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iirff I Ti is % <; i i' * ' |. ■
V- . ■ ■
X. S. MORSE.
(s|fljtudt & Jifittintl.
TERMS.
tiik vvkkki,\ niKovu'i.i: & hi:\ti.\ei,
IS B U lit. ISHKD F. V Eli V WKUS ESI> A Y
THItliK ’TOM IH *6 00
MX JIOM h* tfl’J «0
AI.WAY- (.N AOVA MCE.
*,V EEH!. Y AOVBKTISI-VU it \TI S.
O*Di:t i*v Auv«j:yt*tu;. -i jtUt Weut.l)®c
isYYK* out lAU: i< •■-•■lit m artion .
* p g.: IAI. Vo i (>. rift (V ■ )c* A duiJur urj<3 ttft Ijty
flv«a ,-.«lur;aUUi
>0 M!tni;ii,Oirrii: i’j.l fV.VEHiI. \omEi 2fi>Jwlh.r
cam.
•■if i«t JfuiifiK =nnr ji "'iii < for one ln«'. tioo
i!"o'h MorW-tjlv, WUiri Ot.Muary Noflec mv,u *
hi a Irti oir.'l *'JIV 'O'! if! if vi ! i I'.'i" .A n.’nv'pe;
Ol'K FOKKIO.X F.YE'.IIKM
The North i-: not I lie only power with which
wo aie contending in this war. We are fightr
ing the wor lil. We me battling with combined
Europe. All her diversitiml nationalities are
leprri.etilt 1 in tin- Federal armies. The hod
Trig European Stair* have been aud are now
turniabiug Iho Iroop* to (ill up their depleted
rank*. '1 hey are arriving constantly by ship
load* lleneath the tlojf of every maritime na
tion of Europe they are crowding to share in
the rich booty of the rt uth. This in the une
qual contest wo have to sustain-a contest
with all the kindreds, tribe* and tongues of
fail lb, subsidised for our overthrow. No won
der that y.c meet with snch disasters—that in
Vain we slaughter armies which would exhaust
the fighting population of the mightiest king
dom?, when fresh armies from the prolific Eu
ropean hive ore ever ready to take their plan s
Hut it is not upon the.hi mercenaries them
selvftv* that our censures should chiefly fail.
They iiro but Hie pissivo instruments in the
hands of other;;. Ihiveuby importunate want,
lhey accept the bounties cU'cied them : or
• educed by fair promises of remunerative la
Jior, they cross the deep to be forced or caioled
Into the Federal ranks, it, is their governmtT'ts
that should bo held responsible, They ».rp
oar re:ti enemies They connive ut Ibis emi
gration. They waiv- the;':' pr'?foD(led neutral
ity, and set aside their laws against foreign
enlistments, to permit and encourage'it. TTy
are as much responsible for this vast emigra -
lion of r.-Cmitt' ter the armies of the North., as
If they themselves openly raised flu so troops,
find sent them arme i aud equipped to light
yigalnst «s.
First among our foreign ener.ib-e, .as the
•eldiof' and most powerful and influential e;u-
Hires of Europe, are Franco and England Hat
for their example nndV nuivaueo, the le*-; i;n -
povtant Slates, which aro to a great extent
H out rolled by them, would not have joined in
this crusade uyunst us Their conduct
throughout this war, towards the South, and
Indeed towards the North also, has been most I
nefarious un iby poet itic il. Their policy baa
|>eon to iujaic and cripple both parties for
iheir own selfish and malignant ,ends ; to curb,
and it possible destroy that mighty Western
power widen threatened their own ujiprpjjjacy
both on land and son. while they turned this
war to their own aggrailtiiA'lii'-iit, ft>i the fur
therance of their own ambitious projects The
annals of the world furnish no such example
aif double dealing and underhanaed and u;i
--i-vrupulous intrigue.
Tbo treachery i.t .England has 1-ccH most
nonspiettous. Ehs Inti; dealt foully with bolt*
parties. Afierdug neutrality, site has beep
ialso and inimical to both. To eivt? her an
opportunity to entry out, her darling scheme
»>f supplying herself with cotton from her own
, olonio?. and thus breaking down the produc
tion of llte r>o ll H' she tolerated a pailial am*
Illegal blockade of mu polls, iu fiat violation
t.r her own recent and declared Intel pietaiion
of the Law of Nations no the subject. To
sweep the commercial marine of the North
from the seas, an l secure to hereelt the iiu
mouse carrying trade of the United Slates, aa
•ii compensation for the loss sustained in the
crippling of her manufacturing intercuts l*y a
short supply of cotton, she eounivad at the
construction and equipment in her pwn ports
of a uPUiherof torniidalde and swift sailing
War vessels for u J , which have done her work
effectually. And v.ith characteristic hypoo
ricy, to appeusd life wrath of tUo 1 idled States,
she afterward* seised ether vessels known to
be building for the same purpose, which she
hud permitted to he neariy completed in her
thlp yards, hut then concluded »vre uoi peecs
pary to effect the original object she had in
view,
To still further mollii. her often,led rival*
bliß ha* persistently winked at tiro recruiting
operations of lb" Federal a ranis in Ireland and
England, in gross violation of* or own pi ftp >
sitious of neutra ! itv, and foreign'eulb'm. tit,
avts. While affecting a lofty neutrality, and
admiration for ns, she ha? been furnUhing
armies to tight against us. Her canting amt no
principles! mirdsti r, I.ord John Russell, has been
guilty of a series ofl, egiversations on Ibis sub
Tcct, only worthy ol a common client ami swiii
dler. He has publicly admitted that he knew
the character and objects of the giiiiginticn :
lag oh '• that the etuigi ruts were recruits for
t he Fcderi.' armies; and has mT-eted to remon
strate with Lincoln upon its illegality and vio
lation of the neutrality of Great lJritain. And
yet, in the face of all ’his be has let it go on
unchecked. Re has not raised so much as a
little finger to stop it, He ha* nut pi evented
ft single emigrant ship frost. leaving a British
j,»>rt. Indeed, tiie evidence show's that he has
been actively promoting, and affording every
facility for carrying on the business. And yet
■within the post few weeks he has been again
prating aboilt England’s neutrality, and in
sulting the South with expressions of sympathy
and good will, when lie was furnishing armies
to crush her Into the dust.
Were ever such meanness, unfairness, dupli
city and treachery exhibited by any govern
ment on earth? We may well exclaim with.
Lester—the author of “The Glory and Shame
®f England”— Perfidious Albion 1 !!
