Newspaper Page Text
ler
G>‘i
j J3
dr. [}-.
•3 Labis ifTiin
Tnoma* Jordan, iaie of the
e armv, but now second in
rr>0'.2 lli'* C .baa insurgents,
’■/lone. Harri tglon, of Ctn-
Armt of the Potomac, >
May 3. 1663. }
To Leonard W. Jerome, New York :
The bov, we fear, is mortally wcmn
ed. ' ' D. B.
3.000.-
Gdaimako, O i. 19, IS69.
M E*
nerd:—Nearly two
'e.'Sed a letter to a
, ill which I repre
.i a >v
:n \t
hat the Cubans
tiling for men,
r.edicines, arms
I am gratified
of mine has met
nose, and that
Else# of clothing
ded ir* the bay
- bo-mri i-.jf .Sisai
TIE STATE Fill if UCIX.
We have received a handsom
from the .Macon Telegraph, «
The Geoigra State Fair Bul’ett
taiiong the list o: oremiums, i d
tio i of the Fair Grot
;#. name;
filers IEUUE.
No one «app- 4 * that Gen. Grant is
rPable of wri'Hitf a respectable paper
. 'he general at; at of the nation, and
r*re is considera>le tiation as to
fi > n he will enira»t the preparation
t i. s first message io Congress. The
nrrespe dent ol the Bi>i ore Gazette
ves us some light on me subject.
le!err;ng to the reports lh.it have been
g i|»bed Irnm YYashinstoh purport-
give" some of the leading meas
§outimn Ittcortor.
i
exte
A trier
were
that
L~
<L‘
,A n ,
1790
1800
1 SI 0
t ' 2*1
1 5-jO
1 "40
1 "00
1600
It will
tiiHt I tie p*
i'J4.lv A.
232.4-33
340,9-3
i fi
rer>'ese;,i jpe stiun-
bettcr than can l the
ivii war. While we
r*ee*l of foreign sol*
i to carry this struggle
ilion, we do need sup-
i' 1 am able to calcu-
twentv-six thousand
?n wj o have arms, and
ret sincerity that we
;ed;att;T sevrniv-five
if arms, and with that
could er.d tr «
Committees of the State and
Associations, and much othe
connected with the approach
which promises to be the nift
sive and interesting demons-
the kind ever witnessed in ti
For the information of those
template visiting Macon t
Fair week, we copy from the Billet
the following official programme :
O&DER OF DU31XE55, AND ADBRESS1
AND DISCUSSIONS DURING THE FAIR.
AH entries of articles for ex'
wi
the
11 tor
must
as t hr
be made before M
books will then be closed.
Tuesday—At nine o’clo:
commam of
the army.
eu.et -•
? norths
our lands.
J ana Mr. Calhoun, was, in a great degree, • for wbieu be was appointed a M.
I i« their power of elaboration of principles. • er*l by brevet. Sicie *i.e 5; j
i Mr. Webster bad a wonderful analytical General Wool’
mind—or great comparison—or inductive
reasoning, ability and disposition to anal-
ys.e. to classify, draw inferences, Ac. Bat
he was no originator or leader, and he
never was the leader of a great principle
or maaanra. Mr. Clay had a rr.ind for or
iginating, and Mr. Webster was his striker,
and could elaborate and draw deductions •
rithoat end ; kenca. ha was called the
great “Expounder of tha Constitution.”
but h« ooold cot have drafted sueh an in
strument. Give him a principle of law,
and ha could reason beyond any oth
er man in hi* deductions. We will not
deny to him statesmanship, but his great
powers were circumscribed in a great de
gree, to New England interests and r*
Our people are waking up to the value ! have heard him called, when speaking ot
of their lands, and are realising the great J him to men who knew him well, and com-
TELEGRAPH k
We Lave receives t:
Tefegropk A Messenger,
#r*ser having eons . :a
Telegraph. A few
Reese bought out tie j
from J. W. Burke k C
now be controlled a
Messrs. Gilroy, Reiu &
With the taieat ifca:
bear on its c-dtuaa*, tb
•anger will be one of
papers in the 5:at-
J. W 14-irke A; Co
Win. M. Browne. wJI
lion to the Farm k H
* is r,.
th that the true wealth of the South U * paring him to Clay and Calhoun, as the
paper
rime.
»• r;
>eak a:
after ad in tie land and its productions.
That there is not a richer mine than land
“New England Attorney” denying to him
wei. plow?
