Newspaper Page Text
4ltV.
TV p -r of the • iicuro C .nvenUon
fr m.l t'i vr - . J i;> 4 i ■* J-i
4,ci a .ii > ' u'-at Ai > it -'O ! Hi- -tubl and
©no.. >n wilt lrnv Iholtt- or? O i th" (>• •*!>** t
c.m -t b-fore them auJ rtr. • o-t-rn tfitvn
• | VI .. ..cctmliog.v. It >M*> oc ur to th
!■ » th vt the interval r>t comparative quiet
t*iil r.£T id ther.ral iiou-***ot tin- Abolitionra!?.
tm- Krvraonler* arnl Lracoloites, more space
t, coni-u ninat c their scbisrn isit... open mpi-.ire
a,i t violent lend, than if they were check. 1
( reatrained by a c mm* n *tta< lP of a third
ii rtv It wil . however, coiideiiMt tb« camp;«i<n
i it ..•err narrow limits— hardly more time than
sixty days.
The l uarledon Cornier states that several
nine's have managed to tret through our
r, ,Vt lines by saving that tb-y belonged “to
th" next p . tation.” The fellow-, wherever
roi.bt aw,, from home should be made to
y a good account of themselves.
ioe manufacture of anifici tl limbs hes been
C"i'«nri** ■ • I an J *• buw tinccesHfuilj curried on
at .N* .v/iiiu, (Jroigiti.
'Jr,,- wool cir-ii Ti. estaMifhment of Col. Rob
ert White, in Jackson county, was lies '.roved
f,o one night la ! week At this ti ne the
j . ;l , one bjlii to fho proprietor ami
the c mmunity.
The Ann, and Navy Messenger says that it
i, Mated that when an i lb ier is under charges
f ~ i|,ungentle s. , ; -ti Lee ends tor him. gi es
f in a lecture, and- offers to withdraw the
cha .... -t on condition that lie wilt sign a pledge
i e t lbmk any tiior during the mat.
Fiv ■ e , tpeil Yankee prisoners were lately
r- |j and neir Kpolisylvania Court Himse, Va.
Th-y report that they jumped front the train
f wi!i,r the guard was asleep, art t say that about
tilty men g it away at the time.
I.'eut Stephen 0. Lee h s been appointed
Li,sit Oen in the Confederate States Array
and placed in command of the Mississippi Dn
y uncut.
Five hundred and two thousand one hun
dred tn I fourteen letters werr mailed at tho
“Ai my of Teno’’ Post Office durtt g the quar
ter ending June JOtb, 1801.
Planters wh , have put away wheat in the
sheaf under the imprea-ion that it is dry
enough should examine it—turn it over an l
air it a li'tle. Some wheat has been sp iled for
the lack of a little lim-ly atten iorr of this kind
Major Lewellyn, General Pillow's Cornmis
ettty. w.n arrested by the vigilant authorities
tit Jackson. Miss., on bisway to the Yankee
liie's. Mij if f, was we learn under aire t for
crab •?./.! m it or sonu other speciesot fraud
upon the Government, but made his escape
and succeeded in getting as fat a:-; Jackson lie
fore lie was overhauled.
Tne number of volunteers from North Car
din v i 88 117, the number of conscript 11 ■
4UO - grand total 102,G(17, which the State h >s
furniahed up to about the Ist of March, 1801,
in tl: a army .of the Confederate States.
At the last tn, eting of the City Council
of Columbia. S C , a resolution was adopted
to the effect that hereafter all lines for viola
lion of the anti liquor selling law shall be paid
in specie or is equivalent.
Ii is said th ,1 Louisiana has pent 63.000 men
to toe field, out of u white population oi 300.-
00b An exchange st So that the city of New
Oi leans alone has furnish, and 166 companies.
Gen. Morgan took $25,000 worth of race
horsegfrom John M Clay, <>l Lnxington, Kvn
-1111 Uy Among tin in the famous SB,OOO horse
Skedaddle.
11 n. John Bell, who lias lost all of his large
©stat"#, end is no.v a refugee’from hit, homo,
w im. a ; w days siuce, sojourning in the Coun
ty of Meriwether, at the residence of Mr.
I'reeoian.
'1 he correspondent of the Mobile Register
■t-iies that the amouut of revenue reruivid in
M y on the Montgomery and West Point i ail -
roan whs s*2sl 1)00 lie also learns that the
revenue m th" Virginia and l eniies-ee railroad
—a cood part of which is in the hands of’the
Yitnio', h \yes for ihe same period of one
month ovei 3100,0C0.
Sixty bales of cotton have been burned at
the emsdnur or tie* W C. R & 11. R. and A
q U. JI It ,in Noith Carolina. The fire
cane -.1 fivm a locomotive spark.
Mr i Wu'ls. Iv.rolli .g Dili vr of l-'ayelto
county, Ala., was phot from bis horse } i few
dais a il, whilA crossing a creek, by persons
lying- in utnbn-h
In thecHse of (ho Frys and others, or -xam-
In ‘tio'i before Commissi'inei Neshet .t Moeou.
lori l ling in the escape o’ deseiters, and trea
sonable communication with the enemy, three
of. Ia- pri-nni—s were di ■■-barged and seven
It m n led for I rial.
'I he No■•rotary of War has decided that a
phi ioian of thirty years of age who had been
in the prat-.ti-'C of medicine seven years, and
X’ ho bail not bra tt regal n-ly licened, is entitled
to exemption under the laws of Congress.
A card factory is in operation at Tat uhassee.
Fit
'few wheat is selling in Greene county, Ala.,i
at f v,« dollars per bnHiel.
• ams are running on the Southern railroad, !
to tin'i ii i-r nt J-ickson. Miss .as usual. Th« I
enemy were whipped away before they had
dciiu-r.iuch damage.
Another new paper mill is being erected in
M " 'ii-ster, near I; olunond. It will bo ready j
for operation this season.
'j t o closing exereisi sos the Wesleyan Fe-j
male eolb-'to, at Uacou took place on Wednes
day
. lie Confederate Stales steamer Atlanta was
lsuueli. dat Mi’nig.mieiy, Ala., last Snturd >y.
Tim boat oust $125,0110, and 200,000 feet of
timber weu* n din her construction, iter
lei.gilt is 17(i tVet, her extreme breadth -10 fiat,
nod In-r eu! \ iue capacity about 500 tons. '1 he
Atlanta is the second largest gunboat ever
bniit at Montgomery. Her machinery is ready
mi.l will be put on in a few days.
Commander Winslow; of the Ke e-sage, was
recommend ■ l by the Secretary ol Hie Navy to
be commodore. It is said tii it the value of
the Alabama will be ri’str bated among the
•ftteers mid io*>n of tile KemSnge l>V Gong. ms.
he faimers in the vicinity of Selma, Ala ,
have mid by th. ii crops, mi l that the pros
ve rts f’»r i great return o’ tt*i if labo’s are
Cheering
t'.-n Hors commanding the district of
Nashville, was lately ordeied to extend bi«
district from Dm k river to the Teuncssee liver
and along the line of the Nashville ami Chat
tai o-’g« railromi south ol that stream. H’"l to
call it the District of I’enuessee. He has be< n
(blowing up deieegetj to protect the dillvrcnt
rsiiieai'a in bis district, utiil in an order to bis
troops t.e sa\s *No cavalry-command, how
evei huge, while on a raid, can br.ng with
them n sufficiency of artillery ammunition to
reduce his blot kin u-e#. ami if thty could they
could not ntl nd so to expend it. J hectare no
si nen l r under any circumstances will be
allowed ”
The Yankee pap-tv. in the Northwest, gir
th \n ill iicoounts ol the condition of the crops
Tt’ereweie attert -d: 'ught and cold. wh : eh
wa re making, the lamaars shake. A despatch
dated M'Uvaa.i e, June Hi t, stites.that the
cvepsof Wis.c ns . ~- in prospect almost entire
ly reined !Shui;ar a, r enms are given from other
States.
* Ihe lat ge drug store of ' : us. Abrams in
N'*w Orleans, lias b. en seiz a ay order i-i tli
a> ihorities. It is si .1 that frige qu titles of
Quinine mid other medicinal loyes have b“tn
cent bey.-nd thedines am* thu there is dacu
i utary • vidence ii.-m Gen Nit by Smith, ids
jjti ~,. (’. nil on Ii there connected with
the ; flair, which will probably convict the
K *.<■* Ab ;ms and result in the confiscation
of then . tore andpioperty.
