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National tUpubUccm
" LARGEST CITY CIRCULATION
Official Organ of the U. 8. Government.
THURSDAY MORNING March IS. ISM
SBE NEVER SMILES.
Bb* never emilee—no happy thought
Light! up her poneiro eye;
The sorry laugh front lip to lip
Paeeee unheeded by:
Trow for ever in her heart
The tpwrkling fount of glednee»,
And o'er it ponre ite tepid flood—
The chon were of eednew.
e * * * * *
She nerer emilee—he» frowning grief
With hie etern magic hound her J
Hat cere her long, lean flngere raised
To oast her fitters round her r
Has one so young the lesson learned
That lore is oft betrayed ;
Ah, no, she nerer smiles, because—
Her front trot* nr* decayed.
“official
Laws of Congress.
Patted at the Second Sestion of the
Fortieth Congress.
[PcBLH' Resolution—No. 13. J
Joint Resolution authorizing the transmis
sion through the mails, free of postage, of
certain testimonials by the adjutant gene
rals of the sereral States.
Be it resolved by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled. That the
adjutant general of the several Slates and
Territories be authorized to transmit through
the mails, free of postage, any. medals, cer
tificates of thanks, or other testimonials,
awarded or which may be awarded by the
legislatures of said States and Territories to
the soldiers thereof, under such regulations
ns the Postmaster General may direct.
Approved, March 2, 1868.
[Public Rksolution— No. 14.]
Joint Resolution authorizing the Comptrol
ler of the Currency to revoke the appoint
ment of receiver for the Farmers and Citi
zens’ National BankofAVilliamsburg, New
York, and to restore said bank to its
owners under certain conditions.
Be it resolved by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assetfibled, That the
Comptroller of the Currency be authorized,
with the approval of the Secretary of the
Treasury, to revoke the order appointing a
receiver for the Farmers and Citizens’ Bank
of Williamsburg, New York, and restore the
said bank and the management thereof to
the directors for the purpose of enabling the
association to continue the business of bank
ing: Provided, That said banking associa
tion shall first present to the Comptroller
satisfactory assurances that the public in
terest will be * promoted thereby, and shall
secure, in such manner as the Comptroller
shall direct, the full payment of all restore
the capital stock to its original amount in
case the capital has been impaired by losses.
Approved, March 2, 1868.
[Public Resolution —No. 15. |
A Resolution authorizing the Light House
Board to place warnings over obstructions
at the entrance of harbors, or in the fair
way of bays and sounds, and for other
purposes.
Resolved by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled, That the
Light House Board be, and they are hereby
authorized, when in their judgment it is
deemed necessary, to place a light vessel or
other suitable warning of danger on or
over any wreck or temporary obstruction to
entrance of any harbor, or in the channel
or fairway of any bay or sound.
Sec. 2. And be it further resolved, That
the Secretary of War is hereby directed to
appoint a board of competent engineers, to
consist of not less than three persons, to
examine the condition of the wreck of the
steamer Scotland, now in the waters of the
harbor of the city of New York, and
ascertain whether the same is dangerous to
navigation, and to report thereon at an as
early a day as practicable, with a particular
estimate of the cost of the removal of said
wreck.
Approved, March 2, 1868.
[Public Resolution —No. 16.]
A Resolution relating to the survey of the
Northern and Northwestern States.
Resolved by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled. That the
second section of an act entitled “An act
making appropriations for the construction,
preservation, and repairs of certain fortifica
tions and other works of defence for the
fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen
hundred and sixty eight,” approved March
second, eighteen hundred and sixty seven,
shall not apply to the appropriations for
the survey of Northern and Northwestern
lakes.
Approved, March 2, 1868.
SLATE LINED
REFRIGERATORS!
MANUFACTURED bt
Stephens & Ritchie,
116 and 118 West 25th Street,
NEW YORK.
'PHIS REFRIGERATOR HAS GAINED A
i- very high reputation during the past two
years, and proved to be superior to any Zinc
Refrigerator ever made. It was awardod the
PREMIUM at tho FAIR of the AMERICAN
INSTITUTE, in 1885 (no Fair held in 1888).
All kinds and sizes made at our Manufactory,
116 and 118 West Twenty-Fifth Street, New
York. JAS. STEPHENS,
selO—ty J. I. RITCHIE.
