The New York Herald Newspaper, June 18, 1867, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

4 "NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1867.—TRIPLE SHixT. aores in extent, with the improvements, may now be | defeat the game of those radicais? j= T HE S$ O U TH fo | Bad at digerent prices, ranging from $50 down to $5 | servatives, carry the Biate [hoa atl ne gtnia and the valley of tho Mississippi, If Meuator Alcom | and noth nt} and the gentiomen act ng with him are only supported | foot square’ ang’ Marine Only ome room, some slghtoen ery. dt shat i an acre, one-third or one-fourth “cash on delivery."* an jure, and the delegation to Con- the conservative ropublicans of the North, there will - ‘Those springs are in the market for the reasons as- | Us? "None in the satay eee a ere ue eee pat ON ae por tee a pales Wilsoe a Sime fre Mek gh os signed, Most of the othor Virginia springs—the white pode eotens a tne ae wilt bed = sat, They bere _ others of that ilk. It F not do to Sealine the | vails, and by those not ce oo Lae ponies, oe epohinet Sistine ee ee its beni Norre: 2d | cunt tend to hold it. Mari words, | infamous work eed by these mem of organizing # Reports of the Special Corr espond eulbhurs, red sulphurs, salt sulphurs, the chalybeate, Sir, not ono of the ten Staten of F J th ce | temo oy agers phen en th oper Neved, that it was here Joff Davis, who, whon a lisuten- | influences, Judge Byers, who has chergs of the Soaths the hot, the warm, the bath, alum, &,, an endless | tricts wit! be allowed to partreipate In antin the army, «as on duty at Fort Gibson, also here ents of the Herald. catahguo—baving eacaped the torch of war, are adv tendency, and who is a gentieman of most t 4 ern superjnt coming Presi- bey ty ody immunities of etizenship, never — om the Arkansas river, became acquainted with General pa liberal views, holds pertinaciously to this di dential election. Not one, air” ‘aken from him. The people of the South will Taylor's whom « daughter, jt sneak trom 2 to Ba day. he | au een ot a er wernt Wit | seh wenesone atti Gitar man somatst | Sea Pay, cma rns roagend fertensey poss asa mers rete eeerehnes pn nrrnrnentn Propritorgdo not expect a return of thelr Soutbera | wood into the United States Senate, or something of that ) menace and contiaual site; they do not want to see | terrrt pp fa Nece anon exiond Commerce, Crops and Politica ! 212% before tho war—cotton, tobaceo, rico and | $F, and Hunnicut into the House of Reprosentatives | Once more engraftod on any poli party an elemont (4 Po ay ible Lying Siping a > a sugar alers, Southern Govornora, Congressmen, | {fom the Richmond district, and a general disposition of | to be used and abused, I! the negro is to be agitizen ips, betng to pay them their last government ennui ‘as im Virginia. ita a a eae ney otha eae a a aac encanta ater; | nasa abehentare Slo, metas caaiag | Known naratve osc tert tne Geno | gat io gin % : a at vocation of the cerned are after; if how use that o ID; Prodigal nigger trador, spending his cash by thousands, | but the Fortien Congress, the war office, our military | Say the Southorn people, pormit the banding of all the off Davis as his son-in-law until after tbe lat- isforeve gone, A few old siagers from the South, and | ‘istrict commanders and th something | S24 al theso ager he old time | Prefer to contin: ddry in his | ore. With black mon together under a continued excitem: of apprehensions of trouble with their whi Keep these men, Kelley and Wilson and others We will reorganize in peace and reorganizs under this subordinate post captains, Of the Freedmen's Buren, would things sometime longer just as thoy natruction their vocation will be gone; only thifow, are ex ho havo The Negroes Opposed to Reeom=Fuction, as | from tly wrecks of the wat, In Southen merchant, however, left hig! ows. and It Prevents Co~aseation, hoaps o Copfederate acrip, some sagacious Southern Ho- | &"4 80 thelr roal game is to put off the initial Stato Coa- | movement of Senator Aloom, for which the conserva- aT tar satiate atte | "SA Rauaie vio ha etatorans | Sapene artes eiraketna ar nee | tama tren gy of rahe pon i ae SNES r . " v7 racial discount, are Apis sarin tale “Eald at ihe pasting ee vidual. Thetime for that has passed, Wo want tobe | geiom,, The number of inhabitants is set down at lerstanding could be epecatiy cettied. looked for. are the mon whose | | “Prue, sir; but the strong forse te with the we A Mew rolidical Party Formig: | 2% 247 be found among tho new baiidings of Rich | BORTO*. = We are warned that 2,500, including a good sprinkling of the colored ond, Jolumbia and Atlanta. The Hebrows know, from | Present reconstruction torms of Congress wo may look toy tie reject theao | fully restored in all our relations to the government of { jation. Except ti which is broad and thousand Tadians below Fort ‘Arbackte. is pose male the Union. This is the speech of all the Southorn com- { jong, and ai tft pam state ublis! here to-da; ix Mississipp: two or sand years’ experionce, how to do a | 96 for something wore, That means confiscation. | Servatives, who are tired of the crazy mothods of the bo Spedal ban a Ade — ‘Won of pa dld | hae prov dig the an tigate CREO edaition” “ {vlug teainess im the midst of a disastrous civil convul. | Very good. But don't vou see that if by theponilar | radicals and of bong kao>ked from pillar to post, the one stury affairs, and very straggling, | al to the facts contained in m il ston, shiking the inatitations, political and social, of a | Vote the mitial propozition of a State convention is | sport of every Idle political trimmer or mountebank. igmentable hsence of shade trees, A Amad but exhilaratin; aalion ever Whasard prat rt ore arte areat muniiy into ruins. Their trials and persecu- | 4¢/eated the whole scheme falls to the ground, and the Senator Alcom will speak to the people of Memphis built after the stockade | amid a profusion of wild flowers modanetsotien . oN tions hat a tho abrewdost financial philoso. | C98 1s clear for Stevens and his confiscation bill? | on this subject in afew days. I will give you the re- fact owing to tho searcity of pi: lumber, | view of fifty milestrom the summit of Bald Knob, ‘the. areyt’ IN LOUISIANA AND ABKANSA8, | Pbers DE the word, idark, then, if the negro vote of Virginia is not cast | suit and tell you what to nopo for, as to be brought from forty ai 'y milos | cemetery here in which about a thousand Union soldiore But th) chiei expectations of tho landlords of the Vir- preg early golid against a convention. I tell you, sir, baok in the country, and’ consequently and as many Confederates, including Generals MoIntosh gaia Springs aro in the North, Northorn curiosity | *he {s after that forty actos of ground.” very high price, There are some larve and well stocked | and McCullough, are baried; therise in the river, giving vir Seekers, hod hunters and speculators will, It Ja thought, From other conservative politicians in Virginia, at LOUISIANA. stores, but business is diseouragingly dull at present. | the belief that it is the annual June rise, and the GINTA, combine huainess and ploavuro in atrip to some of wwe | different points, we fearn that they have no faith ia ~ The leading merchents are from the North, and the only | hot weather of the past two days, give subjeota for anes Virginia aprin; ‘They may thus find this existing p'an of reconstraction as @ finality. “The SBN li : SPECIAL CORRESP a has pg ih pe Annes mete al norco ed Pehding constitutional amendment, as a primary condi- ONBENCE OF THE HERALS. water privileges, cotton, rice, sugar oF tobacco planta | {on allowing cach State to adopt or reject nezro ia to Wa a tons to sell at a bargain; or Northern morcantite dram- ‘d ig’, they say will not stand. It will bo tal ken up Frenton=Movement | mers may at these springs find purchasers for thoirgoode | ™ ded in this Congross 80 as to make universal bank in the town is under the control of Northern mei ach more wri! bat atready gone consider. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD showing that oven here, on the borders bs clvilvzatton, ably beyond ay tnicaat line One (het should, be —— as elsewhere, @ enterpristi > Freepecte for’ 1808—Pks' Ceape—Supaticn for | I Somamey be Maegan a, famosas w owe Laiterin ee te eae ae ee Pr. Al Fa eeenee the South—Court Decisions Favorable te | with the Indians, large pumbers of whom, in | here. Captain Barker, of the Freedmon's Bureau, of Virginian Laud Own s orm’ sinoe, on visiting thint loos ers—Th, even in Alabama. Tho local merchants of Vi by | Suffrage in overy State the Supreme law of the fedoral Planters, all the imaginable quaint Around Manansas—Hone Heape ane, 324 | sue way, aro much aunoyed at the ingenuiteeat thers | couattution® and as this will carry ua beyond the Pros Teaerseama Lanonsa, | | ferent tribes, a daily-to be soon im the streote, be found several fecrliee wisn root 8 mouthttt of fag 18 Road—Tho Piedmont Couain ae ene the | Nard’ drummers in evading tooa erases nod inset | teauial election of 1803 not ous: of the’ tan ‘nxctuted Cannort Panisn, La., June 8, 1867, ponies and booves are: their prevailing’ substitutes for { thelr houses. Quito a mumber have died of starvation. Warrenton and of Virginin— ing goods ay /"8 than the cost price of the local deator, In | States will havea voico ia tt—not one, Tho radicals, Tho Southern States are looking forward to the year | greenbaoks; but these are readily accepted, boing capa- ple came from ' Kansas, having gone there early MeetingwBew bic Bis ar—A tRepublican | tis thing we Tims,” One Of tho causosof the universal | MY dear air, havo the power in Conzress, und they ; ble of ro Waking Ue ne | ‘sine sy tian 000 of he cemenel: the untvsceal | OT. tas tela he 1868 for a much botter con‘lition of affairs than has pro. | D2 of speedy eonvermon into cash. Three weekly | in the-war, and returning last season too late to make & ks a newspapers—two republican and one conservative—are . Propel bave been send thon pe Women of Warrenton, Considerable portion ef ihe ,mited sums of money which | _ “But yon forvet the possible interruption of a(narcial | vailed herototore, They have planted largely and abun- | qubtished in the town, bat are struggling with ama | cener reer omDrls mere pie : Fauquier county, Va., Juno 14, 1367 theae people can afford for abe," Purposes thus finds pas" Sg ges with ite tromendous reaction against the | dantly in corn, which will provide broad, fatten pork, olroulations. {srehes are abundant and in flourishing ae lexandria 7 8 Scien its cl Sey, le drommers; and ‘wer.’? <i condition, and there is a growing onoowraging in- to Warrenton, Va, some Atty od | thew ane nde ge Noe mere, doliare is some. | “NO. slr; thero 1 our greatest danger, That thing | beef and chickens, and also make forage for stock. SUP- | (orsct ig: common school education. in‘: | REPUBLICAN RECONSTRUCTION IN VIRGINIA. miles, thei a oe ee i. Las {0 interest the hisiorian, the politi. | thing worth saving on Jobnay’s coat vr ac "9¥'9 dress, | Will be sure to br'ng upon asthe remody of confizeation— fan unter. On the land question it may | When ma pas had to sell all ihe caea and Thay ens’ pons be said That tie whole of Old Virginia, or that section iy hooper) months to ralae a fexe Lota me 9 OR = hair ar meionn nes bet, (edt : fost of all, itis bi iesini ed, sian ying east of the Biue Ridge chain of wisentilan: iy tal hewrinnd oH eben ddectgrs Tod aiidm and oonfi<cation ho will carry tho day in Congress, plies, such as meat, bread and forage requirod for 1833, ‘ What do you think 18 the present aspect’ of political will be nearly all producod im tho South. This year the | affairs in this Stato?” Taaked a gentlomam stopping at | ne Conference at Wichmend—Report of the the sa botel with me, shortly after greater portion had to be parchased from the Northwest, | Poitaman to whom Laidressed the iamyirp at ave tae | Delegaton from the Union League Club. and required a Jarge amount of capital, This wasmainly | was prominent in politics im this State, and carries yet a At the monthly meeting of the Union League Ciub of sr of tho | the remedy of the Jacodin ropublic of France. ‘id bgt market, and that land owners are as anxious to sell hoiresses of the Southern States, as widows and maidens, na pe flenihropy, meh ae acne iaeeclor 4 ‘owing to the faiture of the corn and partial failure of the | large influence with bim. His ie as he