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NEWS & HERALD.
HAaOJV & EKTItL,
EUnOIH END PitOf'BIKTO&S.
> aauf wwt uwTuii* in
Col. W.T. THOilPsUAi, I
Dr. J. 8. JOSK1 |
AuucUtc fidlton
It jMDOt bt dented that (be infamous
seosmefl of |he Jacobins in Washington to
impoVftriab and hnmift&tfe the S.»utb conUl
never bave been accomplished but for' tbe
active assistance of the great and powerful
Northwest Her leadiug citizens, who are
mostly Massachusetts' men, haysr controlled
tbe new States of tbe West aud led them in
blind submission behind tbe trinmphM car
of that fanatical and ambitious Common
JKfiftllb, The people of the West have beep
.too busy with the pressing pursuits of life,
the opening of lands, tbe making of rail-
. roads, aud tbe building of towns and cities,
It is stated that tb« ng P®P erB admit B t u dy political science or make themselves-
Paper oFthe City.
lAKiEST IIMU&IMl II tlliill MBITIT.
TKtnttDAY, J'AMTABY S3, IMS. "
VUE FHftlAM PAiUO lS KNOLaSO,
the existence of a great panic among the
people of England on account of the
threatened depredations of tbe Fenians. It
wonld appear that in the worst days of the
“rebellion” the Americana were never so
frightened as tbe Britons are at present. In
London there are thirty thousand special po
lice, and In all the large ; towns and cities
these special guardians of the public peace
been proportionately increased.
I The resident Irish element in England ml-
"'ways constitutes a considerable portion of
her people, and this excited and dissatisfied
element may prove formidable in trouble—
sometimes; and at this very tiineit if said
that the “Green Isle” is pouring in her peo
ple upon the cities aud munutmciuring towns
in veryJtHrgu numbers, it has been estima
ted tbat'oul of 'Vbb 20,000,000 inhabitants of
Englaud and Wales, 601,624 are natives of
Ireland. This coudition of things existed
so long ago as 1861. Of course there is a
very considerable increase since that time.
This being the .condition of affairs, what
wouder that extra vigilance is exercised by
the Government.
Tub Washington reporter of tbe Poiladel-
phia Inquirer telegraphs -that there is a ma
jority of over twenty in the Senate in favor
of the House bill requiring two-thirds of the
Supreme Court to bet aside a law of Con
gress, aud that the bill will pass in a lew
days.
Stanton evidently intends to remain in tbe
War Department. It is stated that on the
day he took possession of the office every
Senator and every foreign minister in Wash
ington, received by special messenger, an
envelop containing two visiting cards. On
ope was “Tbe Secretary of Wur,” and on
tbe other “Edwin M. Stanton ” It was re
garded as a significant intimation that Mr
Stanton proposes to remain at the head of
the War Department.
Tub Memphis Bulletin states that many
Soutnern planters and overseers have ap
plied to the English Cotton Supply Associa
tion for employment in the culture of cot
ton, in any region where they can be made
available. The Bulletin represents them to
be men of character and position, who have
been ruined by tbe war, and who have been
forced to this alternative to better their for
tunes.
The planters of some parts of Louisiana
seom to think that tbe fertility of their lands
will enable them this year to overcome the
difficulties that are paralyzing agricultural
enterprise m other portions of the South.
We learn from the New Orleans Crescent
that bauds are wanted in the sugar regions
of Louisiana, aud that thousands of them
can obtain high wages and rations.
acquainted with the ruinous consequences
of their course. Under the cry of “Union
and Liberty,” they have readily and blindly
done the work assigned them by the unprin
cipled wire-pullers of the East—puppets in
the hands of the unscrupulous politician,
whose chief aim has been the aggrandize
ment of bis section and self.
They have carried tariffs which make them
pay annually millions to the Eastern capital
1sts; they baVe rendered bonds sacred from
lax, and out of their own pockets pay tbe
dues which those bonds ought to pay. They
have destroyed the beat aud most accessible
market for every thing they raise aud have
to sell, so that all their produce has to be
transported at great expense over roads
owned by these Eastern capitalists, sold by
them, paid by exchange ou their banks,
until. the transportation, commission, ex
change, Ac., eat up the crop. They have
made the country to which they axe the
natural allies so poor as to render her uuable
to purchase, and, have tampered with her
labor-system iu such a manner as to make it
to her interest to produce the very articles
she used to buy from them—changed from
a purchaser to a seller. If ever a country
has been blinded to her true interests, it has
been the West.
But she is now giving signs of an awaken
ing to this fact. All over her vast prairies,
on tbe shores of her great lakes aud mighty
rivers, bold, able men are lifting up their
voices against this suicidal policy. The Al-
leghanies will mark the limit of political
power. The Mississippi valley will unite in
the accomplishment of a free commerce,
equal taxation, white suffrage and fjonstitu
tional iieedom. In the great struggle now'
going on between Jacobinism and patriotism,
we will also have the aid of the Pacific slop)
She is stretching out her hands to the Orien
tal wealth, whose acquirement will make
her richer than even her own exhauslless
gold mines. Neither her interests, sympa
thies nor doctrines are bound np with tbe
Radical party. We may, therefore, confi
dently expect that in the not very distant
future, the West, the Pacific slope aud the
South will be united ou the great questions
of finance and policy, which are looming up
before us. Tbe East foresees this, and
thrusts the negro into general politics as the
apple of discord. While the others fight
over the negro, she gathers into her coffers
the rich spoils of high tariffs, inflated cur
rency, untaxed bonds, immense* Federal pa
tronage, and of tbe transportation, com
mission, exchange, &c., of all tbe commerce
of tbe country.
Gov. Jenkins' Opinion op Gen. Mkade—
In his recent address to the citizens of Mil-
ledgeville, Governor Jenkins spoke as fol
lows of General Meade:
“Aud here allow me to say a word in re
lation to General Meade,-though it may sound
to you strange as coming from me. I look
npou the commanding General of this Dis
trict as a high-toned honorable man,
and one who w ill do what he thinks to be
his duty. Like all military men, bred to
arms, he has that idea of force; it is part oi
his education; subject to command, be says
to one go, and ue goeth, to another Come,
and he comcth, and to another do this, and
he doeth it, not questioning the right or the
authority. As 1 said, he will do what he
thinks right, but I must say that I thiuk he
has thoa&tit wrong iu this instance, and has
misconstrued the authority under which he
has acted.
Newspaper Gossip.—Greeley’s editorial
management of the Tribune is Bo satisfactory
to the stockholders that they have just re
elected him responsible editor. Rotation is
the rule in tbe Tribune office. Old writers
are going off and new writers coming on all
the time, but Horace is a permanent fixture.
