University of South Carolina Libraries
By Telofsrt?pli, Treasury Afl'airx. NEW YOEE, Sept. 26.-Hie Herald's Washington special says: The act of Congress authorizing the 10.40 loan, fixed tho limit at 8200,000,000; but the Secretary of tlie Treasury, finding that it interfered with the taking of 5 per cent, loan, discontinued it, when $173,000,000 were taken. There is a growing probability that the remain? ing 27,000,000 will shortly-be put upon the market. .Mexican Affair*. NEW YORK, September 28.-From Mexico we have advices of continued fighting and uncertainty. The city of Matamoras is fairly beseiged by the Liberals, under Gen. Escobodo. There is a garrison of eighteen hun? dred men in the city, and the attack? ing force consists of twenty-five hun? dred or three thousand men. exclusive of Corrina's predatory bands. Ef? ficiently handled, the Imperial troops should suffice to hold< the city, but the .Inarists think so meanly ol' Mejia, tue .encrai in command, that they assert that, with a little more ammu? nition, they could carry the city by storm. . The Republican forces had captured the little town of Catorzo, in Leon, and secured musketry and ammunition. "Moreover,1' quaintly adds the officer in command, 'the merchants of that city furnished me with $18,000 for the use of tho troops." At the pass of Cubrus, the Juarists also claim to have defeated nine hundred Imperialists with two hundred cavalry, and are further said to have occupied the town of Cara? va jal. Matamoras papers make light of and entirely deny these successes. Juarez is at Chihuahua, with five thousand men. Test On til for Members of ?'ongress Tile President's Opinion Asked. WASHINGTON, September 29.-A letter was recently addressed by some of the citizens of Charlottesville, Vir? ginia, to President Johnson, prompt? ed-by the difficulties which surround them in relation to thc approaching j Congressional election. They appeal to aim for counseh and advice as to | their proper course of action, being wholly uninformed as to whether the test oath will probably be repealed or modified so as to admit Southern members. They have thought it possible that he might enlighten them on the sub? ject. They say their main purpose is to pursue that course which will be most likely to sustain him and his policy in the administration of the Government. The Attorney-General, to whom the letter was referred, re? plies that he is instructed by the Pre? sident to say, ' 'that he has no more means of knowing wba| Congress may do in regard to the oath about which ?hey inquire, than any other : citizen, but it is his earnest wish that V loyal and true men, to whom no ob? jection can be made, should be elect? ed to Congress." This, Mr. Speed says, is not an official letter, but a simple expression of individual opi? nion and wish. A Texas lett er-writer says: "Any man in this State who does not own four hundred head of cattle and seventy or one hundred horses and mides, is worse than worthless. Beef sells here at five cents per pound, horses and mules from fifteen dollars | to thirty dollars for round lots, and ! are within 250 miles of a good market. As far as the eye can reach in every direction, and as far as you may go, the country is alive with stock. Tho whole market of the United States might be supplied here, and there would not be any apparent decrease.. Two colored women and a colored man were in attendance at the White House, a few days ago, seeking an interview with the President, to ask pinion for their former master--a man named Williams. Williams is, or was, at the breaking out of the war, a wealthy citizen of Virginia, and at one time owned a number of slaves. Further particulars are furnished uf thc great fire in Stamboul, Turkey, on the 5th instant, heretofore briefly noticed. The number of buildings destroyed is estimated ai 2,KOO, and some accounts make it 'is high as 12,000. Nearly 2:j,000 of the people were rendered homeless. It was sup? posed,.though not positively ascer? tained, that many persons were killed I From Europe. J It is, stated that Donald