afterwards | this elty, on Thuraday ovoning, the President, Mr: Jay, “sacrifice ag merchants who have bills to moot and casting about for dostrable Nortiicrn capltaitsts who want | Servte' — sadlnnb-anioees or Vingiales fr ine tance, | cotton crops, which lett the Southern planter in a great ‘ Lapel the Southern saemy. called to the-chair Mr. George-0. Ward, and mado's ver- gees is a held, Teeatting frow the eaniear ae yes are denouncing them in all their clubs, ‘This fact they | measure dependent on Northern capitalists. he ropiied, “is a dificult one to | bal report om behalf of his associates, Mr. John G. Hol. OwDery at alec Ee, Meeting of these Virzinia tana | {ie able-bodied men of the South, which cannot fai! tu | Proc'atm, Dut ag these clubs hold thoir confidential bi; | hg want of capital also conpctled the-planters to ; ae aeieal tliataarenteg | Dfook, Colonel Goorgo . Noyos and Colonel Thomar-B. a : attract ew a8 : y gies - ’ i Alexandria tast night, Mr. J. Barbour in | and teohae yee ne amr sing conservatiys widowers | what they are driving at from the droppings of their | Make different arrangements with tho froodmon by xiv They are encourazing decause of the great num. | Van Buren, of their late mission to Virginia. He sald ‘the chair, the gist of which may be Bathered from the | dutyjn binding tho two sections in tho lasting bonds of a | tse conversations. From all that we see ani hear, | ing them an interest in the crop tn lou of wages. 1 | bor of good, sterling Union» men living to-day in Ar- | that tho différences among the Unionists of that State, Preambio and resolutions adopt t fect and from all that we know, we, tho people of tho ten A my plantations and it | kansas, whose loyalty to the government and-devotion Whereas, Virginia, in her sicoares ago vee oe aed, excluded Sintes, may expect torbe excluded from Con. | bAve carried out this system on ih oe tinea nover-| (2 tho State will presorve. it from its worst enemica, 1 | Slthough, we Mr. Botts said, they rested upom etiquette and water bower, posseason all thoeismedie ol maar ee | Polithes and Parties—Result of tho Harmonte | &Fees till aftor thie noxt Prosidential election, and, inthe | has proved an entire success. e sty bap caer mean by Union men the conservative clomeut of rather than upon principle, had reached a point where 83, 6 ts of natural grea “ ne ; - - - “ webae Bad ey caplial ond population to dovelop her Cenvention—Tho Stato te be Carried by Ne- | °V¢8t of a financial panic, we may oxpect confiscrtion in | worked better or more industriously ; they fully under- | the State—the men who were called rebels at the out- | they threatened an abaolute-and fatal divisiowof the the south to save the radical party in the North." eer gd y Such are among the views entertained by leading anti- Resolved, That an association be o: fi UaAchmond Courts—Robert Ould Rampant— | radical Southern politicians from Goorgta up to Vireinin, Virginia land owners the policy of eniiey o iee MPO” Fonrnalism ta Richmond. and that thore is somethipg in thom thoy seriously f outtin Y farms and putting th Paste erg 1B up their in bolieve, establish paeios In aot ns ets to gather inform | afé 3 ‘Rrowxonn, Va,, June 14, 1867. tte he subdivision of many of herlarye piantadons tuto swaller farins will allord teal stand their position, and consequently tee! edeep inter- } Set of the war and during the war, the men.whom many } ary Rxcention had been taken by Mr. Botts, Mr, call rebots yet, but men thaa whom those more loyal, oat in cultivating tho crop well and in time, I nover | 44 1 interpret. lovaliy, do not live in this county. | Chandler and’ other gentlemen: representing a: large bave coon my lands better plated and cultivated than | These mon, as far as eniitied, will all rogisier; and they | number of cubstantial Union men throughout Viginis, thoy are this season. Last year I paid at tho rate of $200 ee Pee fal had vote tor coaservative } +4 tue convention held at Richmond in April last; by ties Lorne. | BTOee The Blacks Onposed—Disloyaltyin the for the sale of landrte Belpatetios andtr gation: | may rocent harmonizing convention of political par- . par baud as wages, and the result was, tho lands wore | pron mncr ante ot eran ee asked, “itt: they ae- | whom the present State Comraities had beon appotntad. Resolved, That the association be cull pik a . MISSISSEPPH, badly worked and the freedmen lazy and trifling. Now | ject ¢ ‘didates?’ : Sgepany, with (pawrer to receive nubscrsptte \ stginta Land | 8 {0 thw Stato, held at Goveraor Plorponi's marhieh they do a full day's work and obtain a quarter of the wares Mit be those who served in the rebet | TB0Y obeeted: to: the authority by which t way-ealledy atig sy and to sell the same, » .“4% of land at | in tho Capitol square, rosulted in tho coalition of 149 two be sari pabietiak wait? i ee. Peaks’ be | factions in the State of the republican party. the gon and with a lit'le assisto~ -aent of Tesponsib's fien, tlemon from tho North, hoaded by Senator “filson, lent 08 fro A. State, which wili | material aid in this much desired direotlon, Tt is now etsy A the palpable conclusion that the §tglo“will be carried ~ he sb of set pony Tatzee in. wih by the republicans. The whit9s-fopresonted by Botts, 4 merged into the Hunpia¢ party, make but a drop ~ ag country. Virginia, east of the an < . ee eee by nature {nto two distinct reo. | in the bucket of what “no white vote in Virginia would eid or section and the Piedmont section, | be—not less thy, ono hundred and twenty thousand— connor gS somparatively poor in soll, the result of two | Wbile the cbmbined white and negro radical voto will ee ybacco nd’ widicul ela carcel h ty-five thousand. The quve. it lave | scarcely reac! seventy. _ “pocas bittite, Sed nélieat tion then comes up, how are the radicals ors , but it has the advantages of the game, the fino pe tere, crabs and fish of the numerous nevigable rivers | to carry the State? and the answer is simply that not only and inlets emptying into Chesapeake bay. The Picd- | here, bat throughout the whole South there is overy- crop, I furniabing tho supplies, If they average ten | army or at lenst those who sympathized with it.” they laid strese on the fact that it