Newspaper Page Text
Al>»&ESi5 .
Of Col. Tbotpai to the,18
Georgia VolnnteeiSi after
drill on llie 17th October,
camp near Centerville.
Sohlicr*:—The appearances surround
ing us indicates we will have a tight in a
few days- perhaps in one day. IVe have
been mistaken so often, however, that I
will not venture to prophesy with perfect
certainty.
1, like yourselves, have never been in
battle. It will be a novel sensation to me
as to you. But by inquiry among those
who have seen and felt it, I have learned
something that perhaps would he useful
and interesting to you. The great object
our enemies seem to have in view, is to in
vent some means or lino some, plan, bj
which they can kill us without being hint
themselves. If we adopt some measure
to circumvent this single feature of their
tactics, they arc helpless, and we have
them at our mercy. The sole thing,
therefore, necessary is to go up close.—
We arc told some of the. ritU-s in your
hands will kill a man half a mile. Don t
you believe it, it is all stuff. No gun will
kill a man that far, and it they could, no
one can hit a man three hundred yards
with any certainty, \ougo up within one
hundred yards or less, and then >0111
marksmanship will tell. Get close to t hem,
stand firm, aim well, and not a single
regiment they have will stand before 3011
five minutes.
But their artillery—their terrible big
guns—wc bear they have two hundred ot
the finest pieces of artillery in the world.
Well, I hope it is true—we want the guns
—we are entitled to them—we know lmw
to use them, and they don’t—and Provi
dence never intended that fine cannon, nor
anvthing else, should he held by those who
understood not their use. After diligent
inquiry, I can hear of hut one single man
on our side killed by their cannon at the
battle of Mannassas Plains. Providence
fouglic with us at Manassas. lie will fight
with us again if wc. are brave. He loves
valor, and lie loves a valiant soldier. He
will help us, but lie will not drop cannon
down to us out of the skies. He expects
to help us by putting it into tlie hearts of
our enemies to bring the cannon in our
reach, and then He expects us to take
them.
Another marked feature ot the fight, if
we get into one, you will find to be the
whistling of the, shells. Our enemies have
succeeded admirably in constructing a
harmless instrument, which makesa curi
ous and unpleasant noise, and it has this
wonderful peculiarity: it seems to be com
ing straight at every man who hears it.
Now, we know it can’t be coming at hut
one man, or, at most, two; and the truth is,
it is coming at nobody. You have nothing
to do but to pay close attention to j our
hind sight, and the whistling of the shells
will, after a little, become rather a small
matter in the grand drama you are acting.
The man who hears thunder is never struck
by the lightning. The great implement of
death in war you hold in your hands—the
musket and bayonet—and your enemies
have none better or more terrible.
Another feature of the fight will be, the
falling of the killed and wounded. It is
a trying thing to a man to see his friends
fall side by side, and our first impulse is to
carry' them to the, rear. But remember,
the best way to save your wounded friend
is not for five or six to leave the ranks, and
thus weaken and break your line. This
will insure his destruction and your own
by the trampling end bayonets of your
enemies. Your wounded friends ought to
be in the rear, and you ought to be between
them and the foe. Now, the plainest and
most effectual way to do this, is to close
up your ranks and advance on the enemy.
Soldiers, you fight for your liberty, your
country, your wives and your children.
You cannot afford to be defeated, lour
fate would be “liewers of wood and drawers
of water” to the enemy you abhor. Your
enemies are bought with a price—fifty dol
lars per head bounty and large pay induce
them to enter the ranks to destroy your
rights. Can you yield to such a foe?
With one powerful blow let us crush them,
and return home to our families and
friends.— Sac. llrp.
The Invasion of our foast.
Startling intelligence.— The Raleigh (N. C )
State Journal, of the 23d iust., contains the follow
ing:
l r cry Latest.—Information has been received hv
his Excellency Gov. Clarke; just as we go to pr-ss.
to the effect that a large fleet had sailed on Mon
day from New York for the purpose of attacking
Beaufort and Kcwbern. And also that a fleet ot
over twenty vessels had strived m Hampton
Roads. The citizens of the counties on the coast
should he prepared with every available weapon
to march at any point at a moment’s notice.
The following from the Newborn (N. C.) Pro
gress, o* tue same date, no doubt refers to the same
thing:
An extra train arrived here yesterday morning
from Goldsboro’ beaimg a dispatch from General
Gatlin to Gen. Hill, Col. Singletary and other offi
cers in command in this section, which he had re
ceived from Gen. Huger, of Norfolk, to the effect
that a large Federal fleet has left New York lor
an attack oil this piacu and Fort Macon. The in
formation seems to have reached Gen. Huger
through a channel not altogether reliable, but
supported by circumstances which did not justify
inattention to it; hence, ho communicated the in
formation to Gen. Gatliu, and he urges upon the
offers in command here to push forward the works
with all possible speed We think this is right,
but, at the same time, would as soon think the at
tack would fall about Norfolk, or somewhere on the
Potomac. It may be a taint.
Ana the New Yoik Commercial, of a late date,
gives the following description of the great expe
dition:
One of the most extensive naval expeditions in
which this country ever engaged, is now in pre
paration, and a part of it is already on the way to
a common rendezvous.
The larger portion of this fleet has been fitted
out at this port, but several vessels have been pre
pared at Roston and Philadelphia, all intended tor
the same object. The fleet has been furnished
with every necessary, yet all has been conducted
without bustle or confusion. Merchants have of
fered their vessels, and they have bien accepted
by the United States Quartermaster with prompt
ness. The transports have been rapidly loaded at
our wharves, and then hauled into the stream or
otl the Battery, waiting the signal to start. Large
steamships that have won themselves renown as
ocean palaces, have been stripped of their gilding,
loaded h. avily with cannon and death dealing mis-
sites, and taken into the ranks of transports and
war vessels,
The expedition, as it was composed in our har
bor a few days since, presented a somewhat novel
appearance. The Bailie loaded nearly to her
guaids, the Atlantic, Vanderbilt and other ocean
steamers, all hearing valuable freight, lay in the
stream, with saucy gunboats, side w heel and pro
pellers, and even the diminutive tug, with a new
coat of black paint, laid proudly with the war
fleet. By the middle ot last week this expedition
was so tar advanced that people began to speculate
upon its probable destination. The very curious
d:d not hesitate lo take an early walk upon the
Battery, and to devote au hour to the critical ex
amination of the fleet, to see if any of them had
let! during the night. The wonder lovers were
gratified on Satuiday by the departure of the
Coatzacoalcos, Cahawbs, Roanoke, Kmpier City,
Parties bn rg. Unadilla and Atlanta. The 3d Rhode
Island regiment was transferred from Fort Hamil
ton to the Cahawba; and Col. Serrill’s Engineers
were takpn on another vessel.
Yesterday, the Battery was thronged nearly all
day by a crowd of people, anxious to see the de-
parture of more of the vessels. During the day,
the Star »f the dumb, Ocean Queen, Daniel Web
ster, Ariel, Arago, Vanderbilt, Orieutial, and
Rhode Island, left their several anchorages and
sped their way out of port. The Wabash and
sevral gunboats and transports remain in ihe
harbor, hut, in all probability, will sail during the
■lay. Three ferry boats were purchased on ‘Satur
day, the Ethan A leu, Commodore Perry, and
Stepping St,me. These will be despttciied to
morrow or Wednesday.
I iie entire fleet will have left this port by
Wednesday, and probably by Saturday will have
r- tseived the troops who are to take part in the ex
pedition.
We commit no impropriety when we declare
that the fits* destination of the vessels composing
tlie expedition is Hampton Roads and Annapolis.
The naval vessels will rendezvous at the former
The ultimate destination of the expedition is
known but to the Government and Gen. Scott, and
even when the licet sails, the General in com
mand of the tro'ips will probably receive sealed
dispatches, which he will be instructed to open
when in a certain latitutde.
The utmost care has been taken to censure the
success of this expedition, and we are safe in as
serting that when tlie blow is struck, the effect
upon the Sonth will be terrible.
Ourreadeis and cotemporaries may accuse us
of violating the express commands of Gen. Mc
Clellan. in making public so much of the abox'O as
may appear to have been xviihin the scope of the
instructions refurred to. We will say that we this
morning obtained permission to publish the above
facts.
RRPBE8K,\TATIVI8 ELECTED.
Appling—A. P. Surrency.
Baker—W. D. Williams.
Baldwin—L. II Briscoe.
Banks—F. G. Moss.
Berrien-—James Griffin.
Bibb—L. N. Whittle, J. n. R. Wash
ington.
Brooks—O. L. Smith.
Bryan—W. II. Yanbrackel.
Burke—D. B. Gresham, J. M Reynolds.
Bulloch —David Beasley.
Butts—J. W. McCord.
Campbell.—J. M. Cantrell.
Camden—H. J. ltoyall
Chatham—T. M. Norwood, R. T. Gib
son.
Columbia—R. S. Neal, W. A. Martin.
Clayton—J. B. Ivey.
Clay- -J. L. Brown.
Cass—W. Akin, Samuel Sheets.
Calhoun—J. W. Roberts.
Carroll—A. T. Burk, Thomas Duke.
Catoosa—L. N. Trammell.
Charlton—O. lv. Mizell.
Chattahoochee—E. G. Raiford.
Chattooga—D. D. Dumas.
Cherokee—W. F. Mullins. W. W. W.
Fleming
Crawford—Jacob Lowe.
Clark—Wm. Jackson, F. W. Adams.
Cobb—N. B. Green, G.N. Lester.
Coffee-*-Elislia Lott;
Colquitt—Henry Gay.
Clinch—AY. S. Tomlinson.
Coweta—J. T. Brown, T. Kirby.
Dade—R. II. Tatum,
Dawson—Jas. L. Heard.
Dougherty—S. L. Barbour.
Delvaib.—M. A. Candler.
Dooly—H. M. Key.
Decatur—J. P. Dickinson, K. Powell.