Ho Batter Gift for a Musical Friend
THAN ONE OH ALL OF THESE BOOKS.
pOMPRISINO THE MOST COMPLETE
Collection of Choice Music, Vocal and In
strument&l, to be obtained:
The Home Circle, a Collection of Music for
the Piano—2 volumes. The Pianist's Album,
forming the third volume of the “ Home Circle "
The Silver Chord, Songs, Ballads, Quartets,
Duets, etc., piano acc. Shower of Pearls, Vocal
Duets, piano acc. (Jems of Herman Song, Ger
man and English words, piano acc. Gems of
Scottish Song, Scottish Songs and Ballads,
piao > aec. Gems of Sacred Bong, Sabbath Songs
and Home Ballads, piano aco. Operatic Pearls,
Sootfl, Quartets, Duets, Trios, etc., from the
principal Operas, piano aec. Price of each
volume. Plain, $7,511; Cloth, $3.00; Cloth, foil
gilt, $4.00. Sold in separate ’volumes, or the
sot complete, by all Music Dealers, and sent
post-paid by
OLIVER DITSON A Cos.,
Publishers, Boston.
CHAB. H. DITSON A CO.,
mhT—tf New York.
Furniture and Piano Hauling,
J_JAVfNG A NEW AND LIGHT
SPRING DRAY,
I am prepared to haul Furniture, Pianos, and
anything else, without scratching or bruising,
as is too often the ease.
Orders left at my store, on Bills street,between
Washington end Monument, will be promptly
attended to, at reasonaole rates.
Particular oare given to moving Furniture and
Pianos. “
„ WM. HALE (Colored),
Dealer in Family Groceries*
oul—tf
Article on the Legislative Department,
At adapted by (As CbwOteOyMi g—*■*»*»?
Ueorna, and referred to the CommMm on
Hrm&on.
Section I. ... , _
1. The Legislative, Executive nnd Judicial Pe
partmeuta shall be dtriiuet, and sash *»!**;“•»*
shall ha confided to a gMStt body of maats
trncy. No person or ooHection of parsons, being
of one department, shall exercise any power
pro perl, atteebedte either of the others, exeept
In reset*herein eEßteeriy Provided.
3. The legislative power shall be vestejj in a
General Assembly, which shall consist of a Sen
ate sad House of Representatives, the members
whereof shall be elected, and the returns of the
election made as now prescribed by law, until
changed by the General Assembly.
3. The members of the Senate shall be elected
for fonr years, except that members elected at the
trst election, from the twenty-two Senato
rial Districts numbered in this Aoustitution with
odd uumbers, shall only hold their office for two
years. The members of the House of Representa
tives shall bo elected for two years. The election
for members of the tienewtl Assembly shall begin
on Tuesday after the first Monday in November
of every second year, except the first election,
which shall be within days after the ad
journment of this Convention; bat the General
Assembly may, by law, change the day of elec
tion, and the members snail each hold until their
successors are elected and qualified.
4. The first meeting of the General Assembly
shall be within days after the adjournment
of this Convention, after which it snail meet
annually on the second Wednesday in January, or
ou such other day as the General Assembly may
prescribe. A majority of each House shall con
stitute a quorum to transact business, but a smaller
number may adjourn from day to day and compel
the presence of its absent members as each House
may provide. No session of the General Assem
bly, after the second.uuder this Constitution, shall
continue longer tlum forty days, unless prolonged
by a vote of two-thirds of each branch thereof.
5. No person holding any military commission,
or other appointment or office having any emolu
ment or compensation annexed thereto, under tliis
State or the United States, or either of them, ex
cept Justices ol the Inferior Court, Justices of the
Peace, and officers of the militia, nor any defaul
ter for public money, or for any legal taxes re-
Suired of him, shall have a seat in either House.
'or shall any Senator or Representatives, after
his qualification ns such, be elected by the General
Assembly or appointed by the Governor, either
with or without the advice and consent of two
thirds of the Senate, to any office or appointment
having any emolument annexed thereto, during
the time for which he shall have been elected.
6. No person convicted of any felony or lar
ceny before any court of this State, or of or in tho
United States'shall he eligible to any office or ap
pointment of honor or trust within this State, un
less lie shall have been pardoned.
7. No person who is the holder of any public
moneys shall he eligible to any office in this State,
until the same is accounted for and paid into the
treasury.
8. Tho seat of a member of cither House shall
he vacated on his removal from the district from
which lie was elected.
Section If.
1. There shall be forty fonr Senatorial Districts
in this Slate, composed each ot three contiguous
counties, from each of which Districts one Seua
torsliallhe choseu. Until otherwise arranged,
us hereinafter provided, the said Districts shut! be
constituted of counties, as follows :
The First District of Chatham, Bryan and
Effingham.
The Second District of Liberty, Tatnall and
Mclntosh.
The Third District of Wayne, Pierce and Ap
p fins'.
The Fourth District of Glynn, Camden and
Charlton.
The Fifth District of Sott'ee, Ware and Clinch.
Tlie Sixtli District of Ecliold, 'Lowndes and
Berrien.
