Newspaper Page Text
;i\ omit &
■mtv,- mi mmarv.
r.j ires- in speaking of the
eat to Yankee priso
it the North My*:
, id liy a flag-of-truce boat.
• „ ,e miserable #conndrels who
. umlaight burglars, haw*-come
- .„ bi in, steal, carry auay
ilfc. jone. while trausporta
, -is can nardly be had for
when not one box in ten
iso■ ■ r- by them ever
~i d* - lunation without being
• thing valuable in it.
; . .rn the women of North Caro
io.bussed to Governor Vatic#,
. .. i.li widows, mothers, wives,
.. i• -and friend*, iri Guilford
. .. ina-' on the Governor for relief.
.-a - she Columbus .Sun : Moses l’adget, an |
. th'- second war for independence
in i ;2. :o>v ..viugia Macon county, Ala .is
, Irenj 10 Os whom are eon#
. .ave*been at some time during
i.:. i, tbemilitary service. Three
!: dried, they have sons, loin
i ~ , : , t rvi>.e. Mr. i’adget has
i foui on i) law in the military service.—
Tim old ■. • l ll . tr i> seventy-seven years of
i nod ili.ii.oi ,li to feeble for the hardships
■ ;j. i • a desire to lie permitted
... allowed to "shoot
, ins oc-.a-ion may offer without
to military rule, 't woof Lis
: .. I : he foe for the last time,
i: i . ■ now lie in a neighboring
.. iiuine of the noble old patriarch
, i- md in Virginia, Tennessee, Mis
i>V : .pi and Texas.
- oi Atlanta are organizing a sup
• - sbares titty dollars each, which
in. i.i.ldm to ti lde to t,he amount of
■ : ■ tube sold at
■ 1 1’ r s idiere’ families to be
:'.f ,<j i nlUicatc iron, any
i f 1;«' ».i 3 !’<’< 't< »r*.
■ top <>» Alabama, It is generally
i, is i in: lav. "‘stone ever produced in
V : Conference meets at
< ii oil the 4th of December
; i. ... >. .in. L< paituisnt of fuuvo
< arolina, < tgiannd Florida, lias been placed
imd" .!••'. •mum i clof Brigadier-General Henry
A. Wise.
Abo 1 • -ti thousand dewaters have been re
in* larolina. A great
them have done so voluntarily.
irl time sineo caught
|... , ,■ ill lion in North Alabama near Nor-
Uii.f: :on ibe I tig bear. The baltallion
i. iron newly clothed and .admirably
innod. They withstood Ferguson's furious ou
-.1.n; id only a few minutes, when they broke
lor lli " hi>ling places. Over thirty prisoners
and two pi-, es oi artillery wore captured.
. I, it K. Colston, nays the Savannah
Hrpiiiibc-ui, Inis been assigned to that post as
tin #.ucce u or of Gen. laliatVrro.
i;ivi i ,u of Miss., has temporarily taken
up |,i o 'I■ ■iu Columbus, in that State.
ii i.ri orating room of the powder mills
~v ijai di, blew up a few days since. Loss
inference oi South Carolina
. ill.l- .on the 10th of December next.
, i triple •'! ; ctersburg arc about to ostab
foi the poor of that city. This
is a good work.
V Hollins non of Commodore Hollins,
of the blockade-runoiag
was lobbed at Richmond, Va.,
on iti'tii ult . of nearly three thousand dol
i ia --old ami notes, and a gold watch and
■ a.ini worth .wo thousand more.
I,', i Hun Esq .of Crawford county, Ga.,
■ us: #to all civiliauH who stop with him, an
old i-!,' I meal of ‘‘ham and eggs, butter,
hi -i.it. • • mine Rio coffee " etc., for fifty cents,
>'i re* o£ charge. Hehasnev
i i 'ban . ■e or lour soldiers boarding with
dm rpat'.iii.iUHiv at any time. lie furnishes
them ben needy with apparel also. 1 loserv
■ foi nearly two years, and is now
in the State service. He is a true patriot.
By order of the Foeretarv of War, all Mis~
souriAns li.ihte to eonseripti u, not on duty in
t!>*. lieM are ordered to the Brigade of Missou
rian . tow being organized at Demopolis, Ala ,
to n ill they are temporarily attached.
•Vo associations nave been organized in
* iii'.rt.- Ue. N.C. us iuuiany cities of the South to
ons The object of ond is to fur
ui.-ii ii'c, ei ily with nucesaariw "gratis,” dupng
•ii . ini. . i bat of tin otlicr is to buy provi
so to II feotfconsumers at cost. Letassooia
tioi - <>l fun kind be formed everywhere, and
ii* ' i" i ' provisions will soon come down.
• 'bin I rives die foil.,wing
he Exchange question:
N*’ •• yet been mage, and no change
■ ' ■ fcotiatjons for a l ester
underat ibjcftt i>i exchanging
w Ttad Washington authorities
•ii ..<•-!• a cepti i nor declined our propo
mm oi v.bniUted rival oucs. They continue
v oi ii'r*.,;u'a: end special exchange, as If
pen : yrhaps to keep
do •• • tl»-' mr.i-tituGiigs of their own people.—
The »•< mluct Os the enemy iu this matter is dis
graceful but characteristic.’,'
Mot. ■> c.-iioer l.iay bo summed up with
truth -i *l* ws : Ho has. lon-lit sixty-three
bal'd— otd i . -been successful iu fifty-seven ;
• u . ballot '.‘0,000. and de
rtli of property, taken
AO ee' l - land of small arms, and fifty pieces of
uni iv, M.oon lion and .travelled i‘2,000
min ;' . • ;■ ni ■ ..rpassanything in the tin
not had with him at
.my mil " ■ ; ;l ‘ i men for fluty. No man
-d more, if so much,
, i Hi" .iimming up shows an array of glorious
• 1 vri that, w -re never surpassed in number ami
brilliancy,
t ,i iti, ii of Montgomery, Ala., are taking
1 p " ' iv,-• -it -b.es io that place sold tub he
.at cost ■
Tl*" -tnour. ■ ston of the Alabama Methodist
* nil! i.i i l l at Columbus, Missis
sippi, Nov. -
•' >1 lb •i-hi. near IMrlUand.Gveen county,
Ala. >- selliog iiotatoes to soldiers at one dol
lar per h is'iel. while all others in the vicinity
an' asking fix "-U lour to Aye dollars.
The editor of vtlauta Appeal has had an
intoi-v;.,"’ ip ,11. 'lhomas Watts, of Ala.,
lm~ i •turned from a sttimpinr trip
IP, ~i, ,i ic g >them section of that State,
•t ... i ;,.vei-.'ir s-tvs f ii:tt in St. Cltur, Talladega
~,'hl i’:- - I’l.unties, whose fidelity hits been
lnolv tt . v he fonml the most grati-
L -,. -I <*r affairs The arirumont of
.. *, . .. , .... nullifies against recoti
i,., ii,. , w . simugly put. an*l in every
was- ;•••• I with ihvinrmstrations of "the
~.. ;.i-u■. : i men and women. The
•iimouii.' i. of his purpose to call out more
, ,as liis appeals for aid
(h,. fanii'iesof tlt-'sohliers. wore received in
i1.,. sin*, •’•.ji.tl" latter having been attend
,..| in ■ me , by the immediate fruits of
pop-tint u: e*o,i. tid hujre subscriptions
in !,;••.i. (..*•■ mi ■ Watts is both in lino health
nn-1 tints spy'ite. *
. ' ■ rin the Mississippi army s>-.m
! ■'; 11 "if riny is spread over a considerable I
extent ot cot. try The boys seem healthy.
mlotitci. jin Use best of spirits, having a
plenty to e;v. and wear.
A i report published in the
Aihint l . i p. .. p.ukenness and crime are
ti .irP.ltv v : the increase in that city.
a ■ m :'n .ir I rean. Lincoln called out
l men . • ■■ e .ii out the rebellion." Af
:. rM o - ,s■ eriedout for4oo.ooo‘’to
• uni the v is uediut,Ay-" Then he must have
. ini.one C, |, r "linisn tne rebel
lion.' Ti- aim shrieked for ffoo,Wo«uiore ‘-to
.ve \V - :teii and then he must have
:;00 . nu» am — ■ • re,)lace the nine months men,”
and then o'O.b'b) more "to be allowed on the
m-jt <i • • tiilion seven hundred and
, . . : men, an i the South in
:ter it y. and the North weaker
than eve • e sintie war began. Who
S it the Smith, but th«
rhitinl'i. i is; .fsm that wields the sword,
desti oys the liberties, degrades the States, and j
centralises the pow< r of the North.
Alai. C n. French has established his head- |
quarters at F land mi Miss j
ix op n j
tv, u..W. A. Scott, late of California, i
formerly of New Or lest,.-, has b.-en installed j
pastor of Hie Street Presbyterian .
Church, in New Yoik.
An extra session of the C nneetient Legisla
tore has been caded to and the State m raising
its quota ot volunteer.
'The Chicago Times radi *al Republican
paper, takes ground ;»k L .coin s policy,
in the troubles now exubug Mi- - -tri.
The Feoorals have succeedeil in raising sev
eral liegrt* regimeiits in Nashviiie. aii*i ate try
ing to raise more.
