The Albany patriot. (Albany, Ga.) 1845-1866, March 10, 1866, Image 2

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■ALBANY, SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1866. C®” H- J. N eville is onr authorized agent for the collection of subscriptions and other dues to the Patriot in Macon, NEW advertisements. Jons Monnow & Son, ef Atlanta, Ga., ' will furnish Shoe Findings, Coach and Sad dlery Hardware, Saddles, harness, bridles, - etc., at greatly reduced prices. Tboy are also prepared to supply Shoemakers, with Akls, Bristles, Lasts, Pegs, Calf Skins, and in fact everything the may require. Sad dlers cair be accommodated in the same manner. . Robert J. Bacon, Esq., has bad two Mules stolen from his plantation in Mitchell Co., on Tuesday night, the 7th inst. He will pay a liberal reward for the recovery of one , oa both. Michael Wilson, of Mitchell county, will apply to the Court of Ordinary for leave to sell certain real estate. Read Worth county legal advertise- - raents. ' . C3£f”J. M. Cooper will sell at auction to day, twenty No. one Mules, all young, in front of Wright <fc Hill’s livevy stable. An Ordinance appears in to-day’s paper to which we call the attention of par ties interested. The alley running between tha Kidd Hotel and Messrs. Richardson, Talbott'A Co’s. Grocery store is declared a public thoroughfare, and is now subject to the same Ordinances and regulations as our streets. The Albany Provision and Produces mar ket rtinge from 25 to 75 per cent higher than those ef Atlanta, Savannah anil Charleston. . . . Greenbacks are quoted in Newark at 33J <l«T«t.sm f t.II usurps evil law. per cent, discount, and Groceries and Pro visions are as cheap as before the Avar. The Southern planter is about double -us'well paid for his capital and labor as the North ern agriculturist, but, like Oliver Twist, several of them ask for more. ceeduigly anxious to do restored to wieip v . * . * . . *• f n i. rights within the Union 1 —even more «rthan _Iho constitutaonal. guaranty is as fol- ... «» --Wo lows: - • ■ they were five years ago. to secede. -We nckno weldge our inaTMpSPfpTHow “hot and cold” at the sametime, and we confess, that while wo'are willing to 6ee'Georgia rein stated in former lights among, the sisterhood of "States, we are opposed to all “dickerings” or compromises with the radi cals in Congress or the dough-face Execu' tivc. The first require of he. to extend citi zenship to the negrp, and impose off our congressional delegates a test oath, which if taken, would be perjury in .ninety-nine cases out of every hundred of the whole Southern people. And Mr. Johnson not. only freed our slaves, but he made us swear that he was*right in doing so. Nor did he stop here. Our State Convention was forced to repudiate a debt, the most.of which was contracted to-protect the State from inva sion, and to provide for the widows and or phans of our gallant dead. Therefore, we stand by the Constitution only,,and leave pot-valiant politicians to adjust their own .differences—not caring a cent which ‘dog’ is uppermost in the fight. All the branches of the Government—Ex ecutive, Legislative and Judicial—arc at loggerheads about the rights of the rebel States within the Union. Chief Justice Chase and Congress say we are ofily pro vinces—thus admitting that the Southern Stat possessed the right to cast oft’ their nl- legience to the U. S. Government—while the other six Supreme Judges and the Presi dent onnunciatc the doctrine, that a State once admitted into the “Union can never re cede, or he forced ."back into a dependency. Nevertheless, our rights under the Consti tution lire still withheld from us by both factions; U. S. troops are still in possession of onr cities, towns and hamlets; the habeas < o -pus has not been re tored, and military It would have been far better and less expensive to tho Government it all the volunteer troops were disbanded after Gen. Johnson's surren der. Our people would appreciate the con fidence thus reposed in their honor, and the intell’gcnt and upright among ns would frown down any attempt to renew a liopless contest. But as things now stand our peo ple are daily becoming more alienated to wards the “head-center” at Washington. CONGRESSIONAL. ~ a-gg i—-, ,, . - . V on I lecture concluded; a bad