Newspaper Page Text
NEWS & HERALD.
MASOJV & ESTILL,
EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS.
Col. W. T. THOMPSON,
Or. J. 8. JONHS,
| Associate Kdi tors
Official Paper of the City.
lARSIST OUUBLATIO* III CITT ARP «0»»T»r,
THURSDAY. MARCH 5,
THE SPRING TRAD®
We have the most satisfactory assuiRuces
that the wholesale dry goods merobants and
grocers of Sarunnah are making extensive
preparations for doing a large jobbing trade
this spring, and are prepared to give and
now offer as great inducements, and will sell
on as liberal terms as aoy other city.
The merohants whose advertisements ap
pear in our columns, we do not hesitate to
assure our country friends, aip exhibiting a
great deal of enterprise and much accommo
dation to win ths trade of the country tribu
tary tib our city, and we know they are well
worthy of-haviog ^conferred upon them.
It will be seen that they are receiving
portion of their spring stocks, and we are
pleased to learn that a lively business season
is anticipated. It is argued with much force
that as the price of cotton has greatly ad
vanced, and dealers throughout the country
have for many months persisted in the pol
icy of small purchases, the process of distri
bution and consumption cannot proceed
further without a general recourse to the
chief sources of supplies. There is, more
over, a general conviction that prices are not
likely to go lower, at least during the active
spriug season, and, as a consequence, buyers
evinep far less timidity as regards replenish
ing stocks.
We speak by the card when we reiterate
the assurance that merchandise of all kinds
can bo purchased as advantageously in Sa
vanuah tvs elsewhere, North or South, and
we invite country dealers to teat the ac
curacy of this statement by favoring our
merchants with their orders.
An organization is in progress in St. Louis,
composed of Democrats and ex-officers and
soldiers of the Union army, designed to
counteract the inlluence of the Grand Army
of the Republic. P. M. Fullerton iH, or will
be, President, and other prominent Conser
vatives will bo among its officers.
Thk black-and-tau conventions in the
Southern States, although having completed
their useless labors, refused to wind up and
go home. They get up the most ridiculous
pretexts for continuing to rob the people at
the rate of $20,000 per day.
“Thebe is room,” says the Nashville Ga
zette, “to suspect that Johnson and Chase
understand each other. Johnson bargains
to kill Grant in his peculiar way, and Chase
bargains to shield the President from im
peachment.
“To do this is no very difficult matter.
Of 64 Senators, it requires
Thirty-five wHi mot suffice.
need manage only eight Republican Senators
to defeat impeachment, fie can do it; and
we suspect that he will do it.”
It is stated that Mr. Stanton has quietly
revived the Freedmen’s Bureau in Kentucky,
in the face of General Grant's order discon
tinuing it. If we are not liable to “im
peachment for high crimes and misdemean
ors” for asking a simple question, we beg to
inquire: If Air. Stanton is Secretary of War,
by what authority has be done this; and if
he is not, by what right does he assume so
much ?.
A leading org-in of the Northern Metho
dist Episcopal Church—the Zion’s Herald,
of Boston—has come out in favor of perfect
equaiity in that Church between whites and
blacks. It calls upon the Methodist congre
gations in Massachusetts to declare their
willingness to receive negro preachers upon
the same footing as white ones. New Eng
land, says the Herald, which has had to take
the lead in every reform, must pioneer this
movement, and teach her followers “in New
Orleans, Charleston, and Richmond,” that it
is folly to build seperate churches for whites
and blacks.
Thk Lines of ihiB Pbesidxnt’s Defense.
—The New York Express says: “The
friends Of impeachment say that th# whole
thing will be over in six days. The friends
of the President say that thirty days will
pass before the impeachment will be reached.
They have been advised by the ablest coun
eel in the land that Senator*' can be objected
to as well as jurors, and the men who have
prejudged the case cannot sit on the trial.
They intend to object to every Senator who
has expressed an opinion on the matter, and
in case of a denial, to bring forward wit
nesses. They intend to contest the matter
inch by inch, and use every legal defense
that the law allows. If all Senators who
have expressed an opinion as to fbe*guilt or
innocence of the President shall be set
aside, the jury to try the President will be a
small one.” '
It will be remembered that after the
reading < f one of the President's veto mes
sages on “reconstruction,’'in July last, Thad
Steven^told the House and the country what
he (the leader of tire House) thought about
it. Said he:
“The President starts by’ asserting in his
message what, if true, would support all his
arguments. He says the Constitution of the
United States is theoretically operative in
the conquered provinces of the South. If
that wag true, then all we have done here is
rank usurpation. I deny that the Constitu
tion is theoretically or actually in operation
in any of these States.”
