The Rome weekly courier. (Rome, Ga.) 1860-1887, March 25, 1870, Image 1

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volume xxru Ifltw Conner. “^'v^GRADY, Associate Editor. “ FRIDAY. KATES OF WEEKLY. ... $3 00 1 75 1 00 KATES FOR TRI-WEEKLY. OM J8»r---- «, • Jtontta.. T brte ' $5 00 One ' 2 50 Oil Months... 1 25 Thr “ ^vari'ably’Tn ADVANCE. Tonlube Of Five or more one copy mil be f»; liiheii gratia- y. DWIh'ELL, Proprietor. LEOAL advertisements, ,T ',1 bv Adm-’nistratorn,Electors or Sales of hand US ™ v _ , K . h.M „« 'required by law to be held on .* . . .. mnnlh hpfWPfiD T.n A ““f . Tuesday?u eaca month, between the lhe “'1 in the' orenoon and three in the louri ot ten , t HoIiae in tb e CO nnty in ‘ f K7hepo,*rtyis situated . *h*h thM ti J c5e * salea raust be given 40 days previouB. },'otic«s o a. a pub- ffiiwof the sale of personal^property must ,°„ nke manner, through a public gax- previous to sale day. if l» Hwo/I i f nr dte 10 days Xotice ‘ i estate. Debtors and Creditors of suit t« P? M ‘.?lnyfcations will be made to the Xatirc the papP' seU land must be .-o'ur't of Ordinary for leave .obhshed f f administration. Guar- mnM be pabliahod3bdays-for h -Ltrou Administration, throe months— rat;r;srhot Guardianship, 40 days, enlcsfor the furecloseure of Mortgages must *“ ai'.kerl monthly for four months—for es- ifflSSSt for the full spaec of throe |V. foreomnelling titles Irom Executors or It in Gators *bere bond has been given by idmimstra > . f n ,,p aC n ,(three months. °pSS ™ wm alwa^be continued accord, J „ these, tbe legal requirements, unless oth- rwise ordered, at tbe following RATES. ,, <,i e , ner levy often lines orless $3 00 tf&.^*p«i«y ; 5 » t.t Collector s sales, per levy,.... Citations for letters of Administration 3 00 ritationsforlettersof Guardianship.... 3 00 Notice ot application for disraisaion from Administration ----- Votice Of application for dismission from Guardianship Application to sell land, — — Xotice to Debtors and Creditors, Sale of Land, persquare,■—■ ■■■■■■- * SKe of perishable property, 10 days 4 00 Eitray Notices, fiOdays Foreclosure of Mortgage, per square .... 4 00 A arm adrertising his wife, (in advance) 10 00 Republic to aa absolatedespotism. - If we figbtboldly, and upon-live issues, wa can chief Justice Chase and the next Presi. VNfffloatT^ In closing a lecture recently made before whip the fight, but if we tack oppositionto /nct 0 sin s a lecture, recently matte betore negro suffrage to the banner of the party, ^e Democratic .Association s£Philadelphia, Mr. John Campbell, the y somewhat noted Bookseller and 'Labor. Reformer in that ci- it will require no prophetic ken to foretell' the defeat that awaits ns. “Fll Send some Troops.”—Lie: be nevolence of Ulysses, the C-reat, in dispense ing his military favors over the country is truly remarkable. If a negro in Tennes- see hears the chickens in his coop clucking or flattering at night from some disturbing danse he is immediately (with an utter dis regard of the possibility of minks, or thiev ing darkeys) fancies himself the victim of. a kadclnx, and telegraphs the next day for troops to protect him—Ulysses invariably gratifies him. If the conscience of a Rad ical Judge in Georgia twitches him rather severely he wants protection from imagina ry ku-klux, and wants troops, which Ulyas ses Instantly sends him. ; . If the poor Indian of the prairie, rev- past, lets off an unconscious and innocent war-whoop, troops are sent, and the unfor tunate dreamer, and two hundred of his comrades and children murdered in cold blood. This meddlesome ‘‘troop dispenser” is’ about to meet a troublesome opponent now. ty uttered the' following sentences : “How shall ttfe Democracy poll, on next Presidectal election day, a majority, of this vote ? How shall we bridge tbe "chasm' tnat separates the negro vote from us ?— There is only one architect 1 that can bnild this bridge—there is only one man who can poll this vote, - and that ‘roan is Salmon P. Chase.’' ■ ■ ; . With-this the lecture was concluded IWfiT ' ” . .. --- -- ... . . Tennessee Negroes “Interview” Grant. A lot of negrb loafers fironl around Nash ville aiid Memphis, led byjtwoor three rascally preachers, so-called, land -escorted by -Horace Maynard, who is one ’grade low er even than the ineanest'of them all, called on Grant Thursday. Such a string of lies as they told,'we'‘ha.ve : hardly known equal ed even by the negro Radical loafers, and politicians and ’’ Another Proposed Constitutii AaiENDMENT-i—Tms Jews - Excited.*^ ItT_. . _ * wjl bejecollected thatai .“Christian^ iehn- ... ventioulield lately at Pittsburgh :^als ire- soriber/ r .aaking'fur information concerning I last .three months.’ solved to urge the adoption of an amend- the cultivition of brboni corn- how to save I Xhe EaFiyette,: Ala., Reporter under-l* Waspixotox-, March inent to tnc constitotffln recognizing Chris- »b*nd-p.repai&it lor.marltet^tc.c- Xow.that | jgjjf; n ' al1 nn - t h ft route ahove that l-PadfieRairoad Committee tianity as the fountain and basis of ojur .l»bori moral and - political being. The Jews are, there I: 5,;sSI“ss..s , fi^Sx'SKsrasi*** - i n, journals published in another column. Bat. Wn requires but little labofeomparatively The’Past Grand Worthy Patriarch of longed session over Tenriessee-fhe result not strange to say, while tlie Jewish Times, the andI yields profit much larger than that the Yirginta.Sons of Temperance has just transpired. .a:.; the organ of the liberals, or radical reform- derived .froth many other crops which de- died .of delirium, tremens. -The Judiciary Committee, except 1 . Rice, are Reported fbr tbe Tri-Wwkry ; ri iw.M.eoiJrtss^r* jsccoy arm 1 - iC; ^ ^ ______ !