The Seventh District of Brooks, Thomas, and
Colquitt.
Tlio Eighth District of Decal nr, Mitchell and
Miller.
Tho Ninth District of Early, Calhoun, uud
Baker.
The Tenth District of Donglierty, Lee and
Worth.
The Eleventh District of Clay, Randolph and
Terrell.
The Twelfth District of Stewart, Webster and
Quitman.
The Thirteenth District of Sumter, Schley and
Macon.
The Fourteenth District of Dooly, Wilcox and
Pulaski.
The Fifteenth District of Montgomery, Telfair
and Irwin.
The Sixteenth District of Lanrens, Johnson and
Einannei.
The Seventeenth District of Bullock, Scriven
and Burke.
The Eighteenth District of Richmond, Glass
cock und Jefferson.
The Nineteenth District of Taliaferro, Warren
nnd Greene.
Tlie Twentietli District of Baldwin, Hancock
and Washington.
Tlie Twenty-First District of Twiggs, Wilkin
son and Jones.
The Twenty-Second District of Bibb, Monroe
and Pike.
The Twenty-Third District of Houston, Craw
ford and Taylor.
Tlie Twenty-Fourth District of Marion, Chatta
hoochee and Muscogee.
The Twenty-Fifth District of Harris, Upson
and Talbot.
The Twenty-Sixth District of Spalding, Bntts
and Fayette.
The Twenty-Seventh District of Newton, Wal
ton and Clark.
The Twenty-Eighth District of Jasper, Putnam
and Morgan.
The Twenty-Ninth District of Wilkes, Lincoln'
and Columbia.
Tho Thirtieth District of Ogletlirope. Madison
and Elbert.
The Thirty Firtt District of Hart, Franklin and
Habersham.
Tlie Thirty-Second District of White, Lumpkin
and Dawson.
The Thirty-Third District of Hall, Banks and
Jackson.
Tlie Thirty-Fourth District of Gwinnett, De-
Kalb and Henry.
The Thirty-Fifth District of Clayton, Fulton
and Cobb.
The Thirly-Sixth District of Merri wether,
Coweta and Campbell.
The Thirty Seventh of Troup, Heard
und Carroll.
The Thirty-Eighth District of Haralson, Polk
and Paulding.
The Thirty-Ninth District of Cherokee, Milton
and Forsyth.
The Fortieth District of Union, Towns and
Italian.
The Forty-First District of Fuiiuin, Gilmer and
Pickens.
The Forty-Second District of Bartow, Floyd
and Chattooga.
Tlie Forty Third District ol Murray, Whitfield
and Gordon.
The Forty-Fourth District of Walker, Dade and
Catoosa.
If anew county he established it shall be ad
ded to a district which it adjoins, and from which
tlie larger portions of its territory is taken. The
Senatorial Districts may he changed by the Gene
ral Assembly, hut only at the first session after tlie
taking of each ceiißus’by the United States Gov
ernment; and their number shall never be in
creased.
The Senators shall lie citizens of the United
States, who have attained the age of twenty-five
years, and who, after the first election under tills
Constitution, shall have been citizens of this State
for two years, and for one year a resident of the
District from which elected.
3. The presiding officer of tlie Senate shall be
styled tlie President, and shall he elected viva
voce from the Senators elect.
4. Tlie Senate shall have tlie sole power to try
all impeachments. When sitting for that purpose,
the members shall be on oath or affirmation, and
shall be presided over by one of the Judges of the
Supreme Court, selected for that purpose by a
viva voce vote of the Senate; and no person shall
he convicted without the concurrence of two
thirds of tlie members present. Judgments in
eases of impeachment shall not extend further
than removal from office and disqualification to
hold and enjoy any office of honor, tract or profit
within this State, but the party convicted shall
nevertheless be liable and subject to indictment,
trial, judgment and punishment according to law.
Section 111.
1. The Ilonse of Representatives shall consist
of one hundred and seventy five Representatives,
apportioned as follows:
To the six largest counties, to wit: Chatham,
Richmond, Fulton, Mibb, Houston and llurkc,
tlireo representatives each.
To the thirty one next largest, to wit: llartow,
Columbia, Cobb, C'owota, Clarke, Decatur,
Dougherty, Floyd, Gwinnett, Greeue, Hancock,
Hams, Jefferson, Lee, Muscogee, Monroe, Merri
wether, Morgan, Maeon, Newton, Oglethorpe
Pulaski, Randolph, Sumter, Stewart, Troup,
Thomas, Talbot, Washington, Wilkeeand Warren,
two representatives each -, and
To tlie remaining ninety five comities, one
representative each.
1. The above apportionment may be changed
by the General Assembly after each census taken
by the United States Government, hut in no event
shall the aggregrate number ot Representatives
lie increased.
