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THE DAILY NEWS. RIORDAN, DAWSON $ CO , PROPRIETORS. , offiff iv i>. 18 H a y n e Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES.-On« copy, twelve months, UO; nix mouths, fft; three months, »2.MI. ADVERTISING RATES.-Fifteen couta »linc for the first insertion, and ton conts a lino for each aubsoauout Insertion. Marriage sud Funeral Notices $1 each. TRRMH.-Cash, lu advance . LETTERS should be addressed to the DAILY NKWB, Mo. 18 Hayne-iitreet. Charleston. 8. C. REJECTED MANUSCRIPTS wiU not be returned. CHARLESTON. TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 29, 1867. NEWS SUMMARY. -Cotton was quoted in New York lower. Sales 1600 bales, at 20o. for Middling Uplands. -Gold cloned at 42* a 424. -Of 1647 national banks, seventeen are in the hands of receivers. -At the Ute election in San Franoisco the Ger¬ mans voted the Democratic ticket en moase. -It required a Detroit Radical newspaper to make fun of the ravages of yellow fever in Now Orleans. -Three-quarters of the two thousand boot and shoemakers of Worcester, Massachusetts are out of work. -The oost of the original Capitol at Washing¬ ton city was $1,400,000. The additions, now nearly completed, will oost 912,000,000. -The Republican, a Radical shoot in Selma, Ala¬ bama, which has been beating between wind and tide for several months, has at last given up the ghost. -Bistori was a gipsy. Her father and mother belonged to a wandering company. She first ap¬ peared on the stage at two months old, in a basket of flowers. -The uniform movement is gaining. In New York State all railway officials wear A distinguish¬ ing uniform, and before long it is prohaM» tb»t JMBMI employees wiu no tn o same. -The New Orleans Picayune says there ia at thia time an unprecedented amount of realeatote thrown upon the market in that oit j, for rent or for salo. Prices demanded are but little if any less than those asked last year. -A manufacturer in New York city is filling an order for two thousand thimbles, at eighteen couts per dosen, for the managers of a popular gift enterprise. "No blanks I Every tioket en¬ titles the holdor to a present." -Arrangements have Leen made to hold, in the oity of Philadelphia, commencing on the first Wednesday of November, a National Convention, composed of delegates from the different branches of the Presbyterian Church in the United States. -Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton has nearly ready for the press a collection of his miscellaneous writings in three volumes, consisting of critical papers on Lamb, Gray, Goldsmith, Pitt and Fox, Sir Thomas Browne, Schiller, and other writers of the prosent and past centurj. -A most extraordinary case is reported at length in the St. Louis papers, no less than that of a woman named Catharine Peterson, who went be¬ fore Justice Shundley of that oity, and claimed as, her husband Christopher Peterson, who denied ever having seen her. -The egg trade of New York is onormous. The Post says that for the past nine months the re¬ ceipts have averaged one thousand barrels per day. Each barrel contains «bout eighty dozen, or nine hundred and sixty eggs. The aggregation, therefore, would bo in one day nearly a million. -Mr. Thurlow Weed, of New York, who ap¬ pears to know a good deal about Mrs. Lincoln, says: "It may not be inappropriate to say that Mrs. Lincoln received ten thousand dollars fiom one, and five thousand dollars from another con¬ tributor in this city, before Mr. Lincoln's death, and probably without his knowledge." -The abuse of false hair for the lost two years has produced a rise of 60 per cont, in the price. Tho French "capillary artists" now sell annually 140,000 pounds of hair, and when braided, curled -»d cork-screwed, bring in a revenue of more than S15,000,owi i vvhore all this hair comes from is a secret whioh, for the tranquility of families, had better not bo fathomed. -It is stated that the Turkish Government has Belgian capitalists tho right of constructing a series of railways from Constantinople to Bel¬ grade, from the port of Enos to Uskup, and from Salónica to Sophia, all of whioh ore to be com¬ menced immediately, and will extend to a distance of more than 1600 kilometres. The ground is given gratuitously by the Government. -Archbishop Purcell, of Cincinnati, has written a letter in reply to Bev. Thomas Vickers, in whioh he declares that the Pope has never been opposed to progress; that it is a stale slander to say the Catholic Church is opposed to the circulation of the Bible, and that he himself is opposed to a union of Church and State, and prefer* the con¬ dition of the Church in the United States to its condition in Italy, France or Spain. -Burrell H. Leeks, who was a practicing lawyer at Cass ville, Ga., for several years previous to the war, and who has been residing at Cedar Keys, Flo., since, was killed at tho latter place on the 16th inst. He became involved in a difficulty with Dr. Hodge, a practicing physician there, with whom be had been previously friendly, and in an alternation which took place, Dr. Hodge kicked him in the stomach, from whioh he died in three hours. -A London paper says the plato at Windsor Castle, for the use of her Majesty and the court, "weighs nearly thirty tons, and that its value may be roughly estimated at £8,000,000. It is secured In stone chambers with vaulted ceilings, which form part of the original buildings, and are tho¬ roughly proof against burglars. Among the plate ü a single dish, not of silver gilt, but of solid gold, made by order of George IV., and represent¬ ing all the orders, both domestío and foreign, which that sovereign wore, or was entitled to wear ; it is estimated at £8000. Grand and magnificent as the assortment of plato is, our readers will be. astonished to hear that very little of it indeed is old or carious, most of tho pluto used by former eoveroigno having been melted down and rem od «liedby George IV.; very much of it, consequent¬ ly, is tawdry and rococo, as might naturally be expected from the author of the Pavilion at Bright ton."' -The principle of representation of minorities ls already making troubla in English politics. Tho plan of granting to each borough two members for the majority, and one for the minority, each elector being allowed to vote for but two candi¬ dates, they coll that a "three cornered constitu¬ ency," by which, os neither aide can hope to gain a victory, the great moral power of the healthy conflict of parties is taken away, and, practically, political warfare will become enervated and modo «yen more than now a matter of bargain and «ale. Moreover,. and more seriously, this plan already tending to cultivate tho gravest danger England can apprehend-class conflict and «las« législation. The Birmingham Trades Council have resolved that it is expedient to «end to Parliament, besides Mr. Bright and Mr. Dixon, a working¬ man-not the best man, whatever his occu¬ pation, whioh would be a true Democratic idea; bat a workingman, os such-on idea containing the vital essence of aristocracy, «nd the political separation of social classes. I -A dispatch from Vienna, dated Ootobcr ll, ¿ives an extract from the Presse, relative to th« Bastera question. The Journal alluded to, says that accor¬ ding to intelligence bf the same tenor from several quarters, negotiation« are being carried into . bring about an understanding between Prince, Austria, England and Prussia, with tho viow pf morally restraining Busala from solving; the Eastern question in a one-sided manner, and also with the object of effecting a harmonious solution of Buropaan questions generally. Tho proposed Journey of Baron von Beast to London M «old io bo $ connected with thees endeavors. The Emperor Of tl Austria has sent . letter to Boron von Benst'with 1 reference to tb« recent address of the Austrian j prelates in favor of the maintenance of the present Papal Concordat. In thia letter Hi« Majesty lay«' j down tb« principle that the address will be re- served for doe constitutional treatment at the hands of the Ministers, and the Emperor's ¡final decision on tho subj cot is postponed until his re- ¡ torn, which will take place probably the day siter j to-morrow. « -Secretary Mcculloch, some week« «go, rocoiv- ed a package containing $19,000, a greater portion of Which wa« in 7-80 bond«, with the numbera oat out, and the remainder in national currency. No letter or signature accompanied the moue}, brit j the envelope WM postmarked Urbana, Ohio, j The' money WM placed to th« credit of the consoWoe ' fund, theïo hoing nothing to show from whom it j «erne, and the fact that the numbers were edt etti: < of 'the bouda proved that tho former owner of i thom did not want to be khovm. On Wednesday j \ last « latter wa« received from a part* InÍ sin, the postmark being Honey Creek. The writer I claimed that ho sent the mohey toheooaVerted M into other «eenrttte», «uah es th« Scereeary might j ' ihtair tuMMter to «end. and arate «éMfc^ TSU¿V seeding no communicj||»fl^^r Jllgnaturo with the money, that he was ¡Cy idcWaT the time, and not able* to write. Tho officers of tho Treasury aro of th* opinion that tho'îe^ttor is^fipom eome pai ty who j saw the publication that $19,000 had booti received, and thinks fie can claim the líame. Detectives of the Treasury will look into tbe matter. 0_^jjflf On to Rome. ( 1 AHÍ H A t.m and his followers are again shouting wolf, but the cry is now so common that it onuses but little alarm and no serious anxiety. It ls true that the red-republicans aro demanding Home as the capital of Italy; and it is equally true that the Florentines and Venetians are calling upon the Romans to strike a blow for freedom. But hurrahs and ^proclamations will not shake the walls' of St. Angelo; and the citizens of Rome have free¬ dom enough, especially from taxation, to care but little for union with tho kingdom of Vio* TOR EMMANUEL. There are, of course, in the Kalian pro¬ vinces, hundreds of adventurers who are wil¬ ling to engage in any expedition in which discipline is lax and plunder plentiful. "Unit¬ ed Italy" is a popular watchword ; and the trouble that one rookless brigand may cause, it may bo hard and tiresome to undo. Rut, whatever changes time may work in tho con¬ dition of tho temporal power of the Popo, it is most probable that GARIBALDI'S new "Ou to Home," will close as stupidly, and disastrous¬ ly, as that brief campaign against the Italian forces whioh ended so abruptly on the field of Aspromonte. A man who has no occupation but red- republicanism ; who has been, by turns, mercenary soldier and roaming sailor; who has squabbled with the many-tailed Paohas of the Porte; who has fought for nothing in Uraquày, and taught mathematics for something in Mon¬ tevideo; who faolped to' lay the train intended to blow up St. Peters at Rome in 1849; who has made candles on Staten Island; who is a com¬ pound of Dick Turpin, bold buccaneer, and Flying Dutchman; whose only capital is his red shirt, long beard, and vast impudence; is not tho maa to destroy a kingdom founded ¡by CHARLEMAGNE, is not the man to lead tis erratic legions to anything but inglorious discomfiture. France, and Austria, and Spain, have a word to say upon tho Roman question. It is a mat¬ ter that they may prefer to leave in abeyance; and, while they do BO, oven puissant Italy is powerless for harm. More than once has tho Pope been driven from Home. Píos VII. died in exile. Pius IX. wns forced to abandon his capital. That whioh has boen done onco may be done again; and a few days, or hours, may show what the temporary result will be. CARLO MIMOTTI, tired of speech-making in London, has joined his illustrious father. An uprising has been attempted, and has failed, in Rome. GARIBALDI, in