The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873, June 13, 1871, Image 1

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amurf unns—trsir 1 *>JIK * SAVANNAH. EVERY TUESDAY non not rota, mu Kindi BT BTKUntlBOf THU LUTE, OKI .^-*3 mbuu .ISSSSSXt Oommsudsr. TIMO, BULKLSY, Commander, Through bill* of lading |4m bj Umm itesmkhlp* by all railroad connection*, and alao through bill* lading glT«n In Bsvsoath on Cotton deatlned for Liverpool and Hamburg by drat olaaa ataamahlpa.- PHILADELPHIA AMD SAVANNAH MAIL STEAM SHIP OOMPANT. ruiLjtn vjurjrjtH. ATLANTA, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1871. NO. 333. EVERT SATURDAY from each port. nrsUKAMciQjr odttom bt steamers on this LIME ONE HALF PER CENT. CABIN PASSAGE |» DECK, with aubalatenea 10 thin 11M !• oompoaad of the Aret olaaa ateamahlpa WfOElSS.. TEAL. Commander. VIHI4WEJUEA, . .BARRETT. Commander One of them ataamahlpa leave aaeh pot* EVERY SATURDAY. Through blUa lading fomteRsd by i atmmahlpe by all railroad oonatcttont. Tor ht or paaaage, apply to HUNTER A UAMMELL, 14 Bay atreat For Boston. POP. DEATH TO RATS, roaches, BEDBUGS, AC., uer.r filing, boio. double tU» «!«»»* other*' •» Macon & Augusta R.R. Manna «im«bt. asnun imc (f TRACTOR and BUILDER Hi . " rteral Superintendent of Bulldlnga, and all Mannar of Carpentera' Work. ned would respectfully it pnbllo that he hm lose corner of Ormbb and Spring k Mitchell’* Lumber Yard, wh«b Building and ie propoeee to jerned :-aadM >w figures aa auy one. He makes a apeofallty of r Building, and propoeee to give eatiefecNon. " 4TOH. Leave Auguata at..7T Leave Macon at f 00 A. M> Arrive at Maoonad f dO P. M. Arrive at Angnatn at In P. M. -m*' 0. Z. DUTTON, ‘ PRACTICAL STENCIL CUTTER, DESIGNER AND ENGRAVER I 0RAB8 ALPHABETS, DRY AND [, INKS. Stencil Dies. StanJ 1 and Hotel Check*, Marking . _ . _.j. ft Whitehall St., a few door* below Banter atreat. $9“ N. Psrtirnlsr attention paid to Branda and “* " i for Merohaota, Miller*, Tobacoonieta and crrF BREWERY. • Celllaaand Harris Street«; Fecklrr a Merer, VropiirtorK. OOe> ta OM To* one* Bulldln*. nett O.U City Bw, G-oovgift. T.„1P. GRADY'S R. R. ALE HOUSE* •’ *“"■ ■ « st .lnbftma Street Atlanta, On. FUSTTeoeivod, h tidfe lot of Champaign, •F Jersey Cider. Families aupplied of ti , their HM.™ tud Alal**oxa n oil Poet ofltee. ijacimawiNEe. and eegam aMaynmi hand. Bottled Aleaauf * — * ipagne Jersey • W.J plflMOd. ^ stiff Porter Alee, Beer aud Champagne Jersey Cider oa Grad vend Uncle Jack Coughlin, AVING disposed of his interest in £• sUL '*74 Saloon,” on the coruer of Broad MASfPS *J4dd.v, BEADY • ItlERYTHING nnodattou of hla old friend*, and •mass may think proper to give him John pan esoecial attention to the ii IlMR the Inter man, both P*J» especial attention DRINKS AJro CO AD CVJrCHRS. _ ' OU1 bed UK am. myUOlluM, THE BOHTOH IHZfHATUVHKH STEAMSHIP UNI The eteamehlpe Oriental,....., Chpt F. M. Swam. Vltkikurg, Capt, ST H. Mmuwit CABIN FAJUL.... 1*8 00 DECK 10 00 Through bflle of lading given by railroad agent* to Boaton, and In Baton by Steamship agents to prin cipal points In Georgia, Alaama and Florida. SB- Through bills of lading given to Providenoe, FmlBlvar, Portland, LoweU, Iawrente, he. Use—■bgknteetedat nUraaS depot, and u9k» rooms aecurad In advanoe by writing agent* in Sa vannah. RICHARDSON ABABNARD, Agent*, Savannah. ». MICEERSOr « 00., see* r ,. For New York. atabtotulu. — otbOT. - i. nd Mfi *mK. Tot MU I ,h«rte., T.ylor h« Cm.- THE GREAT SOUTHXKN STEAMSHIP OOMPANT. EVERY THURSDAY, i by thia Um tu b. AaU Q open policy at one-half par rant. CABIN PASSAGE The first olaaa Hernia Livlagitoae,. finis. Baraea F. O. - WUlmllaafbUowa: ■. LIVINGSTON June let, 5 :::::::::::: »S OBI. RABNHK... Jon. 9th, - Tbr pamige or fret u.g’SSKtiV mi maorai For Baltimore. THE DAILY HUN. OSecCwrmer of Brand and Alabama St*e J. HENLY 830TH Manager. Traveling Agent* i J. M. W. J. W. HEARD, HOW WO BENIT Y. We will be responsible for the uf«* arrival of all monar aant ns by Registered letter, by B«pieaa. or by Draft, but uot otherwise. 