£•—suppresses disorders Mid the assessment ers, is ( violent in tone, hods defiance at the grater expenditure of Force, m'-u.ns I ^ Cincinnati woman has brought suit I unanimo us against. seating Ames as Senator movement and speaks of St. Bartholomew and-time we thinV it is well adapted to the I f or a divorce because her husband neglect-, from:Mississippi. massacres, the Hebrew Leader, which leans condition of our people. It w-now sellmg,I ed io kiis iier before leaving home. Inlthe Senate Kellogg introduced a joint partially to the erthodox side, trcr.ts the m Chicago and elsewhere fiw . The Hon . j. j. Wri „ ht b]ack J ud ,ie of resolution, directing “the Secretary of the matter somewhat-facetiously, and jrather S22Qjierton formside;brnshF,S200 to?250 | nxli"I v nt. ' laugh at the “old ghost i of Puritanism. ' ‘1*® S “P'®“.® Court « f °So“ th Carolina/is a I Treasury, within six mouths to transfer^the Enough is indicated, however, to show that hurl.. Pcnntjlvan.a negro, but is as black a. ope Mint, lands and build.ngsof the c.ty ofNew IFthu^ Pittsburg proposition he persisted in ' The following"directitidd 'wflp <5Smprise I .f?® ^ a c0 oulovr - Orleans. . . _ the conntir may expect serious cornme- ialh^he information soi^ht, by ‘--A; Sub?cri- I The Nashville Banner says mules are, he: London, March 18.—rThc agents ot the In- - ‘ ^ Vgg fa* Ithft overloading the. city tions. ^ . t|i|ieaeherd of tliis State.— eling amid the war-like memories of his Th^y declared that negro men. women and children were being daily shot, hung', drowned, skinned-and burned alive,' cruci fied,-and otherwise put to death all -over Washington March 17.—-HowEv-*— be good.’ ^ffciuigiitiflil'.be 'as fresh .its you I day, and twomore:Wednesday.'“ '. ' I Bcwton v . ____ _ PJaft’ of Virginia, M M inta ■indlancorm be . be^innintt to I »g ^ rraolntion-_requtnng4he .econstruction,<»m.. W^,b^qn > .i tf .d„»fi J bw r (nSs4.it ! iAian tbe jy^^ h ahtioi ,, t ? o jtors.hgrd.lalior,for carry.ng arm. tuttee to'4nqtnro 1Bl ® ^he cpnstitutionality, ; “JtL ’j", \ .1 Dated. Pceh tmwwrwin Ml bW I tairy toJaw. ■: • ’‘i oftho enablingact: of‘Virginia, by^ which 2.Plant the seed in the spring, (not too * State officers, were vacated and the vacan- early,) wheu the ground is "■ warm and in t«isa*a* .-f* < A bjH. distributing arte ar tfcei equivf ept i« ordinance st,-‘ e tp tbe Soathern he from 18(51, to 1865. Passed. Georgia bill resumed. Drake’s amendmen Hocsr —Bills introduced incorporating In- dian territory, and Gulf Railroad and au thorizing water guages on the Mississippi and its tributaries, to protect alluvial lands, and improve navigation. It provides for a regular system of observage*; also to promote commerce and ainity between Mexico add the United States, by encouraging citizens to aid in the developemeht of the country. A resolution wa* introduced that the south and west are first entitled to more eiretUation* The House refused to seoond the question. Referred; and banking currency rules sus pended," and bill appropriating twenty thou sand to the Sisters of Mercy of Charleston; torebuiid.theixOrphan Asylum. Passed. •; Tariff resumed. in session to-night ferde- bate. uunJ mad ns me in fail bloom. 11 rUOVaut SATURDAY MORNING, Mar. 19. muiiknersto the rear—brave MEN TO THE FRONT. The bravest editor is he who dares tell his readers the truth. A cheap reputation for courage and political pluck may be giined by paudering to the jaundiced opin ions of the people, and showering upon their heads torrents of vaunting gasconade and false promises. Mauy Democratic editors have thus be haved in regard to negro suffrage. They tell us that the issue is still unsettled, acd that the people of the North will come to their senses alter awhile, and revoke their late decree. We tell the people to day,and we say it sadly, but firmly, that ne- jro suffrage is a fixed fact—that it cannot bo changed by any party or any men, and that the party that attempts to combat it will meet with disastrous defeat. We have fought it manfully, and have been whipped in the fight—it is childish to grieve over it longer. The Northern people spent three hundred million dol'ars and sacrificed five hundred thousand lives to give the negro these rights, and they will not see them wrested from him. Look for proof of this tithe election in Ohio. When the ques tion of negro suffrage was first proposed, the |*op!c, acting upon the first impulse, re jected it by fifty thousaud majority. The question was put to them again one year afterwards, and they accepted negro suf frage by a decided majority. They canght the wpular infection daring the interreg na between their elections, and yielded to thereigning opinion. We repeat it, then, that negro suffrage is a fixed fact—and as far as thoughtful •ten can see, an imnuitahle fact. As we should drop it fiom our minds, and busy ourselves with thoughts of the future. The journalist, who tells the people that negro question (as far as voting and ™.diug office is concerned) is not settle 1, deceives them. He who tells them that ’ tffbiinous action, they can throw off i 111 nightmare, decoys them with Jted fallacies, to their ruin. He who j s n columns with invectives and lamen- IMou concerning this fatal issue, distracts ! ® from contemplation of more essential utters. We denlon He proposes to send troops to Utah to ernsb ont Mormonism We are not much