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II(OO)I',A. I)'NS I'I"l'TSi . CII E OR ,AT H T ITRENGT [II NING TONIC Not a BVhlrky Preparation. - V IIOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS WILL CURE DEBILITY! DEBILITY I RESULTING FROM ANY CAUSE WIIATEVER Prostration of the Sr.tem. Induced by SIVERE IIARDSIIIPS, EXPOSURE, FEVERd, oR DISEASES OF CAMP LIFE. SOLDIERS, CITIZENS, MALE OR FEMALE, ADULT OR YOUPI , WIl find this Bitten a pure TUi not dependent on bad hquors for their aImo.i tmUaculous efect O DYSPEPSIA, And Uieses ResuitEng from Disorders of the Llver tod DIes.tlve Organt, ARE CURED BY HOOFLAND'S BEBRNA BITTERS. 7aBltRtteree hPrbformed more Care., givea better |atie'nc. aE. EaR m,,ro Te.,tmyJ, hN, more IepI.ctEble People to vych for , than any other article thle market O We dkey any one to contraUdlt this Asertion, and WIIl Pay 1t000 to any one who will produe a crtflrIte published by ,u that la u,.t gcnne~na [OOFLbANI)'S GERIMA. N BITTERS Will Cure Evry rxse 1f CHRONIC OR NERVOUS DEBILITY --Hnd- DIe.ReR of the Kldtleyt. OBSERVE TUE FOLLOWING SYMPTOMS, RESULTING from Disorders of the Dtge tve Organs: CouBtlpstIon. Inward Ples., Fu lnea of Biod to the Hed, Aidity of the Stomuch, N len.- ,eicrtIril DNigust Cfr Food, FV!An. . or Weight in the UtmcN, Sour Erue GtU.,), Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stmuach. Swimming of the He v, Iluh ried and Difficult Breathig, Fltt erIng at the Hed, Chkn.A or Surfcat Urg 6anmeltona .hen in a IyiUg po.ure, Dim-ER Al r*lon, Dote or Weba before the SIght, FeLer ana Dll P~R in the Hel, D. N.iency of Per splrtion. YAllowness of the E k,n and Eyes, Pain in the SId. Bak, Chet. L.iUmb. rrc., e Sdden lueNhe of Het, Burning in the les, Contant itAglntEga of Elvl, and UreN Depres ioa of Spirit REMEMBER! hsiM tho BNttern not Alhnalic, cEnRt Uin no Rom or Whlky, aad canlut make DrunkdJ., but ,o the Beat ToSuc U Ithe WrlE.L READ WHO SAYS SO. [From the Re W. ItD 6ielrtd. Pator of Twelfth Baptist tlgemen-1 have reaently hea Ii rio under the diR treMtng effc-t indlgetf~n, o ce amp--ed by a prostration a d t bbut w th PROM of the ncrvoul nystonl~ .Yuluer++.l raInedto w 7re rtehm by persn. who haodtr V d them. and Iwhos favorable mention of these Bitter, induced md.o Y.tr them. I must confei s that I had n ersion to Patent Med cisa fru m the " 't hous and and one" quack " Bitters " h,,iyu aim seems to be toBILLE palm off sweetened and drugged Ilquor upon the community iL. a sly way. aud the tendency of which, I fear, is to make many a cnfirmed drunlkard 'p in leamlg that yours w reay a meadcin1 prepa¢,thon. I took it with happy effect Its action, not only upon the s, mach. hut upon the nervous eys tem, was prompt and gratifying. I feel that I have derived BIL great and perluanet benefit from the gee of a few bottles. Very reepectully, your, W. D. hEIGFRIED, 51 Bhackamnon at. CIRC [From the Rev . D .Fendl. Aelliltnt Editor Christian pihruteb., Plll llelhir I have derived decided benefit from the ag of HlfBand' Germe Hitters, lid feel it my prtilage to recommend them ass most valu,.ble tonic, to ae, vll,, are suffering from general eblity or from daels arising from derangement of the alive, Yohs truly, B. D. FENDALL. [FProm the Rev. D. 51 e, PatIr tf the paleyonk Baptist From the many re.potable reol naendatiano given to Dr. Hoo*a od'y ftermd., Btters,. I wa i ,,deed to give them a trial Al\er usglu everalbott'en, I fund them tobe a good remedy for dseifty , and a most excellent tonic for the Btomach. D. MECRKtIO [From bRe. W . Rmth, formerly Pastor of the TVncmt athow aud Mlllvlle (N J.) Baptist C:hurhes.] -'ts ..tindtitd in my family a number of bottles of your Heof l .a' Or4..nan Bitters, 1 have to say that regard them as ta a44ellent medicine, 4pecislly ab~pted te remove the disease they are recommended for. They stregthen nd Invigorate the system when debilitated, and are useful Ip disorder of the Uem , oss of appetite, etc . l ave also recommended them to veal of my friendsih, tho have tried them, and fond them rt.y. beneficial In the restornat m of helth r your. tun ly Wa i W It. SMITH, F66 Huthinon I., Phlldelpbtl (rom the Rev. Joseph . Kear, C. tor o thJACKSON" th Baptist Church I I have ble frequently requtted to connect my name rwith ptmmendatins of different khinds of medicine. but regasrdng the practic a l ot ol my aptropnate sphere. I have I.n oam declined hot with a clear proof in vario.s lustnce, ead particularly In my own fardly, of the un.aelme of Dr. Hoolinnd's German BLtter*, I depart for once trom my auei course, to expressm full convicth1n that, for general debility othesystem, andepeall for Liver Compalp It Sla safe O and rvaluale preparatio. In some cases it .n ai, but maally, I doubt not, it will be very beneIleie thorn who eodm from the above causes philadelphia, December 21,1864. Rev. J. 8. Herman, of the German Reformed Ohurch, Knt - towr, Bek. county, Pa. wag cured of Dyspepsia eftwenty U, ,S ' BA, HES, WARDSCO ,ye.as' AgOndtg.t A. . Spangler, editor of thc Culturist, No. 25 North girth .tret, philadelphia, says this Bitters was recommended to him by a medical friend, and Rix bottles cured him el complete prostration of the nervous system. Rw. J. Newton BroWn, D. D., editor of the Encyclopedia of ReiIglous Knowledge and Christian 8hronole, Ptlldel. Rev. Thomas Winter, D. D., Pastor of RoBborough Baptist Rev. Lev. 0. Beck, Pastor of the Baptist Church. Pemyarte1, N. J., .ormerly of the North Baptist Church, Phlladelphia, at present Pantor of the Bapthrt Church. Chester, Pa.: "'rhIe gentlemen express, In the strongest terns, their t~or bl. opinion of this Bitter. Bleware oF (.nouterett•! Am that the signature of "C. M. JACKSON" Is onthe wrapper of ech bottle. Bbould your nearest Drnggllt not have the article, do not be pt off by any of the intoxicating preparations that may be . id in itt pince, hut send to ua and we will forward, 0.1411y paced, by expre.a PRINCIPAL OFFICE AND MANUFACTORY, P(". $1 Arch .treet, Philadelphia, Penn. JONES & EVANS. (Bucxew1or to P. M. JbA1KON 1 CO.. For 'al;,by Druggist. and Deaers in every town in the United tt 8 BARN]S. WARD A CO. qew Orl.1ns, Agpn. I-N F0 V 0 RKL 0A-N S A---I L V i ESUK 2E1Nf'. THE CJIR.ICENT IS PUBI.3.SEI DAILY (Sunday ExoapFNd W IEEKDLY. BY J. O. NIXON. No. 94 CAMP 'TEIET. TERIMS-DAILY, 