Flake's Daily Bulletin. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 21, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1865 Page: 1 of 2
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Notice.
■ •i? Arm o! Kaufman ti Kl*n«r bas bren dissolved
at, ) the liminea*, ^ith all activa ano |t saiva, atieut*i««i
U* J. KAUFFMAN,
who will eoiitiuue the «ame henceforth for bis ovo ae-
C°Hr V UerHcnici- will sign by pr ora ration.
(luTeKton. l«n« 23.18flS.-tf . X A UFFM AN.
j^. llcicliHiiin & Co.,
A uütiQWJb ,ind Commission Á:<vchar.fn.
im*um'ON, tkxar,
Will «hortly op< u U 1I:jUm«í in («AÍA'KSTON. \¡<>o<N
/•a ¡ u* v iiaign'm | l*co. i>jiiicstir product
•' vnvs on hand for ¿alo or to oxchuiigc for : u r «Han-
' A'.',, , v [je2U-Cni
ft on 1«1* Uak«r & Co.,
COTTON AND WOOL FACTORS
AND
CUkiUtiiSSioU MiCl sh'tHlK.
> otile : rttraul, Galveston, tf
dahvktv King. aakon kinc.
§!. Jk A. King,
j'-
| Conciliation lu Maryland.
I The Baltimore American uses t ie fllow-
ing language in ii'gird to conciliation :
There h at t' e present moment—from
that portio; of the press which ha* durng
tho wm* constantly favored thj r-be lion,
concealed from public view its crimes and
ln artles* villaiii'es, or apologized for tb >se
o ' whic'i U liad be n publicly convicted—
!n arvoat outcry for • co ci iation and forbear-
U¿ cii," an J an appe.il t • 4 forget bygone « as
Komi as p sille." When ihes< journal!
will come out manfully and acknowledge
tli ir criminality i-ii ihe past, and ask for-
giveness far their traitor->us conduct in
♦ iiri' g the Southern h":irt" uf a p ir.ion of
the people of a loyal State, and thus aiding
out ouraging and abetting a 1 twl< ss mol to
murder government tr- ops passing though
ruir s'ree<s to the defe ice i f the National
O pi til, we will acknowledge their right to
j initio suiili appeals. A portion of tho-o
M rylanders whose '♦beai ts wore thus fired"
v.- finished the education they received
IV. HÁtUtoiie,
NO T ^ H Y l'UBLIC,
riticc : LidstOiifl's Auction More, Market Street,
Jiecvmber 10th ,1804. Oaiviitfu, T**m$
Doctor Oreeuvllle Oowell,
burgeon and physician,
Office : Masonic lluila'uig, Post Office street, Galvestou.
; r|vrttu patienU tak«*n. Bod and board furnished If
way? K ' necessary.
«i. L. (JiTord,
auctioneer and commission merchant
AMD DKAI.KR IN
general merchandize,
Old Maud, Tretiuml Street, Galveston, Texas.
April 15, 1863.
N. Lidotoue,
aUCHOSEER AND O -NEltAL COMMISSION
MERCHANT,
Xtwt Building, Market Stmt,
Galveston.
♦ Sign, Onametdal and Steamboat Fainter*.. „
Í*Wr K(U>pcrs..Ctl(uifort, dte. dfce.,
i nriri'f r mumed Wniiéáa sit tlioir oV «t«rw1. or, MarV¿íí?r Vr i i v. , • , . " , . .
