The Rome weekly courier. (Rome, Ga.) 1860-1887, April 02, 1869, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

" -'*' ' '.*•'.tiSzu loMjJi Prop’r. mVLNI^L, EVERT FRIDAY?? pi;bl:s' j>:p EyEI l*\TJSS OF WEEKLY. ■ (ID 'Vuniii- 5 " ■■■■■■■■ —#° ,rw 'jpvm m t -w s &Wk&4 2 50 " booths. •: * U>25 ••'* **’*■*■***’’** * .... 4 -v-variably is advance ! of Five or more en«.c»iiy will be fur- sra ,u - „ , s >V imte.l in exchange lor l\lo ;$,,£*■* !**'■* 1 Me hou.se of Mr. 0. W. Proprietor. Floyd Superior Court. Ou Wednesday the ease of \Y. It Weh- deceased. to recover pilret^e'in^ucyland, was tried. The suit was for 31,500 and interest since 1859 or I860. The ease has been in court tea yea>/^nd tliisLis tliV < fiiat0tr1S5 i I O^K* i*or earlier diet gives the plaiutilT $1,000 and interest from date of note The CrhiytraJ t^kju* up on Thursday morning. Iteaoeu Sitnui«'ns colored, of Cave Spring, was tried for lar ceny,of books and acquitted^ ^.Jerr^^arks, colored, tried forburiiary and larceny from , ;v , L apvi&tisements. MU'! by A lm : t-istrators, Exc^toM nlian.-. vured bv law to be held on — , ., l r ^xca month, between the the fir- 41 T«iw» a J* *. ^ rcmMjn an ^ three in the iniuri of ten ^ urt i£, m8e in the county in ..(ieru.MU. ^ s jtuafced. w .... which the P r ^‘«* e - ?ale , must be given m a pub- Xolir ’*■ , t j c ,,f personal property must manner, through ft public gaz- .viou? tosale-dayi ?., ' rri-uior. a'estate, ■'letters of Administration. Guar- . must bo jmblishod ao days-for l)U Admintsivation. monthly .« from Guardianship, 40 b!ishe.l f»r * m ship -for dis.. ,ordered; r fur.-elo^ure of Mortgages must RnV» ? he tVi ' ior f., U r months—for es- - yulHab w won f >r |b . fulI .pace of tl.roo '''" S , ""‘t no nLlliiig titles from Executors or i.Innnistiaior.-, ,j t bree months. Pulmcutwu^ .1 f J re ^ uire mcnts^nnlos- oth- cred; at ttief jhowfn& - .j u i~- RATES. . r of ten lipCS orJUQtl <»• fa. rales..per tyrjV; » ®® ,er levy..:....’ - ,:,x •■out.“ ' .ifAdiniuistnitio:i. v .. 5 ut > » far letters ot ; Gu«rdiftuj»Ui(»'4 V.StUrgiwiA «; “**T.. t o. amiliei/tfoM for dismission from ' Guiitdianship, -. ., tiniliatioa to sell I end •■*. r<-~ N tiirt to Debtors -trril Creditors Sn l, of Land, persquare .I.critr,- Sales per M s|ieriiTs Moffo 1 #> „ 4 «» .<> < CO 2 (10 Solo of periebaiile property. 1* days..-...-.2 00 Fitfov Xotire*. Obslays r.rcciostiri' of Mortgage. persquare.. 4 «0 c idrertising li A Wllo Im Responsible! •• he recent unfortunate tragedy at *\'ar- renton, rays the Chrnmrle gi&miiiut,' Wats- -sittfl upon by* cert ain parties in Atlanta a il mailc tin: text for sensational po litical 1 .-lip trap Tito affair *:ts flaslietl oYer thi i sin's to the New York Tribune a ml For- m v's papers as evi Juice of the dttSKCrs ttfY which ‘ loil" 'non were subjected iu the rebellious State of Greurgia Congress was implore 1 to legislate iunuediately uud final If upi'U tile (Jeorgia bill; to enlr.rce com- jitiat.ee with the detuandsnf the Fourteenth tInclai'iicnI,*tsiltest"far xhc expe/fest uegioea to scats iu the Legislative bails, aud to wake Bullock, virtually, Dictator Tue Jullawing from the Atlanta Xar Krn seems ti ilirmf some little light upon this mat- Kush, was eon- Ticted. J.J.Saluder of* Walton "county, airuigned for the murder of Sarah Siuis, plead guilty t ■ ^Ppfetghter. The parties icopvfcfed have not been.sen- .enced yet. TJie other criminal eases, yet tribe triad, will, pr ■ l^bubly cousuiue ,£h? re- muiu(lers«)p l ‘|he week. ~~~ It bad been hoped that J'udgo’ Pajjott woujd hold court bere next week. l ut as- he- ha.fnot.been h.ard froiu.-probably there will Georgia Slate 1-oUtcrj f"t the IJenefit of the lUasunic Orphans Home. antee that the drawings will be fair ami the business honorably conducted. ; - i An A&JWlbil f me^II iMM April 1st. where tickets c:iu be bought and dud the money drawn will le paid. Draw mgs ever}'day. Price of tickets fioui 10 ets. upward. Official Notice of tlie Draw- very clou rly to flcjiciennf, no dess tha n *i nef fioicri^(if ^^nl^ab«>r ^t,f!ie South'. ^Tf'sd^ a l.drir arrangiTmerlfe must.ln* ndjusfed to^,a- niiuioiuui amount of labor. 'Vu-wituM 1 dot t~. - II 4* 't" ' -» } .lit cut year, unless,S^Juvuf iuawl #undant The Fifteenth Amemlmeiit. J here now bci“p tW ty »'x Gtate., it will^,guntrarj'^ouf'jiirfiest' 'advtee, a4. Keriitolpfe' •Lf](rftvtfiatlen ottllcsd ^efnsdrjYattly, in pr i,fi g5C J is giveiample scope andsvurg»to; rdertn defeat, the last bill of abomiimtions, knoyili as the Fifteenth ^.tnepiuiept. litis believed that even more than this number will refuse tu swa.iow tjtis l ,ua'isc:i , iug„pijl, of radical hate and death r redticiiig (luali ities-ththe iftd A Tho Minnesota and llhoJe Island J e"is latures bdt'h’a'djourned without action.' Tht Indiana Legislature broke up in a row sons A prevent action, and the Governor of New Jersey argu-s against ratifica ion. * .. t We believe the following States may be set down as almost r —tain ag, iost rttibca- Counecticut, ..ewJorsoy. Delaware. Maryland, New Fork, Ohio! Indiana, Min nesota, Kentucky, Georgia, Calitoruia, Or egon and Wisconsin. ■•Kuoene Davis and lira' dispatches Thu recu it political dispatches scut from, this point to the Waslungtou CKronicle,™ith a view to influence legisiatiou in... Congress on:s:iid tu be the introductions of one Ku- gene Davis, private. Secretary to tils Kx- wlieney (Tuveruor Bullnek. A e ought w r uv tlimugh the trjolf during our so- i"urii in Washington. It proved rather a Iras -ante with President Grant and in- tellieent aiembers of bith houses of 1 inn- e r, *st Air I) fvis is , nice youug man,but, i ke the (Livernor, he don’t- exactly under -tied hoar to keep a first class hotel.” ' > Mr. Kugtne Davis, private Secretary His