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SAVAffff.UL TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1868
STARTLING AND DISGUSTING IHBCI.O-
SURES.
Th.e l^ew Yotk World is Trmlrir^ startling
disclosures of frauds and adulterations prac
ticed by the New York dealers in family
supplies. From its last article we select the
fallowing, which we. comment Aq the atten-
tion c Of hflliAAkflAnpra *
jVo, 111 Bay Street .'. ;
Lttrgestfiirciilation in City and Country.
pungent us the following, extracted from a
private letter of an officer in the United
States Service; who spent several months
cruising along fee coast of Alnskri ’That '- ttom-
OF AFlni/poUN]
[From tha New Orleans timet, December 17.]
The most extraordinary event conned
with the licent political disturbances 1
never been Tally written out. Thie WaS t
mer: mu I 1
I wonder what Seward bought' Russian
America for? -If I owned a nigger, and should
: catdKBim uptherc of his own free will, l
• wonld certalnly'either sell him or let him
-Stay tbepet .skimnC. \hsomlaaaS »-.»-* akOis |
• The scenery was very grand'and wild—t4o
much ao? I think, rid :be -enjoyed;. Yana go
hnndredaaf miles through inland passages,
not wider in mony.places than the Hudson.
river, with great .mountains -rising right out
aoflhetwater, and lifting theic-.heade. ip^lh^
. region. of perpetual snows, where no.'ymae.
:ppj~
Dully ..*io ™
Tri-Wcckly -••• 6 00
Wtikiy a oo
C.1CXTBV SCDSCUrPTIOSS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
All communications must be addressed to the pro-
priotor.
Paraona wishing the paper furnished, for any time
; e si tlisn one year will have their orders promptly at
tended to, when remitting the amount for the time de-
S ALL papers by mail are stopped at the expiration of
the time paid for without farther notice.
No ’ity subscription discontinued unless by positive
oriler left at the office.
the extraorc
of efforts m
mand'of rei
Theexae!
ed and -dot
destined to
'such we giv
his fiurvivin
matic and
tde at Uie^tune) beyoutl the coih-
iorters. " — ';
manner in winch the high spirit-
irmined, Fillieu met his death, is
[lave its place in history. And as
i below the statements made by
j wife, of what was the most drn-
iragic sitnation of .any of the re-
ances. The evglencewaa taken
Jndge Thornton, Mr. Henry Cas-
ngaaprosecuting ntiomey far the
State. '• I
Mme. Pablo Fillieu sworn—The last time I
saw my husband alive was oh the 25lh of Oc-
tober; he whs then at our bouse in the parish
of St Bernard; on that night a crowd of some
four hundred negroes had come np .the road;
they had approached very slowjy, and finally
stopped in : front of our residence; one of
them cried “halt,” and they all halted; they
were armed with all kinds of kniyes, pitch-
late it may be of old junk; cinnamon is largely
adulterated with' cassia. This is suposed by
the unsophisticated to be the same thing, but
with_ a network of such waters, . enclosing
arcEpelagb afler archipelagoofislands, from
one mile to fifty mileslong. I did notknojv,'
nor’did anybody aboard our ship .know,'
whether we got a sight of the -wnrin land or
not during the entire voyage. ' .-
> The fcoak survey is a good institution, and
baa done great service to the science.of geog
raphy, and it is possible that it may have
been in the scheme of Providence to give it
a perpetual lease of, life ; certainly if it ;is
ever extended over that wilderness of waiers
the officere engaged-upon it may exclaim “A
thousand years are. aa one day” .in such an
undertaking. - '
it is not; the cinnamon bark is thin, brittle
and aromatic; the cassia hark is much stout
er, more.pungent, and leaves a bitter taste.
It is sold everywhere for .genuine cinnamon.
Nutmegs are frequently deprived of a portion
of their essential oil by distillation, and after
being well.covered and rubbed with lime, are
again sent into market. Thus in want of
their most valuable properties, they feel light,
and are dry and brittle. If on the surface
small punctures appear, it is certain that a
great, portion of their essential oil has been
extracted. In France, damaged or worm-
eaten. nutmegs art doctored thus: The small
apertures are covered by a kind of cement
formed Of oil, flour, and powder of refuse
nutmegs. These fraudulent nnts are shipped
in large quantities to America.