:nd
ured, and that it
-23
out
I S-
yearn,
the im
ie, do
armies nor
Kin* 7 cities m
m—hr cause, even
era, it would be at a
>jr trained soldiers,
» edge that we could
the reason that we
defend them against
morning the Fair Grounds will In-
ready to admit visitors.
At eleven o’clock the annual meet
ing of the Slate Agricultural Society
will be called to order bv -he Presi
dent.
At three o’clock in tlie afternoon
lecture by Hon. Mark A. Cooper, on
the “Destiny ol the South under recent
changes, and the Policy of the Co?to-.
Planters indicated thereby.”
Jftdsetday—At ten o’clock distin
guished visitors and invited oucsts
will i/e formally welcomed b • (lie
President and the Executive Commit
tee of the Society.
At eleven o’clock the annual .no ire--
thi
DOii
r. v
ad
th<* .-i xi n,
i ; t
lb£
P
la;
the
ties:' 3
i i l to
ir ent
n-rn.
bene fitte<
to send ti
- we have so close-
*v are ready of no
except the name oi
e occasionally are
in their attempts
Principe will be delivered bv Gen. Wade H
ton.
omes, wi
n Cdv-
oer
90 ve
li increase
rule of fit-
l n .0
1"" 0
1990
1 900
1910
19*0
19 30
I 940
1 900
us
C.'tM
c;u
i ( j i
ish*
Kr»-at
ite wi
the
(!e« a !e, which
2 p suit# :
1.210.000
1 3S0.00u
1.597.000
1.524.000
* 100,000
2.415.000
2.755.000
•3.205,000
3.700.000
nut three t :ni-i
thf- »mr:e per-
ihe , *diol»-
ivc h:i Hperctfir e of
50, of about 120,000,-
le larg>: immigration
counirf, outside of
Id tlcein lwentv-five
» cade, a nearer .esli-
f<r country, and that
200,000,000 in 1900.
■ is amah, when the
i considered, as cou.-
;uur, tries.
;iec with Mr. Dick-
• » dei.se p>ipu 1 ations
ni'ieiits and fully be-
[iid religion are cher-
r digree in moder-
i in more populous
Trier
use.
people are
m any othi
are, tr,
The
creat mind arid
The Cuban pairi-
rn^n of a higher
r Spanish Arneri-
- most of them, aii
At three o’clock remarks on Taxa
tion and Labor by Hon. David A.
Wells, of Washington.
Thursday—An address bv IL-v. Dr.
Willis, at eleven o’clock, on the rela
tions of Morals and Agriculture.
From rnne to eleven o’clock, Wednes
day and Thursday, will be devoted bv
the Judges to examinatio
and animals.
Friday—At eleven o’clock, the re
lam “representative men in the;
a and coai interest, he made the
2e?l speech he ever before essayed,
. I think the best. . He then prociairn-
in substance, than !fom Jackson’s
io to his own, the ieaimate futic-
;5 ot the Legislative and Executive
inches of the government had been
vapped oiT;” thai Congressmen
ipoiritmeut business, in
if which they handed
al legislative busine«s
e. This was putting a.
here ins tail ought to be,
lerraiued, if the Senate
to go t>ack to first prin
were allowed to carry
pent business urunoiest
taiil u arch to Jericho
;>ad, itt the Legislature,
he cared, at
that he won!
ed, no matter
all such on
B.t that,
jject to tfie ;t
•hatting \viih B ,
about coal, *= wi
>tii«r metals.
b«*t3 go’ IT : :» cat 0! sight.
We see that ianda that were selling one
ami two j. ear# ago for 63 and So per acre,
are now bringing *10, $12 and $17. land
that was considered oalv medium. Oar
a broad statesmausuip wiien compared
with those men-
Mr, Ca Ih iun.uad great comparison al*o.
with large causality as strong, if not as
nicely drawn at that of Mr. Webster ; and
besides, h* bid large perceptive faculties,
which Mr. W. did not posses* ; which inane
Axsbujas -
nal for Xorem
with matters i:
riodical, at.d
informi
■ 9 ^s. wei
It :i a *3
r.e'
paga::
Parks!
■i tv. C i a;
.si If s.
old lauds are now looked upon as the most him not only a good reas^nei, bet a ready
“t
.Oil
Congress
n their own
>r a;i
ig ami
r*w nil
d and
i i hr would veto
d execute u’l the
where leading,
Jers, if it broke
nevertheless, hr
delegation’ vis
ituell, who
II as iron,
desirabio, a^ they are Ire* of stumps and
can be cultivated with more ease and
more rapidity ; and a# to fertility, deep
plowing has shown that they have plenty
of hie in them with a little manure ap
plied.
