Savannah daily herald. (Savannah, Ga.) 1865-1866, January 13, 1866, Image 6

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■ Even in ber distress and sorrow, t£ie Sooth commands tbe respect of her enemies and of the world. The manner of ber resuscitation from the war reflect as much credit upon her as the courage with which she conducted it. Her surrender has not been a pretence and a trick, but has been manly, honest and sin cere. Our people are loo brave and too in dependent in spirit to play a double pari; to affect a submission which they are aowilling to make good; to pledge their allegiance to a Government which they do not in good faith mean to support. Their practical wisdom teaches them that their highest pos sible welfareds to be attained in the Union, and the sacred regard which they cherish for their honor and reputation is so exalted as to make them scorn to countenance ajfac- tious hostility to the Government. We shall have no repetition in the South of the state of .things which existed in Ire land, in Hungary, and in Poland. There will be no secret organization for insurrec tion; no incendiary meetings in the small hours of the night; no whisperings of trea son around the street corners; no deep, silent black, terrible undercurrent of hate and hos tility, under a smooth, smurking, shining surface of affected contentment and coun terfeit loyalty- The character of the Southern people is too frank and sincere for that. What they pretend to be they are, openly and honestly.— They do not deal in duplicity. It is foreign to their nature and habits. They have a traditional love for free government, and a traditional incapacity for any other. The liabits of centuries cannot be shaken oft, and they expect to enjoy free government iu spite of all that has happened. But they have an instinctive feeling of the necessity of yielding to the exigency of the times, and of proving their title to freedom by showing themselves supeiior to the passions and pre judices of the hour. The South ruled this Union from its forma tion for three quarters ot a century with dis tinguished integrity and a success which seems miraculous, fortune has, for a time, changed her relations to the Government. It is now for her to show that she can obey with the same integrity of character and of motive with which she so long ruled. In this Union, on this continent where public opinion is supreme, and where this most peculiar and most wonderful Anglo-Saxon Norman race predominates, men to attain to power must control by force of mind and character. What a striking exemplification ol this fact is afforded by the distinguished instance ot Mr. Seward, who, for four years, has been the presiding genius—in his person the embodiment of the Union. Tue giddy multitude may elect popular men to high position, only that men of great minds and character may rule in their name. Every intelligent citizen, every triend of the South must witness her deportment in her present hour of huiniliatidu with un feigned pride. The sterling and sturdy hon esty and dignity with which she conducts herself in adversity; her freedom from that puerile and frettul peevishness in distress which belongs to small minds; her supe riority to faction and duplicity; her scorn for the wretched characters who court popular favor by appeals to unworthy passions and prejudices; her silence and patience under insult and detraction, all mark her as supe rior to the fate which has befallen her, and worthy still of a glorious destiny. Let the South persist in the honorable course which has thus far been pursued. Until she regains her place in the Union, re covers the full possession of the rights which attalch to a free people, and can claim a sov ereign voice in affairs, let her continue to obey the laws, to respect the authorities, to eschew a factious policy, to scorn duplicity, to frown upon agitators and mischief makers’ Let her prove the sincerity of her renewed loyalty to the Union, obedience to laws and measures which are necessary for her restora tion.— The (Richmond, Va.') Republic. General Lee—Letter Written is 18G1. —TBe Old Guard, ot New York, publishes the following letter which shows the ground taken by General Lee in the beginning of the late civil war: Arlington, Va., April 20, 1861. General—Since my interview with you on the 18th instant, I have felt that I ought not longer to retain my commission in the army. I therefore tender my resignation,, which I request you will recommend for ac ceptance. It would have been presented at once but for the struggle it cost me to sepa rate myself from a service to which I have devoted all the best years of my life and all the ability I possessed. .During the whole of the time—more than a quarter of a century—1 have experienced nothing but kindness from my superiors, and the most cordial friendship from my com rades. To no one, General, have I