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NEWS & HERALD,
MASON & JSSTlUi,
EDITORS ANt) PROPRIETORS.
Cut.
Hr
I. W.T.THOMPSON,) AasuC i*te Editors
, . J. M. .IONKS, I
Official Paper of the City.
lARBEtT CIR8HATI0X l« filTT AID DDIITIT,
satukuat. aphil ».
NEW PD4I1aIOAT10N».
Lippincott’s Magazine. May, 1868. J. B.
Lippiucoti & Oo,, 715 and 717 Market
street,' Philadelphia.
This new magazine, of which this is No. 5
pf the First Volume, has proved a great sue
cess, the first issue being favorably received,
aod an improvement being visible in every
succeeding one. We are indebted to the
publishers for the receipt tf the Magazine
regularly. As we have not had time to ex
amine this Number, we merely give the fol
lowing table of couteuts:
Dallas Galbraith. Part V. By Mre. R. Harding
Davia. Passiug Beyoud Hy Edgar Fawcett. J.hn
Neagle, The Artiot. By Thomas Fttzgerald. Valde-
uiar The Happy. By M E. If Smgafer. A Village
School lu Germany By U M. Marliu. AD Amartcau
Fishing Port. By G H. Procter. Loyal eu Tout: 4
tale. By Kate P. Kereveu. The -Talmud. By Rev.
Louis 0. Newman, D D Court oT the TuUeries. By
George M. Towle. Coiuinu .icatlou with the Pacific
and beyoud. By R. T. Colborn. Willie'a Wife. By
Rosamund Dale Owen. Bostonian Wit aod Humor-
By Rev. Walter Miicbeli. From lire Woods. By Paul
H. Hayne. Our Monthly Gossip. Literature of the
Day. • * i
Thk Riverside Magazine for Young Peo
ple. Hurd A Huugntou : New York. „
We have often tpoken of this magazine as
the best printed one iu tbe United States if
not iu the world, comiug from the celebrated
Riverside press. The readiog matter is all
original, beautifully illustrated, adapted to
ull shades of the juveuile comprehension,
and much of it instructive and amusing to
those of “older growth.”
Every Saturday. A Journal of Choice
Reading. Selected Irom Current Foreign
Literature. Boston: Ticknor & Fields.
We receive this magazine punctual irom
the publishers, and find it very entertaining,
taking the place of the old Littell’s Living
Age. The number for to-day has arrived,
and is attractive as usual.
Ptospectus of a New School History of
the United States, the First Ever Writ
ten in the South; With Selected Extracts
Showing tbe Purpose, Slyle aud Character
of tbe Work. Winchester: Times Cftice
Print.
We have received a copy of this prospec
tus, and can assert from a thorough know
ledge of this State and adjoiuing ones that
the work will be welcomed by tbe mass of
the population There is no reasou why
Southern children should have Paritanical,
partizan text books forced upon them, with
the talent which exists io the South. Tbe
authors of this work are Messrs. Wm. N.
McDonald and J. S. Blackburn, both gentle
men of literary eminence and good reputa
tion generally. From the sample extracts in
the Prospectus we judge the work will be
very popular.
Mr. Wm. Ebtill, the news dealer, has our
thanks for tbe May numbers of all the maga-
azines, qpd a lull file of all the late illus
trated aud literary papers.
The New Yore Underground Railroad.—
The bill granting a cb arter for the construction
of the tleulral Underground Railroad iu the
City of New York, having passed both bran
ches of Abe Legislature, has been signed by
the Governor.. The/ route of the road
is from the City Hall Park, on‘ the
Broadway side, opposite Park place,
across the Park to Centre street; thence
through City Hall plgce to Pearl street;
thence up Mulberry street to Bleecker street,
aud under the blocks between Bleecker and
Great Jones street to Lafayette place; through
Lafayette place, and across Astor place, to
Fourth avenue; up Fourth aveuue to Four
teenth street; thence in a direct line to the
foot ot Madison avenue, and then up Madi
son avenue to Harlem river. The fare is to
be six cents fur three miles or under, aud
two cents fur every mile or fraction of a mile
in addition, .Government tax in all cases in
cluded. Operations are not to be commen
ced until $8,000,000 of stock is subscribed
for, and the time for tbe construction of tbe
road is limited to five years. Tbe company
is to deposit the sum of 300,000 with tbe
Comptroller of the State before Jan. 1, 1869,
as forfeit rooqey, to be applied to education
al purposes, if tbey fail to complete tbe road
within the time specified. Tbe books of sub
scription to tbe stock are to be opened to the
public.
Election in Bryan County.—The follow
ing is the vote at Way’s Station: Against tbe
Constitution, 88; for the Constitution, 272.
For Governor—Gordon, 88; Bullock, 272.
Congress—Fitcb, 150; Clift, 157. State Sen
ator—Lester, 38; Bradley, 266. Represen
tative—Geiger, 38; Houston, 270.
Horace Greeley as a* Gentleman.—The
Round Table, noticing some of tbe recent
cbaracleristU} blackguardisms ot tbe Pull-
osopher and Philanthropist of the New York
Tiibune, declares that Mr. Greeley has'dis
graced bimselt. his newspaper, and the
American press iu general, and goes on to
tell a story, with an intimation that Mr.
Greeley was its hero, about ao American
journalist who went into an elegant coffee
room in Liverpool on* rainy day, and, seat
ing himself before the fire, deliberately
polled off his wet bools, and held bis fett
out to dry over some plates and viands
which had been placed there to be kept
warm. Tbe guestB objected, and tbe land
lord showed him out.:
Masonic.—The Supreme Council of Sover
eign Grand Inspectors General of the Ancient
and Accepted Rite for the Southern jurisdiction
of the United States, will meet in Charleston
city on Monday, 4th of May. This is the high
est Masonic body in the country, there being
but two of them—the Northern Council, having
jurisdiction over all the States north of Cmio
and east ot Mississippi, and the present C01
having jurisdiction over all the States andf Ter
ritories south of the Ohio, and west of the
Mississippi, as far as the Pacific Ocean. filbert
Pike is the Sovereign Grand Commander, and
Dr. Albert Mickey, the Grand Secretary
General of the Roly Empire. There will,
doubtless, be delegates from most of the States,
including Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri and Cali
fornia. The body has much important business,
and will probably *be in session a week. The
sessions are held bi-emiially. The last session
was held at Washington in May, 1866. The
most distinguished Masons in the United States
are members of this body, and high Masons
are expecting a good time at the coming meet
ing. •
Sunday Schools.—The American Sunday
School Union held its annual meeting In
New York this week. The Secretary’s re
port states that within tbe leal ten years 20,-
VS1V1BHIALITV OK RtlllCAL RAM-
OAIdITV.