two columns, is maroh¬ ing on tho "Eternal City;" and the Papal foroes are retiring. Rut the French iron-clad fleet has left Toulon. Transports, crowded with troops, are about to sail for Italy; and the embarkation of ammunition and material of war is rapidly progressing. GARIBALDI on one side, and tho danger of a general war on the other. Sans-Culottism, against policy and diplomacy. Red-republican individuals, in opposition to conservative masses. The game is too uneven ; and, unless there is some great and speedy change in the situation, the "On to Rome" of 1867 is very near its end. Baltimore. There is no city in the United States that, to a Southerner, has more pleasant associations than are oonneoted with the name and memory of Baltimoro. Thc "Monumental City" looked upon herself as a city of the South; and, when the late war began, she showed Dy ner con¬ duct the purity and disinterestedness of her creed. Those who have pined day after day in the barrack-hutches of Fort Delaware ;-those who have frozen and burned at Point Look Out';- those who have tasted the unpleasantnesses of Fort Mc Henry, and the Pens of Elmira ;-need not be told what Baltimore did, in olothing the naked, feeding the hungry, and giving words of comfort to the wounded and distressed. The good works of the people of Baltimore, were only limited by the wanta of those who were suffering, or by the restrictions of military orders. They knew no such words as weary¬ ing and turning back ; but gave freely of all that they had for tho benefit of the Southern soldier, at a time when a word, or act of kind¬ ness, for the Southern cause was liable to end in a tedious imprisonment, or a forced journey "across the lines." A Southerner, when the war closed, however worn or shattered, how¬ ever banished or torn, found a warm welcome in Baltimore. His reception was not measured according to the lace upon his sleeve, but, whatever his rank or condition, he received a cordial greeting and substantial aid. Means were found of assisting Southerners in their business affairs. Mea who were able to work were given employment; but there, even,ithe big-hearted Baitimoreans did not stop. They planned a way of educating the orphan chil¬ dren of Southern soldiers ; they subscribed for the support of the maimed and injured ; they poured out their substance like water, in behalf of the destitute South. It would be a mockery indeed, to.pretend that it was necessary to prove the olaims of Baltimore upon the South. Gratitude, honor, lote, respect ;.-thia is what the South gives to Baltimore, and, with all her giving, it will be long ere the vast debt is paid. ' But, while Baltimore is a large and flourish¬ ing commercial city, there is one way of lightening the burden that lies upon oar shoulders. As a market for the South, Bal¬ timore is equal to New York. Her business is rapidly increasing, and, already, a fine line of steamships finds full freights to, and from, Charleston. The city that remembered! the South in the day of her adversity, should be remembered when the South has business to do and patronage to give. A whole generation of Southern trade will not give Baltimore more than Bbc has given tho South ; and, when duty, interest, and the memory of a thousand acts of kindness, impel our people in the same direc¬ tion, there is little doubt of the result. Snarf) Talking. There will be a convent ion in Virginia, and toé Stale press is speaking with strength and sharpness. The Charlottesville Chronicle, a conservative, and not anti-negro, paper, says: >*The negroes in Vkginie har* set tho seal to (heir doom. There is no longer any peace. The question now ia who shall occupy and role th* ter¬ ritory between forty and thirty-two degree* north latitude-th* black* or the whites. Every con¬ ceivable effort hae been made here to I&armOniae mad^^e Wacke by the wb7tee.ltvew.appliance waewexrrtedto to carry the election. M^aejbeen £ J*?! IPESSL ^£,fc^«n*red $ke » body of disciplined troops, obeying an ordor from Ot» centrai Jessee like s sigu iront a marshal's baton, the'negroesi bava d*Uy*fed their yeto Hie a moo what negro suffrage means. Tb* feithor tho ^'Ä? «W» *Hmor* vtoteBtwitt be «he recoil, tho Sörth will not .believe nntU «hey soe; and, they prill BOO when the Southern elections are rtoJahed*' The Richmond Dispatch, a paper which baa been in favor-ef Congressional reconstruction, «y* who h<* n<>t been made acquainted iavo votod everywhere for toe Radical nominee*, lhere ha* been no division anton«* them NAI moatInoonaistent, oomtpt and dhrreoutablemen som!* who àre^vi^mucb*^^ black eonetltnbtst* show, however, no greater latte*»** to the«* than thaydo to another*. people with w|ém hf? bas boen raised and with whom he uiuaflpvc. ''Tbqroturrih.hoin «very county show that they. J** Qeflppletidyvbanrtod together AB ono man in at rJLr~W)t onlyrPolit'Oal--a(rainst their people an« |hoir»wn boefclntoroqtH. lt ss tho saddest fokturfg fof twjso monstrous tliuios. Our citizens find thaW PheyÄavo a budy in their midst whiubu is wholVjf without-havo made tho slightest impression upon ^MfcjfMtd union. It ia as painful an it i H incom- .ptelHEelble. The Norfolk Virginian, one of the mont re¬ spectable papers in the South, says: "The intolerance manifested by tho negroes horo yesterday towards one of their own color who had Ihe.manuness to voto "the white man's ticket," as he called it, shows tho o licet of tho teaching they received from their Radical tutors. All the sav¬ agery of their nature waa aroused. They hunted and hounded their intended victim through tho H trent H and besot him mit il, like a stag at bay, he turned upon his tormentors und gavra thom a taste of his metal. They still threaten to kill him, and hiB Ufo is really in leopard}-. And this ls tho sort of freedom wo are to have under Radical rulo and suffrage. Well did Hr. Doolittle say that the Radi¬ cal Congress had 'organised hell in the South.' " These are the words of intelligent and con¬ scientious journalists; who were disposed to acquiesce iu the laws of Congress, and who live in a State in which the whites have tho majority. Tn Kin: is a squabble in literary circles about BYRON'S album, which has been extract¬ ed from an English library. It is believed thnt the album was brought to this country, because there are many mon here who are, or have been, Byronic-in their collars. There are others who have two eyes, and one noBe, as BYRON had; and, of course, they would risk the Tombe, or Blackwell's Island, for the pos¬ session of a relic of the author of Parisina I And Don Juan. Others there are, like THADDEUS STEVENS, who have a graoeful limp; and they out-Byron BYRON, by being worse than they represent themselves to be, which the Lord of Newstead could not succeed In doing. But \\\o affectation of Byronic airs has had its day. It is dead,-killed by new follies as popularly ephemeral. The Album may have wandered to the "New World," but it cannot be shown with¬ out détection. It must be hidden and hoarded; and, like the child learning the alphabet, who would go through so much to get so little. IT IS proposed to unite the waters of the Missouri River with the waters of the Qulf of Mexico by a new channel, beginning with a canal at Kansas City. This is to inorease the value of lands in Indian Territory and Texas to the extent of millions of dollars ; and the great canal, saving all the lands on the Missis¬ sippi, Arkansas and Red Rivers and doing away with the levees entirely, can be completed for tho trifle of twenty-five millions. The United Slates is to advance the money. When is tho new Atlantic Suspension Bridge to be begun; and when will arrangements be completed for the new Balloon line between Pekin, Moscow and the next world ? A-WESTERN PAPER is comforting itself by the reflection that the shining merits of ROBERT LINCOLN make up for the peculiar con¬ duct of his eccentric mother. Mrs. LINCOLN is soiling old olothes through aa auctioneer, threatening this minister and that, with con¬ dign vengeanoe, and promising an expose of the mysteries of the White House. ROBERT LINCOLN, who is scarcely twenty-five, is mas¬ ter of a handsome law praotice, a practitioner in the Supreme Court of the United States, and and "an industrious, quiet, courteous gentle¬ man." * THE ELECTION for delegates to a Convention, under the Military Acts, begins in Georgia to¬ day. There is no conservative tioket running ; and the conservative press recommend conser¬ vative men to refrain from voting« to stay quietly at home, and to induce, as far as pos¬ sible, their friends to do the same. The negroes have tho majority in the State, but it ¡a tliniiirht that there is some ohanoe of defeat¬ ing the Convention. In this, however, our neighbors are probably too sanguine. THE AUGUSTA CONSTITUTIONALIST has receiv¬ ed a letter from a gentleman in this city, re¬ ferring in bitter terms to "the ingratitude of South Carolina towards the late HENRY TIM- ROD." Carolinians are not more ungrateful than other people. HENRY TIMROD did not want for affection, nor did he want for such aid as our people could extend to him. COMMISSION MERCHANTS/" ROBERT MITRE & CO., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, BOYCE & GOVS WHARF, CHARLESTON. 1IBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGNMENTS J of COTTON, RICE OB NAVAL STORES, to Liver¬ pool, London and Glasgow, and to Northern porta. October M_ Imo A CARD. WM. McKAY. .JOHN CAMPBELL. MCKAY & CAMPBELL, AUCTION AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Ko. 136 MEETING ST., OPPOSITE PAVILION HOTEL, SELLS DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, ¿io., ko. Vor Salea ace daily papera under Auction Column. WM. McKAY.............. .JOHN CAMPBELL. McKAY & CAMPBELL, A \a ct »om and ComraiM lon Mere nan ta, HAVE THEIR WHOLESALE PROVISION STORKS No. 971 EAST BAT, between Hasel and Want- worth, next to- c. W. SEIONIOUS* Coal Tard: have al¬ way* on hand a foll supply nf FRESH 8KOKED BACON BIDES, SHOULDERS, HAMS, Ac.. Ac., et lowest market rates, N. B.-City and country buyers will find it to their ad¬ vantage b t giving na a call prerioua to purchasing. October 39 _ tal gath lt. H. MARSHALL & BROTHER, AUCTIONEERS, Rea! Estate Agents, Brokers, Bio. «3 BROAJVBMPEtSBV. EEAL ESTATE, STOCKS, Ac, BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION; LOANS NEGOTIATED; PRO¬ PERTY LEASED. aa- Auction of HORSES, FURNITURE, Ac. every Wtfnesduy. _October JOHN & THEO. GETTY, COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND .STEAMSHIP AGENTS, HO. #8 BAST BAT, Will make LIBERAL ADVANCES ON CONSIGN- M <. NTS OF COTTON to our Mends in Maw York, Ac Pelober 9_imo WILLIAM H. GILLILAAB & M, Beal Estate Agent«, Anetloiicttr« COMMISSION MERCHANTS, WILLIS & CHISOLM, FACTORS, COMMIWi HIRGHANTS. AND SHIPPING ÀGËNta .MMflpM WHABIF, Charleston, li. (D. E.' WILLIS.,w.............R. OHIHOi.il Qetotoeevw -? I. M. BHemm & SON. IMPROVED Mercantil© Airency, SO. 20 BROAD STREET, CHAHbRITON, S. O. WANTS. T>ARTNER WAN TKO.-A YOU ft G M.VK, hJL with a «mall capitol, asy »IOU to »200, will find <t good investment by addreesinK "INDUS ru Y." at this .Almeo. Ona acquainted with tho grocery business pre¬ ferred._Bg a: ¡jg October 29 WANTKP.