mark, was entered Saving Bacon. A corrcspondci t o ‘ n I against her in tho register. It is the custom exchange gives the following short process so hool mistress to inflict corporal pun-. — ’ ’ ' lament for all bad marks of a certain niagni- UEW advertise lows: . “The United States shall guarantee to every State within this Union a republican form of Government:” . ' Mr. Sumner wasted all his efforts in dis cussing the words Republic and Republican It is the “form” only that Cdbgress is bound to guarantee, not necessarily the substance- Rvery school .boy knows what tlie “form’ *is, and therefore what is the object ot that guaranty. It is simply such a “form” as admits of a representation of the people in a legislative capacity, and without hereditary or any other ft auures peculiar to a despot* ism, monarchy or aristocracy. The ques tion whether all the people are allowed to vote does flot enter into its. “form.” This is what the United States must guarantee, and nothing else. Mr. Sumner not only argues that tho guar anty covers universal suffrage, but he rises to Empyrean heights in his conception of the attributes of a republic, aiul makes it embody every virtue known to a full Chris tian man. lie says that Congress sits as a court of final decision on tho question, and is at liberty to make the terra Republic cover every quality of “a well ordered life and a godly conversation.** According to bis argument, Congress can riot only require each State to admit the negroes to a vote, but women also—and not only this, but may require a prohibition of whiskey making and whiskey drinking, define the system of* edu cation for a State, prescribe wliat books shall be used, what classes of men and wo- for saving Bacon—-and salt: ' Hake a solution of saltinhotwai raised as high as. tho fire #ill .make it,) J>u1 the pork in the hot brine, with as much ani mal heat as possible.. Let the harps .and ’shoulders be kept three foinutes and,a half, and the middlings two and a half minutes, and then hang up immediately ana smoke them, and you have a'choice article of bacon, in a very short time, to what you wtU'by the usual process, as well as saving fouivfijtns of your salt. ‘4k> This process will answer any time between November, and April. L'have saved much that way for‘six or eight years. See that you keep a small portion of ^alt, during the process, in the bottom of your vessel, to be certain that your brine is sufficiently strong during the whole process. J AN AIT To enable the Justices of the Inferior Courts in the several counties in the State of Geor gia, to raise a fund Sufficient to discharge the indebtedness of the several counties, and for other purposes. Whereas, by reason of the repudiation of a large portion of the State debt, and the unavailability of Confederate notes, in which two classes of indebtedness the assets of the several counties are chiefly represented, the said counties will therefore, he without funds until new taxes can be collected—for reme dy thereof, Be it enacted, &o., That from and after the passage of # this act, the Justices of the calfskins, \ lasts, iss, Soieu Axels, Saddle . Just received t>» JOHN MORR OW . mjcatjjr smee" 1 * .““{“"J March 10, I860. » ' ■ , . Inferior Court of anv county mav authorize men shall teach and that every man, women tho Treasurer to issue bonds of said conntv, and child, shall’ prey three times a day, in such sums ns may seem advisable, pay- N0 COURT. Owing to the sudden indisposition of the Hon. Xw-U. Clark, Judge of the Superior Court of this Circuit, there will be no Court , held in this city next Monday, as was pre viously announced. On Friday afternoon the Judge was taken with convulsions, which his attending phys. .... ician feared might terminate fatally—we .- .are happy to state, however, that this (Sat- . nrday) morning, be is wraeU better. Judge Clark is one of the ablest and most talented i s c | cct Comni’.lce or jurists in Georgia, and not only his family a rcport B - and friends, but tho State at large would mourn his death. ' We hope, by our next issue, to be able to annonnee him entirely out of danger, if not recovered. • CgTHr,. Richardson informed us some time ago that he (acting as agent for-his daughter, who is post mistress here,) had . * the.powcr to lot contracts for conveying the - „ retail at the following rates: i ' For mail three times a week, *22 00 - per mile; twice, Si 5 00; - once, *8 00. He further said that the reason there wore so few mail routes re-established in tho interior * is owiilg to the fact that no person has ap plied for the position of mail carrier. When such applications are made he forwards them to Washington, where they will be approved hy the Post Master General and returned.