Louis Napoleon has played his part of the
game in his own characteristic way ; bu r wi-h
equal duplicity, heartlessness and knavery
The friend of neither party, he tus de Led
and betrayed both. He, too. hat. joined \uih
Jiluglau and in the scheme of driving United
{states shipping from the yeas for their mutual
J>enellt. The war vessels for us sent from Brit-
AUGUSTA, GA., WEDNESDAY MOi Mb ’ AN; ARY Id, 186.;.
sh ports, wer*- pemiitted to receive thf-ir
armaments in French waters, and afterwards
to undergo repairs in the imperial shipyards
But like England, Napoleon, also, to pro
pitiate the United States, ee’ited ;!:? iron clads
known to be intended for us, which hr had per
mitted nearly bi reach completion under his
own i ye.
it ro happened that when *v.r wav broke cut,
Louis Napoleon was enxapr 1 in the project of
placing an ally of his own on the re-erected
throne of M -xieo. Hut the Monroe doctrine
was in lbs way. Ho dreaded ti-.e veto aud in
terference of the United States. That crafty
Emperor concluded llmt the war in which that
power was engaged, would atr’ord him a liu-f
rate oppori-inity to ft tii of the Monroe doe
trim-, ami cll :.-t his purpose: To this.end bis
policy w'ua Htcadi’y directed. Ili.s iii'M.step was
to prefeud a wiiitu f.,r u,j, whiih eo
liiug licliulpd our govefhtiiiu.t and pt oplu with
dh" hope of intervention, doing us ineab-iiiable
i- .by deterring us front making the timely
and adequate proparaUoi.H whicii we might
othnw'-i' 1 v>- ii.,. .■. To alum. St-ward, he
piojrurti'd to Erglaud to oiler their joint medi
ation in oui behalf—a proposition which he
knew would be ejected lud’i re he made it.
.This (rtilir-g t:• utcciuplish the end. to diive
tlio stuh'noiu EedeiaisTroui the ground of their
lavorite Monroe doctrine, fits next dodge was
the construction of the iron clads; which par
tially succeeded, extorting from Seward a re
in. V.r.t a:,d njuivival acquiescence in the t»
tablishmc-iit of.. Eutopcan Monarchy iu Mexi
co, while the Federal House of Reproscntativps
it-: lilrmed the Monroe doctrine by a unani
mous vole
H iving gained his pjint, what then became
of Louis Napoleon's ardent sympathy lor us 2
It evaporated into thin air. We hear no more
of it. Not a fig decs he care now for the South
or i cr indtrp; ndetice, having unde all the capi
tal out of her that he needed. Having served
the purposes of his artful policy, slie is cast
aside, scorned and neglected its a useless thing
by hi* •imperial highness, llis countenance
and cncoiuag-mcnt are now given to the
to keep h*»r quiet, to prevent her from
iqin with the inconvenient Monroe
dc-cfiinn, to ffitiph be jigows she clings with
unyielding tenacity.
Wo regard, therefore, England and France
aa our poifiilious foes, as our worst enemies--
our betrayer., ami ijiurderers. They have
stood by, larding tits dollies if them (hat
stored us, consenting io the death of Soultiera
iudependence. 'i’imy have treacherously stair
bed us hi the b.v'jk. and-worked steadily against
us, viiiiln struggling with an adversary out
numbsring u.i sou. so one. Wo owe tin m
nothing- -unlci.l it be just contempt and »:g!;t r
eoiis hate.
Rut that lelributlve justice which visits
with condign punishment the crimes of na
tions, may net always slumber. Fttgland aud
France have : cur red the* enmity of both North
aud toulhj'ijd may some dry be made to feel
their united vengeance, The lops of Canada
and .Mexico may yet expiate their treachery
Hy their unchristian connivance at and fes-ter
jng ff tlii* bloody and destructive wav. they
Jj.iyo unrw'd into, being a col Usual military
and naval power on ibis punTinout Which may
i.oy-afv.T hold its ml in I rrornu ova-r them,
an ! c.-.m-s tii.'!*' luughty rnonurohs to tiemble
oh tiler: tottering throne*.
T 81K llt l’i OR THE HOI H.
There are certain great crises in the hi Rory
of a iistiion, when the liigluvt whilom is vo
ijiiiu'J -fii ; ivu it from min. In such an hour
tho ( vdiuaiy :* ulinunts wiii’di move political
bodies are no longer potential. Tie men who
usually in an the Kil'ilrs of puTteudi -appear,
u . gulls 11 y before the fury of the tempest.
The occasion is too grand for their tactics : th
exigency too solemn for their counsels, 'iiii
is true of all nations, It is especially true in
a popular government,. - In tranquil times
much latitude may be allowed to iho acts of
the iteßi'gogfto. He spoils like any other hfo
sec! in the summer air. Rut in those awful
ho,us. wiuin tho wry life of t*i» uatfop 5s in
peril, there is no room for the tricks of more
party managers —oa«;uvsfness, truth, reason
and high courage are the qiulities wliie!i the
cii?'t dmnands. *
These Southern Stales have reached that line
whi i,e something must be done to save them.
We feel no dfopositjea to say a single word
that would wound wantonly. We have no re
proaches to oiler ■. tio curni,fi:.i;i; ■? to uticr. V-. c
are quite cure that we write i.i tin? spirit of
P"> teaching* of the great dramatist.
in msßc'.V
It is ouriiniy L> speni; to (he pe.ij.ie jditir.ly:
{.» p,.;n* (.lit ike dangers Which environ them ;
io warn Uit-Bi *u. -f £*i-rtiii;io»c (OUiist* ; uu«l
to ujge the m to t\ve tiitrit iiirUiiuifctiH while
mny.
TUe country is hi ii dei>loiul>»ti ♦•cn«?Uio»n. —
C*or BridiuM- db-mters have brought ua to the
verge of ruin. Tiiie greet State has been sac
rificed. We do not (barge it as the if Milt of
any purpose to I unisli it. It is imt at ail ue
ee-vaiy to Leal the question in that spirit ■
L;at it is now a pmt ot the history of the event
ful tiiu siu which we lire, that a hostile
army has bc«a permitted to march through
spreading desolation in its advance,
without any vigorous effort on iho part ot'
those who e.oUiol the Confederate Govern
ment, to arrest or"defeat it; an army defi
ciont in supplies; wanting ammunition to fight
a single pitched battle ; an army that might
have been captured to the last man, by a
proper employment of the forces under the
control of the President. The audacity of the
march was only equalled by its complete suc
cess. The veteran regiments, of Georgia were
ranged along military lines elsewhere : and
their own great State, stripped of her natu-al
defenders, has been left at the mercy of the
invader, who left the mountain region with
his battallions and his wagon trains, and
plundering asd spoiling as he passed on.
marched straighten the sea.
The army which ought either to have con
fronted Sherman, or to have pursued him,
turned its steps toward Tennessee. The coun
try now learns how fruitless —or rather how
wasteful that enterprise has proved. It is un
derstood that Hoed recoils fr?»m the shock of
aims in .the State which be undertook iotas
cue, Nashville stands unshaken by ike tnoa-
<ler of Confederate artillery. S ..v'.unuh i,
passed under the yoke of f-c eneuv.