11 money a-nt in an unregistered letter is lost, it must be the 1<mm of the person sending it Nopspe^wHl h* sent from tt* efflpe till it la paid for, and names will always be erased when the time paid for aspires. Make ap Flab*. We shall make Tu Sun lively, fresh and Inter- sating—<outalnlng all the latest u«-wa. We shaU AU it with good reeding matter, and *haU have la t*cb issue as much reading mutter as any paper In Oeorgla. and we shall soon enlarge aud otherwise improve it so as to give it a haiulsohie appearance aud make It edsily reed aud desirable to have In the family. W* ask our frleuds to use s little effort to make up a olub lor ne at every post oAU-e. Hee our club rates. A very u\*1l short is all that is need d to make up a large li*t. Terms of Hubm'i'lptlon « DAILTi Per Anuum $7 00 bix Mouths -X 4 OU Three Months 2 00 one Month />..*. *i 76 WEEKLY PEB ANNUM : Teu Tweoty Fifty ,. J 00 . 4 60 ..14 00 .26 00 .60 UU Three Ten' •• “' “ .I...'. t.Kki.t, Twenty •• •* Fifty •• ” ..** No ■ubsrriptions, to the Weekly, received ehorter period than six mouths. All subscriptions must be (iald for !n advr Terms of A.<lvoi'tlt*in||;. [ Coltun 2 WEEKS | 3 WEEKS | 1 MONTH. $ 8 So $ 6 00 jTfr| | ft Str 6 00 7 60 0 00 11 00 12 00 14 00 18 00 40 00 3M ( «5 t 1H 00 24 00 27 00 U3 00 3«i Or 3H 00 47 00 75 00 Advertisement* in the Local Column marked with an asterisk, (•) will be charged 23 cents per liuo each insertion. Advertisements under the Special Notice head for less time than one week, will be charged per line. Advertisements, except for eMtablished busi- houses, in this city, must be paid for in ad- New Lumber Yard, JUNCTION OF MARIETTA AND WALTON IT!., ALL KINDS 0* , ‘ ’ lx lx m b an zti C ..JTANTLY on band. eclnl Attcnfloi S Wen. M A. HARDEN. LANDSBERO'S ],UJIBEE V A OFPOSm OlOflOIA Jun.KOtP DHMp. CAjaPAaBAOl.^—.. The Baltimore and Savannah Steamship Co's. Nssnaf MUknm Savannah during December as Thursday,February 3d tesav 1 Saregoena. mrsgom% Thi '.‘Th. ivali and Departures of Trains to and from Atlanta. ATLANTIC (OB BTATn) BAILROAD. Night Passenger Train arrives 1:42 a. m Night Passenger Train leaves j». U i Day Passeugsr Train arrives 1 p. m Day Passengsr Train h aves k:15 a. m Cartersville Accommodation arrives J0:30 a. m Cartersvilie Accommodation leaves 3:00 p. m I OaOBOrA (ACUUSTAI RAILROAD. {No Day Train on Sundays Night Passsnger Tra'n arrives .fl:40 a. m Night Passenger Train leaves 5:30 p. ni Day Passenger Train arrives 6:20 p. m Pay Passenger Train leaves 7:10 a. m Stone Mountain Aceommodiitloii arrives . 8:05 a. m gtone Mountain Accommodation leaves C..46 a. m MACON AND WESTERN RA1LTOAD. Night Rusenger Train arrivi g IV«I ^ r.bSl ly 4. LAND8B1B0 *06'. PrapriMora, B. d. .,.mnp«. t. *4 M9M9 nrmht't Crtrh MtUt. A. BAHliOUR * CO., D IXOUR. UKAL, A SHIP STUFF, rmjjrmu.v, nmvtn To Parties Desiring to Build I would respectfully Inform tht ttmpnHmUnd tht 9m I As M**Uh4o* AA, First Clmas SSSSSl&A»*-■ •'4 sour c. riot LE BON TON, 14 Peuchiret Street^ near ike jymtwnml Hoiti. DAN. LfNCJTS GLD STAND. FREE LUNCH FROM 10 A. M.TO 1P.M. EVERY DAY. PBBMIUM BEER. MJLK PUNCHW. OF ALL KIN DP. [ TBB CELEBRATED AMERICAN CHINA, ••NIP UP.* 1 Tkommt &. mmmil, -1ATITH 8HRY00K A ROWLAND, W ^ R^otosnls ItenMa \msrn mod Mmsfmtmrvd Maw. 6 rrRFBQUTOON^Ajrp^ irciihad CORN MEAL, HOMINY, •OAP, CANDLBB, OOAL MU AND FANCY Q ROC ERIKA ^jtenS No ‘214 Commercial strait, and 10t { No 214 C Lave*. _ BT. li 9 U I 8 afwUdm * ight Passenger Train leaves 8418 .1 Passenger Train arrives 2:101 Passenger train leaves 6:001 ATLANTA AND WEST FOINL H MLHOAp, Night Passenger Train arrives ,10:07 A. m Night Passenger Tmln leave* :f:»o p. in “ r Paasenger Train arrives 515] Passenger Train leavoe 7:lo i ATLANTA AND RICHMOND AIR-LINK RAILROAD. Regular Passenger T*a n arrives 4 ::*> ( - ■ - - • Regular Passenger Train leaves.. SAFEST, CHEAPEST AND BEST FRTJIJT JARS In the mnrkeL MoBXUXHD ctooo., ANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS FOR FBimJ4^w4iB4jK TOMBLKR*^ w ASSIGNEE’S SALE. !