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THE FAIRFIELD HERALD Publixb.t I Elery Wedniedaily at WIA'iV)lIORO, S. ., I I A1 Ill' I)EIORT'IJS & W UUIAI S. ---- 'li',I'R -N A IJ\VANCE. 1110 C(oy one yer, - - $ 3 o0 Feiv '' - - - 12 10 Tel 25111i) T111e Mc.ssiay of' ikc Guiernor. We pr utsell in other coht111us to-d ay the iaugural message of the Govorn or1 nild his reg ula n 1n111111 111 msstge. 13th are admir. able ill toilo anlid spirit. :und will m0111 mend themselves to the hearty approval of every fair-minided 1m in the State. lFairther logislation is, as we pro. dioted lasi, year, iecossary, to protoct. the initCrest, of the Stato in tU JhoS phate deposits. A tlroughi in vostigat ion of tle af frait of the Laid (',oil ili on l i re - connlillinded, anid we trust will be Made. TIe Govorior suggests no deliniiito phl. Whitever a nbuso exists uimt be corrected or tll) whole system abolish ed. An entire revision of the wholo 1ysteLin is d10111nded. 'l'he ren 'onsi bility Of' the W1l01e 0 should be 1laid Oil n mli an (I 111Of ap1proved honesty, not Irominiiienitiin politie05, nld who can1 give. a heavy bond for the careful and' faithful per'olmaneo1lC of' his duties. This only will satisfy the pooplo and mii a ko tle ball (Conu1itsionii a be. Ixelit. Th ( overnor s.ulggests modifications of the Trial J lst ices' Mystem, similar to those already urgued iy The ito publie.en1, aind to which we shall give our heartiest sipport. We hope, too for tle displ:acement of unpriicipled I1111 wierever they are now ill (ilb0. Investigatioll of tile illaigngemieit of the County Conmmissioners is recou miondd. We hope thnt it will be 8ieudy, thorough aid eieectivo. 'I'he at ent ion of th0 Legislaturo is agail cailled to the defects in or in aid egnaooy of' our1 ~0$ pset sys5tem to seenre just ice. it. is to be hoped that, lie present io gislature will niot give the subject, tle go-by, as did their predecessors. liarily aniy mat ter will be bI oLched wc iis moro vital to the s l'ety of the lives and property of the ltiblest citizens. Q'glho emp1loyment, uitilization andl better treatment of olir native labor is wisely and admirablo recotmmnd oil. We heartily second the recommen, dation to tax Corporations, ati a rate fully eui1al to tlLt imposed (ill real eistate, and the proposal to reduN1c silaries of some ollivers whose duties a-e ve-ry light. The proffer of the G1overnor of his 111d to every one Who will aid in securing hai tmany, peace and pros perit y amoig aII (tlr- peoplei is sincere aund heIartfelt. We holio to so a 11111o which will eicourago the lheentivo and choer ovory heart in the State. 'l'h' whol Mle8sagC is platinl, traig'Itforward, manl11y and practical. It' the Legislature will but Comoin ulp iln its worl)k to) this~ stand ard, well will it..b oro our Stato.-&S C. Repudlj llespolhism it Sighit, 'I'ho0 lead ing organ of tihe Radioals in Nliss~ouri sees ai (danger' iiead, I{. S ys: FI'~o1WEMF.~NT.-Wllctor' tileo difl cult ies in New York result Jivilone or' not, it is already pin tha:t tihe ob. jectionsl which we mlade on) the enforce mlenit act, while it was un~der conlsider ationl, were well foun~ded. It pllaces in tile hanlds of the1 Federail Governl.. IOnent a power which however dlesirable iln particulalr ca1~Sn is attlays and ev'erywhere liablo to be0 absued, greatlyt the peril of free inIstitu. UntdStates troops are under arms in the city of Now York with a (General of the army to commaiund them. Whait does this mlean '? New York is not in rebellion ; it is not mennooncd b'y anly foreign foe. An eletionl is being 1h0ld, anid we hlave comoi to such a pISs with our |Republlio thlat thatmenl think it desirablJo and right for F'ederal troops to) he kept uinder alms, within reaeb of theO polls, 0o1 election dlay. Suppose, no0w that this power should happen to fall into bad hands ! WVe have had dangerous mon01 in the 'White house already and may yet hiind thlero a man with tile spirit of Napoleon the Usurper. Sup pos that this dangerous Presidenlt wh lever' he may happen to be,~ should b~e nomi na ted by a certain party contriollIin~g its macehinlery by means of IFederall patronage, and should then flid that hie was cer taini to be dlefeated by the froe vote of the people. Suppose that lhe bleing desperato, and11 sustained by a multitudo of retainers and depen dents, whose oflicers are thec price paid for their support, should resolve to dlefont the will of the