816; WNXKLY, 05 PER YEAR. VOLUME XV. TIIURSI)AY MORNING, AUGUST 9, 1866. NUMBER 306. The Jew Orleans (Jrescnst 30oo0I AND JOD I'I PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT, 94 CAMP STREET. T tho, and J. O. NIXON, Proprietor. N PeC on 1 Ine The Crescent Job Establishment ,Iu --l9ae raormoD- Y bod C WITH THE LATEST AND MOST IMPROVED foot foul STYLES OF PRIiESSES, Ver No. -raox- o The Celebrated Manufactories st Gir -or Th ,Ieasrs. R. HOE & Co., and GEO. P. GORDON, old And with all the valon e rtyles and eaeign o dr TYPE, BORDERS, ORNAMENTS, CUTS, ETC., of og From the wllno wn foondrite of OI Se L. JOHNSON & CO., PHILADELPHIA, AND JAMES CONNER'S SONS, NEW YORK' of de di. Are prepared to execote every deIcription of B00OK AND JOB PRINTLNG, 1S UNSURPASSED BY ANY OTHER ESTABLISHMENT IN THE SOUTH. COMMERCIAL AND MERCANTILE SPRINTING, --Such a. ut IPROMISSORY NOTES, d DRUGCGISTS' LABELS, DRAY RECEIPTS, d BANK CHECKSR, 'to CONTRACTS, I BILLS OF FARE, ka BAL TICKETS, F PROGRAMMES, It AUCTION BILLS, i'C- HAND BILLS, ebd BILLS LADING. ENVFLOP ES, t BILL HEADS, CATALOGUES, MORTMAGEB, CIRCULARS, HEADINGS, IIVOICES, ad'. DEEDS, bem CARDS ol -And- EVERY OTHIE VARIETY OF BLANKS pt NOWN TO T E CO E ,Dr KOWN TO TRADE OR COMMERCE. em a the -- house incite adver under morn We ae prpared opart with may PRINT AND BIND o chos In a Superor Style, Fr PAPHmETS, sale BOOKS, fxed BRIEPS, form CASH BOnK, REE DAY BOOKS, and LEDGERS, milit a TOC., TC. sci Yfue I Of an it Iand style of typography or binding to slt the mad t o te of the moat fatidoia. the of tl tom, deal K STEAMBOAT PRINTING. Bri - the' th to pecpoifattentton agren to printin m Mel STEAMBOAT BILLS, at of BILLS OF FARE, po MAsIFESaTS, ETC. pel plain or Ia any Number of Colori. t e RULING AND BINDING Se Executed with dpatch, and in the mt workmake manner. be Ar work warrantd to goire atsfa . J Ordeom tteoded to with diOpatob. M. Prmeu reasonable. en. crescent Book and Job Establishment, SNo. 9 CAMP BTREs . Betwe Nae and Pa New Orleans. t aw Orleans gai1n ieffntlT TE OFFICIA1, JOURNAL -ur --,-or- "ITHE STATE OF" LOUISIANA. Bal • TtlItSDAY MOtNING, AIUGUilST ', .i. ocal A.nte'lligille. SEIU Reltrltlon IlemNovd. Th.- order of the military governor, io'nd on thle th instant, prohibiting the sale of firearms Allej and aormunition, wao rescinded ye-.terday. lncendlarlrm. Night before lust Mushet's cotton pickery, on Pecanier street. and Waterson's blacksmith shop, on Thalia street, were fired by unknown parties. In each instance the tire was subdued before it could make headway. Inqueat*. Yesterday the coroner held inquests on the Itdi bodies of the following named persons: Charles Walter, native of G(ermlany, aged 49, found dead on Delord street. Verdict, cholera. Unknown white man, about 40 years of age, found dead at the arsenal oa St. Peter street. FUR Verdict, cholera. Providentia, female white ctiild, 2 years old, at No. ii St. Philip street. V\erdi t. cholera. Johua Lewis, colored. at 1t1 Teboupitoulas gaf street. Vc,-dict, cholera. I.ewi lfnwlinit, colurcd, 6O years of age, at f9i Girod treet. Verdict. chon ra. Su.an, colored, 25 ye:ar; cof age, at No. -3 St. No Thinmas street. Verdict, lollera. Henry t Wachingto,ll. clr cl, thirty-five years old, oil Bas-i street. Verdict, cholcra. Sam, colored, seventy years old, at 493 Pry dras street. 'Verdict. ch lerl . Josep.ine, colored, thirteen years old, at C . N. Burgu-ndy sttt. Verddet, -helera. Delcli- nHammond, thirty-three )ears old. native of Baltimore, at 49 Ray street. Verdict, cholera. Unknown white mnan, atbout thirty-five years of age. found in a dying condition at the crner of pHi Orlean- and Bourbon ,treets, was brought to the Second District station, where he died. Verdict, sunstrokb. Cit,a. Smith, German, thirty-four years o'd, late of Company F, Lt United St itt.s hlfantry, found Ei dead in a barber-shop on Greatmen street. Ver dict, brain fever. Josephine Miller. six monthis old, at 312 Maga zine street. Verdict, unaras.mu Colored infant, eight daly old, at b3 Terpsichore street. Verdict, tris-na--enticcom. Recorder.' Co'urts. Fr'.on DIoTIe.-rd-Jocepht Carter, colored chargecd with stealing two c.ir of paccts frcm L.ouia Mu-se, vahued at $2.i, plead g,,Jlty. ccd wa.i rent IT before the First District Coucrt, with $'.i0 ball. Francis Gastner, chacrg.d by Jun. ('line with having in his possetrono a lot od buggy hearnso stolen ftrom the ploa ecntoi I t.t .une, was sent to the First Diatriot Cocni. fait .tcoa. James Bohan, ecn!ored, charged by tdosanna iteilec with stealing geh.kcco falrol Ih r preclul-cs ou Hevia street, wao selt to the tblhouooe ufor ix' nmouth. at tar'y Muorrory. drunk, lewd and abandoned, on SDryades street, wa ordered to the workth use for ninety daes. tnbt. H:tll. drank on Dryades street, sixty daysa in the wornhiou'e. at Mary Daocly. drunk and slerpy in Coliseum tc sqlluare, sentenced to the workhoiuse for thirty (;iorge Waohington, colored, for a. ault and tt battery on Jas. ). Corbett, was fined $25 or sixty a days in workhouse. it Wm. lo. ectloredc focr thea-tening to kill Oc tavia Hill, was tilled $20 and eolpelted to turni-d boods. James Duane, late lieutenant of police and me- n ta ber ot convention, clarged with embezz elcent, waived examination and was sent to First Diuicet court tlr trill. SECOND I)STRICT.--Joaeph Edwards, charged with burglary and carrying a c.o rea:ed weapon, n, was remanded to the pariah prison to await ex amination. John Williams, colored, found sleep:ng on Basin street, was finerd $5. Charles Winter and Win. Htitz, charged with fighting on Urauline street. were disporsed of by I ME, the former paying $i, and the latter being dis- f charged. Mclhael nMurphy and Wm. Noonan, arrested as dangerous and suspicioua, were fined $15 each, or ten days in tie parish pri-on. E. B. Fruder was fined $2 50 for taking just two tIS, two fingers too mouch. Paul Morend, chareed by Carlos De Suams with stealing a lot of clothig,. was sent to jail, being unable to furnish buond tor his appearance. TttnnR DISTRICT.--Petter (cnzalea, charged by Joseph Raft with shoot ng at hir with incet to kill, was discharged. Goczales hasing acted in iself-defense. Geln. Lyle and Wilson Booth, charged with being dangerous andsuspicious and osinr incendiary and seditious language, nere both sone to the work house fr six to,,cotha. MOBILE AND GREAT NORTHERN RAILROAD.