McKay * the well-known American ship-build er, is in close communication wit] thc Admiralty on the subject of t?i pedoes, which are to be laid down ii the channels of English harbors i: case of war. .. * Mr. Headley, in addressing his cou ?stituents at Oxfordshire, paid a lng tribute to the qualities manifested b both North and South in thc late wai and contrasted their character mos favorably with that of Austina an Prussia in the affair of the Duchies Late advices from Marseilles repo; much alarm there, many of the ii habitants fleeing on account of th progress of the ?ludera, j The Times' Paris corresponde! gives a report that the Italian G* vernmeut, encouraged perhaps 1 the Gastien transaction, and by tl indemnity accepted "by Austria f< Lunenburg, is on the point of sen i ing serious proposals to Vienna fi . the cession of Venetia' for a ania j money. The project is said to 1 I supported by the good offices France and England. The Times' American corresponde represents that tnt' Fenians in Am rica are collecting large funds ai sending them to Ireland, and spen J ing money in America in purchase I arms,, etc. 'The Dublin Elxpress, this morning, says that after t arrests ajb tho Irish police oflice li night, orders wore issued to all poli stations and military barracks i forces to be held ready in case of a .attempt to rescue the prisoners the populace. A police constal \v;us also stationed in each telegra office for the purpose of stopping a message relative to Fenianism. Tin" latest intelligence says that t 1 Irish police still continue to am the Fenians, and the number of p soners is very large. Among otln arrested is a person said to be a Ci tain in the American army, in wh< possession documents and a unifo] were found. On Saturday afternoc the prisoners, escorted by mount police, were taken to the police coi to undergo an examination. The suit had not. transpired. The ni heartily cheered the prisoners, 1 made no attempt to rescue Jthem. The Privy Council are said to si: ting to determine what course i authorities should take in the pro cution and sentence of tire arrest parties. m j The correspondent of the Lone Times at Biaritz mentions thc ? co veiw of a plot against the Emper either on the way to San Sebastian on the return to Bayonne, includ: a brother or cousin of Orsini. I cautionary measures were taken, J the Queen of Spain insisted on companying tho Emperor and I press to the railroad station, notwi standing it was night, in order t she might share any risk run by guests. Thc weekly returns of thc Bani France, shows a decrease in cash 4,500,000 francs. It was asserted that the Bus.? Government had sent circular's tc diplomatic agents respecting the C tien Convention, in accordance \ circulars from the English and Fre Governments. It is further assej that England, France and Ru long since exchanged views rela to the Duchies, and that a per agreement exists in their views u the above Convention. VICE-PKESOJENT STEPHENS. find the following in a late mimbi the Boston Transcript: Some of the friends of Alexa1 H. Stei>hens are making effort . obtain his release from Fort Wa upon parole. His health, ab delicate, it is thought will be in ously affected by confinement du the cold season. It is also ar) that his great personal popul with the class of men in Georgia engaged in restoring that Statt; t Union will materially aid that ol Should Mr. Stephens be allow? go South, wo have no doubt his sene" would be very beneficial \ Union cause there. " Since the rf of R. M. T. Hunter from Fort laski, it seems hardly nece.ssan Mr. Stephens should be longer in confinement. The Illinois papero abound counts of murders und nutroo the most flagrant nature, quHxT in atrocity and as numerous a accounts wu have from any < Northern or Sou.th-Vestern ? Most of them ay ?pear to hav( perpetrated by returned soldi by the foreign ir.uuigrant popu The intercourse between the ern i ?nd Southern delegates ? late Odd Fellows' Convention timi ?re was very Itarmonious. A curious feature of the book trade j sales just closed in New. York, wa? j th* sale of a large quantity'of Bibles, ! prayer-books and other religious j works that had been captured from ! blockade runners-said books being j a donation from the British anil i Foreign Bil de ? Society to the rebel i army. I . MOKE GOLD.