About The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1872)
suk: thje^axltt Pa bUshni hy Um AtluU Sna PebUsklBg Ceapeay. alexakdct M. *T1F J. HfiM.Y SMITH, Q.n’L Ed. I Pi-tp’w Tmvtllag Afinui JAMES L. CALHOUN, Tuikegee, Ate. B. RKBHUT, Social Cibolk, Oa., TromUm§ AgmL A|cbIi for Th* Snn. M. F. Echols, Opelika, Oa. J. B. Cmawlkt, Wolfakln, Oglethorpe Co., Oa. J. K. P. DouglajM, Hoi».er, Oa. Da. M. P. BOKH», Monroe, Ga. J. U Wwiuut, Woodstock, Ga. J. Q. Cai-dwall, Bonevillo, Oa. Antina A Haqkiuiam, Thomson, Oa. H. 0. Hamilton, Dalton, oa. W. C. Da via, Jr., baton tou, Ga. J. C. Pabbam, LaOrange, Oa. Da. W. H. Jkhbhll, 1 D. W. 8rmaoa, Covington. L. a Thokaa, Oxford. J. H. Pimin, Wintervllle. R. 8. Kavdi 4 Co., Crawford. B. B. Brnainoa. Butledge. THE SUN. VOL. III. ATLANTA, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1872. NO. 714. Jack Kino, borne, Oa. A. J. Coma*. Cleveland, Ga. A. M. COBVS. Social OlrcJe. Oa, Gao. LumKim, Stephana, Ga. A. W. Amm, Maxej'a, Ge. Jaaaa Cana, Oarr'a Station, Ga. ■AntiLD, Convert, Ga. _ Daumom. Woodvllle, Ga. 0. L. PXAOOCK, BUrille, Ga. W, O. Someone, Warren ton, Oa. KtuaB Dtfiou, Sparta. Oa. Bsmapui Moon, Colverton, Oa. Mini 4 9oiuor, Crawfordvllle, Oa. (TlMd'li Bvnmta, HflledMvllle, Ga. ATLANTA. GA.: Fiuday Morning, Sept’h 27, 1872. FOlt (JOVKllNOIt: JAMES M. SMITH. MORN IN O’ EDITION I tl " iI \“ er '’, There is a soul a — ' “Petite then of the most elevated char acter of nolle heroism without heroies iu words that I have ever seen. Charles O’Conor will not perform t lie tour of a traveling demagogue, not even n! 0 1>r »>dent of the Uuited 8taU*. There is no man in the United States more Utted morally, mentally and polit- tcally, for the Presidency than Churles O Conor. If elected he will accept, and oo Presides* of the United States ever bad highs* qualifications for the offioe than he. Above all other eonsid- erations he should be eleoted there is no man MHng who would perform the duties of the office with more, adherence to the duties thereof under the consti tution than he. Vn> L Platform Adopted by the Jeffersonian Democratic State Cojtveatloa Aaoenv bled la Atlanta aa the Wth Angut, im. rjn 1. Resolved, That theGswernmcnt of the Doited States ia oadMWed by sepa rata States; that it ia on# of limited pow ers, delegated by the EM4e for specific purpoMa and objects set forth in the unswerving devotion to your rights, not to be disturbed by partisan dictation or sectional prejudice. Besides all this, which may fully guide you between the caudidotes, it is my duty to remind yon that uscit'Zuns of the United Stales and part of the conutry, your trollarc is indissolubly associated with that of the whole oonntry. Where ajl are prosperous, you will bo gainer. Therefore, while justly oareful of your own rights, you oannot be indifferent to the blessings of good government. It is for yon to oonaider whether the time has not come for something batter than a ■word, and whether a protector, like Horace Greeley, does not give stronger PENNSYLVANIA. IRELAND. New Turk may be llurnt up, bat Wc'U I The Catholic Bishop. Vot. oa tho STcv.r Knew It Until Greeley 1,1 Uaullon of Horn. Hole Through III, Political Harangue, —I t>_ n , ., ore.i.-y s.ye „o p.r„n ha, n Ki«ht , S N > 8e P*-2d —At a recent meet- to spmic but hi, immueuinte Self—Hr 8 , “Oman Catholic Bishops, in Mag- Antlclpnfc, HI. Ilrf.nt, anil Begin, to ““pu^Archblshop Cuilon Op- DeGive’s Opera' Umm A (tea. MMtar, Ms I INITIAL SEASON or GRAND ^ rpm uitsinn non A log the opmlc s( u^m C.l.nr»tW V K?lT.a 1 Tho pvtaatpal Artkw. of the Terms of Subserlptloai DAIZiTi Bast. Copy r* Annum. ,10 14 “ KftStouUi-iii-Miai; *" (MrMonthi too OLUM FOB THB DAILY. Thro* Oopiee On* YMI J Fly* •• « « ■w ;• * Tan •» M « MtbfU Copim eeee.ee 43 00 68 00 64 00 . . KM*. .......... 100 « 00 Tan “ Twenty * BN 8 00 If 00 28 08 WUKLY—BIY MONTHS 1 Slngl.Oopy 01) Thraa •• : , M T*n •• Twanty« T 10 16 00 On* Hundred Ooplsfe Six Month*.... Sfofffe C*|»4m * . <6 00 . S Owl*. Oalftm Ikhlff Alvertlm by the Prcu of Allan ^Adapted iPiiw 1 l i j 111 !ll|l|ll!|llHll!l! f|5|5|3|8|S|S|||Jli 1:1 i 11 j|5|S“|5|l|5|l|S|3|j 11 ? 