The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873, June 17, 1871, Image 1

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J VOL- II. ATLANTA^OTOWJL*. SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1871. NO. :«7. ilroftMional Curbs. A. C. G ARLING T ON, Lttomey At X^A'W', SHUTTLS COR. WHITEHALL AMD ALABAMA STB.. ATLANTA. OA. J. KNOTT* M. D. PojroUrr /anile Snsing JHatl|ine» THE WTUBOM SEWING MACHINES, Sauannah.Slipping Ciiua. JHRKilI"S LINE—NEW 1 'IRK Sr SAVANNAH. EVERY TUESDAY toom HAJH n T >R . 1 ff Si *“■ •“’.J? 0, , " 0 ’ * 1 ® 1 ' 1 IN8UUANCIBY KTEAMKHBOr THU LIME. OBIX A $110, etc. Lot out ou $10 month I v utyiueut* . HALF l*JUt CJtMT. nr nn. R»lf fft ps>r nn, l .lb. ’ »** UARTM PASSAGE FOB S1MPUCITT. DURABILITY AMD BKaUTY DECK, w(Ui fiuUuUuo* . n«jr Stand Unrivalled I ovar JOHN KKKLY, comer Wbitahsl 1 Htister -treete. DkNUE. Oollino Street, b*twe*n Coin sud , MARSHALL. DKNT1NT ft and Peftf htree 8U., 1 & THOMSON, rtORNEYS AT LAW, .Jt A IS, H. L Kimball JUmo, ^ Ofloe. fronting on th* O-wrgiA, ompt attention to any felted to thorn, (loo. N Lootor Lotto, otid till Attend 1 gnuersll) bo st the QMU-7-Sa r & Howell, INF.YS AT LAW. ATLANTAj_OKOROIA. undersigned have formed a part norshlp for the practise of law In thin city,and I promptly attend to all bnalnoaa outruatod to Mr nraagata—l in tha Atlanta Clrcmt. the 8u » and Poderal Courta of tho Mtato, and aucb plaooa, bp apodal oontnwt, aa their aerriooa * C. Paeplea will, for the present. _ _ t the Flint Circuit He will be Uuiea, la tha aeeond atorp of Keltey’i tha Dallp 8c* “ “ Tha flrat olaaa attemahlpi LEO DEARBORN. Oommsadar VIRUO, UULKLKY. OateteMbdar. Oompoav thla line, and one of theae ataamahipa leave a each port EVERY TUEHDAY. Through bltla of lading given by theae ataamahipa by all railroad oonnertious. and also through bAli la,in " .'iveii in Bavaunah on Cotton dwUMd far LJrerpool and Hamburg by Oral else* atoamahtpa.— For freight or paaaage. sppljr to HUNTER A 0 A MM ELL, M Bay atrwt PHILADELPHIA AND SAVANNAH MAIL 8TBAM SHIP COMPANY. rtiU^UBKLPiiija wf.ro I \UYJTAH. MW VO RJBMIT MURKY. Wn win ba raapooMBUfor tha aafe arrival of all teOD* «at WtUy lUgt^erM LaMar, by Expre*., or bp Draft. tmt not otharwtae. If money sent in an must be the loaa of the JHACKIE, Fainter and Itrco- ator, \mcisa».w. O. JkV. Wblt«hxU .tret, FA irnathauka to hla old i>atr,«na for former and hopes by attention to bunineas to merit a tanoe of the aaina. ap'ifl ly Harass Southern Enterprise B. HOBSON — Broom Factory. — l Parker e RmUliug. Broad |L Atlanta, G*. I AM GLAD HE HAS COME. ' CAN now cane your chairs, and make them look new for the tame you will pay for a bottom. No irge for varnishing chairs when 1 cum them, and C>AeJeter fog-* Rnmit, loan ft It' t ItfMlriari dr., iva astiafsction. Furniture oovaracut, made and warranted. Hair and apring mattreaaee made to AU kinds of houaeliold furniture and up- y dona at the shortest notice. I have re- to DeGive’a Opera House, under Maysun’a i Wareroom, < i Marietta street. C. T. BROWN, Lata of Richmond. Vs. .nil CONTRACTOR and