Weekly Georgia telegraph. (Macon [Ga.]) 1858-1869, June 18, 1869, Image 8

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m&m ■- -* ■■»•<"■ the telegraph. The New polltieftl Era. IfiT TEXiBGR-AJPH. X. H. STEPHENS AND HON. HENRY WJJLSON. MAOON, FRIDAY, JUNE 18,1869. All Depends opoq Hr. Hoar. The Constitutionalist _ debating'" the point whether Georgia “ will be remanded” or not, concludes there's not ranch danger, and the Radicals have done their worst, in any event. We say it all depends on Hoar! The State of Georgia is waiting the Iegtfl opinion pf Sir- Hoar. If Hoar says Georgia is a State—she is a State; and if Hoar' ssffa Georgia is not a State, she is not a State. The political wisdom of the North has so simplified the plan and operations * of the free, sovereign and independent States in North America, that they are now any where rAnd whatever a cabinet officer decides them to be. The whole scheme has become a system of puppets—a grand political Punch and Judy—to stand and to do—to exist and remain, or die and depart, just as the cabinet at Washington de cides. ' Well saith Air. Stephens an his letter— tbere is no difference between imperialism and consolidation. Yes, perhaps there is some small difference in favor of imperialism in this : That under the Empire the responsibility could be fixed somewhere, but under consolidation it is hard to locate it. For example : Suppose Mr. Hoar should be of the opinion that Georgia, as a State, must die or is dead ? Who has killed her—Congress—*Gen. Grant, orMr. Hoar? The Hat Trade in Columbus.—'The Sun says that in one hundred bales of Northern hay, bought iff that city at two dollars per hundred, forty dollars were paid for the wood which bound the bales. . That is a little better than Macon experience with Northern hay; but wo ought ell to be made to pay blood money for being so ^‘trifling and no account,” as the darkies says, nc; to import our hay from the North instead of wiring it at home. Any man who will properly .enrich- an acre of ground .and sow it down in xpd glover and orchard grass, in November can ■cut two tons of hay from it, in May or June. Tbere is eighty dollars to the acre for three years jnado with very little trouble, after your Ta-rfl is well fertilized and seeded. By fertiliz ing, we mean fifty or a hundred wagon loads of good stable manure to the acre. The land broken up twelve inches deep and well dressed withi phosphate and salt. • The Wheat Oboe is Cheroeee and North Georgia.—From a very intelligent and observ ing gentleman, (says the Chronicle and Senti nel), a resident of (jherokee Georgia, we learn that the wheat is now being harvested through out the upper portions of the State ; and that ihe general yield will snipass for quantity and -quality any previous crop grown there for many years past. The crop, he states, will tom out to be a most bountiful one, richly re warding the farmers of that section of Georgia, who had sown an area much larger than in pre vious year. A few days now of fair weather, ?aa more wheat of first-rate quality will be har vested than was even hoped for by the farmers in that- wheat growing section. This is good news—glad tidings—for which let ns not forget to give thanks to a bountiful Providence. J • The Warm; Smses.—This. famous old sum mer resort-is now open for the reception of visi tors. The present proprietors, Messrs, James A. Frazier, (of the Rockbridge Alum,) Jno. W. Warwick and Joseph Ligon have made improve- -nients for the comfort of their guests. These •Springs are situated in the midst pf the “Vir ginia Mountains, ’' and in the locality so long famous for the beauty and grandeur of its scen ery,- and ite-delightful, salubrious and invigorat ing climate, : 'The waters of the Warm Springs have been celebrated for their curative qualities for near ly a centnry past. . . The “Hon. Henry'Wilson, of Massachusetts,” contributes an article to Frank Leslie’s last il lustrated newspaper upon the “New Political Era.” This era embodies only one idea—and that is the equality of man—which is a false idea as to the fact, everywhere throughout the .universe of God, so far as we have any means of information or knowledge. But the grand idea of the new political era is being carried out byGeh. Grant. "Mr. Wilsori cites the Macon Telegraph in evidence as ..admitting that Grant practically saying to ns in Georgia: “No matter what may be your ideas on the subject, we hold the negro to be eligible to office, and mean.he shall have it.” And he also discourses about the “poetical justice” of a negro Secreta ry of State and negro officials of other kinds in the land of Calhoun and Hayne! He squints the endowment of the Indians with civil rights and suffrage, although he confesses- to -some difficulties on the subject; but Mr. Wilson does not discourse upon the Chinese, .who will be the next applicants by millions for the benefits of this grand idea of the new political era. _ , We had thought of'printing Mr. Wilson to day side by side with the letter of our own pro found political philosopher and learned and practical statesman, Alexander Hamilton Ste phens, but had not space for both, nor would there be.any value in the essay of Mr. Wilson, excepttopointa moral or institute a comparison. In the judgment of one of these men the American Republic has' jnsttaken leave of fun damental error and entered upon a new and more glorious career, of safety, stability, pros perity and beneficence; while the other,-in tones of awful and portentous solemnity warns his countrymen that the path they are traversing with headlong speed can lead to nothing but a terrible catastrophe. The one is all hope of the political future—the other is all solicitude and anxiety bordering on despair. We have no doubts about the comparative accuracy of these political diagnoses. Mr. ment Stephens rest his conclusions not 'more upon sound political knowledge'and philosophy, than upon practical experience,. Wq look back upon a country once lightly taxed-and, ; iiberally gov erned—intelligent, honotabW; ■'’rapponsiblo and conscientious in. every department—her Con gress the forum of her'national .wisdom and eloquence—a far more.njighty intellectual and moral, than political pbw^i/ What can we see now, but the reverse of - the picture ? If Mr. Wilson will look back, see that his ‘new political new era” is nothingnew after all. Liberty, equality and tnnVfersal brotherhood Lave been the watchwords of several “new political eras,” both before and since the French Revolution of 1753, but r what dfd they amount to? . “Great moral, ideas” are of value in. human government only as they are sound practical ideas, embodied in a well digested and well balanced system of. fundamental and statutory Ijiw. .Even just ideas sometimes become, per verted into instruments of practical folly and mischief by untimely, unwise or disproportion ate pressure. How will the account of human liberty stand with the abolitionists, if to eman cipate a few slaves, they have forfeited a free, constitutional government to the American people ? , The Postsiasxeb at Macon.