represented com- bales per hand, as in old times, they will realize $250 “But will such a convention, in case you elect a ma- | paratively few counties; they complained thatat was each, provided cotton romains at its present market | iority of your candidates,” I further inquiredy “form. composed almoet exclusively of the colored " vethe average cost of producing cotton in the Mississippi | “rinaconautntion os required by Congrosst” | F slement, andithey insisted thatthe citizens of Virginia bottom lands in the State of Louisiana can be cstimated | vention wiil be the one clected. And it will be done | who avowod themselves uncoaditional Union men; an@ as foHows:— without, oaucusing or wire pulling or politicabtrickers. | who dosired the organization of’ @ great Union party, Every true Arkansan knows and foels that he has a work todd, and he will do it—s work on the prompt and } Would not come into the party-thus imperfectly. right dung of which he knows furiber depends the:best | ized and exotusively led. They nad accordingly issue@ intereate OF the Sake and people in the feaure. Ar~ | for signature woall for a new State Convention; torbe ANAS Ww e duty preacr ‘or her, and’ wit Congress must rest the remaining responsibility,’? hejd at Cheriotiesviile on the Fourth of July, to organise “If the-State is admitted to-the Union what kind of | the republican: party in the State. This call, whick Total por bale, 400 Ibs... mon will you send to Congresa and elect to fill your | entirely ignored the existing-organization, had’ teen The decision of the United States Supreme Court that | State and county offices?” signed, as Mr. oy 7 obligations given for nogroes (slaves) are null and void | ‘The same class of men, to be sure,’’ he repited. | 80 + Botts stated, by nearly three headreé for want of considcratéon 1s a step in the right direction, | “None but Arkansans to rule we isour chosen motto, | names of respectability and note in their respective ‘and has been a very groat relief to largo planters. Their } And thero need be no fears of the State undar such ruie. | jocalities, representing ina large moasuro the old Union SPECIAL CORRESPONDERCE OF THE HERALD. A New Politionl Movement—The Southern Sintes to Form a Political Party—Radicals and Democrats to be Ignored—Scantor Al- com, of Miss., One of the Leaders. QGranapa, Miss, June 10, 1867, ‘Since I fast wrote you a great political movement has been set afoot in the South, this State leading off in it in the person of Senator elect Alcom, well known before the war as one of our leading whig politicians, The opening speech of Mr. Alcom, made recently in Oxford, Miss,, was charaoterizod by the utmost freedom and the groatest latitude, in contradistinotion to the extromists and radisala, who, to outward appearances, are contead- (Bovidieas be Bivens, emigration from the Deautiful and invie’ mon i where an apathetio indifferenco to political affairs on the stance, ill now be sovent, and they will be in a better | Shois loyal now, and she will be loyal then ’” fen Recs vers saankwurd te Chaniorsotifa gag | part ofthe whites since the passazo of the Miltary bil, | !s forthe mastery tn the South. AS, for in in | cant win command capiial to caltwvate next year, | “Whatare the’ dishoartening: toatures,”” { asked, “of | Whigs and land owners, Colonel Lewis, himself of a Pe er ees fe Carn ant This te axe. moajority, ‘They do not intond to register, | OB Of his torse sentences he stated that as between s | Hoe “ir in oases of suits brought to recover advances | the political situation to which you referred?” Ravolotionary family, ra that most of the names below, is an elovated country, from thirty to fifty milk 7 weer A oh - at gai. | resuscitated democracy em the one hand and Stevens | made on cotton (that was destroyed during the war by “Tt is the kind of men," he- rejoined. belonged to lies ‘which bad’ settled in Vireine pre in width, and more charming to the oyo, with its ever { nor, if registered, do they intend to vole, The fooling | i iis om the other, he had nothing te hope for— | olther side) were decided ins similar manner it would | radical Union wen, who ire seeking and axpect ‘got | vious to the war of the, Revolution, All the effort i st—on . w gave the mer- reins of pow ese aro TaS tas wad foresee of mountains hilly plains and | Tsim Fide so ie doril; we muat bide jurdimes*’ "| one or the other triumphant, in bis mind, the same hi Mae cocpiise the Rite tian bn the-ceeb, | stiese oe. were, prolsdnelty.” Gia: Laateuae ars taDaE : fa Cr ‘levers bn purest rere bound vg moe In all tho addresses issue’ to the peoplo here by the | degree and character of ruin to the government and tho | pat not a lien on any other property. This crep then | when the war broke out, and went in for hanging ovory pepo a bape ete tet deusious waver, and | tadical party the influenoo of the has boon mainly | joopie would follow. became the security of the merchant, and the planter | Union maa. They are now clean turned adout and want merely acted de facte in rarsinc the crop for him; and { to hang every rebel. It is easy to see that such men think, the obligation ought to cease. ce stability of character. Successful crops will make the Louisiana plantor in- eo wind and as vaorshabic. F prenrnmy than he was Ory. : ; her ignored also im wator power without limit, This {s destined to | sought; the whites have been altoget! irl ‘Thus sentence illustrates the purpése Of Mr. Alcom in ‘Decome one of the most famous regions of the worid | though thoroughly in favor of reconstruction on. the 2 for ite beef, mutton, wooi, milk, butier and cheese, ana | terms of the acts of Congress, Lamy pgs State | the movement he has initiated. Rogarding the demo- all the fruits of the temperate tone. pol: demagogues have re oe ORTOO", | cracy ag the agency through which civil war was forced Passing through the tidewater district to-day, in leav- fo tho whites aro constantly spoken rebels, | pon the country, and believing that the Siate spvora ing the immediaio v: of the Pd.omac, and through | séoeatlonists, and who are Bo se. saan ead J a . G ney oi m5, the impoverished but still desirabiv lands of Fairfux | rales.of the cause of freedom. oe ‘je — monts, if