Expresseiency It. 1J. Bullock, is according to the .V,ur Era, the. author of special political dispatches,” concocted in Atlanta, having for their object the stirr- ’"T U P IJ1 the -'-loil. Iieart” against the terri- Me Hebei Kv-kluxes of Georgia, who toilcre with the pilferings of loyal senuh-,- Jreis from the Treasury of the State. ' ^ lie editor ol the Era, wlto seems to .tuw ut what he speaks, accuses Davis of writiug the lying dispatches; when he saiiw, very well that Bullock is the respon sible ussas-iu. wh) stabs the people bfGdor- fia through one of his underlings, «'h" merely executes the behests "taster. Ueutcnced to the Chain Cans. | Two negroes, Jerry Derry, principal, aud Aaron Turner, accessory, were convicted last Tltursday, befo r e Justice Perry,. of lar,- cony of hogs from Mr. Prentice,'ttnd scii- lejietd, the former to six, and the latter to- three months in the chain gang, ^litfy; were immediately manacled mid put In work. ... I....;. clim.'te vary as'muc’i'as they dbdd ditter- qualh* appdt- ami .te vary as muc'i as they - ludieato a tine ot pr cedar'- e< cable t" all. Ti e time for plantiau. corn, for instanjQv£rugtrJ5 , i tlnff r0'jnjlaroi', irlier along the Gulf, to the lattor part of May,.in the ' alleys of ihe hj}l cndlt^r Again, dpop.th^ flat ianda qf >h>.’ 'klfiijtfit aud Gulf* border, and bottom ilands--else- where, which is not thbrongbly draineilf it is net^rjthe fcurpitippifa .ridge, fu prevent“drowning out”, in. wet rtettUier-y wherea8;ia Tolling and hilly emibtry,‘fhp best farmere recomraensl'plaut.rugdn a leveV with thep*urCioe, | .'r,#ven several iockaseiber: low.. ; Agaiiil Uk*tbl distance^ This, may, certainly be less ou flat, rh'vhliey^Iadijs, par-' ticnlarly when rich, than in hrigh and dry plauL 'uatuiaTfy habit, it may, without iujuay, be ^crowded m'ueb pore-titan in waroier znnes,-: ivliete thc.teiidancyis totpraducc atsdl, lnxnmnt stalk. Ileuoeaat.the North; corn splaittoi! much thicker than at the South. < We beg c n cl &&Stest's &am^. all tnokc diffoient circoipstanc s, as wycutg op iiis mvh locality. and bo surej, if tie’ errs. to err op the side ''f,giving yJ' iby ' ' to hisWrt^icspcciitlly if rolling lauds Tii common with sotno of our. correspond-• -sue' The charter of this Go has recently been revised by the Lcgislatrire, aud ihe follow ing -managers appointed: i'ldward Din neadt* and Col. J. D. AVaddeii of Alar ietot; Dr U; L. Wilsoo aud Col. AlV" . M. Wallace , of Atlanta, and CilJJoffu Eluward of Ggr_ certain extent, at least, is within pur con- JL * />05 i. • i ' Bt - .* trnl. Manure, plow and drain one acre so tersville. There names area sufficient guar- [ . „i...., -j ents, we have already exp; ess d. unr* doubt as t j eorn being the cheapest grain crop we can raise. TheTtrge aiiumoi (if ( work^tiep ; , eSsaty tp^iiiakc a*’c ru' Cf'V^ ui'o'ue very|lso-' f rioits objection to it, but-this difficulty,- tu a ltitidtt : of th'clttbor question;; for v Uji.Ieai yrq, are. greatly, uiistakeu,-the indications-point arrangements for a full supply of provisions' from small grains, -Hover, Arc. On rife prphgscd. gi.ve. ampld scope and ivurgo. to: a provision crop; and then plant what is deft .iu dbuafiv *'•'•. " i '^‘ f4 ."'C 4 ...7.!**(i — «“ AVJe do ugt propo-e lb argnd.iho-question fi of how uiucfcri.ttoo should bo planted. We tike i- for granted everybody will' plani . all' whey ctin tend, atid some 1 J ' *W i good deal more.. ay they should be bus£ nowiu beddin; io uusv now jn Deriding c . on disO ow ;^3L>tJnuiiodfal-of the fact that they are a*»out tn become free *md“en)iglitejed citi z^u of a •rreaA^WpliWiC^trttf’lraolly indi(- i-iri«'t.miithcigidrf«^ imaiMnSl i*.Ak-fei)!iJVK'«BentiBain*iB«wa.-<. rebel- >, t^.ZlZTlaA n eAkrkttliia ve seen: ni.1i(it»Bdt)g n' lions >jiirjtx auisjivnigttJietl.ioofenitiMrt i'l- fitiaU thotiU'SthntiXiLnhle.r -Wcolo tintuie yet.knotfithu extent. At ‘the .difficulty» bt|t at IfcastdiKevs iMihnand* twii Indians liave •been-ilespcrtLelyiieciundcd./: ;The army and 4m*y dfficersdu. tbatr qnaxter. ire are glad to kuijnk cii- opierato cordially iad the: effort to Te siore.peacepby-tho.inusti apprqved' const!- tutional measures. -It unfortunately hap pens that from thtpcculiar situation of the towns and villages of our new ilomttiu. it is extretiitdy difficult to.-apply:the law in its sf iffitec muiihdire' off ictuaL processes for instance;; .Geitiacl; Davis, iri rbporting-this utragd-oothe part of - the Indians, says -Their village- are remote! from the sea, ainl the mcn-of-war canoct-get | lear ei auiyii t-l IlclJ thgire. regret ill is stat..* of •thufttfih.eca|isa;We.p'ifukL.de(.iiledly.i prefer thaltltc siniple and, legitimate powers of thu'bumbsliell houldl e exhausted ou the Vl-ikirs. before, resort, is liad (a. less justifiable means......But il' it is jmp issible to.shell the tow,;is ntthese Cbilop ludians, and to coii- veut a legislature f proletarian car|iet- baggerq. tud'peripatnti.o neelves io govern thimj f'W.tjifjl'uturiA.it U clear that we u.ust try.,i tkftxancasu»e6..,eveu ..though they b® arc unt warranted by the.-lettor ,of s itution. l^u-s^ -disloyal" distarb- ers tactile peace must-be U'atlg to feel the strdng arm nf,the "(loverniiieut. The lives of‘‘•loyal” uieu alii wholly unsafe ill Alaska These nSdnigfit assassinations prove conclu sively that the Knklux^rc turist'dtqnidglily oiganixedthere, ft.'isBecause of tlio iu as foihake it produce as much as 3 or 4; that tense btttrddwith -.Vliich ever j rebel Child: is;t! e true potiev. -Therein lies, also, the so- res-irds the people of i the,'Nofthe'.ii 'States ..xtv-rt... (X- ....I:**...’. - • • - 1 r -.1 ^4 v .,. „ UJ Jwc a go/efnta«u?f' aod’ ‘every heart Ts tjir-ibbing with affStWy'HtWtftr'The. uational life.’