1 ? ? CHARLES BUHNER. [ We re publish the following portions * ,„ r , . t , — . . „„ os iu oonotitueiit integral parts; that the of Mr, Sumner's letter declaring for Gree- a candidate whoso oonduct in eivil done more work and devoted more atten sales 160'; stook 2 ifo. ijs a,, “ The present position of the colored Q a * no 7» ©specially towards the colored wo ©“ployed to sustain this msohine of citizen ia perilous. He is (*xpoeed to sn rftoe j '* * * OQ tLv.Mt^auuuHiunm auutOH WUUIUtOH “»«»«» WUUWT, giving QD *'« » were technical and trivial. to P©rtv services and to President re-eleo- 784 ^exports tion, the time ana energies that belong " C|S|il8|S|3|3|8|j| EJlMlLMIJli II: 1:1:1: p*r o*nt off th* table »atea. W. A. HEMPHILL A 00., Proprietor* of the Oomtitatlon. [J. HENLY SMITH, Manager. Of Th* Attente8un, other—is an Indiapansabls part cf this politieal system, and therefore, the per petuation ot the Union in ita integrity depends upon the preservation of the Statea in their political iatagrity; the Government of the United the tee being a Federal Republic, and not a consoli dation of the whole people into one homogeneous Nation. 8. Resolv'd, That the “right ot looal State-government” with the •‘subjection of the military to the eivil antnority,” and “the security of the privilege of the writ of habeae corpus," in time of peace, with the power to enforce “the rights, and promote the well-being of its inhabitants by such means as the judg ment of its own people may prescribe,” ore reserved, seonred and guaranteed un der the Constitution of the United Statea to the several Statee of the Union; and that too, not “sobjeot to any solemn Consti tutional obligation upon the part ot the Federal Government 1 ’ of any kind what ever; bat on the contrary, the Ftdcral Government it under a solemn Constitu tional obligation not to interfere in these matters in any way,- and when it does to, it becomes a usurper of power, an oppres sive tyrant and an enemy to the libertiee of Hon. Dawson A. Walker’s VALKEB, Republican cnndl- ; will addr«M th* p*opl* up- wftb* country »t th* follow- . dit* for Oov*rnor, Thursday. Sept 12 Greensboro', Gr*one county. Saturday, Sept. 14 Athens, Clark* county. Monday, Sept 14 Jefferson Jackson county. Tuesday, bept lT....DanielsvlU*, Madison ocunty. Wednsaday. Sept 18 Hartwell, Hart county. Thursday, Sept l9....Caroesvtll*, Franklin county. Friday, Sept 2 > Homer, Banka oouoty. Saturday, Sept 21. .Cterkesville, Habersham ooonty. Monday. Sept 28 Cleveland, Whit* county. Tuasdsay, Sept. 24....Dahlonega. Lumpkin oounty. Thursday, Sept. 26..Daweonville, Dawson county. Friday, Sept 2T Gumming, Forsyth county. Saturday, Sept 28 Canton, Cherokee oounty. oday. Sept ID Jasper, Pickens oounty. * — * EllUay, Gilmer oounty. Tueeday. Oct 1.. i..Spring Place, Murray oounty. Smith U respectfully invited to join in discussion ni each abd all of thee* appoint ment* with assurances of a fair and equitable dlvia- ion of time at each of thm.sepIOdAwtod The Grant Republican Convention, rhioh oosembled at Dahlonega on ljr attended, and adjourned witnont making a nomination. Our New York Correspondence. Bead the letter of Vidi, from New York, in thia issue oi The Sun. The matter referred to in the extracts from the Herald, has already been given in substance to oar readers. A H. 8. . injurious pressure, whan he needs sup port ; bat I see no earl; extrication, ex cept in the w»7 proposed. Let him oat adrift from managers who would wield him merely as a politieal force, without regard to hit own good, and bravely stand by the candidate, Greeley, who hss stood by him. “The Demoorats unite with him. So maoh the better. The association thus begun, most naturally ripen into a oonmon friendship toast.' He addressed his correspondents w-citixens,” ‘gentlemen and fellow-dti He delated answering, that he might reflect extracts: “ Ladies' and gentlemen : In and fully inform himself. He has lis tened to much from both tides, but his best judgment is now in harmony with bis early oonolnsion. He is tonohed b* the appeal his correspondents make. He has been the friend of their raoe, and is glad they oonaider him the special advo cate of their rights. They do him sim ple jnstlee whon they believe that his oounsel, at this oritieal juncture, would be free from personal or partisan preju dices. Ur. Stunner contrasts the two candi dates. Greeley was born in poverty and educated himself in a printing office.