Newspaper Page Text
J 2 f ■ v -
B*.'»«eea f,oa
»r a ’’lisi* 1 on » large scale bv the
T derate fTanfcdvz'-ce'info Mifwaflippi Troops
rtf
-.»»* t ■’«—■ »',;“5 T b h a t
Fell r: :1, «+■ ‘ CTel " Lr'l'i. ~
a . . 1 ' r' ‘ P ;t to full ba«.
Tbs.” ( .r -*- ' /.« n»*-.e wiib a )«/•
dis./ A 1 c b ■r. their contract in Is.-,
»' mx s*ei«Nb dl 1 '-«P‘.op!‘‘
ot i; . : g ov> - on, bat wi ■ n taev
ct t -do n will, gloves f if; tL rt
the. wi ;on ; wort in one bond atd f>
U) ' ;± ' <**•'' ■*? ";!' 1 ►-read devastation
*nc ruiln i en- e.iaee Urm nou&i
*»d .and I harm , andtUir
in Lille?' t pon toe worl :
Pi»nia!:ot-« -wV ’ *d»jjg-oyed; the people, wtthonl
regard to a ,< ’jn‘*P < x7 if dt .id and insulted,
nod the - r.-v-r ed into wiidern< ss.
Such, and .wffiWPffiy.s 1! < t, ' ■ that awaits Mis
aiaaippt it ♦*<***• «•**** if '. lin ‘ a porno*-..
On it. 6 IL*TT . ( .- ,r of Petersburg,
Tb.,t> --f
c ‘ ' J .iourg; remitting
that n.ici. n-.meslhe
rig' ‘ . -J -ai penu tie !or
TANARUS, • f
, . , -% »Mi •<?
We i leu--! too -i.a*,
«jSXA
t. - ji "- 1 ifr H?y.
1 " - w«tfw* a**
'■ "*• " ' ( ; >y re vti! bo
®feSs*S?
•Btlffi! ■ !l i.. iled by a Federal
steame., Sftrrr •!'.t that'the Aboli
t ,*M» L u iu.». y the Salt Works at tha’
plane. * -
t»~ii- ) Arkansan am-onnc- that
it. #T» tit.,...). e.-n thousand troops
in tii . i I fn-—w cl , they are arrest
ir.gwiwt * ■n.'ii , ! Eying waste the
country. IJun.
The (,<■, louSporernmonl has undertaken
rou-tti D» ' , ’3BdP * 1 ' "rk will be prosecu
ted a; o
We ■ “jfltr .at under the decision ot
n e GffilJJJXcf this State, that the prop
*rty Oi o t ». n ~gb etto taxati ;B. The Ma un
•Bri » 'n I o- i--j -e sold lor the tax
Oln.rnuo to be on
In «p> ■ ingh: -fr* -sabstitut i.-.. <set, -, in Kich
•>;j rays: “Wa note.more anima
tion in tin# market. Able bodied ioreignera
have*b«en rotd ltfl.K week !rom 1.1 JO to 1,400,
thhUßh tb ,s-who have notorioanly deseited can
De bought .-1 . i a ! !v did pi. ,u, Iron)
tbreetoH-xhuaur and u . .ns.''
there i m much t-nffer. ann ng the people
the.--, i-i 00. -atsl u peck . but
ter, fl a , 11,1'.: ;<•!■:,; 60e. a1» and ; wood m
u oorpj an . # , yibir..; ti . in , roportion.
A tor.-, pon- • ;t »i F in il-ntgo-nery Adrertioer
say,:, in i, ■ re»n- .t . lien. lire„g, a certain King
ondfoui ••- u men .sere captured in tee mountains
and execut* 0 a iJuinborlai.d Ford. They had
“ bus). iv 'mtK ” -a - lry. Jn retaliation the
Federal. mi. , • ml :«u ii on,- prisoners from the
Court House of Un'djUtvn.
0 e Otb: r-. Oi I mail pox ban mailo ita u[>-
pcu-aoco ii Hoi- . A u-,,r0 boy who attended
the ,i.ot c wh.-.F iis i . v, . i.rlv v. - s!i, b:»a taken
it, blithe inis not been , xrio - aud no danger of
afurt ii o . is F-pprehonded.
Ther aieliirec ..email pox at the p.st
house in ■ ■ .-ici.nty oi Dal.-. Qu.
kl'i-r V. 1 1 ii. -.- aox Fit the East Tenn. <k
Oa. Ka Ir ad e< u, ■ iy, r r contiy purchas'd m
Knoxville, four hundred Uniucuud dollars worth
ol 8 per c it. coupon nds, aud ihe game officer
has ordered an td.tiou ri-hundrid thousand dol
lars worth ot ib- aecu.lt ■ utasiug itltogolher j
the hs&djouta mv ~t of hall a million of dol- I
lars lbr Lis coinpa;. ;. The inrijiment itself, at 8 ]
per cant, win be r«.,‘ btioD to the already I
largo remiui < ■ ,'c ;• . uy.
The County Court ot Southampton, Va., has
nppropr.ate n tnousii,,, <i.,t!.,n! lor the purchase
of olothiog . r i:. r , tfom that county.
Cos,, li-i- •, ot -»<ij :ii H.- imont,
died out! h A til .*•
The a* ,lo : -.tbsby yellow lev., in
Houston, . rag, tjJffiK li ■, lour--., n. The
wbcl ■ ?s»e Sm. a . ,
euss teemed • ■ ■ ‘k-
Aa exchange .a 1 ■ • .-s. C■• „»•!-. aie otli
eeva ai dn. »• '- , L,- i. Vi,.' burg up to the
V!Bd ot Nov, mb itiWßu® ell'. oC-a, ;.. • nroclu
nation i. it. ysw. . , - at TANARUS, ok?. ur,
frsen i!n« m .flKh - ’.mi i delivery
Aboil, sstani j i oi,
ea " ' hWw by
u gorei ua nt agent Tot a thousand milt. from
Obarleali b.-cui.i-i Jv - - lot quit.- up to tho
gortrumeu. n. .! T!u-:.o same shoes, the
Courier now uy , we-ro afterwuida bo d in
Oharlealon a $0 |< t pan . ana have nee been sold
to u government ugeat in North Carolina at slk
per i.Fiir.
Com is selling o i tho Mississippi river at tweuty-
Ave wnta a busheL
There hi s been some raisunderstauding in South
Car, liuii in relation to ihe organisation of the re
sa.ves They have decided to await the action of
the Li igislature iu the premises.
The Chau mm alt bol makes the remarkable
observutio.i that in this war those sections of
the id ,uiu occupied by tha enemy, the pit-ss,'
lees Km i any other source i pu il.c icfljonce,
has buoriheed t ini u-aud honor of its fellow
oiiUens, or knell to ihu behests ol tiio foe. This
faot furnishes a jost aod ettrao,diuary cocnpli
tnent to the pair,on., t and courage of the South
ern press.
A o ivalry officer, belonging io Leo's army, who
m de a r»ojuiioise..noe sour miles within ihe en
emy’s Lues a w days ago, reports that Hum
side will advance- j.oi u as ho cau get supplies
of food —his nu n uviug ulmost mutinous for V-e
waut of »,.m„'liing to eat, and ouly restrained
from the outbreak by ap>peals made to tb.uir patri
otism, undbj contrasting their msiguilioant suf
leringswr.: the terrible hardships of tho rebels.
Foragiuv pj-u.-s ar, ut oat by the enemy in
all a rci is,- nd wide spuad destruction murks
their track. Federal Osh. llirncy declared to a
larrn.i, v. itli whom Ibis officer convuresd, tliat ho
Intended to make - ab, r..es f ell that oountry,
and to drive tl.« xn ah 1 1 s beyond t’he lines oi
the Confederate at my «i whom they sympathis
ed.
A feutherrd exiori.jner, iu the shape of an owl,
measuribg five and a bait feet irorn tip to tip,
aud ot unusual dimensions, was lately killed
in Dinwiddie County, Virginia, while pouncing on
a pig.
The S ate Convention of Florida tried th “Exe
cutive Council” experiment, with no good result.
ftr»r. Mi ,o ~ ;> : i., littsagg, while according full
pruise to ih discus ciiuiposiDg the Council, ur
gu-'saen nst i- -6 nueoiistitutioual and nnuecessa-
ry and cjuriouH.
l'be N..uhtz Courier tsuys : Ti>e:e are enough
nit"i suciect to the conscript law now running at
large, who, ! ’.ei n connection with, stragglers
lroiu t a. .ay, would 01 themselves oansMute a
Teiy iorwidabi, force. Let them'bo looked after,
A tu« duyas uce Col. James P. Howard, with a
squad', :o; 9 c -i, ~ en route tor Burksville,
M> « i» tu • . ror force of the enemy’s
cavalry ■) .u 0 and Kentucky stock
roaJ. 1 iu-m my were nt no aud waiting, whi n I
Lot. it watd s ga.tuni oivn; and catne upon them, I
und a Btiu.p i. 11 brtllieni ekirm h ensued r.tu.t
mg in the ..., ,1, , . of the k aokees. Thirty
ot the iai.k- wort ailed mu wounded, while I
tlm lom us U.L Hawara's oommand, amounted to
four n« a * uex nouiid and.
The ta lea rt u. Conoieracy are paying iu-
Sti.uuoi :,4 tins i' ; v r.ihot,- whuh save been
moal cm up and uiu •and by \hc enemy. From the
last repor. of tiic Virgo,.a Central road wo notice
that us re tin; f.r .in- pa.-.t ti cal jtsr waa one
■lfliilll if liars, l ex, ees-’s not' quite
d»7i,oOC The ion. .inbuu ,aui thj Ist if Oeic
b«r wuj |1,567.1yS T. > jj.l durmy the year
has btc-t gritiily i ju.id by ibe otictuy.
The Jaonson ALsi-iasipp at oi NYv. 29tb, lewus
tb»i whs enemy ure lano, i ; > m heavy force at Del
ta, twcuty-nv.l uiiM s oi i • H e is. ihtv ure also
debars u., m coustoe able u •co ,'u the Mississippi
•hors opposite link .a,
A Clips,. eat .. .'t«u. os, Fa., Nov. tdtta,
aaya ; ••sir colics, jail returned ft out West Bay,
reports tu.. iue enemy shelled the Balt Wornsia
that vicinity, killing sad wounding several. They
then value ashore, and witn small arms killed
men aud Wants. cap; .nug several negroes, some
prisoners, a u souii 60d wagon.-.”
o: ni atttTß lnNcw Orleans is truly
deploraoie It v 3 tuied < at the twenty thousand
m i U ’ e " U) -oroed’oath of aI
~M *>*« op nlv registered
VJZ '* ' 4bc httoh tyranny at
and w.vZe’i; . g:. '. r ‘ ” ' W. n ,? e citv
household vfec s . V ,
sere, l'host ill a a: * \ ,
shipped NorK r onc.\ U. . . a,..'. '‘',° ei es ’
the taeoty thett-.ud pair..- . st-rT-'or take
the oath ot atiegu-uce n or - get a p.-rmn to
lesve the city.
Several hundred rate hs - - fortified r .«mee;vej
ta fi*st Tcnuo -ee, Uia *ue North Car ua liu*,
about torn-vivo lie. Wes’, i As. v . This i 6
la a very oislet al -.coon o, count; y, ami i-e force
guttered there is comp.: .■ ; rob .b.j ctdi ffo.ted
men who have h , :r.>, * r Lei-.es i avoid the
aonscr.,'
>. U. mikua to keeg -ao traitors it. -heck, urn,,
.troops trout Geu. iiroy Smiths comma id can ar
rive ai the place, -a;;, ad to u -ut.
The & obo-oud Enquirer contains an emoorate
article cb how. w..j M,r ..,.d .11 in 1661, and
why she did . x . I-oe writer minks
that crue. tnjus'.ce i, , j i Maryian>%ii the
taunts and reuaa-.id .a.net hi-r character
anocouiage. lit- p v e - ihi. v ary land has done
ser'ioe 10 'he Svuu. aqmvs.iat ntrnisbtaf
kl.foti men.
The railroad from Meridian Miss., to Selma, A.a.,
wih"be coapieted in a short time. Between the
Utter plaoe, A Montgomery, a distande of -thirty
■kUsthe connection will be made by steamboat.
Newi SuaimarT.
