University of South Carolina Libraries
VOLUME rv. HO. 463._CHARLESTON, S. C., MONDAY MORNING-, FEBRUARY" ll, 1867~ " mjrr* XITTTT* Our Cubil,- Diaimittil-?. Pauli, Houtombor ?.?. I hu Minister i-Woim affairs has untied a noto lu Um diplomatiti repr? scutativus regaining rooeul ovont* ; due laro* thai Ilio impiotai* meeting u( Stl/biitg should bo la garde.l as a fresh pledge for lue maintenance b! chu peace of Europe. J?kiii.in. iiepicmbar 2.? Tho city elections rcsul tud, ? Iba'Choice oi raili.-ul inombora to tbu now Parliament. Uotida1?^: Po',,embcr - Noon.?Coinwla llij. tf*n% *M>tenu>r2--2 P. M.-Colinola down thu cro"s ,"'!ll,u-''J- Weather delightful fui ,,,??,V.>;n,.00, ? s,?I,tcii>"<-'r 2 -Noon.-Cotton quid TWc?wvjf * ******** unehangoil. ?, - JnfgffgP^&V iftiepWr ??3 P. M. Com du vtiued?\.s. allow declined-Ma. European Kevro Her Rttamw. }"??n' ," " 1 ''? Arrived, the Manhattan anil GUp ol Boston from Borono, with dates lolbo -ai. liai vest me, had comuioiiccd nilb favorable weather. 1 bo heaviest ihundcr ?torni ? known done at I o"a""- 11,ero *? * imieb damage The Reform League celebrated the paa?.igoor thc.net by n banquet. .Mill IUII| Bright \vr..te.lut ters urging tbo Itairne to demand (ho ballot, preadin n 8 " , Ual.v k violent and ?SF' ,'l',IC|Mls,..1 u>;"?,! American products dull, supplies liberal. Washington n.vv*. * \? ' <,:,'? ?ept?Ml?r -?- dispaici! from tort Han says that tbo t'avages in that suet iou do uot Ttnut peace: imi bili ih,. Commissioner? if I bey can. rhey arc drlvllin oil Ihe buffalo toward their villages on ihe Republican lllvor. Tli?r attacked train .near i on Smith, mid wero' repulsed. Twenty Indians, one officer and four soldiers wero Killed. Tbc Secretary of ilio Treasury has ipccircd u dispatch from special agent llell.'Htatiug that only three of the custom llOUSO officials were on dut v." ibo Secretary ordered Ihe i-ustoin bouse further down the river, outside Iii? Ollv. Alaximilliuu has adopted as his heir voting Itur bt, 1.0, now with bis graiidinotbor on (Icoroptowit Heights. Tvieclmugo in (be cotton lax from il tQ 91c. por potimi, Roca into effect te-dav. Nine regular army surgeons died within the last thrco veoka. Simon Cameron favors impeachment. Tbo internal revcuuo to-tluv amounts to $1.000 - l)0U. Urani iijia ordered the discharge of aeventv-onc of the one hundred and forty clerks of the a Department. _ "??? Richmond. I'.ieniio.vn September 2. - ,lno. L'odv. a soldier iuf tho lllh t/liiled Slates Infantry, cui his throat t'.'ie morning nt Headquarters.' He was from Newark, N. J. The applications for bankruptcy in Virginia dur ing tho last week have exceeded tho total number since tho Bankrupt Law was passed. i-Vani Cincinnati. Cincinnati, September 2.?Jones is co infort itilo; attributes his (lufciit to fracturo of the m?ai, which occurred at the j.Ub ronniL The in juries about the bead are nut aurions. Auw York %'?wj, New VoUK, September 2.?Arrived, ihe Henry .Chauncy from Aapinwall. Shu brings f-l.103.o5j Loans docrcascd i'v.'n cr,'.i ; Spccio increased {1,243,000; circulation decreased I21.U00: deposits increased $2,113,000; legal tendoni iiicrcnaod $2, ?72,OU0. V'll Orlruin \>\v1. New Orleans, September 2.? Thero wore thirty intermonts from Yellow Fever here yesterday". Among them Tom King, the pugilist, and Lieut. McConnick. of tho iron ciati Mainak*. Tho official on1 er relieviog Slieridon was received this morning st Headquarters. Ueneral Oriniti baa been tclcgraphrd fur, and up in bis arrival General Sheridan will tako his departure. Colonels Foravi lie. Moore and Sheridan accompanying him. From Sonili Amcricn. .Pana.ua, August 23.?A revolution lo lost ii?at'iqueiv"4 has hern discovered mid Ibo leaders ar rest*'d. . , TiV choleva is dying out nt Nicaragua, but ia alili rSvTing in e.'mio districts. The Peruvian -JJongroaa will allow Spaniards lo remain ivi lhocoiiu.vy, the iipprchonsioii ot the ro timi of at Spanish 3??' rtlstelpjlsjl. Th? worh, u. tu.. but Ut lea h v> neon suspended. Tliero hod been ?.'? " utonn at imparano, in which the shipping am.' dwellings were uani oged. One bark was wrerkeci a,,d ? **> '??* ,roriS lost. Mosquera will be tried for treason. Domestic Markets. noon mbpatvu. New , September 2.?Htocks alrong. Monoy 4o5 por "eut. Gold ll?. Sterling Sjaoj. 'G2 coupons lili : Virginia i)'m ev.-eunpnim nOJ. matura iuni*ATou. Stocks heavy, Gold 41|. Sterling !l?ail?. 'G? (*; ? 114L , Cotton steady nuil unchanged; aales t?OO bales nt >7o ? Pleur quiet : Southern i'.laKl. Wheat dull mid fave ra huyere. Corn ajnlet; mixed Wost?m il ?a $1 '? O*1* heavy and declined 9s3c; Kotllheru C5a7Ci '?? porli heavy at 23le. Lard heavy. Wbis kev at 'tive at 40c., io bond? Siignrtirm and In good dernaL'd: Torto Biro 12c; .Muscovado HI BOalS -r>0. Rico* idi. Coffee quiet. Turpoiitina steady, (IBs 5gjc Rosin steady. Preighi? dull. Bal' "*i swnE, Scpfombcr 2_Cotton quiet and nomina H Muldlings ;. ;. Collo lee dull and unehang ed. Flo V du"' "* ?*' arn,ori Ordinary to Fair lard?Ci'lvia ? Wcs'cr? 13-1? Whiskey?no sales. Corn LOCai.13. Mesa "?- Shoulders 194? C1?sa^fe;ltcrnber 2.- -F^ unchanged and in modeiato dem: invi. Corn v.No. 1 ?loL05. Wniskoy etendy. aleas Porle h. ^nmul et ?la 23.25, but little oft ired below ?'23.nU. . ? ?<>" nel ivo. Shoulders 13. CU VX eidos 1 ?4. taro .?? ? balee. New OnLEAXa, Augiivt 9.?Salea Of Colion 300 bales. Low Midi Bings 24?a2So. Itcccipl? 238 bales. 8tigar and Woliisse.x tpiiot and unchanged. Flour tliilT Ulne $ 7 : choice ?li a ? SO, Corn dull; SUppl:f liebt. White fi SS; yellow 1 27A. OatH tli'il'/at 70 ?. Pork in good demand nt ?2t? 50. Baeai.i hold as fast ne received. Should ers lSJc; clear -unies 17ial8e.; few or UO ribbed sides in muik-.-t. l. nn' in reqiiost?in tieruOS 13<c.; in kegs 15c. I in Id el?nod at 40 Ja 10J ; sterling 153a 155; Now York eight exchange i percent, pre mium. Sav&nnau, Bcptanbor 2.?Cotton quiet ; Mid Alinga held at 98c, offered 24'c. No sales. Be co, 'Pis 27 baioM. UecoiplH of 1 he year 247,059. Ex pci ts or tbo year 247,011. Stock BU. lloceipts of ?tea jBland 15,i37. Rxporie 1*>,115. Stock 139. \\? itbor hot. nnd cloudv. Adui ! A? September 2.?MOrkot dull. Sale? 41 balea. Middlings 23Ja24c. Wcatkv,r P'9 uBant nnd clenr. s?m; Items. Rain i 3ku1 s. A-c_For Clio past fe>v day a WO have b?o ft vi A ited with ncc.iaioiuil ftbowors of rain, but not o noiigi'i to injnro the growth of tbe crops. Andwhiliiwo road of heavy rains in different parts of tl 10 cou. itrv, and the damage tifino to tbo crops. It i grotir/.ii'g to us to alato that the inju ry to tbo f lorn colloti crop in this District is very oligli it. Wo trust that the injury to tho ci ops ihrongho ot tho couutry are not ur? serious as w??i nt ?ret nt iticipalciL Tbo corn and cotton crop m tho uplan /Is of this section of the Pee Dec country ib doing 1 nmnrknbly v.oll, und Ilio farmers havo every rea tonto bo encouraged. Wo learn tb&t tho river lias risen three or four feet at Society Hill Fen- r in conscqiicitco of tbo laie raina in rhu up-countT5'. The river is now in excellent order for navigi ttmn.- HenneU?ViHe Journal. Aubest-of an I'.MisBAiiv.--A colored man, call ing himsolf Bev. Nnl. Williams, has bi-ntt arrested by t?io niJ.'itarv authorities for preaching inoen \a doctrKTo? to the treed puo?iloot this Districi^ Ho w.ia carria d to Headqiiarlora at Darlinglon lust Wednesday hi u iloluchiiicnt of soldiers Hunt hcio for that ' ???* ? where he will bo Iried by tho Mihtary Court.Ut Vi-'uif/rst'i/iV ./ /?/ /. REOisrnATioN Br. rmiNS.- 1 he following nro (be regiBtratiui, returns . for Merlborongll District for tbe three Oral days: f??l?? roI.ollKI,. Benuottsvillo. . ?25 :U-r Adamavillu . . }J! !;; Bruton'sFork. " \}? ,S Grant's Mill.?? ?S ?S Clio 152 142 Red Hin. '%\ 'fS Brownsville.. 71 ' Total.77?' , -? (| ?coi..r As will be seen bv tbe foregoing I a ? ?. . 