But these military disasters are rot our c
est calamities. Tiro s!*y p.hove us d.-.ikecs
Even th ■ lichtof hope begins to fade uv.
To the arocious cry of the p:-r pv, “Watelimac,
tvbat of the night ; ' our Uonfcdcivde h-xdns
have no cheering mr- iye to leturn. Timv
are understood to be seeking a,d iur.u 'i .- !.
Aid to be pini ha.-, and, if ramor i, to be crodit.'il,
; lq ti.e Sicrilhv ol tin. very inlirosi.i which we
: undertook to vindicate and . w. *i , -
e:.:it aid c:uj oe > -iu!--it oniv , ’ a et
oltr social system, ii will be hum ht u-- too
great a prie.-. ibeu if v.e eiieCei-dtd in pre
v-diiag on EugUnd a'n 1 l-Vam.'.- !o ini, ; ,
in onr hel.-ilfj npnu such tei'm 1 find if their
iotei venlion hltouid be ..i.e uh -c,- - -. i, i
so far ns to put u« upon our ! ill ‘hat
would leave ’.;s in a state of S.i : h:..t ,1..
pendeuco upon our allies. V. here would h
that cod-eied indepenJ-a'.-e •;hi.;'i v. ■
striigglt'd for 'f Whefe our rank aamav n-i on.
Ii Aiht'P.i bud -oilylit inotri 1;11 ■ . P,; ,:;-
agaiusl, tire arms- ol Ebillip, what would shs
have gained by the success of her policy .*
We have said that our military disasters do
nqt constitute our greatest calamity. There
is on the part of the people of these Confcder
'.ate States, a want of confidence i:i the c-ajiaci
iy of the Administration at Rlelnnond to con
duct the cHairs of the Government successful
ly. That confidence has long been declining.
It has cea?(d to exist. We do not write this
in apy other spirit than that of an earnest
statenu-nt.of our estimate of the state of the
country. We have reached a crisis. The ves
sel is on a lee shore ; the roar of the breakers
is heard ; the storm sweeps with terrific pow
er through the rigging ; the helm is power
less; the hand that graps it is too feblo for
?n •!• a task. At this solemn hour what is to
bo done .' It is no light thing to effer counsel
at sucii a time.
One thing is quite plain. It is l.he%right of
the people to decide their own destiny. The
people of Georgia may meet in peuveulion to
deliberate upon the affairs of the Common
wealth. They are the real parties in the tre
mendous issue which is to be settled by the
revolution now in progress. The Legislature
jjoes not represent the people in their sever
O’gnty. It to - law-making body. Its func
tions are specific and limited, fi. eau do no
thing which affects the organic law. of the
Slate. Rut aco nvention would ri pter.cnt the
sovereignty of the people. It might create,
change, or destroy. I! might be well at this
lilife t 6 bring the people of Georgia together
to consider the state of the country. Surely,
when the lilb of the Smte is iu jeopardy, ii is
eminently proper that (he supremo power in it
sbcjgtu copsiflpr Hs condition It might at
least adyise, if if did nothing more. It might,
instruct, it it did not ad.
The scheme of negotiating u ith foreign pow
ers for tiio abolition of slavery witbin the
states, is freely discr.v-rcd A n.’goFati.-e, too,
to be conducted by the Con federate Govern
Piei.t. The proposition is a monstrous one.
We do not now speak of fine policy of emauci
patioo, immediate or remote. Rut wo <!o say
that to cb*. in for the Oonfed; rate Goverumcut
the power to negotiate at all upon that, sub
j vet, i.i n monstrous assnmnliou. That goy
cirnaont possesses no right whatever to control
slavery. The system of domestic servitude as
it exists in these States, belongs to the people
of the several States, ft is for them to say
when it shall cease to ex : sf. To advocate (he
right of lit* Confederate Government to dis
pose of slavery, is to exhibit a very impeiftci
acquaintance with Ihc structnro of onr govern
moot. The t’ou.i'.iterate Government has no
more power over it, so far as its existence or
jts moditicaUcu of form caa be .cone rued, than
it b.i* over serfdom 'ii Rns-ia, or lbs appren
tice system in Ragland.
Upon this subject and upon other questions
arlVcting their rights, the peoplo of Georgia
miy well speak, .‘a Convention would bo aide
to define the relations of the State to the
Confederate Govoi tiioent, to other Stale?) aud
to dispose of all questions & Heeling the inter
ests. the welfare, and the honor of this great
Cm ouionwoiitj).
The state of the country ec-tainly demands
the exertion of its highest wisdom, patriotism
aml virtue. In other words, Th.; motto of the
tUate may nov, inspire our counsels : “ J;srn a..
WisnoM, Mian iiAiiox.''
A Proposition • .»: Tk.vuk.—Tho IV-ilicalor
ol (bin \v< rk public., aan article on peace from
the pen ol Bar. L. O'Otmnpll oi Uolumbm,
8. (I. to Ii v. Dr. Cummings ol Kew Yoik- 1
The wiiter tit at talks of the .honor and cruelty
of a civil war -n cooelu-tion which evety mii
stblc man has c uae io by this time, lie theu
sp.vu’i,:vs Upon the duration of the present
war and thinks that, unless mc;y lues arc taken
to biiiig it to a (lose, ihat ldr years the land
will bo coaled with ttm blood of. its inhabi
tants, and it will.be ua* lot io witness again
the scenes ci dLtietv and agony, which we
h-.ve already wiiues id.
The South he says has t!,,s mratts within
liotewU for p.) i ttirii;;ng the ijar for an indell
nite period; and so has the United States also •
Put he remarks it can never be ended by the
sword. Neither tlpes be think foreign powers
can arrange matters.* To ct;d it suttessfuliy,
aud satisfactoriaily it must be ended a-: it begun
—by ourselves and between out selves, j
Ho therefore suggests that the Catholic
Church of both sections oi the couutry, with
the aid and co-operation of all who may feel
disposed to encourage the undertaking, organ
ize itself into a grand Peace Association—a
Convention, as it were, to discuss propositions
for peace: and after adopting some plan, pre
sent it tojooth governments for their adoption
or rejection.
In making this proposition he docs “not
wish it to be understood that he is a reeon
structionist, a unionist or any thing else:
but that he is “a peace man'"
Mr, O'Connell, in his endeavors to bring
this war to an honorable close wiil find that
he is taking a very popular position. The
people of both section are getting sick of the
frightful scenes they are called upon to witness-
An honorable peace is whp.t the masses o f both
the South and North are longing for.