Baked House’s Liver.—Our statement that
horse’s Ever is used as an adulterant of coffee
has shocked many of oar readers of delicate
stomach. The process of using the adulter
ant in England is described in Hassell thus:
After baking the horse's and bullock's liver, it
is ground into .a powder,, and sold to low
price coffee shop dealers. The best way to
detect the adulteration is to set aside an in
fusion of the suspected coffee, and if animal
matter, be present in a few days the liquid
.will omit an offensive smell.
An Atrocity—An English gentleman con
versant with the process of adulterations in
his own country informs ns that old coffins
have been ground.up in London and mixed
with coffee to give it a peculiar and much af
fected flavor. We have not yet been able to
ascertain if the practice is in vogue here,
though we fear our poisoners of food are
none too good for such an atrocity.
Fios. —Our readers have observed the small
boxes of figs sold at the street comers all
over the city at a low price. They are old,
damaged, and wormy figs, steamed and fixed
over and put into new boxes. They are un
healthy and should be shnnned. particularly
ay Correapondence containing important news,
from any quartor, solicited. We cannot undertake to
return rejected communications.
To Advertisers.
A SQUARE ia ten measured lines of Nonpareil of
The Mobnino News.
Firat insertion, $100 per square; each subsequent
insertion, 75 centa per aqaare. ' i
Advertisement** for one month or longer will be in
serted at special rates, which can be ascertained at t)ie
° l Advertisements outside of the city must be accom-
5:30 P. M.
7:20 A. M.
jrs excepted)at.. G:O0P. M.
west of LaWton take Day
S ABNEY A Co„ Commission Merchants, No. 12
Stoddard’s Upper. .Ranee. Liberal advances
made on consignments of Cotton; Wool, Hides; ’Sic.;
to our Mends ,ih. Baltimore. Philadelphia; and New,
York. augSO '
>d with all kinds of kniyes, pitch-
forks, hoes, bayonets, &o. Having halted,
fonr of them made-a great noise by knocking
violently at the door. There being no ain-
swer, those that knocked returned again in
the road; ray husband was at the time in the
rear of the house, and, upon entreaties being
used, said he wenld do nothing if they did
not trouble him.
After the four men had withdrawn to the
road, a volley of at least fonr hundredshots
were fired at the house; whereupon my hiis-
band ran to the balcony and fired at the
crowd; he Returned to reload his gun; while
he was loading the negroes again fired. ‘ My
husband the second time fired npon them.
This interchange of volleys was five times re
peated. . At the end of that time I ran to the
window to see,if they were going away. ' I
then discovered that they had possession of a
load of hay. I saw them come in frontof the
steps of the house, pile up the hay and set
fire to it. I went to my husband and fold
him they :had set fire to oar house. He
thereupon went round and fired another
musket shot. After this he returned and or
dered me to go away and save the children;
who were six in number. There was present
only my sister, a white boy, and a colored
girl. Each grow none of our party took a
child and went toward the woods by the back
way. That was the lost time I Baw my hus
band., The pegro Brown, now in court,,
halted me in going oat of the gate toward the
field. He was then crouching by the fence.
When I refused to halt, he ahbt at me. F
then stopped, and, coming up, the man
threw himself Upon me. I begged his par
don, when he interrogated me, and I asked
him to save my life and that of my poor chil
dren; He cursed me, and said “D—n you, I
have pity on the baby in your arms, but none
on yon.” Continuing to beg for mercy, he
finally told me to go. After I had started to
run, lie commenced calling to the crowd in
the road. He now cursed me again, and
BY TELEGEAPH
— TO —
THE MORNING NEWS.
This is one good thing. There is another.
The timber on the globe is not exhausted.
There are enough cedar trees on many'of the:
islands up there to make the telegraph poles
for. a line around the ' globe. Say the line is
25,000 miles long and we want forty poles
per mile, and we would require one million
poles. Why, sir, you would not miss that
number. ' 1
I certainly saw enough Umber last August,
just sailing among the islands,'to bnild aU
the railroads and telegraph lines now on the
globe, and half a dozen lines of each clear
around it besides. What thero may be in
have levied upon all that tract of land, situated in
at a. HeusgciEaat tgn iMtighatgaaTsiapyiMi:.
South by lands of John Oliver, and Wi st by lands
formerly of Mathew Dotson, and-win sell the same
ilwlsn Uni riiiil>gnn|n flnnijtn|tl||rtTT1|af||BfiUMi»1i|
county of Chatham, and State of Georgia, bn the;
FIB8T TUESDAY in JANUARY next; (IMS), between
the legal hoar* of sale. Property pointed ont in said
fi. & Terms cash. Purchasers paying for titles and
:staWips.-[:l :.i(A xftrwdtiot K&aflMem J
• decS-lawim ,, JAMES POONEB, Sheriff C. C.