Effingham—T. R. Hines.
Emanuel—John Overstreet.
E uly—J. W. Hightower.
Echols—John S. Johnson.
Elbert—Robert Hester.
Fannin—Jeptha Patterson.
Fayette—John Favor.
Forsyth—F. M. Hawkins.
Floyd—Z. B. Hargrove, G. S. Black.
Franklin—A. AY. Brawner.
Fulton—C. A. Pitts, J. J. Thrasher.
Gilmer—E. Fain.
Greene—L. D. Carlton, A. A. Jernigan.
Glynn—A. E. Cochran.
Gordon.—James Freeman, Eldridgc
Barker.
Gwinnett—L. A. McAfee, T. P. Hud
son.
Glascock—Allen Kelly.
Habersham.—J. H. A\ T yly.
Hancock—C. AW Dubose, A. J. Lane.
Hall—U. AY. Blake, AY. P. Smith.
Harris—A.G. Jones, F. Hargett,
Haralson—R. F. Speight.
Hart—J. E. Strickland.
Heard— R. H. Jackson.
Henry— L. M. Tye, B. L. Harper,
Houston—Levi Ezell, G. L. D. Rice.
Irwin—O. II. Cook.
Jackson—James Lindsay, H. C. Gid
eon.
Jasper—T. W. Burney.
Jones—Benj. Barron.
Jefferson—B. S. Carswell.
Johnson—G. AY. W. Snell.
Laurens—R. Robinson.
Liberty—J.B. Mallard. I
Lowndes—A\ T . I). Howell.
Lee—AY. A. Jones.
Lincoln—J. E. Dill.
Lumpkin—J. J. Findley.
Macon—AY. II. Felton.
Madison—G. H. Bird.
Marion—J. F. Rushing.
Miller—J. J. Swearengen.
Milton—J. AV. Nesbit.
.Mitchell—R. F. Bacon.
Murray—11. McCamy.
Merriwether—J. J. Hussey, J. A. Ren
der.
Muscogee—J. A. L. Lee, A. J. Robison
Morgan—Joseph Letncnd.
McIntosh—J. M. O wen.
Monroe—Edmund Dumas, E. G. Caba-
Ti’lSS.
Montgomery—A. Peterson,
Newton—D. T. AYliite, Lewis Zachry.
Oglethorpe—Mial Smith, P.M. Stevens.
Paulding— N. N. Beall.
Pickens—E. A\ r . Allred.
Putnam—T. G. Lawson.
Pulaski—B. N. Mitchell.
Pike—T. S. M. Bloodworth.
Polk—J. F. Dever.
Pierce—B. Henderson.
Quitman—E. C. Ellington.
Rabun—F. A. Bleckley.
Randolph—O. P. Beall.
Richmond—Wm. Schley, G. T. Barnes.
Schley—AV. D. Stewart.
Scriven—E. B. Gross.
Spalding—Janies Lavender.
Sumter—AV. J. Reese, J. W. C. Ilornc.
Stewart—Samuel Walton, T. II, Scott.
Talbot—AV. B. Spain, M. J. Mulkey.
Taliaferro—P. B. Monk.
Tatnall—A. D. Eason.
Taylor—W. J. F. Mitchell.
Telfair—Duncan Cameron.
Terrell—Daniel Lawhon.
Thomas—P. E. Love, B. B. Moore.
Towns—Geo. Smith.
Troup—N. L. Atkinson, B. H. Bigbam.
Twiggs—R. R. Slappey.
Union—W. G. Butt.
Upson—Joel Mathews.
Walker—A. B. Culberson, Adam Clem
ents.
A\ r alton—A. B. Whitehead, Harden
Haygood.
Ware—L. W. II. Pittman.
Warren—E. Lazenby.
Wayne—S. O. Bryan.
AA r ashington—J. S. Hook, AY. J. Irwin.
AATiite—Jno. J. Moore.
Webster—J. P. Beaty.
Whitfield—AV. J. Underwood, John
Thomas,
AVilcox-—T’hos. Gibbs.
AA’ilkes—AY. D. AValton.
AAlilkinson—R. J. Cochran.
Worth—Daniel Henderson.
35. Clayton, Fallen, Cobb —A. J. Hansell
3l5. Merriwether,Coweta,Campbell —J. H Gaston.
37 Troup, Heard, Carroll —W. P. Beasley-
31 Haralson, Polk, Paulding-—J- M. Ware.
39. Cherokee, Milton, Forsyth.—H. P. Bell.
40. Union, Towns, Rabun.—S. A'. Jamison.
41. Fannin. Gilmer, Pickens.—James Simmons.
43. Cass, Flovd. Chattooga,—D. lv Mitchell.
43. Murray Whitfield, Gordon —R. M. Jackson
44. Walker, Dade. Catoosa —R A Lane.
The Battle of Leesburg.
“Personnc” of Ihe Charleston Courier has an
interesting account of this glorious fight fiotn
which we extract the following particulars not
hitherto punlished in the Telegraph:—The F>-d-
crals crossed the Potomac on Sunday evening, and
during the night, in rowboats, at various points
in front of Le -sburg, from twelve to fifteen hun
dred strong, accompanied by three pieces ot field
artillery. On landiug they immediately formed in
order and waited until day light to march into the
interiot. Gen. Evans having previously fallen
back with considerable precipitation to Goose
Creek (about six miles ) and left a portion of his
baggage, the supposition conveyed to their minds
was that he was rapidly retreating towards the
main body of the army, and that they would eu-_
counter 110 obstacle in an advance upon Leesburg,
distant three miles Iront the river.
Great was tire.r surptise ort progressing little
more than hall the distance to meet a portion of
the force ot our General—who quietly moved
around the Northeast side of the town, and posted
the Eighth Virginia Regiment, commanded by
Col Eppa Huuton. Here a tremendous fight
ensued, and the Y’ankces were routed attire point
of the bar onet and driven back to the river. The
Thirteenth Mississippi wete held in reserve at or
near Leesburg, and did not get into the battle at
all. The Seventeenth and Eighteenth Mississippi,
Colonels Featherstone and Burt, in the same man
ner engaged othoi detachments of the enemy, and
with equal success forced them to retreat Such
is the epitome of the fight, which lasted all day,
but irt order that it maybe clearer understood in
the absence of details, it should be explained that
the battle was a scries of desperately contested
skirmishes between largo squads of nren, the two
sides being continually reinforced—the enemy by
the accession of those who were constantly crossing
the river, during the battle, and our soldiers by
detachments from tire three regiments engaged,
ordered into position as their services were re
quired. Finally near the close of the day, after
much hard fighting, the total Yankee force were
again driven to the river, their three guns cap
tured, and in the •‘panic’’ which ensued, a large
number, variously estimated at from one to two
hundred and fifty, were drownded in attempting
to cross the Potomac. It would tints appear that
as evening approached ihe two armies became con
solidated, and a hard fought battle terminated the
samller succes which had preceded. * * *
'I he loss of the Federals is uncertain. Seventy-
live are known to be killed, while one hundred and
fifty of their wounded, as is supposed, and the
fugitives who were crowded in a flat boat en
deavoring to make their escape were drowned in
the Potomac. Of prisoners, six hundred and
forty-nine have already been sent to Richmond,
and others are being capture ! hourly. Several
hundred are said to tie in the mountains and woods
of the vicinity. These will, of course, be stir-
rounded, unless the Y ankees throw across an im
mense body in the meantime and lake possession
of the locality, which ol course they cannot do
without another struggle.
Of the number engaged intelligence is equally
conflicting. Our own fighting strength was not
more then fifteen hundred. According to the
statement of Did. Lee there were only twelve hun
dred Federals, but it must be born in mind that
they were crossing all day at vatious points and
thus may have swelled their column to the dimen
sion of several thousand. Our men say there
were twelve regiments. * * *
Aside from the moral effects of our victory,
there is one circumstance which alone will cause a
howl of holy horror to ring through Massachusetts.
We have two hundred and fifty precious gems
from Worcester County—the X'cry hot bed of fa
naticism— members of the Fifteenth Massachu
setts Regiment, connected with the first families of
the black-hearted community. Personally they
are bv far the best looking of the prisoners, but
colloquially they boil over with threats of ven-
geance, hatred of the South, and contempt for our
soldiers in a manner that eclipses all similar ex
periences with which we are acquainted,
THE SO.YG OK THE CAMP.
A CRIMEAN INCIDENT—BY BAYARD TAYLOR
The subjoined touchingly beautiful poem—for
it i» a poem in the fullest sense and meaning of
term—was wiitten by Bayard Taylor while the
fortress of Sebastopol was beleagurcd by the allied
armies. To a full understanding and appreciation
ot it. let it be remembered that “Annie Laurie’ is
the song of the British camp, and wherever there is
a British regiment—whether in Canada or India.
England or China—whenever the simple Scotch
air that accompanies
Maxwelton’s banks are bonny,
When early falls the dew;
And 'txvas there tiiat Anttia Lautie
Gave me her promise true—
Gat e me her promise true,
And ne’er forget will I,
But for bonny Annie Laurie
I'll lay me down and die,
is struck up. the heart and voice of ex’ery soldier
responds as promptly as would their hands if the
order was given to charge the enemy.
THE INCIDENT.
“Give us a song!'' the soldiers cried,
The outer trenches guarding.
When the heated guns of the camps allied
Grow weary of bombarding.
The dark Redan, in silent scoff.
Lay grim anil threatening, under;
And the tawny mound of the Ma'akoff
No longor belched its thunder.
There was a pause. The guardsman said:
“We storin the forts to-morrow;
Sing whiie we may, another day
Will bring enough of sorrow.
They lay along the battery’s side,
Below the smoking cannon—
Brave hearts from Severn and from Clyde,
And from the banks of Shannon.
They sang of love, and not of fame;
Forget was Britain’s glory—
Each heart recalled a different name,
But all «H sang “Annie Laurio.”