We leam •'rum the Kobe) that a negro man
w.tif fttresti 1 near Grtfin, the other day.
cb.tired iv,lb mMrg in'ieeent propositions to
a whde In" r. und urt: -iqr compliance upon the
g-.i und t'. the two liH't s would soon be upon
cqua'Fy ai -l tl at ip- would then protect brr.
A gent! -n n j -t fr in the Mississippi river
says . e saw right transports pass down the
rther day lad< n with troops. He thinks they
etoppeiat Vicksburg.
she w-h our ruble;# destroyed Gunpowder
br'dge I ctweeu BdliUK-ie aud Philadelphia
w . - Ihe bridge. I'eb'g L '•.•*.d.*d by tlte
siiiile t, a train was set on ure by i .e rebels
s: . ; started over the bridge, r ceav-i
Eli vn g when about twenty leet from the
s' t<* , lit fire from the i -s lommuni. at^d
thh ties of th * bsidge. and burned them.
f,,.1 ti.v it ■ motive toppled over into the rivr r.
•jj..* prop aty of a large number of residents
of 0 -lAu.drut. V'a , has been confiscated and
■old.
- |,« j|<hVc and Pi’cctory of General Johnston s
a-m.v ha» bi tu uniporarily established iu Ma
'* , 'im f. omner Virginia, vrh'ch grounded near
TANARUS; i f ’ ran. Mot-ite. in running the blockade.
1) s ~ p gat ofi'aud is now lyi'tg m quarantine
in tb" bay. , , . ~
At tfie :ast meeting of the city council of to-
Irv a. S. t , u ndoiution was at^opK 5 1 to tne
eh' c' tb t bereaiter alt & es fur the violation
ot the aoti-liquoi seiiing iuW sfcail be paid in
spvcie or u# equivalent.
'herep'iail
no extlustoD of Witnesses on ata: ,u.t of color
Ibe Herald »pe*ks thus of foreign irnmiz a
ii,. t AU'o.preca* rltk 1 i ut'-'tsli n b, ra I.*-
rope "to '.ms ouut! v I,a* Uhn place (lun.u
p tyear. It is observable also Umi the
migration to our ur, at 1, rritoiies 'e*oda,
x .... r- Colora 1 ■>. A —h is immensely iu
c„. -d.tt e highways to the v c uiurve* being
filfetl wi’h people on tbeir way to locate there
i t ■ resuds during the next year will be enor
„ tlil While our armies re developing ti e
ti 'bring qualities «i to.sgreat nation. the thou
- ~’j who have settled in the West will devel
-o j, : © res,.tiroes of tiro-* regions to an extent
wiiich will immensely increase our revenues
au I produce a consequent state of prosperity
mi, quailed in the aQual.-t of our country.
Ne.v York pipers of the 28t. June report
very hoc Wrather—as high a- 99, wnich ’..as
rarely been recoined but in July or August.
According to Cincinnatti papers they must
have very warm weather in that city One ot
the locals says that a steamboat was at the
whftff discli rgirrg lead ; anitg r would start
with a oar on h*« shoulder, but before he could
get to th" dray the leaii would melt and run
over the tree oiler, m iking it necessary to cut
him out with a cold chissel
The famous Vnginiu ladv who has done such
good service to the. Confederate cause, pass, and
down the river to Monti eal. on the steamer
Bail slice, a short time since The lady carried
a small, but suffice tally pe snasive revolver p'a
tol in her skirt 0,-!', a precaution not altogether
uncalled for, even on a neutral boat, plying
•nly in neutral waters, rilie was dogged by
iwo Federal spies whose business it is to watch
her. Miss Boyd haw resolution enough to de-
IVn i heiselt lruru any attempted lout play by
these gentry.
A ship of war is to be sent from Vera Cruz
to Havana to convey with all possible honor
to the Mexican shore Santa Atiua, in bis new
capacity of Field Miishall to tbu empire It
it expected that the Austrian frigate Nevara—
the same that conveyed the Emperor and Em
pres; over the ocean -will be selected for the
duty.
Jeremiah Clemens, of Huntsville, Alabama,
ls,s removed to Philadelphia as his future home.
When l b arrived at Washington, he was met
| by a committee of ci'izeus who escorted him to
the hoiei with marked i chat. His change of
• residence is no doubt owi g to the couv'C
i lion on his part that afftit's are soon to have
■ a turn which would make his presence in
I Alabama rather uncomfoi table.
England has complained officially through
| its Minister at Washington, l or i Lyi ns. of
; Federal “rilist.ments in Great Bi iteiu an I Ire
j land With the nonchalance which only a Van
j b*-e could parade, the ■ hronicle 'tells John
1 Bull that his bad government and oppression
, has driven the population thus lost, from his
inhospitable siious to the new world, in' order
that they might escape starvation.
We learn, says the Nashville D'spatch of
May 25ih, by letter from a gentlemen dated
Stevenson, Ala . May Ifftii. that a brutal out
rage was committed at that place a few nights
'previous. The circumstance are as follows ;
A soldier, dressed in military uniform, entered
the house of a man named McOannon, about
eight p tn., an i used improper language to
one oi the young ladies. Miss McCann.m, who
resented the insult and order, and the soldier to
leave the house. This he refused to do, when
too young lady seized a musket, which hap
pened to be near her, and snapped it at him.
The soldier then seized the musket, and in the
struggle for i,s possession they got outside of
tLe house. The girl then released her hold of
the musket and ran bickinto the house, and
while she was in the act of fastening the d"or
the fellow went around to Ihe window aud shot
lu r, Ihe ball ente ing between the shoulders
and lodging iu the right lung. She expired in
a few minutes. He als > shot at a sister ol tiie
deceased, but missed her.
In 51;lintt the Republican Convention has
nominated Gov Cotry lorre election, and resolu
tion were adopted en l-.rsing the war policy of the
National Guverumi nt;declaring thuUu>impt o
mise should be made, that, the war should be
prosecuted until Mil 1 submission is yielded
to the Constitution and lygal anthoiitns of (be
nation; expressing entire coufi fence iu Ana
bam t.incoln and Andrew Jonnson; decliring
that they should be i-nthusiaslically support
ed for P.esident and V'ice President of the
United States; endorsing the Baltimore plat
form, and expressing gratitude and' sympathy
for the Yankee a;aiy in he field
Dr King has resigned the Presidency of Co
lumbia, N. Y. College. Rev. Dr. Barnard suc
ceeds him.
A large disti'lety was burnt at Warsaw, 111.,
on June 28tb. Loss $125,000.
The prize sti-ameV Greyhound has b;-’ti sold
in Boston for forty thousand dollars.
The iron double ender Mobonge has been
launched at New Yoik.
The Paviilioß. at Hock away, L. 1., together
with all t'fe corsages and several other'budd
inga was burned on June 23.
Fremont and bis wi f e announce that, they
will spend the summei at Nnhant. Mass. *
. The directors of 'he New York sixth avenue
railroad company have issued instructions to
. their conductors that there must be no exclu
sion of colored people from the cars hereafter
The Yankee treasury note bureau are print
ing notes at the rate of one million of dollars
per day, which is soon expected to be doubled,
and tins not being enough, the government
being iD arrears to the army for their pay
ninety millions of dollars, is about to borrow
from the banks.
Adv'ces Item TLn li state Ihe insurrectionary
movement at Gonaivvs has been suppressed
'ihe Dominican leader, Tendon, who bhot
Florentine, escaped to flayti, where he was
arrested and imprisoned by Gt-ffrard, as atoea-
Mireofsaeiy. It is said he will be given up
to the Spaniards.
Lincoln and wife, it is said, will spend the
rummer at the Soldiers Home, three miles liom
Washington. •
The New York Chamber cf Commerce, at a
regular monthly mt-e’ing, lately disehar id
tin* special committee appoint'd some time
a ; i to obtain s b.-'ciiptioiiJ ior thu payment in
gold, of the inters! on the State debt held by
t-reign creditors The committee tstimnte
that to pay t .e interest, in coin at the py gent
rate of gold, would require two hundred and
fitly thousand
In New York on July 4th the Scotch Presby
terian Chinch, ou Greene street, and adjoining
buildings, w -re destroyed b> fire L 'ss Sl«t).-
000. Tberoot of Ft. Clement s Church was als 1
and strojed by fire Ihe total loss by the site at
Louisville. Ivy , on July 4th inst, amounted *o
31 -154 800, the insurance on which ivas onlv
3100,500. The government loss amounted to
38*10,000.
The Nashville Union says Wm P Lemmond,
C L C-atUey. S B. Nerion, li West and B
West, nl; citizens espousing the Confederate
i cause, were hung at that place on the 15th.
Charges of murder, bushwhacking, Ac., had
been preferred against tlnm.