The Davis Trial—Effect ot the Amnesty
Proclamation—Georgia Negroes at the
Capitol—Grant vs. Whiskey, Jfc.
f ETBOPOUTAN BILLIARD
Washington, December 28.—It is stated
that Mr. Davis urged the surrender of him
self again to imprisonment, when a writ ;of
It'iUas corpus will bring him before the; Sut
preme Court, whereby the potency of the
President’s Amnesty Proclamation will be
fully tested. ■ '
It is also stated that Messrs. Mason, Sli
dell, Benjamin and Breekenridge, all inquire-
regarding the exact protection which the Ain-
nesty affords.
A delegation of Georgia negroes is here to
protest against the present admission of the
Georgia Senators.
Dispatches sent hence say that Grant is de
termined to root out the whiskey, railroad
and other rings, even if he has to fill every
civil office from the army and navy.
Grant leaves on Wednesday to be absent a.
week. I j f -
McCulloch has returned.
Bntler is preparing a speech against the re-
rnmptionof specie payment
THE CUBAN REVOLUTION.
Havana, December 28.—'The revolutionists
have destroyed the lighthouse at Lacretia
Channel, thereby endangering the navigation
of the Bahamas. x It is reported that eight
hundred fillibusters landed at Cochonos on
the 18th of December.
Eighteen hundred troops at Santiago, it is
said, are surrounded by ten thousand insur
rectionists.
Several jars of strychnine were found
among insurrectionists’ baggage, captured at
Moron.
General Loborre sailed on Friday for San
tiago with troops.
Six hundred government troops are closely
besieged at Manzanillo, where, in consequence
of bad food, the cholera has appeared.
Accounts of the battle at Moron are entire
ly confl cting.
FOREIGN NEWS.
London, December 28.—The London Times
and Standard, editorially, condemn the Con
ference as useless.
Brussels, December ‘28.—The Independ
ence Beige says the. prospects-- of the Confer
ence are re-assuring. ’ j
Athens, December 28. — Dispatches of
the interior I don't know.
hov7-
DOWN DAY TRAIN.
CHATHAM SHERIFF’S SALE.
TTNUER AND BYkncrUEOF ADISTHESSWABt
U .BANT, issued out of Justice L M. Marsh’S
Court, in fiver of Hetty E. Elliott vs. Andrew O. Wad-,
dell 1 have levied upon Two Hundred Bushels of.
Bough Bice, and will sell the same, by sample, before
the Conti House door in the City of Savannah, be-,
tween the legal hours of sale, on the FIRST TUES
DAY in JANUARY next, (lSCU). Tern* cash.
decS-iawlm JAMES DOONEB. 8heriffQ, C.
BREACH BETWEEN GENERAL GRANT
AND CONGRESS.
The sudden and widening breach between
General Grant and the Fortieth Congress is
the topic of the capitol to-night. No new
annunciatons have been made by the Presi
dent elect. He has not referred to the sub
ject, and only casual callers have dropped
into his headquarters. His position, stated
in these despatches last night, to the effect
that he demands the repeal of the Civil Ten
ure law, and the continuance of the law pro
viding for Congress to meet in March, has
.been confirmed to-day by the flutter it has
caused in the Radical circles. A few Sena
tors, Nye, Morgan, Sumner and Stewart are
here, and had an informal meeting to-day in
in reference to the new situation. These
Senators were, without exception, in favor of
the continuance of the Civil Tenure bill, no
matter what may be the result. . They de
clared that Congress was prepared to yield
nothing to dictation, and that General Grant’s
extraordinary and peremptory demand ought
at least to have been postponed until the occa
sion of his message,andthenbeen respectfully
couched in the form of a proclamation; They
EFFINGHAM SHERIFFS SALE;
TT7TLL BE SOLD BEFORE THE COURT HOUSE!