Voice after voice caught up the song,
Until its tender passion
Rose like an anthem, rich and strong—
Their battle eve confession.
Dear girl, her name he dared not speak,
Yet. as the song grew louder,
Sometihng upon the soldier’s cheek
Washed off the stains of powder.
Beyond the darkening ocean burned
The bloody sunset’s embers,
While the Crimean valleys learned
How English love remembers.
And once again a fire of hell
Rained on the Russian quarters.
With scream of shot and burst of shell,
And bellowing of the mortars,
And Irish Nora’s eyes are dim
For a singer dumb and gory;
And English Mary mourns for him
Who sang of “Annie Laurie,’’
tfc* Ualii* of £«*!»•»«« *!*«•. | In imps which where rs worthy M theif chiva'fie j
LHs weM infoirded army correspondent of the | commander as ho wss’ft lead set tioh’Ci so btavei ■
New Orleans Del; rq writ log frdffl Fairfax, gives i«tcd so high minded an ernty j
an Interesting sketch of General BenuvegUard's
official report 0! the Battle of Mafiassas Plains.—
lie says :
leal
sv Avvaoatvif.
Latest Richmond positionsHoops Tin - lair l.v j
dns ot Richmond, the Etamiiftr tells us, have be- ;
It is so clear and intelligible in its descriptions j g tlI) f () discard these appendages. The ultra fash- j
and explanations of the movements, both of the | ionables eschew them altogether, ihe middle,
c j HSgeg> %v | 10 desire to preserve looks and fashion ,
at the same time, hold on to them, diminishing j
some of their exuberant proportions, while those j
country cousins and others who don t care for j
dame fashion, sport them as large as file
England and Russia —We learn by the latest j
foreign advices that the letter lately addressed by
the Czar of Russia to President Lincoln, on the
subject of our national troubles, lias given great of
fence to England. Lord Palmerston pronounces
the sentence in which the Emperor Alexander al
ludes to the preservation of the “balance ot pow
er" by the United .States and Russia as a “diplo
matic falsehood,” and au “open insult to Great
Britain.
A Spiff Correspondence.
Richmond, 31st .—The Whig of this morning pub
lishes the correspondence ot Brig Gen. W. 11. T.
Walker and the Secretary of War, upon the resig
nation of the former. General Walker, in giving
some reasons for resigning, says that he has been
overslaughed by the appointment of young officers
he had ranked in the old service, l’lie General
further says that the Government, not content
with putting his own countrymen over him,
brought from New York General Lovell, who was
an office holder in New Y'ork when the battle of
Manassas was fought, and made him a Major Gen
eral over Southern men, and to cap the climax, took
liis (Walker’s) brigade from him and appointed
one of liis junior Colonels Brigadier. General
Walker concludes his letter by saying that one
would have supposed that an Executive who had
himself been a soldier, would have scorned to
wound the sensibility of an old and tried soldier
The sacred cause for which I drew my sword I
will fight for in my native State, but I will not con
descend to submit longer to the insults and indig
nities of the Executive.
The Secretary of War replies that it is due his
self respect to remark on the impropriety of Brig
Gen. Walker’s using the War Department for the
conveyance of his disrespectful and insulting com
ments upon the action of the President of the Con
federate States, and says that the sole offence of
the President consists in not selecting Walker a
Major General, and that there is no question of pro
motion involved in the appointment of a general
officer, the law expressly vesting the appointing
power in the hands of the President, and it is no
disparagemect of any officer, whatever his servi
ces, that the President prefers another as a divis
ion commander
Gen. Walker’s resignation has been accepted.
Gen. Walker, in reply to the remarks of the Sec
ret ary of War about self-respect, says that the
War Department is the only proper military chan
nel to convey his resignation, and the present ac
ting Secretar3'of War, in consequence of his short
sojourn in that department, is ignorant of it.
The three letters are spicy, and will doubtless
be read with unusual interest throughout the coun
try. _
Haw the Klnir nml Fremont Pa|i<T» wire
yinilr Public.
The papers iu the Fremont and Blair cases were
first published in the Cincinnati Esquikek. The
Cincinnati Commercial, after stating that a Mr. Bel-
mau had been sent to St. Louis as a correspondent of
the Enquirer, thus accounts for the appearance of the
papers .-
In the course of human events, the lion. R. M. Cor-
wine, who is fully determined not to relax an effort un
til rebellion is crushed out, was made judge advocate
of Fremont’s army. He, of course, knew Mr. Bel-
mnn, and with his accustomed courtesy to the repre
sentatives of the. press, tendered him the “facilities’ -
usual in such cases—that is to say, ann - i chair, desk,
room and stationery.
It came to pass, as Gen. Fremont was about to take
liis departure for Jefferson City, that the judge
advocate had a press of business, and needed toe la
boursofa copyist. He availed himself i ninedmti-ly
of the services of Mr Behnan, who was to be property
compensated for his toils, in making fair copies
of a certain correspondence, it being necessary to
forward duplicates of the papers in the ease to Wash
ington.
Mr. Belman, in copying the letters, found them in
teresting, and wondered they had not been in the
newspapers. It was his leading arti.de of faith that
nothing upon the globe accomplished its destinj- un
til it made its appearance in print, with proper head
lilies. Therefore, as he copied letters from .lessee Ben
ton Fremont, and A. Lincoln, and Francis P. Blair.and
John C. Fremont, he was astonished at the want of en
terprise in the pressof St. Louis, and with perfect uat
uralnesstook copies of the aforesaid for use in iiis cor
respondence: and one copy of the correspondence was
sent to the President anil another to the Cincinnati
Enquirer.
For some days after the event of publication, St.
Louis, Fremont and Washington city were in a con
dition of surprise and wrath. The tndouiinable Bel
man, panoplied in innocence, was late in finding out
there was a row, and still later iu knowing himself as
the instrument of Providence visibly working in the
nation. The state of mind of Col. R. M. Corwine,
“when he learned it ail,’’ is said to have been stupen
dous. It may not be improper to state, in this con
nection, that Mr. Belman has “retired” from St.
Louis.
Another JBurilcr.
Chunnenugee, Ala, Oct. 24, 1SG1.
Eds. Confederacy:
Dr. R. L. G. Bozeman who lived near
this place, was cruelly murdered on Thurs
day last, by two of his own negroes. The
two negroes had run away about a week
previous, and on their return, the Dr.
took them—his overseer being absent—
to tbe black smith shop to correct them.
While addressing one with his hack to the
other, lie was struck on the hack of the
head, either with a sledge hammer or oth
er piece of iron, fracturing the occipital
hone. The boy who killed him has esca
ped. The one at home charges the killing
upon the fugitive. We learn these ne
groes were given to Dr. Bozeman by his
aunt, living near Milledgeviile Georgia.
[ Special Dispatch to the Savannah Republican. J
From the .North Sidr of the Potomac—Object
of the Lrrabui-g .Tlovrinr nt. — The Tribune :
ConfcNNca lo u Terrible Defeat.
Richmond, Oct. 29.—A gentleman just arrived
from Washington brings some interesting mews
front beyond the Potomac, lie saxs :
Dan. Sickles is on Ihe Potomac, opposite Evans-
port, xvith 1(5,DtiO men and sixty cannon.
A large force has been ordered to take position
opposite Matthias' Point, and liax-e been concen
trated tln-re by telegraph, thereby showing the ur
gency of the movement.
The plan agreed upon at Washington is to at
tack Evansport in front with ships, and while the
engagement is progressing to land a large force at
Matthias’ Point and turn the Confederate Iront,
thus enabling McClellan to attack Beauregard iu
the rear
The blockade of the Potomac causes great in
convenience to the Federalists.
It xvas reported and generally believed in Wash
ington that the Federal fioet is dest.ned to operate
against Nexv Orleans.
The New Y’ork Tribune says the battle of Lees
burg resulted in a terrible defeat of the Federal
ists. The fire, it says, was even more terrific tli.rn
that at Bull’s Run. It sets down the Federal loss
in killed and wounded at twelve hundred, and esti
mates the Confederates actually engaged in the
fight at thirty thousand !
Ah, soldiers! to your honored rest
Your truth and valor bearing;
The brax-est are ths tenderest—
The loving are the daring.
Senators Elect.
1. Chatham, Bryan, Effingham.—Geo. A. Gordon.
2. Liberty, Tatnall, McIntosh —C. F. Fletcher.
3. V ayne, Pierce, Appling.—H. R. Fort.
4. Gtynn, Camden, Charlton.—Jno. M. King.
5. Chffee. Ware, Clinch.—Thos. Hilliard.
6. 1-
place. while the transports are engaged in taking
•hi board noo. a frnir. Annapolis. It is stated with |S
seme s-mblauce of truth, that there were 15,000 1 26. Spalding, Butts, Fayette.—Wm, Moseley,
inen sent to Annapojij on Thursday. We also I 27. Newton, Walton, Clarke.—John Billups,
• i.- t th» rto
hols, Lowndes, Berrien.—T. B. Griffin.
7 F|ool;s, Thomas, Colquitt—J. L. Seward.
►. I -ciitur, Mitchell. Miller.—T. A Swearengen.
9. 1 irly, Calhoun, Baker.—s S Stafford,
JO. 1 tugherty, Lee, Worth —I). A. Vason.
11. C ty, Randolph, Terri ll.—O. P. Anthony.
12. -*wart, Webster, Quitman.—Jas. Hilliard,
13. t* inter. Schley, Macon.—T. M. Furloxv.
14 liioly. Wilcox. Pulaski.—D J Botbwell,
15. Jf iitgomery, Telfair, Irwin.—John McRae.
Id. is urens, Johnson, Emanuel.—Jno. B. Wright.
17. 1* lloch, Scriven, Burke.—J. T. Shewmake.
IS. fYdtmond, Glasscock, Jefferson.—\Y T . Gibson.
19. ^ , iaferro, Warren, Greene—M. W. Lewis.