been as much indebted as to youselt for uniform kindness and consideration, and it has always been my ardent desire to merit your appro bation. I sha.ll carry to the grave the most grateful recollections of your kind considera tions, and your name and fame shall always be dear to me. Save in defence of my native State, I never desire again to draw my sword. Be pleased to accept my most earnest wishes for the continuance of your happiness and prosper ity, and believe me most truly yours, R. E. Lee. Lieutenant General Winfield Scott, Com manding United States Army. Two Valuable Plantations FOR SALE In Liberty County. ITUS subscriber offers for sale bla two Plantations, A called Ricehope and MUlbaven. Tbe Rlcebope Plantation contains two thousand font hundred and forty-five C2446) acres, one-half of which ia choice hammock ana rice land, the other half pine land. He rice land will produce seventy bnahels of rice per acre; the hammock, from forty to fifty bushels of corn or a bale of aea Island cotton per acre' The pine land is very productive—will produce from flReen to twenty bushels of co-n per acre, or a half bale of sea island cotton, and la very easy of cultivation.— Upon it is a vast quantity of ranging or mill timber, within a half mile to a mile and a half of the Atlantic A Gulf Railroad, which passes through the middle of the tract. This place Is situated on both sides of the Golf Railroad, thirty-four miles from the city of Sa vannah, and tho wood and timber upon it, whlrb can be easily transported to the city, will pay what I ask for It ten times over. The heailh of tula place, espe cially the pine laud, cannot be excelled even by the mountains of Georgia. There are a number of de sirable settlements upon it, and the tract can be di vided np into a number ol small farms Tbere are fourteen hundred acres fenced and about four hundred cleared and iu perfect order for raising a large crop tbe enduing year. A good gin-house, corn-house, overseer’s house and negro houses on the place. The place is situated equi-dislaut between Hinesville and Walthourvile, the public road botween the«e two f daces passing through it. So well am I satisfied of Is productiveness, that I will sell it lor the products of one crop to a purchaser who will come under suf ficient obligations to cultivate the cleared laud prop erly, or I will sell for money, as hereinafter stated — The range for cattle and hogs cannot be excelled iu Georgia uor Florida, as they are fat the year round in the woods without feeding. The Millhaven tract contains three thousand one hundred and eighteen (3,1 IS) acre8 pine land. This is my residence, upon which I have resided for many years, and, fgr health, I do not think it can be ex celled in the world. Upon it are two valuable mill sites, with an Inexhaustible supply af timber upon never-tailing streams ; upon one of which has been a valuable saw and grist mill for the last sixty-five years. There are two hundred acres of cleared land, which is very productive ; a fine dwelling house, ne gro houses, Ac. With this place I will cell oue hun dred and twenty-five head of cattle, a number of horses, mules, hogs, Ac. These lands were selected by me some years ago with a view to permanent lo cation and investment. 1 am induced now to sell for the reason that my professional engagements are such that I cannot devote my peisonal attention to the in auguration of a free labor system, and for the further reason that I believe that this system will thrive bet ter in the hands of Northern men, as our former slaves are either tanght to believe, or inherently inclined to look upon their old masters as their natural enemies. I wnl sell as above stated, or for cash, or a portion of the purchase money to be paid in one, two and three years. The titles are indisputable. Plats are left with Bell, Wyliy & Christian, in Savunn&h, for Inspection, and refer to N. A. Hnrdee A Co. and E. C. Wade A Co. I invite nil purchasers to look at these lands, and if they don’t salt them, then l think they must be fas tidious indeed. WM. B. GAULDEN. Millhaven, Dec. 20, 186S. j3-tf CRUTCHES Tj'IRSTand only premium swarded at the American a Institute Fair, 1865, und State Fair of Pa., 1865, for Crotches. Hartmsn’s Patent Elastic Rubber Crntcnes are pronounced by surgeons, and everybody else, to be tbe very best ever invented. They are easy and con venient, they prevent paralysis of the nerves, do away with all the weariness Inseparable from the use of all others, and are In all respects unrivalled. Send for a circular. Agents wanted everywhere LOVBJOY A TaYLOR, Sole Manufacturers, No. 416)4 Broadway, N. Y. 6m-n23 THE NEWJfORK NEWS. DAILY' SEMI-VEEKLY A D WEEKLY. THE; NEW YORK WEEKLY AND SEK1-WEEKLY NEWS. THE FAIREST OF THE FAIR. huLU, owing to the peculiar and Important re- latlona which they sustain, their peculiar organisa tion. and the offices they .perform, are subject