Newspaper Page Text
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NEWS & HERALD.
MASON & ESTflil*,
EDITORS ANt> PROPRIETORS-
Col. W.T. THOMPSON, I A-1M >ciate KdUora
Dr. J. S. JONES. I
Official'Paper of the City.
URIEST CIRMLATIM II RITE AID COIITR*.
TUDR8DAY. APHID 1«. 18»8.
FOK GOVERNOK,
Gen. John B. Gordon,
OT FULTON COUNTY.
FOR CONGRESS,
Hon. Henry S. Fitch,
OF CHATHAM COUNTY.
FOR STATE SENATOR—FIRST DISTRICT,
Rufus E. Lester,
OF CHATHAM.
County IN ominations:
FOR REPRESENTATIVES i
J. R. SAUSSY,
JOHN J. KELLY,
JAMES W. RANDALL.
For Sheriff—MATHIAS H. MEYER.
For Ordinary—JAMES L. O’BYRNE.
For Tax Collector—JAMES J. McGOWAN.
For Clerk Superior Court—WILLIAM J.
CLEMENTS.
For Receiver Tax Returns—BARNARD E.
BEE.
For Coroner—Dr. ROBT. P. MYERS.
For County Treasurer—L. S. FAIRCHILD.
For Surveyor—M. T. MULLER.
NtCKTIYG OF THIS lOMSICKVAlIVIt
ASSOCIATION OF CHATHAM COUNTV.
A meeting will be held THIS EVENING,
(16th.) at 8 o’clock. Business of great im
portance will be disouHsed. All Conserva
tive citizens are eareutly requested to attend
R. D. Arnold, President.
Geo. A. Mercer, Sec’ry pro tem.
' The Codnty Ticket.—We omitted to state
in our issue of yesterday, that CoL Aaron
AVI bur bad declined the nomination by the
Conservatives for Representative in the Slate
Legislature, and that his place on the ticket
had been filled by the nomination of Jame*
W. Randall, E-*q. Colonel Wilbur declined
lor the reason that he expects to be absent
duriug a portion of the summer, when it is
expected the Legislature wilt be in session.
Xu Messrs. Saussy, Kelly, and liaudall,
the county will have au able representation
in the House, and we |coufidenlly hope to
see them, with our worthy candidate foi
Senator, R. E. Lester, and Colonel Fitch as
Representative in Congress, elected by a
handsome majority. With proper exertion
on the part of the Conservative people ol
the District, we can secure the triumphant
success of our entire State ani County
ticket. Chatham expects every man to do his
duty!
A HI V V AND A WARNING
' A writer io the Macon Messenger assumes
that General Meade’s order No. 57 was in
tended to keep Expressman Bullock and
“sharp and quick” Hurlbert trom discharging
from employment a laborer oq account of bit-
having voted as he pleases, as in the case*
of Gaskell and Corledge. The writer com
mends the order, but thinks General Meade
has not gone quite far enough, and suggest*
that he issue another order which shall com
pel these Radicals (who are proscribing em
ployees for thinking for themselves) to give
employment—when hiring, after the election—
to the many laborers who are going to vote
the Democratic ticket.
Unless such order is issued, it may hap
pen that we shall fiud, in the market places,
draymen, and bricklayers, and carpenters,
and blacksmiths, and gardener-), and their
wives and children—waiters and drivers, and
cioksand washers—standing idle, because
no Radical will ever again hire them ; be
cause Bullock’s proscriptive oreed forbids
it.
“I invite,” says the writer, “the attention
of the true Democracy to this probability,
and beg tbat tbey look after these friends of
Georgia and her true sons, aud give employ
ment to them, when they have done their
duty to their Htate. If the Radicals will
persist in seeking out aod employing only
those who have voted with them, of course
the others (I rneau after the election) must
■confine their favors to their own friends, or
they will suffer want.”
It is generally understood that the Conser
vatives in this region will be governed by
the policy indicated. They will most as
suredly give the preference to their friends
MerciTOB.—The attention of shippers and
others is invited, to the communication of
“Mercator,” in another column, In reference
to triplicate bills of lading, in wbioh their
rights are authoritatively declared.
General Hancock on tub Freedom or
Thought and Speech.—General Hancock
rightly says : “Woe be to ns whenever it
shall come to pass that the power of the
magistrates, civil or military, is permitted to
deal with the mere opinions or feelings of the
people. I have been accustomed to believe
tbat sentiments of respect or disrespect and
feelings of affection, love or hatred, so long
as not developed iuto acta in violation of Inw,
were matters wholly beyond the pnnilory
po wer of human tribunals. I will maintain
tbat the entire freedom ofihonght and speech,
however acrimoniously indulged, is consistent
with the noblest aspirations of man and the
happiest condition of bis race.” -*
A Freedman’s Impressions op Liberia.—
A freedmau who left Charleston, South Caro
lina, for Liberia a few months ago, writes back
the most glowing accounts of matters aud
things there. After stating that he never felt
free until he reached that Republic, and that
he had selected Jits laud for cultivation, he
adds : “ Of all the fruits I found on the land
my tongue is unable to explain, but I will give
you the name of some. First,'a field of thirty
acres of coffee, second, cocoa-nut trees in any
quantity; third, lemons by the bushel; fourth,
the great palm tree, the most important tod pre
cious tree in the country, from which we get
nice oil, cabbage, batter; then the kernel,
shingles, then cord and thread, and then, best
of all, we can get wine qf it to drink. All of
these we have on tho farm. Tell my brother
m 1 * '' ' f to come to.”