It would §eem that cheating and swin
dling in elections is a piactice universally
prevalent with the “party of moral ideas,”
and trenscendant patriotism. Tbe carpet
baggers wbo are maoaging our so-called elec
tions in the South ore only putting in prac
tice the arts and accomplishments iu political
knavery which they learned “to hum” be
fore they came down South to pull the wool
over the eyes of the igoorant negroes, aud
monopolize the offices. We see it stated
that several Radicals are undergoing prose
cution in Hartford, Cjnn., for bribery iu the
receot election, and that so far as the case
has proceeded, the proof seems to be clear
enough. It is a singuluar feature, remarks
the Boston Post, that the six most promi
nent criminal lawyers of the city, engaged
to conduct tbe defence, did not bring in any
evidence, but relied upon a legal quibbla
flaw in tbe indictment, to clear the accused.
When this was overruled by tbe Court, they
asked a week’s delay. _ Meantime, the Radi
cal papers are howling about the “wholesale
frauds” of the Democrats, unable io back up
their silly assertion by a single individual
accusation.
Tbe South Carolina papers contaiu ac
counts of shameful irregularities and frauds
practised by the Radical leaders and mana
gers in that State. So undisguised was tbe
determination to carry the election by force
and fraud, that in many portions of the
State the whites were deterred from pariicipa-
ting in the contest. At the Court House in
Laurens District, the League took charge ot
the ballot box, and the whites were crowded
away from the polls. Negroes who attemp
ted to vote the -Conservative ticket were
threatened with hanging, aud driven Irom the
election ground.
Similar accounts reach us from various
quarters of our own Stale.
Iu Arkansas the. most infamous frauds
were perpetrated Ijp-many of the counties.—
At Clarksville, for instance, uinety-uiue
votes were returned against the Cousliiu-
tion—since then the. affidavits of one
hundred and eighty have been takeo of
those who voted against it. One of the
Registers is known to have voted twice, aud
was seen to tear up Conservative tickets
from the military ballot-box. Negroes were
permitted to vote two or three times, aud
even negro women appeared, dressed ia men’s
clothes and deposited votes.
Foster Blodgett, the Chairman of the Re
publican State Central Committee, has published
a card requesting all Republicans thus elected more
aud unable to take the oath, to forward their
names to him at Augusta, Ga., as soon as the
result of the election is made known, that steps
may be taken to have their disabilities removed
by Congress.
Congress might further benefit the Radical
party by declaring a general jail delivery, and
passing a law of general amnesty for theft,
perjury, and all other crimes, peculiar to ^he
loil.” There would be equal propriety in
such legislation as in the application of the test
oath to State officers elected under the- pro
visions of the Reconstruction laws, so-called.
Arbe8T of a Delegate.—Frank Arnim, a
white delegate to the Convention trom E Ice
field, was at rested a few day 9 since by the
United States Marshal for fraud and ewbez
zlemeut of Government funds, and is now
confined in the jail. The charges were pre-
lerred against Arnim while in the Conven
tion, but his position prevented his arrest at
that time. He has since been nominated for
the State Legislature by tbe Rspubhcau par
ty, but ueither his post nor prospective hon
ors could save him from the clutches of tbe
law. Tbe case will be tried before the Uuited
States Court.—Charleston Mercury, 20th.
If tbe Uuited Slates authorities are going
to pursue this policy, if they are going to ar
rest every thief aud peijurer who may be
elected to office by the Radical scalawags,
there will not be a respectable * majority of
them left. We mean respectable iu poiutof
members. Respectability of character is not
known among them and would be regarded
as a disqualification by their party.
That able Conservative paper, the Journal
'of Commerce, lays down the following plat
form for the Democratic party at the ap>
pr< aching Presidential election:
1. The union of the Wales is to be main
tained, and the Constitution as the funda
mental law is to be respected alike by the
private citizens and the public servant-
“2. The landed debi of tbe United States
must be paid according to the terms of tli«
contract, aud this cannot be done consist
ently with tbe national honor, except in
coined money, or its full equivalent.
'3. Fraternal relations, and consequent
peace and prosperity, should be restored as ■
speedily as possible throughout tbe Union,
on the principle of a general amnesty to all
engaged in tbe late war who accept its
conclusions as a settlement of the peudiug
issues. , / *.
•4 The personal rights of tbe freedmen
should be placed upon then same footing as
those of their brethren in the older free States,
ann some arrangement be made through tiiate
legislation for an extension to tbe race of the
privilege of suffrage, under restrictions based
upon qualifications of either or both property
and education.’
ing 70,009 pupil*, and 4115,000 have baas
expended. T?Lk'U' ( '• '
-Tli
hibu luge Democratic gnlag. Io (HaetaaMi
nearly four thouMDd in one you.
r. ■ ■ f<« M j J » i
. ooilz TfcfcS til i'iO SLGi, i
Children in Massachusetts Factories.
There is a law in' Massachusetts intended to
regulate the employment of cbildreu in facto
ries. The officer appointed to enfored this law-
reports as follows
In Fall River he found one thousand children
employed in faetoris9, mostly of foreign parent
age, in a generally low condition, ignorant in
many cases, of their own ages, earning very
low wages, and deprived in great part, or alto
gether, of the school privileges which the law
requires. To illustrate tbe spirit of some of the
employers, the officer inquired of the agent of
one of the principal factories, whe’tber it was
the custom to do anything for the physical,
intellectual or moral welfare of the work people.