Here is a frank avowal that the Radical
policy is “outside the Constitution.” And
yet the Radicals have determined upon the
impeachment of Audrew Johnson because
he has iusisted that the Constitution is ope
rative everywhere on the American soil, and
that all, high or low, must obey its provi
sions. '
How to Judge Weatheb bt thb Sky.—*■
The following-qiode of judging weather by
the sky, is taken from Thomson’s Coast
Pilot:
Tho color of the fiky at particular times,
affords wonderful good guidance. Not only
sunset presages fair weather, but there are
other limes which speak with equal clear
ness aud accuracy. A bright yellow sky in
the evening indicates wind; a pale yellow,
wet; a natural gray color constitutes a fa
vorable sign in Urn evening, and an unfavor
able one iu the morning. They are full of
meaniugiu themselves. If their forms are
soft, underlined, an 1 feathery, the weather
will be fine; if their edges are hard, sharp,
and definite, \\ will be foul. Generally
speaking, any deep, un.usual hues betoken
wind and rain, while the more quiet and del
icate tints bespeak floe weather, Simple as
these maxims are, the British Board of Trade
has thought fit to publish them for the use
of seafaring men.
—The dearest word tin our language is
Love. The greatest is God. The word ex
pressing the shortest urn*. Is Now-
three make the greatest and' sw<
XlS ARROGANT AND
TioN.
thb Jacobins in Congress are trying to
Cheat the Northern people out of their liber
ties by claiming that as the people are the
source of all power in our Government, and.
Congress represents the people, therefore Con
gress possesses all the power of the people,
or absolute power. The Northern Democratic
press should warn the people of that section
to beware of this plausible, this cunning lie,
which is so well calculated to deceive the
uninformed and unreflecting. Congress
represents the people no more and in no
other manner than the President, or the Su
preme Federal Court. The people have, in
the Federal Constitution, prescribed and de
fined and limited the power of all the three
independent departments .of the National
Government. Congress is as positively re
stricted in its jurisdiction and powers as
either the Executive or the Judieiary. The
people, with their reserved rights and sov
ereignty, stand behind all three, and neither
of them can assume more power than is
granted to them in the Constitution without
being guilty of usurpation. This Congress
has done, and leading Radicals have avowed
the fact That party has, of course, usurped
the reserved power of the people, aud the
people canDOt sanction that usurpation with
out consenting to be made ibe slaves of their
servants.
The usurpers, of course, will flatter the
people by telling them they are the source of
all power, and that Congress only exercises,
as their representatives, the power of the
people. But that is balderdash.
The men who promulgate these senti
ments are responsible for the hazardous ex
periment now making for partisan purposes,
and must finish their work, or they will be
hurled iguominiously from power and
crushed iu the undoing of that which they
have attempted. They understand this, and
here lies the danger. But it is plain that
the right which they claim to do whatever
they determine, after the fashion of the
French Directory, and shall be done without
restraint or limit, cannot be permanent, and
oan only be adopted as a means to an end,
and when that is reached who shall guard
the actors themselves from the revolutionary
spirit they have invoked ? Iu the outwork-
ings of this principle is the grand hope of
those who look for an early restoration ol
the supremacy of the Constitution, for when
those who have substituted their own arbi
trary will for the law are brought to face the
exercise of this authority by another hand,
and compelled to bow their necks to the
tyrant they have enthroned, their eyes will
be opened to the error they have committed,
and they may be the first to clamor for pre
sent freedom and future safety in a restora
tion of the checks they despised in the wan
tonness of their power.
01SKRANCHISKMKN V IN AEW YORK.
It will hardly be credited that the Consti
tutional Convention of the State of New
York would voluntarily and deliberately
disfranchise four-fifths of the public men in
the State, and yet if the almost unanimous
allegation of the political press is to be relied
on the new Constitution, which has just
been adopted by the Convention, if ratified
and pnt in operation, will work that result
lucfuiiumug « — ^
chising clause of the New ConstuutioA 8 ?™ 11 *
All restrictions upon voting, taxation, rep
resentation, and office holding a,re to be re
moved upon the adoption of the constitu
tion, the only restriction bein<? the ext lusion
from voting at an election of any one who
may give or receive a bribe or may pay or
promise bribes to be given or received by
others; and the Legislature may enact laws
permanently disfranchising all persons con
victed of direot or indirect bribery.