G«n. Heintzelm in is to -be superceded in the
pommund of the defences of Washington by
Gen. Harvard.
The quota ot .Pennsylvania nuclei the late
call fur volunteers is
. Provost Marsh *) Fry advises Governor Sey
mour that New . wasdeticieut <m the 10th
of October last of 17,CAT men, s j that the whole
number of volunteers to be raised before Jan
uary next, to avoid the new dratt, is 10f,0Fo.
The Unionists have carried the day in most
sections of CalUornia in the late elections of
Judges &c.
A prize fight come off a short time since in
California between two pugilists named Dwyer
and Walker. The fight came olf in the after
noon, but after seventeen rounds, it was ad
journed on account of the datluiess. it was
resumed tre next morning, and continued for
tnree hours and twenty minutes, making in
all forly-ono rounds in font hours’ lighting.
Dwyer was declared the victor. Walker was
withdrawn by his seconds much ttgitinsfc his
will. Walker was entirely blind. The fight-’
ing was declared good by all parties.
The Cincinnati Enquirer speaks thus of the
Federal Administration : The policy of this
Administration is wrong, and it no violates
'every principle of justice and morality, and
the spirit of the Jacobinical Fiction by which
it is supported is so devoid of sense and wis
dom, that it is certain to he followed by'a ter
rible retribution. The longer it is delayed Uie
severer it. will bo. tho more tremendous ‘i.o
wratl .' deceived,and outraged people.
ft jv -i -.t tnat Lincoln never leaves the White
|ti , "’thout abody guard of sixteen soldiers.
on b« > t'loH in his carriage the guard are
i inountcii on Landscme black horses
'J m* Boston papers stato that the ' "on -
1 •. . ■■'.plcte failure. altogether
too deep, and she draws nearly twenty-six foot
of water—two teet more than the Great Lattt
ern, and one font more than the tiunotis ilrilish
iron clad Warrior, tier main deck ports do not
seem to be more than live l'cct from the water,
and consequently’, in a seaway, could not be
opened with safety to use tier best battery.—
She has not room enough to contain more than
two and a half months’ stores ior her crew, in
consequence, of the blunders of those who de
signed the alterations in her. She was so deep
when she Imd ail the stores on hoard that some
of her coal had to he taken out to lighten her.
The Juarez Government has sent ji full lega
gation to Washington. This appointment to
the United States, at this time shows the im
portance which Mexico attaches to .the action
of the United States at this moment.
The Federal Provost Marshal General autho
rized the statement, that the colored troops
," ; sed in Maryland prior to the draft in that
Sttu will lie duly credited -on the present
draft. * -
The latest advices from St. Paul are to the
effect that Ramsay’s treaty expedition is likely’
to fail, ou account of the large price demanded
by the Indians for their lands. They demand
SIOO in money and $55 ti'il iu goods per head,
for fifty years. The demand of the Red Lake
and Pembina tribes, combined, amounted to
over $10,000,000. They will probably agree to
take $20,000 for the right of way on Red River
and over their lands. This is tb" offer made
them.
The Russian naval officers, now in New York,
have visited Niagara Kalis, and also partaken
of the hospitalities of Gov. bdyrnoiarat Atbnny.
There is horrible suffering among the negroes
in Memphis, Tenu. About .T 5.000 are gathered
along the liankS'of the Mississippi.
A Vicksburg letter in the Nurthera papers
says : ‘‘Weshall, in al! probability, have a Pro
visional Government establishes! in Mississippi
in two or three weeks. Colonel Markland, of
Kentucky, is spoken of as most, likely to fill the
gubernatorial chair.” The letter adds that im
portant movements are on the tapis, and in two
weeks there will be no ai med toe upon the soil
of Mississippi.
In the “Soldiers’ Cemetery,” near Washing
ton City, the remains of over seven thousand
Yankee soldiers, who have died iu hospitals and
in camps in and about the city during the war,
have bean interred. This does not include the
thousands whose bodies have been removed by
friends and relatives. 1 which ate distributed
among the other cemeteries in the city, and the
number of which,-the' National Tutolligenoor
says, there are no means of dc finitely ascertain-*
ing.
Northern papers state that General Blunt
■will soon occupy - Northern Texas with a Fede
ral J'oree.
A nephew of Federal i'ostmaster General
lifiiir lias been arrested for stealing. He was
only following tho example set him by his tin
clc.
The negro element is growing very strong
and demonf.lraflve in Washington. List week
•‘the Capital of the United States” was treat
ed to a procession of the negro order of Odd
Fellows. The turn out is said to have been
very tine, and Cutty is said’to have disport ed
an immense quantity of gold lace and tinsel.
Negro delegations from other cittes joined in,
and after parading, with martial music. Through
the streets, they repaired to a ball, where Hie
entertainment, was speeches and'
songs. There was a great display of oratorical
talent, an it. rare Was no end to the songs- -the
performance closing with an abolition song,
set for the occasion, in which the whole' com
pany joined. A demonstration
similar to the above had been gotten np by tin*
negroes iu Nashville. In fact, negro equality
is developing itself everywhere the Yankees
have a foothold in the South. Tlie affair at
Nashville was .very incendiary, and tho spirit
of the “speeches” was as-thoroughly warlike
as if written in the Tribune ofdoc. ’l lie meet -
ing closed with the declaration that they would
soon V>e “gom • coon hunting to kill t hose gray -
backed coons that are going through the coun
try,” and with the reaffirmation of Greeley's
doctrine that a “white man is as good as
a negro if lit* beiiaVcs himself.’'
Five Confederate vessels attemptipg'to run
the blockade off the Texas coast, have been
thwarted. One. tlio Friendship, was heavily
lad:; with munitions of war. Another, with
powder and jKtrcussion caps, was blown up hy
the. Confederates. Two others were*-fired and
blown up. .
General Grant arrived tit. Chattanooga, Oct*
25th. The following is Ms order on assuming
command of the district : -In compliant}
with General Orders. No. 337. of dal e Washing
ton. 1). C., Oct. 10, 1 Stiff, the undersigned We*
by assumes command of tLe "Military Division
of the Mississippi, embracing the Departments
of the Ohio, the Cumberland and-of the T< ti
ll esgee.
’Someof the Yankee papers say that Mealies i
late movements were not a retreat, but only an
effort on his part to bring ahou’tran engagement
wftli Lee.
A turtle of the “leather tortoise" species,
weighing 1000 pounds has been ‘caught off i
Newburyport, K. i.
Some of the crews of the vessels captured Fv
our steamers off the Cape of Good Hope have
arrived North. They report that when they sail
ed that the privateers Florida and Tuscalocs •.
weru cruising on the coast. The private
Alabama is said to be at or near Soldanka Key
superintending the disposal of the Sea Bride's
cargo, which is reported to have beeu pup
chased by British residents at Capetown. A
master and crew had been sent from Cane town
to take charge of the Sea Bride.
A Washington correspondent of ti e Cinufc
nati Enquirer gives a frightful picture of tba
wholesale robbery and plunder of loyal citi
zens ill Maryland—and the rotting of the crops
in the grouud. and the indiscriminate stealing
of slaves and horses. He states that the to
bacco crop will be almost entirely lost. The
atrocities of the skunk. Schenck, and his i-ule
in Baltimore, are described as f;yr exceeding
those of Butler.
■£*»*»*
\UBfrAAS vt. »V «
, . c r. ’.v -tmen't- pat ad* ibtt streets of Sfash
vi.-V’. and y ’ -
“To New York Time* attack* Lincoln foi m
. moving RrweeratlZ.
TheFeJerafs Generals are issuing procla
mations reomineuding the ..bsei vunee ot Lin
coln s thafik‘■giving d.y—Thursday, Nov. 26.
Admiral D ihltrrett has .gone to Washington
probaidy-t" fix up viiattrrs so as not to get su
percefled.^
I.i’it iffu Iras ermsolidnted the corps of Gens.
| McCook and «T ittcmlen, and given th& «»m
--man*l to (J«n.
The Northern papers say that Roseucranz
mi - ; i very popfllai couiniamler with his troops.,
notv, i k -oamting ills unpopularity at Washing
ton- ,
A large force*if sailors liave been ordered
from New York loicijiloietj Atlmiral Dahlgren,
at t Iu; Icsbin.
Gioltt men v.l war. ordered l»y the Navy
Department at Washington to prepare for sea
at New York, are now ready to depart.
Eleven otbds An-nearly ready for
nation unknown as yet,
A Confederate private has been seen oft the
Coast of Maine. Name unknown.
'J i.o Louisville Journal announces, that no
reel tilting *>f negroes will take plate in Ken
tucky. Lincoln i.s.afruid to hike such a step
at j,resent. He has not yet the State ill sutti
cTcnt subjection yet in do sue: a thing with
impmiily.
A few nights previous to his execution. Dr.
Wright, of Norfolk, made an attempt to i-s'Cape,.
which was a most successful. Although the
ceil was closely watched I y a detective white
his family was with him, yet his daughter man
aged iu the shadow to transfer to the doctor
the guise of a woman, and so to veil and oth
erwise 1,, ,-ouceal his person, that iu parsing
throil li 1n,.; building there was no recognition
until one of tj*e im nki-ys, named Garrison, af
ter ho had g»,tt* u out Os and some fitly yards
from 111.; pii;-,,n» suggested licit, that lady was
very tail for Djx W right’s daughter. Lieut.