Wo are entering upon a new era io
planting, and one that will astonish the
old fogy who was so terribly afraid to
plow deep, for lear the soil would be in
jured thereby, and that it would not do to
turn up the soli, for fear that the rain
would wash it all awav, anl that scratch-
man, a prompt debater, that could take
in at a moment, a proposition or theorem
as soon as announced, and <1 aw the de
ductions in bis own mind. wi»b lightning
rapidity, before tha epeak°r Lai atterei a
half d'.r.tn words. Mr. Webster wanted
time to think, to rea»on, and t < ana'rze,
and as he acknowleJzed, r.ev»r spoke un
til he Lad prepared himself.
Mr. Calhoun had an original mini, a_d
IxiTi.v t : — A:
ithcat ;Le exr..
•“S :
Hence, snirr
now as tfcev
waaeapaoieol origmat.ng n.tasuree, aod
was a man for a eri-i». lie bad not
Webster’s scholarly attainments, bat was
ing on tiie top was euoagh, aud thought big superior as an original thinker and a
a?or *Le a^e i:
» F^D?ible wi
that an average of twelve bushels of corn j leader of men. Stephen A. Douglas had a ed— be fitted to
!ere _
to the acre was doing very well, and one mind very much upon tha same order a*
HIT Dili l.mUER P'.CIFIl
;‘IVf“(
•*}<.' c
-r.- at ii'ast.
A.
miurris awarded.
There will be a session of th
cultural Society every night, i
e and pre-
Agri-
•ri who have re- ports of Judges will be in
eaucation either in the
tales or in Europe. They are
»mpr“heusive, able, Hrei devoted to
eir cause, I observe that there ex
's :« doubt in the minds of a few citi-
n-» ot the Lnitd Stales of the extinc-
m of *'avery in this island. Slavery
as abolished when the standard of as may be named hv the Com nittr-u
Mr.
ID.
Ae
Richards
m ho left :
ee as the Executive Co;
select, at which there will be disc
sions upon the essays submitteil
premiums, and upon such other t p
revolt was raised, and acain bv the \
lwentT-fourth article of the constitution
of this republic. There are forty
thou-and liberated slaves now follow-1
ing o*i- camps. Thousands of them 1
are armed with machetas, a half haich“t
and hall meat-axe. They have shown
a willingness to meet the enemy in the
open field with such weapons only as
From nine o’clock to eleven, c-
morning, and from four to five in
evening, will be devoted to the
and examination of horses.
to oe ei
from Ci
the 30i
wc wer
On me 1st ins
covered with
Galveston
SCo, Sept
bst ruction#
lie present
Or
’tiii<
1! C
igh the
fiiUti
1 t!
d snowing
mountains,
the ground
i ork
B u
V
»nl<
most desired to call Four
our great need of clothing
I feel a-sured that if
res-iug want <*f tlie.-e worthy
: was well understood in the
I Slates, there would such a tide
t ributions of materials and money
us as would reiiev
■tort
he
re i
, ft
•1 by
i... F
n I Ir
T»ire,
t'
SI)*'*
re to
ittua in the
isiiorn L»r us to
urage • unmigra-
nuient lias be
lie immigration
i /i;s liiriL were
be< n changed,
mm one ot Iree
; and a# each
tjiving for e.ri
ser: our State
ot- poured
«li our wants ar»d secure fn
an earlv triumph over thr
inrous Spaniard. .
1 wi.-h this might i;e brought before 1 rejt H several of their very best
ike Cubans
truly bar-
A few weeks ago, we publish?
significant extract from Parker 1
bury’# first letter to the Ne
Revolution, dated at Charleston, and
ail about the negro. He has written n
second letter if possible more spicy and
interesting than its predecessor. * }Je
ihinks it his old friends Garrison and
Wendell Phillips would come “down
South” and see for themselves they
w«uld relnrn Northward sadder and
wiser men. Speaking ot the three oi
negro office-holding, he says :
“A majority of tire Legislature ol
South Carolina are colored men, and
maav of them can neither write rroi
ceiKiei* tne east
Mountains ail si
ed, and the chat
manifest.