Gold in Cuaulestos.—On Monday gold was
selling in Charleston at forty. Sterling ex
change at thirty-five.
V ;c\ I '.TVRVBK.
no
: .-big forvigo
i;■ t> rv = - v O'-o ' the principles for
i v. - • ’ * V’. : ad also by agreeing to
. , '.-..•-■ used a jt:«t iu-
d r ' r '-' ! ' ie people at home
’ , ,■ j ’ v- iy evident that
.. - -). niicid ti j >ii ,
I',- j; ; , kb >; il"; ■■ i*. aii opinion
• , ; ri, ,->ia ev ia ili- -.f-r
--, j ( icr c-ltlccr;
• : im'n. joi;' le. an.l public,
•‘m .. . ‘ ■ (,i , s ],iv,-ry with
- .'Oi 'o;i kiter
' •• v r wi.te narii.n-.diiy •
; ‘*o von ••• it * ■■ et .day -rv.
; ■; ;ib!i-v !;’ va*s
-. I "tv. S into flirt
‘bn , ... oi ;i ’ r.l, -I. i: on. ill!
■ • - '-r.-.vided for
' ■ . '• .. • io liitkct our
. . ■ . Vii '•■ ‘ o •!) u.i, -iy • No for os
••('■■■A ■ ais c<U'i :o : r.'. o' ' - . a i;u !'i can
*‘ei I '. 1 : hi’. i".i1.,:0d0 of hul pCUple
"ai 0 •.vv'O.ih :i as abird. Her Legislature
“ha i -1 g. , 11 ow long would it take
‘.‘'her: for G - : a to tut -mble in Convention?
“Ti* Govcar.or • • aid call on the Legislature
“fur advice on a point so important. That
i- i-o. lire- i:ioi to Js-nie a preedam.?-
•• f i-i'a ij-.liba; up as (be people to assemble.in
: “Uonv aha * -a- U as they deemed bCSI.
“Rhouh! tii-" crle .aeel i ndevtu propose the
“abo’itb.'.n (• 'biv: iy, ha-.v long would it take
“bcl.-rc neiden could he transmitted
“thru;..- b (la- •.‘•;;uh.r clu-.iinel to the foreign
“governuienfii • Afiei it bad t-een transmit
“tod, how lon •; v. ;-nld it require to secure a
“notice from Gm di-.'aiiied ministers of those
“c.uiiioua uu ! ■ub ti govern in orits ' Am ] far
“from iVcii. •>.: I si -a; that lddo would ex
"p;h- V■- •'(>*• - 'so cab rd Confederate States’
“would receive a
‘■Rat where see,you a re;-sot. for supposing
"th... t.-. * hope of securing practical
‘•iulervurdion f-vm if we made this effort? I
“eandbliy c.- .■ s U,-.? ! bolivye t'ap effort
* wonv. b • fit" lev, tUitess w? r.'uld otter those
“powers sofii 'i ait inducomCEts in the way cf
-‘comp'-nsafi 'o f-c Use losses they would sus
‘•tain by oai ’T.fcrver-tion. The immense
“m ’fil'd irdi': .' of Englf; hmcp and Frcnch
“a en th. dFUh s, liable to eangsea
“Uon o' the ; ■ ',/oi;; e. ' uv.l.ivuo’ war, lotttl
“ly call for a Kinuancu of neutrality. Whal
"coiUi i: ..'ioii --i ov: -. ;■ those
.‘111":r loss os i-l■■l aod treasure? 1 leave
“Uk-s-s vho s.'s. is for their
••'neutrality k. , .v. r t'ais. question •, as well
•a.* tl.ie olber tp :-; ion i :>w American Stales,
"always non firm" ‘ ut! >■;:-i q ■- m: expect ;-t
“this time i'lrir s ii heir own bchili ?
“Rut even ii •••/•.' con? '* is us:' foreign aid by
“ti— bo’Uioa t; i!• vy.-ulfl it be for the
“b-sl inictc-ds c-f the C ir.fcderacy to accept
"ik" - ’.s m ; A s;-, ij j*,-,;.. la not easily an
- s' :! • and co;rent, cau
“be.u. - fi i". is th; ; iiii uiative, and the
"neg hive is i:.> 1 s is: lunate. It is beyond a
“doul-t ;U * ’ ih ' ihandafloa of our
,: Si>.- r .?l Sj-i'cm. ri,.-ir»y th:' -ilntioH-i and
••V>e .«’■/> -I'd '('s' Ip, a p/vcariuiw vomit-
I).-: rironv : iv t'r.v .m - About S
o'c’.v ! s\ . l-icl'.i :y di S'S weo) ill!
COVCit i ! • • I*l • 'U...1 W..i'.’t.'ill3o Ol
Col. ( .IS. li.'-u ill i: :!',i'.-irg. S. C., and
bi'lore tbe lire c-"uM lo isfi-lni'd tke entire
buildir-g v i-i oi s. nunri, togotiier with about
fourteen hiiudi -■! b <-T col 1 , in. The cotton
belonged I■> pi r.'.ib pat fi . and was only par
tially iii-iiie.i: Ri.t It-: (si the cutt'-’U will reach
over one luiiiioi dolt a: s'.
Tbe Is ,ib- ,v•;: ii w- - jown-’d hy Major
IT'iUiiuoitil. w.i.r parlly brick a'ul the re
tnalndci f- Tbs : . ick puvti. a was 15$ feet
by and the frame hd'rlding .‘IT.) by 4;) feet.
The loss oil ts s: urn will amouiu io about |
ip./il.OOfi— insured for fiii‘-.‘f*o.; '
Th • lire cm r.ouriioilod to a hr’ek divtlli'ig
•adjoinii. : ; the coltcn wai.-honoyyutd and
occupied by ii j u H.uaiaoritl, whichwas,.; a.a
-iigc<j: to the niuohf t oi
This'llr. - W « .one cf'(iiii 'inost saddefi' that
bas ocunTre 1 "s ' bet uo the citnw-ns
weremvaro et itfilhc entire building was on
%r bq.l'd i" ljj',l li''.V"lirill;’,' i ll■ all'llt.
Ti.'. ; i; no (hjubc lli it this tii'o was the
wo;k oi nn I' i- the third time
au aft*.nip- I>-* u in .*e to destroy thi.s
wareiiouse.
Thu 11 rim I' i < : Gkouoia
'-IV hi I (;•••)••. .1 Ik «.-is S!I -ur city, a ill
, w>.Uml. Gi-uee-
Jt i |i. L li e ■i.' Lo has the I
j’i .. ).[ ii ~ ■ 11 .;:':)!)!:• Ito (leuetal
liiHiig io Ills u.-n.d '.(.>y. bobj the State at
•ili f-u '!u ; , fop l’p fi: : I I:\ fc' JOV
U'.J •‘fti.-'U Si ■.•(■■) A of the dee
paicU liK-tii-mge i ir.no. ir.’ri us an ifVa m
..tji! .> idol. »toi lie ... h.d •• Wlr.lt is your
availuldc - t’>r Ihf < perp-.'rc •
TANARUS„ v-fii :. C ; ■: ;i IT: •.:•••< promptly reili !—r
‘•Five P:c -."d’i.'ami <-!H* brig (lie.”