prophet, bnt we confidently predict a con siderable squabble before many moons have waned. The Mormons will fight with an obstinacy, for the perpetuity of their mor tal luxuries, that we have not • dreamed of. Perched upon an airy crag of the Rocky Mountains, inaccessible to cavalry/ and al most to man, armed with trusty rifles and inspired by the constant plaudits of lond rosy lips, they will worry the“boys in blue” very considerably more than did the' dread ed ku-klux of Chattooga county. Weshould not be surprised if many “old-time rebels of the South, did not, (led by the promise of a Mormon wife, and the chance of a crack at the Yankees) align themselves with the Mormons, and fight as they fongbt when Ashby strode his milk-white horse charger, and the face of Jackson was lit with the light of battle. . Peanut Statesmanship!—One Abbott —carpet-bag Representative from South Carolina, inspired with a frantic desire to benefit his constituents, and iaecure immor tality for himself, petitions Congress to give a tariff protection to the peanut—t,he proud peculiar product of his adopted home.— Give us the protection. We will make the production of the convivial pindar, a huge monopoly—foreign competition being beat off by an enormous tariff, we goober-produc ers of the South can advance the prices of the oleaginous nut to incredible figures, and make the world acknowledge that the Peanut is the prime minister of King Cot ton. The universal peanut once champed by the common jaws of the philogarli; mob will become the dainty luxury of the up per-ten, and the memory, of Abbott em balmed alike in the praises of the pindai monopolists and the curses of the goober- loving newsboys of New York, will be ten derly handed over to immortality. lib s much as any one, tbe ptawof negro suffrage. tggling But it is clamp- “Poa us. and no power available to ns ° ln ^ c fact- It behooves us then waie our lamentations over the ghost of Vnm bestir ourselves lor the com- eoafiict. He who hurries to the field Me is raging, and principle is ; \ °° s “ t for i 'a a braver man than he a js own and weeps upon the quiet d ^‘be issue has been made and «e is more glory to be found-in re * llTe cnem y than shedding the bn e C0! V Be °f a friend. Then 'he rJ e ° f tlie Dem °oracy come fronted not behind them. “ k “ n *=■•- W. JUocombattbe accursed eentralm- ’! P aral Jzios the land, ooaffiat the centralization, of ofW 7: r ’ ena * ) ' es the specnla- ^StreettoshakethemoaVysys- oft he country by their private schemes: rroj f.. 1 t * le ^ ew England States ‘stem ih at a ° ° ate<1 from - a high tariff V J bapoverishes the South and e ave got to combat the cen- of commercial power, whichen- t^cWtsof New York to di ®’ 4 .andwh'I® C ° tt0n pIanter3 of *® tw een Clofr *° causes a pereoaal quarrel ’ s of y d Stewart—the dry goods »arl-e t ofp YOrk ’. tOUDSettle the dr ? ttece , 0 ^ And we mua t com- | tttJ t:r.- i0a of ?°iitioal power ° ar ffestin* eDJamm Batler the arbiter lites the Dlat^: at makeS the Southen > tlal PermU n D88 ° fthe e8laad ®- of a few nl a free State, and place her of tbe military. We must ilxatio” telma ’ ttia a ®®®taod tender.^ that is drifting the The Burden Lifted—Tax Payers Friend.—It is rumored that. Ulysses S. Grant has promised to pay off the National debt from his own pocket. The method he proposes to pursue is this: He has de termined, with a commendable patriotism, to devote one-twentieth of the - value of all the presents he has received in return for official appointments, and is for instance, the house and lot from Borie and the horses from Bonner. Ee will also give five per cent of the money made by showing, “at twenty-five cents ahead, negroes and chil dren half price,” the “remrrkable dog, the only present ever refused by Grant, with a lifelike representation of the eabalastio “C. O. D.’ that accompanied him.” This it is thought will pay the whole debt. He will not contribute any of the money made by himself and Mrs. Grant on the “gold-corner” speculation, that having, as the sagacious Jim Fisk, jr., airily remarked “gone where the woodbine twiaeth. The Festive Sammy, in Clover.— We learn by a letter, that Sammy Bard is perfectly confident that the Senate "ill endorse his nomination as Governor of Idaho. Well let the honest old rogue go in peace. We wish him joy. We can see him now, as on the night of his confirmation, sur rounded by festive friends and flowing bowls, his ruddy face mellowed with champagne and his mild nose tipped with a lively pink, os the convivial old scamp, beaming through wine-dripping eyes,says of himself as Burns said of the famous ‘‘Tarn O’Shanter.” “Kings (hie) arc blest; bnt I (hie) am Glorious Over all tbe (hie) ills, of life v(bic) torious. "* M U The Tennessee by; the Democrats and Kn-Klnx and the law gave them no protection.— Grant replied as follows : ' . A “I regret very rnuoh the condition of the State of things in Tennessee. I will-do my best to check these outrages. Tennessee is a State in the Union, and I have no righ: to take possession of hertorritory by troops. L williake the whole matter in consideration. We have troops to spare, and I will see if l cannot send themtilrough out tile: State, so as'to have a moral effect at least, and also fo’atd the Uni ed States Marshal and his deputies in carrying out the laws of the General Government and the decrees of the United States Courts.— As to the 15th Amendment, I am sure its provisions will be carried out in every State, as. Congress is now engaged in pre paring a law for that purpose. I will cer tainly give this matter due attention, will consult with the Secretary of war and see what cau'be done.” r: > - trarv to law. ’ • i -i-.