Some persons
mountain Severn
trujuiries, expo*:
rime four inches
day, as wc des-
; of the Rocky
snow disappenr-
■ as
'It
emperat ure
l fit
lS ; Mri
wi»n „ . ....
je American ladies. ! wisli that they i friends assured me they shou;
light crjriif> r eli»-nrl how 30,000 Cuban J su pport such again for the sake of- th<
-ffbr! s
road [.
..'though tin
gie.11 st;rng
bout twenty th
v«*l !hose who
juble snows on
(•r.i-hing avala
they are called
that l lie snow
away by the m
universal opirii
impo-sabie for
ve lived i-.i lin-
in reply to our
opinion that no
touhl
u.a
■>h
this
liter, arid
iuiil with
a ml
expense
oilars [»«r nine
messed ihe ter-
ot a-
,; t.
Hums and lire
snowslides, a#
*j the opinion
tag to three or four acre?, pretty good.
We predict that in the next five years,
the farmer who pretends to have an idea
in Lis bead, will think that it is ordinary
farming if he does not get 20 bushels of
corn to ihe acre and a bag of cotton from
tiro acre- ; and that will be good farming
that gives him 40 bushel# to the acre, aud
a bag to the acre.
We are in the infancy of true and eco
nomical farming, but there is a bright day
ahead for ua and our children, aud we pre
diet that before the year 1879, la nos that
now can be bought for $5, an acre will
then demand from $50 to $10C. especially
it they are what are called cleared lands.
Never can there be a better investment
than putting money in lands now, and
those who are looking out for safe invest
meuts, tree from depreciation, could not
do better than to buy lands. Should emi
gration turn South wards, as we have every
reason to believe, there is no telling to
what price our land# will go. Cotton at
from 20 to 30 cents is too great induce
ment not to invite cultivation.
that cf Mr. Calhoun's and Lecce his grea’
power as a reasoner, ana a ready aebater.
DLATH OF AMOS KENDALL.
Tne telegraph announced th* death of
Hon. Aic-js KeLtla:! on the 12;n iust.. al
ter a Lng illness Says the Journal A
Messenger :
Amos Kendall was the last of that
school of politicians of wLieh his g.eat
friend and ieader, Andiew Jackson was
the chief. Without any pretensions to be
ing a great man, he was an eminently use
worm s mind, jes: as m
acu adjasted tc the
individuals body ; wnen we nave out
grown eitber, they should be cast aside,
unless we wish our movements :s oe crank
ed.” An Institution because it is old, is
no recommendation within itself, unless i:
has kept pace with the pr -gress of :be a?e;
fur no tiaveler who desires speed, wool]
take the old 6tsge coach when the rail
road car is at band.
Patriotism :—That sentiment
of countrv that claims iteel* an
ful and practical man iu bis day aud gen- principle :n t::e human
He
loves no: the land
land that gave him
jreast.
fathers or ti
is destitute
eration.
He was born in Dunstable, MassacLm
setts, in August, 1789. He was a staunch that soui enuoul.ng loyalty tnat stampsim
Democrat in politics and an ardent friend man. Ihe love or country, is fti n to th
iMif:# or
eXprf' »r
shrd* would be swept
In it i# nearly the
a that the road will be
and supporter of General Jackson, by
whom he was appointed in 1829 Fourth
Auditor of the Treasury. In 1635, he
a as appointed Postmaster General,and by
his energy aud business capacity, and
method, so reformed the orgiuization of
the Postal Department as to make it self
sustaining, aud free it from the debt by
which it had been previously encumbered-
Iu the following year he procured the pas
act of Congress reorganizing
s numerous government j{ ae department thoroughly, and estab-
iiundred and five thou-:,. , • . ,. , -
ushing tee system winch is substanfiahy
the same as that which exist* at the pres
ent day. After the retirement of General
love- that a child bear? mother, and tbe
true patriot ever exclaims, I love the
“Lard wLer* I tearard to }i?v a n
The first belov'd in life, tee last for;
Land < f aij frolic youth.
Land of my bridal eve.
Land of my children and the jrare
Land that ej&im* my first, my ~ r
A land for which I’d freeiv * “3 mv
I'jr illiut Did They Die!
The New York World sa_\ s that there aage of an
are buried iu th
Cemeteries three
sand Luion soldiers, and asks the perti
nent questiou : “What did these men
die for ?”
