Newspaper Page Text
THE DAILY SUN
Monday Morning Jolt 24.
OIodgcU-GaiUUI AflTalr.
Atlanta, Ga.. July 22, 1871.
Tlie Journal of Commerce of
New Yorft—Its Correspondent
“W, P< C.” and Judge Reynolds
of Covington.
The Journal of Commerce, it seems
—following the not very enviable ex
ample of the New York Herald, Tri
bune, and other Radical sheets, has
engaged in the business of sending
out Bohemian correspondents for the
purpose of manufacturing public sen
timent for the North, touching the
condition of things in the South, by
“interviewing” the leading public
men in this section, and giving such
distorted accounts thereof as may suit
their purposes.
In a late issue of that paper we see
that one of these traveling “inter-
| viewers” met with rather a hard case
| at Covington, in the person of our
! friend Judge Purmedus Reynolds,
’ who is well known throughout Geor-
! gia as a distinguished member of the
Legislature in days of yore.
It may he interesting to our readers
to know what this Bohemian said of
his “ interview” with the Judge. It
is in these words:
Among a number of persons to whom
I was introduced in town was an old gen
tleman, aK (; d about 70, who was reading
The Atlanta Sun, Mr. Alexander H. Ste
phens’s organ. His namo is Judgo Rey
nolds. Just who the Judge is, or what
he is judge of, I am unable to say. Bat
I am told that ho lost a fortune by the
war, but is still wealthy, and that he is
considered the ablest man in Covington.
Ho has a good-sized head, broad fore
head, towering perception, wiry eyebrows,
keen eyes, largo nose, and a firmJy-olosed
mouth with its comers pointing downward
He looks like a good man to avoid in dis
cussion. Owing to the prominence of the
man I determined to ask
judge Reynold’s views.
“Well, sir,” fl&id the old gentleman,
“I will give you my views. The South
has been badly treated since the war. If
the war [query: Gen. Grant?] had dealt
gonerously with us wo would have got
along very well.”
The Republican party has had control,
Judge.
“That makes no difference. The ma
jority of tho Northern people send radi
cals to Congress. If they desired to leg
islate for our Interests they would not
eloot radicals. Thoy have oppressed ns
with the constitutional amendments and
thelReoonstraction acts, and all sorts of
unconstitutional impositions. What
guaranty have we in Unking our fortunes
with tho Northern Democracy, that we
WiU be better off than now ? They are
Dot over kind. We have no guaranty.
In my opinion there is only one course
for tho people of tho South to follow.—
Lot them hold aloofjrom any departure
from tho principles they have always
maintained. I do not behove the amend
ments to tho constitution ore valid, be
cause they interfere with the rights of the
States.”
Do you expect to annul those amend
ments ?
“ No 1 Wo don’t expect to do anything
except submit quietly to what we can’t
help, refusing to affiliate with any party
until the time comes when wo can better
our condition. We will probably vote
tho Democratic ticket, bat we mil not
acqniesoo in their platforms, or advocate
any of their dootrines. In fact, I will
oppose them on the stump, in theHonse,
and oterywhero. I havo not since the
war seen the party in this country that
snlts'me. I believe in the old doctrines
of the constitution and State rights; I
believe the amendments to the constitu
tion and the reconstruction acts are un
constitutional, and I have hopes that some
day we may overthrow them. Bat until
the Democratic party shall enunciate
those principles as a party, it cannot ex
pect to receive tho vote of tho white peo
ple of the South; and while we may qui
etly submit, as I said, to what we cannot
avoid, we cannot believe in that party,
accept its platform, or advocate tho prin
ciples it seems to have adopted. Tne is
sues I speak of are not dead.”
The account above given, of what
transpired between Judge Reynolds
and tho “interviewer” in this instance,
wo have no doubt, is much nearer the
truth, than what we meet with in this
class of reporters generally, though
we take it for granted, as a matter of
course, that it is as highly colored, to
suit a one sided view, as possible.
The probability is, that Judge Rey
nolds distinctly told this political
missionary—in substance at least—
that the true friends of the Constitu
tion, North and South, would have
no more guaranty for the protection
of their rights, under the proposed
doctrines of the “Now Departure”
Democrats, which this “interviewer’
was attempting to instill, than under
the principles of the authors of the
wrongs from which the country is
now suffering.
