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iy alf
"'a3 enthusiastically received,:.. i i
•enhagzh,October 6. King’sspeecli
one year will have their orders promptly t
tended io, when remitting the amount for the time de
sired. ; ’ -l ' L
Vo city subscription discontinued unless by positive
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B\ r TELEGRAPH
TO f ;"-t i > M
the morning news.
monster democratic meeting in
NEW YORK.
ongreas presenting, a. qheerful picture of af-
faira^ in the republje.. It is expected-that
Congress will ratify'tleatiesf^riS* life United
1^1 S333U
) Democrats In Procession—
Xrarly 100,000
',00 000 Democrats In Connell—General
McClellan Endorses Seymour and
Blair*
Sew-Tore, October 6.-^The nemjpcratie.
meeting lost night was the greatest ever held-
in this city. An experienced police captain
estimates tlwt ninety thousand persons were
in the torch-light proisession. ■
After the procession was joined by the dele-*
gutions from the adjoining, counties, it ex
tended ten miles in length.
The scone in Union Square was grand. , \
The main stand represented the Temple of
Liberty, and was brilliantly ilhuBinjLfod) by
strings of lights stretched to Tammany Hall,
lie streets in the vicinity seemed literally of jj
pe trith calcium lights, rockets, fire-paint
ings and balloons. The main stand facing
lirmdway, was the cefitre of attraction out-,
tide of Tammany Hail, although there, were
ax other stands at which speeches were madeg
to the immense throng, roughly estimated at
Ufa million of men, women and children.
The crowd stretohed compactly down Broad
way to Eleventh street, while the cross-streets
were alive with citizens; 1 !* 1 lli
General Baldy Smith,' who presided, said he
represented hundreds of thousands of sol
diers, who thought the results of the war
Timid he lost without an entire change of.”
policy.
A lei car from General McClellan was read,
rinpharicaUy endorsing the Democratic can
didates.
' m r< >
Foreign News.
Pairs, October 6.—Later rvdyices from Bio
Janeiro state that Lopez had arrived at San
Fernando with ten thousand men. Twenty
§Ip*£pHia«.
tions against the Paraguayan position at the
,j/>>ag latuififlq
adutd- October 6.—Prim has arrived, ana
l/HMOO UHr *i-
MD ARISTOCRARY
Hi r.
'si CA
■f i
arrived, am
. r' 'IO . . •
-If f)l
with, Prussia regarding Schleswig HoLstein
are
sale jofs
Unitjed States is P«tol¥WI1 I T S
States:
I IHAir.7
iroin Washington: i-i 2*'li
ashinoton, ’'Oct, 6.—Mr. 4 Sfefrard 'ficog
nizes, aud xvill confliiue to'tfecognfee, Goni
as represeutiug Spifci. until Spain named a
snefcessor. H <>'|' '
, There, ^ras, a frill cabinet to-^ay except
Bvarts, I K J 1 ; djto JJ -" r wl ibu> ,~a
| The debt statement shows anet decrease in :
the Department of: S970.QP0, 1 Cojn in the
Treasw® ,*p&891,Qgq.. SK l 18£&W $ iMSs
«0(J. t j_
McCulloch things (he 3isbtfrsdnnfent8 I; -foT-
t e current' month, will be lighter -thorn the,
at, and that Octobers statement, xvill show a
further decrease... September’s disbursements
aggregate $30,027,000.
•13 no
. ,. _ - ol i’TU.i
itt.O sal 1c, tat kk.u l
the New EnglnM
-bed of Radical ism—Pnegnnl Dlotrl-
ion ot the National Banks Throngh-
the Country.
Wilson boasted in*t speech at Bos-
the United States bonds were owned
east of the Alleghanies, and that there
nited States~’Senale.'“'‘rfonr
man, of Ohio, in a recent speech, shows what
has been done for 4he bond aristocracy of
without result .The ratification of the , New-Wlan/ 1 ^^’ " .17| ^Hve more
' (.XjL^Su'3 .Jj'iT -Athpr islIiHlttb the ® ut of f^ 16 contrivances to give one see-
i ofSt. Tfibfeas rfha other isloilrttf'to tM the CO nnt^an advant^e over the
other, the NatiomfuQhfcd^tAih is Hie most
cunningly devise* a»lttfa« -nJR«t Effective,
iujknow that this system was created by act
i uA,Cbngres8, and to make way for it, Congress
Galatea attacked The ,rebel cruisers Syivam Ihxotl the Stat^flanks out of existence. Un-
and -Liberte. The Sylyain was sunk and the
Liberte burned by her <AvA AMr. Salnave
had gdifd’on the 1 Galatia^ to bombard JHi-.
rirgoaheu - .avoje oinaor,o aooo a^rrr,
Telegraphic, .advices, fron> Mexico to. the
• 23d|nlL state tljat Juarez pent a message to
Co ,.' „>1
,nts
e. amo-
le'
Bank system, the Federal government
' es the notes to the banks organized
it, giuHKM
-notes for every one hundred dollars orgov-
emment bonds it deposits with the Treasurer
of (he United States. The consequence is
‘^pufeequeutly the most money,
h i ut, as 1 have Hhown, the Eastern States
hold far the greater number of the l>omis;
afiti what is the consequence ? I will state it
•'frbi i this official report of the Comptroller of
the Cimeucy, ' * '
mittod tjpl tin
Congress? at _
winter. In this report is a table with the cap-
. tion: -The following table will exhibit the
number of bank* with,the amount of capital'
and circuhitionm etfohStfe W Territory’.”
Fipm {htf'AblfeSUk^aus fUtltheFAIlNtw .
[landHtitea have an actual circulation
lcial report of the Comptroller ot dea<
T#e Jurd.n or^aXatlon akd its Remedy.