Washington
^ U8i*ndthej
You rtUiy 5 suppowj
that we think woj
•we do think it wj
— you immensely
will qgree with us. ,
H wfro enough to'
lerve is needed in
toy other effect-
; *sen who have no
advertise little or
little or not at alL
ehtgiving advice
|t ourselves. Yes,
pt ns, but benefit
|L«JUtetJUld you
[au agree with ua,
■LtmUvUln
JUDICAL CORRUPTION AND DUPLI-
«n.
It seems that duplicity, perjury, felony or
knavery of some sort is indispensably neces
sary to fit an individual to be a leader of
the Carpet-bag-scalawag parly. When we
look to the shiaiug lights of Hie party we fiud
that almost invariably their luminosity has its
origin in tfieir moral putiesceoce. In a moral
poiotofview, as John Randolph once said
of an opponent, tbey stink and shine, and
shine and stink like a rotten mackerel by
moonlight. We will not individualise, but
with this suggestion we-leave our readers to
pass the radical leaders from the highest to
the lowest in review, aud to determine for
themselves their respective claims to the
dirrinclion we have indicated. In this review
the qualifications of H. P. Farrow must uot lie
overlooked. This individual, a prominent
member of the late Black-and-Tan Conven
tion, it will be remembered, wassecoud ouly
to ex Gov. Brown in denouncing the nomina
tion of Bullock for Governor, and in his patri
otic zeal to protect his native Stale lrom the
disgrace and ruin which was sure to result from
the election of the Augusta carpet-bagger,
threw himself iuto the breach, announcing
himself as a candidate for the office, and
declaring to his frieuds that
This Constitution confers extraor
dinary and daugerous powers upon the
Executive—it erects a Kingdom—a des
potism, and in the bands of bad men,
can be wielded for unparalleled oppression
and the utter ruin of the people, ll it tall
iuto the bands of the carpet-baggers and
uegroes, with Bullock at their head, they
will plunder the people aud bankrupt the
State in one year. They care nothing for
the good of the people; their object is spoils,
and their game is legalized robbery. The
greatest calamity that can bclall the people
•>f Georgia, will be the success of these
carpet-baggers and negroes. I will suffer
martyidoin before I will give my consent io
the domination of such a faction over th«
property and the white meu of Georgia. I
kuow their schemes aud their purposes, and
£ will stump the tilate from the seaboard to
the mountains, aud expose their desigus aud
defeat their aims.”
A few hours after these declarations had
been made, after an interview and arrange
ment with the illustrious C. O. D , this
man Farrow, this self-sacrificing immaculate
patriot, proclaims his adhesion to the Bill
lock-Blodgett faction, denouncing all as ene
mies to the best interests of the'Btate, who
refuse to vote for Bullock and the Constitu
tion. Ia a speech before the Couve ntion he
said :
1 am here to endorse your Constitution,
and your nominees. It is the best Constitu
tion ever presented to the people of Georgia,
ind you have acted wisely in yonr selection
of a standard bearer to carry it before them.
We will plaut ourselves upon that Constitu
tion and rally to the standard of the noble
leader you have chosen.”
This shameless duplicity and disgraceful
inconsisteneucy, being characierized as it
deserved by the editor of the Al
bany News, and other leading Con
servatives, Farrow with a hardihood ouly
equalled by his perfidy, boldly denied* that
he had ever expresed him-elf opposed to the
Constitution aud Bullock, as cn irged, and
resorting to a pityful quibble, off'trod a re
ward of $1,000 for the e * i.I m« ■ that he had
ever “put io black aud white’' (uot uttered)
the sentiments attributed lo him by Colonel
Styles and Hon. B. H. Hill.
In the Atlanta Intelligencer, of Tuesday
last, appears a communication from Colouel
Styles, iu which, at'tef reiterating that the
denunciations of the Constitution of Bullock
and his carpet-bag faction, were uttered in
his presence aud taken down by him at the
time, as they fell from Farrow’s own lips, iu
farther evidence of his duplicity, pub
lishes the following letter from that individ
ual, which we think will leave no doubt on
-the mind of the reader as to the altitude
which the writer professed to occupy iu ref
erence to the Convention, aod its nomina
tion for Governor at the time he wrote it.
It is proper to add that Col. Styles gives the
letter to the public iu vindicuiou of truth,
considering that under the circumstances
t ie seal of confidence is broken, and that
moral ethics releases him from the obligation.
The A llowing is Farrow’s letter verbatim et
literatim:
Atlanta, Ga., March 4, 1868.
Dear Carry : I am playing a heavy hand,
and God knows I am steking my country’s
good more than niv own aggrandizement. I
will go to the verge of the precipice, but will
never take the damning-leap; I will go to the
mouth of the yawning gulf, but will not throw
myself iuto it to be swallowed up. You will
barely have read this uutil the die will have
been cast. The Treasury of Georgia, the pre
sent aud future hopes of a recuperating State,
can uot and shall not, if in my pewer to pre
vent it, be surrendered to those whose only
object is to plunder a people with whom they
are iu no way identified,-and of whose State
they are not bona fide eitizeus!
Should the Augusta clique succeed, the
Opinion will suspend immediately. It can be
bought on reasonable terras, lor if 1 fail to whip
the fight, it will not iBsue even next week
Come hero immediately, and don’t let it suspend
for a single day. Lot it, iu the eveut I fail, run
straight on, but in the new line. I will make a
full haad in the fight if I enter. I herewith
send you a slip which I have been sending out
by the thousand, aud ~jl is now germinatiug
throughout the up-couutry. I will try to pre
pare the Union for the swindle, and make a
general stampede. You may predict Bullock's
defeat. You are at liberty to quote the first
paragraph of this in your Tuesday's issue if
Bullock succeeds, just saying it is from a Had
ical, and not intimating or insinuating from
whom, but saying they may look out for squalls.