Letters from Texas state that the Federa'.s are j
making preparai ous to attack Port Lavaoca agi- "■ ;
The most active preparations were being made b
our troops to give them a warm reception. Li-'
vacca is the second port on he Texas coast, an •
die shipping point lor Victoria,Gonisles, Seguin, 1
San Antonio, and the principal districts of Scut;,-
tV eatern Texas. It is a good sized village, sum- \
hiring about three or four thousand inhabitants
It is situated on the Matagorda Bay, on a ,
ow, marshy plain, and presents every ap-
Dfarance of being an exceedingly unhealthy
p'ace, and has long been noted for its loose :
uorabty generally. A railroad from Lavacci in
the direction of Victoria, has been completed to
. vithia a fer miles of the latter place. Between
Lfivuroa and Victoria, is an immense prairie, ex
•endin j over the space ot sixty miles, oc which
not a shrub of conseqnence, or a stream of water
:.owever small, or a habitation, however humble,
can be seen. The timber of which the railway is
constructed, waa shipped from Florida before the
war.
The stealing of treasury notes and counterfeit
ing ho same by negroes in Richmond—like the
defalcations in the Medical Purveyors department
—proveg to be a story made_ out of whole clotb.
Some chaps in that section mußt either be fond of
gulling the public with big stories, or very fond
of givmg currency to that which is not true.
The Report of the Chief of tbo Department of
Treasury and Finance of South Carolina shows
t ;.t when the Confederate Government has set
tled theciaims of that State against it, which, it is
•eaid, is likely to be soon, there will be placed to
the credit of the State the amount of 11,444,705,-
iS, and subject to futare legislative appropriation,
after providing therefrom Jot any existing, obli
gations to which the said luuda are liable,
At the market price of cotton to-day, our now
useless staple is of value enough to pay, of itself,
every dollar which the Confederates .Stales owe
A t this moment there are 3,000,000 bales of cot
.ton within the country which, at the ruling prices
of the staple now, is worth 1700,000,000. Since
the vvorid began no nation has ever had in ita
hands so much wealth in a single artiols of pro
duction. The consumption of cotton is increas
ing in a ratio far faster than the increased
means of its production, and this results, in a
great degree, from the new fabrici to which it it
being applied, to say nothing of the increase of
the world’s population,and the new civilizations
which immediately require its use. Regarding
these interesting facts and statistics with respect
to this annual store of wealth, it is impossible to
suppose that the sum of debt which tins war wili
accumulate can be unmanageable or fall with in
tolerable weight upon our people.
TUe I’laquamine Gazette of the 22d, learns from
a gentleman just from AUakapas, La., that the
Federal gunboats have gat up in the vicinity of
the .Salt w.i-ks, (iu their rear,) in Vermillion Bay,
and that those works had been abandoned—all
the wagons, slaves, Ac,, there, engaged iu working
them and c;nte there for salt, had left.
i Mr. N. 11. iianoiou, oi ihekuns county, Miss.,
who hu.. a plantation in Noxubes scanty, Mies,,
can donated 5000 bushels of corn to tho latuilioß-
I of soldiers in tue counties of Picking and Noxubee,
“without money and without price,” On the
breaking out of the war, he subsc-ribsa 250 bales
ol cotton, aud jjiIO.OUO a year, until the war is
over.
Aludy ia Richmond, who has juet completed a
tr p through Missouri, Southern Illinois, and In
diana, Kentucky and Western Tennessee, gives as
|ha result of h . observation, her opinions being
founed, after free contact with civilians of all
grados, ihut peacs is the desire of the Northern
ina3j(js, who are irae to admit that they are sick
of toe war--especially so, sinco it has become - an
Abolition cruuade, in which it is expected by their
-.uthoi iUca they will shed their blood, and expend
their treasure to support a cause a majority of
them abhor. Such declarations were boldty made,
and the oniniou, to her astonishment, seemed to
be general.
It ia stated that the negro market ia more buoy
ant iu Ricbniend at present, than at any period
since the commencement of the war. This i3 ac
counted for by the fact that many of the owners
of slaves in the counties of Virginia in possession
ot end threatened by tbo enemy are daily for
wtiming them to Richmond. They are here sold
to dealers from the South, who transport them to
the more secure conttues of tha Confederacy,
where the enemy are not likely to penetrate.
Every paper we open contains fresh proof of
the barbarity of the . aukees in their treatment
ot n<- f ;roes. Abolition philantbrophy is exempli
ii ;d by enticing negroes from tbeir homes, and
Uii ;i either woiklngibem to death, beating them
unmercifully, shooting them by wholesale, no tho
did ot Norfolk,leaving fhem to perish by cold and
ifarviition as at Cairo and Waehington, to die, of
small pox, i )on the South Carolina caas', or
kicking tnem out of Abolition communities, u-s
they do in Illinois.
As long a i bank* pay checks with the eight
p f cent con exlabl.o uuUu their vulue will re -
-..a nut par; but when, they begin to pay out
the new seven pvr cent notes, the brokers will im
mediately chip a i reinium upon the old notes,
and the people will begiu to hoard them.
A letter from Jackson’s army, says that the
command was never bo full, never so thoroughly
- L. • i .. ... .a.:
Tip- iiwj are "cheerful, even to recklessness.
G- n. ’hepiey, abolition Governor of Louisiana,
boa ordered an election to beheid on the 3d day ot
December in the First and Secon i Congressional
Districts in that State, for two we mberß of the
Ftderal Congress. Butler’s Delia mentions the
traitor J. E. Bouligney, as spoken of for the first
District, and T. B. Thorpe and otbeis, for the
Second District.
Tho editor of tth Atlanta Commonwealth has
been shown a pair of clastic wooden sole shoes.
The uppers are of cotton duck, tipped with leather,
aud leather lacings. The duck undergoes a pro
paration which renders it impervious to water,
and gives it a blackish color, and makes it capable
if receiving a polish from blacking, the same as
leather. The soles are so oinstruoted as to spring
under the thread; by having a transverse slitua
<f r tho bull of the foot, the water being excluded,
however, by a strip of sola leather let iu on the in
ner surface.
An army correspondent thus describes the
manner in which railroad tracks are destroyed
when military necessity requires such a proceed
ing i The track is torn up and the cross-ties piled
up, then tho iron rails are laid across the ties,
unil lire communicated to the whole, when the
iron b- eomea hot it folia ot both ends, and bends
iu the shape cf the letter Y. This renders the
iron worthless until tt is taken to the foundry
anil worked over.
The small pox has made Us appearance iu
several places in Alabama.
In Arkansas, we hear the abolitionists are re
treating towards the Missouri line, though Fay
etteville may yet be in 'heir possession. A few
Luudred of their cavalry came down from Pitt
-man’s ferry to Pocahontas. In all these incur
sions they robbed, murdered Rnd committed all
manner of outrages. It is reported in Little Rock
that Colonel Parsons has again taken a number of
prisoners, among them eighty or ninety negroes,
all of whom were dressed iu Lincoln’s uniform, and
armed with guns and side armß. Col. Parsons
aud bis command have done an immense amount
t good. Not a week passes witaout his killing or
capturing it iot of abolition.sis, cutting olf trains
aud keeping them in hot water. There is not a
u>au in his command who has not killed or taken
prisoner twe or three of the enemy.
Mr. Troup Bunks, son of Col. John Banks, oom
m tted Buicida at the residence of his father iu
Wynnton, Ga , Tfov. 27th. He was supposed 1 1
b. laboring umier mental abenat'On at tlistimaof
committing the act.
It was stated at a meeting of the Richmond
Common Council, Nov. 25th, that there were
seventy-five or one hundred oases of small pox in
' :u’oity, und the number ot deaths showed the
disease to be of a virulent type.
Hon L. W. Crook, Judge of the Cherokee Judi
cal Circuit, died at Dalton, On., on Saturday iasi.
Col. D. K. Mcßae, of the 6th North Carolina
regiment h.a resigned because his services have
be n ignored, and i.is claims to promotion disre -
gai Jed, a ;d especially beoause Col. Alfred Iver
son of Georgia, his junior, has been promoted to
the command of his brigade.
It is* staled that Gov. Letcher, of Va., intends
t -■ get tile C. S. Senatorr'alp made vacant by the
dc-»th ot Hon. Baliurd Preston—if he can. Gen.
Floyd is also a candidate for the place.
The Confederate War steamer Florida, late the
Oreto, which the gallant Cnpt. Maffitt ran so suc
c. slnliy through the blockaders some time ago.
is to remain in Mobile Bay, to assist ic the defence
of that place. Admiral Buchauan has hoisted
hi a broad pennant over the Florida, and will make
her his flagship. *
General Holmes had issued an order giving
notice that no officer or person other than those
having authority trom the Secretary of War, ap
proved by him, would be allowed to recruit volun
teers front Missouri.
A court of inquiry has recently been held In
Mississippi, prerded over by Gan Price, to inves
tigate charges of drunkennesi which had been
made against General Van Dorn, which court
after a careful investigation have reported that
the testimony in their opinion disproves the
charges.
Mr. James Doherty has comm, need the manu
facture of shot in Fe ersburp, Vs., and his wo**ks
r>rd now in successful operation. The steeple of
* old Pi? byierian Church ha# been converted
a shot towi r, and the ; roprie or is prepar
ti Ti-cp from two to four thousand pouccispei
week.
Brig Gm, Wm. N. Fecdleton, tho Lh.ief of Ar
tillery in the Annies of Gea. Lee in Virginia, is an
Episcopal minister. He, like Oeu Polk, was a
-ridu&te at West Point, and became a minister,
aGI divested himself ot the surplice in the begin
, , war > and, aa Captain of Artilery, dis
: s 7*“'. a “ himself at the first battle of Manassas
n a ,t', i ritan to the highest position
‘ Je Arullsr 7 serviec ofth* Confederacy
• The Savannah RepnbUo&c has been aims'u 4
t 6 - best. It is’composed of numberDss sc-Tds o°f
'hick gray uuiform cloth sewed tocVth-r 3,1,
tug s kendsoinely botilid, andis th. I 1 “ and lh , e
of Miss Amanda Khan, of tffingbLn ooumyZ
Tcousands cfeuch scraps are uaily tbrowu “ w a 7
whi.st this patriouo tady has proved that wnhZ
litHo trouble they may be made t 0 secure the
comfort aud preserve the life, of many a crave
a idisr. Let others imitate her example.
Boms rascals undertook to garot* a merchant
in Richmond, in his own counting room m the
day time, a few days since. Richmond, it is evi
dent, is gening to be one of the places.
Nortixem riews.
. f*« days iacs Jno.Sw-.veii, with fc ; s t-vo
r'-.-ld. •-u usidFo-; m Northfield, Staten Island,
A Y • f > J a-id in the.r beds An inquest
V„e.- cixn. to tbeir deaths bv poison,
. b-'- r-'X-,d in their food the day
before The wi e and mother escaped.
The New Fork Tribune relates the following ;
no 1 , - s > j -ignntion in consequence of the Emac
hu taken place. On ac
iiy.jV .v* pubbeationof this document, Lieut.
t t- a c-’tv - 17th Kv., tendered his resigna
v' icrG,--i McCook, when he ordered him
‘ ‘ « a s'- t • ’ ih« military prison in irons.
\ . . , -i or hftee-i davs’ confinement, no charge
' tsen preferred, General Boyle relieved
hto ordering him to iAu his regiment without
and -L-V " Jobuso; again uedered his resignation on
the same ,-rou- is, when he was pincsf under nr
r • a- vs Ad Dorn the service in disgrac, and
hi# in s "i '• ia of office stripped from him in me
ore.-ce of the whole regiment, Gen. Brossn
cran'd orders on the sarjeci were read at the
head of the regiment. ,
T-.e wealth of the States wblffi recently voted
a „ aia cr Lincoli.— according to the late census
i s( > ,*« nos 252 737 0 New Er.gianu and
was in 186- sn.-scz zor . v.. V *
ai' tL" rest which are for him, it was f 3,602.3*0,u5e
The 8:. Louis (Mo) papers represent corn m
gelPce «lowly a-, ten cents a bushel. The low
l u 3 exactions of
railroads. For the
ablican say s, wheat is not
wrvih the cost cf its production, and tha. Uie
en rmous tar.h’on foreign imports ex»rac,ed for
the b»neflt C- Ndw Enal .nd, weighs jxeaviiy upon
the We'tsrn-Statss.
at a man named Ellis,
keener cf a race track in New Orleans had been
iarred-ind feathered on pretence Os his being an
abolitionist.