1 Gem. Thomas Ewxso, Jjr.» m addressing.a
'^rge Democratic meeting at Zancsx*illc, Ohio, ■
made the following comments upon the,suta,
ject itatefi above: u u.,
Y< u can’t see exactly wlieVi? the tax is; but,
if yc u take any one article o£ your' clottfiri^,'
saKsisiassSWSIS!?:.
pie; weighs on them like an oppressive nf-
osphere. You can’t tell ettictly what part
Ky )u is most rifflfeefcd by*, but the whole
is depressed^ 1 aS ttic ’fixes lire insidiously le
vied, so that they fall on th#masses without
thei ever seeing the tax-fritherer, 'and the
irly and* have to struggle
- J? 111 "' “inhere
is a way-side inn in England knoxyji a^ ‘tl^e
“Six Alls.” On the centre, of the sigh lire’
pair ted the letters ,“A. L, L.” A,minister
stan Is on one- ride pointing: to the letters and
sayE “I pray for all.” A lifivyer above him
poii ts to the letters and says, “I pleadforall.”
A c octor upon the other riile points to the
is and'sars, : ‘‘I^fire all.” (Bather amex-
■vhgant Rfatetaent, by,the way.) Above the
or, tat. soldier, .points to the letfei^^d
\S, • “I “fight for^nllii’. Above all
Sovereign Majesty of England, p<iintiug^to
the Setters and saying, ‘ I role nil,” and un
derneath, bearing on liis shmildersthe weight
of the whole sign, stoop-shouldered -irithjthe
burden, is the laborer pomtipgLtipI'saynia;
“I pay for alL” [LjiughterJ Th'at is a s6P
^a- 'fP 11 if 1 England; and oue-tenth of the
ana’ jfcjmlation afe,ji»aper^ Arid so the masses
of he people of tins country aiv.being burr.
dei ed with enormous loads tof debt levied in
the form of taxes oat of sight. He feel*
them, but he doesn’t see them:- ‘ He is but-
,300,629..
■rrt au
W.f
The six great Northwestern States—Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois, Michigan,, Wisconsin and
; Io(va—have an actual circulatibu of $18,-
554,335. • s r > *j , I - "
The: six igKBti cotton, tobacco and Alhe
States of theGouth—-North and South Caro-
Missisrippi and Ar-
i that the
Camijl^reports ^111 be.mailedto-morro^,. Ma-
ny parties here claim there has been juggling. *—
' ; •i« i “ > hi. : . ....
! -MAV -Ti" fiMSOTl »«W8. dl ci -a , , . tthij
S.VN Fkancisco, October C.—This city has
iHSJj' 000 ! in^ohl^to the earthquake^
October 6.—Capt, ,\Yil^iam Don-
;ed with killing a neg. ro^ibe I
mblic several months ago, wa
sum of $10,000. .
St, Loots,
aid ,on, charged
jsfeamer ' Eepublic several months ago,
bii/.ed in Hie-sum of $10,000.
Mf.mphii
of anus liaVe
Bock, supposed todtai negroes.; .So,i
boat would .take them as freight to'
Bock on any terms.
[Telegraphic Corre3pond<W»30tto|Cyomclc &
Letter from Atlanta.
u
. From this it appears that the National
.„ - , , , jj.q.1 Blink circulation in the six’ New England
Atlanta, October 5.—The Senate rebwv^ States is at the fate of $29 80 tor each wo-
deied the resolution to adjourn Thursday.;.,
’ FROM
ATLANTA.
Atlanta, October C.—The House commit-
» today examined into the eligibility ofi
Beard, Belcher and Davis, and reported that
they, after a full investigation, found Beard
io have in his veins-Tatore ' than ontw'igl^h
:-gro blood. The report was adopted,
Thereupon a resolution was' offered that
Beard be declared ineligible to a seat, whiShr
»asadopted. t ■ .'"re
A resolution was offered to adjourn to_ re
semble at Milledgeville and defeated. A
till to incorporate a Land and Immigration
V
Company, was passed.
After the passing of bills of local interest
only, the General Assembly adjourned sine <
die.
The Speaker of the House said: “We met
strangers personally, but politically our
feelings are fully embittered by the extraor
dinary teachings of those who should haye
kntwn better. We separate to-day almost as
one people in sentiment and common interest..
Listen not to teachings of political slanderers. 1
This is our Government, let us correct the
evils that may exist by-appealing to intelli
gence and-the wisdom of the nation, not to
•lie passions of a mob. Lot our motto ‘he
Wisdom. Justice, Moderation, and all will Be
veil. The Assembly will re-assemble in
January; the members separate with fraternal
feelings towards each other.”
Gen. Meade reviewed the garrison of this
city to-day, comprising eleven companies of
inlantry, several of cavalry and two of artil
lery. “ J * if
From Virginia.
Richmond, October 6.—To-day as forty ne-
Po penitentiary convicts, hired ont to work
on the Chesapeake and Ohio Bailroad,
going on the' Central BaUroad to Covington,
they overpowered the guard four miles -beyond
Gordansville, and twenty-four leaped off
T hfle the train was going at full speed. Two
vtre instantly killed by the leap and three
mortally wounded. The rest of those who
ittped off escaped. r , ; , J
I. K. Orattofa, the ofldcial attorney, 1 to-day
£nve an opinion to the City Council that tl ie
city smali notes issued during tW ' vrar,
«monnting to a quarter o£ a million dollars,
cannot be paid while the Alexandria Constitu
tion is in force, as it forbids paying 9fjy ,^ebt
incurred to carry on the war.
John Quincy Adams, of Massachusetts ■hr-
tived here to-day on his way to Georgia.
— k t
From Alabama.
Montgomeby, Oct. 6.—The Governors has
aigned the Begistration bill passed by the Leg
islature. Both Houses have passed bills
providing for an election. The Senate bi|l
®akes it a misdemeanor for any, person to
‘•fialleuge a voter, punishable by fine aud im
prisonment. The Probate Judge of each
county is to designate any number of voting
Places be desires. Th# is,<|one to tarn all
the voting at the Court Hnuse. The’ Demo-
crats denounce the Begistration and Election
lolls as frauds. It took five days last Februa-
T, by General Meade’s order, "for the negfoes
lo vote at the Court Houses.
