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VOL. lxv.
[NEW SERIES
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, 1865.
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n the,mpnd|p^ et
VfSlTlNG
whether tbo b»»*u phalU Jfe m*iaUi»ed Of
diifcomWded.
Ju^ge Bighorn, and a delegation of Geor
gians had an interview with Secretary Harlan
on Saturday for 1 he laudable ptxrptfce o$-
wedding, visiting and business
Alt OS of the latest and most fashionable de-
. 4DS, printed in the very best style, and at mod
erate prices, at. the REUBLIOAN JOB PRINT
ING OFFICE, Bay street. tf
Bn.i. Hsads, CiBcctAJts, Posters, Mawtvrsts,
I.AKSUS, Rbcupts, Checks, Ac., printed m the
^hest style of typographical art, by experienced
workmen, at the lowest pnee and shortest no-
. at tbe REPUBLICAN JOB PRINTING
OFFICE.
T« K>DAlf
REAPING HATTEE oif EVERY PAGE.''
oA V ASH AM. omgteiM SifffiS-
exceed what may in your judgment be ueces-
»urv to meet the ordinary wants of the coun
Irv. All other applications you will refuse.
r
Secretary of the Treasury.
Th> Counterfeit Compound Interest Notes.
The chief of the Currency Printing Bureau
made a report’ to Secretary McCuTloeh to-day*
in re/e ran <e to *he T new one hundred dollar
courtlerfdU, Whioh has Lean "lire subject ^of in
vestigation at the Treasury for several days
iM82£itf$S5S
tions of a genuine plate are substantially those
given in the Herald. The Secretary spent
several hours in the consideration of the re^
port'and exanfiiiatien of experts in tis stipV
pert. 1 It is Voufly-Trimintaiacd by thuse that-'
there is n gigantic fraud somewhere not exact
ly of the nature of counterfeiting* and appa
rently they have settled to the taiisfactiotk of
the Secretary that the trouble is not in the
Printing Department of the Treasury-
_A well. px£cutcd twepty dollar greenback, ig
two parts, pasted, received at the Treasury on
tbe tools of the one hundred dollar excite
ment, gave rise to the report that another
.isngerooa counterfeit had been discovered.—-
investigation proved it to be a genuine note,
which had been cut in pieces by some cautious
person for safe transmission by mail.
: The Subject of Par (to is.
The President has either adopted a more liberal
W'iii . c SS ce :?ajS:
WASHINGTON
WAsateaxue; Bept. 16.
x, ,j„ nsi>,n of the iVrit if Habeas Corpus.
Vcsterday » writ or habeas corpus, jjm %ue4
l’,y Judge Wylie on the petition of Samuel fl.
Burch, filed by.his coahsel, Joseph II. Bradley,
| , 1 , commanding tbe officer in charge of the Oh)
<\,i,itol to produce before him* at elearen o’clock#,
the bodies of his fttier, Samifel aa$ fcH'
1,others, Charles Batch end firlaiiff* Mafck? WbrT
represents to have been unlawfully arrested
.ind illegally held, they neither now o* ever bav
in* been connected qith tbe land or naval forms.
T -day Gen. Batter, by whose order the pasties
nore Arrested severs! days aiooe et their homes in
i airlax .-onnty, appeared with the writ endorsed
by tho I’refident ss fef!4Wi» ' / > ■ »
ExecuTJV* Massiqm, Sept. 10, 184#-.
In the cases of Samuel Burch, Obsrioa Burch
And oriando Burch, named within, tbe execution
f the writ of habeas corpus Is hereby suspended.
, AxdrcW Jchrsok, President...
Another of tbe family—Elijah Burch—was ar
rested yesterday. They are charged with tbe
larceny of and marking government horses with,
the brand it if |t*ted ch-ewws caught
m (he act AJUoA} General BtireHl have
rr -.‘vrred thirty bones to marked, supposed to
l« with the same brand. General Baker stated
there would bo no.objeclion to tHtniog ^he .par-
tis, .nr W' jbc clifit mi«u at *no», iTtb*I could
be tried immediately, or they would be turned
over to be placed jmdsr bail. It is probable they
will be turned over in a few days to, the civil au
thorities at AleAMHa.
Souther* Mail Contracts.
G«v. ILiadall, Aotiag Poetaiaeter *i*neraU this
morning closed contracts for carrying tbwtfoilwi
flutes mails with the MetnpMr *ddd- Cha|IIArton ,
Railroad, from Memphis to StevenaoD, 2,722
miles, daily, or ofteaer, if refjaired, at tbo rate of
$T1> |-er mile pereennm. He also.made contracts
for carrying tbe malls from Mtjofii, Tenn., to
Somerville, end from BoafljiFt^rjaicefo^orepoe,
at $;;<> per mile.
Pardons.
The President t»«dey granted 134 pkrdwns.—
rbe crowd about the White House is not dimin
ished. and the work goes bravely on.
Struthm. Ptrtbtnx tiranted o* the 18tA.
D 8 Uemonv G GrGonway- € C Cooke. J M
t'ooke.Gen Aaron Jtuury^ Chria*ophj|r Mel be, G
Moukio .losej* Jaoksda, Joneph Jack'eeo, JiV
Alfred T Harris, Ann flaljin, E L Retiijohn, W
Ronmll, J L Maury, Lemuel Turner, James M
Taylor, Thomas Creed,^«dm|in Catfhefler.
tfnelrf* LeocaTd-BTiafcr, .John 5h Jfecsdk, A Jj
a -iVrlord, W^jU^^ordjUT tos/fc
P WilTiams, Jessie willisms, Holt Wilson, John
Washington, W T Vanoey, R Beverly, W Bene-
rv, T H Campbell, G Davis, J G Hobson. J B
McCullough, W N Micfiklf,-.!’tfitth^f. • Alsba-
ma-T Hoicitoh, Jbkn i 'WhMakr, Robert B
Walker, Jamas A Tellman, Haunis Tinker, W
linker, A G Nelson, G Nelson Bridgewsy.Rich’d
Randolph, FF Hill, N\G. BLuene. D JiUV,AJC
Hatch, G Eewin.P p prpo’ue,'SihnugT Corwin,
•Ida Chapman, Af F' Alexander, W Allen, G M
Hunktof, N Binoman, Mrs G I) Gimore, G
(inowes, Maaoo<janwatt/JobH. G Hscnell Irwin
I) Houser, C A Lomea . H LeUmao%R HXIaUpft.