No official actim has been*taken in the Yankee
War Dt pirtuient with regard to the act recent
ly passed for calling out the national fotcee.
■rh*a “colored citizens" bad a grand celebra
tion at Washington on July 4.
The steamer Locust Po .it had been sunk by
a col) sio.n off New Jersey, nineteen of her crew
were drowned.
Yankee papers represent the drought, as very
ceneia! in nil par's of the United States, from
Canada to the I’otomac, aid from Massachu
sot's !o Missouri, Rain had not ialleu sot
several weeks, aud vegetation was parched up.
\ttht l Sanitary F;v’r at St. Louis, two i c
gro w were 'i:r rod tic and at one of the taii’ee in
t .e /el h'dt Oaf* RtioOß, and jeung ladies ol
the tst le'ptetiibiiity were required, to
furnish them wait refreshments
On the niglit of June 2, the milling shop of
die Cui td States A'senal . t Springlield, Mass .•
took tile, and was destroyed, witii all its con
tents. the building was Iwo hundred feel
tong and two stories high. The loss in ma
ebiti'-ry aid material was very heavy. TV
•• i ia'ug buildings—one containing 300,000
rifled muskets—escaped.
Nine of a car load et conscripts, who were
«t route from Boston to Cincinnati, a •short
time since arranged and ex. eutai an exceed
itvly desperate plan of escape between Chat .
: ant aal Sahodse depot, New York. The
titans t i the cars wete ItK’ksd a guard being
stationed on the platform." Hut while t,i
uitts wete t iraed down so that he could not
see plainly through the window in the ricot
what was going on, a hole jwas cut iu the f1..0t
o" the car large tn ugh :■.> admit. the passage
•i a u I'; s body ti.e t., to w.»s ttearlv o\ei
the who s. the a setm -to ite to crowd
out. and by holding on to the brakes eti'ect . n
es'.rrpe when the tuiin w..s storied er wa> mov
i::g si ,vy. < ; of tee nine were so
t K.ihav.iy as.tdlnt rhi: evde of escape
•nd tiny paid tSTWhslity w ; t t heit lives
their b dies ' emg ebocktugly mangled. Th.'
oilier live jutyped from c-neot the car windows,
woiie the -ain was n ~ving nearly thirty file
rules au hour, linee cf tin m receiving njarie
: which they hive died, while the other two
were not expected to lire.
The Yankee government provides SSO tor ev
ery limb that a soldier losses in t h e war. This
it' t« help si» to gat artificial limbs.
C .pt R a,., S. turn?*, of the Coaled, r.- ,•*:
navy, was ori-cally an officer of the Una--.,
Stutes navy He was burn in Maryland, an ,
as ari r. nos that state w as. < u April 1- .
I- S. • t.'e ia , -!!'(!. .not t ••• Id ■
S,j iV , Hi w,s .irst lit'll. I.'-;- p ;
of vv r Lexiugion, eighteen eun.'. wiiich, in \
IS.'7, was added to the M Ciierrauean qua- \
rirou lie was afterward attach -d to the sloop i
Erie, eighteen guns, on Ihe \V’e-t Indian squa
dron. la iiJo ne served in the schooner Bor—
p i-e, belonging to the last named squadron,
ihd m-x; year went to the Naval School at
Norfolk for examination. He “passe-v” on
the 28th of April, 1832. and was allowed leave
4» abr nee He ws« during ISB3 appointed au
a ii l in charge of the chronometers, .vc,
D n ing 1835 be was appointed Acting Master
o* the ti igate C’onsteiiation, thirty six guns.
0 r sliip of.Gominodcne D dlas, on the W s'
iu.lia rquadrou, occupyirg this position about
two years. On the 9b of February, 1837 he
w -s promo’ed lie tenant. *nd dining 1838 was
scut to th" Navy Yard at Norfolk to serve on
the receiving snip staying there until 1810,
when he w is attached to the brig Consort, eis
g g. don the surveying service, along the
c- t-t of the Gulf of Mexico He was m-xt
placed , n share duty at the Navy Yard at Feu
sacola, aud in 1813 Commanded the s'e ruier
Poinsett, engaged in the survey of Tampa Bay,
and was attach ad to her until April, 1845
He was next ordered to the brig Porpoise, tea
guns, acting with the Home squadron.
The Mexican war no.v bn,k- out, and ho
was transferred to C> mmodore Connor's flig
ship, frigate Raritan, forty lour-guns, belong
ing to the Havre squadron, a it returned home
in December, 1817. He was next ordered to
command the Electa, a two guu store s.i'p
belonging to the same squadron, and left her
in June, 1818. when he was appointed Insptc
b r, A-. at Pern-tenia. After leaving this po-i
tt.,ir he went on a short cniise from which he
tefurntdiuAp.il. 1819. He remained unein
ployed for several years. -On the 14th of
September, 1855, h a was promoted Commander
and during Ife.rb lie was appointed Lighthouse
Inspector at Mobile, Alabama. Dining 1858
be became secretary ol the L gb'house Board,
which position he held at the breaking out of
sect-ssioft
On the 26th of March, 1861, he joined the
Confederate service, a»d was nude commander
of the Confederate war steamer and piivateer
Sumter. With this vessel tie operated suc
cessfully until driven into the port of Gibraltar,
when tbe vessel was soid to a “neutral.” He
was made a captain of ihe Confederate
navy, being appointed as a citiz- nos Alabama,
walh cornmis-ion dating from July 15. 18ii2.
He >vas then ordered to the command of ihe
steamer Alabama, or “2.90,” with w .ich In
operated against the commerce of tire North
ern Suites.
Bemmes, iu the inflicted upon
the commerce of the United States a series of
damages by which we have lost about one bun
dred vessels, valued, with lln-ir cargoes at
$20,000,000. The career of the Vvasels has
been brought to a close, but Semmea is among
his bos an friends in England, a great man for
tire time.
lit.- really has been only the agent, of a British
vessel armed with British guns, manned by
British subjects, officered by her Maje-ty’s gen
tlemen adventurers, burning British coal, eat
ing i!riri,-h beef and bread, and receiving Brit
ish gt Id a-' the price of their infamy, arid tbe
tight witnessed bv anxious British spectators,
was a combat between a Biitish vessel arid
a true blue Yankee, gunboat.
A Cape Town Journal drew {he following
picture of Captain r emmes' appearance on the
occasion of the Alabama’s arrival at that port
about a year ago:
At first sight Capt Semmes floes not come
tip the idea which every one voluntarily forms
of any celebrated character. He has nothing
of the pirate about bum—little even of the
ur<’ nary s, a captain, lie is rather below trie
middle stature, with a spare, bony frame IDs
face is care worn and sunburnt, the features
striking, tt broad brow, with iron .gray locks
straggling over it, gray eye, now liribl and
ditamy, f en flashing with" the as he warns
in conversation, a y tominent nose, thin com-!
pressed lira, aud well and veioped chin
lie is close shaved, with the exception of a
gray moustache, twisted ala Napoleon, above
tire corners of his mouth. He was diessed in
au old stained gray uniform, the kuitout, with
battered should, r straps and faded gold trim
mings, buttoned up to the throat. In looks,
maimers and dress he had lucre of the military
than tbe naval officer about him He is fifty
three years of age, but looks somewhat older
He is tcetobdi-r, and though not- subjecting
his officers aqd m-n to any unnecessary res
traints, by bis example he enforces the strict
est moderation and sobriety.
It--ferring to the Cape p ipers, which he bnd
,i"Sv been reading, hp spike feelingly and grate
fully < f the sympathy shown towards him and
ins cause in every British port he had entered
He was more puzzled than flattered by the re
ception he had met with at the Cape, which
was more enthusiastic than any he ha I be
lo e. “Do you know now,” said he pointing
or the b quets of flowers and other little tokens
1,-tt to sent on board, “that my own country
men ail women would not have and ne as much
los me or any one else. Timy are not foml of
heio-wejtbtp. You, English, are a queer peo
ple," contained he. alluding to t.e work he
had to do all day, “I don’t believe there is a
mm or w mau in the Slate who would tare
that (snanping b s fingers) for ury autograph,
or that of any of rinse non,’’ poinling to the
portraits of Confederate leaders Davis and.
Lee, whom Ire knew intimately, iie said, wore
pillars ot strength; no ten men iu the North
were a match for them.
A French Law be it Aoaixst tub Coxfsdkk
acy.— iu« Gajignanis Messenger, of Paris, pub
lishes the annexed particuiara in regard to a
law S'-nt against the Ctuiti d'-rate States, witich
has lately been decided against the piaimifi'. :
The Civil ’I filmnal lus given judgment ia a
suit arising out of the destruction by .the au
thorities of the Southern bun-s of America of
a ship and e.argo.of cotton, after the same had
b. en pu chased by French merchants.