Yours, in haste,
H. P. Farlow.
P. 8.—Quote the above paragraph as iu a
letter to a gentlemau of Albany, and not as
directed to you—would it not Lave more ef
fect tbat way ?
After perusing this precious document
will toy one presume to doubt for one mo
meot that its author is pre-eminently and pe
culiarly qualified for the position he ©c
copies with Foster Budget and Ex-Gov.
Brown, as one of the leaders par excellence
of the oarpet-bag-acalawag faction of Geor-
Horriblr Murder of a Boy by His
Parents.—A man—so-called, an atheist—by
the name of W. H. Taylor, of Quebec, with
a fiend, called his wiie, were ai rested last
week, charged with having murdered their
child, a boy of eight years. The testimony
of the ueighbors went to show that the poor
child had, for some time, been subject to
the combiued effects of hard work,- ex
posure, famine, thiist aud cruel beatings,
under the superintendence ot the wietched
lather aud his wifi, the step-mother of the
child. Emaciated aud weak, he had been
kept at work cutting wood, in the heat of
summer, and in the free zing cold of winter,
without cap, shoes or sLockiug*, clad only
iu a blouse. And when off' red clothing by
compassionate neighbors, Me child had said
his mother would beat him if he pur them
c»o. “When there was wood to cu*, he
was sent outdo sell candy, with the promise
of a whipping if he relumed with any of it
unsold. And the step-mother kept a leath
er strap, with which to beat the child, tod
resorted to (he additional punishment* of
keeping bun in the streets as late as 2
o’clock in the mofning, for not selling out
as ordered. The cbHd often begged bread
and water of the neighbors, .saying that his
mother pot two handfuls of salt into his
soup and then refused him water. The
neighbors also testified, tbat they sometimes
had to interfere to prevent fatuer and mother
from cruelly beating the poor outcast, flie
child, fortunately, is now beyond the reach
of father and mother, so-ealled; but a post
mortem examination revealed many marks of
tiolenoe. The brutal man is in prison, and
tfcobchial women, too sick to be pal *
prison, ia i
r . Ido sick to be put into
• under guard to her own house.
By Telegraph.
NOON DISPATCHES.
FROM WASfflNGrON.
Impeachment Proceeding*, **•
Washington, April 15.—Chiel Justice Hi
ram Warner of Georgia is here. ; ^
Mr. Stanbery has the pleurisy.— The
weather is inclement. Mr. Slanbery s physi
cian bas forbid exposure.
House went in a body to the Impeachment
Court. The Speaker reserved the right
should the session of the Court be brief to
make a regular call.
The Senate resumed the consideration of
unlimited speech, but postponed the“msttor
indefinitely. A morion that the Court here
after meet at 11 o’clock, was. defeated by a
vote of 24 to 26 • Io the absence of fijUhbery
the defence proceeded with the documentary
evidence without asking for an adjournment.
An influential meeting in the interests of
Gen. Hancock for President and Hendricks,
,,t Indiana, for Vice President, occurs io
Philadelphia next week. It ia ^understood
that Pennsylvania will present the ticket to
the Convention.
humUH I
V. ait iudeblaff w tt. courtesy of lb.
Officers of the Oastoma of taU OuUaetfea
District, for the foilowiof stttemeat of tbs
exports, tooosge, Ac., of lUs post for tbs
month of March, which will bo qf interest,
not only to our own commercial community,
bat to those elsewhere who are interested in
the growing commerce of Savannah!,
ment of Exports and Tonnage far the Bart of So*
WiZaKaafM the month of March, 1868.
EXPOB1* POKRIRM.
- Bales. Pound*. Value.
UplAnd Cotton...' .... >»“»*» **■”>■«»
8®* I t l88 27^,027 16H 554
From New York.
Albany, April 15.—The Democrats have
carried the city by two thousand migofity.
From Kuropo.
London, April 15.—The Marquis of Sales
bury is death
The Prince and Princess ol Wales are iu
Irel aud.
Phe Paris Desdebats ridicules the war
apprehensions. O A
The Czar declines to mediate between
Prussia ami Denmark.
EVENING BIS PATCHES.
FttOlU WASHINGTON.
Ii»|ieacDut< nt—Prospect of the Acqsltsl
of flirt Prnilileni Improving—More
Kntlic-nl Hast-allly—Unveiling of ike
1.1In Monument
Washington, April 15.—Senate—The im
peachment trial was continued. Mr. Chase
ruled out the President’s message of the 24th
of February. The Mauagers objected lo it
on general grouuds, bill Mr. Chase objected
on the ground that the Senate’s resolutions
did not require it, aud that therefore it waa
uot a part of the regular preceediags.
The President's message nominating Mr.
Ewiog, of Ohio, as Secretary of War, was
admitted as evidence.
Au immense mass of documentary evi
dence was admitted under continued objec
tions for Butler.
The documentary evidence was concluded
aud the Court adjourned.
The Senate ordered certain reports of the
te siou and proceded to consider the im~
peachmeut and deficiency appropriation.
During the dii-cussion forty thousand dollars
deficiency in Forney’s accouut was dis
closed. Cameron intimated tbat Foioey’s
clerk was wiougly charged.
House—Stevens made a statement to the
effi-ci i hat the Statute had determined not to
hear I he i in poachers fully, and gave notice
that he would move for night sessions iu the
House, to allow the mauagers aud others to
make iheir speeches.