- ATLANTA INTELLIGENCER ” OFFICE. B y virtue of an order FROM the HON- _ onfiv Dhdiict ConA ef tka United ttetee Y VIRTUE OF AH ORDER FROM THE HON- Bt Court ef tbs free from all Mi THURSDAY, the II Junsi &8IL*t No. 30 Whitehall Street. Atlanta. On., • Mk,i ^** * XN3 at eleven 111) e'elo I - (J1 ^ ^ Contelne 4 large font of Bi and In working order. Contains fonts of dmaU Plom Long Primer, Bre- ter. Nonpareil, together withTo font* of wood type for poster troth, about lTO fohte of types of different >. Nonpareil, together with poster work, about 170 foul jteaa aud ita^Mon. lmpntea* i FBBM BOOM? . vajwh. tnmS large Hoe Cylinder Press, one small niff tete order. Contains OM of HIkok*t Ruling Machines, one staudif mu, two |«ner tupere. one hoard cutter, a complete set of binder*' fools, onaoabtetH with type, one wort bench—all complete aud in good Ofioe furniture, eonstetlag of one in, tabtee. chair*, f oopyiag press. Bold as fit property of Jared l.WItlt- whteh a fklr price will be paid. MOORED ACTUAL BUHINM COMJU4B. may41 At Oar- Whitehall and Bantes street*. Sad Bereavenent. [From the Nasbvlilo Union aud Amarican- We are pained to learn from n tele graphic dispatch received yesterday, of toe death of Mias Emma Hatcher, only ohild of our esteemed friend John l£ Hatcher, of the Louisville Courier-Jour nal. She was on her way home from Iuka, Mississippi, and reaching Paris, Tennessee, was seized with a congestive chill, which terminated in death. The dispatch states that her remains will be taken to Oolumbia, Tennessee, for inter ment. The circumstances attending the death of this beautiful young young girl are peculiarly distressing. Early last fall, in company with her farther, she proceeded to Aiken, South Carolina, with the hope of restoring her health, which had been feeble for some time previous. She spent the winter there, aud to all appearances had g;eatly iin-* proved. During the spring she was taken to Iuka, Mississippi, where she continued to improve rapidly, ana the doting farther feeling assured that a per manent cure had been effected, poseed through this city a few days ago to ac company his daughter back to Louisville. The sad intelligence conveyed aBm# teUa the reat. Truly do wo sympathize with the parents in a bereavement so sndden and unexpected. If eatly death waa to be the fate of his only child, it would have been consoling at loaht to First Lesson for Republican Be ginners. From the N. Y. World of June 7th. 1871. A ferment exists among Republican newspapers in the oountry. It is to be seen ail along the line of office-holders. The yaaid in the dough is whal this jour nal has said about the Ku-Klux law and the purpose of Grant Republicans to blot out the Btates so as to leave practically bat om government, with its political centre in Washington. The local organs of Republicanism sputter about the World furiously. We, however, detect in so many of these country journals that the inapnng cause of their unhappiness ia ignorance of the Federal Constitution and its authorized interpretation that we have determined to do what we can to supply the vacuum before entering with them on serious discussion and ex planation. The volumes of decisions of the Federal Supreme Court alone num ber nearly eighty, to say nothing of ad judications of inferior tribunals. A Re- publioso tax and tariff have made these Volumes and all others frightfully expensive, and we appreciate the Inabili ty of most Republican journalists to pro cure them. Therefore we have directed the World librarian to make t\ brief di gest and citotion of a few leading cases of constitutional • questions explaining wbat the Supreme Court has said are the legal relations existing between the gen eral government and the States. What to-day are elementary, but when studied by our Republican contem poraries ws will give a second lesson.