— Grant, fortunate in early patronage, he rn me a eadet at West Point, and wta educated at publie expense. One start ed with nothing but understanding and character; the other with o military com mission. One was trained as a civilian; the other as a soldier. Horace Greeley Eon. Amos T. Akerman’s APPOINTMENTS. HON. AMOS X. A It EH MATS Will Address th* ptoplo ia support oi At th* following times and places, to wit: Friday, September 11, 8 o'clock p m, Augusta, Bich- BUariiMf, Sept.*14,12 m, Waynesboro, Burke Co. Monday, Sept. If, 8 pm, Savannah. Chatham Co. Wednesday, Sept. 18,12 m.Thomaavllle, Thomas Co. Friday. Sept. 20.12 m, Albany. Doogharty Co. Saturday, ttept. 21.12 m. —^ ~‘ i. Americua, Sumter Co. Tuesday, Sept 24,13 Wednesday, Sept. 28, . ... . Thuiaday, Sept. 28.8 pm, Macon. Bibb Co. gr ggnt. 28.12 m. Barnsavills. 1 Monday. Sept. 20,12 m, Griffin, SpaldingOo. Tueeday, 0*4.1,12 m, McDonough, Henry Co. WiUMihr. OW. X U ». Joawboro. ClwUnOo. Hob. W. T. Wofford tad Hod. Hrarr L. Bounin,. Uk* Greeley Electors for th* State at Larg*, an rw pact fully Invited to Join in disonaaten at *aoh and all of the** appointments, with aasuranoes cf a fair sad equitable •eplS-dAw-1 TO THE MERCHANTS OF ATLANTA The Atlantic & Gulf Via Savannah, Qa. JJlfl LEAVE TO ANVOUHCE TO THXIB FA* troas aad friends that their Bates and Cllaaaiffoatloaa ■hall always baas low ashy competing llnss, and any ‘•flpeetel Cir*utera" or ''Lstters,” issued by other routes, giving lower rates than at present ad vertised, will bo promptly m*4 by corresponding o- dactions oa tho Atlantic 4 Golf Freight Lin*. Merchants visiting N»w York wUl oousuU their terostn by calling on 0. D. OWENS. General Agent of the Una, 228 Broadway, *. a. LAwaox. 4 Ltitmn LA WHON A FITZPATRICK, Attorneys at Law. SATOSTOS, OA. WUl pmOen la lb, Ocmnl,M Clrralt iad I ■natOiwl IVniiintuaaatlonriTaetoOvlli-^- Th. Junior atm, by pwmwrlon. to E H. Ownbcnn, Hon. F. A Boblakai, Hoa. A. rum. L awpbru. m They New York Hay Booh, and three St. Louie German papers, which, previ- oua to the Louiaville Convention sup ported Horace Groeley, have recently hauled down hiB name, aud flaunted to the breeze the nnmoe of O'Conor and Adams, for the Presidency snd Vice Presidency. The New York Irish JVor.d has slso hoisted tho names of O’Conor and Adams. Statn Coil,,, of Agriculture aud the Mechanical Arts. We learn that this College, whioh con stitutes a co-ordinate department of the State University, and was opened on the 10th inst., already numbers over one hundred and tweuty students. They are represented to be a elsss of earnest, hard working yoang men, vigorously prosecut ing the various soientifio courses offered to them in this College- Universal advantages are now of fered the students of the State College snd of the Uuiversity. A thorough course ot analytical and in dustrial chemistry will be given in the Chemical Laboratory of Professor White. Professor White is the Professor ot ohemistry, eleoted at the last Commence ment He was formerly Professor in the State College oi Maryland, at Annapolis, aud analyst in the Laboratory of the Ma ryland Institute, at Baltimore. He ia regarded, we learn, by those beet quali fied to judge, as ranking among the first ohemists in the country, snd may be re membered as on* of the chemists whose evidence was influential in securing the acquittal of Mrs. Wharton, in the late celebrated trial, at Anapnlis. As tbia fa tbs first time in the history of Colleges in Georgia, so far as we know, that a regular working Chemieal Laboratory has been established, we note it as an era in the history of Southern education, and a mark of decided pro gross; we look lor (rnitiul results to onr State therefrom. My wisdom of tbia onion of the Col lege, of Agriculture and Meohanio arts, and the State University will soon be made manifest in the number of soientifio agriculturalists, practical ohemists, arehi tecta, engineers, and other workers in life, trained in the ways of soientifio thought that will be numbered among her graduates, and reckoned among the ctpel men of oar State. Hew T,rk C,m,f,,dia„. Now You, Sept. 28, 1872. Hon. A. fi Stephens—Dxxn Sib: Ion oloee for your use items from a Sunday Herald, if deemed proper for Tai At- lakta Sun. Yon have published the great letter oi Charles O'Conor, dated August 31st, to the Louisville Convention; and also hi, response to the Committee of that