TbeNorw tv Jror v. orks at South Boston, Mass.,
with ill the valuable maohinery and a larie
amount ol Block, ua-s been destroyed by fire-
According to the Northern accounts, since the
occupation of NaahvUle by the Federate there
hav,- interred largely over one thousand
soldiers The deaths now average aeput forty a
weak, the fata! diseas i being chronic diarrhcea
aa<i typbqii fover. Theie areeick iu the Hospitals
of the City more than two thousand soldiers.
The frauds perpetrated by the Abolitionists at
the pciis in Missouri, at the late election, are so
infamous that even their own papers do not hesi
tate to denounce them. The Missouri Republican
6a -8: “immense fraud.# were commuted. VV e
be- rit charged that the ■ --n employed rii tho
gunboats many ot wiioui are not legal voters*
voted at Oarcnanl’t, at: • : hon cam" up to Bt.
Louis a-id then vot i a-nin, Everybody seems
-fi have born I' rm; red . vote wbo La;l the
•r-.rbt tit- - - VVc lea i i R.ile ehailsDgtug,
aoi? o'no rejection-except egainst all hut" tbs
aboi’iT '.ioks*. ’ ‘ Every man who
■r. jd- . i m!Jo a grouad was denounosd as a
seceß ionirt, end threatened with bayonets and
. ;i.ru*. on. the t ffiopra ’rafused to
th ur.d issue certificates
• - - ; v■. L : - t chat
\ -iopau ; tv- #1 ,N- ovi-u i j iLc Northein pa
pers say; A navemeni r.'f ihs federal army ia
. riv impo at *-e until regular supplies'can be
. ■ Gen. Rosencranz says he will not
move for popular effect ; war is a business, and
must be conducted properly or not at all. The
railroad bridges across tho Tennessee at Bridge
port is repah i'd. Tbs meeting cf the Union ref
ugees at Nashville was merely a speech making
affair. Nashville is full of desperate rowdies—mur
ders occur often Avery stria ent general order
is issued touching Federal soidisrs who surrender
themselvts tha. they may ho paroled and sent
homo. Gon R >sencrrsnz has determined to tend
nil such to Camp Chase with night caps oa their
heads, afier exhibiting them ignominiously on
dress parade. Northern papers state tha wo cop
ter-, and millions of dollars worth of stores at Lexing
ton lay.
The City Couceilef V.nceunes, Ind., have pess
ed resol.i'.iono expelling troca that place a lot of
contrabands that recently arrived there. They
also threat scud to prosecute ali parties employing
raid negroes. Toe condition of the poor creatures
is siiid -o be deplorable. They uru crowded to
gether in numerous buildings outside of the town
—dying from exposure anil want ot'propsr food,
Gen. NegSy and .Johnson say. the fortifications
around Nashville are complete ; That 20,000
men can hold theplrce against 100,000.
The Canada papers state that huge numbers ol
men still continue to "come aeros3 the border in
orot-T to escape from being -drafted into Lincoln's
army.”
Frail ia fires aro earning much damage in por
tions oi Kansas. A family of six parsons were
b trot to death a short time sipce.
According lo the paper* the prices of many
things r.rc gain" up rapidly at tho North. The
newspa;>6ra genera‘ly have also increased their
rates.
A lat v Nciihein psper informs u« that negro
property in H n ...1 has de'-rctlated, and it is
raid to bv nearly iinposmb.e to coll a slave any
where in the country tor one fifth the ordinary
rice, while every other species of property bar
increased in vaiuo. A 81. Genevieve paper reports
•ii e.to .pr>x<c> I LLxu.t douuty WlAvaa
have long siuco ceased to boos value in iha ooun-
K 3 adjoisiag Kansas. The counties between Kan
sas City and trio towns oi Atchison county on the.
St. Louis side of tha river, ar- said to be patroled
by the enrolled militia to prevem the escape of
slaves from inland counties. There were only
lourteen hundred slaves in St Louis two years
ago, and the b ut judges now estimate that there
are less than five hundred, and those principally
old and dsorepid bouse geryanta.
The New York World denominates the present
operations m Y rginia "the final campaign of iha
u Fir.” Tho Federal# undoubtedly intend io crush
out the "rebellion” by the tinie the campaign is
finish and but they will find themselves mis.aken.
The New York Mercury eays that a crisis is
impending in the Federal Caoinet; that Howard,
Smith, B air and Bates ft iff retire, and their places
be filled by lessen den, Col/ax, Winter Davis and
some other Western Republican. It may not be
announced befme January, as the present heads
of departments make reports to Congress in j;o
--cembtr.
It is stated that the FedoJUs have largely rein
forced Gen. G rant': command in Tennessee.
A great fire ocourred in Chicago on the 13th,
destroying $600,000 worth of buildings alone.
A railroad bii igc over lbs Long Bridge, ct
Washington, has been completed.
“Gen, Buell’s f says the correspondent of
the Cincinnati Gfx.ttf, “ dots not improve oa in
yestigation. Parties who are best informed, ay
Lo will be cashiered.”
The present oi Representatives of tha
Federal Congress stands—Uopahlicans 107 ; Cou
ftrva’ivo 71 ; Republican majority 83. la tho
next Congress, the Conservatives already have a
handsome majority, and they will probably add to
them members from the other States that have
yet to elect their Congressmen.
The New York “Herald” says that Seward
and Blair, of the Cabinet, opposed McClellan’s re
moval.
It is stated that, a portion of Burnside’s for oeu
have returned to within eighteen miles of War
rectou.
The Spanish government has claimed an indem
nity fir burning the Blanche from the Yankee
government of $:t97,72U. This is ratber a costly
experiment on the forbearance of that govern
_m nt. Mr. Seward will have to apologize for one
"of the subalterns in ihe Yankee naval service,
slapping tbs face oi a Spanish official. Verily,
pelted
dirt.
The Abi'lit; ai; h ■mvg httVa the rear
deiieee of the prrminsr.- sympethiaera with the
cause ov iho CorHi vav on» ssetiore of
K-’-'lnckr, and conv rted i' sm into hospitals.
Ti e New Vnk Hc-r hi, 'n specking if the nc
c - Eiry rl j active winter rsmpa’gn or; the patt
of thr sava : “Time is prec'oue. The
con i; r t the- Feders! treasury and of the car
renev of the cour-try, th heavy drain upon the
rseouv’.-g of tbs !oy . States required to ansiain
our imc. '-’ flec-M and armies iu the field, admit
of no inactivity, no waste©!' titn , money, mtn and
opportunities, y wa'.ing upon f-eelements. We
must during this winter, if not before the expira
lion o this pro ..eat year, convince the people of
the South o f lb: oily of farther resistance, and
Knglan:. and. France of the foiiy of intervention,
or wt >.n( - o*. what may be cvncequences ”
R-p r s fro ; t’. e Ueiiod Starrs Adjutant Gen
eral’s Offi tc ettimafe the number of sick soldiers
r t this tor., '.cut t 105,000 —nearly one-sixth o f
the afire Yankee army.
Northern tJhpers state that the main body of the
Tennessee Fed’ ’ -1 army is at LaQrange.
The next deifgotion to Congress from Ohio will
stand—fourteen Damcerats to five Abolitionists.
Tbs Northern papers jeor a* President Davis’
reialiat’Oa latter to Gan. Holmes, concerning the
ten mu dered Missourians, and de r anding the
butcher Federal Gen. McNeil. They say he dare
not put h s threat into execution j and that his
inter.cinr ■ in the -w r; ferret to ig double
insoleiic
The Tatu. n irspapeis -o t g’lin i.j 0 feel
the cflecte rt ins vr, or we :a *{* t u j Yankee
oorrespecdents that the paper famine promises
so-ions r-nh-rra-rroeuts to such of the daily jour
naia of the North r 3 are afflicted with a targe c.i
cnlr.rfon
7'*: c '••' L'rii 1 •#* * • .*• v *t -B-isngide bag
le-r ic . ' hi|.mo.re„ •:;» by .heavy rains
A• " #xcu»-»b.Tt'r t a'- ri r
Tho Federal G .-1 al Mo:. r , 03 his vrrv bs; s
to Fa- T. lessee
Workingtnta in m s ..1 ions ottt,. a, j;i» or*
getting he eji’M. In Crr.atc, ui torts ors are
obiitred 'vpav sixty dcl'.ars a month; the price in
fl-nser wes f.b?ut ‘”.= !v d-ders a mouthy
The upp-.v Micjiggippi cio-cd hy ice.
The Jste Cincinnati papers are Ailed with the
detail#'©!' an important movement soon to be made
bv'the Aboiitiosista down tho Micstsaippi. Major
Gen. McCtern'and, at the head of ten thousand in
fantrv.q,receded oy seventeen.gunboats, is to go
down the river to some point in Mississippi, sup
posed to be Vioksborg, and there begin the work
of devastation. The gunboats end troops are new
collecting at Columbus, Ky,
Gea. Anderson, of Bumter f.itue, has been or
dered'to ths command cf the Federal forces in the
vicinity of Covington and Newport, Kentucky.
Gov. Gamble, of Missouri, writes home from
Washington that' he is in favor of Lincoln’s
scheme of compensated emancipation, and wilt
recommend the same to the next Legislator©, in
his message.
For tki L hrcnicU c
TUe Bestluv of the Souri
The South is destined to become afn at
aepeiiafcut Goveracaeat, rrhsther
recognize her claim to a seat among t- - i-'.tm' ? t !
nations or not; whether the war % ‘
years or twenty ; whe har our e-re, ’
our cities and viliages, and over run -
try, or are successfu l? repuLed
troops, one thing is clear beyond
he [south cannot be conquered, an
work out her freedom from the ,hra
lamination of the long abus-d a,---
d o °ift h . e !, rnpoWer - Moon struck Unions - finv
«. ;
such an utterance of the intention c ■
V he power of ,he Soothe
satisfied Europe and the world t.ia n
esiabl.sh hsr independence, unai v
quarter whatever.
The w 11 of the peoplo of the Sent
acy has gone forth as the will of a gi
mg less than omnipotence itself ca
, 1 °f Whose earn eatress and now
lion of men in the field, living and
resolute and determined outcry of
at home of all ageaand sexes, are
exponent. Her growing unanim f : ,
increasing resources for the ws th •
condition of her army in health
moral force; the-cheerful resign#' : on . * '
zens under all the calamlttes pi !
ings and indignities: hey have t".
witness end endure n this atroci - iu
war—ana above all the purpose- .-" -. . i
emn, r.wavering, mighty pnrp; -
through the hearts of the pen h . # i
billows of the ocean, make up i V !
proof almost amounting to ifai .
ter cause must ultimately tr ue ' r I
nv.,y be blockaded by a counties -. >. a’ ''i -i 1
reed m by a superior force on las . ti;
coniinueto thread her rivers r. • -= e '
pe l itious may lay waste her ferti
and destroy the habitations cf . .. -
God be for her, as He has ever 1 U, -i
she will not fight her battles ah o ie
as in the past His shield shall ; ... 1. 1 .
and h.s right arm her delivers
throw and confusion of her enerr
Without presumption then, w t' e
assertion, no matter Low the sti , ; , J ?
to other?, that the independenc
eia-.eSlat«3 may bo regarded a‘
fact. And if, as has beea wise! id, • 1 ,
tious never move backwards,” tt ? are
about to be introduced to anew epoch in the r
history. Mighty changt-g and great events are
about to das n upon them ia the rising sun of
their existence Events which will present theirs
'a new phases to each other, singly and coileotive
iy. ind which will develop new relations, and de •
voire hew responsibilities and duties upon their
citizens. Hitherto the Southern States had, in a
measure, fulfilled their mission an oniutegral por
tion ot the old government, by large contributions
to the general weal, in the great agricultural
staples of iiu ir region, but by a very moderate
success or addition la the commercial, mechanical
or liter cry enterprises of ins day—whilst the larg
est portion of our implements of agriculture,
school books and other literature, the various and
msumerable products of art and skill, com
mencing with a pin, and running up to tha mighty
engine, together.with the endless profusion of
domestic eemforia and luxuries heretofore enjoy
ed by us have been made for us, by a people who
have growu rich on our industry, but trorn whom
we hare now, by a decree of tha Almighty, made
an eternal separation.
It is better for ua to admit the truth t an bliud
ly pursue a delusion. Our efforts in tho past to
advance the arts, to develops our own capacities,
and powers, or even to supply our own domestic
necessities, have been confined to a very narrow
circle indeed, Notwithstanding the unprecedented
success that has attended the most prodigious
efforts of skill and ingenuity cc the par-colour
people to supply iheuißelves end tho government
during this war, with ihe prime essentials ot com
fort and existence; still thu vacuum has not been
filled; ana time, energy and talent, alone wili
enable us to furnish lor ourselves those articles
which we hitherto received Jroin abroad.