20. 1 dwin, Hancock, Washington—B. T.Harris.
21.1 riggs. Wilkinson, Jones—D- N. Smith.
22. B bb, Monroe, Pike.—G. A. Winn.
23. Houston, Craxvford, Taylor—S. D. Ktllen.
24. Marion, Chattahoochee, Muscogee.—W. M.
Brown.
25. Harris, Upson, Talbot.—J B Kendall,
Our ticumih.
We regret to see a disposition in some quarters
to decry the abilities, and criticise the move
ments of onrGenl’s., by those who are not iu pos
session of the data upon which to form a judgment,
and who do not even profess to know any thing
of the intricate science of war. The great subject
of complaint is, that our army has not advanced
into Maryland, and is still at its old battle-ground
of Bull Run. Why don’t the fault finders take
the bull by the horns and arraign the Executive,
in obedience to whose ordeis our Generals act ?
No General of our army lias the power to order a
forward movement into Marylaud, or upon \V ash-
ington. The Commander-iu-Chief, which is vest
ed in the President by the Constitution, is exer
cised by him in fact, and iu conformity with his
orders our military movements are strictly regu
lated. So that, whether it was good policy to en
ter Maryland or not, it is the President, and not
the Generals, upon whom the responsibility of ac
tion or non-action rests.
We don’t knotv that any service in the world
lias more accomplished military men than are at
the bead of the Southern armies. Gen. A. John
ston, of Kentucky, Gen Johnston, Commander-
in-Chief of the Army of the Potomac. Gen Beau-
tegard, Gen. Smith, Gen. Magruder—wo know
not where to slop—form a host of military worthies
that xvould adoin any service in any age. We
conceive that they haveevery motive to accomplish
ev rything- within their poxver which can operate
upon the most unsparing of their critics, and
probably understand their business as well. And
this is equally true of the President. Undoubt
edly, if any one individual in this Government
has more interest than any other in the success of
our arms, it is the Chief Magistrate. We do not
hold with the Lincolnites that the Kiug can do uo
wrong, but we cannot resist the conclusion that
our Executive, in the trying position he occupies,
must be at least as well disposed to do the best be
cau as any of his critics, and that it is fait to pre
sume he avails himself of ell the lights of his
position, and all the wisdom and intelligence that
• to his counsel.
enemy and of our own forces, on that eventful j
day, that the reader will be able to comprehend
the strategy and the tactics of the battle field, as
weli as tliev can possibly be presented through a
verbal medium. In addition to this, tbe report
will embody a narration of the events preceding
the engagement, and will present a connected his
tory ot what may justly be called the campaign of
Manassas, including an exposition of the motives
xvhii-h compi lied the concentration of the two ar
mies of tlie Potomac and the Shenandoah : of the
accidents which intervened to prevent the junc
tion in time to carry out Gen. Beaureguard s bril
liant and masterly plan of attack, and of the cir
cumstances which finally compelled him to meet
the enemy’s assault on our left.
It will be seen, likewise, that the idea of the
junction of the two armies emanated from Gen
Beauregard : that he advised the Government by
telegraph of the enemy’s intended advance, and
earnestly asked for an order for Gen. Johnston to
come to his relief; that it was only on the 17th of
July, the day before the ba’tle of Bull Run, that
the Government consented to give the order, and
that it was to this delay that the failure to con
summate a brilliant programme of attack was ow
ing. It will likewise be seen that, even at that
early day, Gr.n. Renurcgard had conceived and pro
posed a plan if offrnsirr. operations which, from the
light shed upon events by the subsequent results,
xvould, if it had been adopted, have swept tho en
emy from Virginia, relieved Maryland from the
thraldom imposed on her by the Lincolnites, and
placed Washington in our power. When it be
came known to Beauregard that tho enemy was
about to advance on his lines, lie proposed to the
Government at Richmond a plan of operations
subsequently as follows: Immediately on the ad
vance of the enemy, Gen. Johnston was to detach
a portion of his force to operate with General Beau
regard in a combined attack on the advancing as
sailant. at the same time leaving a sufficient torce
to guard the defensible passes of the Blue Ridge
against Patterson. The enemy having been de
feated and dispersed. Johnston xvas to march back
against Pattorson and overwhelm him ; then to de
tach a force and reinforce Garnett, enough to make
! that General superior to McClellan, and to drive
i him beyond the Ohio. This being accomplished,
| the whole command would rejoin Johnston, who
| would cross the Potomac into Maryland, rouse the
| people of that State, and advance to the siege of
! Washington, in the rear, while Beauregard with
j liis army, xvould operate against the same city from
j this side of the tiver. The design was brilliant,
; and, as subsequent events have abundantly dem
onstrated, entirely practicable It was consistent
| with the xvell understood rules of strategy, and
would have given us the advantage of operating
| from a central point, with every facility for rapid
concentration, against widely dispersed armies,
j with which timely concentration xvould be simply
a physical impossibility. The programme, al
though daring in the extreme, involved at the
same time the kind of daring xvhich is equivalent
| to the wisest caution. It xvas founded ou tho idea
of using the largest possible portion of our forces,
at every important point, so that we might bo ev
erywhere superior t,o the enemy in number or in
impetus, instead of permitting our armies to remain
segrated and everywhere inferior to the enemy in
front of them. For reasons which are not ex-
plaint d, but which appeared to the Government
to more than counterbalance the advantages of this
plan, it was not adopted. Nothing, therefore, re
mained but for Gen. Beauregard to fight the enemy
as lie came out from A exandria, either at Fairfax
at Ceutreville, or behind the lines of Bull Run, as
circumstances might dictate. As the positions of
the armies, and the intentions of the enemy devel-
j oped themselves, it became apparent that Ceutre
ville xvas the grand strategic point--the key to the
situation. Genera! Beauregard had p-oposed that
( xxhile the enemy attacked him, either in front, as
at Blackburn’s Ford oil the icftli. or on the flank,
as on the 21st, General Johnston should fall with
his army on the Federal rear and reserves at Cen-
treville—a movement which would have insured
the destruction or the capture of the whole hostile
force. The bad state of the roads rendered imprac
ticable the consummation of the scheme. It then
became necessary to modify the plan so that after
the junction of the two forces the attack ou Cen-
treville should be made by columns of divisions
along the converging roads crossing Bull Run, in
case the enemy should make a demonstration on
our left flank—a movement xvhich Gen. Beaure
gard became assured, alter the engagement of the
I~tli, would he attempted. It has, for a long time,
been generally known that tlie failure to carry out
this plan of battle in its details, and the necessity
to which Gen. Beauregard was then subjected, of
changing front on his left, and finally of drawing
from his centre and right in order to stem the ene
my’s progress and win the victory. All these
things will he elaborately stated in the report, and
of course far mote intelligibly than I can describe
them.
The correspondent of the Richmond Dispatch
says of the report:
I have been favoted with a brief synopsis of por
tions of General Beaureguard’s report of the battle
of Manassas, which has been forwarded to the
War Department, and xvhich will, doubtless, be
published in a short time. General Beauregard
opens with a statement of his position antecedent
to the battle, and ot tlie plan proposed by him to
the Government of a junction of tbe armies of
Shenandoah and Potomac, xvith a view to the re
lief of Maryland and the capture of the city of
Washington, which plan was rejected by the Pres
ident. Gen. B. states that he telegraphed the
War Department ou tbe 13th July of the contem
plated attack of Gen. McDowell, urgently asking
for a junction of General Johnston's forces with
his own, and continued to make urgent requests
for the same, until the 17th JuJy, when the Presi
dent consented to order Gen. Johnston to his as
sistance. Gen Beanregatd goes on to state that
liis plan of battle assigned to General Johnston an
attack on the enemy on the left at or near Cenlre-
ville, while he himself xvould command in front;
but the condition of the roads prevented this. It
xvas then decided to receive the attack of tlie enemy
behind Bull Run. After the engagement at Black
burn’s Ford, on the loth, Gen. Beauregard xvas
convinced Gen. McDowell’s principal demonstra
tion would be made on our left wing, and then
formed the plan of throwing forward a sufficient
force by converging roads to attack the enemy’s
reserves at Ceutreville, so soon as the main body
of the latter became inextricably engaged on the
left. Late in the day, finding that Gen Exvell,
who was posted on the extreme right of our line,
had not moved forward in accordance with the
programme and the special order which had been
sent to him, Gen. B. dispatched a courier to Gen
Ewell, to inquire the reason why the latter had
failed to advance, and received a reply from Gen.
E:, stating he had not received any such order.—
The enemy’s attack having then become too strong,
on tho left, to warrant carrying out the original
plan, as it xvould take three hours for Gen. Ewell's
brigade to reach Centreville, it became necessary
to alter the plan, change fr< nt on the left, and
bring tip our reserves to that part of the field.—
Tilts movement xvas superintended in person by-
Gen. Johnston, Gen. Beauregard remaiug to direct
the movement in front.
At the tune when Gen. Kirby Smith and Gen
Early came up xvith their divi-ions and appeared
on the right of the enemy, our forces on the left
occupied the cord of tlie arc of a circle, of which
the arc itself was occupied by the enemy—the ex
tromes of their lines flanking ours. The appear
ance ot Smith's and Early's brigades, and their
charge on the enemy's right, broke the Iiue of the
latter and threw tlitm into confusion, when short
ly afterwards the rout became complete.
Gen. Beauregard highly compliments General—
then Colonel—t.vans, (commanding a brigade)—
ai d uoxv the hero of l^eeshurg—for tho extraordi
nary military aptitude arid great gallantry he dis
played in his movement from Stone Bridge to
Sudley’s Ford, after receiving the enemy’s first
onset at Stone Bridge. General Evans had only
about one thousand men, but divining that the
enemy's movement was a concentric one, and that
bis columns had gone through the woods to the
left, and xvould attempt to cross at Sudley's Ford
he left at Stone Bridge four hundred men, and
tiling off towards tho ford at Sudley’s, with 6(10
men kept the enemy at bay there for nearly an
hour, although in force several thousand strong.