No truer man to the Union of the
States under the Constitution, than
Judge Reynolds is, can be found in
any State. What he, perhaps, en
deavored to impress upon the mind
of “ W. P. C.” was, that if the Dem
ocratic party of the Union wished to
secure his confidence and support,
must stand squarely upon the pure
and unadulterated principles upon
which the government was formed.
In tliiB Judge Reynolds is eminently
a representative man, in Georgia, '
least We do not believe there are
5,ODO white men in Georgia, who
favor, any other policy—whatever con
trary opinion may be expressed by
%ny number of Bohemians.
ors of tho peace—these instigators to the the month of September, A. D..1S6
slaughter of innocent people—have been I —sufficiently to remember exactly
, used by certain politicians for ulterior po- -^at he did do. After considerable
Editors Atlanta Sun: I notice in your j litical purposes. Whether or not there is j ^ e ] a y Robb informed them by letter
issno of this morning an article headed any foundation for this suspicion, time ‘ r * fii p f] ia f the error was
“State Road Robbers,” copied from | will soon disclose. I am told,
tko Georgia Republican. Having never
seen or heard of that paper before, may i juuugeo mo lumimg mm * , '* v itT'C*7 /,— ... . * _ Q _
I ask for the benefit of yonr readers the and elsewhere. These are nnqaestiona- and that ‘‘herewith please nna
name of its editor. bly founded, as they have been hereto- vouchers to replace those suspended."
The credence given by the public to fore, for political purposes and bad ob- Our bewildered nautical friend and
such charges depend much upon the per- jecta These “Lodges” are composed of ex _Captain having again “taken the
son making them, his object in so doing, men imbued with hatred to the Catholic „ a <f Corre cted his latitude and
and his relations toward the party as- religion, and especially towards Irish i iripr i 4-i 1P fnllnwrno-na-
sailed. You have given us the names of Catholics. The whole scheme and fonn- longitude produced thes lonowmg pa
Messrs. Blodgett and Goskill, now give dation of such societies has no better pers, which he evidently _ tnoug
ns the namo of the editor of the Georgia starting point than a stupid and ignoble would pass muster, and wlncli con-
Republicqn, that wc may judge between j prejudice against the laboring class of firmed the impression previously
them. Yours, A Subscriber. poor Irishmen—diversified by the grumb-1 mac j e on official minds that he (P.)
In reply to the above, we can only mmy official positions in New York _ It J
repeat what we said in our issue of | is veiy true that they_hoM many and im-1 ptt/lsburt. • ■ dr.
the
Y37T
fist
$34.25
[Signed]
1 , r nuuMin.. ,
Weigher and Gauger.
Wo certify th having worked tho time above stated.
, , biB
.'Sorpio x Soule.
UiniQ mark. X
. Eero follows other names.
Witness: James Kearney. •
To make the total of the month
by us 4 _ .
do not know whether it is editorial this class of Irishmen always become j Hero°follows
, rm.. -i. citizens as soon as possible, and have a other names,
or not The copy from which it was American politics.
set up in our office was clipped from But, let me ask, who among the gram-
some other newspaper and handed to biers at Irishmen holding “fat offices"
... * .. ... would object to taking the place of my
us by the person requesting its publica-1 friend Rich’d B. Connelly Comptroller, or
tion. We regret our inability to give of my other friend Michael ConnellyU
“A Subscriber” the information he be^^totoaTaM^Sted^wIthreeittermewTOupherswere made,
desire3". We published the article of I riean,” who would even refuse to take a similar to the above, on which
the because we were requested to “iob” under either of them. What is his
do so-accompanying the same arith ?2£tioSZ *** g™* appears for 53,35 and
such comments as we thought proper, those sons and daughters of toil, who -• , mar]c ,., . ^
disclaiming anv intention to become ma y sometime come “between the wind 63 hours respectively, so that accord-
tusciaimrag any intention to oecome 1 d tbeir nobility> » They have ever mg to the new set of vouchers he—-
parties to the criminal prosecution been objecting to the naturalization laws, S.S.—labored but the : reasonable time