-A SlTUATHtlM HY A WHIT IO WOMAN a* Washer and Ironer for a numil family. I -Can como well recommonded. Apply et No. 47 KAUT I BAY, up stairs._ 1*_Qc tob" r 39 il/ANTKll Ttl HIIIIO, A WOMANI AS COOK . T YT Also, one as Nurse, to mind children for s small family. Must come well recommended. Apply at Northeast corner of KINO AND HDUSON STREETS, np stairs, over tho store._\+ October 29 WANTED, A OKRA! AN Li AD, AS APPREN¬ TICE lu the Office of "Die Charleston Zietung." Apply at No. 3 BROAD STREET, between 8 a ul 10 A. M._._ Pcb ber la A«HINTS WANTED FOR THE GRAY JACKETS, And how they Lived, Fought, anti Died for Dixie, WITH Incidents and Sketches of Life bi the Confederacy. Bond for Circulars. Address JONES BROTHERS & CO., Broad street, Atlanta, Qa. Ootobor 21 Imo* TO RENT. mo RENT, TWO LARGE ROOMS IN A .JL private family, with pantry, piazza attached ; also, use of kitchen room. To a suitable person terms mode- rate. Address "B." at this Office. _3 October 29 TO RENT, TWO OR THREE ROOMS, WITH or without uso of part of kitchen, to a genteel mar¬ ried couple, or a small tamlly. Rent moderate. Apply at No. BER STREET._1»_October 29 O RENT, A BRICKHOUSE ON MOUNT PLEASANT, containing seven large rooms, pantry and dressing rooms, fine elstern, and outbuildings. Ap¬ ply to WM. RIVERS Mount Pleasant, or Marshall's Wharf, Charleston. th«tu October 2s WHARF TO RENT-PATTON'S WHARF, East end Hasel street, will be leased for a term of years, on favorable terms, to a responsible tenant. Apply to T. J. KERR & CO., Kerr's whaif. Ootobor 19 _BtnthO mo RENT, A TWO-STORY WOODEN X HOUSE, No. 4, Wall street. Apply at THIS OF¬ FICE._2» _October 28 mo RENT, TWO STORY WOODEN HOUSE _1_ with four rooms, gas, cistern ; parlor furniture will be left to a tenant if desired. Also, good tone Plano to rent. APPLY AT THIS OFFICE. 2 October 28 TO RENT, FOUR OR FIVE ROOMS. WITH or without Board, in a private family, In tho lower part of the city and on line of City Railway. Suited for a family or single gentlemen. Apply at THIS OFFICE. October 26_ rflO RENT, A PLEASANTLY SITUATED X HOUSE, in the central part of the city, containing six upright rooms, gae fixtures throughout the house, a line cistern. To an approved tenant terms reasonable. For particulars, Inquire at No. 277 KINO STREET. October 16 FOR SALE. TTtOR SALE, OLD NEWSPAPERS, IN ANY _1J QUANTITY, price 75 cents per hundred. Apply at tbe Office of the DAILY NEWS. Imo October 28 LOST. LOST,ON SATURDAY MORNING, IN KINO STREET, near Hasel, a ROLL OF BILLS amount¬ ing to forty-five dollars, The finder will reoeive five dol¬ lars reward and the thanks of tho owuer, by leaving tho money for D. J. at the DAILY NEWS OFFICE. October 28 0 LOST OR STOLEN, FOUR SILVER DES¬ SERT KNIVES, marked on the handle E. F. A liberal reward will ho paid upon their delivery at No. 15 ASHLEY STREET, and no questions asked. October 28 6 BOARDING. BOARDING.-COMMODIOUS APARTMENTS and fine BOARD can bo obtained at the KINO MANSION corner of George and Meeting streets. Also, Stabling, and outrooms suitable for a small family. October 29_tuf2 BOARDING_A FEW GENTLEMEN CAN be accommodated with BOABD in a private fami¬ ly. Apply at No. 2 GEORGE STREET, Terms mode¬ rate._October 2* THIRST CLASS BOARD WITH COMFORTA- JU BLY furnished rooms, can be bad at No. 1 SO¬ CIETY STREET._Imo_October 9 BOARDING.-EXCELLENT BOARD CAN be obtained, at reasonable ratee, by applying at No. 434 KINO STREET, one door above Hudson street, near tho Citadel. The Street Oars' pas. the door ovary ten minutes. 3mo October 7 STORAGE. STORAGE, THE MOST CENTRAL AND convenient In the City, at very reasonable prices, for COTTON, RICI', SALT, FERTILIZERS. Ac. tte. In- aoranoe, when desired, ss low as any in the city. Apply to GEO. W. CLARK lt CO., Corner East Bay and Cumberland streets. September 17 / TAILORING, ETC,_ FALL AND WINTFR GOODS FOR GENTLEMEN. DOBDAUM & MENKE, MERCHANT TAILORS, NO. 180 KING STREET, THREE DOORS ABOVE HORLBEOK'S ALLEY, HAVE JUST RECEIVED A FULL SUPPLY OF FALL AND WINTER GOODS of every description. Suits fitted In the highest style, and as cheaply as can be done by any other establishment in the city. Full satisfaction guaran teed._thstuimo_October 17 EDGERTON & RICHARDS HAVE NOW OPENED THEIR FALL AND WINTER STOCK OF CLOTHS, CASSIMKRi.< S AND VEST¬ INGS, which they are prepared to make up, OR WILL SELL BY THE YARD. ALSO, MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS« SUCH AB : WHITE LINEN BOSOM SHIRTS, SHAKSPEARE COL¬ LARS " Merino and Shaker Flannel Undershirts and Drawers Duke of Edinburgh Cravat Ties Suspenders, Kid Gloves Linen Cambric Handkerchiefs, Cotton Half Hose English Silk Umbrellas, etc. ALBO. Tailors' Trimmings. ALL OF WHICH THEY WILL SELL AT THE LOWEST MARKET PRICES. BARGAINS IN FLANNELS. SAXONY. WELSH, PATENT AND TWILLED SCAR¬ LET, of direct importation norn liverpool, which we oiler at Wholesale and Retail, at a considerable reduction from Import cost, or as low as the Inferior article of American Flannels. They are all Wool, without mistare ot shoddy, and are admirably adapted for Ladlee' Balmo¬ ral Skirts. Som. AND 3* BROAD STREET. October 25 ? Ut, PAl MTS, ETD. OM LEATHER BELTING. A FULL STOCK OF HOYT'S BROS. SUPERIOR PATENT STRETCHED PATENT RIVETED PATENT JOINTED Oak Leather Belting. THE GREAT DEHAr-D FOR TH TS BELTING DU¬ RING, Coiouel L M. HATCli's Agency, la sufficient gua¬ rantee for its qualities. For salo at New York prices, by HOLMES & CALDER,- A gents. No. 12« MEETING STREET, October 24 _Imo_ Charleston, 8. C. HHS LEAD AND ZINC PAINTS. 10 OOO LEAD; PKBKIUM PÜBE WHlTE 10.0JÜ lbs. puro Philadelphia White Lead 8,000 lbs. New York White Lead 6,000 lbs. pure French White Zinc 10.000 lbs. Washington Medal White Zinc 8.000 tba. Franklin Snow White Zinc. AU of the above for aale lour by HOLMES * CALDER, October 24 Imo_Na lae Meeting street OIL! OIL I OIL! r r\r\ AA7.T/mn pim* WINTER SPKRIT OIL ÖUU ¡WO gallons Winter Bleached Whale Oil 800 gallons No. 1 Lard OU 000 gallons No. 1 Tanners' OU 000 gallons Whits Oak OU 800 gaUons pure Neatsfoot Oil 700 gallons English Linseed Oil 400 gallons Boiled Linseed Otl. For aale low at HOLMES A CALDER, October 24 Imo Mo. 120 Meeting street ~~M. M. QUINN, Wholesale & Retail Dealer i 'j» ;'; A l\ ~- BOOKS, PERIODICALS, NEWSPAPERS, STATIONERY, «TO. flo. 897 KINtt STREET (Oppojlie Ann street), Charleston, O. 8. LATEST ISSUES of tho Press always r>n hand. ruñáVtAti^o7**Íy*<i (*00<1" dellvored or for- M CASH OB DEBS will be promptly attended lo. WILLIAM ¿KOOKRANKS, »TEAM GA« FITTER AN» Pl.IlliaiCIt, f>LAW AND ORNAMENTAL «AS ill Ul RF*. GAS I FITTING AND PLUMBING nto^K.« \T< I ENDED m Jto.U* KtmMKUYÍx àajpain BotVMA Mo«« and «yneen »tee¿a, MEETINGS._ CIT* COUNCIL. AbPEOlAL MEETING WILT, DE HELD THIS EVENING, la Council chum her. «A 7^ o'clook, for tho nurpbai of receiving tlu> report ol' tho Special Qom« mitten on Retrenchment. By order. W. H. SMITH, October 30 1 Clerk ol Couucll. CHARLESTON SOCIAL CLUB AN EXTRA MEETING WILL BE HELD THI« (TUESDAY) EVENING, at 7 o'clock, at your Hall. Members arorequested to be punotual, aa 1MH>\- neas of Importance will bo tranaacted. B- Y*««, P-. J. F. EARLY, October av 1* Secretary. AMUSEMENTS. LADIES' FAIR VOli. THK BU1LDINO OF AN EPISCOPAL CHURCH AT FLORENCE, 8. C. THE LADIES WHO ARE INTERESTED IN THIS CHURCH have determined to hold a FAIR, on the lath, 13tb, i-ith aid loth of November at the MASONIC HALL. Arrangements am hoing mude to havo a CONCERT or CHARADE the last .wo nights. Doora open at 10 o'clock each day, and 7 o'clock each evening. Admittance 30 cents. Any donation or contribution will be thankfully re¬ ceived. 17 October 28 EDUCATIONAL. FEM ALSO COLLKOK. THE FALL TERM OF THE FEMALE COLLEGE, Spartan burg, S. C., will opel October 3d. 1807. Tho ProBident, Rov. A. W. CUMMINGS. D. D., will bo aided by competent, experienced teacher» lu every de- pertinent. Board for hair year.$70.00 Tuition. 20.00 Contingent Fee. 2.00 Muslo and all the Ornamental Branches very low. Those wishing to patronize the School will please ad- dress tho President. _itu August 1) MRS. JOHN LAURENS* BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES WILL RESUME ITS EXERCISES OCTOBER 1ST, CORNER WENTWORTH AND SMITH STREETS. The course of studies ia thorough and complete. The French Department will be conducted by a resident Fiench Teacher, and tho young ladies will be required to speak French. For terms, etc., apply as above. September 10 thstu JURS. JOHN A. BLUAI XI TILL RESUME THE EXERCISES OF HER SCHOOL YT on TUESDAK, October lat, at her Residence, Mary street, opposite Elizabeth. MUSIC AND FRENCH taught whon desired. September 30 ¡v* HOTELS. CHARLESTON HOTEL, CHARLESTON, S. C. C. A. BULLER.Cashier. J. P. HORBACH.Superintendent. October 17 S. SWANDALE, PROPRIETOR OP THE Mansion House, OREEN VILLE, S. C. Jane 8 ST. JAMES HOTEL, NEW ORLEANS. PBOPBIRTOBS : WM. A. HURD.Of New Orleans W. F. COREERY.Ot Spottswood Hotel, Richmond. Telegraph and Railroad Offioes in Rotunda of Hotel. Jone IT Omo STEVENS HOUSE, Noa. »1. HS, MS ANO »7 Broadway, N. Y., opposite Bowling Green-t n the European Plan_THE STEVENS HOUSE la well and Widely known to the travelling public. The location is es¬ pecially suitable to merchants and business men; lt is in close proximity to the business part of the city-ls on the highway of Southern and Western travel-and adja¬ cent to all the principal Railroad and Steamboat depots. The STEVENS HOUSE has liberal accommodation for over 300 guests-it ia weU furnished, and possesses every modern improvement for the comfort and entertainment nf ita Inmates. The rooms are spacious and well venti¬ lated-provided with gas and water-the attendance is prompt and respectful-and the table ia generously pro¬ vided with every delicacy of the season at modorate rates. The rooms having been refurnished and remodeled, we are ena) id to oflur extra facilities for the comfort and pleasure ..f our guests. GEO. E. CHASE A CO., May 28 Orno Proprietors. SA100NS. RESTAURANT, BY HARN & MRHAMMËR, Corner of Broad aud Church streets. CHARLESTON, S. C. WE WOULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM OUR friends and the public that we have recently fitted np our establishment, and have now connected with the IB _A_ IR/, WHERE THE BEST LIQ.UORS MAY BB HAD, «a A NUMBER ONE RESTAURANT, ON THE OLD FRENCH COFFEE HOUSE STYLE, Where everything in Season la furnished OJ reasonable terms. Ordere for MEALS will be promptly attended to. MILL POND AND PLANTED OYSTERS always on hand, and will be shipped to any part of tba State, in cans or In bárrela, at low prices. HARN & SHERHAMMER. September 17 ruths 2mext MACHINE SHOPS. WILLIAM S. HENEREY, MACHINIST AND FOMOEIl. No. 314 Meeting street, (NEAR LINK,) CHARLESTON. S. C MANUFACTURES STEAM ENGINES, BOILERS and MACHINERY, Saw Mills. Corn Mi Us, Horse Powers, Vertical and Horizontal Sugar Milla, Cotton Baad Crushers, McCarthy Cotton Gins, and all kinda of Iron end Brass Cutings, to order. April ao _'_"_ thatnemo December M stulh 1 yr mumm MATEMAI, ETC, NOTICE. LUMBAR! LUMBER11 T1HE UNDERSIGNED BAS ON BAND AMD FOB J. aale on reasonable torn»», ttl qttantttka to ault pur¬ chasers, all kinda of Rough and Dressed LUMBER. JNO. O. M ALLON EE, Hortbcok's Wharf, near N. B. B. B. October 28 f :, ; . LUMBER AN!) BU I Ll) INO MATË- JBHALS. OBIME NOBTBBRN WHITS PINE OF ALL «IHDS. C Mahogany. Moulding*. N.wsto, Bajista». Vansara, rboleaal* and retail lor Ç***^ WOOD. Agent, Corner Market and Bay. October 17 . ?_ thstatoo* mJ[ the Sumter ftewa. ! ; DARR & 08T2EN, Proprletore. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. AT SUMTER, & C Sfcbeerlptton 04.00 per annum. To Chiba pf «Mi ^AdXt.ae'rnent's Instiled on Mberal Urm*.' j Oaoaaaoets i$3ed«M> 4 FINANCIAL. PHILIP H. KEGLER. NO. IO BROAD STR14RT. OHAULKSTi >U; S. C. CHECKS FOB SALK. ON NKW YORK. BALTIMORE AND BOSTON. FOREItiN EXCHANOE.--BILL8 DRAWN ON ALL TU'i PRINCIPAL CITIES IN EUROPE OUliB, KILVER, SECURITIES, BANK NOTES AO., BOUGHT AND SOLD. COLLECTION S MADE AT ALL ACCESSIBLE POINTS. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. October 3!)_liio* MDMW M. MOREL AND, BRO IKI IB IR,, No. 8 B110AD STREET, CHARLESTON, H. C., OCTOBER «8, 1807. QUOTATIONS FOR SOUTHERN BANK BILLS. liuying Rate». Bank of Camden.»5 Hunk of Charleston.t.