* ,Iott : ihd‘ 1 PTbffdbhl'cfhVn,' 'send' to Alaska men •SwlieSc vefy'names .shall * mean vengi'anCe—deep:' tcfribFe and ill rest 'effect ive veiigeance '' Le't ushavo “tlib peace (which'is stirc to -follow the sword.” 'As there * is did. (Mver' iV^ro inlthc co.nitt p*, if .wdijd*Pi!'its8iii'| t ffio'tii ; liffi'ofBtitIcr W"ex,- pcei’hini flrgdL A's'ftere »•■<! ncr newspapers rtliifeh"Wvc : 'l(’3rnca tlie art oftreatiug the |efiSii ; ofhriitjijir'hi(d r eYh.msteil army by 5ve tSriick:ifs r nuniBirs as‘ ah’ achievement itnkiDg with tiie’rendwn"d victories bf the world, of cdurse SIttridah would decline the task of reconstructing Alaska. Thereare no 9oods in which to take shelter from masked. TOtferies,' nor are there any railway * trains in .wttifchthr retreat from thelp, acd ' tleic furtiwe eturtiot rfvail ourselves of the exper- IrttVAfllltr aYaU A!* * MlllACO J/OltftU aa'ff _ _ iSrAlpdii'*4bb l - lfuiifatlily ol * otfr planting l ris i pbssib!c. The young pjaqts.tyjl^ ^iiatio'n. ' But there arg'Ttbcr Iftytil nien wh6 then have both a mellow and rl«nj bod. siI) g)sall*"i«ejiofi4 caJFbf thc*Pfcs- .*--| jilciii; ainl tfn le‘rthfce!tiri |: re6'Jhstr‘-elioo of Dancing the Death Cotillon tn the Air. A lady, by tbe name of Mrs, Boacb, was- recently murdered in the cjuuty of Austiu: Texas; She was sitting in 'her chamber, sewing, when some unknown person .fired throulfo -*tfce window, 'killing 1 her Instiefl^- The murder created the wildest excitement in the viiinity, add every effort was made to discover the perpetrator. Suspicion fell upon a young man whose suit to Mrs. K.'s daughter had beeu rejected, and lie was ar rest'd. A remafkable circumstance fixed the crime upon him. In Ins pocket was found a copy oft ie NaiV Or'eaus Built tin, from which a piece 1 ad beeu torn. Q;j the floor of the room-m which -M rs. Roach wus shot, a piece of paper was picked up, scorch ed and discolored by powder, which pre fitted to the torn place in the .-paper. Make, the beds loir, as the only pbiects sired irrfifopaf thfi ^l»g abov^i^t^rji wet freatner, and to prevrsut its being cover ed up at first, wort ing. l’reparq._at ogee s,.me.goodsf£apkj> .Jl Bed out a plenty of Sweet Potatoes, 'un’t forget that where the seasons a re d° rt ; potatpCi early £ j'rtu were going to make a hot bed—digout a foot oi so of ground ; gnUaiaawxuizturp uf frisk stab'e manure aud leaves, and a ltyer of good earth upon this, pl&'t* t thc "potatoes—end next to vine slightly - raised. The heat «P f Wlfe*fAMantiiig ma- out atffiAkt fiv€*ffitsli(!lS w|e4atoes for every acre to be planted. We would earnestly jrge upon ur rt aders i ucretiffit! '(KlchD™- ’ to this valuable crop._ For a general crop, and 'variety equals the old-fashioned yeliojv yap). . For early fall (JI <1 Sfifhrah aiiu Ilayti yam may be used.—Southern l'n ’firiiibr,' ibr'Al-ircfi. srf ylbrto * "A •♦TTsalao 1 Some.-bigblj interesting;.iiiformaGou in relit for, ' - - luisuauHj;. luiur liiuiiuu iu j - f ~ * > -- pMiluctiou nut] manufacture ilauiilfcori, of Maryland, seated. * * ' ~ T * IJiiusE.— Mississippi bill p stpoued until Assoeiifit-u- of Cotton Manufacturers and ,1’fojitnrs. L,..:. „v. -I sistr. ■ A.--*.. : At the present time it appears ■ that thu nuuibtr ,ol' : cotton milD in the Northern Slates,is Ofid. rucuitig -6,339,020 spindles.' aud consuming., annually';.. 383,932.021 pounds of the, ofi* ~ ads of the raw f|yfopal u In the South. States there ate but 86 mills, running — i operation in the year 1860, there jife’sonic oue Hi' dred Je'wer running now'thaii then. Buring the last Year the total cb'usnmp tioiit-f cotton, ft A rtiauuf-icturiiig purpotesl . - tb( i was 460,000,000-pounds. At thti usual r-stiuuite of400 pouiids to tlie bale, L.425,- .knniu^TUJt .J. -'.i.i. j* .j _ ‘.i 000 bales-were ctiusuiiicd, or ah lot one half tWwhoIc iTodnction of the United States. \ Tbe aggregafe consumption in 1868,‘iti Up Kurope and America combined, wits 2,054, 105,000 pounds, against 1.976,320,000 pounds in 1858. and 2,284,901,000 pounds in 1959. Since the first of January of the present year, the receipts of cotton in the ci'y of Nitw Orleans have already* exceeded the whole receipts of 1867. and 1868. U to the first of September, 1868, in that ci 669,000 bab*s had .been receivedup the fir**t of March of the preseut year, 671 000 bales have been received: The total ' receipts of* all' the Southern ports; however, since the beginning * of * the year, are estimated as about equal to those i>f last season; New Orleans running up her large amount by reason * of the gTeat success of the planters who cultivate cotton :in the region adjiccht to her ‘ poit- Last season the cotton crop in -the Mississippi Valley was very light; this year it is cor respondingly heavy. Uuless some untimely disaster befall, it s almost eertaiu that the total yield of the-Valley this season will reach 900.000 i bales, which: at > average rates, will . be worth, t in money,rthe large suia of $90,000,000.. It is .estimated that the product of the whole ‘‘outtiwill exceed, in money value, S?00,000,000. Pour military district in the far Northwest They, shoule’ be summon :d at once to the -task, and instructed to act as “the necessities ilStStt/nny suggest.” The “will of the loyal men'is'thc ffiw of this lard,’’ aud it impe'rtffdsly'de[n!iflds th'at GeaeiM Grant .fotll'fiVonce begirt tdifi’busiifeks'of restoring <Se CSfluStHuKdaiin' Alli'ska, By ippoi: miliL-My^lriljj’giJltijr'dut'Wderai voi els,' Cooking I ,b.*vve learncd much in the half , dozen years since I have assumed the responsibil: ity of : being; uiy own. housekeeper, as to the Mb WQdeqi\boib,ng.