-VWe invite the attention of the general reader to the advertisement of this road, which will be fouud Boot under the appropriate head of our paper this have morning. This road passes through an interesting Tt part of Alabama, and at Montgomery connects with the whole system of Georgia railroads, which foet may well be said to go everywhere. For persons Ti going North or East, no better route could be gh chosen. thei -thri FIrE-AMns.-Messrs. Dart & Walkinson, whole- A sale and retail dealers in pistols, guns, rifles and refe fixed ammunition, No. 55 St. Charles street, in- Catl form the public through the columns of the P CRESCENT this morning, that they are again open, bets and will sell anything wanted in their line, the L military order to the contrairy having been re- The scinded. The rarity and extent, as well as the the fine quality of the goods kept by this firm, have L made their house popular all over this section of 5-2( the country. Their goods are always exasctly what they are represented to he, and the members epe of the firm are courteous and attentive to cos- sigl tomers as wcllas fair and straightforward '. their leas dealings. 1 KEEP YOUR PRoeMItES )ItlNt'IECTEDt.-MIeeers. be Bridge & Son, No. 120 Grave r etreet. have forYo sale a lot of lime for disiefec ing ptrposo, whlich an they will dispose of cheap. See advertisement. de STILL SOLO COeAP.-The beautiful and well made stock of clothing and furnishing goods which ea Messrs. Garthwsite, Lews sc -tuart have on hand se at Nos. 31 and 33 Camp solret, Is still biung dis- Br posed of at very low psice, ald .re would advise sa persons who need suits t" o tlheee to get them. kn WANTED.--Parties t ith os c.sh capital of $1500 al are referred to the nolice tuder the head of on " Wants," where the advelti-er promises a busi ness yielding a profit of one thousand dollars a It month. Address L, at thisoffice. de List of passeugers per steamship I. C. Harris, 81 Sorimgeonr, from GHlve-ton and Indisne la: Phtliopa Peter-n. Dr ev ns and teild. Allen N or, J A KommioS, Sethel-melT ,1 Yr a ure ,, Jnde Dcr n and f srvant mith, reorer ea illna e .d I aned Iny J Dtahs, Edoard ETlnclntn, S ufs. lady aud thral D tat Wallrce. l, ot,,n, tDural. Nreerbaum. 3 hea. Re,,e. sa v.b H.ar, Mnllr. Jaeqes, a eugae 1 .. l'la.c t iulanl ol, A C ares. .allerr erf n st Heustoe Metn eem0. h0ith, Jan Smith, Me- herson, . nl-nrae COMMON SCOLDS.--The l apreme court of Pene sylvania, t its recent seesion, decided in the case of Elnor Mohn, of Lerhigh tOtttaty, theat a ,nan can be indicted as a common scold. Judge Woad ward, in delivering tile opinions of the enurt. ried: " As to the nnerenaonahloe.s of holddldng women liable to punislshment toe a too fr e uRe of their tsonsaee, it is -nough tea nay that tala eommont Iaw, which is the express wiedomot ages adjldeetd that it io not unreasonable. And the I.eistlaure have not changed the coromon law it this regard, but. on the contlary, d.eclre-l so recently as 1860, that ns this ollense shall be pumuahed as heretotore. TELEGRAPHIC DISPATCHES. Baltimore Registration of Voters, Poi SEIZURE OF AMERICANS BY PRUSSIA AND AUSTRIA, at I hun Alleged Complicity Between Detectiven and pre Counterfeiters. (er Oth disl QUEEN OF THE SANDWICH ISLANDS eve IN NEW YORK. arr pre tive by Irdian Outrages on the Kansa~s Border. 1 pro joe FURTHER DETAILS OF, EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. Ste Reform Meetings-Armistice-Peace Prelhminaries to St 0.* No Quarantine on New York Vesuel, at to Savannah Unless Sickness on Board. -l: N. E. PECK APPOINTED TO A . . . HATIEN MISSION. ti] PHILADELPHIA CONVENTION DELEGATE ELECTIONS, English Markets to the 7th instant, r by the Cable. a HOME MARIC~E.R-RIVER NIEWS. SNTERESTING MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. t TAuoettaOd Press DInatrche.l tre NF.w YORK, August 8.-The steamer Java, f'mn The it Liverpool the 28th via Queenstown the 29th,has will take arrived.be trans There has been no further disturbance of the a peace in London. The reform league has ealed a mn etiog at Hyde Park on the 30th ult., withtthe GST alleged consent of the government. The nili- A Huski tary declared that no such consent had been W Rol given and warned the league against holding the T S SPa meeting. They admitted the misunderstandcing GeoC and resolved to abandon the meeting and holl it Young: instead at the Agricultural Hall at Islington, Phe tletmphl government gave its assent to a meeting at MeGee, Princess Hillor other appropriatespot, but will IbayO, not allow the royal parks to be used untilthe Nye, M question of right has been determined. The gov- ler, Bel ernment gave notice in the House of Comment ol realey, the necessity for a renewal of the suspensort of Eliono the writ of habeas corpus in Ireland. Smith e Tie truce expired on the 27th, but was ero- Mlerac longed to August 2d. A four week's armisice, wife, commencing from the latter date, wasconcluled. Lawi It was also announced that the peace prelimna- Lu. ries had been signed and had reached Vienna Oibbs, for ratification by the Emperor of Austria. The wite, union of the German States was not includet in em the armistice, and hostilities between themand , e$ Prussia continue. lardit The suspension of hostilities between Autria t ittot and Italy commenced on the 25th. LONDOo, July 29, VIA QUEENSTOWN.--The FAL French gunboat Danton has been ordered teget Seernl ready for sea immediately. IIer destinatim is nary a unknown. Pena Rumors are crnrent that if Frankfort doesnot fl Ito pay the forced contributions immediately the unexp town will be closed and no one allowed to otter reins or depart, cter, The Italian government has determined npm a Conte full inquiry into the causesof the late navaldebat and The following bulletin was posted on the Petia eanfee Bourse on the 29th: tie f " The plenipotentiaries of Austria and Prassia lot at have signed an armistice for four weeks." ably The Calir of Florence states that negotiatons tte he for the conclusion of an armistice had led to re- fron suit satisfying the dignity and interest of Italy Abou The same paper says France has recognizedthe were right of the inhabitants of Venetia to dispose of room, their own destiny. Austria, it is said, has witldrawn her dematd in buildi d reference to the intervention on the part of the coma 1- Catholic powers in the Roman question. aolee Peace negotiations were to take place directly Al h, between Italy, Prussia and Austria. years :e LIVuKPOOL, August 7, 6 . . - (Bytheebtbh.)