Jn the beginning of 18(i2, M. 31 Dnpassenr,
Leci q & Cos , o* Havre, Oougiitat New Orleans
a ve.-si 1 called the Lemuel Dyer, and em
barked in her 2,78 5 bales of cotton. In April
following the Baip and ber cargo were burned
by order of the Ailjutant General of the Sta'es.
tbits causing the owners a loss of nearly 2 100-
000 fr. Count Mt jeau, the French Consul, >tn
mediately addressed a protest to Mr. Jb'ore,
Confedeiate Governor of Louisiana, against
the destruction of this property, and also of
cue hundred and eighty-seven bales ol cotton
belong to a Mine. Havre, another French sub
j ct; but was unable to obtain any compensa
tion. The parties interested then applied for
redress to M. Drouyn de Lhuv3, Minisf..t* ol
F<>re ; gti Affairs, who teplied on the 9th of
April. IBG3, that as the Emperor had not rec
qgn!z-d ihe Confederate States, diplomatic
mteivention was impossible
M M Dupasseur & Cos., and Mmo. Favre de
termined to apply to the ordinary tribun-'is'
and having learned that M M. Erlunger A Cos.,
bankers, bad contracted for a loan totl’M'on
fedeiate States they applied to the Presto .
the Civil Tribunal fora judge’s order :
zing them to lay an attachment on the hr .
in the hands of the above named —
The or.ier was granted, but cancelled »>on af
terwards at the demand of ii M Erl atge> &
M M Dupasseurc Sr Go , and 31 me. F.tvre
rouseqneutiy commenced the present procee*!-
i; a s against the Conlt derate .States, represen
t’d by their President, Mr. Jtff rson Davis,
Mi Men minger, Secretary to tr*e Treasury,
and Mr Sudd on. Mb-ister of war, demanding a
"rovi-Final indemnity of twenty thousand
francs.
this demand raised an important question
■if competency. Mr Senar*. counsel for the
plaint ins. maintained th this clients were au
v. • r / and to make their demauil b article 14 of
.’ode Napoleon, which enae'ed that foreigners
were amenable to French t’Punal-s for al* ob
igntions contracted towards French subjects,
ind hecite-t a great number of precedents in
upportof this interpretation of the law. JI
M. Erlanger, & Cos., at peared bv counsel to
lernand tliat tne plaintifissh uld not be allow
ed to lake adviuitage ol any judgmeat that
idvi.t be given to attach the funds in their
anus. Alter hearing M Sen art ia reply and
he Public Minister, the Tribunal gave judge
ment by which it*was declared that M M. Erl
•nger A Cos.. La ino locus, -di in court, not
hr.t.g parties inte#stsd. With regard to tho
,i!:ii;it-fIV demand tiie TNbunal and .ided that
•riiclt* 14 o' the Code Napoleon did not apply
*0 persons acting iu a public capacity, but only
;o private .individuals: it therefore declared
■seif incompetent, and condemno l the plain
its to pay ail cos is arising from tbeir demand
A siniilhf judgment was given in the cage of
Mine. Favre.
Lieut Larin ore, of’ Company I. Fortieth
Kenfi’, Ay, itifo*m the Cintinca i Gazette tLat
rt-n Morgan's i fiieer of the day at Mount
Sterling carried out his threat to shave the
leads of hi# prjso- •rs A Sen tuck y lieutenant,
- 'ken prisoner at that place, was dily shaved
n retaliation, for th' memorable tonsori tl ope
ntion upon Gen, Morgan and his staff.
Two women were lately detected t lacing
orprdoea on the track of the Nashv'dl* and'
- “•‘twnoooga r tilroad. They were allowed to i
ake a taw articles from their ho;n«*. wh.n t*
was fired, “I
i’T.is the Holy Father's iroprov «at!on en be
i * i in tniema&tiea of the
-in : 1 Czir. Tr Pat He tells us :
T. ■fti. • • • s: Fiie.is of fcicraa tog. u was
: ’ i!m F'- 'f.omUe24th April,
, t o »> ae ;.r.-! pupil of thalinatitntien
' V...J w -r tv crqnn o. uurtyidom. ice Pi pe
J a-s -'ea at B e soiemniry ihe crowd w,.s inr
I nrra.- e. The Archduke Victor Loros of Ausiria
an I the Infants of Portugal were there also.
Alter the ceremony, tbe Pope made a sign ’hat
V Wished to speak. All eye* weie immediate
ry turned up.,n iiim, and amid fb.e breadilcea
si’.once-of ad present, the chief of the viiurcn
y.-nvered the following ad iress exteu:p*;e.
wh;ch •■•• as taken do vn in writing on the spot
Alter alludiug to the feast of the day, the Pape
said :
The blood ot the weak and innocent cries for
veng- tnoe in-fore tire throue of the Et-rnal,
against those who shed it. And in our day
do we not see innocent blood pour forth in a
C-.th.vK country, in hapless Poland, where the
same Curnoiic religion for which St. Fidelia
sacrificed his tile, is so cruelly persecuted! I
w; uld have preferred not to speak of this be
fore tire-approaching Consistory, but 1 fear,
keeping silent any longer, to draw down upou
myself the heavenly chastisement denounced
by fi»- prophet against tbo-e who suffer iniqui
'y-to l»e commsUeil. Vac mihi quia tacM (Wan
is meahal l was silent) My ootscieuco forces
me to lilt my voice against that powerful mon
u'*h whose empire reaches to the pol*. Listeu!
t his is that powerful monarch who dares to
c i-i liimself a Cathoiic.while outside of our holy
citurch, and-who fmgets the judgment of God.
which awaits him for his crimes This monarch
persecutes the-Poliah nation with ferocious cru
elly, and lie has undertaken the impious wmk
extirpating the-Catholic religion in Poland, and
of introducing schism by main force. The
pw. fi!- of that Catholic nation are dragged vio
lently. from their fl icks, some are exiled, others
a' e condemned to the galleys, or to degrading
punishment* Fortunate are those who have
been able to escape, and who are now house
less wanderers iu foreign lands. The churches
are prolaned. Some are phut in the absence
of the priests. Nay, this arrogant potentate
iiafi assumed a power which belongs nut even
to ‘he Vicar of Christ. After having torn from
his dioceses, exiled and kepi, in capfiviiy’for a
year our beloved sou. the ArcHbuhop of War
saw, he has dr. 1 io and. p-ive him cf he charge
which we hid i jw and upon him In casting
opprobriu'u ... it a.;ta we in no wise mean
thereby to give encvucag-.'inenf to European
revolution, li e knew, well how to make a dis
lereucebetween soeiaU.-t ievolution aud the ie
gitima’e rights of a nat on which is struggling
for its independence and for the preservation
of religion. Iu branding the prosecutors of tbe
Cat . die religion, we fu till a sacred duty ol
conscience, and this is why 1 have lelt bound
to impart to you this deplorable news of that
unfortunate country, for which we ought
lo rodo'idile our prayers. We declare, iu c;iu
-8 queuce, that we give our apostolic beoedic
ti u to all those who this day shall have pray
ed for l’oland. Lot us all pray for her.”
Tint «!vrc.spouder*t o f the Petrie says that the
Pope delivered this speech standing erect, with
a loud voice, aid with great emotion. His
whole frame reveal and the spirit which possess
ed him, au I the indignation which his noble
soul always (eels attliesigFt 0 f every injustice,
of every p-rseculion, of every suffering, of all
who are in affliction, of all who weep and pray.
ihe Gazette du Midi says Pius the Ninth at
Fuat moment 'was sublime. His magnificent
voice iang formidably. He ruse fior* his
thione, and fits outstretched arm seem and about
tn launch the thunder, The holy wrath which
filled h:m had flushed his brow and changed
hts aspect. In all Europe this unarmed old
man s'ood alone erect. Diplomatists ate talk
ing of re-forming the Holy Alliance for the
ends of Russia, and kingdoms ber,d before the
Muscovite in almost servile adulation; this old
man alone demands a reckoning, and bid* him
aus cr for the blood of Poland. Fourteen (Jar
liinuls and an Austrian Archduke were among
'he ambience, ail were struck with awe and ad
miration at this superhuman courage, at this
lofty scorn of all calculations of polioy in the
pvi - m e of duty, at this almost divine grand
eur of the man who is the supreme interpreter
on earth of the truth of God.
The Ken-inn Charge d'affaires having asked
the Pontifical Government for a a explanation
of tin. allocution lately delivered by the Pope,
Cardinal Anton eld defended the right and ne
ce-sity of speaking as the Pope had done.