Cook, iuunedialvly hurried utter ttie figure, end
*o fe, |-;i .. ifiv e nothing was wrong, lifted the
; veil, when (he doctor was discovered appareKl
i ed'*! /*/He exhibited hut little em
i barrassim-nt, simply observing to the LieUten
-1 nnt that “despernto means were panloneil un
| dor desperate circumstances,” and turning,
•valkml hack to his cell as uuconccinelly as if
nothing unusual had occiiriod. Kuteriiig, the
daughter was found reclining upon the bed,,
bools *>u and protnuling from beneath the cov
ering. the doctor’s style. No-restraint was im
pose* 1 upon her by ibe officers in charge, and
tho doctor banded her to the care of Lieut. Rob
! orts, who escorted tier home. Extraneous in
! teiligenee Informs us that every arrangement
j had hi ■ell completed for facilitating the doctor’s
, escape. Availing** was stationed in waiting a
short di.-dupre irom the prison, outside of pick
ets licit i?iianl the different avenues leading to
the jail,-ami every essential and suitable pre
caution taken to insure his salety. incidents
are narrated by the Northern press of Dr.
Wright's children singularly expros five of de
voted filial attachment. A small hoy came to'
Lieut. Roberts, and approaching him with a
caressing manner, and looking up into ids face,
said, ‘Van 1 not die for my father A small
daughter iH’i’onipaiiied her mother to Did Point
on a visit to Gen. Foster. During the confer
ence, the little girl clambered upon the knees
of the general, and putting up her sweet, inno
cent lac* 1 . said, vv-illi an earnest pathos that
■went to Li * very soul, ‘'Save my father, wont
you : ' None blit hearts lilted with Abolition
iiate could witbsfaml appeals of tljis kind.
Gen. Living, the Federal General in -com
mand in Western Missouri and Kansas has or
dered Ins men to lak e no prisoners in fights
with Goutedeia‘eguerillas. The Northern’pa
peisr.ty Id orders have been strictly’ obeyed.
Tile final result of the home vote of Ohio in
stated to be . .’,807 majority against Vtdlandig-
Jiaui. and in Pennsylvania tlie Philadelphia
Pit - suys Curtin’s majority will icueii ill), 01)11.
If is slated in the Yankee papers,'that Slew
art, the New York dry goo*ls merchant, paid
s "-iO.Ofib as his income tax ibr-last year. That
would make Ids income leaqh live millions.
Mi. : niithrc.n. iht! Washington banker,is still
confined in the old capital ; all his property
having been taken, and Laker, Hu: notorious'
i detective has pl aced Ii s brother .in Mrs B’s
1 house, and rehised to let. Mrs. £. have even a
bia.nb* tto proteit her riiiidren. indeed, ho at
first refusedlier permission to removehei‘ wear
fog iipj-uol, lciiinrkbig that the .dresses would
tk id, wife. It ii ciKmrii to make us blush
when xv.o remend-cr that we were once citizens
of ti:e sarae natiou:
At the recent trade sale in New York of the
booksellers, about $500,000 worth were dispo
sed of.
It is now reduced to a certainty, savs a late
Yankee paper, that Heiutzelmap, will be re
lieved* ol his cominatid of the defenses of
The succession to Ids place is
understood by tunny to have been tendered to
General P-arntU'd, the builder -of all the Wash
ington defenses, ttild by'others "to have been of
li-ied to (7* n. Maijimlale. ‘ .
The D. S: gunboat lvekrney ai rived at Havana
oh Uie lit)t-h nil., from Key West, She reports
that ill*- United States gunboat Tioga took- into
Key West, bn the 28th, the rebel steamdr
Hcral.l, with two lmmlie.l and fifty hales of
cotton,.and the agents of anew rebel company,
with a capital ol J.*y*> million dollars for block
ade running., The Herald waS the first vessel
~.f the new company.
'j fie Ohio Statesman sa y# .that Mr. Lincoln,'
ill r. <'li;oe and Mr. Seward are understood to lie
rival candidate# fra*' the next I'residency. The
Statesman thinba Mr. Lincoln is determined
that, lie wilt be re-elepted, or nfall jevents, that
lie will retain the office for another term, ail*}
is of lira opinion that tlie chief rivalry is Ire
tfveen him and Chase.
TJie New York Herald thinks there will be
tiotibie.in Washington when the Minister from
He'' New Emperor of’Mexico arriv ■# there.' Lin
e**l it ini# aTreailv icPeived flu* Minister from the
Juarez Gitvernment. The Herald says when
Maximilian's Minister does arrive the Washing-'
ton Government will tiave a plain duty to phi -,
form, wiiich would-be to reject Inin.at ont-e.
There can be Ho middle course. 11 Lincoln
doe# a# Ih * Hera hi odviper, it will create a dif
iicuif-y between him and France at once.
Blair has been delivering a jjspeech to his old
| constituency at .St, Louis, In it he used lan*
guaeti iii regard to Federal Treasurer Clia.es
j and hisailios.-whieli. if held by one of the o(v
j position would lead to an abode in one of the
| numerous military'prisons, He does nolhesi
j tate. by very unequivocal implication, to de
j uoniiet;Chase as a rowdy an,l a blackguard ;
j and m speaking of his policy in ieganTtb the
| Mississippi river, in th. matter ofrenioving ob
j s.tmeti<njs to its navigation, be says the policy
; and plans of .IvHbf'sun Ibivis hav* IxVii adopted
: by ti • Yankee Secretary, nu.t tlmi tie wifi con- 1
I tend as str.ong'v against I'lias'e.'.-; embargo of
i the Mississippi as he lias dune against that of
; Dayis. i■•"gar,He.*s of wlpit. power or position he'
holds or.wields in the (fovejnuient.
i The New York World says that unless the
; Fedei ds -Hi-iRe mote rapid pre.gie-n ju.tbejr
, cot: ir ri.uii, Ifiler.i! n nodices will rive
~;it b o ui ■ i’mifedeiatea give up.
According to file New York papers tiicrd is
a growing teolhi; of hostility in tliatuity to the
•i.ngli.-h and French. This feeling they say was
demonstrated at the Russian banquet on Moil
day. The English Adviiai Milne, sail. il away
with*a ! l his squadron witkont- replying to the
invitation to the banquet TANARUS;« French Admir
-lal Reyn >ud a h nt a polite note of regret on ac
i count of-previous engagements. Every, one of
the speakers hai} somhthing to say in oondem-
i jatieii of the bogus neutrality of Engteml and
the anti -American schemes of All
such set)tine uta were warmly and emphatical
ly applauded and endorsee The unanimity
,'f (he ; ::-emhla;re in regard to thissnjbeet was
--,remarkable.
According to the account of a deserter pub
lished m the Noith. in papers ibe obstructions
in lie-Charleston harbor consist of four lines
stretched across the harbor, one of which is
wenty-tive feet wide. Between there rows of
■>i!es are masses of stone. The deserter thinks
■ bat it would require the labor of a year to re
move the obstructions, eVen were there no in
terference by Confederate cannon.
Paris correspondents of the New Yoik papers
say there is no truth in the rumors that France
intends to recognize the Confederacy.
The business portion of tb* town of Big
Oak Flat, California, has been destroyed by
fir**
ieeivpH&fcN tie; »>-.
imtiei h*a again applied for au active com
tcand.. ana intimate that he will resign if it is
not given to Lun
The latest advices from St. Paul arc to the
cite, t that Ramsey’s treaty expedition is likolv
to fail, on account ol the large price demanded
by the Indian# for their lands. They demand
M 0« in money and $55 Gl', 1 , in goods per head,
for fifty years. The-dennnd ot the Red Lake
and Pembina (vibes, combined, amounted n>
.over $10,000,000. T *<’y wilt probably agree
to take $ 'O,OOO for the l ight of way on Red
River and over their lauds. This is the offer
made them.
The Washington correspondent'of the Phila
delphia Ledger .slates riiat the Goiirt of lu*pii
rv iu the case of Gen. Buell returned a verdiet
oVaeipiittul on all thßcharges )u <’ferre*l against
him. The venibt was rendeied long since, but
for some reason or other lias never been pub
licly announced.
A dispatch from Leavenworth, Kansas, says
lhat the Confederate General Cooper has been
reinforced from Price’s nrniy, and again threat
ens Forts Blunt anil Rniith. General Blunt has
gone to meet him with a force huge.enough to
oiler battle. The guerrilla, ijunntrell, has
joined Frji’e, ami the Confederate force in Ar
kansas is believed l** be ‘J.OOO strong, with 1$
pieces of arti levy. Confederate Gen. tShelby.
liav ing been driven ont ot Missouri, has united
the remnant of Iris loic-sto the command of
Brooks, who, wilh ff.UUO men, is on the Wliite
*river. neat HuuisvYlie.
The New York Herald says Cii itjanooga is
100 important, a position to be given up. and
calls on the government to use e*.cry exertion
to retain it.
Some of the Northern papers say ltosecrans
was removed because lie would not become a
party to the political intrigues iu Washington.