3. The Representatives shall be citizens of the
United States, who have attained tlie age of
twenty-one ycurs, and who, after tho first election
under this Constitnl ion, ahull have been citizens
of tliis Stale for one year, and six months rest
dent* of the counties ftorn which eleoted.
3. Tlie presiding officer of the House of Repre
sentatives shall lie styled the Speaker, and snail
lie elected viva voce from the body.
.4 The House es Representatives shall have
the eole power to impeach all persons who shall
have been or may he in office.
5. All bills for raising revenue or appropriating
money shall originate In ths House of Represen
tatives, but the Senate nay propose or ooaour in
amendments ae in other hula.
Section IV.
1. Eaeli House shall be the judge of the election
returns and qualifications of its member*, and
shall have power to punish them for disorderly
behavior or miscouduct, by oensure, fine, imprison
meat or expulsion, but no member shall bo ex
pelled except hr a vote of two-third* of the Hones
from which he is expelled.
2. Eaeli House may punish by imprisonment,
not extending beyond the session, any person not
. a member who shall be guilty of a contempt by
any disorderly behavior in Its presence, or who,
during the session, shall threaten injury to the
person or estate of any member for nay thing said
or done in either House, or who shall assault any
member going to or returning therefrom, or who
shall rescue or attempt to rescue any person ar
rested by order of either House.
3. The members of both Houses shall be free
from arrest during their attendance on the Gene
ral Assembly, and in going to or returning there
from, except for treason, felony, larceny or breach
of the peace; and no member shall be liable to
answer in any other place for anything spoken in
debate in either House.
4. Each House shall keep a Journal of its pro
ceedings, and shall publish them immediately after
its adjournment. The yeas nnd nays of the mem
bers ou auy question shall, at the desire of one
fiith of the members present, bo entered on the
Journals. The origiual Journals shall be pre
served, after publication, in tlie officaof tho Secre
tary of State -, but there shall be no other record
thereof.
5. Every hill, before it shall pass, shall lie read
three times, and ou three separate and distinct
days, in each House, unless iu cases of actual inva
sion or insurrection. Nor shall any law or ordi
nance pass which refers to more than one subject
matter, or contains matter different from what is
expressed in tlie title thereof.
6. All Acts shall be signed by the President of
the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives; and no hill, or ordinance, or
resolution, intended to have the effect of a law,
which shall have been rejected by either Honee,
shall he again proposed during the same session
under the same or auy other title, without the
consent of two-thirds of the House by which the
same was rejected.
7. Neitiier House shall adjourn for more than
three days, nor to any other place, without the
consent of the other; and in case of disagreement
between tlie two Houses on a question of adjourn
ment, the Governor may adjourn either or both
of them.
8. The officers of the two Houses, other than
tlie President and tlie Speaker, shall be a Secre
tary of the Senate and Clerk of the House, and
an Assistant for each, a Journalizing Clerk, two
Engrossing and two Enrolling Clerks for each
House -, and tiie number shall not he increased,
except by a majority vote of the House. And
the per diem pay and mileage of tlie members
shall bo fixed by law, in the passage of which a
majority of the members of each House shall
concur.
!). Whenever this Constitution requires a vote
of two-thirds of either or both Houses for the
passage of an act or resolution, tlie yeas and nays
on the passage thereof shall he entered on the
journal or journals. Ami all votes on confirma
tions or refusals to confirm nominations to office
by the Governor shall be by yeas and nays: and
the yeas and nays shall be recorded on the jour
nal.
10. Every Senator and Representative, before
taking his scat, shall take an oath or affirmation
to support the Constitution of tlie United States
and of this State ; that he has not practiced any
unlawful means, directly or indirectly, to procure
his election, and that he lms not given, or offered,
or promised, or caused to be given, or offered or
promised to any person, any money, treat or thing
of value, with intent toaffeet auy vote, or prevent
any person voting at tlie election at-which he was
elected.
Section V.
1. Tlie General Assembly shall have power to
make all laws and ordinances, consistent with this
Constitution and not repngnaut to the Constitntion
of the United States, which they shall deem neces
sary and proper for tlie welfare of the State.
2. The General Assembly may alter the boun
daries of, or lay off and establish new counties, or
abolish counties, attaching tlie territory to con
tiguous comities, bnt no new counties shall be
established lint by a vote of two-thirds of each
House, nor shall any county be abolished except
by a vote of two-thirds of each House, and after
tlie qualified voters of the county shall, at an -elec
tion held for that purpose, so desire.
Section VI.