Now, it is a notorious fact that scarcely a
prominent politician in the State of New
York has escaped the charge of bribery and
corruption, and the investigations of their le-
gistive commitifees have, from time to time,
startled the couotry with developments
which have gone far to satisfy the public
mind of the correctness of the general
charge. Scarcely a measure in which per
sonal ambition or pecuniary interests were
involved, bag been carried through the mu-
uiciple or State Legislature, for several years
past, the success of which h&9 not been at
tributed to bribery. So common is this be
lief that a seat io the City Council has come
to be regarded as a post of fortune rather
than honor, and the first inquiry in reference
to the passage of an important corporation
charter through the Legislature is “what
will it cost to put it through ?” If bribery
is as important an element of'political suc-
cessin New York as it is represented to be
by the press, and if the provisions of the
new constitution should be strictly enforced
the disfranchisement in that State will be
greater than the disfranchisement in Geor
gia, under the reconstruction laws of Con
gress.
The introduction of the disfranchisement
clause in the new constitution is in itself evi
dence of the alarming prevalence of bribery.
May we not hope that it is also an indication
of a virtuous reformation iuthat rt gard V
By Telegraph.
NIGHT DISPATCHES.
M-For telegraphic narteUM. oommeraWInW.
ligence.
FROM WASHINGTON.
Impeachment Proceedings. die.
her a
Washington, March 4.—The Chronicle
supports the Mississippi Levee agent s when I
plication fbr the Yazoo Basin appropriation.
Two more impeachment articles are pend
ing.
The bill authorizing the Secretary of war
to employ counsel to defend reconstruction
officers has become a law by the lapse of
ten days.
Washington, March 4.—Chief Justice
Chase writes to the Senate, expressing in
mild and somewhat indirraL terms his non-
concurrence with some ^Hhe preliminary
proceedings, ho'ding tbat^wnen the Senate
sits for impeachment trials it sits unques
tionably as a court. The Senate must nec
essarily receive notice of the intention to
impeach from the House, bn* the organiza
tion of the Senate into a court should pre
cede the actual announcement of impeach
ment on the part of the House, aud the ar
ticles of impeachment should only be pre
sented to the Court of Impeachment No
summons or other process should issue
except from the organized court sod
the rules for the government of the
proceedings of the. court should only
be formed by the court itself Mr. Chase
finds himself unable to come to any other
conclusion than the above, but adds, “I am
informed that the Senate has proceeded upon
other views, and it is not my purpose to con
test what ita superior wisdom may have di
rected.”
House.—Immediately after the meeting
this morning Mr. Jenkes proceeded to urge
his article of impeachment, declaring that
the impeachment would be incomplete with
out charging the President with criminal in
tent. The previous question failed of -
second aud the article was lost.
The House then went into Committee of
the Whole to proceed with the managers to
the Senate to present the articles of impeach
ment. The Democratic members remained
in their seats. The others formed iu pro
cession aud proceeded to the Senate Cham
ber.
After their return the Tennessee contested
election case was taken up, but postponed.
General Grant baa been directed to report
the number of votes cast for and against the
Alabama Constitution.
The Military Committee reported a bill
for the protection of soldiers and sailors
against claim agents. House adjourned.
Senate.—The chair FUbmitted a commu
nication from Chief Justice Chase, which
was referred to a special committee.
The resolution to erect a warehouse
Fortress Monroe was referred to the Mili
tary Committee.
The Sergeant at Arms announced the im
peachment managers The managers ap
proached the Bar, and the accompanying
members of the House arranged themselves
around on the back seats, Speaker Colfax
being seated by Mr. Wade, President of the
Senate. Mr. Bingham read the articles of
impeachment. Butler’s articles, which quote
largely from the President’s most stinging
speeches, caused aenation. The Chair said,
“(The Senate will take action,” and the man
agers retired.
A resolution to admit spectators to the
galleries by tickets was postponed.
A Committee of three Seuators was ap
pointed to notify Chief Justice Chase, and
conduct him to the Vice President’s seat to-
moiDW at 1 o'clock.
Several votes to-day indicated a determi
nation on the part of the Senate to adhere
to its rules, notwithstanding Judge Chase’*
letter. The Senate adjourned.
(in ^^atqr Wade presided to-day during the
the question whether 1
final is-ue of impeachment.
Mr. Farnsworth’s telegraph bill contains
fifteen sections, mostly devoted to the pro
tection of the public against frauds and in
justice from telegraph companies, agents
and operators.
The President to-day recognized Jean
Baptiste Lawson as Consul of France at
Richmond, Adolphus Boder as Austrian
Consul at New Orleans, Alexis Robert as
Consul for the Pontifical States at New Or
leans, Carlos Heinsius as Vice Consul for
the Argentine Republic at Savannah, and
for its dependencies—Darien, Brunswick
uud St. Mary’s.
The Supreme Court is still engaged in the
McCardle case. Mr. Trumbull spoke to
day. Mr. Dudley Field follows to-morrow.