entrustod guidance of that party agai county, looking rich in their luxuriant crops of ripening | here are dead, and tho recent fred In the Fedical ets: | of its former leaders in the disguise of a faint couserva- wheat,'we approach from the plains of sanassag, tire oe this ieee role 4 bo yiege va, | tlam, wilt be made the means of @ reintroduction into Fledmont region proper, sloug the instep of the Bing | bat ive partion, Maat Ut tip camry the tate, for theres: | national affairs of now and equally minclarons ieee u Around Manassas, within thirty miles of Washington, | 80ns above stated. place of the ‘negro,’ he was prepared to propose large tracts of land are lying waste, the fences having To-day, in the Hustings Court, where the ae tse Rycbescllprte seailede Bir d+: ooking ‘Deen destroyed during the war, with the owners ieft woo | vey; the freedmen’s school teacher was erence, peopl uae opea pater eee ee prem far impover.shed to replace them. The fields thua thrown | and he sentenced, but alterwards Cyne <i Co gh b» to the establishmen' gront party | out, however, do no: giare in the suo with their naked | nor, several gambiers wero armenet et of es ‘ag | Person of the next President. In order to give strongtn soll like the’ Belds left uncultivated 1m Houth Caroling | hibiting the EAP ot Tenge during. we’ war. and ‘ur, | to Ute now idea” was docided upon at Washington Saletan compas Gis atten tush tote bey Johnson appearing for the defence. The evidence was | (where it had birth) to give the honors of its introdoction ‘ conctasies, and it gas apoarent that lynn o to Mr. Aloom, who was ady.sed to do as he has done— mere pap aay oe : oye 4 kely to give it coun- Le he a | develop it first to the people least likely to give from the ashes of Joe Johustvn’s abandoned mili de- | in a most disloyal haranguo, he said that ‘were and it aiready rjo.ces in two Lotels, Rescrsguat'é magisirate or a juror he would find ie Mien pod tenance. Tho first object of the projectors of this new Poctifloations, which ia their bess condition might have | guilty for any offence not felonious, on a | NM party movement is to reconcile the ability, intelligence been ran over by a flock of sheep, are disappearing; and | Court—it this bo trod vetlys to. the reversal of their | and respectability of the South to an acceptance of the those numerous rebel army viilages of log cabins around | He then alluded, sarcastically, to the anes is fave ia ees te Manassas, which in the spring of 1802 told wo atrange a | decision by Governor Pierpont and Genoral Schofield. | now order of things, and secare their co-operation in the story of General McCicllan’s “masterly inactiyitv,” are | which the magistrates felt keenly, and, actiog ete ‘be | Schemes hereafter to be made known, through which bo more to be seen along the railway, save here aud | impulse of the moment, ordered. t nats Fiohce show | they are to be rescued from lediscriminate plunder there a hut occupied by some treedman’s happy family. | entored in each of the cases. er LenS ia one ssa tea aes But at Manassas tod at Cuulow’s ani Brisiow’s Stations | that the sotion of Genera! Schofield, placing the civil | hy the Thad Stevens radicals, and from the interme great heaps of but collected for the bone mills and | authorities under control of the military, acs ‘or the | agitation and social misery always a co neequence of the Shans ta those ‘part art heseea be hago = ane arti sgn of Se paioveal ik Uheen triumph of the plander-dreaming democracy. 80 far Mr, sheep during the war. How maay hundred vons of these | wagis and all other judicial ofMcials will improve | aicom has not disappointed his friends in the enter. Domes have been carried away there is no tolling, but | the present state of affairs. Old Point, vistting his | Prise, Bold and foartess, and thoroughly conversant bork perdge remy eth Gon Onempean in oratly Attod up | with the bistory of his Ytato, he felt bimsclf in a double ‘The soil becomes more fertile as wo approach War- | faraily at the Chesapeake Logg —_ vA eo Cy i State, renton, and the fields are generally under cultivation, | for the use of the dey ere iq sense “at home’ in the troatment of his subject. Sup- ARKANSAS. SPECIM. CORRESPONDENCE OF THE WERALO. brothels and sough: 4 Early Histoi And such men would rule over ua, Tiwould society. Taylor’s Old Headquarters Turned into rather live under a military governmea a thousand years Convent—Jef Davie’n Elopomont with the | than be under the rule, of such Rend ay prion! Goncral's Daughter and the Subsequent Te- | Toor che dominion of sich base and olssrable wretoben, concilintion—Description of the Present Mil | and theso men adé lying to insult. They write North and itary Post and City—Choice Mediey of Views im everywhero that they are not received into Pre! 8 tho Political Sit- thern society because they are Union men.” Indians and the “1 don’t believe,” said another gentleman mith whom ind Sti hon. T afterwards into conversation, “that all the constitu- Indian War—Destitution a arvation. tlons.we sai ‘adopt in the world will have the least Fort Surra, Ark., June 4, 1867. effec toward getting. us back late the Union ‘The radi- Of diminutive size, irrogular in shape, a rough stone | cal in have cut out the matter to suit wall enclosure some three foot thick and six feet high, ‘ but three bulidings inside, one for officers’ quarters, an- other the soldiers’ barracks, and the third a guardhouse, two smali cannon the only artillery defence, part of an infantry company the garrison, and no embrasures or moat or drawbridges to give impress of strength and im- pregnability, and Fort Smith, interesting as it {s from its past associations and in the fullest sense historical, does not present a very formidable or imposing appearance. It is very finely situated, however, on the south bank of i ious Krowth of white ciover, furnts ful Util i z i [ it Lf * r ; H 3 Re 3, il Ht heat, corn, er, and it is eaid he will not return til July, when the river, the ground being high and forming part of an be rng py saa trae Ne ssction de ieaemawes'| in sapposed the work of regustration will be theroughly pray ud large ips “ech beim of — extended platean, the obief requisite and beauty of a aged