to many sufferings and ailments peculiar to the sex. Freedom from these contributes in no smalt degree to their happiness and welfare, for none can be hap py who are IU. Not only so, but no one of those va rious fame, comple*”*” cas Jong be suffered to run on without involving the general health of the Indi vidual, and ete long producing permanent sickness and premature decline. Nor ia it pleasant to consult a physician for the relief of these delicate affections, and only upon the mast urgent necessity wills true woman so tar sacrifice her greatest charm as to do this. The aex will then thank us for placing In their bands simple specifics which will be found effica cious In relieving and curing almost every one of those troublesome oomplalnts peculiar to the sex. HELMBOLD’S EXTRACT OF BUCHU. PROFESSIONAL, CARD* SO WELL OOBB. COBB & JACKSO Attorneys-at-^aw, MACON, GEORGIA. LAROCHE &. JOHNSON, Timber&Lumber Epalers 200 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA.7 d4tf / Port Royal louse, HILTON HEADjS. C. GREAT FAMILY NEWSPAPERS.' BENJAMIN WOOD Editor And Proprietor. Journals of Politics, Literature, Fashions, Market and Financial Reports, Interesting Miscellany, and News from ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD! Hundreds suffer on In silence, and hundreds of others spply vainly to druggists and doctors, who either merely tantalize them with the hope of a core or spply remedies which make them worse. I would not wish to assert anything that would do injustice to the afflicted, but I am obliged to say that although it r/fhy be produced from excessive exhaustion of the powers of life, by laborious employment, unwhole some sir and food, profuse menstruation, the use of tea and coffee, and frequent childbirth, It Is tar of- tener caused by dlreot Irritation, applied to the mu cous membrane of the vagina itself. When reviewing the causes of these distressing complaints, it is most painfnl to contemplate the at tendant evils consequent upon them. It is but sim ple Justice to the subject to enumerate a few of the many additional causes which so largely affect the life, health, sad happiness of woman In all classes of society, and which, consequently, affect, more or less directly, tbs welfare of the entire human fam ily. The mania that exlats for precocious education and marriage, causes the years that nature designed for corporeal development to be wasted and pervert ed in the restraints of dress, the early confinement of school, and especially In the unhealthy excite ment of the ball-room. Thus, with the body half clothed, and the mind unduly excited by pleaaure. perverting In midnight revel the hoars designed by nature for sleep and rest, the work of destruction Is half accomplished. In consequence of this ssrly strain npon her sys tem, unnecessary effort is required by tho delicate votary to retain her situation in sohool at a later day, thus aggravating the evil. When one excite ment Is over, another in prospective keeps the mind morbidly sensitive to Impression, while the now con stant restraint of frshionable dress, absolutely for bidding the exercise indispensable to the attainment and retention of organio health and strength; the exposure to night sir ; the sudden ohange of tem perature ; the complete prostration produced by ex cessive dancing must, of necessity, produce their le gitimate effect At last, an early marriage caps the climax of misery, and the unfortunate one, hitherto so utterly regardless of the plain dictates and re monstrance* other delicate nature, becomes an un willing subject of medical treatment This is but a truthful picture of the experience of thousands of our young women. a _ » Long before the ability to exercise the functions of the generative organs, they require an education ot their peculiar nervous system: composed of what la called the tissue, which is, in common with the female breasts and lips, evidently under the control of mental emotions and associations at an early pe riod of life ; and, as we shall subsequently see, these emotions, when exeesslve, lead, long before puberty, to habits which sap the very life of their victims ere nature has self-oompleted their development. For Female Weakness and Debility, Whites or Leucorrhcea, Too Profuse, Exhausting, Too Long Continued Periods, for Prolapsus and Bearing Down, or Prolapsus Uteri, we offer the most .perfect specific known : Oelmbold’t Compound Ewtract ofBuchu. Directions for use, diet, and advice accompany. Females In every period of life, from Infancy to extreme old age, will find It a remedy to aid nature in tho discharge of its functions. Strength is ths glory of manhood and woman hood. * HELMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUCHU is more strengthening than any of ths preparations cf Bark or Iron, Infinitely safer, and more pleasant- R1DDKLL A RUGG, P|of*i»tOb» / . X. S. BIDDKLL. M. F. BUflO. Iu3-tf ESTABLISHED 1826. WM.H. !