The Herald's Fortress Monroe ot rrespondent
thinks an important military movement will
soon be made'from that place.
Several blockade runners have been arrested
by the Federate at Norfolk.
A large abolition Union meeting has been
held in Baltimore. .
Several prominent New York merchants have
been arrested a’iid sent to Fort Lafayette.
Geo. Jeff. Thompson it is .said is to be
paroled.
The first, snow of the season fell at st. Louis
October 22d.
Andy Johnson informs Lincoln that he
thinks tyi election can now he safely held in
Tennessee.
Email pox has broken out. among the Confed
erate prisoners at Foi t. Delaware There are
now about one hundred and fifty eases.
The Federate repose great-fit l hin Gilhnore’s
ability to take Charleston.
rt is said that all aUempls.to remove Ad
miral Dahlgren will prove unsuccessful.
It is the intention of. the Mexican Govern
ment to burn.all the cotton at Malamotss, la
ther tin’ll permit it to lull into the hands of the
French
Silu-e this war commenced ‘.’00,1)00 Federal
soldiers have been discharged oai surgeons’ cer
tificates.
Tbn Federal Provost Mat -hsl Genera! re
port that tire machine: y for executing the en
rolment act is in complete working order. ■
A Washington dispatch says the reason why
tbn Federal army in Tennessee does not move
is because it cannot gut supplies..
The quota of Pennsylvania mnh'r Lincoln’s
late call tor volunteers is 35,70!).
Provost Marshal Fry advises Governor .Sey
mour that New York was deficient, on the .loth
of October last of 47,057 men,so that the whole
number of volunteers lo .be raised before Jati
'tiary next to avoid the new draft is 108,085.
. Gov. Todd announced that there would be
no draft in Ohio, the quot'd having .’been tilled
bv Volunteers.
"Gov. Yales of Illinois, has? issued his procla
mation for volunteers trader Lincoln’:; call
The French have notified Lincoln of the
blockade.of the Mexican coast..
Line >!n ha# decided that no c.itirt martial is
deemed propci or necessary in Mi Irby’s case.
Advices from New Orleans, to O’ct. 17, rep
resents that the advance of the .Federal forces
had grossed the Vermillion river, and fora
week jnior there had been considerable skir
mishing, without, mg!iv casualties on. either
side. In the parishes,,of Pluqueivdjra Mdi La
fourche. planter; were beginning to grind .the
sugar-race, hut iu conaequriule of ftp* disturbed
condition of the labor market Ibe.crop did not
promise ta he large.
Roseerans in a speech at Cincinnati said that
since tlie battle of Ohickamfiug.i he had ic
eeived a letter of approval from the President
•for his action in that ajfiir : and whatever
charges appealed in the Eastern paper against
him, he was satisfied that The Government was
in no way responsible for - them, tie expressed
his readiness to do whatever Hid Government
required of him.
According (o accounts published in Northern
papers our guerillas on the Mississippi are very
successful in their operations against Federal
steamers.
. It is rumored iu Washington that the Feder
ate intend to abandon Morris island.
The b ailing Northern papers are demanding
Gel) Meade's report.of the Pennsylvania cam*
paign.
Mis Lincoln has lately given a grand ball at
the White 1 louse. The Washington .Journal
oonimeiitsVuv the affair as follows:-' Nero fiit
dled while Koine was burning-. Mr. anil Mrs
Lincoln give-expensive entertainments while
the conjitvy is in Hie hist- throe of dissolution,
and while tie* people are taxed to the 'utt*r
most to sustain -the policy which is xlestim ing
it. “Nearly »H the gene ml# in I lu* army wise
there!” "It cost thousands of 'dollars, ” while
hundreds and .thousands, of widows and oi
phans, made such-by this way are suffering for
the wants of Hit* common necessaries of life
mid mourniqg in their poverty tjie absence *>t
their bushttnds and fathers, who sleep Ilicir last
sleep in. Southern graves.- So it. goes. "'On.
on with the,dance.”
The fugitive slaves And free negroes in Nash
ville, have been holding “war meetings'’ re
cefitly. The:‘.‘black gemmeu” talk as vocifer
ously, ami almost as unmercifully tow,mis the
South as their wWt.e brethren.
The total .amount of gems and 'jiYecßms
stones, not set, tutored at the New York cus
tom-bourn hi IStil, was but t?4:i,Slff; in JHf>2 it
was £11*8,821; while tor the first quarter
of the present year it has been s!)7,£4t>. So
that in the second year of the war, the impor
tation-of diamonds iiiCreurcil f,mr fold on I lie
previous rt-ar, and (In* {bird year bid fair to
double mi I bat. The shoddy dealers and New
.York speculators d«» n.ot appear to slop to
count the costs.
The official quota of New York, under the
present call lor volunteers, is one hundred and
rigid thousand men. • ■
It is said that the governments of Central
America are taking, umbrage at the course pur
rued hy France in Mexico.
It is said thai liin runaway negro»s in and
a.rmmd jMcmplus are in a terrible condition.
They number about thirty live thousand. -'I heir
condition is represented as one of extreme des
titution. Multi Hides have" im change of rai- 1
inent whatever, while that which they made
their escape in, is perishing. No one wlio has
not seen can at all imagine the tilth and dis
ease which th's simple fact assures. Many
have not clothing sufficient for the uses of mod
esty and decency. They come in, necessarily,
without any cooking utensils. The suffering
arising from this want-, it is hard to imagine
Exposure is already doing its deadly work
among them.
According to letter writers the enlistment
of negro soldiers is going ou rapidly in New
Orleans, and the Union troops have been very
successful in (he destruction of'salt works,
tanneries and other Confederate piopc-ity,
across Lake Pontchatrain, in Mississippi.
Harper's Weekly, of October 17, says Cap
tain MafHt had resigned the command of the
Florida in consequence of ill health. Lieu
tenant Barney was likely to succeed him.
The Federals have made another raid
through the Northeast section of North Caro -
lina, destroying a great deal of property.
Twenty-four of Morgan's men have escaped
from Camp Douglas, near Chicago They
managed to dig a tunnal under tie prison
fence, large enough to get through.
FyßßtuK ilftwe.
i’be Btlt sU Admiralty pan d«t* i*iei to cob- I
strupt anew squadroi. of non gnu-boat*, armor
plated. with double screw propellers, to be ;
armed with two heavy Armstrong guns.
The Alabama, Georgia and Tnscarorr con
tinue criiisiug around the coast of the Cape of
Good Hope.
T in* l uited Slates steamer Vanderbilt has
arriv*-d at the (Jape in pursuit of the Alabama,
anil WHS f, paired in Simon's Bay.
The Paris papers say that the. outbreak in
t aucusus is ol a very serious nature.
Napoleqtis organ announces that Frauce will
agree with other European nations on the Pol
ish question.
Denma, k has ordered a large hotly of troops
to be massed on the Schlesnig frontier *
More Russian troops have been sent to Po
land.
An alliance has beeu formed between Swe
den and Denmark.
The United States armed steamers George
Manalnin and Kihan Allen, engaged in eniising
among the British Islands, have been summaiT
-ly ordered from some of the ports of Prince
Edward's Island. A private letter from at offi
ebr attached to the former vessel stales that,
when at Charlottestown, an order came from
the Governor requiring both vessels to put to'
sea, a proclamation in the name of the Queen
having been made milking the demand, which
was promptly complied with.
. The London Times of GctoberUl, says the
Paris advices state that tho new’ French loan,
which is expected shortly lobe introduced is
likely to be for about Al(i,00t),00() -SBO,OOO
- ‘
A coal mining machine lias been Invented in
England, ami it operates successfully. They
would be valuable here now. One mail and
two hoys in England took out eigh t hundred
tons ol cod in six days, working eight hours
per day with the machine.
An English paper narrates the following ac
count of what it calls "quick work.” Messrs.
Joseph Robinson A Cos , the extensive biscuit
manufactures, Denton Mills, Carlisle, reaped a
field n! -w heat, at four o’clock in the morning :
it was thrashed, ground into Hour, and made
into biscuits which were on the hieakfast table
by eight o’clock —the time thus occupied being
only four' hours.
Earl lie Grey delivered a speech at at Ripon,
in which he said : \Ve have from theoiitset de
clared our intention to preserve, in the con
test going on in America, a po-i I ion of strict
neutrality. That position we have unswerv
ingly to,maintained, and 1 think, ii we wish
t,* litul a proof of the truth of that asser
tion, we-tumid discover it in the fret that, by
tints holding -an equal balance between the
two contending parties, wo seemed to
have pleased neither.
11, nfy Ward Beecher had addressed a large
audience in Liverpool, in support of the ab
olitionist view of tin* war. lie was violently
interrupted I’> Confederate agents amt Con
federate sympathized, but carried nut his point
of making himself heard.- Beecher recoin-,
mended an alliance between England and the
United .State.*, to enable both countries to
withstand the stock which may ensue from the
threatening complications which, iu his opinion
exist.
Gut Lamar, of the Confederate army, de-
Tivereila speech at an agricultural banquet in
England iu favor of {he Davis Oo’nfederaey.