The answer wdnld not have been out of place'
in the master of plantations, or the captain of
a coolie ship: “ We never do; a9 for myself,
I regard my work people as I regard-my .ma
chinery ; so long as they can do my work for
what I choose to pay them, I keep them, and
get out of them all I can. What.they do, or
how they fare outside of my walls I do not
know. They must look out for themselves, as
I do for myself. When my machinery .gets old
and useless, I reject it and get new, and these
people are a part ot my Machinery.
Another agent in another part of the State
replied to a similar question, “that he used his
mill-hands as he used his horse : as long as he
was in good condition and rendered good ser
vice, he treated him well; otherwise he got rid
of him as soon as be could, and what became'
of him afterward was no affair of his.” That
man, the report says, had upwards of one huu
dred children in his employment, most of whom
had never attended school. These hre cases of
exceptional hardship, hut in the majority of
establishments, jt is believed that, by the con
nivance of parents and employers, the‘law is
violated, at Idast in some, of its parts, to a
most fearful extent.
The fair held in Boston during the past
week* in. aid of the suffering Cretans, was
dosed on Saturday evening with an address
by Wendell Phillips. The net sum received
Is about $15,000, which will be immediately
sent to the Cretan refugees in Athens.
A riot occurred at Clinton; Mass., on Sun
day evening between: some Germans ; and
Irishmen; : Ibere bad imeu ill-feeling be*
tween them for some time, whictfculminated
in an attack on a German meeting by tbe
Irishmen. Daring tbe melee ope of the latter
waa killed and several others dangerously
wounded. ^
—Two- pndMjdrt, uo&r -the sentence^ of
OWo «-
( to«koaii cause they were notTanged on th£day Ap-
im
A Fcsrfil least «f IlSSlbttr.,
The terrible soeue of tbe Brie Ballway
slaughter ia tbua described by an eye-witness:
“Tbe air is freighted with moi
sighs of the quick aud tlffi^d;
smooth Delaware flows quietly
it receives as tributaries tbe ’001
rivulets of blood and liquified „_. T
poor fellow bad bis nostraia scraped-out as
if done by an oyster-knife. A man named
Puritou, as he bouuces from rock to rock,
has bis eyes beaten in, his upper forehead
toro off, and a hole is dqg out of his skull
with as much facility as if it were a spring ..
turnip. One man had bis jaw tornout,* and
it hangs limp by a chin whisker dangling
from the chin. His*flugersaretwi8tecfitorA,
and burnt by the embers ia the ^rear
car. His eyes are glassy and have
a reproachful look.' Ttiere lie together,
grasped in their last embrace, man and wifo,
Ephraim and Mary Hoytt, torn and jnatq- ’
lated, their foreheads riven and
with the traces of the jagged* rockpofnis. —'
Nothing but a confused ifiass of torn limber,
broken aud bleeding bodies ; and, to add to
the horror of it, one of the cars take's fire from
the scattered coals of the stove, and, aix per
sons jammed iu the seats—fonrWrDRiatt .and
two meu, are slowly reduced to 'alhfia 'mid
calcined bones. Ou, the piiy of it! One
man uauicd Oliver has both legs broken. He
is jammed under a ear fiat on fils back, and
iae
By Telegraph.
ELI
(total Without Doabt Elected
(toerivr !
Conservative Majority In tile
> Legltauie!
Colonel Fitch Probably Elected
gresB!
while thus undergoing unspeakable tortures;
his evcB are fastened on a woman alongside
of him, who is also fastened by a timber,
whose head is broken to fragments. The
brave old man hearsVber last expiring sob;
ami his arms being free, he makes a vain at-
to free himself. For two long beurs, this old
man, who is weak aud sickly, Ues^un the
c«»ld, damp plateau of moraBa {before
be extricated.’’ wf»41
The Erie Directors charge that iu conse
queuce of the granting of an injunction pro-)
venting them from issuing $10,000,000 worth
of bonds, the Vanderbilt party are directly
the came of tbi9 deplorable accideot. They
say that tbey had contracted for th? purchase
of 20,000 totis - of steel rails, to replace the
brokeu rails which bad been snapped during
the severe cold weather. That immediately
after the granting of the injunction, the firm
with whom they contracted refused to furn
ish the rails uuless the amount should be de-'
pouted with Baring & Brothers. In conse-
queuce of the injunction the Treasurer re
fused to disburse any of the funds oif the
Company until tbe present difficulties could
be adjusted. Therefore they were compelled
10 leuve their road iu ao unsafe condition.
Baltimore as a Market far boutbera Mer-
t-bauts.
A Southern exchange made a very great mis
taken few days ago, 111 stating that wtute Balti-,
more offered many inducements as a market to
Southern merchants, it did not offer many ad
vantages as an agricultural depot to Southern-
farmers aud plauters. The la t is that Balti-
ore is a very large and important agricultural
arkef. Tb< re are a number df establishouents
here engaged in the manufacture of agricultural
implements, and it is well known that, owing
to the great natural facilities possessed by this
city, it is real y not only one of the chehpe9t
manufacturing places in the country, but is a
point from which implements can be shipped
and delivered to many parts of the South
cheaper than from any other market of atiy
considerable size. The principal sales iu this
line are made to the South. Not only are large
shipments constantly being made to the sea
board towns along the Atlantic and the Gulf,’
but a considerable trade is also carried on with
the Southwest. There are a dozen houses here
now engaged in the manufacture of agricultural
implements/the 1 names of the principal of which
Messrs. Sinclair A Co., E. Whitman & Co., J. L
Slingluff A Co., Norris & Son, R. Crowell, Jr. aud
otheis are from time to to tune to be foundin' the
Gazette. The trade of all these houses is al
most entirely with Maryland aud the South, and
even in the present depressed condition of the
Southern country, the sales of some of ihefn
amount to nearly half a ’million of dollars
annually.
Among the machines and implements manu
factored here for the Southern markets are
Reapiug and Mowing Machines of every variety,
Horse Powers and Threshing Machines of
various makes, Hay and Cotton Presses, Rice
Threshers and Tobacco Screws, Plows, Harrows
and Cultivators of every description, Corn,
Cotton aud Seed Planters, Grain and Guano
Drills, Plantation Gri9t Mills, Hand and Horse
power Corn Shellers, Corn and Cob Mills, Qay
and Straw Cutters, Cider and Wine Mills, and,
in fact, everything el9e that is required on
Southern farms and plantations.
