The Rome weekly courier. (Rome, Ga.) 1860-1887, September 20, 1867, Image 2

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Yf An Oa V W Tl’ tli go th m' Tl ill la it al af oi P' ■'V m B0H£ a TOESlUAY SOKHIWGSept. IT. Stirring' Times Ahead. Theindications are that the contest between the President and' Congress will soon be brought to a Snail issue. One or the other will, have to give way. ■ The 'antagonism cannot much longer coulinue in its present arms-lengih po- sition. “A fight or a back down*' now j.jj ese n y m phs of the . industrious band k syswmv ani maintained fay MeOulloeh, under v these blinks receive bounties or re % -tf.tiYr sites anronmir.g to twenty-five or thi - A que\ million/a year, extracted from th X rite porta A. pockets' of the people/ and under which ff° Uo '“ H we ar^threatened with a moneyed di scerns probable. The President’s re cent proclamations arc now being offi cially furnished to ail the officers in all the departments, civil and military, of the government. A third proclamation is confidently looked for, which will make more definite and spoeifio the du- tios required by the first two. We have a rumor that orders have already been issued to the military, having reference to some contemplat ed movement. The Pace -Track in Atlanta has been leased by the milita ry and Barracks are being made of suffi cient capacity to accommodate all the j Horseshocfail troops in the State. Most of the gar-! backward rison at Augusta has been ordered to ’ Atlanta, and■ the indications from all garcivy more powerful and corrupt, and mor£ grasping and insoiant, than ever worths slaveholding oligarchy of the South in the height of its demoralizing reign. However patriotic Mr. McCul loch and his Chief engineers of the ties, f*r If We have ii the subject,. tain facts wh ; planter and £/. vantages arc d- rope. We baa- leading cotton. A* ig inquiries on •ertained cer- >3 that both the dl find the ad- in favor of the •e us letters from , irs in New York Treasurv may be, however pure mav be ; Liverpool,. .om which wo learn J ' the following facts: 1. No loss io suffered by (he tare on heads- $ve ons, in ^ t W~' ojs. etc., which have r-^Attfirney Gendr- .iiauee with the irder addessed artments Circular. All District Attorrpvs and! Marshal of the United Stab*, and' to all thfir respective Assistaits anfil Deputies, and to all persons holding any Official Relation to the Attorney General’! Office. Attorn >y General’s Office 1 10 h' September, 1867. j Sir: I herewith furnish you with an of feminine operatives in the depart-, ** bound ccfion in U» NewJork | ^ ^oi be pt^^of t^ ment, the sytem under which toe market out iron-bound <x>Hpa suffer* ; P , a , ldpnt ” f United States, dat- Treasury and our financial affairs is 1 * Jg*? 1 two pewits-fere per btUe. managed needs retrenchment, and r form, and the people begin 'to feel it. j From the causes counter revolution Radical excesses and experiments Sjlarid destructive schemes of the. -Repti): party; and .the movement will nC ( ,-,n. We should not bp-surprised Iron bound bales are liable to rust. President of the United States, dat- ; ed the 3d inst., rud in the ninety-sec- r."c’ .u . , ., •« , _,i 1 ond vear of Am-rican Indenendence : It is the custom of the trade to demand ^ proclamatfon recites in brie f the "we^have '"recked X) £S £picS offi “io bide I obligations of loya'ty to the Rcpablic j Constitution, .they were" made to be- . - { , ui^ on0 ri tk - nut and ' vas intended *o admonish you, m I lieve the North intended to deny their *““‘"****“'*• ! «S i ifiey oin»oVb6 'aiuo'k-tifl 0 ? m ““"' ,ilU “ 11 l””"*. (-oMiDg at,y ] oqml righis ftmdw that CMttteU*. th, bale witioat . „ ™. mu* be j Motes e V'* -9 by b !b; hill. To General tf. »$. <??