It is in this view of cur position, as a people
cat olfirom the resi of mankind, that are not
united to us by community of interest, harmony
of sentiment, aud similarity ofinstitutions-do 1 ask
the question, what is to be our future career ? is
this trying, alrucst exhausting ordeal, through
which we are passing, to be of uo practicable val
ue, in enlightening, and marking out with wift*
doer, our future progress, as a nation ? Bright
prospects and great duties are confronting us.
How shall we meet them? What shall !e our
character and destiny, as a peopie separate and
diitiuct from any other on the face of the globo ?
Shall we begin our history, determirnd-to elevate
ourselves 1c a sliil higher point of civilizaiion;
and, iu our moral, intellectual, and physical r.ttri
i buics and abilit-es, a’tain in the end those bless
ings which the Godof Nature and Providence has
so lavishly be&owed on ourselves —or shall we
falter in mid heaven, and like the eagle, with
shattered pinion, droop aud fall to the earth, and
become, at iaet, a pray to our enemies?
Tiro practical solution of these great questions, I
leave mem men of intelligence, of influence, of offi
cial pmmoa, nun t*t nnrret worm, to uovernors,
Legislatures, and all others, into whose hands the
people have committed their liberties, aud ilia
fortunes, iiai'ety and protection of their persons
and property. You are the men who have it m
your power now to shape aud mould aright the
future seutiaients and principles of this uew-boru
Republic. Your'watchful eyes should discern the
course and tendency of coming events, and with
wisdom and patriotism forestall them for the pub
lic good. Legislators now iu session, bring your
minds to the consideration of this matter like men
in earnest, for the burden of this great duty of
rightly directing the energies ol our people at
heme, whilst our brave soldiers are in the battle
field, you. Ovkutos.
Siiintern k sideps-mtNice.
The distinguished Mr. Gladstone, Chancellor of
th British Exchequer in a recent speech at New
castle on American affairs, is reported to have,
said : "Jefferson Davis and the ether leaders of
the South have made an Army; they aro making,
it appears, a Navy am! they have made what is
more than either,—they have made a nation ”
Again “ws may with certainty anticipate tha
success of too Southern States, so far as re"ards
effecting their separation from the North. I. for
my own pert cannot but believe that that event
is ns certain as any event yet future and contin
gent can be.” In this, ho has but echoed tho senii
menta of tho British people and of the civilized
world, that the South has both deserved, and
earned aau must success ully obtain at no distant
day, her independence. However tardy the Gov
ernments of Europe may be in recognizing this
fact, wo make our acknowledgements to the peo
ple of foreign countries for the concession which
we claim aa our right.
Great responsibilities aro involved in the erec
tion of anew governniont. Our failure would
render us a by-word and a hissing on both sides
of the Atlantic. Bat ii we succeed, to any bon
orable extent, it must be by a thorough revolu
tion in our ideas and notions of social and do
mestic economy, and by giving scope and suc
cess ts tho various industrial pursuits which have
hitherto from false estimates of what constitutes
worth and respectability been unpopular end con
sequently impractical. What is the independen .-e
to which we have aspired and for which so many
precious lives have been exchanged? ft is sure
ly something more than a mere name I Some
thing more than a form oi acknowledgement of
our sovereignty by other nations. I answer it
mu.it be a reality, a sublime fact or rather an sg
ertgetitm and series of each facts implying, not
bn’y o«r right of self government but alio in a
me; sure rnr intrinsic resources, and elements of
wtaiih necessary for ali the purposes of self sup
po- . growth, expansion, and self-defence, with
inch general and comprehensive sense of their
terms.
True, in the primary and absolute meaning of
■fU-'t dependent, no man or society of men. state or
nation, or any creature, whatever powers be or
they may possess, can be propeny called inde
pendent. Only of God Almighty, the First and
the Last, eels-existent, infinite, eternal creator
and disposer of all things, can this attribute, in
this eeuse be. predicated. In ail other applica
tions, it must he takea with limitations aud re
stricrions. Man. though often proudly boastful
of his independence, is, in fact, from his birth to
his tomb, r- 1 reaturo of dependence. This very
.'ouditior, of comparative dependence, isoao oftbe
chief causes and necessities for the organization
of societies and nations. And these individual as
sociatioas, no malt 1 how much enlarged they
aiay become, rarely or never attain absolute inde
pendence of similar communities, bo us to need or
receive no help or support of any sort from I hem.
This dependence, however, varies; in suoie it
is almost entire,—in others, only partial; and the
reason for this difference and distinction claims
cue attention. A nation is considered indenend
©nt when not subject to the control and domict.
lion of any other nation ; whenever it
self-government, and disowns and rejects the n!«
tsrferecoes of any fora'gn power, it is eoti'LH #0
be consider,-d at a nationality, in tbi-
the United States assumed to b., ~,0,- '
pendent m 177«, when tu -v repu.fuiUd eil
allegiance 10 the British crov; -n,; ~.r
ed upon an i;.j Innetioas of <>• -s 1 1,; .
government—in like manner the
tates have asserted, and aie nqw v,. 1
treiutafn aud establish their independence, in
eluding an the limits and powers oi <. bc p.
and sovereign national ©xistecee. •- Whefi they
succeed in tjua, as they soon will, in to© ©pinion
of the writer, aDd these rights become recognized
by foreign nations, we :: V-, is the great end cisd
object for which w- 4,. and the d-d On-on st
m ■
as :j ;® r Hafwhere as# fhe©“ g7e>;
; ioaa. chtsventents aack* uwesweatK tfci.-i respoot.
We seek in van for .tEem fja His other hand
may we not say that there uanalohea .Temples cf
liberty have fallen Mrfd crushed Sbnea h their
ruins these unwary andviceompetent builders
Many a noble ship has been iannehed and freight
ed but which neve! 1 returned wish golden treasure
to its owner We mas: take warning from the
many and fatal omissions that have hitherto
proved destructive to the hopes *nd aims of as
great statesmen, and as pure patriots as these
who are new placed at the helm to direct, this
onr nearly launched Ship of State If we do not,
the mere tact of being recognized—onr rights and
outward form of Government acknowledged, will
al! avail us nothing. We cannot expect to shun
the fate of those nations that now live oniy in
name OvxxTOjt-
tor tiie Uit.rotticU <£' Sentinel.
tsal 1* ladcpeudence I
Y ready made the remark and new re
be term independence means some
and inroives a higher significance
„ foot of hsTing oar name and form
at acknowledged bv foreign powers,
no mintake on this grave point. If
, ed with the attainment only of this
... eer a« ration will be a brief and
We hopo for the best, however,
that the sacrifices ard trials of the |
~ v ; throw the liaht of wisdom on our i
and cause ns to pursue as a people
and policy and system of internal do- t
nny as will inevitably work cut our
ity and greatness, and establish our
en§, peculiar as they may be, on a
.if • id foundation regardless of external
, i- yr interests. We ask then what is
e» our answer is, that it is the result
ct of those numerous forces and ele
a .; sngth which by the harmonious ma
overnment are put into operation for
of derelopement, improvement,
:nce, support, and perpetuity of a
3 will of the people being at least in
r form of government the fuudamen
e land, expressed through their rep
. .. , the sphere and limit of legislative
and be prescribed alone by the wants
ics of the governed. What those wants
.'re is may be, is a matter which cannot
i by the narrow minded and ignorant
ae vision of the enlightened states
ilosopher can alone comprehend in all
the essentials to the prosperity and
... .. :a of a people. Under a few general
.:. s b ver, such as moral, mental, religious,
, mechanical, manufacturing, mercan -
rcial and artistic, may be enumerated
i wants which civilisation demand and
| >, ... h the object and purpose of all good
! govtrmr. is to supply.
The nvi-rer this end ia attained, namely, the
o,r - 1 prosperity of the various pursuits
übove ... dinned, the nearer will that nation
acme of independence. On the other
I a■ *. never these industrial pursuits, so es
the welfare of a people arc neglected
I .. ought out. we sea weakness and depen
result. We can oiler no better illustra
) ;io at we intend to describe, than the oon
i CU these Confederate States at the time of
ssiou. The thoughts and energies of
having been exclusively devoted to the
i Ii and exchange of a lew leading staples
jlect of almost averthing that was essen
s comfort, luxury and even existence of
its people. It was left, when without this re
sou .ee, in h state of comparative destitntion, and
we are now supplying our actual wants and sus
taining by the most unparalleled energy,
patriotism and self-denial on record. This con
dition of affairs was not owing to any physical
defect peculiar to our dime or soil, cor to the
want ci any. native elements of industry ia our
population. Far from it. We are blessed with
every variety of soil and climate, having the most
abundant facilities lor manufacturing purposes,
find us much original talent and constructive ge
nius as any people under the sun. It ia not our
purpose now, with all the above advantages on
our side to go into an enumeration of the reasons
why we were found bo unprepared with the means
of eell-existenc% and self defence. This we may
-Jo at a future time.
Having suffered from past iuipru vidence, let us
for the future mark out anew and wiser mode of
living as a p.-ople, for in fact the ends and purposes
of civilisation demand such au extraordinary
change 0? efforts on our part to keep up with the
progress of the age, that unless we matte them,
our last end will be wotse than the first. The
mental faculties o! man are being exerted to such
an extent that every thing around us ia. stimula
ted with more vigor and activity than in any for
mer period of the world's hisiory. We are in the
commencement of a great revolution thut is on
ward in its progress, that will not compromise
with bail way measures or undecided policies; do |
cisiiju and action nra its mottoes. If « a are not :
prepared to go along with the same spirit and j
impulse which moves every thing about us, we |
will be 'eft behind and others who sympathise will
do it.
i These remarks are particularly applicable at
this time to us cu account of our proximity to
those who ara distinguished for driving ahead in
every department of life, it is well for us to
keep constantly in mind the' nature, character,
and habits, o! those against whom we are now
waging a war of separation, and opposed to
whom we shall hereafter be compelled to live
when our armies are withdrawn from the field of
battle ft would have been far better for us in many
respects had we realized the truth and acted ae
cordingly at the commencement o' hostilities,
namely that the fankeaa are endowed with more
physical energy, elasticity and endurance, more
restbsa activity of body and mind, mors religious
speculation anti—bibie theories and dogmas,
mixed up with more deceit, cunning, hypocrisy
• and craft, barefaced impudence, more trading
tricks, schemes and devices for gratifying their
never satisfied desire tor money more of the
Drvii in every conceivable shape of evil in feeling
and nr-ion, more mechanical aptitude and skill for
invention in the various arts, more inherent
spirit for progression and improvement, more in
domitable perseverance and unrelenting bull, dog
rtetertnintrotus to rarry out in spue 01 every inmg
what ever they have commenced, than any other
p ople this side of the infernal regions. If we
are not prepared to admit the truth of this de
scription of them as a people from our past
intimacy and intercourse with each other ana
from what we have recently been called on to
suffer and endure from their hands, then we are
n a fair way of being our own blind and self
deluded destroyers, and it will not be long after
our independence ia recognized before we relapse
back into our former state of luxurious indolence
and enervating habits. We must watch and con
tiol tbat inbred disposition lor the enjoyment of
the “otium,” the inglorious ease, which delighted
to hate and dishonor all useful activity and employ
ment; we must repudiate buggies, easy chairs,
lounges and ail time killing diversions.
Thesi modern effeminating ndulgences, uius*
give place to 'he demands of sterner life. The
crisis which ia now upon us, has no use for drones,
and consumers, but calls lor a nation of practical
“living men.’' fiach individual must stand in his
lot, bear his portion of the responsibility and
burden of the State and in his chosen sphere of
action, become a producer prolono publico Away
—forever away, with thia senseless opprobiuin
which has heretofore been more or less attached
to manual labor as being disrespectable and a
dangerous foe to “the Republic.”