Convention. Both of these Communi cations ore superior to anything of the kind in all our history. There is so at tempt oi display in the language ol these two remsrkaolc extraordinary produc tion 1 !. No seeking in them; but there we ideas in them of a for higher type anti-slavery, (nil of sympathy with the oolored raoe, and always foremost in the § at battle for their rights. President mt, except as a soldier, summoned by fSrPj > L e „»? # fd®“ t of war, never did anir time shown any sympathy wltA 'mi colored race. Horace Greeley earnest.; desired that colored citizeua she ored race. nnld vote, snd ably championed impartial suffrage; but the President was on tho other aids. Beyond these contrasts, which are miU'hcd, it caunotbe iorgotten that Hor ace Gruclcy is a person ot large heart, aud large understanding, trained to sup port humane rights. Mr. Grocley’s industry,|genornl know ledge and his amiable nature, and abovo all, bis hoLcsty, whioh suspicion has not touched, are mentioned. Few of these things appear in Freaid- nt Grant His great success iu war cannot oliange his record toward the colored people, while there are antecedents snowing that in the ; iroseeutiou ol his plans he cares nothing l or tho colored people. Mr. Sumner, prefacing that the story is painfnl, bnt must be told,gives the his tory of Santo Domingo snd Hayti, where he outraged oight hundred thousand blacks, who were engaged in the great experiment of self-government Here follows his history of the attempt at an nexation. He alludes to the disrespect with whioh Grant treated Fred Douglass, who, by his Invitation, was one of the Santo Domingo commissioners. Grant has little oapacity or indmtry in protecting oolored people and assur ing pesos at the South. After violating the Constitution and international law to insnlt the black republic, snd setting an example ot insubordination, he was in no ooudition to rebnke law-breakers. Mr. Sumner then consider* tne pres ent condition of the two oandidatea Each was nomit ated by a Republican Convention. He lands the material com posing the Cincinnati Convention. Comparing the character of the tnp- ]jorters of the two candidates, ho says i he country shows too well the military ring, tne Senatorial ring, and the Cus tom House ring, through whioh the President act* Such supporters are s very poor reoommendation. He says it is idle to say that Horae* Greeley snd the Republicans w- ioh nominated him at Cincinnati, are any less Republicans, because Democrats unite with them in the support of cherished principle* and the candidate who represents them. He says the hardihood of political falsehood reaches its extreme point when it is sorted that under Greeley the freedmen will be enslaved; or that the oolored people will in any way suffer in their equal rights. On the oontrary they have in his election, not only the prom ise of the platform, but also the splendid example of a foil generation, dnring which he has never wavered in the aaser- tion of their rights. To suppose tbit Horace Greeley, when be is placed where he can do them the most good, will de part from the role of his honest life ia an insnlt to reason. It is none the lee* idle to suppose that Demoorats, supporting Horace Greeley, expect or desire that he should depart from these principles which, to Horace Greeley sre the glory of his character. They have accepted the Cincinnati plat form, with its two-fold promises and purposes, and intend in good faith to keep it “Gentlemen, in that answering yoor two inquiries, I have shown whV yon as colored fellow citizens, and also who would uphold yonr rights and save the colored race from indignity, should re fuse to sanction the rc-< lection of the President snd pnt yonr trust in Horaoe Gr«*ley. “I ought to add that, with him, as Vice President Oratz Brown, whom have known for ^eurs as a most deter mined abolitioms’, the two together will carry into the National Government, in assuranoe of good^government, than oon thing to whioh _tlie people ought be found in The insulter of the oolored not to be reconciled. !ro them, of WnutisoTos, Sept. 26. — Cotton firm r*oe, already famous from the rings oour**, “like master, like man,” net ““JPte ^03; exports coastwise 251 Constitution; and toot it possesses -ot "onnd him, snd his plain inaptitude for The whole body ot office-holders, fifty "took 4,228. itself no original or inheMBt power Hn Uttu w n inabn J 5 “Tenty-five thousand, generally in- Chakuzston, Sept. 26.