October 6.—^Municipal
electii
Both Houses will undoubtedly adjourn at
twelve M. tounpn'ow (Thursday) or take - .'it'
, lrotb Houses passod as bifii 10 pcobibil- the
salts of liquor during lelfctfou days.
; r l he IJouhc huishyd all, the Senate bills at
noon to-day and was - feadfy' 1 to ‘ adjouiftf ‘Itinf
die. Thu Senate has two hundred House bills
yet to act on.
The House' Committee, on the cases of
Beard, Belcher and. Davis, rqport that Beard,
of Kichmond confityt, biifs*. jiqr e than one-
oighth negio blood in his veius. In accord
ance with the report of tha Committee, Ain.
Gober offered a resolution 'declaring Beard
ineligible, which was' adqjited, almost unani
mously, and bis seat wiisi theiefotft (leclaied
vacant. ' ' ■
[Note.—Our talented and distinguished
entitled to the-seat in the Legishytureinade.
Vjiimnt by the expulsion of Beard. ~e-fkfS ft 2
Both Houses - are remarkably concilia
tory, readily acquiescing in bills and aineud-
m itS certamfy knl^ln t^A AXfisMulome
to Georgia as soonos the Legislature adjoiumst.
The Treasurer has given out that he (mil,
pay members to-morrow if they adjourn. If
the Legislature does not adjourn, members
are not to be paid'uiitil it does. This rooks
hke^^’fo fti^an^^jjjurn-
m Both Hotmedba^ IfeW- .‘f
bonds to pay the interest on the Jahip}*£
toal circulation of two •- ought to pay ^onlj’ a lair proportion, about
nncl fiftir oiv IliAivonwrl A. I . “ rl. . C 11. j c 11 /. «
lion two hundred and fifty-six thousand
( hundred and twenty-five dollars, ($2,-
i,125.)V ‘' V-
Lite population of the six New England
.tea.-by the census of J.860, was three mil
lion one hundred and thirty-five thousand
two’ 1 hundred, aiid 1 eighty-three (3,135,283).
the six Northwestem SUtefe, &everi million
six Southern States, four million nine hun-
jfred and fortyJfour, thousarifl five hundred j
*a id seventy-two (4,944,572).
The 1 eighteen States increase in population
ii i very different ratios, the increase in the
A r est and South bein'; much greater than in
Total....
19,000,000
f l“ tlf^ofth&Stcr,; i
! .-a
six ti
to tli
two I
Sout
of.tffekNatioUfti iiant sysl
jland SI
uch money per head as it gives
" " - pfidjrteqsevfp^y-
times as much as if gives to the six great
onthem States. Or, if you take the number
of voters as the basis of comparison, you find
Chat it gives to each New England voter $180,
to each Northern voter Jibout $29, and to
the amount of your bank cireulatioji your
selves, according to. your own necessities; but
ow, if you need more money than you have,
another drain ii* addition tt^ose I have be
fore mentioned.
uuu to
[From
op»:
State debt.
The bill granting a charter ti
from Athens to Clayton', bai
HourissLt-Vx ' wif/.D ! i-
’ The House passed complimentary resolu-
pers and Ainlioiud HepuMu:o.n mr"Tree papers,
furnished during the. session, Also, a j com
plimentary vote to the olficers, . j .
The House presented'Osliii with 'a watch.
The Senate meets to-night.. X.
o the
h passed both
ibd, C^nn., October 6.—^Municipal
occrirred thrcmghoTib this State to-
The Democrats gain largely, Tli^ir
av: _ .: ■— irrrrv 4
in this city isYSOi aDemocajvticgainJ ^^ipraeffee
EiiLBOADS IN Georgia.—From a-long rail-
by a correspondent from Atlanta, we make
the following extract: a- W <£ ;J[
I suppose that there can be no doubt nnw
that the Air-line Boad connecting this city
and Charlotte, North Carolina, and running'
in a straight line through the entire breadth!
tirelv of Northern capitalits who are said to
be ready to furnish the money now that; the?
(itate has agreed to,. d^d U .belong Wd.
The Northeastern Bailroad, too, connecting
Athens and Clayton, Babun county, and thus
i ohiinc? the Georgia Bailroad (from Augusta
to Atfanta) with' thefTeiifieesde roads, and
running in almost a straight lino through'
ClOrke, Jacksofi, Banks, - Habershqft}. andBaJ
bun ccrantieg,' vrili. Bp -
pushed to completion. The Georgia Hailroad
and Bankifik company are largely interested
in it, and will oyijj|hey<i^when finished.
Difficulty at Jn AtaoN tnxa-r-A smtons
difficulty occurred uear that place ouMWay
hist, in which two geriUemW were,- badly
woimded. It seems that E. W. Crockef, Esq.,
bad purchased a cotton gin of Mr. ^' Wim
berly aml called to remove it This wairob-
the right arm. Crocker fell, Dur ldfte agam
afrd’fired a pistol qt Bovnton. which t'tokef-
fect in jiis oac]i. The wound is consiairefi
verv dangerous,'if' not fatal!' We have ndt
{h^ furggr.^journa^.af-Mfessenger, • r
A company of tanners attacked a house on
the comer of Sixteenth and 0 Fallon streets,
St. Louis, «*“«■
and firing shofi The CHffiBany was
Domrianled by Peter Daily, clerk ofi tfie
Criminal Court.’ Brophy, the man who lived
in the house, is a Democrat He fifed seveipL
shots at the company, hut uu Berson was
killed. The immediate canes -pi &«
was that scrine one in the vieinity hurrahed
for Seymour and Blair.