Wo have thus seen the nature of those duties
and responsibilities which should claim our imme
diate and undivided attention in the formation of
our new government, if wa desire hereafter to be
a free and independent people. Shall we not in
its commencement make vigorous efforts to accom
plish it? Yes, let us begin at once to raise a na
tion of practical men; let the families pf the weal
thy be represented in every workshop in the land;
let (heir sons direct the engine, follow the plow,
and strike with the sledge hammer; that thus by
their own sweat, manly frames,and praiseworthy
examples, they may render every honest avoca
tion honorable. s Mothers, ministers, statesmen,
commence at once to make the truth stand out
with vita! power in ail the teachings of tee family,
the sriuctuary and the press, that nothing is dis
graceful but ignorance, indolence and vice. Train
the rising, and discipline the action and sentiments
cf the current genera ion, so that in their future
lives they raß~ illustrate the sublimity of this hea
ven born fact. Tbue we may be enabled in the
course of time to summon into action to the ut
most, the varied powers and capacities of the peo
ple; ana shall net then bo compelled to import
anything from abroad which can be created at
home Ci extracted from ocean, earth or air. Then,
and not till then, will our independence be fully
established , then, and net till then, will we be
superior to tfee caprics of foreign recognition;
then, and not tilt then, will we carry within our
elvcs an inherent, procreative force of our future
glory and perpetuity. Ovbbtos,
Sorihern News.
Ttic loilowinsr “ bit of secret bistory, 1 ' ia taken
from tbe Buffalo (X F ) Commercial Adrertiser.
“ It bas transpired that- General Albert Sydney
Johnston, killed at the outlie of Shiloh, concerted
a t..co plan to possess tbe secessionists of Califor
hiU at the beginning of the present war. He was
in command at San Francisco. At a given time
the .jocessiontais were to take the forts, with his
connivance, aud seize 60,000 standofarms shipped
there by rloyd for tie very purpose. San Fran
cisco at their mercy, must hare succumbed, and
tbe Confederates would tbu3 have a port in
which to fit out privateers, and would likewise
have obtained control of tbe vast trci.aures of the
State. The iact was either suspected or known
at Washington. Brigadier General £. V. Sum
net was appointed to the command in California,
and was privately put on board ship at sea, ar
riving a. Baa Francisco without any previous in
timation of his coming. He walked, incognito, to
the office of Johnston, informed him that he was
bi3 cucc-tsor, showed hix his papers, and de
manded immediate possession. He had no alter
native but to comply. In half an hour all the
guns i>i tbe tort weie run out ca the land side
and h€(.TJ/ shotted, 'i'bs same evening tUe 60,-
000 stand of arms at Benicia were secured. This
fir ; . c but quirt • -tp J'etot, saved the El Dora
‘--1 • ss lb .. Ge , Mcis !
g’d ’ w ‘.I ' • .1 . '. u
, / ,i u- (.<•• .1. j (1 . ;
-lir n.; it V. — te , Vv . i.ou
tiaj. Jien. Granger ths left n
I ope has ooea i...ui hi I*Soll> to St*
L^r^^U^ji^ipmjedh^jr^up^gedsOttrti^
SWEDE IKON AND PLOW STEEL.
A* GOOD assortment of bWEDE PLOW
c'i LL. embracing j tlesLaoie *.aa for Plantation
purp cs? for £a.e in qu&Et.ti<rg to Bu:t purchag;** by
_ W. H. GOODRICH, *
? r »7i Draad at., Augusta, Ga.
POSTPONED SHERIFF’S SALE.
YYriLl-.be sold ai Appling, Columbia county, between the
ff jtg al Lc’dis oi -hie, c-n the - n: .Tuesday m JAN V AKY
text, the following rropertv, Vi* : one Livery Br&ble and Lot
in iowe of Tnomso:: j-.e~ieci on as tbe prop any of Hopkiai
Tihery to satisfy an attachment issued frem Columbia luxerloT
Cc rt in favor of WLLam T.liervY vs Hopkins TUlery. •
John b. lakh in. bbarfiL
December?. Isfri. 6w48
Executor-'’ Sale of Laud A Negroes.
AUKESABLY to lie last will &ni rea'&m.ix of Thomas
.V tti due Cl Moreau county, dtceased, will be sold w
lore me C sJt House IjOr la toe town o! Mjdlson, on tne flret
Tuesday in JaSUAHi seat, atumcer of .Negroes belonging
to the .state of said coceaseo ; also, about six hundred acres
ts Lanu. a part : : whlcr. ia eite ieni All sold aa
me rro-'ertT cJtte estate of said d..c«ased. Terms on tta day
of aara!' THUS, k SOLA.', J
' jriK.IK_SOI.AN,
(JVYKIA ». NOhAN. )
Novambcr fy, 1963* 6w49
A BilllM ST ll ATO R\S SALE. j
WiLL be old, on the fire? Tuesday in JANUARY next
11 within the legal hours of Bale, before the Court Hou*e
door In Lexington, Oglethorpe comity, Georgia, agreeable to
an order ot the Court of Ord nary cf said county, one likely
Negro Woman, named Antbor.et, about seventeen year* of
age, and her eh'ld Ida, eight months old. Sold as the proper
ty of Wm. H. Cone, deceased, lor the benefit of the heirs aud
cr ditor? of said deceased. Terras ou the day of sale.
Nov. 11, 135-2. *IIIOS. CaLLAHAN, Adm’r,
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
II Y •• 1 rof t: ; .- Cos irt vt Ordinary of Richmond count y,
> -e.rgK ••£ sold on the li fit, Tinmu\ 1 J.\NUAIiY
next, bi the Lower .Market House ’»■: th * city «»i Augusta, be
tween the usual hours of .eibsic sale, tins follow.ug Negrops
belonging to the estate of »*>•» 'aney H Malone, deceased,
vi/.: for.th a woman, 7 yea soi age ; Andrew, a del 1 hand,
65 years old A ;*iv, his wife,.»good coos, 68 years'old; Ann.
a was* er and ir« ne ,45 Years «Id ; Messer, a store noy or
ilraym&n, 85 years old; Weston, a drayman, 9s; John, cat*
rlfc-ie d*iv«*r and fi-1 i hand. 95 Louisa, a field h nd, 28 : Netty,
n
Mary, a field hand, 14 ; G. orge, field buy, 12 and John, a boy,
4 years of age. Sold for the benefit of tin heirs and creditors
ot the estate. Terms cash.
Nov. i, 1362.* JAMES F MALONE, Adm’r.
NOTICE.
WILL be sold on the fli st Tuesday in JANUARY next,
within the legal hours of sale, ~efore the Court House
door la the town oi Lex ngton. Ogle horpe county, the Store
House .nd Lot, with tne bull ring known as the Glade Store
House, in said county, containing four acres more or less.
Sold under a decree of the Superior Court or sold county.
Terms on the day of sic.
AMBROSE WITCHER, 1
MITCHELL M. MARTIN, ',, ~n „ r , ,
ABiL KBERUAftT, } (.om.i.lwiomtf..
JOHN B. PASH, • |
Nov. 11. IS6-J. 3w45
Administrator’s Sale
OF
LAlfB AND NEGKOIS.
AGREEABLY to au order Horn the Ordinary of Morgan
county, will be sold before the Court Hou.se. door In the
town ot Madistu, oil the first Tuesday in JANUARY next,
thaf wejl known and valuable Plantat'on and Mills, known as
Swift’s Mills, It being the place where John G. Malcom lived
at tho ime of his death containing between dx and seven
hundred acres of Land, more or less. Also, two hundred and
seventy acres known as the AicFoy place. Also, eight likely
Negroes—Men, Women, Boy a and Glrla. All sold as the pro
perty of John G. Malcora, deceased, 'terms of sa eon the day
HJLLSMAN HAWK, Adm’r.
VIRTUOUS AL M ALCOM, Adm’x.
Nov 12, 1362. 6w46
EXECUTOR’S SALK
WILL be sold, at Appling.Columbia county, on the tirot
Tuesday in JANUARY next, the following property, to
wit : Ml’ey, a Negro Woman, and hartao Children—Romu
lus, a boy, and Louisa, a girl. Sold agreeable to the will of
W. W. stone, deceased, Tor the benefit of the heirs. Terms
on the day of sale. JOH N F. SUTTON, Qual. ExT.
Nov. 12, 1862. 4w4d
A D MIN IST RAT i» S A LE.
B\ virtue Os an order of the Court of Ordinary of Lincoln
county, will be sold before the Court House door In said
oounty, on the first Tuesday In JANUARY next, between i be
lawful hours of sale, the following property, to wit : One hun
dred acres of Land, more or less, In aaid county, on the waters
of Gray's Creek, adjoining land-: of Zachariah tipires, Haywood
Roberts and others. Sold a* property helougins to the estate
of Green T. Spires, late of Bind county, lor the benefit
of the heirs and creditors of said deceased Sold subject to the
widow a dower.
A1 SO,
At the same time and piace will be soid, the interest of said
Green T Spires, deceased, in the Grist Mill of Roberts &
Spires, on the waters of Gray 1 * creek In said county—said in
terest being one-half bold for the benafu of the heiis ana
creditors of B*id deceased. Terms on the day of sale
fc Nov. S, 1862, FIIKABANT F. bUKGKriS, AdmT.
EXECUTORS’ SALE, ~
FOB the purpose of a division among the legatees of the
late Robert Fleming, there will be sold, ou the first Tues
day in JANUARY nest, at the Mm kot House, the following
Slavas: Fanny, about 60 years of age; Cheney, about. 45 years
of age -, Alfred, 28 yeait or age; Mohr, 16 ana an Infant one
mouth old. 'J iiOb. W. LI.CMING* )
PDRTUR FLKMTSO. } R-Xis.
Angiiata. N«*v. fi. 186-2 > |o v**
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
Bt virtue ot an order of the Court, ol Ordinary ol Llucola
comity, will lie sold before the (’ourt Honan door In said
county, on tho ifret Tuesday In JAN LA K V nexL between
Uie biwtul bouvaof sale, tbefollowlng properly, to wit: 'Loro,
a man 40 years old,and Wash a man 40 ye:.rs old. bold us
foe property belonginz to the estate of Cnardy Sale, late ot
eard couuty, deceased, for the beneflt of the h irs and creditors
of said deceased. Terms on the day of sale,-
H0v.8,1802. REV TON VV. HALE, Admr.
AdSlidsiraiof’ri Sale ol Land.
AGREFAIiLY to an otdoi of the Ordinary ol Morgan
county, will be io!d before the Court. Houae door in the
town of Madison, on the .first Tuesday in JANUARY next,
seventy hundred and fifty acres of Land, more or less, it being
the Luuls and Plantation owned by Robert A. Prior, deceased,
lying upon Big Bandy creek, about ten miles northwest of
Madison : gout water ; healthy, and the best of society. Any
n iton desirous ot making a purchase of a valuable Farm,
would do well to examine the. eame before the dav or sale.
Bold is the property of Robert A. Prior, deceased, for rite
benefit of the Lerrs and creditors. Terms ou day ot srie.
JAM.KB O. A. RADFORD, Adm’r.
November 17, 1563. . tiv/46
ADMINISTRATORS’ SALE.
IIV vlitue of au order from the t-'ouit c>i Ordinaly or
It Greeue county, will be sold before the Court House door
in G \ eeneaboro’. on the firs*. Tuesday in JANUARY next,,
within the legal hours of sale, the following name* t Negroes, t
wit: Daniel, ”0 yearn old; Phillis, his wife, 60 years old;
Maria, 60 jeaie old; Kliodu, 40 years old, and her chilu
T’ony, a years old ; Rebecca, 60 years old; Sam, 22 years’ eld.
Aaron, 12 yeaid old ; Susan, 5 years old; Emel ne, 26 years
old, and her two children, one 4 years old, the other 6 months ;
Harriet 9 yeura old ; Alonzo, 8 years old ; Ella, 16 years old.
Fold for the beneflt of the heirs and creditors or Elizabeth
STEPHEN^ENOLISh,j &an '^
" A DM! NISTRATOR’S SALE.
BY virtue of un oniar of the Ocun ot OrdraaiY of iau o.
county, will be sold before the Court. House door in tin*
town of Lagrange, Troup county, on tuo first Tuesday n
JANUARY next, between the law fill hours of sale, the v
lowing property, to wit: Negro Man John, 41 years oi i.\ ■
Scott, 89 years of age; woman Rachel and children '■
Stephen. I years old, and girl Betty, 4 years old. Bold ai i c
property belonging to the estate of Charity Sale, deceased, or
the benefit of the heirs and ci editors of said deceased. Term
on the day of sale. PEYTON VY. SALE, Adm’r.
November 8,1862.
EXECUTORS’ SALE.