-ii ^LivEBPoot, Mar. 21.—ShipMicbeal Hutch- >v the Governor. Beck objected good, condition/ I eat corn brought SI On per bushel; fodder I ., 1 . .. f A B 3!Kd'.S«h , dH"iiS f oS saying reconstructed. pel Butler sale vote bera L being required, was adopted stalk of two rows, diagonally across each'Lcracy 0 f West Yirginia to accepV' tfhgro per f/“““f■ ’ other, about two feet from the ground. The suffrage as a fixed fact, and act according “ f f ti freedmen enjoying the brush projects beyond the tow, and is then h v , Frights. j; • cat and.laid on the table thus formfed, to | ’ T . _ B ’_. „ L.L.iT T The President was at the ( How the Wind is Blowing. following wail from the New York Sun (intense Radical) will fall like fragrant mnsic on every siak Southern heart. In short, Gen. Grant has, at the close of his first year, proved so lamentable a fail ure, both as a stateman and a politician, that a politician, that no well-informed and far-seeing Republican contemplates his re- nomination as a possibility j while a large body of the wiser and more cautious mem- en ’ here of the party apprehend that his course most inevitably break it in pieces before the next Presidents! election. Let It break Mr. Dana, let it break, the sooner the better. The Athens, (Tenu.,) Post says.:. /- ^ “A fellow in Washington last week gulp ed one of John Forney’s - artieles on the ‘situation in Tennessee.’ In fifleen minu tes afterwards he commenced dripping lye eqoal to a two-story ash hopper.” Substitute Georgia for Tennessee, and the story would be correctly told by lessen ing the time ten minntes, nnd adding at least two stories to the ash hopper.—Tel. & ffffM. Exciting News From Richmond. .Richmond,-.March 17.—A conflict of authority; between newly appointed city authorities and the old incumbents arisen Mayor Capoon refuses to give np his office to Mayor Ellison who was elected last night by the r city council. The former has been sworn in and 1^0 special constables, in eluding .twenty- colored-men, and the latter has 200 special officers. -The old j police force is divided- equally between the two Mayors. Ellison has possession of the city hall and ail other publid • buildings except the station-house 'which was .held -.by Ca- poon’s party. Capoon wrote to Gov. Walk er stating his position, and asking assistance to maintain his.anthority. Walker replied that Ellison being legally elected under an act of the Legislature, he could not recog nize any one else as mayor; that C-ipoon is incapable of holding office nndbr the law,as he ahendy holds a federal office; that no breach of peace can-oocnr without OapooDS act and that he should resort to peaceful judicial remedy if he wants to test the question of right, and finally that he should obey Ians and sustain the constitutional au thorities. Ex-Gov. Wise, Judge R. W. Hughes andL. T. Chandler, are counsel for Ca- poou, who, with about thirty men is in the lower station bouse, besieged by the Ellison party, who have cut off gas and water, and forbid any provisions to be sent them. A crowd of colored men bought out a bakeshop and commenced throwing bread up to the wiodo vs, but .were driven ofi by special po lice. At dark Mayor Ellison, Chief of po lice and others were arrested by United States Marshal, for haying refused a Rev enue officer permission to see Capoon in his capacity as. United States Commissioner. They were bailed do til to-morrow. A com pany, of troops have been bronght.into the' city, by order of Canby. It is stated that Judge Underwood will arrive - to-morrow, ancLissne injunctions prohibiting Ellison Your Rogue Mr. ’‘Forney not 0.uas —The Augusta Constitutionalist copies this extract from the Washington Chroniole,and in the remarks following, exposes one cf Forney’s unfortunate blunders : “Men who have publicly prayed that the loyal delegations who came to Washington should ‘perish by the wayside’ are to be; forced upon the Republican party m Geor gia by act of Congress. Now, that is richness exemplified. The only man who “publicly prayed that loyal delegations should perish by the wayside”, -table' rows; c is cat acd placed upon waso-tl Sa muel Bard, a nondescript w h o h as. hle.rows ofeorodf. . If.it is easy to see that r Twostock fefiners ; Q California . Lad a I In the Senate ConUing reported, from th " ^ _v__, eeen_ ; “everythmg > turns aad-nothmg e and dare wagon.rj^witjxa .able ■ cn | dispu( • „ to whelher Cashmere . goats or Judiciary Committee, adversely to Ame^-o. played ont I?^re "a mora oS,it ir film KlnniFaiF clinnn AisnietieiF Annet I J 3 (TLa r ... . . - ' . . ... .JLffljfdn. Wtt IB “Ifai ii the Negro.” I '• The New Hampehire Democracy are I mnm on the ‘nigger’ in this eampaighe.They are riding the Laker Reform bobby.— -i JemmU Jomal t r^9 to»!q ■ ' Well, we thin^ itis about time dor the I f, arc 1. _ in Chicago the police force is to be' : im-j authorizing militia, was adopted. The de- 1!®?“°®'®®?” “ nd , th ® ^iV 5 *! 8 . *?°! 49 ^ the ta- proved by the addition of colored citizens.' 1,-0, i,™;., Mtter tke ne ° To :done > attend to the interests eethatJ , A. ■ v ^ d :’*. - of white folks.- self by appointment to the Governorship of Idaho. The loyal "Bar J, in a doable lead- od editorial/made-that prayer, and now we have Forney, dexteriously attributing it te the Kn-klnx-Klan!'; • . U - i ■ 7.