The rumor that Bryant was about to retire
from the Evening Post has received an em
phatic contradiction in his re-election to the
post of chief editor.' Mr. Bryant's labors on
the Post are now very light. He leaves the
long articles to other bands, and contents
himself with paragraphs. Bennett. Hr., is
still chief director of tite’Herald, but anxious
to get a competent manager. He wants Mr.
Hudson to oome hack. The report of his
desire to stoll the Herald b untrue. Young
Bennett manages the Telegram and the
Weekly Herald, and they are enough for him.
S ie editorial staff of the'World, beaded by
antou Marble’, is eaid to embraoe the most
gracelul, writers in the United States. Pur-
naps, but with the exception oi Marble, they
are not particularly strong. Tbqriow Weed
appears in public with a new hat, and Gree
ley’s friends want him Jo do likewise. But
it Horace got a new hit, tea to one he would
forget it iu the first restaurant be entered.
Raymond is writing strong articles against
the Radicals, but I suppose if be were iu Con
gress now, he would be voting with them.—
JY. I. Cor. Charleston Mercury.
“My duty is to execute a law which has
been passed by the Congress of the United
(Mates. As a soldier, I conceive that I have
no right to question tbe validity of tbe act
from which 1 derive my power*; nor can 1
permit it to be questioned by those under my
command. There is a proper course to be
pursued in testing the validity of all acts.—
Gen. Monde.
This is from Gen. Meade’s speech to the
Georgia Convention,, as published by bis At
lanta organ. He won’t permit the validity of
the RecboatwQtiQO Act tot he questioned by
thoke under his command, that is, by the
people bt his Military District. Any toao
who questions that act’s validity, aby one
who expresses tbe opinion that it is oooon
btitutionaf, witi be punished by tbe satrap.
Tongues are to be tied and mouths to be
sewed up by the fear of penalties.
*. The sairap pays “tber# is a proper course
' to be pursued in testing the validity of all
acts.” But ho#, oh most Sapient and puis
sant of satraps, can the validity of an act be
tested in your happy satrapy, if you will ‘al
low no man even to question it Louisville
Journal.
By Telegraph.
NIGHT DISPATCHES.
ffPnr telegraphic market* see Commercial Intel
ligence.
.. vuoa WAuuisfliM*.-
of
Sir. llroolu Tells tbe Radicals Wiiat the
Democrats Will Du.
In the Hoase on Friday, Mr. Brooks,
New York, said:
“We intend to undo what hag been done
by this Congress, and we shall, sooner or
later, have the power within the walls of ihc
House to undo it all. These proceedings in
Ohio and New Jersey are but tbe beginning
of ibe revolution which has already made its
appearance elsewhere; and the precedents
and preiogalives and powers which tbe ma
jority iu this House is now assuming in the
most revolutionary manner we intend to
make use of to undo alt these revolu
tionary and violent proceedings. So
the honorable gentleman from Mass*
cbnseits might as well make np his
mind now to see the beginning of this
great re-actionary movement. We do not
intend to deprive the negroes of the South
of their liberty. We intend to allow them
a five-fifths representation, not a three-fifths
one, which the negroes iu the North are
having But we do not intend to allow, so
lax as we can help it, the people of the North
to be brought into negro co partnership in
government on tbe floor of this Hoase, or to
be ruled by black majorities, by rotten
borough negro constituencies in the South
We do not intend to be ruled by any such
government as that, and all the processes of
legislation by which that has been reHched.
or is to be reached. Through State Legis
latures, as iu Ohio; through State action, as
in New Jersey ; through 50,000 popular ma
jority in my own State, to be increased next
year to 100,000 If this House goes on with
those proceedings, we intend to undo them
all. I repeat, that everything which has
been done is to be undone. The voice of
ilia people is no longer heard in whispers,
but in the loud roar of the whirlwind, com
teg front all parts of the country; and it wilt
sooner or later unseat a large majority of
..those who now constitute the majority ou
this floor, potting in their places the De
mocracy of the country. If the statistic* of
elections are examined even now, it will be
t<mud that a large majority of members on
this side of tbe House hold their seats here
aud vote here on these bills who no longer
represent their constituents, but are acting
in utter defiance of the people who sent
them here.”
J Supreme Court i>f Georgia.
Mayor A Aldermen of Savannah j j, Jonj
Algernon Htu-tridge. j Cbwhum
Habbib, J.
This case, in principle, tails within the
decision of this Court in the case of Jones
vs. The Wills Valley R. R. 30tb Geo. R., 42.
In that case it was decided “that yhcre
the private property of a citizen was irtkcn
against his wish and will for a Railroad, he
should he .paid the value of the property so
taken in .coin.”
‘It’ the owner of tbe land tafcen sets np
claim for apprehended evils aud incon
veniences, the incidental advantages which
he receives from the location of the road on
bis £iemises may be set up by way of re-
duotten of such apprehended damages.”—
Judgment below affirmed.
E. W J. Harden, for Plaintiff.
Hartridge & Chisolm, for Defendant.
Thk Vallkx of Death —The following is
a probable explanation of tile Upas tree
story: “A real valley of death exists in
Java; it is termed tbe Valley of Poison, slid
it is filled to a considerable height with car
bonic acid gas, which is exhaiieJ from crev
ices in the ground. If a man or other ini-
mal enter it, he cannot return; and be is not
sensible o! his dander until he finds himself
sinking under the poisonous influence of!he
atmosphere which surrounds him; the car
bonic acid pf which it chiefly consists, rising
to the height of eighteen feet from Use hot-
com of the valley. Birds which fly into
this atmosphere drop down dead; and a liv
ing fowl thrown inti) it dies before Itra&he*
tb« lioliom, which if strewed with carcasses
of various animals that have perished in the
deleterious gas.”
The New York Legislature is in sassion,
but me Albany correspondent of tbe New
vYofk-,4\me«pftyi ihetU-ratfi^r an e^uivopd
♦compliment, when h *. aooonct* that “fli*
atteudiuice ini both branches v*ft very ta
'end the market active,-’ as they say in Wi
Afreet.”
Tj» Debt Increasing.—The report of
the Secretary of the Treasury, shows s
steady increase .of the. debt ol the United
States, within the last few months .-
la September 1st .' .$2.Ll.iiOO
In Octouer 1st ; 2,fciO,OoO
la November ut..
Ia December 1st.'
la topuary 1st
i 016,008
.... -2.6i9.Wki
2,042.0 0
$ia.«77„o.4
Tbe increase is as follows ;
Making mors than twelve, mil lions in four
months, being about the whole annual ex
penditures oi the Government of the United
States, during the administration of Presi
dent John Quincy Adams.
In the meantime, gold has gone up within
the last fortnight from 134 to 141|.'