— If you jvarit a regular mail, gentlemen, let some of you step forward and apply for that position: with their faces turned toward Massachu setts! f - ‘ We modestly submit that Sir. Somber carries the joke a little too far—that his Ar gument proves too much. He had not a word in the whole thirty columns to say about tho “form”—that upon which the whole controversy turns. T . Believing that the future safety of this country, depends upon a. Congress of very limited powers, and States ot complete ex clusive sovereignty, except where the very few powers conferred upon the General Government are concerned, we are compel led to believe that Mr. Sumner, and every one like him, is a very unsafe man to trust. He argues for tremendous despotism at Washington. We contend for the freedom of the people in the Slates, and, as far as pos sible, in their townships and in their town* Wo therefore ask by what right Mr. Sumner claims the distinction of being a radical ? TI!E FREEDOM OF THE TRESS. We are informed and authorized to say that Lieutenant General Grant himself or dered the suppression of the Richmond Ex- tude, and my neiee.hatT seen one or two of tlie young children whipped; hut her atten dance being, only on' certain ,days, she did not know 1 that the discipline'wfas anything but “inlantilei.” - To her snrprise, when about to leave after her lesson, she wns ordered to the school room. To her amazement and indignation she was to be birched “for impudence to a teacher.” She protested and implored, but in vain. Her resistance was useless against force; sbe was held accross a desk, the cloth ing was completely removed from the lower part of her person, and the, lady, principal f avo her twelve sharp cuts with a birch.— To Etonian was ever so indecently and cru elly treated. ,. ” I am an Irishman, and yon may imagine my indignation at •such an outrage to a mod est young lady who is actually engaged to lie married. "My resolution was soon taken. That evening I consulted the wives of three of my friends, who entirely approved of it. Decisive Bflttlpe nt th n With ranch difficulty 1 induced my neice to V " alUeS <H the Bei return to the scheol on Monday. Luckily, it was not long to Christmas, aud^he escap ed ahy further insult except the occasional “chaff” of one or two younger girls. Early in January I wrote a polite note to the lady principal, asking her to lunch at my honse, and receive the amount-due her. She came, and was shown into the library, where the three married ladies above mentioned await ed her. Causing her to be seated, I told her my opinion of her conduct, observing that, for niy nciec’s sake, I desired to avoid the exposure attendant on legal proceedings, and added that, with the approval of t he T he Proprietor of tins 0C w now publishing an copies. -I, 8 lioi of contributor 11 ° f deal ot the best literary taW”’ West. Besides il.e two sdutiraH* course of publication— Adventures in tionth the March number contain, th. « " James Wood Davidson, of ColuU™^ How We Know Each l "OB- THE SCIENCE GFHujluv There will also be WjSWpte and Volitics/romtb, aV$i»fe <• Bill Arp.” The Prize Story will b- „— ii*.le at a period not longer than three years ladies present, I should punish her as she from the date thereof* bearing seven percent, j ^ a< l punished my neice. Ol eour&e there interest, payable semi-annuallv. | was :l tempestuous scene, but sbe submitted. 