°If the brush is large,six inches of stalk A Jnry wa ? appointed, and about1J non-citizenship;. j s «fciy expensive in blood aid treasure! No should bo left to it in cutttng;hnt the small 1 ?:? f yf on fP artook of . tke hMbeettc with Georgia resumed; Mr. -Wilson o ered-an matter wbatreaybe said or tbongfat now of brush much more—say eight.to twelve j '-jj- 0 l f lal Wi ^ celeprated- The jury amendment making the tenure of the? pres- the causes or conduct ofthewar—we claim inches Knives should be procured with dec ' ded m favor of 2° at b ? a vote of e ^ ht lent Legislature date-from January,-’79^- that ^tnegfOihas, been the . pretext for good bandies, and kept .sharp. xo iour. j Schurz fovtired Bingham’s amendment, and cost and more demoraliiatiqn since the war - 8.^Pbri«hing the seed-Sff is the next The Jacksonville Republican says : The Lpoke severally against the proposition to ex- than during the War. We are going to Judge A'ndrews.informs the editor of the 4hit»g.g',A.eylinder ofwood. twelve inches peach crop may turn out not to be entirely tend the teiiure of the Legislature beyond the quofo “!!**■ the Weitzel Letter, for that Augusta Chronicle that he has'.in press, long and ten inches in diameter must be j destroyed after all. Some report a pretty I j e ^j term. -Adjonrnid to Monday " waa the key note of reconstruction'when the “The Reminiscences of an Georgia Eaw- provided. . It,should be ol solid wood. Into good stand left; ifethey do not Jalloffi-The -m. H - . district and mtent 1Mr . w “ ended^nd'Nao satMSiefoijr towfoe* yer.” Itwill be a pamphlet volume of about this iron or.steel spikes should be driven..] ®ro]i was killed lower in the bud than.ever I , * 1 tenths of the people:* owif'NlT _ _ . one hundred-pages, made up of profesgion- two rncliesapart, with three left outside the before known in this section. ’ • ; . - ‘ ’ Head’qis Armies ofU. 8., 1. ~ —w~. ^£rJ?aSSrS.Si^ fc . 9. Sheds must be provided for curing, so The census of South Carolina b com- pcctcd to reach Cape Clear to-day. “ derire to assemble at Richmond and take that the corn can be perfectly protected P^ed- The total population is 661,099, Rxcnnosn, Mar. 18.—'Tins aflernoon^Geh. unenwrea to withdraw the-Yirgjiia trebiis fromthesun and rain. I put my earn in of which 274,961 are white, and 38G,13S I Canby interfered in the municipal troubles, >ud oither■ support from resistance to the racks eight inches apart, leaving abundt-nee hlacx. by sending a guard of soldiers and'rawing GoTermin “^ . , . . offorce for free ventilatmn. Four yoong ladiesand a young man were the siege at fol lower station house, and giv The yield is four hundred ,to one then- 0D Sunday week baptized in Rom River, ing free egress hud ingress to all having hnsi- sand pounds co the acre the latter figure Minnesota, while the thermometer marked „ ess there. This action, he says, has n6 ref- being a very large yield. 12 deg. below zero 1 7. U1H which ease you • will notify them, giving 11 Baffng is done in a hay press. The , . . • . „ ’ ' f™oce.tpthe question of. tiiemayorAty but them reenable time-to leave, and at the brush shonld be laid straight, with care,and . Th ® hl 8 h P nce °/ cora m Tci2S ( scar -® 13 taken KW. 11341 prevention agatnst acts of end of which time arrest ill-who remain.- the bale may bo fastened by wire hoop ln so “® sec£lons a , 2 ppr bushel) will in- disorder or violence- This action is applaud- Allow Judge. CampbelLto see to this, bnt J v3ajnt l~~I it- adt at md author says, is intended more. .“to. collei from hitprofe^ion,material for a book.tha pretending to be one itself.” Curious Report from Utah.—A cor respondent pf the New York Son writes from Salt Lake City, under date of Februa ry 20 : “It has been defiinitelv ascertained that Brigham Young, with several prominent saints, will start for the South early next week, with a large train and camp eqni- poge. It is announced a3 his intention to be gone three months, bnt none 'outside the flock know his purpose or destination, It is strange, to say the least — his leav ing' at'each a time as the present — and conjectures are rife concerning the purpose of tbe jonrney, the favorite one among the Gentiles being that it is with the object of finding a New Zion further south in case the Government insists on the execution of the laws. Brigham’s , old policy of dis couraging mining, because it would brin_ ip, emigrants, has succumbed to force of circumstances. The shipping of silver ore poles dace farmers to plant less cotton and pay j ed by the friends of Capoon, and was protest- Yours, Ac., .twite ? s -siu. A. Lincoln. 12. The cost of cultivation is just equal I more auenn0Q 00 grain. I ed against by Ellison, as an unwarrantable to that of Indian corn, until it is ready to Twelve thousand emigrants, mostly Sean- interference with the civil law ot the State. . _ cat. - The catting-hading and--threshing dinavians, arrived at Memphis daring the "When the military took possession of the sta- . Under the policy indicated here, the Un- require eight men per day for each acre of last-month, one-fourth of whom have found tion house. Mayor Ellison’s police left; arid “ n N as intact and secure the moment the corn, beside • two teams .and one wagon, homes in that city and immediate neigh- being, rocked by the crowd of colored men, Uontederate armies surrendered, slave This includes putting it on tbe rack for cur- borhood. ing. The cost ofhaling is just double that from’ exercising* the. duties of his office. _ m <m m ; - Great excitement here all dav. and but lit- The Law Against Interfering With tabor slavery charged themj • About fitly shots were filed) waa abolished .1*.,“ ' is , , _ . _. ... 