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Tli© Greorsia "Weekl'y
and Journal & Messenger
Telegraph and Messenger.
Southern Capital anil Eeonomy.
MACON, MARCH 1, IS70
The Nashville Banner contains the new Con
stitution of Tennessee. The vote on the ratifi
cation tales place 26th March next.
Connecticut.—The Democratic State Con
vention of Connecticut nominated Ex-Govemor
Wn^iinh for Governor, last Friday.
At the present time there are one hundred and
seventeen ocean steamers making regular trips
between the United States and ports in Europe,
not one of which bears the American flag.
Florida. Being Sold Out.—The Florida In
dependent publishes eight columns of Alachua
county Sheriffs sales. A few years more of
Badioal rule and the whole State will be under
the Sheriff’s hammer. «.
/ ““
Gen. Lee’s health has suffered somewhat of
r late years, and by the advice of his physicians
and friends he contemplates a visit to Europe
during the present year. The old World will be
honored by the presence of the greatest captain
of the age.
More Returned Brazilian Emigrants.—The
British steamer Kakaia arrived in New York on
the 21st from Rio de Janeiro, with one hundred
and twenty emigrants from the South to BrazQ,
sent back by the Brazilian government. They
were under great disgust, but report the emi
grants who went from the South with means,
have all done well, especially those who settled
it^ the department of San Palo. The passen
gers were without comfortable clothing and suf
fered much from the inclement weather.
The Fall in Gold.—The New York papers
of the 22J, report a temporary rise in gold,
growing out of the passage of the House reso
lution calling upon the Committee on Banking
and Currency to report a bill to issue $50,000,-
000 more currency. It is a fair presumption,
therefore, that the decline in gold to 11GJ, on
Thursday, was due to the passage of the Sen-
ato resolution on that day formally declaring
against any expansion of the volume of cur
rency.
Personal—Coal Mines.—We were pleased to
meet, a few days since, Mr. Chas. H. Beattie,
late of England. Ho is a mining engineer, and
came here at the solicitation of Capt. John H.
King to prospect in the coal mines west ofOal-
ton. After testing the coal mines Mr. Beattie
at onee decided that there was plenty of coal,
and arrangements are being made to sink a
shaft, procure an engine and the necessary
machinery to reach it without further delay.
He thinks he will have plenty in market by Au
gust.
Gen. McMahon, our late Minister to Para
guay, lectured in New York the other evening,
on Paraguay. He defended Lopez from the
charges of cruelty and inhumanity. He said
the Paraguayan soldiers were the best soldiers
he over saw. Lopez, he said, now occupies an
impregnable position in the Cordilleras, with a
force sufficiently strong to overturn the weak
Provisional Government at Asuncion. Such
being the case we may expect that he will ere
long show his hand.
Through Sleeping Cabs.—The Chattanooga
Times of*yesterday says: “J. W. Thomas, Su
perintendent of the Nashville and Chattanooga
Railroad, and W. J. Ross, Superintendent of
the Memphis and Charleston Railroad, were in
the city yesterday to make arrangements for
running sleeping cars from their roads to At
lanta, without bringing them into the depot.
Mr. Thomas informed us that there was no
blockade at Nashville, but that they wero hav
ing some trouble about getting their cars back
from the South.”
A Bad Color.—A London paper recently hurt
the feelings of an artist by saying that his pic
ture had “two much orcho in it.” As the paint
ing was a twilight scene, partially gray in color,
the artist saw a chance to read the critic a les
son, which .Jie did by advising him to leam
something about colors before he undertook art-
criticism. “There was no orche whatever in
my picture,” wrote the indignant artist. The
critic, knowing that a soft answer tumeth away
for an item, informs its readers that he has seen
“a olever looking young man all the way from
Maine who comes down to these parts to prac
tice law.” Run for office, you mean.
Personal.—The numerous friends of our fel-
wrath, replied that the “orcho 1
mediochre !
Postal AflUm in OMifia. I The Oeorgto Pre*.
, , , m \ We never knew postal affairs in Georgia so The young lawyers of Atlanta are to meet
An article which we copied, yesterday,_from I ^ dis j IrMSgrfI as I to-night to form a Young Men’s Legal Assooia-
the Charleston News says that in the six States ^ D0W There ig not „ ^te in the tion, for mutual improvementin their profea-
of Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, Sop State, within our knowledge, that is not almost sion. . .1 .
lina, North Carolina and Virginia, thereare demonstrating, in its miserable failures The Constitution says James, the Atlanta
thirty-six national banks, with an *ggr*g* ^ mismanagement, how very difficult is the banker, on Tuesday out the ice from the ponds
capital of seven millions of dollars, while be- —„■ p&ri y and the postoffice at in Atlanta and vicinity and had it carted to his
a capital of thirteen millions ° - ^ ^eat reason, of the embar- now twenty thousand pounds of ice secured^at
Thisfact is vastly significant It ££ entaS IL£nces to which this wretch- leas thin one-fourth of a cent per pound. Tbe
why business enterprises of all kinds languis ^ imb6C i|ity or worse, subjects them. Lettere I iee was in layers of one inch thick. After de
in this section—why the people pay tw ^P er ^ newspapers, both, are victims to this mis- positing it in the ioe vault at his residence, he
cent- a month and more for the use of money , sprinkled water over it, and the whole is now a
why, of all business, that of the userer is so toba no Bort o{ BV8lem al ^ 80 lidmass of ice. .
profitable that investment of capitri in any receiving the Trails at hard- We-get the following items from the Const!