(),::• . .it ,:'d i. t sc .' the point :.nu
, . | ' . p,: to : On.
Why, ... and i:i:. (.}.>>•; Brown issued a prccla
ma-icn. that v,-s on.'. Gen. A H. V.'rwhfs
; , ah - !<!■ sidenfk H'tide three k, '•:u
t. v 11,I 1 , it Hill's made four, ard that frem the
cfi.Jit ni-.mbejs u Congress made live.
*■] shall ccmstdar Sherman a hard case if 1
oaif t 'crush' him with five proclamations ana
one brigade.”
llait. Storm —A correspondent writes that
Woodbury, Ga., and vicinily was visited with
a severe hail storm, Dec 27. The bail was of
all shapes—from the size ot a pea to a hens egg-
A high wind prevailed at the time, and the
house of Mrs Kendall, in the vcinity of Green
ville, was down. Mrs K was severely
wounded, and her sea Jndge F. Kendall, or
dinary of Meriwether, county, was killed.
Goods which were in the house were blown
fer miles. The tornado was only about a
, j e w hundred yards in width and was very des
tructive in its - course.
The Tobaoco Mark r—The Tobacco Mar
ket in th'. section lias had an upward tendency
for the past few days. Tbe prices of some
! grades we are told have advanced some three
or four dollars per pound. Over a half million
I ollars ’worth of the article we are infoimed
| has changed bauds.
HE4CB UV AG .f! ii * VK)".
A lew d.-.y-l iir.ee semo ■ • v .
trodccec into iho North 0-nollna Lc-.-i:
to settle cur exi- iiLg difficulties by n. , •;
and wilhout further fighting. Tho r. - ;
were discussed at eorae length, j ;,t* i. i • •
are the remarks of ifon Air. ,•
subject. Ile'sakt:
'The great question now l eforo the pe,
was in wh.it way peace Could be obtaiuo ; ;
the vs".; honorably end-',!, in Use opu-of
some i! m!':*.( gi;--;'; : , 1 r Ju.'.C; , J.
Iy be old afocl by ..' . q j... W:)l . ... ,
roll its deed o'- 'r ,-d ii o i,j s> ; .q
cub'*, Ctud b;oh..;; I.t . ■ h ii was le t i.
spb’it of hi.* pe.iriotit-m. "c loved ti e h >i:ii ..
! the be&utifiii South his birth \ Rice, hi, l.owo
< i seal ol ill his affec ’»q as ihe .], v, ;
.Jeni-Mic-m, and in that spirit desired that
peace should bo within her walla and pram a t
Iy with iu her palaces. War was cot'like
those of-Europe where one potentate, for a
pniiutiiio, warred upon another and •
ciorconary troops of either fought with no t\-
a q . It was a great civil state btiw-on
two peoples of tlio same race—for w a uv. •
Up -a" iace, .-aid tho Spc»k r, havb
; am. forW’uf govbi nntem, the game -Jangaugii
the same history ; and with one exception, ib.’
same domestic in,dilutions. TTu> Almiiht.v
had seemed to intend that both should live to
gc-ther and rule this confluent as out; mb'litv
nation, though fanaticism and ambition hail
ordered otherwise.
A war such as this could not ba endeß by
arms though the Goidian knot that b'-nnd ilie
American Riates together might be 10, seem!
by skillful negotiat'd;;j U oonid never be cut
by the sword. Wo had fought three-hund'ed
battles, we had won two hundred victor!
our Generals were not surpassed by Seioio
Africanus or oar soldiers less brave than
those of the Roman legion or Macedonian pha
lanx, but the mounds tm the battle Hold, ’ the
graves around the hospital, the iqouniing of a
thousand homes told sadly of the brave that
were gone. Insatiate war had swallowed up
the strength cf our manhood, it was now tear
ing the seventeen year old boy from bis mail
er, the old man from the midst '* r ’ u lTr) . n 'j
children, the blind., the '-.m , the‘halted
bJUOiy ePCiiD:,.p,ud yet was it still to k o ou !
were we still to. drive our children into ‘the
ri ms of Moloch ! Must we forget every gentle
teaching of the Ghustiaa religion, aud war on
till, in a land bereft of tficir natural protec
tois, our wi'vj uml cldldien should be left Mo
the lerociuas negro and (ho hardened sold;; ;?
1 he country, rich as it was, could not ctand it.
its products could not be yielded without
kdior and where was the labor to cornu from,
with the white men in the army and the ne
groes escaped to the enemy or dr.ven c if into
ths vaults ? In our lessening limits, too, wn .i
numberless refugees, ftll consumers, non p:c .
ducars, whom chaiity foibado us not to' re
ceive Through the blockade cauio tK'ihla-r
but supplies for the war, luxuries for the rich’
or goods for the speculator and extortioner.
Freshet and drouth and shw tm ss of crop had
still 1 art!:!", reduced our stores and how, in
tii-i midst of all this, was it disloyal for a man
to so love home and country as to wish for
peace 1
Again, 100, as another evil result of the war
se.d havoc had been made of the public intel
ligence and virtue. Schools and colleges w.qe
(jese.i tltd. TVachers svtiil atudouls in this rank*
or iu tue grave. T'he Church Itself had felt
the evil and in place of ils crowd of devout
worsliijieis prison ted only empty beeches, and
mourning habiliments and tearful faces.
Should the war continue, virtue would peruh
a*ui with it liberty hosw.pt away, for it wu
. our politic and doctrine that' libi ity rested on the
virtue and intelligence of the people. Tim
currency, too, was iu a doplortih'.e condiliou.
Tlie Government— and he dad not blame it
had issued an foliated money. r j be nece si tics
of war had. forced i=» isrual, since a wise fore
sight and a due employment of our great sta
ple prodiiels had not been thought of. It had
once been said cotton was King, and so It
might j’avp been a Monarch, if stored up in
Europe ar-i ii base of credit, but now, wh'ere
was-King Cotton ! JlWing in nooks and d>ip
pluciv; trusting kinvcli it*, nfighf to the winds
and the billows, stealing forth in the darkne-v?
like a ilucl : the tool of speculators to grind
the faces of the poor, sneaking through ibo
lima like a deserter io the enemy, and finding
tu ia*) anrl fi lends alone in a foreign land -
government Mr. IT. tUea went *oa lo
say, had never aitunpled to win the oft < lions
oi the people. It bod set aside.the most so!-
cmn contruoU, it fiad Iraprcssed the pc- pie’s
property, the fruit of honest toil, it hml tfirco
time* suspended the privtege of the will of
habeas .jormu aud was nboiU to, da au ag fin.