1. No money shall be drawn from the Treasury
except by appropriation made by law, and a
regular statement and account of tlie receipt and
expenditure of all public moneys shall lie published
from time to time, and with the laws passed by
eaeli session of the General Assembly.
2. No vote, resolution, law, or ordet shall pass,
granting a donation or gratuity in favor of any
person, except by the concurrence of two-thirds
of each branch of the General Assembly, nor to
any sectarian corporation or association "at all.
3. No law or section of the Code shall be amen
ded or repealed by mere reference to its title, or to
the number of section in the Code, bnt the amend
ing or repealing act shall distinctly and folly
describe the law to be amended or "repealed, as
well as the alteration to be made ; bnt this clause
shall be construed as directory only to tlie Gene
ral Assembly.
4. No law shall be passed by which a citizen
sball be compelled, against his consent, directly or
indirectly, to become a stock holler in or contribute
to any railroad or work of public improvement
except in the case of the inhabitants of a corporate
town or city. In such cases the General Assem
bly may permit the corporate authorities to take
such stock, or make snen Contribution, or engage
in such work, after a majority of tlie qualified
voters of such town or city, voting at said election,
shall at auy election held for the purpose, have
voted in favor of tlie same, but not otherwise.
5. The General Assembly shall have no power
to grant corporate powers and privileges to private
companies, except to Banking, Insurance, Rail
road, Canal, Navigation, Mining, Express, Lum
ber, Manufacturing and Telegraph Companies;
nor to make or change election precincts; nor to
establish bridges and ferrieß; nor to change the
names of legitimate children; bnt it shall pre
scribe, by law, tlie manner in which such powers
shall be exercised by the Courts. Bnt no charter
for any Bank shall (>c granted or extended, and no
act passed authorizing tho suspension of specie
payments by any bank, except by a vote of two
thirds of tlie General Assembly. Tlie General
Assembly shall pass no law making the State a
stockholder in any corporate Company; nor Bliall
the credit of the State be granted or loaned to nid
any Company without tlie concurrence of a ma
jority of noth Houses; nor without a provision
that the whole property of tlie Company shall be
bound for the security of the State prior to any
other debt or lien, except to laborers; nor to any
Company in which there is not already an equal
amount invested by private persons; nor for any
other object than a work of public improvement.
Tiie General Assembly shall provide adequate
penalties to prohibit the sale of lottery tickets in
this State. No provision in this Constitution for
a two-thirds vote of botli Houses of tho General
Assembly shall be construed to waive the necessity
of tlie signature of the Governor, as in any otlie'r
cases except in tho cases of tlie two-third vote
required to override the veto.
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL NOMI
NATING CONVENTION.
The undersigned, constituting the National
Committee designated by the Convention
held at Baltimore on the 7th of June, 1864,
do appoint that a National Convention of
the Union Republican party be held at the
city of Chicago, 111., on Wednesday, the
20th day of May next, at 12 o’clock m., for
the purpose of nominating candidates for the
offices of President and Vice President of
the United States. Each State in the United
States is authorized to be represented in said
Couvention by the number of delegates equal
to twice the number of Senators and Repre
sentatives to which each State is entitled in
the National Congress.
We invite the cooperation of all citizens
who rejoice that oar great civil war has
happily terminated in the discomfiture of
tho rebellion; who would hold fust the
unity and integrity of tho Republic, and
maintain its paramount right to defend to
the utmost its own existence, whether im
periled by secret conspiracy or armed
force ; of all friends of an economical ad
ministration of the public expenditure, of
the complete extirpation of the principles
and policy of slavery, and of tho speedy
reorganization of those States whoso Gov
ernments wore destroyed by the Rebellion,
and their permanent restoration to their
proper practical relations with the United
States in accordance with the trne princi
ples of republican government.
Marcus L. Ward, of Now Jersey,
Chairman.
John D. Defuses, of Indiana, Secretary.
Book aITd Job f rinxTn u ”
Exeouted at this Offioe
At tho Lowest Terms and in thojßest StyV
Come and see samples.
FORTIETH CONGRESS.
TERMS OT SENATORS.
Benjamin F Wade, of Ohio, President.
John W Forney, of Pennsylvania, Secretary.
osio Term Ex
Ben) P Wade 1869
John Sherman.... 1873
INDIANA
Thos A Hendricks..im
Oliver P Morton..lß7B
ILLINOIS
Richard Yates..... 1871
Lyman Trumbull.. 1873
MICHIGAN
Zach Chandler.... 1869
Jacob M Howard. .1871
WISCONSIN
Jas R Doolittle 1869
Timothy O Howe.. 1873
MINNESOTA
Alex Ramsejr 1869
David BNorton. .. .1871
IOWA
Jas W Grimes 1871
Jas Harlan 1873
MISSOURI
J B Henderson.... 1869
Chas D Drake 1873
KANSAS
Edmund G Ross. ..1871
Sam’lC Pomeroy. .1873
NEBRASKA
Thos W Tipton.... 1869
John M Thayer... .1871
NEVADA
Wm M Stewart....lß69
Jas W Nyo 1873
CALIFORNIA
John Conness 1869
Cornelius C01e.... 1873
OREGON
Geo H Williams.. .1871
Henry W Corbett.. 1878
Mama Term Me.
