The Sun and Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1874, June 03, 1874, Image 2

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r ■ruv. ■a#0H>«,l»r4. Frldsy, (ho bUt mdootog tbe troy being under soosideretleU, Oen. Butler offend an laerdaeit designed to “Ond 'off" Gen. Sherman's reported design to re move the headquarters ff the wy to Bt. Louis. Bailor's urntawt provided thet the headquarter* of the army shall never be removed from the national oep- itel, except In time of war. It wae re jected without a divirion, hletare, except froaa I* appeata from the dtepntahae that in the Honre of liepreeentativcr on Monday, Batter, ineteed of reporting a OvU Bigbte bill and thru bringing it immedi ately before tbe Honre, ae he had a right to do, moved a rarpenaion of the rnler to permit the taking of the Senate bill fMm tbe table of tbe Honre. Uadqrhte privi lege to report a Civil Bigbte bill at any time, be could bare reported tbe Senate bUI ae a aubetivnte for thaaua recommit ted to him. Bat be preferred to make a motion wbioh required's two-thlrde vote, and tbia vote oonld not be obtained. It ir not difficult to peroeive the deeign of tbia manceuver. Batter wUl boro the came opportonity nett Monday. they may. The dap her gone .part, in Georgia at least, when lawlrat btBtea ou with impn- alty aaaail men la the iiao of thetr dnty, ner fear the 1 reaatte breonm they aUp' tbrengh tbo meaheeof the law. Already we have exhaaated tbe pattenee of Ooot- gi* readsrxiq rsaitiag tbs kUttag ofpssv old Philips and the jedioiel farces that followed M. We have grown weary of re- jHaftfrau gramme of tb/BMoietioha aebmitteg to toe Georgia delegatioa lad whiah Were pabltabed in my .last, with the view of thee responding to thA aeatteMofo M Bteta eovereignty party at the Berth; and in tbia way effecting falMO eleetteae at the North, while we, by ebtndeaiag ae- 1+ntbU poiiUou, algal hi ikli tfr Iffift onr flag afloat, aatil toe oentnUrta shoulil be driven from power in : the Federal Congress. I had noidea that them Oen- greankmal oommteriooere would bo re- eeived, or treated with, by MriliBooln. My object was that, by aneh a movement Tire negroes of Montgomery, Ala., ate kloking np ebont their exolneion from meeting* held by the white wing of tbehr party. They eeam to be well eooqgh satisfied for the negroes to do tbe voting and tbn whites to get the offloea, but they want some bend in arranging “the elates'' and making tbe preparations for the sta tions. On Monday night a masting of oolorsd Republicans was bald, ai which resolutions were peaeed denouncing/the exolneion of their raea from tbe Bndleel meeting of tbe 38th nit., dsobringthat any colored man who wUl ooantensnoe the sotlon of snob meetings to unworthy of the rights of n freed ewe, end ealling a convention of “the representative ad ored men of tbe oonnty" for the parpens of considering “grave questions apper taining to the internals of tbs ooiarag people." Bo It wooB sum thet uibsre, besides Democrats, are raising the “ram irnns” in llahamn tha unwise legislation of Wmhiagtosj bar own son, tha thrifUm% sqontag and vagrant are sacking oat her remaining blood, and blackening her fair name mors than every other cease. Tbe vul tures of Louisians ere seoonded in their lawlessness and rapine by those who oaoe wore Confederate eoekades, or strutted in soft plasm with the uniform of the Oba- federacy on their becks; sad anti! them ermtarm are pntnttde, the Booth eeamet expect tte stronger party North to under stand the terrors of the situation. We advise onr correspondent in New Orlaana, Mr. Louis Newman, to appeal to the eonrte of Lontelene for jirilii.. Of eonrm he will not gat M, haring taken the grooadand the stead that he hm; hot i. p«M<e, or to to mads puttie ; hat for a secret MOUarp Contention to maintain the. Memos dootriae. It had no direct reference