people. Five large States can be conitrolledb y thao vote of five largo cities--New York, Phbiladelphia, Cincinnati, Chi~ cago, St. Louis- Suppose that this desperate P'resident, using the army unlder color of the enforoomnent nct sh~ould by means of it sustain his ad. horonts ia maastring those eities, andt through thuir voto should earry nine ty eoetoral votes. If the army may properly ie usod at all to regulate 101con ito time of peace, desporato non will never Iack exnulsea for using it. Eheher iho excuse is good or had, the Praesident rebne is to judge. WVho does not see that the poser thus conferred upon tihe Executivo is one of the nrosn. ,oi to. free siu A Worthy 1ribute. d, John Mitohol's Eulogy on G:ner-Al Loa. [Froi, (1e Irih Ciizen.J ti Ilo highest acad. the noblest and ti grandest character of our continenat, p the Imiost conseoitiousi, humane and b faithful soldier, the most chivalrous genltilemsana in (Iii vorld, tlie best, the most superb example 1f the A morican wal i.)r-, has fillIen Iikeo a Isnighty tree ni 1ho forest ; and "dell wonde. m, r after w tim: first tho ek of the ne ws to 1ind1 that W ti-re ias such a gap, Such a blank, in tile World. What isi there wiliting, t.o tlhe fame of this illti.triou A merican I d WINNSBOROa "1 d i Wodnosday Morning, Dec. 6, 1870. Desperai ont. Thero could lie no better proof of the change in political opinion it the D:ortlh, and that, sonothing cio t-e. V *iidos prejudico and hatrod against the a white people of the South 1 i now no cessary to seoure popularity, than Beu 0 Butler's lato speech advocating a war t with England. Drowning mon clutch t at straws, for surely no such measure t as this of war, can buoy up the sinaking fortunes of a party whose storo of I ideas is exhausted. Tho bolder Rad- I icals have, onl the ,thor hand, taken v up woman suffrage is it measuro more h suited to purposes of agitation, and costing far less than a war. The idea t is sure to take with the Northern and with the Negro mind, and its agita- i tion promises to restoro the govern- t mont, for a long lease of years, to the ' Conservatives at the North and to the .whites at the South. Wo believe, however, that, in the end, woman auf t frago will be one of the experiments f of the future, and it would not sur prise um to see South Carolina the first of the old thirteen colonies to lead oAf F in the matter. Did we believo in Radical philosophy as 'to the nature of political rights, as many profeis tc do for it mare temporary purpose of gain, we would join in this woman movement because of its perfect con si-tenicy aad logical lcessity, though t foroseeing that doing so ianvolves a solf-sacrilicing abandonment of the offices of the government for many at long year. But the way the vile by pocrites outside of South Carolin a, for here the Nogroes will givo them) a majority, will now flinch and smi 1rm and bolt, is going to be a sight to wake the mnost charitable laugh t h EAov. Sicott', Inaugmural anid i. Message. 0 The tone of Governor Scott's Mes- ii sage is excellent, and its recon)menda- p Lions, though none of thom involving i great change, are good. We copy a . baief abstract and criticiam of it froma e theo South Carolina Republican. Ina I his inaugural, Gov. Scott rises to aj tone of sentiment (asi can be seen in t the introduotory extract which we a1 prinit to-day) which is truly magnani mious, and if his deeds prove equal tol his pirofessions, his inifluceIC is doubt loss so great, that lhe will make record in the early future alike honorable to, himself and bonelicial to the State. if a pubi officer really desired to dIischargo hjis duties with dignity andl imapartiality, we could scarcely imag, ine huis set ting out in better style. The eyes of more than one sober and intelligent oit izen are, therefore, turned, without prejudice or bitter nessi, upon the course which Governor Scott andl those profcssing similar a sentimeints will now pursue. A Fact Explaiued. Wec have inl this State a aufflcaentd number of our people engnged in "I agriculture to support a population three times as large, or to state it an other way, the human miuselo employ,. edi in agriculture in South Carolina calls, according to the highest stand-. ards of social progress, for a popula- tI tion of two millions of peopla. Yet s it is a fact that our agriculture does L not feed us, and that wve, but 730,000 people, at least three-fourths of us en- 01 gaged in agriculture, dio not raise for th ourselves the leading staples of food. 