ACKRKABLY to the last will and testament of James Mi
fiord, iate of Lincoln county, deceased, will be sold beioi •
the Court House door in said county, on the first Tuesdu. ii
JANUARY next, the following property, to wit: Two I. iu
dred and twenty-four acres of L »nd, more or les3, In said com
ty, on the waters of Gray’s creek, adjol; lug lands of Mrs. M t >
Cox, Win. O. Pascal, and others. Bold as the property belcn ■
Ing to the estate of James McCord, deceased, for the bench r f
the heirs and creditors of said deceased. Terms on the day
sale. JOHN N. MOCORD, Kx’r.
November 9,181-2.
" ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE. ~
BY virtue of an order of the Court of Ordinary ol Lincoln
county, will be told on the first Tuesday In JAN UARY
next, before the Court, Hbuse door in said county, between the
lawful hours of tale, the following property, to vylt: The Ne
grcea belonging to the estate of William C. Robertson, late ol
said county, deceased, consisting of Women, Children and
Boys. Sold for the benefit of the heirs and creditors ot de
ceased. Terms ou the day ol sale.
RICHARD F, TOMPKINS, Adm’r.
Nov. 18,1862. __ _ 4w46
TRUSTEE’S SALE,
BY virtue of a decree granted by the Hon. W. W.iiolt,
Judge of tho Superior Court of the Middle Circuit, at.
chambers, there will be sold.at the Market House lo th’e town
of Louisville, Jefferson county, on the first Tuesday in JANU
ARY next, within the legal hours of sale, the following pro
perty tq wit: one Negro slave, John, a man about 80 years
old, a very good carpenter; several unimproved Lots in call
town lying in fiont of the re-ldence of Mrs. Q ninny and sepa
rated from tne lots of K. L. Gamble by the street leading from
the County Jail to the residence of Dr. R. A. Garvin. Also,
the office and premises, on the comer of the square near tne
Market House ; also, the House and LoUronllng on the Mala
street, and situated between the residence of Mrs. Susar. A.
Robbins and said office ; the House and Lot on the cot ctr
of the square, bounded by the street leading from the AU- i
House to the WayDeabjio’ real and the street loading irt-m
the Academy to the Bark C imp road, both of taid Lota mvo.
ail necessary out-buildlnga. The above property will t o old
as the property of the children of Thomas H. PolfiJl, de;*.. e-i,
fer the purpose of a division. Terms made known on tfi< it >
of tale. WILLIAM A. WILKINS, Trustee «V;.
November 22,1263. .
EXECUTOR’S SALE.
BY virtue of the last will and testament of John F. pa # r,
la’.e of Jefferson county, deceased, t'.ere win be • -’ll u.
tbe A*arkc-t Kv.u >2 in tbe town of Louisv;lie, on their 1 xa
day in JANUaKX next, all oftbe Land be:ocgingt and the es
tate of .-aid <_e. eased, to wit; _everal adjoining tract?, con.
taining about twenty-two hundred acres, more cr lea-*, adjoin
ing tbe lands of Lindsey Coleman, Abba D-m McDaniel, Samuel
{Smith, Hamilton Ridford, and otters. Tbe place is weL’ im
proved ; upon it there is a good MU «*c. TVrm3 made
known on tbG day of sale WILLIAM a. SI-ILK, Ei r.
November 22, ISo ?. 0w47
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
BY virtue of an order from the Court ot Ordinary of Jefier
son eountyi wdi fce add at tbe Mari;i t House in the town
0: Louipvliie Jn said county, oa tbe first Tuesday In JAN UA
KY next,-wliLiu the hours of 3aie, th3 following
Slaves, to wit: Dennis, & man about 2? yfErs Old ; Mary, u
wcmaii about-30, aud iicrfour W Ilham, h boy about
IC, Louisa, a gi.-i about 10, Jenny, a girl a;.out 7, and Aleck, a
boy about 6 year? old Sold as ihe prop rty of TLcinaaK
Lolbill, late: u said county, deceased, for the beueiii of the
I heirs and credltois of deceased. Terms made known on
the day 01 sale. LD A akDH. W. lIUNTEK Adro’r.
Ncvcmbei22, 1862. 6w17
EXECUTOR’S SALE
T virtue or the last will and testament of h llsha 'am. late
JO I of Jclttrsou c«>unty, gelated, will he sold on .be’ flint
Trn eday In jALTUAKT next, at the Market Heme In the
town of Louisville, twenty Negroes belonging to said d-ceaeed.
S j 1 a for the hens flt of the b**ir 5 and crpdltora of d eceased
l’erms of MaKGARE C CAIN, Ex'trix.
Novemler 22,15€2. 6w47
“EXECUTORS’ SALE.
be Sold on the first Tuesday in JANURaY nekt,a
1 ▼ trai_t of Land in Oglethorpe county, given by Woodson
Daniel, 11 his last wili anil t- srament, to i.:* wife, for life, cm
taining four hundred and fitly aorc?, m>re or le?s, being a
partef the tract of Land wnereon the sa u Wo .dson Daniei
lived at the time of bis death, lying on tin Ge rgia Railroad,
one miie from the Lexington Deo J, i»* said county. 'lhe
tract hereby advertised, includes the Deeding and outhouses
and will b? sold • eforetne Court House door in the town of
Lexington, Oglethorpe county, between tie le*ai hour* of sale.
Terms cash. JOHN C. DANIEL, \
B. K. HAKUEHAN, j tx Is -
November 25,1262. 6w47
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
AGREEABLY to an order irom the Court of Ordinary of
Columbia county, win be sold on the that Tuesday in
JxsNtJAuY next, a 1 the Negroes be'cnglng to the estate of
Klr-h&rd Avery Among
one with children, the outer with three ; also, t£r< e llke.y
fellows. Sold t rlb - beac-fit of the heir and creditors or raid
e>T tte. 'i\rms oa cay (>' tale. ,
<;*:<> GE H GRAY, A.- r.
| overt.:- r 23 r lde.'- H.iAdwlT
\HMI MSTK \TOirS SALT
i --xUt). W.a. va tb« h»j- ■- : ; r.i. t
- bei&r« ihe c'J-ort ji->u*; uO h* il< o: Appung,
tje:*/.eea the u»u*' noure of tale, on# acr- Leva belonging t >
me e*tat% ottke .‘a’e John O. WsJson, wLh the iinpr iVjir. nts
U heing the pieoe occupied by tne late jenny Fux-er
lolnlTjilandior Juo 8 Watson, Shockley, and other*. T :mi
S™ JNO WATSON. Adn’/
Ncvemler 22. lc&2. l6wi:j of Jn >.C. Wataon, deed.
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
i u-KKKA BLEW at order glared fcy use Ordlaary ot Co
s n rr. hi a ooUhtf, will be eon ot ti,e iirat Tuesday In
FEBKtTARY next 6efo:e tiie Court Houae door it Appling,
• Ooiumblaaounty, the trwt GMiod, eituited in eaid (o.utty,
on the road leading from Augusta to Wrfghuboro’, adjoining
land,of Alexander H. Beau, J i' VVUitama, b. A.Oibron and
M Jon*A contalningeleven hundred acre*, more or lta«, with
all' the re»«f»ary r.utbultdinge, gin house, pacimg erre*e. jgc.
boal aa property Belonging t'. roe estate of tt* Safe Martua
H. Bowdre, ceceased, ot said county. Term, on dayol sale.
W. S. jpCrES, *
Adm'r de fcov-r non cum tcst'.tnento annexe.
Decembers, 1362. 6wj%
POSTPONED SHERIFF’S SALE.
XV'ILL be sold tJ Appllcg, .Coluinb a county on the first
*1 Tueedayiri JANUARY next, one Negro Women .Slave
by me name of Mary, of dark connexion ; Levied on a<s the
property of isnac Averett and Jerermah Averet to satisfy ti e
following namea fi. fa»., to wit r i-ottliain, Jennlngß A Cos , vs,
Isaac and Jeremiah Averert; two fi. fas. vtaseengaie A
Jonee vs. Isaac Aver*R: two fl. £as. V. XL Barnes v*.
Isaac Averett; cne fi. fa. Walters Dunn va. Isaac Averett
one fi- fa. John E. Holliman, trustee for France- E. Jones va'
Isaac Averett; one fl. fa. Nlch Tomklni vs. Isaac Averett, and
on* fi. a. Rooeita, C6ekery 4 vs. Jercihiah Averett, and
Isaac Averett security. JDHN E. LARXiN, Sheriff.
DeN&tsr 1 IS n. Cw4s
CITATIONS ~
&Z>& LiilTikllS Os
COLUMBIA I’OUNTY. GEO —Whereas, Mary L. Adam
appUe»to me tor fetters of Adminlstration on tLa ea
ot •’ C 8 ' > late cf said county, deceased :
1 ~ t!,oret o cite and wlmoulbh all and singular,
tne kincut-d and creditors ©f sold deceased, to be and appear
v w,thlnThe time rro;crib dby law, to show cause
h ~n> th?y have wny sT.d Letters t-hould not be gr mte
ft. . - uEi iv. o nr.
D 'l'"! 1 ' VULIiMIUA t-oi-.Vi
' 4 '> Jar. as, JosejOi U. i-snoktnn ui.iil t. -i >
**'■ **"* olB - Brtt.We If -aid
These »re therefore to cite an* am.ioa\sh a!! aud Miuralar the
:iaiu Jecvased, to be and appear at my
office. Witliiu the tune lirfscribej by utw, to show cAise ol
snylheyhsve, why saldletters should not Veßrunlec'
Given uiii erriiv office in A;inlir.e, thin lUth day* of
w - w -
G 1 E'.KUIA, COLUMBIA OOONTY.
« Whereas Joseph H. Stockton applies to .. e for Letteis
or Administration o i the estate ol Ayr.? V. Blanche and lale ol
said county, deceased ;
These are therefore to cite and admonish all andsfngu or the
and creditors of said deceased, to be aud appear at m>
office withm the time o escribed by law to show cause
if any they have, w’hy said Letters should not be grantcnl.
GU«n under my hand at office in Appling, this 18th day of
November, 1862. W. W. SHIELD*, Ordinary.
November 17, 1362. 4w46
STATE OF GEORGIA, OGLETHORPE COUNTY. i
Whereas, John Martin applies to me for Letters of Guar
dianship for Laura A. Martin, minor heir of John *. M .rtin,
deceased :
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular,
the k ndred and friends of said minor, to be and appear at my
offlej within the time pres, ribed by law, to show cause, if
any they have, why said Letters should not be granted
Given under my hand at office iu Lexington, this 15‘h day
of November, 1862. E. O. SHACK EL FORD, Oroi narv.
NovYl7, 1662. 4w46
Georgia Oglethorpe oounty.
Whereas. James F. O’Kelley ajipiies to me for Letters
of Administration on the estate or JVmes O’Kelley, late of
saitl county, deceased:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular,
the kindred and creditors of said deceased, Vo be and appear at
my office, within the time prescribed by law. to show cause, il
any they have, why said letters ehoula not be granted.
Gm and uiider my nand at office In Lexington, this 16th day ol
Nov., 1862. E. C. SHACKELFORD, Ordinary.
_Nov 17. 1369. ’4w46
State ob Georgia, oglethorie county.
\V hereas. WDey H. Bush, applies to me for Letters ot
Guardiansnlp of Louisa E. Britain, HaselUne Britain, Autluett
Britain. Mary K Britain and Henry M. Britain, minor heirs
ot Jack L. Britain, deceased :
r ®fu re I to cite aud admonish ail and singular,
the kludred and friends of said minors, to no and appear *«'»>•
office within the rims prescribed by law, to show cause. If any
they have, why said Letters should not be granted.
Given under my baud at office in Leiiuglon, this 16th day
of November, 186*2. K. O. SHACKELFORD, Ordinary.
November 17. 186-2. 4^46
O.EORQIA, COLUMBIA COUNTY.
\3l Whereas, James B. Neal applies to me for Letters ot Ad
toinliiration on the estate of George W. Barber, late ot said
countv. deceased :
These are therefore,to cite and admonish, all and singular
the kindred and creditors of said deceased to be and appeal at
my office within tne time prescribed by law. to show cause.
U any they have, whv said Letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature at office in Ap
pliog, this IMh day of November, I£6*2
W. \Y. SHIELDS, Ordinal
November 17,1862, * 4wto
JEFF ERSON (’OU NTT. OA,
Whereas, Edward K. Oars well applies to me fox Letters
of Administration on the estate of Robert (.- Lester, late ot
said county, deceased:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all andslngu'ar the
kindred and ered*’ore of said deesas-.-d. to be.and appear at. my
office within tire time prescr bed by law, and show cause, it
any they have, why aaid letters should not he gr tidal.