General Beauregard settles forever the various
questions so much disputed respecting this battle
He acknowledges the great generosity of General
Johnston, in fully according to him (Gen. B.) the
right to carry out the plans he had formed with re
lation to this campaign, in yielding the command
of the field after ex tiling and cordially approving
the plan of battle, and in the effective co-operation
which General Johnston so chivalrously extended
to him on that eventful day.
He remarks that the retreat of our forces from
Fairfax, immediately previous to the engagement
of the JStb, in the first instanceotnecord of volun
teers retiriug before an engagement and with the
object of giving battle in another positiou
i lie number under liis command on the 13th Ju
ly are set down at 17,000 effective men, and on
21st, to 23,000, which includ-s 6,200 of Johnston’s
army, and 1700 brought up bj' Gen. Holmes from
Fredicksburg.
The killed on our side in this ever-memorable
battle are stated in tbe report to have been in num
ber 393,and wounded 1200.
T lie enemy’s killed, wounded, and prisoners are
estimated by Gen. Beauregard at 4,500, which does
not include the missing.
Theieport is rather lengthy, and is accompanied
by anothei from Gen. Johnston, giving an account
of tlie movements of bis army at Winchrster and
march to Manassas, also by the reports of brigade
commanders. It will be seen that the hero of
Fort Sumpter and Manassas can write as well as
ho can fight—that he wields the pen of a Caesar as
well as tlie sword of a Wellington. In modesty
and bravery he exemplifies the highest type of a
true soldier, and has earned an undying fame.—
The graceful tribute he pays to his brave troops is
well merited, and will endear him more and more
to men who are proud to rally under his standard.
It is none the least of Beauregard * merits that he
was willing to cncountrran army so ranch larger
and so much better appointed than bis own, and
ACTS AND RESOLUTIONS
of the Second Session of the
PROVISIONAL CONGRESS
or THE
CONFEDERATE STATES.
1361.
4Ri.il*, tlt!ittiiu;-Viiii<J. | ( m, ,< a, l , a .
I ctiiia-wi.i- pre-.a.-d ttri turmeric" ' 1 IMtf.gjj
1 fX rtohai«ai! putt jf -y,i.. . ,,
eeder, b»S. ebauy. I;snum>vite r e *o;i!| tit;
•atiu'n Mil. and sll o'ih»-r w,..-,-/ * M Wr*!'.egauv, ’•<j
fcMitiiacturea. *
au.l pi*,.,
*8tia*'.voTd, tuid allO th*.
t.iitinzs and jdnttLi
iaauiiiM-t.it..,
mt aud other like
mlb?h«iVoithe At„.
Spei.-mienaot natural tri.tory, mim-raW. .
is.- provided tor. ° r twtany, not other-
1 N->
iG-\ 1
unodities Imported fr«
AN ACT to provide R
Foreign Countries.
Section' 1. T:u* Congress of the C mfederate States of Ameri
ca dot inirt, Tiiat from aud it’’? -fheoNt day of Align at next, a
duty ahali be imposed on ull good*, product*,
idwi
Aar
ted from abroad into
ntlollowd:
rticles enumerated
On ; 11
•uty-tive percent urn.
, au ad valorem duty <
•rated iu schedule C,
Ou ai! ari.el<
Conledei&fe Slat-
valorem duty |
Jj -as aud uumainifactored tobacco.
Schedule K. (live per centum ad val.
Articled used iu dyeiug and tanning noto^herw;
Rrass. ill bar* or p lg s, ol i and lit only to he ri** l ’ r, 'V' U * d f ‘*r
bell4, old; bell uietal. v v rp * m &iiufactuixi
t " rpor - wh "> -w ^ fi
wcl*; Ftiller'd earth
- provided lb
n schedule A. an a
u all articles euuiue
vveuty per ceutuui. Ou all artici
ad valorem duty of fifteen per ce
•rated iu schedule I).
• centum. < >u all art teles e
eui duty of five p -r centum,
schedule F, a specific duty •
i euumcratad iu schedule G
d uty o f " ten p
E. du a.l rul
euifticrut-i i
that all artiel
duty, to-w*t :
Schedule A, (twenty-five percentum ud val<
Alabaster aud s-Mir ornaments; auchovien, sardiuea
rnt*-d in schedule
And that all article*
therein named. And
thull be exempt from
cious stones, and
Emery, in lump or pulverised
Felt, adhesive, for sm-athing v*
G itu 4 of all sort* uot otherwh
uiauuhicturi.d.
Indigo; India rubber, in bottle, eln
India rubber, milk. of.
Juuk. old.
Piaster of Paris
idHftU i hides and s!
Sheathing copper-.but no eopp r to be considered
ci pt m ►licet*lorty-eigbt inch« * long ami foartceu
•n'tiing irom eh veil to thirty-four « .
md ull ot;
preserved u*
U randy H-idoth
other tables o ' ”
i: »mp »s.tioi
lasses, bran ly
pirits distilled from grain or other materia
voviJed for; billiard end bagatelle tables, u::d i
boards on hich gam. * are played,
tops for tables, or other articles of furniture; co
Hits, swv« tmeats, or fruits preserved in sugar, in
t»r otuer liquors; cordons, ubsyuthe, arra< k, cm
esser, liquors, maraschino, ratafia, and ull otu
;rages o; a similar character.
Ma
vlar-tvood. gr:
j in p. ■
ia r *p s , for tables <.r otiur i
aud all other ami
V-Uurguudy, champagne, c.
and ull other wines or imitations ol y
Schedule, B, (twenty per
Almonds, rain us, currents, dates,
preserved fruits, not otherwise pro’
or German silver, manufactured oru
brddered with gold, silver or other i
Bab
c >atr
ililln,
scutum ad valorem. )
tig.-, and nil other dried or
ided for; argentine, ulaimta.
luiauuiaclurt’d ; articles cm-
otal, uot otherwise provided
; aud
arns. cosmetics, essences, extracts, pastes, perfume
res, us d for the toilet or for medicinal purposes; bay
>t*amber, composition or wax, and ull other beads; beu-
; bracelets, braids, chains, curls or ringlets composed ol
hich hair is a component part, not otherwise provided
d brushes of all kinds.
Camphor, refined; cane* and sticks, for walking, finished or
uufimsued ; capers, pickle*, and sauces ot ul! kinds, not otherwise
provided for; card eases, pocket-books, shell boxes, souvenirs,
and all similar articles, of whatever materia! composed, nut other
wise provided tor ; compositions of glaas, set or unset; coral, cut
or manufactured.
Feathers aud flowers, artificial or ornamental, and part- there
of, of whatever material composed ; fans ami fire screen* of every
description, ot whatever material e.imposed.
Grap s, plums, aud pruuen, and other such fruit, when put up in
tot :1cm, cases, or cans, not otherwise provided for.
Hair, humau, cleansed or prepared for use.
Main -tcrures of gold, plntiuaor silver, u.»t otherwise provided
for; manufactures of papier muche ; molasses.
Paint mg* «m glass ; pepper, pimento, cloves, nutmegs, cinna
mon, ami all other spic*s; perfumes and perfumery, of all sorts,
n *t otherwise provided for; plated and gilt ware of all kinds, not
otherwise provided for; playmge-ards; prepared vegetables, fruits,
meats, poultry and game, sealed or enclosed in cans or otherwise.
Silver plated metals, in sheets or other form; soap, ca-til**.
pcriumctl, Windsor, and other toilet soap* ; ^ugar of ull kinds ;
syrup of -.igar.
Epaulettes, galloons, laces, knots, stars, tassels, tresses, and
wings of gold or silver, or imitations thereof.
Schedule C. (fifteen per cent, a 1 valorem.)
Alum; arrow-root, articles of clothing or apparel, including
hats, caps, gloves, shoes and boots ot all kinds, worn by men. wo
men or children, ot wuatcvvr material comp .sed, not otherwise
provided tor.
Ba /. •*. blankets, bookings, flannels and floor-cloths, of whatev
er mat .'rial composed. not otherwise provided for; baskets, and
ail otner articles composed ofgra-s, osier, palm-leaf, straw, whale
bone nr willow, nut otherwise provided lor ; beer, ale and porter,
in c ink * or bottles; beeswax; berries and vegetables of all sort*
used tor food, not otherwise provided for; blue or roman vitriol,
or sulphate of copper; bolnguajsausagns ; braces, suspenders, web
bing, or other fabrics composed wholly or in part of Indian mb-
* d for; breccia; burgundy pitch; bnt-
mi'-i pnrrha, ,, n .
or,bcrt<,nntt*ar, rttlrpd;
f>ttris °r Iiih'l;. te of lime, ground or uu»a,iin,l.
ns oi al; ku»d undressed. u *
is tuck,
t 11 ?!***.
holly or part of iron ; sheathing o/vri’uu?* " r
ie Uu." i,l '“ t " iD5 vt% * Ui tbnmu * 2%
<>»!; to be rt.
etal n
exprcsel
r bars ; tvpo, old and lit i
yellow
nl; nails
1h> Its and
Tin ore. and tin i
manufactured.
Wold.
Zinc, spelter,ortvuteuegue, unmanufactured.
Schedule F. (Specific Duties.)
I«‘e—one dollar and fifty cents per ton.
Salt—ground, blown, or r>»ck—tw
pouuds per bushel.
Schedule G. (Exempt from duty.)
B ioks, map., chart., mathematical and nautical
puiloaoplu-a! apparatn., and all other article* wl aterefi^!!!!'-
mr the use O. tue l-on ,-demte States ; bools, pa^r-d
eal. -nut... t-. published by r. I:*:.,... cun d ’
All | .i i is-.pineal apparatus, instrument., h..l
euarts ; statue*, btatur.rv. busts and ca*t». of u aihl.
buster, .,-r plaster u jju-i*; jmintiug* and drawn,
*p eiu.eus oi sculpture; cabinet* oi co'.iis; medal-
collect i; ** J 1 ”•
ported i
tallished for philosophical
eomafuieut ul the line arts. „.e ur uy me order of
church, college, academy, school or seminary of learning in Vis
Confederate State*. * ia
Bullion, cold and silver.
Coins, gold, silver and copper ; cofl'-e; cotton, copper w;
ported lor the mint ofthe Om ederate States. ’ eoi,l>
Garden seeds, anil all other seeds for agricultural and horti ’
tuml purposes; goo,is. ware* and merchandise; th** growth *
duce -»r mauul'at ttires of the Confederate States, » xp*uted to a
eigu country and brought back to the Confederate Statei i n »! r '
►am- condition us win n exported, upon which uo druw-U. v ;
wen allowed: Frovnled. l'ha all restitution, to
identity thereof, preecribed by exietine law,, ,. r which ma. I
pr.-HCibed by the Secretary ofthe Treasury .hall be com/lil!
with. Guano, manure*, and fertilizers of all sort*. ^ a
Household effects* old and in use, of persons or families *r>jm I.
eigu oouutries, if used abroad by them, and uot intended for
other purpose or purposes, or for sail*. f
Models of inventions or other improvements in the arts : p ro
tied. That uo article or articles shall be dtemed a niodei wh^h
cjui be fitted for use. 1 ®
Paving stones; personal and hoc
of citizi n* of rue Confederate St: U
Specimens of natural history, min
the same he imported in good taitUfo
rated or established for phil i-ophicai, agricultural oTborj
u. ” “ * Jfep.]
t-nt i pfr ha.het, oftiftj ,
. “'P* »ad
til-
* rtcitiuta.
. . ... ia H S‘Uis. acd
idl'd, the |*U1L- In- ,piciahy j.
n-f i-'7„r S ° Z ^
oilrt literary pnrporea ur r..r th,.
r lor the use or by the order
cultural purposes, or for the if
academy, school
• fate
ary
r botany; provided
"cuttttn.;*^ * D *
by the orde
if learning in the Confederal
>t ull kind*
viiatever material made
ner mercurial preparatio
ton Kami button moulds <
CabU-s aud cordage, of
amine; calomel and all ot
►odn : castor beans: casti
st. ar.iU‘, parafiiie, tallow or wax, and all other rankles;
bats, uni A'* aud tippets, aud all other manufactures of fur,
which fur shall be a component part ; cups, gloves, leggius, mit
*»cks stockings, wove suirts and drawers, and ull similar urtic!<
worn by men, women and children, and not otherwise providt
rpet.ng. hearth-rugs, bed-sides, aud other portio:
cadmium; cal-
s; carbonate of
of spermaceti,
aps,
of carp, ting, b*
Turkey. V.-u.-tii
wise provided :
chain*, ot all soj
. Wilto
r Aubus:
•* an* 1 /part.
• rand other b-v
• p n id< 11 •
cn.ite, hy-driixi;
nnbsof all kinds
Brussels, iugri
tier similar labric.
cl a for ;«
>pp. ra
i,i gailov
all.
IP*
nljma*e oi i
ings, cottou triiumiud, Wes, cotton laces and braids; court plas
ter : coial. manufactured ; crayons of all kinds ; cubcbs : cutlery
of all kind*.
Delaines; dolls anil toys of all kind* ; dried pulp ; drugs, medi
cinal.
Earthen, china, and stone ware, and all other wares composed
of earthy and minerul substances not otherwise providec for; en
caustic til***; ether.
Felspar; tig-blue: fire-crackers, sky-rockets, R>man candles,
ami all similar articles uwd in nyroteehuies; fish, whether fresh,
smoked, salted, dri-d or pickled, not otherwise provided for :
fruits, preserved in their own juice, or pie fruits; fish glue, o
isinglass; fish skins; flat*, braids, plaits, “parterre and willow
square*, used for making huts or bonnet*; floss silks, tenth-
beds, feathers for beds, aud downs of all kinds; frames and sticks
for umbrellas, parasole, .and sunshades, finished or unfinished ;
Frank ford blacg ; fulminates, or fulminating powders; furniture,
cabinet and household, uot otherwise provided for; fur*, dressed
on the skin.
Ginger, dried, green, ripe, ground, preserved or pickled; glass
col >rert, stained or painted ; glass, window ; glass crystals for
watches; glasses or pebbles for spectacle*; “lass tumblers, plain,
moulded and pressed, bottles, fia-ks, and all other vessels ofglas*
not cut. ami all glass uot otherwise provided fort glue; grass
cloth : greeu turtle; gain benzoin or benjamin; guns, except mus
kets aud rifles, fire-arms. and all parts thereof not intended for
military purp >se*; gunny doth and India baggings, and India
matt iu 2 a of ull sorts, not otherwise provided for.
Huir curb'd, moss, seaweed, and all other vegetable substances
u*cd for beds or mattresses ; hair pencil* ; hut bodies of cotton o-
w°ol; hnt-uml bonnet*, for men, women and childreu. composed
of straw, satm-straw, chip, grass, palm-leaf, wilb.w. or any other
\eget iMe s ibsfonce. <<r <‘1 hair, wladebou*-. or othr-r mu;. ;
otherwi- provided for ; butt- r’s plush, of wha*ever mat-rial rom-
Wearing epparei. aud other persona] effects not lEerchandi*. •
prof*s-iounl books, implements, instrument*, aud tools of tr^j ’
m-rupution or eintrfoymf.it -fp. rb.in. •reiving i„ the- UnoM?.
rate state*: Provided, That tin* exemption shall not be run
rued to include machinery, or other article* imported fom*
in any manufacturing establishment, or for sale.
Bacon, pork, hams, lard, beef, wheat, flour and bran of wheat
fl »ur and bran of all other grain*. Indian corn and meal, barlev'
rye, oat* and oat uieal. aud living animal* of all kiuds, not other!
wise provided for; also all agricultural productions, including
those ofthe orchard and garden, iu their natural state, not other
wise provided for.
Gunpowder, aud all the materials of which it is made.
Lena, in pigs or in bars, iu shot or balls, for cannon, nnukrti
rifle* or pistols.
Rags, of whatever material composed.
Arm. uf every riptiou. for military purpose., and pan.
thereot, munitions ot war, military accoutrements,aud percu**i«n
cap*.
Ship*, steamers, barge*, dredging vessel*, machinery wrew
pile jetties, ami articles to be used iu the construction of harbor*
and fur dredging and improving the same.
Aud be it further enacted, That there shall be
every non-euumerated artici*
‘ nal, quality, textur**.
Ink and LjJc powder; ipecacuanha ; iridium,
iron casting--; iron liquor; iron iu bars, bolt
railroad rails, spikes, hailing plates and cuair*
iug nuir.iads; ivory black.
Jalap; japanned ware of all kinds not otherv
jet. and manufactures of jut. and imitations tb
im.taliuus thereof; juniper berries.
Juices of cotton, of thread, or other materials not otherwi
vidc.l for ; lampblack : lasting*, cut in strips or other patte
th** 8izc..r shape for shoes, boot*, bootees, slippers, gaiters or but-
tons, of whatever material comp »sed : lead pencil*; leaden pipes;
japanned ; leeches ; linens of all kinds ; liquorice, paste.
■ provided f«»
of; jewelry,
' P^ -
id all ot
ehiuery i
f eyery de-
inagnesia; mauguu-
eork tree; mauuf&e-
us, or worsted, not
of all kiuds uot ori;-
>f ud kinds not other-
Timr* very significantly indicates to the powers that
re* offlax of all kinds not otiierwist ; he, that the men will not fight unless they are paid,
ct hemp of ull kind* uot otherwise j Has it never occurred to the Times that hireling troop,
ot )oue, shell, horn, pearl, ivory, or | no ina tter how well paid, unu never contend 3ucce»-
,'p. I fully a/rainst men wh*»fi^ht for their homed, their fir*»
sides, and their families, and not fur pay !
loath 1
_ it; lithargi
-Moccaroiii, vermicelli, gelatine, jeliie*, i
preparations uot otherwise provided for; in
senptiou uot otherwise provided for; malt
• * •; niauua; manufacture* of the bark of tin
t.ireso •ulk; manufactures of wool of all ki
otiierw ise provided lor ; manufacture* of Lai
erwise provided lor; manufacture
v;h- provifled for; u.auu
provided lor ; uranufretiir
provided for ; mauuiactur
vegetable ivory, not otherwise provided for ; mauufucttm
cl us, vessel* urn* wares, not otherwise provided lor, oi bra
per, iron, steel, lend, pewter, tin, or oi which either ol tin
ai* simii lh‘ a component pait; manufactures, articles, vessel*, and
w are* oi glass, or of whicn glass shall Ik- a component matt rial, not
oth. rwUe provided or ; umnuiactuxe» und articles of leather, or of
which leaf H.-r ►hull ;*e a'Component purt. u<>t otherwise provided
for: manufacture'aud aitirles of marble; marble paving tile*, and
Mocks in the r«>’i.h uot otherwise provided lor; manufacture* oi
paper, nr of which paper ia a component material, not otherwise
p ovided tor ; manufactures ot wood, or of which wood is a com po
ut a - part, not otherwise provided for; matting, china or otner
floor mattiug, and mats made of flags, jute, or grass ; medicinal
preparu:i-»us,drugs, roots and leaves in h crude stale, n »t other
wise provided for; morpuine ; mutuilic pens ; mineral waters;
musical instruments of ail kind*, and strings f»»r musical instru
ments, of wiiip-gut, cat-gut, and all other string* ofthe same ma
ter.ul ; mustard in bulk or in bottle*: mustard seed.
Needles of ull kinds, tor sewing, darning and knitting; nitrate
of load.
Ochre* and ochrev earths; oil-cloth* of every description, of
ul* ot 1 ’ •
c dlected and paid
which bears a similitude, either in n
the uses to which it may be applied, to auy “ mi me rated wt:r r
chargeable with duty, the same rate ot duty which i* levied aid
charged on the enumerated article by the foregoing sdleduki
which it most resembles in auy of the particular* before inemtion
ed; and if auy uou-enumerated article equally n-seinhlrs two
xir wore enumerated articles on which different rat** ofdutr an*
chargeable, then* shall he levied, collected and paid ou micl/unu-
• numerated artie'e the .same rate of duty s* i* chargeable ou tie
article which it resembles, paying the highest dutv: Provided
That on nil articles manufhetuu-d from two or more materials, ths
I’jty shall beas*< sued :it the highest rate* at which auvofitgcom
ponent parts may bo chargeable : Provided further. Tiiat ou ail
irtrcli-* which are not enumerated in the foregoing scbedulea and
vmiiot be classified under this sectiou. a dutv often per eeut *d
valorem shall bvclutrz -d.
S •<’. J. And 1h* it further enacted. Teat nil good*, ware* and
merchandise which may he iu the public store* a* unclaimed, or
in warehouse under warehousing bonds, on the Ul*t day of in-
gust next, shall b- subject, ou entry thereot for consumption. r«
such duty as if tbe ►am*-had been imparted, respectively iftn
that day.
Sec. 4. And be it further enacted, That ou th** entry of acv
good*, wares or merebauei*e. imported ou orafter theSIat day of
August aforesaid, the decision of the collector ot the rustou'i at
the port ot importation and entry, a* to their liability to duty »-r
exemption therefrom, shall lie final aud conclusive against tb»-
owner, importer, consignee or agent of any such gi*od*. ware* and
merchandise, unless the owner, importer, cousigueenrageatiball,
within teu day* after such entry, give notice r<> the collectir, in
writing, of his dissetisfa*-tiou with such decision, M-tting forth
therein distinctly and specially his ground of objection thereto,
aud shall, within thirty day* alter the date of such deeiaiou, *p-
pt-al therefrom to the Secretary ofthe Treasury, whose deri*iou
on such app«-al sl:oli he final and conclusive; aud the said s<hh1«.
wares ami merchandise shall be liable to duty «*r exemption then-
Horn accordingly, any act of Congress to tbe coutrmry notwith
standing, uuless'suit slia.'l be brought within thirty days after surh
decision, for any duties that may have been paid, «>r uiay theretifor
he paid ou said goorls, or within thirty days alter the duties shall
have been paid in cjs«es where such goods shall be in bond.
Sec. 5. And be it further enacted, That it shall be lawful for
the owner, consignee, or agent of imports which have been actual
ly purchased or procurred otherwise tbau by purchase, ou entry
of rile same, to make such addition in the entry to the rust or value
given iu the invoice as, in his opinion, may raise the tame to toe
ini** tunrki't value of such import* in tbe principal market* of tile
country whence the importations shall have been made andtoadd
thereto all cost* and charge* which, under existing law*, would
form part of the true value at the part where tbe same be enterwi,
upon which the duty should be assessed. Aud it shall be the du
ty ofthe collector within whose district the same may be import
ed «»r entered, to cause the dutiable vuiueof such import* to be ap
praised. estimated and ascertained, iu accordau:-*- with thepror.*-
ious of existing laws ; and if the appraised value thereof ahkli ex-
»-et*d by f'*!! jserc -nturn. •>; niorr, the value so declar’d on entry,
then iii addition t »the duties imposed by law on tlie name, foirs
shall be levied, collected and paid a duty of twenty per centam
ad valorem, on such appraised value: Provided, neverthele**.
Tiiat under no circtini-tauces -riiall the duty fo- assessed upou va
amount less than the invoice or entered value, auy lawofCuognrM
to the contrary notwithstanding.
Se<-. G. And be it further enacted. That so much of all act* or
parts of acts ns may be iucousist *nt with the provision* of thin*!,
siiaii be uud the same are hereby repealed.
Approved May 21, 13G1.
X« Pay No Fight.—Tbe Cincinnati Time* com-
plains grievously that many of tlie Ohio soldiers ia
Western \'ir^i;:in are now almost naked, are suffering
reatly from the weather, and liave never received a
• loilar of pay from the Federal £ovenin*enf. The
S P E C I A L NOTICES*
The following complimentary notice is taken from
the Missouri Democrat:
Immense Amount of Suffering Reliercd ly Tnkim
Meljean s Strengthening Cordial.— Since the 17th .f
August, the following cuses have been rejmitcdfnrei
105 persons hove been cured of General Debility.
Ii8 “ “ “ “ Nerx’ous Debility.
28 “ “ “ “ diseases of the KiJnryj
181) “ Who have been afflicted with variiuu
complaints, Fever, Ciirouic Diarrhoea, Dpeeten,
Liver Complaint, Night Sweats, Dyspeosia, nod \\ eol
vee.-taii.- hil'i mi 1 ueriU, , 'ir.it"!ith’.:rwiM"iniv1d‘.-il tiiri'olivra ;opi'nui; ne4s ofthe Digestive Organs, have been cured, besides
or.iucvaudlfiwin peel’; o.i.,-r or willow, prepared f..r bm.’ktYma- j a large number from whom we have not yet h-nrd.
kers-use. . | McLean’s Strengthening Cordial and lViood Farider
in course o! printing aud rcpublication in
*•*; pitch; plaster ot pari*, calcined; plum-
unnnnufacturcd.
I’edfrnl Offlcrm cnpttir<‘«! nt IiCfsburg.
The foiloxving list appears in the Richmond
Dispatch.
W. R. Lee, Colonel,20th [Massachusetts Reg
iment.
Col. Cogswell 12th Nexv Y’ork
E. J. Revere, Major, 20 Massachusetts.
Charles L. l’earson, Adjutant, 21 th Massachu-
sels.
E. H. R Revere, Assistant Surgeon, 20th Mas
sachusetts.
Francis J.jKeffer, Captain, 1st California.
John M. Studley, Captain, 15th Massachu
setts.
Henry Bownam, do do
Chas S. Simmons. do do
John Makall, Captain, Is: California.
Timothy O’ Meara, Captain. 42d N. Y.
Geo. B Perry. Lieut 20ih Mass.
J. E. Green, Lieut , 15 M RES.
Samuel Giverson Lieut , 42J N. Y.
Wm. C. Harris. Lieut., 1st Cal.
J. H. Hooper.j Liout, 15th Mass.
C. M. Hooper. Lieut., 1st Cal.
Frank A Parker, i ieut., 1st Cal
Henry Vauvoatt, Lieut . 42d N. Y’.
W. 11. Kearns, Lieut., 1st Cal.
G. W. Kearny, do dj
B. B. Vassal, Lieut., 15th Mass.
Why Gen Anderson Resigned.—The Nashville
Banner is furnished with a letter irom Bow ling
Green, dated October 21 which says:
A gentleman who reached Bowling Green on
Sunday relates the following conversation wtiich
occured in Louisville between General Anderson
and himself : “General, I understand that you
ave resigned,” “Yes, sir.’ - replied the Genera!:
‘my health is very bad, and it may he better to
die in retirement, the “Anderson of Sumter,” than
to sustain a disastrous battle, in nsy present posi
tion, lor the want of necessary supplies—soldiers
and arms—from the Government I serve.” (Tnis
is reliable.)
CASDS’ SARgAPAKII.ilA. - The original
O and genuine article!!! A»u Spring and Fall
puritier of the blood, and general tonic tor the system it
stands unrivalled, acting simultaneously upon the stom
ach, bowels, kidneys, liver, ami the circulation, it de
termines and carries off'the productsof unhealthy sec
tions, and geutly stimulates while it disenfects and
expels from the stomach and bowels all that is irritating,
until they are clensed and restored to a sound and heal
thy condition.
Prepared and sold by A. B. & D. SANDS, Drug
gists, 10U Fulton Street, New York.
For Sftle in Miliedfftville b? GRIEVE * CLARK
and UEKTY A HALL 24 il.
Ptiintet, dry or ground iu oil, uot otherwise provided for; pap*’
antiquarian; demy, drawing, elephant, foolscap, imperial, lector,
aud ior priutiug lu-wcpapeni, baud-bill* and otner printing, and ail
otner pMiH*r, not otherwise provided lor; paper boxes, ami ail oth
er faury boxes; puper envelope*; paper hanging*, paper for
wall*, ami paper for screen* or lireboard* ; parchment: parasol*
ami *un-(diade*, aud umbrella* : patent mordant; paving and
r m Gag til**-, and bricks, andro >ting slate*, and tir«- brick ' *
ical* aud other work*,'
the Confederate State
bazo; potanxium; putty.
Q iit-ksilver; quill*;* quasia, manufactured
Red chalk pencils; rhubarb ; roman cemei;
Saddlcrvoi ull kinds, not otuerwise provided for; saffron aud
saffron rake; sago; salt*, epsoni. glaulw-r, rochelle, and all other
*alr< and pr--|>aratio!i8 of salts not otherwise provided for; srrsa-
purillu ; b«-r»*w**>f’ali kiuds ; scaling wax; seine*; seppia ; sewing
► lk. in the gum aud purified : shaddock* : skiu* ol ail kiuds, tan-
dressed or japanned; slate pencils; sinaltz; *.»ap of everv
description not otherwise provided for : spirits of turpentine ;
spunk ; squills ; starch : atcreotvpe plate; still bottoms; sulphate
o/'barytes, crude or refined; anlpliate of quinine, aud quinine in
all its various preparation*.
Tapioca; tar; textile tabrics of every description, not other-
wit-- provided lor: twine and p^ick thread, of whatever material
•-tulip -sed : thread brings ami inserting*; type*, old or new, and
type metals.
itnbreliat; Vandyke brown; vanilla h> an*; varnish of all
kinds; veilitin ; Venetian r«-«l ; velvet iu tlie piece,composed whol
ly of cotton. or of cotton and silk, but of winch cotton i* the com
ponent material of chin value; verdisria; vermil.ion: vinegar.