0 ed people have 337 majority in tbo D.'aV , 0,iv ?, white citizens have not registered ns pvoi.. ? . thoy should have done. They should do . BD B once.?Vcniicttsoihc ,/ounial. Toe Oar Wonka.?Wo are tniiv clad to lea.'1 that there in every probability tba't in a fow wecU tho Qm Works will nguin be In succeeatnl opera tien. Negotiations in reference sale thereol bave bcon pending ror soveral days . and wo bolieve thoy are now completed, bv which theso works fall into tho hands or two enorgeiie ritlzens. who will soon "let their light shine" for tho benefit of the comminity. - Wrt-ii.uiiie UownfMiMMr. Homicidc-Oii Wodncsday last, a difficulty in curred on the plantation or Col. Hubert Boat of thia District, lietucon John Lowe and l'rinco lTcv wood, freodmcn in which tho latitcr was el abb?d and lnsUntly killed. Ixiwe wns arrested and com mitted to jail.? Umonvi?e Tima. The c?icial cens?a of l8(!G flives a total ol 110.12C Torcigli residents tn Paris, which is, nc doubt, considerably under tho roa rk. Of tho vari ous nationalities the most import: nit are tho Ger mans, Belgians, and Swiss: the two former o 11.0 ? bici! probably ?xcoel 3 >, 0 , the latter being up ard of 30,000. UtiAjtiKAlj SICKLES AND ?HK UNITED STATES COURTS. LETTES it KHO.vi JOHN M. IUM.K1.1SV ACTtMC *TTI!HXBV.?EXEKA1., TO I'nESIDKV'l' .11)11 \.SO*. AnoiiNF.Y-GtNcit.o.'H Omet, I ? _ August 21, 1867. I Air. Pr?munit?Circumstance* have iicvolvcil upon mo the duty or laying beforo vour Excellen cy, wit bout delay, matter arising vvitlim tho prov ince of thm Department which appoani to the un dersigned to bo of great gravitv and of imminent urgency. llerewitli I respectfully submit documents mark ed from A inclusively to O, in which tbo following administrativo dift'iculty develops itself lor solution by Ihe Supremo .Magistracy of the Republic. btatl'ilENT THE .11. At tbe regular stilted term of (be Circuit Court of the United Stales for the District or North Carolina, begun and hold at Raleigh on Uto llrst MoMay in Juno Inet, Chief Justice C'liaae presid ing, among other civil actions which passed to judgment wero two in which parties nuuicd David ntid Daniel liahnwoHcr wero d?fendant? of record, as I am informed. I have no particulars respect ing aahl miitn beyond the caaential fact that, in duo course, alter judgmcot against tbe defendants, tho proper writs of execution wero rognlarlv is sued nnd piacod in the bands of Ibo Marshal, Daniel R. Goodloo. Esq., for tho purpose of having them sorved ngainst the proport of the dofoud aiits. Tho Marshal charged his responsible depu ty, nr. Neff, with that duty, who, beforo execut ing tbo process, was expressiv forbidden so to do, m a writing to that effect, by R. T. Frank, au oftl cer of ilio army, having command of tho United Slates soldiery stationed at the military post nt Wilmington. U|Kin information of the action of tho command nut oC-eud post, tbo marshal, who wan at Raleigh, addressed a respoctfui letter to tho superior olltcor of the fonnor, Major-Uenoral Sickles, in which tho marshal of tho United States for thai judicial dis trict brought to tho knowledge of the commanding oflicor of that reconstruction district Ilio fact that tho procoas the Foderai Courts was obstructed by one of his own subordinato officers. Mnrahnl Ooodloo doca not appear, from this com munication, to have addressed himself to General Sickles in tho manner of u ministerial officer of Jus Ce:; on tho occasion of a riotous or otherwise for midable resist aneo to civil proross, demandine; of nn officer of tho nrnry tho necessary militare sup port, as, it seems, might have boon done with per fect consistency, and with uiuinestionahln obliga tion upon tho officer to respond, whether the of fendere were or were not troops of the Uni ted States under his command; but Mr. Gooilloe appears to havo anticipated with confi dence the prompt interposition of General Sickles for tho vindication of tho law, as tho supreme ob joct or his allegiance. Ho also reported his action to this office, with copies of the noverai papers. Upon receipt of theso a roply wob inado to tbo Marshal, to the affect that no further action would be bad here in tho absenco of information from General .Sickles. It was coulldontlv believed in Ibis ofllce that tbo obstruction would be promptlv removed by command of Gcnurnl Sickles, or that if he thought fit to hesitate in that dutr, ho would not knowingly suffer his authority lo fall into col lision with that the national judiciary without llrst communicating with the seat ol Government. Under dalo of tbo 8th instant, however, sonio ten or el von days after the obstruction of process be gan, tho Marshal reported that ho bad received no responso to Iiis communication to General Sickles referred to, and bad aeon it announced as a fact in the newapapera that the action of Colonel Frank had been formally confirmed by Gonoral Sickles. Hereupon, it was doomed unbecoming for tin branch of tuo public ecrvico to apponr longer in sensible, in any degree, to the paramount dignitv nf the civil authority, and, accordine!}-, such in structinns were commuoicatod to the* Marshal, under date of the 13th imitant, as should comport with tho statutes in forco for the protection of the judicial power of the government. Ho was further instructed that, in tho opinion of this office, tho military authority imparted by tho statutes in forco for tito reconstruction of tbc Southern Stales did not extend in any respect to the Com is ol tbo United States. The eamu had beeu eaid, in nearly the samo words, by tho Chief Justice of tho United States, on the solemn occasion of his opening the court, whoso authority is thus coutenuicd. Under date of tho 20th instant, a report was received from Marshal Goodloo, iuwhicn hocuclosod copy of tbe following communication, addrosaod to hi's deputy : Headq'B'j Po*p of Wilmikuton, N. C, I Mr. , . . \ ? , Deputy VH^ST'taaiei^Sarthai. Wibningtf/n, '. C: Sin : action in auspeudiirg, until furlher or dere, tin execution of certain decrees of the Unitod Staigs Courts in North Caroliua, attempted to be anformen m violation of General Ordor No. 10. cur tent series f'nm tho Headquarters Second Mili tary District." haV^'B ?><*?>.approved by tho Major Ueucral commanding. 1 "?" "ot Por??-. ul*11" ' receive further ordore, tbr, lud?niont or decree of any Court to bn ouforeed in Violation or exist illg .nidore, and shall use the ueceaaary :orie "? ln<= vtMd it. Verv respecllullv, vour obd't nerv't, R. T. FRANK. Ilrovot Lieut. Col. and Captain Hlli Infantry, - manding Post. . . . The Marshal adds Hint, in obedience to Ins in stnictioiia of tho 13th instant, from this ofUec, be will report the caso to tho DiBtrict Attorney rol lila action under tbo criminal Ittwa o? tue Uniteti States, which bo says, is all that can be done in tho presence of an ovorpowering military force, until the Government interposes. Uy this lime it ia presumed that tho proper Dietrict Altornoy baa received due information of thooffenco. As vet no express instructions have been issued to that officer in Ibo premiaes. Ho ie, of courso, ex pected, and will bo required to act with whatever resolution tho occasion may call for. In Ihe lotcat report rocoived from tbe marshal, which boars tbo date or tho last mentioned; ho anuouucci that tho letter which, in tho first in stance he addrcaeed to Major-Gonoial Sickles, ond to' which ho has reccivod no roply, bambeen Wim ned to him through tho post commandant at WUmington. He montions an endorsement there on of Beverni inquiries addressed, as he is under stood to aay, to bini, dated at Charleston,.August 12? but he docs cot stato whether or not any signa ture wne subjoined to them. Ho furnishes no full transcript ni these endorsements, but reporta a copy of his own, mide i? responso to theso rc forrcd to, on the wiwie Jotter, .la his endoraemont, tho marshal reciten, apparently, timui or ...bo ror mi?r: ''Whoro and when tbu Bovcrei pauses ?r nctioir accrued : whether the actione wero for uVjbt or other causes; when tho suits wore begun; When Judgments wero givon, nnd when final pro cesa ivas isauod," ote. Ii the object or theso In- 1 terroRotories woa to elicit data upon which Gene ra] Sickles could determine whother or not tbo proceedings wore regular and valid which bad been conducted to judgment' according to law, un tici'the presidency of tbo Chiot Justice or tho United Stutoa, I must aay, th?.t it would bo diffi cult to imagine a more proposloroue affront to tbe Bench of Jnstico, legally considered, than to thu j attempt to constrain, or to invito, tuo nmiislpriul Officer Of tho court to inqujio into tho validity of ilk ircocese m his hands. Tbe marshal, with duo propriety, dechned to engago in theinvestigation. l-'innhv bv a communication of the 22d instant, a copv oVw?ich is herewith nuuoxcd, ilio approval of t?o Law Department is communicated to Mar shal Goodloo, with instructions substantially to the effect that ho shall continue toese^euto proMsa in conformity to tho authority of the Comi; that bo is not bound to expose tua porson to manifest lieril; that whou menaced by force, as in tho pres ent instance, bo shall report the particulars ond names of all offenders, with their aiders and abet tors, to the District Altornoy, ho has dono in the present case; tuet ho is required to dc-poi t i'mself as iuoffeuaivoly ai possible, bin. fliat bs is noi authorized to compromise lie digwly of the Court ffboso servant he is, by descending to ue goiiat? wlt'i? any porson, however reepectablo, for Tkus the matter stands. Although it dooa not, in tho Janmble opinion of the undersigned, qualify, In any degroo, upon es tablishc? and unqucstiouablo principles of legal obligation, the relation which General Sickles and hia subordinato officers and soldiers haar to the violated l.