Ï0 B ink of Chestor.ll Bank of Georgetown.17 Bank of I lamburn.ln Bank of Newberry.40 Bank of South Carolina.10 Bank of State of Booth Carolina, prior to IHM.. .18<g>14 Bank of State of South Carohna, after 1st Jan'ry, 1S01. 0 Com mercal Bank of Colu mbla. 4 Exchange Bank, columbia.ll Farmern' and Exchange Bunk. 1 Merchants' Bank, Cheraw.ll People's Bank, Charleston.50 Plauters' Bank of Fairfield. H Plantera' and MechaulcB* Bank, Charleston.lt) Southwestern Railroad Bank, Charleston.27@30 State Bank, Charleston.4 Union Hank, Charleston.75 City of Charleston Chango Billa.85 These QnotaUona are liable to fluctuations. Bank Notes sont to mo will be remitted for as directed, at tho best market ratea. Stocks and Bonda of all doscripti.ms bought and sold. Quotation Sheet for Bonds, Stocka and Coupons, issued every Friday Morning in this paper. October 28_3 CITY STOCK WANTED. WANTED TO PURCHASE-CITY OF CHARLESTON SIX PER CENT. STOCK. Apply to JAMES M. 8HACKELFORD, October 28 Broker, No. 6 Brood street Up Stairs. 2 INSURANCE. IHK QUEEN INSURANCE COMPANY OF LIVERPOOL AND LONDON. CAPITAL.»10,000,000 IN GOLD. THIS RELIABLE ENGLISH COMPANY INSURES against loss or damage by fire on BUILDINGS, MERCHANDIZE, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, RENTS, Ac, at established ratea. Loases promptly paid, without reference to England. GIBBES A CO.. Agents, .atobor 28 mtuOmo NO. 10 Adger's "outh Wharf. RAILROADS, SOUTH CAROLINA RAILROAD. GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE, i CHARLESTON, 8. C., October 4,1867. ( THE NIGHT EXPRESS FREIGHT AND ACCOM¬ MODATION PASSENGER TRAINS will not run nu Sunday Mah ls. Ail Freight tor Copi mb ia by thia Train must be in tho Depot by 2 P. M., and for Augusta by 3 P. M. H. T. PEAKE, October 5 atuth Imo General Superintendent. AGRICULTURAL. *RROW TIE COTTON BANDS. AFRESH SUPPLY OF THE ABOVE CELEBRATED COTTON TIE, Just received per Chattanooga, from Liverpool. For salo by ROBERT MURE & CO. Octobor 29 tuthaO "EAGLE" COTTON GINS, MADE ONLY BT BATES, HYDE & CO., Bridgewater, Maas. NEW YORK-187 Water street BOSTON-5 Phoenix Building. NEW ORLEANS-61 Ht. Charlea street. August 0_ arno CHARLESTON AGRIGULTURAL WAREHOUSE AND SEED STORE. LITTLE & MARSHALL, No. 140 Meeting Street, (OPPOSITE PAVILION HOTEL,) Dealers In all kinda of Agricultural Implements, SAW AND ROLLER GINS COTTON GINS. GRISWOLD GIN. HENEREY'S McOARTHY OIN. H. L. EMERY & SON'S SAW GIN AND CON DENSER, for Band or Horse Power. SOUTHERN COTTON CO.'S GIN. NEW YORK COTTON CO.'S GIN. BROWN'S DOUBLE CYLINDER GIN. BROWN'S HAND GIN. CARVER'S GIN. EAGLE GIN. HORSE POWERS. LITTLE GIANT HORSE POWER. TBE LITTLE GIANT, THE BEST. MOST COMPLETE AND CHEAPEST HORSE POWER MANUFACTURED. In introducing thia new Power Into the maiket, we would state Stat the following are some of the advan¬ tage* possessed by tb* "LITTLE GIANT" over all other Horse powers i I. Ita groat strength on account of being double-geared, which not only doubles the strength by dividing thi strain on twice the number of teeth, bnt by gearing on both aide* of the wheels lt equalizes the wear on Ute shafts, and materially lessens the friction, enabling the horses to do much mora work than with any other Power. 2. Ita coaapaotneaa and extreme portability, lt weighing about one-half aa much aa other Horse Powers, and occu¬ pying but one-third the apace, lt can be packed in small boxea, thus saving much expense. It ia so simple that tho most ignorant person would have no difficulty in putting lt together. 3, The facility with which lt can be adjusted to any kind of machinery at any angle, either on th« ground or over bead, without moving it from ito foundation, will be appreciated by fsrmera and planten aa specially adapt¬ ed for driving Cotton Gins. HORACE li. EMERY'S PATENT ENDLESS RAILWAY HORSE POWERS. ' NISHWITfc'S MOWING AXD REAPING MACHINES. WASHING MACHINES. Plow« of aW descriptions, Cast Iron and Steel. BLOW CASTINGS, In every variety ; Cultivators ; Hone Hoe«: Harrows i Cant Iron Field and Garden Rol¬ ler* j Fan Mills; Oom MUU ; Corn shell«rs ; co» and Cob Crusher. -, Hoy, Straw and Corn Stalk Cutten; Planta¬ tion Carts and Wagons ; canal and Garden Barrow» ; Sugar Mills ; Grindstone* i Road Scraper«; Chara*': > hovels ; laped** i Bake* ; Forks ; Hooa, Ac, Ac, Oar- den Seo ls, of all Kinda, warranted pure and Fresh, LITTLE & MARSHALL, No. 1*0 Meeting Street, I (OPPOSITE PAVILION HOTEL,) CHARLESTON, ». C. yan* 18 tnths FURNITURE, ETC. Wf, BLACK & CO., WHOLESALE AMD RETAIL DEALERS » ANO MANUFACTURERS OW* XT R I X XX H£B I OP EVERY VARIETY. No. 78 Bowery, near Canal Street* NEW YORK. HOTELS AMD PUBLIC AT TBE SHORTEST NOTIC HNG3 eada ptarohaeed of oar House goarantcad M re* f. RO**< ,! ,' JlWM RfcoOK...' ".? ono. ¿«VD*» *Vj»J*«B «?**?, 0/li »ft ..?''-o'- , . J' GROCERY AND MISCELLANEOUS. DUBLIN AM) LONDON PORTER, .'SCOTCH WU BNOIilSII ALKS. BOXER BLOOD, WOLFE k CO/8 DUBLIN PORTER -pints URITKIS of Truman. Hanbury «V Co.'a Brown stout- phils ant] qunrU Darnd* ot Alison's Alu-quarts Ilarrclu of Aitkens' palo Ale -pints barrels of Knox A: Sons' Allott Ale-pints. For sale by W. H. CHAFES, October 29 tuth.' No. '207 Kant Hay. FISH. fTrtr. PACKAGES OF MACKELEL. O Vf Vf CONSISTING or: llnrrelH. hall barrels and kits No. 1 HAY ANO SHORE Barrels, bull barrels aud kit» No. 2 Bay and Shore EAtrc!?. bali barrels und kits No. 3 ! a rn« Half bartel* »n«i Vits ot Afeas HwvrelH, half barrels and kits NEW SALMON 800 boxes Sealed and No. 1 HERRINGS; SMOKED 75 «iiisrter lioxos FRENCH CODFISH 50 eases of Oysters, Lobstera omi Salmon lu ono and two pound caun. lu store and to urrivo. For sale by W. H. CHAFFE. October '29 tilth? No. 207 East Hay street. BACON AND LARD. BHDS C. H. SIDES '25 ketts Leal I.srd 6 barrels N. Y. Pig Hams 10 barrels N. Y. Bacon strips IC barrels N. Y. Sugar Cured Shoulders Just received aud for sale by W. n. CHAFEE, October 2«.» tu<h'2 No. '207 East Hay street. TRENTON CRACKERS. 7K BBLS. OF "EXTON'S" PUEMIUM TRENTON *J CRACK Kits. Fancy, Wiu«>, aud Butter, just land¬ ed I rom steamer, and for sale at low prices by W. H. CHAFEE, October 29_tutli2 No. 207 East Bay. DUNDEE BAGGING. /* r\ BALES SUPERIOR EXTRA HEAVY DOUBLE \y\J WARP DUNDEE JUTE BAGGING fi bains Extra backing Bagging. Just received por "Chattanooga" from Liverpool. For sal« by ROBT. MURE ti CO. October 29 luths!', 10 LIVERPOOL SALT, FLÍ\f\i\ SiU;KS LIVERPOOL SALT. FOR SALE O'/VfVf to arrive, by Octobur29 ttitbsO ROBERT MORE k CO._ PIG IRON. (?f \ IONS CELEBRATED "DITTON FORGE" PIG t)U IRON, per ship charleston, from Liverpool. For salo, to arrive, by ROBERT MURE & CO. October 29 _. _ tuths6 BACON. -| Q HHD8. PRIME SIDES AND SHOULDERS. FOR LO sale by T. J. KERR A CO. October 29_ _8_ SIDES AND SHOULDERS. 1AA BHDS SHOULDERS LU Vf Rib, Clear Rib and Clear Sides. Lauding and in storo and for sale by LAUREY St ALEXANDER. October 29 2 No. 137 East Bay. BACON. 6HHDS. PRIME CLEAR RIBBED SIDES, LAND¬ ING and for sale by October 29 1 T, TUPPER & SONS. SIDES, CLE AR AND RIBBED, AND STRIPS, NOW LANDING, A C\ HHDS CLEAR RIBB AND RIBBED SIDES .fl f 10 hhás Clear Sides 20 boxes Choice New Strips For sale on accommodating terms, by T. M. CATER, October 28 2 Brown's Wharf. SHIRTINGS AN D YARNS. £T r\ BALES BATESVILLE 7-8 HEAVY SHIRTINGS Uv/ 20 bales Assorted Yarns. For sale on favorable terms by GEO. W. WILLIAMS Si CO., Factors. October 20 8 CORN. fi) ¡r r, A BUSHELS CORN IN STORE. FOR SALE ¿jt) Vf Vf in lots to snit purchasers, by SHACKELF0RD*-SEEEY.- October 24 ~" ' No. 1 Boyd's Wharf. MOLASSES AND SYRUP. C)f\ PUNCBEONS BARBADOS MOLASSES AÚ\J 15 puncheons Choice Syrup. For sale low, to close consignment, by RISLEY k CREIGHTON, October 9 Nos. 143 and 145 East Bay. LONDON PORTER. DIRECT IMPORTATION, FOR SALE BY RISLEY k CREIGHTON. October 7_Nos. 143 and 145 East Bay. GUNNY CLOTH. THE BEST AND HEAVIEST IN THE CITY IS TO BE fouud at GEO. W. CLARK k CO. '8 September 18 No. 199 East Bay. WHISKEYS, WINES & LIQUORS, I f\f\ BBLS. WHISKEYS, OF DIFFERENT GRADES, B.v/Vf qualities and prices 600 cases Claret Wines 100 cases Schiedam Schnapps 100 casks Brandy, Gin, Jamaica Rum. St. Croix Rum, New England Rum, Sherry Wine, Port Wino, Madeira Wine, ko., kc. 1000 dozen of the above in cases. For sale by September 1?_GEO. W. CLARK k CO. SALT, SYRUP, &c. 1 ft Ar» ntLCVH SA.LT FOB KALE. IN LOTH TU l_ fJVf vf suit purchasers, at le?» than market rates. 600 Blue Grit Grindstones. 100 barrels Syrup. 100 barrels Sugar. 1000 kegs Nails, 600 bags Shot. 1000 boxes Herring. 100 boxes Starch. 1000 boxes Soap. 100 boxes Tobacco, kc, kc. For sale by GEO. W. CLARK k CO. September IG GUNNY CLOTH ! GUNNY CLOTH ! 1 i\f\ EALES GUNNY CLOTH, EXTRA HEAVY. JL Vf Vf 100 Rolls Gunny Cloth, Extra Heavy. Just received. For sale low and in lots to ault, by September 16 GEO. W. CLARK 4c CO. BALING ROPE. 1 Af \ COILS MANILLA ROPE,, LU\_/ 200 Collu Hemp Rope. \ 200 Coila Jute Rope. \ Just received and for sale cheap for cash, by September 16_GEO. W. CLARK k CO BREAD ! BREAD ! BREAD ! 1 f\f\i \ BOXES ARMY BREAD. XU Vf Vf For sale by GEO. W. CLARK & CO. Septemb: r 18 SMITH'S BURTON ALE. -| ri. BARRELS JUST RECEIVED OF TBAT CELE- l.\J BBATED ALE, by GEO. W. CLARK St CO. September 16_ GUNNY CL0ÍH. 1 *7tf\ BOLLS-ABOUT SIXTY YARDS EACH. L |VJ For sale at MEETING STREET ICE HOUSE, September 6 _ BALE, ROPE, BAGGING AND TWINE, T7V3R SALE IN LOTS TO SUIT PURCHASERS. BY JO the Manufacturer H. OLUOUS, No. 67 Pine street, New York. September 24 4m o CALIFORNIA WINE COMPANY. (IHCOHPOBATKD NOVEMBER 1, I860.) WINES, FROM THE VINEYARDS OF Sonoma, Los Angelos and Napa Cornil íes, California. W, H. CHAFEE, Agent. NO. 207 EAST BAY, CHARLESTON, S. C. HOOK, SHERRY, SWEET ANGELICA, MUSCATEL, Port, Win« Bitters, Claret, Sonomo Brandy, California Catawba, Houoma Champagne (in quarts). Sonoma cham¬ pagne jin pinta, 24 jin a case)-in wood and glass. April 80 _V tuths6mos COLGATE & CO.'S GERMAN Erasive Soap, THE STANDARD OP EXCELLENCE. For »ale by all Qra«ers. October 21 8 mo THOMAS~R. AGNEW, hrponrxn AND DXALxa nt grtme Uroeerlen, Choice Teas, Kt«.. Kt«, NOS, 960 and 262 GREENWICH-^,, COR. OF MUR BAX NEW YORK. November WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC. A SUPEHB STOCK OB* RAWS SOLD AND SOLID SILVER WATCHES. All wanrnaktad te ran and thoroughly rcgu- «1 erted, at. «tu» low price of «JO eaten I SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. 100 Solid GoW Hunting Watches.taso to tl ooo 100 Msgle Cased Gold Watches. 200 to 600 100 Larisa' Watches, Enamelled.MO to 300 200 Gold Huntlog Chronometer Watches... 280 to 800 .JOS Gold Hunting English Levers. 200 to 250 SOO Gold Hunting Duplex Watches.160 to 200 OOO Gold Hunting American Watches. KW to 240 600 Silver Hunting Levara. 60 to 160 6fl0 Silver Huuttng Duplexée. 75 to 280» 600 Ladlee' GoMWatches.. 60to MO 1000 Gold Hunting lupines. 60 to 75 1000 MlswdUaaous Watches, all kinds. 50 to 100 MOO Silver Hunting Watches. 25 to 60 6000 Assorted Silver Wetchee. 10 to TS The above stock wül be disposed of on «the popular ono ortco plan, giving every patron a ana Gold or Solid Sil¬ ver Watch tor tio. without regard to value. We wish to Immediately disposa ot the above magnlfi- oant Stock. Certificates, naming the articles, are placed in sealed envelopes, and well mixed. Holders sro enti¬ tled to the artiste named on taste certificate, upon pay¬ ment of Ten Dollars, whether lt be a Watch worth «1000 or one worth lees. The return ot any of our certificate» entitles yon to the arnols named thorson, upon payment. Irrespective Of tte worth; and aa no article valued leas than *T0 ia named on any certificate, lt wül at once be swan that thia is no Lottery, but a straightforward legitimate iransaoUcn, which may be participated In even by the most ÄstkUw« I Satetèaa, éflTSSswWby, l^Qoyenanent, and open. VaTOte «terni scrutiny. .Jgfa^gfa Importers, No, 161 Broadway, N. Yt October* lm9
1