Mr. Roulidcll Palmer, Attorney General of
England, staled in a speech Ih itGieat Britain
could not recognize the Confederate States un
til they had achieved their independence.
Their rights as belligerents must be respected,
but Great Britain could do nothing more al
present.-
The Loudon papers say that whatever may
l,e the intention of the English government
concerning the mysterious rams now building
in the Me*soy, no attempt has been made to
s op the contract or from finishing them and
getting them toady for sea. The custom
lion:c officers, however, are still on board, and
the Goshawk,-tender to Her Majesty’s ship
Majestic, e .ntinues to be mooted close to the
ram which is being fitted up iu the Great
Float.
The poles had applied to the Sultan of Tur
■ key i,u a recognition f-.s beligei eats. -'The Czar
had notified the Sultan th it such recognition
will lie taken as <v declaration of war against
Russia.
Th, Eogli di Cabinet had postponed its de
cision as to tho recognition of Poland as a
belligerent.
The London Army 'lin'd Navy Gazette regrets
to .shite that in -tho last.-experiments with the
Armstrong guns, the defects of tlie lead coited
shot and title grooving were very apparent, as
happened in tiro previous practice. With the
full charge ol twelve pounds, several of the
shells hurst at. the muzzle, a.*.d one iu the gun,
cutting up the grooving ; while others of the
shot# were stripped of I heir lead coating and
fell-short. Tlie.experiments which were con
ducted partly to try, the luscs, showed that, illo
one hundred and ten pounder could not bo-de
pended upon in tlie hour ‘of.greatest need in a
close, hand to hand combat, and established
also tire fact, that*the peculiar nature of the
Armstrong rilling ■rendered it very difficult, il
not impossible, to obtain a safe lirae for the
gun* . •
Tlie.London Daily News says, that owing to
llu* large increase ia the yield, the harvest is
.estimated lobe worth £20,000,000 to £30.000,-
000 more than, that ot last year, ami there will
consequently he no necessity for tlie importira
lion oi large supplies of Iu eailshifi's from abroad.
All ih'*;*Euiopi*iiii governments lrayeconsent
ed to recognize the New French Emperor.
The Rope's Nuncio, as \ve’l a# M. de Montho
lon, (he new Lm)iassa ! uu' of France to Mexico,
will accompany tin* new Empowr to Mexico,
i in; first is to assist iu the ceremony of the cor
onation, Which will take place Immediately af
*ter his arrival in the city of Mexico.
The organization'of .the Mexican army ap
pear.-: now to he the object, or the care of tin:
French Government. A considerable number
of Fieneli officers have been’appointed ;is in
slryetors (If Ihe Mexierpi .sohliers, and 30,000
tmlfoi iijs and stand of arms haveh* en forward
efi IVom France to Vera Uruz for the purpose of
’ armingyitid cquipping the Mexican army.
The London Times 'upholds the English At
torney General Fulmer in his seizure qf the
ironclads, said lo be build.fig fpr the gonfe.'lei
aey.
Russia had cbmmeiliv.il the work of the geo
graphical-obliteration of Boland, an imperial
decree ordering the incorporation *»f two whole
dirtticls into the Russian empire, .
ft i s reported that a.new French loan of six
teen millions'sterling would shortly be an
nouncod.
The London “Times’’ of the 21st nit. con
tains Rio Janeiro advices ot tseptembei 24th,
US' follows : -On the 13th September, at 4
pel pel; p.-m. the British hark Cuaeie, former
K- Hie American bark Fannie' Crenshaw, was
towed rail, fa ballast, bound tor Liverpool. At
A.-!', p ui. tl.e. Mraoie saw in the distance-the
! |,',.i1,-r,..l pauper M.lhigan, and learilig ho.-filities
• 111 Ibe part of tlie latter, the printer ordeYcl •
I 1,1 iu boat to rj lout UJid. am For the Vessel
I near the toll udder the protection of the tort
land Her Majesty'"s ship Kgniout. It is re
ported that the American minister has given
orders to the captain of the Mohican* to fire on
the<;ratio, the Lottie, formerly the AmericAh
hark Abigal, the Virginia add the Afitl E. Graijt
slmubl they leave port.'as soon as they'get
outside, on the plea that they are Southern
property. Jt'is supposed that the Mohican is.
now cruising about with that -object. Jt is
staled, however, that the BraziliiiUi Govern
nlent lias wfthdraw-n the clearance papers of
these vessels, and, therefore, they will not be
able to leave port.
Major Bereslord, m. p , during a recent af
•ter dinner spee< h in England, said : He avow
ed before, and he did not Hindi lrom savin'*
it now, that he was rather addicted to what, Un-
Americans called “Southern proclii ities;” in
other words, whatever sympathies lie had be
tween .the belligerents were for the South, and
not for the North, and he firmly believed that
this feeling was shared by a large and inliu
eDtial majority, not only of his constituents,
but of bis countrymen. He said this the more
strongly and deliberately in eonsequence of
the assertion made by Earl Russell—who hold
the high position of Secretary of State for
Foreign Affairs—at Blairgowrie the other day.
He (Major Beresford l had no hesitation in de
nying the aocuracy of that statement.
The i’edrt.ds setrit 'Vo thiuK Shat tt.e n,,m- •
bardment now going on at t.’huiestun, will re- \
duee the place
The New York World i barges that from
twelve to fifteen thousandme« fiom Pennsvl j
vania, in Meade’s army, were furloughed to go
home and vote in the late elections; that Meade
began his movements for retreat soon after his
armv was weakene 1 by this taking away of
Republican soldiers for politic il purposes in
Pennsylvania.
Tho ocean iron-clad “Dictator” lias been
completed at New York, amt is ready for launch
ing. Nothing like it has been built in tin*
United States or Europe. Federal paper# say
tfiat the magnitude of the armor on lun turrets
ami her sides surpass**# tli<- most formidable
protection ever conceived lor ships before.
Several prisoners who managed to escape
fiom Fort Lafayette have arrived in Richmond.
They say that the Yankees assail our prisoners
at ( .imp Gli;l>c v i h constant importunities ami
bribes, to turn traitor, and take the oath to
Lincoln. The number of prisoners there at
this time is about twenty-live hundred,
A Confederate prisoner, captured from the
I.oth Virginia Regiment at Gettysburg, writes
from Fort Delaware, October alii, that the litre
dealt out to prisoners is crackers, boiled l.eef,
and dirty water lor soup, with it soil board to
sleep upon. The small pox prevails in the
prison, and. tlie number of deaths average sev
enteen | er day.
The New t h leans correspondent, of the New
1 ork Herald thinks it is the intention ol (he
Confederate commander in the trans-Mississippi
Department to concentrate a large body »f
troops at Nibletfs Bluff's, on .the Sabine liver,
which, together with the lake of the same name
forms the boundary between Lmisiaua and
Texas. This is a very strong position, and
one wliich’canjbe |e sly defended. Tho Cor
respondent gives the annexe*! description of
it: Sabine Like lies immediately upon the
•Gulf coast, being connected with the Gult by
a nanow channel known as Sabine Pass. Tlie
lake formed by the inflow of the waters of the
Sabiile and Neelies river Upon tie Louisiana
side of tlie Sabine is situated Niblet's Bluffs;
iu almost the same latitude, on the west side
of the Neelies’,' lies Beaumont a small town..
Between the two points -by land across tin*
peninsula formed by the two rivers—there lies
an immense swamp, impassable at some sea
sons of the year even to local conveyances ; but
for lin: passage of an army, its infantry, cav
alry, artillery, baggage anil supply trains,
would be at all times.iniprneticable. However
bv running from Niblet’s Bluffs down the Sa
bine river, across the lake, ami thence up the
Neelies t*) Beaumont, from ail excellent water
communication between the Bluff's mid Beau
mont, the distance being but eighty-eight miles.
Fur purposes' of navigation by this route tlie
Gunfederates have #bout twelve light draught
steamers. Upon liras** excellent considera
tions Niblett’s Bluffs has been chosen as the
defensive ov offensive positions of their con
centrated armies, and Beaumont the base of
supplies; lor, from that place to Houstoiq
Texas, the communication by road is passable,
and at Houston the cattle and entire ngiicnl
turaj resources of Texas can be centered tor
transportation to Beaumont, and theuca to
their army at the blutt's.
Tlie Abolitionists at Charlestown, Md., un
dertook io hold a Union meeting a tew days
since. Some persons in tlie neighborhood.did
not like the plan,’mid therefore threw eggs nr
the speakers. -'This, of course, closed up their
eloquence, and the meeting also.
The directors Cf t-lie steamer Great Eastern
have declared the corporation bankrupt, and
taken step* to wind lip the company.
FHOti ».« It Ml Al, tl<4AlA.
The Mianla.ilpplan of Thursday test Oct. 29
gives some of a Federal raid in
North Alabama, which the editor has gathered
Irom LieiUenant Colonel \V. A. Hewlett, ol Jas
per, Walker county. He states that the Ala
bama Federal cavalry, composed of lories and
deserters of North Alabama, and commanded
by U. 1. Fail field, auda batiallion, styling them
■selves the Alabama, Mississippi and Teuiic*-
seo sharpshooters, made a raid into the Cain
creek country on Tuesday of last -week, -and
were engaged by the command of Cos!. Forrest,
(a brother of Gen. Forrest), with’what result
is not kqown. On Tuesday night, Ferguson's
brigade was ordered to tho scene of action*
and tought the raiders until Wednesday eve
ning, with but few casualties on either side.