The Court allows twelve hours to each
side.
The Revenue Receipts to-day amounted
to $154,000.
Amount of gold in the Treasury, $106,
250,000.
FROM EUROPE.
Arrest of George Francis Train.
Liverpool, March 4.—Train has been ar
rested for debt.
of a i
Tfce
[From the Nashiile Union A Dispatch.]
TUe Drama at Shelby vllle.
J. Wilkes Booth, in Avenging tue South,
Assassinates Himsilf.
The show business in Shelbyville is run
on a big scale. No ..ordinary concern can
draw a bouse there in wet weather. A few
nights since there was one for the benefit of
a negro school, and the hills had announced
the prodnciion of a sensational representa
tion of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln
by J. Wilkes Booth. Of coarse there was a
tremendous crowd—tremendous in various
ways—and many stood up in order that the
ladies might—all have seats. A healthy
looking darkey named Levi Sparrow took
the part of Booth, and some other equally
interesting personage appeared as President
Lincoln. The great sensation threw every
other part of the show into the shade, if that
were possible, aud the variegAted audiene
awaited with breathless suspence the raising
of the curtains upon the most fearful tragedy
ever enacted upon the western continent.
A church yard at midnight would have
been noisy, compared to the amusement hall
at the moment when the triangle bade the
mysterious calico to lift itself and reveal the
assassin and his victim. Up it went, with
the grace and regularity of a sheet of tan-
bark undergoing a similar process, and the
awful spectacle broke upon the gaze of that
vasty multitude.. The silence was painful.
The miuiature Lincoln sat rolling his eyes
toward the awe struck audience, awaiting for
Booth to shoot, while Booth might have
been taken for Ajax defying the lightning,
as he stood there like a carpenter’s com
pass, tragically awaiting the culminating
poinf- "Sic Semper Tyrannis” burned on his
lips.
lips. Jerkiug a revolver from his pocket , he
raised it nervously. “Bang! bang!” went
the iron, “Zip! zip!” whistled the bullets,
but instead of the late motto of Virginia,
came a howl.pf pain from the assasriu as he
hastily dropped the weopou from his gory fin
gers aed danced about io a very untragic way,
waking np Lincoln, who had died rath
er prematurely on hearing real balls so close
to his head, and astounding the spectators
beyoiffi 'expression. Several excitable col
ored females were thrown into hysterica or
something akin, and the excitement for a
short time was unparalleled. in the history
of shows. On order being restored, how
ever, it wsa found that Booth instead of fin-
i ishiag the President, had shot himself in the
duty j hands, and the avenger of the tfrath was
j taken home on a shutter.
Another Democratic Victory*
Portland, Maine, March 4.—The charter
election in this city shows a .Democratic
gain of 386 votes since the fall elections.
South Carolina Kudical Convention.
Charleston, March 4.—An ordinance was
presented to-day, appropriating the Citadel,
formerly the State Military Academy, for ~
college, grammar and primary schools.
The section of the Constitution, making
education compulsory, was passed after au
animated debate.
O.i the proposition, imposing a poll tax of
$L lor educational purposes, it was agreed
that the penalty for non-payment shall not
amount to a deprivation of the right of suf
frage.
Virginia Radical Convention.
Richmond, March 4.—In the Convention
to-ilay resolutions approving of the im
peachment of the President were adopted
by a vote of 55 to 36.
The majority report on suffrage, which
gives suffrage to all males aver twenty-one
years of age who have resided one year in
the State and three months in the county,
was adopted.
A caucus of the Republic*!)* will be held
to-night to consider disfranchisement.
North CarolinaRadtcal Coavemtlen.
Raleigh, March 4.—The Convention last
night adopted the relief ordinance. Its
leading feature allows debtors to pay ode
tenth annually on their debts.
The Committee on Privileges and Elec
tions reported in favor of ousting Mr.
Williams, of Sampson county, and giving his
seat to a Mr. Half .. ,ii j .
Georgia Radical qBAvcntlos,
Atlanta, March 4.—The Convention re
solved to-day to adjourn on the 11th instant.
Fifteen thousand dollars were disbursed to
the members this evening, making forty
thonsand dollars in all received bf the Con
vention so fur. Adjourned.
Maine Democratic Convention.
Bangor, Maine, March 4.—The Demo
cratic State Convention sustains President
Johnson, favors greenbacks for
and Pendleton for President.
Democracy Gaining QreWWd.
New York, March 4. —*Ike municipal
elections generally indicate Democratic
gaius.
Maryland Senatorial Klectioa
Annapolis, March 4 —Tho last ballot tor
Seautor to-day was Earle 27, Thomas 25—
the rest scattering/
Railroad Accident.