— in the meantime, we advise that they paste this instalment in a conspicuous place near the editorial desk. The several States which composed the Union, so far fet least as regarded their municipal regulations, became entitled floe* the time when they declared them selw * indepencjepb to Jl the rights and poweto of Boveiei^h States, and did not derive them VGUI‘ concessions of British King. The treaty of peace tains a recognition of the inaepeedi of these States, not a grant of ii Hi the laws of the several State gov era men ts passed after the declara tiou of independence were the laws of the sovereign Htatea, and such were obligatory on the people of each State. (Supreme Court, 1808, Mo Ilvaine rs. Coice. 4 Cbanch, 209; Thii# Circuit (V. J.) 1880, Bennett rs. Boggs, Baldwin, 00.) Prior to the adoption of the confeder ation the several States were considered separate and independent governments. (Warren Manufacturing Company JKkna Insurance Company, 2 Paine, 501.) For all national purposes braced by the Federal Constitution the States and the citizens thereof are one, united under the same sovereign author ity, and governed by the same laws; in ull other respects the States ore rily foreign and independent of each other. * r -( lindcner vs. Irbiley, 2 Pftehh, 1390. Washington, J, Dodgers. Woolsey, 18 H., 850. Wayne, J.) The respective States are sovereign within their own limits and foreign to each other, regarding them as local gov ernments. (Bank of Ihs United States vs. Daniel, 12 Peters, 33. Bank of Augusta rs. Earle, 13 Peters, 520. Dodg< Woolsey, 18 H, 350-1. - The Union was made by each of the States conceding portions of their equal sovereignties for all of them, and the Constitution acts upon them conjunctive ly and separately, and also upon their citisena (lkslgevs. Woolsey, 18 H., 851.) With th* exception of the powers sur rendered by the Constitution of the United States, the people of the several States are absolutely and uncondiUpuully sovereign withfn tl eir respective teiVito- ries. (Ohio JJfe Insurance SItf- Trust Company vs. Deboll, 16 H.,-£Afc) All the legislative poyypt, granted by the Federal Constitution are conoessions of sovereignty from tlftf u people of the States. (Dodge vs. Woolsey, 18 H., 349.) The powers of the Federal Government are limited ; it possesses none bat such as are delegated. (United States vs. Ba ly, 1 McLean, 234. McLean, J. The Federal Government being form ed for certain puipoaea is limited in it* powers, and cau in no case exercise au thority where the power has not been delegated ; the States are sovereign with the exception of certain powers which have been invested in the general gov ernment and inhibited' to the States.— ipraig vs. Missouri, 4 Peters, 463. Mc Lean, J.) It would be as gross usurpation on the part of the Federal government to inter fere with Shite rigid thy an exercise of powers not delegated as it would be for a State to interpose its authority against a law of the Union. (Ibid.) The Federal government is one of del egated powers, aiid till powers not dele gated to it or inhibited to the States are reserved to the States or to the people. Briscoe rs. Bank qf Kentucky, 11 Peters, States vs. The Bright Star, 8 Ink It. Ren, 130. The words “all laws necessary and pro per for carrying into execution powers expressly granted” means laws not abso lutely necessary, but appropriate, aud plainly adapted to constitutional and le gitimate ends which are not prohibited, but consistent with tlio letter and spirit of the Constitution; laws really calcula ted to effect objects intrusted to the gov ernment. Hepburn