<*«/f. - * - \ The American j (rpying each oti nces of oplnioD xist and have e: „ r the people of-the respective sections have not understood and do not under stand each other. Everything has been managed by policy and deception, Our statesmen have been mere strategic par tisans. If the people of the North c.ould now be made to see the real de sires and purposes of the peopled' the South, they would,, become ashamed' of the deceptive Radical catch-word rebel, and all distrust and bitterness would disappear, aad disunion would not con tinue one hour. The people of the South never did desire to got rid of the at home or fibroid, under the Uni and all good cit they believed, from oppression, and pot from tba Constitution. They may and that the — —t t - * ,« 7 _ i • ,i ' . bueu bUUUU V io iutbt, tiflfj ilia were soon to-assume the rushing force j ® ,re ^ W01 ^ 311 U1CIUS 1 1L | Government thereunclc'*, witb its cop ! al co-ordinate branches, legislative, ex- of the Niagara rapids, and swiftly bear ■ 3 The leading cotton brokers of Liv-1 .. - , . , , the. party in power into too abyss of the erpool, in a letter written in response to j ® cutl y e > au< jf •“ lcla ,* s 0I |\u, a "“* inquiries upon the subject, write that I ■',' e \ D ' I1 ?-'“ .. 0I , ' 'PH ,u ’ R . u ' <• the rope bound bales ire much pro-! Withstanding that many noil meaning If revolutions flever go ,b„ revolations “Sy lyi I iiS? Yhwl,’in of dS iscour ultra revolutionary Radi- .. Wel . Q the r e two iots of cotton ofequal i turbln S evo f nts th:1il .f--. f>? v happily must ran its course to the orgaui- quality and value before us, the onel }° ‘till | ugainsc \ 1 cals mus quarters are that some general move- j zatioa 0 fanew national party, main-1 rope‘bound and the other iron bound, j fi ^ s ® a t H t ^ a “ g ' pr r ff r ‘!f® '? ad me P in h0th , ! ment. or chance in location is contem- l .1 ,1 ...m.j : we should cortainlv eive the former ; impressions, and Constitution of j have been deceived. Were they ? Has the oppression come ? Can Union add oppression live together and restore prosperity? If the North can be as sured that Union can be secured with out the oppression, will they not aban don the oppression and repudiate the oppressors? I believe they will. There fore, I write. Therefore, 1 write most plainly and without any concealment. Bad men in both sections keep up false in location is content- j taming together the great issues settled j S” t; ‘3 ! law of the land, and also the most ment, or chan plated. We have no doubt but that the Pres ident has counted the cost and thor oughly understands the situation. The Radicals arc rampant and defy him —threatening impeachment. It may not be long before it shall be known uiAo commands the Army and Navy of the United States.- Let the South stand firm, obeying all laws while maintain ing their constitutional rights. by the late-warand the form of gov ernment established in the Federal Con stitution. only "be carrying out the instructions of our spinners.” : The spinners complain of the difficul ty of opening the iron bound bales, be- A Veteran Printer Go ok to His ; cause so tightly rivited, and of the Best.— Mr. Samuel B. Hunt died of a danger there is of firing the cotton in preference, for by so .doing we should ' iae “““f:?, 0 l “ e f . n, ° bS , onlvNe carrvinc out the instructions 0 f Identic proof of the will ,{ the people; The j congestive chill, at his home, in this i j county, on Fridhy last. His age was about fifty-four years, and he had been ! employed cs a printer almost constant ly ever since bis eariy youth. He was; j employed hi the Courier office when ; ' purchased by the present proprietor in ! j January, 1355, and has been constantly [employed in this office—except for j about two years—ever since until, less ! I than one week before his death- Ho was a faithful, industrious, quiet j Christian, who pursued the even tenor of his ways with earnestness and sin ness of heart. Few men ever lived, who, apparently, thought less of self did more, according to their means, for / j the comfort and happiness of those de pendent upon them. striking off the hoops. They find, too, that the ropes of the rope bound bales can bo disposed of at a fair price, while tiio old iron hoops are worthless. These are the statements of the high- respectable cotton brokers of Liver- but that there are powe-s of govern ment outside of the Const.tution which may lawfully violate that instrument, and the laws made in pursuance of it. All citizens of the Unite-; States owe allegiance to that nationality, as the same.is embodied and organized in the- Constitution and such amendments thereof as, having become e :pedient in the progress of the country, have been duly made and ratified. But in a spe- encourage mutual hatreds. Bad men, like certain ani mals, live on the carcass of good things. They fatten -on ruin. If the people were virtuous and wise, bad men would be officeless and/powerlcss. . Now, then, do the people of the North really desire to understand U3? If so, do not let them be blinded by ei)- ithels—as “ rebels,” “ traitors,” anq “ men who desired to break up the Gov ernment”'—for these things are said by bad men, and are said to keep up pas sion, and not to inform the mind. der if? 1 apos They *of their They raee, bui gradatio They wi he right of .ever fail to cb 6 „,^ aaa m sjthosc wlo dare oppress or execute a citizen, olack of white, without such ori,W f : ve ^' !