other trade is a misjudgment. It^esatthe 8 _ * of Somelimes tntion:
foundation of all our wretched maladmmistra- m gavannah Augusta, Columbus, and Exposed.—We noticed a number of open care
tion and want of economy in buying and lm- ~ dav after thev are ! loaded with bacon casks, standing out exposed
porting from the ends of the earth everything Atlanta reach this office the d y af y to the sleet and rain yesterday. They were des-
which we ought to make at home. Capital is ’"“Ken. and sometimes not until the day after. tined £or Macon and Southeastern Georgia,
actuallv too valuable to be employed in manu- Sometimes the papers published in those cities Sl , w ._The tops of the cars arriving on the
, 7 ... fl n in roach ns the day after publication, but veiy State Road, yesterday, were covered with snow,
factures and the credit a man gams on an m- J & ne xt day. Yesterday, for Snow was falling about fifty miles above here,
voice of imported goods, is worth “ore«jhan ^^ onepaj J rfrom Savannah, State Road Cabs.-We leam that the Daw-
tlie profits he could probably realize on the pro- * , - Colnmbns We son Car Factory has contracted to build some
ductionof those goods. one from Augusta, and one from Columbus We twenty . five bo / cars for the State Road. The
This evil may perhaps be alleviated to some ex- have not seen an Atlanta Era m two days, state Road, it is said, by some of Jiteofficuds,
tent by the grlnt of more banking capital under though its cotemporaries got'through. We see, has over two hundred coal cars ^m^mng
. a f. rn HnnorAKH - hnt. after all the too, in other papers, and we hear by letter, simi- A Paving Road.—The delegates from the
SEA I comptaita of a. *»***, a a. »cp. •*£ of
selves. It must come out of the ground, by tion of the^TELEGRAPH and Messenger. Western and Atlantic Railroad earned, in toe
hardworkandasavingeconomy. Ifmoneyis Where the fault is we cannot exactly month of January, 1870 $ 150^000 ;themnmng
worth two and a half per cent, a month, that U, but it exists, ®nd Bhould twTlse ^FeCS* SS
is a new reason for saving and accumulating it. We have every reason to believe that aU these largely.
The News gays there is a vast amount of money troubles are the result either of carelessness or ^ 0inoinnati men get their in-
now lying idle in the South and the people are incompetenoy of officers of the postoffice de- ? Preanmably from th oae whoknew.
hoarding. We doubt whether that is true to partmenL .Most of them don t seem to rare ^ - hafl fart her ^ told M
any great extent, and if it be true, it is a very what becomes of the mail service, P r ° v1 ^ bat had becomQ 0 f the $70,000 that Blodgett
senseless fact. If planters have a surplus, now they draw their pay regularly. Those who am ^ ^ acoountedfor>
is the time to use it,in well secured loans onam- careless don t mind whether or not they do jus- ^teUigencer’s local possibly “hard up’
plo interest. I tice to a people with whom they have htfle or I • Lao « y
If w6 had a Legislature oitf of the beat things no sympathy, and the incompetents couldn’t do
it could do would be to repeal all usury laws, better if they desired. They are in office as a
and let the planter sell his surplus capital as he reward for party service, against those who
does his cotton, for the most he can get for it, have suffered most from their zed, and*of rEB80NA ^_ iI10 uuluoluuo
without being driven to the necessity of evading course not to be affected by complaints irom I ^ 0 itizen, Col. O. J. Malone, will be pleased
any laws fixing a maximum price. Usury laws that quarter. Some of them do make an awful £o j earn t ba t his daughter, jhe wife of CoL
work for the benefit of sharpers at the expense mess of it, to be sure, but then they are “loyal Persons, of Macon, who has been lying very ill
of Bcmpdou., «nd !»«. to our judg- ttot do,l, .11
ment, not one particle of sound philosophy in The proposition to throw all the telegrap fliia| lecovery< —Savannah Republican 2il7i.
them. Those who have money to let are as fairly business of the country on the shoulders of the ^ Savannab Republican announces the
entitled to what they can get for it, as he who Post Office Department raems to us, doum here, I ^ of m Josepb Latr> brother of Judge
has houses, or laud, or horses to let. peculiarly ridiculous. That department brings and one of the oldest and best
Now as Georgia recovers from the ravages of the government in debt eveiy year and in this sec- of L - be CQtmt
war and begins to have some unemployed and tion don’t half do its duty besides. What would r i1j ■ -
ready money on hand, every inducement should become of us if the “loyaV’ postmasters and g^tlgu. District Cad^ship.—As
bo offered to put it in active circulation—in I route agents of Georgia were saddled with other I C0 ^ erftb , Q interest is being manifested in the
trade, manufactures, and every other form in duties in addition to those they now make such appo j n t m ent of cadets to West Point by our
which it can secure employment, increase, and a poor ont at performing? Running the Radi- car p e t-bag Congressmen, we have been at some
pra at.bl,l.bortoih.p.«pl.,.»ai,.l P tor.l.to °
our savings and accumulations at home instead and papers seem to put these official p sons have received warrants at the instance of
of sending them abroad to buy goods and wares, they know. ^ How could they find time to mud- Clift, since the close of the war. The first
which we ourselves ought to manufacture. die any other business? Wo hope Congress will was Phillip Carroll, of New York, who served
Thiq not onlv retains onr money in Georgia, kill all propositions of this character—at least in the Federal army during the war, and at the
but by employing' our own people enlisjts a labor until there is a wonderful change in the man- tinm o Qf p^^^Boato^lgent on tho Atlantic
capital which adds perhaps a hundredper cent, agement of postal affairs. J and Gulf Railroad. Mr. Carroll presented
or even more, to the value of the investment to We have never given the subject much study, himself at West Point, but having failed lo
.. c to ,„ rwoin For exanmle • A nuts a but these mail vexations have set us to thinking stand tho preliminary examination, was com-
tho Stalo of Georgia, t or example. A puts a tQ retir0 He is now Assistant Assessor
hundred thonsand dollars in a factory and em- if, after all, it would not he best to let out tne P f Eevenuo of thig district, and resides in Sa-
ploys a hundred Georgia men, women and chil- management of the postal affairs of the country vannah>
dren, who before were pretty much idle, at an to private parties. There are corporations rich qi b0 second appointment was conferred on
average say of four dollars a week. Don’t you enough to take the contract, and fully able to Frederick Sibley, a son of Gen. C. O. Sibley,
be has invested? His money capital is worth qualities are sadly lacking now. unere coma £ tndiea ag a cadeti
say $12,000 or $15,000 a year. The labor he be no loss to the Government under such an A Njce p 0INT 0p understand that
has brought into employment is worth $20,800 arrangement, whereas under the present sysi em tbere jg a SQ jt pending before a Justice of the
a vear, and is just as good a capital to tha com- here is a deficit to make up every year. Not Peace in this cityt involving a nice question as
,. ha monev caDital corporation could do the work half so ineffi- to what is and whatisnot a partof the freohold.