vs. Orisioold, 8 Wal lace, C0K Among ramus appropriate the legisla ture has unrestricted choice but no jtoie- er can be derived hy implication from an express pewer (o ediiot law. u, menu, for eariTing it iuto execution, imlene meh law. come within thi* ileaeriptiou — (Ibid) The deeign of the ('otlutitutiou wiu* to estAbluh a government competent to the direction and Bilminintration of the bAMth of a greet nation, and at the same time to mark hy stfliciently definite lines the aphere of its ujiemtion. To this end it wma needful only to make express grant* of general powers, coupled with a further grant of such incidental and auxiliary powers a« might he required fortbeoxer- ercise of the power*expreeely granted.— (Ibid.) The tenth article of the amendments to the Constitution waa intended to have an aibnuiitiury and directory sense, and to restrain the limited government estab lished under the Constitution from the exercise of powers uot clearly delegated, or derived by just inference from the powers so delegated. (Ibid.) The powers of the general government are made up of concessions from the sev eral Htatea Whatever is not aprauly given to the former the latter expressly reserved. Certain implied powers must (Bri» 268. the parents, had she died amidst home commits, where the associates of her pHkMHHMN*4alaa watch the spirit of the loved one take its flight from earth to Heaven. Aaexnt *1 Spirits ia the Count rj. Returns of assessors throughout the country to May 1, 1871, show the present amount of spirits in the oouatrv to be as follows : Foreijfti aud domeatie'spiriht of all kinds, out jf ’bond, 31,700,421.24 gal lons; foreign spirits, in eastern ware houses, 1,395,444; total amount in the ootintry, 4p, 887,038 K*U"iii. with twexty- eight unimportant dwtxkta yet to hear bom. The sovereignty of the Uuited States and of a State are distinct and indepen dent of each other within their respec- &r l some*1timai tiTC of action, though both exist ., and exercise their powers within the same territorial limits. (Ablnnm tt. Boulh, 21 H., 508.) No department of the government can disturb any one of the safeguard* of civil liberty incorporated iuto the Constitu tion, except so far as the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus is thereby authorized. (Ex part* .1 y/ni, 4 Wallace, 4.) No State has the right to place Metric Lions npbn commerce between the States of the Union. {Baltimore rs. Gunnell*, tiUe anil Southern Penntulvanin Railway Company, 19 Prm, L. J., 576, a c. 13 Am. Ij. R., 750.) A State has no power to Mgnlste a against i>t among these powers. (United State* lludton, 7 Ckanch, 82.) . Ueorgia Politics. [From th* New York Express, June fth. A correspondent of the THbune, writ ing from Augusta, Ga., draws rather s sorry picture of the condition of the Radical party in that State. In conver sation with a Radical Judge that gentle man is reported to have said that the Re publican party of the State ia “hopoienaljr ruined. It is divided into two factions, one Jod by BuHork ami BludN«‘tt, and tbe other by 8«n»tor Joaiiua Hill and Att >mrv fi.*n Akennsn — The quarrel between these iactiQUM. xltlui tgh rn-.ngh in )Uelf to destroy the party, was not the unit trim ble. The bed appoint bod arrayed all me w Mate against the Republicans, and had'dnvra it all iuto the Democratic party. Most of the appointee* wore worthlees fellows who had been sloughed off the *■ my at the end of the war, and who had been ap- iiidntrd in preference to men of character who would have aoeepted ofttoes. He declared that there were now no white Republicans in the State except ufhee- holders. As to the nr}<m*«. ^ uipatuie* were naturally with the Republicans, but any man who thought he could build up a party of negroes would be greatly mistaken. They wore, he said, quite t trustworthy, and could easily be lnllaenced by tb. employers, or induced to