The Sumter County Mubdebkrs.—We
Bottom the Sumter Republican mat tfle
qegrb murderers of Judge Horne were per
mitted, in the Superior Court of Sumter
cousty, Inst Week, to enter the plea of
'‘guilty.of manslaughter in the first degree,”
and: Veto toen sentenced—two of them to
twenty, one to ton, and another to one year’s
ooafinsmeat to tfe*Peuitentiary. This plea
was allowed after a conviction of all of them
of murder some months ago (from which
they obtained anew trial) and after the re
convict ion of murdur of the first one again
tried last week. The Republican denounces
the proceeding as a measure of undue leu-
leney allowed By Jo lge Vason, to prevent a
I Rudicki clamor and movement tor bis <dis>-
pOoomwtt b/ JBUiUuj aulftoriij.
Coagrenluaol
Wasuington, January 22.— Senate—The .
Reconttractitm 4fiil. waa - remi Aaame v.A4m* 4a>&In
Doolittle objected to a second reading, and m ne
it went over under the rules. -- £ j j
Tbe CoufereuCe Odniinittoe’s repot ton 4Be
Anti-coniractiou bill was adopted. It goes-
to the President. '-
The amendment to the Cotton Tax bill,:
aduiiuiDg foreign cotton duty free, was re
affirmed by the Senate, by a Vote of 25 to 18.
The committee will* probably agree*'to, dis
agree, and the bill will fhd. . .
Senator Thomas’ <&se was resumed; when-
the Senate adjourned, in honor ot Mr. Noel!.
A resolution from Mississippi praying the
removal of political disabilities from certain
citizens was presented. ■ jJ j J .*
Mr. Blaue intydducwL'Alina taxing the
shares of National Banks. ' J
The Post Office Committee was greeted
to enquire into the expediency of abolishtog
tbe franking privilege. • « a I
Tbe committee on education and \*boz
was directed to enquire into the expediency
of providing a general system of education
iu Rebeldom, educating every child between
five and twenty.
Tiie Maryland Uniop League petitions the-
extension of the reconstruction acts over
Maryland.
House.—The deficiency bill jyas resumed
Maynard, of Teuu , proposed that the mat
ter oi stationery be left to the honor of mem
bers. Stevens objected; lie said that wiuj
tbe old rule, under; which members made
stationery cover Vpautaloons and shirts.’
Mr. Ross proposed an : amendment suspend
ing the payment of members while travel
ling in Europe. The bill finally passed.
Tbe bid forfi itiug lands granted tbe rebel
States for railroad purposes was resumed,
and during the discussion Mr. ^Chandler
called Air. Julian a coward. The Speaker
ruled the words unparliamentary. Mr.
Chandler retorted, ‘-Certainly not, if he
one.” Mr. Julian retorted, “Mr. Chandler
could test bis cowardice at any time.” Mr.
Chandler replied, “Very well, sir; I’ll take
an early opportunity/’ The bill; went over.
The death of Thomas E. / Notll was an
nounced, with appropriate proceedings, and
the House adjourned.
The Secretary of the Navy has sent Con
gress amended.estimates, reducing tne naval
expenses $22;Out),000.,
Iu connection with General Grant’s re
ported opposition to the new Keeonstruc
tiou acts, it is regarded us significant that
Washbui ne, of liliuois, though iu his Wat,
did not vote for or against the bill.
Tue case reported below is from Louisiana.
Armssrong woiked his fouudry iu New Or-
luaus, while LoveII commanded, m iking shot
nod shell lor the Confederates. Wi
Orleans was captured; Arinstronj
oath aud continued working hi;
which was alterwards seized aud cdWffemned.
Armstrong’s pardon is dated in March. The
Armstrong foundry case, pending in .the Su
preme Court, is very mucu contested. .First,
the Attorney General moved to dismiss the
appeal, insisting the case should be. here on
writ of error. In this he was over-rnietf.
{Second, Armstrong moved to file a plea of
pardon, which the Altoruey-General re
sisted. Leave was given, alter-argument, lo
file the plea. 'So that tbe ca*e wilt now be
beard on its merits and will come up next
week.
the Attornuy-Generai represents tbe
Uniied {Slates, and Horn Humphrey Mar
shill, oi Kentucky, appears for Armstrong.
Tim case is considered a leading one, which
must decide the points, first, wh* ther
seizure and capture are the tame; sefcqndj
whether property liable to capture and prize
embraces laud held by private titte; third,
whether property tainted by tbe guilty con
duct of the owner is telievctl by his pard« i
alter condemnation and before sale; fourth,
whetiu-r the citizen shut np in a place occu
pied by Confederate arms can be responsi
ble to the United {States for breaoh oi mts
uicipal law, under command of the military
force of the Confederates; aud tilth, whether
the Constitution opeiates with its guarantee
upon him when the United {States recover
the cily.
Tue Post Office Department has matured
arrange in cuts for regular mails from Balti-
un»re by Havana aud Key West to New Or
leans and back. The steamer Liberty drives
N< w Orleaus to-day and the Cuba leaves
Baltimore to-morrow, the 23d instant,
contract has also been made to convey the
mails from New Orleaus via Pensacola, St.
Marks, Cedar Keys, Tampa, Fort Jefferson
aud Dry Tortugas to Key West and back,
twice a month.
South Caroliiitt Uadlc-ai Convention.
Charleston, January 22.—The Conven
tion, proceedings to £hiy were dull., lie-solu
tions were offered and referred, as follows:
For the division of the districts i f the State;
to establish a penal code ami reform school;
w and reorganizing the Supreme and Inferior
Courts. Scmie opposition wos in milested to
the measures of relief, but a vast majority
favor them. This question will probably be
decided to-morrow.
h'KUM ATLANTA.
Proecetlinsa of Ihc Unconstitutional Con
vention.
Atlanta, January 22.—The time of tbe
Convention to-day was laigely taken up in
the discussion Of the alleged misrepresenta
tions by reporters for lli6 press.
A committee oi live was appointed to in
vestigale such charges.
Another committee was appointed to as
certain it one of the delegates hail ever been
in the Penitentiary.
Three additional sections of the Bill of
Rights were adopted, essentially the same
us in the old C<institution.
A cull was iesned to-day by Jbe Radi
cal Stale Committee for a Convfen
tion at this point ou the 19th of Feb
ruary next, to transact such business as may
be brought before it, such as nomination
oi a Governor, State ticket, etc., at tbe
election which is to be ordered at the same
time as the vote on the ratification of tbe new
Constitution. -
FROM RICHMOND.
General Grunt Leave* for WushiMj
Proceedings cf the Hadlcat Uouycaf
lion—The Peabody Fpnd, &e.
Richmond, January 22 —General Grant
leaves tor Wa«hingtou to-night.
Bishop Mcllvaine, of Ohio, made a brief
address to the Convention to-day.
Gen. Schofield gives au entertainment to
the Peabody Trustees to-night. . »j
In the Convention the proposed .article of
the Bill of Rights, declaring Virginia equal
with other States, &c., was defeated.