operation is still more apparent. We use make it the laughing stock of the coun ry, an w j 1 j c y 1 was readily granted. Tho bill poster
wacons and drays and plows, carts, wheel- entail, besides, speedy and sure cancellation of drove a na q through the board, into the fence,
barrows, and many other implements made of the contract It seems to ns there can bo no and in
Northern timber, worth on the spot where it is question of the superiority of such a plan in ® bQ p ° 1 r “; nd thafc it baviDg be en nailed to the
manufactured, from sixty to eighty five dollars point of economy and faithful performance of fenca it became part of the freehold, and
a thonsand feet Now when we establish manu- the work over the present postal system. threatened the bill poster with an action of tres-
factories of these things, we bring into use and We have however, very tittle hope that there 42*3
existence as capital, not only the money in- will ever be much amendment of the matter, ^itipostarbra {*^33
vested and the labor employed—but the timber Things have come to such a pass in this party- ^ decide whether or not nailing a board to a
used, which up to tho time had but a small ap- cursed country that no scheme, no matter how fenc6 makes it real estate,
preciable value. We capitalize the white oaks, promising for the interests of the people, ran The Columbu^San says
the hickories and other timber, and offset them be practicalized if it will weaken party power. hairin the middle. The fashion was started by
Windust, the well-known restaurant-keeper
of this city, who saved the distinguished phi
losopher Mr. Greeley, from the fury of the mob
daring the July riots, by covering a friendly
table over that humble individual, was caught in
a snow-drift a few days ago on Long Island,
while attempting to go to his home at Bayville,
and would have perished had not a yonng lady
eome to his rescue with a shovel. And so even
Windham has hisreward— World.
Comments by the Tribune: Tho author of
the above assertion that we have placed in ital
ics is a liar—a graceless, shameless, villainous,
detestable liar. t
Wo believe the courtly Chesterfield of the
Tribune occasionally disoourses, with great con
tempt, of the blackguardism and bad-breeding
of the Southern press.
“The Unklndest Cut of All.”
Commenting npon the case of poor Brother
Whitteniore, of the Northern Methodist Church,
who was kicked out of Congress, Thursday, the
Tribune uses the words printed below. If any
pestilent “rebel” ever applied a more stinging
cataplasm of depreciation to tho backs of the
C. B.’s, we are not aware of it:
We have not always spoken in reverence of
the “carpet-baggers;” we have, indeed, hinted
once or twice to the enthusiastic partisans who
complained of our old-fashioned idea that the
majority must eventually rule, at tho South as
well as elsewhere, that no party that ever lived
could undertake tho responsibility for some of
them; but, after all, we had rated them some
thing higher than this.
Who Wants a Boss Weaver ?
Rockfobd, February 21, 1870.
Editors Telegraph and Messenger : I am a
boss weaver, doing very well at present, but
wishing to leave this cold climate, (it was twelve
degrees below zero this morning,) and go South.
You would do me a great favor by giving me
some manager’s name where there is weaving.
I am at home on shirting, sheeting, grain bags,
cheeks, etc.
I send you onr local paper.
Address Thomas F. Hall,
Caro of Graham & Co., Rockford, Ill.
The Courier-Journal.—Somebody on this paper
is keeping up its old repute for sb&ip-shooting very
creditably. The following are fair u&mplcs of its
latest shots:
Mrs. Edward McCook, acting Governor of Colo
rado, is working like a dray-horse for woman suf
frage in that territory. Her husband, acting Lieu
tenant Governor—particularly in liia wife's family—
is also an advocate of the samo sort of nonsenso.
He hasn’t got Ihe strength of character, it would
seem, to be anything else under tho circnm
stanoes.
In a letter to a New York paper “ General G.
Clnseret” says, “at last the French people
have protested against Napoleon HI.” But they
have done nothing of the sort. Rochefort and his
ragged followers are no more tho people of France
than the carpet-baggers and scalawags are tho peo
ple of theSonth.
Speaking of a female member of the Cabinet,
“Jenkins” says “her powdered hair and Greek pro
file take you back to the days of Louis XIY.” If
through iheao agencies she will t&ko the entire ad
ministration back to the days of Lonis XIV and
leave it there, her oountry will owe her a debt of
gratitude it can never repay.
The Philadelphia Frees says “the Senators elect
from Georgia are men eminently qualified for tho
high positions to which they are elected " Wo know
that Foster Blodgett has boon indicted for perjury,
but what qualification have the other two ?
An exchange tells ns that Dr. Wm. Prescott, of
Concord, N. H., has the dress sword which General
’Washington wore at his marriage. Whether it was
from Mt. Vernon or from Arlington that Dr. Pres
cott got tbs venerable weapon, we are not informed.
There is a strong effort being made to determine
who is really the author of “Shoo, Fly.’’ We hope
thsy'U find him ont soon—and shoot hint.
“Bsdieslisu,” says the Albany Argus, ‘ 'has shown
its hand.” At what a vast sacrifice of soap and
water the thing most here been done!
It is a pity the 8«preme Court doesn't decide that
Delano ia not a legal Internal Revenue Commis
sioner until he m properly stamped. We should
Mis much to do the stamping.
he meant was 0 5tal aga i ns t similar timber in the North The Postoffice Department with its immense the Alabama Legislature. Visitors report it as
worth a great deal of money. I patronage, is a tremendous power and there- | the universal custom.
We have yet to study the beginnings of a I fore cannot be spared. The Democrats used it, H ow do they make it stay parted ?
sound social economy in the South. But that and the Radicals use, and misuse it too. An en- Prettx Good.-Oh one of the boats the other
,, J ... .. . ... n?n« lilro this is too usefal to be given np for I day came eight bales of cotton consigned to a
study will commence with the opportunities- gme like this is wo nseioi w do given up io j . bard wor £ Ho has
the promptings and suggestions of a surplus any paltry considerations of pubhc bene - j ^ vQted ^ D emoora tio ticket
capital seeking a profitable investment But can’t something be done for Georgia right I
— away ? Wo are sure there is no State worse off
Recognition or tlie Divine Govern- in this matter. As Bullock has apparently car-
ment. | ried most of his points, and the Agency is on a
The Chronicle and Sentinel gives the result
of the contest of the firemen for prizes, on the
22d instant, at the grand parade in that city.
The steamers’ contest resulted as follows:
Engines. Distance.
The political grannies are hard at work again furlough, can’fthe postoffice officials stop work-
on the Sixteenth Amendment of the United ingfor the party a spell and attend to their du- I 216 feet 8 inches
States Constitution, which shall recognize the ties? This request is a modest one, and we beg jt a rion.................' 103 “ ‘ “
Divine government and the existence and au- that the Postmaster at Atlanta, who must have clinch ....219
thority of the Three Persons in the Trinity. A | a tittle leisure time now, will attend to it.^ Wo | Young. America 204
call has been issued by Hon. William Strong, assure him that the interests even of the Radi-
tho newly appointed Associate Justice of the I cal party will not suffer from his devoting a I yjg- dan f 239 “10
Supremo Court, as President of the National f ew of his hours, and a moiety of his great influ- Metropolitan 218 “
Association for securing this amendment, for ence to the matter. Will the Constitution men- From this table it will be seen that the Geor-
a cenoral convention of its friends at Pittsburg, tion the subject to him, and ask its favorable gia, of Augusta, won the first prize for third-
Pennnjlvania, next Thursday. Unction? - | class engines, and the Vigilant, also of that city,
consideration?