sell their vote for say small sum. Hekn-w of intelligent negroes, who hat] been hired for a few dmUr* a day to take s horse and bugri' v *nd go about electioneering fur the Demo- Of the Ku-KluXt the correepodent gives a very different discriptiau to that given by onrpet-baggers. •• The perpetrators, (he says), are low whites, who antypethy to the negro eg, which is in- ‘ impvtitlon GROIIGIA \EWS. Mr. J. W. Call ie no louger city editor the A«|—** n —*’* •• L. Maxwei of the Augusta Constitutionalist;; Mr. J fell tills that position. tcnHifiod now that the latter < with the former as laborers. These whites are gen erally young uieu of ruffianly character who would be giad to run the negroes out of their neighbor hood* if they could, and who take a cruel ploasnrs in abusing helplees perwma. In some counties they had eHtablished such a terrorism that uo witness** would testify against tnem.’' In many counties, he says, the “ land owners have organized ” to “ put these gangs down and protect the negro labo rers. ” Finally he says: 41 1 am Inclined to believe that the Ku-Klux have uo present organized existence in Oeorgl* a* a polit ical association, and tbit the outrages occasionally committed in the night time by disguised men art due to other motives than political animosity. Some time* it is a c nveuient way of administereinglynch- upon reel or supposed oflendiirs, without fear ol cousequeuce*. aud oftener a way of wreaking per ns! malice with impunity." It is vrrv gratifying to see that the fla grant falsehoods of unprincipled impos tors who have been continually harping for the post three years of political out rages, are being exposed, and that, too, through the same sonmc that they were uttered. The Macartney Defalcation. jial telegraphic correspond- ' om Wa The New Orleans Commercial Bulletin •ays: “Omr p*orte, being robbed of everything fh»V eonld be stolen, are now left, MtrotfgMhe erimlnaf negligeuoe of the horde of adventurers who tule them, to the mercy of the floods. Tl I is mulling loft for the Connuuue who oouliul Hus vitv to do uo#, hut apply the torch awl flaM." :* rS. risdiotion; but where a commerce and terminates within a State it hos tile exclusive commercial power over it— (BMermnn rs. Beckwith, 1 McLean, 286.) The fifth and six amendment* to the Constitution were not designed as limits upon the Htute governments in reference to their own citizens, hut exclusively as restrictions upon Federal power.— (Twitched rs. The Commonwealth, 7 Wal lace, 321, in year 1868.) The Union of the States is indissoluble the act of any portion of them; not The enoe of the Cuurier-Jvurnn\ from inton, the 9tb instant Bays This oommnnity wns startled to-day again by the announcement that another government official had proven a de faulter to the amount of thirty thousand lolluns. T!.e accused is Mr. F. A. Ma- artney, disbursing clerk of the Fostoffioe Department, who has heretofore stood Vfiy fair in this city. He has been ill for some time, aud his illness resulted, as his friends say, in insanity, and he was yesterday conveyed to the insane asylum. This morning it was whispered about that he wns s defaulter. Postmas ter-General Ureswell wan first informed of the defalcation on Friday last, ami im mediately commcnoed to investigate the inattor. He has not yet ascertained the exaot amount of the loss, bnt it will not be very far from thirty thousand dollars. Mr. Macartney, on being confronted with the Postmaster-General, it is said ac knowledged the defalcation and said it aa caused by his having invested in two speculations—the water power at Har per’s Ferry, formerly owned hy the GoT- emment and the Weeks marble quarry, above Harper’s Ferry. Macartney told the Secretary he did not know the exaot amount he had invested in these enter prises, but lie assigned the amonnt, with ills other effects, to the snreitiee on his bond, and in the