[From the BaTUmorFGizatte.] ^ ' i
Tlie Octolier Electlou* in Peunaylvaiila
and Indiana.
i Elections Msrtp^ediejdrui Ohio, Pennsyl-
{vania and frmiaia n^wh l^stgnt. These
| elections are regarded as being especially im
portant, not only because they may foreshadow’
! the result of the Presidential contest, but
j y^^^^^^^^^^te^^^^^mterially to-decide
arty is not merely hope
ful but confident. The people of Pennsyl
vania, we learn, attach little importance to
the votes of the NewrEnglfthd States. They
argue that the struggle how going on is
“ on the part of the West-
cording ui the aavtOT
there, the Democratic par
The
defied with .taxes until it presses aud weighs
'"•n dowii, so pajs out of his living,
of that which is necessary each day for
support, while the rich man pays but lit-
niore, and that out of hie,superabundance,
ow, fellpvtcitii5eus,. x toat (s. pot. right. .
e are the holders of bonds, who haye ope-
;h of the property ( oi this^country—a pro-
l -’ most deeply mferes(ed'iii the preserva-
of the Govcmmeut—which is all lost if
Government ‘ is destroyed. They are
illy exempt from these pnormous national
dens, with, the single exception of a tax of
iut two and a half mills on the doUat.
t is not right. The masses ofi .the people,
this country,- the whole country, ought to
' according to. their property the national
frdens, and the men who have no property
one-ninth of the cost of the Government.
. The Democratic party .proposed to remedy
that. Tho ltadical party says that it-is all
right now. Th^y Wy that it is right to tax
.tea and coffeo.gfrd uugar'J$72,000,000 a year,
wpile inedines pay $24,000,000.' Fellow-
citizens, if the people. of this country—the
masses of the peoglp—assist the Badical party
ifi subjecting tbe“Soutbem i pcople to the riile "
of the negroes, so as to give that party cou-
“t)1 of the 1- electors of. ffitcen States of. this
uion, then, with the Newj England States in
their bands, the masses of the white people
of this country’ xvill ha\ r e joractically lost'iiay 11
share in its gqivprnuient, Tlieu, in prac-” ®
tjcal effect, tho Badicals of New Eng-
laud will rule the United States. Then,
ito matter how galling- tlie yoke to the
meat mass of the laborers of the countiy,
giey can pever shake it 6lf. If they help the
”” dicals to fasten the chains upon the ankles,
the Southern whites, 4<will be too late for
eiu to complain if t.U|> Kadiqals turnaround
id, with the aid of .the lamed capitalists,
iut the other end of the chain, around’ the
et of the Northern whites. Yofr .will be tied
dp. You will be just where the great mass
Of the white people of. Missouri are ,to-day,
Where one-fourth of the qjeople rule ; where,
the great nfitss’of the people of Tennessee
are, where one-seventh ?bf the people rule.
How will yon get rid of it ? You cannot get
rid of it. You’u'ever can restore your Gov*-'
eminent. It will he goup. You will never'
have the power unless yon do it tlirougli the
throes and blood of.ievolntiou.
' It is all very fine for our Badical jialiiots to
come and apologize for trampliug on the
Constitution by saying, “Oh ! we - only do it
to rebels." I tol[ you, fellow-citizens, there,
jaever was a truer word spoken tliau'tbat of;
Jefferson, "Eternal vigilance is the price of
liberty.” AYc.ijn\st check the usurpation by
Congress as to any jVniion of the pcoplo'.of' -
the Bepnblic. AVe must not seek to smiject
to a galling despotism the six millions of
.white people of the .South in violation of the
Constitution of the United States, and of all
that we held and avowed sacred -during the
war; aud if we do it, and put the control of
1 ox’er one-third of-, the electoral votes of this
i nation in the hands-of. the Badical party by ,
doing it, xve will have no one bnt ourselves ■
! to blaiue for the dishonor, and the shame,
i and the misery to the, masses o{ the people -
: that w ill follow from the hard rule of the
i moneyed aristoefney,- xvhich will thenceforth
' rule (lie land by purse ahd sword.
’ 1 : . • • • -———
How a Negro Magistrate Administers
j.—A terrible qc'-
curTencerinPougkeeprie,
ave natimdly
sive. That the feeling against New Eng
land is an important element in this con-
£. I !S2fliW..W , S8rS
Jirought trouble upon the poufitry. - Tl^e right
of secession:from the Union was. first Bt®-
ously promulgated ithere, .audit wastq the
aggretSlttik of - ftat seefibn Oiftt the nhfeAsion
of the South wa-s attributable. The interests
of all the States have been always sacrificed
to pervert to ignoble enTefWjffiit naa Deen the
sole purpose of tfi'e war against the South.
~ ■ —— throughj
political
Seeing aft
the liegrh' aft
S awar f in S.ta^ „
ad ever heeq exc(uo
States promptly seized it.
and solely
“ashinoton, October 6.—Partial returns
hwHcate: 5,000 Democratic majoritj-in Con-
fiecticut,
edor empty) in?he direction of any persl*
ed or empty)
nniftHH you juteua to kill*
poveriahed condition,
in a state of anxiety. „—, .
ffie^ana
arrogance Of ‘ New F.UglMliii • ffihis ; i» aiuelf
ufg^rtiic^ ( we Imcw,
tq much doubt fttwut tbs success of the
debt °?ueumK^*1by 1^. xiaaicai pa
negro suffrage policy which lit has adopi
set up anywhere afid fcYMywiW8 at wtown
^eqsute,^! ^rrftHl(.W>4an4««ffl«ert»gh
incite t«v,
trol the Goveriiment any longer, if, in «
tion to these substantial grounds of 003
plaint against hthd party the peo]
cherish a deteripinfifiqn wf
aaffls'Sf!
.ont.t-,, -n^UigaiM b, ... ....
ipor% than p. phrase—upon a gran4 and fe^>-
rious triumph in^Peimsyiw
ehtstatem^
nearly/o’ur mil
Justice.