2. That said bonds may be sold at such ■ I1,a ^ ridden-over to Eton, and got a good rates as may tepifered by tlie highest bid- * tout birch. It is only necessary to add that den?, after a«tv>rtising tlie same for thirty sho was treated as ray niece had been in the days in some newspaper published at the 1 matter of apparel, and that I'gave hertwen- j when there is no licwspa- strokes, wl.cse severoty l>ie state ot hir r commenced i furnished at 50 p„ the same Ppf) 0f.ee, « [ Wl : ^— - Address J. . Mareli 10, ISC’. [il-j^ S An Ordinance Be it ordained by the Mayor a Albany, Thai on and after lh:« date a running between the Kidd Hotel i * She was well able , Talbott & Cff.’u Grocery Store, fro* is bereby placed under*ben»J aces an'* •• ^ public alleys i • intends to give up her lteisxliborlkood. iliool auj | i this city. John F. Caroile. Clerk of CotincP. .Vlbnny, March 10, 183d. G. J. til County seat;* and wnen tnerc is no newsj'.. . per so published, then, such advertisement. ^’ticle plainly .attested, mix? w. --—• shall be made in the newspaper published to bear them, being forty years old, unman-; .■„ ... nearest thereto. 1 1 1 j ried, tall, strong, stout woman. My neice “ a11 «W 3. 'Diat the amonnt of bonds so issued' declined to be "present at the punishment, shall not be more than sufficient to realize -but I conn, oiled her to ajToh.gize hnmuly to tlie nett amount which may be required to ber afterward. I have since heard a rumor pay oft'the existing indebtedness, and the site i"'" 1 ’ 1 current expenses of the county so issuing leave the said bonds for the year 1866, according to the estimate of the county Treasurer, when; Kfb fl lugOflailT at JotlBSOn’a Is!:.-_. , , , ra . xx* „ , 1 v_/ the bulscriber. When the rebel prisoners,&\\ ofiicers, and oved HOUSE ! MCLE, with teryli,^ many of the m high in rank, were confined and mouth, thick set. »nd in on, Johnson’s Island, opposite this city, they ! a HORSE ML’I.E. afwve m exhibited a far greater amount of ingenuity A * li}>crs - 1 re *»*l»2 tlmn they were ever willing to acknowledge | onc ° l vW ‘ Ro,’Fn previous to their unde, taking the *task of; Mitchdl Co„ Ga., March Id. Igcia rearing a Southern Confederacy. Previous] ^ •_ to that event, t!n?y considered it degrading, j. Application to Cel and beneath the dignity of a gentlema- WasiiixotOn, March 8.—In the Senate a I aminer, and that lie not only justifies the resolution was offered declaring that to { act, but do.-lares that there are other South- Congress, nud not the Executive, belongs I 0 l r,, l )n i K " rs ,' V ‘ U bu suppressed, if they , . ... 0 J do not change their tone; and that 11 martial the power ot re-estahhshmg civil govern-, 1;ir , „ revaiI ed tit the North, r.sit does at the ment 11 the lata seceded States. South, he would forthwith suppress “three Pending the Constitutional Amendment,! Copperhead i*h©cts, ,v hc.«*©: The NrwYork debate in the House, B*atwe!l, from the j ^Kys, r riic C.hicago limes, and TheCincin- * ,• ^ ^ nati Enquirer. >* e are also informed that coons.rue 10 , a. when the proprietor of the Examiner appeal- 1 hy himself and \Y ashburn, from Gcu. Grant’s order to Mr. Jobn- of Illinois, stating that East Tenuessi-e Is j son, thu President dinc ted General Grrui loyal, bat Middle Tennessee disloyal. They j t.o revoke the order suppressing T he Exam- mad e wilder tlie provisional section 527 clause 7, of the Code of Georgia. 4. _ That the Justices of thx* Inferior Court of any county may authorize the County Treasurer to receive from .any tax payer, such sums of money ih advance of taxes, as such tax payer hiav be willing fb pay, and issue therefor the scrip of the county, payable to beiuer, with such rate of interest as may be fixed by the Justices of the In ferior Court of said county, redeemable in taxes and by delivery. i TWO MULES STD] O N wed: ESDAl'.NlGIlTt -I,,; the.u tnty, Mich scrip to lie pcrfi.rm mtinnalitiimrof any kiml. Ferht.po £ M to bo transferable them care, necessity was themothepof in-, lc * . ,* venticn as well as labar, but Lc tliit as it t.-i ^^IXTY Bays nflcr dnio aj-blie lo the Couri of Ordinnry of v leave to sell nil the*real estate be ate of Wo. R. Wilson, dccessvJ, • Justices or ineAinenor mav (teem ad- — - vr. ' ' t * U ‘ MCU o«n. zow. .net visable; and the bonds authorized to be is- hm- specimens ot >outhem forpiture ( March 10, itwa-pr-J.4* sued by the first section of this .act, si all only a * ;U * J*k chanu m, and not totally devoid of. be issued for such sums as mav be nect rustic beauty. I11 the line of chairs, they • GEOStGIA—v\<>1;TU C(»1S prooosc, as an additional condition, for re-1 l,n< l that for his part lm was op-1 script under thp provisions of the 4th section to it < r. j Tlrp.*.