—Cotton ttroni: whatever. cwiwvsd outlaw, who AUmwi Bpeeking now for myself, I have to nuentul mon, are devoting their time »“d irregular; stock light; ordinary 15J( 2. Resolved, That the Union esteto- J-. ••**. noth a.i, last, .. wm.h “7 that my vote will be given lor Horaoe and talents to le-eleoting their superiors good OMinaty 1C|@18J; low mi< lished by the Constitution is a Union <rf Ttmo *n PMlhrtd for cmni.v «»a tho GreeJoj; but in giving it, I do not go to “' offloa, and thereby keeping thorn- d|| ngsl7(ai8; net receipts 1,884; exports States, Federal in its character, com- **« , wwA*A>i»uh.wi. the Democratic party, nor am I any leu selves in place. ooastwise 822; sales 600; stock 13,408. posed of Buts* thereby united, and ia r _ —— a Republican. On the contrary, I am so I venture to lay tlSt since the first day Nokfouc. Sept. 26 —Cotton aalak incapable of exiatenoe without the States [ We re pubuah the following portions much a Republican that I cannot snp- of May last, Federal office-holders i-avo net receipts 964 j exports coastwise*} 109 *- — ... . ... -a a 1 . A A -. v 1 1 • — nrtr * • rt * n did4t* WnAtot UrttwTnnf in wind (1006 fflOFA arnrir nnd rlewnfaJ Mnna wtt._ aalaw 1KO . «i..L A A is * By the New York Associated Press. WASHINGTON. Harass Orssler Still w-Klehlitg — Hs stahss his Will. Washimottn, September 26.—Greeley whom 4 met at Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, . Indianapolis and Cleveland. I have seen *° on greeter gatherings than ever before on any oeoaaion like this; and not only in thase oitiea, bnt in towns of 1,000 and 6,000 inhabitants, I have been met by immense gatherings of the peo ple, snd every where heartily ; everywhere zeal and everywhere the op- loeite of doubt or distrust. I tell you, riends, the States of Ohio snd Inmans will have to be bought if they are to be errried by the supporters of the Presi dent in the eleotion at hand; and I don’t think either Ohio or Indiana can be bought. [Applause.] I oannot judge so well ot the sentiments of Penngyl- I sen so much money spent by both par- “ *■■■ '■ “ ' eleotion by the Grant vania, bnt what I hsvc seen of it anr- stood forth as a reformer, and an Aboil- prises me with aseurauoes that the eleo- u . , tionist; the President enlisted as a pro- iion oi Mr. Buekalew is a fixed fact. nee as nas in this „ _ slavery Democrat, and at the election of H.w Tea Ha*wiwu*ws. , < J? e \ . 7 * 1 * Te Treasury James Buchanan, fortified by his vote, Revised regnlations will be issued from holdera^ thS£’ the** all the pretentious ot slavery—even tlir Treasury (or refunding taxes paid bv ‘he credit mobilier men, the Dred Scott decision. Greeley from oanks and corporations upon dividend/ 7 ^ tl)e . i , r large divulouds, five times as Msko Viruses, Lumucrci, Sept 26. — Mr. Greeley mode a speech at Williamspoor, Ps., this evening. He commenced by calling at tention to the administration, Cabinet Ministers snd office-holders, running and racing from one end of the oonntry to the other, to persuade the people to keep thon) in office, I think that ia tone* posed tho principle of home rule, tho majority of the Bishops voted in fsvor MARKET REPORTS BT TNZJKMAFH 10 TKN ATLANTA DAILY SUN COTTON MAftKBT. travelling through Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, I have been greatly sur prised at the enthuaiasm, heartlneai and .. . „ , - resolution whiohj found in the people Clonneotient, _ — How under Heaven osp:h* earn this money we are paying him in that position of Naval Offioer at Boston, while he ia speaking all over the country? He is a good, capable man, and makes good speeches, bat I say “he oqght to make his spssohss on his book, ns I do. (Prolonged lsngbtir.l He ought not to bo paid for making them on of the Federal Treasury. (Great applause.) Now, there is another point to whioh the people are not likely to be recon ciled, and that is the enormous use of money in this eleotion. In all the elec- l ions over hold, from George Washington i iown to the present time, there his not energies t _ rhioh the people have . . - . _ . and of whioh the people ought to f 00 ^ °rflmu7 10i@16f ; low _ ,--lee of “that’s “J5?