Daily journal and messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 18??-1865, August 25, 1865, Image 1

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j3 V 6. BOSKACO xw Mi.SSkMiKli. ' ' iiilllk „ A sncHWßTHTa, - fS fHEKKT ..RftT I**" ' . . .. L , , • r > r 0 <l ’ . s’. F.ach subsequent S »er ! D * 1 ... ; j con s por equal*. I rl ' , Irfn n p,e-sqn»ro insertion cp il* i>or fqnn e oacb insertion. - 9* cont3 per square osnh inse-lion. „ „ n p month, $3 P*r rqnaro Second 'it. i.i nr, l wh snooeeding B . n p^r I ', ... A&n 6i th* rate* of I _ h a- pi jur, Wheat, Corn, Meal, I J tickets, etc-will be re. I /ho j.r. lVc to do so »u place of cash . 4t ,> lb market rules of the c ty. Those near r , j hv the K.<pre«s, tree of oharp?. s nm)A\ MOItNLSQ, AUt J. 25, J 865. , ih -nauson Come to Town” ■ •> with a paTtiele of reason, can ; , will, without being reminded t . Baton, we are willing that ■ ] take- our hat fora foot-ball. — K ’. vtainiy playing off upon the B i the editor of the Chicago Trk B writes from Mobile, Ala.: • e *d.g was held here last night, be- B. r statements were made at? to the BtitEcM of colored by white people in the B- : of the State, which would make you : life. One hundred and thirty-three ■ lips were counted in the woods, and B i were q et*n floating in the river. B- : -.i men were seen to pull a negro B- S a a log and cut his head off with [r. Women and children were killed, i xed up and thrown into the riv ■ *omaß was killed by a white man, ■ iriil ref used by him to her relatives. B man to be seen with greenbacks don is death. Colored people B in the woods, living on berries, ■ to escape the fury of their for ■ ~,.;prs. These statements were made -put, candid colored men, before. ■ ;;,.rf>p of several hundred, last night. B M ' l »ile. through the connivance of B ! hurches and npgro houses are : A-nmon «et to work clearing the H rii and women arrested in bed and ■ the guardhouse, fined or sent to ■t • otc. Last night there was a Hrv tire, in which three or four squares, B; v negro quarters, were burned. — B w. * atard to before the fire oc • they would bum every negro ■ -rhool-house in Mobile. These might he remedied. i rk- —The shock at Memphis on i'A ; tbu- described: ;ke occurred this morning at A. M., lasting two or three * first shock resembled a heavy .r without noise, except rattling ft . , , nnd seems to have been much ’ ne portions of the city than r came several slight undula •r.ives, which gradually subsided -us motions, with intervals of ‘-econds, the trembling becom -liter until it was almost im- BK , when they had ceased. The H iv.-* story bricks, on the levee, H by a majority of their occu- w seconds, and blanched cheeks i 'ing hearts were plentiful. It • emus shock felt lor years, ■ age was dpne so far as heard Lcui 1 - Republican notices the ■ :i lr city as follows: : an earthquake was sensibly yesterday, at twenty-five r* o’clock. The motion was an •ie. the earth seeming to swing H? tb<* pendulum of a clock. It v a minute and a half—the in- B . n ‘. ins being slighter than was B :at the beginning and end of the i'anie its duration, chamber furni ■ vtures, etc., be seen to ■ •. >:i:icking sound proceeded from B-> - t th.e houses as if th«ir steadi | Bwo. .-riouilv disturbed. Itunexed table gives the highest Sad the ..r g< Id from January Ist to the 16th Lnwest. Blithest, l 6 ai mxi i 144 V 144 V 4‘h 144 V 1441 4 h - !44,V 144 V • }**% 144^ - 141U' -- 1423* ... 140 V 141 - ♦ —A curious calculation has oc-iy by a savant well known in 1 peculiar antipathy to this para • ted three thousand flies in*a inn fe two cubic meters; on the • > i wind of loaf sugar.— . ■of four days he went toinvesti k ‘t of hi; experiment. There B. .. r , of sugar* This I It IVVhu°s palates that sugar, mXK&f'sSti Agricultural. . BP NOTES ANi» MJ«WiESTIONS FOR THE MONTH is often a very piefMJU, hut oftjgn a distracting month, for the tanner. The summer may jua|begin to be very hard upon the pastures aidrerapt. Wells and springs may be very low. Or rains and murky Weather may rust the grain, and must the hay and hinder work dreadfully, and many thifigs may be perplexing and making extra work. Summer fruit is ripening* and fruit orchards need particular attention. Gun ners and flocks of neighbors’ turkeys are trespassing, paying little heed to the laws tl\ey br-eak or the damage they do. The farmer has emphatically his hands full—so many “irons in the fire” that some will burn unless he uses patience, promptness and dis crimination, and is not worried by unavoid able circumstances, however annoying. Cons. —Farrow cows, that are to be fat tened in the fall, should be dried off at once, so that they may get in good condition be fore coql weather. It is folly to think of fattening an old farrow cow’ while she is milked. To dry a cow off in the shortest time, milk only enough to relieve a painful distention of her udder. This pre vent the secretion of milk. r- * Calves. —Wean calves gradually. Re strict their allowance to one teat per day.