The Divine government has, so far ? mai “- Cnllom * s Polygamy BUI-What it
lained itself without any specific recognition by MeanSf an J W ho Concocted it.
the Constitution of the United States of North piatt writes a letter to tho Cincinnati
America, and though there are, donbtless, a 1 Commercial, exposing the real animus of the
good many of these Northern people who think polygamy bill recently introduced in tho House, ^
it is in some danger unless protected by the flag, | an * Y f^ at “8^“® a “ d | Hook and Ladder of Augusta, Athejis Hook and
won the second.
The Atlanta, No. 1, of Atlanta, being the only
second-class engine on the ground, won the
prize for that classification without competi-
tion. '
Prize for Hook and Ladder Companies—Sil
ver Trumpet—contended for by the Pioneer
yet we do not share in that apprehension. We n0C f te 1 d J ?i H 1 „^ f” nBW t ° Ladder, and Charleston Hook and Ladder; won
devoutly believe that in His sight “all the na- gJfJSSttag the father of his party,°than Refk-Stiv« Trnmpet-con-
tions of the earth are ns grasshoppers —that is any man we know of. He says: tended for by Mechanic, of Augusta, Washing-
to say, they are of no utility to God Almighty, | Cullom’s proposition contains a proviso that j n „t 0 „ jj 0 . Blennerhassett, of Augusta, Vig-
and Ho could dispense with the whole of them ono may be convicted on jl [n t of Charleston, Citizen, No. 8 of Augusta.
“ “ , Z, general suspicion, and on such conviction not Th0 . airected that the contest would have
and feel no loss of glory or power. only does punishment follow in the way of fine ^ be J made again between the Mechanic and
Tho recognition of Cuba by tho united States and imprisonment, but the criminal is shut out ^ ^
government might be of some service to the so- from all privileges of homestead and other ben- p r j zo £or ’ fi rs t-class hand engines—silver
called rebels there, but rest assured we cannot ° f law - hteh P itoher > 8alver 8113 two goblets—contended for
«» government in ttot while . H
a Constitutional Declaration m favor of the Trin- it is the old Indian game played over. Troops p r i Z0 for second class hand engines—silver
ity and the Divinity of Christ,as called for, would are to be sent out to enforce the provisions of I E f and —contended for by Richmond, No. 7,
establish a new test oath which would exclude Xt tte^rate and of AUanta 5 W0Q by Kicbmolia
all Unitarians, Israetites or whoever couscienti- ^ ropose to steaL SmaU odds to them that such * 0 p £ e for B6Cond class ate amers-Bilver wine
ously denies these doctrines. None of these conflict involves a destruction of onr railways, . won by Atlanta, No. l.the only contest-
could take the oath to support the Constitution loss of life, and an increased indebtedness and anfc prize.
thus amonded; and therefore, we surpect, is heavier burdens of taxation, for a is pu prizes for Sd class steanera—contended for
nmtrt t moneyln their pockets. b y Fillmore, No. 4, of Augusta, Marion and
ihe amendment Urged! I am told that the greater part of this high ? America of Charleston, Clinch, No. 2, of
These pestiferous people would compel moral bill is from the pen of a man whose pri- Au * ta Mountain City of Rome, Metropolitan
the Federal Government to championize their vate life would make the devil laugh. He 18 | D f § av annah, Vigilant of Augusta, and tho Geor-
relicious doRmas—just as they have compelled | n . ot ? member of the House, only a member of | Ria x n a epen d ont Company, and consisted of a
ver
class steamers was
■ u _ , _ ,, - , ■ awurutsu iu t j^unu. w. ^u.-ists, and consistod
We hope no intelligent Southern religionist other on the fair shores of the lake ‘where the q£ s q ver stand,
will anffer himself to be betrayed by his religious woodbine twinotii-” A lovely commentary this T bo private prize to the company having the
convictions into coy Bympathy with (bis mheme. »bj«U ,0«
No doubt, it will be pushed with great zeal, and Mormon to a sort of iron clad oath, wherein he ^ ° oon8 if t ed of a silver pitcherf salver and
great show of piety and “high moral ideas;” J is required, to swear that hehas.not, in any time ’ b j e t.
but since the world began, the vilest rascality pas^ practic^ g > g^ y ^“^y n 0 e ^ nga8ed Constitution, in an editorial, calls atten-
has ever been perpetrated by governments and J would tike to see that oath put to members tion to a matter that it very mildly qualifies by
parties and politicians under these pretensions. I o£ Congress, and other officials in and about a dj 6 otive “strange.” It says:
They have been the invariable masque to cover I Washington. What a thinning out of Cave and I £ Strange Matter. The Radical organ
the most fiendish outrages upon life, liberty Fog bank would follow. And yet if we are to b - a mornbl( , contains a proclamation from
ss,2sr , ^»JE:s?®s2 gsssSaissaisssiflia
tyrs who have breathed ont their lives to heaven wb y 0 those blind fanatics of Salt Lake believe P dwards P whtie of Fulton county who is charg-
in tho midst of diabolical tortures, were, with- that they Tore serving God in following the pre- ^ having’killed, on the 8th of December
out one exception, the viotims of spurious but 06 P* 8 Mid practices of toe old Testament, these j. on0 Hales, a negro. The proclsma-
ligion and good government, mussew poUU- [ ^ Ooap.a lo ctcmi pcidiUm. ISSf sS£jSSw!w& ItaUS «»ll»
co-rotigious movement is toe old hydra of per- ■ Declamation, and brought to the city of At-
socution come to life again—let the people Whectemobe, toe expelled member from toe aEd delivered to the civil authorities yes-
crush its head under their heels. first Congressional District of South Carolina is terday, 23d. _ ^ •
I described as a short, portly looking man, about I What does this mean? What ia the object of
Police Regulations bx Cohorm Within fir* feet six inches high, with a bold dear, Urn? throwing p ^ bo
Tf.rdSl.S^.a.aM'ZtHi.wot L! ”V7 “ a ***^“
tent for Congress to establish polioe regulations cultivated by preaching in toe wilderness. He I ter is mysterious. It was certainlv unneoeiBary,
within the States. Dewit was indicted inMichi- was bom in Malden, Mass., is 46 years of age, u the object of offering s reward m
gan, for a violation of the twenty-first section and ent ired the army as chaplain of the 53d ^ Sbiert. WmR nolith£l?