Tin: Charge d’Aibiiroa acknowledged the vir
tue of Monsignor Fella- ki, hut said that he was
i a rebelli us subject, having invited the Czar to
I renounce Lis possession of Poland.
Rations Order. —The annexed order ia re
i ga-d to the issuing of rations, lma been pub
lishcd by Adjutant General Cooper :
In nc'-ordanpe with the act of Congress, ap
proved Jane H.U. 1854, and pub i.hed in Gen
ial*'. Order# No 32 current series, the oomrau
lat on value of rations of tick and Wounded of
ficer# and soldiers in hospitals or other places,
in camp or the field, nsoa us hospitals, will he
the cost of the ration at the post or ptsca, and
100 per centum thereon, which amount will
constitute the hospital fund.
The ration named in th<*preceding pragranh,
when actually issued, will correspond with
that allowed to soldiers in the field; but, iu
reckoning the hospital fund, the whole number
of rations due, wnether. drawn or commuted,
will be estimated in quality and components
(excluding sugar and coffee) according to - the
ration as prescribed in paragraph' 1,107, Army
Regulations.
Rations in kind as are issued to sol
diers in the ti-dd—may be issued to all atten
ds nts in regimental, field or other hospitals.
Medical Directors will report, through the
f-ftrgoon General, to this oftize, soldier# in hos
j) ta! who are n ; ccbaiiinM, and who are patma
hentiy disabled, or i is nelit-ved will it© unfit
(Fr m-rny mouths for field service. When re
ported their trade will be stated, that they be
detailed in appr >pria»e bureaux to relieve
ab!o Lo' 1 itai pii"i therein employed
OnJcer# tni'vViir.g under orqerg yvjll
lowod tranrporta'.ton in kind ami ten dollars
per diem. Ad General or Special Orders
■*'■ -atve other or different allowance# are
-hereby revoked. G-.r.orals or other officers
commanding a district department or army in
tin* field, i-.'.id cbicfa of the Revet al military bu
ri-atix, are done author a-jd to give ordsrs that
will carry. tr.H vportation,
JTot. Txstri cnoNsi.v Reqakd to Taxis.— The
annexe,) instruc'ioits in regard to taxes have
been i.-fuc ' by the commissioner :
I- strncHons in reference to the as'esTnent
and collection of the additional ten percent
on profits: It having been ascertained that an
error has !vcn committed ia the assessment
and collection of tho additional ten per cent
i proa #, ail assessors, will assess the profits,
on!y m ole by buying and selling at any time
F. tween the let. day‘of January, 1863 and the
Ft day ol January, 1865. The profits on which
tno iax is impose ! by I and II paragraph ol
S. c. 4 of an act eat tied “e.n act to levy addi
. for the e mmon defence and sttp
; - ol -Hie Govariixnent,’ - ' are the profits made
*’•■.' and selling between the times inen
'iouid. ti;e o -puiutive conjunctiou “and'-' be
ing used. the buying and selling mustb-'th Ink?
place between the Ist day of Janury. tBGS, and
the Ist day of January, 1865. Such were the
instructiens issued from ihi# office on the Ist
March, 1864, and will be found at page 8 of
additional instructions, therefore the erroneous
assessments made in some districts need not
be coilected, and the assessors will refrain from
such assessments.
The ten per cent additional tax on profits,
made by buying • and veiling between the Ist
day of Janury, 1863,—including that day,—and
the 31st day of December, 1864,—including
tuat day will be assessed and collected at
• nee Ihe profitsder.ved trom the same source
between the Ist day of January, 1864. arid the
31st day ol December, 1864, both included, will
h* assessed and collected immediately after the
31st day ol December, IBC4.
Flab of Truce Letters.—The„annexed order
relatirg to flag of trace letter* has just been is
sued from the office of Exchange at Richmond:
A., letter* to go North by flag of truce must
be sent to this office.
Each letter must be inclosed ip a separate
envelope and addressed to Robert Ould Bu
reau of Exchange, Richmond, Ta. ’
No letter must exceed in length one page of
ordinary stsed letter paper, and its conten's be
confined strictly to p rsoßal or familj matters
No letter alluding to the movements or local
ities of troops will be allowed to pass
Each let er must contain a United States
postage stamp, or i?§ equivalent in silver or
l nited States currency These regulations will
be rigidly enforced, and no letter transmitted
in which they are not strictly observed.
Y\ e continue to receive flattering accounts
ot the crop prurj eeis iii Southwestern Georgia.
1 he indications are that a fine crop of corn has
ane wiy b en seemed in Georgia, Alabama
aud Mississippi.
, Thy corn crop in all sections of N.rth Cara
liua is saiid to be unusually peoxstvisg,
Theeleotion for Governor in North Caroll- I
sa m held on the ith of Augnst, I
FOHgr<;t TT«M».
The -eii jr'-p-'.le v »> . rtr-nd from Par
is to SP-Ciia, . r,.- . .. •• .. dors oi C.F.na.
Mts pr>*p.i:fU to peace a til u U througa
Maont G-.rti iri.t H i, |.aUevi and the projoct
wid yet be put into i xcout ou
A large palrt ot Pompe ii has b en excevat-d
sint>' the wn b"gan. and mtrv udercsti ,g air
eovet as have been nude among the rums,
Anew oornct has V.«ch iiTc.-vi rt and. It was
seen at Marseilles >n : 4th of October, 1863.
by ii. Scrapie. ‘lie dee r.nes it as telescopic,
its position being right ascension nine degrees.
Siiv two minutes, for, 3 -Mur ssconds. and de
rlination thirty tour degrees, seven in notes
In the course of au hour it in. teas.-d a iitfie.
both in rig t a-cer.siou tnd declination, so that
it seems to be moving in a northwesterly ob ra
tion About, the fisra .- time a comet w-.s per
ceived at Amiens, but does n »t so m to be the
same, since it is dc» .ribe l .s having a tail ot
an apparent length of two reeter», while M
Semple’* is telescopic, with a rneve rudiment of
a tad." 1
The Baron Yon Decken ba* ascended the
snowcapped mountain of K'liiuanj to, in f'*n
tral Africa. He ascend-d ir to a Y.-Rht of very
nearly fouttee* th ' !'i id fee tb-'T.; the level
•f the *e», and »taM shed t’l* fact that, it is
crowned with -m,v. lie t*as«—! through eight
different nations in A Sri.-a, ail differing in sue "h
and feature. Decidedly the raust intore ding
discovery of all i» ih »t of the sjurce of the Nile
The pianist Thalberg recently i<-ft Great
Britain for Naples His pn-viiuid tour
through England, Scotland and Ireland during
the years 1862 3, is - aid to have brought him a
clear profit of $259,000
Every one will remember the celehrrted
case ot Sir John Dean Pail,the fraudulent
London banker A recent copy of the Madras
Tim--* gives some curious information concern
ing him. limn diute'y after he wis rent need
to penal servitude, Lady Paul rea'iz.-d ail the
property settled upon her, and preceded with
out delay to Sydney, where she purchased a
beautiful seat iij the suburbs. Her husband
haying arrived at a penal settlement, in anofh
er part of Australia as one of a ge-tig of con
victs, the wife of the convict baronet applied
to the government for his services, and was
permitted to employ him as her “assigned
servant,’’ We need scarcely add that having
thus released him from unpleasant restraint,
she pla.eii ail' the newly-purchased property
in his hands and has since led a very quiet
life(in his company.
The Paris Si. rale says it has received n pri
vate letter respecting the treatment to winch
the Polish women are subjected by the Rus
sians, which contains such terrible details that
it does not dare to publish them, They are torn
from their families arid transported to Siberia,
says the Sieole. They are given, like lira
•laves of old, to pit Ess mivsirr-;, who force them
to contract fresh unions. Their marriage tie*
are broken. The letter we have do'es not con
fine itgelf tp vague allegations, it cites persons
anil name*. If Ru sia continues her system of
transporting the Polish women, let them re
member tb it the Roman Empire which, after
having aLo covered tire world with its vio
lence, was iti turn, overthrown amid violence
and barbarism.
Garibaldi is going back to England in the
autumn, by which time it is supra sand the policy
Frame and BngUtid will be settled without re
ferenee to the opinions or position oi the sturdy
rwpahlican.