'o, Ought this not to startic us into ro flection ? Must not some elements of th civilization be wanting ? And what fo clement 1 WVe answer, the use0 of m maind in the application of machinery of znd scence not only to agriculture, pc but to mnanufacturinig besidek. Trhe census of '60 shows that while ane-fonrth of the people only wore in igricuilturists in England, one-third E af the people of thae Northern Statefl sa were engaged in farming. Yet Eng. St lish farming was far more productive tii in 1860 than American farming, ow- th ing to sup~erior recne and machinery. ti< And the census just taken proves that all Now York State uow has over half a d million more inhabitants, and yet few- of er people are engaged in farming, th than in 1 860. This fact is now be- so: ine ditenssed nar th. henao a uA 3oline in agriculture." We believe is due to exactly tile opposite tuse, and await other statibtics of ,at State to prove it. ^ Wo vnture > aflirm beforehand that they will rove that production with leos labor, ut more skill, wiser scienoe, and au srior implements, has increaoed, roving progro.-s rather than douline. .id what tremendous growth in alith there must havo taken place, lion half a million amd more produ. sr bustltiinl t leuinsl ves in that bttte y other portim. of the w..rk of pri;o .tetion lthant the.or raliming of the kw material ! Tl i o imre scientitie pricnilturo becomes, tic more pro uotive it becomi, a1l1 yet less hut I ln Muscle does it r(-pair. and tle reter tihe iumber of people uil it ixtain in the pursuit of other vi% ii. ;ed emilynmm-ts. The Colunitmix 1mtiiii rer, alluding the dispatch of troops to Tallasil o to "presevo order" during the ounting of the votes at the roecit leotion, says m ost truthfully: Had lie radicals achit vud this succe& ir, iore would have been no call for roops to be sent to Tallanioe to preserve order" at the counting (,f bo votes. E.verybody knows that the 0onocratic party thero, as every. 'bere throughout tho South, would ave quietly submitted to the law and ) the popular will. The mission of iese Flederal soldiers to Taillaihassce to assist the radical party of Flori a in a rebcllion against the Constitu ion and the 1lcolde of their State. 'hat is the way in wich they are to preserve the peace." It is by help 'ig revolutionists and usurpers to rample law and popular rights tinder >ot. Such proceodingi are chartc iristics of a military despotism, hich now reigns supreme over a large ortion of the tyinion. Of the four mcinbers to Congress .lected in Sout h Carolina on tile 9th of October, says the l'hiladol. hia vening Bulletin, three are ie roes, and oie is a white man nicaner Ian the meanest negro. Whatever lie faults of the white people of the tate may be, it is undeniable that hey are among the most respoectable lid intellectual in the country. Is it ot humiliating to every American to Do them ruled by a hotde of ignorant alf-barbarous negroes? Do not the cople of the North feel indignant at be fact that their present condition as beon brought about. by the terror im exercised over them by armed mobs f savages, backed by the Federal allitary and civil antlhories. Lot the co4ple of South Carolina hoar their Is with patience and digity. Two eare hence the voters of the North.. rn States will provo to thorn tha6 rhen they reduced the~ South to sub iction to the Uuiion they had no in ontion whatever of placing thoem at t the mercy or penniless, unlettered egroes. A correspondent of the Worcester py, wvriting from WVarren, says: "Onie day inaat week a lad about fteon years of age, son of Mr. Jas. leJermnott, wias at tacked while in a old near his fat her's house in Au urn, by a large grey eagle, which istened its benk and talons into the oy's legs and shoulers, and eould ot be frightened off b~y kicks and >reams. An uncle of tile lad hap. ened to be near by, heard the niele, nd wvent to the rescue. The eagle irned on imt, and1( he was obliged to eat it to death ini self-defence. The riter of thlis wvas att the house next iy, and saw tlie ugly bird. Its wings ensuired nearly eight feet across, omn tip to tip, and around one of its gs was tied a bit of rope, showing it id escaped from captivity." Mr. Anthony Trollope's niew novel, Sir Harry Hlotspur, of Ihumble waite," has appeared in book-formi, id its effects haIs been disastrous in ondon. Cockneyismi