*,h»uia-, v6 *y well that it was spoiling a good, ham ever to fry it when it ,cap be , boiled- But found there were ways of boiling a .whole ham so as to rpin it;and this is the way ; liow I now boil it: If .il be a ’ Maryland . or Virginia ham, .pr.any one rather.. old or hard it should te, a- aked over night in pleLty.uf wafer, then put into a, suitable cooking pot.of cold ,Water, which-shoqld .be raised to a gentle boil-or rather siiumergtnd this should bo .continued for fifteen minutes for every pound wejght qf the ham. . Then take out, rcniorej.tta.slhiuo uod. .dust over plentifully of bread crumbs aud set in the oycu to bake from fifteen to.thirty minutes. A ham cooked 'in tbis way liould be .very tender, j»py and of gfefiayw, provided was originally good.—[Germantown Tele- rapb. the «re will brin-Uten. forward rapidly. Bed £ t ^S e ^many of our citi teqA^hgt, at.n.weddtng, which was sol- W^tiijpd noqr llustyhut, Georgia, some time in 1843, that tiie brbde’vffiitber,was . killed; in a (iifficulty,jfitlj^jie.brother of. her,hus band. - This occurrence is, pcrlup.--, brought foo readily to the minds of iraqy of our readers. ' It Is, to t'.-Oie acquainted with the circumstances,.known that the bridq fit bat a^ileVr.h^'tfts a^effijtedlto kilj'ber, hus- band.;with apistd, The wife aqd Imsband parleffi, ,Slie weni to'a'u iritcri-ir town iu /i* ■_ - ■ j *„*:t rtv.* _ i confirmation of tbe : r su8pieiou3.iuducoj- '*' 0 J^, 0 ® ct: *. , the neighbors to wioort the -*onng man to a neighboring gro* e, where lie was soan put- to dancing the c jatb cotillon in the air— Excfuntr/K.. of bis • be people ol Georgia, and, especially " ' iess ,J * Georgia should ventilate this' 1‘il.nuy, and thereby prevent susceptible T-ople all over the country fiotn being mis- , •' t '“ : iabricatiiins of ihe assassin Bul lock and his cowardly conspirators 1UE kVMIHEssio.VAL does not ,-ti Kt-KcrioN.—It •‘ipcar w ha: beiame' of the bil I -■ bj onr Legislature to bring ou an election of members to (’ next. ; IThe says. We learn from ageotli near the village, that. pow prevailing in Sandersville, and which has so far,,baffled the skill of the medical fraternity there. From Sunday morning-to 'Tuesday oven •lug. we learn, there: were seVotr death's in the village, all children. 1 -The * doctors say that the disease is an * inflamation of the membrane covering the brain, the symp- tons resembling: very much those observed in co gectjvp chills. The attack usually begins with a feellug of dull .pain or numb ness iu -the -arms lower limbs,quid, iq a few . a .* B . “ 0 ^. Augusta C/tmni'-le & Sentinel n, to join Blodgett and otbersTo vor .to politically wrairemoateHxcc ley Jlili. probpbly, begin;__ „ _ ““ “ -bliRfyr’so called; id" tEe declared that if adopted, it bad to be by tbe-rLfomocrnticirfai^jrrll adopted byrtib DSL) dtiairsIoLth bollock, leavi ongress in May It has probably been pocketed by hours the disease rnns its Courte.*' * L) nearly every case death has ensued rapid ly. y< 5 i> : ig matters in gtalu tjinj. The legislature should have passed the torlt iii the session, thereby securing representation to the State in the Mareh -"'n "I the forty-first Cougress: But tr die delay, it now makes no difference , r the ffin has been carried or lost. If • ' ect '"embers in May, Congress ill . \ ‘^j'mrned long before they coaid vl 'e their commission; consequently . c * cou ^ u<| t take, their seats ui r Ihe Ovnstitntiru provided ^s"ar election on thu first Wednesday "“^5 f! 1 ! M° ^} we ' all necessity lor a special election spring has bet*u dispensed with. So . Vilmcmofi may possrna tteir^sdiKiu pa- **’ ar "^ ^ 14 planters and their hands W|: h their.crops withoutfo-esouLin- aptiou. We shall have enough time tj atestai,fs c _ jssrisen,. lAIWk ibrrkabgffiSdiAi** 8 in h “ Mr^ 0B 1» D “ ^rtffioitee, pbliSfo-i a * 4 K »4»«> « K 4. f* W Itfleld. ffPihft * mrant5 .“S 10 tlle aggreg?be to thirty rtous- and acre* ofr^d^ormuc to4 qer_ -3aii3iSiJ ‘10*3. in this city on Wednesday ay last. H e wns ra ; 8( yj ; n Boup. ntneky, weighs 4,540 pounds ' length, and 11 feet 'in ^•nim'ul offihe proportions vital (oral We understand 1 to tho World’s Fair. Iu one ease reported to us,two little girls, a ed nine and twelve years, daughters of our esteginfid friend, Dr.. BrahflyV .spent Tuesday morning at school, returned to- dinner apparently* well, and immediately after dinner were taken sqdde nly^ind;_d.i(ffi before night. *Df. B. is a leading physician himself, a man of great skill > n liis pr fes- sion, and all was done for the little sufferers that hnman skill could devise. On the same day a colored boewys taken and died es sodrWWJ CjP| |»y^V thre two , pf thrf lrite Kf Kelley were seized and m as suddenly, and also a.child of Mark Ncw- nau, Fsq. - .^iOaS QfeA 3TG0« Unknown Heirs. The following article we copy from the Wrekly j5yw’W/ ! »S»l ) Usbedaj^ W*oo l ^^- as, thinking it rnlglrt. interert “and perhaps be of advantage to some of onr readers: UnkMOWIJ H«ias.-vAIexan.der loch, General Gaud t A and acres and with Travis at tho A}«JJ)Q ; Mr- Mc Culloch is desirous of pommfinipating with these parties, but- knows not jir)}0 -or where they aro.” Can’t Vote for the Negro. It appeals there is a general balk amou; e white Radicals of Virginia at the nomi nation of Harris, a negro, for Lieut. Gov ernor of Virginia.’ Even the principal newspaper organ of the Radicals la Vir ginia, the” Lynchhurg Presk, refuses to abide by tbat tiomlnation, and tells ti e co- gro lladiealo, “the while people of the North or Soath 1 will not vote tor colored people to fill lrigh' offices itnless 'no compe tent whites can be found to fill them.” And further: “We accord to yon equal legal rights, saeh as we have now or expect to,enjoy. Can you ask mo e than this? Surely riot, ifyou are rejisonable;’' right to vol [eli sou entcrerl the. army .. qVnd followed" t^e The Legislature had unseated colored ion for ineligibilily'.’ anil’ flic' ‘governor rs of Dick.liyl-i|, Mfgruder, and of the nbblc'chicftairis wbo comutand- “‘“ilitx n..ie * ' the Gon'fei banqel other \ r . , ctLthe'spTdiers aixu|hd the G / q|C | . . , IVftc'r tjfe'.wiir'thdyoung man. wandered, about th'rough the Gulf' States,' apd ■finally Weated in Tex:.swhfre his tatbers former wffti lived. .She bad. resumed bar Htaidpn borne and'tvisHbri'pi^prietrCss' trf if itngb afnd we 1-phjring hotelwhere she bad. accu mulated an in mense fortune. Arriving at the villflfgc, fhe ‘youftg tuaU ‘stopped' Si thfi’ and 1 was wefi'pTdTided'for bj* the'eh ! isitiO irintthn'*; - Nt:ifchf<r ‘knew the re- Passjj AuRunr.—A Wooden Wed (Hug-Marrying a bloekhaad.—Citizen. A Golden, Wedding—• Marrying for mon ey.—[Ehnira, Gazette, A Crystal Wedding—Marrying a “glass eye.”—[Sfiraquse.Carrier. ... -. : A Tin: Wedding—Marrying a milk-maid. * f* : b *>.-<’t i*.:.l> [Auburn.Afar*. A Paper Wedding—Marryior an editor. 1 J* : ;[Jtham Democrat. ,|A Silver Wedding—Jlarryiug an old maid of sixty.— Hritw/y Democrat. .. .*> An.Iroo: Wedding—Marryiogabbck- smith.—Bnnidon Republican. . A Linen Wedding—Marrying a Laand- ress.^-i.QSjifcwi.:,! -wrd id, fw - A Bray-xen Wedding—Marrying any japkgflj \yho spends histime writing '' paragraphs like thc above,—fifqiiYe fn- bir.lf. I, ... ., Tho Last Wedding— Morryi ig the Golf Nor tfiat penned4he last paragraph. ■_ House and Seuate, bold! toe fifteenth amendment \ spite of the fillibustcriug of the Bullock Re- publieaut. I k> SI < >.-t*«*> lf,1 Had the Republicans of the Houfe r as Well as'tbe,Senatevlcpins qpliig.jt.' #«ily Spirit to the question, it would have carried- both Houses by nearly, i/^op L quitq p., tv^ thirds (iofo.. There was no'time, wl fifteenth Aancndmenfwasup. whpn a-griod' part of the Democrat wpre ^ot^ ready to jqip tbe J Ifej)ubIican parly iu’pasling'it. Ti ^ ,was daleated.'hy Rj*tR<Mj*J)«|nocia$-audi;' o,tishig 'ma'tt-hn*; - Neither knew the re. latiou trf‘<tfce , t >“ the other, and although there was a vast difference in tbeir ages— he but a 'striplifife. 'and she a ‘ comely, well preserved ‘wfimtYn ‘ofthditrly forty—an inti macy dpWhghij/Tlctififott thelnfvhichripeii ^Unto affection, aud resulted in tho prop’ 1 ' sTtion by the young man of marriage, li *,was accepted, andiu'it few days the quiet Hotel was.tlio. scene p^v^ljgegcvelfy. Tht th'fi'soIejmfijyeddihgnrremgDy united a man itai the father—Ns motjier, QSt., - .rJii' / ln< r '*! - Bullock Republicans. Extremes Mei;* : ' -•' 9L Blodgett and bis Committee* . We learned from rohabje authority.whifo Hn WaBMogtop-ffiaJhrhen Blodgett apd hands anti made comiroi oimron cause ^n Both rejoice^ aquairyTogethej if its fall. Scott announced in uis'placc; while a vote his Coinffritteefiallej ipon Prerident Gfaiil v. Blpdgfitt,* whtf'was'ipoLegmira,' was*, nbb'ut 1 to fca<f4is Speecbjwhen bn whkinteTruptefi in i«piy. li'yoh 1 hafi-a OMt imeech to onto, rtnay-Kavo;tiffie to'heilr yriu: btifif fi©*Tber Chicago Times estimajfoof the*S6tf Secrtiffiry hf.Wapf‘“Mr.. Rawlins jVas a iJemtjcraticTlawyer- M Galena it the outbreak of . the war, tmd is jaid/by :Jjo» wb' erntio op'fiilons on all questions .hut Tccop- l strnction.’ But he is probably moreMiepo- t to the fortunes of Grant. itj_Whi hi We hoge tfie uqknown_, r Jiepa of these fillipp lipfoes mpy be found Happy Arkansas,- Thg carpet-bagger acting Governor of Aftansas, has removed martial law from all the counties in , '” ,f State, Jour. mato,! Brian long We leara that, this rather dlsconcer- fed -Mr. Blpdgett, butin.,an; embarrassed mannerrpa^Rffipieeq tffiroRgb.' -ftfttr, lie had ,cpncluded| the, Presidtdt asked him ■ >hdt.hg)wantgfi,o: Ttef»qfiWM< was, ‘fW.e ^an't protection ;.foE. qbe-., loyal, .people of ’; {fiso! jy^.dent,is.naid.. to have . ia-4 op shall have all tfie protep-: tion the law.givesyon; I expect to exe cute tho, law.” , After-which Blodgett and <&i*parj,y retired with mjnds. very, poorly nfodo up q^toiwhe^Rriprt not #py tbifli moved a'peg toward nnrpco»gfo*upting'. -the •State;—At. Era. 1 r. »*»^.ti ':<■ «.rr; "eprThe'New "Work-World; of the 9th, baa. the following •■Itawn for the day,” which is rather heavy'on‘Stewart: ; A’ certain ruler was asked b ip deemed people to sit in -the repceipt of custom. But o r bad. of; tlii Scribes and Pharisees said by the chief Or tho * “'* ” tom. 'But unto him customs.” SiNouirAR 'AcaiDENT.—Mr. James H, Gough, tot: Jasper: county, MiSsippi, was instantly killed a few days ago- by the ex plosion of a mill stone. He was feeding the hopper wfien the stone burst into numberless pieces,-one fragment striking.him On the forehead and prod ueing ins tap tan eons dca t b. n@_Eycry .fireman in Chicago has bis life'insured for wo thousand dollars.! at. the expense of the' merchants of that "'' that the poor fellows who were few days ago left some*'prBvii families. P l »“-*** 1 ^ * n^cui nvf m f't y OgLJt 'hto been found out that the secret of making sugar from sorghum ‘juice ip ip Scraps from Prentice. e masses of the Radicals are .' not quite equal to' Grant, bat they arb all .tbs while approaching him. »5?*If in the filling of the offices Presi dent Grani's relative:.fall sbort.oan't Colfax bad htti"ftir ' J5STPresident Grant’s nppbintniiuffi niaj be expected to increase rapidly. We sefi tbatl they are all in a family way. idct* Hamilton, formerly Sec retary of the Treasury, has tho honor of being grandfather to "Hamilton Fish, the present’.Igecretary bf State. BO^What Andy Johnson did—got Murid out of Dry, Tortugas. H®*It your name is Grant, increase and; multiply with all your might, for per sons of your name are in immense de mand, . Jffl-the editor of the Atlanta New E;*a is a raging “Bard,” and his paper is his i& If the 'coming man and the ooming “"lan eone at the same time, something come otiUT** WimbneL. Washington-, March 25.