Some of these houses have traded for twenty-
five years with the South, and their sales during
the past two years, have been larger than at;
any previous period. Baltimore is not only; a
large Agricultural Depot, but it is an im
portant one. It is one, too, which is steadily ,
growing in this branch of business, -as well as
iu every other, and we call the attention of our
Southern friends to the advantages offered
them here in the selection of these implements,
and to the faoilities afforded, by our coastwise
steamship lines and their arrangements'with
connecting interior railroad lines, that they
may be under no, misapprehension as To the
position of Baltimore as a manufacturing city,
where they can obtain every kind of machine,,
implement or tool from first hands at the lowest
cost. Baltimore claims to be the'best market
for the South, and is rapidly establishing it?
position as such.—Baltimore Gazette.
A Japanese BelJ
Bel|£—«*a«blan»
'CKopiticki—Bai
Ye#4o—
Wooden Sandals.
[ I'ransUted for the Cincinnati Chronicle.]
Every Japanese girl, of inkUet what
class in sticily, appears inspired with an in
nate love ot coquetry. The daughter of the
humblest tradesman loves to -pass whole
days in shopping, and takes the greatest de
light in preparing, long before It is needed,
the dress she inieuds to display for the first
time at the next fete. The day arrived, the
happv girl rises early iu the inoniUgg, and
wfiile her fresh new dress fie? ih oqe corner
of the room, im patiently submits to that dila
tory labors of her bairuresscr, iu whose pro-
lession there are some artists so celebrated
that they devote whole hours to tbe study
and.toil requisite for the composition of
some graceful or fashionable slyle, where
tbe bair, carefully dressed with the brush
and pomade, half hides a piece of crepe co
quettish ly chosen aod fastened by bevy
pins of tortoise shell; or . cotai. The
chip non, it must be confessed, is not alto
gether of uature’s growth, and if, after, the
hair, we examine the face, we fthafl see that
Madame Rachel herself could not leaoh tbe
Japanese much in the art of making up. On
the dressing tables stand a perfect collection
of little boxes just drawn irom,some hiding-
place; there are Whites for the neck, the
aims, the bnsl; reds for tbe mouth and
tbe cheek; black for the eyes; some
time gold ' for thp ftp* ; hod yet,
with all these aids Irom art, age ia unabfe
to conceal its decrepitude, while straugely
enougn the children are the most laden with
paint. Putliug aside this coquetry, universal
in spite of its bad taste, tbe fires* ia very aim ^
pie aud invariably well chosen. A silk robe,
generally of a dark hue* covers a chtmeu en
crepe made ot tmall patches of every oolor,
a perfect-harlequin’s mantle; where bright
green is placed beside aTively red. In winter
the cos.ume is completed by*a short mantle
doubled aud thickened accprdkm te tfite
86**00. The drebs is long, without Ahape,
and open from, top. to •bottom,u.the
upper part is cpnfined by 4 belt broad
enough to cover tbe breast and tbe lower
part of the form. ^&d terminating behind fa
ao enormous kno. ; to tie which wif
Chnring Accounts from North
Carolina!
' S1HUI!,U,X1.K< TIU(V POSTPONED!
‘ Aooobtx, April 24.—The (wanting or the
votes is progressing slowly, and it will be
several days before the result wiUfie
ly known/ It fa fihueved that tfie 1
have-carried the District, electing Prinoe to
Cougfess and giving a majority tor Ibe Con
stitution and Bullock. Tbe Democrats claim
live of the seven elected Congressmen, and
a majority ol the Legislature. The Repub
licans are confident of Bnllook’s election.
The Democrats are equally so of Gordon’s
ejection, but all this is coujeeture. • The offi
cial ciouut will show a close vote.
The negro man wbo was bayoqetted by|a
soldier, in the row yesterday was buried this
afternoon. He was followed U> the grave by
large procession of negro meo and women.
Macon, jSjprijj 24.—N® totes have ypt been
counted, the dah beeu spent in M-
qortiog and comparing with the registry.
The accounts from Southwestern Georgia
''are'still more tavorable to tbe Democrats.
Nearly every county is against tbe Constitu
tion and elects a full Democratic ticket.
Raleigh, April 24.—Tbe following major
ities are reported against the CofistUouoo:
Catawba, 800; Iredell, 1.000; Orange, 600;
Alamaned, 300; • Cleaveland, 700; Chmb9r-
land; 200; Davis, 250; Duplin, 400; Sampson/
600 New Hanover, Craven, Edgecombe and
Halifax are largely Radical but by decreased
minorities. Carteret baa gooe Conservative,
tell lio figures. Franklin doubtful. Chatham
is reported against tbe Constitution. Wayne
for Constitution by 213, ofiiciaL Wake be
tween fiOO and 900, including Raleigh 8o4,
official for tbs Constitution.
.Wilmington, April 24.—’Columbus return!,
complete, give 873 Conservative majority;
Blffilen and Robison give small Radical majori-
itai>; {Richmond is doubtful, with chances in
favor’of the Radicals, Duplin gives 487 Con
servative majority ; Brunswick gives a small
Conservative majority; . Halifax, complete,
1,650 Radical majority; Edgecombe reported
aboutj A,600. Returns thus far indicate that
the vote on the Constitution will be very close.
The western counties will decide it.
Newbxrn. N. C., April 24.—The Repub
licans claim Craveu by 1,944 majority and
Lenior by 300 majority. It, is rumored that
Green give 150 majority for tbe Republicans.
Jones' official vote give 148 majority for the
Republicans. Carierett’s majority against
tbe CoDHtiiotion, 26; Catawba, 1,200; Ire
dell, 850; Caldwell, 290; Stanley,200; Alex
ander, 300 approximated Conservative ma
ajoritaes. Burke and McDowell are Radica
by a small majority.
Richmond, April 24.—Gen. 8ebofle!d
issued an order this moroidg, that Congress
having made no appropriation to deiray the
expenses of the election in Virginia for the
salification or rejection of the Constitution,
tbe ejection will not take place on^one 22d,
unless Congress should make au appropria
tion betore that, time. If tbe election does
not take place on that day, Congress will
doubtless substitute a later day, of wfiich
due. notice will be given.