The Charleston daily news.(Charleston, S.C.) 1867-10-29.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026994/1867-10-29/ed-2/seq-2.pdf · withtheobjectof effecting aharmonioussolution ofBuropaan

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Page 1: The Charleston daily news.(Charleston, S.C.) 1867-10-29.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026994/1867-10-29/ed-2/seq-2.pdf · withtheobjectof effecting aharmonioussolution ofBuropaan

THE DAILY NEWS.RIORDAN, DAWSON $ CO ,

PROPRIETORS. ,

offiff iv i>. 18 Ha y n e Street.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES.-On« copy, twelve months, UO;nix mouths, f ft; three months, »2.MI.

ADVERTISING RATES.-Fifteen couta »linc for the firstinsertion, and ton conts a lino for each aubsoauoutInsertion. Marriage sud Funeral Notices $1 each.

TRRMH.-Cash, lu advance .LETTERS should be addressed to the DAILY NKWB,Mo. 18 Hayne-iitreet. Charleston. 8. C.REJECTED MANUSCRIPTS wiU not be returned.

CHARLESTON.TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 29, 1867.

NEWS SUMMARY.

-Cotton was quoted in New York lower. Sales1600 bales, at 20o. for Middling Uplands.-Gold cloned at 42* a 424.-Of 1647 national banks, seventeen are in the

hands of receivers.-At the Ute election in San Franoisco the Ger¬

mans voted the Democratic ticket en moase.-It required a Detroit Radical newspaper to

make fun of the ravages of yellow fever in NowOrleans.

-Three-quarters of the two thousand boot andshoemakers of Worcester, Massachusetts are outof work.-The oost of the original Capitol at Washing¬

ton city was $1,400,000. The additions, now nearlycompleted, will oost 912,000,000.-The Republican, a Radical shoot in Selma, Ala¬

bama, which has been beating between wind andtide for several months, has at last given up theghost.

-Bistori was a gipsy. Her father and motherbelonged to a wandering company. She first ap¬peared on the stage at two months old, in abasket of flowers.-The uniform movement is gaining. In New

York State all railway officials wear A distinguish¬ing uniform, and before long it is prohaM» tb»tJMBMI employees wiu no tn o same.-The New Orleans Picayune says there ia at

thia time an unprecedented amount of realeatotethrown upon the market in that oitj, for rent orfor salo. Prices demanded are but little if any lessthan those asked last year.-A manufacturer in New York city is filling an

order for two thousand thimbles, at eighteencouts per dosen, for the managers of a populargift enterprise. "No blanks I Every tioket en¬titles the holdor to a present."-Arrangements have Leen made to hold, in the

oity of Philadelphia, commencing on the firstWednesday of November, a National Convention,composed of delegates from the different branchesof the Presbyterian Church in the United States.-Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton has nearly ready for

the press a collection of his miscellaneous writingsin three volumes, consisting of critical papers onLamb, Gray, Goldsmith, Pitt and Fox, Sir ThomasBrowne, Schiller, and other writers of the prosentand past centurj.-A most extraordinary case is reported at length

in the St. Louis papers, no less than that of awoman named Catharine Peterson, who went be¬fore Justice Shundley of that oity, and claimed as,her husband Christopher Peterson, who deniedever having seen her.-The egg trade of New York is onormous. The

Post says that for the past nine months the re¬ceipts have averaged one thousand barrels perday. Each barrel contains «bout eighty dozen, ornine hundred and sixty eggs. The aggregation,therefore, would bo in one day nearly a million.-Mr. Thurlow Weed, of New York, who ap¬

pears to know a good deal about Mrs. Lincoln,says: "It may not be inappropriate to say thatMrs. Lincoln received ten thousand dollars fiomone, and five thousand dollars from another con¬tributor in this city, before Mr. Lincoln's death,and probably without his knowledge."-The abuse of false hair for the lost two years

has produced a rise of 60 per cont, in the price.Tho French "capillary artists" now sell annually140,000 pounds of hair, and when braided, curled-»d cork-screwed, bring in a revenue of more thanS15,000,owi i vvhore all this hair comes from isa secret whioh, for the tranquility of families, hadbetter not bo fathomed.-It is stated that the Turkish Government has

Belgian capitalists tho right of constructing aseries of railways from Constantinople to Bel¬grade, from the port of Enos to Uskup, and fromSalónica to Sophia, all of whioh ore to be com¬menced immediately, and will extend to a distanceof more than 1600 kilometres. The ground is givengratuitously by the Government.-Archbishop Purcell, of Cincinnati, has written

a letter in reply to Bev. Thomas Vickers, in whiohhe declares that the Pope has never been opposedto progress; that it is a stale slander to say theCatholic Church is opposed to the circulation ofthe Bible, and that he himself is opposed to aunion of Church and State, and prefer* the con¬dition of the Church in the United States to itscondition in Italy, France or Spain.-Burrell H. Leeks, who was a practicinglawyer at Cassville, Ga., for several years previousto the war, and who has been residing at Cedar

Keys, Flo., since, was killed at tho latter place onthe 16th inst. He became involved in a difficultywith Dr. Hodge, a practicing physician there, withwhom be had been previously friendly, and in analternation which took place, Dr. Hodge kickedhim in the stomach, from whioh he died in threehours.-A London paper says the plato at Windsor

Castle, for the use of her Majesty and the court,"weighs nearly thirty tons, and that its value maybe roughly estimated at £8,000,000. It is securedIn stone chambers with vaulted ceilings, whichform part of the original buildings, and are tho¬roughly proof against burglars. Among the plateü a single dish, not of silver gilt, but of solidgold, made by order of George IV., and represent¬ing all the orders, both domestío and foreign,which that sovereign wore, or was entitled to wear ;it is estimated at £8000. Grand and magnificentas the assortment of plato is, our readers will be.astonished to hear that very little of it indeed isold or carious, most of tho pluto used by formereoveroigno having been melted down and remod«liedby George IV.; very much of it, consequent¬ly, is tawdry and rococo, as might naturally beexpected from the author of the Pavilion at Brightton."'-The principle of representation of minorities

ls already making troubla in English politics. Thoplan of granting to each borough two membersfor the majority, and one for the minority, eachelector being allowed to vote for but two candi¬dates, they coll that a "three cornered constitu¬ency," by which, os neither aide can hope to gaina victory, the great moral power of the healthyconflict of parties is taken away, and, practically,political warfare will become enervated and modo«yen more than now a matter of bargain and«ale. Moreover,. and more seriously, this plan 1«already tending to cultivate tho gravest dangerEngland can apprehend-class conflict and «las«législation. The Birmingham Trades Council haveresolved that it is expedient to «end to Parliament,besides Mr. Bright and Mr. Dixon, a working¬man-not the best man, whatever his occu¬pation, whioh would be a true Democratic idea;bat a workingman, os such-on idea containingthe vital essence of aristocracy, «nd the politicalseparation of social classes. I-A dispatch fromVienna, dated Ootobcr ll, ¿ives

an extract from the Presse, relative to th« Basteraquestion. The Journal alluded to, says that accor¬ding to intelligence bf the same tenor from severalquarters, negotiation« are being carried into

. bring about an understanding between Prince,Austria, England and Prussia, with tho viow pfmorally restraining Busala from solving; theEastern question in a one-sided manner, and alsowith the object of effecting a harmonious solutionofBuropaan questions generally. Tho proposedJourney of Baron von Beast to London M «old io bo $connected with thees endeavors. The Emperor Of tlAustria has sent . letter to Boron von Benst'with 1reference to tb« recent address of the Austrian jprelates in favor of the maintenance of the presentPapal Concordat. In thia letter Hi« Majesty lay«' jdown tb« principle that the address will be re-served for doe constitutional treatment at thehands of the Ministers, and the Emperor's ¡finaldecision on tho subj cot is postponed until his re- ¡torn, which will take place probably the day siter jto-morrow. «

-Secretary Mcculloch, some week« «go, rocoiv-eda package containing $19,000, a greater portionof Which wa« in 7-80 bond«, with the numbera oatout, and the remainder in national currency. Noletter or signature accompanied the moue}, brit jthe envelope WM postmarked Urbana, Ohio, j The'moneyWM placed to th« credit of the consoWoe 'fund, theïo hoing nothing to show from whom it j«erne, and the fact that the numbers were edt etti: <of 'the bouda proved that tho former owner of ithom did not want to be khovm. On Wednesday j \last « latter wa« received from a part* InÍsin, the postmark being Honey Creek. The writer Iclaimed that ho sent the mohey toheooaVerted Minto other «eenrttte», «uah es th« Scereeary might j '

ihtair tuMMter to «end. and arate «éMfc^ TSU¿V

seeding no communicj||»fl^^r Jllgnaturo with themoney, that he was ¡Cy idcWaT the time, and notable*to write. Tho officers of tho Treasury aro ofth* opinion that tho'îe^ttor is^fipom eome pai ty who jsaw the publication that $19,000 had booti received,and thinks fie can claim the líame. Detectives ofthe Treasury will look into tbe matter.

0_^jjflfOn to Rome.

( 1 AHÍ H A t.m and his followers are againshouting wolf, but the cry is now so commonthat it onuses but little alarm and no seriousanxiety. It ls true that the red-republicansaro demanding Home as the capital of Italy;and it is equally true that the Florentines andVenetians are calling upon the Romans tostrike a blow for freedom. But hurrahs and

^proclamations will not shake the walls' of St.Angelo; and the citizens of Rome have free¬dom enough, especially from taxation, to carebut little for union with tho kingdom of Vio*TOR EMMANUEL.

There are, of course, in the Kalian pro¬vinces, hundreds of adventurers who are wil¬ling to engage in any expedition in whichdiscipline is lax and plunder plentiful. "Unit¬ed Italy" is a popular watchword ; and thetrouble that one rookless brigand may cause,it may bo hard and tiresome to undo. Rut,whatever changes time may work in tho con¬

dition of tho temporal power of the Popo, it ismost probable that GARIBALDI'S new "Ou toHome," will close as stupidly, and disastrous¬ly, as that brief campaign against the Italianforces whioh ended so abruptly on the field ofAspromonte.A man who has no occupation but red-

republicanism ; who has been, by turns,mercenary soldier and roaming sailor; who hassquabbled with the many-tailed Paohas of thePorte; who has fought for nothing in Uraquày,and taught mathematics for something in Mon¬tevideo; who faolped to' lay the train intendedto blow up St. Peters at Rome in 1849; who hasmade candles on Staten Island; who is a com¬

pound of Dick Turpin, bold buccaneer, andFlying Dutchman; whose only capital is his redshirt, long beard, and vast impudence; is nottho maa to destroy a kingdom founded ¡byCHARLEMAGNE, is not the man to lead tis erraticlegions to anything but inglorious discomfiture.

France, and Austria, and Spain, have a wordto say upon tho Roman question. It is a mat¬ter that they may prefer to leave in abeyance;and, while they do BO, oven puissant Italy ispowerless for harm.More than once has tho Pope been driven

from Home. Píos VII. died in exile. PiusIX. wns forced to abandon his capital. Thatwhioh has boen done onco may be done again;and a few days, or hours, may show what thetemporary result will be.CARLO MIMOTTI, tired of speech-making in

London, has joined his illustrious father. Anuprising has been attempted, and has failed, inRome. GARIBALDI, in two columns, is maroh¬ing on tho "Eternal City;" and the Papalforoes are retiring. Rut the French iron-cladfleet has left Toulon. Transports, crowdedwith troops, are about to sail for Italy; andthe embarkation of ammunition and materialof war is rapidly progressing.GARIBALDI on one side, and tho danger of a

general war on the other. Sans-Culottism,against policy and diplomacy. Red-republicanindividuals, in opposition to conservativemasses. The game is too uneven ; and, unlessthere is some great and speedy change in thesituation, the "On to Rome" of 1867 is verynear its end.

Baltimore.

There is no city in the United States that,to a Southerner, has more pleasant associationsthan are oonneoted with the name and memoryof Baltimoro. Thc "Monumental City" lookedupon herself as a city of the South; and, whenthe late war began, she showed Dy ner con¬

duct the purity and disinterestedness of hercreed.Those who have pined day after day in the

barrack-hutches of Fort Delaware ;-those whohave frozen and burned at Point Look Out';-those who have tasted the unpleasantnesses ofFort Mc Henry, and the Pens of Elmira ;-neednot be told what Baltimore did, in olothing thenaked, feeding the hungry, and giving wordsof comfort to the wounded and distressed. Thegood works of the people of Baltimore, wereonly limited by the wanta of those who weresuffering, or by the restrictions of militaryorders. They knew no such words as weary¬ing and turning back ; but gave freely of allthat they had for tho benefit of the Southernsoldier, at a time when a word, or act of kind¬ness, for the Southern cause was liable to endin a tedious imprisonment, or a forced journey"across the lines." A Southerner, when thewar closed, however worn or shattered, how¬ever banished or torn, found a warm welcomein Baltimore. His reception was not measuredaccording to the lace upon his sleeve, but,whatever his rank or condition, he received acordial greeting and substantial aid. Meanswere found of assisting Southerners in theirbusiness affairs. Mea who were able to workwere given employment; but there, even,ithebig-hearted Baitimoreans did not stop. Theyplanned a way of educating the orphan chil¬dren of Southern soldiers ; they subscribedfor the support of the maimed and injured ;they poured out their substance like water, inbehalf of the destitute South.

It would be a mockery indeed, to.pretendthat it was necessary to prove the olaims ofBaltimore upon the South. Gratitude, honor,lote, respect ;.-thia is what the South gives toBaltimore, and, with all her giving, it will belong ere the vast debt is paid. '

But, while Baltimore is a large and flourish¬ing commercial city, there is one way oflightening the burden that lies upon oarshoulders. As a market for the South, Bal¬timore is equal to New York. Her business israpidly increasing, and, already, a fine line ofsteamships finds full freights to, and from,Charleston. The city that remembered! theSouth in the day of her adversity, should beremembered when the South has business todo and patronage to give. A whole generationof Southern trade will not give Baltimore morethan Bbc has given tho South ; and, when duty,interest, and the memory of a thousand acts ofkindness, impel our people in the same direc¬tion, there is little doubt of the result.