—Senate.— after the morning hour, . .. . _ The Rceoustruction Committee hail ‘Utefitiug. The Louisiana election case was heard. .No action. - In an absolutely authenticated interview between Graukaud .the.^Mississippi deiega- - in t' s nsststance in.passing those hteh tried his leader,!. the best -Mid - the pending.bar,Grant doubts whether the bill will restore : peaee to Mississippi *' Urant-favura appointments by Governors with usual mission tution with seperate vote ou objertiouable Tfeaturts. some of which he says’ pil'h- ably would, and perhaps should he defeat ed. Mr. Johnsons physMau_loft,for Greeu- ville in response to a dispitch announcing Johnson’s dangerons sickness. 's wives have r-ached Chicago, overnor of New Jctsey, in his mes- sage armies against ratification. Rhode Island postponed action; Indiana returns opponents iu special election. The appointment of Ge office, under the present Vcdci tion, and his acceptance of the will ju t surprise anjbrdy They may pain, mortify, whii, for four years of men’s souls, fought and regarded him as brivest and a-d true men whaled ~ 3*4, .. in.imperishnhle cbaract rs, among the records of military fame and glory. Ihe Sfint 1 .. and the Southern' soldiefs,* were proud of Lotigstre4. They It'd im less faith in his fidelity and honor than they hadin liis capacity as a. soldier. lEhejJ gave him every honor.it was io tltficpowy to bestow, anti," greatest and most prey of all, they gave him tlteir'giatitud deuce and" aff»cti»n. ‘ In tlie hour of their disfiress tt nl atiou, - hen, having laid down tltei tlioy complied, in good -fofHt—wito die Congressional. Washington; Mareh 26 —Senate.. An effort was made to take up Memphis K1 Faso Railroad bill -otid foil ed. A bil! removing the disabilities of Joe. ill Taylor,of Montgomery county, Virgiuia. A bill enforcing the Convention of July 7th, 1868, with Mexico passed. Discussed the currency bill* without ac tion until Executive session: Adjourned till monday. House —The Commit!® on Foreign Af fairs reported.a-resolution declaring sympa thy with the people of Cuba in their efforts to secure tlieirindepaudencc and establish Republican government. Also reports tbe former resolution, au thorizing the President to recognize. Cuba was. recommitted and oadered to be print ed. The Teunre-of-Officc bill was resumed, and alter long and demoralizing debate the motion to concur iutbe Senate amendments was defeated, by a vote of 70 to 99. The bill goes backio.the -Senate as a peal. Adjourned till; Monday. A full Cabinet present; several nomina tions were made, none affecting the South Orders we issued reducing the force at Ar senals. * Admiral Hoff reports all .|uiet iu the vicinity of Havanas. Raining all Ray.. . The Seuate confirmed all recent nomi nations, except Longstreet and Enomoser, of Louisiana, Plump for Havanna. Tbe following nominations have been made: James A. Cooper, Collector of the second Tennessee District; Isaac J.; Young, as Coileetor of thefourth Tennessee Dis trict; Julia P*. Hi Wollolk. Postmistress at Jackson Tennessee; Jos. T. Smith, Collec tor of the second District of. Mississippi, and qcite a Dumber of Northern nointna. tions. The Executive session confirmed Ban croft Davis as Assistant Secretary of State, and James H. Casey Collector of Customs of New Orleans. Delano has appointed Edward W. Bar ber, for several -years Reading Clerk of the House, as Supervisor of Revenue in Mich igan.- The Senate confirmed all tho recent nominations except Longstreet and Enomo ser of Louisiana, and Plumb for- Havanna. Washington, March 27.—The Recon f traction Com nit tee to-day considered the ease of Geoi gta, and. will consider Texas on Tuesday. . The indications are. that the House will adhere to the absolute repeal of the.Ten are of-Office. . Neither’ House js ip session to day. The revolutionary envoy Semns repre sents that the Cuban 'patriots have twenty- fivc thousand men u nder.ai.ms and wuld have many more if they were able to pro- vede arms. _ .Grant, is indisposed aud received no ydsi- tois to-day. ‘ Hen Ames has,been appointed Commis sion of Bureau for Jlissisipni, qqd Reynolds for Texas. . ■ , . _ . Assistant Seerotary of the Treasurey, Richardson, was instal'etl to-day. . Washington, March 27.—‘In audience with a mixdd delegation of Republicans and conservatives, yesterday, President Grant reiterated his opposition to the pending Mississippi hill. Weather delightful. Mnsterly inactivity * regarding'Cuban af fairs is the present policy here. " Grant favors the policy regarding Mis- mstippi, similar to that proposed by the committeeof Uine'for Virginia. s., Mareh 26.—Evc- Johnson very much Gai ning.—. better, !. >t v w . Savannah, Mareh 20.—Judge Sohley rendered hb decision this morning in the jtn> warranto case of Clements ts. White, that negroes were.ineligible to office in ie State of Georgia, quoting from the.Con- stitutioa -of, the United, States aud.the Code of Georgia referin j to aliens. Washington. March 28—la audiencs with n talxcd- defogatioii of Republicans and Conservatives yesterday, President Grant reiterated hu opposition to the ndingfillsslsslppi bill. Weather delightful. Masterly inactivity regarding Cuban affairs in the present policy here. Grunt favors the policy regarding Missis- similar to-that proposed by the com- ofnjnofof Virginia. Markets..; - ; .... , New York, March 27. —Flour firm and .active. Wheat 2a3c better. Corn drooping. Pork steady, new mess 31 30. Stejm lard dull, 13j. Cotton quiet at 231a29. Tur pentine stcafiyat 30. Rosin 3 4.