The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887, May 11, 1867, Image 2
NEWNAN, GEORGIA. Saturday Morning, May 11, 1867. The Saddest Yet. The South has witnessed many sad and hu miliating spectacles during the last six years of strife and uncertainty. It was a sad scene when her young men, in their pride and chiv alry, laid aside tlie peaceful pursuits of life and went forth to battle for a cause they believed to be jn t. It was sadder still when her strong holds fell, one after another, before the resist less force of overpowering numbers. Her hos pitals arid camps filled with the sick and suffer ing and dying, presented a sight over which Letter from Mr. Turner- NASirm-LE. Tex.v. March Ith 1807. Dear Herald; After one day’s toilsome la- | bor in the Gate City to get iny endorsements ! properly arranged, and travel all night on the •Spite Rood, I reached the very filthy town of I Chattanooga. Taking a look around the place I for a short while, I was most heartily rejoiced when it was announced that the Nashville train was about ready to depart, which was 8 o'clock a. m. Chattanooga shows many signs | of the unprecedented freshet. The whole place is filled with a most v illainous odor, caused, in ) a large degree, by the decay of hundreds of i bushels of corn. My heart sank within me when 1 saw so much grain rotting, and the very j unfortunate people of Coweta suffering for bread. I almost wished from my heart that a similar overflow of the waters had taken place i in the fall and winter of 1363 —it might have assisted very much the care-worn and foot sore It is one of the most wo-begone. ,t v future against loss, by proper advice being ; given in the premises. Resolved, That the Loyal Georgian, a daily and wi ekly journal, published at Augusta, Ga.. bv its devotion to the Union cause, is entitled to receive the support of the loyal people of the State, and that we will accept it as the j oriran of our Educational Association. lb-solved. That we tender our thanks to Maj. G. L. Ebeuliardt, State Superintendent of Schools, and the author of this Convention ; and we cheerfully bear testimony of his faith ful stewardship in the educational vineyards of our State. Resolved, Tint the thanks of this Conven tion are due and are hereby tendered to the Letter from Honduras. Ojio.y. Honduras. } 4 O Clock A. M., April 11. 1SG7. t You find me engaged this early in the morn ing writing you for two reasons: First, when daylight comes I will be exceedingly busy.— Secondly, the Trade Wind will sail this morn ing at 10 o’clock, ami I will have to send this letter by her. I will give you a short summa ry of our trip. We left Atlanta 7:20 a. in.. April 1st. with fifty-four souls, arrived at New Orleans 7 a. in.. April oil, without acc dent; j went immediately on board the steamer Imde Wind, and after making a few hasty purchases in New Orleans, sailed for this point at 5 p m no dishonor to her who was “last at tlie cross' An other case of cruelty has occurred in a school! wounded were left alone. About tniin*~i and first at the grave.” \ Q Massachusetts. A teacher whipped a little boy , the litter-bearer came and Se.gt R **' v ... j ,,, ,, i.-rei,. ,‘„ n ,, n .k nn- f° r hours, until his clothing was cut into threads , , , w ® l - n. wascj As we looked upon the bnglu mounds un ^ ^ ^ drcadfuilv j^ted, and then fled. der which sleep those who were not a.raid Had this occurred to a freed!>oy in the South, the die for right, the puntul reflection pressed it- j aws would have punished the cruel wretch, and self upon us, that if the living ot to-d.vv and it would have been a grand theme for Massachn- the dead of yesterday might change places, our setts eloquence. —Hagerstown Mail. country and our cause could not sutler trom 1 . he consequences.—Sun it Times. angels might well weep. Her slain upon a hundred battle-fields, her desolated fields, her i Confederates. ruined and silent cities, her suffering and fain- | God-forsaken Sodoms surely in America. I ibhing widows, oiplians and soldiery, would : s topped at the Crutchfield House for breakfast liave wrung tears from the most obdurate and i and j can sn y almost anything else in regard heartless. Her wasting armies and their final that unwritable place of entertainment, ex cept something commendatory. It looks more citizens of this city and community for their April 4th, with sixty-ni*ie souls, and arrived hospitality shown to the delegates of this Con- here at 10 1-2 vention, to the Methodist brethren for the use of their house of worship, and also to the Su perintendents of the different railroads who have agreed to pass the members of this Con vention to their respective homes free of charge. Whereas, Several white citizens of this State have been engaged in the education of our people, therefore. From the N. Y. Mercautile Journal. The Russian Possessions. GREAT VALUE OF OUR SEW ACQCJSTIOX. Much light has been thrown upon the con- m., on the 10th, without any dition and value of our new possessions, by accident or unpleasant incident on the route. ' reports from such well informed and authorita- I immediately came on shore and called on j tive sources as Prof. Baird of the Smithsonian the authorities, stated to them briefly who we i Institute at Washington, and -Mr. Collins, the were, and the object of our coming. Imme- j distinguished traveler and railroad projector diatcly a pleasant smile of welcome illumiua- j now invested with the office ol l nited States ted his lace, at the same time tendering us a j Consul at the A moor River ports of Russia, cordial welcome. He stated that this was, lit- j The Professor has had able explorers in the i erally. a great country, and only needed en- j region to be considered, for a year or two past, Sale Stofjed.