now pending, or even expressing any an d the alleged too large freedom of snf- of 288 hours in September 1869, in-
opinion on the merits of that case, or frage^couraged by the Democratic par-• stea d of 736 as before stated. In or-
opimo.n on merits oi tnat case, or ty . With unparalleled cant and hypoc- d t make the total the same as in
in any lyay committing ourselves to racy, their press and their orators have Jr* u. mno nana a a *vv
the extravagance of the' lan£ma<m complained, in this regard, of the impu- the former vouchers it was necessary
exit ga ia a® rity of the ballot-box; and, as soon as they to insert more .names, "which was
used against any parties before con- reeled, intoxicated, into power, they pu- done without hesitation, and Edward
viction; and we specially referred rifled the ballot-box by stuffing it with Polite, Pompey Lewis, Cuffy John-
the whole matter to tho Court, aud a tSiZStZ&L ^Jd“S drtU'not
Democratic Legislature to ferret out | upon the negro if they had not believed L ^ much 0 ’ver 280 hours per
they could turn the vmpunty to their own J The new vouchers Wall
_ _ __ U witnessed by James Kearney—such
tion of “A Subscriber” above, because I have a high appreciation of the worth I is a specimen of the vouchers emana-
he requests it, and again take the usefohiess of that large class of citi- ting from the brilliant Pfflsbury, as-
* ... . .°. ,, zens. They are, for the most part, la-1 sisted, no doubt, by those higm
same position, and advise the same borers in those departments of human j authority. J • 5
reference of the case we did before, toil, where their servicesiare no> lessinse- These vouchers have been received
S aula 1 leptamte because it Lro to lave bLn
right, and if he was right somebody else tbe sen t by ex-Oapt. P., and was
was wrong. A. J. H. probably not examined here for nearly a
-n, ~~ „ * *" „ 7... year after the labor purported to have
For the information of our readers, special Washington correspondence of Atlanta sun. beeu done was set tled forT The delay in
WC give in our issue of to-day, a very SAVANNAH CUSTOM HOUSE sending from Savannah, and the small
® , ,, . ., DEFALCATION. ‘ ‘ ‘ f I
remarkable anonymous letter, wnt- ___________
ten from this city, and published in ah ALont tne Darn ways and vain here before the fraud was discovered, and
Tricks of Radical Plunderers—Tne Pro- '
cess by Wntcn the Government was
Swindled Fully Detailed—Counting
Number of Hours in a Month—Bout-
ivcll Screening the Guilty Radicals,
the facts. t ,
... . miserable advantage ?
We now publish the commumca-1 Por myse if, (and I am no Irishman), 11
Startling Disclosures—Wliat
They Mean 1
the Georgia Republican (Radical) of
the 22d instant, over the signature of
“Lynx,” purporting to make disclo
sures touching future developments! HIGHLY
a most singular and incredible
character. v | Washington, D- fL July so, ib7i
We know nothing of the facts upon i have within the past few days in-
which the statements are based, and vestigated so far as possible the state I never once intimating that there was
must wait for events as they occur, to of Mr. Robb’s accounts, the alleged Bobbb^S^SSa rfBoutweS
see how much truth there is in the defaulting Collector of Customs at the latter felt bound [to help him out;
announcements thus made. Savannah, and have succeeded in ob- even after outside parties djsooverec.
Was the late most extraordinary I taming an insight into the method in I h^simply requested Robb to hurry up
letter of Governor Bullock addressed which the corrupt Ring in the Savaai- and fix the matter.
briefly alluded the other day—reserv- thousand dollars stolen from “Uncle raiBe it the whole story got out.
mg comments upon its character and Sam.”
unfounded assumptions for a future It seems that the Old Gentleman that there is nothing in the matter crimi-
occasion—a preclude to the coming (Uncle Samuel) has been, for some nating Robb, and that he will be retained
ovonte of which it was but the ** ^^ S
oweasthefore? ISomg : bd Jt hayiug f the te | obb agreed to pa, eight ihous-
dence necessaiy to send them up and put of the eleven thousand dollars
NEW
ler in
above stated.-
-Ed. Sun.
do
IMPORTANT CABLE
WIRE-WORKING.
the notice of suspension and delay of
Pillsburyto correct, caused months to
elapse before the matter was brought be
fore Mr. Secretary Boutwell.