** 08 ! .if “ UdUn 8» 17|®17(; net m. ) £575* erroes 2/774; sale* Now take my excel .ent friend, 700 ‘ ** ook 1®i389. General Horriman, (laughter,) who is Nww Oblxass, Sept 26 Cotton ae- here to make a speech to-night Hvo and higher; good ordlnarny 17* for Grant and WUson. He will make , ' v ~' — ,JJ “— *, one He is a good talker. As I under stand the case, Gen. Hsrrimsn is a naval officer of the port of Boston. A respon sible position, with a good late ly, whioh he doubtless bnt here he is earning it early life, w^earneet and courtly jl^wu in honiwt .na aliens, prior to March 10th 1868. Ld Yetrnh^ ptopt'n.^^d Whitev^ OOT » to t0 the Grant ticket Jf 1 \^ nkino. uuo uuuuau.au^ ^niu So in AlVlSvenue, that the money claim- wa8 pa id in Maine for rotJr^- The old regulations required certain specified evidence. The new ones will provide tor the allowance upon any evi* ence, _t '‘ ... ... —™ lhwwfi ed, w*8 actually paid to a non-resident alien. Greeley Campaign Document to be Used In the Norm Only. It is understood that the report allud ed to in the following Washington special the New York Post, is to be used as s campaign document: ‘Washington.—^Tho olUoere who were sent to the Southern States by the De partment of Justice to examino into the condition oi affairs, and to detect any organized attempts to vio'ste the reve nue laws and the Enforcement Aet, have submitted voluminous reports to the Attorney General. From those it ap pears that the Ku-Klax order ie giving way to a new organization, similar to the former in many respeota, but having a different mode of accomplishing the same end. This new organization is spreading rapidly through all the Southern States, snd Is intended to bo made very effeotn- al tut Grteiey dnring the present earn- oaigD, by intimidating voters in Iodi des where tho Republican element is not in the ascendency. The order has established lodge* in nearly every oounty in Mississippi, Ala bama and Georgia, and is rapidly extend ing itself to otner States. Several offi cers of the Government, by disguising themselves, succeeded in getting initiated into the order, and observing folly its workings, and are therefore enabled to take steps to prevent its plana from be ing successfully carried out, NEW YORK. Mara Wrack, and Disasters — Warmtec ■abmlts to his fate, Now Yobm, September 26. — Letter* from Martinique report the loos of 12 veasels and throe live* oo the ninth in stant St St. Kitts. The brig Roeewsy.of New York, cargo floor, and the brig Sa lamander, were wrecked. The barks Jane Riohsrdson and Rosenbad wet* both dismasted, j A schooner was carried to sea and lost. A sloop was driven on the beacn, snd sn unknown bark Imudered to the win^: ward of tbs Island. The hurrioone at Bsrbsdoes greatly injnrsd the crops, and drove ashore the brig "J. Boyer,” of New Brunswick, “George and Gracie Kelley,” of Halifax, and two sloops. No lives were lock Stanley write* a letter to the Herald declaring as Isis* the “stories relative to him by Noe.” New Yobx, September 26.—Forrester withdraws his petition for a writ of ha beas oorpns, snd consents to go book to the Illinois penitentiary. Fouolier has been qualified os Judge Barnard's successor. ILLINOIS. Vstsra. Hlalalar llaad Chicago, September 26.—Bev. Peter Cartwright, a Chicago Pioneer Methodist preacher, is dead. Aged 87 years. paid i tlem«n,if they elect their tioket Inis Fall, it will be beoause they have 8100,000 to our one. ENGLAND. of money being paid before, their money was poured out like water to induce LOUI3ANA. Stmts A .altar's Pardon Unesnsl tlannl. Nxw Orleans, September 26.—The State Auditor, Graham, was recommit ted, the 8th District Court deoiding that the Governor’s pardon was unconstitu tional. OHIO. Stsambantan Organise. Cleveland, Sept. 20.—The ateamlioEt- men's Convention organized a Katioal Board, aud adjourned to Philadelphia on the 3d Wednesday in September, 1878. London, September 26.—Robert Lowe visited Glasgow to-day aud received from the municipality tho Ireedom oi the oily. In Ilia speech, returning thunks for the honor, Air. Lowo alluded to the result of the Geneva Arbitration. He expressed the opinion that tho Americans had come out of the struggle very muoh irritated; but England's object was not to gain le gal triumph. Sho acted, therefore, not as a litigant, bat as a iriond. The money due aoonld be paid without murmur or delay. PORTUGAL. Hoath American Newe* Lisbon, Sept. 26.