of the act of March 1867 Droriding against the I . .. . . , ... must have been an object- ^Wasit poUUoal?
sale of petroleum oU for ilfumi^atteg^purpoees Massachusetts regiment and afterwards of toe Waa it to reward a recruit ? Was it to pay foi
inflammable at less temperature tlum 110 de- 36th. He settled in 1865 in South Carolina, I political services rendered ? Was it to feed par.
gTees Fahrenheit; and toe court now held toe manipulated the negroes and turned the State tjsans at toe expense of toe State in a waytoa
law unconstitutional, because assuming to main- sv.|_ h.^i, j- return for which he was sbow * 9 1 ? 8'°** ®» legality, while it is a viola-
tain the safety of consumer, againt tt£ danger .‘TT’fJ** * won 8 npon ■
of using too inflammable oils, which is consid- I ^ Fortieth and to this Oongreos by 7000 j pockets ?
ned to be the province of the|Stata. i negro majority. 1 It is also remarkable that this proclamation
does not call for the teetimony to oonvict Six have requested toe CHty Counsel to issue #10,-
other proclamations in the same issue of the 000 of city bonds to help the College. Mari-
organ, bearing the same date, offering rewards etta Journal.
for the apprehension and delivery of Cornelius I Xhe Georgia Herald is of opinion that no
Dogherty, W. B. Whiddon, James A. Bedgood, amnrmt of jQ«ilery and manipulation of the
John K. Wood, Nathan H. Urahaw, Ambrose . 0 j ^ state by the Radicals will enable
Jenkins Joe Jackson, and unknown persons, J .. . ,
who released one Andrew Sheffield from jail— them to make repudiation an accomplished
all require evidence sufficient to convict toe par- I fact. It says:
ties to be arrested, before payment of the re- i t ja currently rumored, and generally betiey-
ward offered. I ed, that the Legislature, when it assembles, will
This proclamation, which offers a reward for out ^ 0 id debts. The Badioal party are
service already done, alone requires no evidence [ thoroughly convinced that their sucoesa in fu-
to convict . tore depends upon a repudiation of old debts;
The matter is strange, and requires explana- and ^ intend to oompleto too job. But, in
tion to satisfy the publio mind that it is not a oar op inion, they are now too late. They made
premeditated wrong. an effort at it while in Convention in 1868, and
Bolin Jackson, one of toe old settlers of Pike incorporated it in the State Constitution; but
«■»*. «•* «* “>•
, There was snow and skating at Cartersvitie, repudiation measure on their part,
on Monday, and the thermometer stood at w j d meet with a similar fate before toe
even degrees above zero. - oourts of the country. The Governor may, in
The Intelligencer favors ns with the following reorganizing toe Judiciary, so mampntate af-
° fairs as to put no one on either toe Supreme or
excruciating funny story: Superior Court bench who is not in favor of re-
A Bio Mistake.—A neatly dressed lady, eyi- pn diation. But this will accomplish but tittle,
dently from the oountry, walked into a wholesale fortunately for us, we can very easily transfer
tobacco house in this oity yesterday, and very a „ aaa f rom the State Courts to the Supreme
innocently asked one of toe proprietors if he I (jourt of the United States, and when a desision
had any children’s toys for Bale. ^' I ^ made by tb.a Supreme Court of the United
The Savannah News reports' an officer of states, it is forever binding npon toe State
Terry’s staff in Savannab, on Thursday, for the Courts. _ .
J „ ... No relief measure passed by toe Legislature,
purpose of procuring smtable quarters for the wbicll father than the present relief act,
General and his military family. ^11 ever fi&aUy become toe law of this State.
Mr. Otis Johnson, for many years identified jt may for awhile be enforced by Judges who
with toe boot and shoe trade of Savannah, died will make and carry ont any pledgee Promise
„ , ... for sake of office, regardless of their oaths, but
in Lynn, Massachusetts} on the 17th. Mr. John ^ ^ ]agt gu goon as the issue can
son commenced business in Savannah in 1823. be before toe proper tribunal, the matter
Yesterday’s Griffin Star announces toe with- ^11 be settled, and repudiation put at rest,
drawal of two of its [late proprietors, Messrs.
Speights and Logan. The Star will be pub
lished hereafter by Mr. Fitch, alone.
The ThomasviUe Enterprise says they had a
Rotation of Crops,
From the Southern Cultivator.J
Tn the last number we discussed toe theory of
regular ground freeze down there on Saturday rotation of crope, and endeavored to show that
and Sunday nights last to toe great destruction the praotioe was based upon sound theoretical
“ considerations. The universal attention paid it
of toe young fruit of various kinds. in Europe, where toe wants of a dense popula-
We quote, as follows, from the Dalton Citizen j.j on necessitates toe largest yield from toe soil,
of Thursday: . shows that experience as well as theory, favors
Snow Storms.—Last Thursday night a power- a systematic changing of the crops grown on toe
foi snow visited this section, covering the earth same land. So little attention hasdieen paid to
to the depth of one or two inches. By Satar- toe subject in this countryj thatpubho opinion
day it had melted. But on Sunday everything among fanners has not
was again mantled in a sheet of white. The one rotation as best—neither are there sufficient
weather has been unusually cold. And again, facte on record the crops grown
Tuesday .evening, we had snow to the depth at the South, to enable us to reach a perfectly
of three or four inches. satisfactory conclusion. . - .
Tile Atlanta E„ d«i*eth.tostL.SoS'TU
ending September 30th, claims for stock killed, ea ch other; 2d. Adjustment of crops so that
amounting to $10,007, most of which was paid, 1 one shall not interfere with another; and 3d.
were presented against the Western and Atlan- Such intermixture of those dean worked, and
. ” , T. - .- , A „ those broadcasted, a3 shall counteract as much
tio Railroad. It is estimated that the cost o I posgible ^ wa8 hing of land, and exhaus-
fencing the road would be about $55,000. Six n on Q { yegetablo matter. First then, no two
miles of fence was built last year at an expense fibrous shallow rooted plants, as toe small grains,
of $3700, and this has greatly proteoted the etc., should succeed each other; nor any two
. . , t deep taprooted plants, as peas, olover, cotton,
road from damages from killing stock. bu fc a shallow rooted should follow a deep rooted,
Daring the month of January 16,667 passen- ! op v j ce ve rsa. As explained in a former artide,
‘ ers passed over the Western and Atlantio Bail- [ whilst the fibrous rooted is taring toe surface
road, and the receipts from them amounted to 8oiI . the subsoil has time to accumulate stores
1 “ . Zroa* of f°°ri for toe tap-rooted plant and vice versa.