—Notwithstanding Gen. Tope’s assurance in bis letter to Governor Jenkins j that he had no desire to interfere with the reg- ( ular course of civil administration in the State | we learn that a Sheriff's sale of property in this county was stopped by his order Tuesday last. ! —Macon Telegraph. An Episcopal Church is to be established in Salt lake City, and a minister is going from New York to take charge of it. The acquisition of Russian Amerea gives the United States four hours and thiry-nine min utes more sunlight than it did before. back to the rear, were there two others T ' ^ ded, and remained thereuntil the next eveni’e He was then taken to n village called Burkett ville, about half a mile from tlie bnttle-gro,,', d On the evening of the Kith the thigh wus'an putated by Ur. Jaynes, of the 2d Vermont regiment, an excellent man, and held in g rat ,l ful remembrance. The treatment exceptions, was good by every thence they where they remained one month. Resolved. That, we do hereby tender the | ergy'to develop it, to iintke it a rich and pow- \ and bases his statements partly on their Ircsh same our sincere thanks, wit* soon engage in the prise. and hope that others nine laudable enter- information, and partly surrender, after having often nearly reached the prize for which they contended during four years of vigor, valor, blood and carnage, enti tled their country to tlie sympathies of even her foes. Her manacled chief, her prostration beneath the power of the bayonet, her over thrown institutions, venerable for age, after like a haunted castle, or a Dutch church going west in search of manifest destiny, than a place of rest for the wea. y traveler. You may judge I will not call there on my return home. However, not far distant may be seen the sublimely beautiful and more recently historic the conflict of arms was past, commanded ex- Lookout, made so by the tread of contending pressions of condolence from the four-quarters j thousands, marching to the music of thunder* of *h c globe. Hhe was destined still to witness ! j n g and Jondlv reverating artillery, which rc- sadder scenes than these. For in all that had then occurred her people had neither said or done anything to tarnish their honor or destroy self-respect. If her armies were vanquished upon the field, they at least had fought well; if her cities were burned, she was powerless to prevent it; if her soldiery suffered and died for medicines, her coast was blockaded and she could not obtain them; if her women and children and strong men were deprived of the luxuries and some of the necessaries of life, j she was not to be blamed for it ; if her generals i surrendered their swords and commands, they | did not do it until resistance was futile ; if the j bayonet overturned her institutions and gov ernment, she had no power to prevent it. Her honor, thus far, was preserved. Rut, lo! when tlie Congress of the United States, in March, 1867, made certain enact ments, which the Hon. 11. J. Walker, in his speech before the Supreme Court of the United States, said no man in his soul would contend was constitutional, and which erected a despo tism unequalled for liideousuess by any lie had seen in his travels in Egypt, Turkey in Asia, Turkey in Europe, and Russia—we say when this is done, contrary to tlie principles of our people and the Constitution of our State, many of Georgia’s sons, whom she honored in days passed, from motives of we do not trust ourselves to say—strip themselves of all man hood and sense of decency and propriety, fall down in tlie dust in all their nakedness, and exclaim great is the Radical majority in the Congress of the United States, and holy and just are all of their enactments, and with no tinge of shame mantling their cheeks, ask others to do likewise, extend tlieir cordial hos pitality to those who have given their votes for- those measures. Has earth ever witnessed a sadder scene than this? A people may survive physical disasters, but the loss of public virtue is an incurable wound. deems it a little. When the precipitate sides of tlie mountain were pointed out to me, up which the contending forces climbed to the attack, I was greatly astonished; for it would seem that the active, niinhie chamois of tlie Alps would be difficulted in reaching some of the bights to which the soldiers attained.— Though when men are urged forward by the impulse of pride and ambition, they can scale, with apparent ease, almost insurmountable obstacles. What a misfortune that men have not yet learned that, worldly fame is a myth, and also that while they contend for freedom, as they suppose, they are only forging manacles and gyves which are to bind them and their posterity after them. Where is the genius of Liberty to-day? Alas! I fear ’tisgone forever! We of the South and many of the North can repeat, with feeling propriety, the memorable words of Madame Roland, while she was being bound to the recking scaffold: “Oh, Liberty, what crimes are perpetrated in thy name!” Tennessee is writhing now under the heel of the oppressor. Several members of tlie Legis- latuic came up on the same ham with me this i pjjutment by Military Court commissions for afternoon. They assemble on Monday, I un- j the trial of violations of the Civil Rights Hill; derstand. to settle, in some way, the impeach- i establishment of Union Leagues in every coun- Nsgro Mseting in Mobile. Mobile. May 3—P. M j Tim colored Mass Convention of the State, i which has been in session here for two days ! adjourned to-day. Delegates stated that the I negroes in many instances have been cheated ! out of their earnings, molested and hadlv J treated in districts they represent, but in some I places have been treated well. In many in stances the delegates declared themselves Rad icals. The preamble says: ‘•Whereas, lately the right of suffrage and equal rights have been bestowed on our race, heretofore held in bondage, in order to acquire political knowledge that will insure protection in these newly acquired rights; and whereas, it seems to he the policy of our political op pressors to use fair or unfair means to prevent organization or consolidation as a part of the Republican party in Alabama; therefore, be it “ Resolved, That we proclaim ourselves a part of the Republican party of the United States and the State of Alabama, and it is with a