P’s and Q'a : — We hare often hear!
the expression of caution, to mind yonr
P'# and Q’s. a: (1 it originated in England
in the day# when but Jew cca’I real cr
write. It was customary to chalk on tla
wall the number of Pints or Quarts drank
by the visitors to the ale house
show the number of pints c-r qua:
n
a cnusi
vv
irrablf* part ol Ostensibly for the preservation of the j Jackson, he was continued iu the Cabinet rears not paid for. And in chalking, t
nakr-
are iiving nn aboriginal life, half j c °l° r ^ < l r^ce ituell not e\t*ri to ?avt
ttie nr
Hailrr
pear to concur in
So : i her ti Pacific
United States goverument as a govern- of Mr. Van Buren until 1840, when be re- debtor would doubtless eic!a;ca
ment, but in fact, for the great pecuniary signed Lis office, in order to take an sc- seller to mind bis P’s and Q's
des nnrl spreading 1 Such burlesque on the very name of
•Iter them. Such an ! government, they declared, was never
grow
po.'.(
went
may
only su
the me
Provid
si i’ ;igtn, that slie
n th' council# ot th
As to the evil# such
and
may be a
Govern-
a course
sn*l but poorly sheltered, a« thr
(ijr^sts and fiillsi
palm tree# can shelit
armv of self denying ladies was never
before assembled on earth. Their de
votion knows no parallel except in the
lives of our revolutionary mothers. 1
the State from the Democratic parly.
hope the whole American people rnav
realize the situation of these people—
md
rii;
cl hi tlie lar-oli future, we can
lii,-it we have every faith that
of ilie future, with the aid of
.re will be able to meet them.
Tin;
Out.—.8
that
() I.D
D’iil
I.
’i-idler Hoax Plater
our exchange.# report
aDoiical pint to rob and murder
m Ascension Parish, La., was happily
discovered and frustrated on .Monday
of la.-t week.
Two white men carrying a large
package, called at the residence, of Mr.
A. Colo mb, near Donaldsonville, and
a.-ked permission ot Mrs C. (Mr. be
ing absent) to deposit the bundle for u
etiort tune, promising to return for it,
as it was very valuable. The paek-
iiup v.a-» deposited in a room <>f the
house, the two men taking their de
earnin'. Shortly afterwards, Mrs.
Colntnb passing near the package, dia-
coverctl that it moved. Being satisfied
that such was the fact, she sent imme
diately for the ov» rseer or manager ot
the plantation, who came armed, and
upon teeing the movement again in the
package, sfiot at it with a gun, which
caused blood to (low therefrom, il-
proceeded to open it, and a negro mu
their wants, sufferings, devotion
worthiness—and then aid therm
i wish I had the time to write you
much more. But ns our rn
can only carry a very small parcel,
am obliged to close this letter. You
may address me, care of the Cuban
.Jti (a, No. 71 Broadway, New York.
Yours, most irulv,
Thomas Jordan,
Adj ut.ml General Armv of Cuba.
before seen, j have witnessed enough
myself to easily understand that it
must he ?o< Al the opening of ihe
session colored voters were easily
bought at five dollars, though later
they rose on their price. One shrewd
Yankee from Massachusetts, not a
member, but who had some scheme#
to lobby through the Legislature, enr-
rssenger i r ' Ct ^ ,Q l ^ ie capital some eases of new
jj hats, and with them ?;s legal tender
drove quite a spirited and sucees?ful
business.” *
The Corain
'The United Si at
the Chronicle and
occasion of some
next session of tin
efioa ft? fnifrif Staff: Srnnlor.
# Senatorship, savs
Sentinel will be the
excitement hi the
Legislature. Rti-
beuefit the South wa# to the Union. The j live part in the Presidential canvas# of mark to him Q'# when
>me i
Or pernap#
jvia! driu
the a.:
ir.d Dt-t
be P's.
Toi)” irt n Rtui Fix and a Major (jrnfrai j
^prttilaliii; on Iris CnndilioD.
o\V#
The Joum/il says: A llirifty farmer
living iu Terrel county, informed u# a
few days since that he was “all right
for another year, and we thought so
i too. He. has during the past season
given his personal attention to hi* stock,
and thinks lie .vill have a sutplus of
I lie New Y ork florid shows, from | meat for another year, after feed in (
certain dispatches sent to New York, more than twenty hands. He has d<
during the war, lio%v skilled an opera
tor trie 1 leasury Agcul Ht New York j anti will not have«.n buv a bushe
was iu lliose trying times. At tiie bat- j corn for his next crop. lie also
voted more land than usual to corn.