A L McGhee, ft ftJiolutL William, ftobinsoD,
Stephen C ScheheeiTeivCLS«T*<VSoyer,
Felix M 1 Tankeirftt*, WWiitrt TmfWf, B 8 More,
W R \Veste6m#‘8»«fb , , : €#G^dwait, Miaauaip-
pi -Charles Roplmg, A» J Hykes. J D Folsom,
Wmiiield Gecdhaa, W T Wethers. Texas—
Will *i/i Morhan. G B Smith, 4 ^
NicMa, J CaaaeUf. JeMepsee-A M Rutledge,
A A Keoete. J MenW. Loafs Lay, W Sorgeot.
fleor^ia—fames M Twist, H West. John ll Wil
der. North Ctcolina—W 8 IJaaUett, J T Me
Colluui. SouJh Csrolina—J H Horewood. Flori-
<7 du—SamuelC Gouxmlef. /ikirtrict oi Cokydwm
ration Tyh¥, W MJtUTWm Tfielu gaP 17 ***
Maryland—8 H Lyon. Virginia—Joseph
Lyons Lewis E Harris, John H Dixey, Lewis
N Nelson, Andrew J .Sigourney, Thoma* N
UVlrh, J B Young, G Tyler, Lawson Nunaltv,
GA.Sayeb, CKAf^>Mtf^sto& Jjr
Fairfax, B C Flanagan. F"ll Deane, l>anidl L
l» Dqwj Geo T ppifiBi, JfkY‘Bowen, John It.'
Baylor! Kentucky—J E Kankin. North Ca
rolina—W M Collate*, Joseph W Dick, W IL
B A U
AVatkms Wm IlOleston. Georgia—Bcnj ll
Huth^rfurd^ -iftlsepM -Thomea^ II 8 Jewett,
Atvaioni G Horn*, Alabama—Duff C Green,
John Whiting. Mississippi—J W_YiQk, H S,
M EmiAP*!. O X F(M»Wo, W A
Gu'iuian. Florid.—JnsK*. M Baker.
'Hie 1‘rt^Metil, yarterdav, op to 2 o’clock,
had orde»ed-12* pftdpMM i* ImH.dmtl«l
- 1 -Hows u. Virginig. .IB; Alabama. 42; Missl^-
Mppi, r»; Louisiana, Texas,' 4'; Sooth Caroli
na l; North Carolina, 2; Georgia, 2;-Florida,
i . Tennessee, 2, and 4 of the District of Colam-
am .ng whom to-day is It. M- X ^ B WSF%P^
Virginia. The printing office is kep( vt37T>)^y
iti j repering pardon blanks.
MauemeseU- tsf General Howard.
Oeneral Howard will leave to-morroW on a
t mr of inweetion in Vtvjilria, to> e^anpa-i#-
> the condition'of the'fitedjnen antt^lre dp«*
.....71, ... —• - v— . -r—
Hl ‘"ns of the fveedmeiA bureau in that State.
1 luring next month bn contemplate* axabiog a
cumplcte tour of all die Southern States, for
di/‘ purpose of ascertaining whether the nCw
rcUtioro between'Che fVeedmfth and employers
- ar< ' sotliciently established to admit of iiutiail-
in « ‘he opensioa* of the bureau- The freed-
mn’s bureau was designed by Couj^rehs he
a tein^iorary arrangement to adjust the difficul
ties arising beuroen the tksedaen and their
Iste masters'under tW new order of affairs {
and when it shall b4 -found that tk*e t#ro
< lasne« work harmoniously, the necessity ^or
ahe bureau will; cease to exist andL it will be
discontinued, and it is understood to to the
desire of tbe President that such an inspection
as General Howard is about entering upon shall
be made to asoerttin daflaifrlr the actual con-
piojwrf 1 ito*
taining copies A>f United States Iawt enacted 'States mails and asntenoed to ten years’im-
during tbe insurrection. —
■Washington, Sept. 20, 1865.'
Shtffy-nt e/, &1’> S e*)fl^£*rn"niti<VV Ae
The following circuUr, fprmer
restrictfoYil, na* fiedh 1 fksued ‘ to ^TOueclbfs of
Customs:
Treascbt Depabtment, i
Washington, D. C., Sept. 15, 1865.)
Sir : The circular of the 1st instant relative
to the sbipmeat^bf gu$$ to€ atAMttShi Iftto I'sito States £.1
States* ffwiwftfwe dA^arW' id ftroirecdto is
ljcroby so far modified that yon wttt toreafte?
grant permits, without any referenoe toUfi*f
department, for the shipment of sportum gens *
and aidm ohm-on thhkdWr- “any reahmiekU
Mail Robber Pardonet.1.
The President, to-dpy. granted an unfondL
tlonal pardon tpT/tncii ftuebanan, whp wm
tiied by dh'e Dm trier IVurt of WibcinMn, at
the July term in 1850, for robbing the United
prisoumenL
The PuhUr Tsui tlx.
The (ieneral Land Offioe haa issued instruc
tions to ita Register at Marysville, CaL, in-
formiog him that selections of public lands by
Htates is not admissible from unsurveyed 'land*,
dor double minimum tracts, nor from within
the limits of Die grant of Congress for the Pa
cific Railroad.
a-- i r / /
Mobility
bMUt
M tbe Rebel
Meeting of the Eccentric Bonditolders.
A meeting of the bondholders of tbe rebet loan
. (tm hsid At tbe London Tavetu, on the 4 th, to
amount, and also blasting powder for tnining“ sonslder their altered position, pog that thegov-
e Suited hta»ei bss hseome tbe dt
purposes. You will make weekly returns o*n srnment of the
Ihe last day of p«ch tihek of ibe several appli
cations . -granted by you, showing the names
and reehlences of the consignors and con
signees ; the amounts wad qptoracter of the
powder, shot and Itiwti nfippoLi rH nt> must be
ilioy concerning-pi
ie<bM if p&teifr% bpun
sued with La a week mail gseatkly exceed that of
any corresponding period ot bis administration.
He ba« notified the Attorney Oeneral to sMd
ip bis reception ream this after boob was dess*
rfnd clamorous. , il
• fJkT"-i • ‘ ? "Personal.