—Freights QUicfc. * V . * * ‘ Stocks dull and unsettled. Money 7. Sterling 8j. Gold 1 3H. 62’s 181. North Carolina’s 61J; new 67J. Virginiacx-con- pons, 661; new 64}. Louisiana, old 72} Le. vecs f,S;. East congratulate the Republicans ‘ of Georgia upon the defeat of the XYth Amendment. Compliments to oqr Radical legislators necessitate contempt for Demo cratic renegades.— OomtitvBouahrt, Soldier i vs. Negro;—Ah ex-Federal tain and a buck negro, named Wilder, re candidates for the Columbia (S. C.) ' iffice, with the chances in favor of the allot- I Railroad. postoi atter AND GEOI ter A AS MASI) FACTUR E. ork Woibl: “If there is •aueli of industry in which the ou-!it naturally to evince more energy, activity and expansion than in'any other, it is eottou treanufattures; yet the total atuouut of capital iu that branch of industry, in 135-5. tra.s thirty-two millions, pqrtuuities^ various ways, during that sos mill an increase is it is so, tj>. I i that terns i f their surrender, and asked nothing hnt justice and the respeet due gallantry and endurance, which, though tin- SMcc -ssl’ul, were unsarpassed, th- y had .. a ri. ht to expect that those whom they, hsd t usted and honored, in the zenitb of their power, would stand by them iu their ".is- fortune, and try at least to shield them from the harsh, unjust aed * degrading terms which cruel tyranny exacted from gallon*, helplcssut-ss. They.had a richt to expect _Longstrect should defend them in peace as he did in war, and that the Soldier who iron’d have braved ten thousand deaths rather than make a disgraceful surrender iu the face of the enemy, would rather per T ish from want than surrender to the op pressors';! his country. It was hard to make the Southern ; pe pic believe that Ldugstr&et would desert them. They were astonished and'hurt by his letter recommeoding submission, to ail the Radical exactions, and approving those exactions as just and proper. .They , con demned his'"bourse, bill tiiore in' sorrow than in anger, still clmgihg to the; belief that Longstreet might err in itidgnwntobut that his motives were • disinterested and pare This belief. is now no longer possi ble* We are cbliged to break our idol, and acknowledge that it is false and unworthy, lie has received the wages of bis desertion, and occupies the unenviable position of be ing the only preminent Confederate officer who has asked or would accept office. There are hundreds, nay thousands, perhaps, of miserable renegades wbo are parading their perjured recreancy as their claim for re ward, but they never were prominent, and even in infamy their obscurity and mean ness protect them from public indignation. [Augusta. Prttt. Fatal Affray at Appling, Colombia County. A correspondent of the Chronicle Jb Sen tinel, writing from - Appling,* March 53, gives tbe following particulars of a most distressing tragedy. He says: A fatal -nd most Qqfortnoate tragedy occurred here yesterday afternoon, about four o’clock, io which Mr. Lycurs os Reese was shot and killed by Robert Hardin, on the public square, within a few rods of the Court House, when the Court was in ses sion. As tbe case will to-day undergo ju dicial investigation, 1 refrain from giving any of the' particulars further than to say that the killing grew out of a drunken brawl, in which these two meo became en tangled without tbe slightest ill-feeling to ward each other. Indeed, it is said, they were very particular friends, and had. been for along time. Hardin was sworn in tbe morning as a member of the Grand ury, and Reese tis a member of tbe speoial jury, and both had just left tire Court room dar ing a pause in .the business to take sotfie refreshments, when tbe collision took place, and Reese fell Just as the pistol was fired the Sheriff was calling Reese into court, to try a speoial case on wHich he bad been se lected. Both of them were gentlemen of good standing: in the county—both heads of families. Reese leaves a. wife and nine children. What most have been the agony of this poor woman and her little house hold when the husband and father, who had left them in the morning foil of life and vigor, was brought home to them in the afternoon locked in tbe cold and ghast ly embrace of death. Hardin was arresud and committed immediately to jail, where he is not. waitng an investigation,* which will be had to day- ; Since tire above was in type.'we learn that Hardin has been acquitted- Counterfeiters Arrested.—Monday evening, three men, named Pankey,* Martin and Heppey, were arrested on the charge of passing counterfeit greenbacks. Panky and Martin have been about this city for several years, dealing in tobacco. Heppey, it appears, staid abont Macon- They were suspected for a long time, and finally en trapped by a detective, who managed, while receiving from them some 82.050 of the “queer,” to arrest one of the parties, and finally the others. Marlin* and Pankcy were examined before United States Com- missioner Smith on yesterday and day be fore, and committed. Heppey, we. learn, wiR be examined today. The Martin allu- ded.to is W: A. • Martin tobacco trader from North Carolina, and should not be confounded with-ah excellent gentleman bearing that name.—Atlanta Omrlitution. 