New Orleans, April 24.—Further returns
Increase tne majority fur the Constitution in
tbe Parishes. It will be some days before
the result it officially promulgated. The
Constitution will be ratified aud the Radical
State ticket elected beyoud a doubt. The
JtepnbUean says tbe seat of Mr. Manu, Dem
ocratic Congressman elect, fur the First Dis
trict will be contested by the defeated Re
publican candidate. Frauds by tbe Radi
cals both in the city and country are charged
and cases are cited. In one precinct in this
city over one thousand more votes were poll
ed; tbsn were registered, one of pie Registers
reports' officially to tbe Commanding Gen
eral that one of tbe ballot boxes bears marks
of vinlenoe, and shows conclusively that it
has been tampered with.
FttOa WASHINGTON.
PVlMAb WVITAflOT.
WTXAT.'-'lfiS Meads aogMlstta—
■B in fliaiilr TTr**T — in—tfnUj lavl
«4thrirt|ffintaa
iffiMM TO-MQBmoB
^ wrrr
Special Noticei.
Eoonomy i* Wealth*
KKSIQNE
rXCTFDLLT lot
TO GAS CONSUMERS:
The heavy burden 1b poeed upon large oommual-
tlaa by tbe ooet of Qaa. has heea fcr ySsm ffiscsadi
or great oonplaiaL Ho eubetttatt for Om has been
found to aoawar ma reqafr—antaof i
mvenlMMa, And the aril has tea
uDavotdabia.
11
•pH! ONI
the pubUe that he has recently leased the
Vernon House,
as ■■
hu undergoB. a thorough renovidon, ud
jM«h
'•rerjrthing coaowited with It ptued la QtiMmi
Clu Light Oouguj’. iraxtltt b, which th. wtc.
of light U much ndtwd ud. 0 bMEr hrtwl. (pr-
nUhed, with oat hi ur dura. 1 reusing th. idTU-
Ugu of ou. W« tm ewafoUr uwlaed Iho
openttouof ihtt lupomul oluwhu. Mom #4
purotaudth. right lor I hie eltf, ud iltor thru*
MUd thoroughly th. pMolloEwoAlagf of ihltop- 1
pUoUoo la other efuu. ou oowdutloarl, rdeou-
nud I, to eU wMduIno good udohW, light '■
Oar impureu«ol eouMo la timpljrnuiag Ida
ordinary au, •fUrlllUTu lha mafia, through u
apparatha whlok awlohu U. Ihmaby uultag it. td
•uMUtate burner, of mach lam onpaolty-ahg dnu
f ooaou Uhg thre^tabln lut ol Ou por hour, tot thou
burotn aow ia oonathnl au harming bom eU to
eight gablo loot of Su par hoar. Thanfora wo matt
ueoumMy deer«ue the o aiamptfea a«r par out,
nod wit* tbit diminution fora (thing nttmat 10 pu
owt. mote light. A-
Par furtJur InbrmnUoa, w, inlla thou lalwattod
la oatt at oar odhsu la gornll'a BalMlM tuuddaor,
ud wa will bo happy to eihlhlt aud explain Untight
Wo a.a prepend ta totrodao. thio lap.nrtmut
promptly* * > <-■
OBOROE W. WTUdY,
Preaidant Savaaaah Improved Qaa Light Company.
SPi48»
tion and many reioucbca. Tbe sleeves bang
like l&rge pockets. To ‘the belts ard fast-,
ened % pipe in a velvet case and.fi pocket-
book, containing two chopsticks of stlvfir, if it
is intended to do honor to tbe bo!t wht/may
offer refreshments. Ip one corner wr/lfie
pocket book' sparkles a little mirror, fi Eu
ropean innovation, tor oar civilizatnlp fifig
made this slight breach of Japanese manners.
Daring the greater portion of the yefir the
feel are bare ; in winter tbey are clad in
white cotton, and rest upon sandhis at var
nished wood, kept by wooden snpppr|#: jrigli,
enouge above tbe ground to rocape Ibe mud
find the damp. The snodnl ( i! onUa
with bruida of stiaw, briSOttfttfuet Of v
and held td the Ion byWattipol cloth |
betwteu the toes. Ocoas^tmlly h is
aptbcbneBt-Mr. Neleofi*a ipcMb-Oea.
hetaofleld nominated ns Secretory of
War.
Washington, April 24.—Mr. $Telson spoke
all day. *.He kept the Senators and galleries
well seated, and interested them throughout,
the attention becoming closer as the effort draw
to a close. His points were well made, and, in
some instances, startling.
Groesbeck speaks to-morrow.
The end will not be reached under two
weeks
pointed ppnrt of Mr. Nelson’s speech impli-
j four of the? managers in the Alta Vela
.ir, which interrupted the relations between
the* President and Judge Black. .
Just before the 8enate adjourned tp-dsy, the
Frdkident’s Secretary arrived with a number of
messages Immediately after adjourumeut, an
excited crowd gathered around. The messages
'were opened amid apparently intense anxiety,
showing that the President’s action is still re
garded of some moment. The Pteaifent with
draw the nomination of Mr. Ewing and nomina
ted Gen. j. H. Schofield as Secretary of War,
vice Stanton, to be removed.
General Grant has issued an order instructing
the Commanding Generals of the Military Dis
tricts comprising thj States* of Virginia, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia * Florida,
Alabama, Mississippi, Lousiana and Texas, that
fill 'Vestals arriving at porta within' their com
mands,' from ports infected with the yellow
lever, cholera, or other epidemte disease, but
having bad no caqs; daring tfirir passage, be
quarantined for fifteen days and thoroughly
fumigated.
There was a short Cabinet meeting to-day,
at which all Were ptesent. . V :
The amount received from customs for file,
week ending on the 18th in^., was $3,141,000.
Washington, Apil*5fi.—;Itepeacfi-
raeut Court meets hereafter fit noon. Mr.