VV door In Springfield, Effingham county, Georgia,
on the first Tuesday in~JANUABY next, between the'
usual hours of sale, one-tract cf LAND, containing
three, bunded and fonr. acres, bounded by lands of
Goff Arasdorff & Snider. The property is abortt two
and a half miles from. Springfield, in a very healthy
location, and is considered good planting land. Sold,
under the foreclosure of-a mortgage, in favor of the
Trustees of the Effingham Academy against the ea-'
tate of Thomas Flood. JAMES ZTIT'ROUB,
decll-lswlm Sheriff E. C.
at Gordon daily. Si
He yvns listened to with the deepest attention
by a large, audience, and was' frequently apf
plauded- .
Dr. Boynton’s lecture last evening on Bible
subjects, with colored illustrations, was very,
interesting, and, notwithstanding the inclem
ency of . the weather, was well attended. The
concluding lecture of the Cooper Institute
course will be delivered this evening by Dr.
B. on “The Mastodon and Mammoth
Period.”
■££££
EFFINGHAM SHERIFF’S SALE.
"1T7TLL BE SOLD BEFORE THE COURT’ HOUSE
VV doorin Springfield, Effingham county, Georgia,-
on the first Tuesday In JANUARY next, between the
usual hours of sale, one tract of LAND containing*
five hundred and serenty-eigfat acres, bounded by the
village of Springfield, and lands of Zetler, Amaaorfl,
Perry and Baddy. Sold" under the foreclosure of a
mortgage in favor of Elizabeth Jones againat William
B d«wim
Interesting to Endorsees of Notes.—In
the Court of Common Pleas yesterday, before
Jndge Garey, the case of Cromwell us. Stew
art & Laws was tried on these iacts: In. 1865
J. R. Stewart gave a note, signed by himself,
for $500, payable to the credit of S. T...Crom
well. On the back of the note were signed
the names of William Laws ana Eli Henckle,
at the time of its’ delivery to Cromwell, but
Publishing House,
i Y VIRTUE of an.order of the
1 comity, will be sold on file 1
■which CromweH never endorsed. The note
was not paid at maturity nor protested,: and
no notice given of non-payment to-Laws or
Henckle. Cromwell brought sait against all
three as the makers of a joint and several’
note, though on its free it was “I promise to
pay.” Tife defendants, Stewart & Laws;!
severed their defence and pleaded separately,’
Laws claiming to be merely an- endorser 1 , And
signed bis name on the back of • the npte as
snch; that to be held liable the note needed
protest and notice to him of dishonor. . The
plaintiff claimed that as the names of all the;
parties were oh at the time'of delivery, what
ever part of the paper bore the signatures of
the parties, they were joint makers as much
as if their names had been signed on the face
of the note and immediately nnder the first
signer, and as such they were liable without
protest or notice. ‘ “ ! — Jj
11 n lnmiliml wm unliiqnnml iilmiwa iknniiupi u
tenths of one hundred and twenty-five seres of land,
with buildings and Improvements thereon,It-being
subject to the dower.of Mrs.D. Brewer; also, one' un
divided one-eleventh interest in one hundred and sixty
acres of land in Alachua cemfiy, Florida.
TsaMS—Three months credit, with note and good,
sechrlfy, purchaser paying for fifles. ‘ ' ***
Losses Adjusted and Promptly Paid,
WITHOUT REFERENCE Tp ENGLAND.
Ek kliL} ;o£Q j—JULO W ^
For Insurance, apply to
R. H. FOOTMAN & CO., Agents,
Office in Exchange Building.
McIntosh sheriffs sale.
i £yr.IHB FIRST TUESDAY JN JANUARY NEXT.
lota Nos. 1,2 and 3, in the plan said city, bound
ed northwardly by Green street, eastwudrmlot Mol'
4, southwardly by Broad street, and weetwardly by
North Bay, on Market street, with all appurtenances;
levied oh ms the property of the Darien SUte Company
and the Directors thereof to satisfy m JL fa. issued
from the Superior Court of said county, infavor afW.
24th day of November, 1868. ' .
. nov28-lawlm * C. C. THORP, SEer&f ^I. C.
PRINTING OFFICE, . BLANK BOOK MANUFAC-
BOOK BINDERY. ^ TORY, and
PAPER RULING ROOM.
The only establishment in the city having all these
fafiffiHpfiJ ' *' L ‘
A fun stock of PAPERS; LEATHERS and MATE
RIALS on hand.
' Orders solicited. Satisfhcfion guaranteed.
fySO-Jy : ' ' ' GEO. N. NICHOLS.
Vienna, December 28,—The Porte will de
clare its adherence to tlie Conference, if the
terms of his Cuban ultimatum are mooted.