*aie. therefore, to eit? ami »»k , ‘. . ,1 . * c x posed to the suppression oTnewsp.ip«», and i of this act. .1 - Gwmg to a scarcity ot tools, the woodc-n; sinff'dar ibe kiml red ami cretitrrrfof admission, that su rage be conferred, wit. - | n f. lvor 0 f maintaining the freedoui of tlie j e. Be it further enacted &c. f rhat in cs- f ra,nes were only m:ide with the use of the! to b« appear at tnj office vtitjiin out regard to race or color. The bill de- press; that the suppression of a 'Southern i timntin" the existbi^ indebtedness of the j* l tk-kuife ami anger, and were really a 1 bribed few iosIhuv cnuse,if«ny n •mtiesnecepting the benefits of this act, "brand* mtule chair. On the reiSise of the- i sfc- 1 e iifilehteiliiefts shall be eettle.1 on equita- l 11 '! !<0,u “ rs , mm.lreus of these chturs were. Scott’s Soul hern Monthly Magzzlne. .. The editor of this truly Southern periodi- ■ cal has been in our city the past couple of days procuring subscribers for it. A11 true Southern men, and admirers of Southern literature, should aid Mr. Scott in his laud able undertaking. Its contents, as a gencr. ■ althinj* are far superior to the wishy-washy : * trash with which’ the Northern magazines . * abourid. -Rev.;\y. J.'.Seott, its editor and proprietor, afa considerable outlay, offers to the public 80 pages of choice, original and instructive reading, monthly, at t5 per an num. Let those mngaztlieSj-wtiuse nele'mer- jts aVe based on wood-cuts, go by the board, and subscribe for Scott’s. See prospeoyis into-day’s issue. bated declares all. blacks citizens, and con fers upon them cqnal rights and immunities with power for their protection. STANTON TO RESIGN. Chicago, March 8.—The Republican has a. telegram from Cincinnati, stating that a private dispatch, entirely reliable; from Washington, lmd been received there stating that Stanton will soon resign, and that Gen, Ltecdman will accept the posi tion. UNION NOMINATION. Hariiisrvih*, . March 8th.—The Union Convention has nominated Gen. Gcry for Governor. NEW YORK MARKETS. New York, March 8.—Cotton dull with sales of 1200 at 42 a -1c. Gold 132. '. the SEW YORK MOFLII. . ’Mr. A,D. Button, traveling agent Tor the "itbqygrjlJBped paper,paid us a visit,on last Thursday.. The leading statesmen and news papers of the South speak highly .of-Thr ' "Would as a consistent exponent of'North '• erri .Conservatism, and a staunch" fri. r.d of us ' much abused “rebels.” ^Vs a matter of pQtyrse, it is ranked by the radieql preis as ; a “copperhead- shcct, ^ecatise it advocates • _ ’ tlje pqufii|a|ioq of ^)»tes, and is uuconipio- - piisingiy opposed to extending the right of. jufiTrageto the negro. It ip in favor of rc- . " storing the Government of; tbp United . V* . States bhek'to its originallandmarks;’it fa vors the admission of onr delegates tp their ' scats jn Congre"ss,’and it particularly .vyare; against the tyranieal cojirse of the Govcrn- ment, now that peace Is restored; ih keeping an armed, force in our pfidst, nnder tbp hypo, ' qrital plea of protecting the wbitoinan against thqjnegw, ?tn41 vice versa.’ Terms—DaRy ■ vYVorid; *10 per annum; Semi-Weekly,-*4 r and .Weekly *2.. We will furnish tlieSpjni- Weejiiy Patriot and Semi-Weekly World at The Isuaelites in Palestine,—A Ba varian Jew, writing to the Israelite indeed, basa statement upon the process of the res toration of the Jews to Palestine, which is worthy of note. He says: “Therogathcring of Jews is now begining to take,place. Not only many single fami lies immigrate to Palestine, but there have been formed a number of societies in almost? every land on this continent, to prepare an immigration on a large scale, provided With aU possible means, money, implements and teol^of cVery kimi, to continence the culti vation of 11 e long desolated land, at once, and with' the utmost vigor. There are men of considerable wea ith among them, and not one without some means, enough ttt least to defray the expenses ofthojeumevy and to purchase a plot of grotiud. I am’happy to state thnf I am one of the leading members of a s.feiety forming liere in Bavaria, Which numbers .already over nine hundred heads of families, besides a number of y pung-pcople who would not form an alliance with the other sex, until settled in the Holy . Land, upon the soil of their rightful heritage.’.’