General Grant Is expected to return by Satur
day of next week.
Senator Stockisn, of Now Jersby, kid Gover
nor Bramlette, General Ladwerth, Green Clay
Scnitb/ J. Boot!, <A\ & i Alien and C,’ Edgsrtoe, <5f
Kentucky, and General E. V. Sumner are at
Win*«T/. 'I' / 1 Tiiii re f it
Broysi Captain J. W. Vronch, of (be Eighth
United States infantry, on the stag* of General
Ingalls, has been qprdered to Ms regiment. Ho
was brevetted a captain for commanding a small
foroe that sank several ooal barges in the chan
nel of tbe James river at night under tbe con*
of-ttoiiewtstt H«
ret>e^ gunboat*, during thp rebel ram raid Usf
Ei&uirn. hi. T. Hufiter and kx ^?0v^T-
tbeir bnmes to-day, on
b»rM» I* 1%
nor Smith returned to
parol^
Tho following urdeT is published to-day :
War DirATusifT, )
Bureau Refugees, Freedmen «V Aban’d Lands, f
: g fTeshicgton,Sept. l'.», 186J. '$
J The follpwisg mlfoed offices *r« acOownsfd as
Asfiistuny'Oeajm&kloners of kbs Burenk' , ftr tlfe
States respectively set opposite Abeir names :
Brevet Major General R. Saxton, for Georgia
«nd South Carolina, at Chariest***, SoutbCafoii-
ns; 6rigaJi*f Udubral Dktvfs 1 TBIsou, Acririg At-
siatant Commissioner tor Georgia, reporting to
B evet Major General R. Saxton, et Augusta
Brigadier General J. W. Sprague, for Missouri
and Arkansas, at SC Louis, Missouri; Brigadier
»of«r»M¥xi»I JlfXTBerffor »1 Vo,'-
idxhMO, 6»*lit Qa-
eral E M. Gregory, for Texas, 1} al vest on,.
Texas; Colonel DU Brown, tot Virginia, at Rich
mond Virginia; Colonel E. Whittleay, for North
ii*mlM)a.’W*"ftpleigh, -tforth^-Gotoliaa:
jSafjiuel Thc^igp, fifr MfiMismpph'-'at Vi)
Mississippi; Brevet Colonel Geo. Osborn,
rida, at Tallahassee, Florida; ftey. J. W. Conway,
for Louisiana, at New Orleans, Louts,an^* .
There are indicatieud that the present irrss-*
ponsihle method of administrating justice by the
a tedmon’s Bansae fay Southern - tiiateA i» all
es arising Ifrlwce® negrtsu add
soon be modified or abolished. At present the
agent of theThf^r^ujo kny 4is(rioj; wields an
bitrary power,"from wblcn there Ties little or no
appro! • lfriflDj' P )ipjforsk<Uld to J
InUnuU Jlcccnus. J2pfri/tt*.
The receipts returned to the Internal Revenue
Hqr^u (u-day. aw g.tsn at $y7f,$^$. i *
The Indians.
Judge James Steele, acting Chief Clerk tif the
Indian Bpreau, -foeves the oity to-morrow to at
tend a <y>dncn of ie India* trtbo* gt^Cm«X>tk
brttieUfris Arktosas riverr^nrto bsM to *kh*
4th proximo. Tkerv are indieations that treai*
ties of a very def&ble nature Witt then be rati
fied.
a * v: VAWfe * i/ee.'v v.{
An unofficial report received to-day et 4to
Freedmen'a Bureau from Alabama briajgt’ the
i r.telligence-that the un stalled state of
fojjtotkeVicinfty hf Mobile has a
tbe importation of a .mounted force to
.of the troubles. The nature of the
hie not transpired.
The Medical Inspector*.
It is noticed that among the nui
vett conferred'upon the officers of the regular
array the medical inspectors hare passed tm
- - * - - -1 V a r> 1 a a ■ nl efaft* aHi nn— . -1 .
br&-
netieed. No
viCC have
class of staff officer*, in the s^-
ted honors more than.tto medical
have worked faithfully,
R'afijr** wm*
.. v Jji^ers.bg the-rntsMiat^Mtul*. d
TtidHtodbf
facto governmem Of the rebel States,' aud if deem
sd expedient to appoint a committee to-* protect
(heir rights and interests and generally to take
$uch steps as might be thought advisable
Admiral Wallace, having taken the chair, Mr.
Chamber Min said they were.pyt tp consider their
position as the holders'6r fhis loan, and also
wtobwas tbe value yf it. He was not stock;
folder, being merely the agent of persons who
Wished to have the' m itter considered. Rethought
it desirable that a committee should be appointed
to Investigate tbe eiroumataneec under which th#
loan was oontracted, and what securities had been
vivsn by chose who brought forward tbe loan,—
They would inquire whether the agents bad any
money in thair hands to be appHed an liquidation
of the loan. He would not give any opinion him
self, hut he had high authority for stating that
the Individual States were severalUy liable for a
proportionate am aunt of the loan He also
thought that the federal government were inter
nationally, a* well as morally, bound to pay this
loan. The federal 8tatos were one nation which
conquered the ConfederateStates, another notion,
puid the former being now the aefacto govern-
K ent of the latter, ha thought .they were bonnd
pay the debts contracted by the Confederate
States. It resulted from a decision of Vice Chan-
oeller Wood in a reoeot case that the foderoiigav-
ernment were liable.
A Ter some discussion it was agreed that a
committee, consisting of the chairman, Mr.
jCbamberisin, and Mr.Morgan, a large bondhold
er, should be apppinted to act, and to report tbe
result of their action to a meeting to be Wd on
tbe 18th of next month.
"(Strange Result of the Meeting—The Shares go
Lkneu-
The bonds on tbe 5tb declined one per oent.
the proceedings at the meeting affording little
ground for hope to th.--bondholders.
[ Sente-Homely A deice to the Bondholders.