Boutwell has known of the defalcation
in the Custom House for some time, bnt
as. is the case with Radical officials,
tried his best to cover tUe matter up,
and allowed Robb and Wellman all the
time they desired to raise the money;
YORK CORRESPOND- lias played the cat and the mouse with due the [Government, and left hereto
ENCE. ^ “ ‘ ‘ ~ ‘ “
Another Contributor—-Some
thing More about the Riot on
the 12th Inst.
them, until they are hard and fast; night per Boston to New Orleans to raise
and if they escape the extreme pen- the money.
alty of the law they will have to show The project of a submarine telegraph
more shrewdness m personal defen- CR ^ e ^ rom Savannah, or some point on
sive rmpi-fttinna th™ fW J the Sonthern coast to Bermuda and the
slanderous and libelous, until thowhqle
programme of the “Spread Eagle Tread,
which is to bring forth such a powerful
and mysterious offspring, came to my
knowledge in all its minutest details, a
few days since. It is deep laid and well
planned; and, of course, a profound se
cret, outside of the inner ring.
Ben. Hill will appear first actor on the
stage, with Gov. Bollock as stage mana-
ager. TTla part will be to inauguratejthe
good movement by delivering speeches
on the “New Departure” in various sec
tions of the State.
The second scene will be an_ endorse
ment of Hill by bringing to his support
certain Democratic (heretofore) newspa-
perswho have-sold out to Bullock and are
now completely under his control. I
have the names of five'of these sheets, but
will not give them now as I prefer to wait
till the list is complete. It will surprise
the good people of Georgia to learn
whither some of their faithful “ Watchmen
on the ioicer” have drifted. -
In- all this, of course, Gov. Bullock
stands in the back-ground, but will direct
the movements of tho actors. My infor
mation is . of the fullest, minutest and
completest character. He expects by this
blank movement of the D®iuo cra t s to
carry out his original programme of 1868.
when he sought to elevate himself high
in social life . with 4 the respectability of
of Georgia, by giving all, or nearly all
the important offices at his disposal to
truckling Democratic men of some abili
ty, but devoid of character. -He also
firmly expects to save himself from im
peachment. This, of course, is all very
well. •-
He proposes to keep. out of sight in
this movement for a while, in order to
help Blodgett and injure Grant. He pre
tends all the time to be very strong for
Grant’s re-nomination. Tins is for the
two-fold purpose of assisting his friend
Blodgett in his vain endeavor to gain ad
mission to the U. S. Senate and also to
deceive the Republicans of Georgia
i whom he knows to be uncompromisingly
for Gen. Grant) and thereby secure a del
egation of 7ns follower's to the National
Republican Convention to cast the ‘ vote
of Georgia against Gen. Grant. Who his
friends are now it is hard to tell; but I
know they are few. In support of the
above assertion I will just here note the
fact that a Revenue Official not 1,000
miles from Augusta, is to play an impor
tant part in this new drama of his Excel
lency’s. He is either deceived by- Gov.
Bullock’s pretended friendship for Gen.
Grant, or is purposely going to take pas
sage in this little new departure schoon.
I send you his name confidentially.—
There are other minor Government Offi
cials in the same leaky craft; their names,
however are too insignificant to mention.
They will be easily cared for at the prop-
ertime. ;
The Ohio and Pennsylvania elections
are to have an important bearing on the
development of tne programme of these
tricksters.
Ben Hill, the lofty tumblist, will soon
be trotted out upon the stage, as Gov.
Bullock has his arrangements almost
complete to inaugurate this great politi
cal movement, that is, in his opinion, to
sweep Georgia irom me mountains to
the sea-shore.
Gov. Bollock does not hesitate (at the
proper time, of course, and to the proper
persons) to say the d—d nigger has
ruined the party; but he was forced upon
us, and we must now get out of the scrape
through the new departure loop-hole.—
He has certainly forgotten who made him
Governor.
There is one great obstacle in the way
of the consummation of this plot which
no one appreciates more fully than Bul
lock. Many Democrats of high charac
ter have entered honestly into the New
Departure movement. Bullock fears
that such men will never under any cir
cumstances consent to have any personal
association with him. Ben Hill, how
ever undertakes to bridge the chasm for
him. Lynx.
SUN-STROKES,
££&**Jim Mace has again challenged Co
burn to meet him “at the mill,” Some
lively fellow ought to take a good-sized
mace and beat Mace nntil he is satisfied.
New York, July 20,1871.
Editoes Atlanta Sun : The genial rays I
Man Samuel.