$50,177-28. _ I Again, those which require an unusual amount
We quote as fbllows from the Constitution: 0 f j^y one aubstance (as wheat and small grains,
Business in Atlanta.—Yesterday, business generally, which oonsume much nitrogen) should
was quite active in the Gate City. There was not succeed each other, but should be followed
on excellent demand for. provisions. Several by one requiring less than the average amonnt
car loads of com were sold at $1 25 per bushel, of that same substance, (as peas, clover, etc.,)
Bulk meats, dear rib sides, 16 cents per pound in order that time may be given for an acoumn-
by the oar load. The through freights passing lation of that ingredient in toe soil, for the
through Atlanta is quite heavy, consisting wants of those needing toe extra supply,
mainly of bacon, com and flour. The Georgia In toe South small grain usually follows com.
Road averages twenty-five car loads per day, Aside from two crops of fibrous shallow rooted
the Atlanta and West Point about thirty, and plants being tons thrown in succession, the
the Macon and Western about forty-five per practice is objectionable, because the corn-field
day. The relative proportions of the three ar- cannot be prepared for wheat-until a too far
tides will approximate the following numbers, advanced period of winter. Everything is too
daily : bacon 800,000 lbs, com 480,000 lbs, hurried, imperfect preparation follows and toe
flour 320,000 lbs. Apportioned among the wheat has not time to establish itself well be-
roads, it will be as follows: Macon and West- fore hard freezes are upon it. .October and in
em—bacon 360,000 lbs, flour 144,000, com 216,- some localities September is the proper month
000 lbs. Georgia Road—bacon 290,000 lbs, for wheat sowing—for oats and barley the lat-
com 120,000 lbs, flour 80,000 lbs. Atlanta and ter part of August and September are the sea-
West Point—bacon 240,000 lbs, com 144,000 sons. The old men tell ns that their fathers
lbs flour 96,000 lbs. The through freight busi- generally sowed wheat in August, and a failure
nes’s has assumed huge proportions. Yesterday was seldom heard of. In every system of rota-
we saw several dray loads of local freight sent tion, such dashing as the above should be
back by the Atlanta and West Point Railroad avoided—the successive crops should be so ar-
because of the pressure of through freight. ranged that ample time should be given for
Sudden Death.—A Mr. Sanders fell dead at preparation, and no temptation afforded to
Kiees’ brewery near toe city, on Wednesday slovenliness.
evening at 4 o’dock. Dr. Roach made a poBt Hi the last place, as land kept under the hoe
mortem examination and testifies that he died and plow, long and late in the season, as that
fmnTTflisaaso of the heart. planted in cotton for instance—is very liable to
from a . wash, and be cornea rapidly exhausted of humns,
Horace P. Clark, Esq.—Our energetic young - B de3 } r-lb \ e t 0 alternate such a crop with one
friend, Horace P. Clark, is faUy installed into |iV(> smaE grain, too roots of which bind tho soil
office as freight agent of the^Macon and West- t0Ketber and leave when harvested a large
emratiroadin this city. We are ple ?®® d J° amount of vegetable matter in it
leamthatheissosystematizingtoerecordsofhis barmony ^ith toe above considerations,
office that we will be enabled to give hereafter, ^ f obow i ng systems of rotations are suggested
correctly, weeMy reports of its business. The anda f ree discussion of them invited. They
company has been fortunate in securing his ar0 no j f ree from objections, bnt with such
services. crops as are usually cultivated at toe South, we
The Rome Courier says competent judges bavo no t been able to study out one which is
pronounce the peach crop of that section fully not open to objections—toe difficulty arising
nff hw the recent “ cold snaD ” from toe cotton crop, which occupies the land
half cut off by toe recent cold snap SQ long and leaves it so bare . The first pro-
The Roman police captured and hmboed a lot poged jg a f our years course—for convenience
of Federal soldiers who were drunk and, disor- g ab0 we begin with cotton.
derly on toe streets of toe “Eternal City,”
Thursday night.
The Courier addrfissestoe following “Plain
Words to Fanatios,” which we hope will be
heard and heeded:
Com is worth one dollar and forty cents in
this city—clover hay is worth forty-two dollars
a ton—bacon is worth sixteen cents—cotton is
dull at 22£.
The above i3 the severest sarcasm that we
could heap npon those men who, with titter
disregard of all common sense, advocate the
wholesale planting of cotton, to the exclusion
of com and the grasses. Just think of it, ye
fenatics!
In this rich and royal country, where clover
No. 1.
1st year, Cotton.
2nd “ Rest. 'Small grain in fall after turn
ing in green crop.
3rd “ Peas after harvest either to be turned
in or gathered.
4th “ Com.
5th “ Cotton again, etc.
No. 2.
1st year, Cotton.
2nd “ Rest; small grain in fall, etc.
3rd “ Clover on small grain.
4th “ Clover. Sod turned under in fall.
6th “ Com.
6th “ Cotton again, etc.
^ At first sight almost eveiy- one will object to
wilfthrive as heartily’as in the"valleys of .Vir- I resting land after cotton—it is so bare, often
einia when corn can be remuneratively pro- ridged and very liable to wash. But if not al-
duced at thirty cents a bushel, we are giving lowed to rest, what shall we do with it? Plant
nearly five times that amonnt for it, and hold- it in com? That keeps the land bare toe first
ing cotton at the disastrous figures quoted above, half of the next year, and the plowings increase
No man is farming on safe principles who the tendency to Wash. Shall we seed it with
does not plant enough com for his own con- small grain? The cotton crop is gathered too
sumption at least. late for that, unless an exception be made in
The idea that we can coin money in piles and favor of spring oats—but the fall is the time for
purchase an abundance of com and pork from sowing oats, and we cannot make up onr fhinda
Western monopolists, is annnwholesome one. to frame a rotation adjusted to & crop of spring
Put in enough com and clover to keep your oats. Again, if oats are sown in February, toe
family and your stock from starving, and then land would still be very liable to wash, as the
if you have a surplus of land and labor, plant crop is not usually advanced enough to afford
cotton to make money with. But be sure and much protection before the heavy rains of
get in enough com and clover to provision spriBg come. It seems preferable to adopt toe
yourself. You can live by wearing last year’s flat culture system as much as possible, and
clothes but you cannot live on the memory of then let the land, settled down and compacted
last year’s dinners by the fall and winter rains, remain undisturbed
INCZNDIARISM.-We understood toe bams of b J the plow. A crop of weeds will spring up
Mr W lliam Howard, of this county, were en- early in the spring; these may be buried
tifoly consumed by fire a few nights ago, with ^ June or July, and perhaps an-
a very large quantity of com tud other ma- crop of them may be ready for toe plow
teriris. He believes his loss to bathe work of grain is ready to be sown,
a negro incendiary. It has been bnt a few Proceeding m tins manner there is no other
weeks since' Mr Heard suffered a similar loss ?">P “ the way of thy preparation for or sow-
ftom the same quarter, and a few weeks before “g <* 8 ® aU g«“ «°P a > and a8 "f ar ® satisfied
htaMr. Ivy lost his gin-house and cotton in the £*t 8acb crops must, to a large extent, supplant
same way7-Thomasfille Enterprise.