THE EASTERN QUESTION.
London, December 28.—The Eastern ques
tion looks more threatening. A conference'
of the Great Powers is not absolutely
certain.
The Porte declines yielding any of the
points necessary as a bams of compromise.
DRY GOODS FAILURES.
New York, December 28.—The failure of
Messrs. Storms, Thurber * Co., retail dry
goods dealers, is announced. Hopea are en
tertained of a favorable settlement with La-
throp, Ludington & Co.
FROM VIRGINIA.
Richmond, December 28.—Gen. Stoneman
has directed the Mayor to bold in custody
Sally Anderson who was recently released by
Judge Underwood.
The court so ruled, and
judgment was given'for the plain till'. —Balti
more Sun. ot bLbbs awllfi j fie:
Old Stories Retold.—The New York Trib
une, at intervals, reproduces old and interest
ing narratives under this heading.’ Its latest"
is an account of the hanging of young Spen
cer, aboard the U. S. brig Somers, for mutiny,
many years ago. The trial that followed tins
act created intense excitement at the time,
and public opinion was much divided as to
the propriety of it. Our boyish sympathies
sided with the midshipman whom we consid
ered murdered. . Tom Benton’s review of the
affeir in his “Thirty Years in the Senate^
confirmed our youthful impressions. We af
terwards came to. know a brother of the. hung
■man, one Ambrose Spencer, the most infernal
scoundrel our eyes ever rested upon, the
same who has outraged many Southern com
munities, from South Carolina to Mexico, and
who since the war prepared and 'published a
IN A1 COMPANIES, compffoaig
LIFE, FIRE, MARINE,
* ‘vfcnnER anii ACCIDENT.
Insurance at as low rates as any other first-class
1 PREPARED UPON PURELY
.by a regular practicing Phy-
FERE' INSURANCE.
court he tse. He was then committed to jail,
and esc ped again on the second night after
Al V_ i L -1. ... ll, aaII vw.Ja ni*vnif Ill n
through i hole in the call made to admit the
air. —g tij-tci ■ si lo J
BaMu *a-arrested the second day after
tbaAMHM4d lighter lying: at the wharf, in
ich he had built a fire,,and was
ly occupied in reading a novel.
with palpitation of the heart? Are you sometimes
nauseated? Have you loss of appetite? Do you feel
that you need some kind of a stimulant ? *
’try one bottle of
And you will bear testimony vritix hundreds who have
. been henefitted and cured by its use.
AS A MORNING TONIC
ind the people, after seeing the
rhich he escaped, are complete-
arid only anxibris for him to
lore being arrested,- pawned
h have been identified as the
essis. .Myers and Goodman, of
ad winch he had been accused:
raUahassee Sentpiel
holding any civil office. The reason of this
is not given. Whether the politicians think
there are not more than enough offices for
themselves, or that they are more competent
for such.duties than naval or military men;
or whetherit implies jealousy and distrust of
General Grant and military rule—we are left
to conjecture. If the first suggestion be the
true one, and civilians wish to absorb civil
offices themselves, that would be in keeping
with the disinterested patriotism of the age !
If the latter—a dread of military ascend-
ancy—be the true motive, the Hon. politi
cians are rather too late. The rule passed-
from their hands when, in ’67, after they were
beaten at'the polls, they fell back, against
their wishes, on the General of the Armies,
and appealed to him to save them from Andy
L Since then they have been mere append-
r .-1-1 A .: J J Ilirnnoli
Fatal Accident in Washington.—A young
man, about twenty-one years of age, named
Frank Smith, a clerk in the employ of S.
Franklin & Co., cotton factors of this City,
Was killed on Wednesday last in the town of
Washington. Mr. Smith was a native of
Wilkes county, and left here on Tuesday
night to spend Christmas with his friends.
Before he left here he purchased a pistol, and
when in Washington, on Wednesday^ while
in conversation with a gentleinan named
Williams about the weapon, handed it to him
for inspection. While engaged ' in handling
trie pistol, in some manner it was discharged,
the ball entering Mr. Smith’s' left- temple,
killing him instantly.—Augusta Chronicle.