1 . f iti- 1 now—and the eoast was still elsar to bang A coirespocdent of the Greenville Ad- and two or three colored men wounded. Af- as m ofthe i».q ar , M ^aht b« thought vocate suggests CoL W. D. Mann, proprie- fairs have since quieted .down. To-morrow avisable. It regarded the Umon as reitor- tor of the Mobile Register, as the Demo-1 both Jlayors will have a police force on the ed—though every individual who bad W- crotic candidate for Governor or Alabama, streets, and hold independent courts; iW -tidpated in the-vrar uu'iho- Southern'ndd, at the ensuing fall election. ~ I hie is apprehended. The conncil is (niseis-; was nqdqr restraint.and exposed to perils Tbe State Anditq?'of, Gfer|ia reports a sion to-night considering what shaU he done. Besidep, they were excluded by testoathp bushel; it may be ohtaiited.for Jess in some | losaiif two-fifths of the negro popnlation in The city council to-night passed an ordia- from any participation in the Government. Francisco daring the winter. ’ Tfie ore is places. One bushel properly put ,iju,-wiil| nine; years. Reports shftw a’heavy decrease ance abolishing the station houses nowin the We had then, Union, Peace, Freedom; re-shipped to Ewansea,in Waie% and the re- plant twelve acres, and the usual yield of in all the otaer Southern States, except, hands of Capoon’s police, authorizing Mayor with ample powers of vengeance besides. 'seed per acre is fifty-five or sixty bushel. perhaps, Mississippi and Louisiana. Ellison to call out the first brigade as a police, What more did we want? No honest X 1 -■«“» ,:Jr2 “ - - for baling hay. We would advise those; going- inte. the j “ business of broom corn raising tor profit, to begin with five or ten acres until they ac quire some experience. ' 14.:The seed cost ahdnt'thi-ee dollars per salts of the meltings theie, have .been Vary satwfoctory.” - - - • Great excitement here Ml.day,.and butlit tle business done in the; 'city. Who Is Wm. L. Avery ?—The Sa vannah' lt<j>ubltcan, gives tbe following in sight to' the character . of the graceless man Avery, who.recently telegraphed vile misrepresentations to “two Senators,” at Washington, concerning Georgia affairs. “The wicked, lying dispatch of this Radi cal creature, dated from this city and ad dressed to Senators at Washington.evident- ly with the view of influencing the vote on the Georgia bill aod thus playing into the hands of Bollock, affords a sample of the re quital received by the Southern people from some of those who have been treated as gentlemen. Every honest man here. knows that, so far as this city, and section cf the State is concerned, the statements of Avery are the basest fabrications and falsehoods.— Never was onr community more quiet and free from all political excitement and dis order of every kind. The Government of ficers here will testity to the truth of what, we say, and we do not consider it worth onr while to waste words on the subject. And who is this man . Avery, w ha thus moves among us quietly enjoying the pro tection'of our laws and under the cover of the telegraph maligns and slanders' them ? He is a New Yorker, and the attorney and lobbyist of the Brqnswick,gnd Albany Rail road. We learn-he resides in Atlanta, at least he has opened an office there, we sup pose, to be convenient to Bollock’s Legis lature, from whom he and others proenred State endorsement of bonds to the amotint of many millions. Conant, the party allnd- ed to in the dispatch, is a Northern con tractor on the same road, and instead of “spending millions” for the construction of railroads in Georgia, itis reported that the ' hands on the road have .struck because they were not. paid. Avery arrived in this city Friday last, and if he has been treated with the slight est disrespect, we have yet to hear of it.— So far as this community is concerned, we halve no hesitation in characterizing his statements as wilfully and inalicionsly false.” ' ‘ Editor Enquirer:.; ^Having personally ex perienced the inconvenience and annoy ance of obtaining and keeping latjor.under contract, by the month or otherwise, and believing.it is not generally known by the public how to protect, themselves against this prevailing evil, I herewith annex the law on the subject,'.which yon can publish, if yon think good wiH "result thereby: “If any person, by himself or'agenf,sbal be guilty of employ ing the servant of anoth er, daring the term for which fie, she or they may be employed, knowing, that such servant was so employed, and that his term of service wrs not expired; or if any perso n or personsjahall entice, persuade or decoy, or attempt to entice, persuade or'decoy,any servant to leave his employer, either by of fering higher wages, or in any 'other way whatever, daring the term, of service, know ing that said servant was so employed, he shall he guilty of misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof, shall be fined any sum not more two hundred dollars, or be con fined in the common jail of the county, in the discretion of the Court, riot to 'exceed. three months-”—Got Etw: ... The hard winters having killed manv of I pledging the city to pay all special nolice N all tod anything morejbnt a gang of thieve* _ - ,7 'the small birds North, agents ire buying sworn in by Ellison, and authorising the city » an <*d Pri w « an d plunder, and they but- ay? ftr - - c -at^ad n- * r ,n r at! ?