BUILDER General Hupcrlnlcndcnt of Bulldlngn, and all Manner of Carpenter*' Work. 1HE undersigned would respectfully aunonuce to the publi< that he baa lora- limaalf on the corner oi Grubb and Spring streets, near Bice A Mitchell's Lumber Yard, e-hen* ha proposes to receive Coutrscti for BuiIdlB: and general Carpenters’ Work, which he propose* to carry out to tha satisfaction of all conreruftd : ami at aa low iguraa a* any one. He makca a aixviallty of Stair Build tug. a T tad 1 and propose* to give n •faction. BANKSTON. Whitehall street, between Mitchell and Peter* B. X. DUTTON, practical STENCIL CUTTER, l)ESIHJiER AND ENURAVKR! MaK tTTA<TVB** O* |RAS8 ALPHABETS, DRY AND FLUID STENCIL INKh, Stencil Dies, Steel Stamping Dias, Railroad and Hotel Cheoka, Marking BraudsTec., No. 61 Whitehall St. a few doors below ■mnter atreat 4V* X. B.—Particular attention paid to Brand* and Bteucils tor MerchanU. MlUera. Tobacconiate and Dlatillera; also, to Name Plates, for marking clothes, which will be sent to any addreaa for seventy flv oants. including Ink. Ac. aeplAly B 1 ttcfrcol)tncnte. CITY BREWERY. (enter Colllnamud Harris Street*; Fechter & Mercer, Proprietors. Oflea In Old Post Office Building, next Gate City Bar, O-oorgiR. y«S T. F. GltADYH R. R. ALE HOUSE* 2 « Alah.nm Stroot Atlanta. Oa. IU8T nuM.»line lot ot Olutmpoifii, ftf Jtmj ClJ.r Fwiilll,. rii|ipll*l At •*>*. hOMM. A floe Meortmatit of the h-M LM)DOIIH WINKM. tofl ^(U. linn on laud Uotth-1 Ale. a, 1 Porter A qaelAllr. Ale.. Doer «ud ebaupafn. JorAer Cuter on draft Call on Uradv and away pleased. dadtf Uncle Jack Coughlin, ihI of hill interest in i," on the corner of liroatl has locat**d himself under tho as, ooraer same atreeta. in the MMB-mtrK AJ6W.V, H aving dispo»«« tha old “76 Saloon. READY for B wt hla old friends, and a- many • aa may think proper to gtv» him " the datb-utloo u» the ln*.or man, both DRINKS *JtTD COLD L CATCHES. LE bon ton, . Arm. 14'Feachtree Street, near Ike jratlonal Hotel. LTltoa fl OLD 8TAMD. no* LDHCH »*oa 1» * V0 l ». M. EVERY DAT. *aoana 4 MsocKB't aaoMaaftaniT. ■DHMU DHIHKfl TEtHUM BAKU, mu PDKOHfla OF ALL HIHDP. Damn ATOP IXUCK DlilNO. "All U»- Ocalfrs in Cumber. LUBBER! LUMBER! IJ1CI k HITCHALL HAVE OH HAND A LABUP quantity of Dry Oak Lumber, suitable for bulldlu, ragons; also aD kind ot Framing and Finish! NITHK POP. OEATH TO RATS, ROACHES, BEDBUGS, EVERY HATURDAY from UfBtnUUfOX (*N COTTON BY HlEAMEBB ON THIS USE ONE HALF PER CENT. CABIN PASSAGE DECK, with aubftiatenue This line is composed of the first class ataamahipa W%<>*!»*<■ a TEAL, ( TON A WAN DA BARRETT, SATURDAY. Through bills lading theae Htt aiuahipa by all railroad oonnaottiusa. For freight or paaaage, apply WaAaU mate Tn fv* Hwaly. fteah and Inter- sating—oonttenlng aB tha latest news. Wa abaU fill it with fftefi raedteg matter, and ahaU have In tame m mnoh rijUing matter aa any paper iu Oa, and we atefl soon enlarge and otherwise lmpawve it. m m to gtte It a handsome appearance a«id make it O^Uy rte| and deatrabla to have In the Wa tefi—r fitends f aae a little effort to make up •a