is at its its' end to pronounce it sue ssfully. A bout the nearest that1 ey can get to it is, "Sir 'urry tapur, hiof 'umibletih wai''"-a result bich seriously leads on~e to believe at Mr. Ti ollope, knoewinig the tun rtunato infikmuity of his country en, invented the title inl a ulnoment malignant miisanithiropy anid disap inted literary aspirai'iion:,. The JBrasillian Legat i-n at WVash gton is expect ing a visit froml the i nperor of Bruaz-i. l),n Pedro, it is - id, intends to comao to the United t ates soon, wvhen lhe will spend some no in all of the leading cities of e United States, t .king in the na nal capita) as a matter of course, d paying hiis respects to the Presi- a nt. Don Pedro is a liberal patron a the arts and sciences, and has boon ' a friend of many distinguished per [1s in A merica, including Professor ~ ,O*3 The Gcriaan Vote. Wo have a telegraphic account of the statement that Senator Carl Schurz i alled upon the President at Wash. i ington, but was not received. The President was engaged ; and so Carl I Scburz did not see the President, and i Aid not learn when hecould be sufli Diently disengage to see the rebel i lious German Republican. This i met ion of the President is in ( keeping with the actions of Itadical leaders and the effusi.,ns of < the R.idialo. pres. So long as the I fermnau were obldient ta orders they I werer ' loyal.'' But a short while i gince' th lt idie-l jires1 teemed with I I: ia Itioiu.s of swet Germn accent. i II.me O ermans," "noble King i \Vllinmi" and "our Fritz," were I I hemes that delighted them daily. i But when Gorma.n A mericans, albeit I good Rlepublicas ehoose to say that i they are in favor of beiing permitted i to ully where they can buy the cheap- I ott ; that they oppose New England I ta ri ffT a nd monopolies ; that they I think that all capit.lits should pty i taxes like other folks; that five years I of plunder fulfill alI the demands : of reconistruction ; that white men i should be enfranchised, and that mili- I tary power should end, and civil power reign ; why, then, these Ger mans are rebels and copperhe ads, and are absolutely disloyal and do s:rve censure and punish meut and ban ishiment front the circles of the faith ful. Carl Schuiz mu:-t go back to Missouri, fur he cannot bask in the sunshine of court favor at Washington if he fails to obey orders, and if any other CJarls in any other State in the Vest should dare to hold and expresi such obnoxious heresies, a similar measures will be meted to them. CIron ickc and Secntinel. The Denmceracy did well in Pennsyl. vania, because they nade a platform in which the Fifteenth Amendmentis declared to be a usurpation and Negro Suffrage an outrage. The Democracy carried Indiana, be eause a similar issue was made, and because Democratio candidates spurn ed the negro vote, and asked only the suffrages of white men. In Ohio the policyites gave us a platform without pitch or point, neither hot nor cold, and the conse. quence istseen in the almost universal apathy and defeat of the paity. Un io Demneroic Northuest. The Democracy will always be beat where thcy%:arc con* rollud by soft-shell milk-and-water political cowards, and they will always win where they in scribe " White Supremacy" on their 1 banners, and declare for a White man, government. The Democracy of Pennsylvania did right when they doelared'the fifteenth amendment "a usurpation," and negro suffrage "an outrage." For the present negro suf rrage and negro rule is fastened upon us, and we are powerless to resist it, but the time is not far distant when the so called oonstitutional amend ment will be declared null and void, and white men will again rule this once happy but now yankee and nig. ger ciro.ed land of ours, Alay the good Lord hasten the day. SUnnFsN' DE~ATHI OF MC iI.LAlf KINGa, ESQ.