.Ou Wednesday and Thursday, (he same force
of tones amj deserters' made their appearance
on the Fmoiintains of Marion, Wiuslou and
Walker counties, coming wit hut ten nii .es ol
Jasper. They burned Allen's cotton factory ,
and destroyed much of the property ol the
loyal citizens even tore up the dresses ol the
ladies, and broke the furniture and
ware at every house they visited. They camp
cd wit hi u ten miles of Jasper an Friday night
- left on fcatiii'day •morning, and appeared at
Boyler’s near Davis’ stand-on Moildav last.
They had three wagon loads of ammunition,
which they were dials Uniting among loyal citi
•Zens.
There is raid to lie a large number' of thcsS
toriesand deserters-at Glendale, on 1 lie Mem
phis and Charleston railroad, between Bear creek
and Corinth ; and from Glendale raiders are
frequently sent.
FHO.il MKX'CB,
Dates from Mexico have been received tip to
Oct. Ist.
No movements of (lie French tloops were
meUliuired.
The french prsss was free in commenting on
the velusa] o* Minister Corwin to hold inter
views with the ITovisimml Government, ami
also on his.neglecting to join in the festivities
celebrating the birthday of Napoleon.
.Tile forces of Juarez WeTe daily in* leasili r,
aild twenty-seven thousand troops were between
tjuerelanuitnd*' San' Liife,
Guerillas were increasing, ami the adherents
pf Juarez Seemed tis determined as eveirto re
sist the French to the la:;t extremity.
'i'lit:opinioii-prevail* ,! that large Fren. li re
inforci-merds would be necessary to complete
the siihjugation of the country.
FKU.U AottTll <:VJU*M\A.
A letter li'om Gov. Vance, dated Marshall,,
Madison Cos.. N. C.. on tlie 2d. hist, states that
that ha*l retired from the Stale into List Tenn
essee. They committed damaging depreda
tions on private individuals and effects, as is
flush' custom, wherever they went, autl took off
several prominent loyal citizens in cliains, but
that portion of the Hiatts is dree from them
.Again*,.‘andrwe Lope it may. remain so for the ‘
balance of the winter.
A. F. PENDLETON
A<JK.\T rim 'I‘IIK t-tOIXKCTIon OF CLAIM#.
HKIHMOiNt), V UOiINIA.
'ft yk riTH every fa. ill y lor Oispitch In the arul
Mcltieifieut of the <ilu'n»nr of Ueoeaaed :;m<l
" oturr -, afraiuiit the iJdveVmnexlt, he ;mvo *rc.ll
Mri pAUit.T'hAK AriEA’l luN, and ItUMIT l i LY. All
Vances I'l-ule If desired,
I» EFEUFLIt;hH #Med;rs. Jxy. Stj:G£U, I*. VI., Ui< LIII*Hid, \ ...
' HIH A. IIOHE, h;.rnrn: ..f Ki.Nji.il, a J.,i.. i iiicr ; it-\ -I
J'vrßuivi.'*, I>, ,* ; K ia. <i. ... Wm. \ Peni-letoM. .
i? *■?' Ad i-tt » Bbx lf**W, liichiuond, v';i. Lp«*-t. 20 4>v44
LAND FOR S/VliL.
J > V virtue of the Will of Dr. ,Jjimeß K. V ’orter, of f*reen f’o
I > deceas'd, 1 willl sell (if not polfl i> iv iteh') i*t |eiM*c out
cry, in Greeiißl«or«i\ (in , on the tij’st 'PIIP'yDA Y in D«-'einher
Ai. \t, 617 acred.of lurid, lying, in the iiiinavitiate vicinity of
tireenahAro. Tfteie ass- on tlie tract 90 or 100 acies ol original
lorertt»Miowtti, and about 60 acres of good" creek and tuaiie.li
land: Temiaf’aih*. C. E. l iSieciitrit,
Oieerisooio’, Oct. Sib, liC3. of Di. Ja.i. i- J'orM r.
oct 11, t>w42
S2OO HE WARD.
RAIM AWAY from the subscriber, ou the lQth irst., my
bvy EDWAHD. about 18 ye-irsof*a/e, hrigbc ruiM* U> ;
about ft ft*et 4 inches high, right ann has murkd made iu lnoU
luk. i will ahore rowutd f<-r *lu3* arid
Continen.»*ti» In any jaH tliat 1< m him. lie is the aarLfttoy
caught irt u i.LniiOiid lor Thoa. liouee. of Augustrt.
fcoct.-J2 3 «v*l4 . A. U. U. B All. Y
NOTUJK
to (»i£an»K!< ani> t’HMbiflottP
NJ A U oereona indebted to the estate of Abigai jJ»uddeH,iate
oiTi’chrnoDd ounty, are ootitled to niafcc pay ment, to Harper
O’ Bryaou. Esq., Attorney for the' decea-s and. ujulereigued ;
and those havtug claixris aaid estate to pies* ut th.ra
v/ 1 thin the time prescribed bv h*w. ~.u » v , Hm . r *
od 140*42 Patrick mqcahbv, *(imr.^
i?la* tte LlYte of 6S|«4'i, Wafa« Me ot
deoeixsed topreeeiituera proi>erly made cMwnmnttei V e
prescribe 1 by law so as to show their,character aod «mojnt.
And all persons iodabteJ to said decea-ed are hereby re
queaWd to make immraediate
oct 9 ew 4i j.j. Wallace, Adm’rs.
CtTATIONJS
r v • -vTTSsisS'K 4^.--BI*S*'i*KA.TIOIi
Sl'AXtrtf yt l »Ko i EKil.r I'HUKI . L - uUM'V
-9 11 Li Oftn }.f. J.,,1 j.i..; , rtv «*t Jt s A. A!.iruMc.ii ii.or
vr Kolh-ci A*M■•!!»!• . vG *••;... il, ’.D.U'r 1»1.* A '. of •'■UltFFli \«*ur-u
a,:n)iD*‘hi h. nil ami singular,
Un: taudreti unit fnw soisu it in'm*r, t«* t * .uni a*-ai u uiy
office Wttr.tn t iiF irtuv |.u- r K.l by i:i« . U it a* y
tl‘<*y nave. Why **K| vtters>!i« v'.t\ TUB t-e i:i»i,tv■«'.
Uiven under u*y uu .it ;uui G "ii tuiF tlits .°rd dav (4
NovenAv j. : (•. r)\a<• Kl. KK« i .
‘ >;•'«i F.t V.' i. ks:i< >UnTy”
- SI-. .'o!,u tri t lit- On viilirMi-iiip ut>
t tu* person ;»ud | .«*|.« ri \ .-i ■ ,»■*. T. ms licwlamt, orphan,
uiiftwUyiaistif.! *", oj i». i (j. i;... i c.*i, ite.^aatd.
These ate ihen- • ** t. .* -md r.- tdii.* ul! in ra*il»B concerned,
t*» allow cauM-, ii :.ftv tt-oy \% hv s:» *1 AGpltcaiit should not
Ik* ctdriiatuU wilh »if i-iU'Tn -in. . t suni orplmn s oorson tout
property, at ill.-< 'ou t fff tiptin «rv. to beheld iu, and torMthl
(i.veu uiuiur mv h.*nd at'oonv iy <;reensl*oro, \ovnuher 3rd,
Ivm. i hov .. r.w 1:5 i i KN I l*S L. K 1 N(i, Urdtnar>
OK (iKoKCIIA, MO.Vi.VX <’Ol T NTY
Wlu- CHS WiilHm Snutu applV's to mr for iet'ers of a-t
iiTiulstrat uni upon the KsUteoi l_ iuybom Otawloid, of w«nl
county, deceast il,
Ttiene are therefore to cite and arlmonlsli >ll aid ti.c
kintlreo ami c.dditors ot' slid (icOtu>v(t. to hejui.i appear n\ niv
« 111* eon <»r Uefore the first M« r.d . in I'K.jKM iiKK next.then
and thereto sin>w cause it';»u> llicy have, why s-ud letteis
sltx.uUl not he granted, (•ivew .niucr my h:u*<l a. oill* *.• in Mudi
son, the iki h Octuhcr, Ut» ’*. V. W* A KNOi.D,
O. t il 4w4i (!
rt KitfltMA. liK'llMii.M' • NT\ .