At the meeting of the Peabody Fund
Trustees to day, tbe following 1 resolution
wax offered by Gen. Grant and adopted:
“Resolved, That, in view pf the present
destitution prevailing in the {Southern and
outhwestero Stales/it is, tin 4he opinion of
this Board, expedient that the Executive
Committee and the General Aeent* bor inM
thnrized, in conformity : with the pejri
granted by Mr. Peabody, to expend tortj!
per cent, of the principal of tbe fund, in ad
dition to the accrued interest, uud that as
large a portion of said Bum, hot Exceeding
two hundj;ad thousand dollars, be expended
during the nu'rreut year, as in thtir judg
ment can be advantageously used in pro
moting the object of the trust, and the au
thor iiy of the Board is hereby given to such
appropriation.*’ i , 1
Another resolution, was adopted, giving
the General Agent authority to increase the
sum* already promised lor education, and
nuke payments quarterly, or semi-an p mil iy.
The Board then adjourned, to meet m New
York the third Thursday in June oext.
Louisiana Radical Co^veattaiA
New Orleans; Janaary 22 —The Conven
tion to-day adopted Article 93 of ibe Con
stitution providing tor tber eieftion > qf|iw<
sheriffs arid two coroners tor, toe Jfena
Orieabd. Obe ; sheriff execdtfvd
the criminal and the other of Ibe civil
courts. I ;
Articles 94 to 96 inclusive, defining thfi
powers of impeachment and prescribing tbe
process thereof, WrTe adopted.
Florida Kartlcai Convention.
TALLAHabser, January 22.—The Conven
tion assembled at l he usual hniy. No bus
iness of importance was transacted except
he Bppqtotment of atbudiug Oommuto^s.
W. H. Christy, Secretary, resigned, and^S.
Conaitt, white, was elected In his place. (
From tc { UTopn / i ' ' -*|
London, January 22 —The npnrt lhat
Russia is sending troofw to tbs Ho niton i
frontier ia officiary dented.
Uo>
cial
Ay-tTyrr - - __
mandini|to-«UBpebd the,coMecUmi ‘•of ^axea
lor 1867 from ail persons not allowed repre
sentation was received.
The Committee on memorial to Congress
to vacate the State offices made a majority
toym peop!b«f
^«UllU TH1
Th»N«» York
that Andrew Jobi
jpa,.of tbe oppoeii
that open him in the
the only hope of bafflii
rwetwg*
WfBL-. „ . .
sissippi require tbe immediate aid of Con-
gresr Uri>>iZtove^>bs|r^nUens impedir ‘ *’
tqovpsfiu cnpi
assembled; the Slate government is adntin-
eart, bead and policy, am
respects save opeu hostility.
Tho great mass of the Southern people
manifest absqliito Mud’ancntetakable hostility
lo recon»ifti€go»J|SMi{4|t|^ Union men
and loyalistsnaVemeiprosmipiiOD with calm
rebel sentiment has culminated (»n the floor
of this Convention by a member in a report
to this body, averring that -the Convention is
an unauthorized aSleibbly called by an un
constitutional law, wna that Congress has,
therefore, no legal or binding power over the
State of Mississippi in compelling obedience
to ita ordinances.
The officials administering the Provisional
of thp. State whose terms of
r £xpfred, hne whb have been eonHhned
in office by the forbearance of Congress,
have neglectedgto orotect toe lives and pro-
perty of loygj; men—4iave OSed and will
contiuue re use power' to prevent the
growth of loyalty and the restoration of
peace and order; at least, tfieir action or nop,
action may result greatly to the : embarrass
ment of the Convention in the work of re-
eo ns true lion. We, there te re, inthemime
aud in behalf of the loyal people of Missis
sippi, and in the naufe'hf justice, liberty and
humanity, jnost airsc&iy and rcspadlfully
petition your honorable bodies lo authorize
tbe Convention to declare the civil officers
of the Slate vacant, and lo fill them at once
by the appointment tuf true and loyal men
who, we believe, will greatly arid to the sue-!
cess of the Coogressionul plan ot recon
struction.
A minority from the same, committee re
ported: •••
As Congress has confided affairs to the Mili
tary Commander of the District, and us the
bill now pending before Congress in ali.pror
bability will soon pass, giving Generul Grant
supervising power over all Military Districts, 1
thus securing more just aqd.effioto.iU govern-
incuts to tliis'and all other 8-urthVru Slatfel;
as Congress receully defeated :\ resolution
to vacate the offices and empower the Con
ventions to fill them; and as probably there
will be speedy cfhauges from military to civil
government to be established by the vote of
the people, it is deemed inexpedient to me
morialize Congress on the subject. No ac
tson was taken ou either report.
be lost; aud it ahoold be boros in mind, also,
it is hja[ ffirm an^mlmfttf flfjM 11
maintained * against *a r combination oui
w«eUM4^*>isu. ALmmmmA
of the junta that
vertiseme
[ tb*)ofe,nal acbemM
r ftbuolttto pov«r.
There it . great deal of force in Ue atiggee-
«on. that ff he
power, that ha, concentrated upon, hia head
the wale of vindiciiva wralk. The Badianla
North Carolina Radical C.invention.
Ralriou, January 22.—This body sp«nt
to day fixing the jHixdiom aud^he traveling
expenses. The former was fixed $8 per duy
f*r the members and $12 ior the President.
For traveling expenses twenty cents per
mile.
know and feef that be la the IJon in their
path. Tna Herald aaj»:
There are men profession soma degree of
wisdom in our poiiucai affairs who, while
admitting the great services of Mr. Jobmten
in defense of the Qankiiunteo, are iotttinei!
to Class his . pretensions and hit posiuon
with those of John Tyler. This is a great
mistake. The issue upon which Tyler Was
detached 1 rum the Whig pfirty .WiOl involved
in his vetoes of certain hybrid national
bank bills; -but with his second veto the
question was settled, and there was An and
of it. Towards ton close of jiis admin
istration tbe only issue for the succession was
the issue of the spoils, Aud upon this issue the
Democrats wisely selected a hew: Candidate
as preierable to ah old one, and Tyler sup
ported the movement. The<0as^of President
Johnson is widely diffeteut from this.—
He is now engaged in tiie very visis «# the
battle with the destructive Jacobins pf a
Radical Congress, if he were to give way
the whole Cause of a constitutional restora
tion'ol the Union Wonld be lost. All then
of all parties opposed to tbe. tevolnlioiuuy
and dt-spolic schemes of the Radicals have
leurned to re*y upon Andrew Johnson for a
dc-iiverintee, and they hAVenoWnb other re
liance. > In this crisis against Chase or Grab*
as the .Radical candidate, to may Well be
doubted whether any other man is compe
tent to take Johnson’s place .as the recog
nized bead of all the opposition forces.