M. de Pu’sky, one of the chiefs of the Hun
garian revolution in 1818, who accompanied
Kossuth to this country and mad -a most fa
vorable impression while here, Uat l»»eu per
mitted by the Austrian Government to return
to Hungary, ami his forfai tad estates have been
returned to bin
A Smyrna paper states that a cotton crop 0
150,000 bales, 43ff pounds each, will be secured
at Anqfolia, this year, While the crop of lest
y«ar was only 50,005 bales. The cost ot rais
tug tbiM cotton is mny tea pounds per baie,
and it sells readily at AJO per bale, thus leaving
a large profit, fire same paper says tbe
interior is becomlHg rich by this culture,
and “wo have no Hesitation in saying that in
a few years the staple of Turkey cotjou will
equal the American.’’ *
The new steamer Yeddo, believed to have
been built for the rebels at Bordeaux, had left
that port for Amsterdam.
Mr. Eugene Dufre*, a wine.merchant, of
New Orleans, on June 13th. was sent, need t«
the Tortugas during the war. His offence was
register mg himself S.s an enemy and not leav
ing the lines.
The French iron clad frigates Sollerino, Mag
enta and Couronne, have been ordered im
mediate,ly to change tbeir armament ami hoid
themselves ready for sea—it is supposed li r
T unis. They are to carry rifled guns -of 30
and 50 and four mortar# of 0 80 centimetres.
The Couronne i* to carry of the rifled gune
?Q pieces of thirty and sixteen pieces of fifty,
making 1b all forty guns of heavy calibre.
A protest, signed by Senor Jesus E-cobur y
Aratendureg. agent of the o*Ußtitiitioiial Gov
eminent of Jfexico in London, was published
iu that.city o» ihe'lOtk ultimo. S.anorEsco
bar protests against all the acts of tho French
intervention, ( ar,d especially against Maximil
ian's Mex’caa loan. He protests also against
every species of obligation which shall be co; -
traded at the charge, of the Mexican nation,
by what person soever, who shall not be au
thorised W>- the Constitutional Government.
Cardinal Autonelli has demanded from the
Italian Government, through the mediation of
a met!a! Power, the liberation of Cardinal
Mprichina, who has beeif. arrested at Jesi, Au
(soiie.
Tho Japanese Ambassadors were to leave
Bans on the 21st of June, ea route for, Japan
direct. They had signed a convention confir
ming former tieati >s, tendered apologies tor
the a?fv#-:in6U"U' of a French lieutenant in
Japan, and guaranteed the payment of a in
demnity.
Ihe governm nt journals of Paris announce
that the Mexican army is about, to be reinforc
ed by two thousand picked men recruited m
Belgium by General Chapeliur, formerly Di
'rector of tho Royal Military School at Bai3
reis The organisation ol this corps is begun
and the men will sail for Mexico in September
ft doe# not clearly whether this auxil
iary ioroe ia to be under the orders of tl e
French commander or of the Emperor ol Mex
ico.
Madrid advices state that the Spanish gov
ernment, iu consequence of the difficulty it
finds m putting dawn the insurrection ut 8t
Domingo has decided on sending out an ex
peditionary corps of large amount, some say
as many as 25,00-0 men, who will embark iu
September next.
Oapturk Exteaokdinart —A correspondent
of the Beteibburg Express gives an account of
the capture in Brunswick county of a gang of
Yankees, consisting of n Lieutenant and thirty
one men by a Confederate captain and six citi
r-en». The capture was effected in the lollow
ing manner :
While the Yankees were, awaiting a break
fast. which litey had ordere! Mr. El more to
c- ok,Cap-. White was in sight, maturing his
plans for their surprise and capture. He sta
tioned his company of #ix mourned men sever
al hundred yards i.ff in a lane, at the further
Gope of an eminence, and in such a manner as
to 6reTent tne appearance oi a front rank ot
cavalry force They were two abreast, and
really looked as appearances would seerrl to
iudica*e. Capt. White then madaa circuit so
as to avoid being seen by the enemy, and dash
ing boldly up to the paity, defiantly oidered a
surrender, or be would bit* them t" pieces in a
moment, at the same time pointing to the head
-of what seemed to be a squadron of cavalry.
Overwhelmed with surpii.se and pauie stricken,
tne valiant Brooks asked for time to consult
bis men. Capt. White replied that there wa#
no time tor i arley. He must stack at ms in the
road and match immediately up to the Dixie
boys, or the Dixie b"ys would march to them.
Lieut. Brooks hnmedratciy complied, amt
stacking arms, marched up to Capt White’s
“formidable” body of cavalry. Upon finding
that they had surrendered to s x Citizens, arm
ed only with double bairel shot guns, their
mortification was great, but it *y too late to
retrieve their misfortune. They were so far
from their arms, that Capt. Wfcire and his men,
being mounted, could have killed half of them
before they could have fallen back many pucee,
and then have speedily dispatched tne balance
by Hi st gaining access to their carbines and
pistols,
Pbicbs or Promo Lands in Alabama.—For
the information of the public, the Montgomery
Advertiser states th» price of the pub! c lands j
in that Stale;
The priM of land lying within six miles of
of a navigable wa'eroou se. or a railroad, or a !
proposed railroad, is ten dollais per acre. }
The price of that lying between six and fif
teen mites of a navigable water course or a
railroad, is three dollars per acre.
The price of that outside of fifteen mile* ota
navigable water cour.e, or a railroad or a pro
poted railroad, one dollar and a halt per acre.
The mimeral laid* o«n be entared only at
Me huadred dellare per acre.
Thegradaatiea law wa* repealed at the last
rente* es the Legislature,
SYIUPMIMS, '
£! 4 Tv A- Siiii, t'-H t i-.con hand, at it-.- CrcMn
. .. ... c . i A , “'- y
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u.. ; t w. -s-s'.a, v«U in-f. v>!.. f ; w■* oini.uoa cal. on
u .wi r a. i. c «r ..ho /$& t.aL Koad
.!> ■ .4,3.' AJL X at. ALLKN
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CtTia•; :. v ' is - - i>o ...> ~*r*iVr. • Su
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’bsciudr,'" *’ r‘! a ' -!“ .rwifrorhood o\ fw pood teraw a*
aroouoiuoj atluacuui.lly Wdl allow. Adlir St
! Bogow Jeff!r o^^ AN dft.
SSOO ' EHAitD
S r< * L ? j ’ - r ’ ran,y Sl,! ' le '•» Atlanta 1.0 n'pht, a bright
■ ; - ‘ 7 ’a',:
•uthe paw tail „£££%
Atlanta, Jul ,-T . S. ROOT
v - T j y y-i ’ ,sp3 -v 21
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* ’ bxrv-xi! a? lajsisaißATiesi
S r w r . S r 0 'i E ‘ ,KU| A H OUM(*iTIV UOI'N ■ Y
Oft I, tho, tiavo, wayaatdLettl-ra siTouiduotWp.a*
Stv^V' , hi : uiday ( !f*i‘ui* n^i,* jUU,<! " at " r *- at olfice ' n Au
jyS4wl7 . " D.rVIPL. KOATII, Oriinary
S T ?^.
lh seai eUirreioi-clo cite and admoni-li all ann ,i. » i«.
gs * bloraots J : ' Fn',’
U,. ~m r .»!•!•,. the lilac pr. «-r l> ■,! ,y law, to -ho* oau.e il
• 1 “ why .-a!'i, L'l io' - should i.ot
Oiveu under m> hatiU audoffleiat t ign..t .n w-' -i li d-vof
J '!v7 - i~o!i • JS -° 8,41 rcKtl-FOi-to,
_l>74_as Oulu,ary.
r os’ -.ctonoi , oi.uiH-.i-, otits', v "
v h rrao, Move;- l»ram ap; lies for cUu- olpuaidi nxl 1b
if Pjrson«at.d pro;*rty or I,&ui..a V.. Oeorpla c ”IS
- ■i-e-i ! '““ mck ’ lul,or rbudren of Moses Haairict. de-
Tlic-e areth rcfore.tocitc and ad.net.lsh al'.ard ato-u or the
aoit ineude ol said minors, to be and appears! n»
ofllce Wkt In he nine preawibrl ay la .v.io slm .v cause, il ar.v
the l , iiive, >’li\ >»i • Aafttfi'c iivt be granted.
pS-a!* ffloe 111 At ’
juisiiwas VV. “ SHIKLDsI. Ordinary
QTATk OF CKOUGIA, GKEENE OIJM I Y.
O i.e.-tas ih„ E-:;it.-of George .T Heed, tale of said ceun
t} ; aecea-o % n anrepres-, Lted.
tbu*? Hit* tlierefcre. to ci e rlc! admonish all persons con-
FCrF. ti iu 'i.J'.v caiHc il a y thoy have. \vb\ the ncuilia tration
tie t;.’!! > non o, ff.i esia-e should not! e veebe- mu e k“*k of
the sure i,n- Court r in a me. th rllt ast proper peTot at
lC ’ ■-uri ol Qr-.i: ,ry to tie lic-itl iu ait toi said county on ilie
nrst o onday iu Ju y n- xt.
