of erection. The location piles are all driven, to effect which, from pres- “ a beautiful one for a town, is as healthy, we ent prospects, will take some time, the work do J u b t “«t, as any that could have been selec- may prove inefficient and the laborers be com- ted m any other portion of the county, and the pellcd to begin anew. ) vater » R°? d and abundant. The population The water from the swamps is, in the mean- 18 steadily increasing, society improving, and time, rapidly encroaching upon the habitable ^ e , woald J ad e e theda y * a not distant when and inhabited portion of the opposite side of the Colquitt will be a place of considerable bust- river. Yesterday it made its-appearance in the „ .. rear of Algiers, upon some lots that are occu- £here ^ere but few cases of^any impor tance pied by families. At McDonoughville, we are tr,ed durm ? th,s term the Court ’ informed, the water has so far encroached up- I fb e bnij was pretty numerously represented, on the cultivated lands that it has covered lots I the following legal gentlemen being present: just in the rear of McDonough’s gardens a foot ^ 1C ^ Harrell, Sol. General. Arthur Hood, deep. Those acquainted with the position of C at bb ert ; Lott \\ arren, Samuel D, Irwin, this place will recognise the fact that a near Y* ! n ' Slaughter, Albany; lhoma3 J. Lox, approach is made to thc front. Gradually, the I d °b n Lyon, Newton ; Francis I. Cul.ens, waters creep in towards the river highways, I Cort Games ; S. S. Stafford,_W. M. Potter, Fun with tho F’S. A famous fisher found himself father of Sr* flirting females—Fanny, Florence, Fernanda, Francesca and Fenella. The firstfourwere flat! featured, ill-favored, forbidden-faced, freckled frumps, fretful, flippant, foolish and flaunting Fenella was fine-featured, fresh, fleet-footed fairy, frank, free and full of fun. The fisher failed, and was forced by fickle fortune to forego his footman, forfeit his forefathers’ fine field, and find a forlorn farmhouse in a forsaken forest. The four fretful females, fond of fig uring at feasts in feathers and fashionable fine ry, fumed at their fugitive father. Forsaken by fulsome, flattering fortune-hunters, «Lo followed them when first flourished. Fenella fondled her father, flavored their food, forgot her flattering followers, and frolicked in frieze without flounces. The father, finding himself forced to forage in foreign parts for a fortune, found he could not afford a farthing to his five fondlings. The first four were fain to foster their frivolity with fine frills and fans, fit to fin ish their father’s finances. Fenella, fearful of flooring him, formed a fancy for a full fresh flower. Fate favored the fish factor for a fez days, when he fell iu with a fog; his faitiiui Alley's footsteps faltered, and food failed. He found himself in front of a fortified fortress. Finding it forsaken, and feeling himself feeble and forlorn with fasting, he fed on the fish, flesh and fowl he found, fricasseed and fried, and, when full, fell fiat on the floor. Freshin the forenoon, he forthwith flew to the frnitJiil fields, and not forgetting Fenella, filched afiir flower, when a foul, frightful, fiendish figure flashed forth; “Felonious fellow, fiager.cg my flowers, I’ll finish you! Go say farewell to your fine felicitous family, and face me in a fortnight!” The faint-hearted fisher famed and faltered, and fast was far in his flight— His five daughters flew to fall at his feet and fervently felicitate him. Frantically and flu ently he unfolded his'fate. Fenella, forthwith fortified by filial fondness, followed her father’s footsteps, and flung her faultless form at the foot of the frightful figure, who forgave the father, and fell flat on his face, for he had fer vently fallen in a fiery fit of love for the fair Fenella. He feasted her fill, fascinated by his faithfulness, she forgot the ferocity of his taw, form and features, and frankly and fondly fix ed Friday, fifth of February, for the affair to come off. There was festivity, fragranKi finery, fireworks, friccaseed frogs, fritters,fish, flesh fowl and fermentry, frontignac, flip and fare fit for thc fastidious; fruit, fuss, fla®- beaux, four fat fiddlers and lifers; and the frightful form of the fortunate and frumpish fiend fell from him, and he fell at Feneila’s feet a fair, favored, fine, frank, freeman of the forest. Behold the fruits of filial affection -' There is a man in Hampshire so mean that lie was lately caught stealing acorns from a blind hog. “ What,” enquired a schoolmaster, “ what the plural of penny ? “ Two pence,” shou ted the sharpest in the class.” A wag tells of a boarding-house keeper whose tea was so weak that it couldn’t get up the spout of thc teapot. Good morning, Jones—how does the orld use you ?"—“ It uses me up, thank you." follovying thc course of the low lands, but at taining an elevation which endangers nearly all the cultivated grounds on the opposite side of thc river, if the tide pouring in from the riv er he not speedily arrested. The crowd of visi tors to the scone of tho rushing waters daily increase, as almost every one who has never ^en a crevasse of the Mississippi is anxious to rectify his preconceived opinions by tho ac tual scene.