Given under my hand at office In Louisville.
NICHOLAS DIEHL*, Orulnai*
November 20,166‘L 4w47
JEFh ERSON COUNTY, GA.
Whereas. LindseyO. Warrt-u ap/ilea tome tor Letter*
oi Administration ou the estate oi WlMiam H. Baitay,
late ot said county, deceased:
These at e therefore to cite un adrnouwh ail awl-insular the
kindred and ciedltorfcof said deceased Übe and appear at my
office wlthlathe time prescribed by law, - show cause, If any
they have, why aaid Letterasheuld not ot- graa t and.
Given uuder my hand at office in Lv>*a'svil!e.
NIUHOLxx > I*l Ell L, Oi dinar y.
November *2O, 1859. . . j
| KFFERSON COUNTY, GA.
Whereas Julia A. Kfieny applies to m. for l.ctlere ol
Administration on the estate or Augustui H. fttheney, lale ol
said county, deceased:
These are theiefore to cite and admonish all aud oinguiar,
the kindred anti creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at
my uffioe, within the time prescribed by law, to show cause, it
any they have, wiiy oatd letter* should not be granted.
Given under my hand at office in i^ouisville.
NICHOLAS DIED U Ordinary.
November 20, 1662.
JEFFERSON COUNT*. GA.
Whereas, James S. Spiers upplfo-s to me toi i.utterso
Administration on the estate ol James a Bodlngtieid. late
of >au couuty, deceased •
These are ihe.-eiore to cite and admonish all and t.aguiar.
the kindred aud creditors oi slid dec-eased, to be and appear at
ray office within the time prescribed by law, to 3how cauie, li
any tlsty have, why said Letters should not be granted.
Giveu uuder my hand at. office in Louis villa.
NICHOLAS DIEHL, Ordinal y
November 20, 1862. 4w47
JEFFERSON COUNTY. GA. 1
Wherein, William Warnockapplies to me fut Lette s o.
admlci-lration,tie bonis non cum testaiuento annexe, on the
estate of \V iiliam J. R Carawell.late of said county deceased :
These are therefore t > cite and adaonish all ami singular
the klndrt and and creditors < f said deceased, to be and appear at
my office Within tuetinie prescriljed by law, to sJiow cau.=k, 1>
any have, why said Letters should not be granted.
Given under uty hand ul office lu Loulsvlle.
NICHOLAS DIEHL, Ordinary.
November 2-.\ 1862. 4w47
JEFFERSON COUNTY, GA.
Whereas, John N. T. Jour's applies u> me tor i.utters cl
Administration on the estate of Ja Keon Minton, iate of esuo
cou: ty, deceased :
l hese are therefore to cite and udmor.lsh all and singular,
the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear a;
my office within the lime prescribed by i »w, to show cause, »
ar y they have, why said Letters should not be granted.
Given uudor my hand at office in Louisville.
NICHOLAS DIEHL, Ordinal?.
JEFFERSON UOUNI’H, GA.
Whereas, Francis K. Tarver applies tome tor Leltiis
said county, deceased:
These are there:ore to cite and admonish, ail and cinguloi,
the kindred and creditors ol said deceased, to be and appear at
my office withia the time prescribed by law, and showcaust,
if any they have, why said Letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand at office In Louloville.
NICHOLAS DIEHL. Ordinary.
November *20.1862. 4w47
'effeksulouun i’ v, gaT
Whereas, John N. T. Jone3 applies to me lo: Letters
of Administration ou the tstale of Jeremiah J. Johnson,
late ol said eouuty. dc/ceased :
These arc therefore to cite and admonish all and singular,
the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at
my office, wiihin the lime prescribed by law.to show cause, ii
any they have, wny said Letters should not be granted.
Given under ray hand at. office ki cioulsvilie.
NICHOLAS DIEHL, Urdlnary.
Novembet 20, 1862. 4w4’,
BTATE8 TATE OF GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
Whereas, Marla . . llnley applies to cue for Letters of
Administration on the estate of w illiam V incent Tlnlay, late
of said county, deceased ;
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all and singular, the
kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at my
office, on or before the secoad Monday in January next, to show
cause, if any they Lave, why said Leu era should not be granted.
Given under ray hand and official signature, at office in Au
gusta, this 26th day or November, 1362.
DAVID L. ROATH, O.rdinojy.
Novembariy, 13t2, 4w48
BTATE8 TATE OF GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
Whereas Frank H. Miller applies to me for Letters
of Administration on the Estate of Solomon Tcbey, laic of
said county, deceased •
These are therefore, to cite and admonish, ail and aiqgulai
the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appeal
at my office;, on or before the second Monday in January next,
to show cause, ii any they have, why said Letters should not
begranted.
Given under my hand and ofllclai 3iguature, at offlecln Au
gusta, this 28th day of November. 1862.
DAVID L. ROATH. Ord’y.
November 29,18f>2. 4w46
STATE Or GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
Whereaa, Maruartt V. Dye applies to me for Lettwc «n
Adminintratlon ontlae eetati of Jam & IL Dye, late of said
county, deceased:
These arc therefore to cite and auinonlsh, ail aud
the kindred and creditors of i ild deceased, to be and oppi ar :v
my office, onor before the second Monday in January noxi v.
show cause, if any Oicy have, why said letters should net bt
granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, at office in Au
gusta, this 2bth -day of November, 1863.
DAVID L. KOATU, Ordinary.
November 2y. 18412. 4w48
STATE OP’ GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
Where -e, Helena R. applies to me for Letters of
Administration on the estate oi Alexander K Rais on, late of
Sii i county, deceased;
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and jingulai, the
kindrevl and friend 6 of said deceased to be and appear at m>
office on or beforethe seconu Monday In January next, toeho w
cause, if any they have, what said Letters should tot be
granted.
Given under my Land and offltiai signature at office in A ug>ir
ta,this2Bthday of November, 1863.
DAVID I. HOATH.Ordy,
November 29,4w4J
STA'I'E Or QKdKGIA, OOLKTHUBPK U.N T
Whcrea-, John L, Landrum apnlleeto me for LeUeis of
Admlei:tration on the estate of iilLtiLeth Landru© late of
•?aid counL , deceased ;
Theoo arc di-.-reiore to cite and admonhh ail and singular tiu
kindred en n creditors of cald deceased, to be and at m>
office v/khisitii* time prescribed by law, to show cause 11 ao>
they have, jvhy said Letters ehouid not be gi.ir.Uu.
Given under my hand at office at Lexington, this 27th day o'
NovtmbfcMSea. &. C, SHACKELFORD, Ordinary.
November 29.1862. 4w43
STATE Ob' GEORGIA. OGLEIHURTECUUNTY.
Wnere*;, Unury Kinnebre.v applies to me for letters
or AdniinLtration on the estate of John R. Huff, late ot said
county, deceased;
tre therefore- to cite and admonish ail and singular
the kindred and creditors ol said dece-osed, to be and appear.',
my office, within tne time prearibed by law, t: show cause, if
any they have, why sr*id letters should not h* granted.
Given under my hand at office In Lexington, fids 27th o'a>
of November, 1&452. E C. SHACKELP GRD- ordinary.
Novembers. 1862, 4w48
JTATfc; oFgEGi gTa. < GLETHORTE C«9UNTi. '
yj Whertas Andrew Camp -cu appib sto me far Let ars of
Guardianship of Wliham A., Antaomt J.anu JamtsP'. Mara-
Lie. minors of Robert Marabie, late of said county, deceased:
'These are thrrefore to cite and admonish ail and singular,
the k; dred ands lends of saiu mi ors, to be and appear at my
office, within thj lime prescribed by law, to ahow cauie, ft
&r-y they have, \/hy L'aid Letters should cot be granted.
Given under my hand at offl&e In Lexington, tula xTth day
Os November. l<wi. E SHACKELP’OKD, Giulnary.
Noveihbet 29, 1862. 4W48
STATE OF GEUItGIA, OGLETHORLE COUNNY.
Whereas Mostou Ui*/, appli-sto me 1 i L tters of Ad
ministration on the estate of uohn tiray, lai : or said county,
These are therefore to die ana i-lmoni- - all and singular*,
the kiDdred and creditors of said deceased, t he and appear at
my office within the time prescribed bv law. io show cause. If
any they have, why said letters shoe Id not .-*• granted.
Given under my hand at offi.-e In Lexln den thla x7th dav
o? November, 18r;2. E C. BRAC EEL 4 ORD, Ordinary.
November 29,13t2. 4^48
STATE OF GEORGLY, WILKES COL .MY.
Whereas, BenjamiTi it. Hardinapplfs lome foi i.eueia
O' Adm-iibstration on the esfate of Hent y '. iLud n, Lite ol
-.aid • -no;/, dec’d:
r-. e ure tnereiora to dte, summons a ail and
the kJndr.;d and c.-editor* oi deceased, to bf>
.. -w - h.-h in- T • •*..'» \ ./•”!. V-J"r’-il '
au e. i/ry ana -i r'teot. ir» Wa- .ton.
m Gr. G. hii/LALAN, O.dkiary.
Nov So lfici. • 4w4i
ro-iA'iE up* Georgia. tFluua ly
o Wher***, rhill* T Com** anoll'A U a for Letter* of
Adrr. 1 nitration oath* estate ofGsorg. r.„ utecfsald
c.yunty, d««as*d j- q
i'beae are therefore to cite and i: a i .r, th»
kindred and creditor* of said deceased to be m . appear ot m>
offle* within the time prescribed by law. tc . * *.v cause 1; anv
they have, why said ietter* should not be gi v: ed.
Given under my hand at effle e In Wash: •_ :. x
G. Q. NOR.‘> * 1 Ordinary
.November £O, IB6i, 4w48
Georgia, ’ " r "
Whereas, Beatom Brown applies to »ters or Admln
litßoion on the estate of Cora brown, u • raid county,
deceased: ,
These are therefore to cite ana a-lmonU a and Enguiar.
tbe kindred and creditors of said deceased,: » ue and appear at
my office on or before the second Monday in Jammy next,
then and there to *how cause, if any ts < y naye, why said
letter* should cot be granted.
Given under my hand at office In Madiaon. thi* SBth day of
November, 1862. F. W, ARNOLD, Ordinary.
November bO, 1362. ***<
G« EORGLA, MORGAN COUNTY. , t 4 .
r Wuereas, WllUam K Hawkins apphes for Letter of
Administration upon tbe estate of William 1 • Hawktn*, late of
ifMd county, deceased; .. * .
These are th refore to cite and admonish ail *md singular,
tie kindred and ct editor* of said dec*aae<L to he and appe» at
my office on or t,»/or« the »«oaiMOTd»y?n JxauaiTßMt Hen
xac Here to How q,um. IX they I*»T*, wty nu jetttre
«SP
• HovemOer ®. I*W.
CITATIONS,
roll LETTERS ADHIINUnUTj^,
G 4 EOKQLA, WILKES COONTT
W Whereas, tsamuui HsrnPU apnita,u, m, ft,, I ..
AitailnislmUon o-a the estate of Wiliam H sirnHfli ?*
o'aaidrcuntT, decoasett • "mama. tstmmoaa, late
litevW. »)•; o<t j. .■' * V.-V * .„. w dj r
(liv tnu,.W lov ha- ■! • :. e : V "
I>. .er e tl (I NOHMaN, OiUlhar/.
i 4w48
J 4 El IKili. WiLKES 1.-oIiJJTY
O Wl‘. rca. ,K-.,eph W Wllkrsoi,,, Uvs to me for L«.
ktadS t ZiSEZii
my office, within tb time prescribe,l by law, to show oauaa u
a..y Itc7 have, why sal.l Lett. r. shout,t ootWa^ted*” 4,
tiiven tinier my baud at office lu W sh'netoi.
December % MM. ®
j I ATE OF OEOKGIA, RICHMOND COUStV u
O Whereas, Foiter Flemii« applies to me for Lette-ffi
Admmifitration on the estate of Prudence B. Fleming. nJi
salt! couuty. deceased : * UI
These arc therefore to cite an J admonish, aU and simnifar tha
aindred aud creditors ot said d.weaaed. to be and arDeaiiSmi
office, on or before the second Monday in ,l«nu r ynilTto show
cause. If any they have, why «dd letters should not be granted
Decembers, m DAVID l " r
GGORGIA, GREENS COUNTY.