-.ws which aro in force for the runieli mont of poraoiiB who obstnict tho administration of luetico in tho Courts of tho United States, vof it may bo Just to mention hers, that tho remarka ble nction or that diatinguisho? oflicor appears to havo been prompted by tiio roal perauaaion that an order ieBuod by himself in April laat, of which, from an official copy, I quoto ontiro tbo paragraph that touches this question, ii Ot such uncommon dignity that it is his duty to enforce it, ui Its largest coustmction, in deflatico of tho Constitu tion and Statutes nt Largo. Tho following ib the order: ?'' - "Judgments or docroos for tho payment of monoy on causes of aotion arming bolwemi tho 10th of Decomber, 186 , and tbo 15th of May, 1885, shall not bo enforced against tbo property or per son of tho dofondout. Proceedings in such causes of action now ponding, shall do stayed : and no suit or process shall bo hereafter inatitutod or commenced for any such causes of action." ? This order does not oxproselv oxcept suits iiTor froces? of tho courts of the United Statos. Cor ftinlv snch sn exception must have appeared quite unnecessary. In coso of controversies bo tween citizons of difforent States, for example, the judicial power of tho United States is vcBtcd, an terior to all lawn of Congress, by express provi sion of tho Constitution. similar grant of juris diction by General Sickles muat havo appeared -idieulons, had such been insortoti iu his order, > - the enfranchisement of the Federal Court-.. ?U -h moro absurd would it havo appeared had H, riyilpgo beoii imparted by general order t< i t ' a States to instituto suit and real i/o tbo u. ??ytjon against a defaulting puollc ageni upon ev whoro tho cauBe of action bad ariacr r,r a debts ?, 19tn pf Decombcr, I860, and tho 1511 holwcoiriD? th? cxpo<i?oney of criminal prose May, lew.?.V 1M* os taay lodged in tbe discrelioi eutions ie ? V" IU ttuj- reconstruction district si of ?J'ofco,?mef^jtfbte. Ia it tobo understood thai t iBtofco lcotuii, "o t f K or lh0 DStiontt tho punishment or CO. * , d 8l(ltM ,?,,, Ac. I ticjpated that upon a loose implication troni ordor promulgated by militaiy ofilcor, charge : 4 , ."1' "?. circuiuscriboil loyalty, trilli a a ; civil MUM iunior a provisional systoiu of roston live legislation, ilio judicial o*tabl?Bhtnonl of II Hcpublte wan to conceive iteolf oustoil of jurisdl ' turn, stripped ?I iiuthoritv, and degraded to sul servieney? Was it oxpeetod that Iho judges, i g?/!*?-'quenco mieti un imphcatioii, would m lUiitiuUy itirn (hoir back? upon petitioners fc justice f 11 acema not. 'l'ho construction whic aiiphes tho order tu question to tho courts or It Union is evidently an aitor-thought. The orde is doted lltli April. On tho ?Ih of June tho Cliii Jualico opened tho court in Hatoigh. 'l'hat Ii publicly announced, in substance, for tho informi tlon of all partios concerned, on Iho occasion < seating himself on tho honch, that it was incorc ?i.itiblu with tho authority of tho national Judiciar to sit whero a military authority existed whicl could unpcile its process, and that it was sololy i: conscipienco of the fact that no such militar authority thon existed that ho felt willing to hoi that Court, was rendered notorious by genera publication in tho nowsiiapors at tho time. Th older expressly forbids tho institution or proseen timi or certain suits. Tho Court was held afto the solemn publication to tho bar and tho peoiil referred to, and Iho suits in question herein wer prosecuted, nil in open contempt the ordor am of all othnr ordete (nudine to hinder tho conslltu tional indi!|)cndeiice of Ilio judiciary. Yot, unti after the departure of tho presiding justice fron tho locality, no steps, as far as I hvvo information were taken to enforce this order in tho promises With tho validity of tho ordor, as oporoling upot iho judicatures of tho States whoso rcauscitalioi line been confided lo tho uianugpinont of Major General Sickles, and, especially with tho expcdien Ojr of il, the prcsonl mailer is not in thu least con pernod. I respectfully submit that the caen is ono ol Ihoso which lio within tho purviow of the atatutui in forco lor the puniehment of persons who ob struct process of Iho United States, and is simplv tho case of a high misdemeanor, legally conten? plated. Hut iu viow of tho respcctabilUy.of tho principal offender, and the corresponding dangei to tho liighor dignity ol tbo law, I understand thai it is deemed ueceasai-y, in thus laying bofnro vom Excolloncy the iactH and documents, to annex tc tho foregoing statement some citations and rotiere tioiis, wliicb a)ipear to tho undersigned to liotlt (he gravo occasion o?an incipient attack bvanus upon tho De) urtine nt of Justice. TUE pool KINK OP CIVII. SUPREMACY. It is i-eapectfully HU-fgrstcd as principio, upon which diflorciico of opinion cnunot ho anticipated m Ibis country, that thoro ia no rightful authority here which is not derived from the Constitution and luws of tho United States. It would scoili to bo highly impertinent lo at tempt to establish llmt proposition, and ahuost as impel tinelli to in gun this necessary result, viz: tltnt ull military authority must be ie'imediatolv or directly imparten by, ami consequently dopomlottt upon, tho civil authority. Action, by military nor so..b, tborofore, which ib outside of this principio, must he unlawful, and if done with Intout to ro sisi that principio, as embodied in tbo Consti tution and statutes, such action, if overt aud with arms, is troason against tho United States. Military powor is but a form in which tbo civil, which is tho only authority, mauifcsls itself in actiOD. A conflict, therefore, bo tweoa tho civil and Iho military aulhnritv of Iho nanio sovoroignty, in logically im possible, unless through tho fault of public agents, vithor civil or military. Tbo laws of a rountrv must, mid tho ministers of those laws roav, bo iti harmony; but thoy may not; and this from inno cent or froui culpablo 'motivee. Theso principle.! aio of the utmost importance to public order, and havo been so recognized by politicians of ovurv school, and partisans of every faction of note, from tho foundation of tho Ttopulilic. Surclv, no politi cal part will repudiate, as nono can "exclusively claim, theso cssontial conservativo principles. No candid person would besitato to accept their eub st unco as iudispomiablo; and we may timeeliminato at tho outset most of the extraneous mutton- tend ing to complicato the unfortunate collision which has occurred, and may be warranted, I think, in enquiring whether it ?b anything in law but a mis demeanor, in violation of ilio laws in forco for the furtherance of the judicial power? Hut the high rank of tho principal offender, a? beforo uuggoslod. and the salutary public objects to which his exorbitant action would probablv he ascribed, no less than the groat magnitude of" the powoi with which ho could support liTS error, simuld ho feel justified in such a course, are cir cumstances which givo the occasion un extraordi nary character, and inspire the undersigned with that eenso, both of ils dolicacy and importance, which domanda tbo introduction hero of the prin ciples <>t thu subject, an pronounced by standard authorities. POWElt AND E ' . OP TUE .IUDICIAI1V,_?, Chancellor Kent says :' ff? m" origin ami title, mini willi tho other poivers Of Government, ami la as ox?luaively veated iu the Courts created liy m- in pursuance ot the Constitution, as tho legislative porrai is vested in Congress, or . Iho I'.xcciilivc power m the President." (1 Comm., 2!H), 2'Jl.) The Federalist, No. 78, is an elaboralo and lu minous oxposilion of the central idea that "the completo independenco of the courts justice is peculiarly essential in a limited Constitution.-' Mr. Justice Story euye : "The imjiin-toiico ot tho establishment of h judicial iloim intent in the Na tional liovci'tunent lias already been incidentally discusseti. Tlio want of it constituted ono of the vital defects of tho Confederation. And every Government must, iu its essence, ho unsafe ami unlit for u free peoplo where such a department docs not exiBt, with |Hiwors coextensive with the legislative department. Where thoro is no judicial department to intcrpiet, pronounce, and oxecuto tbo law?to decido controversies, aud to enforce l ights?tho Government must oithor perieli by iIh own imbecility, or the other departments of Gov ernment must usurp powers for tho purpose ol common ling obodiotico to the destruction of liberty." (2 Story Const., ?1, G71. The samo authority aays, speaking of the judicial department : "To tho people at largo such an insti lutimi ia peculiarly valuable, and it ought to be eminent I. cherished by them. On ita linn and in dependent structure thoy may repose with safety, while thov porceivo in it a faculty which is ooly eet in motion whon applied to, but which, when thus brought into action, must proceed with com petent power, if required to corroct tho error or bubduo tho oppression of tho other blanches of Government." (Ibid, ?1 57C.) And further: "The tramer? of the Constitution, having those great principles in viow, adopted two fundamental rulos with entire unanimity: fli-st, thot a national judiciary ought to ho established; aocondlr, that the ustionai judiciary ought to pos seas powers coextensive with tho loglsliitivn de partment." (Ibid, W, fv77.) , , , Iho convention whiob framed the Constitution voted unanimously for tho porpetuol and invinci ble independence of the judicial department, (chm.j; of tho Convention, Kd. 1808, pp. 100, 1 ?uureme l?oCtf the Unitod States saya : ? The object of tho Conat:tntion was to establish three gwut departments of ucve'nmput : tbo legislative, the exoeutive, aud the Juu.Cl?? de partments. The first-.vos to pass laws, the. se cond in approvo and exocnU. them, and Ibo third to expound and enforce them, tofsriin us. Hun ter, I Whcaton 320.) ? .,.? Authority on this poiut is so uniform, that the above mav conclusively establish tho sanctity, tho dignitv, and tho authority of tho national dopart mont Of justice. Troatdeut Washington "con Bider.