Edmofids moved tbatihe Senatorial speeches
on tbe final vote be published hy the official <
reporters. Mr. Sumner objeoted snd th*'
motlofi goes over. Mr. Wilson nwumedhis
atgontent. Tbe House did no business to
day* j i
vv Later ftrom Abyeelata-
Loudon, April *4 —A special diapaicb
•aya the Chief of Wangarat who proUaaed
fneod.hip while Napier waa pasiing through
hi* territory, i, now operating iidreracly in
Napier's rear, attemptpig to cut hu commu
nication with the aea. ,
*»• British BaUa.tt—Laual rr.ua Japaa.
Lonooh, April 24 —The bndgett wae pra-
•aoted last eight. Hr. Gladstone attacked
it.The Timet aod tbe moavlibera! jonroalt
hay the estimate, of the bndgett an indefi
nite a,d unsafe. i l.
Imtri
ip«u. The Tye<nn.jMatee that Biaki ha. re
tired ftom the Government. TlwXadooftn
indemnity for the murder of French aoidiera.
C,M*BrMlt.. .f m. ■ueaclc Ouariar.
N»W Ouuia April 24.—There ora, a
cometery. All , the grand officers of the
ligations of the
ropreienttd.
enermnuo Kno,; to ue which with more I Later account, hare been received from
lee, elegance demands ia careful examine- Japan.
ml
of this city, a ferryman and
(rrod with leather or paper, tut it nerar hon
ored by being worn ih the hooie.
.rk^A.l
WlrilY'q lutenJ-*rf
<i5-- '‘-'itac
uOnWAooyJ
htfi^ore to-d^, the floor b
util trS -tV
UNION SOCIETY.
Savannah, A»< U *1, ISM.
Any f—tteman dMitlng to become s member of
this ttoe'ety in time tope tfetpet* leeaUbreilng.tbe
118x6 AnnIvMFB«ry, cen do se by me! Ing eppUcetlos
TUI8 DAT. to eltfea* of the OftcMa or ffiansgare.
W. M. WADLkV. President.
P. W. AIMS. Vioe-Ptealdent,
S. T. THOMAS. NecreCery,
EDW. UoINTYBB, Trsaaorer.
O. M OUsiMIhOHAll; I ntmwerde.
P. A. OAEDNER, I
EDW. PADELPOED, 1
•a MINIS, t
i. L. V1LLSLOEOA, f
eprSS-lf H. BBIQEAM. j
NOTICE.
Tex payers ere hereby notified theft the flreft qhar-
tor-tax on real retafta, iuoama, end comeelavtone, and
grorereceipte; elao the monthly tax on groeeaaftee
aod recelpU for freight end pereage money, payable
ia this dty. Is now dee. dpe&lattention iedftreeted
to an extract from the Slh aaotkm qt the Tax Ordi
nance, passed December 8», lMT, to wit: “And it to
hereby declared aod ordained to be the defy of every
person, natural or actlftetol, standing In theretolfen
ol employer to another resident person, receiving a
fixed a alary er compensation, to make aretornoftb*
tax hereby declared payable by or on account of aneb
employee, and, after deducting said tax from sack
salary or compensation, to pay said tax into the Oity
Treasury. In the ease of a corporation, tee retain
mast be made by tbe President, Caehelr or Treasure*
of tbe Corporation, and the tax most he paid by tee
Corporation and deducted ea aforesaid. The
amount of eight hundred ($800) dollars per annum
on all salaries ia hereby .relieved from taxattofi.”
JOBS WILLIAMSON,
aprl-tf OU/ Treasurer.
The Great Preserver (tf Health.
TABBANT* ErFBBVB8flNT SEUkBB'APBB-
IBBT conalwom ha^oUri anoBaaaplaamat.ariM,
-l—*T —*t~ all earn, of 0~Uroa
Pyaywria. Bat hara. ntch Hoaiaoha, IaUfemt
noarBtemaok, Llror Oomplalat, Billina MB .Won-
laaoy, Pallnam of BboAsatall inkhiniariooy Oom-
plalats wham a (oatle cooliax mrhartio la ia,al>ri,
ao asm lha chamiat. oo aays tkoPhyriolan, ao soya tne
groat America Pabbooftha Wlnlamlh Osatary.
Bari ya thorn aUbaaotwilhaat a hottla m the
hoam. Mara Wo la imperitod. deal lahdai
with th. ojmpcoau, rOMObw the th. ,1I«M lotor-
oal diaordtr of toAar awy booomo oo 'Cwriliala la-
camble dimaoe to-morrow.
Manylhotaiad only by the iolo proprietor., TAB.
KAMI BOO., Wbotewl. Draggihla, *73 OrMhwlch
ud toe Wiim atreew, IKw Torh.
Sold by W1 dragglhth.mpu-ly
W THE HEALING POOL. HOWARD
Absocxatzo* Bbosts, for TOBNft Mill, oh
CHIME OF SOLITUDE, end tee KBBOHff. AEU0EE
and DIBEANB9 which destroy tbe manly power* end
create Impediments to MABuIAOE, with sure means
of relief. Sent in sealed letter envelope, fret of charge.
Address, Dr. J. BULLIN HOUQHTOH, *'
Howard Association, Philadelphia, Pa.
febl-SmdAftw * *
Am- BATCHKLLR'a HAIR pvs.—Thii
splendid Hair Dy.ia tha boat la til. world, TOeoaly
trueuApordK! fife Harmlmi, BUablA tab
oa. Ho dleappotatmut. Ho rldlcidoai llata.
BaiMdlm th. IU «H0ahl of Bsdhpoa- larigon
and loan. th. hair, salt ud hmattfal, tuck or trouw.
Bold &g ell DraggMr ud Perfamem, aad properly
applied at Batehelor'o Big Phetory, M hU ihaM.
haw Tor*. » : tanW-Or
MlBBiHS SCALES!
BELL A ‘HULL, Ageati.
tFGRR SCALES ,,
end Warehooa s, and tee
for KaUroad Tract,
PATENT DROP LEVER AND WHEELS
BOMBS lor ganaral'see. of ray fppaolty Bort.400
to 3M0 pounds. Also, the -
UNION GROCERS' AND COONTK&
wOlea wh wMj ordigftoa tha muaf.-ywy;
anTortagmoslmdlfK priaufra*.
tboworld, pltririMMBrportafthe
tide. TUeboweoofebWjAgutehe
[of over 1* yeote, ud will tlweyo km*e fell
Wines, Liquors.