There occurred in th
Columbia,' on night t
mysterious accident,
bahle, an atrocity on]
of ' crime.' On Chr
i Life Insurance Decision.—i-
(lessee, December 22.—In the
>. District -Court, Judge Trigg
! case of Mrs. -Catharine BaiLey
his Mutual Life Insurance Gom-
iction was brought to recover
husband’s life, which the de-
sed to pay on the ground that
had failed to pay the.premium
rters, and that his son, at the
the county site of Colombia county, and oc-
'ageS;-tolerafed and-perniitted-to-go through
certain forms, bnt as to all real power, as
dead as Julius Caesar. If GeneraL-Grant
chooses to appoint General Schofield Secre-
fcuyof War, or Admiral Farragut Secretary
of the Navy, or even to -fill -every post in the
Government with Generals, he willdo iE—
and ask rio boot of Mr. "Edmunds, or Mr.
anybody else. Haven’t the Conscript Fathers
heard of the Army Rffimion at Chicago, and
that at the next Reunion all are to appear
in fall uniform ? Let us have peace.—Lich-
bodics from the fire, hut it is generally; be^
lieved that the house was first entered by rie2
groes, the three persons murdered, and the
premises set on fire to destroy all ^evidences
ofthe crime. Mr. Martin was supposed to
haveJjada good deal of money concealed on
the place, and-this furnishes the true key to
the whole transaction, It is scarcely proba
ble that three grown person^ would sleep so
soundly as to he burned alive in the house
without a single one escaping. —Augusta
paid the premiums whilst
i his death-bed, representing
s usual health, and therefore
ntill and void. The court
Some Good out of Nazabeih.—The trus
tees of the Robinson Academy for Girls, at
Exeter, New Hampshire, have obtained about
$230,000 from the bequest. The donor was
a Northern man, a bachelor, who. lived long
at the South, and was engaged in the rebel
lion. He held, however, to.the terms of a
will by which he founded a school for giris at
Exeter, and invested the money for safekeep
ing in real estate in New Orleans, at a time
when it went a begging. He died before the
War ended, and the trustees, after a struggle,
succeeded in averticg.the confiscation of the
property, and its subsequent rise has given
the school an unuanal en4owjnent._ n
not liold to the
*> ’ UNITED STATES LLOYD’S
^ Marine essurajsce.
rTUTE UNDERSIGNED, Agent for th® above named
JL Association, is prepared to taka Bisks on ship
ment ot Cotton,' or other merchandize,' on favorable
terms. AU losses promptly sdjnsted and paid
contain in - abont
CfiTOnide. .
TheSenato
merit of India
rrumi Whig._
.Apply to' J'J
oc 12—eodtf
dec22-laa-Cm
BESCUE OF SHBEVEPOBT MUBDFJ1EC.S.—
following is the copy of a telegrairi rece:
19 . 186
“ To His ExceOmn) Governor Warmoth :
“William Pittriian and Henlly, under :
tence of imprisonment for life, pronour
this morning, for .murder of Boh Walsoi
rwiw- MARSHALS KALIS,.... ! -12
TTHDER and by. virtue of City Tax Executions
U against Cosmo B. Richardsone, Trustee, I will
sell, before the Court House door.in the city of Savan-
‘uah/on.theTirst Tuesday in "January', 1869, between
the legal hours of sale. Lot letter ^ G.” Middle Ogle
thorpe Ward, and improvements. .Lot fronts on West
Broad street 67 feet 6 inches, and in depth 1G0 feet.
Improvements consist of a double tenement, two story
frame building, with out buildings, on Laurel street.
.(lliT/J THOMAS 8. WAYNE,
JnnO OfJ nil- If. L-l
War Department or "Navy Department; and to
put a new Secretary into the Cabinet .to
superintend it; is an extreme and nnm
T) pmos. Ordinary! tional expenses ? In the first place, the
Fulton county, Ga: - secretary of the new department would draw
the Stale of Georgia will con-'- » salary.of at least eight thousand.dollars per
• year, and this would be bnt a small , portion
of the augmented .outlay. If trie whole
superintendence ofeIndian Affairs be vested
in the War Department, the savages can be
mastered in a short time, and the Treasury
protected from thieves and robbers.—Phila-
j j ——v -v “ — — —» «
aeputy local to smile on yesterday,
just put in a quid of Honey Dew.’
carefully on roe counter for further
tion. While smiling with the frier
a friend, a distinguished. colored
from a neighboring county, arid ai
companion of Joseph Brown, Bt
theBuro people, slapped said qi
potato trap
Hi-ior>E a s ;
dard” Phosphates
SORRIER,
garo states that the Eclipse has
:d by the censorship for a por-
;ene Tenot, author of the “His-
r
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