—The Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Enquirer, tele graphing that paper on the 11th, says, notwith standing the assertions to the contrary, the last official act of the President, before leaving town, was to refuse the application of the white Republicans of Macoii, Georgia, for the removal of Tomer, the negro Postmaster there. In their application, the white Republicans state that Turner was obnoxious to^every white man, witbontregard to politics,'.in that city.'" l Running Our.r-:The Westenf lands, it is stated, • are rapidly becoming exhausted from the pro duction of one class of crops and from the neg lect to apply proper jnunures, -. The journals of that region assert that the grain-growing districts of Illinois, Iowa,* Missouri and Minnesota are yielding smaller crops to the acre every year, and the same facts have been observed in the wheat districts of California. The West, as well as the South, must adopt the plan of rotation of crops. .. DiCksOn vs. PfcrT.vn.—Wo have noticed a con test'going an in Barbour county, Ala., between an acre of cotton of the Peeler variety and an acre-of the Dickson. The Eufaula Times says the Peeler on the 5th was thirty-four inches from tip of root to point of leaf. The Dickson onus not so tall bnt better fruited. . We were indebted to Hon.' S. Gove, on Satur- • <fay r lor, a lot of'fine strawberries—yery.ripe and fine. Also a few rasberries, of a French ■vyitie^.^e pame of which we have forgotten,- Mr. Gove is a better gardener and fanner than politician. : .i i:k - l Attbax in HANoqCK.r-'J'he Hancock Journal Say’s an affray occurred in that county in winch •John ;T*yIor,‘Superintendent ^oF.the Montour Factory, was killed, and two young men, Oxford and Faruth, wounded, but likely to recover. '.These were all the participants!' 'The Winds Decorating ;thB: GBAVSS!r=-In the Btprm. which followedthe decoration of the Fed- 4*61 graves at Arlington, the 'winds swept the flowers off tho graves of the Union soldiers and .placed them knee deep. in some places, on the jgrayes of the dead Confederate^ r.-r-xne Southern Sun says the last week or'fSrotof weather has completely;“pusted” ,the caterpil lar—in fact the big reports which have been in cfiTehiatidp of! the caterpillar’s destroying. the cotton .crop, have, completely fizzled out. '..'Boston signalizes the approaching 4th day of -July by selecting a woman as orator of the day. ’Pretty goodr-but still Boston’s position would ’ RaTe'l>e6n, iport “ advanced” if she had added negro to read the declaration. «.7“«qc. S'; ■■ ^ ' l! ' Too Slow.—A meeting has been held in Illi nois, without distinction of party, to protest against the introduction of Sambo as a eonsti- ■ tuent Element of American politics. . - ' ii."- —**-V • '* •Col. Weild.—The New Era says a dispatch from CoL Weil brings the very gratifying intel ligence that he J* “much better and out of dan ger.” He is in Baltimore. -*w— ' Gratuitous . Advebtisino, —An immense' -amount of gratuitous advertising for Pollard's new book is now done by indignant Southern editors. - - The street oar drivers bf New York struck for $2.50. a d%y, and they got ifc In Boston/they get oniy §1.75 a dajr.,. t . -y.: r:z ::T . A eaving* and loan institution, exclusively fqr, Chinese, is to be established in San Francisoo. If 1* estimated that the Chinese reeidants of that city have from $8,000,000 to $10,000,000 lying idifc • OUR GOVERNMENT. LETTER' FROM' , AHEXiSNPfiR &'STEPHENS. trkn ran«A nf thfi 'Rebellion— From Washington. Washinqton, June 14.—Revenue receipts to-day ^| JC pj-jinQ Oatise of the Bebellibh *1.250,000. ; The Preservation of Constitntiwual The.Yallapoosa has leftfor Fortress Mofirte to idbertyin the convev the Monitor Saunus to Cuban waters. j- , Libeett Hall. Genend-Beckwitfa has been ordered to.supervise 4 ...'. Cbautordsvieee, Ga., June 4,-18C9p- !' r-. tttjv - Tr>felltfiA7ir.P7* 1 subsistence affairs, in the FourthMilitaiy ; District, Messrs. Editors Triteltigoncfl'j Wnsh- in addition to iris Louisiana duties. i ington City, D. C.: , .V.')’.'' General Harvey has been relieved of duty sgrinat 1 I noticed in an : issue of jour paper, some theInffisan, and ordered home on the retired list. •’ weeks ago, an editorial in ihe following worris: The aiaiTi'minufing duties against French, vessels j EE11IE cause, on the bebehwon. raigirtnerft ofine fordoing ffliht'he'Ts leased so gratuitously to say I bad 0» right to do, or ^ras “not jturtifiable^ifi doiiig. wu cans® of the war, as setfortirinthe issue wesMited by me, Oondeused in few words, was tb®.denial of the fact that ours was a federal Government; and the violation of this -ftmdimrerital principle of our complicated political organization ou the part of those controlling -the ; General Govern ment at the time,-by assuming- that' ihe United States constituted & nation of individuals, with a consolidated-sovereignty in the Central Gov ernment, to which the' ultimate as well as prima ry 0 was due, and that any attemptby the several States or airy, .of them to -resume the sovereign imported by American vessels. 1 Nicholas, has long been 'a bibse and intelligent i'student of our political affairs... A life-long and . i • « . _ _ a 11. — MkmiAnanna At. /Vlrialt- The Revenue Bureau has been authorized to cm- ,| unewerying advocate of the *^SU- ploy the troops in NorthCarohna when necessary to j cany out the Revenue laws. '' ' ” . ; servltions ho bas brought the aid.of a powerful in- WasHinoton, June 13,—The New Southern Mcth-1 tellect, an iron energy, the experience of half a odist Church iust finished in this city was dedicated l century dqvoted to judicial andjitemylabors, and 7T , ’ WP iWnnpin ; a patriotic devotion that is questioned by none who this morning. Sermon by Rev. W.E.Muncie. bim a *lthoneh oftentimes, differing widely _ vrL m -«,-o ' j from his opinions. A communication upon such a From Virginia. ! subject from such a source must always command r r . ■ 1 ' - ^ ' o'l-i/T iririffl Rorifiiia rarfon- Richmond, June 13.