Canandaigua, March 4.—The passenger
train ran off the track near Gaaham to-day.
The stove fired the cars, aod many ]
gets were badly burned, three fatally.
li“WHEN does the fifty per cent clause iff
the bankrupt act take effect ?” is a question
propounded by many persons. Il has been
determined by several judicial tribunals, and
we believe it is generally conceded by the
legal profession, that it ia not operative until
the 1st day of Janay.lfifo
IN MBMOftIUM— VITTIK S JTEBBINB*
BY OHS WHO LOVED HER.
Oden have I thought of our schooldays—rile who
mi my confidant, my friend^tfien now I pan scarce
ly realize, (although i’have stood beside her grave)
that my beautiful "friend-sister'' is “no more.’ r
Ouce a year at least we promised to visit each
others’ grave, and although scarcely six months have
passed since she died, my troubled spirit could not
rest ntil I flood benide her grave, and memory
carried me back to the time
m her s* her sisters side, when die was
gome cherub f jroi, cast io ethereal
marble
And she was II
mould; _ .
But when iho sudden pang of grief, oppressed her
infant thought, f ,,
And 'mid her clear and radiant eye, a liquid crystal
wrought; .
I thought how strong that faith must be, that breaks
a eiter's tie.
And bids bet leave her darling’s tears for others
hands to dry.
I saw her in her hour of sport, beneath her father 1
r. bower,
Amid his broad and bright pasture, herself the
fairest flower;
I heard her tuueful voice ring out upon the sum
mer air,
An though some bird of Eden poured its joyous carol
there,
And lingered with delighted/, gaze on happy child
hoods charms, /
Which once the blessed Redeemer loved and folded
in his arms.
I saw her scan the classic page with high and glad
surprise,
And saw the sun of acienoe beam as on an eaglets
(fires;
And marked her strong and brilliant mind arouse to
bold pursuit, ;• »' <>T
And from the tree of knowledge pluck, its richest,
rarest fruit;
Yet still from such precocious power, I shrank with
secret fear,
A shuddering presage, that her race must soon be
ended here.
1 isw her in the house of God, and loved tho reverent
witnShti
i her beauteous head was bowed, low in
, v Jielesa .
Yet little deemed flow soon her place would be with
that blest baud
Who ever near the eternal throne, in sinless worship
stand;
Ah! little deemed how soon the tomb must lock her
glorious charms,
And wing her ardent sou! to find;* sainted siater’i
arms.
/ /1!
I heard that her, pnre trusting mind; her pare, her
trustfUl heart. V
Had iu its’maiden infancy claimsd bur its other part;
I did rejoice, sweet Mattie dear, at this, thy early
love,
And felt that all was sanctioned here by angels from
above;
And longed iu one long, long embrace, to -clasp my
loved one here,
Before resigned to him who clajmed her as his own
wife dear.
He may forget, bufMattie dear, so long as life shall
8o long as memory staude clear, remembrance of
the past
8hjlll take me often to thy tomb, where fervent silent
prayer
Shall prove to my o r wn maker, God, that what Is buried
there
Was dear to me, iny life, my love.
Thy spirit with its Uud above.
mhS-lt Arbor Vital
Special Notices.
SOLOMON'S LODGE, No. 1. F. A. 9
An regular meeting of thin Lodge will by
•held THIS (Thursday) EVENING, at 7J*
-o’clock.
Brothers-.of other Lodges are fraternally invited.to
attend.
" By order of JOHN NICOLSON, W. M.
J. H. Estill, Secretary. mh5-lt
&
IRISH . UNION SOCIETY.—A
quarterly meeting of the Society will be held
THI8 EVENING at 7*4 o'clock. Each mem
bar is expected f tb be present, us bn-dnees of im
portance will be transacted.
By order of D. A. O’BYRNtS, President.
Wm. J. Flynn.,Act. Sec. mLS-lt
Savings Bank. ..
2i> March. 1S68.
The annual interest due on deposits in the Savings
Department of the Oglethorpe Insurance Company
their credit on prosentatfan ^
the office of the Company, No. 117 Bay street,
mh4 3t J T. THOMAS, Secy.
YOUNG MENS LIBRARY ASSOCIATION.
The monthly meeting of this organization will he
held at their rooms THIS (Wednesday night) March
4th, at 7 % o'clock 4-
Every member of the Association is expected to at
tend on this occasion as business of much importance
will be placot'before thorn for their action.
By order ol Board of Managers.
mti4-11 F. L. HALE, Secy.
NOTICE.
SK1DAWAY RHRIJL ROAD COMPANY
Savannah, March 4, 1868.