Without his support they are shipwrecked,
but antler his Uauner they seen re atouce
the key to the enemy’s position. Such is
the balance of power which Andrew John
son holds iu reference to toe succession. Is
it 4o be used Or cast away ? That is the
question. .
VKIDAT-KSMi Haya«iS' a BRfll KFIT—
the Wo- derful ulacK Bxnn. an.ttbe Grand Stniw
A:
By order of the. W. M.
jaiiii
Oenerul Grant and Gen* Mcricrnund-
Personai quarrel of liiklineuUhed
Soldiers.
Spbingfield, III , Jan. 6th, 1808.
Messrs. Editors of State Register ;
1 observe in the Giiicsgn Tribune of th^
4th instant certain extracts purporting to
be taken from “ Badeau’s Life of General
Grant.”
Of whilom Colonel, now Lieut. Badehu,
it is well enough to say, en passant, that he
was unkh'uvu to nip, unless I once shiv him
hanging around General Grant’s headquar
ters as ft questionable appendage, where he
may still he an ornamental rather than use-
(ul appurien mce. Failing to gain distinc
tion as a soldier,‘he seemed determined to
attain intteuouft notoriety both as a persoual
traducer and oapegyrjst.
Undertaking ostensibly to write General
Grant's’biogtkpby, he - ha.^ commenced the
hopeless task of writing him iuto the Presi
dency. Iu this effort he Isas gone out of the
way to assail me, and only echoes his mas
ter’s malevolence. r /
It is rather, then, of his master, from his
position a more distinguished object, that. I
would very briefly speak. Let him publish the
correspondence—the whole of the corres
pondence of which he complains—through
his partisan, aud anienueosis.-, Tips done,
his character tor candor- aV*P 'fun- dealing Vlted to#t tend -
will be exhibited in a better light than at
>reseqt before jibe pqblio, to whose judgment
le appeals, against a fellow soldier.
bometihies General Grant’s sense of jus
tice, bnt oftener his passions, have controlled
bis cohdnct toward^ me. Eyjie'cially has
this been the cuse siucg the. brilliaut aud
•uccessiul issue of tbe Mississippi campaign,
in wliich the Thirteenth Army Corps, which
I had the honor to command, bole such a
meritorious part. In his official report of
that campaign, he, either lrorn ignorance or
malice, falsities important facts, honorable
to the corps and to me, to the disparagement
of both. The proof to. on file in the War
Department, bnt has never been permitted
to see the light.
Only rtceutly, when my name wa9 before
the Semite for confirmation to office; lie, as I
understood, and no doubt truiy, descended
from the dignity of his station to cause ■ my
rejection, tons pursuing me in civil, as well
as iu military life.
A man Who receives an injury may forgive
its author, but that author uever,forgives the
peMo’n lh; had injured.
Gen: Grant should, in prudence, if heit in
4hsticc,‘be more forbearing, for no public
man of modern times o wes so much of repn
tation and infiuence to the fortiearance o(
others. If the veil were once lifted, and the
public made acquainted with hia real char
acter, Gen. Graut wtfufcl stand very different
ly in public estim'stten thau he does at
present That time will yet come when
he wrong done me aud my command will
be corrected.
Your obedient servant,
John A* McCleunanp.
How Things in the South Loax to a
Stran iEB.—In the New York Times of the
16tb, is published, by a correspondent who
has just returned from a tour Ihirbugh the
Southern States, a very fair arid candid
letter, which contains the tollowicig:
The negro- will not work, or cannot be re
lied on m the fnifillment of his contract.
Late in November tbe cotton crops of hun
dreds of fields in South Carolina aud Georgia
stood unpicked, because the negro, was ab
sent, atJending to speeches and elections;
and even at the end ol December much cot
ton was on the ground, a great portion of
which is sure to go to waste.
It is hold by some that cotton might be'
cultiva ed by white labor, but rice cAnnot.
Only the negro can, without risk of life, en
dure me miasmatic exhalations of toe xice
field; aud it is here that tbe most perfect or-
gan zation of labor, tbe most rigid discipline,
are indispensable. Nothing must be left to
the caprice of the lab. rer. Any neglect in
Irrigation, hoeliug, catting or threshing, may
he fatal to the crop. But toe colored man
will uot, at present, submit'to strict super
vision, and hence much of toe rice orop tor
1867 has been spoiled. The.negroes not
only exercise themselves in firearms, bat
carry arms about. At Macon, on TbaokB-
giving Day, there were hundreds shooting
at a target, and one of Ike waiters at ttte
hotel carried a loaded revolver in his pocket
As an instance of their ignorance I may
mention that one of them asked a friend of
mine to explain to him what government
meant; was it a man, or what was it ? An
other, when asked whom he intended to
vote for. answered, “either for massa, ox for
himself.”
h Theatres ; |
JNO TKftfPL&T^&HrilO.
r iff MA^EPFA FCROBSt — LADIR8 1
tfaift fttgbi! Uua^uroAcbabie eea-atiou! By-
ton’s chast* aau beautiful
MAZEPPA!
*
o w
ale or Rent.
THURSDAY LVENlNO, January zad,
Th« greatest Equestrian and Dramatic Spectacle
aver presented on anjr stage. Tbe Wonderin' and
Beanirul Performing Horse, BLACK BE '•»—tbe
Aaest MaX°ppast-.e^i-i America! A Grt-nt Ca»t*.
p u.,.. .....IT™:..
t HK 8UBFORIBGR fffers Uls BESIDrNow
MARLOW, tw«Dtj-8lx miles from SaYrnrmfh k
Central Ruihoar, f»»r sale .»r rent. Tram* n >■. y
a dav, and one boor and thirty minans c^rrio. . e
;O l*e pl.ee, Wh Ch m.ke. It <wsj end coalTnSS
<* the
miw beawtlfal pi eesln tne low count,iTniZr.i!'
““*SftSSi
rj for the convenienoe of ce
BRaaak
»r scr«i saV-
na^-feape, sc^
JJ | I /
sr fti ‘to q»oSjk w:
HOO^MBSPBHrtftteie^arj^ gf the affairs
residing in Piorlda. Address In itfa of this
Ofllos, rtatteirWrmsr sthete ean be se^.Ve.
Janas—2t J
BACON:
|~VKV MT«E»Qlt can he luet tn PIRBiponn.
XJ hTuUHeaW, Street ■tt-nuo.
Address Box 15 Post Office.
10
(ET
,-fu t
HHDS CLEAR RIBBED 81LSS—PRDfflk
* j, ‘ ; PorSaleby 4 —*
»•! r- + -t-r. .'i ,h
; , , . ti t , JOHNSTGN. A .p^LKON,
JsnSd—tf . a> i; >*u, BioddardtyfJppeT Range.
I3aC6fij JBacon!
( 50 ® UDS - SH01ILDEB * ASD SIDES.