-It has been reported i to.thc General Land Office that ex ! tensive gold discoveries have been made on the 'Northern shores of the West end of Lake Superior, in the North-eastern Land District of Min? nesota, which ure attracting general attention. Philadelphia papers announce the . death of William J. Duane, aged j eiprhty-live years. Re was Secretary I of the Treasiiry under President Jack ' son, and resigned rather than consent ! to the removal of the deposits from 1 the United States Bank, i HEAVY BANK ROBBERY. -The Con I cord National Bank, of Concord, Mas ! sachusetts, was entered, a day or two ago, wliile the cashier was at dinner, ; and the safe robbed of $300,000; . consisting of United States bonds and mot-.ey. The New Haven (Conn.) Palladium*, which for thirty years has used steam , as a motive power for its press, now j uses a turbine wheel about the cir I cumference of a straw hat brim, driven by a stream of water only an inch in diameter. j At the annual meeting of the Grand ; Lodge Independent Order of Odd j Fellows of the United States, at Bal? timore, the Grand Sire paid a tribute I to the memory of thc P. fer. Sire. R. B. Boylston. Accounts from Constantinople state I that 2,000 buildings were destroyed by j the great fire, and upwards of 22,000 persons were rendered houseless. . The cholera has almost entirely dis : appeared. At the Fenian meeting, last Monday j evening, in Jersey. City, one of the j speakers declared that movements I are progressing finely, and that bank ! note engravers were already at work on bonds ?ir thc Irish Republic. ALBANY; BRIDGE.-The bridging of the Hudson River, between Albany and Greenbush, is now a fixed fact. AU the piers ure completed, and the ? work on the superstructure is pro ! grossing rapidly. Julia Mohtandevert, widow of the ' celebrated Captain Janies Lawrence, ? United States Navy, ( ' "never give up \ the ship,") died at Kc-?vj>ort, Rliodo 1 Island, on the 15th instant, ' in her seventy-eighth year. New York city crowds its popula? tion of about a million into fifty-five thousand houses Philadelphia, with less than seven Hundred thousand people, has one hundred thousand j houses. A report was lately set afloat in j Italy that the death o: the Enii>eror j would take place at his fete day, Au ; gust 15. Fiesehi's attempt to assas I sinatc Louis Phillippe was predicted ' j in the same way. The Shepherdstown Register says a j Michigan soldier, who was arrested j for stealing a rebel's irooso, said he ! found the bird hissing a, the American flag, and arrested it for treason. The Un ?'ju Press announces the in? dictment of Maj. Gen. Palmer and Brig. Gen. Brisbraine f*r abducting slaves and otherwise interfering with Kentucky. ' Thc freedmen of Louisiana are giving some trouble in violating their contracts, and leaving the planters at the commencement of the packing season. h. fae simile of the President's signa? ture has been prepared, ind over MOO pardons are reported to have been stamped with it at the White House in one day. !" The. children connected with the Charleston Orphan Honse. win; have i been sojourning in Orangeburg for the past two years, are preparing to return to Charleston. The Commission appointed to treat with the South-western Indians, at Fort Smith, have concluded their ne? gotiations, and have been uniformly successful. The paper collar manufactories of Boston, New York, Springfield and Philadelphia now furn out a million of colkws'each dav !A meeting luis been held in Balti? more, for the purpose cf establishing a linc of steamers between that city and Charleston. The receipts of the Bureau of In? ternal Revenue, on the 25th ultim.', amounted to $1,900,300.98. Secretary Stanton had an interview with Mallory in Fort Lafayette. All the rats disappeared from Mar seilles when the cholera came. General Slocum hus resigned his commission in the United States Army. Townsend, the New Haven bank robber, has been sent to the peniten? tiary for seven years. Messrs. Clay, Mitchell, Mallory, Reagan and Stephens, it is stated, will shortly be released on parole. A circus company at Charlton, Iowa, had a fight with the populace, and lost six in killed and wounded. Two or three larg?