— Then allow them to suck only a part of the milk in one teat. After a few days longer, let them suck only once a day for a week ; then once in two days for a week; then once in thiee days. By this time, they may be weaned with little disturbance from either dam or calf, and without growingpoor as they always do, when weaned. Colts. —Spring colts as well as calves should be weaned generally in August. Con fine them in a small, clean enclosure, where they cannot run much, and let them suck twice a day; then once; then once in two days; then once in three days. See that colts and calves do not lack a good supply of clean water and good grass, or fine hay and salt. Corn. —Indian corn is now too large to allow a horse-hoe among it. Pull up all weeds and thistles near the hills, and" set erect those stocks that wind and storm have prostrated, and hill them sufficiently to keep them up. The brace roots will soon, hold them, and the ears will fill much better thau if they were lying down. It is always important to attend to this work before the brace roots are formed. Carrots. —Suffer no weeds to grow among them. Stir the ground frequently between the rows, and if they need manure, apply it in a liquid state with a watering pot, while rain is falling, so that it will not injure the leaves. Ashes —Save wood as well as coal ashes, at some asheries, the leaches are shoveled into a river. It will pay well to collect them in large heaps, and cover the wet ashes with boards, so that they will dry out by next winter, when teams may haul them to the fields where they are to be spread. They are greatly valued in the older parts of the country, and should be. Apples. —Oonfiue swine or sheep in apple orchards to consume the wormy fruit as it falls, before the larvae escapes. Picking it up by hand every few days, and burning or burying in a heap of compost with lime, will destroy them. Buildings. — Examine the roofs for leaks. A crack in a shingle directly over a joint in the course next below it, frequently lets rain through the roof where shingles are good. A heavy coat of coal tar applied to a roof will sometimes stop all leaks, fasten all loose boards and siding on houses and out-buildings before they become more warped and looser. Barley. —Secure it from alternate storms and sunshine, if possible, before the straw is nearly spoiled for fodder, and the grain in jured by wetting and drying. Secure bar ley straw, as soon as thrashed, for fodder. Butter. —See that all milk vessels are well scalded and sunned without fail, daily. Where cream cannot be churned daily, keep it cool as possible with ice. Work thorough ly, salt well, and sprinkle a spoonful of clean white sugar between the layers, as they are packed. See the milkers clean not only the udder and adjacent parts, and their hands also before milking. Bare- Troughs. —Where the water is not collected in cisterns, give eave-troughs a liberal s meaning with coal tar, whether me talic or wood. See that water and dirt do not stand in them in fair weather. Put up eave-troughs to carry water from manure yards, as well as from the walls on which a building rests. Eggs. —Collect them daily. Change the nest eggs often. An egg will be spoilt by allowing it to remain in a nest for a few days where hens are laying. Put them little end down in oats in a cool, but not damp place. Go into a dark room and pas the eggs, two or three in each hand, before a lamp; and if the shells are clean, bad *ones can be de tected at once. Fond. —Farmers pay too little attention to their daily food. A laborer cannot long endure very hard work unless he is fed well. * Fmccs. — Where rail fences have settled into the ground, pry up theground and put stones or blocks beneath. Where no sheep are kept, a rail fence may be raised a foot or more nigh with blocks and pieces of old rails, and thus save man? whole ones.