In Kiiyhig this he spoke wR-li due respect hut
stili it was patent there had been no effort to.
stimulate ntlection deception and (ho s.lri.ing
aim oi military powc-r 1; r 1 been relied on, hut,
even now, ii was not too late to pursue a dif
ferent course, to retrace there fajßo S-c]ia
q!;.=tq-ya tfcc aapred right* of liberty, arid to a? 1
met that the South should riae from her present
proslration o<-vor to he mhjugatcd. The:o
was no other hope Our products could not
now assist us and Europe would not aid. We
bad made this a war for slav ry aiftl o ;
subject Euglaiiif wua uded by'Exeter Il fill,
France Reeded but the word esdawije to excito
her antipathies, and neither would ever iv. *
ogn>s;e tv slave repubUo Europe should kn :w
what we were lighting tor and the 1.500,00 )
tncn who had Voted against Lincoln iii tint
North should be made cur allies instead ol be
ing to; in and worse than the Republicans a? tha
Honfedcrato Government was doing. Tin pol
icy of that government in (his regard .was v. rung.
H leaded to conaobdafo the wliole North
agc.iui ns, and told us that North was a'l for war.
and loll! the North that we were all for war
too. Ilf* believed it riot, for the American
people loved peace better than they di 1 wav
Then there were- opther things in *hxt p-dicy
ho did not believe in . lpa did not but (i id;
■dial arming and emancipating the ucg' o-.-- a
,a giving up ol the whole q iv;fion and would
S'H.ticr expect the win -hnu'd stand eliil in tho
heavens th.;a that the negro would light f -r us
in the Odd. -There H is tnw they mb!;:, gain
that valor by discipline «■ ui luittle they n »v
lacked, lmt when the manhood of tha cms-y
’■v:ys g'iq;e. ivhftn none but Ui». oh: nu n aiul
boys w.re left, what wouhl prevent fiw e
trained negroes from renewing among u>.
bloody horrors of San Domingo '* N- 1 •
'•‘ini ttebj whs the beat, theordy biutie )»«'• ' ' r
the negro, audit with '.!>*:■ white mva abe.wly
g um, the negro was also to Im t. ni AG !. it
wcu’d not be long before 1-imicc wcu-d make
the stoutest heart quail.
S Ju the last three years it could be but too
| plainly seen that li!>erty had been terribly en
croached upon by military necessity and furth
er aggressions were in contemplation. The most
eloquent denunciation of military tyranny he
had ever read was in that message of Presi
dent D ivia wherein he rebuked the aciion of
Lincoln in suspending, the habeas corpus, and
yet now the demand was not only to suspend
that writ, but to place the whole .population
under detail. The press, the great guardian
of public liberty, was to be detailed to assist in
the destruction of the interest it should pro
tect. The Judges were to lie-detailed to wrest
the law and earn, like Jeffries, an immortality
of infamy.
The detailed preacher who did not preach to
suit the authorities was to have his commission
from Aim'gbty God revoked and be sent to
the front to assist la sending sinners to hell,
i The teacher was to teach the doctrine of peace
able se-ession in his born book, to show in his
lessons on biography the present had greater
m a n than Washington, to prove from history
that-Sherman’s much through Georgia was a
Moscow campaign, and show in political
economy that it was right to take every white
man and conscribe the negroes in order to
carry on the war for fifteen years !
■ •“ ' '
! The war must co vc, O.vd w.r
j Greece. 1 urdo 1 v nnb’.h' U ;vjv ...v r ; A
| tus, ir.a En.:-Im: t!: •! a rcr.i' fi
brought -with joy, -an
fro’m under ’the mild iVay of J uG Xa>.
though the Reirm of terror. Hie c, ofi, ■ . ■ •;
the bl '-.ft;: t ire of fi e >i ' •, .
that ynnd ..
nothin;: fr : , the p v.i ’Or v. .cHI. n■; \ :
I'll pi'fit ' RICSi) 1: , OlV: C;: ; !,, ■ ■ ,
fort* to bn vc the war efi-vt: '•• ■ „..,.-. 0
men, n* th'-y were c.\!k-d. t • - ; .-
and tnoui’h they might bo fi.-cni ■! fi; ; ,i j ;v !
toe p ••,■,. i’, ’:s;i i; be, tliev wee • ■ •. [ | .
liberty, tocii'd. or to their coimt.y:
Ho?v, except by negotiation, could wo hop?
to sne Wo could nos icly m ' ,
bivakiu ■ down, on their no . '■■ ,■■■>, ■ ,
conscription or the Eke. Their m • ■ ;■
2 40, ours 38. We had ivo od •.,
why not they? Wo had sen ifo. : ■ ‘ j
hunted down with dog?; tic.!, end. w v ;’•>
am! children were weepin;: about' Id,drfio
e a to .
the fro , a :
would I. it ro:‘i»i. 01. ' ■ v.'.iu'. •
this was tho yplianec. Tho power was in
ha; : .... ’ Rn s>! p r , > . . .
and ftfftffir fvdiiia make jaw v;,, ~
turned their peopi* like Dm gladiators «and (fid
into the arena and li.ohaitlo mint,bo feu-'lf
out.
In tho long run prepond.;;’', • rs . !S
and extent of territory nut: i , ■.'■,.■ .■{ v ,.j
not, before that end. try other ;v .-.;as ■ .•• >,
to terminate ibo struggleil.m st.-u.-fi . ;,i
his place there as a Scmitcr, a? .* rep it. ~i. ttivo
o! a free people, whose hopes, whose feclii-.
whose destinies wore with tho Sonia, who E and
no kindred, no friends in other ’bands, as a
Southern man in heart, and soul, lifted up hi*
vojce for peace that the free and end fide no fit
judgment of the people should dclcuuino to
bejust and honorable. r l iso people had stor- 1
by his liberty amid tho tiros of llio b.D" ,
S.!"iS“.“““ ia '” wi ''" '“"- 1 Ififelrl
proposed in thc-sft resolutions, j
sou “.ti to be taken up, was one that in no v. ; v
violated constitutional provisions. It came
from the States, who wove the masters of Mr.
Davis. It would inform Europe of onr true
position. It would encourage our people by
letting them know they wove not to I.e de -
stroyed without a chancn for peace. It would
cheer the soldiers who would no longer sic
chew less by the campfire, looking forward to
years of gloomy war, and if, iu conseque ice oi
the adoption, peace'should result, tho fcite’ii
gcnce would flash from one end f the country
to the other, to inspire such a chorus of joy fit;
could only be equaled by the symphonic* of
tho glorified and triumphant saints.