The London Star turns the meeting into ridi*
caie, and expresses its doubts as to the opinion
Of the “eminent Queen’s couBssi” which was
there referred to. AH do the proposal to vend is
deputation to President Johnson, it offers Punch's
advice <4 topereems about to marry’’ —Don’t:
Mr. Johnson is a stern man. He has evidently
belief in wholesome discipline. Mr. Davis he
has last enpugb, and it is just wossibletoat he
sligbtgy anreretrt mmrwbat they^taxe o* ifiem-
selves. Mr. Seward, too, bAviDg so narrowly es
caped death by tho knife of an assassin whose
arm wab justws’rfot nerved by a porrion*of thd
six per cent cotton loan filtrated through Rich
mond und Cssada.may not be very complaisant;
and the story of the little bell.apd Fort Lsfhjetts,
if oot htherwise worth «iu<h, will hava w;red
some good purpose if it prevents cmr distressed
bondholders from carrying tbe joke too far.
Suggested Attacltioejil uf' Rebel Property Abroad•.
['From the London Money Maiket Review.]»
Confederate bonds have for some time been
reduced to their mere value os a mere lottery
ticket. They stand at a price of u single year’s
dividend. We (eared, ^pdloften forewartfd,
when, not very Idng ago, they 'stood at 8R, thai
a very sharp reaction was -ofl the cards. Rat
we gained little credetoe’then. The public,
however, much too sanguine afc tfcattfott, ofd
perhaps a little too despondjff^utrtr. Thefr
judgment seems to have run from one extreme
to another.-• This ianoL perhaps, unusual. Of
course it-MqUitdindciMoidthat (bore is an end
to tbe Confedenrip loan as a regular dividend
paying stock. But, nevertheless, there $re Jwo
questions stHkto be solved. In the first plane,
there is reason to believe that tbe sudden fall
of tbe Confederate Government, which bad
from first to lost been dependent on financial
relations with Europe, did not leave their
agents bare of certain funds and resources on
thfi side of the.Atlantic, as well as o'property
in Athene*-already coosigned to tbe Gonfede
rate bondhoidar*.
It has, therefore, to be ascertained what skis
propony:—first, that in Europe, and secondly
that In America—amounts to; ana whether It
can to attached and reclaimed for the bond
holders. In the second place, it has to be
considered whether financial and political con
siderations in America itself will 'elicit any con-
cessions *> 'the bondhoWer*. such as ve not to
reason to expect that a statement may be jxutac
as to the value, and m to tbe consignees of the
Confederate States property .lilted to exist in
France and England. If we are correctly in
formed, J.hpj id likejy to be accompanied by the)
opinions of Rnginb barristers and Froncn
acocats, as to tHe feasibility of its attachment
in tho two countries by their respective muni
cipal laws. A recent judgment, in the limqjer;
of Confederate States cotton, byJVice Chancel
lor Togo Wood, is thought also to lend some
coAur U) flii< IM,Mi dt Ot>or okpi o#ontry it
concerned. Wftb refpect lb A merit!., there
is kola *>abt that ffipttpj betongie, to tbe
bondholders has bees' seietu to e coosider^We
pxteut; ud Ameticjia jurists wjU hu.e to »i-
r els» •, (o the preepect of' litigation before, the
dsdge* of the Supreme Court of the United
Stite», who no doubt wjll deal with tbe Uw as
tiicv find it, and will sot make it for the occa
sion. Ip tunmw to.‘he. second qnetuon, one
of tho Mabuwmi^uAbots. A- tt»dt of some
erenfiml recognition, or rather compromise of
this ttock, turns npon the fact of the credit of
tbe Southern Sisles being tarelred in it. Thesf
States h#*e borrowed rlresdy, sad they »re
keown to be ^ jt^jt.ueed of. borrowing again,
q'hey want money for'broken bridges, railway,
Mrs op, drginege ssd cuUIntion neglected.—
Tbe Confederate Iona wee T.—ie for their bene
fit; end when they next come into the i^nglisb
merket, -they may find ttaat' beggars mef not
be chooaers; that if they want new loanj their
most listen to reasonable terms from as’"
compromise of their last engagement,
said that soma legal question is not unlikely to he
raised wirh regard to the SO per cent, repreaent-
ing Use Jiftereoc* between the contract ai*l
floating price oi the Confade/fte loan.
SaLaana Locoacnvas.—foracune daj,-pa,t
rge number of toeemaUra, bare botm sole at an
Brag, ,f about $15,00(1 each. Tb« Cbattamro-
i railroad aosjpan/ took possession of their roaq
eterday morwlng. Ail the fior®ni.«)9eot am-
large numksrof kteeaoUvae have bcab sold ak an
•f about $15,000 each. The Chattrtwo-^
yesterday —,.., .
ployeas on the road are to be discharged. T>e
eompcej, however, will retain many of them »u
its eervioa. The fare on the road has bees ns-
’ to fiva cents pa< mil*.—NaskcilU Union.
TURTLE SOUP at Onr How# to4*/
•111 tfdock. £
•I .-rtllieo ,e i
THE FEHW.
TMe EnflLh Argusient Agaiutt the
Ulovcmunt-lt 1* a PtogentU
niNUtke. i -1 •
[From the Losdofi Times,^ Aug. 91‘.]
In this country, as indeed) all, over the
world, there praraiU » feeling that, when a
man has done a day’s work* fid^spend the
night as he pleases. He may «o to a public
bouse, or a club, or to some,.pTp r c9 £f ase
ns ent ; be may sit against A, wall while bis
daughters are dancing or ready.to tUnce ; or
lie may go to (i the House.” A belief that tho
flight is your own and you may d# what you
like with it is sharsd by some who hava neC
done a day’s work, and, indeed, those are the
people who enter npon the pleasures of the
night with the greatest alacrity and vigor.—*
We know not whether it is alter a day’s work
or & day’s idleness that a good many. Irishmen
have lately token to a new kind of nocturnal:
amusement- They moetonthe roads, or on
£ y dry bit of ground they cam find, and - go
rough what they consider to be drilling, and
wbat no doubt is drilling. They have been
seen uTvarious places by dozens—nay, travel
ers who hare lUwbfod -on them' in the dark
talk of hundredi*, and itojr *ire described as go
ing through certain military movements with
Oiuch activity and precision. The immediate
neighborhood of a police station seems to be
no hindrance, and a county magistrate found
them only seisod with a sudden shyness and
unwilling to meet his gaze. To the recrea
tion itself we have very little to say. The do
mestic accommodation of tbe eoontry does not
atiiord much means for recreation indoors, and
the mildness of the temperature is favorable
for outdoor exercises. As a matter of comfort
we would rather join a few good, fellows at a
pight parade—if it woe not rainy, or windy, or
very cold—than stand tbe same length of time
oti a midsummer night with two hundred peo
ple in a room which one hundred would more
than fill. Then, if it be really drilling, and if
these m&Mflto really learning the tods of -sol
diering, why not ? They do it gratis, and
without the actual use of dangerous edge tools.