-- ed e- The sales of cotton to-day amounted to 7000 1les, awma te the market closing dull. nmak ;e LONDON, August 7, 6 P. .--Consols 87., 2. 8. bruia of 5-20's 68J. 'y Naw YORK, A.g 8.-The Tribune's Ottawa Ta rs special says hMr. Gait, minister of finance, has re- redu is- signed, owing to the diffcrences from his eeol- are tr leagues on the Lower Canada school question. t The superintendent of police has received nfor- coar mation lending him to believe there is eomlicity cana between detectives and counterfeiters. Jehn S. dec or Young, long chief of detectives, has been releved. a ol ch and inspector Carpenter put in his place. Full that developments have not been made public. ploy ell The purser of the steamship Baltic publides a cnn ch card, announcing that a sailor on the steam'r was in T ld seized by the Prussian authosities in the Iort of cal lis- Bremerhaven and pressed into the service The ise sadlor was shipped in New Yerk, but it is not Ani im. known whether he was anaturalized citizern wne Mr. Funk, late mayor of Muscatine, lova, was ear 00 also seized lately by Austrian authorities while fot on a pleasure tour, and forced into the ralks. vit The Tribune's Leavenworth special jays the e a Indians are committing raids on the Katsas bor- bet der, murdering and outraging. Troops ave been wi tent to rescue the settlers. BALTI.uoR, bag. 8.-The registrationof voters J has commenced. It attracts considerable interest nd from the eflorts which are being wrade by many an a, heretofore excluded, on the ground o disloyally, or to obtain registration. The status of the political of parties in the city and State will depend very tb much on the result of registration. ct Thomas Swann, Jr., son of Governor Swann, ht ne ded yesterday. n -mat PoeTLAND, Mu., Aug. 8.-The DemoCrati Con- ni ao-d- a nlion met to-day. E. F. Pillbury was unani- m cld t mously nominated for gr,vernor. eny BavarNNAn, August 8.-After full representas their l iw, tionstothe war derartment by Major Crofton, te that commandng this T,ost, be has been authorized not o ve to, quarantine verels from New York except upon thai positive eridev ce of epidemic sickness on board. CoLcatoUs. 0., Aug. 7.-The Johnson State Con-- I ention today appointed Thomas Ewing, Lewis 1). Campbell, James E. Stedman, Wm. 8. Gros kech, James A. Genger, M. R. Waite, J. C. SRe Fl aille and Thomas Sherlock, delegates to the Phi- wao ad,-Iphia Convention. tion, VWanrc.roroN, Aug. 8.--The President has ap- II Pointed N. E. Peck, minister resident and consul oil general at Hayti. i"... SARnATOGA, N. Y., Aug. A.-The Columbian hotel tary eas Iburned last night. Loss $40,000; insured for uerI .:m0,000. lno BOSTOn, August .--The Johnson convention pre at Faneuii Hall to-day was attended by over one ther oundred and seventy delegates. Hon. Samo. T. t7 l'Neall was elected president. Among the vice TI presidents were Judge Curtiss, Judge Abbatt, fedle :en. Couch, Levi Woodbury, lieo. S. Hilliard and PdoeS others. eai NEW Yoag, Aug. R.-A special Leavenworth men dispatch reports the crops as the most bounteous rI e ver gathered in Kansas. wand WASINGTON, Aug. 8.-Senator Cowan, who ces arrived here from Pennsylvania yesterday, ex- .ain presses the utmost confidence that the conserva- Nev tires will carry the State at the October election f o by a very large majority. don, The National Union executive committee are and preparing to remove to Philadelphia on Friday, itst where they will retain their offices until the ad- en, journment of the convention. ven NEW Yona, Aug. 4.-4 P. M.-No dispatches tice have been received from the cable to-day. The by eteamer from New Foundland has not yet reached ivt Aupy Bay. .1 The queen of the Sandwich Islands arrived here ma to day in the steamer Sara. its SOUTHWEST PAss. August 8.-The steamship ,°, St. Louis, frlm Boston, arrived at the bar at 4 an. o'clock this evening. The tide is too low for her for to enter. a The ships N. Boynton and South America. and ant brig Marietra, arrived down in tow, and came to iu: anchor inside. Fli The sieamoship Keneingtcn hand Fire Queen, and he .clip Theodore Knoop, are still on the bar. The de bark Florence Chipman is still outside. inc Nothing else in sight. thn Wind southeast. Tide very low. den QUARANTINE, August 8.-Remaining in Quaran- an tine,steamship Alliance, from Vera Cruz; schooner a Teresa, from Tampico; British schooner Mai, C. to B. Hardenhburgh master, from Vera CruzJuly 31st. C Spoke at sea, schooner Ben Willis. Left in port to and up for New Orleans, schooners Oriental, ce Island Belle and Paquette de Tampico. Sailed, bn French bark Susana. te VIcKsscno, August 8.-Passed up, Henry Ames e, and Luminary at 2 P. a. River rising. w NEW YORK, August 8.-G's Of '67 129.: coupons m of '62 109$; ditto of '65 106$ ; 10-40's 995; I treasuries 104l. Gold 14d1. Cotton closed dull, e with sales of 600 bales, with middling Orleans, at hi 30@4ier., and middling uplands at 35c. Wheat in nominal. Flour unchanged. Lard 19@2t1c. Sugar c very quiet. Coffee dull. Naval stores lower; in turpentine G8@73c.; rosin $3 250 3 50. O Arrived, steamer Alabama, from Savannah. t IFrom Yeterday's Evening Paaesel GAL0VESTON, Texas, Aug. 8.-The Texaslegisla- te tnre met at Austin yesterday. Tao House is fully org.anized. b The inaugnration of Governor Throckmorton a Swill take place on the 9th inst. No business will it be trannacted till his message is received. f A.rrlvats at the Prinetpal Hoteltsa ST. CHARLES HOTEL-A J Elder, Miss; A G Greenwood, J Chamberlain, Iowa; J M Hooker, J hA Htskins, Brookhaven; M P Houston, Atlanta; W WS Romven, G W Deup, J D Burros, Galveston; cT Foavage. Missa; I W Kendall end wife, Miss I Georti.rma Kendall, Texas. CITY HnnTEL--M H Crowell, Shreveport; C In SYoung; W T Barnet; W H O'Koneor and wife, e Ienrmllis; W L Brakeman, Jackson, Mliss; C L it lte, R B MLGee, IM D Willhiams, Texas; W H II Iaya, W C Hays, W J Hall, Miis; J B Galla gnter, C B Baldwin, J J Brintnall, Houston; Mrs mNye, lohlde; T C Armstrong, Galveston; M MI Sler, elmont, Texas; A F French, J P Davis, G ,He alev, Galvestnn; C C Howerton, Lavaea: Mr f Ellnw'oth; M L Westheimer, S Unphrasen, D We nar and son, H S Fox, B Haber, Houston; J Smith and sioter, J McPhersen, Galveston; Mirs n- ClrCeacken and children, Texas; G1 L Brice and wife, Mobile; J B Nelson, La; JD Rouse, Capt J Lawleas and wile, E Burns, S H Morley, St Louis. - ST. JAMES HOTEL-B C Williams, La; R F na Oibbs, W E McDaniel, M Stewart, J Ghaleger and he wile, W M Jones, T N Jones, G H Bell, Misas; W in Richmond, Ky; TT Smith and wife, J Thompson. l'exas; E A Hamilton and wife, G W Phillips, Tx; d J F Smnith and wile, W F Dimmeck, Mohble; B E Harding and wife, E H Kinnebrew, N Burnley, Cia Ilinton Ruby. Covington, La, MtGoldsmith, Ala; B Hl Austin, Flrida. FALL OF A HIOUSE.