An annual meeting of the Stockholders of the
Skldaway 8belt Koad Company, and for election of
Directors, will be held at the Pulaski House on
THURSDAY the 5th lust, at 12 M.
C. W. W. BRUEN,
mh4-2t Sec. and Treas.
SPECIAL NOTICE TO PILOTS AND
MASTERS OF VESSELS.
CITY OF SAVANNAH,
Office Health Officer, March 4,185D.
From and after this date all vessels arriving at this
port, from abroad, without clean bills of health, or
having had sickness on board, must anchor at the
quarantine ground/ opposite Fort Jackson, uutil in
spected by the Health-Officer.
p- Pilots and-masters of vessels will be required
to adhere rigidly with the above order.
By order
EDWARD O. ANDERSON. Mayor.
J. T. McFarland, M. D.»
Health Officer. mh4-10t
The Great Preserver of Health.
TABRAHT’EI ’ ifFEKVEdENT 'SELTZSK APEK-
IENT can always be relied udou as a pleasant, mild,
speedy and positive euro iu all case* of Oostiveness,
Dyspepsia, Heart-burn, Sick Headache, Indigestion,
Sour Stomach, Liver Complaint, Biliousness, Flatu
lency, Fullness of Blood, aud all Inflammatory Com
plaints where a gentle cooling cathartic is required,
so says the Chemist- so says the Physician, so says the
great American Public of the Nineteenth Century.
Heed yc them aud be not without a bot ! lo iu tbe
house. Before life is ins pc riled, deal judiciously
with the symptoms, remember that the alight inter
nal disorder of today may become aa obstinate in
curable disease to-morrow.
Mahyfactured only by the sole proprietors, TAR
RANT AGO., Wholesale Druggists, 27S Greenwich
and 100 Warren streets, New York.
Sold by all druggists. sep12-ly
Notice—Special Tax,4868.
Tax payers are hereby notified that the tax on all
busineaa, tradea and professianas prescribed by
ordinance of December 30, 1867, ia now due. I am
raady to receive payment? Jrofrlthe same.
JOHN WILLIAMSON,
Janll City Treasurer.
Coal, Coal !
QRREL PARLOR COAL at $1 a Ton,
ftt Upper Steam Rice Mills,
For sale by
....... - V- ./ , .- • /
18—lw ROBT. HABERSHAM*& SONS.
BOOK-KEEPING.
J^UFFY’S BOOK-KEEPING, by 8ingle and Doa
ble Entry—Price $3 75
Harris* Book-keeping, 8 60
For sale at BSTILL’s NEWS DBFOT,
fe»>84 BnTl street, next to the Post Office.
—
BACON.
- Q BEDS. BALTIMORE CITY OCRED,
For sale, to arrive, by
' JOHNSTON A DbT.BON.
DICKSON’S
MPljoVEr COTTON. 4 ' SEED
SALE’ BT 1 - »«*
, Groover A Co.,
fcMS-tr *0: * WODfnRD-i LOWER RANGE
ls MC/ Lading, me.
[nted at the NXWh AND
' Bayatfoefc v
P PM A N ’S
WHOLESALE DEUG HOUSE,
UHET SQUARE, MMIUE
The Proprietor, haring hli Ageats la Europe, aod reeefriag p large Stock, is prepared to Sell,
at PRICES whieh will be 18 LOW as they can be Bonght in New York or
Philadelphia the Mlowiag GOODS:
DRUGS,
J . ;;k■’ . ’ ii:.>- i-iy- -
PAINTS, GARDEN SEEDS,
j rt : > —-»i : " Li.
Surgical Instruments, Dye Woods, Sponges, Etc.
New Advertisements.
FOR SALE,
rjTWO GOOD DRAFT HORSES, not ever seven
years of age; suitable for heavy work, either in drap
ing or on a plantation. Price reasonable.
Ii.qulra of S. P. TUNISON,
mli5-3t Agent Southern ExpreaaCo.
NOTICE.
Homkrvillk, Clinch co., Ga., March 8; 1868.
T he firm of rubsf.ll & gokttbr is this
day dissolved by mutnal consent. The btulneM
will hereafter be continued In the name of JAMES
RUSSELL,who ia responsible for all demands agalnat
the firm and Is authorized to colleot nil dc bts duo the
firm. JAMAS RUSSELL.
mb5~8m F. M. GOETTKR.
Rooms Wahted.
W ANTED—With qr without BOARD, by respec
table parties, TWO ROOMS; one unfurnished;
convenient to the business port! n of the city.
Address, stating distinctly terms, etc.,
J. L MORTON.
mh5—H Box 848, Savannah Post O flic a.
DEY GOODS!
SlPRIlSTGr TRADE !