*S§*v‘. whitepkjr- . «mh&ionti v,,z“:’ 4 poble art Whites and [From the New York Herald. 1 Counter Revolution Coming at | Last. It is an old axiom, says that “revo- | lutions never go backward but it is I none the less true that when a revoiu- i tionary movement is pushed beyond ! its legitimate ends, the parti- concern- j ed in it is demolished by a popular j reaction. It was so when the great! French Revolution of 1789 fell into th hands of the Jacobins, and when they , attempted to shape it according to their ! monstrous ideas of“liberiy,equality anci | fraternity.” An equally decisive reac- J tion followed the Puritanical excesses j of the Cromwellian Commonwealth of England, in the restoration of the monarchy and the Stuarts. How the great American revolution, marked by .the most gigantic and the bloodiest civil war in the history of mankind,and resulting in the extinction of the lace Southern shareholding oligarchy, with the abolition of slavery, is to be finally shaped, is a question for time to deter mine. We think, however, from re cent even us and all the signs of the times, that it may be safely assumed that this great revolution Las reached its culminating point, and that a coun ter revolution of public opinion against the destructive schemes of the .-..ling j p ? r , tio f. 01 Radical faction has fairly set in. The remarkable results of the late •California election are but a ripening development of the same underlying causes which began to find expression at the Ccmietieut election of last spring. The concurrent voice from the recent Territorial election cf Montana indicates the widening influence of the same general causes, and yesterday’s election j to “ E earl - v com l lle ^ c ' n in Maine substantially tells the same I iv rcspectaoio cotton brokers of mver- ~ ,, x; “V“, miqtm; pool, Messrs. Fairelouch, Howell A Sons, ciai manner, all persons holding office Understand motives and judge acts in J dcredto y« Williams A Co., and Williams & Buck- lindcr “ he Ended States are solemnly , the light of motives. I magnanim _ . : ... _ _ . ciraiin rr\ Biinrt.avr fhor I Anet-Tiif'nn rmr ( ^ T 1 tmrh o/*cnv will nererjeonsent to surrender the heritaje of free govemment under ConstitiUonsynor agree to era;e one ;yl]able.If the people's Bill of Kighta . b.y set LrtU in those written Consti- ns3 ' ] these wrongs and outrages, and many inrr.£, i*ioy see attempted in those Militwv BiliS; aid, therefore, they nover will consent to the l' an of reconstruction so ialsolV pre tended lo be pioposcd by these bills. Itiey admit thatnll these things may be forced 'Jpon them. They are not able to re sist'. T ley are tired of war. They are help less. T toy hare no arm-?. They surren dered t< ycr. jit to an honorable ioe! They arc ,poor! Little Bureau Officers daily insult them. Little seargents daily oppress " Little Assessors and collectors dail thorn. Hig h-ti| ted Generals daily eL them. Black and. ^wliite spies daily aog thejn. A pnghty nation, whieh pledged them protection if they would-lay down* their amis, dnqiinatei in vengeance over them, and will aot so;much as hear they- wrongs nor purnj l them even to make complaint of their grie rancel. So,force on! You have th&pomi But know this ; Theforce wh.Ah thus oppresses i^Screaks your own Constitu tion; tram [lies in the dust your own pledged faith aspeople; is accomplished ty the c . clv .. e:c , , . . perjuringfi all those who execute it, andto j franchi-ment-"■ the sha a# of all those who snpp*rt“or per- ■ ■ ■■ mit it. If- you think it honorable to iniefe we shall dpem it manly t» suffer; and, inflict as you maV, one thing yon can Dover e*3 force. Y< 1 shall never secure our consent t<t our ovml’honor ! And, if you, too, of the. North, sha i finally fall, as, persisting in suah sins, all you must/ you will feel cl our woes, 1 ad a keener stingtlian any which has ever y t pierced the Southern people— the sting 0 dishonor. , You wif fad, not contending in manly fight for w lai you believe to bo your own i eudangereiSrights, but yoa will fall in the I work ot degrading your own raee, and by tnemselve. s/.V/i. 7 " J pea«o,youtannwal^‘ God 3 bounty to -,nFi o .1 ? p feline 1 _ ,. IrA. ^I . .. B-atce to er.