Department of Justice, now investigating the matter, they are of the opinion that the Government will not loee a oont. On the other hand Macart ney’s friends deny that he is a defaulter, but say, owing to illuoes, he was not able to give to business that attention he should have done; that the only trouble is that his accounts have gotten into dis order. Iu the meantime the subjeot ia undergoing investigation in the proper department. Small straws show which way the wind blow*, at least the Cincinnati Enquirer ■ ‘ et " P-ismon. Hon. Sam Barnett, the Missiotmrr serif out by the Georgia State Agricultural Society will deliver au address in Gohiui bus next Thursday. Gen. Healy, U. R Marshal, adverti that tn«»re will be a mooting of the cr torti of the Alabama aud Chattanot Railroad on the 2241 day of July. Tuesday Col. R L. Mott lost la*?© pookofc book containiug some va able vapera and 8210 in greenbacks. I tyoep hw mill aud w*id«uoe. Ne morning it waa found at bin door wit! papers all right, but minus the mon- Mr. John Killoni died noar Parry, Hfnmfan County, on the 6th inst., agetl H4 years. Hawaal>ornin North Caroli na, was a volunteer in the war of 1812. twelve year* Judge of the Iuf. rior Court and served one term in the Legislature. He moved to Houston in 1831. The Columhiw Sun says that a l»et- of $100 woh booked iu that eity, Fridav, that the cotton reeents of Cnintnlu ooming kmou would u „t go over 50.000 bales. Acoording to the ratio of 70-’71. this is equivalent betting that the total crop will not ran over 2.800/160 bales. The Columbus Enquirer learns “from W. D. Grace, win* resides near Howurd, on the Southwestern Railroad, that, with the exception of two small showers on 'Pueeday last, no rain has fallen in thia neighborhood in three weeks. The same report reaches us from R-yuol Is aud the apper part of Tulhut county.** Judge Hirrel!, at present occupying the l»euoh of oui Superior Court, decided yesterday that ir OMes to l>e carried by plaintiffs or defcndauLs to the Circuit Court of the United States, under the act of Congreoe, that Um party moving, ami to whom leave i-» gnutted, shall have judgment against them for c-wts already accrued.—[Columbna Sun, 10th. A young man, book-keeper fora prom inent cotton merchant, hua turned up missing, with $2,500 of his employer’s money unaccounted for. The fact was discovered yesterday, and on investi gating the books the above deficit was ioiind. The young man in question has of late been rather fast, and we have bc*-n informed addicted to “lighting the to a oonaiderahle extent. This fact doubtless explains the cause of his sudden taking off.—[Sav. Republican^ Tho Waynesboro Expositor says a dif ticulty occurred, last Saturday, at the mill of George W. Sapp, Esq., noar Al exander, in this county, between two negroes named Captain Sapp and Augus tus Reynolds, and a white man named William Sykes. The negroes attempted to take the life of Mr. Sykes, and would probably have succeeded but for the in tervention of a third negro, who came up in time to avert the blow of a de scending knife in the hands of Sapp.— The negroes are now in jail to await tho November term of the Superior Court. To be Sold. s gr mud. A street rail- Ciuchmati have nut on and have _ . , . . . , , .. . _ withstanding the ordinauo« of seoevtitm {,-ratio candidu o for the Gv»v. ruunhip of road company in their reoil a gorg- oue car, named it “Mci-'oek," after the Demo- passed by the State of Tkxas, her obli- gatious as a member of the Union re mained perfect and unimpaired. (Texas va WhilA 7 Wallace, 706.) But the perpetuity and indissolubility of the Union by no means implies the laes of diatinet end individual exirtenoe, or of the right of eelf-government by the States; the Oonatilution looks to an in- deatractible Union composed of tndmtrmy tible States. (Ibid.) Con grow boa no power over the hi • • Ohio; and