I 8 6 8.
WHOLESALE!
READINGS FROM THE POETS.
THE
HON. MBS. YELVEBT0N
? WILL GIVB A
Reading from the Modern Poets
On FRIDAY EVENING, H.rrh 6tt>.
AJ MASONIC HALL
,03- The READING will commence at 8Jto'dock,
Doors open at 7 o’clock.
Price of Admission $1 00
Tickets aimittmg two Si M
Family Tickets, admitting three.. .$2 ue
TICKETS to be had at tjie Screven Honse, Pulaski
fFfffrMt 1 at.Messrs. Schreiner A Sons’ and MaUpa
IIEA.YY BL U’K SEED OATS rad PRIME
WHITE MARYLAND CORN
AN DING AND FOR SALE BY
J mho—It
/A. MINIS.
FOR SALE,
500 BBLS. ROCKLAND LUIX.
»oo bbls. Calcined Piaster,
300 bbls. Rosen dale Ceaeat,
100,000 Eaaterft Laths,
3,000 lh% Goat and Cattle Hair.
Slite, Tile, Fire Brick, ete.
GRADY 4 TULLY,
h5—3t Bryan street.
FLOUR.
100 BARRELS BALTIIIORB SUPER,
Landing from steamship JTettfc Pjlnt,
For sale by
mb5—eodlw SORREL BROTHERS.
Notice to Shippers.
O N AND AFTER THI* DATE. Freight for ELLA-
Vll.LB, (fjimarly Columbus;,NO. 7. P. AG. B.
R., Florida, must be PREPAID.
0. H. WILLIAMS.
General Fr< ight Agent.
mh5 -It Atlantic and Gulf Railroad.
SEED RICE!
1 AAA BUSHELS SEED RICE, free of gtaa
1UU’ " seed, and less tuan three per oeht. <
red for8aleby
mh4— lw DUNCAN A JOHNSTON.
ORFF A WATKINS
WILL BE PREPARED TO OFFER,
ABOUT THE 10th INSTAKT,
C O M LET E STOCK,
, i* • *nj; - • ,1 • ,-
ON THEIR
USUAL FAVORABLE TERMS.
March 4—St
FLOUR, PORK
BEEF, SHOULDERS.
50
RUL8- PLOlIlt,
14 BBLS. MESS FOSE.
30 K8L3. MESS BEEF, '' ' 1
1 HHD. SHOULDERS.
Just recei ved per steamship Harman Livingston,
from Ne-v York, and for aala low by
mb4-2t HELL A HULL.
Guano! ‘Fertilizers!
^TK HAYS FOR SALE
Hoyt’s Super-Phosphate,
- ■ ” _ • • .' { .
an approved Fertilizer. It has been mud for ten
years North and South, with great success.
Tue manufacturer, In whom w* haw# every confi
dence. asaakea os Hurthle manufacture of this year
is fully equal to any be has maoe Wo will «eU Five
Tone or over, half egah, half 1st November uex’.with
iuterees for approvalaeeaptfcnee. / u ..
We have also a supply of the GLASGOW CO.'S
Soluble Phosphatie and Am-
moniated Guano,
»STMJTii’SS
posc*b t jorhutoy:
Fertilizer that is
we will sell at Seventy
terms an above.
ml)4—1m
PASSOVER BREAD!
* • ’tnni
■ * v iip
«BK WILL COMMKHO* BAKIRtt ON fuM IMk
Ibis uiouth, ..J .11 praiia. ar . koomw* 10
band to their order* us soon as bosh thin H
%3tTCOUNTRY ORDERS punctually attamtol to.
mbs—Iu. A. UOHOHBBT. '
MrUaun Joorna * Mramaw 1
.ttiuttouaiial vubtiab out. uonra at
Office.
I Anguata _
lead Mil to tfcfc
CO TO GARDNER’S-
EAST SIDE MARKET (MglABB, d
(FORMERLY BROWN’S GALLERY.) foa vnira
PUOIOOAftPHs, TOOl
and all other atgrlee ofr-KCTURxS. Mi V
to a Lite Hia* in OIL
nr caff tier ow>
J-RAMBa. ,-lTTUlea. mm ..
5fr‘f iff *
GUANO ! GUANO !!