view of lmrmony and good nnd- rstand- ing not to estalish a separate political party that we have sssembled.” The second resolution expressed confidence in the acts and orders of Generals Pope and Swayne, in the discharge of their duty. The third resolution, in the event of the d.scharge of colored persons by employers for declining to become their political tools, calls for stand ing army protection, and declares that it will make the condition of the people known to Gongress, asking further legislation for tlieir protection, even to confiscation. The fourth resolution declares for peace between the races; c< precates the conduct on the part of employ ers that may necessitate further legislation for the protection of negroes, or for further rebel lion against the flag and country. Other res olutions recommended the establishments of schools, supported by a tax on property; ap- erful country. I have been quite busy since our arrival, getting our goods through tlie custom house, j traders. lo sum up rapidly and briefly all | Jlf e pays like this ? and obtaining stopping places for our party in j their testimony, it appears that the climate of | « this quiet little village, but with the usual i this “icy desert” of which some papers have ; hospitality of the natives, we soon found ac commodations for our party. I shall begin with f ew one - Frorr were removed to Frederic City During all this time noble women failed not six days of seven to visit them, carrying not only words,-,.- comfort, but baskets filled with the most p (i ]\ f table food the country could afford, bocks | clothing, and every man (rebel) that was all j to go from the hospital, either did or was <v, j Iicited to make his home among them, lr ♦ ■ «■ j Frederic City 13th December, and arrived Ristori. it is said, has made $270,000 clear j Petersburg 19th—remained there two months ■ reached his father's residence at Bowdon 18th February. and partly upon the experience I profit bv playing 168 nights during her v , British and Russian Company . to the United States. What other calling visit ! in this morning to make preparations for our re moval into the interior. To give you some idea of the cost of living here, 1 will give you the “bill of fare,” and price, at our boarding house—good bread, sau sage, fish, fried plantains, eggs to suit tlie taste, Irish potatoes, coffee, butter, good beef, milk. wine (an excellent quality —all for twenty-five cents. The ladies were greatly astonished to find neat stores, well filled with handsome'English and foreign goods, and much cheaper than in Atlanta, generally fifty to one hundred percent. I seijd you a fleece of cotton grown about forty miles from this place. Coffee, sugar, corn, chocolate, and all temperate and torrid zones vegetables and fruits are raised on the same place. Land, as I told you in Atlanta, ranges from ten cents to one dollar per acre. The party are in good spirits, and are highly pleased so far.— i . - j - Indigent Maimed Soldiers of Bowdon been prattling, is during tlie winter, on the a coast all the way from l’rince of Wales Island College, to Behring Straits, about the same as that of j Washington City, with little snow and much j rain. The soil produces excellent barley and roots such as radishes and turnips, with lettuce, cab bage, kc. In the waters, herring, salmon, halibut an 1 codfish abound in “exhaustless and a good cigar j numbers. [A friend has promised us a brief biograph ical sketch of many of the wounded soldiers now being educated at Bowdon College under the recent act of the Georgia Legislature, and short accounts of the battles in which they were wounded. We trust our friend will while in the btraits and to the j northward of them, the whale, so prized for ! tl com , with his prom ise. We begin j oil and bone, roves in endless concourse. All , , . , .,, , , x _ . _ the rarest furred animals, such as the sea and ^kis we °k "dh tlie sketch ot . ergeant Biown river otter, the sable, furry seal, mink, black, : and battle of Crampton Gap. These items silver and red fox. with the red deer on the ' ma fi e history?] south, and reindeer—the fleetest and best draught animal on earth—at the north, swarm through the length and breadth of the land— Gold in rich washings on the surface ; copper of fine quality and iron ore of the very best and in exhaust less quantity, are among its mineral treasures that have been tested and tried. Add to these, the coal to smelt them, of various linn Jimdismuik BE INDEPENDENT. T HE attention of the ladies is called to th* various and wonderful labor-saving ma chines for household work to he found at V" M. REYNOLD S TIN SHOP, Newnan, Ga. Ho has on exhibition the best and cheapen Wash ing Machine ever offered, and is agent for Mendenhall’s Celebrated Loom, SERGT. II. G. BROWN, OF COBB S LEGION. • Sergeant H. C. Brown entered the service of i the Confederate States 1st August, 1861, at the ' aad a!! the be3t H atterns of age of seventeen—was enrolled by Capt. C. A. McDaniel in May of the same year. He left There are some Americans here already, and a j kinds, all good and all abundant, and you have 1 Kn 'don olst June, arrived at Richmond 5th large colony from Louisiana looked for soon, a pretty fair sum total of good things.* j August; shortly thereafter was mustered into The native inhabitants are represented to : service as a member of 1st Ga. Legion, com be peaceable, teachable and industrious, and j manded b Col . T R . R C obb. Left Richmond we can conceive of a worse fate for thousands of! J . our suffering population in this climate, which I September fur \ orktown v la \\ est l oint is not so mild as that of Washington, to be as sociated with their new fellow citizens in gath ering gold, storing coal, wearing mink anil sa ble and feeding on venison, with the usual ae- the agent having been here and secured lands. 