-This prom iaing young lawyer died at his residence, in this city, about 10 o'clok on Tucsdaiy nigh. Mr. King was well known in Char leston, and was esteemed and respect ed .as a man of spotles integrity, patient studly and considerable a bility. He was a native of Charleston, and was eduicatedl at the Charleston Col loge, which institution ho left in or der to volunteer in the Confederate service. In the army lhe won an en viable reputation, rising by promo. tion fromt a second lieutenantoy to a captaincy of regulars, serving at Forti Sumter, Battery Wagner and else where in the defences around Charles-i :on. H~e wvas al-o severely wounded at the battle of Averysboro, North Carolina. A fter the war lie began< to study law and was admitted to the bar about two years ago. He wsi admitted into the eopartnership with Messrs. Campbell & Seabrook, and was a member of the firm at the time of his death. A few months since, Mr. King contracted country fever while n a visit to the Savannah. River, and die immaediate cause of his'deathwas a uongestive chill, resulting from this sitack. lie was about twenty-seven years oinge. This story comes fromi California: 'The Rev. C. C. Ames preaches at: n Jose, but, being absent on fur ouigh for his health, Mrs. Ames fillse he pulpit very acceptably in his ab)- I aenco. On one recent Sabbath, she ~ot up in the morning and prepared >reakfast, waoshed and dressed her t ,aby, dressed her little daughter for 1 sabbath-school, put her baby to sheep, t nd sat down and reviewed her scr- E non before it was time to take the e ars for church, when she went to the t, >lace of wvorship and preached, to the t ntire satisfaction of a large and crit- 11 sal audIence." A Kansas paper describing a wed- P ing trousseau, anys : "Thme bide is i a have trailing big.htgownsa, oh, suoh i 'cauties I with ever such long trains P -five feet, at least. One ohemnisette ~ hat our gossiping friend showed us ad over fifty dollars' worth of trim in-1 lirng on it. That is only one of half a c ozen." c Perkins will get tight occasionall, O inch to the astonishment of himself h nd friends. "Five year,"~ says he, it was unaoeountable to me, for I ever (did drink but a mouthful or a vo; andl the cause never dia strike e ae until I masured my mout an s Murder made to Appear as Suicide. In an article in Appleton's Journa t is stated that murders ore often com uitted in such a manner that when thi noetimus are found, they are supposed ti tave committed suicide. The assertioi s illustrated its follows : It seems that, in fle city of Douren I, rag-picker calh-1d Thibert was scei nt a crowd. of peopile, wo filled tht :om a house, addressing an old man o >ighty-one yars, whonm Ie a.sked if II lid not wish to he cured of his in irnitIies. Tlhe old rani, wlho suifferei runm 1 w Ilk-hi leg, eagerly sivi'iid ti Promis. 14o h11el. himl, anill wasI direct00e )yThibiet. to providu hiiiself witdh n i;ew isail antid a long rope nwt the-ker haiti Il ls I le liger. Thibert promiset ha'.after a week's fasitg antid pirtiy ig, Il would Coie t1 his houiso ali< elirvei him of his suifferingsi. Ti oil nin became suspicious, and caused Tui wrt to he arrested when Ie presentie, imself on t he n pointod day. The polic hen examined lhis east lifo and trnce, iis iconnetion with a number of age non. Every ona of them lawd bee Oind lianged biv ieans of a nlow na imd it sieler r-pe alithotugh they ha 'ften expressed their horror of suicide le wgas fin.ally coivicted of having mimi lered thwm in this at rociona way, an lied on lie gallows, auid still gloryin i his popiilar surniame of tie "up Physiciana " A Rare Phenomenon The Chicago Tribune says that a ct rious and very rare planetary positio will occur oin the 8th and 9th of ne) month, to which 11o attenition has hiti -rto been called, and it seems to hav iscaped the not ico even of the complei > the Astronomical Epfihemerides. 14 he spaice of two whole days and fiv 'ours, tile planiet Veinus will be behin hiesuti, as viewed from any part of th artlh's surface. TILe planet is then o ,he further sid,. of her orbit and he -clativo motion only 15* minutes of ar lily, while at the instant of conjutic ion she will be within forty-eighit sec )rids of arc of I.he sunll's centre. Th .right planetary spot will apparentl ouch the Western edge of the sun n eleven o'clock, P. M. on the 6th of D( embor, Chicago time, and emerge frot Jelhind the solar disc, on its Easterr dge, at 4 o'clock on the morning of tih )t It. The phenoiena o fimniersion ain, !mersion will not he visible at Chicagn ho sun being below our horison o )ol.h occasions, but, the two bodies ma , )> Seen through the telescope as al:nos n contact late in the afternoon of Ilh 3th and early in the morning of tiut )Lic of December. Tlhe enerMon Wi >a visible in Europe. The pienonic ion is about as rare as the transit of the time plinet across the suit's disc, wiicl iccurs only onco on the average iln 57 rears. The next transit will occur i )ecenber 1874. A PoLrIcA. RPvo1.UTJON.