I BBLS. MESS PORK,
for rent,
4 SQUALL FARM ronfaiulng fo ir hundred acres, I
aftsatrd eh the salt., and w'tbin off. mfle ot I
. Now l,Ddteg sad for aaJe h,
QCCAYC^coa*N*rn
statloa Ne, 1 iMwelic and ttuli Dallroad. Slmadoli
a. a.>11 by .M rnr on the . aboard. A dwelling add
outoullrtmg oil I lie itremifl ^s
. JPITiwite MODKKATB^ . ' '
Jaa»Hdt »■■; miBMRT HAUfittdHAM ft SONS.
Prices Ueduced Still Lswer.
‘TTTHWiLfiDBldvHit in ftay pdvt of the eUy, until
VV further uoiiee. the b -at q <al't1es ot WOOD
- q ’al lies ot Woub, hi
. v , m.w--; -rr .-T-rrrr-y:77z -;r- t;- ••,. .m I the tolloyaigprices, IfPU MkASUUE GlABANTSXO:
Just Heoeived:
PINE and ASM, sawed uny Rugth..$6 60 per oord!
WOODdn eord lengths at th* lowest market prices.
BIRD-9 STYE DIaPKRS, KID GLOVES,
ORAPB COU.4RS, MAGIC RUFFLING,
BLEACHED CAMBRIC LONG CLOTH,
» canes Bleached Shirting and Bheetings,
MISSES- HOOP SKIRTS, all sizes, r
LADIK9' HOOP SKIfcTs' all sizes,
MULL and NAINSOOK MUtrLlNS,
_ JD in oord length
Weiivfte eoosumers to measure tiie :<i|mensfons of
the esakfta Wh mob am) wn Louie* now in use lx
ta ling s-iHed woo i iu i ho city. Orders dei>w-ited in
our boxes at. the Post Office, at Me ere. A. A. Solo-
Br.%AH i«i toman-a draj< **or. «
«ha at oor c-moe Ob I he BAy and at our 3 aid will be
prou ptly attended to. JOr FHRMS CASH
Jan.O-lw PKLor, TCOKgk A WRioHT.
Fof sale'at theidweat prices by
De"W"itt Morgan-.
WM, EST1LL, Jr.,
NEWSDEALER
Gen. Hancock has issned an important
order to the registers ol voters, advising
them that the law, fairly interpreted, pmst
he their guide in determining the qualifica
tions ot y. «turs, and not General Sheridan's
construe lion thereof, as set forth in his
printed memoranda of qualifications, issued
iu May, 1867. ,
Special Notices.
ZERRUBBABEL LODGE, No.U,
F. A; M.—a regular oomuiaoicatieu of Zer
rubbabel Lodge, No. 16, .will be held at the
Masonic Hall, THIS (Thursday/ EVENING, at 7*
o’clock.
fraiisicnt Brethren of good standing and Mem
bers of other Lodges in the city are fraternally lx-
A
Waited,
war N URSE—WHITE OR COLORED.
Aply to
H. G. ROWE,
BOOKSELLER,
| Bull St., Next to the Post Office,
Corner St. J alien street and Johnson Square.
Jaii82—tr
NEW BOOKS.
I janlS
(DOWN STAIRS,)
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
THE GUARDIAN A&GEL, by Oliver W.:
Holmes.
DR. S. T. DDPOM
Playing for High Stakes, by Annie Thomas.
THE BROTHER’S BET, by t tmlie Carleo.
MABEL'S PROGRESS, by- author Marga-
v - vet’s Trouble. 1
RUFFS GODWIN, by Mfea Braddon.
THE HUGU KNOTS, by Samnel Smiles.
CARLTON’S YEAR-A NoWf.
The Huguenot Family, by Socsh r »y the.
Pickwick Papers, «tc., new edkioo, paper.
Cooper, Oicott & 0b.
Jm90 ^
PI AS rbturned and resumed the pbac-
TIC^6f mEDI0I NE. office at his old residence at
rhe Lie of Hope.
janl5—9t
JEWELKY.
V. W. SKIFF,
F0BMEBLT
PARTICULAR NOTICE.
j 129 Congress Street,
saVasnah,
Realttaaeei will not be Invested In
•■r next Great Drawing—m dnpllente of
the Orasd itwlidsf Scbeme^-xale«s ed-:
dresaed, ns aisal, 10. the old watwbltahed
aad oaly regular Stale Hauagere,
MURRAY,
T AKlSS THIS MSTHODof saying to hia Southern
neaila in 8 vvanndh, and the whole Stale of
QenrKK that he in now connected with and is one
6f the firm, well known as the
EDDY & CO.,
COVINGTON, KY.
Whole Tickets §12, Halves 86, Q,utr'i §3.
' : jilLSl—VITU&8
HIM MMFMiM (0.,
181 Broadway)
CANCELING and BUSINLSS
STAMPS,
I
NEW YORK CITY.
Ihis House being extensively engagt diu the manu
facturing of-
SILVER PLATED WARE,
Are prepared 10 inrni.sh the entire trade with every
dt-w tipiioii of ttiis-kiud of GoOdN, at- m low fignrffl
ior f*rtiue quuUt - sod upon us mcnodutliig nrne
ieether deviers in the same liVe of bu-taesR.
• la Lhis r-omiecuou Rr. hkiff wimid add while
nuiidr< det-f h'« ^ lo, '»-fri:i filemlu are kmming to the
tact, that hi- longt-cay utoo g hero and h>s Hom
B. J. NUNN, Secretary.
FURNISH-THE FOLLOWING CANCELING I
8TAMP8 xt makers’prices : ' I
SecmnVs rauccii-g stame, wiffi die and da*e*i I
com, lute $S; Se-’ornL’a Banking HoneeStamp, with-1
out d*te, from $l«'ta $16; nira Dies $-2 60 «ach; I
^ttra RIWmAis, Item §f-fitiU> *»:**%*.extra.,) att^iiun m ausir.tea ga.e him the i^ht ^nd thie lo
Audres* ordera to •• }£dLL I antetf»b4tiiicudwledjr"Ot rfW and evervC.in»r apper-
Ball street, Lext to the Positiffice, | tuning to tb f \yattth, Jowwrs aud Frnicy booda
■•uniboae. Hp w'»utl now say to them that b*> has.
iXtimute commercial r^krti nH wfiii an tbe IradiBg
houses ia. M- trade in Ni w York City, and is PKK-
PAKED TO EXECUTS ANT COMMISSION IN
S IN OB OUT DOOR CLERK, or as j TitAT/ItlNJfci 'j* 1 _b u friendanay entrant him with,
Jguai—
Buiannah.
SITUATION WANTED,
A 8
lAJE/WN , .
j promising at a» times to fai'hfxliy tarry 1 ut their
BOOKKEEPER. I wishev and instruct ious, and 'ever to study ibepecu-
I ortr? lntertut of either individuais or firms.
Batishctory referendea-giVex.