whatever to Pesos on any terms. Mr. Blair thought, as Mr. Davis reported to am, that it wonld load ulti mately to tbe restoration' of the Union witbost the subjugation of the Southern States. Thtewmoaeef the poiate to be ooosidered in eseadteg teii- My vteWe "«MitnVT Thb members of tbo Oocgrsorionel Con ference Committee, to whom wee referred the Onrrenoy UUs of tbe two bouses, are mid to be mnoh perplexed with the busi ness in bend. Ihe trouble is to oonooct e bill that will satisfy the demands of the more onrrenoy man end st-the seme time not inour tbe Exeentive veto. Mr. Sher man of the Senate, end Mr. Maynard of the Hones, ere for bringing In mob n MU as will be ears to reoelvs the approval of iho President. Mr. Morton of the Sen ate, end Mr. FerweU of tbe Hones, ere more deoidedly in favor of more enrren- ey, bnt etUI would prefer to avoid the veto. Mr. Merrimoa of the Senate fa vors a bill providing for a liberal inoraam of tha currency, whether the President vetoes it ov not secret military convention as da night, or rather m light te from i Bat it now seems froaa Ml. written history of the “coma; net the conference (luff—that M need tbe Biair proposition for _ The Auguste CnutituUonoUet publish es Mr. Stephens' No. 4 of tbe controver sy between himself and Mr. Hill. Ha oommanom It by giving tha whole of Mr. HiU’a letter to him, for wbioh Mr. HiU made so imperative e call. We oopy it in e oonneoted form, without Mr. Stephens' interjeotional oomments, which are simi lar to hie strictures which follow it: LaGaenoa, Ga., March 14th, 1864. Disb Bra: I did not raoalvo tha Gov ernor's Msasags until yesterday. I pro- eead at onoa to give yon my opinions of its merits and positions, as I promised to do whan I parted with yon. Beginning with that portion of the Message wbioh treats of toe muses of the war, how conducted, and who responsible —from that point to .the end, I amt lay I have not reed anything daring the revo lution with hell so muoh pleasure nod satisfaction. I know-1 most -think pen tor it The whole country will owe yon an evert sating dobt for it. Gov. Brown can never pay yon in hind tot the great purpose bat to defeat both; end that Mr. Hill wee in oonepitaey with him in this object, in order “to stop" my “tongue” 1 Mr. Stephens says, in reforms to Mr. Umbo Tuwht«,no. . and Mr. Olymer is n herd-money Democrat, who will hardly These six gentle- agree to nay lucreees. men constitute the Conference commit tee. They represent all the ehsdss of opinion in Congress, end if they oonld unanimously report e bill, we might rea sonably look for its psaaaga and approval. BAtn'tk'maS," ininiiHM. It ia well knowo that the administration of the Treaaury Department by Secretary Biohardaoa—particularly bta Inattention to hie duly or careless indUfersaoa in tha matter of the Banbora contracts—has beau made tha aabjaat of investigation by Congress, - and that many members have freely eoodemaed hie ooadnoL It haa been eteled, without any oontredlo- tion which we have seen, that the oom- mities lately investigating tbe nutter bed agreed lo report e resolution oensnring Biohardaon, eud only delayed doing so to give him an opportunity to resign. His resignation under snob circmnstenoea is certainly not an event that ought to oom- mend him lo the appointment te another high end responsible position—particularly suoh a prompt appointment as would amount to a Presidential end Beaatoriel vindication of the Bearetary from the charges made against him. The troth is he retires from the Treasury Department “under n cloud," and the President’s at tempt to lift it by nominating him for the veonnt Judgeship of the Court of Claima ie too apparent to be ignored. The Sen ate can heidly ignore it We feeleatie- fied that a nomination made under suoh ciroumetaaoee will be reeieted in the Sen ate, end we truet that the resistance will