The President’s counsel hail it pretty
much there own way this afternoon. The
impeacbers show unmistakable signs of dis
couragement.
President Johnson unveiled the statue on
Liucolu Monument to-day. Graot was on
the sidewalk, having declined to appear on
the stand.
Terrible Railroad Accident.
New York. April 15 —A terrible accident
occurred to-day sixteen miles east of Port
Jervis, caused by a broken rail, which threw
tbecafsdowu an embankment twenty feet
high, fhirty-iwn persons were killed in
stantly aud tifiy-two wounded; seven of the
killed were burned beyond recognition.
Partial lists of the killed and wouoded
show that there were no Southerners
amongthem.
, Virginia New*.
Richmond, Va., April 15 —The Republi
can nominating meeting in Hanover county
adopted a resolution affirming tbat under
present circumstances more stringent meas
ures than are contained iu the reconstruction
acts are neither asked or desired.
Gen. Schofield to-day appointed the city
officers and councilman of Petersburg.
The Convention is engaged in the revii
of the Constitution.
THK REGISTRA1IUN FRAUDS—OR
DER FROM GBN. MEADE.
It seems that that unscrupulous tool of the
Radical party, Hulbert, Chief ot the Regis
tration Bureau in this District, has inaugu
rated a system of fraud, especially ^n the
upper portions of the Slate,by which a large
number of registered while voters have
been stricken from the registry lists, with a
view lo their disfranchisement in the ap
proaching election. This gross injustice aod
outrage has, we are glad to see, been brought
to the attention of General Meade, who, as
there it not sufficient time previous to the
election to have a thorough investigation qf
the mailer, has issued an order which it is
hoped will have the effect to defeat the vil
lainous designs of Hulbert and his vile’sab-
ordinal) s
A committee of gentlemen from various
sections of the State called upon General
Meade, at his headquarters in Atlaota, on
Monday afternoon lust, and represented to
hitn the course that was being pursued by
the Registrars iu striking the names of
qualified voters from the registration lists.
The result of the interview was the prompt
issuing of the following order, which sp
peared iu the Atlanta papers of Tuesday
morning :
Head Quarters, Third Military Din.,)
(Dep’t ol Ga., Fla. and Ala ,) >
Atlanta, Ga., April 13, 1868 )
Genera) Orders, No. 59 ]
Whereas, it has been reported to the Com?
manding Geu.-ral, from several parts of the
Slate of Georgia, that very many names have
been stricken lrom the list of registered
votes, without any cause being aesigued for
said striking off. or an opportunity given to
votors btfelofore registered^fo meet the Qb-
jeciious received iu tbeir cases; and Where
as, it is the determination of the Command
ing General that all candidates in the ap-
proachiug election shall have every
tuuity to show from official data, j
said election has been honestly to!
corniacted, and in accordance with law; It
is hereby ordained.
That all managers of elections shall re
ceive the votes of all such persons as shall
have been stricken trout Uie registered list
during the last five day’s revision: not count
ing said votes, but keeping them seperate,
with the names qf the persons presenting,
them written on the back, and said voles
shall l>e sent in a seperate envelop wKb the
returns made of such election, to cola-
pared with the reasons required by law to
be sent to these Headquarters, whenever n»y
Board of Registration shall deem it proper
to strike names from the Registration lists.
By order of Msjor-Generai Mradr :
R. V. Drum,
Assistant Adjutant General.
Go for Relief and RAvwTnrfimriMl-^
The Atlanta Opiolou ^-Tn^cU^ Sty*:
A gentleman who hftartl t)t M
speech at Ne wnao, reports that that,
man, (who was with Bullock in the
Uon), charged that Bollock said the
Company would lose over §100,000 unless
Relief Measures should
idled.—We are isfaiaid iki a
MM i* »•*
ie, by t sentloal of t unjmi
Negro Killed.
negro man
oigbts since.
League, vbo was inab
person passing. Vbb negro wa« fjaiMg the
place where the meeting waa bald, when be
.was shot, as above stated. He lived ‘ '
foil® while. Wonder wbM aril be
about ibia thing. Will Hen. Meade
the members of Ihst Lesgue smslod, si he
did some of the most ' “ "— ”
Special
Total.....
P. P. Timber
Saefcp-^
.... 40,370 19,638,967 $4,990,100
....toot 1,8166*0 valnsf 19,615
... '• 993,047 “ 21.1*7
\7T.. «• 9.409
[aVFIOlAX*]
■•tic* «• Keepers •YB»r
a B d outer Places, tor
Jdiqaors Retail.
Mayoralty of Savarwam. \
April 16, 1868.)
Hw following extract from General Oitors Bo. 99,
HMdqamrleee Third Military District, Is pabUahed
for the information of all conberbed:
$ 43,172
...4,398,100
Cotton
Total value Exporla Foreign $4,433,272
EXPORTS COASTWISE.
Upland Ootton.... *sMs >Hg«
,21,391
bales 667
t&^V'V.'.'.'".':.’.'..Ow»244,l)S
Rice caaae 187
Bides «.602
8aI' sacks 8 685
Konab rice bnsb 12,662
Tar h...bbla 47
Other Merchandise
for the sale Ol liquor aa man, at wmm *»“ , f
aeata and at other poltoMplase . shall be oloead from
6 o’clock ot the eveaiug preceding the eleoUoautil
6 o'clock of the moraio* after the Met day at the
eleo lon. Any person violating this order aha<l be
subject to a Ana or imprisonment. Sheriff* end their
deputies and municipal officers will be bald respon
sible for tbs strict enforcement of this prohibition
by the arrest ot all parsons who may transgress the
180,160
Cotton
Total valua Exports Coastwise..