-Mdiroculous Escape of outsid Seventeen Persons.-Ooe of the most extraordl ary accldentn that hat ever occurrd in thi see- ued iln, tok place at Montroe, at about eight o'clock cT an Sunday evening. The well known and beauti- it Of reFl meooon of Mr. Jan. Riley, at Montrose. tell rs unexpectedly and buried seventeen people in th lates ruins--etanse to say not seriously injuring any of tre themt. The ho eeo had been rented by Mr. hi. FaOa- Iati tier, photosera her on the corner of Dauphin and ot th Conceplion soreeta, and wasoccupied by hisfamtily Pribil and that of Mr. F. Festorazzi, the well knownr pct confectioner. For several days past it had been in noticed that the house had a leaning towards 00s0F the ftont. hot nothing was thought of it. The ploys lot on which ile house is built alopes considter- o ebly from rear to front, and the piles on which the houae is erected in the rear are only about two with and a half or three feet above the ground, while in rolti trot they are fully five feet above the level. the About 8 o'clock Sunday evening, as the family hash were teated on the frontbalcony and i the supper All room, the edifice commenced to more, the piles more gave way, end the front wallparted-a lud crashll mali followed, and toe seventeen occupaats of the us to buildings were buried under the roof. They all It is comm, nced crawling out of every opening they queu coultd find, bringing those too youang to-help them- ditt aelves along with them, treat A little child of Mr. Festorazsl's, about three crept years old, was lying asleep in a rearroom, and the tiott, bed wan thrown entirely across the roomt wihout the awakening it. The neighbors turned out in force, and and the unfortunate parties have he complaints to a gl nmake of thle lack of hospitality. Those who were pu bruised were carelully attended to. out [Mobiodnertlser. t'te -----~---- hpr THn INDIaNS MUST Bn PONtoenu.--t is now plt reduced to a certainty that life and poperty t1is are unsafe on the route from here to El Paso e.e hey arte banded togethlerin large t.hber, and cne uttl they are punishled they wtll continue their man cartage of bloadandrobberiesa. Our cavalry here pre cannot be blamed, for they can act only under or derst and ou "'loyal tniot league" doloegation at T Washington have so paonted matte a here that not the a roldier can be sparyed. It has been suggested eve that some twenty of our citizens should be em thi letyed as a tcout on this route. But at the prts ent time we reuppose thtis would hardly do ; for are the report woual go abroad that the late reberls yet in Texas. were armting; it would go from one radl- r cal sbf-et to another-- I "- Every one that tri.d It wold bhear it a tittlene ee, end every ure th. ttold it would add something to." lr Andh by the time it got to WuSVrieigtot, Forny ant woould have it in the Chronicle that twenty thiu snard rebel cannibals were again under arms in 'rexoo. each witha mountain howitzer, and that " loyal Union men" there were nearly all do voured. tit oe ,we suppose that our citizens will have to cot hear it. and be hbutcfhered. But we believe that d' w when the President is reliably infolbrmed upon this op tubject the matter will be attended tio. o Isir ont. aio Ledger. tie t A soldler's life in Brazil is by no means a pleas Sant one. Camp life is thusan portrayed to Our camps greatly resemble an archipelago. In t al order to visit my comnrade of other dvianlone I ant it f obliged to torn and wind about for miles round ry the lakes and swamps that divide us. Aerphibioas creatures abouuud. In my own tent1 ha'e already m Skilled four snakes. Every mometnt I Bnd myaelf , t, accimpaeied by a body gutrd of fifteen or trenty tl totitontous toads, which have quietly plent the ee tn- night under the corners if the hldes that erveo ni- me at a bed. Enormoes allireators prsemntade t r"gngla-ly Irim lake to lake "every niht. In a t majotr's tent, the utiher day, one was killed fhat a to- measuredl about at..'feet in tegth, ald an unfeer on, tOna'e Braziliart soldier was unexpectedly takent nlit off hsl legn by ioe of these hirrible creaturea and a Scarried into n'u. nearest Ilke. ton ------ ..--------,--- 1. The hri-:ktoers out t\\ eat are on a strike for five on-. end a eil dou.lra per day. Afalrs In New Orleans. its } Fromt the N. . ewsn. Ang. 2.1 nati ince the d!y that hatter entered the city that da waa destinel to be thereafter his field of specula- call tinan and epoliations. New Orleans hay suffered blir thi presence of a vindictive, pitiless, mercenary gati hliue, composed mainly of men foreign to the con soitlf L,u-c'iana, and who, in the early days of R "":ctupation," by the assistance of Btlr's mill- rept tary, held high carnival over the prostrate cornm ae nutnity. In proportion as they were "loyal,' i; i were they knaish; and by this combination of knavery ad "loyaltyt' they villified and op- mor pre-erd tite people upon they had fastened themselves, and whoem. through the asistance that given by ivading bayonets, they ruled inconjun- the tion with Butler. tgin This evil cpirit, since the surrender of the Con- t federate armi-e, and the developments of the op pol posatin to the policy of the President; has become the identified with the plans and purposes of the radi- the cal majority in Congreass. In casting about for a on means whereby to advance the schemes of thin It revolutionary mijority,a conspiracy was hatched, den which was bold enough in conception, certainly, nat and needed only impunity to make it a suac- in t cers. This plan was to