—* Fasten ill loose boards before the Wind, or MA.OO3ST, GtA., FRIDAY. A.TJGHJST 35,3 865. them stand on strips of boards, as rust often corrodes them nearly much as usage wears-them out. Horn Piths. Collect them at tanneries and plow theth in whole where there is no mill to crush them. They are valuable fer tilizers for any purpose. ' High Bife at Watering Places. A Newport correspondent of the New York Times writes as follows. In the matter of hats I have been amazed at the ingenuity of womaukird—the nu merous changes. I have been here ten day.s now, during which perioa sev»n dis tinct fashions have been aired in the ave nue, had their day, and disappeared; some turn up, some turn down, and some don’t turn at all, but all have the everlasting pheasant’s tail or goose wing ♦but not one of them have a vestige of protection to the lace, and the broad glare of the sun falls full upon the faces of the wearers, which is particularly comfortable when a lady is driv ing and cannot haudle her sun-shade; the consecfueaee is the contortions of counte nance are fearful, disfiguring the pretiest faces with frowns and squints to such a de gree that their own mothers would scarce know them. There are any quantity of teams driven by young ladies, and lots of pony phaetons, conveying, at first glance, the idea of a bundkrof clothing going to the wash in baskets. It seems to be the thing for ladies to in vite nice young men to drive, and you see a great many young ladies “doing the avenue” holding the ribbons, and by their side a young man being aired who, for want of oc cupation for his hands in the awkwardness of his position, either carries the parasol in a clumsy manner, vainly endeavoring to shade the delicate nose of the lady and his own eyes; but the more orthodox style is to fold the arms, g la Napoleon, looking as if they were sitting for their pictures and-had just given the word “all ready,” and were also following the artist’s direction to “now wear a pleasant expression.” Everything in these days seem to run to Masculinity.— Look at the dress —by degrees the female race have adopted garment after garment; they began with thc-never-mention-ems, and have now got to swallow-tailed coats, sack coats, overcoati, .paletots, hats, caps, boots, and take the reins in their own hands and drive horses, and make a man look the per sonification of humiliation, and a woman a perfect tomboy. Sensible men don't often select such for wives, but almost any man is liable to be taken in and doue for. Getting a wife is a great deal like buying a horse, high grooming covering a multitude of de fects; and however well they look, they don’t always turn out “kind” in double har ness : and when they bear a little too heavy on the “snaffle,” and you have to put the curb on, ten to one the heels don’t go slam into the dashboard—showing the effects of being put on the market wild and half-bro ken. What a blessing a “Ilarey’ would be to subdue such; but women, like horses, in another respect, have so great an admiration for anything that conquers them,* that they would be very apt to follow off the con queror. A Saratoga letter to the same paper has the following: I overheard, while passing thu ugh a hall to-day, a batch of girls conspiring against the life of a young man who paid his atten tions last year to one of them. Already several men have mysteriously disappeared; it is supposed they have been frightened away to some foreign country. Those who do remain intend to retaliate by expiring all cases of fraud, such as young ladies wearing paste diamonds, false hair, somebody else’s teeth, imitation thread Jacc, pinch-beck jewelry, and in what bad taste they dress, the startling contrast of colors, gorgeous as butterflies; and, horror upon horrors, they they intend to declare war against the uni versal tendency of ladies going through the streets with nothing but petticoats on below the waist. Think of.a modest young woman rolling her dress up under the arms, But this panic will, I presume, subside some time or other, when something fresher comes up and engrosses the attention by being a novelty * The shoddy aristocracy at Saratoga have great difficulty in wearing their usual ad-, vancements. Some ot them make most ri diculous work of it —reminding beholders ot premium cattle