-id tho judiciary tho .chief pillar upon ?hieb our National Govonimont must real," arid irono diutcly upon the organization of tho Bupreste Court, addressed to tho justices a respectful lettor, having previously addressed .each ouo separately, in which be oxpressed his sohse of the value of their independenco of operation, and solicited tboir instruction- (See vol. 10. Sparks' Writinge or Wushington. pp. 35,8C). I could not with groater humilitv concludo this psrticulor topic, with my own gcnorol impressions couecioing it, than hy ollering them iu tho unimpeachable counsel of Judge Sjorv : ' N ibbig,'' fcsye that great minister of juatlca, "ie moro f .icile in republics than for demagogues, under art tut protonces, to stir up combinations against the rogular exorcise of syibority. Their solasi', purpoece are too often interrupted by tho fliuinoes sac) independenco of upright magistrat.9, not to niake Hit-in nt all times hostile to a power which rebukes, aud an impartiality which con demns them. Th?r ludlclery, i? tho weakest point in the Constitution on which to make on attack, is, therefore-, constantly that to which thov direct thou- assnults; sud o triumph hero, s'ded by any momentary oncouragemont, echio ces a lasting vic tory over the Constitution itself, Honce, in re publics, thoso who aro to profit by public commo tions or the nrovalonco of faction, aro always tho nnomios of a regular nnd independent administra lioii ol Justice Th?y sprcod all aorta of doluaiona in ordir to nimicati tuo pnblio mit-il end oxcito the public prejudices. Thoy know lull well t-hat with out tho aid of ibo pooplo tboir " schotiios musi provo abort!?--: and 'hoy, Ihnrofore. employ ovory art to undermine fbo pubh'n confidence and to make tho p?onlo tho .'.'uHrtiraaiii? of subverting their own rights and lihort'Se. (?? "??T Conel., ?1<in-> , .1 m t Wo must, thou, an wo aeo, recognize tbo Judici ary as tho third part of tho Government; and loi us now inquire what iu the sphero of its authoi it.vl This i the canin as the question, in what brand of ilio public business is tho judiciary tho supremi power of tho nation ? Tho Constitution ordains: "Tho judicial power of tho United States sha) bo vested in one supremo court and Id auch infori or courts ns tho Congress may from timo to iimi ordain and establish." (Art. OI. ? 1.) "Tho judicial powor eball extend to all eases il law and equity arising undor this Constitution the laws of tho United States, and troatiot made or which shall bo mudo, under their authority; L all eaaoa affooting ambassadors, othni public min intera and consols: to all caso* of admiralty an - maritime jurisdiction: to controversies to whicl tho United Stales shall lie a party; tocontrovornio botweon two or more Staton; botweon a State an I citlzons ot another State; between citizens of dil forent Staton: botweon citirons of tho samo 8tat claiming lands under grants of dureront State - aud between a State, or citizens thereof, and foi eign States, eitizeuH or subjects." (Ibid, ?2.) We eoo here that whenever, within tho torritor - of tho Unitod States, irrespectively of persona c of oircnmstancfls, mutter of controvorav arise which is distinctly comprehended undor any on L of the clauses above quoted from tho CouBtitutioi I and which is in snch a posture to bo Huacopl , hlo of judicial actioii.it must go without udJuJ cation, or olso it must bo adjudicated by tbo cour - of tho Unitoti States. Tbl? provision being o f game, it Is not lo the power even of tlio Nation - legislature. If (bit body could be aopposod eti >> I to have madn the attompt, io refer the adjmlio 1 I lion of any ope of euch cases, against tije nonio] -1 of the pwtles, or in derogaran of the power tho ju M?tely, to the oxocutivo power, or to any power or agency whatsoever, l'or esemplo, m con ,OTimeV ^"L'?"; ? a contract between citizens or ??iaeieiit matos. Undor Mils orgauie provision, thopartios bav<, a light to put ilio l-ViLral judi cial^ m motion lur the seltloinent or their dini.nl.?. und il is obvious that Ibi* righi cannot lie im paired without tin amendment of tho Constitution. Ilm 'Judicial powor or the Uuile.l State.-." is u unit, lu tuo t.imstiti?ion it is mentioned in the Hingulur numbor; ami the masoning of Ilio Su premio court in the cano ot Mortili tut, Hun tor, is to the oftect thai no mucii of it as Ilio Constitution eft CougrcsH to vest in inferior courts was incapa bio of aentecation. nnd eon> jqiientlv vest d ni a wholo in tho Judicial establishment. '(1 Whoatoii, 830). As a power, tltou, it in to bo concoivod of as oiniiiproeeut within its Constitutional Rphero. nuil consequently, with respect to tho dignity of lawful Judicial procoss, Ilio sonico of tlio namo is uol of tho lcaal mgniHcance, ai,d the laws forbidding ob struction of it, maku, sccordinglv,no distinction, rbo contumacy, there fore, whicli would be inoro nilgar if offered to a writ boni in the hand of tho Chief Justice of the Supremo Court, would, in re spect to the consolidated judicial power und dig nity, bo of the santo logo! quality us irtho lii;i> writ wad despised in the uuuiis of ?lio humilient sor vaui of a court of Ibu lowest grade in tho avatom. IliiH miieh as to the paramount authority of the Judiciary mall uinttor.4 to which their power is ox tenuedby iho Conslitutiou, acting through the courts and oflicors, who aro the orgnn.s the po ver. To rosist that power anywhere, and m any matter, within itn constitutional sphere, ?n to resist the wholo or it, and to aspire to an insuo with tho Judicial Dstpartniont of the Government. It might occur to seiae minds thut if this power over tho subject m-tiers oontldcil to It by the organic law lie atiprcVio over Hie Legislature ami thu Esecutivo, and, of rounm, over the military branch of .ho Kxeontivo, il might, in any given caso, tie misapplied by the error or the crime of Ilio judge. Hut tie... liko very other evil with Which wo may lawtutlv cope, without. In sreord nnco.witli its piovtH?ti"s, amending Ilio Cottalitlt tion, has hern untieipiited uiid provided against iu that iiiHtr.nneut. Eor misconduct, it- peach nutiit is provide,! ; and for error, the right '. anil nil uecoaaary tacihlm? for appeal to anotUc. ourt. The Supreme Comi, it is true, cnniiot be HUpor visud; but it hon no originili Jurisdiction, with two exceptions only. Buch in the character of Un judicial power,' as the only and tinit resort for the soltlcmont of u class of eases nini contro versies enumerated in -.ho Constitution. ? tauch, 177, 178.) liut tho action of the judiciary would liewboUv m,'fi.vinal, aud Ilio |K>wCT would not lie co-m di luite, Hillens tho renidt, in a pro|>er Cane, was con clusive aod binding upon the other brunches of tlio Government and (lio cutir? people of the coun try; for all tho proceedings of a court are con ducted for tho uako of tbo result, which is the Dual process. A control, then, over the filial pro cess is a control over tho wholo proceeding, iiut u eonlrol over tho wholo proceeding is ii control over tho court, tho judges, and tho parties. This would not bo controling, but abolishing tho court, whether bo who abolished it did or did not cou tume to employ its joilgtii and methods of busi ness for the admiimtrationof his will. That lu did ho in ono ease is tho nsmo in offect as. if ho had done eu iti all cases, for if he did it by permission of thu court, it was the court, and not bo, that ?xertod the powor; if he did it without ponnis aud beoiimi, in his opinion it was right for In... io do so in (hat cano, lia uiay do no in any other ease in which bo formt* u simi lar opinion ; and as it cannot be foreseen what opinion a man may foira, it cannot lie foreseen in what case he may think ho ought to interfere; and ir any case in lia bio to interference, uu ruse ie cer tain or roaehing a judicial result, and, under euch circumstances, there can ho no legal iidjudieatiou, and, consequently, no court. Thm shows the real necessity or a judicial authority which is soourelv fortified agaitiht all possible int'erforeuee while the state of society admite of judicial sessions. Ruch being tho nature or the judicial fund ion, and Ilio powers in the Federal (ioveruinent, it is obvious that the terrltoriU Holds of its operation is co-oxtensivo with tbo ustionai domain, which, with respect to tho judicial power considero.1 as a unii, is a single territory, iiubieet to lie divided into ulaecH of jurisdiction un may lie most con venient for the purpose of aduiin?sterinu: justice. Bui with respect to the subject mnttei of judicial cognizance it is far ut hern ibs. A large proportion of them pr?suppos?e, in their existence, organic geographical divisions, an into Stales, inchoate States, and the soat of the General Ooferameut the District of Columbia. Those aro political divisions. Judicial divisions exist, but they are altogether independent of them. Three aro adapted solely to the presumed expedi ency or administering the Judicial power, mid may bo altered from timo to time liv Con gress. They iiiav and usually do coincide In unnio .lc.nr^....