be so strong ea to show the Premdaut that mere personal or party favor cannot pro cure such an indirsot but unmistakable an endorsement of the administration oj a Cabinet offloer who had to resign to eaoape oeusuie. —The Macon Star learns that arrange- msata are being perfeoted by tha hotel keepers to hold a convention at toms cen tral point in the State for the purpose of adopting snob measures for their aalf-pre- taction as may beoorne necessary in tha issoo of satesi eorput ee is folly answered ne items. All that oh Cards Wool set grists Wheat and Com- Moa la ner ef Wlltlch 4 felted's, Baudolph at. JsG*• H. OhlLTOM, tasMsat. ■ummmm ■iimsiraua co. tiaaafoeteraa ef tHUmOA IRUTIKM, tami, ura.ee. OOLOIUOI, OA. Orrics tiouiLs a Unuss asiuiess, t t'OLuasUB, (is, Juus X, 1874. f 4 TTY.ll Dili dais the following rats* win te charged: Ilnabwa to Uwtow Spriiss—»ts daw ST easts, otb class S6c, 7tk class sOs w IOC fo. Colwwbws to Nos. t sad IS—(Ik rises Uc, Mb otics 30c. 7lh clam »5c ■ lOOfo. ; Colwfobm to Trow-lth class Me, *th choc Me, Tth cIaaa Sftc 100 ft. 747,}written al- I agree. I laUmste as mnoh in my speech. I wiU never agree that the MUL tery, «g tuck, from the oomaaader-ln- ohief down, oen take charge of and con trol thecMten. Civilians moot be gov erned onlg by cfeti tribunals. Persons in no way attached to, or oonneoted with, or within the line* of, the army, cannot, ought not, and moat not be governed by Military law, or military olteara. Tha suspension of the writ of detent eorput dose not and oanaot ennui, repeal or mod ify the ettieen “constitutional bUl of rights. Hare lisa, deep embedded, the oomer atone of Freedom's temple, end I will never nebmat to its removal. Tha aet of Oongrass, if carried not, does infringe ia this rvepeet, and, there fore, I voted against it 8. Bnt to a oertain extant, and for proper oases, I think the public safety did demand the enspeosion of this writ There ere characters, some m and some interfering with the army, who ought to ba arrested by military order—held with- 8 it Warrant—and triad without a jury. at them are persona who are enbjeet by Igw, or by their own act to military power. As to citixana, I freely end cheer fully admit the only snepeaeion of the writ that oen be, iathat they may be held for trial after legal arrest and upon proper warrant Pat in nil thle, I think, you will And WBtohirakBrfr 10 MY FMENDt AND PATRONS: Ounnss, 6 s., Jeee N, l(Tt rruix Wactcrn KallrwaS Ocfoaaar mt Alstons . £? Tl 5* teto the 0ml teriacas it Oe- lanboc, Os, I an thread oat ef Iks Barest, sad weald ropacifwlly ad rise jse to parckacc car loads (bin then at tka prcccet lew fries thef of-rtoccll thiwwgh their Agcet. XUaeMicek «•»•« °s account of the trcijsjwt leceiricc node as to what 1 will do. * Ian ooapclled to withdraw for tbo arctael. as L* ‘.•SB'Me be ss tadlridsal tsesnssta with a largo oorporotioe. Jc3 3t D. t WHLIAMt, Cool Agcmt. POSTPONUD Mudcoge* 8horiff 8alg. W be sold on the Aral Tneedey la j Q |. Btg * . between the le^nl hoare of tole, before the Auction honee of Ellli A Ilerrieon, Brood etreot, Sirff ,l,U> ‘ ' tiie fo,,owl11 * proport/, South pArt of city lot No. 14a, with the ia- g^!?**** t*»«rooo, frontief 73 feet end « inchee running beck 147 fOet WRti2? hm ' u th * P«>P«rty of Mvt. ^ *° oQfO iaenid out of Mue- wgee CountyCourt in feror of B. B. Ooetchiue A SpJri^'at^;""- "~**"* — J* 3 ,d ff. 6.1VBT, •hcrif, M'oiclee i ner end wo ssm the Oonftio ' it* lam,” than LOVta VUU> HATtlU SALOON, (tececster to B. Boats.) Vader 0-orgfa Baas taseisaes (sild.wg. Prole pi asd poiHc hsrhsn ia sttaadaste. character, ieupoa the grooad that ba did not stand to tha principles and senti ments so sonounoed by him, for tha spaea of “one hour.” Mr. HiU shaU not bo permitted to os- PlWAA-MAfelWg, ovont of the passage of the Civil Bights biU. The convention will probably meat in Maoon.