■» bu
rop.
m-
tleof Chancellor#vi:Ir, Butterfield, with i forms us that by close attention and
ihe epaulettes of a Major General and i proper arrangement# for stock raising,
mors are afloat respecting “Slate# that
are being made up” bv the friends of
those who desire the seal now filled, or
rafher the seat now not fiifed f»y reason
ot Radical three ano fraud, by the Hon.
H. V. Miller. Mr. Candler, of DeKalb,
and Major Joseph R. Gumming, of
Richmond, are spoken of as candidates
acceptable to the Democracy for this
important post. On the other hand it
has been repeatedly asserted that “Bui
lock” is in the field, and lhat there are
enough ut Tadpole Democrats who are
now neither fish nor frog, bill who will
on that interesting occasion determine
their condition bv their support of his
Express’em y. Current tumors indi
cate lively times ahead and “things
much mixed.” it is said lhat there
will be a Radical caucus at the Maco
Fair, as preliminary
Radical Convention t
Blodjett, State Road Manager.
Pert
the uo?t ot Chief of Staff to the Corn-! he lias not lost a hug this j r ear. He
mHiding General of the United States ; informs U3 that there are a tew oilier
Army, it is alleged took advantage of : in hit neighborhood ; and one who has
Considerable tn' iu
his position, which gave him control of
the telegraph wires as well as a know
ledge ot the plans of his chief, to com
municate with a leading broker in Wall
-trer-t, and made the crushing defeat
of the Federal army [tour gold into hi?
pockets. When the tide of battle was
turning agamst the Federal army, the
Cfnei ot .-#!at] telegraphed as follows:
Armt of thk Potomac, )
May 2, 15(33. )
To Leonard W. Jerome, New York:
The boy is wounded. D. B.
Later in th« dav when “the rebels”
e parties wme umter 1)a(j lhe fllll | aci|y lo fl ank the great
l ,t ' 1 ’ ° oin * ,a< Sickle* and cut him off from the main
body, having previously given the
eleventh corps “particular fits,” “D. B.”
f*cm another dispatch, which i# as fol
lows :
Armv of the Potomac, )
was found killed therein, armed with
a revolver and large knife. Jost thru
tlie two white men carne rapidly to
the house for the purpose of assisting
the negro, when the manager of the
place shot and killed one of them, thr
other man making los escape,
opinion is, that tin
not bought corn since the war.
T’hu is whnt we call “practical re
construction.” It is the king ot con
struction—and the only kind—that will
Ify?srinlhe Io thr Boston Einttgriical
Prpitrlurs.
Boston, November 8.—The follow
ing is P( re Hyaeinihe’.* reply to the
address and invitation to visit Boston,
States knew full well, that the Sonth as
an independent government, freed from
the protective tariff# of the North, aud
with her great productions of eotron, rice,
sugar, tobacco, Ac., thrown open to tiie
world, that New England and Northern
prosperity, was at an end, for there would
be no longer a South to bleed for the ben-
efif of Northern Manufacturers.
Tu« Western men fought for a tree
Mississippi, for they feared that should the
South be successful, that they would con
trol that river to their hurt and disadvan
tage. Henee the war was not actually
for the Union, but for the pecuniary ben
efits that would naturally follow from tho
South being a part of the Union. As to
love for the South, Ler people, institutions
manners *>r habits, they were hated and
abhorred, and war was made npouusfor
fotiy years iu Congress, aud out of Con
gre?9,'u the churches : in the school room ;
to the coming j on the stump, to imbitter the
lied br Fostei j people agaiust us as a people.
i Take away the wealth of’ths South, or
. destroy her great products, and we, as a
people, might go to the dogs, so far as the
North is coucerned. But Bo long as we
,are the financial backbone of tbo govern
ment, the North will never let us go wil
Mr. Kendall wai upwards of eighty
years of age st the lime of hi* death.
DEATH OF HON. ROBT. J. WALKER
The Hon. Robt. J. Walker died in
Washington City on the 11th idsL A
writer in the Atiauta Constitution gives
ns the following ot him :
He was torn iu the year lS01,in North
umberland, Pa., and graduated in tlie
University of Pennsylvania in 1819. He
commenced tbe practice of law in Pitts
burg, in 1521, aud commenced his politi
cal life by the uomiuatiou of General Jack
son for fhe Presidency.
In 1825, he married Miss Mary Bache.
a great grand daughter of Benjamin Frank,
liu, a lady, who united in ea eminent de
gree, loveliness of character with heatity
of persou.