—A duel took place Saturday [ respectful consideration ahd ,ii)rit;e. #ejious reflec- fivenins between Capt. W. E. Cameron, editor' of j bon. . • stsss Robert W. Hughes, a contnbutor to the Richmond j titled “The CinMa"<7S«so«s of the :;latSirebel- State Journal, a Republican organ, iq consequence lion.”' Tn.this' article., the writer indulges in of an article- denouncing Hughes. The fight took j some remarks in reference to myself whjch I place njNQrthCarplina,.sixt.e^milfi8.fe Q nrth0i' or '’: do not thiulr ought to be permitted .to pass un- fdk and Petersburg Railroad, -.The-weapons were | noticed by me, coming from, the high source pistols. Cameron Was 'strucii in'the breast the first! they do; and being indmsed as they are by so fire—the ball striking his ribs and glancing. Hugfies I ^dereUnd it requires demanded anot&er shot, but the surgeons pro- | g^Qtild not be permitted thus to pass, nounced Cameron nnable to deliver another shot. ; j must, therefore, ask jour indulgence, ini quow- Hughes then declared he was satisfied, and the af-! i n gme to make such comments in .reply, as I fair ended. Cameron's wound is severe but not! think the matter .deserves. This would have considered dangerous. ,f. j '■'■■ ■■ ’ ! been'done at an earlier dayv but for coutMued Staunton. June 14,-Jesse Wards, the negro who ! severe bodily affliction. The remarks to which raped and afterwards murdered Miss Susan Pyle a , * SK^condenscd exrtacts art taken from respectable young lady, was taken from the jau to- j ^Q elaborate and abje book of Hon. A. JEL Stephens day and hanged. Edwards has confessed.,, . , on the causes of .tlie rebellion, and in: attempted ganio principles is stated to have been'the im mediate and real cause of the war—the “‘causa odusdns-’- of-it^--.This‘"statement, sustained by indestrnotible facts as,-it : is,'must • remam Jhe. truth of history for alltime to cotoe. As to the-origin of' the vrur, -Or the first out break of hostilities, Idonotsaythat it Was “in- avgwdted ou thei'ohe sido’to vindicate the-right bf syeession, aqa rdfi.the '. ptiier in .denial .oLthe right and to resist its exeicisei’bitti, h. .< It was not inatiffUraM ahdWag^d.bj'"fii6se then' ! Controlling ;th®;' Federal. ;Gqverhjaetofc rfo prevent seebssion.;. On the part of -the seceding Edmund Fountain, the father of the:Chesapeake 1 vindication of the pomidousfioihaa of .fiecesrioru t, -i - 1 I - “In the nature of the United States Government and Ohio Railroad, is hopelessly sick. ' . - I “ Negro slavery was unquestionably the occasion admit of sixty killed, and twelve wounded. The ..of the-war, the main exciting case on both sides, Spaniards estimate the Patriots killed and wounded j but was not the real cause, the causa caitsans of it. *W | “SgSto.'X.'SS&£ A Santiago dispatch from a Spanish source says a j pf the right and to resist its exercise. It schooner landed one thousand fillibusters sixty 1 grew outopposing views as to the nature of • the miles east of Santiago. Lodi betrayed the fiffibus-! government,, ana where, under our system, ulti- ters and sixty of them were lulled and the balance j matosoverogn power or paramount authority re captured. The leader was shot and the captives 1 were taken to Santiago for execution. The sldres of the expedition were captured, including two mil- honsof unsigned revolutionary currency, several b^tte^tSXw hundred rifles, and three or four.pieces .of artillery, j-that “ opposing views" as to those rights was, the true cause of the civil war. Minister Motley to the British Cabinet. !_ What Judge Nicholas means by “the ortho- London, June 14—The Cabinet have considered dox State rights principle:’^ho has notstated; the Alabama treaty. It is loosely stated that Earl Clarendon read a communication from Mr. Motley. statihg that the Senate'rejected flie "'treaty'on ac count of its failur'e ftdly to settle the question in dispute. Mr. Motley intimates that the administra tion approves of the action of the Senate, and says that be is instructed to negotiate a treaty which shall be just to both parties, and leave no question open to future misunderstanding. Mr. Motley is willing to receive and consider propositions. The African Imbroglio in W ashingtou The political and social status in Washington seems at length to be arresting some degree of attention among our Northern brethren—so to speak. It is perhaps fortunate that the grand experiment of political and social miscegenation to which the Radical party is committed, is to have a prominent illustration in the national capital, where it can be known and read by all men. The Herald of the 10th leads the way in discoursing upon the aspects and auguries. The Herald is discontented—in fact, the Herald would swear a little over the matter, but for its rigid adherence to morals and propriety. The Herald shows that, since the legalization of negro suffrage in Washington, the white vote has been dropping off by thousands each suc cessive year, and was this year several thousand less than the registries called for. That this was due to the ruffianism of the negro voters and has resulted in reposing the destiny of the Federal city in the hands of two-fifths of its voters—for the most part a pack of squaled ne groes and a corporal’s guard of carpet-baggers to engineer them. But not contented with what they have achieved under the direction of the carpet-bag Radicals, the Herald announces Jthat the ne groes mean to set up for themselves and dis- has just been elected as Register, to the Mayor alty. Cook corrects a statement in Forney’s Chronicle that the negroes are going to content themselves with the galleries in the theatres and will not seek admission to the boxes; and says that they will contend for the full benefit of the ordinance “breaking down such degrading bar riers” as distinctions on account of . color, and will “make no compromise or truce with any manager or anybody else. Bnt, as if to illustrate the nature of this am bition of the darkey to force himself into social contact with the whites, the negroes charge that Cook himself is an aristocrat, refusing to as sociate with any body but fancy niggers, and they are down upon some of their newly elect ed Aldermen, who are mulatto barbers, and will allow none but whites to be shaved in.their establishments. Such are the questions and strifes which agitate official municipal circles in Washington city. Such are the practical workings of manhood suffrage. The Herald concludes: The moral suggested is that a few more such manifestations of negrp suffrage will be- apt to inaugurate that conflict of races - whichf when fairly begun in this country, will only .ceaso wifh the disappearance "of the African. - Nor will the reekless political carpet-baggers, lead ing him in this direction, escape the conse quences of their folly; -.t With Andy Johnson in the White House, these riotous proceedings of the Washington blacks would perhaps have re sulted in terrible scenes of- bloodshed.- ?Tho strong hand of General Grant ..within call maintained comparative order; but, still,jh few more such' examples bf negro electionexing may bring negro suffrage to a pass beyond^th" reach even of General Grant. j and character of the Union, can alone be discovered ! the remote but real ■ causes of the war. All these troubles resulted as inevitable consequences ,from Important from Cuba. Havana, June 14.^-The rumor of a heavy engage- [Jhe yloktion of. the fundamental laws governing our enfc at Puerto I?adri i3 confirmed. The Spaniards 1* 4t tn-o^slaverv was tmcmestionablv the occasion Mr. Stephens has a perfect right to usp his time and talents in self-justification. as an aider :'of the rebellion, but lip.is r.ot justifiable in even uninten tionally drawing upon- the: orthodox State-rights . Foreign News. London, June 14—The steamship Great Eastern in her. preliminary movements to get ready to lay tho French Cable performed admirably. 'Z Madrid, June 14.