A good many of (hem will finish by taking the
Queen’s shilling and figbtwg, as Irishmen al
ways do fight, against her Majesty’s enemies.
After all, they will find this pleasanter than
turning out after dusk, with sticks or any
makeshift accoutrements, without a farthing
of pay and an utter absence of creature com
forts, not to speak of results.
Bat for their own nku w« cannot but b* sorry
that they are doing all this; with a bad con
ference, as we cannot doubt they are Nobody
shall ever persuade ns that the poacher ie quite
satisfied as to the morality of his amusement, nor
shall anybody perfaade as that an Irish man
really thinks be has a good ease for learning, in
this shabby way, hoe* •Dwat'VHTf throats and raise
the stkioeisiBd stars, or any other (lag. oa Dublin
Castle. So for as regards sey ioten ion of this
sb : ft, waeaa tell him exactly bow It will be in the
happily improbable event of a. war between this
century andlto United State*. The War Office
at Washington will follow the example of the
grane. Tke vernall was a great fusion of the two
races, insomuch that while tbe difference et el oa
ses- still ex into, and tbe relation of master and
servant is fonnd kens in a very intense and abso
lute forsa,.Normans aad Saxons are now indis
tinguishable, except in some hereditary type* of
appearance andcbarac ter which, it requires some
discernment to reoogmze. The nobility -of this
country, including tbe royal family,.is as Saxon
*8 ik ia Norms** Indeed, we presume, this to fie
the messing of fake Irish when they give tto; ex
clusive benefit of their abuse to th j daoons, and
never say a word about the Normt.na. , But, it so
happens, tbeir own great lpadoKaers stand mqre
immediately in the shoes' Of the first Norman
conquerors than oars. It is a cooqaest. and k'
Norman con quest, that it is so painfully impress
ed on tbe features end iaetitutioos of the oootftvy.
Ho let them give tbe Normans their dneaas wall
as the Saxons. But they cannot do thia without
at onoe reminding themselves ind everybody
else of the way is which England met her misfor
tune She found tbe Normans, on the whole,
very good masters, and tto resolved to make the
best et them, and get round them by other means
than by periodical rebeitioaa. This she did, and.
so complete has been her seoceta that when tbe
Irish abuse tbe governing classes of this coun
try they don’t see its Norman origin at all, but
call it simply Saxon.
JEFF. DA?K
rchaaefn. The sales were TOO package* si 88>fc
th# latter rats qDOKtreffofer » er J Choice.
*“*.wsa without noticeable change in every
ci- "We learn of nobles.
iak*>> A me derate .demand prevailed and-
IM* *1? l-tc. Kaiaad »*ai,Mj atjTMUr-
1 , < fffijipSnrffiB&ipt«. Done. Tbe market waa
J >a*et trader a geod'dameD*. Tto Miea were
His New quarters in Carrsl Hail.
Tho Fortress Monroe oorreape ndoot of th#
Philadelphia Inquirer eaya:
"With the intense sultry weather of September
the casemate in which Davis has been niltovN>
confined bas bee.-me verjr damp, tbe condensed
vapor trickling from wall and ceiling. In this
condition the casemate certainly became 'damp
and unhealthy.’ General Miles and I>r. Craven
at onoe laid tbe state of tbe case before tbe War
Department, and received prompt permission to
confine the areh traitor in healthy wad comforta
ble quarters. One of the most comfortable rooms
in the Fortress has been chosen.
n As yet Day.is knows nothing of the p'easant
change of prisons in store for him. Whilst taking
bis walk this afternoon on the parapets and along
tbe shaded gravel walks of the forUess. tbe furni
ture of the casemate lately occupied by him will
bo removed to the room assigned to his future
use, ip Unrrol Hall, and at the conclusion ot his
diarnml walk this afternoon, Jefferson will ba
conducted to the second story of Carrol Hall,
southeast room, and when with is its pleasant con
fines he will doubtless offer up a prayer of thanks
giving for his captors, jailors and vanquishers;
and the Christian pseudo ex-Presfdent may like
wise ruminate over tbe quarters be so charitably
provided for United Status officers at Libby and
at Columbia, S. 0., and for tbe soldiers of the
Union at Belle Isle, Salisbury, MTlFbn and that
synonym lor Tophet, AndeTsonvi’le; that plea
sant room in Carrol Hall w>U be as eoals of fire
on the head ot the master spirit of tbe late rebel
lion.
•Carrol Hall is an oblong brick building, of
two stories and an attic in height. It is paint
ed a bright yellow. Its peaked roof and toll
chimneys are visible above tbe ramparts of (he
fort, and the intensely curious may now see
without a pass or military permit the roof un
der which Jeff Davis is held in duress.
• “The hail was built with the fortress, as.a
~ , residence for officers of tbe garrison. Nearly
WMr Office here, end will perhaps to even wiser overv one of the officers of tile regular army, 1
in tta Iteration. It willjojnr wh.t ,mwer, before the re belli™, hare at on, or anotto.