The Constitutionalist, referring to the extrao- m6 nt After harvest peas may be put on the
tion of a bullet from the arm of Mr. Burnett, of land, either to be tomedin as a green crop, or
Sparta, where it had been nearly eight years, h® gathered—the former, if possible. This
* ’ I would leave the land in elegant condition for
say 8 : _ com, the next crop in our course. After com
At the second battle of Manassas, a horse be- comes cotton again, the point from which we
strode by Gen. A. B. Wright was straok in the started. The Beoond course proposed differs
chest by a minnie balL The other day this ball from the first only in substituting clover in
was extracted from the animal’s knee. It was p]aoe of peas; the clover would oocupy toe land
considerably flattened. one entire year by itself, thus increasing the
Mrs Thos. S. Metcalf, of Augusta, died on length of the course and making it a five instead
Wednesday, says toe Chroniole and SentineL of a four year shift.
. _ ■” VT T • x> _ I An improvement on No. 2, would be to seed
Wakd of the Nation. Louisa Pope, a down some of the grasses proper, as orchard or
black woman, cf good, j olly honest appearance, h rdg and let the land remain undisturbed
ofAfriran descent^ pure and unmitigated, fw 3 ^^ears. A portion at least, if not toe
grated to Liberia before toe war. About two whole ^4 j* treated in this manner to very
years sinoe toe returned from toe AfnranBe- ^ advantage. The supply of land at the
public mob of a government .RepnbUomm ^ uth jg greatly in excess of toe labor and rapi-
ffilara 5 ^ItiritoT&hcm? fb?li£Tp£ ava ^v® for s ^
DBrpuMjoui imumj, uot ««««> j. o- . and hoe, and instead of letting it remain
&•» covered with broomsedge, ’tWd be vast-
Bontoem people tosa1 to ly better to have it covered with toe rich, nntri-
WM cultivated grasses, affording abundant
?*f 1 ® b ®''*®J VJ® - nfvm treat* pasturage and forage. Hay and fodder are now
have moved there, and wharnona of em trrata ^Uingtii the interior of Georgia, at frem $2 00
eaoh other better toirn dogs. Louisa has to $2 25 a hundred. An acre of good grass
to°en7 ought to yield at least 3000 lbs. of bay a year—
and ^ 0W8 *° end ber at present prices worth from $50 to $60—whilst
“. ' ..... - toe ooet of production, would be one seeding in
A Radical member of the Agency, named j 3 or 4 years, and a few days work each year, in
Goodwin, from Bartow oounty, writes a letter mowing and caring. As stated before, we should
to toe Era about Bryant’s “rediculoua SilH- be pleased to hear from onr readers on this sub-
tudes.” What does the fellow mean ? Is this j j®®*' -
some new crime Bryant has been committing ? MaeshaL Soult, once showing toe pictures
The Marietta Male Academy has been re- be stole in Spain, stopped before one and re
organized. Mr. Honton’s home burned Toes- marked, “I value that picture very muoh; it
day night. Mr. Hamby and Mr. Fry harnessed I saved the lives of two estimable persons.” An
their horse and mule to move Mr. Hunton, and | aid-de-camp whispered in toe listener’s ear—
a tree blew down on, and killed both hone and 1 “He threatened to have them both toot home-
mule. The Trustees of toe Female College • dlately unless they gave it np I”
SEEING THE WORLD.'
VttMit It Coata to Travel a»4 live (nearer,
[Dr. Osgood in the If. 7. So tniug
1 It does not ooet as much as I expected to b.
vei and live in Europe. Some friends said S
I might get on well with ten dollars a dayt!
gold, and on thinking the prospect over j
thought that seven dollars a day ought to’u
enough. I am speaking, of coorae, now of tw
proper expenses of travel, and not of the onaj,
for dress, works of art, books, etc., for which!
man can spend any amount that ran-be namJ*
For these proper expenses, I found my eatim^.
too high, and that six dollars a day in gold va
cover tha whole amount of this expenditure fa
two hundred and fourteen days of absent
Some persons spend less and some spend mot.
A young man told me that by walking muoh cm
going to cheap hotels, be got along for two »
three dollars a day,and I have very trustworthy
information from a banker, of one small AnJ.
ican family that spent at the rate of over
thousand dollars a day, although I.think tfa
this sum must include all toe expenses of dre»
curiosities, jewels, etc. Probably most rea<w]
will be very much of my way of thinking, ^
desire to travel in a quiet, unostentatious I
and have all essential comforts and refinement! I
without dash or extravagance. !
Americans are generally agreed on one pofa
—that they will not oonsent to anything tL
looks like degradation, nor be mixed up ^
low company, or undean usages, for the sake d'
a little saving. We must go in good vessels laj
cars, and have good beds and tables, or we are I
not at ease; and* in a reasonable sense of tb
term, we are the most aristocratic nation on
earth, and quite as muoh set against dirt ash
vulgarity£8 the upper class of English society
if we go in first-class steamers and cars, and
live at firstrdasa hotels, we may get along *54
six dollars a day, comfortably, on an aTersw. I
and for a less sum, if we stop long at import™ j
places instead of being on the wing. It jg 0 f u
said by Englishmen to^ * pound, or five do'
lara a day, is enough to spend in travel, and tin'
is probably so where the stops are long and tin j
journeys are short, as with toe English in theb'
summer tours on the continent. Bat if one h I
constantly moving from place to place by log. I
reaches, the expenses are greatly increased.!.