£E WAKE BOOMS lMMuftnet, IMPROVEMENTSJNTRODUCED IMMENSE CIRCULATIONS^ DETERMINED ON. THE LARGEST, BEST AND CHEAPEST PAPERS PUBLISHED IN NEW YUHK. NEW YORK WEEKLY NEWS, Published. Every Wednesday. Single Copies Five Cents One Copy, one year $ 2 u*» -Three Copier, one year # 00 Five Copies, one year 8 Ts Ten Copies, oneyear IT 00 —And an extra copy to any Clnb of Ten Twenty Copies, one year 80 00 The Weekly News Is Sent to Clergymen at $1 50. SEMI-WEEKLY NEWS. Published every Tuesday and Friday. Single Copies, oneyear $ 4 00 Threo Copied, one year 10 00 Five Copies, one year 16 00 Ten Copies, one year 30 00 —And an extra copy to any Club of Ten. Twenty Copier, one year 66 00 To Clergymen 3 00 HELMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUCHU, having received the endorsement of the most PROMINENT PHYSICIANS IN THE UNITED STATES, Is now offered to afflicted humanity as a certain cure for the following diseases and symp toms, from whatever cahse originating : General Debility, Mental and Physical Depresalon, Imbecility, Determination of Blood to the H Confused Ideas, Hysteria, General Irritability, Restlessness and Sleeplessness at Night, Absence of Muscular Efficiency, Loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, Emaciation, Low Spirits, Disorganization or Paralysis of the Organs of Generation, Palpitation of the Heart, And, In fact, aU the concomitants of a Nervous and Debilitated state of tho system. To Insure the genuine, cut Oiie out. ASX FOB UELMBULIZS. TAXI NO firms, w. M. Walsh, Between Broadway k Greenwich Street. oct2T-3m Brown’s Standard Scales. U SED by the United States and Foreign Govern ments for more than THIRTY YEARS. Adapted to any branch of business for foreign or home markets. Warranted accurate and durable. Sales rooms No. 3 Barday-at., new Broadway. N. Y. sepl9 ly R. BROWN, Manufacturer. WILMINGTON IRON WORKS. PUSEY, JONES & CO., Wilutinjfton, Delaware. M ANUFACTURE Iron Steamboats, Steam Engines, Boilers, Machinery for Saw Mills, Ac. Having had long experience in business and being provided with very extensive facilities for doing work of this dash are prepared to execute orders with despatch, octlS 6m New York Piano Fortes. Ernest Gabler, Manufacturer of New Scale First-Class PI ANO FORTES, Factor;, 122,124 & 126 East 221 St.. R ESPECTFULLY announces that his Large New Factory is now completed, folly organized, and In successful operation. Ire means of which he has greatly increased his manufacturing facilities. He will there fore be able henceforward to turn out 36 Piano* per week, to supply orders promptly, without that incon venient delay to which Dealers and Purchasers have been suh|ected, from the fact that for more than two years past he has been continually a hundred instru ments behind orders. A full assortment at all timet may be found at his Mamfihctory and Warerooms in New York City. Every instrument fully warranted. Retail Warerooms, 743 Bsosdw&v. 3m-nl6 1' y« MACHINERY DEPOT SAW MILLS, GRIST MILLS, WOOD WORKING MACHINERY, SAWS, BELTING, &c., &c. WOOD & MANN’S, CELEBRATED Portable Steam Engines Corner SOLE Broughton & AGENT FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS. OF Barnard street, THE STATE GEORGIA. The Pope to Quit Rome.—It Is stated that a private letter-received in London says that tbe Pope makes little secret of his intention to leave Rome if the French troops are really withdrawn altogether, and will, in all proba bility, accept the offer of ihe British govern ment, lately received, to provide for him an asylum iu Alalia. —The total revenue from the tax on ch v- ing tobacco for tbe last three years is nearly eighteen millions of dollars- To Mail Subscribers $10 per annum Six Months Five Dollars For sale by all Newsdealers Specimen copies of DAILY and WEEKLY NEW8 sent free. Address BENJ. WOOD, Dally News Building, No. fi) City Hall Square, septsi New York City. “' jir Mess Fork, Adamantine Can dles and Whiskey. P )R sale by A. MINIS, j9 No. 3, Stoddard’s Western Range. JUST RECEIVED BY 1 M. SCARBROUGH & CO., 140 Congress Street: 2A PACKAGES New Bacon Strips * v 20 packages NewIBacon Shoulders 10 packages New Lard, put up in 26 pound pails 60 kegs New Lard 60 firkins and tuba best Orange county Butter 60 boxes Cheese 1°0 boxes Candies 100 bbla Flour, best brands .' Together with a splendid assortment of Raisins, Nuts, Ac* Ac. 420-tf FROM FOUR TO THIRTY-FIVE HORSE POWER. We have the oldest, largest, and most complete works in the country, enraged in manufacturing Por table Engines. Our engines are. "by experts” now conceded to be the beet apparatus or tbe description ever presented to the public. Adapted to every pur pose where power Is required. Medium sizes constant ly on hand, or fnrnished on short notice. Descriptive circulars, with pricelist, sent on applca- . tl0 “‘ COMSTOCK A KINSEY, ' d!5-eod6m 164 Bay street. Savannah, Ga,