$ 2<>9 274
. ..2,446,78-*
..$2,716,064
Foreign Exports
Coastwise “
.. 4 433,272
.. 2.716.064
Total value of shipments for month $7,149.3
Cosatwlae..
Foreign...
Steamers. Other vessels. Total
. oO 16 76
2 18 20
62 34
No. men....2,0
90
Total......
Tonnage... .61,430
CLEARANCES.
Steamers, Other vessels. Total.
rise 66 io 66
Foreigu
24
24
Total '.
65
34
89
lull u age... .67,240
No. men. ..1,927
vsaaBtai ui roar march 31,
1868
Foreign. American
Total.
Steamers
1
14
J5
Kbit a
6
11
16
Barque*
.4
2
6
Brigs
1
1
Msboonera
i
16
16
Sioopa
7
7
Total
it
60
61
Todob^h. .. .‘JH.571
No. meu....833
Value of Foreign Imports ....gold $28,
hoc. lpte of < uatoue for duties uu Imports •• 43,600
Custom House, Savannah, Ga., April 14,1868.
[communicated.]
It i9 very common everywhere, and the usual
practice here, for shippers to leave one of a set
of bills of lading with the Captain signing the
same, or the consignee of the vessel. The
writer of this recollects to have seen the sub
ject fully discussed at the period mentioned
below, and his attention is again cailed to the
following paragraph, from that valuable busi
ness paper, the New York Journal of Commerce,
under the head of “ Money Market,” Wednes
day evening, April 8— 11 Commercial Column,”
—and is intended to bring it more directly to
the notice of our merchants: “ A Subscriber”
is right in supposing that the owners of a
vessel cannot legally retain possession of one
of the bills of lading which they have signed
in his behalf. If the bill of lading state that
1 the master has affirmed to three bills of la
ding,’ the shipper is entitled to all of them.
This has been settled by the decision of the
courts, and was tally discussed last year in our
issue of June 29th and following. The vessels
may retain a copy; but not one of the Origi
nals.” Mercator.
[communicated. J
COTTUN.
In yonr issue of some day lash week, yon
bad a cotton article which must, justly by
its tone, be ascribed one of the “Taurine”
species, and recent developments have
proved the fact that his arguments although
based upon truth, as then apparent, still
point to a degree of insecurity as to the
Blreogth of the position, the rear not as
well protected. The Bank of Englind
and Bank of France are having their
bullion > reduced, and it is a sign ot
weakness not to bs disregarded. Man
chester reports the stock of goods and
yarns as increasing; another symptom of
early cessation of present excitement, and
we are constrained to warn onr friends not
to be too sanguine of any excessive farther
advance in Liverpool. Prices have attained
a figure never anticipated by tbe most san
guine jinring tbe last fall, one shilling
being their nsual limit.
Caution is now requisite, and although
prices may, under excitement, go oee penny
higher* it behooves each and all, whose
interests are identified with tbe South, to
realize, aod let those who have made the
money on cheap “arrival” cotton ‘hold
the bag,” as vulgarly, but aptly expressed.
We do not look f >r any great depression,
possibly some farther advance, but tbe feel
ing: with us now is that the Booth* especially
its merchants, had better stop “playing with
edged tools,” dependant upon continental
politics, European finances, price of bread-
staffs, et id onme genus, as cotton is, and as
before advice, realize their handsome profits
which added to a Conservative success in
our politic-! will place the South sod South
ern inert in a poai ion to protect, and employ
tbe race about which 90 much humbug has
been wrUfoa aod spoken, aod ao little done,
that they themselves have not been taxed
for, but I began on commerce aud now am
meigiog into politics. So, excuse me,
Messrs. Editors. Yours, T.
SVHM # •
muaulirMtu*
By unto, of JOHH NlOObBOH. W. K.
J. H. Emu. 8w^«r. oprli-l,
• • * * ~
CL AU public bar-rooms, srIoobr, aad other piaoss
By order MAJOB QKNER01. HIRES.
Commanding TMrd HUllwy IMltrlcL
A true extract
Edward 0. Andbrson,
Mayor of Savannah.
aprli-td
County Treasurer.
Meters. Editors News and Herald:
Please aanounoa tha name of Mr. John Reilly as
an iodapendaat oandidata for tha office of Oountj
Treasurer, and oblige,
Savannah, April 14,1868.
MANY VOTERS.
aprl6-iw
COUNTY TREASURER.
To my Fellow-Citizen* of Savannah and of Chatham
County:
Being disfranchised by the operation of the Recon
struction sets, I am not eligible to office, aod for this
reaaou only my name is not before you tor re-elec*
ilou to the offlot ot County Treasurer.
1.. 8. Fairchild is a caudldate for County Treasurer,
sod for him 1 respectfully solicit the voteq of my fel
low eitizeus, grateful for past favor*.
1 am, yours respectfully,
aprl4td L. J. B. FAIRCHILD.
For County Treasurer.
Fellow Citizens:—1 beg leave to announce my
self aa a caodidUe for the office of County Treasurer,
and respectfully solicit your votes.
aprl4-td L. 8. FAIRCHILD.
Notice—-Obstructing Streets
and Lanes.
CITY UP SAVANNAH. )
Office Clerk of Council, J
April 13.1868.)