-It i tated that a great political, if no oWial revolution has just takon plac n Manchester, England. The elec ion of members of the school boar or the city created great exciteneh >n account of a sharp contest betwee :he "Secularists," who desired to ex ilude all religious education fror public schools, and the Non-Secular iets, who oppesedI it. The struggi was also enlivened by the entranc >f two Roman Catholics and a womiai nto the lhst. The Roman Catholic ire not only elected, but head the poll whlile Miss Laydia Becker, who occupi. re'ry much the samne position there a \Irs. Staniton does here, received 15, 249 votes out of 20,513, and was :oiirse elected. "The Secnlarists" re :eived the smallest number of votes c miiy of the successful candidates, an. >nlly t hree of them were elect ed. Si: ,f tile successful candidatecs belong ti he Chlurch of England. Manche'ate hnls toleratos relhgious liberty, grant -qual political rights to women, an, lisists upon relhgious eduication im tht iubhlic, schools. It does not appear ex otly in whlat that religiouis educatioi ~onsists. This election is lie more im bortant as it refl,'cts the views of man' fnot most of the large Englishl manu actturinig citit~s. Btinor P1OTTERl's Foo-r DOWN 01 'uls lIIrruALsTB -Bishop Potter hai mitated the example of the 1Righ lov. Dr. Littlejohn, of Long Island n relation to the new order of Englial litualists, whose members have at emnpted to offloiate in the diooese l'ho bishop baa prohibited any pries >r missionary of the organization fron erforming ministorial acts as clergy non of the Episcopal Church in his e ; and the pastors of the varion: hurches are liable to constjo if them ermilt them to preach from thieil mlpils. Th'e body whielh has thus eon laid under the ban is known at he Order of Evangelists. It has ranch in Boston. Father Bradley he well-known Rittaalistio priest o t. Sacrament's Mission, has also ro elved a gentle hint from the bishoi s abandon his practice of commrunica ing alone, after the manner of (Catho c priest.--New York Sun. Hron. FARMiKo.-A Bishopvillt lanter writes to the Sumter New, hat be has made this season thirty, wo bales of cotton, weighing 40( ounds each, from just thirty-tw< ares of land. This was the result o1 n intelligent application of ferti. zers and lot mannre, and It showi anotuoively how much m-' y be aec amplished by those.whao are progres. ye enough in their ideas to use the teans of qulokoning and invigoratin~g to soil which now lie ready to theu andd. Donkey's flesh ranks very high mong the ntew1 Apecies of food c~opt. I by the besieged Parisians. It is aid to resemble veal, with a poultry y r Telegri~,Izice THE WAR IN EUROPE. latest Advices. Lo~No, November 29. A Cabinet mecting w. lte'd hbo to-diy, at which it was atgreed that G.. .ra koff's last despatob sho's.1 I e e m sid ered as reuoving the que.tion of RuSs.sdemuan-.! trim thlt. sphere of Papers contain a riior tlnt alt at tn:pt, had11 boe n m.ilt by a lhavarian d->fier to sh:>ot the Kng 1f Prussia. - lIa:N NA, NOV! I,.lP 8.- >C I t 'i I nct, is not ni n f v,r. h i to .i c f. .r. ni i' of tihe powers in pritnciple, bt, pi es o0- a mtettient of preimiary ques Stios. DCespatches ft it Io -n t anot inople say liho Sult"ant and Ilrand Vizor :,hw a., alarm at the situation, couttiig in a 3 peaceful .ol ution. iie ii it i. It IV ernm otient has bto ugh . all the g,111v eIr cotton in mn:irket. Li l ht-u ud van.tUcc I to X23 per ton. The Financie say, simmeuse suppiis of armls aid im unitio.., of war b.ve arrived at Russian pos t inl the !ack BUCIIARnST, November 28 --The Routiani:tn C(hamberas operined yo:-ter day. Ptmco Chare l hi. i is adeldes. referred to the saisfactory -elati,,.a-i with 'Turkey and the adjustmeut of the consular ju.risdict ion. liitu, Novemer 29.-Austriat Qontgratulates Pru.iX.L upou Lerman n unity. t A detachmneit of 8.(jo Prussit.s is reported at Chatetin tgnatltut, tv.. - e ty-eight, kilomoeter from Tutr. T Sorman right. still oeiJ ies .Alot gp: r-Corcattt. Frederi. k; chia res' , r:o y c has been strongly r:--i forc d. Th d Prussianl movoutmnts indicate the oh 3 ject to turn Vendome and a Lidt. on 1 Tours. r l3at 1.i, November 29.-Th.. Kim, c telegraphs the Qteen fro'-n \'ersaih that Maiteuth lI, witI a portiont of the first army corp-, defeatedl the Fr-.nebt e on Monday, a fe-w miles SIuth of ( Amies. Tihe French lo.s w.s I,000J t killed and wounded, and 700 priso.t - era. The Prussian loss was compara c tively uniiportant. The IzDkle of lchlcerburg is in rear of Le.tLn, a where Keraty has 20,000 u n. i Nmw Yonx, November 29.