—A member of the Cortes hav ing stigmatized the Mexicans S3 cowards, Prim in replying said: “A people able to sustain them- nor has be intimated xcherein I have in the book to which he refers' “unhitentioiially” or other wise attempted to draw upon this orthodox principle; according to Ms idea of it, additiohal obloquy or obloquy of any kind. Nothing Cer tainly was further from my design than whafcis thus imputed to the result of my labors. The great object with me was not self-justification barely, as he intimates, but the vindication of the only true State rights principles which are consistent with the faets of the history of ,ohr country. • On these alone our entire fnbrio' of constitutional liberty was based in jthe begin ning, and on these alone can it be-maintained and preserved fqr the future.', These principles, from the indisputable and irrefragable facts of Mstory adduced in their vindication, and, I may say, establishment beyond the. power of .refuta tion,, ne cessarily carry with them the sovereignty of the several States. •' ' Whatever ideas Judge Nicholas - may have of selves against invaders are not cowards." . Aim the orthodox principle of State rights, I venture called Juarez the great: Republican. [Load cheer- to affirm that it would be impossible for him; or anybody else, tp-name any single right of a mLbid, June 14—Gen. Prim told the Cortes that j State, or any single principle of State rights un- ty. When the regency was settled candidates would , of t g” seTer2 i states. There is no such be plentiful. Gen. Prim hopes for Fernando, of thing as State rights without State sovereignty. Portugal. His refusal is not irrevocable. i The States severally possess no power, nor enjoy of States, which' they claimed as a sovereign right. TMs i3 the substanoe of the -statement on that point; and so the fact will go down to P P TE?truth fsweil established thait'the'secedmg States did not-wish or-desire war. * Very few of the public men .in ■ these States.expected War.— All of them, it fe true; held themselves in readi ness for it, if it should jiip6n them against their wishes and moat earnest protests' tions.: • • >IJ ! ” ! * This is abundantly ana'conclusively.a.pparent from tho speeches and addresses , of/ their-lead- ing publio men at’the time. ' It is apparent from the resolutions of the State Legislatures and the State Conventions, before, and in their acts of secession. . It is apparent and manifest from their acts in. their new .Confederation at Montgomery. It is apparent'from the inaugu ral address of President IJavis,.. It is apparent from the appoifitment-.b(i Commissioners to set tle all matters iavolvBd in. the - separation ; from their- former confederates honorably, pefice^bly, amicably and .justly. JOt is 'apparent, apa mani fest from'every act that truly indie'ates the ob- jects.aud motives bf men, or from wMcb their real aims can be justly arrived at. :Pense not only with.the States from wMch they had sepa rated,, bpt, peace. with all, the • world, ^yas the string 'desire pf tile jConjgwiiato Stated The war web hot only inaugurated by the authorities at Washington;’ as, stated/ but it was inaugurated by them J while' the. Confederate Commissioners, with the olive-branch of peace in their-hands, were at thefeeaVof the|"General Government, and were. given ‘ to ‘liflderstand )>y those .in'mffhoritythere', that Fort.Sumter, whichibecame the scene of the' first conflict? of arms, would, at an early' day, be peacefully evacuated by the Federal troops then, holding it. The..war .was inaugurated, if not-begun, -when the hostile fleet set out for Chariest** * the purpose of reinforcing that fort, “fas nefos.” Hallam has weU said, that gressor in a war is not the first who use: but the first wh,o renders .fofce necep And so,tha facta, of history:::wilL-ever Sh< and by whom this late terrible and most lament able war was inaugurated, * as well as bjpriiom it was begun. They will iiow .who wSrelthe actual aggies’sors, and who first violate® thejor- ganic principles .and laws -of our 'American Sys tem of self-government by the people. i • YVhatever may be the ultimate resultsw this .war, so far as the fate:of constitutional liberty on this continent is concerned, the responsibility of its 'inauguration can never be justly and truly charged.upon.the seceding States.! ' _ 1 Their object in separating from their/orper associates, with whom' they considered theyihad been united in aTFotieral compact, was nwt'Only to remain in peace with them, but to preserve and perpetuate the principles Of that Constitu tion which badVdem'onstrated such. woeH(ous results as a bpnd of Union between sovereign States so long os its principles had'been adhered to, btft wMch they apprehended, under errbneous construction, if no.t checked,’ would sootflfeadTo consolidation and despotism. —M ; P- if they were right in'their, position thrt otars Paris, June 14—Documents have been seized . any privilege, by favor, grant or delegaticm v AU was a Federal Governnibpt, then the ajuhiiri- liich indicate that the recent disorders were them rights snd powers, as well those'retained t] es at Washinetou 'were the .aggressors iff inau- as those delegated, are inherent and sovereign, -wap to prevent the- ehCrcise ;of the >.! -.1.1 ■ ■■% tL trtrt 1 i f tli Avt vi'AV.a tVlai f wMch « a*, i ^ersigny, muiug “ j on t he other side, that the General Government and freedom 13 not incompatib e. - „ o • possesses no power by -inherent or'sovereign ment can bear the existence of every liberty. • right. All the rights : and po^Vers a^e. held by “ aT*N a ! delegation only, and held in trust.by delegation 1 fronTthe sovereign States constituting it. Of New York, June 13.—Arrived, Hecla, from Rio course I speak of matters as they stood'“0raf^ Janeiro! A letter, received by her. says omancipa- bdlumZ' tion is Etronriy urged bv prominent citizens. The i If the facts of our history be as set forth in it •uHsassisssp’?* i <? daily. McMahon’s whereabouts is unknown. - jtheyleadtoacoinpletejustificationof.thesov- Fremont sailed on the Yille de Paris. : ereign right of_ secession as tho only sure check The steamship Quaker City, has UEen re-seized. barrier against the usurpation of uiidelega- . Buttalo, June 14—Thet editor of the New.York ted power on ; the part : of the-General Govem- Spanish paper, who said that; 'native' Cubans were 1 ment. In the domnin of reason the conclusions cowards and’a Cuban youth,'fought at Lundy’s of logic are inexorable; This is the appropriate LanTtday flS iras’shot°in both legs, ; ^^“^e seriously. • ' ' —t But my/object in this note is .not to. Join or Cincinnati, June 14.—A drunken Codington auc- ynl - n ny discussion.with Judge-Nicholas on the tioheer was shot and mortally wounded to-day by ■ matter of the orthodox State-right principle,!:.It two women. ' ' ' ” ”, \ will be time enough for me .to do-this withhim, or anybody else, when there Is dn attempt made. pense witii their white fuglemen.} They are ^ ^ ^ ^ about to nominate a John F. Cook, a negro who Letter From 'Varreillon—Civil. Law by reason'and argdm6nt,’fo 'refute the positions Restored- ^ of the book upon thatisubjeefc. What I do not wish'to permit pass unnoticed, is what he’styles Avivo-Afo* 1 tri. Pnm t&e'Avgiifa ('ontiiiirt ionalUi. ___ __ t t , ...