galvanize into new wet existence a convention which was assembled in tion New Orleans in April, 1864, for the purpoae UJi of framing a new Constitntion for the State of Louisiana. and which (its work being done-the Constitution submitted to the people and ratified) ceased, with that consummation of it purposes, to exi-t. This convention adjourned on the 25th of July, 1864, after having passed a resolution to the eflect ctht it could be recon vened on the call of the president. This resolu- N tion, however, was never submitted to or ratified all by the people. And so the convention f 1864. gi its labort finished and its volume closed, expired dur by limitation and became extinct. C .It was thils mtaerable delusion and spectral law- to making bodly that radicalism invoked to work out Yoi its plans. tith no more shadow of authority insr Louisiana than have the edicts of the Kalmnek Tartors, this political snare was set, under radical au-picee. fir the purpose of entrapping the nun fortulate State in the toils of her enemies, When this conspiracy against the peace, rightsa and opions t tihe petple of Louisiana w pro-i perly arranged, thie agitation among the "loyal- - i ts" of thle )ootie stamp commenced in earnest. Flimsyand ridicolousexcuses were advanced-itn ke!.tpmg with the reeolutionary work in hand--f r f 1the outoage ab,uttobe committed, atndthe presi- th dent of the conventlion of 1864I was called upon to he issue a peoclamation summoning from its grave pt the legiilative body that had been for two years c delunct. Notwithstanding that the government ec of Louisiana was quietly and impartially ad- th - ministered under the Constitution that had been p, *r adopted in 1864, the intention of these revolu tionists was to upset its own work, and to create a o Constitution in unison with, the radieal heresies, . and wlhch should put the State under radical con- y, t trolt. When, however, the presidentof the extinct a I, convention was called upon to reassemble the tt I, body, he refused on the ground that the conven- h tion was dead, and could not therefore be called } together again. Another member of the old con veation, more facile than the former presideut,a was thereupon invited to go throunglh the cere- a a mony of "proclaiming" the convention back to life, This tool was aound in the person of R. K. Howell, who "proclaimed" the "convention" to oassemble on the 30th of July. This Is in brief the .t history of the revolutionary body whose proceed- h it inCgs were cut short by the riots. t SOne event immediately prior to the assembling tof ths usurpative " uonvention," Is not withouta interest, in view of subsequent facts. A Ncw b Orleans judge Abell--charged the brand Jury that it was their duty, as it was his, "to use all lawfulmeans to prevent any unlawful assembly a or assemblies, and such as would have a natural a- tendency to create a breach of the peace." ly For te bloody wor that followed, we cannot but express our regret. But there were elementse to at work which rendered thle collision almost itev i itable. There was that haleful spectacle,so hate ful to the eyes of Southern men, of negrces arlned with tile motley weapons of Wat Tyler's ftllow ore, paradittg the atreeti with the insolent word, and tile more insolent iutent. There were the Sderce impulses of a proud people whot have nt understood yet the Northern idea ol the equality i; of the negro race-and totn race their forncer n; stves. AndVhat more likely thtan thltt the itso S lence of the negro, and the ioral provcation af f rded by his armed gathering on that day, of all days, lshtold lhave been met with tihe tornado that L sprang from the rage of men of the osuperior race, vexed at the dttempt to deprive them of ht-ir birthright. But of al those whose guilt a springs irom that doy's work, the most guilty, ateurely, are tho', who have fomented discord be l twecn the two races by heretical clamor and in 'sidiouscounsel to the negrocs. Let the New York Mr Tribune put it, hand upon its heart and say: " It FJis not 1 that have done this." CornratiraiTOei tinOONBACKO.-Afn tOventig ion of more than ordinary Importance is- now in )rogreen belore United States Commissioner On orn, in New York. The pirisoner is accused of Etitsee5 oaving in his possessio.n, with intent to utter the Amor crime, a counterfeit $100 compound interest in yoor Ireosorynote. The testimony thus far elicited, if to one reliable, discloses, says the Herald, the existence allude I of a most extraordinary state of affairs in the inhabit printing or engraving bureau of the United States Thinl treasuory deparrmert. One witness, employed in troly sl lie plate printing department, testifies that he was and lee approached in regard to taking impressions of the Blos plates on lend and paper, and furnishing them to Col. Di outside parties. seven t To ease the conscience of the witness, it wan Savanr urged that other parties were cheating the gov- btton erement, andhe might just as wellhave the bene- mi an it of doing the same. It appears that the im- fey preunions were delivered, the fraudulent printing copse plates engraved, and a large issune of conterfeit the at treasury nute wa tlhe consequence. The investi- erpti gation thuns far shlowas nt only criminal negligence face a on the part of persons having in charge the plate tomet printing bureau, but also preeents tte ease in anna- wholl pect seriously affecting the moral character of cer- of cit lain parties in and out of the department. A Who couple of women, oine of whom at least, was em- by ol ployed in the treasorn department, are brought 1836 0 upon the stand, and with great reluctance testify fanr I to the criminality of the accused, their comphitty larger with the parties, and the impurity of their social bt in relations with them. The immoral character of and fa the lemale employees io the treasury department taking has heretofore been a subject of comment. The All these accusations, however, were considered a hal mere inventions and scandals, the offspring of riod a malice arid envy. But we have in the case bhefre air, t as subastantial evidence if a different charepter. riar It is unpleasant to dwell upon tha social dehn- yards queunesa of governmental oaftlals ; but. however In disagreeable the task, the whole rottenness of the ladies treasury department from the thirty millions dis- tit. a crepancy tinder x-Seeretary Chase's admitintra- three tiot, down to the stealing of the impreaslnsa of blw the treasury note plates of the government, feet. and the circeamstrnes attending their transfer to laoI a gang i ecounterfeiters, la matter of the otmost that importance, and saetuld not be passed over with- diae out a rigid Congresclinal invaetigatinn. It is At sated that these alleged counterfeit plates are not tirel impressitns mere y. bh-t actually the original eride pltes. engraved la' the treasurdepnartment. It Dr tubn be lse, so murh the more urgent is the ne- hibb eesoity for a thireugh overhanlitg or evervthttgt ies connected with the management of the dela.t- ashi mantfrom the begiuhtilg oe the rebetllion to the Oth present time.