«3U» an revels, A lawlessness of aposi.'lteg. . c ^ -Mf; The issniif; if 6 1 , people. They ,. **** ’ ] Radicalism. J;.,, '; 0t ja ‘ disanl.-;, bi without end .. 1 T. 'Thisn-w.be the Situation/' ’Mail the many caooursri B i‘ coived tr<n£ * , I New Han-r.ih!': sj - ■.;!** {'• '. J diers and titizc®;- t - '*'3 ■' -! Siding an 1 * everywhere. 1 ’.■■.’-'■'*''■'2 ent. .. Yf*' patriotism - lev. Messrs. William Bryce & the iniuuitj o’ oppressing those who vurren- j—a *. - 3- (ecu' arms, trusting to your own ’ io redeem your own pledged sworn to support that Constitution, and I For this reason, General, I hare made f faith aceor-fn.; to your own written law : ’M - J ! ' pa the men in the South ' Tho Socially be poor Mor.lacaiat theroy- the Military bills and < be | ai gate-A q^ imperial Constitution but tcKo Xu ’ r v I care the It dr tb donot become the humbled actuate them. I have WTlOUGEf KI fTtfiiru -•’I v V/fil.iall'i \\ LAMB eon-; Ml ebratod Wr- . Bailing Cotton, ; efinap, by V Genii A f»pt. Ill—t Haman at the scaffold 1 uu -i... . . . ,. known to you those who re- ; It is now quite certain that if thi3 Radical perlor economy and profit of rop« say • i 18 in0WB f ' ie 3 r ‘ iaVQ * )6en retained, | ject those bills, and tho motives which j programme is persisted in these States must - ' " found that or been placed, in their respective 1 actuate them. The .first cl of them were transported through ian_ _ | and rough routes, where they, had to i j be handled many times. During the past j ! season we have had so much trouble in i His aspirations were not so much io \ delivering cotton with iron bands, that attain high position as to be true to the i ' T ? would strongly advise our planter trusts imp: in his sphere of action rectly with the enforcement of the lively sense of their sanctity thority is anticipated. You are requested to_ acknowledge i bring a war of extermination on the laws, a tions of right and of duty to the conn- j was t - hive no decent man touch, taste or and au-1 try and to the Constitution; violate! handle ti a unclean thing. But I became i their oaths ; degrade the white raee; 1 J e 3' s:r ' ;ti °n did not commit to u _ : _ _ _ ’ . f ; xl. 1 t tae Icuah-y of the mp , , . , n , , j friends to use the best qualitv ot h sed upon him, ana faithtul j rope ia preference to iron bands. •e of action. Elis widow a'nd j But one advantage is really claimed ten children, in great distress, at this j mr iron ties, and that is in the case of sudden bereavement, have our tender-1 “ re -, . But l ‘ lis I s b Y means free from th - receipt- of this comuaication. Very respectfully, Your obedaient servant, John M. Binckley, Acting Attorney General, To black race, and destroy free constitu tional government in America. No and might enable us to defeat the whole scheme at once, and without strife.between the races. 'And jf. lie military commanders had respected the / (teORGI Two mr tho Cour leave to tato of, benefit*. R.th Mt r IE( j man has answered—Gen. Pope does not , will of the people, and not considered them-/ i y „, 1... -i.;.: reives as ordered to eirry our, the bills, vri nrigbt hare sdceceded. But it now sooiif that the purpose is to force through thspk est sympathies. May a merciful Provi dence protect and defend thorn, afford spiritual consolation, supply their earth ly wants, and prepare them all to meet- their earthly piotecior in that Heaven ly land where labor and sorrow shall be known no more forever. Selma & Dalton R, R. Meeting. — There is to be a meeting of the Direc- j tors of the above named road, at Selma, j on Wednesday, the 18th inst., for the pur- I pose of ratifying the recent action of a e Board, in arrangements wiiu New York capitalists, and com plete the arrangments to commence the work at the earliest possible date. The ratification referred to is merely formal, as we learn, in as much as al!! the Directors have given their individ- J uai assent already. j doubt. .A few bales, placed where th j air can circulate around them, to keep j the iron cool, would perhaps realize a j great benefit from iron ties. Butin the cotton presses, warehouses, steambeats and ships where cotton is stored in mass, iron ties are of no special service in case cf lire. This is asserted by those who have learned it by costly experi ence. In such conflagrations the iron hands soon become red hot and com municate fire. Under the heat they weaken and burst, giving the entire bale to the free acton of fire, while rope-bound cotton in the same fire, political News. Washington, Sept. 14.