iupprpuse, withoqtfc patiel* of sentiment. We
should every much doubt whether it will nut the
risk of throwing away its ships or its men upon
Ireland^ but if ic should happen ibat the Irish
persuaded them of a rising in that country suf
ficient to embarrass England and vocupy its at
tention—in that ease it is just possible America
would send over a small force, as it were to inocu
late Ireland, and hring : o«sta otaong "rach” on ita
ssrfoce. This-wpnld probably .at a. time when
we were much engaged in some ether quarter, so
oa te feel tbs abstraction- of twenty theusaud
men. We will oot speculate os to the result of
the supposed campaign; nor is It necessary, for in
any result, whether aucoess or failure, the Ame
ricans would eventually withdraw their force
fro ii Ireland, and leave its exalted population to
eurwwn tender mercies. We trust that in that
darlr hour, tbe counsels of mercy would prevail,
and that England would interfere to assuage the
fury of flections, and even to soften the avenger of
blood. But there is sqch a thing as martial law,
and ttoip have been some commanders ap tto give
a free vent to their sense of ind'S^tion and tbeir
hatred of treason. There are mea in this coun
try we thouid be sorzjr, indeed, to let. leoee upon
Ireland, 0pea ahoqld £r§lapd its*]! leek ut t^at
crisis an adequate representative of British loy
alty and Orange predilections. Tto only result
of the comparative handful America from her
great distance would: to abledo throw upon Ire
land Would be a most dangerous encouragement
to the tflsnffecte J, and something more than en
couragement—a fatal neceyity to show them
selves. Thousand* of poor fellows who now only
talk of repeal would {fAd’ tbetustivag obliged yo
declare the^jelves eosiiqies of t%is country, they
oould net possibly recede sqob a backing Horn
Ameriaa as to give them even a day’s security
ia any part of the l«laad r and they would short
ly find themselves compelled to rue for peace in
a manner moat repqlxivc to their feelings of self
respect, or submit to annihilation. a$ for Aroe-
ty or thirty thousand British soldiers from more
pomtik«ld'|P ,, 9%f hi s<*M: : extra trosble
ilitol *totl«a<;|^Ma qror
We can tell the Fenians, for tbeir comfort, that
,t !2““ t nn ® lo teo isWaUiutr for llie first oppor
tunity to sell his nine comrade*. No it al»
_ . il
should be interrupted. It pleases them, and
cannot possibly hurt us. But as soon as there is
anything io’kelUabtru.ara- plenty-rf follows, as
bragging and threatening as tne rest, wbo will
P* *
Indeed, many of these men ate compelled to
join these ridiculous .proceedings whether they
like it or not, and they very naturally think that
m ttoy os*, alls*** 1 *® V< ¥P*» ot tte >r own, they
are free te revenge tbbms^yto' by trearhevy* We
have no wish to excuse such double dealing, but
we may state the Universal lact that a reign of
terror always produces spies The local bully
mit. but they pay
f-qiu ii4uu 1it meal
Kit'rs rotmd Hpoi
Wee terq trade brands
C (oomoa ‘‘outbvrn
Fancy and extra do.... -
[QttoipoMctotiffMf
„ P*7 hitft oqrforif .
to s policeman and tolling him ofr shout it.
the bully makes them bis slaves, be must expect
pfea£S;SE£f
the cue given them we cannot see why the spec
tators should have been Out at such strange hours,
. J T Cat) to ia tke fflfiUf'.
end there Ifijl be ^ayeyal juforu.ers, nu.ludin^
probably tfie captain hupoelC competing Tor the
‘ * ’’ - - It bas fre-
aafc knefirn
. ^ ros going on, ; ^
and has frond that the noljoe knew as much oe he Good to choice and extra
did, excepting, perhaps, tbe etofto* that ha « ^
police at all lik«-
ly to De mistaken. Disclosures of this sort are
dleaked by maov sacceasife operations, and it m
very soon found whether an mtormaet >s telling
ins ti u th' qr pM. _
But, ia the dams Of sofnsaen sense, wbat is it
these Feaiaai want*? Whom do they proleos to
bate, and whom do they wish to expel irpm the
Uload ? Tto Soxooa? That would to a ,wery
Irish proskediag. They are fighting the duel
with the wrong am* altogether. It la tto Nor-
mew they ought toexpst it ttoy can; thoHs, if
ttojf stbm ot ebanc**. Their supposed
enemies are tto ancoessory of titrongbow and his
Norman coileognss, who were th trqth nothing
more than the wav* 4j Norms* conquest passing
over this ialafid into Ireland. Very little mors
skanaosatursfrUrraito batws**tk« two 900-
tkne resided under the rooffbf Csuirol Hall.
Grant once lived here; then be wo# a lieu ten*
ant of artillery. 80 did Tecumseh Sherman,
when be was a captain of infantrj; Dave Hun
ter and Stoneman, and the renegades Robert
E. Lee and Joseph K. Johnston. All have
Spent many hours under the ro?f of Carrol
Hall. And now it is the prison house of him
who wonld have subverted the Iit<erti«s of. the
republic, aided by the very men who oa this
ground were trained to a profession that de
manded of them, as men, to lay down their
lives, if necessary, that the r*}>ufi4c tplght
]kyts.
“Carrol Hall is a roomy building. On the
first floor are fourteen rooms, with * large
kitchen and office. These rooms are all large
and comfortable, and ore uspd as parlors and
bedrooms by the officers of the Third Penn
sylvania artillery. Oa the second floor are
twelve rooms, with a library and officers’ din
ing room. On thia floor Davis is now co^r
fined. The third floor is divide^ int^ (hirteea
rooms witfc ^ diumg room. The
bgiidiog is qortb of tbe sallyport, and quite
near the southern rampart.
“Carrol Hall will now be cLoumvallated
with guards. Bayonets gleam an its itair-
casea, ind sentries will tramp through its cor
ridors. Tto southeast room on the second
floor will ever be under guard,”
J
Ladies’ Work Boxes, Dressing Cases,
Traveling Bags, *0. ,*t Bchr^iaar k Son’s,
Hxad'obs List, of Savannah
,’t,o£
' 1885
OENERAL ORLEBSpf
No. 29. * T1W F‘ .
L In obedience to Special Orders No.
42, Headquarters -Department of Geor
gia, dated Angustq, Ge., September 21st,
I8G5, the undersigned relinquishes com
mand of the Listrict oT Savannah.
IL Brevet Brigadier General Edwin
P. Davis, Coknml(151W New Xor^d Volun
teers, will assume temporarily the com-
tnaud of the District, ,
J. M. BpAfiNAN,
Brevet Major General TJ. S. V.,
2t Commanding District.
UsAnquABTsaaSus District ox OcfscHoa, [
' ^ .Savannah, Go., Sept. 20, lh«»5. )
Circular, I
[So. &. f
Oa ancf affri* Ibis date articles in the Rubik
Martoh sf th% oily oiM to taaldvd 4h*. frtofoiog
prices. Poisons violating this order, will be re
ported to this Office and summarily dealt with.
By command of
Brv’t. Msj. Oen. J. M. BHANNAN.
Wm. H. Folk, fot LmjuU and A. A. A. G.