- "s ‘T'if.’H t-v Wareenton, June 10. “condensed extracts" from'tlie book referred to, Everythingis quiet and calm, as in day of Agaitist one of these “condensed- extracts” it is yore. The military received instrnctiou to-day : my wish to: enter a respectful protest. Many of to respect the civil law -and the-injunction yo"urreadera, in this, as well'as in foreign conn- right of withdrawal; if they were wrong I positiomas to the ichRracter'Of th*rGeneral ernm'ent; if;it,‘ in' ‘ fact, wasmot 1 Federal nature and.. character,. but was a.-gover with a; consolidated sovereignty in the c- t head,! then they were the aggressors in render- fng the inauguration of the war ffecessai the maintenance bf . central' supremacy^, whole matter of right or wrong in the beginning of the war,as weU as its disastrous cbnsequences, depends upon the ‘great question, ..whether the General Government was a Federal Republicaor not; and what, under the Constitution, vjas fie true “orthodox State-rights principle” tojwhich Judge Nicholas refers but does not enlighten the public upon.—In other words it depends upon tho true answer to. Jhe question, where, under our system, does sovereignty reside ? Cs it lodged.in. the General Government, or hi 5 it passed to the whole people of the United S: ites as one aggregate mass, or does it still rei tain with the peoplebf the several States'as diatmet political organizations?’ The doctrine of-the book is that sovereignty resides just where it did in 1776, 175B jtnd 1787—that is; widk: Wt'.piople of the several States! It maintains that aU that the {states did by .the adoption of the Constitution fvaq/to delegate, in-1 rust, thee Zeroises-of certain specific and limited’ sovereign powers'to the General severally, sovereigntyitself r __ that great source from which nil polilical powers emanate. This doctrine, I must insist, too, is not only thtftnte aoc6flne!..but'.t6e or(Ji£doir&otXt&i& t^S on the’subject; Jfiidge Nicholas’ opinion to the contrary notwithstanding. Upon the point of orthodoxy in reference.to tbis matter, I know of but one standard on the subject, and that is the Jefferson standard, erected and established in the first of Kentucky's - great resolves of 1798. The doctrine of this chief apostle of State rights operation most orthodox principle so established, with the ;i From Crawlbrd. ! - Hickory Grove, Ga., June 11, 1809. Editors Telegraph:—Crops, in this county are growing ^finely. • Everybody is .done chop ping, and is hoeing the second time.'■ Cotton has a fine color, hnd corn begins to look like a d The Wither has be"en splendid (except; the cold nights in May,) and rains exactly as we j aSbfi needed them, wheat crops are p as was expected—the straw' is good, is not ranch in the head. against Norris. “ \v I! . tries, tofty see these extracts, who may never see H. P. Farrow arrived to-days from Atlanta, : the boot'itself. I do not wish them to remain and examined the records and" bond pertaining j under the impression that I aor-tliereia'aecu- to the appointment of Mr. Raley as. sheriff of ] rately quoted: at least, if they give snffltient at- Warren comity, and is convinced that Mr; R. is I tendon to the subject to be impressed. by Jliq the legal sheriff. This throws Norris in rather ; matter at all, J think it essential to .a. correct a badfix, aaheisnowliable to prosecution for . understanding that: their opinions should be false imprisonment, and at the mercy of. the ; formed.from My own language, ' and^nofc kijj menhe hasiiiglily wronged, but as there ap-1 representation of it.' -Y . -t. -XZ- pears to be a disposition to let him depart ini What I said about the cbiefcau.se,- the origin, peace, oh the part of a majority .of onr citizens ! and actual inauguration of the'whr; is in these —thus heaping coals of fire .on his.: villainous , words:' * ’ 1 2 :!! :h head—I do not think thero will bo any action “Slavery so-caIlocl. .oi t that taken against him by the parties aUuded to, : the black "race to tlie!white wM?h.#isted »n>ll hut provided he “refugees” again. . C . . .^ ! oneof tho States.wliqq the Union was formed^ and ■ Farrow, accompaniedmilitary,-leaves jnfifteenof Sess'by hU th'odepiifbSOTe Government, for_theA^^dg^orhoo^m,th^mormnsi • we increased, grew, and prospered for sixty to investigate the killiflg of , oe AdMns. The other _ it ^ not ' the real 1 cause, tha years as no nation on earth ever, did before, niilitoryis to assist the civil authorities, it nec- C(UlM ea „„ a , ISO f ft. That was the,assumption an Whatever disturbances temporarily marred the essary, consequently their tup: is am mmeces- tlle part 0 j t ^ e Federal 'authorities that the people the harmony of the general systeminthe inter- sarv expense and trouble. Sir. Raley, onr 0 fthe several States were, asyou say, citizens of va i upgnthe subject of^^tariffs, interrialimli»6ve- sheriff, has tendered hisservices.to those.' who the United States, and owed allegiance .tothe Fed- ments t he statusof the African population, etc., have the inveatigati<win charge, proposing to enl ^veromentaastiio abeoafeaOTtte^p.,power of departures or attempted departures, make any a«est desired;; without the nfflitai^ M the FkerafAdmmistrations Vroni i£e,stand- escort. All he asksis a legal.warrant. Norns . irc . asc ^ fTOm tbo doctrines embraced, in tlio ard thus erected by Jefferson as to the-nature has not denied the charge made against lnm in i ue gt; 0 i propounded to mb.. It growoutof differ-: and extent of the powers of the Federal Govem- the Clipper thismorning, concerning the assas^ ent uia directly t^jpositeviews 1 as to the naiture-of meat. Tho more nearly the"principle's taught ination of ,Captam Charles Wallace, and which, tj- 0 Government of the. United States, ancl wlierg, by him were adhered to,-the more prosperous I am informed^-oan be proven-in a--Court of underour system, ultimate sovereignTOwerotpasa- a nd happy the nation was in all its p^rts and justice, whenever necessary. «• 'j-; - . ■* mounti^oritypjffipdr^^i^-J Y7 member^ 5 ” '' "'“ For the present favorable condition of affairs,-. “Consiaerations amHwted wiffl the ltegal j US6 the word nations this conneetion'pur- (the supremacy of civfl law,).Warren county is posely, for, notwithstanding Jhe very-.^eat indebted to the indCfa^hle onergy andper- ^sentiments an^ winciplM abuse'of this word, in very recent times,^we are severance of CoL E. H.-Bottle-aim Judge a. >v. of ° tliaae jRgt ,electedto:th* ;two highest offices '6P nevertheless a nation a. a very proper use of Hubert!- ■ ————— tlie Federal' Government.-pffeswis. Lincoln dqd that term. Far was it from my object in the F. S.