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SAYm AH DAILY HERALD.
VOtiUME I*\
Jfo. 4*s* i
|pt fttbatmal;
PURUBHEP
EVERY EVENING, SUNDAYS EXCEPTED,
RY
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OCR NEW YORK LETTER.
New Fork, Friday, Feb. 25*.
BUNTING
Ms Tolled osot this week froip. all the
housetops in great profusion, and there
Is no attempt on the part of our people
to disguise the great satisfaction felt at
the announcement that the accursed city
of Charleston is once more, and now
forever to be, under tke flag its inhabi
tants have so long contemned and dis
graced. The fact is one ot intense
gratification to your correspondent, who
was most outrageously chaffed in the
office then occupied by him in Broad
street in this city a few weeks before
the fall of Sumter by one of the assist
ant editors of the Charleston Mercury,
who had just returned from Europe, ‘fin
order,” as he said, “to be present at the
funeral of the United States!” Os
course the response from the writer of
this was rather savory of what might be*
expected from a Boston boy under such
circumstances, concluding with an inti
mation that unless the then embryonic
rebel did not leave our premises he
would be kicked out. He left. His
fulminalions in his paper all through the
war have been ot the regular blood and
thunder style, and now he £as sneaked
out of Charleston just as he did out of
our office four years ago to save himself
from being kicked out, for no decent
Yankee would have the name of captur
ing such a contemptible whelp. God is
great—God is just—and the workings of
His hand never were more forcibly ap
parent to good patriots than at this
hour. His bow of promise rises beauti
fully res plendent over the dark clouds
of war, and we shall yet worship Him
with thankfulness an* praise in anthems
“Peace on eartl and good will to
man!”
THk PETROLEUM TRADE
which risen to be a great element
in the business of this city, and of the
country has established a Stock Ex
change of its own. Petroleum companies
are growing daily, and if one quarter of
them strike He the income of the govern
ment from the illuminating fluid will
soon double its present amount, comput
ed at forty millions a year. The sessions
at the board arfe quite lively, and the suc
cess of the enterprise is established. Its
members already rumber.fi ve or six hun
dred. At the opening of the .rooms it
was stated that but for the exports of pe
troleum the price of gold would ere this
have reached 350 or even 400 pei cent.
That it is a great source of national
SAVANNAH, GA., SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 4, 1865.
wealth there is no doubt, for the oil re
gions stretch from the Alleghanies to the
Mississippij and even though two-thirds
of the companies organized should prove
to be “South Sea bubbles,” the sound
ones will soon, if they do not already,
render the trade equal in importance and
in material results to that of the dethron
ed “King Cotton.”
THE LATEST THEATRICAL SENSATION
has been the debut of Mrs. F. M. Lander,
widow of the General of that name, and
•formerly the popular artiste Miss Jean
Margaret Davenport. On her marriage
she left the stage* of which she had been
an ornament and to which £he has re
turned. Four years ot retirement have
not altered the Miss Davenport of our
memory, always a good painstaking and
correct actress, and in many respects a
superior one. She was distinguished for
an unemotional, freezing style, to which
an iceberg might have been called warm.
A perfect lady, mistress of the aits of
conversation and elocution, she is the
beau-ideal of the higher class of women
whom the stage port rays. Y~et the per
sonal magnetism which had distinguish
ed others of our first actresses is want
ing, and while we feel tha t before us is a
perfect conventional artiste, we miss the
hearty outburst, and the magic smile
which havepn other's made the stage al
most in seeming a paradise, more parti
cularly to young and impressionable
theatre-goer3. The play was “MesAe
liance,” formerly “Lucie d’Arville”
brought out in this city some years ago
by Mary Provost. It has been consid
erably pruned, and among other scenes
omitted was the sensational one which
gave the drama some popularity. This
was where Miss Provost used to climb
up the side of a vine clad tower, expos
ing her ankles to a bewildering
extent. The play will give way to
some of those in which the fair artiste
used to appear, and in which she will
show to greater advantage.
ARTEMUS WARD.
Has been delivering his “Mormon”
lecture all over the Eastern States. He
carries round with him a lot of photo
graphs of large size of the ‘'belles of Salt
Lake city,” or at least that’s what he
says they are. The faces are remarkably
handsome, and there is a strong sus
picion that Artemus has a fresh set for
every place he visits, and that the whole
lot have been obtained surreptitiously,
for everybody knows that the haggard,
skinny, blear-eyed women of Utah
couldn’t be induced to sit for their pic
tures at all for fear they would crack all
the plates in existence. Artemus lec
tured in Lowell a week or two ago.
Ralph Waldo Emerson, the well known
metaphysician, also addressed an assem
blage the same night. A stolid old
farmer irom the interior went to Emer
son’s lecture, and the next day was asked
by a triend what he thought of Artemus
Ward, and to the surprise of his inter
rogator replied that if “that was Artemus
he was a mighty poor stick.” The joke
is that the farmer had attended Emer
son’s leeture and not Ward’s, and had
not been able to discover the difference.
ATTEMPTS
have recently been made made to injure
Gen. Meade, in connection with the Pe
tersburg explosion failure, and the affair
has been fully investigated, the Conduct
of the War Committee endeavoring to
throw the blame on him, while a debate
was in progress in Congress.