*Ah.r,eii|(J.al ,a other diviaious of coincident with siieh. 'v>ii>ar.?. diction. Circuits are ? ? | usually of r.eveial entire State?., end district ? aro sometimos com posed ot parts only of diU'ereiit States. This does not arleet Iho causen of action over which Iho judi ciary shall exercise exclusivo control. Tor they ro Utaln tho same ss if each Slate of the Union irta district, aud only districts wero established, and no circuits. When a cause of acllon, or a criminal infract ion or a law of thu United Stales, arises fol lile action of the Federal judiciary, iho cognizance of Dm latter is forthcoming, and the only question is, in which districi or circuit shall it lie taken. The ronimoi* territory uf the nation is alno sub divided for other purposes, as for the purpose of collecting taxes, duties, Ac, by net of Congress, dirortlv ur through executive agents, empowered notado, by Congress. Sneh divisions, like tin judicial provinces referred to, are subject to chango at tho pleasure of Congress. The recount ruction Military Districts in thu South are examples of districting for specilli- mid temporary purposes. But hero arises a most important distinction be tween judicial geographical divinum? and those of any other kind which have ever been created by Congress. Until tbo 2ith of September. 1789, 11 Stat. 73, et seq.,) Iho judicial powor of the I nitod Statcs'was not all vcatod. Unen the passage of the celebrated act of Congress or that dato, organizing the inferior courts of tbo Unitod States, tho whole judicial power, not directly vested in the Supremo Court by the constitution, vested in tbo courts so created. This proposition having been laid down after solemn argument by the greatest of our judge.!, and nover since dis finted, must bo accoptcd as unquestionable, it allows from this that the power of tho Legisla ture cannot go beyond modifying and changing from timo to timo, as in their wisdom may seem expedient, tho orgsnization of tho courts and the divisions of the country into judicial provinces. But having once vested the judicial power, which, as we aro instructed, CongresB was bound to do, that body cannot have the power to vacate a judi ?is) tract. But it is otherwise with tho districting for revenue or other purposes. Thu constitution has noi inhibited their total-abolition at tho plca suro of Congress. But there is another reason why Congress oould not abolish tho judicial dis ti " tu of Iho United States, though thoy may, and frequently do, chango their boundaries. Tho con stitution pr?vidos : "In nil criminal prosecutions, tho acousod eball enjoy tho right to a speedy tr.'J public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein tno crime ubali have been committed, which district shall have been previously1 as?erl?inr.d by law." (Amcndmont (Jocatct?Vion, Articlo'Vl.)' A powor to abolish nil Judicial dlBtiicle would, therefore, tor. power to abolish all criminal jurisdiction of tho Unitod States, which would dolcat the law-making powor itsolf. Tbojudiciil provincoa of tbo nation aro, tbou somotliiiiR more than rovonuo provinces, or reconstruction provincoa?employing tho lattor term tor tibarnoss of distinction. Though suli joct to thomoditioilion ot their boundaries, ae may bo oxpodlont. tho terrtor> embraced iu them cannot bo either oxoneratod from' the power or, por deprived or the right to, the ustionai rnauliin ory of justice; except, indeed, when violoncepro vonts the operation of that machinery, but then only whilo tho ilitorrnption continues to provont the regular judicial 6iftlhg*. A violence cannot, of course, come from tho legislature itaoif; l?ist o? all, iivoagb a mere construction of its acts, pass od'with object.-, extremely remoto from such a pur pose. , .. . , What, then, is the sfato? of tbat Judicial pro vince which is designated by law the District or North Carolina,'' with respect to the eanctit-? ol civil process? . By the aul cf Congress of 4th June, 17W, I ?1st. 126, it is provided; " The said Slate shall be one district, to be called the North Carolina District; aud the,o shall he a district court thoroi ," ote. By the ?et or 15th July, ls-n; (9 Stai., .13), it m lu'vviuod, trial ."(ho circuit courts of tho United States for tbo Distriet pf North Carolina, shall ho hold on the first Mondvil in Juqo, ? ? and nil actione, suits, apposi?, racognlsaucoe, pro c?seos, writs, and proocudiiiRS wjatsoevor, pend ing, or wliicli may ho ponding in said courts, or roturnahlo thereto, shall Uve tUv thoroin. and ho hoard, tried, procooded witli, and deciccd. otc. In this sot repealed Y It will not bo protended that en act, of ( Congress of tho United Steles has ticen ropoalod \,y rlrciimstancos. If over (ingress has impaired a constitutional Judica ture, onco cstnhlibhed for tho people, it ? ? uni by any implied ropesl; nor could it bo dono by any liOpliMiipn, but such as could bo recon ciled with no Other rpaspnahlo iiiterprttstion of tho statute supposed to won* such ropet... in Uiorprosont inattor, howevor, tho; (ipjios|lo itii plieefion. from an aot which took eneet on tho samo dsy with tho Bret of tho neconslrnctiou acts, amounts' ??nQat to an ?Press provision for tho continuance of the NorJh Osrofiris Pis trieL in common with ?[^O&^Vj^fXL " ? the Chief Justice of tho United States and To Asiociate Juatlces of the Sapremo Court ehaU bo allotted amone tho circuits now existing, bv ordor of the court, and wlienovor a now allc-t Tho circuits (aud er.nsequontly tho districhi composing them) "now-existliif;," ?. ?'?. ??" "* on tho day tho first o? tho reconstruction measures took oftcol, wore thooxprcssbauisof the allotntciH, to authorize whloh was tho obloet the aliove cnoted provision. Tho possible "alteration ? said circuits was anticipated, showing that uniti ono or more oircuKs Bbould bo altered by law, hey M'Oro not to bo otherwise recognized ttinti as hcrotoforo. Aooordmgly, tho following is of ro cord In the Supreme Court, undor dato or Moiiusy. April ?, 1867 : . , i? "Ordered, That tho foUowlne allotment is inailo of tho Chlor Justice and Aasociato Justlcos of Dio Supremo Court of the United States among ?'? I courts, agroaablo to tho aot of Congress in such caso mad o and provided." ' Tho assignment of the ?overa! Justices is sub joined, among which the following, appears: "For tuo Finitili Circuit, Salmon '. Chaw, Cliiof Justice" The tirsi section ot lka id of Congress ut IStb July. 8?'.7. passed when rebellion ?a? in full head way, thereby showing Ihat the interruption of I ho sessions l>, rebel vtoteiije wa* the unh chungc which fuugrcs* was willing tu retwgidxeiu tuo Ju dicial li.uh:.-*., provides: fli.iv.ili.?. I!..? Diatrift? ?f Mai il uni. DobtWJlY, tirxima ami Notili Uarutiiia -hall uoiwtitulu tttu louitll Rheidt." : 12 Slat., 57G.) Um tiuiM mail.- .apparent, nut only bv ?arllor, hut by ?utitoni|Mrauooua kigutkttio?, of ilio eauio session, by tin- sanio imliviiiu.il itiombora, and al most un tini suine day, Hint whatever, under Ihn Constitution of the United States, oilhcr of ? Inori tv or jurisdiction, ntlachi'U tu thu districts and arcuila uh Uh? ?land in tito otalulo hook, was intended to be, and must lio deemed nuil hold lo bo, of full forco ami virtue now nu betretoforo. IJut rro have seen timi u tract taf country, composed of Statua or |inrte of Stateti, once brought under the ?puration the , judicial jionor, cannot, without rovohitioiiary violoiice, be deprivod ofor exonerat ed fmin a. Violence is tho only recognized excep tion, und that, by Congress, us wo niiall liereofter Nao, in leo.gm/.eil only while (ho violence Inat*, and then as an mila?lui der igatioti from Un- ludi cini piitvcT. If it Ite adutlUod that Ihr judicial power is in tact in the iliHtrict i?r North Carolina, tltoutch tho Hiilijecl Iiiutters of its authority air limited to a category, it is ootiatM that upon Uionu attbjoci iiiutturH. the courts of the United States for that districi arcllio supremi: authoritv of thu (failed Slates. Tlie high prerogative of Ute independent judici ary may be well illustrated, in closing sketch of the Mopartinoiit of .1 usi ice. In n word respect in; Ilm conclusive anil binding diameter of a Jude* meut at law. It may be rendered even by mi in jchoi- court; but, if the court is competent, the judgment may bo defined to bo Ute vorv law of the lami for the particular mutici adjudged ( (tanjo, 280). To ",ins|>oiid" a judgment in ii man ner iii.i pointed .on by law in. therefore, losiisncml Uto law. Luti cmTml-iUu *,?..,? i lavs : ' Htrra is no pri-.cipln uff law tor sunn <i;n. that every act oTn comi of aompetont jurisdiction shall bo presumed to have been rightly ilonu till tho contrary appears. * ' So "long nn a judgment remains in forco, it is in itself evnlenen of Um right of tho ptaintiffto the Illing adjudged, Bttd gives 1 lina , rieht lu pinces* to execute Ilio Judgment. The error? of the court, however ap parent, min hit examined Italy liv an appellalo power." (Vourhee* pa. Ills. II. ., Peten 472,473). Study we need not impure whether the Legisla ture ol the Untoti has attempted lo vest in par ticular executive or military oMcerri uu "appellate power" over judgment*, -'however erroneous,"' which have been pronounced in a court of tho United Stute?. Let the inquiry rather be whether tho right of oxocuting process which has issuud upon such a judgment is anything olsc but ono of the very "rights of person a{id property" which, if the piaiul ill Reeks to execute it Within one of tho rceonstruction districts, the commanding ofllcor is charged to "protect? by Ilio expr?s* terms of tho toeouatruuti?a lawn? (Actol -2d-Match, 1 7, sec. 3.) It must ho beyond dispute, if the authorities anil (he statutes ivhioh hare been introduced are accepted, that thu rigid of litigating in tho federal courts, and the right of being Intu? in thetn for violations ol Ilio criminal codo of the United Stales, and. of coulee. Ihn duo conservation of (heir authority in every form, lit! part of Ihe rights a be protected and Ilio duties to be per formed by the respective commander* of iho rp. rniiiiiIldiim districts. In this view, the error >? finterai Sickles reaches the fall atatuni of ? per version of authority, which, it persisted in must , immediately acquire Ihe character ol the crime of levying war against the United Status, un under taking which would not for s moment ho imputed 10 the deliberate intention of an ottici r h.ral.lv ? itetinquhwirtl for Iiis gallantry in defence of the , Constitution. Hut, it ion lit be said, may there not have been t doubl es) to jurisdiction ? Certainly in Ibi*, as in ailV other matter there may h ive been u doubt, mit it ironld insult tho intelligence of the com- ! Tianiler of the Second R.'construction District to ! Inquire ?holliei or not bo supposed himsult an ihorlzcd by lavi to forbid the Supreme Coin! of the Uuitod Statoi from hearing cansen fleet im; 1 aei'.-.oiis inhabiting the Stat.u North end South 1 Jarnvitu, without hin consent, Naturally no per- ? ion cottili hed?ale whothi r be batlMteh a newer, ? aithoiii coii-idei'iiig whether it Wa? imi lim duly 0 coerce liti? Court by arms ir ii should resist ? lint ? We must lake it to bo certain that it could 1 liavo been m ihe oiileitiplatiou of liciterai f UekkM, when issuing his Order No. 10. to dis- j' iute with his sword (lie authority of the .Supiomo tench. Vot? it i* equally certain, that If be had J icen disposed to aseertiiiti his authority, through . atMiidH'?lioa by a comp?tent court, ? decision 1 night ", ui???**}*lth the greatest l.icili- 1 ? judgment tvas then adverse to Ihe power ol lenirai Sickle., it must liave liecn easy to pro- J uic a hunt und cotwllteive d?cision ni the . ''iiprenin Coltri on a writ of error. If hat oilii er had a dbiiut on this subject (hen, he IMSt have known IllC only lawful cnur.se Itti ?liitiou. When- a difference arises between u iiihtji v agent and iiioiirtns I.? the jurisdiction { if the lattei-, and the former presume* to decide t for himself in his own favor, the act can hear ' tat iti Iter natie' ll.uii usurpatimi. Itili it in: Im IlliUgllt he did s.) Only as to the infermi' omi t, und - ? ml it.. lo Hie Supremo Court. .Nine, though he 1 nay not have snsp.eled Ihe fact, a moment's re- , lection must show that the iutei lereneu which in 1 inder coiniider.itnn. was an interference\liV lien- ^ rial Sickles with the judiciary, including tlic Su- *, iremo Court of the United States,ns a whole, and . he toree which, through his Hiihor.liiiite, Colonel . 'rank, was threatened against the proi?aa of the ! ?lCllit ('outi. caituot] think, be distinguished ' 11 Ii.vv from a similar thieal, rudely ilireot- ; d, to the imlgt-rt of thu BnurooMCourt ut Wash- *! ngtoii. ?> pi-ocess, which was in Marshal ? loodlne'a hands might, and, indeed, lor j' ught that appears here, may hate bocu process !' >sued m pursuance of a tnamlate from theSupieme ' !cnrt, remanding a cause with directions for * urther piOccedingr. in conformity to the decision l? filial court. A control over such process, as he iiro remarked of any final process, would bo a con- ? rol over tuo whole proceedings, and the conrl il- 1' ell. \t? august judges of (heir judicial will. More ver. if final process may be controlled by the ; rdcr in quoatlon, so may mcsnc ]>roceas. or any S top in luigation ; lor the order oxprcaaly com- H lands that ccttaiu suit3 be stayed, and thnt liko nits, not yet initiated, shall not be instituted. If . he interference ol process which is now in hand J oil.l be justified, so rould an effectual interference, q t any stage, and in any case, at his pleasure, in ' ho Carolinn districts, be inailo by liciterai H?cLIch prevent all appeal to the .Supr?mo Comi. This, T oteiilially, is ousting Ihn jurisdiction of tho Su reme Court itsell, abolishing thu l'olerai COUrta s such in tho locality, separating his district in tie vital particular from tho national body politic, | ud depriving Congress, tho Executive, and the 1 eoplo. ot all mcanu of onforcing his subordination ' a tuo United Statod, except by torco ol arms. Tho irtiiiHofnr.iimiiii.iv bo permitted to autborixo I im to aspiro to so daugoroua an iiidepcndouco of lis fellow- .'itizens. Ho, if tL?ro had boon a doubl who the r tho pow- l rn of tho Unitod States Courts woro nffoctcd by ho iccuiistriietloii lawd, the proper way to solvo it i vas the very thing which would bo totally ucclud- | d by tho violent action which has becn'takou in ho promises. Hut is there so much au a doubt V J THE llECOKSTnrCTIOM STATUTES. . Three acts of Congress pass under the doeigna ion of tho reconstruction laws, viz.: thoso ol tho id March, tho 23d March, and iho llllh July, 18fJ7. ? 1 ie picamblu ut the Ursl doctores u alato or politi- t :al and asciai dissolution to bo impending or s tcluallv oxistiiiR In sovural States of tho Union, c ind that, in conscqucnco of their condition, and r [or tho purpose of effecting their restoration, the 1; ironoatid UgiiiaUf.n km. Ucouio necessary'. Sup- i [losing Iho conditions to bo as doclarcd in tuo c preamble of (he erst act, theso statutes t iro to bo treated as eminently remedial and t -onscrvative. Hie Slates being" prostrato, in (j ihe opinion of Congress, the ohicct was to restore ? them. But tho legislative snu esecutivo depart- ? ment? of tbo Government, partock in no degree 3l the prostration, as wonld bei'conceded; and how much did tho judicial doparltncnt partak? or it? If (h? object was \o r'econstnicl what bad fallen 1 into min, so that it should bo restored ?.& good order, skull that which is in ntvy* order bo over turoi'V Ontl?na?V, WtUti was left of order w.ae to bo conserved, and what was in diserdev was to ho roatorotl In roapoct to tho revenue, tho mails, etc.. I have hoard, of , sudi dostructivo inlerfer once; but in respect to tho courts, tho disposition ' is exhibited to dostroy. Yet the whole ? of provisions in the aororal acts contains nothing in I which I can percei vo a attorce for euch on astonish ing misconstruction. Un thocontrap tbo follow- I tng cet, which, like Ihn act rotatimi to, ilio nllnt-, ment of Justicie, look etfuelOn Iho ?. u o ilaty ?Hb i tho carlieet of tlie reoousti aotlon acts, appears to tloniniiatrato tho opposite view: ? "An Act lolallnc to Appeals and Writs of Error to i tho ?upromo 'Court. " lie it euaeitd, ?tc? lliat whero any appeal or 1 writ of error has been brought to tho Supremo ( Court from an Anal judgment or decree of an Inferior court of tho Unitod States, for any Judiaial I ili h t riet in which subsequently to tho roiuhtioai of mich judgment or docrco tho regular sessions of i aqch ooqrt a, honn suHpnudcd or interrupted by ' insili r? ii.m -1 ci.clii,m, such appeal or writ of error shall ho valid and effectual, notwithstanding tip- timo limited by law for bringing tho same may havo previously expired; und in cases4whoro no appeal or writ of error baa been brought (rom any Bu,ch judgment or decroe, such apposi or writ of orror may be brought within ono year from the passage of (his act. Tho provisions of this act shall not apply to any caso in Trhich tho right to bring an apponi or writ of orror had expired before auch snspoobion or interruptions of the rogular ncsiioiis of tho coprt." (Section 1, Act of Mm ? h 9, 1867.) ? , . Tbio tri. if regard be had to its special object. | may bo lakon to bo in pan inaterin with the re oonslniclkiu laws, and to the like extout, undor tho rulo, tliev nro all to bo road as ono law. I.iko tho three acts above mentioned, tho object of Iliin was to remedy miseliiof, whirli bad anseu out of the rcboliion, bot for tho purpose of this remedy the judiciary, aud not tho district commander woro to bo tho instrumentality, lltghto ol appeal which had not ypt expired by lapso timo ?ero cut off by circumstances. 