bedecked for agricultural fairs. One unfortunete dunce of oleaginous development actually went through the mar tyrdom of dressing fifteen times before sup per on Tuesday. A young damsel at table in one of the *big hotels yesterday “aston ished the crowd” b,f 'Claiming, “Lor! mar, I’ve dropped my diainent into the gravy !” A vigorous search for the lost jewel—a stomacher pin—was made in the kithen re fuse, but unsuccessfully. It is worth SI2OO, and “papa” comes within Toodle’s definition of a gentleman. He “don’t care a dam.” Thera is a greater crowd at Sara toga now than ever before at this time in the season; but less of real refined gen tUity.” _____ A clergyman of Saratoga Springs, a few Sabbaths since, was preaching a sermon upon death f in the course of which he asked the question, “Is it not a solemn thought His little four year-old boy, who had been listening with wrapped attention to his fa ther, immediately answered in a shrill, pip ing voice, so as to be heard throughout the house, ‘ Yes, sir, it is”—greatly to the amusement of the congregation» The Trade of Bavana&bv The increased activity of business in alt branches of trade dtsiripg the past week b a <* been apparent, to tine most casual observer The gradual reopening ofjome of the ob structed channels of coiiiirntnication . with the interior has caused this implement, and affords a gratifying indication of that expansion which must necessary follow the entire completion of the repaiw' now pro gressing on the railroads, and the contem plated enlargement of the facilities ot trans portation on the Savannah river, and east wise to Florida, embracing the numerous in termediate points, commercially, tributary to the city. Th* immediate reopening of communiea tion with the counties of Southwestern Georgia by the running of steamers from here to the Alabama river, until the repairs on the Savannah and Gulf railroad are com pleted, and for which we are indebted to Messrs. Erwin and Hardee, of this city, will bo hailed with pleasure, as an event of the first importance. The most interesting feature, however, now presenting itself in connection with the affairs of this road, is the practical inaugu rative of its long expected intercourse over the branch roads just completed, with the roads of Florida. We are not advised of the arrangements that have been made for transportation over this road, but in view of the immediate importance of the connec tion, we may venture the assurance that op erations thereon will commence hi mult ate neously with the renewal of the suspended communication with Thomasville. We shall not inflict upon our readers a re capitulation of the benefits to be realized from such intimate commercial relations with Florida. We have said enough on this subject already. As the period is now at hand when our communication with the interior will be re established, we deem it proper to announce to albclftsses of the people of Georgia and Florida;, that the stocks of merchandize now on hand are sufficiently large and diversi fied to meet all their wants and necessities. And the merchants, appreciating the finan cial difficulties of the crisis through which they are passing, have avowed their deter mination to ba satisfied with small profits, and do everything in their power for the re lief of the industrial interests of the coun try.— Savannah Herald. The Next Session of Congress. The question of the admission of members to the next Congress from the Southern States is a subject that is now agitating the public mind and is one pregnant with im portant consequences. With a law of Con gress prohibiting any one from holdingaseat. in that body who had been engaged in the rebellion, it is difficult to solve the question who the South can send—for there is no prominent man alive in the Southern States who has not, directly or indirectly, been concerned in this war. The first matter to be considered, then, is, manifestly, the re peal of the law, so as to relieve the South of the disability of being represented in the national Congress. Will the radicals consent to do this? That is the question. We have no donbt there will be an intense struggle to keep the South out, but the people of the North are more anxious for the South to coine baek than the South herself is to return. — Hence if the majority insist upon Carrying out their plans, andr closing the doors of Con gress upon