—The Califor nia Democrats have 20 joint ballot, and two members gre try to answer—the arguments by which j they prove the correctness of their con victions. If, with these convictions, , ritti0ui r ^ a - rdto the willofthe pc le v they were to yield, would they not be j w atr ; kll & s om -ti,e Iist registered uMil fr I rebels indeed, and woula not you dc- , can be done. The large white disfrancY : spise them, and would not they despise , ment, the large negro vote, and this imp | themselves? Would an honorable man ment, Uie large negro vote, and tins Imy the elec-ion, .-.-ill, in all probability, of ’ majority on j ask them to yield aghl; st such convic- i pHsh the cal: of p- Convention. —*- bers of Con- j tions. much less denounce them ns :‘tnr-1 B'U-.i gwe my opinion now, tlK tions, much less denounce them as ! i bulent and disloyal and deceitful, At the Republican meet.ng at Phila- j cause they openly, and in the most pa- delphia, benators Nye, Cameron and 1 - • - - Cattail spoke. A resolution was pass- triotic utterances possible, avow them ? . But there is a way to reconcile these ed declaring it the duty of Congress to differences ; to end strife; to restore impeach, try, and, if guilty, leinove; harmony and goodwill; toper the President. siastically. white inau can go to that Con. retain his character. There is .an get respectable men to go to the Ci Whyi' No-Mo shape its protres' ‘ from Wasnir."- these are dictated di —r-etion is pcnr.itted. The/' character for, the ioic/ff It will fail. It ought to fab purify or polish a siuk by th'" in nd into it, but you will < - the-jiainoud v,-ith ; rh. Th like the foregoing, vieweJffitell'igently,! cati ° n f ct ’ wh f ° tb ^ P^l-erty of » c 0 ...P J -.‘Arn; iv in ironr. S.nnf n noc enfri , „ „ l m perpetuate It was passed entuusi-1 the Union; to build again, as never be- . | fore, national prosperity; and to secure McGool has challenged ooe Coburn to j equal freedom and protection to all sec- j races and. colors. Now then, if first Couventionsci North will still their passions long j pose df disfranchise enough to hear and fully comprehend i franchising negro-. the South is willing to do, and j odjousHissrriuiaatL * LQfrOt the South ill afiisro-fe-fdj it of Trailer- • ' L * r ' lead to but one conclusion. The pre- rerenco is to be given to rope for bal- ! ing cotton. In the matter of first cost,- iron has but an inconsiderable advan tage over it; and that small advantage G entirely lost in the two pound tare igevitabl} to . 1 . • demanded upon iron-bound cotton.— Ir. now seems nearly certain that this ] That tar am * onuts to . flfty cents per great enterprise will oe pushed forward j bale, which is equivalent to a discrimi- ons who went South was sold during ; ness and honest purpose, Eureka ! l.v- those implicated. Caleb reka\ will burst, in lopdacelamations of 1 ehrn-rtho enU Cushing has been employed by Dr. i joy, from thirty-five millions of people I ^roas go. The Garnett, who occupied a high mclicai . rescued from bloody anarchy and per- ; thety ronventu-. .r position in the Confederate army, to^petual despotism ; and bonfires and il- ensues in this w. conduct a test case. j laminations will blaze in a common light from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from the Lakes to the Gulf, reveal- Cuba JRspatch. equivalent nation of five or six cents per pound against iron ties—that is. rope at 15 cents per pound is as cheap to the plan- Fai.l Goods.