-iven under i.v hmd and offlcnl signature, at office in
Uroc tsb-io, ihisSothuay of -icy, 1.-n*
mystswas ISUGE lUS L KINO, inltnarv.
ct fTK OB I.EOKGIA Oi.EErNkOQa ft. ’ ~
f? n V ,¥ r f '■ «r-\M»ry V. nd »« u nettt ant f r letter* or
a,in!ii;i,ti(i,.on on the estate of i- tryar And rs, n, late of said
courtLy, dv. eased,
I rf aw thereto c, to ett: and adnnn sh all, ami s ncular
the kliidied and c.tdno:s of sal , ceoe;i:er., to hhow cau e 1
.*ir> thfij have, why leti.er» should uy be KiTiiik-o .‘it th
( Oiutoi Oiviimry,' • hjhbld iu audio. Ba,a louiity, ou the
fir.-ftt ;i<.n< uv m h v«eu l» r n xt. J
oa em reem i sboio*, July 14th,
“si}*™ hbGKMIKK.K,N(^
(K T AT K OF OKOKi IA. COLUMBIAGOTTJITV.
Ft. j;> le e » s - -• M. ruber applies for let era oi Guardi n
snip ot ihe persona and propeity o,' he minors o, K ,M r ull r
ueeeased,
rJhmwt ‘kere-oretocl.eard admonish all and singular
ti e A.iD r daru: fneiu.HO’ s.ao mm rs io be and appear .t try
(iflk’e. -it ii. tiie ime presr-rih and by lnw, to bow ui>ice. ii udv
.fti. d,w >, way ».* io L ttersghouni not lx? grimed
Sig6: ‘ tUre ' «*“ l » A4) -
i:vry> 'W w Unrrc, DS.Ord narv.
4ITATE OF GEO KG' ■ OR :- NE I’DUN'IY. ‘
I' " h«ma? tan esute l ..I melon ram, a lee reraon of
cyio . ia e«i .ft t.a i-oiiiity, dscc-.s'-d is unrep*es; n «-d :
I are t eref v■, t cite and : and n.MiL hal p.-rg j; s conorrn
e ,t > s-i w c-i.B win th. a »a iu.-. ratio t .. sui: es a e- hi uld
'■'J ’ ®. v ‘' !* ll * !•* •* ’lot of 1 tie -upr.-io- i o .it, 'or In ft me
tlier ti and-proper person, 1 f. 0-.un of On<ln ,r v to heh. Id
m and tor saidernm-y n the • rat M idu in mi-tt, . ;ut
Given uu,.e. my Jnu.d at oflii.e iu (Tre. neab ,ro, J urn- 28, 801
*US«MU» L. King.
Oid.fdry.
OT.yrET)!* GEt,>KGtA, R!G'riM()NDT)(UiNTT. ‘
hJVV evens', till Mu-!! , Guardi in of * 11 ,ani H. SI ierV ni
n r, (now r nee) anlilies tome fr l.T!e sos U.-ml ion t
~ *?mi ibo-ctore. to site and it monish all and singntai
[he kh.d-edarn I.lends of end minor, to 1- and appeatat
D,y olflee on o. iK-for.rt ,e n t Touday m fteptember next, to
g irUd lU e ’ !f :<Uy thiy ’'we, Why Saul letters should not he
<J r L ?,V’ HI 7 h » lll > mW-'iM stgnarurs, at ifitce In /u
--gu ta.tU.A 1. day oi Uui>, 8 4
■i 7 DAVID L BOAT IT. Ordii ary.
t’G-r.i .-Vl« liru I'Hp dlU’l I»’|. *•
Gs BORor V. GREENE Q- TJ.NxV ——
f- Two month.- alter date, to a it: >t. the nx- October tens
, Ino t onir o'Or- uai-y o raid county, apr, irar ~
,I,J ’.j'J ’ , ,/' r f ’ nrt ’ I'd'-Tvv.. to ft ■■ 1! a ot of !m,! containing
’ "! re to lor-, >a Ilia o r ora e limits o*' u,- «u s
~‘2, 0 her tateo John P foot deesa-ed. fn
the bene it id the h-ira and r. di-or-of raid «.*awl* .
‘ v ** L, Ad mV. of doUh i J . x/i.Q' t dco.
14 3 Sw'd
f-lEO •• IA, URkrpN COUNTY.
t’A, VTs ’lf? •*° I: At H e lien August
I e.n cf y-e 'y urt of Oidii,#ry oi ts'-.t comity, apt) (cation wit.
be tea ,e to siitct cot'.it t r Ifttve to set a tr o' of Vid iu m].,
A;™': I'*:*r f -ri«w, b to
t»t(* ot .# -.rah M.uiits. a (1 ,i .i.
, - „ .. OKuKQK.t. SOU' HEi'l-AND,
i 'me A. n; rot ,-.b h I) «rb, and. tecs ,e«.
WOT!<;K
T-Vr itfTßk r»*trs»fg*«>f!>}t
t’E TO I’KKIUT iR-> AND DfcTTORS.
oeorgiv. crecti " am'y—..-ut it? i? here: y given to a 1
" av uAinandH at AI xander Ki.c, deceaeco
om.* name t • lie mi ims-i.ihi, a-.e lit
iff "eOiaS'wmcn P t?™ nS U,deKed 10 ' K "^'***«
,» Executor of Alexander Kiaz, JeecMnal,
J> Owi»
N °L , ' K * J# ’,P aM T U an licit E DITOKs!
A-UnV. Ue bools non wttU tec win adneied .f b’. ’
——— 6w2!>
"RJOTICi#.
iW,” 1 its :,?]£ uht'a™!. ziSrti
* , ' uieoe " ea " , ; r u v^i , ™ .
, i 1- de ban s non wiih the will smiexod ot Ki lip7)ili.
II yil * s " -?
A"MSitllSTOATOtt't MU!.*"
i ftps t'.TljEsi>A . m Augual unit, wil! be sold
i he r ihe 'tour' Bous, door, li: ti.e town of V. a I ."-'on
,-i.gc- com,!-., the .oUovr.iu prop it,, to wit: t fa. me ~»rj
loctlr too I(,v vnt Was! iiipun. coj.ly of V .ifaee. Se'd il l
c.jn amt'.ge.rot : , C ies lomoo. iese. Bia m Hie presetlj- el
“TT. •U) sue. eased, bem* tb* pica Ica la(el> > c.*u>! «
b> the sod Jeceaa. and. ;Id for 'he in. St t ti.v t«Ir» M.I
lpcio.j-.i huacecea eU. IrrmsoD the
ju HO „-ii GUO. BYbOM, Adm’r.
AD‘in I'THAI Oil’s HA I.E.
BY virtu of an ord fr ms y onm.bi .. v , t rfOrdlna
y t'OlUoDt cun y. wi:l b. Bold r a the flrs .lE#
I. ( ia - p emb i:i xt. bra tb art it us do- nt n.
mug «dc unty, ml ti.e ni.g , a b-.-l aging t, .eat £f
• I Mill UlB.lt! l, 8,1 -Olds - <h ben fit Os t . ll I.BBMd
u Gt'is rssidufcc used i * roi.s >*n <]<t> ©. tal ■
# Julyi.7 6wii» Ri MMON liAKiUH, Ada*. !
aE OKG1 aTcoLUTTB' A COUaTV.
ft liHiH-H, b a (ijbsfii has tliU ruy :tl) lb'Hed bufer*
a . e'trt.y Dors., a red son el. h-zeo. iace f’l <u ,* Cel vh : »
l/y-Ua°ofd lfctt nthl,il o t* n ' buiS*
r pp h Dcd t}’ ns at four hundred dollars.
Ju., stb, 1864.
A. M CR-WFOP.D. F. H.
,' tins extract from the E»traVjJ U . k.'j.'jy
CiiO. ... GRAY. Deputy Clerk.