*-st The Navasota, Texas, Tablet of the 3d of the city, against’ the lawlessness of the says: Corn is up in the country and also conspirators- •We love its fireside tales, We love to h_ear. the singing.birds ; We love the sweet salubrious air, We love the prospect wide and fair ; We love to ploush, we love to sow, We love to gather, lov<> to mow ; We love the new-mown gras3 to smell, We love to hear the tinkling bell, . We love to tread the grassy Jawn, Among, the brooks, atriong the corn; We love—the whole, but can't lehearse His pleasures .all, in prose or verse. A correspondent of the Maine Farmer has a new use for cats. He says : “My within the corporate limits of-Navasota, - The City-is quiet this evening. The casn- and looks thrifty. . Early-plMting,^- one |«ifies of the day have been, onet man killed main socret of sriccess. Corn is getting np and'three wonnded. Capoon has Ms head- in price too. New Irish potatoes, of this qnartcrs at the , ower stat roii ; house where the year s growth are now served up <5n the ta- n; v ^ head tera ^ Me Of Smith’s hotel.^- ’ ( ’ EUison)! police patrol the _ . I city to-night. Modes of Salutation. I WasnixcTON, March 2i —Ndshyillc 19.— Gentlemen have none, and laugh at the Thc wholcsale r merchant ‘ s of NashvUle adop- iW one person he.ng iq^or. L^St ted B eq^hw.addre^d to.the Boards if Islanders near the Phillipines take a per-1 ’¥ de “ the TOftf dtIes of the Unl0 "* ^“to toke^t U>n’s a hand or"'fooT and rub it ove"r“thrir I setti,1 S forth tte condition of affairs in Ten- when yon first yoke him is to take a rat K Lessee, appealing to them to use their influ steer’s n^nd n P eraLTy.hoM 6 hcr°rath* Laplanders apply their noses strongly. er hard. My word for it, he will been his a g a >nstthe person they sdnte. They allege that the State is unusually quart I - 1 n . « - In New Guinea they place leaves. upon and peaceful; and business prosperous, but 8 “ S ^ i >'' * the heads of those they salute. the proposition to subject the State to outside The Monument to StoneWalL Jack- In the Straits of the Sound, they raise interference has brought trade to a stand still. son.—Ex-Governor Letcher, of Virginia, the left foot of the person saluted pass it | WisnsxGTON, March 21.—A canvass of the drops of sweat.ran down his face; but. the ireisure was too. great, and. he yielded. ' Hen followed six years of “reeonstrnc- tion”—not completed yrt' at- an extra ex- lenseofnot less than- Two Hundred Mil- ions a year—and nhon whatriretext? Why, that the negro most vote. He was free,he had every privilege and protection accord ed to white men—hut that was not enough— he most vote. ' wisriL** -V-q ver Well, we have resisted this, for good reasons, we think. No matter now what they are.’ They .tell ns the fifteenth amend ment is ratified, and will be the law. Very well—it is a folly and a crime of onspeak- able magnitude; bnt if those who; pass it can stand it we eaa. 'Negro votes will help elect a Democrat President in 1872—mark that. Mnm oa the nigger!’ What wowld you have assay? Whxt more do yoa waatof him ? What other use eaa yoa pat him to? The Bureau of Statistics will present in the next monthly-report "a table showing classes in the different countries of Europe. Reports from Germany show that in the trades the wages of workmen range from 16 to 24 cents per day; and of women 8 to 14 cents. ri WS wiirhndertake to demonstrate that he has published a statement rrapecting.thelgently over the light leg and then, wertls^ ^e^more thaa a thousand miffitmsof proposed -monument to Stonewall Jackson, I their face. l -i“iYl-1, jfGi „ ft, 'tT •' ; : i ir tif dollars he waa free,and thismoaey baa bata saying jEdO,000 is needed,and that no local An Ethiopian takes the robe of another „ ? J ,, . extorted firom the horny palms of Northern or sectional views restrict the scheme- and ties it about him so as to leave h!s Senate in Executive session on Bradley for workiDgmen . We think ii]a high time that; it is.national in its design and the friend.almost naked. .->:*• ‘“P Snprme bench. ... . for everybody to be ‘mnm on the nigsar,’ North has cordially responded to the ap- The Japanese take of a slipper, and the Li the House regular call. Nothing im- attend to vital home iaterert too long r , 'Bart * ^ I j J ’ '-ortant. Committees nothing. neglected. While w« have bee* soHettotoa Havasno. March 21.—Derodaa visits -No. " the averages of prices paid the ^laboring ^ and the'East and the West are mov-1 people of' Fararan ’their sandaE; in thej poriant- Committee^ nothing Progress. The Reconstruction Committee this morn ing considered the question of the power of Congress to exercise authority in Tennessee to remedy the dangerons condition of affairs there, butadjoorned without definite action. Congressmen Maynard and Oruell were be fore the committee, giving information with regard to affairs in the State. Bader said he had no doubt of the power of Congress to interfere with the authorities of Massa chusetts, shonld "proper occasion arise.— Washington Dispatch 8th. ing. Itis proposed to erect ^a memorial I house, when they salute, chapel in the Military Institute in Lexing- Two negro kings' on the coast of A*frica I entas and Puerto Principe, accompanied by tori; and, should the fnnds collected permit, salute by saapping’th?'middle finger three the late rebel General Napoleon Amngo, a statue in bronze or marble,“to transmit to times. who -will assist Derodas in restoring peace, coming generations the features, form and The inhabitants of Carmine, when they Wasdiotox, March 12.