Whereas, numerous citizens baring bean oom*
plained of for violation of ordinance relative to ob
structing tbe streets and lanes with boxes, vehicles,
building materials, Ac., Ac., the following section of
said ordinance ia published for information of all
parties concerned:
Ho. 616. (6) Ordinance, 19th August, 1839—No per
son eb»H bring, lay, put or cause to be brought, laid
or put any timber, bricks, stones or other materials
for building, or firewood, goods, wares or merchan
dise, or other bulker thing whatsoever, and permit
and suffer the same to continue and remain in any
square, street, l*u» or alley, within the said city, for
a longer time than six hears; nor shall any parson
permit or suff -r any cart. aray. wagon or carriage of
soy sort to stand and remain in any ►qusre, street,
lane or alley longer than such time aforesaid, * *
• * * without previously obtaining the Written
consent of the Mayor.
The ordinance will be rigidly enforced.
By order EDWARD 0. ANDERSON,
Mayor.
Jambs Stswabt, Clerk of Connell,
apr t3-10t
. ELECTION NOTICE.
8RV.NNRB OA8 LIGHT COMPANY, I
8.V.MHAU, O.., April 7. IMS. I
m. ADBAta Election lor Prooldon. and limotor, at
the devumah UAO Light Gonpen,. via be ktadta
tbeir office ta U o’clock, M., on MONDAY, the ttk
'THE GREAT
BLOOD PURIFIER
OH* OF THE MOST PREFECT VEGETABLE ALTERATIVE »nd nr,™
BAMBINO CORDIALS known to tbe world, no infallible remedy fur
•11 ita fOTIBR. SKIN DISEASES snob u Pimp ea, B ils, Teller or SaH Kbeunr 1
KryejpelM, Chronic KbeumaUam, Scrofulous Sore Eyes. ULCERS of every kind 8 .
known kind ot OONSTITUITONAL. SYPHILIS or VENEREAL DISEASES^'’!
how old or ioyeteiAte It quickly removes virus from the Coosiiluiion sod Blood f
stores 'be patient to perteci health aod purity. This REMEDY ie used and J J)
mended by tho moot eminent medical moo, and is known by iu works os the tree I, i, ‘*1
by ita fruits. WARRANTED TO CUBE.
FOR SALE BY THE DRUGGISTS.
J. H. PEMBERTON & 00
PROPRIETORS AND CHEMISTS, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA I
A. A- Solomons & Co,
spoilt—oodJm ^ Wllinmi Altm, SAVABIAw'i. I
New Advertisements. IFAIR! FAIR
NOAIOIC.
A FAIR WILL BK HELD IN 8T. AKDRltf
HALL *»n ing the week, openingr>n1ttetvA
I Q of ttie 13th and ck» ug on the NIGHT ot ul
■-ntent, for the purpose of ■
apr8-2p
J. F. GILMER.
President.
The Great Preserver of Health.
TARRANT'S EFFERVK88N T SELTZRH APER
IENT can always be relied upon as a plaaaant, mild*
speedy and positive care in all case* of Oestivaneaa,
Dyspepsia, Heart-born, Sick Headache, Indigestion,
Sour Stomach, Liver Complaint, Biliousness, Flatu
lency. Fairness of Blood, and all Inflammatory Com
plaints where a gentle oooling cathartic Is required,
so says the chemist, so says the Physician, ao says the
great American Public ot the Nineteenth Cantary.
Head ye them and be not without a battle in the
house. Before life ia imperiled, deal judlcioasly
with tha symptoms, remember that the slight inter
nal disorder ol to-day may become aa obstinate in-
curable di rnaae to-morrow.
Manufactured only by tha sola proprietors, TAB-
BANT 400., Wholesale Druggists, 279 Qiaanwlck
and 100 Warren streets, Hew York.
Bold by all druggists. sspH-ly
0-THE HEALING POOL. HOWARD
Ataoouxioil Kim xa. Cor YOU NO „BN, aw ta,
OBIKti OF SOLITUDE, lad fo. INBORN. ABUSR8
indDIBRASBS whichdtaboy fo. MMMIf powmud
emta. Unpcdim.nl. io MABUldtlS* wife wwotatau
otiwhta. B.ntiu .Mild letter ravtaop., fin. of chug..
Dr. J. BK1LLIN HOtmBTON,
Howard Ateodtalon, ptuladeiphte, IK
bblSudAtw
OBBCUKU
ruou UUUTH WKST1CHN
OIOMU.
Hon- B. a Hill, whose zealous hod effec
tive efforts iu the present canvass entitle
him to the lasting gratitude ot the people of
Georgia, in a letter to tbe Atlanta Iotelli-
geuoer, dated Aibaoy, April lltfa, says:
I I am delighted with the. pruepectin this
portion of the State. Thousands of segroee
will vote for Gordon, end many against the
Constitution. Relief la despised ss s cheat
down here. Gov. Brown's effort to mislead
tbe white, ot Cherokee, with tbe idee that
negroes cannot hold offlee under the Coa-
BtiiutioD. ie re-acting here. Peopk (black
and white) are only made to believe that the
whole Constitution Is e cheat. Radicals
complain here that they are compelled to
nominate negroes for office to prove that
Gov- Brown’s version uf the Cumulation is
not carted.
I am now/ally satisfied that If the white
people of Upper Georgia will do their duty,
we shell elect Gordon end defeat the Con
stitution by e large majority. Wo ahall
•are onr Stale Dorn disgrace A very luge
torchlight procession of Democratic tnggtre
are marching through the streets while i
write. I have addressed an immense au
dience to-night in the conrthonse tqnsre—
gta Democratic mottoes. Proclaim it
throughout Upper Gaosgia that everythiag
is eaf*—honor a*yed, peace •aeored, democ
racy trio ■opbant. aad tha phuuforen badly
I the kaigeeraad bast andianoat I have
at dmarieaffi on Thursday. Splendid
tad mg prevailed. I never saw a caavaee
doing beuar. The poor white Radicals
Dive lost character, end ere now loatsg "
.._tb5aa“58X , af^.-,
AgainJ ley, all we salt Ie, that the white
people of Upper Georgia wifi show them
Sad‘$taES;^2Sve tong eSfrafod’h?
rogaee, and Shove the tgaomtoy ofnalng
ddededaegroeata Iqrce • haled CowaUla-
BW- BATCHELOR’S HAIR DYE—Tha
flpleotUd Hair Dy« te Ute boat in the wiMlfl. Tha only
true and perfect Dye—Hinnlam, Bwliitto* Inatante-
naotu. Mo diuppoinfoaBt No ridiculona tints.