—N. O. Picayune, 20th inst. Blakely ; I. E. Bower, M. W. Grow, Baker Co. ; John V. Heard, S. W. Parker, & Bro., Colquitt; Thomas Maun, Richard Sims, John W. O’Neal, John J. Hales, Baiubridgc. Byrou Bower, of Baker co., son of Judge Isaac E. Bower, was admitted to the Bar and | stood a creditable examination. Bainbridgc Argus. The Last Confidence Game.—We arc undone, shocked, collapsed; our feelings vio- ' Baptism in lloops. Ilatcd; our confidence destroyed. Jessie Fre- At Chicago, last week, a rather amusing mont, “ our Jessie,” is a humbug, a myth, a scene took place during the baptism of ayoung canard, an electioneering card. There is no lady by the pastor of the Tabernacle. The such woman—there never was. Her name is Union says: “The minister requested her to Ann—Ann Benton Fremont—plain Ann, aud assume the dress peculiar to such an occasion, nothing more. Jessie was a family nickname, but she declined to take off her hooped skirt; perpetuated through 1856 to catch voters and the minister told her of the inconvenience that make poetry with. Thc discovery is fatal to i t must result from her obstinacy, but she persis- Col. Fremont in I860. The Republicans can the army for which Capt. Marc}’ was t— ^ ted. When she came to descend into the bath, never survive the loss of “ our Jessie !” What New-Mexico, and the cattle on hand w ^ the inflated skirt touched the water and rose up becomes of that army of two year old babies ticiently recruited for the 'heavy St!r '/ 1 ) ) iij- ost I named Jessie Fremont ? We move that they ; which they were to be exposed, “ ie P r £ Ar Hampden of course.- from • Some Negro Statistics.—In the States, ranging from 25 to 75 per cent., oflhe free colored were born out of the States of then residence, showing that the increase has been from immigration. The old Southern States show a very small portion born out cf limits. _, About one-fifth of the free colored in -w* York city were born in the present slave States. A comparison of Louisiana with Connecticn shows that in the former 1 in 12 of thc b-a c 5 were engaged in pursuits requiring education, and in Connecticut only I in 100. . There are about twice as many free u- ac as free inulattoes. , . .. In Connecticut the negro population in sijj. years has not more than doubled, n0 JT l t standing the increase from immigrants. **• Virginia, in the same time, which rece J' few from other sources, and sent so ma > thousand away, it has nearly doubled. The mulattoes are twice as numerous am the slaves as among the free blacks, ana * little more than one tenth of the whole co ed. Half of the negroes at the North are. lattoes, and only about one-nintb at timo® In 1840 there were ten States rctur , ave slaves which returned none in 1850—do schedules having been sent there at that. ^ There were never more than 400,wo j . imported in the United States in all- British West Indies, 1,700,000 were i»P® ted, though only 600,000 were left tone cipated. In tho last three years of ,ae Ba t trade at Charleston, those ou whose S j ir j t ; sb the importations were made were Ji subjects. 89 Rhode Islanders, 10 Fren and 13 Charlestonians.- —DeBow's Press. It is doubtful if the Peace Commission^ or the message dispatched to Johnston, reach Utah in time to arrest the forward m« ment which was contemplated at- iu e . j counts. If the supplies of catde seB tto around her like a balloon. Her bead was lost I named Jessie Fremont ? We move that they j which they were to be exposed, me f 1 to the congregation, she was swallowed up in have an indignation meeting—iu Hauipdeu ty is that Gen. Johnston will not wait ^ the swelling skirt, the minister tried to force Park, of course.—Springfield Republican, \ reenforcemeuts now collecting at and a ^ her down into the bath, but she was kept above | Fremont Paper. i iiur from Fort Leavenworth, but #ndc»^ the surface by the floating properties of the crinoline, and was buoyed up so successfully I 135“ Four lines more beautiful than these that it was not until after much difficulty and arc rarely written. The figure which it in- many forcible attempts to submerge the lady, volves is exquisite: “ A Solemn murmur in the soul that the minister succeeded in baptizing thefair one. Finally it was effected, to the relief of the minister aud the seriously inclined audi ence, who could not keep from laughing in their pocket kerchiefs.” Tells of the world to he, As travelers hear the billows roll Before they reach the sea.” -Buffalo Express. a sudden and vigorous blow to decide the test- He will not be in camp a day . than is absolutely necessary, has continued as thc latest ii; ed it would, his force will h by the Commissioners. Johnston and determined, and whatever he atn V ^ j li^ve the sauctiou of the coolest judgffl® ‘ the most thorough investigation-