Thus, at Rome my regular bill at the best hotel
there—the Angleterre—waa but twelve fnaa,
or two dollars and forty cents a day; while fa
fare to Marseilles, which is usually reached a
thirty-six hours, or a day aud a half, was at. I
hundred and twenty-five francs, cr twenty-hi j
dollars—which amounts to over sixteen ' "
a c ay.
Tne fare by the express train to Paris fn*]
Marseilles was one hundred and ten francs fa I
sixteen hoars, which is at toe rate of thirty. I
three dollars a day. In France and Englndl
however, railroad traveling is much more coedij
than in Switzerland, Germany and Italy. M
Germany the second-class cars are as good a j
the first-class cars elsewhere, and cost aboil
three cents a mile—a rate which enables a fat. |
eler to go a tolerably day’s journey for sixdij
ars, at toe speed of twenty-five miles an hocj
In Italy the cost of railroad traveling in fat j
class cars, which are most preferable, is fmj
six to eight dollars per day of tenor tweh>|
hours, at the usual speed. |
There is not a great difference in the costofl
hotel living in different parts of the cootimaj
of Europe; all cheaper than the English hotik|
At a first-class hotel in London, such as bl
Langham, which is made bo pleasant to Ameij
cans by Col. Sanderson, formerly of New Yofil
a good single room costs a dollar and a half t|
day, dinner at the table d’hote toe same, breikl
fast seventy-five cents, attendance thirty-sets j
cents, making a regular daily oharge of $4 lit]
day. A maffmay make this sum considerate!
less by taking an upper room and dining at til
restaurant, but this is the amount an AmericsJ
is likely to find himself moved to spend, and: j
is not much above the mark to say. that it coal
five dollars a day to live well at a London hotij
without expensive wine.
In Paris toe rates are less, except, perl
at such “swell” establishments os the Gn
Hotel. Yoar room will cost, at such an eictil
lent hotel as the Chatham, which so many quill
Americans frequent, from four, to eight frates!
or from 80 cents to $1.60, according to p»!
tion; breakfast 60 cents, dinner at a doltag
service 25 cents a day—the whole amounting tj
from $2.65 to $3.05 a day, without wine. L;
Switzerland room rent is very cheap, and ij
good chamber does not generally cost more the!
60 cents a day; and a dinner varies from Si
cents to a dollar—and you ran’'make an egret)
ment for any length of time to Hve comfortetej
at from seven to ten francs a day, or from $1.4
to $2.00 a day. A well educated clergyman tot!
me that a good pension in toe beautiful towns!
Lausanne could live comfortably with til
family by toe month at toe rate of five ftiuj
per day each person.
At'Eome a clergyman of my acquaint
who has rtfined tastes and a wife with
Boston notions of comfort, took rooms nears
hotel, and assured me that he estimated hit <
penses at not more than a dollar and a halfd
day for each member of his family of si
persons. He hired pleasant apartments,
had his meals served and his work done by se|
vants of his own. His figures may have bea
too low, but not mnch I think. Borne is gen
rally a cheap place to live in, and I have rev
to speak well of the hotels there, alike for cc
fort and attention. In one respect they gob
yond Switzerland in cheapness, and at the Hot
d’Angleterre, beside an excellent dinner, tl
light wine of the oountry was given at please
to too guests, for one dollar. I may as wellsj
that in Europe everybody seems to drink via
at dinner, and toe stomach is thought tobepj
tected by it from the doubtful mercies of ejt
of the water. My experience favors the g« a
impression that the water is often debilitates
and that a moderate allowance of light wbej
proper, as it is common. A frugal mans
add twenty-five to fifty cents to his daily eip
ses for this item, or may substitute beer at t
perhaps quarter, the cost.
Of course, we may greatly increase or less
our expenses by our habits of frugality or f
travagance. I am speaking of the modem
outlay of one person. If one has a private?
lor the amount is nearly doubled, and the P'
ence of ladies always brings more fonsv
deliraby, attendance and delay. If husbands
wife travel together, the expenses are in s
respects more than doubled; and even if 1
do not indulge in toe luxury of a private p«
they mast expect to be subject to the red-^J
exactions which wait on all royalty, and v
try to make-out every lady to be a queen,
not well to overlook any cause that will “.
our rate of expense. Thos, if we travel nj
country where we have many friends wbo *“
ns to visit them or dine with them, onr »
bill may be less, but the cost of carriages 1
other incidentals may be more.
Tlie Great. Sean. Slag. Case.
.The following is toe case alluded to in *
dispatches yesterday:
A Scandal in Enqland.—A dispatch l'I
London, dated February 18, makes thus
closure : Great excitement has been
here to-day by the damaging testimony s®*
in the Mord&unt vs. Mordsunt divorce suit
Sir Charles Mordaunt was examined at le?
He charged that his Royal Highness, toe PH
-of Wales, had for some time past earned j
clandestine correspondence with LadyMoroj"
Sir Charles forbade the Prince the pnvtier
entering his mansion, bnt the latter
Lady Mordaunt during her husband’s awfl
npon several occasions, when her husbaMi
attending to his duties as a member of r»j
ment Autograph lettere from the Pu®* j
Wales were found in Lady Mordaont’s
desk, in her private boudoir.
To-day Lady Mordaunt made a full coni*
of her crimes. She acknowledges that sj*J
committed adultery with the Prince ofJJ’j
with Yisoount Cole, and with Sir Fre»H
Johnson. The Prinoe of Wales denies
the charges made against him, and
pressed an ardent desire to have an ur
examination made in order to dear
The defenoe set np by the counsel f« ■
Mordaunt is “puerperal insanity.” .
English people are excited intense] y ovei
developments. The Queen is said ton*
disturbed in mind about the affair. Ibe
from the Prinoe of Wales to Lady
have been published this afternoon-
they contain many expressions of
ship, they are not of an amorous
No positive proof has so far be*® “T]
against the Prinoe of criminal interco®*' j
The London Timee attempts to
each day of its oontenta. Anenterprtf^^
don firm kindly interpo— for the
journals, and publishes every my » "Zj f
tie paper of twelve pages, about the
the Year round, oalted the News Ind***
In it is a list of the subjects discos*®
morning papers—the ooneependene*
and intelligence. Weekly papers and
sines aredeatt with in toe same w,.
price of this curious little sheet is |
m
ClMBSSM C—gMMT—
beta! Chinese onto* Pacific e«*»‘ s ’