W. F. Smith, President of the Cuba
To illustrate one of tlie methods Cable Company, and he is now in Eu-
of your Sun shine bright and warm over employed, let us imagine a form, r0 P e endeavoring to raise funds to carry
the heights of Atlanta. A pure, white blade filled out something like the follow- oufc tke P ro J* ecfc -
rag:
UNITED STATES TO HLLSBUBY.
Names ot labor*
ers.
Hours of labor.
Price
pr hour
216.
25 cents
The connection with the Cuba cable
and thence to all the West India Tslnnd^
and thence to South America, will give a
. vast amount of business to this new cable
via Bermuda and the Azores, and the
—— cable thencejto Spain will connect through
$54 ‘ I Spain with the great Mediterranean ca
bles to Alexandria, and thence to the
East Indies, China and Japan—thus
We oertliy to having worked the time above stafed. 1 voiding the exorbitant charges of the
present Atlantic cable monopolies.
Mr. Cyrus W. Field is now in London
using all his influence to prevent the con-
summation of General Smith’s new oable
This “voucher,” as it is called,Js project. It is to be hoped he will not
his
8CIPIO M SOULE,
mark.
(Hero follow several other names.)
Witness: Edwabd Thosib.
STARTLING DISCLOSURES!
is glittering in its light, and the vision of
the “new departure ” has been disturbed
by its reflection. T1
metal has awakened the faithful, and the
bewilderment of their nightmare is pass-1 scipio sotde.
inff ftwav (Here follow soYe-
° _ j ral other names.)
In your paper of the 14th instant I no-
tice your instructive, historic editorial on
the “ Battle of Boyne Water, July 12th,
1690.” Your article is called forth by
our riot and its heart-sickening incidents,
on the 12th of July, 1871.
We have
right of petition;
the people,
StfssffiS I for ^ i
ject is questionable or wicked, that we <aone September; and it
have heard of the sacred right of proces- appears from said vouchers that Scipio
sionl Procession, in a great city espe- Soule labored hard in the service of I Treason!—Treason! —Benedict
cially, is a privilege granted, or a nuis- the United States under their intelli- * ^ '
ance tolerated! It impedespublie travel; gent agent, Pfflsbury, for seven hun-
... - lal rights; it disturbs the I dred and thirty-six hours in the month
public peace, and suspends the enjoyment J niontfi
of public liberty. This is the ordinary °f Se T f ^ mier - ^ow as September is
character of peaceable processions of cili-1 supposed to nave but thirty
zens among citizens. days and only twenty-four hours in j Atlanta, Ga., July 17,1871.
But what of the procession of Orange- each day, and as the officials who had Editor Georgia Republican:
men ? Could that bo considered peacea- to settle Custom House accounts at You will no doubt be surprised to re-
Tf 8 ’ dn/TWTJ Treasury had been taught by ceive a letter from me—on?who h£j so
If our warm-hearted and full-blooded I
Irishmen
class
the
and
acterise _ — w 1MKS l a. i nnTnn - hut was not favorably ^pressed by7om
And what shall I say upon the admUtpd I inTTiTTaTT™ * ° I reasoning—recent developments, 1
point, that those who P would nrovoS evidently wrong; either er, so stern and irresistable, have
Arnold Completely Outdone—-
Tlie Infamous [Plot Exposed-
Names of Conspirators—True
Men Forward to tlie Rescue.
United States, either by birth or adop- dered Pillsbuiy, ex-sailor, to his i xr v % xr - ™ a . . ^ .*
tion, and whose oath of organization nrT senses thev RPT1 f J +h l 8 New York Herald recently stated that
vents them from ever becoSdS ' tLe that S ^ E ° b -,V Gov ‘ Bullock ’ of Georgia, would soon
while th066 insulted are ° G ^ ^ad suspended his follow in the wake of the NorthernDem-
zens—eithor bv birth or the Iawa ^ w* acconnt ^ or ^e month of September ocrats on the “New Departure.” This
uralization—in ono or the other of these xm o announcement was received by tho Re-
o x . . « F OI tliese | untll p 00r g cl p io _ So n]e could have P^hhcans of Georgia as an idfe specnla-
* * mark n ■ uon. For one I must confess that Gov.
x- „ x. ; • t -~ - ,, _ Bollock had so long and successfully
me to recover from tne fatigue pja yed upon the better instincts of my
of laboring day and iught and nature that, I not only declined to accept
bnnclays, and sixteen hours over, iu the statement, but openly declared it
ways? I pause for terms of^denuncia
tion-confessing that I cannot do justice
to the subjeot. J
Moreover, there ore strong reasons to
suspect these Oran gem eu—these disturb*
OOMMEB.OIAL
Finance and Trade.