—The mail steamship from Rio De Janeiro with dates to the 6th inat., hss just arrived. The Brazilian Minister on Agrioulfare is dead. Senor Barritz has beeu appointed as his succes sor. The eleotiona for members of Congress throughout the country resulted in favor of the Government oandidatea. Negotiations between Gea. Mitre, tb* Argentine Envoy and tho Brasilian Gov ernment, were ■'ill going on. The set tlement oi the dispute depends upon the construction of the boundary treaty be tween the Argentine Confederation and Pa rtgnay. PRUSSIA. German Item** Benue, September 26.—Tb* Reioha Anzeiger publishes sn official notloe that the payment of tho North German Fede ral loan will begin January 1,1878. The Prussian Cross Gazette states that Bosicngierg succeeds Von Baten as Ger man Ambassador to Belgium. Emperor William has given bis con sent to farther proceedings against tb* Bishop of Ermetend. FRANCE. V*ee*l Caaght nr*. Haves, Sept. 26.—A fire broke out on the steamship Helvetia, from London 21st, for New York, while she was lying in this port. It was qui kly extinguish ed, only m few planks being damaged, ■laellcsn IMtna. Elections have been ordered for 10th Ootober, in Allgiera, Oohrados and other Districts, to fill vaoaneies in the National Assembly. MEXICO. Tb. Sinhnnti nod IS. Uov«raw.nL Matamonas, SepL 26.—The merohante have accepted the proposition ol loaning the government 880,000 snd secure the extension ol the old tariff for thirty days, the merchants guaranteeing miffloinnt im portations within that time to cover the amount in duty. ENGLAND. Crnpa Raised. London, September 20.—Aberdeen, Sootland, and vicinity have been flooded by tains. The crops are ruintd. FRANCE. Gnab.Ua ■ecaaUaw Falri.tl. Pabis, September 26.—Gambetta, in a speech at Albestville last night, de manded the dimolation of the National Assembly of France. low middling* 18i; middlings 181; net « ro *» 8,878; sale* 8,200; stock 88,876. LrvrappoL, SepL 26—evening—Cot ton eloaed qua!; uplands 91; Orleans Galtsbton, September 26—Cotton firm and light offerings; ordinary 144; good ordinary 16; net receipts 689; ex- f^oo-twte. 66; sale* 860; stock Memphis, Sept. 26—Cotton firm and active demand at 17l@174; stock 8,468. Boston, Sept. 28.-Cotton qaiet and steady; middlings It; net receipted; gross 746; sales 800; itock 8,000. Augusta, Ga.. September 28.—Cotton qaiet; middlings 10|; net receipt* 1,190: sales 1,164. New Yobs, September 26— Receipts to-day, net none, gross 8,766. Sales of futures to-day, 17,760 boles, as follows: September 181@18 11-16 ; Ootober 18 l-I6AIB|s November 18t@18|; Decem ber 18 5-16@18{; January 1816-16319 8-16; February 19 9-163191; March 201; April 20»@20|. Cotton easier, sales 1,806; nptends 181; Orleans 191. PRODUUR EAEKET. Louisville, September 26—Floor sa tire snd steady. Corn 60362. Provi sions—good order trade. Pork 913 76. Booon—shoulders 8; oiesr rib sides lit; dear sides 121. Paokod lord 913111; order lots la higher. 46 81 ’ &fEf) Bejrtember 26—Floor quM ohanged; small lots tell at 9l4li($@T4 m Bacon irregular with some sales. Baltimore, SepL 26.—Flour firm snd unchanged. Wheat dull; oltoice white 82 06. Corn 8rm and soarce; quotations unohsnged. Provisions strong; stocks soarce. Mess pork 815 00; shoulders 81. Lark heavy; prime Western 8|. Whisky 981. OtNontNATi, SepL 26—Flour steady. Pork in fair demand and firm at 818 75. Lard steady, for kettle 8|. Booon in far demand and firm; shoulders 8; dear rib side* 111; shonldsrs 81; dear ribalds* Lard in Am antes. _ BEtXJND ClHASI) TSSFOnMAMOR S Friday, September *LWJ« BARON'S DAUGHTER. Opart Nights limited. Doors Open ut. Its ItaaUjr OteBte V... *.*.*..11 V.V.'.".’ '.IV.TT.' S Colored Qaiurr ^* ,, * 5 fftm aoutr IgffnKHtt. lYOTioST ih*t *n lnatAllaaat of ten m* oaat from tb* KtocUoMin of tL a w ■■ sir *««•*■*• Sap et JamTSat W. T. OEMS. Saa-r. ffen OUmnUErHustg waju> «r. 1.1*1 Oa ■.