« BORGIA M2LITIA—AII. ISTKIUS vi'i.’ .„ t;OH
RISSI*OSiDS£XC'K.
Ht.VUQUAnTERS MIUTAKY RoST, j
West Point, Ga., Dec. 2?., 1861. ,
7o Ills Excellency, Joseph K Breton :
Sir : On theltith in?-rfi I was in AloGigom
cry, Ala., from which point t telf';:'i aph I' j,
to my Inspector to brine: forward to : a
cry all 'convalescents able for duty ..
trenches ; all tho men lrom tho two i -fi’ •:
stationed here,and all from ton 37Ri i)i :,
Georgia Milifa that would volunteer, to i."
armed as iniautTy, I lmd o lcnlated on p
thirty or forty from i;.hiMilitia. V, jui, v ...* ;,jy
astonishment when all but four r*. imiKlcd !
There was about thirty absent upon fi.,
all of wnieh threw up their leave anil c;;;ue
forward. AU honor to Trc ?p!
It is whjt I I .li e. ,! b-: ;, : v )
sir, bs assured 1 am proud of such moo ; (in- r
will do tilemseivus cu-riit any;,here.’ A j
seemed eager an 1 anxious lor the frav—en
thusiastic and full of life.
On arriving at Pollard, we marched tv-vni.v
four miles the same nigiif. iu the dircciioii <f
Pensacola and returned t>, xf day, uiaku -
tv-eight miles iu twonf-y-four hours, and ' ,
the hardest- marching 1 ’cave do:-, mu -to
commencement of the v.<i K
complaint, no caviling cr limit . . l
assuicd, sir, they in mi j, ;• • :, H- n- : -
til the last, but tie.y wt-ie ice sor, . ls.nie.fi,
stillest set of mfei, 1 ever ;-"i -. : bey stand'
ready to go again whe .u rl may u; k ;i 'in. ■
4on may well bo proud of such man and snob
patriotism.
Wo failed to c/nne up y.’fi'f tha vandals; but
our course on Saturday ? j ; ht was jiphled up
for twenty miles by tbv biuz-a of burning home
steads —evefry Bouso 'in' that distance being
burned but two.’ These!left were pillaged of
everything they containOd except the bodies of
the peoeple. TTie road the whole disfonoe was
strev/n with articles of ladies wearing apparel,
feathers, broken crockery, remains oi’ books,
iiou.ehold fu rail lire, and properly of every de
scription. Wo ail mayed to come up with
them, and I fully bo-loVc every man would
have gone ipto the «onte.?t with tho detena
inauon to flonqtier or die. ' God bless the boys
from Troup,.
I have the honor to remain, with c uranco
of high regard, your obedient rvivanr,
If. (,’. Tyi.kr,
liiig. 0 ue-..!.
Exroc'ffvi; Depahimrst. I
Macon, Dee, 26th, 1 kf.4. j
Brigadier Ben. ii. t. Tyi«:
Gbxehax. : Your commnuication of tire ii 1
last,, has been received, and is to me, r ; it
doubtless will bo to the p.-opie of tbi; foide, a
source of much gratificu-.imi.
The gallant and patriotic Militia of Troup, j
hy the noble response to which you r... i
have entitled them to th highest coium;..uia- I
tion, and as the Executive of the State I !■ ';.>• ;
leavoto return them through you, vdj sfo;.,c i
thanks.
Some of our public men have lately 'epoh n j
of the ‘‘obliteration of,State Lines” in; a mat- ;
ter of but iitUe moment. This’the pcviplo of]
Georgia will never ass-nt to. co Jong c- ti cy ,
are able to resist encroachm -,rs (•;’ -•
Rut lam happy to k-qow, i ft" v. ; o C - '
common enemy :.s to be met, (ho jal,; Li, of-,
Georgia, imitating the ic.b!".; son• id :(.'on
federate service, have never stopp- I to cm;-,ire
where the lines their State are locao-.L
The Reserve Militia, though not san;j >ct u .fi,.
the laws of Coiigcerf, to Uoafedcra-.a r\
have rallied to the nelu, by t-hot: •.: ds ia res
ponse to the call ol the Exe, -itivo of th-.lr
State—the men and the boy? ;■ ..o' pone—
and have rendered signal and raltant Jm-ice,
in all the battles on our soil, from Ken .• to
Savannah. Kut their pptrimi.-m ha.; not Loon
bounded by State Ibn-s. They cro .ml fi’e
Savannah liver, arid upon the soil of on.’ no
ble sister South CaroEua, bore a co. so ;
part in the bloody fight, tad are <. «ii;Uc ; t j a
large share oi tee power* of the so; Mat
victory at Honey Hill, for; foe older
side of the Stave the brave AI li • •, ol Ti up,
when the homes of our valla'..'': :fo ' ts iu
Alabama were be’ng 1 i was-.o oy n\,
patriotically respond*: i to y> r c. Tl. end pass
ed into their sister S ato to ;u* * r the ion.
Georgia never fulled to do her s:\n-'; duty to
her sisters, and to the great cause, o <h-ar to
• every patriot’s heart.
Neither her enemies, nor the public journals
which tafce pride -in misrepresenting in* can
truthfully deny, that ‘h‘ ba; eonU-ib.it-d her
full share to tue armies of the . Cohfqie aey
and that err it.-- :ve Mili-la, not subject io
Confederate service, b -ve rend -1. mo t
able service,'not only upon tii: ,il ~f- their
owuSta! . , out. upon the te-• . / 0 f < 1 v-r
States. While tttous.ni-i-: hav :L- <•,-» j.i |, n i
on several bloody field ,
and have i<t- -ri by t e c. •• , j rm: <•
man of the Militia of the;- > far ■>.; I
know or beiijve, -v- r h.-.-.. - :. :t ■ba ric
fiebl»or turned Lisiu •...... if.
advanUng foe.
i must not omit, iti this c, -.i:, to men
■•:•: i
,/ *
'
; *' • ; . i
I (VfoJ'i ' . . ,
ham back . , ;
; ih" i>- in..i. i , “ l
i’ rim iu ‘
! u;\m the iu’.i'.c (i l.j, wi -i j. i , »•
1 lure felt it due t :■ ,q,
It>i .u. ;; iintl r»ny *. •' ; . • ( • ' ~v ' t
of Troup —f t . ’.tu Aiu*.*
•• ■ - • ia;or/x.