Lot M Morrill 1869
WmP Fessenden.. 1871
xaw aumsiu
Aaron H Cragln. ...1871
Jas W Patterson . .1878
VBKMOXT
Geo F Edmonds.. .1880
Justin 8 M0rrU1...1873
MASSACHUSETTS
Chas Snmner 1809
Henry Wilson 1871
RHODE ISLAND
Wm Sprague..... .1869
Henry B Anthony ,1871
CONNECTICUT
Jatnet Dixon 1869
Orris 8 Ferry 1873
NEW YORK
Edwin D Morgan. .1869
Roscoe Conkflng. .1873
NEW JERSEY
F T 1869
Alex G cStell... .1871
PENNSYLVANIA
Chat S Buekalew . .1809
Simon Cameron.. .1873
DELAWARE
Jot S Bayard 1869
Willard Saulsbury .1871
MARYLAND
ReverdyJohnson.. .1869
Philip F Thomas... 1873
WEST VIRGINIA
KG Van Winkle... 1869
WaitmanT Willey. 1871
KENTUCKY
James Guthrie 1871
Garret Davis. 1873
TENNESSEE
David T Patterson .1869
Joseph 8 Fowler..lß7l
RECAPITULATION
Republicans 42 j Oppositions (lit Italics) 13
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
Schuyler Colfax, ot Indiana, Speaker.
Edward McPherson, of Pennsylvania, Clerk.
TENNBSBEE
1 Roderick R Bntlcr
2 Horace Maynard
3 Wm B Stokes
4 Jas Mullins
5 John Trimble
6 Sam’l M Amoll
7 Issac R Hawkins
8 David A Nunn
OHIO
1 Benj Eggleston
3 Sam’l F Cary
3 Robt C Schenck
4 Wm Lawrence
5 WmMungen
6 Reader W Clarke
7 Sam’l Shallabargcr
8 C S Hamilton
9 Ralph P Buckland
10 Jas M Ashley
11 John T Wilson
12 Philip Van Trump
13 Geo IK Morgan
14 Martin Welter
15 Tobias A Plants
16 John A Bingham 7
17 Ephraim REckley
18 Rufus P Spaulding
19 Jas A Garfield
INDIANA
1 Wm ENiblack
2 Michael C Keer
3 Morton C Hunter
4 Wm S Holman
5 Geo W Julian
6 John Coburn
7 H D Washburn
8 Godlovc S Orth
9 Schuyler Colfax
10 Wm Williams
11 John F C Shanks
ILLINOIS
At Large , J'no A Logan
1 Norman B Judd
2 John F Farnsworth
3 Elihu B Washburn
4 Abner C Harding
5 Ebcn C IngcrsolT
6 Burton C Cook
7 H P II Bromwell
8 Shelby M Cullom
9 Lewis W Ross
10 Albert G Burr
11 Sam'l S Marshall
12 Jehu Baker
13 Green B Raum
MICHIGAN
1 Fernando C Beaman
2 Chas Upson
S Austin Blair
4 Thos W Ferry
5 R E Trowbridge
6 John F Driggs
WISCONSIN
1 Halbert C Paine
2 Bcnj F Hopkins
3 Amasa Cobb
4 Chas A Eldridge
5 Philetus Sawyer
6 C C Washbnrne
MINNESOTA
1 WmWindom
2 Ignatius Donnelly
IOWA
1 James F Wilson
2 Hiram Price
3 Wm B Allison
4 Wm Lougbbridge
5 Grenville M Dodge
6 Isabel W Hubbard
MISSOURI
1 Wm A Pile
2 Carman A Newcomb
3 Jas B McCormick
4 John J Gravelly
5 Jos W McClurgo
0 Robt T Van Horn
7 Benj F Loan
8 John F Benjamin
9 Geo W Anderson
KANSAS
1 Sidney Clarke
NEBRASKA
1 JobnTalle
NEVADA
1 Delos R Ashley
CALIFORNIA
1 Sam'l Axtell
2 Wm Higby
3 Jas A Johnson
OREGON
1 Rufus Mallory
DELEGATES
ARIZONA
Coles Bashiord
DAKOTA
Walter A Burleigh”
IDAHO
E D Holdbrock
MONTANAg
Jas M Cavanaugh
NEW MEXICO
C P Clever (doubtful)
UTAH
Wm H Hooper
WASHINGTON
Alvin Flanders
WYONING
Jas S Casement
MAINE
1 John Lynch
2 Sidney Pcrham