—Fwday MoEfuNO^-Farrow - and the H 4m b n ;\ to the power of that Government oyer argument in the ^oldma referred to by Judge squad of soldier8’aUiffle4 .to,'went'down tins this aflhJecti'Mid'oBBw;^™* 1ftN*tena&<M-\ras Nicholas, to show that “tita.;^ite& i States’.do r M ,» itnniiAtiih Conutv very reason that had induced theniiiatfittt to enter 1 by some writer, unwhat hewas pleasedto<&>n- Coonty.. ^ , mm it; that iTfor their ownhetter-protection and aider a review of the work-The “greatobjfeet FuLTON^MHii'. JuneJ-R 1869:— gecul .; tr . -Those whohad the control of the admin- with roe; to the'contrary; was to show not only. V ■ . • A A _ 1 ft A^ftftft* * ft. ft 9 »r V rmt 1 ft* Srt J fl " — 1 ! xl-ft ■ft.ftftft.il. A ‘ W flji » ft V ft •-* —- - * * - - W - - * Messrs. Editors : .1 have just taken a tour istration of‘the Federal-Govein'meiitdfifltarfliih’ ofinspection all over tins district, (4th of E?h- Sted^ mid^d'^t^^at jSh^of argumept that-wo axoHioi a nation of indie* dolph) and must say that the drop prospects are era y Government against these States, or the peo« ' blendedjn a common m« aa with a con-’ very flattering. ... Some: failed to get a good pie. ofthese wbirb solidated sovereignty ©ver-the whole; bnt it is . J - Tv.. . .. . .. .. v . .. from the Umon.-Gn toui>art.ofthesB^tateB WHICH ‘clearness tUdt we are anOSk, the constituent elemento-er members of which are separate and distinot political organizations', States torhsoyereiigtittesl " L '.'•*• , Tt is shown that onts is a conventional, nation ‘ «?■ j iff total-TftJl crops sro- (ft ejeell.to cto- »»»iSSSBi33SSSS»ag. 5S2?SSK3S& 'S»£^gS8' Gardeos or. g«.d, s.d « h.rc to .btodsccc ’ ?L“” '***#> ^ .cd d,«toct .or.,# porcto, f™ ^ r«ti«»S is Kiss^hasfa “°o. i£2 SS iSfirsrJ”" 1 ” 8 prop ' ^BSS iSS&SSSSt££&%£ has guano on it looksten per cent, better. ’ j eriy Hans. kind,-after the paseio'MM the day’-shaU.hathnatidfi'fitJw—^fioik/nktipiitif bub people, or i»rie s ., ,. ( - ... . «*»—:—— 7 '.. j ed off. and shall buried with the marly gallant and political organization, but a nation of several: Ckops in Southern Georgia!—■'The Bainbridge j '8owvn«nN’Hir"'G^«>Bft—The floMe-spiritadmenWho fell Ob both sides m* the distinct politioal organinslions. We aW a ^conv ftrgc., of Satnrday roomtog mjc : i | Thus far, neither ^rorrn or other destroying vote of 56 to 28 laid on the tftble a resolution contest, it muat be rendered in favor of the one.sido ® present XJxuon* s, agencies h*aveTdone any thing to blaatThe pYo?- fo'r^Ushing aR^ctions of r^nd color pects of the planter,;:, AU species doing well, and promise an ’ * Some fields of: choice cotton.. will more than aversge-knee-higb, __ , —try.- Tr5T , stalks already have eighteen and more squares will aU be arrayed "against hegro' ; : - ■— -.-u *1, ' u upon thenC 'Wtf also hear of cotton 1 bBoms. their workshops, and the administration before ing the inauguration of the. . .war» .and .that .in ine- wona ever onw. Com war soon be" made. A few good seasons ’ long will hear from them at the polls.—Wei- hisoondensed extract, then, perhaps,- it'would to the cotoplex f«m. of rain, and this crop will prove equal to that York Herald. . be a useless waste of time to argue With bird' It is, indeed, in man. yisiona fqr fhe pseservation of free institutions, if it be bnt rightly administered.- The mostim- portatai of thMe 'ibatuieS Is the' new' principle which: it. iotrodnoed in the: pika of. Federal Unions, of permitting the common Government, the conventional power of nation; to dxecflte its . delegated powers, within their limited sphere, directly upon the citizens of the several States, or smaller nationalities composing it. - This new idea of so constituting a Federal Republic as to make of its separate members “one nation as to all foreign concerns, and to keep them distinct.as to domestic ones,” with a division of thepowers delegated., into “legisla tive, executive taniT judicial departments,” with a perfect machinery of government to operate within prescribed limite in the execution of the delegated powers, constitutes the most striking difference between our present/Federal Union and all former republics of its class. It marks the greatest stride of progress in free institu tions ever before made. It is this this which has so impressed the minds and excited the ad miration,of intelligent foreigners in contempla. ting thb" wonderful workings of the American system. This is the feature to which the learned and philoepphio, De .Tocqueville refers when, speaking of our Constitution, he says r “This Constitution, which may at first be con founded with the Federal Constitutions which have preceded it, rests in truth upon a wholly novel the ory, which may be considered- as a great discovery in modem science * * * And this dif ference produced the most momentous conse quences. Of the same feature Lord Brougham has re corded his opinion in the following words of high import: “It is not at all a refinement that a Federal Union should be formed: this is the natural result of men’s joint operations in a very rude state of so ciety. But the regulation of such a Union upon pre-established principles, the formation of a sys tem of government and legislation in which- the different subjects shall be not individuals but States, tfie; application^ of - legislative principles to'such a body of States, and the devising means for beeping itk integrity akaifederacy wlnle the rights and pow ers of the individual States are maintained, entire, is the very greatest, refinemeiit in social;policy to whichany state of circumstances has ever .giyf- ris.dto; or to which any age has eTer given birth.-. Brougham's Political Philosophy, vol. 3, page 336, This grand conception of so forming, model ing and constituting our Union of States, which so impressed de Tocqueville, and which Lord Brougham considered “the very greatest refine ment in social policy” “to which any age has ever given birth,” originated with Mr. Jeffer son. It came'from the same master mind whose master hand, .drew the jD.eelaration of Indepen dence in 1776-and in ; 4798 set forth with so much clearness and .power’the . true, if not at present orthodoxy principles of the whole struc- The Court met putsuaht to adjournm.^ * • Argument in the cAse of Hightower vs w , hams was resumed and concluded—Hood *5} Kiddoo for plaintiffs in error—H. Fielder f defendant This was an ejeotment from county, and was the 18th case from theP«^ No. 19, Pataula Circuit was withdrawn. CoL A. Hood, representing Hon. C. B. for plaintiff in error, and. by W. A. Hawfei!? Eaq^,representing .Hon. F. M. Harper fot^' No. 21. Pataula' Circuit—Gunn vs. .j to . motion to set aside a judgment, from RarsTw —argued by CoL A: Hood for plaintiff in .Jr and by H.--Fielder for defendant in error ™ No. 22. Pataula Circuit, was transferred .the, heel of the docket fqr the Southwestera R cuit for providential cause. "' ' Ut ' No. 1. Pataula Circuit—Gibson vs. the Sts* —attempt to incite insurrection, from Eafi having been transferred to the heelof the (rtT et for this Circuit, was now called and arw i by Col. A. Hood, for the plaintiff in error -j!} by S, Vi. Parker, Solicitor General, for the fendant. u "' The Court announced' that nest Mon-'- would be reserved for consultation, and adioV ed till 10 o'clock, a. ji., Tuesday. The Si case on the docket from the ; Southwestern C -' ouit will then,be first in order;—Eevi'JSra.' ERiDATj'June 1 !!, 18G9.