Address RNB:tOf, at x
THIS OFPTCR.
Guardian’s Sate.
Stay Law Dsoxifi kD Urconstittitional.
We find in tbe Miiledgeville recoider of last
week the bpad notes, of a number pf deci
sions of tbe Sopreme C-onrt of Georgia,
latel]i;§xoiiquoQed.. Axuimg them is toe long
expected decision declaring the stay lawi
passed by tho last Legislature of Georgia;
unconstitutional. Oute of the points made,
and tbe primary on 6. fs that such a law is!
prohibited by the Constitution of the
United States. Thjs .being the case, (ami
the decisions of Federal Courts sustain!
dike to ’follows that the “Kol'iet.” «r-
diuemco' of T the Convenlteu now iu sps-
j$pn at . Atlanta is a*«o nnconsfitutlonal,
and owes its vitality to toe sanction given to
it Ay the nUiitery authority, wbieb has been
mude safrt-niu in 1 for an' indlffinife-
•®iip l>y "M l<!giniaiioii of Congress.
- „ Those
who are to be beneQUed by Ibis “relief” will
therefore see lhat it uniat ceese when the ci-
eil authority IS restqfeStoits full jurisdiction
end supersedes the “notary government.
Tdis oonsideraiiou will show that those wlio
have Connected tbe “relier* question with
that ot tbe Utooventioa miitt the udoptioo of!
theirCanstitation- have “o'erleapea them-
BlT*’’—tbey have msde the cmitimlnnce of
■reliel” cuusequent upon the rej -ctibn, not-
AtWi'.VTl tlift jCooshlutihi!—C5>
i qmrtr.
wu _•'•••a
NssoLXofi PanxMO KW Warn.—Paris
pap«K report Ihet,4be, utmost (mtirity
prevrnlp iu the Fyegch dockyards, .where
there ere no less than tniriy-nine vessels in
course of construction,"inclariing foursrmor-
pltted frigates, the seme bamber of etirsettes
and of gnwdships, likewise - armor-plated, -
and a formidable armor-plated floating bat
tery. Besides tbe foregoing, there me a
screw frigate, sir screw corvettes, and a
screw transport, none of which are nrtnor-
sA The actual sea going lorce of the'
Ith nary how amounts to 343 -t opi-
■ and 116 sailing vsseeiii; "Wliii*, witni
N tu c„urae of ciiasmcCibn, glyes ; > a !
total oi £04 shipa-of-war.
NOTICE.
aTLANTIC AUD GULP RAILROAD COMPANY, 1
a.VASSAB, JAtlLUr. lllO, 1A.0, j
The annual meeting of the 8tt>ckhQjder8 of the! At
lantic arul Gulf Railroad Compsoy will be held at the
Compstry's Office, iu tbe Oity of Savannah, on WED
NESDAY. the lfith day of February Beat, at U
o'clock A. M. , ./ i
An flk etioa for Directors to manage the affairs of
the Company lor the eu«uing year will be held at th|s
meeting.
' Stockholders attending the meeting will be passed
true ou the iraixe of the Company from the 10th to
the 14th of F.brnaiy, on exhibiting their c«rt|flcaMl
of stock to tho Couductoie. -.u't-aft
D. MACDONALD,
jan 22-td . t ..* Secre tary.
BATCHELOR’S HAIR DYE.—This
splendid Hair Dye in the beatiu the world. The only
trite aud perfect Dye—Hartuleee, Reliable, Instanta
neous. No disappointment. No ridiculous tints.
Re uedles the ill 5fleets of Bad Dyes Invigorates
aud leaves the hair, soft and beantifu], black or brown.
Sold by all Druggists and Perfumers, and properly
applied ut Batchelor’s Wig Factory, 16 Bond street,
hew ¥<?rk. . , 4 ■, a . . J>nl6-ly
Notice-,-Special Tax, 1868.
Tax poyenrare hereby noUfied that the tax on ail
bnatnase, Wades --and profeeslaat, prexorfbed by
ordinanoe of December 3Q, 1067, is now due. Iam
ready to-receive payment-* for-the same.
JOH^ WILUAM801T.
l*nU City Treaadre*.
f <w-
NOTICE.
BourH-WESTEBN RilLBOflOdOKPiRT,
OrnoK, Macon, Ua , January 10, yss
The annual election for President and seven
reCtoni to manage tee affairs ATthts Company for, the
ensuing year, wilt be held at ttMr office In ot
Macon; oil THURSDAY, 13th day ot February next
Stockholders attending the above ejection wtllbf
passed free over the line of this road by exhibiting
their certificates of stock to the Conductors. *
JNO. T. BOIFEU1LLRT.
janll-td . 8; oretary and Treasurer.
NOTICE. >
tki payprf, an t»erei>y sotibd ttat tk* YopjOft
Quarter’s Tax on R -al Estate,. Ineome .end Gewu
sums, Gross Receipts, Exoes-i on JJanis; Ml, the
Monthly returns on Rales aii^ Trelght pnfl^^aaggs
M«m«iy, are now due. Payment fog the axan* to re
q aired by City Ordioanoe to be made betwui ,jh>
flrot and. tenth inatant V" - ' ‘'’ r ' l *
JOHN WILLIAMSON,
oJWlrv-iayium • i Qtl ItN—l
A i/8ti3 Ifflfll
Kequtrcti immediate aitentiuiMUBd ahORkl bn.
choc ted. If allowed f
(rr I tal ion of the LXBfS, ft FSWftXtat
Tnn»at UIWMI, w, i wnvpiiia,
.^-*i. 4a#fte*th»Maalt.
Brown’s BrouclUal Trochee
: Infloenco to teft pgrtl, sfbre Jmm-
o'-ed with always 1 Xifit ntiiirt— f l
hiving a direct influence to <Chft jartir
diate relief. Kr- “ *-*-* --
larib.t'oBini
TkOCHRh are o--ed wtthelwayh 1 tifitTiliiiliil e
' U- “*°
Sisgeiys
dtixr gnd «rtii
imitations that may tftoftni
80U> tomanttMl
200
'Uyqrdk
BARI1EL8 BALTHCQUB «7P«R FLOUR,
v»Mi> <;.• ... AVi srt
..V, XfirTL
...H .aoil*ut v.. J
_ BBortuaar
jftftll—eodl
4INI4JX:
SORREL
Bishop Elliott’s
SERMONS.
A GRRRA6LE to an order Qf the Court or Ordi- .
xarv oC McIntosh county will be sold on the f
SERMONS OF BISHOP ELLIOTT
or less on which Inti mgiaII doei.iug hooee one I Can obtain tueir copies fiy-apptying at ,
kitoheu, on the cast Side of the Ridge Road, t»o y. JtojYbis. aiatlancr
mile* ram the ciLy of Lwton in Suid couniv. Sold J ‘ , f
for th* benefit of minots. ' I - Comer Ball and State ettoets.