W »i. u:t !. •ii.i.tl l»*. *it. ,*» to.’>•,■. . j*; !i. su» n.t* for let! ti *
adn«ini'*tuuu ;on 11*. i-:,-; u ol l.cu.nvl l»wvlle. late of sal a
C °Tites»':»iv t .vi for • tori!? and admocish, art and singolf.i.
tho kindriul and cit’d t* ii ol ertid and t-e-oed, !*• !*e and ai-ju-ui at
in v ortho oii » i iwiri* fii.-' \o**.t.;v in I >li>' I'M HKU luxt.
tos.u w ctuis.r ifnny ti,* . rave, v.'ii* lv.l«*>sehoultl not be
K, £iv > e l |* under n.\ lun' and «: i offl* i if -inhature', at office in
Augusta, this-JTth da* .it »«•> or, I *’*
o?t ;*. ixv u 2 1 A '* il) \ JA : li.prdjg
TA I’M of (.i h'u »lit i I A*i.l M’< iI.N 00l ,i V
J** Toad v h m;i ii u.i. o. 'ii •■r.i. rioasnnt 1 Ihjiyei* lmv
in:* i:* r-ntf l *’! I n:w u.u .:* 1 l«» hit >■ rj* rmudeni. loiters ot ud
•niinisJralH.u ou In- c-tao of Wihisn. A. liurtfe:«. htle ul su.d
isloo.it** nil and. xtngu’ar, Ihe aud noxt of kin
of William A. Hiir* .i o hi.<l aj»i*u.ir at •>.) office wUUm
tho time allowed hv tun . and s’t w « . iso, it uuy Ihe)* •’ l,l .
pormanent adndni. *i.dio . t v,,i*t! l*t * o imto* o 1 Uaaunt 1- .
B :rget;s,oft Wilt'un. A. l:»i -• • Ud.
\\ ivno-s my hanc and ofii* am: dioo.
it. F IA To -M. Ordinary.
.“LO* 44
ST AT EOF UFOUOIA, UK FI *\ ' ’>L : NTY.
Whe.eas 1- *h\\ i; app’.i slo ' l'twleUerH ci
M:don'\ 'f' turti V l'lu ■!!' ' « Vum I:> !la»u >»alot»e, or
pltaiiK guilder fourtee < years «>f:t o,>»d Thompson M lone, d*:-
rami require all persons <• in anu-d,
to he and aj.p. ur :.t tiu (’.mil of- ‘ouii.ti v !*• be he'd in and l'o»
Sviid county mi the til:t Monday in 1 .!<:< \.V. I*P K m-ft.toshovv
ifnnjtthey h;u*. v. iiv t.! o'U." ”sld nottlnul e
gruded; , - •
liiv.u undev mv hui.d ;*4 ollh- n Cteemdinro. Oot.*2'U»,
ovt 2‘t t.w44 EKIKMI S t*. K (N«i. Oioliumv.
TWO MONTiiS KOTICKS
Application w\Ui>.* m:oi- tothc rtmrt of<)rvli.n:sry ot
fjineoln county, Georgia. :il tliv tic t is-us i T. nn :iltci ti e
.xvtiiraihui. 1 1 wo iuoLiuH fr*‘Ut tlu.s in *>t *•, i t lou>® in nil j
portion ot the lands fie’i nging loth*' 1 ’ate *>i MidiuelSmalley,
Snr.. late of sMiid ct’GSitA .’.*•• ' *•« •* »S. twin tit . Iho’.t- *> ’
Cl-Oituoi# ■ tAiitl ilvc.iv*. .1. WIU.IAM A.UIIKIA. h -~
( h.t. *iOl il, I sf’.'h ocl Sw 4 i
Wkl'OTl CJ2.
Ajipli. ation will lu-m do to tiie Court idV-idiiiHiy
I JiiLxdit coUuty, Gcoiui t, ; t the lli>t re -n.ar T- • m att' i the . \
piialion t t’two monli*. :r m !hi. !\o:lo, 1.-r have l* seiitl;-
lUJK I '. o*S Io the 1.-IhE o!' ItaWCS, I He. o! *at*t
count y' dot :■ rt on Un: i.eueii'. oi the heir- of so l F-Uit**.
Oct 2»ilJi, is."., Mb Nlt Y I. i,A XM, A.lnfr de K-iii
Oct *2J S .vrt-t| lion wRIi ll.e WiM yl rt< t..i ll.»v\ . q
IN <*iio li’onth il”.!:' il’T*. lon will he mad.'* to the Or
diua-y AT*.!.'; u. o-hpv, on tlie -* cud Monday m,.ANt A P.Y
nevt., fornn •ol i’ g. nrt u i-• M theiandufld nemo, s
of the b xtut of W liium U il.-ort, late of «u ' • oauiv dccoa-ed,
this id and iy ..rNc.oii.’.l,. l-v.‘WILLIAM li. WILSON.
unvM Sw4% Executor.
ly'O’flcMi*
'two mom li.-* after date anpi;t:t!i.)n wVI mile totjiel
C»nllnurv of Moj,i.irt om.ly\ foi an i-idof u i anting louve tr• eel
alicgro tn-'.'i • • .... ne of King, I ioor hr. to tin. estate of
K'>hor* I*. IVoich.* d* >'*■ , . and.
Uetolßr -Ith, «‘)H*N It. F-ALOWIN,
o ff *i7 B*v*i4 J Administrator.
\iT» ; i ifE
li months utter date applit ait ion wit! be made to Uie
Ordmar* of 'loigm. vrtndy I'or an order j.-i;mt mg louve. to sell
the lauds and ..t-gr-.u: helcnging to ti." cs Me of Mducy (J.
Jh.v’H late of said c-.uuty, iUu • sed.
ocioicr V4ti. istW. .IAMES M ZAOUEKY,
out 8«*44 AdmtulSlrutor.
i^kloTh'W
TwomonthslU'.. r did apjdl* h»i.»n wll he made t.o the
I‘oiirl of Onhnui > •>! Line dn ( vunt * f.u have to »m*!l the rial
Estate of Huy v.'iAnt I >. Eoh-it.. h.t.* ot svd omi.ty, >'.<■& ..sm .
sep ifi, bwJJJ WILLI \M II uOtiEKT.s, Adm'r.
KaECI S feALK.
”nv vi 1 c.e of an t* ••* ’in the Court «*i Owl-nary ot Oj/ltt-
Si thorn
ffjA.Nl * 4 beforettio
O. ii t 11** . v < in 1 • ••’. ■! U*ii.ni)ii, tu+alu county,
SI; u a rtiAE •” G’*rl >cats old, and tli.sey, a wouiun
about”', -!• !• tut- <.f Joel H. I attmei
late *,f : a\t <; i.i.fv, and .-* 1. >**ld i-r the benefit cd the heirs
and credit oi.iGj-md d.oca cd. L’. nn
. h f .l’c-i JHiti. if *. ' H A a I >uL4J.A KNOL f >
oct -Ji ti .vJrt f _ Executor.^
virtue Oi • 1) f ids. H..UI tlie Court of Ordinal", MOjiJe
*l> thorp, county, wijl h sol* .‘.••fore Nie<'.-uM lions*- tiper
iu the tow 11 of I Imdmi n tui.L.'om.iy, within the leg* hour*
off*»ic, on»th’_ 1 v iu 1 ri'cembcr nert, one thousand
sieve.-* if land, in>*i •• or Jos I . oci *nt von Hi*i >sat«‘V- o»
tMotid Otreck. aij .'‘nir _• ?i*. l i".l • '*• ’ .Y, y, 1 Livid W.
.lohnson. Abie M Irtfl.-t;. 'i ... l . cilen, and others, h.-dd
t. act of land is v l» • u-i* l ii seventy live acres i-rst daw
bottom la rid, ut,d one hm-dr <t *»«. w.. w.-od land, with goo I
dwelling }.nd alt olin«r 1 ■ try **»itl luldm .-s, wit f. ntv» r
h'U.drcd and rivi u n..«- under .e.uce, :.nd in cint
ivat mn . 1 ■ . 11 »i« pioperty
• * , :.**• d;.\ ofs.de.
L'Xing'uO, Oct ■ ■* • ; vvaKKJN HAWKS.
'I 11>_»/) V‘ U. 'HAWKS, ”
oct 6v/ 4 1 - Ad niiii'traters. _
r:% STrt 'UTOJi» si * Ltt •
* k ’trtue ot lhi 1■ • .. ..:Vu i U; !:..* <ni cd il(».
%% Mu.twiuirl *‘.of Mo.it * ••:u.i v ii* ~r*-ce,:ed, wilt he
sold ho'orc th- 1•* u.t li.*o - d.*o in tLcei ; ••!•*’ lo
bid er, bet
'
estate of said d** u-’ui, to-'vit Aii 1 L : in:u. anont '.hi > card
old and de»i y a mao about 'o yertf.-* old, Tei.ni *. :*.h,
Ore-unborn’, Oct -■*, tI A * lv> I'OLV Il\, I*x’r.
*. that * , itfM, (leca.
K.\M! SAIjR.
4 *Tiin-’.E.v!’Li: . - ill will -mid tPzt gm. i,t of Miller
IF.-U. .1 t ensed, v.nl h .*ol.l 1 th * Court if •«>.-«
«lu,»r in tic-t. t. > ;.r «n. <"..!■• c-MUMy.Xiep g u, oil
th* 1 lif t.Tue»<K\ in iAi\ Alii h aI. within the !«>•.-*I L* lira
ol fU * , one tr:»i t ’ Uni -' •and • •Hl,tv or. It," Waters of I ot.rf
f• . vU. *.}f ii _ 'll • i*• *i iirir.ia J. I’H <• Win. VViuy, Lo»*>> .