A littloincident of the result of ..Radical-
rule has just be£n related tq us. ’ It occurred
in our sigtgr fitQte, Louisiana which, iq, Ils
late election, elected*!! number of negroes to
office. In tlie parish of Madison, among
others, a negro was elected justice of the
peace. He xvas duly installed, and for months-
past has been playing magistrate. In hjs
neighborhood live a very worthy • old negro,
named Billy ^fipugh., Billy owTiedtwo mules,
and Inst year^-to enable him to plant, he gave
a hill of sale of the mules to Colonel B., who
snpplied him with a stipulated amount of
supplies. Billy, with ewery one engaged in
S ’ ' g last year, met with a ,; totiil ; failure.
1 avenues on
White Slavery in New Egland—A
j ’ ' ’ 1 ■ Picture.
'A corresrftipdcnt of the' Newark
xvntos to that paper from Norwich (Conn.)
as follows:' ' ' y L, ~ ■■■l
In and around Norwich are numerous cot
ton and woolen miHs which give employment
.,io some six dr eight thousand: people. I said
employment. It is a fingering doith. Old wo
men; yqniig women anu little girls rise in -the
morning^before' the twinkling stara-retire,
prepare thdfriselves ft scanty- meal and go to
those “fniiihs,” misname. 1 ■“’mills;” at 44
Ofildck, work tilbl^l o’clock, rest till 1, then
resume the torture and suffer till 6, all for the
, mk^rabte'jWttarice of'from S3 ti>'$5 and $6
per week—a living death from the cradle to
the (pave.' - ' -l--myl i . .
■ Let us nfrioll for a few moments through
thte tapper friri ‘of the city, through Broadway
and!Main street, and view the palatiaLLreti-
dcncc-s that line those- beautiful a
r side-for;
l whose arcKitec'tuial skill carves placds
marble, and blesi'the Giver
good who gave the blooming flowers
d leafy trees to beaatiiy and. adom the
h man,’s garden and’'purify the air With
bit'sweet'perfumes. Let us "look at all
and compute their cost, if possible; and.
inquire aS to .where the mafaey came from
■y for all this, hixurv.
onitny left,.up Broadway a
distance,.-a magnificent private resi-
built of brown stoiie aud marble,
h no sdne man would say cost less than
$400,000 .to finish anil furnish and lay out the
fitfully shaded walks lined, with rare and
flowers. Yet a lew year-ago the owner
this xvas comparativ.eljt a poor man and
in the humbler xvalksof life. But during tlie
war he became eitliejj ah oxyjmr or a stock
holder 'in one of those Jarge fitotories just
belpw the hill, and.' his enormous wealth is
-nbtjthe result of the legitimate profits of those
mils, but of robbaies committed upon the
helpless xvorkers—women and children—who
bury themselves in them. They make no
prdfit upon the capital invested on account pf
competition, but they force the profit from the
wages of fihe poor operatives. Oh ! look at
thq poor, emaciated creatures in the dim
twilight,; as they wearily. .wend their way
homeward, and see stamped the brand of
Hopeless,, abject slavery, and' think of the,
happy, cheerful colored slave of a few years
agO. No smile comes np from the hearths of
these poor people, to gladden the. hearts of
their little ones, but the gloom of the fixing
fomb.injiiiich they, toil overshadows their
lix'es. The.,men twe slaves to - the Badical
owners too. When one was asked to take
out his naturalization papers,, he said - he
“c are not do it g that his foreman was xvatch- ,
in ' him and all.the other x’oters in the mills;
(hat he preferred to remton disfranchised thsin
be compelled to vote the Badical ticket”
Such is the case wfrh hundreds in this city,
and this is the secret .of the political complex
ion of Nprwicfr.
1 Nowlpok doxx'nin the valley, at the cot
tages of'those poor laborers, then - at the mil-
lionuircs on our Broadway aud Main, aveunes
nid xvptch them as rime passes by and ri6te
lie changes. The rich man groxvs richer ahd
The pqpr man poorer. The miirble palace re-
ceivys,additional improvements and the poor
man's, cpttage is tumbling about his head.
The rich man rides in his carriage and fores
sumptuously every day,' and at last dies on
his bet) .of ease and is buried in the cemetery
among towering marble monuments, while
,y,.
xust
tmxvept, utdionored. and unsxtng. All this is
the fruit of Nexv England fanaticism—Badical
rule—which destroyed it slax’eholding aristoc-
racy ,in order to' bund up : a Badical boridhold-
inrf aristocracy. They have riveted the chains
of the freed African upon the xxTists of the
, laboring whites of Nexv England. How long
, wilj(this, last ? The children ofyIsrael never
lbnged for tlie promised lah2'ihore'eartiestly
than do th&se ’pbor’ people of- New England,
yet they know not how to deliver themselves;
but many of. them loyk to the Middle, West
ern and Southern States to free them by the
election of .Seymour aiid Blair. iu Noveiuber,
when,the xx’ild shout of yictory will ring loud- ’
est in this downtrodden sectioii. Up and
at them, and intike them flee from the wrath
to come; then “Let - us have peace.” -
orobr’ErxStm'tfisaraa
knowjngjWW ta«e pe^ecUtolioneyb ffieC
onel permitted hun To use the mules
making a crop thirty ear. A few-
our colored -Soli
thepralpsm _
mules were sol
tint
e Col
in
ion of n. magistrate nttdcS^
[y’s hands, and "thfe
Col. B. being apprised of
the Usual legal
thfe'-Sbonv dis-
■pcnsex .af justicQ that he arrested Billy,
chained him for two days and nights in front
of his door to a.tree; and refused to give him !
for that period- .either , food t .(5
finally released his pri a 0ner on condition that,
Biilypay him txyefity-flve dollars in cash.
This was readilHpdrforinfed^hen the prisoner
of cotton, to he paid.’
th^;' it will
was in the collection of the
,, „„ , No USy - for mfliterj-
c'oni missions xyhere this negro magistrate
rules.— Hcksburg Herald.
~ T
Forty Acres and Wo Male,
We don’t krtow Btext-uian^ hegroes have re-
ceived from thei’/paftyiprog?¥a% aa4 great
moral ideas,” the promised forty acres oip(nd
-^wa^-jriisg&a
,9 ti.i .