1 also saw Professor Debee, from Alabama, here. He has just purchased three thousand acres of land for a colony from Mississippi and Alabama. Our party are all well. There is no duty on articles for our own use or consump tion. Persons coming to Honduras ought cer tainly not to buy goods iu Atlanta. I saw a poor calf in Atlanta labelled, “Off for Hondu ras.” Say to the owner he ought to send it here to fatten it—for this, veritably, is a land of abundance. / Direct your letters to me, under cover, to D. Dowd, N. O. letters to our party should be to the care of the U. S. Consul at Ouioa. I will write more fully next time. With respect, etc., G. Malcomb. COOK SST , 0'X7"jSS. i All of which he i3 prepared to sell at Not I York prices. He keeps on hand complete stocks of TIN WARE & HOUSEFURNISHING GOODS. work in the Tinner's Line done to order. May Il-tf. companiments of farinaceous and vegetable preparation. The second skilled informant, Mr. Collins, claims to have drawn his knowledge from the highest sources on this continent and in Russia j and to have ripened it by personal experience. He corroborates all that Professor Baird reports j September, ’62. and gives us far more. l or instance he says 1 comiqenceil the 10th. On the 12th the Le that the prospect for gold mining on the Steek-| , , . e J , TT , , , .... en or St. Francis river, -is equal to that of the ! took Passion ^ bandy Hook, below the tow ment preferred against Judge Frazier for releasing, under a writ of habeas corpus, the members of the Legislature who were arrested ty, and that the next Convention be held in Montgomery in June next; and closed by say ing that the above represent the sentiments of the Convention, pledging their lives, fortunes, for bolting last session. I trust that a just j and sacred honor to tl e faithful observance of The Negro. We trust our people will begin, this year, to make preparation for a change in their labor system, for the fact is being slowly recognized that the white and black races cannot live both free, harmoniously together. One or the other must occupy tlie country and fully control it, and force the other to seek homes elsewhere.— The negro is content with nothing less than thorough social and political equality. In Richmond, Charleston, Mobile and New Orleans the blacks have demanded the right to l>e jury men and officeholders, nnd to ride on the same car, sit at the same public table, occupy the saint boxes at places of public amusement and pews in the churches, and send their children to the same school with the whites. The same demand will he made wherever both races are God may direct their deliberations, and the faithful Judge may come off unscathed by his traduccrs. The Legislature of this State is fast following in the wake of the delectable United States Congress. If Rrownlow were not so good an imp of radicalism, they would soon absorb the co-ordinate brances of State govern ment. They are now about to take under their guardianship the judiciary. Why do the peo ple thus slumber over their rights? Browalow is going to overawe conservatism with the bay onet, or secure his re-election to the guberna torial'chair. May a kind heaven deliver Ten nessee! I will spend the Sabbath here, and early on Monday morning I will begin my arduous and heavy mission. I’m fully aware of the needs of the people, and if I fail it will be after strenuous efforts. Though I feel now that 1 will meet some success. Those who wish to address me can direct, for the present, to the care of the Louisville Hotel, Louisville, Ky. Respectfully, W. A. Tcrxks. Negro Educational Convention. them, and the principles of the Republican party. The following was then adopted: ‘‘It is our undeniable right to hold office, sit on juries, ride in all public conveyances, sit at public tables and places of amusement.” From the Springfield (Mass.) Republican. Gen- Pope and Gov- Jenkins- Those who defend Gen. Pope’s course toward the Governor of Georgia, make tire same mis take with the General himself as to what con stitutes opposition to the reconstruction acts. The Governor lias neither attempted to ob struct the operation of the acts nor threatened to do so. He has expressed the opinion that the States had better nut reconstruct un- ! der them, but wait till a decision is reached as to their constitutionality, or till popular opini on changes on the subject at the North. This may be advice ; we are quite sure it is, and that Governor Jenkins makes an unfortunate mis take in not uniting with the large majority of Southern leaders of opinion in advising the peo ple to improve the opportunity they now have to secure a return to their normal political con dition, and to representation in Congress. But the Governor does not resist tlie law, does not in any proper sense oppose it f in advising the people not to reconstruct. If General Pope will look carefully over the laws he will see that the supplementary act es and provides for the expression From the N. Y. Times, Rep. Confiscation at the South- We see it mentioned that a “Republican meeting,” recently held in North Carolina, | adopted resolutions in favor of confiscation.— | We agree with the Republican journals of the I North, which have declared, with very great unanimity, that confiscation forms no part of the party platform, and which repudiate, in en ergetic terms, the persistent attempts of Mr. Stevens, Gen. Butler and other ultraists to force it upon the party. It is quite true, too, that Congress refused to enact any confiscation bill and that tlie Republicans in that body gave the project no substantial support. At the same time the movement especially in the South, may become formidable. The ul traists of the Republican party are determined to build up a party in the Southern States fully in accordance with themselves. They scout and reject the moderation of Sen. Wilson, and hold such Senators as Sherman, Fessenden and others of kindred temper, iu quite as much disfavor as the Democrats themselves. Their plan is to consolidate the negro vote, which with, the help of the original Union men of the South, they think will be sufficient to overbear the great body of the whites who are not disfranchised by the Reconstruct ion-bill.