—The Court suant to adjournment. 1J ' . Argument .was resumed and concluded inti, case of. White vs, Clemens—Quo Warred from Chatham—by Gov. James Johnson. No. 3. Eastern Circuit—Reiuslieart vs. Hae Rule on foreclosure of mortgage, from Brran' argued by Hon. B. E. Lester, for plaintiff ^ error—no appearance for -the defendant -'a-The Court went back to' the Patauln Oircnh .and called, as next in order; case No; 15-Van - Teu ner ; vs. Wooten—Rule.against the Sheriff, Randolph—argued by CoL A- Hood, represent ture of our federal organization in the entire series of Kentucky’s famous resolutions, before referred to, and which were so strongly endors ed and established by the country in 1*801. To the administration of the Government in con formity with thehe principles, or with but a slight departures from them, “the momentous consequences” spoken of by de Tocqueville, distinguishing our unparalleled career, for sixty years, in growth, prosperity, happiness and real greatness is mainly attributable. ' V And .bow, Messrs..Editors, do you ask, Cut lono? A\Vhyso much.written upon the dead issues of -the past, when questions of so much magnitude, of . a practical character press upon the public mind ? If bo, the reply is two-fold. First, to vindicate the-truth of history, which is itself a jbigh duly on .the part .of any one who has it in his power to do it; and, in the second place, to show the people of these States, in this vindication, not only the true cause, the real “causa causa its" of the late war, but the real cause of their late troubles. The Federal machinery for the--last ten, years-has been ab normal jq'jfo antihri. It must be-hrought back to the Jeffersonian doctrines, and made to con form in its workings with the organic principles of its structure, before there-6an possibly be a return to the days of peace, harmony, prosperity and happiness which formerly marked our course. There is no other hope for constitutional liberty on this continent. Judg8 Nicholas may “dream dreams” about another constitutional amendment, providing- a new mode of electing the President, bnt the remedy lie3 in no such device as that. It lies simply in bringing back the Government in its administration to original principles. This is to be done not by secession, however rightful and efficient a remedy that might be. This is abandoned. Nor is it to be done by force ,or violence of any kind, except the” force bf-' reason • ; and. the power of truth-■ It is . to be-.-,done, .if at -(ill, at the“ ‘b'allgt-b<TZ.' Free' institutions are more generally lost - than etftabhshed or stfength- tened by a resort to physical'force. They art: eminently ■ the achievement of virtue* .patri otism and reason. That, our institutions, and everi'nominalform of- government, are nowin great danger, the prudent, sagacious and wise everywhere virtually admit- An able editorial in your owu paper, not long since, put the per tinent and grave question, “Whither are we drifting ?” To this question I take the occasion for one to give you a direct positive answer.— Jl'e are drifting to-.consolidation-, and empire, and will land there at no distantjwriod as cer tainly as 'the sun will set, this ddv,_ .unless the people of the' several State'suVvake to' a proper appreciation; bf the danger, and skve themselves from the impending,catastropheiby. arresting the present tendency of public affairs. This they can properly do only at the ballot-box.— All friends of constitutional liberty, in every section and State, must unite in this grand ef fort. They must seriously consider and even reconsider many questions to which they have given, , lpti.little, aitenJjojD heretofore. .> jShey Government, while they retained tothemselses, the fathers to express tha _ 1'0‘f ttieir^work—^“ Epltiribus unupi." ' In this sense we are ; no,t only a nation, but A tween the isstie.as thus presented by me 1 touch- nation of the highest abd grandest .type that It rises:above the simple’ I- 1 AciifFEB Ship,'with over 700 fillibusters for- jnsticaif.tha,Radicals get t»e:grand National oper ft of words . u he m Mfl the dif- ;moststrikiiig ctotecteristies; These peouHar Cuba, is reported to have sailedfrom New York Workingmen’s Party” down upon them as the ference, then there is no need for any farther featuresof its strocture plaoett far madTance on Saturday result of their dealings in African ebony. defence before an intelligent public for his ar- ofallotheroonfederaterepublicsinits wwepro- fature iby rtiidyihg; And borreb'tiE^’fhe erriefts of the-past, ,: :ra h«5 a iiurtH •> ri’ 7 ? ;i$kis tha_only r hope s ,«j I ; ^F t Jtated,fQr the continuance of even our present nominal present form of government. Depend upon it, there is no difference between consolidation and empire! No difference between centralism and imperi alism! The end of either, as well as all of these, is the overthrow pf liberty,, tfpd the estab lishment of diffietlsni. .1 give you the, words of truth in great ; efttriestriess-“Wbrds ! • which, how ever received ofcheedednow;- will: be rendered etemaUy true. try. .the, .development of the fu ture. Yours, jnost respectfully, ' Alexander H. Stephens. ing B- S.. WorrilL Esq., for plaintiff in etK . and by W, DV'Kiddo/Es'q,", fpr thedefendmti; errbr. •’ : No; 16. Fatuala Circuit—Butler' arid Hori vs. Weathers—Complaint from Early.' Jam** by CoL' Herbert Fielder for the plaintiff in ata No appearance for the-defendant i ■ No. 17. Pataula Circuit—Long vs. McDorti Complaint from Early. Argued by B. B, Bova Esq,, and. Col. L. J. Glenn for plaintiff in eng. 'and by Col. William I). Kiddoo foz defend&tih . No-. 18. Pataula Circuit—Hightower et. aln Williams. Ejectment from Early was ca!>; and pending the 'argument of Col. A. Hoodfc plaintiff in error, the. Court adjourned tiiil a. m. to-morrow.—Atlanta Hew Era. * — > Certificate of Character. The - New York World furnishes the Radicals in’ Washington' witii t th6" follows certificate of character: ; “These negroes steal, and .only steal, (excep murdering',) and that'continually,' GeorgeTr, man, the Maryland negro hanged at Freder.d 1 for- murder,' MAy 28, stole the-preacher's pods handkerchief while engaged witii him in pm-: the night before his execution. Stealing a lying are as natural to negroes. as .water to £i Citizens dry their clothes on the top of tag houses in order tostop the negroes fromsta ing them. ' These people^ave no'idea of socii morality. Every black woman on ‘The Island with only such exceptions as age and sickis make, prostitutes herself gratuitously to ertr solicitor; out.:o£-mere love, of lust. The it? are only less bad- because the~black"wtnnetr& sert fhem iii favor of 1 their white; paramomi whom there ‘ are : plenty! ' Thhse negroes, i» spective of sex; herd as animals. Maniagri not even- a name among. them: ‘Wife’ mea- ‘a woman, sar, dat I: took up wid’.down in lie- ginny, when de army, moved. oftV The chilis all know their mothers, but no .child hasti been found on the Island proverbally r- enough to' know its own father. As a rti: these negroes are a mass of thieves. butIe arid bawds, the lowest of the low, arid the riles of the vile; they only need a year's reside:;: to : nullify ; witii their ballots. the votes of 17. IV Comoran; Montgomery Blair,' Caleb Cashing. 