’fo:
"“"ft !:.-Yr,: r ,„:Wt
j v ’ ”• oh Hi Atlantic. Captai •F. vfi. Han—
' ''' the brig Sjisan, who was captured on
'
(.tin:: ii ", llio Grande „ r ..,, 0 (
I arrived ,
bsrk Grace, of Baltimore, and- fumisWtllA
•
imwii.-ug ,*f R-• !. ..f \ T , ; . inbcx
about two oV*„|-k .- . . .
the <ii"’ ntf", v-- ■ . (.* . ... .^
’Kid stco.l r ■' ;fi c
•’nil a
when she hoial it too K Rllhli flaw ou;l tired,;
g“0. Wo set ; 1)0 . h'at’did lln ire to.
Sin; then In; •» iR • n- ■
fired anotheri.!' • i.mij ii-.ao Imis,.;
the *
were shortly aft, rwarda , u:ni
boat from ' : -. sou • u >••. ;.>ho . «
Trig, il'id evd"'i and the t
pair cm board wi • b tue eh- Tins oc
curred in lutltiid* -I 80 ii-, ' . u fi n-.u "O.r )
west from Greenwicli ..ing th-.t
•ship's pap' : the < n.i.d.- , Ip • .-.r.vataer or
dered ti;o In ;to h.’i s . ' . c utof ii
everything ih t could .• . . u-;: ■.
pi'!),ifdoi(; , ft ft .... . ' ;! , x
ship’s coijifi.i' y ; : • 1 |;• . i, and c._
foots, CXCft.pi. ■ LX ilfoi ( ■
Tie Si<:-Vi r i.. :> . .1 ! v.'fih rjfi -
ing toysfi'!-'. ii on low •.
lower yards, nmp ...
full sail, eU'.v-.i: k : ■ ; .fi Cli?,
gow, by in 1 Sfi.j, I
was foVmoGy c " . .■ jy .
ofticor's own repcit, i;."-l i (•:-.;•! ~q ,
Ltiuddii ond .liftin’ . •• - •.. y i( » ,•.
now armed v-; ’.■■ , ; • unoolh-boro
gens, two 32 puuuder rifle*, and iw., 12 pourt
ber smooth-boro ; ■>;■■■: ; 1 : viy- thv•"o
sow, on board, n; x-solo; v.-. had join- l
aa.or v. Funchal Irn i>orq by V-' • steamer
vimn I; .1 been s -nT on from }■; -••U:n«l for tft"*
nU..Rhebadaci ; ;- :u L-'lidc-u t .
so ii.-ny, which ib.-y i-.dii; l.c j.",d cu board at
■ ! •
In nay op.nio:?, s.• not !fi fi> t ?,ny v, ■
;u>i; is 1 u l .*it , c . yc- cu-a -
except lac iio ;il . • . . . >
only cue <;r ’ . o i. :i:(*n." Shu
(lent in h'.;;d;i;g •,. .... ... ,j’," t .‘,
sii;;; K., te I'Divo. v’. •I-- filv wfi
ncr-fted, he ia: ■ . •, . ...
out .knowing whelks r.sho fi >; ■ uof «
a i:; i • ..
men a’ quarters. " ... ... . , i
that they < uld ha\ .i . tawayby.a
discharge frcr-i :.;i . q u.. ,t on .
ishod me ?<i . : ; :.;cn! in ih;a
respeev, cs ho s' id h-i fi ii •• . i:i
tlio Aineri. ::■ ;• •,•. >.y 1,;.* own. -atemca;,
his name Vvft* V/ard .11, a ;t’ve of 31 '.ryiaud
and rradii;:'o of A;.; -fi - ;. '■ v/; .'
formerly in coinrinl of the United- Slat;*'
sloop of War bar* t 0;....
AH who were c-a baovd mu- ;
nek no wild (bat , : . c.
U* well asjiH oiifift -,i :. :
and wore, m < , ■ : , . 1 ■ !ei h* ;
I’reyious iu fi:-' c ,! , ’ fi.”,
bark Elena, of L. fj .‘odfrev
(placo i .ui>k :;ow3), : . , ijli u t-u < te.fc"
of Run I'Tm? co, 1. .a I : a t lio
fleers-of Bm
into E»o Janeiro j
I.IIC iv?v*‘. : iICC .ini-iJ , con VO V"*
ed mo i\n<, th:*:. oi • < . • • (> ;
thencCPwc ss-’i .and in fi -.bark . -"f I’ M
more, for New Yea!
About live bend; ft! i>o:s’ v a.of t'.-;-" fj
porperty, wifi ti < 1.-.d, ‘ . j’,jf, .
the hand* cV,ao p-,,, . ■.
A Hoi.r.MN-Tiu ■: -V , c.i-r;i-.aoV
to writo long articlee Tubs 1... •<| , -ay if
9 : "• rnmtintid tpu rt stop'tti
the plmjdi::i:)g Os
airy cailiu!; !h. .. : .. ,
toe day a<4 ! hs Confederacy ■: c i ui,'., \
they be few.
SOMETIIINfI rou -CTU: l'V'-?r,E TO THINK 07 -~\
studied effort is nuwSe -,y- trio r ri r ! ■
tended friends'ol .
Ml ht ph<
*
<'onied..-.; ■ .* . p...
tbci?c rJAtettoen b’ iCve ■ : . as
orfiil c . lit:: . WO'-i ••(-.. a : is t f vn -
more good than .- • ’ • •. .■ . v ii J Is ,
anv harm sr so i'.in .si ’ I-- - ,
or the Cc parts,’
by such ijf . : :: a u , ■■■■_, • ...y i
plea ■> alKui, I:-.:.-, r ■ w . ; .
but we fay ii wi: hoT . • . * - ■•pCgnn..
cessful rei u.ii.-n,. , p- ■/. in tu.
future- whe.i thia - ■ at las
to l>e sfcl iied, as i',': . :•* '• • dy, »■>
two piea in . ■ . -i 1 i
move useful b> u : --t o: i : ve:;
ed quesiiou. . .l:-.. .- ami
Joseph L. (Biowri. -d.ul i.. . ;V.ck..p
Un.'on.
*
Os the Indianc,polls Joorn and V : la-.'follow-
Ipg- pkriire l ( :
A you - ;.;d . ,
Open country, lo: . ; t,.cu,. the >•
ter ionelisc. .>, tin , :l ;r 0 .a'-rika.,
one with a 1: ..... q-, i ;
spring on th :■: •.. .'
drinking of ML • .
i g'- 1 --' in th .1 id-:, ■ . . -. i..
.V < Is, n . . ... qi i
! ii :ard "he h-.e lv- ■ h. ; a..... ..
| busy tenor
!si inline ' f . a! • ; . --.i -a>M
j the wild b’ud ih ■■ a a note, y-. ,
I look aroarid-supr : a: -. :••«.. t
' any iivii '
j ThL the
: wilt. Atj;l the lod:.' t .■> -
| l-*r tho r v:-,i '• • • -/"' ■■ ; -y
; «, t»
*