Sun Office, July 24,1871.
FINANCIAL.
Specie—There is very little doing in
specie in the city. Brokers are paying
$1.10 for gold and $1.05 for silver. Not
much is offering.
COMHEECIAL.
Business—For the past two or three
weeks business has been remarkably dull.
There is not much demand for anything
outside of breadstuffs.
Even the usual wagon trade has greatly
fallen off, owing probably to the fact that
farmers are busy with their crops ; also
to the fact that most of them have better
supplies of meat of their own raising
than is customary with them.
TTTE GRAIN MARKET.
Wheat—There is no wheat offering
except some lots of Western. The crop
in Georgia, Tennessee and the Southern
part of Kentucky was a failure; hence
our millers and merchants must look to
the West for their supplies.
We saw a prominent miller from Romo
a few days ago who informed us that ho
had just returned from St. Louis where
he had made arrangements for enough
wheat to keep his mill going. Western
wheat in the market brings $1.65.
Corn—The stock of com is equal to
the demand. The demand is moderate.
It is quoted at $1.00@1.03.
Oats—Oats are selling at 75c.
PROVISION MARKET.
Meats—The stock of meats is good,
but the demand is very light. The mer
chants complain of very small sales—
hardly enough to keep the wheels of
trade well greased.
Bacon—Shoulders are quoted at 8jc,
clear rib sides 10c; clear sides 10ic.
Bulk Meats—Shoulders 7*c; clear rib
sides 9c; clear sides 9jc.
Lard—In barrels 12jc; in cans 13ic;
in buckets 14 Jc.
BREADSTUFFS.
Flour—There is more demand for
flour than there is for any other article.
The supply is light and prices are stiff,
with an advancing tendency. It is gen
erally believed on the streets that there
has been an advance of 50c a barrel in
the Western markets during the past few
days; but the advance was not felt here
to-day. We quote superfine at $6.50@
$6.75; Extra $7@$7.50; Family $8.50@
5.75, and Fancy at $10.
groceries.
Thn market is well supplied with every
thing in the grocery line, but the same
dullness is felt that is common to all other
branches of trade.
Sugar—We quote “A” at 14|c; extra
“C” 14jc; New Orleans Brown 12 to 13£c.
Coffee—Rio is quoted at 16£@18£o,
according to quality.
Proctor Knott will speak at
Louisville on the 6th of August. The
“New Departurists” are beginning to ex
claim, “will J. Proctor not let us alone!"
B@i=Since woman, by law, is entitled to
only one-third, no one of the three Mis,
tresses Bowen has any cause to complain,
as She has her legal rights.
B€&°The Rome Commercial reaches At
lanta only twice a week ; but then it is
so weak one oould not expect it to make
the trip any oftener.
BgL. The President has at last done a
sensible thing. He has refused to see a
“Southern delegation” who went all the
way to Long Branch to see him.
$ar“ New York has commenced arrest
ing “black-mailers.” If it is kept up
what will become of the editors of that
city?
The New York Sun thinks “like
master like man” holds good ; bnt if it
be true in all cases, what a miserable set
of fellows Dana’s subordinates must be ?
JKg^Only eleven white Boston girls
married negro men last year. Boston
does not begin to practice what she
preaches.
When Horace Greeley got wind of the
compliment that Amherst College had
paid him, he merely said, with his usu
al candor, “Go to ’ll, d— you!”
James Oxford has been tried for mur
dering a negro in Washington county,
two years ago, and found guilty. He
will be hung on the first day of Septem
ber. It is scarcely probable that he will
like the “Oxford tie” that the State will
furnish him.
■ —-—=•
i ug^We give this morning another po
em from Joaquin Miller, the new Califor
nia poet, in whom “the poetic faculty” is
developed to an nnnsnal extent. “Kit
Carson’s Ride” is one of the finest pieces
of word-painting, yet produced by an
American poet.
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH*
NOON.
Ltvebpooii, July 21, Noon.—Cotton market openod.
uplands 9V£d, Orleans 9% a.