' their oldnuLstero, xriththe title deeds,
ty acres of good land near that towp- WtaU
done for Marion; that ia the ^aJ"to enable
with the miserable wretches xylio have
far led them on'toxvard ruin, and if the
of the Sooth would ’take a little troubl
let them understand, that we intend to
by•'those whoSadfbyhs, and to let th,
who go with onrienemies get their bread
batter tot the parte they go
diange-in their views and their votes,
ly requires that the citizens of the South,,
whom the.negroes.are entirely dependent.:
food, clothing and shelter, shall calmly
- firmly resolve'liotto outfit employ those wi
are detertnnreS'Wg6 1 wf®tlie sci
tWs, men NJBIS txAthj **8 settle in yota
ffiindB yhetheif ^in prefer,to' be ruled as.
are or to ma£e-i» sniaffr .tiaerifi^ tq sr
jmnr-liberty.—Stharieston iJBratry,
Miwourl—A Bloody Registration DilH-
v ii It y at Martinsbnrg.
■St: Loots,-Oct. 2-—The Democrat lma. infor
mation that a difficulty in regard to registra
tion occurred at M^iifrsbifrg^ Audrain county
in North Missouri, whien Vesiifred in the
killing of three men and the wonnding of
>Iat^e$'Galloxvay, -the Begister of that' place.
The .following are the particulars, as fiir as
can fre ascertained, of the shooting which
took, .place on Wendeaday last, while the
Board of, Begistration xx - as in session: A re-
turrant Rebel soldier named Sam Fletcher
handed a letter to a Union, man named Sued,
ordering lifrn to. leax;e toxx-n in fifteen minutes.
Reed showetl the letter to the. registering offi-
jeer, xxho, to prertadfr ait■ outbreak,,xvhich
; seemed imminent, ordered the arrest- of-
Fletcher, bnt when the Constable attempted
! to serve-' the warrant Fletcher refused to be
, arrested, and draxring a revolver called upon
hi» friends for assistance. Mr. Galloway, one
of the registering officers, ordered the Con
stable and men summoned to. bis aid to dis
arm Fletcher.
A brother af Fletcher’s then interfered and
drew; u revolver upon Galloxvay, but when
just in the act of firing, Galloway shot him
dead. A man named Marshall then shot Gal
loway, xyonndiug him aud received a ball in
his head in return. In the mean tierfe the
tiheriff had interiered to prevent Flejcher
from using his pistol. When the firing began
he ran axi’ajp'Fletcher theta ran a short dis
tance and fired at the officer, who returned
the fire, giving him. a mortal xvound, from
'■feiobftteUlied.iii » short time. -1.,
Quite a number of shots were then fired at
the officers by persons concealed in buildings,
and by nnknoxvn parties in the crowd. The
‘registering officers, constables ■ and posse sur
rendered themselves and gave bonds to ap
pear at the next term of the court. Both
Fletcher and Marshall were returned Rebel
soldiers, aiid desperate characters. The af
fair created' great 'excitement, and yesterday
about fortX ex-Befrels collected near Martins-
burg for the purpose of taking vengeance
Upon the registering officers, btit the citizens
to theffi - support, and have thus far
further lav
(any I
r lawlessness.
Not Taxed.—We heard ti citizen of Bich-
moiid laughingly remark yesterday that'whpe
he is so poor that he elm only raise stamps to
buy a peck of meal at a time, there Is some
consolation in knotting that' he has ni
to tax, and hence pays no taxes. He seemi
to forget tfiftt the com from which his peck
of meal is ground was grown on taxed land,
plowed by a taxed plow, drawn by taxed
horses hitched with taxed Rears. Ityas hoed
with a taxed hoe, cultivated' xvith taxed. - im
plements, gathered with a taxed wagon, drawn
with taxed horses; thrown into a taxed crib,
shelled cm a foxed machine, measured in a
foxed measure, taken iff a taxed sack and
ground at a foxed mill, sieved with a taxed
sieve, mixed in a foxed pan, stiired xvith a
foxed spoon, salted with taxed salt, put into a
taxed, bake-pan, baked in a taxed stove, laid
out on a taxed plate, cut with a taxed knife,
w ft****
O. Hndson
the scene of Bluebeard’s dead room was
shown ^-aix pretty heads all bloody,
ed-along the wall, the bodies of course
behind the canvas. As" the cir
one of the heads was observed to smile. It
was afterwards ascertained that some one
had stolen behind the. scenes and kissed the
hand of oan of the wives.
ot* Schedule.
NO CHANGE OK CARS BETWEEN SA
VANNAH, AUGUSTA, MONT
GOMERY, ALA
TRANSPORTATION OFFICE CENTRAL B. R,
Savannah, August 14,1868.
AAN ANT) AFTER SUNDAY, 16TH INST., .PAS-
V / senger Trains ou the Georgia Central Bnilrouft
will run as follows :
is UP DAY TRAIN.
.1. leaxe. Aonxvx.
HaVsimah ,...18:00 A. II.
Macon I......JAM P. U.
Augusta 5:S8 P. M.
X'1ll.-- !.,. v,H.. 8:58 P. M.
EatJoton 11:00 P. M.
Connecting with trains that leave Aufiuata,. S:li fy >1-
DO#N DAY TRAIN. - -
Macon.......:: ii.,7:00 .
SaYsnnah..-;i ...„ ...6:30 P. M.
Connecting with traintbat teaxes Augusta. .8:43. A. M.
! * ITP NIGHT TRAIN.*1 -^ ! > .
Savaunah. *........ 1......7:20 Pi M.
Maoon...jj..l 6755 A. M.
AObidHti - - 3:13 A. M.
Oontiectiiig witli train that leaves Augusta. .93SP. M.
1 ; DOWN NIGHT TRxMN.
Macon 6:25 P. M.
Savannah..! ...5:10'A. M.
Augusta...' .3:13 A. M.
Millegeville u 4 :80 P. M.
£atonton... 2:40 P. tf.
Connecting with train that leaves Augusta. .9:33 P. M.