—. He also adds: “The Gentiles hereabouts - that i', in the petty German Protestant king doms and principalities-t-nre evcu uiore astir about Palestine-than the Jews. - “The • improvements which are taking place in Judea are -very great. ' for some dbtaqcc around Jerusalem pro extensive newspaper diet no good iu the South, and I harm everywhere; and that as to Northern newspapers there was a Radical paper pubs lished iu New York, which did more to re- tard the pacification of the country and to keep up strife, than any ot those nmned-by General Grant, and which ought to be sup pressed sooner Ilian they, but lie was oppos ed to the suppression of any. We hail with delight this striking evi dence of the President’s determination to stand by and defend the Constitution, and those inestimable rights which that instru ment was designed to secure to the prop',* of this country. As for the Lieutenant, General, we hope and believe that when he shall lic-vc studled l he Corisfitution a little longer, and become better acquainted with the principles of free government, his good sense and earnest patriotism, will save him from the commission of such blunders r.ad wrongs as are involved ‘in any assault upon the constitutional freedom of the press; [N. V. News. m are now me preserved blc principles, having regard to the value of BoI <l «* P>>b!ic auction, for whatever they the consideration upon which such indebted- Wou *a bnni;, ami many of the ness mily have been created, ami uot to tlie Jittered about the conntn nominal amount of the same. - i Thomas HaudkmaXj Jr.. Speaker House RepA^cr.tatives. J. D. AODEI.L, Clerk House of Re^resenta.tfoes. \\ ILUAM Gxiikox, President^)!’the Senate. John I». eejis, Massachusetts axd hie Pre.^idext,— The following resolution was offered in the Lower House of tlie Massachusetts Legisla ture on the 20 ol Februarary : ^ * ‘ Resolved, That the recent public attack upop one of the honored and beloved Sena tors of Massachusetts, by the President of tha United States,, in a public speech, in the “City of Washington, is an insult to the com monwealth, as unjust as it wns nndignified and disgraceful, and calls for the indignant rebuke of every patriotic eitizAn of that State, to whose sons the country is so large ly indebted for tlie salvation ot* the national capital, when those \^Jio heard and applaud- by sympathising friends us relics, and all that rituains of a cause once dear to their hearts, but now, alas! no more. Others carry one homo .as they would a So Met oi-a piece of slftfil from a* battle-field, not that they attach anv intrinsic value or lr^rit to it, but simply because it is a rebel relic. . Every chair-was marked with the name of the owner on the top slat of the back, to- :c , section as a limita- w Ik the number of his regiment and tion upon the amount of the proposed bonded t,lc ^tat.° from whence he came. They debt, nnd not as a rule prescribed for the ' ve ro not niftrked, w e suppose, because they scaling of the existing debt, to govern ti:e SMS P c °ted the honesty of their fellow pris- Judiefiary—which latter abject , is not ox- or ' ers S but simply that they might be able JT_f F? T7 T ivAJ pressed in the title—I approve the act,’ Gih to t e ll their own, and be able to reclaim their February, 18U0. ^ . t ..i.—i-n* A - - ” * Secretary, of the Senate. Construing the sixth secti s:iid Utters shikuLi not bcprsutc^. iv Laudaail wal. thoM V- JaMgSW.I Murob 10, 180-3 — [IT—004 G WORTH COUNTY. 3 THE HONOBAIil.E C01UT H AVING fiillj aJmmistercd duties as Executrix of t lie tj. Jordan, late cfsaid coiinJy dewasetj prajr the usual citation to issue for«3( show cause why ♦ should col he dismia t»st, this March 5th ^ ' ELIZARETU t •hy her Altotuey t March 10, 19Q& F32. 331301 Charles J. Jenkins, Governor. Secretary of the State's Office, Ga., i MilTedgcville, Feb. 14, 186«. i 1 ITOj erty shoi^l it stray fronfi tlieir quarters. It is not an uncommon thing now to sen a chair sitting arournl, once owned hy Colonel Sawyer, of the Fourteenth Mississippi, or of Ihnive.lt. .. P T ». at * * 7 V . ^ _ _ y j Prigsidicr Generals Johnson, M.armaduke, The above and foregoing twopages con- 2. 