the South, the Northern people will arouse themselves to the necessity of putting down the radical.; and opening the portals of the Union to every wayward sister who comes back, casting around her the cloak of charity and forgiveness, with com plete obliteration of the past. The South has been restored to her political right by the amnesty proclamation and by the oaths of allegiance taken by her citizens. No fur ther tests can be required, unles it we Hie test of probation, and that is, of course, out of the question. The men of the South who have conformed to the requirements of the Government are entitled to vote, and it is absurd to argue that they have not the power to select their own representatives; and it is a still greater absurdity to say that these representatives shall not be received when elected. To deny the South this would be placing her in a worse condition-than the American colonic 13 were before the revolution, when the deprival of the right of representation was one of the prime causes of separation from the mother country. No such doc trine can stand before the American people. When a Southern rebel takes the oath of allegiance he must be regarded as being re stored to his former political rights. He is as good as any other citizen in the eye of the law. The Government must’recognize this fact, else why administer the oath at all ? No doubt President Johnson under stands this matter, and if the radicals do not wish to go before the people in the pend ing elections in a position inimical to the administration they will handle this subject with firmness and moderation. The President regards it to be as much an act of disloyalty to prevent a recusant State from coming into the Union as it is for one to go out; and if the Northern States op pose the restoration of the seceded States they are as criminal as the original seces sionists, and liable to all the pain 9 and pen alties of secession. Suppose these South ern representatives be rejected, what will follow ? They will, of course, be re-elected; and if ftgaiu rejetted they will be again chosen, and there will be no end to the force. Congress hss ®o more right to keep the representatives of the Southern Suites ««trftfcttoplwlthinU kw to kN«eat I KreoMStts tttt ffost, and wifi,not be tolerated by iLo ? eople. Between the Intolerant rallhl and the re pentant rebel the good of the people will not belong in deciding# About the question of negro euffecage. the. Southern States should insert u clause in their constitution regulating the pr& requisites fora negro’s vote. Here in New York there is a property qualifinttion. The same provision exists in most of the New England States. The Southern States have the same right to fix the standard of qnalificgripn /for voting Bfet a ny Northern should make their franehise codwembrace the roqnireme’nts of landing •»nd writing, and good moral, religious edu cation. This the North has not done, By this mean the intelligent blacks of the will have a chance to become somebody, and the ranting Jacobins of the North will have an opportunity to Iraternize with them, as they have always pretended to. In the meantime it is ail nonsense for the Northern radicals to attempt to prevent the wayward sisters from coming back. All the members thus far elected in the South are and Union men. If there be any anti-administration men, that is another matter. It will give spice to the proceedings ol Congress, and Andy Johnson has sense enough to know that a spirited administration in the Union is better than a fiat one out of it—A ]' Herald. Unmanly, Unjust, and Unwise These epithets fitly describe all *ucb lan guage and sentiments as the followiuir, which we clip from the report of an lodian Com missioner, sent out by the Gorenmieut to report upon .the condition and disposition of the Indians on our Western frontiers “The Indian, like the whipped rebel, uow pretends to a loyalty he does not possess, but because he is awed by ow power, fears more than hej-espects it, and finds it to his inter est to flatter his ‘great white brethren of the North/” It seems to be in the interest of certain greedy speculators in the spoils of the war, and certain political stockjobbers to continue this style of maligning a class of our coun trymen, who, .though, for a time, enemies to our peace, arc now quietly and honestly do ing their duty as good citizens. Our Government