— R. 8. Norton, Son _ story. The overwhelming success of j Co., have received a part of their stock i ter 113 Don ties at 6 or 10 cents. Add- tho ublicans of Maine last year, on of Fall and Winter Goods including a in? . to this the considerations named, the latest popular vote ever polled in j beautiful assortment of Dress Goods, the State, on the platform of the pend- ! Trimmings, Notions, etc., etc. It is ihe | Hardly necessary to inform the ladies of Rome and vicinity that these goods constitutional amendment policy of Congress against the recon struction theory of President Johnson, we accepted as an infallible indication | have been purchased in accordance with of the voice of all the Northern States j the best taste of the senior member of in favor of Congress ; and so it turned j the firm. So far’ as wo know, this is the out to be, from New York to the far J first arrival of dry goods this season',' and purchasers can there now find many articles'of which this market has been destitute for a few weeks past Give them a call. sepl7lsw£wlt. } that rope-Lound cotton is subject to no 1 loss from tare, none from rust, none from the necessity of rebinding, and that it enjoys the preference in tho great markets of tho world, and reasons Key West, Sett. 14.—No business on ! ing the grand jubilee of the nation over the Cuba Telegraph. The only opera-; consiihctional reunion. is down with tha fever. j h UIn hle citizen, claiming no merit Wiiitarv Order ! save a life during which no man can * ’ ! truthfully say I ever sought or desred Washington, Sept. 14.—The follow- ■ i Q deceive a living thing, I tender you ing order was issued to-day : myself, my all, for a hostage that what re of the very pettiest styles for the* eaou ? h a ?P ear for determining the aud vo!uu i e f s , Kti 'i retained in . _ ‘' o' ' r iuey | question with which we searted vor of rope for ties. in fa- tw&w-lt. “District commanders will co-operate ; £ now say in behalf of the deceived au >1 with the Commissioner and assist the \ unfortunate, but gallant, noble ever Commissioners of the Freedmcn’s Bu-1 honorable people of the South, is as reau in reducing tho number of era- j true in feet as it is fearless in utterance. teers still retained in I p. The Southern, people are willing, service by giving details of officers and j anxious to obey the Gq^tUution and to enlisted men of the army to take their j live in 1under it. They ad- places when it can be done wbhoui • m jt that the construction which they West, by results analagous to the result In Maine. But what is this Constitutional Amencraant, upon which the popular ■iudement of the great North was so j emphatically given last year in favor Congress and the Reconstruction party? It is an amendment which provides, j among other things, for the disfran-! . r „, . ... c ■ 1 , , ! September 2od. Ihe same jurors that ciasement of certain leaning rebels- 1 r . ,, , . , , r .. . ., . , , : wer.3 impannelled for the last week o* subject to a two-thirds vote oi Con-- j - gross, and which provides that each of ] the States itself may elect whether it will have, and how far it will have* ne gro representation with negro suffrage, McClellan Sent For.—The ■’-*■ _- wr -**Jnngton dis- manifest detriment to the service. patches of the 6th inst., contaa*- following: honestly placed upon that Constitution, of the right of a Stale to secede from the Union at will, has been decided off Chan tho blood* the gsiilty Macbct thebsuality of the . for iStincujing tho I from disgrace, if th tion, and a fair •<. sehome is now »ti nott ; .fig but a tr J forte, fraud and. j you tv SI sell yob'’ courso-f pres3 on -rsreemOd, and V could possibly /J Military Bii’'-'- tion. .. Of the there oar- " tile leg; lews—4 GoustitS - UUAAY I-’lctd County Superior Court,—-Ju rors and parties interested will bear in i mind that an adjourned term of this Court meets on the fourth Monday, the July term are requested to serve at | this adjourned term. Registration in Georgia. The result has been refused to the it will sacrifice its blacks in excluding j papers of the State, yot a correspondent them from the right or suffrage. Up* , of tho New York Tribune pretends to on this platform, leaving the- question of negro suffrage to the several States, the .Republicans last year gained the-r greatest victories—greater than the | give the exact figures. We can see no I honest reason w’"v tho official result j should not be pu' fished, for the State and also for ev^ry county—but per- •H'* Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 4. ’67. The work of registration in Georgia is nearly complete, and the results to this date are as as follows : Whites 89,892 Colored 93,682 Total Colored majority 183,570 3,794 victories of Lincoln. But with the re- | haps radioed policy would not thus be jection of the amendment by the rebel 1 subserved. The following is the ex~ Statos, Cougres took the bold ground of j tract alluded to : prescribing for them new conditions,! of reconstruction, embracing, under j a supervising military dictatorship, uni- j versal negro suffrage and white rebel J disfranchisements which . inevitably j \point to negro supremacy in tho reor- /vmization of the rebel States. •~b’-s unexpected and dangerous r«v- experiment has given tho s . of the California election whatever^''-* 7130 tbo superficial expla*. Nations o[^H ,iefea .' ed P art Y- Public opinion in ^'Y^alizihg against that ul- ■tra revolutio^^ > : ° infc committee of which not only itoT^,, u(1 . uct «‘ e «>ata, but the gen- •srisl go.- ..rama‘ nt oa a system wrhich arofsise - ® ab °Ush the Execu- -tive i)«partntfc's,t- and the \essential re ceived legislative'yjpwei s of the several •States. There is olse^bogioniisg to be a etveng active public saf.-tiraent 'a^aipst that Federal political machine organ- How the People are Represented.— The Pittsburg Post gives these figures to show how the will oi tha people is represented under the Radical rule: DEMOCRAPIC. Penn 290,000 Ohio 215,000 Kentucky... .90,000 REPUBLICAN. Penn 305,000 I Ohio 252,000 | Kentucky. .33,000 N; 5 aud-y.ut in operation by Mr. Cfitae | regard for the popular will Total 595,000 j Total 560,000 Here it will be seen that a Democrat ic excess in the vote of 5,000, but the representation in Congress is: Demo crats, 9; Radicals, 34! And these thirty-four Radicals vole and act in Congress as the representatives of the j gold, says: “There is now a cleep people of those .States, That i3 Radical dercurrent of distrust, anxiotv and Montana. Washington, Sept. 13.— The Du-1 against them by arms, and they accept Iowa, Herald, in speaking of tha 1 that decision, and will live by it, and I °‘ ectlou rr, ‘ x-. And in | maintain it, if necessary, irith arms. ‘It. is known that the President’s ! Montana. J. J>£. Cavanaugh has been friends have telegraphed for Gen. Mc Clellan to come home, is expected by the 1st consents to attach hirnsel dent’s cause. Just how Air. Johnson expects to use him has not definitely become known. handsomely elected to Congress. that coi; over rest. set aside v. ery officof nil. ItSl cannot 2. They concede and will maintain ourconie; the freedom of the Airican race in the VERT POOR COPT A Prostituted Press. The Macon Telegraph says : * * * “The on'y remedy for tha evils of the press lies in the hands of the people. Let them discriminate in their patronage between the worthy and the unworthy—between those that are honestly devoted to the dissemina tion of truth and sound moral princi ples, and those that pander to corrupt public taste, and have no real enlight ened regard for the general weltare and purity of society. Discard that large class of adventurers, without character or fortune,-who attach them selves to the press for mere purposes of thrift, and are willing to sell them selves to anybody who will buy, and advocate any principle or movement that will pay. Do this and we shall be rid of a class of journals that are blots upon any honorable profession, and curses to the country.’, * To all of which we heartily respond “Amen.” Registration in South Carolina.— According to a table made up by the Charleston Mercury, the registration in this State, thu3 far, foots up : Whites, 18,309 Blacks, 42,532 tion, aun told him that ho was a dirty dom was made part of the Federal Con- < - °8- | stitution, and by which it was guarnu- j teed in the State Constitution. From Washington. j. Whatever may have been their opin- rr r o i FT -r - . „ ions oi tue right, of slavery, and its ben* .....7 S11INGT ? y ’ , ’’P '. Lieu—-uov. | e g. s to t q 0 African race, they discovered S epbemon has b ee u inaugurated Gov- | thafc it cost more t0 ma :^ tain slaves ernor or iientucky. Ho endorses, and i fc j ian , than, as a property* rt was vrortn. vydUarry out, the principles enunciated There fore, for peace and for interests ov '-., c m ; . . they yielded it, and will never, by Gen. Grant is inclined to favor simul- j their act restore it . Moreover, the ne- taneoue elections on the first Monday j being