Snarf) Talking.

There will be a convent ion in Virginia, andtoé Stale press is speaking with strength andsharpness.The Charlottesville Chronicle, a conservative,and not anti-negro, paper, says:>*The negroes in Vkginie har* set tho seal to(heir doom. There is no longer any peace. Thequestion now ia who shall occupy and role th* ter¬ritory between forty and thirty-two degree* northlatitude-th* black* or the whites. Every con¬ceivable effort hae been made here to I&armOniaemad^^e Wacke by the wb7tee.ltvew.appliancewaewexrrtedto to carry the election. M^aejbeen£ J*?! IPESSL ^£,fc^«n*red $ke »body of disciplined troops, obeying an ordor fromOt» centrai Jessee like s sigu iront a marshal'sbaton, the'negroesi bava d*Uy*fed their yeto Hie a

moo what negro suffrage means. Tb* feithor tho^'Ä? «W» *Hmor* vtoteBtwitt be «he recoil,tho Sörth will not .believe nntU «hey soe; and, theyprill BOO when the Southern elections are rtoJahed*'The Richmond Dispatch, a paper which baabeen in favor-ef Congressional reconstruction,«y*

who h<* n<>t been made acquainted

iavo votod everywhere for toe Radical nominee*,lhere ha* been no division anton«* them NAI

moatInoonaistent, oomtpt and dhrreoutablemen

som!* who àre^vi^mucb*^^black eonetltnbtst* show, however, no greaterlatte*»** to the«* than thaydo to another*.

people with w|ém hf? bas boen raised and withwhom he uiuaflpvc.''Tbqroturrih.hoin «very county show that they.J** Qeflppletidyvbanrtod together AB ono man in atrJLr~W)t onlyrPolit'Oal--a(rainst their people an«|hoir»wn boefclntoroqtH. lt ss tho saddest fokturfgfof twjso monstrous tliuios. Our citizens find thaWPheyÄavo a budy in their midst whiubu is wholVjf

without-havo made tho slightest impression upon^MfcjfMtd union. It ia as painful an it i H incom-.ptelHEelble.The Norfolk Virginian, one of the mont re¬

spectable papers in the South, says:"The intolerance manifested by tho negroes horoyesterday towards one of their own color who hadIhe.manuness to voto "the white man's ticket," ashe called it, shows tho olicet of tho teaching theyreceived from their Radical tutors. All the sav¬

agery of their nature waa aroused. They huntedand hounded their intended victim through thoH trent H and besot him mit il, like a stag at bay, heturned upon his tormentors und gavra thom a tasteof his metal. They still threaten to kill him, andhiB Ufo is really in leopard}-. And this ls tho sortof freedom wo are to have under Radical rulo andsuffrage. Well did Hr. Doolittle say that the Radi¬cal Congress had 'organised hell in the South.' "

These are the words of intelligent and con¬scientious journalists; who were disposed toacquiesce iu the laws of Congress, and wholive in a State in which the whites have thomajority.Tn Kin: is a squabble in literary circles

about BYRON'S album, which has been extract¬ed from an English library. It is believedthnt the album was brought to this country,because there are many mon here who are, orhave been, Byronic-in their collars. Thereare others who have two eyes, and one noBe,as BYRON had; and, of course, they would riskthe Tombe, or Blackwell's Island, for the pos¬session of a relic of the author of Parisina

IAnd Don Juan. Others there are, like THADDEUSSTEVENS, who have a graoeful limp; and theyout-Byron BYRON, by being worse than theyrepresent themselves to be, which the Lord ofNewstead could not succeed In doing. But \\\oaffectation of Byronic airs has had its day. Itis dead,-killed by new follies as popularlyephemeral. The Album may have wandered tothe "New World," but it cannot be shown with¬out détection. It must be hidden and hoarded;and, like the child learning the alphabet, whowould go through so much to get so little.

IT IS proposed to unite the waters of theMissouri River with the waters of the Qulf ofMexico by a new channel, beginning with acanal at Kansas City. This is to inorease thevalue of lands in Indian Territory and Texasto the extent of millions of dollars ; and thegreat canal, saving all the lands on the Missis¬sippi, Arkansas and Red Rivers and doingaway with the levees entirely, can be completedfor tho trifle of twenty-five millions. TheUnited Slates is to advance the money.When is tho new Atlantic Suspension Bridge

to be begun; and when will arrangements becompleted for the new Balloon line betweenPekin, Moscow and the next world ?

A-WESTERN PAPER is comforting itself bythe reflection that the shining merits ofROBERT LINCOLN make up for the peculiar con¬duct of his eccentric mother. Mrs. LINCOLNis soiling old olothes through aa auctioneer,threatening this minister and that, with con¬

dign vengeanoe, and promising an expose ofthe mysteries of the White House. ROBERTLINCOLN, who is scarcely twenty-five, is mas¬ter of a handsome law praotice, a practitionerin the Supreme Court of the United States, andand "an industrious, quiet, courteous gentle¬man." *

THE ELECTION for delegates to a Convention,under the Military Acts, begins in Georgia to¬day. There is no conservative tioket running ;and the conservative press recommend conser¬vative men to refrain from voting« to stayquietly at home, and to induce, as far as pos¬sible, their friends to do the same. Thenegroes have tho majority in the State, but it¡a tliniiirht that there is some ohanoe of defeat¬ing the Convention. In this, however, our

neighbors are probably too sanguine.

THE AUGUSTA CONSTITUTIONALIST has receiv¬ed a letter from a gentleman in this city, re¬

ferring in bitter terms to "the ingratitude ofSouth Carolina towards the late HENRY TIM-ROD." Carolinians are not more ungratefulthan other people. HENRY TIMROD did notwant for affection, nor did he want for suchaid as our people could extend to him.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS/"ROBERT MITRE & CO.,COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

BOYCE & GOVS WHARF,CHARLESTON.

1IBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGNMENTSJ of COTTON, RICE OB NAVAL STORES, to Liver¬pool, London and Glasgow, and to Northern porta.October M_ Imo

A CARD.WM. McKAY. .JOHN CAMPBELL.

MCKAY & CAMPBELL,AUCTION AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

Ko. 136 MEETING ST.,OPPOSITE PAVILION HOTEL,

SELLS DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, ¿io., ko.Vor Salea ace daily papera under Auction Column.

WM. McKAY.............. .JOHN CAMPBELL.McKAY & CAMPBELL,

A \act»om and ComraiMlon Merenanta,

HAVE THEIR WHOLESALE PROVISION STORKSNo. 971 EAST BAT, between Hasel and Want-worth, next to- c. W. SEIONIOUS* Coal Tard: have al¬way* on hand a foll supply nf FRESH8KOKED BACONBIDES, SHOULDERS, HAMS, Ac.. Ac., et lowest marketrates,N. B.-City and country buyers will find it to their ad¬vantage b t giving na a call prerioua to purchasing.October 39

_talgath

lt. H. MARSHALL & BROTHER,AUCTIONEERS,

Rea! Estate Agents, Brokers,Bio. «3 BROAJVBMPEtSBV.

EEAL ESTATE, STOCKS, Ac, BOUGHT AND SOLDON COMMISSION; LOANS NEGOTIATED; PRO¬PERTY LEASED.aa- Auction of HORSES, FURNITURE, Ac. everyWtfnesduy. _October 1»

JOHN & THEO. GETTY,COMMISSION MERCHANTS

AND.STEAMSHIP AGENTS,

HO. #8 BAST BAT,Will make LIBERAL ADVANCES ON CONSIGN-M <. NTS OF COTTON to our Mends in Maw York, AcPelober 9_imoWILLIAM H. GILLILAAB & M,Beal Estate Agent«, Anetloiicttr«

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

WILLIS & CHISOLM,FACTORS, COMMIWi HIRGHANTS.

AND

SHIPPING ÀGËNta.MMflpM WHABIF, Charleston, li. (D.E.' WILLIS.,w.............R. OHIHOi.ilQetotoeevw -?

I. M. BHemm & SON.IMPROVED

Mercantil© Airency,SO. 20 BROAD STREET,

CHAHbRITON, S. O.

WANTS.T>ARTNER WANTKO.-A YOU ftG M.VK,hJL with a «mall capitol, asy »IOU to »200, will find <tgood investment by addreesinK "INDUS ru Y." at this.Almeo. Ona acquainted with tho grocery business pre¬ferred._Bg a: ¡jg October 29

WANTKP.-A SlTUATHtlM HY A WHIT IOWOMAN a* Washer and Ironer for a numil family. I

-Can como well recommonded. Apply et No. 47 KAUT IBAY, up stairs._ 1*_Qctob"r 39

il/ANTKll Ttl HIIIIO, A WOMANI AS COOK .

T YT Also, one as Nurse, to mind children for s smallfamily. Must come well recommended. Apply atNortheast corner of KINO AND HDUSON STREETS,np stairs, over tho store._\+ October 29

WANTED, A OKRA!AN LiAD, AS APPREN¬TICE lu the Office of "Die Charleston Zietung."Apply at No. 3 BROAD STREET, between 8 a ul 10 A.M._._ Pcb ber la

A«HINTS WANTED FORTHE GRAY JACKETS,And how they Lived, Fought, anti Died for Dixie,

WITHIncidents and Sketches of Life bi the Confederacy.Bond for Circulars. Address

JONES BROTHERS & CO.,Broad street, Atlanta, Qa.Ootobor 21 Imo*

TO RENT.mo RENT, TWO LARGE ROOMS IN A.JL private family, with pantry, piazza attached ; also,use of kitchen room. To a suitable person terms mode-rate. Address "B." at this Office. _3 October 29

TO RENT,TWOORTHREE ROOMS, WITHor without uso of part of kitchen, to a genteel mar¬ried couple, or a small tamlly. Rent moderate. Applyat No. 1« BER STREET._1»_October 29

O RENT, A BRICKHOUSE ON MOUNTPLEASANT, containing seven large rooms, pantryand dressing rooms, fine elstern, and outbuildings. Ap¬ply to WM. RIVERS Mount Pleasant, or Marshall'sWharf, Charleston. th«tu October 2s

WHARF TO RENT-PATTON'S WHARF,East end Hasel street, will be leased for a termof years, on favorable terms, to a responsible tenant.Apply to T. J. KERR & CO., Kerr's whaif.Ootobor 19 _BtnthOmo RENT, A TWO-STORY WOODENX HOUSE, No. 4, Wall street. Apply at THIS OF¬

FICE._2» _October 28mo RENT, TWO STORY WOODEN HOUSE_1_ with four rooms, gas, cistern ; parlor furniture willbe left to a tenant if desired. Also, good tone Plano torent. APPLY AT THIS OFFICE. 2 October 28

TO RENT, FOUR ORFIVE ROOMS. WITHor without Board, in a private family, In tho lower

part of the city and on line of City Railway. Suited fora family or single gentlemen. Apply at THIS OFFICE.October 26_

rflO RENT, A PLEASANTLY SITUATEDX HOUSE, in the central part of the city, containingsix upright rooms, gae fixtures throughout the house, aline cistern. To an approved tenant terms reasonable.For particulars, Inquire at No. 277 KINO STREET.October 16

FOR SALE.TTtOR SALE, OLD NEWSPAPERS, IN ANY_1J QUANTITY, price 75 cents per hundred. Apply attbe Office of the DAILY NEWS. Imo October 28

LOST.LOST,ON SATURDAY MORNING, IN KINO

STREET, near Hasel, a ROLL OF BILLS amount¬ing to forty-five dollars, The finder will reoeive five dol¬lars reward and the thanks of tho owuer, by leaving thomoney for D. J. at the DAILY NEWS OFFICE.October 28 0

LOST OR STOLEN, FOUR SILVER DES¬SERT KNIVES, marked on the handle E. F. A

liberal reward will ho paid upon their delivery at No. 15ASHLEY STREET, and no questions asked.October 28 6

BOARDING.BOARDING.-COMMODIOUS APARTMENTS

and fine BOARD can bo obtained at the KINOMANSION corner of George and Meeting streets. Also,Stabling, and outrooms suitable for a small family.October 29_tuf2BOARDING_A FEW GENTLEMEN CAN

be accommodated with BOABD in a private fami¬ly. Apply at No. 2 GEORGE STREET, Terms mode¬

rate._October 2*THIRST CLASS BOARDWITHCOMFORTA-JU BLY furnished rooms, can be bad at No. 1 SO¬CIETY STREET._Imo_October 9

BOARDING.-EXCELLENT BOARD CANbe obtained, at reasonable ratee, by applying at No.434 KINO STREET, one door above Hudson street, near

tho Citadel. The Street Oars' pas. the door ovary tenminutes. 3mo October 7

STORAGE.STORAGE, THE MOST CENTRAL AND

convenient In the City, at very reasonable prices,for COTTON, RICI', SALT, FERTILIZERS. Ac. tte. In-aoranoe, when desired, ss low as any in the city. Applyto GEO. W. CLARK lt CO.,Corner East Bay and Cumberland streets.September 17 /

TAILORING, ETC,_FALL AND WINTFR GOODS

FOR GENTLEMEN.