A«1 fill* ami olio. I ! n. fc ' • liUidFd a’lics Mori- u, ivs
A'hc on. o'lit’i pi. if Ui.d • -ititamhig fo'i.-Si,- vh looter r Ich*,
Ilij )t!|lln; ! inilo.t - cu II \f-- 1:T! m and •>'helß, Oil the wal*. 3
Qt'lJtUji - '
n i. f ,. i :'sTTi, In- VYM c. OIUIAM,
, . t |o6vi44 ut
AllMiMK'n* vroit s 84LKS.
AOKKKAbJ.K !-• ■ i «>••.!,*r ~,f th- Cotul .n Ordinary, of Ogle
thorpe ' -unty, wji! l.e sold outlie first 'Pnob<l:t> in !>«*-
dHtilrer n-»; r , tiet \ve< i! th- ••■jral tio’ir.s of sn l -, Leone Cnort
House door oliquid county, th- lojlowi Lruotf ol land I>uig iu
sTid eomity, to wil : one lie t containing eight hmidted and
ten (3l(h •.en .s, nior«* or !«••**•, on the wuers ol ML*. < re« k .
Imunded hy of P.'.viti C. i'arrow, l.ciiiuel Edwa.d ,tu*d
.laiiiea invcl. Oin* ttael . -•' ' • - ihi**e hnn«Jr««l :icm, more
or 1-ss ties- iilti-d in a dwH in ■•' •Lv I r.tnh'in'f", ( -.truphefl, to
L'hynay. and ben-bu d-d • »!.•' •Jdlt .lulv, lsffu. aifd re
cur.Vd in tiie < 'I- fkHolJbf o' Uk Sun-rioi <’ tiot of said county,
In [’,< .ok |! |»:-i?(*8 tJ -and '■>!Aida small' lot. ol Jsind, con
taining eight ami < nc * t in.ib r ocrcs, more or tess. near Aiftioeh
Cloia li. adj<4»r:iui l-li" l» »i:r•i.: Also :s!..it!l, forty myioH,
t,iiT<, wory. ti and chiUti’) n ; rttri a-, the |>toj».-ily ( .f
Jacob I'hinVy de- < as- and. Tornjs cash
BFN.IAVIN F..HARI ). 'AN,
oct J!) 6w41 'Ad MUi stialoi wilji tiic Wilfaimexert.
' AIKtlMk 1 K V r«H ls Vti.a
Wll.T, |.u ill. 11l- I.- *" >! iX.-t M 11“::. iptl,e<;i»v of
Augultti, on »... 2h i Tii' «<hy in l im. iiH-.t next, under
an ordci Iron- 4h" Court cl'G' l ; <r>. r..l* Kti hm"oi»d count v* two
iicaroinen yl .vcs, Mflo am: Lm S..io as th** yr-per \ r.f
the«.-t:dcnt Wilii-m H •!-.'«••<•.!, 1 th.* Wnojlt ofthe
ijeirsiind- rc.litoi.' of «sii i••I. '< '!'■ i nia cash.
j.) w.fin i;. tirm.'H.
oct 17 A lininiet valor.
\inil \kal H \ rillTM H\l*K.
old ai she r Hans.* in rircc.ri -loro’, on the
\V »ir.*t file ula . : .JAM AL). 1: •1, I~e iiKerest of 1 holii.s
Hiehtow'ef, ialeof hun-w .* • •-nit, do eased ; being on*' hail
in life following iGoj.oft* . to wit,: One i< t < An-aii.m/ two
acio.< mob or 1.-ss, w4lo Dwelling 1.0 i.-e and oot homes, »U
--joiidiig'n»oi!.|»'io,i ami l’.rv;tist « i.urcii. Omr Hd of tv..» acres,
more or less, with dwvllmy, hot rtut-bniM n/s ; al-.o one
lot - ,i-m ‘ g Alfneml amt otb*is. AH
situated hi tl.' Vill-ige "f \\ li o* i'! a i ia*flreea co-nty. Sold
‘ririder arroiricr f.fUn < »nit of ordinary ol Hancock county.
Tt- ms «m Urn day. W Al. 1 , DEI *LK, A d.ii r.
November •'{, yLf-k . nov6Cw4s
IVOR'S ft.k Ms'.
BV v'rtue’ol’an oomr from Itie •ons ol < >i.Unary of Macon
county, <3 t.. will • s dil on th- tii4 Tu- '(lay in Dccem
1«T next I.T'ore the Court fi r - Go ill the townofl»gJe
'the'.Ti' , Witliin tb. r.• 1 hour- ot m e-, tlu* valuab c CoMon ;,i A,
< i rain i dart'd It i< Delongin# to tie estate ol Ernnl:",’. •!*. Mo
ooiTib, dcccaß.d < - is-lifgoflh. lollowlln lov-,
2o 2«»1,. 17m, 117 ami I»S, and fractf/M o«». I'D, 2F.H.
2J6 i'jfS and fr.t**tioiiS not t- < "IIc« !. !, • ;i winch lit** Lsi.L >
Kerry islo< tfL <l. Perry ii.c'mled ; th •• »>«!•“ containing I,Bbo
’l'lie above kinds lying on I h«'• 1 of Eiitifc/f? r. e tend
|„(rf«H).ll„ l:\--r f
the St. ,• -‘i |- ? ■« ■ .'-I* ’il . <■ ui M-f U*«wis and i,\e i- *,
v, i ■ 1 t and i ' nnuU.er cn.- « • ' and lift’u | ;. -
Jatlon* ,rf toll. wing.
There It soNi 1m- ( lu'f.r.nMhe
..j.i.i.i • Hos ?!,.• ot i-oi a ami ,«n-ba'-!e propei tv I elonjpii«
to li.. said e •: 'Li-- ' *’ *. L . -
i ... 1 j *,
i ,||..*t j. i c,' i* tsfb.n t. u .I,* ted •-■n .• • - II i
’ to ». ellUar 5 *!• • ' Hi />•/ t u d|v Mlitll fid ir
Tn -I ~<> -|„ r., * in. .1 1 )••)*•> >- f-n ' -
Out H.i.s.il« u di-l' wi'y-ti: •’ ' ■ p i •
* i; ’’ .1 Al ... .1 n [*■':'• ■i.
J if .ii.,i ■ i,iii . l it- • n.
a ,„IY • • *■*'•• ■',()")), 'l*
u '2rtwiwv-’ j-'ka'‘''V-T*' ah?.kfriV .
~ 4«Jli.\isTltAT»ll9 WALK «>l-' L.\M»
5>V v*)t)U! II . : <• -It Mil,- "I •>••1.11 O', <- <»/<!• U
£> ('r.Hiitv, will*.••*•»'.. i- 1 ; "I nq. 1."1',u !•••< Wirt
llimri) Ij,«r l" cin-. *• 1 : 1 J". pH,l,—'
next. w;tl,iiriJ«- Jog/l UO' l 1 ia,.<i Jv',.-i* n, -u..1
eyitnty 1,*4 Miking t‘‘t-L*'. Tate ui iti .HjpfOa djion.-. descess
ed‘- coitami. f at-o.it e-i—'.. anjr.uiing Und-of John
Ifram-b, vv m.K'ahder*, Wm. Atw. tud o-sou,. rs and i.tiuamd
t.n she water *of Town (T«vk at f- ui county, and known a-, the
'•Home Tract.’* on the pt* ; a two iy’ Dwell i.g
with six rooiuc, and ail u<- • lU7 out bGjidingg. . old 4r.rt.htf
her..-tit of the h-irs and c-red um 1 or.u- • .-'.l,
J.jNKITI il M AiJLN E, Adminstrct. r.
GrttßSirtTf)*, Oot j 2111, I- ‘ I.A'TBA MAL.Ui*S, A(tn*’x
oct 14 6v?42 j ;..cr.ps«iii AiaoUc, clejettsed.
t NIM fOlih biLfc
W IM. be s.ji.l ;ii iJj- Jd■ 0.1 'l. e o Thomas Kiorem c
It d.aAea.'t, iii i in** n eomii.v, ti.i.. u.i insifay the loth
d.»y of Novell.L'i, alt Hi- i*eq* rly 0* lunging t*< Laid u* -•, a ».d ;
••. uifisl n.g of cum. i.sldet, oak . rye, barley, eotLon mules
.ijt'k', iKMpI, p, plui.ia l 'Ui 1 •/*«,.>. b'u>.-tiuld and kitcl.eM
riili.iiUlv Kiel *r»i*o'» ntii-T a» '■ A-1 ■: > a!.*.ul •.:< li.ui.di .
’ ... the Jutds 01
Wnilarn Hat la- aud o’ Imi -a .2 Owicx of pine land in De
catur county*. Np. 221 ; also i-. I'.kciy Negroes. Teima made
t .o’.vri on the day 01 .L ; t u, <■/.:,,\nut troiu d.-y to day
til ail L-. t>d. O. V, . Executor
o. tJ» 6w t 2 cf T horn:... Florence, dcsea'Cil.
For Bale!
A WO /'M'LA.' m !'n/* tovuty, ot te»i tiDfl;
1. iiu,. . < *bi. Lai,d,hud atout t ty
liv* JSJkJitOJES, witb UTOC'K. UTitHSILK,*c , If
AfPiJlo UW W. BVAisS * SO *
AURUBtt.Wov. iitt), 18«5. ot.vll liCitlw