Be uediee tha HI afeteta ot Bad Dye*. Invigoretea
and laavea tha hair.aoft and baantifol, Maak or hr*um.
Sold by all Drnggiate aod Favfnmem, end proper^
applied at Batahelor'a Wig Ffiotory, IS Rowd attest.
New York. JanlL-ly
NOTICE.
Tex payers are hereby notifled that the fleet quar
ter tax on real estate, income, and com.alas Iona, and
groaa receipts; Also tha monthly tax on gross aeles
and receipts for freight and passage money, payable
in tbia city, ia now doe. Special attention ia directed
to an extract from the 6th aaotiun of the Tax Ordi
nance, passed December 90, i96V to wit: »*Antl it ia
hereby declared and ordained to be foe duty of avary
person, natural or artifleial, ateoding in tha relatiOB
ot employer to anotber rmidoat parson, raoetviRg a
fixed salary or compenaatloa, to make a return of ihe
tax hemby declared payable by or oa iiwati eftofih
employee, and, after dadnoting said tax from aaeh
■alary or companaatkm, to pay aaid tax into the Oity
Treasury. In the oaaa of a corporation, tho retain
must be medi by the Preri i—fl, 'CMhhoir or Tree—inr
of the Oorporaitott, and tha tax ffiaat be paid by the
Corporation and dad acted aa aforesaid. Th$
amonnt of sight hundred ($809) doliara par aaaam
ou all aalarlaa la hereby rettavad from taxation **
JOHN VILLKAMSOH,
aprl-tf City “
NOTICE,
Tax payers are harehy aoiitod tost tha
qoarter*a Tax oa
-•:*>»! <*
>» a#a«
TbomaaviUs, agreed to ‘trimefer the B
bridge Ihmab College building, wi
Colombo^ for tbe kilhmrof A
ahall aa,-Sumter Ny.ii}ttei. -
>*r <
iSSgfS 1
at
BAa
CoDege boUdiag, which,
ta an aedalihad atata, aoet that*
dollars, to tha Trustees of Sin
Coltege, rodwviii|t Abe privilege
■MtaUHA, (he
monthly ratarasmi QaMa aad Freight aud
Money, are mam daa. Payment for Ua aame fa ta>
qaired by City Oidl— na to ha made lntwiM to'
tret and Math laat iat. -
JOHN WILUAM80H,
Polytechnic College.
I* M. whaler
89 Yoiifitreat,
To read
Polyteohnic College,
tpetatata foXtaytatalatritai. fl.nr^a
will Mrianrijr.taasttar ta. iw*Mrtaoaa et foa f
•aetataakrtri>ahaadtaartarmite sariga
OFFIOE OF 8UPTGA. CBNT’L R. R., 1
SAVANNAH, April 14, 1868 |
/\M AND AFTER THURSDAY. April 16th. tbe
VJ Passenger Trains on tha Georgia Uaotr*r Rail
road will run aa throws:
UP DAY TRAIN.
ABBIVr. LKAVX
tab ...8X0A.M
7:3a p. at
iris 6.-39 P. M
ivllle 7 46 M. ...83)0 P. M.
A 9:ai»P.M
Connects with train that leaves Augusta 8:46 A. M.
DOWN 4»A% TRAIN.
Savannah 6:16 P. IK
Macon 7:06 A. M.
Angaata »:38P.M
MUladgevUia 6:26 A. M.
Binrtri 43W A. M.
ponaacis with train that leaves Augusta 8:45 A. M.
UP NIGHT TRAIN WITH WESTERN MAIL.
Savaanah 3 K)0 PM
Mama 2:36 AM
Aagaata 4:00 PM
DOWN NIGHT TtAIN WITH BAHTEhN MAIL
iavannah .6:46 AM
Maeoa 8:46 PM
Angiuta 5:30 A M
SAVANNAH AND AUGUSTA TRAIN WITH
NORTHERN MAIL.
Savannah 10:00 PM
Aagaata... 6:30 AM
Itocoo 8:46 PM
AUGUSTA AND SAVANNAH TRAIN WITH
SOUTHERN MAIL.
SEvanoah 12:00 PM
Aagnaia - 43k) P M
2:86 A M
KAIONTON AND M\CON TRAIN.
(SUNDAY > EXCEPT ED.)
4:3* AM
4:10AM ... 6^3All
... 920 AM
I...! 6:15 PM
5:38 P M
MACON AND KATONTON TRAIN.
(SUNDAYS EXCEPTED.)
4:16 PM
• 7:4>PM 8.-00 PM
9:50 P M
8avAi BSh 8:00 A M
Aagaata 8:46 AM
JOHN G. CLARKE.
spl$—tf Assistant buperlnt ndent.
Raising Funds to Build a FrtJ
School House
FOR THK CHILDREN OF ST. PATRICK'S PAHt
OB a met .thtible Lot tatelj bought for tbit*.
Tlii« beiug a matter of g, nerai mil ty t 0 ttie o*
munitv, tl.e patronage of the public id reswcim
solicited. * ™
BAUUiN.