DOBDAUM & MENKE,MERCHANT TAILORS,

NO. 180 KING STREET, THREE DOORS ABOVEHORLBEOK'S ALLEY,HAVE JUST RECEIVED A FULL SUPPLY OF FALLAND WINTER GOODS of every description. Suitsfitted In the highest style, and as cheaply as can be doneby any other establishment in the city. Full satisfactionguaranteed._thstuimo_October 17

EDGERTON & RICHARDSHAVE NOW OPENED THEIR FALL AND WINTERSTOCK OF CLOTHS, CASSIMKRi.< S AND VEST¬INGS, which they are prepared to make up, OR WILLSELL BY THE YARD.

ALSO,MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS«

SUCH AB :WHITE LINEN BOSOM SHIRTS, SHAKSPEARE COL¬LARS "Merino and Shaker Flannel Undershirts and DrawersDuke of Edinburgh Cravat TiesSuspenders, Kid GlovesLinen Cambric Handkerchiefs, Cotton Half HoseEnglish Silk Umbrellas, etc.

ALBO.

Tailors' Trimmings.ALL OF WHICH THEY WILL SELL AT THE LOWEST

MARKET PRICES.

BARGAINS IN FLANNELS.SAXONY. WELSH, PATENT AND TWILLED SCAR¬LET, of direct importation norn liverpool, which weoiler at Wholesale and Retail, at a considerable reductionfrom Import cost, or as low as the Inferior article ofAmerican Flannels. They are all Wool, without mistareot shoddy, and are admirably adapted for Ladlee' Balmo¬ral Skirts.

Som. 3» AND 3* BROAD STREET.October 25

?Ut, PAl MTS, ETD.OM LEATHER BELTING.

A FULL STOCK OF

HOYT'S BROS. SUPERIORPATENT STRETCHED

PATENT RIVETEDPATENT JOINTED

Oak Leather Belting.THE GREAT DEHAr-D FOR THTS BELTING DU¬RING, CoiouelL M. HATCli's Agency, la sufficient gua¬rantee for its qualities.For salo at New York prices, by

HOLMES & CALDER,-Agents.No. 12« MEETING STREET,

October 24 _Imo_ Charleston, 8. C.

HHS LEAD AND ZINC PAINTS.10 OOO LEAD;

PKBKIUM PÜBE WHlTE10.0JÜ lbs. puro Philadelphia White Lead8,000 lbs. New York White Lead6,000 lbs. pure French White Zinc10.000 lbs. Washington Medal White Zinc8.000 tba. Franklin Snow White Zinc.AU of the above for aale lour by

HOLMES * CALDER,October 24 Imo_Na lae Meeting street

OIL! OIL I OIL!r r\r\ AA7.T/mn pim* WINTER SPKRIT OILÖUU ¡WO gallons Winter Bleached Whale Oil

800 gallons No. 1 Lard OU000 gallons No. 1 Tanners' OU000 gallons Whits Oak OU800 gaUons pure Neatsfoot Oil700 gallons English Linseed Oil400 gallons Boiled Linseed Otl.For aale low at HOLMES A CALDER,October 24 Imo Mo. 120 Meeting street

~~M. M. QUINN,Wholesale & Retail Dealer

i 'j» ;'; A l\ ~-

BOOKS, PERIODICALS,NEWSPAPERS, STATIONERY, «TO.

flo. 897 KINtt STREET(Oppojlie Ann street),

Charleston, O. 8.LATEST ISSUES of tho Press always r>n hand.ruñáVtAti^o7**Íy*<i (*00<1" dellvored or for-

M CASH OBDEBS will be promptly attended lo.

WILLIAM ¿KOOKRANKS,

»TEAM GA« FITTER AN» Pl.IlliaiCIt,f>LAW AND ORNAMENTAL «AS ill UlRF*. GASI FITTING AND PLUMBING nto^K.« \T<I ENDEDm Jto.U* KtmMKUYÍxàajpain BotVMAMo«« and «yneen »tee¿a,

MEETINGS._CIT* COUNCIL.

AbPEOlAL MEETING WILT, DE HELD THISEVENING, la Council chum her. «A 7^ o'clook, fortho nurpbai of receiving tlu> report ol' tho Special Qom«mitten on Retrenchment.By order. W. H. SMITH,October 30 1 Clerk ol Couucll.CHARLESTON SOCIAL CLUB

AN EXTRA MEETING WILL BE HELD THI«(TUESDAY) EVENING, at 7 J» o'clock, at yourHall. Members arorequested to be punotual, aa 1MH>\-neas of Importance will bo tranaacted.

B- Y*««, P-. J. F. EARLY,October av 1* Secretary.

AMUSEMENTS.LADIES' FAIR

VOli. THK BU1LDINO OF AN EPISCOPALCHURCH AT FLORENCE, 8. C.

THE LADIES WHO ARE INTERESTED IN THISCHURCH have determined to hold a FAIR, on thelath, 13tb, i-ith aid loth of November at the MASONICHALL.Arrangements am hoing mude to havo a CONCERT orCHARADE the last .wo nights.Doora open at 10 o'clock each day, and 7 o'clock eachevening. Admittance 30 cents.Any donation or contribution will be thankfully re¬ceived.17 October 28

EDUCATIONAL.FEM ALSO COLLKOK.

THE FALL TERM OF THE FEMALE COLLEGE,Spartan burg, S. C., will opel October 3d. 1807.Tho ProBident, Rov. A. W. CUMMINGS. D. D., will boaided by competent, experienced teacher» lu every de-pertinent.Board for hairyear.$70.00Tuition. 20.00Contingent Fee. 2.00Muslo and all the Ornamental Branches very low.Those wishing to patronize the School will please ad-dress tho President. _ituAugust 1)

MRS. JOHN LAURENS*BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES

WILL RESUME ITS EXERCISES OCTOBER 1ST,CORNER WENTWORTH AND SMITH STREETS.The course of studies ia thorough and complete. TheFrench Department will be conducted by a residentFiench Teacher, and tho young ladies will be required tospeak French. For terms, etc., apply as above.September 10 thstuJURS. JOHN A. BLUAI

XI TILL RESUME THE EXERCISES OF HER SCHOOLYT on TUESDAK, October lat, at her Residence, Marystreet, opposite Elizabeth.MUSIC AND FRENCH taught whon desired.September 30 ¡v*

HOTELS.

CHARLESTON HOTEL,CHARLESTON, S. C.

C. A. BULLER.Cashier.J. P. HORBACH.Superintendent.October 17

S. SWANDALE,PROPRIETOR OP THE

Mansion House,OREENVILLE, S. C.Jane 8

ST. JAMES HOTEL,NEW ORLEANS.

PBOPBIRTOBS :WM. A. HURD.OfNew OrleansW. F. COREERY.Ot Spottswood Hotel, Richmond.

Telegraph and Railroad Offioes in Rotunda of Hotel.Jone IT Omo

STEVENS HOUSE, Noa. »1. HS, MS ANO »7Broadway, N. Y., opposite Bowling Green-t n theEuropean Plan_THE STEVENS HOUSE la well andWidely known to the travelling public. The location is es¬pecially suitable to merchants and business men; lt is inclose proximity to the business part of the city-ls onthe highway of Southern and Western travel-and adja¬cent to all the principal Railroad and Steamboat depots.The STEVENS HOUSE has liberal accommodation forover 300 guests-it ia weU furnished, and possesses everymodern improvement for the comfort and entertainmentnf ita Inmates. The rooms are spacious and well venti¬lated-provided with gas and water-the attendance isprompt and respectful-and the table ia generously pro¬vided with every delicacy of the season at modorate rates.The rooms having been refurnished and remodeled, weare ena) id to oflur extra facilities for the comfort andpleasure ..f our guests. GEO. E. CHASE A CO.,May28Orno Proprietors.

SA100NS.RESTAURANT,

BY

HARN & MRHAMMËR,Corner of Broad aud Church streets.CHARLESTON, S. C.

WE WOULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM OURfriends and the public that we have recently fittednp our establishment, and have now connected with the

IB _A_ IR/,WHERE THE BEST LIQ.UORS MAY

BB HAD, «a

A NUMBER ONE RESTAURANT,ON THE OLD FRENCH COFFEE HOUSE STYLE,

Where everything in Season la furnished OJ reasonableterms.Ordere for MEALS will be promptly attended to.MILL POND AND PLANTED OYSTERS always onhand, and will be shipped to any part of tba State, in cansor In bárrela, at low prices.

HARN & SHERHAMMER.September 17 ruths 2mext

MACHINE SHOPS.WILLIAM S. HENEREY,MACHINIST AND FOMOEIl.

No. 314 Meeting street,(NEAR LINK,)

CHARLESTON. S. C

MANUFACTURES STEAM ENGINES, BOILERSand MACHINERY, Saw Mills. Corn MiUs, HorsePowers, Vertical and Horizontal Sugar Milla, CottonBaad Crushers, McCarthy Cotton Gins, and all kinda ofIron end Brass Cutings, to order.Aprilao _'_"_ thatnemo

DecemberM stulh 1yr

mumm MATEMAI, ETC,NOTICE.

LUMBAR! LUMBER11T1HE UNDERSIGNED BAS ON BAND AMD FOBJ. aale on reasonable torn»», ttl qttantttka to ault pur¬chasers, all kinda of Rough and Dressed LUMBER.

JNO. O. MALLON EE,Hortbcok's Wharf, near N. B. B. B.October 28

f :, ; .

LUMBER AN!) BUILl)INO MATË-JBHALS.

OBIME NOBTBBRN WHITS PINE OF ALL «IHDS.C Mahogany. Moulding*. N.wsto, Bajista». Vansara,

rboleaal* and retail lor Ç***^ WOOD. Agent,Corner Market and Bay.October 17 . ?_ thstatoo*

mJ[ the Sumter ftewa. ! ;DARR & 08T2EN, Proprletore.

PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. AT SUMTER, & CSfcbeerlptton 04.00 per annum. To Chiba pf «Mi^AdXt.ae'rnent's Instiled on Mberal Urm*.' jOaoaaaoets i$3ed«M> 4

FINANCIAL.PHILIP H. KEGLER.

NO. IO BROAD STR14RT.

OHAULKSTi >U; S. C.CHECKS FOB SALK. ON NKW YORK. BALTIMOREAND BOSTON.FOREItiN EXCHANOE.--BILL8 DRAWN ONALL TU'i PRINCIPAL CITIES IN EUROPEOUliB, KILVER, SECURITIES, BANK NOTES AO.,BOUGHT AND SOLD.COLLECTION S MADE AT ALL ACCESSIBLEPOINTS.INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS.October 3!)_liio*MDMW M. MORELAND,BRO IKI IB IR,,

No. 8 B110AD STREET,CHARLESTON, H. C., OCTOBER «8, 1807.

QUOTATIONS FOR SOUTHERN BANK BILLS.liuying Rate».Bank of Camden.»5Hunk of Charleston.t.Ï0B ink of Chestor.llBank of Georgetown.17Bank of I lamburn.lnBank of Newberry.40Bank of South Carolina.10Bank of State of Booth Carolina, prior to IHM.. .18<g>14Bank of State of South Carohna, after 1st Jan'ry,1S01. 0

Commercal Bank of Colu mbla. 4Exchange Bank, columbia.llFarmern' and Exchange Bunk. 1Merchants' Bank, Cheraw.llPeople's Bank, Charleston.50Plauters' Bank of Fairfield. HPlantera' and MechaulcB* Bank, Charleston.lt)Southwestern Railroad Bank, Charleston.27@30State Bank, Charleston.4Union Hank, Charleston.75City of Charleston Chango Billa.85These QnotaUona are liable to fluctuations.Bank Notes sont to mo will be remitted for as directed,at tho best market ratea.Stocks and Bonda of all doscripti.ms bought and sold.Quotation Sheet for Bonds, Stocka and Coupons, issued

every Friday Morning in this paper.October 28_3CITY STOCK WANTED.

WANTED TO PURCHASE-CITY OF CHARLESTONSIX PER CENT. STOCK. Apply toJAMES M. 8HACKELFORD,

October 28Broker, No. 6 Brood street Up Stairs.

2

INSURANCE.IHK

QUEEN INSURANCE COMPANYOF

LIVERPOOL AND LONDON.

CAPITAL.»10,000,000 IN GOLD.

THIS RELIABLE ENGLISH COMPANY INSURESagainst loss or damage by fire on BUILDINGS,MERCHANDIZE, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, RENTS,Ac, at established ratea.

Loases promptly paid, without reference to England.GIBBES A CO.. Agents,.atobor 28 mtuOmo NO. 10 Adger's "outh Wharf.

RAILROADS,SOUTH CAROLINA RAILROAD.

GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE, iCHARLESTON, 8. C., October 4,1867. (THE NIGHT EXPRESS FREIGHT AND ACCOM¬MODATION PASSENGER TRAINS will not run

nu Sunday Mah ls. Ail Freight tor Copimb ia by thiaTrain must be in tho Depot by 2 P. M., and for Augustaby 3 P. M. H. T. PEAKE,October 5 atuth Imo General Superintendent.

AGRICULTURAL.*RROW TIE

COTTON BANDS.AFRESH SUPPLY OF THE ABOVE CELEBRATEDCOTTON TIE, Just received per Chattanooga,from Liverpool. For salo by

ROBERT MURE & CO.Octobor 29 tuthaO

"EAGLE" COTTON GINS,MADE ONLY BT

BATES, HYDE & CO.,Bridgewater, Maas.