RHINE WINES. FORT, HOCK
TAM® 101 "
FRENCH COBOL
NEW 8 WEST Cl
ALES AND. P0UTEU,
PLANTATATION BITTERS, .
MMOKING TOBACCO, SEGABS, ■
CHEWING TOBACCO, at 7-
•o.
ha WHITAKBB BIHBHT.
NEW BOOKS, »0.
SHADOW OF TRE ROCK. *' " ’
CHANGED CROSS. , . < /
Letter, Fr*m The Frontier; Gha.aMoCnlL
GOSPEL TREASURY, Hlmpriee.
FAMILY BJBLEB. .
ST. josepBs MANUAL.
ANDREAS HOFRB. Mahlbaob.
BLACK BOARDS FOB SCHOOLS.
Cbpying Wheel* for Marking Pattern*.
Mallon «& Frierson.
oil,, IL.
Krfeii
BS fiau. HO. 1 Kfi
BI8CU I
OTarER,'xuTrre, * ^ 1 '
GRAHAM, EQG;
PILOT nOT *Ti
.
lew Adi
aments.
Jtof fckshedule
-H0USI
BLUFF.
Wvw
L SUPERINTENDENT’S (
• 4 00 pm
oiMOfthhterios- n* 1-K.jta«l» tnti o c*a tMgJtj
The OW* 4 *»*,IT, Vfc * i
ggglWrifrandeHoteatihU. i (m l.lfniv ol
..The BAB and BILUAHO BOOM wlH be Sager
eetap^te^niudetroe.:;; .-
-V
r...nuut«T»8 OFFlot ,
tterJLmaoio Co«,.„'
Womtrh.Apr.iota,t**' f
/••VH AMD APTKB aUMDAY, the lath i...
Lwty^Bavonoeh dolly (Sunday, exrept
Arrive at Jackwnvifie
Dm JttturUie daily (au,KUy.'«: ,10 *»
LelreLlr. Fg
Lm ^Belabrtdge dally (SundayViii^Y “G
JJJrijeping Cen ran Uwo^J
riory ToSdiy.Thamd^Sd’SSdlt'J^’J'rit
mtarnioe .very Honuy.Wwta.wl,,
AtMchri,dt».tt*..Ratal - THROUGH TICKETS ST THIS Ijw.
BQHiflB. * J tm*ff vmx -j,*,- . -VHl „Low U hy uy other mate.
■AIL aod FWHIMO BOATS o'way*'rrhdy- for ; AaBUW,o.aavB C'loic.nf due uf , 4
■AH. ana wwey. w g^uumta. or ham PkoleiA onlSu.,"!'? <"a
arid-* V-
T8‘ a'wiye rehdy
r/jt.ii k™.-’•
•you’ill! i.r, UBUH.
CHtlLIt ■'dTriAW'd UHiTlUfT.
DEPART ORE
> ! T '* *
Am
d -.li
Akne. IttOB OtW AH BTtAM-
IP. the eeebai! wf the unw uder.he oowtram
or Hr. Charlm Buhu wito thr Beaewu ymreyi
nutwtll IrimNBW OBLBAHa foeN.d DE /J
NB1BO. oo wfiDNBODAY. HaY *0th, HEXt.
ruua* CABur F*8S*eB.....*.ao S oou>.
- BBOOND OaMw PMBAUK-—•tax IN ao, u.
Allfthe Peaasncerfl will fere at the aims tobies.
Abundance of snnetanttol,.wHl cooked food; ptoety
Of beddlDg and' oed room; wgter, to L ■civante;
madielaea and mH«eel attention tn all mtoe.
faaarngere* baggage, pmsona) efieou, Aad hgricul
Ural imptomenw carried tore of charge ,
Weight will beiakre at Turk rabh.
w Eilla or excllhnge given on Htode Penns*.'
A circular, with fun details of Mr. Natt»e«* fioiH
tract,AVill beforwerf ed op anpl'csOon, nl .
pagsas* or height appyr
No. 10 Uaton atreet. or
ap2f—DaTWI
HAtf; Afikhf,
r P. W*«o»lHW6,
MXW.OaidKANS.
BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION.
, j •• , 1-. .
f1Ui|| LAOlBfif BENEFOI.BNX* ASSOCIATION
X- would iaform.their /rknrta sadlhe pai»Jc KCMr_
iliythet la order to RAISE FUWW FOR TBtf Kfi
IdUT OF THK POOH OF THIS CfT» they propore
to offer an dntertainmeat of TABLEAUS and MU&IC
earn In tha,eomlag.week. , ill . -i • »■.
«rCK«Tfi OF ADMISSION may bg foapd at itbe
bank I tores, drag Stores, mod at tbe hotolft to-day.
and antll thwevening of the entertainment, of Which
do* notioe will be given.
TiqMKTS fil if fretx for $9 00. Children ui
reivf ipare, W cents, or five for >8 00.
"SOMETHING HEW!"
THL-E * • '
Wtler-Priif Ska^e is ill fetors*
J* - THXCtBIIK
Mosquito and Insect Shield,
FOB CRIB9 AND BEDSTEADS.
MOSQUITO CANOPIES io LACE and
GAUZE and the FRAMES atw.ye oo
hand, and put np at- shift notice.
JUST RECEIVED, 4 FULL LINE OF
MATTINGS.
’ • ikywT 1 !■ '*H '
M tATHROP AX<Xr,r i;
aW-fift Owner Oongrrea and Whitaker afreeto.
not!imAmi
SiMSft
for one 1
Jinmrw
> MF 8T. be
MnHDAY. tftn loetoot, et 4 .Woes,.™
j rtiMt, near earnerd, la the atom Italy
• by Hr. B.U. Tlldeo, ud will te couitaued
Oreek. — - . e^M-St
iiogyllle, or from Piooieiai "ou arrlml or'^.?"i
.., oaneot at Baldwin wit,, Florida S^ 1 *-
ttalameinwaod FOroendtaa. Ttatarorcfdt*.'' 1 *
karea Baldwin 00 Hood., end Krldtai - “ria
amnrmat Baldwlo ou Tamday and Stlurd,
ear steamrra law. Balabru,, a,, SoiiL,
laud Fort Oalnm on Hood., Wc Ifc -
tar. onnrrtaMOMmin; retarei.,?; 4
We on enme d.ye. u. g. HilNK,
aener.1 a,,ta,ta,^,.