Mo. 1 PKIiU VIAIf GUANO, per tom of 8,000 pomade, «m Rasa $93 00
SOLUBLE PHOSPHO-PERUVIAN GUANO, ammoalaUdwitb No. 1 Peruviaz,
per tow of M.OOO pounds, 1m bags $70 09
AMMOlf ATKO SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO, mnumontpted wUh animal mat
ter, per tom of 2,000 nommdz, im bags or barrels ..$65 00
iAKKR’8 and JAK.V1S’ I.hLANO, SOUTH PACIFIC, beet PHOSPHAT1C GU-
\ ANOS, per «om ef 38.000 pomade, lm bags or barrelsu—ji... $50 00
BOLIVIAN, rich gemmlme PACIFIC GUANOS, per ton of 2,000 pounds, im bags
ir barr«u...raUi...^.;...ra w *........$55 oo
Also, lawer grades of PHOBPMATIC CARIBBEAN SKA GUANOS....$35 OO to $40 00
Also, GftKOUMO ljAMD PLASTER, GYPSUM, at $« 50 per barrel.
GASH AT SAVANNAH- Credit will be given until November 1st, 1868, upon un
doubted city acceptances—in which case an extra charge will be added.
PARTICULAR ATTENTION IS CALLED TO THE ABOVE-MENTIONED
Soluble 3?h.osplio-3?eruvian
— AND —
Ammoniated Soluble Pacific Guanos!
Wtocb are RICH COMPOUNDS of BAKER’S ISLAND and BOLIVIAN GUANOS,
Ing €5 and 80 per cent, bone phosphate, rendered soluble, and yielding 3U to 35 per
Wspborie acid, ammoniated wilh No. 1 Peruvian Guano, and with animal matter,
_*a most concentrated and rich Fertilizer; combining tbe cljief mineral constituents
of all vegetation, and adapted as nearly as possible to all climates, soils and crops, having
been thoroughly aod satisfactorily tested by practical aud scientific Farmers aud PI ante is,
upon Cotton, Tobacco, Wheat, and Vegetables of all kinds, from whom the highest testi
monials have been received.
ffiTPor sale, by the CARGO or RETAIL, in bags and barrels, in quantities to suit pur
chaser, by
JOHN B. SARDY, Importer and Manufacturer,
58 Suuili Street, eormer Wall, New York*
TISOJT St GORDON, 96 Bay Street,
GENERAL AGENTS AT 8 AV ANN AH.
C. GINESI, No. 1 Stoddard's Lower Range, is also authorized to sell,
For farther particntoisftend for Fampiitet.
2
*88—t.prl
BOLSHiW & SUVA
' ‘ ! i'*\; ;\i t ' ■
Crockery,
CHINA. GLASSWARE.
I; ’ll
Kerosene Lamps, Oil,
CLOTHES-WRINGERS
ASP
AT
68 ST. JULIES
AND
101 Bryan streets,
SOjm’H
Chuttga of Schedule.
GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT’S OFttCl,)
Atlantic A Golv RaiuoaD Company, >
Sevaunah^eh. ante, 1568. )
O N AND AFTER HONDA?, THE 2m> MARCH-
the time of arrival and departure of PASSEN
GER TRAINS on this Road wilt be as follows, Sun
days excepted: ' : -
Leave .'evannah ......7:00 A. M.
Arrive at Bainbndge.... ..10*70 P. M.
Arrive at Live Oak. 30 P. M.
Arrive at Jacksonville...... ..._.UJ5 P. M.
Arrive at Tallahassee...... ....10:25 P. M-
Arrive at Quincy 3AA- M.
Leave Jacksonville..... J.‘..11 ffiO A. M.
Leave Live Oak ...6:30 P. M.
Leav< Balnhridge... 2*OP. M.
Arrive at Savannah..... ..v;.£v. .«.■«) A. M.
MR-PULLMAN’S SLEEPING CARS ON N1«HT #
tma ns. ’ ;■■-*•••
■JF Ceabect at Balnhrldge with Steamer for Al
bany a very Satnniay; for Apalachicola ev*ry Wednes
day; mod Tor Fort Gain**, Enfanla and colon, bus,
•very Tneeda., Thursday and Saturday, steam r*
retiming from Oi.lumhus same day a. Meamji»
leave Baiabridgv on arrival of trains fromSavanusU.
H. 8. HAINiiN,
General Superintendent
a 1 - ro REIT—A TKSEMKHT i»
EVANS* ROW r containing eight rooms aod
kitchen in the yard, with waterup “ d
down Min., .Apply to Hra. tm'g,.
FOR RENT,
The BftlCK HOUSE oo Hall
street, second door west from Moot-
fab26—tf
COOPER. OLCOTT A C*.
House to Bent.
A DESIEABLE RESIDENOE »it- ‘
flitted on Montgomery street,
[ Liberty, in Fplcndldorder^bd fitted «P W
tg»a and water throughout.
Apply at THMyBFFlOE. fohS^H-
FOR RENT,
•jukm
•ulttbl. tor » raraB firallj '
■tafloH*lll.ub WIU be rata# loo I