■OVAKSa W. B. Howard Wtnhsuse A OswusbAsa 1 No. A Wains Black, r, - AUGUSTA, BA SSS3S»«aw All Orders Htrlotty Obeys MAbereet [CM* Adtemttt MCWten. to**l AttmUea paid to WM(hli*ar3*M 1 BAGGING- AND HnijMEtmEllNtoNia. Important Land Sales Oa First Taesday tm Oetetsr. to* CITY HALL. TxraxMBEB thdB. Ira^lBaSU haObte Bo. At torn Tantna, a. par plat. Th. LawK LaUa sbB- aiTtdM. Gat a plaL ana go and aaa tha tvofa saw on thaa. Will gHa tklrtx day.om Site Rydial by naataA ALSO. Thoaa Sr* bplaodtd lota aad hoaaaaea aanavat MllahaU and fo,J atesi, be fee plalar Ik* MaA thaw BloaEataSM. Sold far la* Buaaton. ALSO, Thoaa Sv* aplaodld suaL dairy ram. oa Tara. plk., ona MbU* sort ol th. o. In th. Hart Brathon. Soap 11|3U|; dear side* Il|3l2. fair demand for future delivery for steam 81; January 8| for Deoember, January, and Febraary. Whisky steady at 89. New You, September 26. Floor insetlve and unchanged. Whisky unohsnged. Wheat closed qaiet, noon's sdvanoe mosL Advsnsed freights, with depressed market Corn steady. Rtoe quieL Pork nnobonged. Lord firmer, 81391. NataIo steady. Tallow doll, 81 i91. Freights firmer. MOMtoY MS SEST. New You, SepL 26. — Money herd dnring the day,, bnt dosed easier at 5. Sterling wesk at 71371. Gold 131(3)14. Governmentsclosedstoody. State*doll and steady, London, SepL 28—Bullion decreased nearly nail million pounds sterling. FIVE SMALL FARMS, ■o Milo from IneorpormtloM LIb* *fte4 City, ou (hi Taraplkc 1h4. T > Y ad order of th* Obtnoellor. I will stH At ffte D City HaII. In AUao(a, on th* Ttni D*f ot 0* tober. m3* (Iat, FIFTY 40BK8 of kAAMfiiQFAaM. Ad lADd, divided, AA per ptet, late FIT! LOTS. • . The Tract Ia divided by th# Turnpike Bead, ab4 • Adjoin* Hart* ■ Avrate, abA Ia rlthia Was Mmb ahiM • mUeofth*0*ortte taUxoad. ob the north ■«*.■■< U ona mUa *aat of AUanteon tea Turmpte* te D*» tur, and oonventeBl to KdMWoad Chureh and Ert- nay, In foil view ot 4hs MkMd, aa« > to AooomtDodatloa trala. j*fifty Actnite AtlHidldly gteiwffte parib*inff In wood*,and wAttabwai. MlhB thr*e glorlouA eprlaf upoc 14 OBAOfllteai mlamoL for dairy punoee*. Tlai/wdi or v*f*teMe pidna £d wiS^Md^Md bUmTm Smkmm. A4d a«dtnmtr*AAH— ■oatho. wtlh IS pav l nl IsHslR MliSilp P.q-wm Siva SS Sara an tell ISV■> Npeclal Notice Fnaumayalaabthat has has* lavtsamMao* rafuiatac by a eenrsa ot that meat benaflaaol oi sn ragntnbl* allxln. OnalnUnr-n SMnanA Bitten. Soch. nt tenth U tha loteraaos vs nr* eoapalted la draw from th. tetUmony ot Ihimtniln ot petoue nwain* Is unhmlthy Atehrlnte, who attribute thate aanapa Worn tha apUsmle aa* ethnr complnlnte vkteh pra- «all thms la Ih. spring bad an turns nolalp Ie lha oaa o< Ihte gnat pntaoUr* aad prsvaoltn audtetna. Many Western sad Snattora Steman aad pltatenb thMr fkjnlliea aad employe^ i thatneelvM from twlc* to thr*a ttmea a daar. Tha demand for ii ia th* fever aad ague dlHrlcte border- log on Ute Mlaalaelppi. Ohio, aad pArkaoeae river* la lmmeuMj and wherever Um natural conditions an ■uch aa to g*ner*u Intermittent or remittent fever*, It la held lath* high** »*hhb. both aa an antidote to tho almomharlc vlrwe which provokaa thoaa, aad aa a awift and certain r*mody ter thoaa Mfeialtg form* of dlaeaae. It la alaaoto Unueoeeeary to My thatUiia r*nuwn*d tonic an 1 ran orator “ •rally accepted aaa Mandard apoetdefor re. bnt by all unprejudiced medical popularity oi tha Bitter* luff any counterfeit# and Imltet ona. against which tha ooMHaalty are rwqnMted to tMffi their guaid. Dr. Sltostoswto*? Liver Bafolaisr, Extract ot. latter Item Hoe. Al.xaadar I. Me phase, dated Mh March. 1STS: "I occasionally ass. brhaa my condition rainlr*. U. DB. SIMMONS' LIVEB BEGULATOB, with gaud affboL It 1. mild, aad tails m* battev Uaa mom sdSdt Valuable Lands for Sale IN HANCOCK COUNTY. TOR MTCFHCI8. 1,000 • of th* most rateable Ptatotkmatn lha la now offered for aal*. with a vtew to ahauj* the luve*tm*nt, aa It doao bo4 a«4t tho Miwfeiil to aaa after tfeti h* agraad mart w. htephess, idaz. Sparta, Oa.. 23d September, 1073. Philadri’a AMO Southern Mail Steamship T-fna fPO WILMINGTON, N. 0,-te sumps. A Tint OlaM ata.rn.hlp.. of SCO loon lag Mim mob port nay WEDNEH>AyT TBItOUGB BATES In all potbte Soalh ,.l Wb wml an low aa by any other routes. Urn. L » paraseL Prompt aad crisn mmilih gteaq. lor istea no Gaaanl Mmahaadlm, OMtea, UmS- B&iitaS? WI1WI, OOMBBe Hill ■ n 1—A A A -A" THE ROYAL INSURANCE 00. OF L1VMFOOL. utornnim. rrml non otelmmat at to* smdEtete at to* I Ompawteto. Iat daea, EmA.toswwtoaa» The Capital Stock 0 Two Millioi ■ OETW WLLTOWOF | he Agent U AUante U mk ' ney loeeee at once, wlthoe# 4 Jo the Company, m{ M ninety itey*. which h CMsTerMB Charles Berghstraaa, DBT GOODS, CTOTHUfOt J. a. BOHN,