jer wa \, beon uraged é Virgo pre cu tie Shenanonn valley, and. tot “4 ise “gine the demise of the Timer here the Ezaminer and | tinue, and already feels songvine that he will oring | permanent military post. At two anglosof the walls and eZ hek: comedies,” sald Cot i ~ : tbat valley bas 40 ai roved since the war is have been struggling for the supromacy. The | abou! reorganization of that State, and materially | outside areseveral buildings belonging to the fort, which | |. first loyal regiment in ry ee yd pedo lpr Tesi porting resorts i taprodacire oi The pital, while the | assist in the development of a healthy public opinion iB | inoagh showing ahetreogenous mixtare of material and | to Congress from the Third district and President of the je hore, however, complain that they are ali desti- | former is now published on the co opens Brownlow ridden as it is, he ‘expects to make more than | architecture, doubtless serve fully the purposes for which x held at Li * not requiring pear one-half the Te ee Ree eae | Gpponent in consoquonce. These two journals were the | an impression, and to ais in tho formation of w truly | quay wore built, in connection with tho Quartermaster, ith an excusabie pride they boast that though | main bidders at tho sale, and it now appears that the | conservative party get ped ubiio | Commissary and other departments. Fort Smith, as it harassed and deapoiled by four years of gunpowder, und | Dispatch was outgeneralied iat having to 1 Pay. Lycee Ra = leads groneing = net peonie ~ es a reas | stands, was commenced in 1838 by Major Thomas, now tortured by two years of reconstruction, they still live | the Lyfe nd ema ¢ ‘ned nati panes, watts | som, Pr pre of the Quartermaster’s Department, ant a, or vey ge | toorysy ad = pos ae Meominer, wae Smaart enough to secure the | Heretofore, since the war, the classes to whom Mr. | °° re seset'tout' youtd Taner... As thn ing out of mover failiog soil, im its crops of bread and meat , * rs . ° 0 i] and comp! . breakii Tie otiot veeiag (sho 10:b) a radical meoting was | sericed of tho most talon'ed employ of that paper, | failed to participate. in. poiltiel aftins.” Dreading. tne | the rebellion it passed into the hands of the rebela, and | in Hitaois, Very for, it any, extreme Soathera men held im this town, at which the ehitef cook and bottle ji - wil el as ic Masher was a Dr.'H. G. Hrvwa, an agent of the radical | The extreme, dulnese oF Jonreaian «'butar airugglo, tn f and thecontscating, tongueclashiog rdicals on neomer, | Yaa held by thom until 196% when General Buns, then | Sach candidates. Every day there a growing evidence aily abolished, but still existed by law, and declared Congressional Comuittes. ‘be meeting was chiefly | malos the contest for life herd and bis rugs So cals ner’ bene ane Ga support to eitber, | Commanding the First Division of the Army of the Fron- | of increasing affiliation between the opposing political groat desire to be so to unite in the republican party all composed of Clacks. A loyal league was lormed to look | which every avalinble.fosee'e 0 rey san it ie that politcigus inthe Nevin are able to | tier, after taking Van Buren, occupied it with a federal | factions. While recently the life ofa Union man was | Srost desire to be #9 to unite tn the republican. part etter the registration aad the orxanization of a regular 1 | charge them with sullonness and moroseness, when in | force, The enomy, however, as will be remombered, | *arcely safo out of the reach of « military post, no sich | rien throw their arms around the blacks and Fopublican camp for electionoering purposes. This plas | The Radical Movemont in Virginin=Loyal | charss tiem null nihentne tt me Samy are | force. 5 ; apprehensions need be entertained now. From all this | TEN! throw Meir rng ara eee scoterined oy of ‘operarions is now being actively pursued in every | Activity Everywhere—Alexandria Meetinas= | Cinisisiered by inofficioncy ina Congress that ia con- | fled without a battle, only stopping to burn buildings | | angur a restoratiqn of barraonions a jy ability and great earnesinoss, and exhibited at times = ads ae fi Doge 3 A , WE ‘Dereia, ft fe Expected the Raal- | tinually legislating against the possibility ‘of democratic | containing Confederate stores, blow up a magazine and | ture. It is only reconstruction working out i - | stroug personal fooling, the expression of which and the army of occcupaiion in the tive mi itary How Ail the | ascondancy, with i's incapacity louble dealing. | destroy the steamboats at the whart, Their not destroy. | Tate toe ence eaten pag bow Tie aura | however, tempered by uintual expressions of regard an @istricts, furwiwh the active egents moans and faciiities for the work, whereby the radicals hoid such immense There was and is really no party for these to ac aformal'courlesy. Mr. Botts, for instance, in reply with, Anxious for sn ecitionsout of national aiifica ing the fort can only be attributed to their hasty flight | to caiculiate that two-thirds of the negro vote will be '| Ore colored apeaker whe had an os yt se] advanta.es that they wili probably carry every State their own way, from Virginia to Texas, They get up te. State restoration, they yet preferred to risk the dospot- | Subsequent to the surronder, when General Hunt, Onief iesend | his poople to Mfr. Huanicat, every, ism of the military biM to soiling themselves by contact | of artitiery in the Army of the Potomac during the war, | wiv hors a hing, companion sein, Bye tg seati. | Peassn to be attached to hia, ead Were ‘perfectly fight ta these meetings \Very quiouy ; tuey are briet and im- to business deals; but when they adjourn they hove will fication of the Pe wrfth the seum that since tho war have played kneve | vas in command hore, one of the buildings t= the fort | bea brief account of my. inlereiew with Major Recor, | Sading by and trusting bim, Before adjourning it wag leave an organized camp delind in, Against an oppo- sition without organzation or meaus or ieaders, t with an Amendment—tirecsley and fool in the dificult réle of leadership and states- agreed that each party should appoint a committee Gerrit Smith in Bad Odor among All the | mansbip. accidentally caught fire and