has given these persons assurances of protection as citizens- and has seen fit to place faith in the honesty and sincerity of Their intentions towards itself. The great leaders of public sentiment and action at the South, thp leaders of t lie re bellion itself, both military and civil, have all united in adyiatng genuine and honest acquiescence in the accomplished facts of the war, and sturdy and faithful adhesiou to the Whited States Government. This is so reasonable, so perfectly in ac cordance with self-interest in Jfll that per tains to the people, of the late Gonlederafe cause; in fact,so imperatively necessary to their peace and well-being, that ho must be a “rnad rebel” indeed who would pursue or countenance any other course. For a few over-zealous partisans —malignant haters of the Southyvr —-without any cause or pro-; vocation, save as it exists in their own tur bid imaginations or malevole*t feelings; to attempt to drive the Government to suspi cions and persecut ions of thesrt people seems to us to be without, justice, judgment or propriety; and to be impolitic, unjust and produbtive of serious evils —V. 0 Pirn i/unr. Qwen Victoria's Adrier to the Jamaica Laborers. —A petition complaining of dis tress in a particular community having been forwarded by. a political agitator t<» Victoria, the Queen, through Mr. Cardwell, returned the following charaeteri«*ic reply-' 1 request (writes Mr. Cardwell ) that you will inform the petitioners that their petition has been laid before the Queen, raid that I have received her Majesty’s command to in form them that the prosperity of the labor ing classes*, as well as of all other classes, de pends, in Jamaica, as in other countries, upon their working forwagas, not- uncertain ly or capriciously, but, steadily untl contin uously, at the times when their labor is wanted, and for so long as it is wanted; and that if they should use this industry, and thereby render the plantations productive, they would enable the planters to pay them higher wages for the same hours of work than an* received by the best field laborers in this country (England); and a* the cost of the necessaries of life is much loia iu Ja maica than it is here, they wowld be cu abled, by adding prudence to industry, to layby an ample provision sot scasous of drought and dearth; and they may be as sured that it is from their own industry and produce, in availing themselves of the means of prospering that are before them, and not from any such schemes as have been sug gested to them, that they must look for an improvement in their condition; and that her Majesty will regard with intest and satisfac tion their advancement through their own merits and efforts. . farmers have commenced thrash ing the new crop of wheat, and the crop is generally very inferior. Much of it will not weigh over thirty-five or forty pounds. All of that kind contains hut very little flour, and is almost worthless, except lor Nothing short of the best skill in the art ol manufacturing breadstuffs is equal to the task of eliminating any thing fit to bake in to bread, from the wheat grown the present year, in this section. — Richmond ( Indiana) Telegram. Basil Duke and his rebel Cal. Braokiaridge, have gone into part tier* fttp ftt Liiisgtofi, Ky„ for the collection and *fTO§tft,sof <kmhin dafcw. ‘ VOL. LX III — So. 1. ] The Banquet at Cologne being William of Prussia seem- t ) 1 - straggling for pe?Tsw»mil ass vrefl sj aggrandizement, and with the wor‘r imag inable success. He deal res for buns. If the exertise of an arbitrary power mcoc it with conmitutiona] liberty, and in beiait u t his Government the leading position am ,r.- the German States On the one hand fcc .% rcrialed by the popular vowe, and « n tlr other by his sagacious com per, Franris J 0 seph ot A u.stria. He doubtless cons. 4 the former refractory if not poaitirdv nr.’v and the latter very between them, his trials ar* grievous indeed r,r, i late he seems to have been provoke. 1 rash measures, regarded by man. as t. ing the last hopes of reconcilhiim let the crown and the Parliament. At i futu: they will he reeretteJ H, leading diplomatist, Herr von Bisrr.rk, 1 • long been retained despite the popnia; r<? monstrance, and recently the financial but get, by royal decree, Was decur. dto be ,l lorce, notwithstanding its fiilure to rece.,• Che sanction of the Home of Common* Th P eo P le > Mrictly speakine, the lib eral party|tate*'aj :W | re«live under the *«d. mary of their representative hod* it was this last transaction which tad to th* banquet at Cologne, intended as a aolace t the abused legislators, and at the same lime a protest again* the action of the Gome ment. This was the ounce which w.