1 ! other notables of the once rebel bull pen. tains a true and correct copy of the original )' ears hence such articles will be look- Croton Fire Insurance M] Adriatic Fire Insi Security Insurance Cinfj Atlantic Fire Insurance ‘ Phrenix Ins. Co., h Norwich Rre Ins, Co,, I* > often iu EngliPU schools, the oustom ^Pasftsd bv the Snnnttd. 1 ' Total Capital Apply to Albany, Ga.. March 8d, 1 act, now on file in this office. w Given uuder my hand and official-seaf N. C. Barnett, Secretary ofStale. WiliPFIMi A FEMALE TEACHER: ed upon as greater curiosifics than many that now grace our ]>ublio museums, and cost hmulredsof dollars. [Sandusky Register. A DILL up often iu English schools, the custom (FasSsd bv the SenateL vvould be “more hom*ed iu the breach than Sec. 1 The General Ass the observance. " Assembly of the State i } i . lr • if Gcjrgia do 1 enact, That all negroes mu- „ 1 . "'<1 . Ma L n y yen™ nffb ray h’ttoes, mestizoes and th( ir descemlents hav- onlj sislcr died, leaving her daughter to my ing < no eighth negro or African' blood in wl'tbat attack, were^aitoronslyjJotting to ! m^' C st aiidweH comlncre^a^raig'hdyias ^ lmovrn 5n th!s State as plant the rttjrtdartl of treason upo.nta walla, j I know anywhere., Up to last sfptemW ^ ' and to destroy the constitution and the GovI | ghe atte.ui«i a Lohdon^ies’^ol^of the ridff tomikeT'd ° f , co!o ’" sha31 liave ** ermnent. fi.st rank and tmo "P! 1 ' tom ‘ke Sad enforce contracts, tb sue. r. ‘‘Mi ““fraction, -aiitl’bc sued, tc be parties and irive ovidenee TnE Tenxessee plavtations of young olive trees, and in and about the cit y ut-vv buildings are both mime-, runs and handsome. Kvory European na tion seems anxious to have a footing iu tho Holy City. . The Russians. support , the Greeks,,the French theiatins, and the Eng lish^ (though not avowedly as a nation,) pat ronize the Jews, whose intofest will soon tfcbme the strongest of all.” . The Npw York Tribune of the 21st says: HFres'd n: d« lared Jast night to a party who applied for an official appointment, that lie.could not.have it without the condition of giving in its adherene parts, and that this . : UnTon Convention J month*! took a residmico ala'pk-asaift^own ^ OT Aviiieh met at Nasl.ville, on tlie 22d, seems «®.the Thames. _My niece, who U fond of have frill mid renal benefit of* nff lnws^ to havedistnrbcd the nerves of Brownlow’s ? ° c , e3din ? a the security of persons and organ, Iho Press & Times. Jt lets fly'the following Characteristic hit at thatliody: “’ni© mock Union Convention of yester day ijaibirNLAbraham Lincoln and the Uni- oh’army, hnhg out lio.Uhion flag, played ho Union tiiusic, and tp-iee hissed the gallant General Joseph A, Cooper, of East Tennes see, a soldier \vho fonght four yeara for til© Union. and .fought heroically untler General Thon\ns,in defence of Nashville. The devil take all sncli damnable Union Conventions as the imposture of yesterday.” • ’ " T- ■». ■ ’ ' -a - 2^^ Thirty-four citizen-, and firms in New Orleans have presented a long memo rial to Congress, setting forth that they ment for that purpose upon the subscribers to the public safety loan for the defease of that city against the United States, and ask- ariXS"® jEZ-GCetf A LARGE LOT Ot WALL W1NEOW Albany, March 3d, 186$. priticii le. *.r ” ^ ” y ™ vwrent [muishment, pain ok penalty nsajN° distressed face by inybid iiousekeeper Her tion^al AW ^ W ? J n,1 -P^ rt8 0* lan$ ^ rela- ; A fincAsscrttneni cr room. ±lie oicl servant had. however n> - r|> ■ Wurt-,18 AYonan’r Missiojr?-lThis mb- ; tlic —3w—infewjaw ani- mal be thought her mission was to—aw— unit on the snpewmw— to bo aw—aw^sawt her obtained admittance, aui was tlie matter. - Thei-e was " ’• ■ " ’ x had, however, ■ertaintd what at the school that morning, the teacher bein<. a v,s,tor tutor. Lecturing rather gUhly on I Englisli poetry, this-persoir attrih® ted^the , “We mortal millionslive i^n»y 3 to Mr. Tennyson. As'I am occupied in lite rary pursuits, my neice has re J mbrethan -And' ill kinds of Tsoklc just ««• . - .- ’ ■ Albany, March 3d, 1306. mm was air. Mat- psr' A a K ■ verness, who sat in of ^ “"J 1 twQnt y' four tpld her not to con- >^6''®. petitioned con gross tor the 1 . ... ,,,,,, aw ^ » . • — >t to con- riirlit of.m “ congress lor tl when tho good as a n : gget ? ^ e {I lsn ^ a voman 1 l a. s. m Snrincal Office on Bros OYER JONES & . .. ALBANY. r ' February Sd, 1806. CltKESE. . r.EOBGU- Albany, Sov. 4 ' ■ J