'iVso circnutatuncos continusa uujil Hi" limitation oxptrod, and with it tho t ight, after which they i caacd. 1 ho object, now, was to revive said righta. Tho circum stances which had intervened, and which, had now ocaaed. are denoted In tho a?l. Thoy aro thne doflned |n It ?, "T/bo regular sessions of tho court havo hoop suspondc^ pr interrupted by insurrection or rebellion." Thlu *0t by unmistakable. Implication, aho'ws, on Iho day ot passing tho principal reconstruction stallilo, that with the exception of the suspension or iu torniptioii . h,, legulnr sesamiia ..i Ilm court Im rebellion, ote., u,,. ludi?la! utlnbHahiiieiil iraMuor arti} i'ii i. t. as ii Ibero i,.?i in ? mi ri-bollino uml no ov?mmhi loriest.ii.itn.? I. gisl?tioii. 'rimi ihn only interruption Itati, Iti the numi m (.'tingi,-.h wholly passed away, at least, imi Ilio IM Maruli l? uvi.lc.it tinn? in,- tari lliai lite ?et v,as omuuh? Kiantlngti thing l.t I..? .tono mm dm Ihil oturota cumini ili-.1 It) auch litici itptiou il cuulil noi bava boni itono form-rly. at-d icimring iim it be dono williiii t>m- yen- belici', :ts ollierwiHO the Uniti whi.'h, tu ilio alMOtiuoof interruption, rana again*! Ilio light. Kltall run in Iba disti iris ivboro the tu ber lo til." effect, a? il runa elsewhere. Midi, in respect tu its digiiity, ita poorer, ami tbc unimpaired Inlogrity of ils iiiaotiiiioiy, is tim judicial iiiliiblisbmuut taf Ilio Uniteti Wales. Tu guard tu airpromacy in Ilio sitaiinini ration o? jua neo, Congress baa provided storti laws. l'CNIHUUEXT FOtl IinslS 1 - 01 . AUTIIOlirrV. Tho following provisions, among otbors, beloni' Itero : If' any p?mon or peraotta shall knowingly ami wilfully o Mttroet, resist, or oppose anv officer ol Ilio nit. il States in sorvitig, or attempting lo ?orvii or execute, any iiiostic process or warrant ur any rttki or order of any or tbe Courts of tin. Uniteti States, or anyotlior legal or Judicial writ or process whatsoever, tir sitali assault, boot or wound any OtUcor or Other person ihilv uiithorizoil in serving or executing any writ, rule, order, or pro cesa or warrant nloreaniil, over* peraou so Itnow Inifly anil wilfully offending in tho promises, Hbull on conviction thereof, bo imprisoned Dot exceed ing twelve montbs, and lined tint evcc'diii" I bree hundred dollar*." t Act .Will April. 17!?t), section 23. > Tho offence of obstructing process eousists, Hayn Mr. Sttatico Washington, in refaaing to givo up possession, or in opposing ?>r obstructing ihnoxo culion of Ilio writ, by tbrcaU of violunec, which it ia m tbu power ol thcnnitv lo enforce. (United Hiatos vii. LO wry, 2 Wash.. MO.) Anv obstruction to tho free action of Ilia oflicor, or bla lawful us sistniits, wilfully plaeetl in Inn way, for tbe pur noso of alattrtteting him, la sufficient. (9 Curtis, C. C, 39.) Ami what is "procesa" undor leni *8ri T,'?, r0,,r'11 "??>>' >' embraces a ??,?? cofcu. t ??onT^OT?! S?fUl0 mai-iHlmlc, o, cmiimisHiiuicr, acting 111 tuo duo administration of nui' law of tho Unilnd States. (United Sluice VH, Lubina, :i Waah.. 333.1 Again : "if any pci'snu or norotiiM aliali, oomiptly or by lineate of force, endeavor to induoiieo, intimidate", or impelle any juror, witness, or oflicor in any court ot the United Stales, in the iliachnrgc of his duty, or aliali, corruptly or by threats of force, obstruct or impede tbc duo mlmiliislratinn of justice therein, every pcraun or rentaos so offend ing shall be liable In prosecution theiofor, by in dict tuoni, ami shall, upon conviction thereof, bo punished by lino not exceeding Ilvo hundred dol lars, or by imprisonment not exceeding three months or'hoth, according lo tbu nature ami ag gravation of tbc uQoitcc." " (Act of 2d March, 1831, section 2. 4 sut., 488.) Those laws ore in force. If tbu President could he supposed tobo willing to suspend them, it is certain that be ban not tbu power. Ilo must, how ever, execute tbe Inns. What, then, abat? bu tlonu with these? 1 aliali consider, before con cluding, tbc peculiar energy with which tbc oxeen livo department ia bound to act where tbu prurog ativea of tho unarmed but majestic judiciary are inaiiltod. The oxocution of tho criminal laws of the UuitoJ States, unit especially till such as aro iuteiitlud to guard judicial authority, belongs, un der the l'rcaiilant, to the supervision of the Attor uoy-Ucnoral. It happons thus lo devolve upon Ibis office to rotteci the indignation which the law ell COO rages in .bo judicial breast against an insub ordination ?hielt, when it refuses reverence, des troys power, unless tbe department to which tho national sword is oontlilcd puls itself in inutiou lor tbe vindication of Ilio constitutional ministers af justice. tuipoxaiMLiTT or the rxccmtvr. It is not u bont diflidcnce Unit tbc Importance d tbe occasion evokus a further autl limit lemark ouchiug Id- legal rcspotiRibility beruln of the i'residont of the United States. Whatever bceomea a law, contouipluteu for itself list it shall bo executed. It U tbu- with tho evenne laws, the postal Iaws, the criminal lana, mil tbe military lawa; and it is ihm. with tbu ru 'onstruetiou lawn, which tbo pruacnt executive eels bound to carry into effect, in their (rue intent mil meaning, ascertained UIHMI lllOMO pi incip'.ca of nterprctatioti wbictt are tbcmaelves a tacit but .iibstautivo pait of till stalutua wbutsnevcr. Ilm ill Hit lawa of any country must bu prosuiued to .ein harmony w'ith each other, und, tberofoie, honid they appear to cunUtct with oacb other, he rueoiiciliatiou of tliom is a judicial work, if, indcr the conili lions of the caso, lito discrepancy s capable of Judicial action. If not, still, as the nM) WnoinUBt oTncifio' musi nino, 'to m?t cxient, ulorpreithu law?. If lito Cotodilutiou Ite on* ? be laws in t}Ucstioit, the principle is, of course, lio aamo, uiilesa, indued, it lie of stronger appli aliotl. (Ubiof Justice Marshal, 1 Orancb, 177, 178.) Vat the purpose of Hi?h cxeeiilkMi of tlm la?a, lOwcver, there must be an executive power. This muer must bu veatcil, or olao tbo country has no bnatitiitiou. It may bo treated, aa the judicial aiwer iiuderour tlovernmuiit is, in soroial pel ona or ilopartm?nta; or, as m sowe i^iiitiiea, in largo aaaoittbiy; ot it may lie vested in 11 single iiilividiial. Whorcvur it ta vested, Iberp ia the orrcsponiting respoiisitiilily. If tbo courts of natica aro to be protected from tlegradation, it an only lie Ibrougb the executive power of tho ilute, it cannot bu by (lio luw-niuking power, lu? anse ila lawa nro 'iuuurctual without cxeeit ion, and that ia impossible, against ?.-si.-t nco. without phrsieal force. This, then, ia a aac for BxeoUtive intprveiilion, which, considering bu trauscendaut valuo of an inucpeiideut judici rv, iaof tho utmost sanctity of ubligatiou, uiilesa it hall appe:.r that tbo independence of tbo judiciary not attacked, but only that the elocution of a tv.-, by nit executive agaul, involves a contlict will, be protcnaioiis of the judiciary. The Inltor would com lo tie tbc viow of the officer charged with tho xccution of tho reconstruction of tho Carolinas : ud bo ia au executive officer. Out jurisdiction it. judicial question, and one which tho judiciary a?, 111 this iualnncc, decided, and decidrd against he oxocutivo officer. Tbo laitcr, not ncquicscing, he caeo would resolve itself into c.iso of a oUisiou between tho Executive, and tho Judicial lopartmonts of a common government. That dc iucs a revolutionary rehtiou between them. But has that revolutionary relation arieen? I liink not. If the Ei.eculivo 'power of the United Itatea n.i>iRlB tho judicial power of tho Uuitcd li?tes, there ie, indeed, such a ?olation. But the 'mint limimi of tho United States pr?vidos? "Tito Executive power oliali bo vested in a ?resident of the United Status of America. " Art. I., sec. I. All powem of tbe Federal Courts run in the me of the President of tbo United St.it??.., be tauso the mandates of tbe court call him to notion, is tin", do all, to Kubmissioii, and ho must uxocutc hem as laws of the highest sanctity by tbu whole lower of tho nation ir necessary. Is your Excelloncv in a atalo of coiliaiou with bo national JudiciaryV If not, aiuco tho whole ivcciitivo power is thus vested in you by tho or inole law, and can bo divested by nothing bui a ihango of that organic law during your incein Mitioy. it must follow that tho "collision of uuthor ty" which is the subject hereof, is tho moro mis lomoanor of a contumacious and unfaithful oxocu ivo agout, who having offended against tbu lawful tower of the judiciary, has rendered himeolf liablo o prosecution according to law. But thu groat ceponsibility which appears to mo to ariso on luch on occasion, whore the physical powor of ho offender ia great, is this : that for tho iole Executive to aufler the Judiciary to be iverturottn in any case would bo poteutially to iverthraw it himself, and, therefore, I am solctun V impressed with tbe belief, that unless tho Pres ident promptly represses the contumacy thus die losedto him,, he will bo exposod to tho just impu at ion of a culpablo insensibility to tho co-ordinalo Ugniti" and paramount sanctity of tbo national l?partment of justice. Contempt of law indulged, pecdilv grasps at tbo heartstrings o? public order, to teaches history. Very respectfullv. your obedtont servant, * JOHN M. BINCKLEV, Acting Attoraey-Qenersl. Akobew JoHxaoN, President of the United State*. The Iuiltituy. In Ina testimony betoro tho Tudt?n Commission iiiwiat tbo West, Ueneral Hancock aaid : Thero was no aecuri. .vlutuvor for transporta ron ami travellers on my part of tho Plains. leraon is liablo to bu uttacked ovenifhobaHa tuiujted moa with him. Vigilance is tho only lately. 