— It is upon this that they rely for success. If they can get the whole negro vote keeping it compact, manageable and wholly subject to tlieir control, they feel confident that tire Sou thern States will become more radical than the Northern. And they rely upon confiscation to secure this result. A promise of a homestead—to be taken from the whites and given gratuitously to every colored voter—will be a most formi dable weapon fur the accomplishment of then- object. It is precisely tlie kind of argument likely to prove most potent with the class of —remained on the Peninsular until its evacua- i tion by Gen. Johnston, 3d May, ’62. The Legion was composed of infantry, cav alry and artillery. The infantry battalion to which he belonged was used as a supporting force for the artillery of the Legion ; hence it was with Johnston on his retreat to Rich mond, and found no use for rifles until the 14th The siege of Harper’s Ferry ion I am exchanging one and a half bushels of old 184‘.) days in California.” He expatiates upon the magnificent extent and navigating fa cilities of the Mississippi of the North, the great river Knitchpek, and the multitude of salmon and other fish that inhabit it. On Kotzebue Sound are immense deposits of fossil ivory, such as has become the subject of such valuable trade on the coast of Siberia. In mentioning tlie fur trade, Mr. Collins says, that the tact of the Hudson Bay Company af fording to transport tlieir merchandize and sup plies overland from Hudson Bay, or by way of St. Paul, and return their furs by the same route, is a startling evidence of tiie value of Ihe trade, since transpoitation over such a dis tance cannot cost less than $1 per lb., and with the Knitchpek open to steam navigation, ten cents per lb. “would pay enormously.” Of the fisheries, Mr. Collins lias tlie most ex alted opinion. lie believes that they will at Htock Meal for one bushel Wheat, and aixfr pounds best Kentucky Ilay for ono bushel Wheat. A sample sack of the Meal will he shipped There it remained until the 14th, at which time it was relieved by a Mississippi brigade, and ordered to Brownville at double quick. Sandy Hook is at the termination of Pleas ant Yallev, near the river. Brownsville is sit uated eight miles up the valley and opposite Craqipton's Gap. The battalion arrived at the village about 5 1-2 o’clock—Lieut. Ross com manding company, Lieut. Col. Lamar the bat- to order on the receipt ot §2 2; talion and Gen. Cobb the brigade. On arrival, one of the com pan}* being very sick, Sergt. B. was ordered to procure a room for him, and while in the discharge of that duty the drum tapped, the battalion flew to their arms, and were soon marching towards the Gap. The cqiml propor- The Hay and Meal, user tions, makes very fine feed for work Horses and Mules. The Colored Educational Convention, at Mu- can, adjourned on Tuesday evening. The following is the school report for Coweta county: In Coweta there are three schools, and 2S5 ! . , . i .scholars. One teacher paid by the Northern i nearly equal m numbers. Can we, will "’e} Methodist Church-two by colored people.- i Three school houses—two built by the Northern j Methodist Church, one by the colored people, j One teacher a Northerner, cue an Englishman and one a Southerner. stand this? Reader, you say, no. Well, you must and will unless you, by all lawful means in your power, expel the negro from our midst, and urge him to seek a home next year in th£ West or elsewhere. Hounded on by fanatical fools, the blacks are fast working their utter ruin ; but so ignorant are they that they fail to see it. The negro is the source of all of our troubles. He invites the military to our peace ful towns and villages : he is a spy upon all of our actions, and with swift and lying tongue delights in reciting to the military officers im aginary wrongs, and chuckles when our people fall into the rough hands of the soldiery.— What man in the bounds of your acquaintance has suffered military arrest except through inriiorizes and provides for the expression j voters whom they address. J. hey were ail land- of just such opinions as those held by Cover- ! Isss, and can scarcely be expected to remain nor Jenkins. The third section requires that | blind to such glittering expectations. And, they vote tor delegates to a constitutional con- I n ) ;i v re-i}' upon it, the scheme will be press- vention, shall also for or against holding such 5-^ " despeiate and remorseless audacity.— a convention, and if a majority of the voters j ^he men engaged in it are not men easily are against a convention it will not be held.— daunted by fear of consequences still less by In that case the present joint provisional and sp iuples as to tlie character oi the man employ military governments would continue till some Sergeant pointed out the way to the litter I no distant day, build up a commerce and a pop-| bearers as best he could, and immediately I ulation rivalling those of New Foundland and [joined his comrades. The Confederates occu- j The delicacy, as well as the quan- j ied South Mountain frorn t]i0 Po tomac north tny of tne fish, is unequalled, and the immense! , _ ,, I . r , ,, r , demand of the Pacific Islands and Asia would j ward - C;lnnon were m full play at different on ( ot on Crop, absorb all of its surplus, while the labor would ! points on the mountain. For several hours Applications shotiid he mad” at once. Jp§y“We are not prepared to make advance! give us a fresh and splendid nursery for first 1 class seamen—the very material we require for the grand nautical and commercial supremacy which we are to claim on the great ocean. Tim-| P* ed their places. the artillery defended the Gap, but their am munition being expended muskets soon oceu- Sergt. B. w-as excited, but j her for ship-building purposes, not to speak of i did not think he would he killed ; yet nothing niaor uses, covers the whole coast, and water power for saw-mills is lavishly furnished by the hand of nature. The mere ice trade for the Pacific slope, of both North and South America, and for the Islands anil continents of the East can be made to pay the purchase mo ney of this region, and for internal trade the Knitchpek offers as valuable, varied and exten- but a sense of duty, prompted by a love of country, could have induced him to have en tered tlie fight. The top of the mountain was reached by the infantry just as the artillery were leaving their position for want of ammunition. Posi- -A-- SEAGO, COMMISSION MERCHANT, Corner Forsyth and, Mitchell Streets, May li-33-3t. Atlanta, Georgia, sive navigation and resources reuce. The fpllowin adopted: Resolved, That resolutions were unanimously w? acknowledge th: of the Christian religion to he an essential part, and the only secure foundation of Education— the safe-guard of human freedom, and theonlv source Of individual and national happiness and prosperity ; and we earnestly appeal, therefore, to our bretlieren throughout Georgia to use every possible means within their reach to se cure for themselves and their children sound and thorough Scriptural instruction. j subsequent attempt at reconstruction, or addi- j tional action of Congress. Congress, having I thus made reconstruction optional with the j people, to speak or vote against reconstruction ! is not an act of opposition to the law. j General Pope’s first demonstration in this truths i matter, like his grand movement upon the en emy in Virginia is a false one. If he shall re move Governor Jenkins for any such reason as he has threatened it, he will have mistaken his duty. He has tlie unquestioned power to do it. There is scarcely a conceivable act by which he could exceed his powers, but the re moval of the Governor will be a grave error of judgment. Opinion in the South as elsewhere, must be left free. We want the South to re construct and return to the Union, but we od. Neither Mr. Stevens nor Gen. Butler likely to halt in the execution of such a scheme from tlie fear that it may lead to a war of races or plunge the South into hopeless and remedi less ruin. The character and temper of the men to go South as their agents and mission aries—Senator Nye, Judge Kelly and Gen Lo gan, fur example is by no means re-assur- ing. There are two grounds of reliance against the success of such a project. It may reasonably be expected, in the first place, that such a wholesale scheme of confiscation as that sug gested will unite the white vote of the South against it And it is also reasonably certain to Coweta Mortgage Sh’ff’s Sale. On the first Tuesday in fitly next, as the SL Law- ! tion was taken across the Gap. narrow and j \\7"D>L be sold before the Gotirt House i x. . j . . , . , , ,, ; it door in Newnan, Coweta county, with - I deep, that had just been occupied by the artil- ; • ,, , . , cl., c ■> •' , *’ „ ,, . , , , , f J \ iu the legal hours of sale, the following pro- j lery. On the right and left the mountain was j perty, to-wit: _ Fnisox Scexe.—On Fast Day tlie Governor of ; impassible ; just in front was a small field lying | One town lot situate in the town of Newnan, S-d.^ndSS‘vising Ihe Imiidffig^rcq^estoi i whoI! y " ithin the Ga P- aQd extending almost | in said county, known as part of lot No 11, ’ - “ ! across it. The side nearest was enclosed by an ! f om "facing at the north east corner of the old rail fence, hedged with bushes and bjjars New eo the warden to bring a certain prisoner to the room. In a short time Mr. Mayo ami the man entered and took tlieir position in the middle of j the company. The convict was, of course, aston ished to find himself ushered into so large a gath ering, in which were some twenty ladies, including the wife of his Excellency. Tlie Governor rose, took the man by the hand, and spoke substantial ly as follows: “3Iy friend, about twelve months ago you were committed to this prison for five years for the al leged crime of passing counterfeit money. Soon j after your incarceration, circumstances came to i light tending to prove that, although a counter- j feit bill passed through your hands, it was used ! by you in an entirely innocent manner, and that { you were unwillingly the victim of a scoundrel, | "who tied the State and has never been arrested. ! “ I immediately ordered a full investigation of your case, and I am thoroughly convinced that | are ari innocent man. serving out an unjust son- j shape of a horseshoe. lot whereon the carriage shop of Win. H. Luck- ie stood on 28th January 1858, and running so dense as to prove almost impassable. The | thence east fifty feet thence south thirty three field was quite ngirrow,,and the opposite ov low- | feet and six inches, thence west fifty feet, thence er side was enclosed by a stone fence three and a feet high &n the-upper side, and about ten from the top of the fence to the road, which was directly below. We were fronting across this road, and a steep. Rill lay opposite, covered with big trees. At the foot were gullies, logs and boulders, behind which the enemy had sheltered themselves from the artillery. As soon, as the firing ceasei] they advanced to the right and left, and formed themselves in the Such was the condition In north thirty-three feet and six inches, together with the improvements thereon. Levied on a* the property of Wm. II. Luckie, to satisfy a mortgage fifa issued from Coweta Superiot Court in favor of Wrn. P. Nimmons executor &cvs. Wm H. Luckie. Property pointed out in said mortgage fifn. GEO. H. CARMICAL, Sh’ff. May 11th, 18G". tenet-. The Constitution of the State gives me () f a j^faius when we were ordered to charge, the power to open tlsc doors ol tms prison: and m ; ° the lawful exercise of that power I now grant yon a moment our gallant commander, waving his | This very hour the war- , fiat, gave the command “ forward, boys!” with on react in the North, and work the overthrow of „ , , . . P urt y which adopts it as part of its policy- j rcdieve^on°of a convict’s uniform and , IV* riMm. it n.rtiun (hut ilu> amt miM of tl.e , :iv0 you a citizen’s dress. You ha v-e been a good j a shout, and on rushed as gallant a band as Alas, alas! that such an