250 HHDS. BACON,|
SHOULDERS,
RIBBED SIDES,
CLEAR RIB SIDES,
PRIME ffiBAT, jtut received and Ijt aale bj |
•pl5—tf HABNEY & C0.I
NEW BOOKS, m
SHADOW OF THE ROCK.
CHANGED CROSa
Letters From Tbe Frontier; Gen. McCtl |
GOSPEL TREASURY, Uimpriss
FAMILY BIBLES.
Sf. JOSEPHS MANUAL.
ANDREAS HOFER. Mahlbaoh.
BLACK BOARDS FOR SCH00L& .
Copying Wheels, for Marking Pattens
JVEallon & Frierson. |
ay 6—tf
Bacon, Pork, Corn, Hay 2'm
Groceries.
a
H.vlartk
For Liverpool.
The Al American Shi* M AYVLOWKH,
Captain Call.
_rrlav ttalarver poitlon of hercArgo on board, rs-
“SfilSMoLS a co.
CITIZENS!
100 HHDS ’ BACON 8IDKs .
50 Hhda. SHOULDERS,
50 boxes qry Salted Bac .-n,
75 barrels PORK—Mea^ Prime and Fumj,
lOOO bales HAY, Rastera and Northern, -
WOO sacks COR V, White and Yellow,
/and A GENERAL BTJCX OF GRUCSfilB.
IF YOU WANT A GOOD FITTING
SHIRT X
SO: Iff MS. lia BROVOHTON STREET,
aad gat them made to ordar by maasara, at vary low
prioaa, just aa ioa want them.
-* — GEO. 8. NKHOLfl
JOHN VcMAHON « CO., I
Cor. Broogbton aud Jefferson ml
pBIMETBNi
:ORN!
B COEN on h md and VR'A
CLEAVELAND
Mineral Springe
.,4. SITUATED IN
CLKAVELAND COUNTY, N. C ,
For aale loarfry
BURROUGHS, FLYE A C0„ |
aplff—tf No. 9 Stoddard’s Lower fi
LIME m EAT.
r yvfo. Han of Ui. WII Gil acton, Ob.rlotts and tin.
ta therfoid Ralirota, will be- opnt fur ration on
tbe local JUNK.
WATERS—CHALYBEATE, RED AND '
WHITE SULPHUR.
OHABStS—Per day *3. ft week tin, per month
*60. Oblldren nndsr seven ,er
1000 8188118 bcp * e,oe i- 1 * 2 -
BALES PRIMS EA8TBHN BAT,
Landing and for sale bj ,
spu—at L. 1. GUILMARint*®' I
THE AGENT OF
ir.l
i ticnlare addreaa tbe Paominoaa*
apis—lawsm
fflHE (vrr» “COMMON 8XNSE 8IWIS0 J.
A C(>lNEa* , is happy In mincuDcing to
tuc ||| vi HY v| |uc | e ^^".d%ToKte,^:e a “J
I nr All AI IIA Vi LA IV «J a important consideration-are well weigbpa:
wmmmwm ■ let. Their extreme simplicity of c< nslruiiion.*!
consequent non-U* bflttj to net out of repair. J
Ed. Their oompaciutaft; may be carried udw"
lady’s ana with’aaaa, atobaeived.
3d. Will saw a' a i ch auy desired lengtfi--. „
tbitd one of wfilch m*y be severed. tl:Slnot nt I
pall apart. .
Alb. (No- laaatj the pi ice for them fa■ 1
OA>>H—$9 le?a than they can be obtain* dfurtl T^
tall of the Manufacturer. Indeed they » ie
Union. Leagues!
CtlSBffVlTIFflS, KKPDBLIC1NS
AND THE PUBLIC GENERALLY
tnlbl, monfo. tha ar.b lnwwit. we wtU™fst
ia Mlerr. m tb. Upbeat bidder. Twenty funr
(a*j at foe saoat dl iilte, riluant. and beta toeuad
HE OILY TRUE
LOTS
Cm OF BAINBRIDGB, GA.
IOWE8T PRICKO Machtnra in the market toJL
warranted (except we*r and break-btre of n
remain la iw)>air five jeare, and will *“1 «r
of fabr c, ( frqm the ami ddkaie haenroob^n
U Sw-P.*n». will be «3Tve1 bv » EADr
verasns wHh tk m, end Ul n cessi-ry 1 .
Siren. Sul) H pkoaD sthki.t
twnea Bwunt al Wtuiibo . d 1
arswftsswt ttj:
BALI POSITIVE.
uttataiav
j NEEDLEWOMAN’S FBlOjl
aoonn-s office, at tb a sigs • |
uamndtLtsrnma. (apM-ffi]
W.T.COXACO..
Auetionaar*-
PHOTOGRAPHS!
Eloral Ba
SAVANNAH. GA
. ’.A .'Utl in
CORN!
i
RIGHT Bar. BISBOP BECKWITH.
5,000 BUSHELS
PfilhE TENNESSEE COBH
tdratteb,
BIGHT REV. BISHOP GREEN,
WI
If. ta habubb b
sos‘*|
•YAJI'M
oamasnMoonotuLunn.
200’
WAAXKW,
lili itaaasMWta
BACON!
Da. DIB gniSd S” 11 880®^
DiOSi-l
Far sale bp
_ . jpgawoH *
OIL, OIL. 1
iMpS
tAii— small niHiiiiiin i.mf.
m mas. so. i>
muun ward « set
ositsw^ nt aata.
EATS
-,J: • .i
kzm'*7n:'i
.'a