A. M. trains from Havannah and Augusta, and P. U.
train from Macon connect with miledgeviUe train
at Gordon daily,.Sundays excepted.
. P. M. train from, Savannah connects with through
mail train on South Carolina Bailroad, and P. M. train
from Savannah and Augusta with trains
Western and Muscogee
attg 14-tf
Act’g
it WM. ROGERS,
Masier of Transportation.
Notice to Railroad
ContractorsI
OFFICE- SOUTH GA. AND FLA. Rj R. CO., I
, Thomasyulle, Ga., September 13, 1863. |
X> ESOLVED, THAT THE PRESIDENT BE AND
ti. he is hereby authorized to receive bids for
contracts for the construction of the. South Georgia
. and Florida Railroad, until the 20th of October next,
by Sections or otherwise, for a part or the whole, - and
that the Board at the time will accept Or reject the
bids.- 1 -
* The above is a true extract of the minutes.
Ii P. S. BOWER, Sec’y and Treas.
ENG'RS OFFICE SOUTH GA. AND TLA. R. R.,)
Thomasville. Ga., September 19,1863. >
In accordance with the. above resolution and in
struction of the President of the Company^‘Sealed
Proposals will be received at this office until Octbbcri
20th, 1868, for the Clearing, Grubbing, Grading, Bridg
ing and Superstructure ou the fifty-seven miles Of the
South Georgia and Florida Railroad, extending from
Thomasville via Camilla to Albany.
The proposals are invited to be made on 6ne or more
sections of three miles each or the whole.
: Maps, Profiles, Plans and Specifications may be seen
at this office after October 5th.
The entire Stock of tho South Georgia and Florida
Railroad Company is, ny agreement with the Atlantic
and Gulf Railroad, convertible into the Guaranteed 7
per cent stock of the Atlantic and Golf Railroad Com
pany. Bids will be received for Contracts. ,1
1st: Payable in said Guaranteed Stock at par value.
2d. Payable one-fourth cash and three-fourths in
Guaranteed Stock at par.
3d. Payable one-third cash and two-thirds in Guaran
teed Stock at par. ■
4th. One-half cash and one-half in Guaranteed 7 per
cent Stock at par value.
Those bidding for contracts who take the largeet
portion in Guaranteed 7 per cent Stock will be pre
ferred if terms are reasonable.
Tlie Company retains the right to reject any or all of
the proposals which they no invite.
All proposals will be directed to R. H. Hardaway,
President South Georgia aud Florida Railroad, Thomss-
ville, Georgia, and the envelope endorsed on one corner
*‘proP OB M*”
J. A. MAXWELL,
sept2S-law4 Chief Engineer.
Dissolution of Co-Partnership.
FTIHE FIRM OF JOHNSTON & DeLEON is this
1 day dissolved by mutual consent. Either partner
will sign in liquidation. O. F. JOHNSTON,
ocl-lw . P. M. Df.LEON.
i\ M. DeLEOISr,
GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT,
‘\lf7TLL continue business at No. 13 Stoddard's.
▼ V Range.
room was
suspend
ing© being
descended
' Ope of the petils moidards of Paris recently
lost every sou at tlie jeu (Tenfer, borrowed a
smaU sum of his sister and won it Ml-back
again with joi twidrft mwgita- To provide
Againrtreceidenfo &e then paul all_ his hptel,
- tailor and shoemaker bills and made arrange
ments to be’fed; clothed and shod for-ton
years. Npxv hp ten play without fear of (jes-
titution.
Liberal adYwnces made on consignments/ ocl-lw
CO-PARTNERSHIP NOTICE!
YSrU, THE UNDERSIGNED, have this day formed
V V , co-partnership For the transaction of a GEN-
the Him
Savannah. October 1,18G8.
B. CHRISTIAN,
F. JOHNSTON. ^
CHRISTIAN & JOHNSTON,
General Conuniwiou Mercbants,
BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA1
CtFEflAI, ATTENTIDN given to lie sale of Cotton,
IO Flonr, Grain, Bacon and Mcrfchandiso generally.
Advances made on consignments to us or our friends
in Liverpool, New Fork and Baltimore. ocl-lm
D. A. O’BTHSSL
i'i* r- D^*.«0€ianp.
0’Bti^]^ & riOLi/AM),
attorneys
i A
— AMD —
* * ' i i
COUNSJELLOliS AT LAW.
A NEBSHU* for tha EBACTICE OF. LAW, IN ALL
ITS BRANCHES. They wUl attond\6etmt info*
United State, Court, in Florida.
corn
Store.
MSf Office in the second story taf Sorrri', 1
rn»r of BuU street and Bay tanrMitnr
D. I-. HOLLAND.
S. PAGE EDMANDS.
JOHN HI
EDMANDS, GARDNER & CO.,
genkbal
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
Savannah, Ga,
T ibeRal adyancis MADE ON CONSIGNMENTS
I l ip oar frienda in Sew rort, Boston and LtverpooL
Messrs. Dabney. Morgan & Co., New York; Juris
Slade, Eto^^rYork*Bon.-J. WRey^^ Edmsnds,Bun
vaunah. . 6cp2S—tf
Frank L. Guk. Geo. C. Peabce. Aixra G. Bam.
GUE, FEAR€E & Co.,
Cotton atod Provision
MERCHANTS,
NO. 79 BAT STREET.* SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
i [octi-lmj , _ ;
JOHJSf OLIVEB,
dr DTAUat IN
Sashes, Blinds and
Doors,
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS,
Pointer’s and Glazier’s Tools,
i Mixed Eaints
OF ALL COLORS AND SHADES.
HOUSE AHD SIGN PAINTING, GLAZ-
1 ING, Ac.;
No. 6 Whitaker St., Corner or Bay Lane.
Jys—iy '' ■ ■
CHOIS. MUXCFHV.
rWiB. ^||»»
Murphy & Clark,
House, Sign, Ship and Steam
boat Painters.
Gilding, Groining, Marbling, ttUling,
And Paper-Hanging,.