Fresh Beef, 1st cut, per lb.. 20
fresh Beef, 2nd cat, per lb 15
Country Dried Beet j-* 15
Country Cured Beef 15
Jerked Beef 10 to 15
[Veal, per lb 30
,v • I •• r -
ILiver, per lb
Fresh Pork, per lbf'.
.[Bass, per !b
Drum, per lb
Fresh water Trout
•Halt “ *•
Sbeephead
Mullet, togs aixe, per bunch,
Muller., small size, per bunch
Brim, per bunch of ffys
Perch, per bandh of live
Suckers I
ITbitiUg 1
Codfish, per lb
Shrimp, per quart.
Crabs, each
Sturgeon, per lb
Sausages, fresh todtY-..i’.
Bseas,pas lb, ffom..,,..
Batter, per lb,
Clams, per bushel
Cabbages, each, from
Turnips, per bunch..
Tomatoes per o'uxrt.. ’.
Okra, per-qukrt
COIIIQERCIIL iVrELLIUEM K.
New York Ciold Market.
New York, September 20, 1866.
The gold market was a shade weaker than yes
terday. bat steady, and loans commanded 132
per day. Tke political mooting of the policy pf
cun ti notion operates hgainst spy sdyan«y» in tke
prtminni and politician^ of »ota jiaxties ore
likely $9 agree upon this point. The opening
pric.ewas 14*K, from which there was an ad
vance to 144, followed by a decline vo 143*^. The
market subsequently closed at 143j£- The ex
port of specie by the Scotia was $655,000. The
Teutoeia took oat none. “
Foreign exchange wjs firm. Leading bonkers
asked Lvi>X a 110 tier tbeir sixty day Bills, and
110^ a lUjii three days.
The exports, sxcln^ivp of specif from New
York to foreign ports for the week ending Sep-
temper 12 compare ss follows:
18**. 18«4 r 1845.
Port** week..•2,044,666 t.-J.ldtidBd ♦3,7t)4,4J5
Frevi’ly rep’d.l24,7V7,7*4 156,510,064 111,204,650
Street Potatoes, per bsshel
Irish Pototaco,par bushel
Green Corn, each
Waiter Melons, from
Apples, per bushel
Peachy per bushel
Bonny, p«r *b
Deck.,-per tou.. ...,,,,,
Turkey*, per pound
Goase, O m
Fowls, grow*, per lb...... .
R’oe Birds, per doz
Half Grown Fowls
Spring Chicken*, pea pair
Soring (Jfhlcsana, 2d sue
Eggs,per doien,,^.
25
15
J5
15
15
20
40
25
40
40
95
4o
111
15
3
7
40
90 to 25
40 to 50
*2 OU
10 W 3G
10
30
10
$3 00
$1 50
2
15 to 50
$3 00
,|a 00
15
$2 00
18
18
16
3$
75
50’
iP
80
Since J’n 1.$127,444,OVO $161,667 536 $114,908,834
Tbe business of the Sab-Treasury to-day wad
as follows :
Receipts for customs
Total receipts re
payments. ...... 1;
Balance ;.........,
Subscriptions to government loan..
Mew York Oe
* V«w Yons, Bept. $0.
The flour market was more activo, ana prioes
advanced for all brands. State ted Western
ruled 10c a 15c higher, with aaJes at 15,000 bbl*
at our annexed quotations. Canaria flour was
aliio 10c a 15c better, with sales comprising 400
bbla. Southern flour was rather more steady.-r
Tbe sales embraced 500 bbl*. We quote:
Najxrflne State- and'Westerrt .f«> 95a 7
Extra State
de....| , 7 GO S L:76
Choice Sfofo . 1 jtft $ I if
fit
. • 70 a lo
. 8 9**10 00
. 8 10*10 90
Cotton.—The market waa uwehai gsd in every
.. . _ -* = •
laj^c, and 91 mats
particular. The sales were fair, comprising
' ®if r '!"!«
Corn. -Tto tomnd wma T«rj fai.-.tnd pricM,
If anything, were rather strongar, though no
qnotahle nnanga tranipirad. Wa nola aatM of
1,000 toga common Bloat
Jara at M^c, ia gold.
PaonsioKs—Bacon m dull. Cat
maiaed atead, under a eery mndaimti inuauja—t
Tbt aaiae van about . inj paokagm, at 1 in alio
for •fannldera, aud lw> SiUe tochaoa. Bolter
WM flnu. *Hth a goto iebbia* trad, at Mo a tie
for Waataro, audlto auo tor Btafea. .Ctomavaa
nttorqaiet but firm.aUlc aljl-to loroommou
to prima laatarj. Tto lard markat vaa aot an-
UTgiitofimit toidan .vHvOO't )**«• «l
OFFICIAL.
A PROCLAMATION.
By Jaa. Johnson, Provisional Governor.
To the People of Georgia ;
For tho purpuae of enabling the people
C\f Georgia the more easily to prepare
themselves for the exercise of the rights
of citizens, I hereby proclaim and direct
that the Ordinaries in the several comi
ties of the State, be and are hereby au
thorized to administer the oath of Am-
nentv set opt in the President's Procla
mation of the 29th tif May, 1865, to such
persons aa shall be entitled to take and
Ke*tiiv6 the same ; and in..case oi a vacau
oy in the office .of Ordinary i n a^y coun
tv or counties o£ this State, then and in
tii*4 case, the Clerk of Hie Superior Court
of such countv shall administer said oath;
proritled, said Officers themneives shall
have previously, taken said oath.
It is further declared and directed, that
the oath is administered as afore
said to any person within any off the ex
ceptions specified in said proclamation,
it shall be rippendOd to the petition of the
applicant—which petition shall also be
verified before flnch Ordinary or Clerfc,
by the oath of th6 party; and wha^
ministered to any jpersoq ||(rt emhysjtced
wftlnn any of the Moep&OBS Reified,
tsV® afid anhaoribeo,
(inau oe sent by the oflfcpt admiuiattriag
aw ^ the Syretery of Stvte of tho
UnUcd states, anil a cwtiflad oopy shall
he (pvwi to ttio applicant.