Waters : w.iter colors ; whaleboue : w bite and red lead ; white
vitriol, or sulphate of xiur; whitinc, or Paris white; window
glass, broad crown or cylinder: wooleu aud worsted yarn*, and
woolen listings; shot of lead, not otherwise provided for: wheel
barrow * aud liMiid-l, irrow H; wagons aud vehicles of every de
scription. or part* thereof.
Schedule D, (teu p^r centum ad valorem.)
Acids of every description, not otherwise provided for; ah-or-
noque ; aloe*; ambergris ; amber; ammonia mid sal ammonia ;
anatto, roueon or orleaus; angora Thibit, aud other goats’ hair, or
mohair, unmanufactured, not otherwiocprovided for; aimia-seed ;
antimony, crude or reguluH of; argoi, »»r crude tartar; arsenic:
ashes, pot, pearl and so.in ; uspliultum : a-safa-tido.
Bananas, c s-oa nuts, pine apples, plautaiu*, oranges, aud all
other West India fruits lit the*, natural state; barilla; bark of
al! kinds, not otherwise provided for; bark, Peruviuu ; bark,
guilla; biamoutli;.bitter apples; bleaching powder of chloride of
lime; bones, burnt; boards, planks, staves, shingle*, laths; scant
ling. and all other sawed lumber : also spurs uud hewn timber of
all sorts, not otherwi**-. provided for; buue-bf&t-k, or animal car
bon, aud bone dust; ooltinz clatba; book*, printed, itiazuziu* •*,
nampulet*. periodicals, anu illustrate*! in wapapi-rs, bound or uu-
luMiml, not otherwise provided for; books, blank, bound or un
bound; b *rutt of lime; borax, crude or t meal; borax, refiued ;
bo.ichu leaves; b »x-wood unmanufactured : Brazil paste; Brazil
wood, braziletto, and ail dye-wood* in sticks; bristles; bronze
and Dutch metal in leaf, bronze liquor and bronze powder; build
ing stones ; btitter; burr stones, wrought or mi wrought.
Cabinet* of coin*, incdaD, gems, and collection of antiquities ;
camphor, «*rude; rantharides; cassia and cassia buds; chalk;
cheese; .-hickory r*H>t ; clyououietc-r*, ts>x <*r ship, and parts
thereof;c-lay, burnt or nub irut brick*, paving and roofing tiles,
gas retort*, uud roofing slates ; coal, coke aud culm of coal; cocb-
iueal; cocoa nut.*, c-x'oa and cocoa shells; cocuhis indicuc; coir
tarn ; cmlilia, *>r tow of hemp or flax; cju’hade down; cream of
tartar ; cudbear.
Diamouds, amoeos, mosaics, gems, pearl*, rubi*:s and other pre-
cio-i* sUtues, and imitation* thereof, wheu set iu gold or silver, or
other metal : diamond glazier*. *et or not set; dragon's bltHid.
Engraving*, bound or unb mud ; extra--t of indigo, extracts
and decoi tious ol log-wood and other dye-wood, not otherwise
pr»>v ided for; extract of madder ; ergot.
Flax, immauulactured ; flaxseed and linseed; flints and flint
ground ; flocks waste or slioddy ; French chalk; fur*, batters’,
dressed or uudressed, not ou the skin ; furs, undressed, when on
the akin.
Glass, when old and fit only to be re-manufactured ; gamboge ;
gold aud silver leaf; gold-beaters*'skin ; grindstones; Gums—
Arabic, Barbary, copal. East ludics, Senegal, substitute, trngn-
cauth. aud all other gums and resins, iu a crude atute, not other
wise pr iv ided for.
Hair, of all kinds, uncleansed aud unmanufactured ; hemp, un
manufactured ; hemp seed, aud rape seed; hops, horns, honitips,
bone, bone-tips, and teeth, unmanufactured.
Ivory, unmanufactured, ivory nuts, or vegetable iv*
Jute, sisal gruH*, coir, uud other vegetablenubstausesj unmanu
factured. uot otherwise provided for.
Kelp ; kermes.
Lac spirits, lac sulpher, and lac dye; leather, tanned, band sole,
and upper of nil kinds, uot otherwir-provided lor; lemon* and
lime*., and lemon and lime juice, and juices ol all other fruit* with
out ougai: lime.
Madder, ground or prepared ; madder root; marble, in the
rough slab or block, unmanufactured ; metals, unmanufactured,
not otherwise provided for ; mineral Kermes ; mineral and bitumi
nous substances in a crude state, not otherwise provided for; moss,
iccland ; music, printed wit h lines, bouudor uubouud.
Natron ; nickel; nuts, not otherwise provided for; nnt galls;
nn.\ vomica.
Oakum ; oranges, lemons, and limes, orpiment.
Palm leaf, unmanufactured , pearl, mother of; pine apples;
plantains ; platina, unmanufactured ; polishing stones; potatoes;
Prussian blue; pumice and pumice stone.
Rattans and reeds, uumanufactnred; red chalk: rotten stone.
Slower; sal soda, and all carbonate* and sulphates of soda,
by whatever names designated, not otherwise provided for ; seed-
lac ; shellac; silk, raw, uot more advuuced iu manufacture than
Strengthening L
is a remedy required by every one ia the Western and
southern country. It ia very pleasant and agreeable
to take, and it can be taken by man, woman or
child.
As a diuretic, it will cure any disease of the kidrevs
or Bladder, ns an alterative ’ ill purify the blow,
and remove all pimples, so: to or blotches from the
skin.
Try it—one drachm is sufficient to convince the mof
sceptical of its wonderful strengtheniugnnd invigorate
properties.
Seo Advertisement in another column.
ft. R.
•iuglea, trem suit thrown, or ornuize ; upongr# ; steel, io bars,
sheets and plate., not further advanced iu manufacture than by
rollinc, and cast steel in bars; sumac; sulpher, flour of.
Tallow, marrnw, and all other greaae or aoap stock and soap
•tuff*, not otherwise provided for.
Ton i tenre tin. iu jdateaor akccte; tencle, terra* japonic*, eat*
aho: tin, iu plates or aheeta} and tin foil; tortolae and other
li AD WAY'S REGULATING PILLS.
Blessed as a Providential Specific ly the Cisnh.
The Catholic Priests uj South Aaitrica Cull u
Sick icith Radicay ’s Pills.
Tlie in valid world discharging the cathartic P® 50 ?®
Mercury and Calomel, demaud RADWAY'S Khot
LATIN id PI LLS. Aud why? Because they
immediately, but mildly; because they <lo not® 6 *!*
and coux'iilse the boxvels like the corrosix e paig>'‘ v '
and common pills, because one of them is uioree® cl€ °
than teu of those that are given wholesale;
they enable the sick to sleep, being coinposialb®"*
of irritating; because they cure all the bowel ana flo-
noli complaints, resulting from cold, e.x;>i>' ure ' ,
damp, unhealthy nir; iu short because they t*#’ 1
amt tone the whole system, equalizing the who.*
tern, equalizing the circulation, and restoring to
digestive organs uniform and healthy action. .
In South America, the Priests of tlie Catholic c-
administer them lo the sick. In thecityot q u “®’
the capital of Equudor, the Arcbpishop uses Kao
Ready Relief, and the Preasts are curiog “* j
afflicted with diseases of the liver, stenmeu,
amt ki.lneys, with marvellous speed. In ” :e ‘ e , ere g
tries. Quinine, Calomel, and Mercury is artmim^.
in wholesale doses. Kadway’s I’iils have e >
wondersin emdioiating the sufferings ot the . r
induced by the use of ttiese poisons.
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF.
Radxvav’s Ready Relief is the most P r V D1 ^*^ JK ;
dy iu the known world, it iustantlv checks ^
that would porve mortal if unarrested, a . ^JLnjsd
lor ulterior treatment. It stops spasmodic » l
revives persons from aspyxia or appsrcu ^
Tlu,se xviio take it es an occasional tonic, w J ^
noxious inhalations. It prevents aud cutis “ l jca t e
ague. Given tin the first appearances ot a - w j ie „
disease it wards off' the attack. Keep it a " °V 5(1 ti'k“
it enn be instantly found in the night, in ease
Cholera, Cholic, Neuralgia, Cramp, Faiol.'f
malic pains, Ac., Ac. Applied ouLwnrdly to
hurts, it removespaiu and prevents innain*am- ^
Kadway’s Kksovatimi Resolvim 16 P, ,,|dis-
prodigies iu bronchitis, aud ail the iung and 1 ,b«
eases common attliis season. In conjurctio j r , a ;
Reoulati.ng Pills it succeeds when all ”
ment fails. Ex-ery eruptive and ulcero jjjju-
hereditary or casual,gives wuy to its p ,1! 1 - ”
ence. „ fV f5.
Some remarkable cures ofopthnhm*.** 1 -| T e jef
nose, sore mouth, and cancer, nave been reef * e o£ |j
ted by Radway's Renovating Resolvent, 1 , c o»i( ; '
positive core tor caucer, syphilis, scroluISi
tutional infirmities in the world. eVtr j
Radway’s Remedies are sold by druggi* *
where. t N I-
RADWAY A CO.,33John Street,-
AGENTS. rlS *
IIERTY A HALL, Milledgeviile; » . *
GREEN, Eatonton. J. C. BATES, Louis ^ 4i
ALLEN, Sandersvill*. —
roach io;
Advick-As the hot season is
person should prepare their system^ the L ujle ig
ill F*
, ti® (
there is uo remedy «», It *t»tr
Strengthening Cordial and BLod Uu nfi . h®
rify the blood thorougly, and at •
strengthen and tayigorate the whole tg • ^
The immense quantity ot lt.th»t»»old« f ^ •»
enough of its great virtues rntborougbly r
impure matters from the blood. We say ^t
It S delieiou. to take. See advertisement >n *
column.