was burned. This | #0 widely known from his connection with the five, to be a tho ment ing, although the general In travelling through the South the strauger sees but little of the ruling class of Southera women, except on Reaistration—H: i Loyal Leagaes South. ‘Afew atiompts have boon made to help them out of | tojiging was a counterpart of the one now occupied by | pada Rs Kovernment agen, | tis shure, Mobi dates. | (mpression soomed to be chat a reconciliation was very ‘Atexaxpnra, Va, June 15, 1867, | this condi but owing to the | league funds, acts i in) le, of Congress and the intrguesof the megre-bursau. Ki was | the officcrs—a two story brick bailding, some one hun hit, hair, done up in a cus, showing bim a | "lye next day, at eleven o'clock, the conference was From Danville, on her southern frontier, to Leesburg, | found impossible to cope with the “organization for vic- | dred and fifty feet long by forty wide, with double mn, Webens he ben Sgarsh largely ro ouae oa Tonewed at the Ballard Bouse, with Mr, Se ee rdeley Tor his su od bomanity "the mapid Aare of Porticoes on the front and rear. Its loss was a serious | anq neither have been forgolien the thousand and one Seater de nemionysh tao AB. head of the Shenandoah Valley, to this little old rusty Phitedsiphia, with pa for genoraliasimo, is fresh | one, as woll as largely detracting from tho artistio | anecdotes told of him as a singularly eccentric but most Lae barenoeenad colonial city of Alexandria, there are in Virginia only | in the remembrance of all ag a failure only through | peauty and completencss cf ‘he fort The chief } intellizent and sensivie gentleman. Sunday at the churches. They uave noi yot learned, a3 a body, to cultivate the Yankees, although the Yankees have been singularly success{ul to carrying off some of the best prizes among these fastidious and incorrigible ee tes erie: ees “That is the hell and damnation of gotting old,” was Stowe mes roreiai b= Vp tne ky bar | ers cen of operas wo now nmi any inst | Semci Fte rtanane can aio fois | imprance sow itching so iso torts ot the | ay genig femur att wan tals ft "A ‘of neck is moiting away. The belles of we vil- | activity and en are, first, the planters | Pee ote aftair, and certainly will not forget it; | distributing point for several posts in the | have to use two pairs of spectacios now, and then I can’t lage, for instance, are getting again in the good old fasb- in working their crops, and h this new mont, which is98 #0 mach, uo- throughout the Stata. Its soe worth adamn."’ And as he said this he laid down a Jon of taking an afternoon airing, and they do not cross | #0 farmers, engaged they, | hence aera lle ou of | Wadia Territory, as also throug! Pre- | newspaper he was reading and shoved w foropend the street to avoid the approach of a siranger suspected | whites and blacks, but particularly the whites—« new | der t 0 enaploes many jeading pul sent garrieon consists of the hoadquarters and Company oan Pree e myend aaa Yankee, The} begin to think that an inva. the Sout! Sou fom of Yankees of the peace establishment would be a thing—men, women and children, in eld or garden, are | “A154 R Johnson and Judge Yorger, both of the | F, Nineteenth United States infantry, Colonel De Lancey ig Past exporionces among tb» Trdiana from working with a will. Secondly, the various burial corps, | supreme Court of Missiasi; nes er, Governor Floyd Jones, Nineteenth infactry, in command, assisted his first Coming pana aed yi ago, recited some PPI Mississi all have signalized thei lively anecdotes abou and General Taylor, ongaged in hunting up the remains of Union soldiers a, S ppl, a ae ea; an. Orr, by Captain Charles W. Minor, Twenty-second infantry, | cave a humorous renwme of hit life at the national Capi. HY f thing, the war having made such sad havoc among thorn beaux. Warrenton, too, has its full share of protty women, and in this fact we may have the secret ) siain in the late war, and in burying them in thonew | Wigner SP? Governor Patton, of Alabama, | as Quartermaster, and Lieutenant John G. Leofe, Nine- !, and then iched off into his views of the war and of ite guempuce ean epamaies Storch and shot aad | sional cometerion, and in ornamenting these enclo- | futly endorsed by the leading ex. ‘officers of the | teenth infantry, a8 Adjutant—a!l officers who made fine oS present veltieat situation. surea, Wherever there is aparty of workmen employed | Confederale artes, i re Aen aCLONMa Laat | and britfint records for themselves during the war, They Were and | in ove of these pretty cemeteries there is a touch of ing men'of the republican party at the North have pro- native “and a true ur . Trked ith daring 2 Everything is kopt in the finest order; uncommon neat- SbIDI-, “Tough, it was a foal error not ace hearty ‘God speed’ to gentlemen, | ness and system show themselrog in every department, ‘Verms offered in 1863 by President Lincoin, fa ot of ue Stoveas pa aha tee Aad the soldier elace & thorough del and diene, } att Tenner tse a Brag, fn Tegeneration of the South. Thirdly, the busiest men im | Po oonstraction party, which i614 sapposed will be | But there is an earlier history of Fort Smith, going con, ‘How do you think reconstruction is getting on!" ~ re a Virginia are tho managers of the radical party with their | strengthened imph by the accearion of | siderably back of the dates given. - ‘You will have to ask,” he answered, pointing Near Warrenten, Va. June 14, 1907, "} | Plan of operations for the possession of the State. prdindarecesen gre shor “Wiliam ‘Bradford, Me tee fifea rhe Yann’ f. proteense ber Bay ¢ Like Beauregard among the débris of Fort Sumter, the The late squabbles of Messrs, Botts, Underwood and on Ganoral Grama, te th traveller may sit atnong the ruins of this once magnii- dard ht, will be called to Ndi which then constituted the garrison were Hunnient, as the central managers at Richmond, having | as the stan aa upon to lead | buildings bearer of this conservative republican | located at the junction of the Poteau and Arkansas | one, and that in twenty years from now we will have been reconciled ision party, and thas success be assured. Soward, id | rivers. Afterwards the fort was aband and anew | several