f. ve , they concede, and will m November. It is confidently expect-, ^ aintail shaU ba ; 0 and reC eVo li ed that district commanders will con- j the law> and by the law> cq „*; protec cu r p‘, ; tion in all their rights the whit< Ihe Heralds Washington dispatch! - - - - race. So, also, bein' mte members of so- says: On the subject of the effect of 0 i e ty being benefit^ by intelligence the Amnesty proclamation the Cabinet | injured bv icnorauco is said to bo a unit. In the discussion , and virtue, and injured by ignorance. I end vice, tho Southern white people will of the Amnesty proclamation the Cabi-1 do , dl iu their power to educate, im- net agreed that its legal effect would prove nu d elevate the Airican be to relieve the excluded whites from j \ nv statement or intimation, wl disability as of suffrage. . . Any statement or intimation, whether disability as to the exercise of the right j f) . om » official headquarters” ormalev- New York Market. New York, Sept. 14.— Flour, more dent, informers, that those who oppose , the Military bills are wanting in will to j do justice—full, equal justice—lo the negro, or have a secret purpose to dis- er. Corn, 1 to 2c. better. Pork, §24 75 to $24 85. Lard, 13J to 14|e. Cotton, dull at 25 to 25Jc. Stocks, very dull. Operators are waiting for the bank statement. Mon ey, 5 to 6c. Gold, 444. Sterling, 94 to 10. Majority for colored 24,223 This result will not bo materially changed by the second visits of the reg istrars . The Rise in Gold.—The New York Times, referring to the high price of deep un- . distrust, anxiety and un certainty about the future.” steady. Wheat, more active and firm- j criminato against the negro in the ma ~ . x.... i s j D g > or a daiinistering the laws, is a gratuitous calumny upon a peaceful, Honorable, but unoffending and help less people, which no honorable man would originate, which no brave man would fail to recall, and which no vie. tuous white people will believe. Ad not only will rights be secured,-’ trusts conferred On the Africuv * when and as, by improvement'ana cul ture, so encouraged and fostered, t v shall develope a capacity, moral, social and intellectual, which will satisfy those to be affected thereby that such trusts, being so conferred, will promote the good of society and the stability of the government or will not damage either society or government. The Southern people believe that office and sum-age are not rights born with man, but are trusts conferred by soc-edy and solely for the good of society, and not for -.he profit of, the individual. ggr-Why is a pretty lady luce a^lofco- motive engine? Don't give It up-— there are plenty of reasons, she senqp off the sparks, transports the hiafle (males,) has a train following her, and passes over the plain. Getting His Pay.—The United States District Court Sf Georgia, now in ses sion at Atlanta, occupies rooms liand- sj^nely fitted up, in the five story build ing erected?, by Joseph Brown, with money made by that worthy during the war. Sol says the Columbus Suti. \ / - m I cuy. rt LTv can, tl.brt his cousoi versal mi G«a-. P(J S as his offij roea-iures the turhxil actions ry feel it ray • onLaie-if. a I, in’,this state only mistnkv taneo to ieatu wbe Oppose coiwtnif-H'on. u.-s is wroi is correct, an-, tiiiiec than he ;■• Radical progra... intelligent, and m mitted to remain ii Pope says tho wise, tary bills are those, Of ability. If this s also right in this pr> will commend itself u anco anil vice. Its v-J fects are to degrade r l - and denude the couu / Bad, designing men. . . tion under these bibs • coed through negro v ious to get rid of the i A ruth and worth, an-.L ing the poorJfiffoUfiF, men aa thjyf enemies., areprojtotedbr th e 1,1 onlvprotection I knot', tedding to anybody. / ■protootion, but how it is the problem to -L • ■•vor got it tVoir, IheW - .corse they arc dJreadf Ndnnnaudcr unsafe/ ought to ha gotten rule - fiat Cho men to HS will nevor consent to tion in these military; er advise tho people q ■ will never consent sit vise'it or not. 'They / sent to negro governnie exhaust all remedie s I defeat, obstruct and so govornmont under thjto will resist nothing. bear every opP^T. '! i ■ 1 consent to . the busing gal « crq, .. rs Vi taose who, w , S/of i op,./s the i-eople of th f j-e to usurp the Stott, pf, m i 3WK3BP ■o».' N „L.-or^t-w2m $