NO x ICJ^.
OFFIOB OF 8CPTGA. CBNT'L R. R. ,
' ‘ Wriunah, April 14, IM, ’ I
Q H AHD APfBR THURSDAY, 4 Pnl ^ ’
,aaaa?*«-e«As
, . .-Ol. UP DAT TRAIN.
• <' • j XMBIVE. LIiww
Angnsto f:3Sp.M
7 46 - M S:0Q p w
Ketoabm. . 9:toP.M 1,IL
Conaacta with train that leaves August* 8- 46 L u
_ JH DOWN DAT TRAIN.
Savaaaah 6:15 P. If
Aueuata 5:38P.R
MlUedg&vilie 635 a. u
Oiaoects with train that leaves Angosta s‘:45 a. M
Dp night train with western mail
Fvamiah.. .vvL.v s:9op a
Miron - 1
4:00 PM
□OWN NHJdT T-fAlN WITH EASTgaN Mail
Savaanah 6:45 a M
Maoon tepi
•Augusta 6^0 \ M \
SAVANNAH AND AUGUSTA TRAIN WITH
NORTHERN MAIL.
Savannah 10^)0 P a
Angnaia 5:30 a If
nation 8:46 PM
AUUUMTA and SAVANNAH TRAIN WUH
SOUTHERN MAIL.
Havannah ..18:00 PM
Anguata...: 4:05 p ff
2:36 A M
LATONTON AND MVCON TRAIN.
(SDMDAH EXCEPTED.)
Eatonton 4Jiam
AUHadgevllle 6:10 AM..... 8«AM
Milferil .-.8:30 A M
SaVaanah .6:15 PM
Anguata....5 38 I'M
MACON AND KATONTON TRAIN.
(SUNDAYS EXCEPTED.}
4:15PM
Mi Hedge vl lie 7:45 PM 8:00 PM
RftftNnoa a^oPM
8ava> nab a S.-no A M
Augusta. 8:45 AM
aplft— tf
JOHN G. CLARKE,
Aasiataut haperintendenf.
S U C A RS.
‘ AT
JBeatty’s,
36 WHITAKER.
POWDERED, CRUSHED,
GRANULATED nnd
BROWN SUGARS.
.Bei
Uta-.lt
iber the New Grocery store.
( Lvi
100
!
BfiMRELfl FINE AND SUPERFINE
For sale by. ■ > } ., ,,
—Iw * SORBBL BBO-I..
Off «KORGIA J -CHATHAM (XUTNTT—
lomii mAyamcera:
- ^
“ on the estate
_ -i*
therefore, to cite and admonish allyrlwm
ft maycoacera« to be and appear before said coart to
auke otyecftloatlf aay they have> yn .Qf before the
first Monday in Jane next, otherigifte mid lettei*
will Im granted.
^teamary oMctolrignataretetoaithda^oft Agrtl,
apto—Uw4w
it*
" " 'lion iy- f) vkn ll
'dpjui'f! f\" fc,-:.
W THE STEAMER /
CHAS. S. HAKDEE
■ l a Will turn ftor HawktnmUte ggl , a. :
Intwrd.y, April S15tn, nt * o’clock p. m.
VorMahtongegaaaeLlPPhr to
dpi#—xt , W- B. BIOBYBHnkT.^eut.,
I M tOH I
55 Hhd8i‘ jllear RibbetjrSides,
- • l^mloby- -- ;♦ i .■ .
oi*4—tf ‘ ^. jjl/fenKr-R'V-
GUL LETT’S
GROCERIES, ALL IMS,
* CANNED FRUITS, PRESERVES,
PICKLES, ORANGES, LEMONS,
NUTS. DRIED FRUIT!
The moat complete aaaortmeat of
F/MILY GROCERIES
n tee dty can bd .oood At
C. J. BEATTVS
_ NEW Ol OCEEtY STORE,
ipW—tf ' 30 WHITAKBB STUIT.
FOB WENT.
rpwo CHFURltlslIKD BOOHS. loanlre drtt dow
X MU of Muonic KAO. on Brooxhto. ttr. et.
. , .' -apis-tf
Policies
ISSUED BV THE
• OF SAVANNAH.
.,grtMf i ’op>ICB,llt gqyllrwl
CORN!
jpRIME TBNNE8MEB CORE on band and arrivla*
For sale-low by
DDRROUGH8, FLTE A 00., .
>U-4f- 'Ho. 9 Stoddard’* Lower Ban**
25 BOZtt STATE CHEESE,
™ WRAPPISQ PAPER,
For aato-bv ■ . •
apfil—tt * WILLIAMS. WARD A McIS
Published for Information,
a bilL to "Sis SSfrrLED
r ixi AN ORDINANCE V
TO repeal the Ordinance passed ia Cnvadl on A*
twelfth day of December, 186ft, entitled “A'* "-
dtoanee to prevent tea ereersetion of avritt
ttodfta aafftogn poctefn any of ue aireit* or tto
ruughferoH* the oltv of Sermofth. *o*l» “«
fieftrelaffmgQft. aad to aiflx penult e« for the
- IvIm oI tn.a nertta—cr “
IdhriThaHAyornd Ataenu.o. •>.m*
mtoh, to Ooaacil mittb^M. do hereby or***
tee above redtod onUnaaee bo and the *»•* 9
j -7 — J tM OotmefL. April 15th. 19f3-
mit t r Drfitoance upon the draft rhadlog and ordfred to to
JAMES BTEWABT.
^ Clark ot Couacff_
bLKAVELAN L>
| Mineral Springs
8RITATBD Bf
CLEAVELAND COUNTY, N. C-,
• '-vL't-t t. t if}
the Mat at tea WUmtogtoa, Charlotte aaJ*J
■YBEATK BED AS®
- WipTB SULPHUR
TfttiADliS
THE
.Society
n irwrign-*— tte jsmt I
amaHffi