- frauds seem to be hushed np everv dev in Nev. York. \VQ learn that the Right Rev. Bi? shop Lynch was still at Rome on the 21st of Augustdast. The unexploded shells around Pe? tersburg are a terror to the plough? men. Gen. Forrest is running a saw mill j in Mississippi. ? They are raising a liberal sum in Richmond for Mrs. Jeff. Davis ! The finders of thc assassin Bootu . have not yet received their reward. OBITUARY. ; Departed this life, at Sumter, s. C.. on j thc 16th ult., JOHN" MARSHALL, only son I of Sarah D. and W. W. Whilden, aged two ? months and fifteen days. Ye mourners, thc dearly choriahctl, bean ? ti ful child is hut transported to hi oom in ! ?elds ot ever-living youth, beauty and hap t pinces. i "As tho sweet flower that scents th<- morn, i But withers in the rjsi.t^ day; j Thus lovely was this infant'1* dawn, Thus swiftly lied it.; lift- away." * '?"?. Funeral Invitation. Thc friends and acquaintances of Mr. and Mrs. Themas Boyne, and Mr. and Mrs. John Alexander, arc respectfully invited to attend thc funeral of ELIZABETH BOYNE, oldest daughter of the former, at thc resi? dence of thc latter, on Arsenal Hill, THIS MORNING, at half-past 9 o'clock. For the Legislature. Du. J. H. BOAT WRIGHT, COL. F. W. McMASTEE, DR. WM. P. GEIGER, J. H. KINSLER. Oct 3 A Card. BEING now about to return, home to my own city and District, after an absence of some years, at thc solicitation ol my friends, I have consented to become again a candi? date for tho Legislature in Richland, and hope to get home at least in time to see un? friends before the election. W. SHIVER. Spartanburg, S. C., Sept. 21, 1805. Oct 3 ? Notice. THE City Clerk's Office 1ms been removed to the City School-house, on Sidney Park, Tavlor street, one door below Assem? bly street. F. H. ELMORE, Oct 3 4 Citv Clerk. Wanted, rv A AAH OF tbo One Hundred HpAlJU-l/vJl J Million Confederate Loan EighrPer Cent. Bonds. ALSO. Non-Taxable Six Per Cent. Bonds. Highest market price will be paid on im? mediate application to A. L. SOLOMON. ? Third door above Shiver House, Oct 3 +3 On Plain street. Goshen Butter. -I (\ KEGS choice GOSHEN BUTTER, IU just received and for sale at CANTWELL'S, Oct 3 1 Bedell's how. Strayed, FROM my residence, Bull street, one dour ?s'ortli of islanding, ves- | ?terday, a sorrel HARE M?LE, closely trimmed, about 12 years old, 15 j hands high and in good condition. A libe? ral reward will be paid to anyone upon ile- I livery as above. W. SIMONS, i Oct :s_^_ j Ttl AT THE C0-UHT8Y NEE? 3 11* A large and direct importation of OF all numbers and grades, from Ute best manufacturers, which will be sold at the VERY LOWEST PRICES, By ? HARDY SOLOMON & CO., Weat side Assembly street. Oct 3 Columbia, S. C. 4?- Greenville, Spartanburg^ Union, Newberry and Winnsboro papers insert three times and send bills to this office. Just Received, ?f /\/\ DEMIJOHNS, all sizes. DUU 25bbls. PICKLED PORK. ?jr, l.bls. MESS BEEF. 50 boxes CLAY PIPES assorted. 50 cases CHAMPAGNE, SHERRY, PORT 'and MADEIRA WINKS. 50 cases BRANDY and WHISKEY- ?ll of favorite brands. For side CHEAP al CALNAN .v KREUDER'S, Gervais street,opposite State House, i.vt 3 tam2 -?.-eLC"tioxx Sales. By Durbec & Walter. THIS MORNING, ai !?.V nel?ek, \Y?11 be sold, before our door. Bure aus, Lounges. Bedstead--. Crib, Mat? tress, basins, Merchant Desk, (?lass Show? case, Benches, Tables, Spades, Hoes, Pitch Forks, Crockery, Tools, Tinware, Cot. Dish Covers aird variety t.f other articles for house-keeping. Also," a Garden Engine and Cooking sio-.e. Get :i i TO RENT, A ROOM, uear Niekcrson> Hotel re Jr\. .cently u.sed .ts a etorc. inquire at this <iiR()( ERIES! 