4Tiifj3vTto.i uesi'lWt.. ll. Itofuiici.*'* ^.r-.íTi-pn Maryland r«'be5 journals by murdering
juice i «"pared to «ftwnd to all work in tteir line. ¡ i're -ideut Lincoln and attempting to mur-
1 ,a1(ay. f d «t i^or blft • *•.««. • '«'o#° Secretary Seward. Tiie " civil imbro-
<5¡ vastott, June /U, ii o- t-w.ltn * , J • ,•
ülit , as they now delight to term the m'a-
mous rebel 1 on which tboy helped to ina ign
rate, having been crushed by an unparal-
leled Hacritice of blood and treasure, we are
appealed it "calm public feeling/'ani.to
allow tlw> traitrouá accomplices of MaiHlial
Kane, and the scions of aiistocracy—who
have been for four years amusmg thems lve <
by b iiulitti excuivions into their iiat ve
Stats couimitting murdpr, robbery and ar-
son—to return to their former hom s, to. lie
feted and caressed by those who enconr. ged
them in t e commission of these criines
ugainst God and their country, and even to
restore them to all their civil rights.
The loyal men of Maryland have no de-
sire to punish these m- n, or to ontrac'se the
"home i rait^whoaidf.'d and abetted them.
But they do most earnestly protest uga:nst
receiving any bdviceon the subject from
UALVK8T0N. tho-e who have "blood on their garments"
iurantes wednvedar s* nraay. ^|jat alifetime will not efface. The appeals
they are making, instead of calming the
minds of the people, are having the very
opposite effect.
Gilbert & Co..
general agents .
AMD
commission merchants,
strand street,
jj3'.Uui Galveston, Texan.
BALL, HUTCHINGS <fc C0V
Cotton Factors
and
commission merchants,
jylw&dly Galveston, Texas,
T1I0MAS M. CONVERSE, ARTHUR POlfcCY,
forincrlj formerly
converse & CO. kerr k POINCY.
Converse & Poincy,
dealers in flour,
AKO
Commission Merchants,
jNo. 31 Tchoupitoniaa Street, . .No. 31
NEW ORLEANS.
Orders for «yery iescription ofmerohaudlz - prompt-
ly atieuded to. Couüignuientü of cotton, hid^it aud
jiroduce solicited. .
W« respectfully offer our services to tb# friends of
tlio iii'tns we formerly represented.
Converse «fe Poincy.
jySJAwIm
JM. S. Kenton,
tfftoker, receiving, forwarding
AND
COMMISSION* MERCHANT,
Galveston, Texas,
ct-gs ieave to inform bis frienis throughout tbe coun-
try tbat be has opened a general
Forwarding & Receiving Commission Business,
«t the corner of Center street and tbe Strano, Galves-
ton, i'e xa a.
He will attend strictly to all cotton forwarded to Mm
for shipment or sale. He will also purchase Planter's
ti'ipplies. Refers to the busiuess men oí Texas and the
planters generally.
GaWeaton. June 18th. 1865. b-tf
I. Berlocber,
general comnission merchant,
Strand. Galveston.
Storage In brickbuildings.
anil Pftrwnr.-Jnrr at lowest rates.
wwi i
Heceivini
.Tuna 1
IfiAft
Vi-if
OB. P. H. SMITH. DH. D. A. JAMKSON. A. H. JONM.
SMITH, JAMESON k JONES,
Navaiota, Grimes County, Texas,
Receiving, Forwarding and Commission
MERCHANTS.
Away from the dangers of fire and on the R. R. track.
Goods on commission will be sold at the highest nar
ket prices and invariably governed by instructions.
The endeavors they are also making to
create an impression at the South that the
feeling here against the return of Maryland
rebels applies to all the citizens of the South-
ern States who took p.irt in the rebellion, is
equally imralting to the loyal people ©f
Maryland. No such feeling exists in Balti-
more or nny portion of the State. Citizens
uf Virginia and other Southern States,
many of wh< m have been in the army, are
daily arris inur and departing from our city,
aud have received nottiing but kindness from
o ir citizens. Th y have taken the oath of
allegiance to the government, and so long as
they keep it in good faith, will be regu ded
and treatecl by all as erring and repentant
b.ethren. The loyal'merchants of Balti-
more are daily renewing their s cial and
business relations with their old Southern
correspondí nts, and fum shing them with
goods and even with pecuniary aid to enable
them to revive their fallen fortunes In this
Respect they have found more practical sym-
pathy from loyal men than from rebel sym-
pathisers. In short, there is no obstruí tlin
to "freo intercourse" with Baltimore, and
no des're that there should be any. There
is, however, an undoubted avers on to allow-
ing those Marylanders who have expatriated
themselves by treason against their own
Stale, to return to their former homes and
to the enj «yrnent of the civil rights they
have forfeited. Wo would suppose that they
would be ashamed to show themselves
among a people whom they have so wrong-
ed and outraged. But we do nut conceive
that they can be legally excluded under the
terms of Gen. Lee'a surrender to Gen. Grant.
ThoseM them, however, who have indict-
ments pending against tbem for participa-
tion in the 19th of April massacre will be
still liable to trial and punishment fo r that
offense, committed as it was before they be-
came rebel soldiers. They, of c urse, will
not come; but as to the other, misguided
creatures we would appeal to our citizens
for forbearance and commiseration. If they
return with the swagger and bravado wiih
which they departed untamed, they will find
Maryland no dedirable*home for them.
(Amendment ft.)
Article XIV.~Arlicle HI, section 3, first
paragraph of the constitution, shall be
amended so that it shall rend as follows :
Treason against the United States shall
consist only in levying war «gainst them, or
in adhering to their enemies, giving them
aid and comfort, or in assisting them in for-
cible attempts to separate from the United
State any State, . territories or unorganiied
districts, or any parts theroof; or in apply,
ing to foreign governments, or people, for
aid or support, whether such separation, or
resistance to the United Statos for the pur-
pose of separation, be intended or is already
carried out for the time being.
No person shall be convicted of treason,
unless on the testimony wf two witnesses to
the same overt act, or to the same positive
act, (where the treason consists in applying
to foreign states or ¡ copie,) or on ccnlossion
in open court.
(Amendment C.)
Artiele XV.-—It shall be a high crime di-
rectly to incite to armed resistance to the au-
thority of the United States, or to establish
or join sooieties or combinations, secret, or
public, the object of which is to offer armed
resistance to the authority of the United
States, or to prepare for the samo by collect-
ing arms, organizing men, or otherwise. No
person shall be convicted of this crime un-
less oh the testimony of two witnesses to the
same act, or on confession in openccurt, and
Congress shall declare the punishment of
this crime.
( mendment D )
Art'cle XVI.—Trials for treason shall
take place in the State or district in which
the ciime shall have been committed, unle.-e
the ndminlstiaiion of justice fhill be inter-
rupted or impeded at the time by rebellion
or war. Congress shall provide by law that
tr ala for treason shall be held in placee
where justice may be administered without
hindrance. .
(Amendment E.)
Article XVII —Slavery shall be forever
abolished, after the—- day of the year —
in this country, the States, Territories, tin
organized districts, or any parts or placa
thereof—and shall never b<: re-established
under whatever form or by whatever autbori
ty; and all persons who are now or shall
hereafter come and be within the limits and
irotection of the United States shall be
t?%fl1ied free, all claims of fore'gn persons or
powers, whether at war or in amity with the
United States, to the contrary not withstand
ing P(
Representatives shall be apportioned
among the several States which may be in
eluded within this, according to the respec
tive number of male citizens of age having
the qualitications-requis to lor electing mem-
bers of the mi st numerous branch of the
respective State LegMatures. The enuni
eration of said citiz ns shall be tuade by
each census of the Unit J 8t tes.
Not a day passes that half a doaen or ir
now stores are not opened to tbe public.
months ago. a pursou in (search of a \
building suitable for business purposes
easily find one; now a mau considers himself
fortunate if, after walking over the city three or
four days, ho meets with an unoccupied store of
any kind in the vicinity of the active portion of
the place. King street having been occupied by
merchants and tiaders, more attention is now
given to the bailding up of Meet ng, lltyne,
«road and-other streets. TlraÜ were formerly
tho streets on wh eh the heavy wholesale trad*
was located., and the disposition of our me:
chants is to place again the i® streets in tb*i •
proper order in business importance.
"Tlieflrst District must and will be rebuilt.
It will bo hnpossible for ns to do a heavy trade
without buildings in which to store the mer-
chandise. Thtfopening up of railroads will give
us an immense cotton btrittaes , and that of
course, will make affairs lively and on the piers
and in the vicinity of them. Next mouth we
will have arrivals lrom foreign ports. Wnen the
seasou comes for doing business, we will find
both men and means to engage in all kinds of
enterprises. In tho Tall we will see daily and
weekly steamers plying to and from tloi «trt|t!
pot ts, a railroad communication open to all parts
ol the country, stage routes established, the re-
gular arrival and departures of the mail, th*
city crowded with a returned population, and
every one doing well in business. Thatiath :
near ftiture of the city of Charleston.
(Amendment F.)
Article XVlII.—Knowingly taking port
in any sLve tiacle, directly or indirectly
Khali Le punisha
, and
A. Allen Ac Co.
have resnmed business in the MARBLVTARD, Centre
street. Monuments, Toombs and Headstones prepared
to order on short notice.
Galveston. .Inna 90. 1RAA. "
shall remain piracy
ble accordingly
Holding a peison asa slave or in involun
tary servitude, (except by authority for
primes duly proved,) selling or buying a hu-
man bcíiíg, abduct ng a human beieg for the
cake of s'-llii g him or holding him s a
slave, and aid.ng in taking human beings
from one place to another, whether wi'hn
this country or bey..nd its limits, for the
purpose of selling them, shall be high crimes
ánd pun sliable with d< ath or otherwise, as
may directed by acts of Congress.
Amendment O. C hr •
The free inhabitants of each of the States,
Territories, Districts or pluces within the
limits of the United States, either born
free within the same or born in slavery with-
in the same and since made or declared free,
and all other inhabitants who are duly nat-
uralized according to the laws of the United
States, and without any exception of color,
race or origin, shall be entitled to the privi-
leges of citizens, as well in courts of juris
diction as elsewhere.
The Future of Charleston.—The following
very hopeful expressions regarding tho future o'l
Charleston, S. 0., are from the Courier ot that
city: , •
"Let no one indulge the belief that the citi-
-nens of Charleston hato not tne energy or en-
terprise to pueh forward and restore the city to
its former high station, both eociaal and busi-
and enterprise
Jiro good
my building on
manent tenants.
Galveston. Jane 13.18«5.
ftiHri fnt* Rani.
pltlwiu, vuium in us nqeuna twr
the Rt.ra.n<l will ho runt* A l«> <n
Twn mnnA «nil nlessant offices in the second story of
< rentf.4 low to per-
X I .HPBT U AT r
proposed Amendment* to !:.« Con-
stitution.
The "unco gude" who have established a
"Loyal Publication Society" in New York,
desire a fundamental change in the Constitu-.
' tion of the United States. They propose to ^ a^...r.. .. —- - y-t —T.
engraft the fo..owi„K provieio/e ^
for the past month and observed the rapid mam*
Fobt Smith, Ark., June 2Í.—Ex-Gov-
ernor Wade, of the Choctaw Nation, has
just arrived hero from Danville, to confetr
with B^'gadier General Bussey, command
ing the Distiict of the Frontier, which in-
ludes the Indian Territory, for the return
to their homes, and the protection of all the
Choctaw Indiana win háve been engaged
in the Confederate army. A temporary
treaty oí peace was effected with the Choc-
taws at Doaksville, on the 18th instjby
Lieut, fclol. Mutliew, of the 89th Illinoi-*
Infantry, who was sent as a commissioner
on the part of the United States.
The Indians agree at once to cease all"
hostilities against the United States, and to
return to their homes and resume their, ft>r-¿*
mer occupations.
Gov. Wade also brings the resolutions
adopted by a giand council of twenty-two
tribes, who met at Armstrong's Academy,
on the 16thof June, which declare that they
will immediately cease all acts of hostility
lo the United State*, and that tbey irfirl
send a delegation of five from each tribe to
Washington, to negotiate for a permanent
peace.
The Indians appear very friendly to the
United States, and hostile to tho Ooofodeara^
cy, and anxious to resume fiiendly relations
with the United States.
A Grand Council is to meet again Sep-
tember 1st.
Gcn Bubs y has issued orders inviting
the Indians to return to their homes, and
has assured them that they would not be
molested by the United States authorities
so long as they faithfully keep the tempo-
rary treaty entered into. He has also pro-
vided for the payment in cash, for all thy
beef cattle procured fiotn the Indian Na-
tion for the United States troops, and has
adopted measures for the protection of their
property.
Gov. Wade expresses himself much
pleased with the arrangement, and gives as-
surance that no further trouble will bo o<--
casioned by the Ohoctaws.
Punishment or Guerrillas t~We under-
stand that the following order now applies
the Statos lately in rebellion west of' the
sissippi river :
WAR DEPARTMENT, AD'J GENL'SOFFICE, )
WASHINGTON, MAY 11, 1865. (
General Orders, No. ÍKK
All the forces of the enemy east of the Mis-
sissippi river having been duly, surrendered by
their propercommsnding officers to the armies
of the United States, under agreement of pa-
role and disbandmeut, and there being now no
authorized troops of the enemy east of the
Mississippi river, it is
Ordered, That from and after the 1st day of
June, 1865, any and all persons found in arms
against the United States, or who may com wit
acts of hostility azainst it, east of the Missis
sippi river, wfll be regarded as guerrillas, and
punished with death.
The strict enforcement and execution of this
order is especially enjoined upon the command-
ing offioers of all United States force within
the territorial limits to which it applies
By command of -
Lieutenant General GRA NTT.
v. n Townsend, Assistant Adfetant
—• 4gL
naaa They rln hftVA ¿lift ahai
till
to accomníish that work, and! whaf 'Ta more.
For Rent.
The store on the Strand formerly occnpi<*a o'
undersigned as a Clothing store. Tho store is we
"TL1®" in complete order for immediate occop;
* 108 0Í Ó°od« ((¡(Ó*. TW Mr,
Galveston. Jnns 12.
, wo., fit-
occupation
ms enquire
BALL.
im.f
- — — ———.. j.. v. .w.vuH w|fvu the
Instrument, the author of which ia said to
be Professor Lieber:
(Amendment A.)
Article XIII.—Every native of this coun-
try, except the sons of aliens whom the law
may exempt, and Indians not taxed, and
every naturalized citizen, owes plenary al-
legiance to the Government of the United
States, and is entitled to and shall receive iis
protection at home aud abroad.
of improvement made within that time will
honestly as?ert that the placo is dead and there
is no use of attempting its rosusftation. The
place is neither dead nor dyioir. We are all
alive to the fact that the worfi o? restoring the
city to its former prosperous condition must b°
achieved by those who intend to make Char-
leston their future home. The people in out
midst have already arrived at that cnnHuainn
and are actinir unon it.
1 1 ■
Panama advices state the steamer Co't
rado, nevt-nty-two days from Yew York, a,
riVed from Panama on the 12th, and sai If-¡
nn the 16th of J upe, for San Fraiinianr
B —P'Ogress
Jhili is tbr« atenpd
«nt cniT « tn tfirms
From A
do h 1
to I
Late
news of the ,
revolutionary
Major Ge-
an the ! Gtli
still continues T
r Spain if she does
the Shena
lnhi, probably
America bftiag
Darriun
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Flake's Daily Bulletin. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 21, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1865, newspaper, July 10, 1865; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth178513/m1/1/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.