In 182G, he removed to Natchez Missis
sippi, where he soon received a lucrative
x - , ’ .practice at the bar. In 1835, he was
Northern ■
: elected to tbe United States Senate, by
the Democratic party.
Iu 1845, he accepted the post of Secre
tary of the Treasury of Mr. Polk’s admin
istration, which be retained to its close, in
1849.
er n-
put a half gallon or so of ale underlie
vest or treated liberally, he was remind?!
to be on his P's and O'?, a? thev were
growing fast upon him.
"N7V OOK.1 y C3f-L©ce
Showing Ih? lit and Body ofthf Tied.
The difficulties an;ong the Mormons i»
Utah still continues, and several digcitt-
ries of the Church have been expel'?“’
The Kiugdom of Y oung is tottering.
Count Bismarck's income is compute•
at about $35,000, derivable from Lis vari
ous estates and oiuc*»s. To thi? roust te
added the cot inconsiderable item f t » f re *
ministerial residence in Berlin, and tat-.?
money.
Mr. M. A. Dupree, a young farmer cl
Meriwether county, near Warnervilie- ra ’’
forms the Middle Georgian that up o 9
acre of bottom land, without fertilizer?, u 0
raised 110 bushels of coru. Thi# i* *
splendid yield, and shows w’uat can i?
done oq good laud.
According to the report of the m :i
Auditor, the American Legation at P* r *
cost for the fiscal year ending July 1. t’- 1
S26.4S7 42 iu salaries, and S3.924 94 in
contingent expenses: total, 630,4-- ' )0 -
Mr. YYashhurne, when a member of Con*
gress from Illinois, drew only 85.000 #*'*'
He cannot, therefore, claim to be »
tendered him through the evangel
iteni ^ rom
ministers in this city and vicinity
As to the destruction of our negro prop-
. . „ ry.
He remained in private lit* til; ISol.when martyr iu his present otnee.
The Express states that several N?*
at the urgent solicitation of Mr. Bacbanan
be was induced to accept the post of Gov
‘1 am very sensible of the hi^ii erty, it remains to be seen if it does not
reclaim the lust fbrluues of the South- honor paid me in the greeting from the hasten tue dissolution of the Union at no
eni people. Raising cotton to i>u\ j clergy whom you represent. I am distant day, for competing interests never
orn and meat, in lhi< country, lias | touched by your expression# of Cnris- ; .strengthens friendship, or rivets affection.
ed in private life up to the day of hi#
! death.
\ T ork aud Boston capitalists arrived
ernor of Kadaas, which be retigned in t'b6 Cartersville a few days since, to make *•"
whiter of the same year, and has remain- rangements for the building ot the 1
tersville aud Van Wert Railroad.
Th.
shown its evils sufficiently, we think,
to cprit ince our people <>n ibis point,
and do away with the practice.
The Thamasville Enterprise having
| tian sympathy and affection. I am n|
Catholic and hope to remain one. 1
have not broken with the Church, but j
its abuses.
A gentleman engaged iu the bar i'' s
... ... business in Philadelphia, iuformeu t t
In public life, a consummate itatesman. p ott6v jli e Miner’s Journal, a short time »•
a profound lawyer, an able financier. In g0 , that not oiie-ttiird of tha goods r * I
in his house and j
look advantage of his absence, lo cum- i
mil the contemplated robbery.
Cot Off Y’oca Chair Legs,—1
will tell you a secret worth knowing.
A thousand things not worth half so
much have been patented and eleva
ted into business. It is this : If you j
cut ufl’thc back legs of your cha r so
that the back part of the seat shall be
iwo inches lower than the front part, it
will greatly relieve the fatigue of sit
ting and keep your spine in a much
better shape.
May 2, 18(53.
I To Leonard YV. Jerome, New York :
The boy is badly Wounded.
D. B.
On the following day, when “the
rebels” “forced us to retreat in lorae
confusion,” “D. B.” ?em another tele
gram, which the superlative bulletin ot
“the boy’*” eoudiiioR. It read ihus :
1 recognize true Christians in nil j
ecenlly asserted, on the authority of n Protestant bodies, lor 1 believe that I
gentjema* from Cuthbcrt, that the the true church, embracing all who | that , . . .
Bainbridge, Cuthbert and Columbus hold Christ as their head, is far wider i ! n V ,tc 1 ectu . R or ®° ( m08 f certainly not m
Railroad had no real charter—the bill j lhan any earthly organization. lo? 7 acu . tone .^. flS . h,s 8ec ‘*«»
1 - J j wards was tD physical resources.’
private life, of pure morals, with a nice
sense of honor, generous impulses, and ge
YY’EBSTER AND CALHOUN.