25th. - - Gospel Truth. The Union Springs Timer utters sound truth in the following: “One thing is ccrtai to mathematical demonstration. The planter who exhausts his means and labor to make only cotton runs all risk. Ho may have a short crop, whije others areblcsscd with large yields, and thus be forced to take a low price. He may'then have to pay out of the disappoint edly small amount realized from the sals of his cotton speculativelv high prices for.corn and bacon, without which he cannot live. The chances will then be that he falls in debt. On the other hand, the farmer who raises plenty of corn andhis own meat, is perfectly cafe, even if the cotton proves a miserable failure. He can live He is free of debt and all the harrasstnenfo which accompany R. Jt will bp moat happy if this comity, next fall, can boast that she has her own food at home; it will be little less than criminal, if by neglecting the grain and vegetable crops, she is found dependent “ foreign supplies. The Convention that met In GainsTille the I9th, withdrew the name of Col. TiYier Boyd, as Demooratio candidate for Congress in the Sixth District, and nomana- ted Hon. F. W. Adams, of Athens. course accordingly. There are few things less impropable. than that Southern market* will, at a not very distant day, be wholly supplied by Southern nulls; not by East ern ones as heretefore'and now. ■ -‘But the lack of progress' in cottons was no greater than that noticeable in paper, iron, leather and the fisheries.” I Adds, tho Tribune : This is what we have all along urged ; yet to the Worl/l it seems a new revelation. Massachusetts has “got Ijar grotfth' n -in manufactures; it is now the tarn cf those States Which have cheaper Labor, cheaper Coal, and an immensity of unused Water-Power. The Spragues are probably'the most extensive and successful cotton manufacturers in America, and they have lately built -or projected three vast n_w establishments : one in Connection’.; a second in Maine;-the third in-South Caro lina.* Massattuseetls. as the World shows, has scarcely extended her manufactures since l855; nieantiiue, those,of tire Wert ; have quadrupled. We believe there are, to day, more woolen factories On the Missis sippi and its^ tributaries than cast of the Delaware; if not, there soon will be. It is Missouri, not Pennsylvania, which is to be most signally benefitted in the. next decade by Protection to Iron. . Massachusetts fought Protection vehemently down to 1825; andshe can now do-withont it far better than Georgia can; .far her mills are. built and stocked with firstrate machinery, which . Georgia sorely needs. But Protection has done her excellent service; and wc trust she will help us to diffuse’ its blessings to States which slavery or lack of pop ulation has hitherto rendered incapable of profiting by its benignant influences. “Let the toast go ronnd. ’ Mr. Sprague said the other day in a speech in the Senate : “A few weeks since, in order to under stand something of tbe condition of the. South, I visited Georgia, and naturally was invited to inspect a cotton mill. In the city of A ngnsla, G a., is a cotton milt that today will surpass and docs surpass, in the success of its operations, the best one in New England; and the secret of that suc cess lies iu the turn of one roll where the - cotton is delivered on the spindle, it turning at one hundred and fifteen turns to the minute, where others in New England; or eyec by the side of it, tarn ninety or one hundred.,’ The Cowr of a Cotton Factory.—The following estimates are furnished by Mr. Montgomery, of New York, of tho cost of machinery for a cotton factory of moderate capacity, proposed *to he built in Jefferson, Louisiana: cost of 1000 ‘ring” spindles and Prep aration—machinery. 1 Mason’s whipper, 1 Picker and tapper, 4 Double doffin cards, 1 Drawing frame, three heads, 1 Snubber, 36 spindles, 1 Fly frame, 48 spindles, 1000 Ring spindles, ak 84 each,. 2 Reels, 835 each,. ■ ,..* 1 Bnildiog press, 1 Baling press, > 75 250 * 1,000 225 ’ ”m 800 4,000 70 S7.345 FIXTURES.’ ' 4 Sets card clothing, at $60, Cans And bobbins, Shafts, pulleys and bells, '1 Ten-horse power engine, Extra charges for fitting op, 240 200 700 1,200 150 82,540 spin Wi! Total cost of machinery and fixtures,89,485 The above is a detail of the cost of 1,000 lindles and preparation, without looms. r ithout geing into detail, $10 per spindle is a safe calculation. One hundred spin dles is a common estimate per horse power. Twelve looms, with accompanying ma chinery, consumes one horse power. Forty looms should be allowed to 1,000 spindles for spinning medium numbers, say 20s and 30s. Looms cost 865 each. The cost of 1,000 spindles, with prepara tion and weaving machinery, would be as follows: Wr.oleo^t of 1,000 spindles and preparation, (deducting price of reels and bundling press, which are not needed for weav- ing,) is Forty looms, at 865 each, One dresser, One warper, One spooler, Extra charge for steam engine, say, 350 Extra charge for shafts and belts, 250 89,765 2,600 450 100 80 l Total • 818,595 From this detail, it appears that the cost per spindle, with looms, is 813 60, but a safer calculation would be $14 00 per ’ ’le. 1000 spindles, without looms, I would recommend a one-story building, 1O0 feet long and 50 feet wide. For two or three thousand spindles, let the building be two or three stories high, eaoh story tho same in capacity as above recommended. A building at the South, with the same cost of tabor and ma terial, could be erected much cheaper than one adapted to our Northern climate. The return from cotton in well arranged mills is 85 per cent. A loom in fair oper ation will produce 32 yards per day, run ning at 100 picks per minute, and making '**■ tin*; “ " ‘ ' n — —” r* v r*-* *“*““*“o cloth 64 picks or threads of weft per inch. _ _ Nearly Finished.—A telegram from Washington, yesterday, says thereare only eighty two tpi’es to. finish on the Pacific Railroad. ttf»:„ A!l the Postmaster on the line of railroad between Knoxville, Tenn., and Bristol, have been removed. Some of offices are worth six dollars per annum,a arekept intlie hat of tbe Postmaster. A man named Blair, while intoxicated accidentally shot his brother at Reynold*, Taylor oountv, on the 21st. A daughter of Mrs. Land, in Wilcox county , while pushing a log down a steep hill side, fell over and the log craahed her to death.