NEW YORK-187 Water streetBOSTON-5 Phoenix Building.NEW ORLEANS-61 Ht. Charlea street.August 0_ arno

CHARLESTONAGRIGULTURAL WAREHOUSE

AND

SEED STORE.LITTLE & MARSHALL,

No. 140 Meeting Street,(OPPOSITE PAVILION HOTEL,)

Dealers In all kinda of

Agricultural Implements,SAW AND ROLLER GINSCOTTON GINS.GRISWOLD GIN.

HENEREY'S McOARTHY OIN.H. L. EMERY & SON'S SAW GIN AND CONDENSER, for Band or Horse Power.SOUTHERN COTTON CO.'S GIN.NEW YORK COTTON CO.'S GIN.BROWN'S DOUBLE CYLINDER GIN.BROWN'S HAND GIN.CARVER'S GIN.EAGLE GIN.

HORSE POWERS.LITTLE GIANT HORSE POWER.TBE LITTLE GIANT,

THE BEST. MOST COMPLETE AND CHEAPESTHORSE POWER MANUFACTURED.

In introducing thia new Power Into the maiket, wewould state Stat the following are some of the advan¬tage* possessed by tb* "LITTLE GIANT" over all otherHorse powers iI. Ita groat strength on account of being double-geared,which not only doubles the strength by dividing thistrain on twice the number of teeth, bnt by gearing onboth aide* of the wheels lt equalizes the wear on Uteshafts, and materially lessens the friction, enabling thehorses to do much mora work than with any otherPower.2. Ita coaapaotneaa and extreme portability, lt weighingabout one-half aa much aa other Horse Powers, and occu¬pying but one-third the apace, lt can be packed in smallboxea, thus saving much expense. It ia so simple thattho most ignorant person would have no difficulty inputting lt together.3, The facility with which lt can be adjusted to anykind ofmachinery at any angle, either on th« ground orover bead, without moving it from ito foundation, willbe appreciated by fsrmera and planten aa specially adapt¬ed for driving Cotton Gins.

HORACE li. EMERY'S

PATENT ENDLESS RAILWAYHORSE POWERS.

'

NISHWITfc'S

MOWING AXD REAPING MACHINES.WASHING MACHINES.

Plow« of aW descriptions, Cast Ironand Steel.

BLOW CASTINGS, In every variety ; Cultivators ;Hone Hoe«: Harrows i Cant Iron Field and Garden Rol¬ler* j Fan Mills; OomMUU ; Corn shell«rs ; co»andCobCrusher. -, Hoy, Strawand Corn Stalk Cutten; Planta¬tion Carts and Wagons ; canal and Garden Barrow» ;Sugar Mills ; Grindstone* i Road Scraper«; Chara*':> hovels ; laped** i Bake* ; Forks ; Hooa, Ac, Ac, Oar-den Seo ls, of all Kinda, warranted pure and Fresh,

LITTLE & MARSHALL,No. 1*0 Meeting Street,

I (OPPOSITE PAVILION HOTEL,)CHARLESTON, ». C.

yan* 18 tnths

FURNITURE, ETC.

Wf, BLACK & CO.,WHOLESALE AMD RETAIL DEALERS»

ANO MANUFACTURERS OW*

XTR I X XX H£BI OP EVERY VARIETY.

No. 78 Bowery, near Canal Street*NEW YORK.HOTELS AMD PUBLICAT TBE SHORTEST NOTIC

HNG3

eada ptarohaeed of oar House goarantcad M re*f. RO**< ,! ,' JlWM RfcoOK...' ".? ono. ¿«VD*»

*Vj»J*«B «?**?, 0/li »ft ..?''-o'- , . J'

GROCERY AND MISCELLANEOUS.DUBLIN AM) LONDON PORTER,.'SCOTCH WU BNOIilSII ALKS.

BOXER BLOOD, WOLFE k CO/8 DUBLIN PORTER-pintsURITKIS of Truman. Hanbury «V Co.'a Brown stout-phils ant] qunrUDarnd* ot Alison's Alu-quartsIlarrclu of Aitkens' palo Ale -pintsbarrels of Knox A: Sons' Allott Ale-pints.For sale by W. H. CHAFES,October 29 tuth.' No. '207 Kant Hay.

FISH.fTrtr. PACKAGES OF MACKELEL.O Vf Vf CONSISTING or:llnrrelH. hall barrels and kits No. 1 HAY ANO SHOREBarrels, bull barrels aud kit» No. 2 Bay and ShoreEAtrc!?. bali barrels und kits No. 3 ! a rn«Half bartel* »n«i Vits ot AfeasHwvrelH, half barrels and kits NEW SALMON800 boxes Sealed and No. 1 HERRINGS; SMOKED75 «iiisrter lioxos FRENCH CODFISH50 eases of Oysters, Lobstera omi Salmon lu ono andtwo pound caun.

lu store and to urrivo. For sale byW. H. CHAFFE.October '29 tilth? No. 207 East Hay street.

BACON AND LARD.BHDS C. H. SIDES'25 ketts Leal I.srd6 barrels N. Y. Pig Hams10 barrels N. Y. Bacon stripsIC barrels N. Y. Sugar Cured ShouldersJust received aud for sale by

W. n. CHAFEE,October 2«.» tu<h'2 No. '207 East Hay street.

TRENTON CRACKERS.7K BBLS. OF "EXTON'S" PUEMIUM TRENTON*J CRACK Kits. Fancy, Wiu«>, aud Butter, just land¬ed I rom steamer, and for sale at low prices by

W. H. CHAFEE,October 29_tutli2 No. 207 East Bay.DUNDEE BAGGING.

/* r\ BALES SUPERIOR EXTRA HEAVY DOUBLE\y\J WARP DUNDEE JUTE BAGGINGfi bains Extra backing Bagging.Just received por "Chattanooga" from Liverpool. Forsal«by ROBT. MURE ti CO.October29 luths!',

10

LIVERPOOL SALT,FLÍ\f\i\ SiU;KS LIVERPOOL SALT. FOR SALEO'/VfVf to arrive, byOctobur29 ttitbsO ROBERT MORE k CO._

PIG IRON.(?f\ IONS CELEBRATED "DITTON FORGE" PIGt)U IRON, per ship charleston, from Liverpool.For salo, to arrive, by ROBERT MURE & CO.October 29 _. _

tuths6

BACON.-| Q HHD8. PRIME SIDES AND SHOULDERS. FORLO sale by T. J. KERR A CO.October29__8_

SIDES AND SHOULDERS.1AA BHDS SHOULDERSLUVf Rib, Clear Rib and Clear Sides.

Lauding and in storo and for sale byLAUREY St ALEXANDER.October 29 2 No. 137 East Bay.

BACON.6HHDS. PRIME CLEAR RIBBED SIDES, LAND¬ING and for sale byOctober 29 1 T, TUPPER & SONS.

SIDES, CLEARAND RIBBED, ANDSTRIPS, NOW LANDING,

A C\ HHDS CLEAR RIBB AND RIBBED SIDES.fl f 10 hhás Clear Sides20 boxes Choice New StripsFor sale on accommodating terms, by

T. M. CATER,October28 2 Brown's Wharf.

SHIRTINGS AND YARNS.£T r\ BALES BATESVILLE 7-8 HEAVY SHIRTINGSUv/ 20 bales Assorted Yarns.For sale on favorable terms by

GEO. W. WILLIAMS Si CO., Factors.October 20 8

CORN.fi) ¡r r,A BUSHELS CORN IN STORE. FOR SALE¿jt) VfVf in lots to snit purchasers, by

SHACKELF0RD*-SEEEY.-October 24 ~" ' No. 1 Boyd's Wharf.

MOLASSES AND SYRUP.C)f\ PUNCBEONS BARBADOS MOLASSESAÚ\J 15 puncheons Choice Syrup.For sale low, to close consignment, by

RISLEY k CREIGHTON,October 9 Nos. 143 and 145 East Bay.LONDON PORTER.

DIRECT IMPORTATION, FOR SALE BYRISLEY k CREIGHTON.October 7_Nos. 143 and 145 East Bay.

GUNNY CLOTH.THE BEST AND HEAVIEST IN THE CITY IS TO BEfouud at GEO. W. CLARK k CO. '8September 18 No. 199 East Bay.

WHISKEYS, WINES & LIQUORS,I f\f\ BBLS. WHISKEYS, OFDIFFERENT GRADES,B.v/Vf qualities and prices600 cases Claret Wines100 cases Schiedam Schnapps100 casks Brandy, Gin, Jamaica Rum. St. Croix Rum,New England Rum, Sherry Wine, Port Wino, MadeiraWine, ko., kc.1000 dozen of the above in cases. For sale bySeptember1?_GEO. W. CLARK k CO.

SALT, SYRUP, &c.1 ftAr» ntLCVH SA.LT FOB KALE. IN LOTH TUl_fJVf vf suit purchasers, at le?» than market rates.600 Blue Grit Grindstones.

100 barrels Syrup.100 barrels Sugar.1000 kegs Nails,600 bags Shot.1000 boxes Herring.100 boxes Starch.1000 boxes Soap.100 boxes Tobacco, kc, kc.For sale by GEO. W. CLARK k CO.September IG

GUNNY CLOTH ! GUNNY CLOTH !1 i\f\ EALES GUNNY CLOTH, EXTRA HEAVY.JLVf Vf 100 Rolls Gunny Cloth, Extra Heavy.Just received. For sale low and in lots to ault, bySeptember 16 GEO. W. CLARK 4c CO.

BALING ROPE.1 Af\ COILS MANILLA ROPE,,LU\_/ 200 Collu Hemp Rope. \

200 Coila Jute Rope. \Just received and for sale cheap for cash, bySeptember16_GEO. W. CLARK k CO

BREAD ! BREAD ! BREAD !1 f\f\i \ BOXES ARMY BREAD.XUVfVf For sale by GEO. W. CLARK & CO.Septemb: r 18

SMITH'S BURTON ALE.-| ri. BARRELS JUST RECEIVED OF TBAT CELE-l.\J BBATED ALE, by

GEO. W. CLARK St CO.September 16_GUNNY CL0ÍH.

1 *7tf\ BOLLS-ABOUT SIXTY YARDS EACH.L |VJ For sale atMEETING STREET ICE HOUSE,September 6

_

BALE, ROPE, BAGGING ANDTWINE,

T7V3R SALE IN LOTS TO SUIT PURCHASERS. BYJO the Manufacturer H. OLUOUS,No. 67 Pine street, New York.September 24 4m o

CALIFORNIA WINE COMPANY.(IHCOHPOBATKD NOVEMBER 1, I860.)

WINES,FROM THE VINEYARDS OF

Sonoma, Los Angelos and NapaCornil íes, California.W, H. CHAFEE, Agent.NO. 207 EAST BAY, CHARLESTON, S. C.

HOOK, SHERRY, SWEET ANGELICA, MUSCATEL,Port, Win« Bitters, Claret, Sonomo Brandy, CaliforniaCatawba, Houoma Champagne (in quarts). Sonoma cham¬pagne jin pinta, 24 jin a case)-in wood and glass.April 80_V tuths6mos

COLGATE & CO.'SGERMAN

Erasive Soap,THE STANDARD OP

EXCELLENCE.For »ale by all Qra«ers.October 21 8 mo

THOMAS~R. AGNEW,hrponrxn AND DXALxa nt

grtme Uroeerlen, Choice Teas, Kt«.. Kt«,NOS, 960 and 262 GREENWICH-^,, COR. OF MUR BAX

NEW YORK.November

WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC.A SUPEHB STOCK OB* RAWS

SOLD AND SOLID SILVER WATCHES.All wanrnaktad te ran and thoroughly rcgu-

«1erted, at. «tu» low price of «JO eaten ISATISFACTION GUARANTEED.

100 Solid GoW Hunting Watches.taso to tlooo100 Msgle Cased Gold Watches. 200 to 600100 Larisa' Watches, Enamelled.MO to 300200 Gold Huntlog Chronometer Watches... 280 to 800.JOS Gold Hunting English Levers. 200 to 250SOO Gold Hunting Duplex Watches.160 to 200OOO Gold Hunting American Watches. KW to 240600 Silver Hunting Levara. 60 to 1606fl0 Silver Huuttng Duplexée. 75 to 280»600 Ladlee' GoMWatches.. 60toMO1000 Gold Hunting lupines. 60 to 751000 MlswdUaaous Watches, all kinds. 50 to 100MOO Silver Hunting Watches. 25 to 606000 Assorted Silver Wetchee. 10 toTSThe above stock wül be disposed of on «the popular onoortco plan, giving every patron a ana Gold or Solid Sil¬ver Watch tor tio. without regard to value.We wish to Immediately disposa ot the above magnlfi-oant Stock. Certificates, naming the articles, are placedin sealed envelopes, and well mixed. Holders sro enti¬tled to the artiste named on taste certificate, upon pay¬ment of Ten Dollars, whether lt be a Watch worth «1000or one worth lees. The return ot any of our certificate»entitles yon to the arnols named thorson, upon payment.IrrespectiveOf tte worth; and aa no article valued leasthan *T0 ia named on any certificate, lt wül at oncebe swan that thia is no Lottery, but a straightforwardlegitimate iransaoUcn, which may be participated Ineven by the most ÄstkUw« I

Satetèaa,éflTSSswWby, l^Qoyenanent, and open.VaTOte «terni scrutiny..Jgfa^gfaImporters, No, 161 Broadway, N. YtOctober* lm9