un- great need of our State, and that v. e will do all in our power by voice and vote to secure the negro instrumentality ? Not one we apprehend. : a Again, the negroes, some honorable exeep- , people in establishing day and Sunday schools, j tions, have determined to give their support to j Resolved, That a free School system is the the Radical party, and every such adherent is j j almost as deadly an enemy to the interests ot j adoption of such a system, our country as the incendiary. A white Radi- | Resolved, That till such a system is adopted cal we can endure, but from black Radicals ’ *' ac Shite, we are iu pressing, need of assis- j , T , , ,. , .. , . , tance, and that we earnestly ask the aid of all good Lord deliver us. In time, then, begin to j who ure interested in the cause of our countrv | seek same other kind of laborers, and be ready for the change which interest and public opin ion will surely produce. Resolved, That the State Board of Education „„„ „„ . ... o of Georgia be requested to appoint as manv 1 waut it dune voluntarily or at least'with E0 | people of the Northern States do not regard ; j nan 'witfiin these walls, and while I and my friends ! ever faced a foe. ......... men as it may deem advisable, upon the broad j further compulsion than the law “authorises, i confiscation with favor. They desire full and j here live we will everywhere bear testimony that . , , , , ’ , • With basis of competency, and not color, to lecture I «=».-«. i ample guarantees tor the future safety ot tue i yom-Jimpnsonment leaves no stain on your char- command naa ever ue.n given, wun and nive instruction and encouragement to the I i Union, and the security of equal civil and po- \ acter. A dear v.ne and losing sister haii? prayed ; unbroken line, onward was the charge until ‘Freedom mEast Tennessee. |««-' I^I«« I- lsutas i L..dW doU z -**, •••** and clearly over the hills and vales of East Ten- ■ an J tn.ng be\ ond ^ t.nm. tni nessee. The Nashville Gazette, of May 8th, gives ! disposed to strip rue Southern peo; the following items from that section’: i little property the war has left- them, or to pro- j person in the audience looked unmoved upon the ; wall was cleared Lamar in front. The firing- prisoner port.’ in crossing there was some disorder, hut soon re-establishing the lead Marysville, mobbed the Rev. Mr. Haynes a mm- .... - , ister of the Methodist Church South, on last htab- anu humanity. j fi a -fi_ and drove him out of Marysville. They Resolved, that we request all teachers to j then went out of town two miles, and broke up open each day’s school exercises with prayer, ; a congregation of the same church while they and reading a portion of the Scriptures, but we , were assembling for worship. Negroes were in do net approve of* teaching any sectarian or j lh. c m°b- Ax Old Newspaper.—Mrs. Ann Stegall, of ! denominational dogmas, believing that all such . The Bey. IT. T. Dowell, ox the Church North, ' matters should be excluded as detrimental - * charged with having been present at a league less are they ' As ‘ ^ Governor closed his remarks the poor ; ] ine we advanced to the stone wall. Up to ~ j man, overjoyed with happiness, trembled in ev- I . 1 people of t:ie | err limb., and his face was wet with tears. Not a time no one was hurt. At a bound the iG’ili. Ol* lO nro- : TM in 171 fUp Or»rllr*nr*« • LwiVoH nnmnvoil -n-rxr.n fl.n ..4 T • r __ rr-i n • prost this city, has presented us with No. 1383, Yol. j matters should be excluded as detrimental to XXIX of the “ Augusta Chronicle,” published ! the interests and prosperity of Free Schools , . 1 ,1 Resolved. That we tender our sincere thanks Maich od, lSlo, and whicn contains a proela- j (fi e American Missionary Association, mation ot James Madison, President, announ cing tlie conclusion of a treaty of peace with Great Britain. This article, together with three short editorial notices, price current of five lines and two marriage notices, is all the read ing matter the Chronicle contains, tlie remain ing space being filled with advertisements.— and all other Northern Aid Societies, for the liberal j manner in which they have ministered to our j actual wants, and all their friends laboring in j our midst, who have thus far aided us in edu cating our free race, praying that the kind power of Divine Providence will strengthen and enable them to go on with this good and j glorious work which they are now engaged in. . . I Resolved, That tljp members of this Con ven- I lie number ot columns are sixteen, the size of ! tion do but express the sentiments of then- paper 18x21 inches, and the type used is small j several constituencies, in awarding unbounded pica, and Mr. George Adams is printer '■ l ,r;dsc toj-he several colored teachers am on We quote the price current in full: ’ i who Coheir unyielding and persevering zeal, Cotton. 15 1-2—16 Sugar, Tobacco, 6 dolg. Bacon Salt, 1 25 cts. Cornmeal, ' is charged i meeting and having instigated the mob. Several Union army officers who opposed ihe mob have been threatened with violence. Arms for the State militia have been sent to Marysville, to one of the lead-rs of the mob. Two assaults were made in Knoxville same day j on men who have been ” rebels." The political feeling is bitter and violent, i The arming of the militia creates intense feel- ■ ing and dissatisfaction. pen and suffering of the- Southern States. The meeting in North Carolina is probably the precursor of others of a similar character. \Ye shall, without doubt, have ‘confiscation' raised as tne war-cry of the new Republican prosperous future.