3 Jas G Blaine
4 John A Peters
5 Frederick A Pike
NEW HAMPSIIIH
1 Jacob H Ela
2 Aaron F Stevens
3 Jacob Benton
VERMONT
1 Fred E Woodbridge
2 Lake P Poland
3 W C Smith
MASSACHUSETTS
1 Thos D Eliot
2 Oakes Ames
3 Gincry Twitchell
4 Sam’l Hooper
5 Bcnj F Butler
6 Nat P Banks
7 Geo S Boutwcll
8 John D Baldwin
9 Wm B Washbnrne
Henry L Dawes
RHODE ISLAND
1 Thos A Jenckes
2 Nathan F Dixon
CONNECTICUT
t Ricli'd D Hubbard
2 Julius Hotchkiss
3 IIH Starkweather
4 Wm U Bamum
NEW YORK
1 Stephen Taber
2 Demos Barnes
3 Vim E Robinson
4 John Fox
5 John Morrissey
6 Thos E Stewart
7 John IK Chanter
8 Jas Brooks
9 Fernando Wood
19 Wm II Robertson
11 C II Van Wyck
12 John H Ketcham
13 Thos Cornell
14 John V h Pruyn
15 John A Grisswold
16 Orange Ferris
17 Calvin T Hulbard
18 Jas M Marvin
19 Wm C Fields
20 Addison H Laflin
21 Alex H Bailey
22 John C Churchill
23 Dennis McCarthy
24 Theo M Pomeroy
25 Wm H Kelsey
26 Wm 8 Lincoln
27 Hamilton Ward
28 Lewis Selye
29 Burt Van Horn
30 J M Humphreys
31 n Van Aeruum
NEW JERSEY
1 Wm Moore
2 Chas Haight
3 Chas SUgrcavcs
4 John Hill
5 Geo A Halsey
PENNSYLVANIA
1 Sam'l J Randall
2 Chas O’Neill
3 Lenard Myers
4 Wm D Kelley
5 Caleb N Taylor
6 Benj M Boyer
7 John M Bromall
8 J Lawrence Getz
9 Thaddeus Stevens
10 Henry L Cake
11 D M l r a»t Auken
12 Oeo W Woodward
13 Ulysses Mercer
14 George F Miller
15 AdamJ Grossbrenner
16 Wm II Koontz
17 Dan’l J Morrill
18 Stephen S Wilson
19 Glenni W Schofield
20 Darwin A Finney
21 John Covode
22 Jas K Moorehcad
23 Thos Williams
24 Geo V Lawrence
DELAWARE
1 John A Nicholson
MARYLAND
1 lliram McCullough
2 Stephenson Archer
3 Chas E Phelps
4 Francis Thomas
5 Frederick Stone
WEST VIRGINIA
1 Chester D Hubbard
2 Bcnj M Kitchen
3 Dari’l Polslcy
KENTUCKY
1 Lawrence S Trimble
2 John Young Brown
3 J 8 8 Gollady
4 J Proctor C Knoll
5 Asa P Grover
6 Thos L Jones
7 Jas B Reek
8 Geo M Adams
9 John D Young
RECAPITULATION
Republicans 144 | Opposition (In Italics) 49
PROSPECTUS
OP
"THE BANNEROFTHE SOUTH.”
Rev. A. J. RIAN) Editor.
— o—
undersigned proposepublisii-
ING, in the city of Augusta, Ga., a journal
to be called
“THE BANNER OP THE SOUTH,”
To be devoted to
Religion, Literature and Art.
It will be published weekly, and will be under
the control of
REV. A. J RYAN,
Author of “ The Conquered Banner,’ etc., etc
TERMS:
Per. Annum, in advanco $3 00
Six Months, in advance 1 50
Single Copies 10
first number will be issued on or
about MARCH Ist, 1888.
JtS'AIl communications for publication must
bo addressed to the Editor. Subscription and
business lotters to the publishers.'
L. T. BLOME A CO., Publishers,
feblS—tml Augusta, Ga.
Fish and Oysters,
Game, "
POULTRY,
VEGETABLES
FAMILY GROCERIES
OP EVERY DESCRIPTION,
Always on hand and for sale low.
CALL AND SEE MB.