WTrE ABE PREPARED TO SELL. AT WH0LE-
T V sale and retail. Paints, Oil, Glass, Potty, and
Varnishes, Mixed Paints, Brushes of every descrip
tion, Machinery and Hameaa OU, Axle Grease, etc.
77 Bryan St., between Bull and Drayton,
mb!*—ly SAVANNAH. GA.
W. F MAY,
(SUCCESSOR TO W. H. MAT,)
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
Saddlery, Harness, &e.,
W* JUST RECEIVED A NEW STOCK OF
OAK and HEMLOCK, (tanned)
_ SOLE LEATH F\tij
CALF and LINING SKINS,
and a general assortment of SHOE TOOL5T. Price*
reasonable; satisfaction guaranteed. Orders for
RUBBER and LEATHER BELTING and PACKING
filled promptly. jan24
THOS. PETEBS. O. M. U'COKMCO.
JL n. SSS1XT.
R. H. HENLEY & OO.,
COTTON BUYERS
—AND—
General Com’sn Merchants,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Office-comer Bay and Lincoln street,, op stairs,
over W, H. Stark A Co'a. apiMB 1
E. W. DRUMMOND, G. C. DRUMMOND.
Of the late firm of L. J. Gnilmartin A Co.
E. W. DRUMMOND & BRO.,
GENERAL SHIPPING
John XV. XValexb,
Anguma, Ga. •
ftrOBOE A. AIXEN,
-Paducah, Ky.
John F. TReraxEN,
Notice of Co-Pairtnersliip.
W E HAVE THIS DAY ASSOCIATED OURSELVES
together under the style of
WALKER, ALUS?? & TREUTLEN,
Factors,"
Commission Merchants,
—AND— '• '
Shipping Agents
in this city, and would solicit from' our friends and
the public generally, CONSIGNMENTS OF COTTON,
GRAIN, and produce of every description.
Jd^Especial attention will be given to orders for
BAGGING, ROPE,;ftc.
When desired, will make the usual Advakcss
WALKER, ALLEN A TREUTLEN,
Wg21-2m Office No. 8 Drayton street.
AN,
I JAS. B. PARRAMOBE,
Notice of. Co-Partnerslilp.
YTTEHAVT THIS DAY ASSOCIATED OURSELVES
V V together und
together under the firm name of
Josepb Finegan &
Co.,
AS
COTTON FACTORS
AND
Commission Merchants,
in this city, and wohld solicit from oar friends and
—'- — ‘—* *- /,/vr TON f
the public gcneraRv, consign manta of COTTO:
GRAIN and PRODUCE of every deacripttra.
LIBERAL ADVANCES made on all consignments to
onraetves or to onr corrsspotideutB in New York and
LiverpooL JOSEPH TTNEGAN & CO.
jg^Office, Jones’s Upper Block. Bay street, Satan-
R. P. SPENCER.
Formerly of Colmnbns, Ga
SPENCER & OLIVE]
COTTON FACTORS, *
J.'BERRIEN OLIVER,
Late of Tallahassee, Ila.
OLIVER,
(Agents,
BLOCK, 8A-
Commission Merchants, and
chasing and Forxru ”
No. 183 BAY STREET, HO:
VANN AM,
JriONaiQNMENTS OF COTTON, TOBACCO, RICE,
V WOOL, HltiES, etc., soheited, upon xrhich'lihcral
advances xvill bo made when, required.
ter B. O. BOX 182. sep28—Uwlm* -
Plans and Estimates
A BE Solicited for BUILDING A FOOT
across each of the slips at the toot of
and Drayton streets.
45 feet in'tho clear.
wide and of sustaining a weight of one hun-
died pounds per square toot,
, u t . JOHN B. HOGG.
se^l 8 ' tr ^ City Surveyor,
Commission Merchants,
154 HAY STREET,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
i anl—tf
WM. J. LAWTON. B. A. HART, J. G. GAT-NETT.
LAWTON, HART & CO,
FACTORS ,
- ’ 1‘ ■- —£NI>— -*•
Commission Merchants,
NO. 4 HARRIS’ BLOCK,
BAIT STREET, SAVANNAS, GEORGU.
aug!8-3mo
S’. W. CORNWELL,
J DEALER IN
HARDWARE, DUTLEEY, AGBICULXU-
BAli IMPLEMENTS, AXES, HOES,
NAIIA TRACES, Ac.
Also, Agent for MCARTHUR’S COTTON GIN9L
No. 151 Broughton street, Savannah, Ga.
•eytlAim
EL O. RUWE,
Wholesale Liquor Dealer,
Agent for Bininger,
agio—ly , WEST SIDE MARKET SQUARE.
Dr. Edwin W. LTDngle,
DENTIST,
No. 106 Bryan Street,
BETWEEN WHITAKER AND BARNARD STS.,
Savannah, Georgia.
: ieia-iy
MAURICE HA<
COOPER, AND AGENT OP THE
MARINE DIVING AND WRECK
ING COMPANY.
O FFICE UNDER THE BLUFF, FOOT of DRAY
TON street. All orders tor the Sob-marine Str
ing and Wrecking (tomnany can be left with him, and
vrUI be promptly attended to. S£3L
R. A. WALLACE,
General Commission Merchant,
>:
PAPER, PAPER STOCK, MACHINERY
WASTE, MOSS, &e., die.
Tk ARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO C0SSI6N,
X MENT8 of PRODUCE or MERCHANDISE.
JONES' OTTER RANGE, BAY STREET,
River side, between Whitaker and Barnard streets.
|
ISAAC EHRLICH,
*
WHOLESALE TOBACCpmST AKD COM
MISSION MERCHANT,
, .:
? Upper.. Block, Sar
TTAS NOW ON HAND TOBA<JOC DIRECT FROJC
I I the factories of North Carolina t - - —
invites his old patrons to examine h:*
is able to sell lower than anv other b
Al^fi. supply of BACON, FLOUR, Ac., «
- -hdfekicsSl