—Exchange. happy and was now more rapid, and some of our rnen | were shot down, and that, too, by an invisible : *- -*• i foe. Lamar fell mortally wounded about twen- ! The Japanese Embassy, consisting of eight ty paces from the fence. Onward still was the ‘ charge, until we had gone about 150 yards { from tho fence, where the fire of the enemy Coweta Sheriff’s Sale. On the first Tuesday in June next, TILL be sold before the Court House- doer in Newnan, Cow r eta county, with in the legal hours of sale, the following pro perty, to-wit: One buggy: levied on as the property of William Echols by virtue of a fi fa issued from Coweta County Court to enforce mechanic’s Uer. fox repaRs made and materials f^rntsboo. on and for said buggy, in favor of Luckie A Dickson V3 said William Echols. Property pointed out in said fi fa. GEO. H. CARMICAL. Sh’ff. May 11th, 1867. persons, two of them special commissioners, ac- _ ___ r _ credited by the Tycoon, arrived at Washington party of the South, as the banner under which j on the 26th ult. They have presents from the the colored voters will be invited and urged to \ Japanese government to General Grant, Presi- j fi eKUTie 30 destructive that we were completely range thcDiaeives in solid pfcalimx. The Mb. ] fSgSSUSST ®arrested. We remained in lino atout «„ r"itb gold, and appro- minutes, during which time one-third of our ; „ .. k ! - either hided or wounded Quieh i Tlie Embassy will remain ly every man sought shelter for himself behind JOSEPH E. DENT, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL (Grocer & Commission VI gECHANT, G KEEN VILLE STKEEV, Si these ‘these architects of ruin.” pres to Re equally valuable, in Washington about four weeks a tree. So completely protected was the ene- William Heard, the Cedar comity, Iowa, cente narian, died on the 6th ult. The deceased was ;ed one hundred and one rears, two months and Letter of Erastus Brooks. So writes a Northern man from Atlanta, Ga. and with a mortification beyond expression, hr twenty-six days, having been born in Loudon co, ! we are compelled to admit that he writes truly, minded Virginia, on the 10th of January. 1766. He held j The heart of the Southern people is broken.— ong ns, : the office of County Surveyor of Columbia cour- j Poverty at the heathstone, a bayonet at the ty, Ohio, for thirty-two years. His direct deseii- : door, the brave and the true disfranchised, the dauts mimber one hundred and niuen-seven timid and truckling lying and fawning, to save W. B. AY. DENT, MASUFACTCTER OF ALL XIXDS OF TIN AVAEE, AND DEALLR IX Flour, 5 50—6 dels We copy concluding editorial article: ily endorse and commend their efforts—and claim it as the indispensable duty of this body Thf. bcnkficial effects of Peace.—Upwards! give some expression of their indebtedness of 8 000 bales of cotton have been shipped thi V J 1 ” f lve soni ^ assurft,lce ” f de ; Fxxrev Covbtesils.—The laws of politeness week to bavannah—also, a number of brave j to tester and support all ot said should be observed not onlv between intimate men, who abandoned that city in the hour of ,. ea . < ;': ierS ', U a f e k ° own to competent, so- friends, but betwe “The Heart of tho People is Broken and The Vicksburg Times of the 29th nit. appeared j my that Sergeant Brown was compelled to ro- their Spirits Humiliated.” in mourning toy tho Confederate dead. j servc; Lis fire and await an opportunity. Several Over 200,000 shad have been shipped from Nor- : had sought shelter behind the same tree, and : folk to northern cities tliis season. j it was soon observed that the largest trees Bad for Mexico.—It is said B. F. Butler rued- j afforded no protection, even to those who were itates a trip to Mexico at an early day—whether fin mediately behind them. Taking position 1 in the secret service of the Government, or on his ; . .. j own hook, is not stated.—Hash, Gazette [ «>me distance irora the nearest tree and resting 1 , r . j upon ihe right knee, three halls were observed j tionBoardsIn the several conntieshi thaVIstate, j to strike a stone hard by, nearly at lightjangles !-AK kinds of Country Produce taken ia ex- to each other. Attention was instantly direct- j ^ , „ t!ian ge. ; ,, I A ill duplicate any Atlanta hill given to ed to the ngnt where the enemy wore distinctly ! merthants * TApri! 27-tf. seen. A\ bile thus kneeling the gun of Sergeant ! B. became clogged, and rising to Ifis feet to j p TT7HTTM force the ball down, he was struck by a minnie j W u* A Si ball, breaking the left thigh igid cutting the ! under the Sherman Dili, will be composed of one ■ negro and two white men. .Tamos Bnchanan, ex ; President, entered upon ^ ^ fii? seventy-seventh year on the 22nd ult. He is was probably the iasf surviving constituent of j tary mandates, and the utterance of their Press . in vigorous health, and occasionally makes a trip his first election. trammeled by tlie sword. They have bowed j from Wheatland to Lancaster, three miles and a to the conqueror, and to day but few have sav- , half, on foot, ed to themselves the last title of manhood, the independence of thought and opinion. In our London. May8tb.—'The Peace Congress met ri.ctiriliv Tin- Tvrocewlinas are secret. This is • femoral arterv. .Tn?t fir. Ibis iitnp nnr lino General Insurance Agency. danger, have departed for the same destination —a prosperous voyage and a pleasant journey o both, rot. we never wish to see their faces more. licitmg aid both at home and abroad for their ily ; and those hous liberal support. and happy where the courtesies oi goou society j spirit Resolved, That the Educational Board be are observed. There need not nor ought not to j the fiour of be formality •but little attentions between broth- ; th.. i iS e The Cofiference to settle the Luxembourg ; stjon is in session. of disaster and despair. Though de-1 ail the powers guaranty tin- settlemeiit, and ob- . tfis cross fire, Sergt. Brown removed one of his. Office at McCamy & Co's. Drug Store, Franklin ise of sanctuaries, places must niu et in^ha^Sfcctton. J Uaspewlers and bound his thigh as tightly as j Buildings. Alabama Str.’t., Atlanta, Ga. : England hesitates to give the guarantee. The his strength would permit and prevented fur-; Refers to Rev Jaues Stacy and J. J. Fiv-, session adjourned to enable delegates to receive ' . t - • . 1 instructions from their Governments. Meantime ; iner 1 ,,loou ' 1 sox. Esq.. Newnan. Georgia, went on with a devotion which did war preparations continue. | The enemy soon passed, and the dead, srvl ; A ng. 11 1 v