-The, World hats a special, dated Tours 1 Monday night, whiolt s:tys the exp'ct V ed decisive battle neutr O.lean- hat not yet occurred. There -h:ivo bcen numerous skiriisics-0 l fa vor 1 ie to the French. Tihe Prussiai . I in those engagements are it. avy, it tt ding nine cannon. Tbc I)ukc of Mecklenburg failed in tn attempt to I occupy Liemans, which was cove:cd b)3 1 50,000 French composed of F~erek r and Keratry's troops. The main body D'Auvell's army still occupies an ertrenched position betwee n 0r a loans and Arthentay. The (Germant t attempted to eneircle him. The Gov 3 ernment here ias every assurance that - d'Auvell's strategy is admirable, and I that at the proper time he will assume t the offensive and crush Vonder Tann, Is who is in the immediate front, and leaving sufficient force to hold it. Prince Frederick Charles and the -1Duke of Mecklenburg, who command a the wings, will move on Versailles. a Private French advices say a great a conflict between opposintg forces, to s the number of 300,00O0 men, is likely ,to oocur immediately, int tihe South a era department. The Prussians are s within twelve miles of the French -Provisional Govet n ment. Troohnu de f nlies t-he trutht of the Statement that he intends to bartish 10t,in00 Pariisians, f because of the searcity of foos.. I llm:aRLIN, Decemnber 1 .-Privaute ad vices from Vienna, say Austria, Eng > land andl Italy accept the Prussians r proposals for a conferene. It is un a destood that Russia's claims would I not be prejudiced by her participation in the conference. Tounis, December 1. - The English i despatch relautivo to a conference has - been reserved. No answer has been returned. It is undlerstood that the Government is inclined to consider England's courae as irreguhtr, itn urging French ndtherence to the pro position coming from P'russiar. LONDON, December 1 .-T'he Tele graph says the feeling is becoming unversal throughtot England, that the French war is drawing to a close. A balloon, probably from Paris, was .seen over the English Channel ; it was driven seaward by a viojet East wind, and it was unqjuestionably 'lost in the Atlantic. It is said the Prussians suddenly evacuated Amiena, retiring towardls Paris. .This muovement is regardedd as very important at Lillo,, wher-e it is believed that a great battle is pro gressing around Paris to-day. VansAILLE8, Decoml er l.-Aspecial despatch to thto Times-i says the acce pt r ance of Prussia's conditions of persco by the Paris branch of the French Government will be0 retiuired before the capitulation of Paris is received. '.o Tharmy of the L~ire is retroating its present positiont and numbters is unlinown. All passtengers by the Bre-men steamship U~nion, ashor e off the coast of Scotland, were safely landed. Nrew YonK, lDecember 3.-.'The New Yotk Tlributno's correspondent with Garibaldi's heandquarters, at Antun, writes on TIhursday, that the Prussiana yesterday afternoon attack. ed Antun, with twelve cannon, infan try and cavalry. Thoy wore repulsed with great loss. Thte Prussians shtelled thes city. The Mobiles behaved well. The correspondent of the Tribune telegraphs, at 2 o'clock Thursday, from Versailles, that the fighting on the 80th was followed by no fresh Iiovamietc-5. IA World special from London Says: "Dnarnt frrda his ay o- Wed. ji ned hands with i'alandines, and the siege of P.ris is in effeet ra.J." A special from Tours say : 'Oflioial despatC's announce that Troebl and Ducrot ruted the l'russians betweein iurio Sur M1arne and Choissy le Roi. Duerot is now en1camiped fifteen Iiles from Paris." A special to ta World from Lon don, s-iys a special from Tours states that Viioy, with the lirst corps, got wholly through the German liii on the Smuth, in til iorimed a junction wi tIh a portion of Palladinle-' armily advanl Oing frn tile So.utih-west. The \Vorld'., speuial, fiomi T.,ur , Vrid sy, annetmoed that Trmoebu and l'anhines h-l fornied a juin-tion and the biege of Paris was virtil ly rai. ed. A desp-t.h to the Time,, dated Tour,. Is, says the armfy Iof tll boiro haSehwtedI a jitionll with Trochu'. forces. Frderiv]k Chailes is retiriig from before the uniteil forci. It is sain Troch his outi'de t10 walls 150, 001) meirn l :)100 anlnionl. Tne wo. I- i s n spicial, d-ited L' ::doni, Oll 1, hlith n a I eg rami . datedl Tours4. _M, saly4 it is ofli..illy stited to-night, that, one or two dayi uillsit yet elase befoire the fruits ~of the inov.emvi enits ro w in prog a es m a1y he flly reape4. Up to this time, the iot complote success I.is attended the succesive steps taiken ; every Imi tment t. brings nearer to eceb other the arnies of the Lire ind Paris. DIri ng the lighting of the 30th, Du. eroti anid Vinoy captured four Prus sian guns and many prisoners. Tou'IO s, Doecember 2.