Lateb—Cotton firm; sales 18.000 bales, nearly duo
from New Orleans, 9 7-16d.
London, July 24, Noon.—Securities unchanged.
Tallow 43®44.
Pabis, July ai.—Rentes 5Gf 12c.
New Yobk, July 24.—Cotton dull and nominal;
middling uplands 21, Orleans 21%; sales 144 hales.
Peoduce—Flour dull. Wheat heavy. Corn quiet.
Peovxsxons—Pork dull; $14.50@14.62. Lard quiot.
Turpentine strong; 66®57. Resin quiet and firm;
$3.12% for strained.
Freights steady.
Financial—Stocks dull and steady. Governments
dull and steady. State Bonds very dull. Money
easy; 3, Gold heavy; 11%. Exchange; long 10%,
short 10%. Specie shipments to-day $385,000, in.
eluding $230,000 in silver.
AFTERNOON.
Liverpool, July 24, Evening.—Cotton (dosed quiet
and steady.
Lard 49s 6d.
Louisville, July 24.—Produce—Flour steady.
Com, sacks, 65c.
Provisions—Quiet. Pork, mess, $15%. Bacon-
shoulders C%c, clear sides 8%®9. Lard 10%@ll%o
Whi8ky_92c.
Sr. Louis, July 24.—Produce—Flour firm. Com
dull; sacks 55c.
Provisions — Pork lower; $14.60@15.00, Bacon,
only jobbing, shoulders 7, dear sides 8%.
New Yoee, July 24.—.Cotton quiot, low grado
steady; sales 1,907 bales; uplands 20%c.
Cincinnati, July 24.—Produce—Flour market un
settled. Corn, market heavy and depressed by
large receipts; 54@55c.
Provisions—Pork, prices nominal, Lard 10%.
Bacon, advance asked bnt not established; shoulders
6% dear rib sides 8%.
Whisky; 92c.
New Orleans, July 24.—Sugar in good demand
common 9%, choice 12%®12%. Coffee duU;13%
5%c.
ICotton—market dull, prices nominal; middlings
20%@20%; net receipts 891 bales, gross 954; exports
to Rouen 82, coastwise 3,407; sales 1,400; stock.
46,352.
Augusta, July 24. — Cotton market dun at
18% for Liverpool middlings; sales 10 bales; re
ceipts 10.
Charleston, July 24.—Cotton, middlings 19%c;
net receipts 101; exports coastwise 995; sales 55;
stock 3,119 bales. <
Mobile, July 24.—Cotton market dull, nominal;
middlings'19%; net receipts 173 bales; 4ales 50;
stock8,453.
Savannah, July 24.—Cotton, no demand; mid*
dling 19%@19%; net receipts 283; exports coastwise
480; sales 25; stock 5,068.
Financial—’81s 15%, 62a 14%, 4s 13%. 5s 13% new
12%. 7s 12%, 8s 12%, 40s 13.
Provisions—Coffee quiet and firm; RiolS%@16.
Sugar, quiet aud firm; fair to good refining 9%©9%,
Cuba 9©10. Molasses quiet without decided change.
Freights per steam—white 9%d.
Boston, July 24.—The following is a comparative
statement of the earnings of the Union Pacific Rail
road: Earnings of June 1871, $728,174 34; earnings
of Jane, 1870, $746,450 01. Expenses June, 1871, $279,-
122 80; expenses June, 1870, $419,151 81. From Jan
uary 1st to June 30th, 1871, the earnings were $3,410,-
234 58; expenses $1,686,887 33. From January lstto
June 30th 1870. ehe earnings wore $3,797,916 09;
expenses 2,739,837 69.
NORTH GEORGIA
FEMALE COLLEGE,
IVY STREET,
B ETWEEN Wheat and Line streets, Atlanta. Fall
session opens September 4,187L For circul ars
containing full particulars, apply at the Book and.
Music Stores, or tho College,
jy 25-dfcw2m A. J. & ANNIE D. HATLE»
Principals.
WANTED.
A VIRGINIAN of experience, qualified to teach
tho English branches, Mathematics, Latin and.
French, desires a situation in a select school or fami.
ly. Rest references given and required. Address»_
stating terms, etc.,
jy!8-w2t S. P. SHEPHERD,
Berryv ills', Clark Co.i Y*a.