0 any other citizen.” Death from Corpulence. n Tuesday afternoon last. Mis. Eliza Or h, ■ riged 40, wife of Mr."AVm. F. OgboSt who resides on Ridge Eoad, Boxboiough, net. Philadelphia, died of suffocation from excessii: corpulence. She weighed four hundred sa. thirty, pounds two' years ago, but those vk knew her intimately say she must have weighs six hundred pounds at~the time of her death, she had not been able to move about muefcfc the last year or two. . Owing to her great weigh she was oblighed to sit on a sort of a 1»l s no’chair'could be found large or strong ercir. to bear her.' In dying, Mrs. O.-fell to the 2<w and it was the utmost that six stout men col. do to'jai?® her .by means .of., the .carpet, 0? & bed. • Five- -tried,* but- : failed.'- • It was the: thought best to. remove the body to. the gromii floor of the house, and some eight or teu r:a were required for that service. The -eo& w* three feet , wide, and there wfere twelve pt- beirers. ,,u ' ‘ ** Forty-six Bu>hel? »f Wheat to Ik In respect to the.prize acres of wheat: Clarke county, ihp ^Athens Banner of the Hi says: ..... . .... All the lots of wheat in competition for premiqnj! have • he^n, cut, aijd the 4 .Cwnmw have been busy attending to the threshing ffi , measurement. The Committee decided not* make public the amount of. .apy crop until * were measured; and we cannot, - therefore, c» a reliable report of any. It is rumored that E Hamilton’s acre yielded forty-six and at bushels, and the impression prevails 'tha.- wfll win the premium.. Mr. Bancroft’s was t» ly injured by.rust.'. Ben. Butler Bnllies tlie Attorney Gen eral. It is said that the recent opinion of Attorney General Hoar, in the case of the Texan who killed a freedmeit foid-was tried by a : court martial,-was frightened' out of-fiim by 'General Butler. Butler, it appears, was familiar witii the case.iandfwhen he - was hers last asked Hoar why he hesitated to decide upon it. Hoar re plied that there were difficulties in the way; it was not quite clear that the military authori ties had the right to take a case out of the hands of the civil courts, under any circumstances. The Attorney General went-on to state his ob jections at considerable length, when Butler suddenly interrupted him by saying, “Well, if you do not give an opinion, such as I think you should give in view of the facts, I will offer a resolution on the subject the first day of the next session. This thing has stood long enough. Now-wq ; ivant to make,an, exampleroLtaome; those.'ieljows in t Texas.’’. . Hoar, premised; give til'd' ma(ter hi3 immediate attention, "j nektrib^ Butler cAlifecL u when thd Atto they Gun^ eral informed him that he had taken anewvliw on : the 8u{3ject, and fo\md the law /quite clear, He woffl’d, he said,' prepare "an opinion sustain ing the action of the court martial, which he did.—New Fork Herald of the 9lit. If that is the case, we really hope Butler will keep away from Hoar while the latter has the case of Georgia under consideration. A Sharfc in Ure'Lottery Bnbiueas. The New.Griemrt Picayune of tha 8th says Sharks of the'.mAU jaating' variety are rarely ever caught in-inlattdwatera. They 1 prefer the deep waters'."oftfie’-wilfarid ocean, for their movements ftnd seek there their prey after a most voraoidurf fashion. * Occasionally; however, when saflors persist in not falling overboard to give them a meal, and no unfortunate crew is shipwrecked to furnish them a feast, they vent ure into shoaler waters and are ravenous in de vouring everything that falls in their way. They have been known to swallow with avidity glass bottles, spoons, crockery, paper, etc.,eto., when veryhungry. A few days since a fisherman sat dozing over his stout line at the pier-head of the Pontchar- train Railroad; he felt a most unmistakable bite, and started tdhiS'feet’jnst'in time to play a large man-eater that was dashing about at a furious rate endeavoring to escape. With some assistance he however soon succeeded in landing the monster on the wharf. He dispatched him at once, and, after the usual custom, proceeded . Masxxo tx- Livelt -for- Them.— States revenue officers are making warn «s IJlIAlvo 1C VvUUu UIULOAd BAO miiimmq ^ . for the whisky men of Cincinnati. T“y';_ zette says: “Fonr suits were eormncniw the United States Court yesterday against 1 "' Rton J. Miller and his sureties, the amount claimed being the trifling sum of 000. The first .suit, for §600,900, is np® " is known' as h warehouse continnanca 1 JO,000 gallons of spirits deposited in ware:- 1 -_ No.'2S;' The Second is for.$180/)00,'ap<>“ same kind of a bond, for the payment <a upon 45,000 gallons-of. whisky, warehouse No. 26. The other two suite -edfotf $20,000 each, upon bonds conditioned faithful performance of the requiremw 1 .^'^. Revenue DeparfmenL ^he allegations the conditions have been breken. •B! The Prince' of Wales has just made ’ speech of his life. It. was delivered ately after his return from.Tii3 oriental t ' at a meeting of the Royal Geography! i His Royal Highness jflisooursed on . tages of travel in a..very sensible He modestly alluded t6 the fact he 'has' aided his" &igltaess, the ' Egypt, in hia noble enterprise of P n “ u 7:. i r ; slavery on the White' Nile. The Prince dently improving in wisdom and also gave a touch of his military and p>^'^ spirit; when, in responding to i® 6 army;‘ha said-lie “ho^ed rast if compelled to go to war—which Goafom shall be able to uphold pur honor ana tra ^ our country as they have been maintained; previous- occasions,”. W* must Royal friend.' After all lie may yet mat* spectable King. Mb.’Seward Gone to Visit His PcbU^' ^ al cats H®- A telegram to the Western prints says H. Seward, accompained by Fred. Se,r f rJ s[ j lady, and A. Pitcti, of Auburn, New fo: in Chicago on the 10th.' They have on a tour of six months' duration, conipR^' trip to Omaha; thence by the‘Pacific . to San' Francisco, where they propose^ steamer for Sitka.' The party propoee , ^ India and China before they retain to - Facts' ' for the* ^jAdies. —I have 1 ^ Wheeler i Wilson over fifteen, year®- ^ done the sowing foi;.two families, beheVoieiit oe Z ai s pairs. I had no peisonal inittuetio®®» to cut him open. Imagine the surprise of the by- j ply followed the printed directions. ^ ^ ivouviuui u^ou. auAwgftft*'' — 1— * . slanders when, from me innermost depths of the stomach of the immense fish, was taken a Lou isiana State-Lottery ticket for the next drawing, which ooctoff on the 26th instant.; All those who entertain any doubts as to the story can call round to the office and see the ticket Coldwater, Mich. Mas: R. Thebe 1b * steady demand for t*a Peace Jubilee, and all the best places rapidly taken up. Dickens has s new novel almost