republics in the United States. Tax without cont establishment brooding upon the desoiations and eas nannelive Covisten of OG GEST Tia Geo qual rodiapesed Co. trntinge. tn. ont ¥ post, called Fort Coffes, ebtened vasa are Fepresentation won't do. People woa't stand it. disasters of war, The armies of McClellan, Burnside, possessions, has given up all idea of the Presidency, and | m' er up the rivor, In turn this was given up Colonel Fi k is anotber conspicuous character Hooker, Meade and Gramt, and the soldiers of Sigel, to hoad off Greeley in his Presidential aspira- | and the post re-ostablished here, It was phere General | hére, ave a¢ea him, but am told that he goes so iy a ewe e wo tions, will tend hearty Zachary Taylor bad for a = time his juarters, | far as to that the reconstraction measures of Con- especially, work destruction hopefully to gain the State. Here in Alexandria dent looks to i and it was likewise the rendezvous of troaps sent to | gress would justify another war here if the rebeis bad brought about. Over ail the wasied country, from the Potomac to the Wilderness, there is not a more ghastly spectacle of ruin and decay than this—in these smoked and dingy columns which mark the piace where once stood great temple of fashion, and in these rows of combined patriotic effort may be made to save the | Mexico during the Mexican war—the barracks they oc. | the power to attempt it He will be remembered as radical meetings and republican clubs, a mixed comm! country from anarc! His ambition te , and oupied, th A melancholy waste of ruins, boing stil having voted for seceaston in the state Convention. sion of whites and mogroes, Are the order of the n! will assist the no of peti movement, which even from | visible. The building which General Taylor had as his | After war broke out ho went North, remained there ave th I ett ‘Stanton hasa word of cheer, The demooracy, accu headquarters is still standing, though greatly rejuvenated | during most of the war, returned just bofore its expira- They have thus a general city organization and » club | ind confiscation aro to be defeated, Who so worthy to and from what it was by the addition of anew | tion, commenced raising a loyal regiment, but which was or loyal leagues in every election precinct, and all ia | in the work as Grant? and where more oj unely can | story, a fresh coat of paint, a neat white picket fence and | mustered out before flied up, be beg r3, United large empty cottages, doorl 4 active rapport with Richmond and Washington, and | the docency, law, and jor commence | an nal tower, with a bell inside, Instead of bein; te were mouldering to ey ay hie ws are told, ae fe with all the party shy ryan antes On ‘Von. hs Tar oo P demoted y ‘me rry Pant LaaTe Rondan of tae ander of Marcy, ascribed to a i" in his political tnrations ua and id many at once andred guess piace; next the registra’ voters under (ho restri ridden ited upper | Glittering brass buttons, lets, clanging swords So close to the Indians—on tho very jers, 19 fact, mange mf 1867 * aay heonaiin are s few pacmy bane . ot Congres begins here and will tinue four oye. taren h thick we Saae. Old fi fashioned Eo hata, Imperioiy majes- | of their territory—I can hardly let my Jetter go without oon poor he® | The radicals, it may be — joted, will have so | have and are pass! As A before re 1g plumes, have givon place to cloistered | writing something about them. In company with two who have found shelter here, with ther pige and | thoroughly canvassed the hat every enfranchised | mark early al) the promit officers of the Con- quisite chapel lone robes | others I took a horseback ride of a day among them, Lis 7 chickens, in those dilapidated cottages As it was, the | Desto will be brought in and every distranchised white | federate army are in favor of this movement, since it ie ly strict toilet of nuns; and in liex of | and though here adjoining the homes of their more cul- iy 4 " with ite improvement hee shut out, They are provided with the sinews of war | the only one that promises the repose they | for, as \d drinking whiskey, and the jocuad tivated white brothers are seen higher stages of fm quarter of @ million; as co pe pv thypton Geb ao hoo a EES Sa Potut ehuceied ethan malevolence °himog all | nd viasing Joh 8 oD Ecaas atta pickmen | Somes nad. anna tems cheer eavareniy tere te 2 ; are, err springs Ga@ the plantation of seven punann halted leagues, bem hrmans the funds, the and ine on ana man are veld ta tale’ aor or baie ia | of the my-ant borane and. penances and counting | chance to see and study the Indian character and form " ¢ P which machinery, the opposition have nothing, abso. | General whose record in this behalf hae al- | beeds and rigid exorcisms of the world, its strifes, vani- | conclusions as to what this people might become under | Aibesset sae a0 lands to they are attached, as we icarn— lately ing, to work with, in haviag no money and ties, joys, ambitions, and a’! that, Le = . fon Ay — | Ww. Wm, vets we tate gat tamare Sh, “cu | Mle ban ae expats ets wn Sete owe va cement | Goede wt here Ray ate ad is tn the marbet with Rondrede of others n Ranera | SUVaure, abe the, Wing, Go o7 defaalte De wnat oy a a a mat ong list of hich will add to the we or toget w \ irginia from Manassas to Charlottesville and below, om- | Of confiscation have not only captured the negrosa of @ most comfortably ag pormanent ing place commy toon oS = Uraoing five hundred thodenad acres of the nicest and moat | &% mas, at many Of cut poor whites, who are tickled for young ladion— eadstantial land the South are feady, if \eatrable farms, and in one of the very heelthiest so. | potential ng tek 1 to flty'to aitempt ie ants follies ond is prideg rele Slates om tbe Basta of equal political Tatts: a a Nie sea ee “You taney to tet tale work of fbobastren. who ange ue eae gt er tiiverml etecetion, aa! § Spagaii.2 > ‘Leautiful and ploturesque in ite geographical featares, | ion by " Agron in the convent eth orginal Mea sarapnd a tcur Vamken yg ag ge M51 of sheep farms, vacriog from ton to fivy husderd |" fpeevamose, at, And why dhould wo attempt to tar General Tegior's adiuvaas Isis aie nar Governor whem the somualies

Other pages from this issue: