THE PLAINDEALER. AJI -'. . , .- . INOKPCnOINT JOURNAL, Published Weekly, at , ' 1 "XTW x x a o r , x . o . Dalian per annua ; Uu DoIUr for BJx t I Mentha l!f ADVA5CB. THE PLAINDEALER.: Batea of AdTCrtz: - He nans will b entered on the subscription es aatil Um moMjr U raviied, and h paper will be stopped at Um expiration of tbe ussv para iur. I MpKimo copies will be aent to any addrea NORFOLK. PREMIUM firth mst BALE of HEW C0TT05. "TXTE OFFER AS A PREMIUM' FOR w w .the First Bah of SEW COTTON to us A SILVER CUP. New being pfpvd KADER fllOOS, CO., aagtiaSw Norfolk, Va. KADEaraoe, WABtads, KADEH BIGGS &'C0., CEnsui c;:;;,:iss!0n i-mechants, AND '. t COTTON FAfcTORO. Xella Wkutrf, erflk, Vm. Liberal advances on Consignments. - .?b.,p,ne,,u " LlTfqVool FREE OF tLuJ.WllDINi COVn8, and the Usual adranre ruadc . . nfri?ftUial,V!.n.l,0u P" to the stile of fw J. N nd M '" of COUNTRY PRO uVfrr?d.trotoPl returns made. , - mV1('1.NU and M,, ttud TI8 furnished on nhonii terms. Aogust 10 29m. jJJUWOLUTION OF COPARTNERSHIP Tbe Flrnii of KADER BIGGS A CO., com ecnl. - JmitPIj J KADER BIGGS la herebr authorised tn clone th Partnership busluus. KADKK BIGGS, JOSRrU J. BIGUS. v KoaroiK, August 2d, 1800. the GENERAL COMMISSION and TOR WARDING BUSINESS wlllr continued by XADKR B1GG8 and ASA BIGGS, hit of North (Woltna, under lite old name of KADER BIGGS CO. The cuatoinrrs of I be late firm, and the Mend of ASA BIGGS, niay bu aurod that business rounded to inuuwill rccclre prompt and i'lll,-eut aueutton. KADER BIGUS, AtA BIGGS. ; NonroLK, Aufut 2d, 1WJ. iru. JAMES E. CLARK, WITH G. W. McGLAUHON &C0. Cotton Factoro. .AND GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, rr WMliiNrivu and Lee street, TOBACCO WAREHOUSE, NORFOLK, VA. - ',- y Will attend promptlr to sales of COT Tl. GRAIN, LUMBER, NAVAL STORES, F1S1I, Jtc, and purchase uf supplied. Liberal Advance Made on Conaigmentav CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. aut 16 29-tf. L. SALUSBURY, MANUFACTLUKU AND DKAI.ER IX CABINET FURNITURE, BOFAS, ROCIHO, AIM, PARLOR AND TAHOT CRAIRS ol Frcncli, niiquo and Modern Siylcr. CiRprre, oil ri.M-rm.cntT a ixs, piano FORT KM. MATTUtttHKH, . .Va.. C8 mtU CO Main St., XORFOI.K, VA. N. B. L'MDERTAK1N promptly attended to In all It brunch-.-. The only A;cnt In I lie City (of FlSKtJ MKT A 1.1C BURIAL CASES. Mahogany and other CtIHns furniolifd nt the ' shorlcat notice, as alfo UMrrins;-!), wi:h the bet - llruratt In the CUy, uud the l'nti-ul ltilit Corpse Prerer lor this City aud sun uundin ctmntry. Marin z 8-aiu ESTABLISHED I 83 I . J. II. FREEMAN, WATCHMAKER &1EWELER, .: '3,VtH &trtrt Corurr of TalUt Strrrt, . ConnUrtUy on band a full assortment of WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVER WARE, SPECTACLES, dec war Watches sad Jewelry carefully and pro prrlVRilred. Ty lUIr Work made un to order. March SB . Rlm JOHN a. DANCY, 7irr, N. C, ' T. B. F. M. II T MAN, It of Warreuioa, N. C. HY1LAN, z I-u er New York.. HYraANfT& DANCY, GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS A 0.47 WiiU Water Street, (Rear of Custom Houmj,) NORFOLK, VA. DAHCY, HYMAN U CO., GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 5o. w Exciaxsk Placr, NEW YORK. Cotton sid nsWr Mrwdiwe sold at owm-r 0ilAn la NorMh or New York, charclnc ouly on roDjinlcie. rsbruaj I 1-tf PETcnsDunc. . r. RITES, M. u. W. it. raocToa. niVCO A PROCTOR. WHOLWALK ANDKKTAIL Z Ef T 0 , T DEALERS IX DRUG 0, ZCocSLlolxxoisB fANCT AME TOIAJST ARTICLES, Pints, Oils, , Dye Stuils, : laportes tod Doontii Winds QLAiS, PUTTY, SPICES, jCr. orrni!ti nr.nrr ron rosadalw. Would respectfully call Um aUcutlon of Mer rhsiiU, PhTBH-Uue. Planters and othrr, to their estrnsire stork sad sapcrior induvemcnts. it ftrcamera st rctcnbnra-, v. Freedom Volume IX NORFOLK. O. H. LOSQ. . A.C. ROW LA Sin I. IX, Long: Ac Do.? GENERAL CO AMISSION ' . AND Forwarding ' Merchants Ne. 11 Keanake Squares, Nor foIk,Va. Will sell in this, or Forward t : North ern Markets, 1 ' CUod, Grsli, Peaoolt, 1X0 ill liBdi Of V. QREENIFROOUCE. I Bark to Jttesers. Burma, llarrisoaJ A Ca.. Norfblk Va.: Win. W. Lemb. Caahleii T Co Norfolk. Va.; Capt. Jaines Coruick, Nor ioik. v a t mum eaiey Bon, Petewbursr - Va. ; R. B. Creiy, IJHzaUiUi City, N. Ci April 27. ltW'J. ' li-i y J. B. UtAmo, W. J. Uaaab, Norfolk. F. E. GoouitiuaE, Poruuioutk. New York C. W. Yocko. New York. HEARD, YOUNG & O., COMMISSION MERCHANTS ( . oa toi Mujor j .aiiY cyciaoies, rrun, pi 47 yi8UIX0T03 Street, NEW YORK.- thcir Produce aent forWaTrwn,nvay uiwwo We rer by permission to ' ; Got. Z. B. Vance; Col. 8. L. Fremont, K. J. Gregory, t-tq., Mcsers. Gay & Tyson, and the Banks and Merchants generally iu Nor loitt ana rortsmouth, va. March in G-im YANCEY, BROTHERS & CO. WDOLEUALK DEALERS IN ' Notions & Fancy Goods. Atlantic Bloek, Main Street, I ' NORFOLK, 1A, Invite tbe attention of the Merchants of North Carolluu to their large, aud vurieJ assortment of FOREIGN AND 4)OUKSTl6 I Notions and Fancy Goods! Including a full line of HOSIERY, GLOVES, HANDKERCHIEFS, HOOP SKIRTS, UM BRELLAS, PARASOLS, DRESS TRIMMINGS JEWELRY, SHIRTS and DRAWERS, and 8MALL WARES generally. j ' Jlatlujr luid much experience in this business in another cliy and ample t:ieilitles, we Jtre pre pared to ofi'cr the strongest iudueeiuentsfto ile trade. YANCEY, BROTHERS O. March 30 il am WM. G. JORDAN GENERAL V COMMISSION- MERCHANT Okkice GO Commerce Street, NOBFOLK,VA. Special attcntiou paid to SALES OF COUN TRY produce of aii irm;ripUon8, on MbiehH hberai casu advances made when ie-; orders for genekal merchandise! promptly ailed. March so i i .-fim HOFHEIMER & KEMPSHALL, WHOLESALE IKA!.US IN BOOTS, SHOES, HATS sfc TITTrVICS, No. 9 MARKET SQUARE, NORFOLK, V A. 5 We intend to be the LEADERS OF LOW PRICES In Norfolk, dnd at tbe Siiiuv lime fur- tiUh our customers vkh such Goods as t-aunot fail to lo eitiUtactiou, notwlthsUndiug the low Azures we place them at. Orders from the couutry trade solicited, and prompt attention gWen to same. March 23 ; 8 4m FIRST IN FASHION AND LOWEST IN PRICE, B. NUSBAUM, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IX FASHIONABLE MILLINERY, A 8ILKS, VILVET8, LACES, WHTE GOODS Alexander's best Kid Gloves, PRESS TRIMMINGS AND CORSETS, noSlEKY and BUTTONS IX GREAT VARIETY All I ask, ts for persons vUltinjj Nortolk, to caUat i , No. 60 Crturch Street, Next door to the Opera Ilonsc, and look at the 1 .U1!E 1fWV i. - Unorders promptly filled. : B. NUSBACM. t Cbsrch Sttwt, Norfolk. Ta. March 30 V-Sra k. BTATOH, W. a. BKSSETT, Hamilton. N. C. Norlolkl t. . bavha, Norfolk. , 1 ST AT0N, BENNETT & CO., COTTON FACTORS COMMISSION MERCHANTS McPmjul's VTsiABr, I - r ' NORFOLK. VA. j na,and wiu, under no csrenntouuees, depart Apra e m io-ij W? R. IIUDGIXS, IliroUTEK AND DEALER IX HARDWARE, CUTLERY, -Vr. 11 Jtarlet Vrr, yOBFVLK, TJ. rfeALL ORl'LRS iU'.MrTtY FILLEP. Pf CQ1cience Free WILSON, , NORTH CAROLINA, TUESI .Y, AUGUST 31, 18G9. THE PLAINDEALER. , . , . ! WILSON, AUcrsT 3i. I800. I THE SOUTHERN FARU. I From the Farmer's AdTooste-J ! ! Mineral Manures. . LI ML. - - . - It is well known that various sub stances belonging to, the mineral kingdom arc capable of promoting the growth of plants. These sub stances have been termed stimulat ing manures, .in contradistinction to manure derived from the animal and vegetable kingdoms, which are called nutritive manures. This distinction, however, was applied before it was known that mineral substances are nutritive) and the present theory is, ! that they act upon the soil bj im proving its texture, or by Tendering soluble the parts of it which are in soluble, or by otherwise fitting it to promote the growth of plants; and, stance. Tile process of 'this action, however, is not fully understood; nevertheless it is well ascertained that certain earths, .Oxides, and alkalies, combine with acids, pass in to the substance of the plant absorb' ed it may be, in part, from the"-at niosphere, but chiefly along with the aqueous portion of the sap froltl the earth in which. the roots are fixed. Of all mineral substances known to us, lime is that which performs the most, important part in improving the soil and promoting the growth of vegetables, It is found in near ly all soils that are capable of sus taining vegetation, and irr combina tion with different acids in nearly all ! . . i r . t ? ? A o ' j natural state, is called limestone, j vegetable suDSxancea. Line, in us and bv chemists, the carbonate of i lime. As limestone, it is too hard and compact to be diffused in the soil, and even quicklime.would be too solid, were it not that through is combination wjth water and car bonic acid from the atmosphere, it splits and crumbles to powder. Limc ! exists in several different states ; first, as a carbonate; second, fas the hydrate of lime; third as tho i of lim whicll j3 tnc .. game as the plaster of Paris; or gjpsum, and fourth as marl, wiiicn is nme - slone reduced to a powder and mix- d with earthy matter. The best .art!v materials for mixing with ; pic of California ii butiug aud hell imc. arc those which contain a ccr-1 ing only for gold,- woild then ac- " ' - 1 ' A u tarn proportion oi uecouipusinii vi' scounnsr Jf ditches, the sediments of pools, mud deposited by rivers' and tides, and similar substances. If quick lime were applied immediately to plants, it would be to them like poi son, it would burn them up; but when spread on the! earth, it rapidly attracts water and carbolic acid from the atmosphere, and it jis only wken thus modified that it promotes vegetation. j To obtain the greatest benefi t from lime, it must be kept as near the sur face as possible. The : reason is this ; its weight and minuteness give it a tendency to sink, and after a few years of cultivation a large por ; tion of it will be found to have gone beyond the depth of its most efficient action.! Hence it is advisable to I spread it on the ground after plough- i J thn Vian-nir it n,ill in. and al. i low it to remain in grassj as long as f good crops can be had. When the lime is settled down below the reach of a common plough, the subsoil plow will prolong its effect by enabling i the atmosphere and the roots of 'iplahts to penetrate the subsoil like - wise. tk quantity of lime applied , stl is various, and is dependent open the nature of soils, the climate and; other circumstances, la warm countries, a smaller quantity need used than in those which are. cold and humid. The stiff clays, for the mos t part, require a larger propor tion ot it than the lighter rcui, and in cisc ef tnch soils as crjutaiu. taurh Press- Free 1 f j peat, a quantity should be 17 jsuflicient to decompose eTect. the inert matter. On common soils, tbj first C ing is ordinarily in the neighbor of an hundred bushels per ace, then in four or five years, tir.1 1 :i :ys I much more. On some herri abounding in TegetiblettOttldiU have been applied six hundred , els to the acre, with decided L .. ciaj results to the land ; yet it i -t .t impossible nor improbable" that half that quantity would have answered as well. Lime, as other manures, must be repeated, and the reason' may be stated as follows ; first, be cause the crops eat up and carry!, off a portion of the lime ; aeeond, jbe cause of its sinking into the subsoil, and thirdly, because the rains !are always washing a portion of it lout of the land, and carrying it a war to brooks and rivers, where it becojnes Every plant that has bce analyzed, with one exception, contains a por tion of jime in some form or other, which it must have derived from the soil in which it grew. "Wcat in flour,1 when ripe, the straw, tc bran, all yield lime when analyzed ;so like wise do barley, oats, retches ind the leaves, the bark and timber of various trees. Indeed this substano. is so universally present in all portions of the vegetable structure, tlutit may fairly be assumed to bcan ntegral part of all, varying, however, accord ing to the quantity existing n the soil in which plants are cultivated. .: : l Uold for Cotton. . The New York Herald of Mandav. I in its financial article, says ; Now that the Southern Satta are about to- commence a net coxton year, they ought to transact 'i the whole of their cotton business on a ! gold baslsVjust Mlie foeign ban kers have always done wclru'cal- Incrs in bills of . exchange xa uiu T ..I j way the whole SontWrn " btates : might gradually plae tVfemsclvcs oa j a gold currency basis Tecisely the ciseiy tnc j ! same as practiced i CautM-nia, j- thus ignoring the Leil-Tendcr Act ; of Congress, just as tc loyal State ; 01 ainorniaaiwavsa uoiie, trout the beginning untiliow. J he fcou-; j thcrn States, by ftlowing the cxm-, A.i.v... In H 1 r . I oil rAP .trl'iiTtf!' r - . .. . . . . k i uuiuidw uum uu 7' vmwuvj, ! wnicn would Dnns aD it a practical c : - w j resumption of specie payments and protect them from Anger of lss from any fluctuatioi that may arise in the market raludof the greenback currency. Cotton commands gold in crery market, atLome and abroad, and it is a letter 1 isis for ;the prac tical immediate re: omptton of specie payments in the Southern States than the gold and ailwr mines of California. Erery Southerner is interested in tbe quesifn, and erery journal in the South bt . to exert its influence to bring suit without delay. out this re- t the South eell its products for d, and gold p their rar- only, and let them k plus in gold as the o currency to use, just as Califo alwars has done. This will be i me progress on the road to specie payments, . and it will tend to keep gold in thw coun-tr7- ... . ' now to Xep Worms from Cotton The New Iberia Times says: Our attention ha recently been called by .Mr. Ulirere- Decmr to a very simple Jg.fegttard.gaiMt cotton worms which he read somewhere, and if true, is a to J discovery that will save to the South ! nllions of dollars. The field should j be surrounded by rows of corn and J cow peas planted together, so that be ' the latter will cover the cornstalks ith its vine. A nlantcr who had tried the experiment saved b cotton, - . while all his neighbors had tUIrs d- ?trovet. AS it is so simpic vvcry j plaster th-.uld try it. ad Freed ooil Tor Wliesit. The best soil for wheat b one in which the prfedominating character wtics -are clay and loam, having neither too much of one nor too little of the other. The lighter loam soils and such alluvias as hare been brought from clayey ' localities, will often produce bountiful crops of. ex cellcnt wheat ; and sometimes . mucky soil will yield a fair crop of this kind of grain. But their fertility for wheat will soon be exhausted. Calcareous days, gravelly clays, aluminous clays, as well as nup toils that arc -a mixture of all these , just named, with good management cul tivating, manuring and draining will almost always yield fair crops of wheat. Am. Wheat Cultuntt. TV m. Fll vs. Wprlntr Plantlns-. A correspondent calls our atten tion to an address on strawberries, read, by Mr! Edwin Sattcrthwaite, ..-.. r. . . . . : strawberries is condemned, and in quiries made why wo so persistently advocate it. Without raising any questions as to the correctness of Mr. Sa views, which arc doubtless suitable to the latitude in which he resides, we con tent ourselves with giving the rea sons which render Fall planting pre ferable in Eastern Virginia and North Carolina. Our Autumns are late, our Winters short and mild, so that the foots of vines, planted in Octo ber and November, take hold of the ground and grow frequently during the greater part of the Winter.- Then again, we are subject to long droughts in Summer and these often occur so early in the season as to destroy vines planted in the Spring, Vcforc they get sufficiently well star tei to enable them to resist the dry ; weather. Experience is the safest m ja . i . i i vines, 'roots, &c, but more especially the SwaUXwiit80cceel much better when planted in the fan. Tve hare never lost five per cent, of Fall planting, while frequently fifty per ccnt 0f Spring planting has failed, tccauso of early droughts. We often'see August recommend ed in Northern journals as a goo time to plant stra berries, llns wiU not do her. Our Septembers are too hot and ilrv. sj that November ana liccctnucr arc oy lar me dcsi mouths for transplanting all kinds of nursery stock. Wc even plant our seeding stocks for budding in these months. In this connection another cor respondent says : I an advised to plant all kinds of fruit trees, except peach, in the Fall. The last, I am told, succeed best when planted in the Spring. Is .this true ?" ,Our ex perience docs not sustain it, and we can see no reason why it should be so. On the contrary, peaches do as well, if not better, than other trees, when planted in November. South ern. Flantcr and Farmer. A San Francisco paper remarks that tbe wheat crop U exhausting the soil of California, and. the yield per acre yearly diminishes. The yield of the grain growing districts of Illi nois, Iowa, Missouri and Minnesota, is also perceptibly less than it was a few years sgo. Rotation of crops, and the utilisation of present vegeta ble wastes, will ere long, come to be an absolute necessity. r x I 7 c v , Do not be afraid of good hard Work, Jtoys. .r-rl Yfttir m.tkI wr-r not an mu ningly contrived to be nursed with cologne and Alexandre kid gloves. Vour muscles were not made for base ' ball alone. American boys it is sad do not learn trades ; they expect to j get their liring by their wits ; poor stoci: in trarve. ji an nooeat caa . . mm - the noblest work of God, he is ing man, witn strong muicles Well developed fr aLriak froia wwfc. om Tor "White 3.1en. NuiiuEn 31. Oppressive Tais ' The whole trouble lies in the nn paralleled taxes we are compelled to We propose to show by a compar ison of the actual figures, that oar people ere taxed higher than . tbe worst taxed people elsewhere on the face of the earth.' We have no means of knowing the exact amount that our people will be taxed the present year, because we hare no certain data but the e$timaU of Federal officers to be guided by, and thceTme"1icretofore proved ex tremely fallacious. The best estimate perhaps is the daily report of the taxes actually paid into the Treasury ; and we find it a matter of boast of all tho loyal financial officers that the aggregate amount paid . into the Treasury is as large now, if not larger, than ever before. Something like a million a ! w I nuum. 00 mat wnen all is conrerteU into the currency of the country the whole income to the Federal Treasury for the entire year cannot bo leu than from $100,000,000 to &150,. 000,000. And this, or zaore, has been the rate raised for the use of the Federal Government alone, ever sinee tho conclusion of the war. In 1B67 tbe cost of running the Federal Government was $100000, 000. In 18G3 it was about the same all in the time of peace. The CrltU. The Olilo Dntory Xrro rXrsMls ' nt The leading Democratic journal of Ohio, the Cincinnati Commercial, has pronounced decidedly for Free Trade. Without doubt, the putting forward prominently, at this . time, of this ancient and important article of faith- in the Democratic creedt which has been obscured by later is sues, is significant. Doubtless this scticn-fif the .Commercial indicates t the. design of the" Ohio Democra cy to press the doctrine as a leading issue. The Commercial says : ' "There has been a great change , un the subject in a few years; and i we have reason to I beliere that it will day. more than half of whiehiavnliLlwse rtr,V VUX, . r.. .v. 1 1-! not be long before the death-knell ofl d ! the inicjuitous restrictive trade tariff, that now amicts us, will be sounueu, i j and the so-called protection (ewin- t dle'i becomes one of the political in- fannes o. the pa!u "The Dcnocratic State Conrcn tion in Ohio declared for a tariff for rereuue utsed upon the closest poa- siblc ar.rcuuation to absolute Tree ! , 1 '., .... , ! tra-i:. Ins doctrine is not only err. doraed Lv all the Democracy of the I - w West, but it has the support of a large body of the Western ltepubli cans, although from prtj fealty it does not find that open and bold ex pression from them that it doca in the Democratic ranks. Too ' many of their papers and politicians are muxtled, or are held in check by the old New England high tariff adher ents, whose doctrines are so.riolewtly