-u nigh broke the camel’s hack A c«.n* pondent at Berlin refers to the ettxaordir.zr events attending the banquet, as loiiow^ “A committee was very soon upp which drew up the follow ing plan A quet was to beheld in the immense Gur*e rich saloon, and afterwards the party #, r * to take a trip on the JR bine m sev-r. steamers, on both of which occasion a is-, crowd would have an opportunity of h.mol. the speeches, The committee issued iavi tat ions to the entire body of deputies, • .j hired from the Urn burgomaster tin u** -f the premises as well m the necessary nom ber ol steamboats. In the meantime • v*r animated telegraphic correspondent w going on between the President of Poli .Cologne and the Minister of the Fet rio» T'ount Bulenhurg, terminating iu a prohil tion ol the festival. Iu his comm our » to the committee the farmer founded t < terdiofion on the Government right f press any political association ft t pear to in* dangerous to th.* prefer rat-, order. The committee, however, rctu ■ i admit that Diey were a political as.-ocn or that the law La question was appli al » them. They therefore protested against * decision, and continued their prepant.. r i 1 hereupon anew prohibition arrived,;*. > u panied by the threat that force would h, te sorted to. The committee then deter ... r t to apply to the chief civil Authorities f v District, and even to the Ministry, hut order to avoid complications in th • time, it was resolved to transfer th «iv agement of the festival to Herr v<*n Cia . KappejniaD, one of the most zealous id als of Cologne, who gave intimation to th police authorities, that all further amt . merits would he effected in his own car The interdiction, nevertheless wa» nut w,r drawn. The day of the festival, look. 1 h ward to with the greatest exj*-. tati.. length arrived, together with seven‘s eighty of the invited guest-; and, wh. gome parties believed that the Governing would, at. the lass niutuent, shrink from tl realisation of its threats, t others anticip «t i that the reactionary party were busy in fic ning the agitation. Hut nothing of the k*a 1 took place The Government carried f its resolutions, and the Deputies wer* liged to turn back at the doors of the G U lenrich sal on, which the military had , c.upied. Ihe banqueters then proceed* 1 the Zoological Garden, at Cologne, wh * *. h#w«-v.er, tliey were also, after sr r , speeches, ejected,bj soldiers.cn wt**ch oc casion some arreaU were ait.-otM. Finally the excursionists sought refuge on nrutn. ground, at a plate called Oberlahnote.n in Nassau; but their enjoyment here win hi wise hut of short duration, the Duke of Ns sau, partly from aversion to such deraon*tri tions in general, partly out of regard 1 r L Prussian Government, having resoiv t break up the party, which was ac-'un.p 'f. . by a body of infantry/' 1 hts affair ie looked np.on as the pveen*- »f.r of a more furious conflict betweentfc.... i opponents. It is noticeable in th*' tarr* connection, t hat while the Prussian roonar h adopts a course Widely condemned by tl.- popular voice, at. verging toward despotism. Austria is pursuing a policy much more er - lighteoed, the new Ministry having uJdr- *'- ed a circular to the Provincial Governs-- directing them to encourage local in*titn tions and to respect the freedom of the pres But both of these Government are soredv perplexed. If one is agitated by political dissension, the other is embarrass?* J by cuoiary distress. And above all, is the l - traction which grows out of the Schle:wi. Holstein question-, so that discord is tl ruling spirit. For the time being, * Ger roan unity ’is a myth. —Xrtr To, l J of Commerce. Norm Frhil;tifm <%t Koktmn r>,, 1/ h The fifth exhibition of an t Amen can bred hor-o* will he held by the Miriti ganders of the oak opening conntry at Kala mazoo, in the tirat w.ek of October. They offer a premium off 1,000 for the bout tr f ter, and one of for the bee runner £ 0 m — The War Department >• daily »<e«ifl? or dew remitting the ftfdiotr of eenrf*-o*«‘*l held dmiug the Was, lo the §•*• t"*** s«um*6e+t**eff §m l*s********* rmm