Terms cadi, puierasers paying for titles. | PRIOR *5.00 PRR VOLUME, payable on delivery.
Jan?!—tawWw
. W. COCKER.
Guardian.
tf'»p*ea also for-mtie.
nove-tf
Dissolution of Co-Partnership KERTOCKT
fjpHR FIRM OF EiTii.L h BROTHKR IS THIt |
. DAY diaNOlved b>'rnutuu) Consent.'
WM. KsTILL. Jb , will p alt bills and collect all'
debts of the firm, aud will continue t» sine-s at the
old siaxd. J U. SSTILL. .
. . ; WM. E-lTILL, jjl.
Savanna})'January 17,1867. u
a AVISGDI8POvSEDnPMY INTEREST IN ES-t
T.LL’o tNJEWH DEPOT to my broth, r. ffli
Jcvi'ILL, jm , mho ha* carried it <*.. for the past two
years, I respectfaUv solicit :vcoatiua*nce uf 1 he lib
eral patronare he rate fora bestowed, upon It.
jantft-W f H. E-»TILL.
F8HCE; SKlfff & co., ijwiers, ,
. sveevssong to 1
M URRAY, SEDY a CO., in the management of •
th- Kentucky t*tar* Lottery for the
bcatfll of Mtelby Cellegt,
SftkLBTViLLVt Kv., Deem her % la67.
To aU whom it may concertj;
' that Jftl
WANTED,
jt) white Sen as ihtcbebs
ttS'uVftal'Iy tb*. IftHES 8. SMITH mtaaen
Mititiea to Dtfi.tha >nettw onlleffe Latter, Ur.nl ol
Konunlit, «an, t>r.p^-*i-.tb.rtuj.o. i.
AUotber Hcnc nm or cl saw, »lt, r 3unun 1st,
18«S, by (1 v(Mt- or druttn, DDdrr the-
now^of A* HlielS, t%l'e,eL.)lt«ry Utooi, are allll-
ottl legal aatamiiy rrom tr,. Ndr are we lu ear m-D-
«er boenatt, fbo pr<icee<.{iK«id.aa> eaeb pereous ao
i«bit—nr
eft BABbEU JACKSON WHITES,
U\f _ _ ttl t.m‘1- Tl.littoffi -
0»iBMk PLtSTATION. | •**■#**! j^te*™**
I L. CALUWRLL,
H, A. CHINN,
„ UELUNGWHOD,
Managers appointed by he hjn-lby Ciicuit Coart
for the Sheibj College Lottery Qmnt.
DAVANT * WAPLE8.
Potatoes 1 Potatoes i
Fu^ti
deciT—tf
and for aale by
BELL k HULL.
^English’Coal-
A RA TONS KSelLisn URREL COAL, pdr
TJW British ship Cog .ty ol Picrou. for sale low,
uv' otsof llve tona aLd upwar.ls. by ‘ ; • f -
R CHIP]
c*sn.
As will be seen by tiie above notice 1 bare tbe eo(e
I aa.1 n :l.wtr*»,efc.i6 |iw ibe Wi.-lby OoUiwe Lot-
1 ur, ou and after January l»r. 18.A. Tku eaaewiU
issass?}^ ,n
Saw ». SMITH.
Jamo
uMd jut
’between WMnVerand Barnard.
177 Bay "tfeet,
QMigaed to our friends in
tevwg«ffitot to Niartneni markets
oor AUSTIN ft RLLlfi.
MRS. WIN SLOW’S
SOOTHING S If R U fj
For Chiidran Taathing,
toe the process of teething, by soften-
reffuciug atl iaflammatiou—will *Bay
^taemodre action, and is
MfttTfl «IM4A7E T«i MVUt
WF-‘ ■ »«.;• m« i . - di •* ci i.» xs;a
.iHtoiUULTKTO YOUR INF AMIR,
• Vaftav, P<4 ap and Md tide article tor yrira. ana
Oaji Satan CoanoJCNcaasd Taura of what wo have
IMVfr bea^ abto to say 6f any other medicioa
Stance at dkeatistnedon tv.S«y one who used it. On
'i«t»le.i vrflh its o|ter*ttoD, and
aieftdxUcm of tta migieid ni-
htow* awtod-rkimx kasklnthh matter
AT WB DO KNOWisflrr yWrra nf aapyxionge, ayp
iMMooft HnWanoa nk. MEfetniEjaaiT sa
WftavwftMftftw MeftAuk: In almost evsn inmaace
alterCfeaVyeni, i, adaOntataeed.- ....
‘ —‘-ff—“r 1 m mill if iu..
Ban*'and ad tor - ,T
\ fjiwr. .,j... w . , .if h,,-. 1... -, u tuv.il-
WfailllW’., •UWIEMSITEMil’
’
OFFuMBS;—216 FaHon Street, New TmflH MR
Ws have filed in Shelby ummit Cdftrt, Shelby vile,
Kentucky, a Bond amounting to Three Huudre l
Th:m*und Dollais ($d0b,(4i0). up the payment of all
The Kentaeliy Lottery on ueNumber phm
wlU be dr.iwn op the I4ih and Span days of coch
^uxUidurmg the year 1866
WOOD! -
..»* ;■ CLASS A.
Will be drum-in Covington, ^efttacif,
«Mto BOta, uea
50,000 MIHMKKN AI^E 1,180 PKIZKS!
■i.
1 Prime oF.. fliMMM 100 Prtftea wf.
1 Prise ffidaUitO a
I Prime of... 15,OoO 1
» Prime-ef.;. ao,(MNi
l KHscsftt. <;v»alN«» j
ITUti M..
All J-rVa, '
*5«»
I5tt Prbu of.... VIM,
tSOPdlnof.... 10*
O Primrt.... 5**
ohfwief.... w*
S.
'Ptftil.f.... M*
• Frim.r. .. i»J
uanUftMr.... M
ifiooPBUM, Honmnw txto.nsl
ThMtmve aunUeemt 8ftftgteN«iUbrs«J0ttery wflto
flfhWftlB Mtoe iarOevingjpmaKitftfcirty. fitted
imieaipnerB, i b e pek P.ACT at the cur-
lltVffll2km*Zi‘ «reels: The ptaitky t<* r -
IFrtesf..:
SO Prime* of..
R
1.000
Li tteriea, th~t have been coi-riucted lor die naat SO -
9<fcra> aft<4«m.tt>kwu' biMWrtheandMWitoN(toobar-
'''ftewffiM.flfi S'nnmlier,iMtrIM ftrttowftdUrt
pnbllahed In tiie New Yurt llerrtHi'OIrtUntt'faW
Cnmmerci.il, and Oin« inuj»it oerman napftM-
m~' ^
rWe.-firawivoA
Jdvanagae facte
P address ibr a dtt