In the course of an elaborate editorial ou
Mr. G. T. Curtis’ forthcoming work ou
Webster, the New Y'ork World says; m, , i iitii ui»i» • ,
YVc suppose it will be the judgment of m * 1 * nd temper. Those who ^ go with the cutlery trade. Our -
terity that Calhoun was overmatched knew him intimately, will attest to this merican manufacturers have nearly ar: u
union of faculties and accomplishments in Sheffield cutlery out of the market,
this remarkable man. In his death the
found on the sLelvea ia their store# «r e _
foreign manufacture, while but a few J etr *
ago more than three fourths were imp 011 ’
So with the cutlerv trade. Our
ven
• • » • * • . • . w nton n no il* uureitai irotjuicrb.
incorporating it never having been en-1 Mv purpose in coming lo America is . j f j )y .-logical acuteness” is meant su-
orrnecod or cinno/l nif t liO f Lttr/i r n,, »• ' , . 1 • . , 1 . • a I .. . . . .
grossed or signed by the Governoi j io es<' : >pc excitement and to rest a little, periority of reasoning, we do not
Geo.*Peabody’s remains will be brout--
country looses a wise counsellor,the South t(J America and deposited in a huge # a "
powerful friend and advocate of the im- eopb*gus of Quiucy granite, which is
r .i l„ (Ua heine- constructed by his direction in •
the Cuthbert Appeal is authoriz<‘d 1>y 1 shall soon return lo Europe, bat hope kctly how Calhoun was’’over matched in *»ediate restoration of her rights in the j being ^ j[ asb acbtt'
Col. Hood, the attorney of the road, to to again visit this country.
state that “the hill incorporating the
intellectual force.” It is well known that ! Union.
Mr. Webster, when hard pressed in argu-
l shall visit Boston early iu Novem
company was duly engrossed, and ber, it possible, and their should be j ment * »P°ke to the galleries. Iu this ti# j
being pocketed by tbe Governor, be- j glad to see those whom sou represent, i b,t ? f demagogism. he was certainly
c*rne a law at the expiration of the pe- | and to explain more fully my position d'® superior of Mr. Caluoun who disdained
riod designated by the statute;’
'1._ I mu c . ’ • i i , ' • ' • . i so far as we are aware, any such arts in
aL°; Lhe future is daik and uncertain, but I ,he Senate. According to the I Vo,Id. we
DEATH OF GEN. WOOL.
mony
setts.
Secretary Fish has ealled tho atn-nd
--- - iru rB
rn rr i i of the Argentine Minister to tiie cai
The lelegrapb announces the death t Cflntly pu bli s hetl by the Secretary _of Lj
that the President and .Secretary have I phal! obey mv con#cientc to the end. 1 i ij ji.. w i , , ’ . e i J, ,
^ ; It-. p y my con. ciencc to me cm ., should say that Webster and Ins section ; Kew York, iu the 80th year of his age
copies of the act of incorpoiatiou certi Greet in my name, with Christian sal-j Represent intellect triumphant by brute 1 r» • « *i
Jied by the Sacretary of State.
greet me
tho veteran Major General John E. Wood, g al ; on deno'uuciug Gen. YlcYIalion.
United States Army, at his home in Troy, j intimated diplomatically that the t
! ^present intellect triumphant by
ututions, those iri whose name you j power, while Calhoun and his section il-
discourteous aud uncalled for
ii year ui inn use. j - •»“ 7- ... , , .
During tl.« *«r with Mexico 0«“« r * 1 ** wfib L'N»P«‘
■ • *.*. „ 1.i>a nA«QOil tlirousi* ^
All the State appointment* of Thauks
giving Day. time far, coincide with the
Presidential
appointment.
Ins-rat* reason overthrown, as a dernier I W ° o1 was a ‘ tflched * Tm y UU(ler
resort, hr meat and muscle.— Conslituliuu- i General Taylor, aud it was to bis skill and
Tlio biggest pumpkin in i’ari* weighed i a l l3f -
300 poaud* and sold tor $23
.orgy that the American* were greatly
The difference between Mr. Webster ' indebted for tbe victory of Buena Yifta,
his position when ho passed t,jrou ° ot
on his return home. The .Secretary
Legation is in cousideratde trouble
tha maU«r.
0? eC
J