WM. HALE (Colored),
Ellis street,
aul—tf Between Washington me
R. R. R.
90
OCT OF
100
OF DEATHS, that annually
occur, are caused by Prevent
able Diseases, and the greatei
portion of those complaints
would, if Eadway’s Ready Re
lief or Pills, (as the case may
require,) were administered
when pain or uneasiness or
slight sickness is experienced,
be exterminated from the sys
tem in a few hours. PAIN, no
matter from what cause, is
almost instantly cured by the
Ready Relief. . In cases of Cho
lera, Diarrhoea, Cramps, Spasms
Bilious Cholic, in fact all Pains,
Aches and Infirmities either in
the Stomach, Bowels, Bladder,
Kidneys, or the Joints, Muscles,
Legs, Arms, Rheumatism, Neu
ralgia, Fever and Ague, Head
ache, Toothache, &c., will in a
FEW MINUTES yield to the
soothing influence of the Ready
Relief.
Sudden Colds, Coughs, Influenza, Dlp
theria, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Chills, Fever
and Ague, Mercurial Pains, Scarlet Fever,
flic., fltc., take from four to six of Radway’*
Pills, and also take a teaspoonful of the
Ready Relief in a glass of warm water, sweet
ened with sugar or honey: bathe the throat,
head and chest with Ready Belief, (if Ague
or Intermittent Fever, bathe the spine also,)
in the morning you will be cured.
How the Ready Relief Aots I
In a few minutes the patient will feel s
slight tingling irritation, and the skin be
comes reddened; if there is much distress in
the stomach, the Relief will assist nature in
removing tho offending cause,—a general
warmth is felt throughout the entire body,
and its diffusive stimulating properties
rapidly courses through every vein and tissue
of the system, arousing the slothful and
partially paralyzed glands and organs to re
newed and healthy action, perspiration fol
low», and tho surface of tho body feels in
creased heat. The sickness at stomach, colds,
chill*, head-ache, oppressed breathing, the
soreness of the throat, and all pains, either
internally or externally, rapidly subside, and
the patient falls into a tranquil sleep, awake*
refreshed, invigorated, cured.# '1
It will be found that in using the Relief
externally, either on the spine or across the
kidneys, or over the stomach and bowels, that
for several days after a pleasing warmth will
be felt, showing the length of time it con
tinues its influence over the diseased part*.
Hr Price of R. R. R. RELIEF, 60 cents
per bottle. Sold by Druggists and Country
Merchants, Grocers, &c.
RADWAY & CO.,
87 Maiden Lane, New York.
TYPHOID FEVER.
This disease is not only cured by
Dr. Eadway’s Belief and Pills, but pre
vented. If exposed to it, put one tea
spoonful of Belief in a tumbler ol
water. Drink this before going out in
the morning, and several times during
the day. Take one of Eadway’s Pills
one hour before dinner, and one on
going to bed.
If seized with Fever, take 4 to 6 ol
the Pills every six hours, until copious
discharges from the bowels take place;
also drink the Belief diluted with
water, and bathe the entire surface ol
the body with Belief. Soon a power
ful perspiration will take place, and
you will feel a pleasant heat through
out the system. Keep on taking Belie!
repeatedly, every four hours, also the
Pills. A cure will be sure to follow.
The relief is strengthening, stimulating,
soothing, and quieting; it is sure tc
break up the Fever and to neutralize
the poison. T Let this treatment be fol
lowed, and thousands will be saved.
The same treatment in Fever and Ague,
Yellow Fever, Ship Fever, Bilious
Fever, will effect a cure in 24 hours
When the patient feels the Belief irrita
ting or heating the skin, a cure is posi
tive. In all cases where pain is felt
the Belief should be used.
Belief 50 cts.; Fills 25 cts. Sold
by all Druggists.
See Dr. Bad way’s Almanac for 1868
mh4—lt.
NO “OPENINGS.”
OPEN ALL THE TIME!
Latest Styles I
THE NEW
Millinery Headquarters,
Next to the Planters’ Hotel,
Have no special “opening day ,«
as tho LATEST STYLES and NOVEL
TIES arc always on hand, roady for inspection.
In all cases,
Satisfaction is Guaranteed !
RECEIVED, EVERY FRIDAY,
DIIUSCT FROM
IST IE W YORK,
Abb KINDS OF
Goods in our Line.
WE SELL LADIES’ AND MISSES’
FELT and STRAW HATS
OF EVERY STYLE,
AT FROM
Fifty Cents to Three Dollars
ter HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR
FURS. Send for Price Lists.
WM. R. DAVIS A 00.,
Next door above the famous Planters’ Hotel,
Hoot— ev Thur« Augusta, Ga.
tau Printie Co.]
Book & Job
PRINTING OFFIC]
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™a§ i§™®yMsQn
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PRESSES, TYPE, BORDERS, ORNAMENTS, m
* And is ready to execute any description of
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o
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Os this Establishment
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