An4it >a farther proohUmeH and declar
ed, that aU the civil officer* of thia State
who have taken and subscribed tne oath
prescribed in the proclamation aforesaid,
if not embraced within any of the excep
tions, or who may have received speenU
Amneety if embraced,' shall proceed
thereafter in the discharge of the dntiia
or their' several offices according to the
laws in eri^tepee prior to the 1st of Jan-
nary, 1861, so far as the same are not ini
consistent with bdr present condition.
To facilitate the people in obtaining
the Amnesty proffered, the Ordinance or
Clerks, (as the case may be.) are author,
hred to procure printed blanks hrota either
Oae of toe foBovrwa a '° < * eouve-
presented at thia offioe, viz : Savannah
BUSINESS CAMPS.
t ARDINB, PIC NfCS, &C,
AT THE
MR. CHARI.B8 S. FLANDBRS
p EWECTPCfiliT Inform* M* flritetos and tto
ok- vitixetof# totttniuta ttot to lireccpioved to tbe
I$Lg Q^iltigMw^r^^rejpared torocelre
An4 to fumiafi
PIC NIC! A«» PARTIES
Al tbe *hortc*t notice., All orders must be left at tto
f>k>re of Messrs. Stnkrt A Co., under Masonic HaD.
i If. Bj—bath Hoassa sod Boats for Fiebiag caa to
bad ou tto premlaeq.. , . jj24
ri»KT. r. YORK, J, a. M'I NT TBS.
* a. WILLIAM^ p. a. WABO.
m. rams, »rat a,
AUCTION A NO COMMISSION
MERCHANTS, - 9r
Bay Street Savannah, Qa.
Consignments of Colton and Lumber solicited.
References:
Snvnnnah-Brfobam. Baldwin A Go.,’ nudes A
t'nckl»vKrwin A Hardee. Hunter A UammeiL
Noritllfjltvi. 1Iinim Rober “’ W > w «Kbiridge, L. C.
LjftV Yorb -fl. T. Kjuvpt It Bru., D, U. Baldwin A
, Hatodbya Tacadaya ato Fiidara. w|*
*. T. OCNffTNOflAM,
! CVNNIWiHAM
FACTO KS,
o. a. pcbss*
& PVRNE,
FOkWABDlKG
Commission Merchants,
-Bay Street, ^ayannah.'Ga,
Referencef* Robt. Habersham A Son*. Hunter A
<**iiimetl. Octavo*Coben, Brigham. Baldwin A Cto,
fErurin A Hardee, Clsgiiorn A Cnnninyhw^ sep6-8iq
C. T. KEUTGEN,
North side Bay street, between Whitaker and Bar
nurd, always keep on hood
The Genuine Piper Heidsieck Ohunpage.
rl«> all kind, of
Kbiaf «»■*, Ciarei.t'Uy Pipes, Ac
repel |X
CHARLES L. GOLBV A ( 0.,
SHIPPING, COMMISSION,
AND
FORWARDING MERCHANTS
JONES’ BLOCK,
CORNER MAY AMR ABKRCURN STS.>
SAVANNAH, GA.
Liberal own advance*! made on consignments to tto
firm represented in New York by Charles L Colby,
Eaq., or to oorfriendv in Boston.
ALRX H. HOL AY, Mwkfont ParUier.
Ibrr.wwi•*».—Mews. Dabney. Morgan A t New
Laurent & Silly,
TUI ASD SHEET 1R0\ WORKERS
j AND
aAS FITTERS,
IU»k St., Sevmd Root from Uouslun,
8AVANNAH, GKORGIA.
All kinds of Tin, Stout Iron, Goa Work, Roots, Gut
ters, Metal Pumps and Leaders repaired at short notice
lm
HEXBl BR1AH,
Broker »»4 Conaissiei Ageit,
For Rale and Purchase of Stocks, Bank
Notes, Produce, £c.. and for For
warding Cotton,
Bryan Street, next Us Merehunts’ and
Planters* Bank Buildlof.
oogfo 2sn
SAMUEL P. HAMILTON,
fSncceseorto Wflmoi A Richmond.^
nXALRB in ^
H.ichfs, tiilrsr Wire, Jewelry,
Cones, Cutlery, Ac.
Cor. Whikiker t SL. Julian curl Congress Sis,
^ iiAYANNAH, GA.
Watches and Jewuhnr repaired. Chronometers rated
by transit. Cask paid Tor old Geld and Sliver.
iirw • tf
A. J. IcBADY, WM. M. SMITH. *. J.
BRADY, SMITH & CO.
Ooxxi.xn4jafi4.f3XA.
AND •
Forwarding Merchants,
AND
Mttnunictiiren' Afcenta
NORTH SIDF OF HAY 8TRHRT,
Between WhKskeraad Barnard,
8AVANNAH, GEOftGIA.
Liberal advancos mode on conaigm&teto of t otto a,
to their friends in New York sod Boston. •
References—Wm. K. Kltcber, P*es*t Naliocal Pork
Bank, N: Y.; H. C.Thacker Bostosn ISMei Co
hen. Baltimore; Hall, Mtrea A CfA.CoihmbB#; Wyi
b Co^Montifvss^y.
Yg* 1
LAIC. 1). LiBOtlUE,
iielien »d4 Oumlssle* Mertkast.
THOMAS J. WAL8H, AUCTlONRKR.
T HE snbscrberhaviog secured the large and com
modious store Northeast corner of Bay and Bar
nard streets. It now preparvd’to receive all merctoiK
dlxe consigned to him, and give the same his personal
attention either at public or private sole. Bake OS
Stores or residences attended to.
Regular sale days befare store, Tuesdays sad Sotsr-
flayg.■ '
RICHARDSON & BARNARD
CoamlsstM u4 Skipping Merck*Ms,
Bay SL, opposite Mariner’s Ubureft,
'LA.
KIRLIN, BRO. & BURKE,
wholb&alb oralsos in
ALES, WINES AND LIQUORS
Oor. Whitaker Street and Bay Lane.
InneVl tf
MARGY, DAY & GO-
a il
kepabhoan, Angnato Chrofliclfi A SentL ;® ° ® ® A Y « T * »
net, Sonthem Watchman, Atlanta Intel- [ Wortfc
italof the
ot Angnst, in
year 6f Amwcac Sndo
WOOD, OOAL AND GRAIN.
AND
^*RALC0MiBI88IMMSICHA5T3
1 1 r * lil MMb yrd
issfissgar '"s