'Hie Indians nro making 1 aids constantly 11 small or largo bodies. It hi bcliuvod iboro aro 10 Indian familias botvic. tho Piatto and tbu xrkansas, They aro oithoi north of tho Inatte or u.utli of tho Arkansas. Tho exponaos ou the decorai Department have icon those of a poaco oaiabJishment, with tbo !xcoptioit ot a small qnantity of forago sent to iliacos where they had none, and with tbo excop llwi also of Tour hundrod Kansas voluntoers, who ivillnotbo paid untd Congress appropriate? the Tunde Our troops bavo had no remount this year. exponse of transporting goiala tbia yoar la muoh loss than ever boioro. Of battilo warriors tbo Oonoral estimated! thai the Cboyonnea uumbor about torn hundred the Arapaboes fear hundred, the Kiowaa tlvo hundred. Thero aro bat fow Apaches of tho Plains, probably four or ftve hundrod. Fifteen hundrod or two thousand will cover all engaged botwoon tho Ar kanaaa and the Piatto, that is, loaving out Iho Co manchP9, who number about throo thousand, Thero Viaa one case, in October, I8Cti, where anus were furnishod to tbo Indians by our agent, after being officially notified that they wore inclin ed t<> hostility. Mr. Bogy, tho Indian Commis sioner, gavo authority to sell arms, after ho was notified that tUo Indians were hostilo, and defend ed the right. Tbo universal tebtimouy is that tho Indiana are well armed with pistols and rides. Tbo Iudiaoa always plcrco the bodies of whito persone they kill Witti arrows. Tho friends of persona killing him, all put an arrow into him. Thev never h?rn powder whon tboy Can use ar rows. In ambuscades thoy uso arrows. Tho principal mon ato armed with Aro arms, and tho others with bowa and tnowa. The Indiana do not light oflou, unless they aro of very eupcrior numbers. Thoy do not ftght without an advan luitu- Whciiover thoy dud their enemy propared they givo up, Tho Jndiina avo now corryuiH on tho war with all tho now improve monts. Thoy have flold glass* os. We found a gloss at Fort Wallace They conio up like a rogiment of cavalry, and appear like a, regular regiment. Tho chiefs stands with a mirrili* and throw rctlcctious as signals which tbo men obey. They have signal men all around. .a. xviW^ V LY J-j OJliiN TS ittT 'Mie ttnlutlvrs, I irmi? und Acquimi) uecHOl Un. Uie Sir?, J. WARD SIMMONS, and ut ,.? ?Marli, Mr'. H. T. RoaWSuN and Mrs Kiciunu !.. uiik are iiiv'teit lu allenii Hie Funeral Service? of Uiu lui tuj ut Kl. Philip-? church /?.? AJUnmm, stbalfpajt t'i? " el'jC. September t LOOK OUT! OR VOI' \ , LOSE FORTUNE. "Ii: HALE tu- TICKETS. OHOItUIA STATE LOTTE. KV, in the (intuii Extra Settata? ol September Mb, CAI'i TAL PIUSE ?vo.ntw. Tickets only Ono Dollar. Ctase* THIS DAY, at ? P. M. Ottico No. 20 BIIOAO STREET. Septcuibor , ONE PRICE CLOTHING vtr^Tjam MAGULLAR. WILLIAMS i PARKER, Mann Invi urer.s, Jobber.h & Retailers or Fi NE AND M ED FU AI CLOTHING. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN GENTLEMEN'S mm wm. pORNEIi OF HISEL STREET, 3 I-I A li I. S ON S. C ; August 30 4uni S E C I Al M OT I C EsT^ ??T LOOK OUT, OU YOU NULL LOSE A FOR UNE. THE SALE OF TICKETS, OEOROIA STATE OTTERV, lu the (Jrand Extra Schema of September lb, CAPITAL PRIZE ?20,000. Tlcketa only Ona DoUar. loses TAii Day, at P. II. OfBce No. 20 BIIOAD riti ET. 1_September 3 ?ir FINAL NOTICE.?ALL PERSONS HaY ^kl demands ngafust the Estate of the lato JONA1I M. ENSTMI are requested to render the same, aud tboia ?epi' ml er II tulliiuS?_Executor. ?3- CHARLESTON AND SAVANNAH RAIL OAD BONDS AND COUPONS.?By decree of the Court ' Equity, on '.16th of Jauuary last. It ss infer alia or ?red, "That the said Trustees, lasse W. a , Eo AUU SenRiNO, and Joun E. C.vncw, do forthwith pn> e.l lo call, by public advertlseuieut In uno or more ?..pip?is iu Ibis State and elsewhere, upon all persons .idilli; Hund? and Coupon? of Bonds secured by tbu Irst Mm t ru,,.-, to pre scut and provo th?lr demanda ou r before the first July next." This order having, beau implied with, no Bonds or Coupons not hitherto prv mteU will be received, sud pu ilei who have heretofore resented Bonds and Coupous, without Itaring tht i,me tar Amid* of Ihr Trutttti, am hereby outlaid that uu is they are bmii?hl forward on or bel oro the Utili day r S. plomber, Ibcy will not ho received. 1. W. HAYNE, ) ED. SEBRIN?. J TrusUos. ' JNO. E CAREW, I September a _ _tul s3 ST CONSIGNEES PER STEAM SHIP MArT [ A arc notified of ber cargo lietng Tt.it. Day dls tiarged at Adgcr's South Whsrf. All geoda uncalled ir at sunset will bo potitirtly stored at risk and cx enac of ormcrc-. STREET BROTHER9 A CO., September 3_1_Amenta. tSrNOTICE_CONSIGNEES PER STEAMSHIP E . are hereby to titled that aho le this day ((charging cargo at South Atlantic Wharf. All goods naming on the wharf at sunset will bo stored at ex. case and risk of owners. JOHN A- THEO. OETTY, Agenta. AU freight anionnting to fifteen (15| dollars or lets inst I.e paid on Ilio wharf botora delivery of goods. September 'J _ _2 AST REGISTRATION NOTIOE.?THE BOARD f Registratimi tor Wards No. 6 and 7 of tho tth preciucl. eld at Ihn Eaglo Englue House lu Meeting t treet, will held at that place, ou Afimifay, Ttiajday and IFednri ay, tho 2nd, 3rd, and 4th September. Registration for >'ards No. G and 8, will be bald at tho Washington u gl on House, Vanderhorst atreet, on TAunday, Friday ' Dd Saturday, Iho 29th, S?lh, and 31et August, from to 3 o'clock each day. NATII!.. VI,I K. Hrnr. Clialrman Boanl Registration 4th Precinct. August 30_eng2o 27?opt3 a ~ 3" STATE OP SOUTH CAROLINA, CHARLES ON DISTRICT.?DANIEL B. BTLCOX sit. JOSEPH T. RAUN.?IN THE COMMON PLEAS, ATTACHHZjer.? rborcaa tho Plaintiff did, onthe26lh day of February. ?G7, file hie declaration against the Defendant, who (as It aald) is absent from and nlthout the Umita of Uia Stats, ad lias neither wife nor sttorney known vit tun the ime, upon whom a copy of aald declaration might be rvod : It la therefore ordered, that tho said Defendant do ap ear and plead to the said declaration, on or before, tho 7th day February, which will bo In the year of our Lord ?C8; otherwise final and a1 ointe judgment will be given nd awarded against him. J. W. BHOWNFIELD, Clerk'a Office, Charleston District O. O. P. March 2_Jane 3. sept 8, deo 3 ?-THE ATTENTION OF THE FIRE DE ARTMEN la called to lbs following regulations : Any Volunteer Engine running on soy payment in ltber the Upper cr' Lower Wards, where the stiestie ?ved, abati pay a fine of Fifty Dollars, sud any Ward E?gUM) eommlltiiig the samo otfsuca their pay shall be topped. The same rill* shall bo applicable to lbs larlols. Every Volunteer Ku?lue Company shall hava elthsr ioUs or a gong attached to llielr Englue or Reel, and the amo ahall not be muffled, either golug or returning roui an alarm efflro. The same rule shall be applica le to Ward Engluea, but no Engine ahall return from a to faster llian a walk. No two Steanirra aliaU work at tho aamo Fire, Well. Ine Volimiecr Hand Engluo may draw water from sama Veil where a Steamer la diuwing; aDd if two Hand Km Ines arc at a Flro Welluo Stoamrr shall be allowed to ise the same. Two or inoro Slcaiiirm may dnw water from a Drain 'It. H. M. HTROBEL. August 20 Clark aud Sup'l. OsT CHIEF QUARTERMASTER'S OFFICE, IECOSD MILITARY DISTRICT, NORTH AND 'AROLINA. CHARLESTON. S. ft, AUOHST 17, IMI? IEALED PROPOSALS will be received at this office inul 12 o'clock M. on Monday, the 101b day of Heptem >er. 1867, al which limo Ihey will be opened, for the pur haw of the following property, viz: Wrock of steamer DOSION, in Asbepoo River. Wreck of ttoamar OEO WASHINOTON, In Coosaw illver. Wreck ol steamer CHASSF.uK, in Scull Creek. Wreck ol steamer RANDOLPH, Id Charleston Harbor. Wreck of steamer ETIWAN, tu Charleston Harbot. . Wreck of steamer KC-BY, In Light House Inlet. Bidden will state the. amount offered for each wrei k. The wrecks will be sold separately and to the highest blddtr, uultaa such bid be deemed unreasonable. Propoaala mutt bo sddressed to the nnderslgued, and marked "Proposals for purchase of wrecks." R. O. TYLER. Brivet Msjor-Oeuorsl, Chief Quartermaster, Deputy Qu arteria inter General. D. B. A. August IV_25 ffff ARTIFICIAL EYES.?AJITIFIOIAL HU. MAN EYES made to order and Inserted by Dra. F. BAUCH and P. GODOT.F.MANN ifortuorly employed by RoissONNEio, of Paris), No. ' jo H road way, New York. a pi ti u ire '.