Some question arose as to the* cause of
the disaster, and after considerable dis
cussion and before any decision had
been reached, a balmy Senator arose and
said, “Mr..President, there is no neces
sity of appointing a commission to in
quire into the disaster. I can inform
you what was the occasion of it.” The
Vice President requested the Senator
to give the reasons; and the answer free
and plump, from his lips, was—“Mr.
President. The cause of this disaster
was these G and and and rebels. ’
There was a hearty guffaw, and the Sen
ate subsided. The failure at Petersburg
is easily traceable to this very cause,
and the attempt to injure Gen. Meade,
did not succeed. Gen. Grant's opinion
of Gen. Meade, fully endorses the latter,
and it is safe to assert that more faith
is put in his words than in the report of
the Committee, and the Senate, by re
cently confirming Meade’s promotion to
a Major Generalship, in the regular
Army, have fully coincided in the Lieu
tenant General’s published endorsement
of that gallant officer.
THE DRAFT * - -
Has been gorng on very quietly over
in Brooklyn, and there has been no
sign whatever of trouble, as it is well
known that Ned Hinks, the Provost
Marshal General here, will not hesitate a
second as to what course to pursue
should any of the remains of the old riot
show themselves. There does not appear
to be any uneasiness on the subject, and
hundreds of the unfortunate ones whose
names have been turned out as candi
dates for military honors will much pre
fer to serve six months in garrison or in
the field than to pay from one to two
thousand dollars for a substitute. Quite
a number of “draft associations” have
been formed in Brooklyn- iu various
neighborhoods to help each other in ob-
taining subscribers.
THE SAVANNAH COTTON
Has pretiy nearly all been heard from,
although it has not arrived here. The
fleet, which sailed so prettily from Hil
ton Head, making speculators’ eyes
water as they dashed off with their valu
able cargoes, met with pretty hard usage
from old Boreas, who has a way of
treating most everything and everybody
off Hatteras with a taste of his quality—
they got somewhat separated, some of
them dismasted, and they had to make a
port just where they could. Their con
voy , arrived here two or three days
ahead of the few vessels which reached
this port, much to the surprise of our
people, who were foolish enough to im
agine that the gunboats were sent as a
protection! Some half dozen have
reached Philadelphia, and it will prob
ably be quite a season before the big
sheds on Staten Island will cover all their
cargoes. It is to be sold by sample.
A MILITARY DUEL
is reported to have taken place in this
city a few days since, between a Briga
dier General, who was In the Red River
campaign, and a western Colonel. It is
stated that the latter made some re
marks about the Red River Campaign
not much relished by the former, who
felt so mueh incensed that he fcoi&bly
challenged the Colonel The aShix
said to have been decidedly rich, the
duel being fought with cavalry revolvers
in a close room, the Brigadier pegging
away with all six charges, while the Col
onel did not pull his trigger at all The
valiant Brigadier then, on seeing the Col
onel about to take his turn at peppering;
him, and knowing him to- be a dead shot,,
ran from the room, shouting “murder ! r>
at all the top of his voice, rushing into*
the midst of a lpevy of brother officer*,
in an adjoining appartment, who baki
witnessed the duel without bullets!
THE TWENTY-SECOm
was duly celebrated on Wednesday.—
There was but little business of any kind
done, and, the day being very ffiaer, out
people put on their bqlklay attire utoll
promenaded the streets and a cadg
ing upon each other to exebuuge. con
gratulations upon recent, victories.—
Three regiments paraded l ,, in chiding the
Seventh, and was reviewed by USovemoir
Fenton, at Union* Square, tito re usew
being witnessed, by some thirty thou
sand people. The old veterans ufr£!'%
(some of whom wear very light umns
tachios for such old soldiers-1 tusuAtcl
out, and let somebody fire their four can
non for them on the Battery at noon.—
then returned to City Hall, in th* adgk
boihood of which they sat down to a
sumptuous repast of coffee and cak&s t
At noon, Broadway in the vicinity el
Trinity Church was crowded by thou
safidV’# ladies, and children, listening a>
the attuned te* pc.*
....“ * andiin»-.the..evening
triotic measure,
A BIG FIZZLE
took place in the different parks, in r/»e
shape of fireworks. Second-hand IwoTja
crackers would have afforded a more
gorgeous display than the abortion
which people were invited by the Cty
Fathers to witness in City flail Parte.,
and the grand, magnificent, splendifler
ous closing piece, advertised as a bril
liant representation ot the “Father of
Our Country,” on horseback, turned ap,
minus ail the anatomy of said Father.,
except a spurless boot, aud the hoist:
didn't have any head or neck—the boys
pelted the thing with mud and ceur.G
in disgust. ff
OUR DRY GOODS ME!*
who attended the Boston trade sate re
turn with many eulogiums of the cour
teous hospitality extended them., not
only by their brethren in the trade, hut
by the citizens generally, from urbane
Mayor Lincoln to jolly Sergeant Dunn,
the latter of whom was found a SpHuttiki
pioneer by gaslight, having previous
had much experience in piloting coun
try members of the Legislature to see the
Elephant. So far as their interests ex
tended in the great sale, they profess
themselves perfectly satisfied, and ex
press much surprise that Boston Sms at
this late day adopted a system vrtuchlbr
so many years has been so saetessiisil
here. The conductors of the side aru
highly lauded for the tact, energy as&
enterprise displayed.
THE NEW ENGLAND
are crowded with soldiers la transit's! to
and from the field and the coast It is a
funny sight to see a one-armed sohtier
dealing out a hand to Lis three ccadja-
I PRICK
\Flvto Cents.