—Gov. Holden, of expression of one whose name and virtues would show a particular attachment, open North Carolina, telegraphs the President to are alike known andhoriored throughout the a vein,and present the blood to their friend snsnend habeas cortms in that State civilized world, and who was a "bright ex- as a beverage. I _ ,, _ _ „ , ’. . emplar of whatever was good and nohle^tnd If the Chinese meet, after a long sep*- _ Y°' dcn tc ' e E^ a P !l3 a Senator, we hato of good report amoDg men ration, they fall on their knees, bend their Federal troops, but we want power to act. ■boat alleged wrong* abroad, aoartrnaa abases have grown .np at oar fart which it will require a firm resolve and steady hand to correct. Let ns go shoot! -i ■ > . Gomlp absat Wsmsa. Jane Hosmer is ssid to own a diamond necklace valued at 135,000. There is a woman in Philadelphia who keeps s lager beer saloon, and weighs 600 TVtftndfl. faces to the earth two or three times,and nse 13 possible the government willi abandon pogndg. ‘•Ticket, sir,” said a railroad conductor, many other affected modes. They have id- its loyal people to be whipped and hanged; ffom Pnujce G. H. Homer, of Athens, fell off a train on the Wilmington and Manchester Rail road, near .Wilmington, on Tuesday night last week. ' He was not, hur t, however, and next day reached Wilmington. A stock company, to build a first-class cotton press and warehouse at Brunswick, has been organized, and 820,000 subscrib ed by each of the four roads terminating there. The remainder (850.000) is prom ised New York and Boston. passing through one of the trains- tbe oth- g0 a k i D -ff 0 f ritual, or “academy of compli- the habeas corpus should he suspended at er day, to a passenger. “My face is my meats,” by which they regulate the nnm- once.” ' . ' .-- j ticket,” replied the other, a little vexed, her pf bows, genuflexions, and words, to be The Democrats voted in a body to-day for “Indeed,” said the conductor, rolling back I spoken upon any occasion. Ambassadors Bradley. The vote was 42 to 9. his wristbands and displaying a most pow- practice these ceremonies forty days before The Supreme Conrt decides that the ten- erfnl bunch of fives, “well, my orders are they appear at court. der of payment of taxes before the sale for to punch all tickets passing over this The Dutch who are considered great eat- bg ^ waer thc law of 186 o was eqnivrient road. | ers, have a morning salutation, common 1 1 _ aTment amongst all ranks,. “Smaakelyk eeten!” 11__ The Columbus Sun telle this story-: | May you eat a hearty dinner. Another Miss Emma Janes; a graduate of Wes leyan “Female” College, (Delaware O.) has taken a “State Educational Diploma”, of California, over 5i competitors, and baa been elected to a professorship in the Uni versity of the Pacifio. Washington, March 17.—The Private Secretary of Gov. Senter arrived here this morning, with requisition from the Governor, on the President for troops. the practice he would ' Madame De Stael said, “If I were mis. tress pf fifty languages, I wonld think in the deep German, converse in the gay French, write in the copious English, sing inthe majestic Spanish,deliver inthe no ble Greek, and make love in the soft Ital ian.” Jt : ‘Dispatches from varions points North report a heavy storm of show and wind. Subsequent sole by commission ers conveyed no title. Posted —A little nig, who was given to I “Hoe' vaart a awe? How do yon sail? Adopt! I Tl *® Coart disclaims jurisdictioc in the picking np things,was told if ho didn’t quit, ed, no doubt, in the early periods of the Flondaclmm of Commodore Meade, it hav- *. 0 . f i ° hi i . . I li: _ x *1 .11 , .j I inn nwn iininnu'iitMi in ttiA Snanmn break into the pen-1 republic, when thev were all navigators and in S been adjudicated in the Spanish Conrt , don’t wuffer cent, fishermen. -■ after the treaty of’19. . > Mister Bullock would" turn me out in two The usual salutation at Cairo is. “How Senate, rememained in Executive amiow days, and den I wonld hav nu clos, and ride do you sweat?” A dry hot skin being a sure I 0Ter an h onrj confirming Gen. Pleasanton all de way dar an bac for nuffin. I’se got | indication of a destructive ephemeral fever. J ^ Baily, colector for Wall street district: the color on nm, I is. It’ll lake a bad bi- * “ *, , , New York, and Jas. P. Bradley, Supreme fin’ to pton me sure ” Once upon a time a Dutchman tried to _ , ’ , . :... - tin do c to stop me, sure ^ I km a do / ttat he hated bnt failed afler Afterwards vanous petitions were According to the eminent French phy- several trials. He then said : “Dat tog | P rcseat fj' sieiau, Dr. Lew, the average duration of I ish no tog, he ish de Tyfel.” I A bill was introduced transeferring ap- pged to life among the Jews is 36 years, while So of the Radical party : It ish de Ty-i pointment of Revenee 0 ‘— “' 5sa - **■ among Gentiles it is only 2G years. | fel. | President. ble bonnets this spring wiH be smaller thaw ever before. If they are much smaller be fore they will have to. be larger behind, or. be invisible. - A St. Louis husband had hi* suspicions aroused by catching hia wife holding chlo roform to his nose when he pretended sleep. He has gone to visit her mother. ” An old lady lives in Portland, Maine, who was once the affianced wife of Daniel Wtbrter. She in a native of New Hamp shire, and in her youthful dayi was accom plished and possessing, The young Indies of aa Iowa town ao- a love-making aod area-choosing, meeting —admission 25 cents.” Paper petticoats at fifteen eenta retail are the Btest sensation in Boston. A ytmng mas ia the city, who a eij-