-The Govern nwlt here referred to their colleagues it] PMa is the nlglish note asking parti clipaI itll i the conference. Touits, Ureemiber 2. --The Prua sinns aro concentrating at Enampos, thirty mi!es South of Paris, to disputo the advanrc of Paladinles. Lat. i. -, lcowher 2 --Ducrot's sritii from Paris was successful. 1I0 ii itow tecking to effeet a juictiu with Palad ines. UniLA..:1.PillA, De-cember --The Girard iron Tuibe \Vorki were iiaud S(-d1:y ; l-s; Si 7 , 0t0 i. :1350 workman arle i brown oumt of elo )loyment. W ASlt1Nuxo, D:cemlllwr -I.- P o)r eign advices Ia-e imluch conisie1 ; Ithe ilipression exists in diplomatie circles, ihat, the French have indi a hrdlin, Mllt and diat the list. -uIhieitie al vice, wtre tilit thtey weret puishiing their .va Ita g' , but. the bi-st geographiler; faib (I to locav I livarmii' e t. P Ii'lla. i hagin liihere thirk the story will i-o .bl wiihin the next fir days AlexONTGOM11, Dvecember~ 3. --NXo cang in Ghe siniua, lIoth I lonse.4 i at on AIlndy. Derek, pments hoped for t heln. WAs11NoT'o, N )eceiler 3.-Cap tain Mivor, comimtand-int at New Or Iltli, telegrnphs Gov. \Varmoitl, 1thiat :an atteiiipl. was nlade to assassinate i. Iitidy, who ttified against the Jaton R1ouige prisoners, ati New Orleains. M. Trielbaril he new Freclh Minis. ter, lis receivia his credentialsi. IHis ren-ception by Ile Preasilent will take inet earildy next, week. M. Herthemliy leaves iimmediatelv for the North, and Thie Demiioirnis of atin- Genii-ril \ m-mai ly alit caen ingl.ii nigh aly, upon ihe si,. 1.cn- ofl imn, achig G~~ioerior Hohidlein anrd en lin ag a rexirnietied Conistitti aonal1 If[an. Josiah' Piii Tnor, Cl it or of th o italhigh Sen itinl , i ad ex Unti tedl~ Sa tes Senia tor TI. fj Clinugmana, land a pe-i-son. al enicoia.or, on the streetsi', this muoranmig. Cianeis were f'reely nsad. and MIr. Clinrgmnit wnuvs ve*ry hn 'ly inajuared abhoit the hiead --ha vinag recei veildi hree or four severe blo~ws. i'ir. Tu'arner' re oimveid (on1 very lienavy blow. Mr. Ciinvgni annuladei th i ssailt. Th'le di li.. eniy oruiiginatedini some H siareune On Mr. C. am ihe Sei- n v'l. Pal l .A us-r.inia Ia, Decaemiberi 3.-A llheeitl o i f ni-clhants was I il to *a to organize ai steamii~ap comapanly hence to Liverpool. Market Recpor'ts. NEW Yontx, lDee. 3.-Evening. Cottoni (lull andr unsettled ; salaes 2,.. 200 bales ; uplands 15k ; Orleans 160.. Gold II ,!4. Cuanr.EsvoNu, Docemnber 3.--Cot ton dull1 andi lower--iiddlingA 14g?. sales dIt0 bales ; receipts 2,775 bales. Liv iuriooi., Dec. 3.-Evening Cotton steady-uplatnda 9 ; Orleans 9i1; sales 8,000 bales. A Wtnors NasPAPER on~ ONtc Savan y .~iIe 01 ParPER.--LONnON, Nov. 15 --List night~ I received from otne of youir correspondents in P'nria the mno.t extralordinary thing in the w ay of a newspaper, that I have ever seen. Your corrosponident had out all the news columns of the Paris journals of Novemiber, had past ed themi together anid thaen phaotogaphedl t hom, reducing whaiit filud seven columns of print t-o a space seartcoly more than, an inch and a half squanro. TIhis hai t hen for wardled by balloon1 mail ; anid although to the, utanissisted eye its Coitents wvoro untdecipherablo, by the aid of a vecry powerfnl magnifying glass and astrong light it could be road.-- orld. Notice to D~ebtors and C'editors. L IA persons ii.debaed to tha E-tate of a1 D~o:-cas Miobley, deceased, ill please umake piiament. to the lindraignedl or o Me Cants anad Douglass', niy Atlorneys, andl tlose, hayvlig Clairest against, said Easit are nlotified to preset them af. once pro'perly tattested to mayself or rmy said Attorneys. deo 8 JOIIN AlE ADOR, Ex'r. Notice to Debtors and O;reditors. A LL persons holdIng claimsgainst- the -Estate of William Brown, Sr., de caedI, are hereby notified to present them properly atlestedl to thes undershgned or to McCants & Douglass, mny Attorneys, and those Indebted to said Esatate, are request,. ad to make payment to the uindersi gned. .OHN FR~N YRY.