opposed to the interests of the peo ple of this reetion. We are pleased to learn of the progress which is be- ing made on this East." question at the Hon. Judah I'. Benjamin, late of me vrfjnieaeraw vtoianvm bww vj t7 111 a I r"""tTheli.ualiuletoo bald to taxi e at the bar, been made Qn . un-, bancombeem4avyi eel, an honor almost without prcee- j 9 dent in the promptitude of its be: n ' stowsl. Aside from making him se- Ohio roted down egretfrsxt nior counsel in whaterer cases he to years ego by fifty thssaad sua- may be employed, the pronation SriU - . " . Being on the Liverpool and Vlan chester circuit, he will be retained in commercial litigations of import anee. " A dispatch from Menrpbis rays that the cotton urosnects are ks t r V.t. T . t - calcadatil that ia this neiiuij will anar.'1 - 3 not Indian raids, tm orders, boras- teal are rr ported in Texas. SMMa, Um To- Tea Haw, iw t pr, mm, esMMMUsie . ... , air. IrsJULMt&t slTrrtinni Ti mmU. 4mac. Crwrl sJr.ruMs us ' anty lc rdac. Tttssw tartat mm We 6eTh ltiths. Two hundred years sgo.ortaore, t party tff heaters fro a Jatsestowv. crn camped tatoi the bttshrs, sixfex lx miles from the piesent site of Ilichiaciid,-and daring the tkey were in ited to a cora-iIaitcf where their Indian neighbors ctlebn tcJ the return of the . Jarr est. la order to guard against losing ' Iheif way while returning withou their duaky guide, they searched to land aarka. And, among otbrr tUagi, tbey selected men pines wE!ca grtw from the same "tump, and chippie 5 these trees with their hxicixts. tier concluded they could safely retrace t&eir by way of the "serea pinea. The spot became afterward a camping ground for white kuatmi and as they separated in tbe xaora ing, whererer they might be, they usually arranged to meet at nooa un der the 4 Seven 4 tine.' Tkaa k Jiatucneld of N:rra I'inea. The Charleston Courier says : The arrival of the new crop of cotton are growing larger, and some seren bales came to our factories on Toeaday. Tbe Sumter Watchman ssys that the cotton crop of that section Las now advanced sufficiently to preacttl decided indications ia regard to the yield. From these it is already sj parent that the crop tmat fall very lar snon CI IU9 products promurvi by the propevt one month ago. ' I VIA nllttl . . m..mmW . k mm.mm pert a, and In many places eepetiaflr frrm the nuLM Where this "pre " rails, we are told it will be cut short " one-half. , "fc twill i J .' BU OCTB CT- iously dj.:2g?d, :A we do not be lieve tie :.-: ,itld will be taore . 1 . ' lr - I t was tir.tclt. ' It i! rt'-cric! that Jntiee 1L C rrt. r t . I niliwl Sff t.. m. Court, will resign early this falL lie is 75 years of axe, snd Lis - ia. come physically enfeebled The X. Y.. Nation says the Ko rmVliean nartr is nlittinir oa ihm queliori of lllC ClnPM vf f.hhrol rt fo iffllorUllt j,ab!;c cCeru" Letters ') from L'ub report a "cbUm" among the lloracmo and that the row is progressing. So far Jlrighsm Young has been able to bold his own, in spite of all "acLis- , inatics" and all rows." Corn and cotton in Trnnrveee are , . . . , Vi t-adly dataszed by the onfavorabU . It onlr cost nine tern thcuaaad four hundred And seventy-one dollars, per bills rendered, to fit the Talla poosa out for tbe little I'reaiJrutiaJ I pleasaretris to Long Branca j l wer ncw T" lwr j rooms, new diihes,' nrw mirrora, wtae, provisions, aerrauts, and their linns repairs, coal, aaa ovavr iociocbw with the ccs: of rasing. Tbe Radical papers continue to assert that the national dtbt is be ing paid off at the rate of hxadred millions per annua.. This is lie. sheerest falsehood. The debt wis, one hundred and ifieca millions lar .".V- 1 f 1..t L' it. - f v . was on the lit of otmbcr. Jonty. hi. a. ni-ifw. TrTthl"a 11ATM a&a tisootut cn the lUpaUicxa ticket are now endeavorta? to force it upow the Bute by -aasxhcT eccsti tutlTnal sry.u Incut to W adejtrd without r7r-!:ng the pepli. Ovr: c-t-if ol ttetefci!l dclhrs -cfviry tr .iiasrrw tbe IcattaLi UTtrpaU WasUrtiub atrUd i ITrxanJ. TL re f prtmt efrylsrie and fi ra n. sa rldA. be -