--[N. Y. Herald. e _______________________________________lime t Tun itosot Wttv.--Coneceing the action of I el t the courts int New Ollrans, the aimpile--tddled Ie oevening radical dination newspaper concern of rili 1this ity says : ae " We have heard reports of the indictment and , ir arrest of conventiatiats and negroeis, bur we have babl is yet to hear of the itiititmeant r arrest of a usingle whtL rebel policeman or rebel ritizen." grea For the exellnmt r aou that the "rebel" police- I me, and "rrbel" eitazes were tingged it sap treseing thi rolteltion whicb "' eoanelttiinisit" t 'Y and " negroes ' were trying to inuun.ortet. is - Rtdteragn Times. it ita atit at A loon D Etsto.--The Etiglish lords of the fian e- bncI decidebd at tWesmitatel, abtat ,'monttlag, po, shat itwao a principle of commoni law. that a ti to imiseltler,in queo.tininga witness, should ad- ot at deas hinm in ordinary tones, ad in latguge of re- Poe is egpet serh as is enlplyerd by a gentleman ill cin- art roesatioa with anotber; that outch lawyer hias nit the right to question the private husineae or moral I ahararter of a witLneos, ally further than i is ap- dr is- parent they absolutely affect his reliability or , touch the easo in hlad ; and that a witnesa is not rig In thontd to answer questions put to him in an insult- so' o ling manner. la nd - e-s in A NovatL COu 9-.nT-A trial of speed was dy made yesterday morning, between Mr. A. H. t i Hauer, telegraph opera'or of the Moutgomer y w oty ofle, and Mr.'. Adams, operator of the Mart toe the flie. The contest was lor a silver telegrauh b re ktry. Mr. Baner sent five lhutded words it thir ade teen minttes. Mr. Adamo sending fire hu'td.id i c a twelve minutes thirty-one seconds. Bauntr aver- n lat aged thirty eight aid a half words per itinute, a itr- Adams lorry i-r minute, who was de,"npred win ken nr, havi.g beaten his competitor tweuty-niue stud oenouda.-Vdiihile advertiser. One of the smoke pip a of th nstoamer St. J,,hno Ee was lately twistb l out of its p oition by a toraadot which was blowing across the Hus-boa river. National Labor C(ongres. To he W er.i,,man o, the Un;nd Rtates At a ',cf, r.n, e (primary in its character) hed in Necw York d.iy en t:he i6th day of March, 1846, the flltwr, preamble and resolutions were unan irnoocly ad,lpted : Wnnseao, The aritation of the question of eight honri as a day's labor has am'nmed an im portance requiring concerted and harmonoons ae iin on all matcers appertaining to the inaugnra tion of labor reforms; and Wernea.e It is essentisl that a national ceo rensaahould be held to form a basis apon which we may harmonionaly and concertedly move in its Pr'oeeution; therefore, 1ui{omed, That this body recommend that a national ongr ess be held in Baltimore, on Mon day, Angnst2Otb, 6it; and that we do earnestly call opon and reguest the different trades, ssem blie and snhnordlnwte onions to respond by dele gationo to this call nom a subject so closely connected with their vital interests. rtesolcei, That we reeemmend, as a buhts of representation in said congress, that each trades aoembiy be allowed two, and every local orgaa iza'ion one delegate. Resolved, That the trades asemobly of Balti more are requested to inake the necessary ar rangements to accommodate said congress, ant that all unions are reqoested to correspondwith the RBltimore trades assembly on all matters per tgining to said call. Ilesoled, That a committee of three be a pointed from thin body, to act in conjsnctiofwik the Baltimore Trades Asaembly, in carrying oat the above reaolaotms relative to said cal, ad communicate to them the action herein taken. In por*uance of the above resolutions, the so dersegoed committee hereby isnae a call for -pch national labor conoress, to meet at the tim'andt in the place mentioned in the resolutions. We would earnestly recommend a large repreenta tion from labor orgaizations throughout the United States. we. mantso, Jo*n ans, onst H. "Ir. New York. w. cineIn JAno m NYLAD, A. J. ,anesa Catttlen. N. B. The committee would earnestly request all newspapers friendly to the case of labor to give prominence and publicity to the above call during the interim before the meeting. Communications to be ddressed in New York to W. Harding, 71 Middagh street, Brooklyn, New York. In Baltimore-W. Cather, 114 Little Green street. - _ _ _ e Stron. Minded an Ewer. Our old Pittsburg acqoaintance Mrs. Jane t.' Swisshelm, is still we see in Washington City, and is a correspondent of several Abolition newnspa pers, among which is the Repository, published at Chambershurg in th State. Mrs. Swsshelm was always Intense in her writinge, but her late mis fortune in being discharged from a clerkship by "the ungallant Stanto, bhas entirely turned her head. Her principal employment atpresent ap pears to be the gathering of all the eaggerated accounte of cruelties to negroes in the South, and it embellishing them in her peculiar manner and I then sagely attributing the whole to the polcy o °President Johnson. The multitudinous morders, rapes and outrages Sof various kinds, so numerous throughont the acountry everywhere-including the lahing of a' young girls in almost a naked condition, by school t mistresses in enlightened M.asachnsetta-hav e totally escapedthe quick percenptionof Mrs. Bwia Shelm, her attention being wholly occupied In em teO hliohiog Sonthern ontrages. These ais paits in ' the most vivid colors. Herelt'a speclelan of this it, amiable creatre's writing the wonder being that e"any sensible editor.woold crowd blis columns with tosuch tranosparent nonsense: " ,We hold the Spanish people responsible for to the horrors of the inquisition, but publice sentiment, he even in the darkest day, made it nedeesary to build subterranean vaults In which to carry om their tortures, and so confine the shrieks and og groans of the sufferer to the inside of one build t ing. No sound could penetrate the pplqrair; c' but the Southern prison bonse was and is one vest a0inquisition, and the public sentiment Itself the wall which receives and deadens the'shrieks of augony and dying groans.' SDescending from the general charge Mrs. S. comes to particulars and among numerous ses of ;on.cruelty by slaveholders, relates the following, which she says she haa gathered 'from a woman vwho does her " waihing te- " Another tells of two young men recaptured cad nd whipped almost to death, thei staked to the - grouno on their faces, and shovels full of live t, coals spread over theirbacks until after they were he dead. This was within a few miles of Petersburg, sit Virginia. ity Another tells of a girl staked to the gronnd ier naked, wlere four unbroken horseo were chained, si- one to each foot and one to each wrist, a bundle af- of dried fodder tied to the tail of each horse, and, nl ut a given signal, all released and started. Each :at horse took a piece." or Mrs. Swisshelm's sufferings and her vanity com of bined, like old John Brown's, have turned her ohilt head. She raves like a maniac, onlythat there is Ip method in her madness. We cannot sa of her, be- even in her most moderate moments, whet Lear in- does of poor Cordella ok "Her olasei was ever so and gentle, "It An enceUent thing in woman." [Ptteburg Po, The Bloewing o ae .r eergat. GAINIOvlLLO, Ala., Aug. 2, 196. E ltor eo the Meobt Daily Tims: Among many other interesting items contained In your last issue, I noticed a paragraph in regard to one of Gceorgla's greatest natural enriosities-I allude to "BlowingCa.e," asiti called by the jnhabitants of the section In which it is located. Thinkiiog that a few particulsrt in regard to this truly strange phenomenon mightprove interesting, and lead to further inquiry, I dot them down: Blowing Cave is situated on the piantatolen of Col. David Barrow. Decatur county, Ga., twenty •even miles from Thomasville, the toerminus of the Soavsnnh and Gulf railroad. The cave in at the bottom of a small natural basin, (whose diameter will not at any point edxeed thirty feet,) in a per fectly smooth plain, and surrounded with a dense copse of wood. There is no indication to lead tO. the suppoeltion that it was occasioned by any eruption of a volcanic or convulsive nature, as the face of the surrounding country, as well as the immrediale neighborhood of the cave itself, is. whilly free of stones,ruggedness and other arks of convulsive action. When first discovered and brought into nmotice by i'olnelss Barrow and McKinley, in the year t1836 or '37, the orifice of the eave was thae- or four feet to the left of the present one, ands maeb larger. Colonel McKinley proposed explorin it. but in altempting to sound it with lead a~Id line and failingto touch bottom, gave up the unader taking a. too bana, dons for further ventusn The peeoentmouth of the nave is abuuthae and a half feet islameter, thro.gh which amoe pe riod of the Where issues a strong ueent ofr air, not tin p bhet a eontinuous atream, with . roar that is heard at a distance of sixty -seventl yards. Ia the winter of '64, In company with severil ladieS, l visnted the cave at the timee of isblwting out. and by wsy ot experIment one o heh ladles threw her ueil into the mouthi of it. whioh wasn blown into the air to the height oE at or aeeue feet. I then threw my hat-a hsevywaol'en .ne-. isto it, with a like renll. Several aBucles heasret t than either of the above were triedl, hut hmne - dately eupelled. At aiother period of the day. thleanotuai aOcels t tiely as great. Any light artlcl hesld senth I orifice is instantly drawn into the-cave. I Dr. Cltton, the State geologis a gentlmana of higbh ,ientiic ability, visited it-at the solieita tions of Cole, McKinley and a.row, aud galve it as his opilion that tlese reveresd' pheo en*na was ,nosed by the ebb and flow a. the tide, ans that the care was originally one of the Sathumlese lime sinks so numerous in thatportinn of Georgia. F I believe the doottr's theory correct. .Leading from all points Into the hais aelndiw I traile, deep wore, iudlcating much tisnting to the carve iy the redmie, ere the axe of the mwats mas Swoke up the eeho's of the forest, med it.was pro wbably regarded by the-nas a pbne sf sansosy. wthere they held commune with the splitn in the great hunting ground aiove. 1 remain yours, mostrespectfly , J. J. UoL Ten Pose AND Ts. S.or-u.--The repeet which is universally felt for Mr. BIeynit. who is saw for a time withdrawn from poblie concerns by a pro lei found and most ealred paiate sorrow, nases it. a, pioper that we saiuld remind the comwfttsy of a thi tact, in orerc that nMthig lay sttaOa tohint I. of the odium and, the score whlih the ECveing e- Poet is earnia from all good me behheatreciooet i. articles whi hlt is now putting lrdsh Ia segad tu althe peiople of the Soakth. l In its issue of yesterday, toe instaeie, tab Pu.t p- describes, the fSenthern teadersa" as being or" everyshbere the abettora sf violelne, of uns lt rightesuowieao, stirring up sedition, the tadstrioua 1t sowers of hiatrod and ouncharitableness. turhulent. |la-laes. defiant." Every rharge here made is v.ittery false. The Post cannot name a single o" Soliuthern leader" a single man prominent l. 1i. the c,,ntldene of the Southern people doritig m he r y war, whetsherineivi or mitarytfe, or whm the .te thi g are true. This the Pat knows; this the -auh pubic kn,,w; end we repeat, it is due to the dlr- h ,uorable fame of Mr. Bryant thathe ehouli be in clearly uiderst,,od to be remored from all preseno cr- respoosibility for the pnblicatin of asuch wanton otec and wicked and incendiary colomiies upon ons .in| great section of the meri'an people niac IN, Yet world, one Id, Fitrhngh Lee is hard at work on his plantation. ,lh near While Honuse, attending to his eropo. bulding ado a iou-e in place of one destryed dtrrg the war, making iences, laying roads, etc.