Whereas, Philip Poulloln applies to me for Letters o;
Guardiansh p for the persons »nd propertv of Julia Poullaln
Boullain. and fiellx Poullain, orphans (ondtr fourteen
years ol age) ol Fq}ix Poullain,
These are Lherstorc to ci'e and oil persons con
cerued, to be and appear at the Court of Ordinary, to be hela
iu And for sffid countv on the second Monday in ••»tiuary next,
t > show cause, if they have, why sold Letu rs should not
tneu be granted.
Given under ray ha and at office in Greensboro', November
25th, 1862. EUOEMU3 L. KINU, OrdiuVrV.
Diceml er 9, 156 J. 4w43
TWO MONTHS NO HUES.
fJHI i
J. Cos
late of . cc-ud‘.*cea*ed.
C. No-
WC nTILs Kit'tf"djue *Hp; -cath.n ~. "'te TmuhTfo
(’
leuv.-t-'
Juy.H L. .-u. w ' r:'.y, deo?* **}
Nov, n >M. JOHN V, POLL EH, Atfo,.
M: lIMTHB after date Mipllcatlon v .
XU . countv for leave br sob
. . . i.
Negro M n u m<.. J .foton.
Nov. 1
Til \YO tviUia i’Hriafter date application whl be made to Uus
JL Court of Ordlsary 6f Wal.ou county for leave to sell «
the Laud and Negroes belonging to the vtatc o. William H.
Kithaidson. late of said county, deceased.
N»'V. 7,1862 * _FRANCIS *. COLLEY, AdmT.
MONTHH atteu date appllcatiou will be made to
X the Court or Ordinary of Richmond county for leave to
oeU a House and Lot on Jou?o Street, In the fit y of Anguita,
belonging vo tie estate of Henry Calvin, late of aaid county,
deceased. NICHOLAS GALLAHER AdmT.
Novimbe: L 1862.
GEORGIA, GREENS COUNTY.—Two months after
date, (to wit: at the January Term, 1865.) apphcatlAß
w:il be utads to tne Court of Ordinary of said county, far
leave to all the real estate belonging lo the estate of Henry
an* ish, deceased. J#HN D ENGLISH,
STEPHEN ENGLISH,
Adm t\ de boi is ten of Henry EngilMt docoa&ed
November 4 ,1862
G 1 EUKGIA. OGLETHORPE COUNTY—At tha first
W term ol the Court or Ordinary of said countv, alter the e*
piratlon of two mouths, I ebali apply to said Court for leave to
se.’l the Lands and Negroes belonging to ih««*tate oi Rob«t
S. Smith, tale of, aaid county, deceased.
LUCINDA D. SMITH, Ek’r.
November 4, L 69.
WO MOMllt* afterdate aupheation*wiil be made to
. the Court of Ordinary of Wilkes county for leave to
sell the Lands and Negroes belonging to the Estate of Moses
Hamrick, late ot said county, deceased.
STEPHEN DRANK, AdnPr.
October 14, 1362. ’
fflWO MONTHS after date appu v.» *U t»c made to tii
B Court of Ordinary of Columbia on ,y ;or leave to sei
tne Land and Negroes l*eionging to U»r ‘cut Adam Wli-
Wnson, late of said county. tleceaee.l
. MARY E. WILKINSON, AdnPi.
November 15,18C2. j dw 46
TKTOTICE.
'i’wo months after date application will be made to the
honorable Court of Ordinary or Richmond county, for leave tb
sell a portion oftbo Land, Negroes anil Personal Property he
longipgto the estate cj William M, 1> Antign&c, late oi said
county, deceased JOHN W. WALKER, fiZx’r
At. A. D ANTIGNAO, Exlrtx.
11. H D’ANTIGNAC, Kx’r.
November 21, Sw47
■%T OTIOfi.
1.1 Two month? alter date application wnl ne rna .e tu the
court of Ordinary of Jefleraon county for leave :o sell a Negro
Man belonging to the estate r, John G. vv hlghom, lale of said
county, deceased. CAKOIINivM WHJGHAM. Adm x.
November‘2o, lß62. Bv?4f
ABMIft ISTRATOSS NUTiCE,
l IXTY OAIB after date application wtU be made to the
i*) Court of Ordinary ot Jetfcrson county, lor leave to sail
the Real aud Personal Property of William n Battty, deceased,
laic of aaid county. .L. C. WARREN, Admr
9, J.3W.
NOTICE
TO DEBTORS AVU CHBUITOUtt,
jAfOTIUE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS
La All persons lndebtei to the estate of A Jam WiiidMoii.
iate of Coiumhia county, deceased, we requested to
immediate payment ; and those having den.anca againot
s .id estate ore required to present th£m ; duly attoetid, within
the licie prascrlbed by law.
MARY E WILKINSON, Adm v.
November 10,18s 3, _ ow
Notice.
xu! persons inaeDieu to tne estate oi i»r. nicnard jb
Mcßd-p, late of Oglethorpe county, deceased, ard notified
to make immediate payment; and those having demands
against aaid estate, will present them, duly authenticated, with
in the time prescribed by law.
AVA M. McKfiE, Adm x
November 17, 1862. __ 6w46
Cl TATE OF GEORGIA. LINCOLN COUNTY s
Notice is hereby given to all having demand*
against Henry’ Wheat, late of Bald county, deceased, UdHreaent
them to me, properly made out, within the time prescribed t|y
law, t*o a? to show their character and omcuuf; and all |»ersots
indebt'M to eald deceasea, art* hereby required to make immedl
ate paymedt. THOMAS H. WHEaT, Es*r.
November?, ltio-2.
IKTUTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS.
All peraonft indebted to the estate or Henry Calvin, late
oi Klciimond county, deceased, are requested to make Immedi
ate payment ; anu those having demauds said estate,
wUI present them, duly autbentlcated. wltfdn the tla s pre
scribed by law. JhIOHOLAs UALLAHeK, Adm’r.
November 11,1862.
Notice to debtors and creditors.
No'ice la hereby given to nil persons having demand«
against William W. WLison, late or Hanc ok county, de
ceased, to present them to me, properly made out, within tha
ume prescribed by law,►so us to show their character azul
amount; and all persons Indebted to said deceased, are hereby
required to make immediate payment to me,
LUCY WILSON.
Nov. li, 1862. Ex'Ulx of Wm W. Wilson, decVL
Notice to debtors and creditors.
All persona having demand# against Charles W. AilJtton.
late of Morgan county deceased, will present them within the
time prescribed by law, and ail Indebted will please mjtk* lm
mediiite payment. THOMAS H MOODY, Adm’r,
Nov. 12. l&rv-3. 6w44
TKTOT CE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS.
Xv Notice .a hereby given to all persons having demand*
agisnat Jack L. Britain, late of Oglethorpe county, deceased,
to present them tc m properly made out within the dm* p
Bulbed by law, ao&ato show tbc-ir charact r and amount:
and all pers' ua indebted to eaid deceased, are hereby requesUd
to make immsdiata payment to me,
JOHN V. COLLIER,
Nov. 11,1802. Adm*r ot estate Jack L, Britain, dec and.
OTIC 1* TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS.
Not’ce la hereby given to ail persona having demands
agadgit Robert G. car j, late of Oglethorpe county, <to
ceaued, wlii present them to me, properly made out, with
in the time prescribed by law, so uIS to show their character
and amount; and ail Jhisodb Indebted to eaid deceased, are
***** alKl t 0 mlie ‘ mm tßoeg£W. t oA^T*K 1
Nov. 11, 1862? Adm'r of estate R, G. Carter, decM.
Notice to debtors and creditors.
All persona Indebted to the estate of Jo.* h A. Graves,
late of B. rfce county, deceased, are hereby notified to mak«
Immediate payment; and those having claims against either
of them wUJ present them, duly attested witMn the Urn#
prescribed by law. EMILY GRAVED, Adxn^-.
November 11,1362. *
miOTICK —All persons indebted, to the estate of Evens
J3I Davis, late or Columbia county, deesaeed, are r*-
quested to make Immediate payment: and those having 4a
ir and.* aeirlnst aid estate, are requested to present them, duly
attested, within the rime presciibid by law.
November 4, 1862. E. L. DA Ex r
Two mouths rjter dateappxication will be made to sot
i curt cf ordinary of tv likes county, for leave to e*l the lie
groc-i boioDgiug to the estate cf Jesse M. Hacxney. ute of NUd
county, dfecaseT MARY HACENEY, Adm x-
NovembertO. 1862
I’' ~ Z
Two iUCiith# aftjxoai-e, tu vCif, at tLe i?eoimy term.
1868, of the Court of GKliiury of Greene coucty, ap
plici.ttcri will tx made tbsail <'our. for lcavs to o*U all the
Negroes blonving to tbe cata'.e of Samuel Clark* D«nl«i,
minor. OLIVER ts DANIEL.
Guardian of Samuel dark* Deufei.
I lecember 2, 1862.
NOTIUm-
Two montha aft<;r date oppiicalion whi be made to tbe
hviiOfnbl* thti Court of < irdlnary of Richmono c.uutyfor leave
to *eJi the Land belonging to the estate of Kooert J. Roe, late
of said county, deceased. KEBE JCA U. RUE, Acm I *-
Hcveaiter HO, I*o2 Bw^B
I\TOTJCE.
X* Sixty days alter date application will be made to the
Crdiniry o. Morgan coi-nty. on the first Tueeday m Fe-ruart
r»rembgr 2,1352 A |dm’t.
Notiee to Debtors! and Creditors.
jUOTjdK laiieiot.ygiven to all persona having daman Ah
against WlUlam iIT RLhardHon, late of ft'ahon count*
doce'iaed, to present tlu-tn to me, properly made out wtrafo
the time prescribed by law, eo ad to bhow theu
amount • azul ail persons indebted to said deceased are he r«j,v
required to make immediate payment. * 7
FRANCItt b. COLLEY. Adm'r
Nov. 7, 1862.* of wm. H. Klcharddon, deceased,
READ AND PAY 7
ALL P< rson? lrdebted to US by note or account, will preass
maae immeiia apA>ment. as we much prefer to have th*
money to use \u our ludness than to ho and ai.y man’s note or
account. {novloßw4*Jj EttTEh A CLARE.
LAM) FOB ‘ALE.
U*W*tt - .... >. f 1 1- .rt • /-i X r -aH O, 1-X.A.t.
Ii 110. l lift RIB-vk. wtUIIUII ua MKI«
two rei to. frou. n Hkir MltH. u 4 aXu. ujlTm
tnm HI&UH.U.&. cm tire i«*d. ll* pHa, U costhi uu iy Utur
Udto J ; a ~,.X prepordoa ot Mttso.
UftOO os Um exoes, tui v«y
§o*d wohard, Sc A putter IwtfMn i tMM uutiw
ry. l-nrctiajan arc invited to call u. 4 waalno tot ttaauolvtt.
Aiso ISO scree IV Hand, ca.r wtufiOamp vratod Va i
iluiu-d. Tat above i.aod« may bo boegnt M I bsicals, tt
applied i.u.rt. J will a,., wlta too piaoo. core. tp4Cw, ostA
L«ae. potatoes, aoa otter tbtagt aeoeaewy ot._, ftm. Ad
drea loe at Kaysvtd", Ua JHU L. fAtoSAX.
rovH
For Sale!
4 GOOD PLANTATION in B&rlM county, oi VW hUi* .
A. nuudied acT«e Oak hl<l Hickory Land, ana abvux Vw%W',-
iulpjlli, No *lott, 1B»>. _ _ DOV 11 tdAtfs
BROUGHT TO JAIL
*
Iv LttcoiLtoo. Lancets county, ax ta«TtJu*i csUisa aubml
JOHN BAHIiXB, wßoiayittU Be TOluute*re4 li a tt
erultto Cspt. Ruat Jone*’ company, Jooe on’, Ke,im«nt. tta*
wttte uid company-wai Hattoaea at Btt Bhaaty, In ttia watt,
tie ce»*ed ; that lie Out he hea.d from tt* Uecimant rt wu
at Cupoexiand (jap. and that a reward of ftity dollar, wm
ctitradfcnttim. Mud Barue, Is about tt year* ot an, S tart
lOlncaea nigh, U*nt hair and Sorld c&taplaxlon i had with
him a knapaach whan arraned. Xha Colima, of laid XU*
mtfit, or caotaln of said Company, art hareoy notlflad la
ooffll forward .payetharns. Ac., and tah* him away.
h. 4. COLIMAH, Hem BhK«.
Oetooar 36, 1W3. • «w«