Lorn tho fact ot its being crowed all tbe time the Enquirer thinks it is a good evidence of that gentleman^ IHjpulerity. A wedding lias recently taken place in South Norfolk, MiwecImaettB, which was brought about ia a romantic manner. A young lady employed iu trimming hate wrote her name and addrpes ou the in side Itning. A yonugNuvr Y»irker bought _ ^ the hat, and a wedding reanltetl. Th** fy intcruai commerce of a ytate. (United' mural ie obvfoue^ The furniture and tittings of Willard’s Hotel will be found advertised for sale in another column, an event, which of course, foreshadows the breaking up of that institution, so far at least os the pres ent proprietors are concerned. There are few establish men (e in the country which have the stow that this old host- lery has. For the lost teu years it has been closely oouuectod with the history of the oountry, and if its old walls aud corridors would only tell one-half ot what they have heard aud witnessed, the volume would be indeed an interesting one. Willard’s during the war was the headquarters of the army not in the field, and generous contractors willing and anxious to sene their couutaj. It may not be generally known, but it is nevertheless true, that Pope’s dis patches and onU rs. headed “Headquar ters iu the Saddle,” wire written in a quiet parlor in Willard * overlooking the Avenue. McClellan, too, cut a magnifi cent dash there for some time. His idygnard was the most splendid array that American general ever had. Fifty or a hundred men mounted ou coal-black horses, composed it while he was in Washington, and the sight of them, drawn up around the hotel, with flnahing sworda, formed a scene not easily forgot ten. McClellan was a magnificent fellow at Willard’s; but he watt uot.quite up to popular expectation on tbe Peninsula.— Au enormous fortune Was mode at Wil lard's daring the wnr bv tbe gentlemen who have now advertise tbe mile of it* furniture. The lease under which they held it has expir.sl, aud that is doubtless tbe canoe of the sale.—f Waahiugtun (D. C.) Republican. The American owuers ot estates in Cu ba are still compluiuing thut, through tbe efforts of the »genu*ot Sp.iiu in Wash ington and elaewhi re, their claims are constantly misr. presented. The ques tion at issue betw. eu them and the Cap- taiu General, tliev say, is uot one of dam ages »t all, bnt whether they shall be al lowed to regain immediate possession of their property—fifteen months after the borne Government bud ordered its re lease—or wait till the authorities of the island have sold one or two more valua ble crops and obtained the money for them* Tbeae men expect to go liefore the commisaiouers with their claims for damages already done. The crops on two of the large estates haw Iteeu sold for from two to three hurnln d thousand dol lars ; but what they most complain of is that,.while tho home Government has ordered the restoration <«f their property, the Captain General stands as an imptHli- ment in tbe way of the execution of the order. The statement that many of these estates have neen relcas- d is true, but this has not been done until the owners have been forosfi t<* p«y l-vr*?o suras of money, and those who own estates still claim that they have the right to recover them without further low. What these claimants desire to have our Government do is to inform Spain that her orders have not been executed, aud perempto rily demand that she cause them to bo obeyed alouoc. A Worcester dispatch oi tho 9th iu- stant asys : The National Anfi-seerct So ciety Association is in aessiou here. President BI lucbnrd, of Ulitioia and other leaders in the mov< mout are pres ent. Professor Sloan, of Alegliany city, spoke of the unchristian tendency of Ma- nonry. Rev. L. N. Riraton, of New York, thought Free Masonry abonkl Im abol ished by law. Geu. J. W. Phelps, of Vermont, was elected President for the