CTAT iFos oeoroi . . colum m a cooicrYTfixri.u
r? !*“?’•? „' t h“ *. *'oTt l util c4un 5 : ’I lie pe
liv II of .Jo.'ll It. V\ li.-wHt. ytoSi'Ul StOVf; i. . tephen lfrkl b
"amn -. t ha'lc), Jam?-; P. VV ;Iru , IMt:. Joli-s au.i %VIJII. in A
l/oj ;n-, 0., ('• imnui ii.t>, Henry .Voor*.an T i** rtip
f, '• * I: ; !l V£ h. lc - \\ iii! m. i U tlncii, j ; me a luo* n, J.hn
lKj"I n V‘: .u 'burli
teid"t. . and . j,
V».i. s,dr«u > iv. .. u.-s'uc 0.b1e,-. 1..... .• A iVetci n> ,1
■:*“«» 54 l ya, us Rich:, ond C.,|.l.iv, Vic.,- t Aon ny ,s
1. «. tiuiy, un.HViliiu'n W hvere t. vi Oglethorpe c-/u, x '
« a MHC-liui! H Wc-iborDbt * arren ccusty, r- .peci.T, ..
Uh.-.h-t WlhbFM, ,tof iUud- p Ufc.irtl
u. . in. h a.. icfnVK.uai liil i>, they Chv a .oci Is j ium
sely. s . -gt.certor Ce pur. o-eo. mauutac ure.g ■ , a ,
and luip.ru. g fr. m ureiein couii.r vs a,I .the materi In ,
eiiihery and uj.e, artixUsnecessar, f O ,- 1, gTu a Td'h
siffi'ej i„ chamai! or lucid jul.l
That said u lueißls lo be carried p Ib the cr.ua! v of Co
s and state a ore,a and. under p « cam, a. and M> ;e o®‘‘l ke
li senrilU Uftau actun ! mpaev," an t thj. th ? amJu.u of
,api a!t. o employed i-ere u., t, ■ tii'u.i and dollars tote
ill id. and ir.to -hares of one thousand dml«r* ea. fi Zt «!,t b
capital there has been paid la tue gum of o„e hundred ih u
a-ncrao/ura. ~ u u
oA'fir bn r le sl'a n™ 11 i,ny ‘.* lto eD “ Wt **>em to cam
2“ t •»an orde. may be p.ssed at tb,
i. .t ie.;i-oi saiu oar ,iu por ua i-e to ,i\ . pv*..ui ;in ~ M-h
truaGif a:.tl prov <ie i t de lining vour pto tion rsdppW'
auu can llu ing a. I ti&r wu.-.-e -,? P . .V?
S°£l t: , C '* " ’ Vit ' r ' ae t" I> »and us T.- da.'o r■ „« .AJ
aa at i., >i i:e au company ’ iur tue
„xfy?fl«. r 0“ flr,t <t - 7 0i h ““
Jnc K ilhoa Char!*d rTTrrav
Jo*! .it btov»i mij’. h Vi arirm
P"sh o an, ( haries A
SMjuei W I .anty • Porter t* i mm.r g
*'' * :>*» lradroe V ofraror
srf? £*?rwi' yt il-fain s Rot- its
it i!. in A (,01l M Janus M p.c, ; . M
II ary .Moore faeorp* ■! rr.uT
kS rs Wm? ■
Joan Bhr.es P M rl.
\A- r ,' _ T- r_ v_ V il l>ve
e, jßotoo, Vc.cect it
t H I cga . b ? 1 Wiliam Wf. a.elk
r., mss A < nl-heater Marshall 11 u
W Jham c Jessup Thomas l- Stovall
Adrettr M J.ick»oa
S'Tn T s ? F COiAMBIA OOUKTTe—Psrson- I
>.j ahy aj joan ri, Jr.hn K. Hi c who b^r.** uul'' B?.r r zi *
aia ttratren tbe l rodent of -Jni noc-.v. |" M i
TX'.om ary,’ ) ♦.ted fc ILe conr.-y arm • .1» at%.= vL. A I
ci.f »i,'oj in luuntitae uriag f o ’on Card m,d uut ortfrg fom I
* r-. • ccmotr.es, tbe ueeessatv ;;j.;..ia.r, niaci-.i- ,fy ad
oUiei,ar,,ces liit ,mj umauuk nf .pul actusbv r ' a ciu
X ' 3 b - ‘ C T ' at this thee la wd
t. ous* and , .js, welch Cfte teen invested mna -' .r,- r ....
th *, Sam °‘ oa * uuucnu auu tweciy die
t ~ JX‘>. h wiLboar.
Sworn to and °Tb#crn» <i before me June •4?- •c 4
D P. » A.NFuiti %H. P.
A true evlrrct from the record af i oiumhia .-npertor Court
J urjf 21 m ibW. /
1/ 2#W «T GEO. W. «RAY i o, wk
BLANK BOOKS.
1 00U BLANK li ft KS
€f Various Siz sand Qualitiss,
FOR SALE AT
THIS OFFICE.
J. ? I
ClliiOiU liE u NEL
JOB PEDiTiii O; *
Is one oi tiie
Largest in the Conlcdcracy.
WE ARE PREPARED 7 0 EXECUTE
IN IBS
s»T'V. w JB
AT
SHORT NOTICE,
AND ON •'*'
H.oasonabl o r Ji
Book Printing,
Lamp hi. ts 3
iberHH.ns,
Addresses,
Catalogues,
Reports,
JOB WORK '
OF
F.VFiH’Y Till'• TAW
aU V jJi ji,%s a .L.&XJL j,
- Sucli as
Posters,
Uaiidbills,
Concert Bills,
iuetion Bills,
Programmes for Concerts
and Exhibitions,
Giro ulars,
Envelopes,
Druggists’ Labels,
Blanks,
Bill-Heads,
EXECUTED PROMP TLY, NEATLY,
AND ON THE
LOWEST •
BY I’Hr, OF BTEAfU
AND THE
HIST OF Pill? gtt' F
111 kinds of work n>©d fey Book r«f s ?!>.r*nv,.
loud ol work bsid fe) fflftsirfaclarfM':'
of win k «>?*d fe* DaiuU,
lu kiads oi work ifci! by kittraue* Cor*rr*?i*. • t
it! ktsids of work asu! by Uaiiroßd C«i;;.
4i! binds oi iffivk used fey S c-inyfeu-; i\
tVIS kiads of work used by Joiul Suck to s
1!I kinds of work .used by
bfj kinds of work used fey
kinilf of wo k used fey Liwyers,
Ml kinds of work used fey Travis! ,«• VO
511 tiail, of „ & a;«r by f-atem AefcaoVmi.rt,
llikiad of WOik ProLssitfft;:! 4tc,
Can and av ill be lurnished
iS GOOD AKI) CHEAP
As AT A'xY OFFICE IE TEE (TAFEIMACY
WE ARE CERTAIN U ALI
Who will favor us with
. - TS-UaxiFi. •i- ,•% gpytj
A LX. I*s WANT Ok'
Any Kind of Printing,
-‘ft.B.E INVITED TO CALL.
BOOK BINDING
IN ANY STYLE,
NEATLY AVD PUOHiTLY EXRCLTEDI
AT THE OFFICE OF THE
CHRONICLE & SEN I IN'L.
Wanted.,.
OLD lEIiCE i COVEFS,
OLD DAT BOOK COVKfiS,
OLD CHLIK BOOK COTEES,
OLD* ELAJtK BOOK CtV^Et,
OF ANY KIND,
AT THIS OFFICE.
BLANK BOOKS,
OF ALL KINDS,
RCLED Irf s!VT A? IS.VF.ft «ISBHO, AND
80Y.T3 in IKE BIST STYLE.
AT THE OFFICE OF THE
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Ig-lai sand Ccnstitu
iio:.s ci societies,
Priniiisg. IVdii
tyi ed P ates,
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Briefs, &e,
| Blank EiM ml Foies,
Bills- of laFiiif,
Ciuk ll eeb,
Business Cards,
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Veiling Cards,
Labels,
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Fancy Job Friuli]}#,
CriatjiiL in C'o!oi*s,
Broiizl I niiling, &c.
.Wf 511 ted.
(. hi) li-fejU t
0.:.' ; VA ii BifOK^i
CL ; u JO it tit,
CL' HfctOSS,
•OB’ - NY KIND
til 'BE A ALL- WhlS-n St CVDR
Ph UY WRITTEN OVER,
on tor vti:i:»r..Y or. ax ax-l.
THE HIGHEST VIA 3KET PKrrR WILL Bit
PAID FOR OLD_BL4NK BOOKS OK
ANY K.'rNi), ry-lttll " i ALL WfUTTRKOVI*
partly n1 -■ •;.!•.n or. r., ok not
j YRIT'LV oar AT ALL. TEN THOUSAND OR
MOilE OF THEM WAN PEL AT ONCE,
AT r i ■ ,-k’J Ifig.
U.l i\ 7t MEi. i Al. lilM IXli,
EXECUTEB IT A HI’PER’OR >J IN.YJCR
' AT TEC OFFCB OF THfi
CHRONICLK & S£NTLN Et.