11HE subsuribcrbas just received and is . offering for Hale at low prices: Bois, choice WESTERN FLOUR- suita? ble for families. Bids. Extra and Superfine FLOUR. Kegs superior Ivcntnckv LEAF LA lil), lieu's F.xtra GOSHEN B'UTTER. . Tierces choice WESTERN SHOULDERS. Ilbls. Extra HAMS-small sizes. Kits new No. 1 MACKEREL lSfiS. Bbb-. PICKLED J?LES. "s BEEF. .'..Ni) ' Choice ENGIJSH DAIRY CHEESE. ' l.ICHARD CALDWELL, i Oct :? I* Corner Bull and Camden ?ts. FEWER, BEX\ETT & B0\VJ?A\, ! (Stic'sors to Hotclikiss, Fenner A Bennett, | i COM. MERCHANTS, 10 VESEY STREET, NEW YORK, j AND MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. j TIIOS. FENNER, lt. BENNETT, D. W. BOWMAN. MR. T. A. TOBIN. whj> was for a length of tune connected with the old firm of Hotchkiss, Fenner & Bennett, has an inter? est in the present firm, and will devote his j attention principally to thc State of South I Carolina. His address will be Clinton, j Lnurens District. Oct 3 Imo To the Citizens of South Carolina. The termination of a sanguinary contest, which for the past four years has presented an'impassable barrier to all social or com? mercial intercourse between tho two great j sections of our country, having at length . happily cleared away all obstacles to a re? moval of those relations which formerly bound us together in a fraternal union, I take thc earliest opportunity afforded mc by this auspicious event, to greet my South? ern friends, and to solicit from them a re? newal of that oxtensivcbusiness connection which for a quarter of a century has been uninterrupted, save by the great public calamity to which I have adverted. It is scarcely necessary, on the threshold of a business re-union, I should repeat the warning so often given to my friends-to beware of all those spurious and deleteri? ous oompounds which, under the specious and false titles of Imported Wines, Bran? dies, Holland Gin, Liquors, Ac, havo been equally destructive to the health of our citizens as prejudicial to the interests of tho legitimate importer. Many years of my past life have been expended in an open aud candid attempt to expose these wholesale frauds; no time nor expense has been spared to accomplish this salutary purpone, and to place before my friends and the public gt-ncrally, at the lowest possible market price, and in such quantities as might suit their convenience, a truly genuine imported article. Twenty-live years' business transactions with thc largest and most respectable ex? porting houses in France and Great Britain have afforded me unsurpassed facilities for supplying our home market with Wines, Liquors and Liquores of the best and most approved brands in Europe, in addition to my own distillery in Holland for thc manu? facture of thc "Schiedam Schnapps." Tlie latter, so long tested and approved by tile medical faculties of tho United States, Weat Indies and South America as an invaluable Therapeutic, a wholesome, pleasant and perfectly safe beverage in all climates and during all seasons, quickly ?xeited thc cupidity of the bonn- manufac? turers ami venders of a spurious article Hider the same name. I trii-t that I have, aftep much toil and (spense, surrounded all my importations vitli safeguards and directions which, with irdinary circumspection, will insure their lelivery, as [ receive them from Europe, to di my customers. I would, however, recommend, in all rases where it is possible, that orders be ont direct to my Depot. 22 Beaver street, <ew York., or that purchases bc made of ny accredited agents. in addition to a large stock of Wines, "randies, Ac., in wood, I have a consider? able supply of* .old tried foreign .Wines, em? bracing vintages of many past years, boi? led np before thc commencement of the rar, which I can especially recommend to II connoisseurs of these rare luxuries. In conclusion, I would specially call the ttention of my Southern customers to the d van ta ge to be derived by transmitting le ir orders without loss of timi', or (Milling ersonally the Depot, in order to insure he fulfillment ol' their favors frera trie pre? cut large and wei! selected assortment. PDOLPHO WOLFE, Oct 2 Imo '.''.' Beaver st.. New York.