club for ua at every foal «Ooe. See our club rates. A very little gffiprt la aft that la needed to make up a Urge list 54 Bay street. P’or Boston. •is- THE BOSTON AND SAVANNAH STEAMSHIP LINK The steamships Or Ir>• taxi, Capt F. M. Swam. Vlrkaburg Capt. 8. H. Minim CABIN FAKE ,. $50 00 DECK 10 00 1 hrough*t»ill" of lading given by railroad agents to Boston, aud iu Roeton by Steamship agents to pn«- olpalpoints in (ii rgia, Alaaiuaand Florida. •%. Tlirough biils of lading given to Provldenoe, Fall River. Portland. Lowell. Inwrente, Ac. Dassagc tick i ts sold at railroad depot, and state rooms secured in atlvance by writing agents la 0s vauuah. RICHARDSON A BARNARD, F. MIOOKHSO* k 00.. no»»-tf Afl»nt». Bo4qq. For New York. SrC., never failing, bozas double the else as other*. Her- . tactically seated and always Irish. Fur sale at wtmleaala at Paaibertoa, Taylor and Co.’s, and all other druggist*. feb28-ly i Macon & Augusta R.R. dat rasanona Taai* u U.T, auMDATs expected. I-ear* Auguata at 12 00 M. LeaveMafl-onat It 00 A. M. Arrive at Macon at 7 40 F M Arrive at Augusta at 1 46 P. M. THE GREAT SOUTHERN STEAMSHIP COMPANY. KVKRY THURSDAY. Insurance by tliia Line can be effected under o«U open polio; at one-half per oent CABIN PASSAGE $30 00 The first class at Herman Living-Gone,... GGi. Baraei F. O. Mallory, Com. Will sail as follow*: H. LIVINGSTON June 1st, at 6, r. M. •« •• IA GEN. RARNE8..Juue 8tl Bills ol lading given hereon cotton and wheat thro, to Liverpool aud Hamburg via New York by f class steamers. Fur paaaage or freight, apply to WILDER A FULLAKTOW, nov 0-tf No. H Stoddard's Upper Rang SQUABBS. *•“ 1 ftqusr* 8 - 4 •• 6 •• 6 « 7 •• 8 • 9 - 10 •• 11 •• 12 •• W Oolmn 1 Oolmn ▼11 8 00 V 80 • 00 11 00 12 00 14 (10 18 S 20 00 « oo $8 00 27 00 40 00 «- The day paaeougn :40 P. M . and makes ' •mnecting roads a i arriving at Macoi Macon. Paaaengci Macon at fi k. M.. will make close coitmvl mak with up day passenger train for AtUnts. \tbei . ay jiaaaeng. rtn Washington and all p*flnti* on will connect at Atlnut* with traiii^o^l mar-JO H. K. JOHNSON. Sup Georgia road, and P’or Hull 111101*0. New Lumber Yard, JUNIJTION OF MARIETTA AND WALTON STS., ALL KINDS OF L D M B CL-, iTANTLY ON eclal Attenliou M. A. apl29-3m LANDSBERG’S LUMBEIt YARD, OPPOgm OBOllOlA RAILROAD DEPOT. ATLA NTA.GA. Sawod Shlncloa «ud Until., Wlllto Pino 8o.ll, Window. * Blind. JU Hindu ot Oretsed and Framing Lumber, frbll-lr A. LANDHHKHO A CO.. Proprl-.ir., ipCo’A Saragossa Thursday,February M America Thursday, Thuraday, America Thursday, radar. Ms JA8. B. WEST A CO., Bay street, foot of Whitaker. SAVE YOUR FRUIT! rHoe. a am pro*, a. d. ulmois, r. a. naauoua. Drake'* Creek Alllt*. F. A. BARBOUR <t CO., IJOALERfl IN FLOUR, MEAL, I SHIP STUFF, PBJjrkkur, iRvri/r«F. w HIOHEKT PRICE PAID FOB WHEAT. -»• ,11 protluc. dall.md ,1 lb. derot fh. of cliuv-. ■WM To Parties Desiring to Build (A- MHIv «*"* Hu.rklmf. — I A- rimUhtmr “•<»• «F Hr. Cltm On* IA or -MW ««•* I. joit.y c. jricHOLS, lirrifll IN AIR-LINE HOUflA. PRVOR STREET I SAFEST, CHEAFEST AND BEST FRUIT JAIIS In the market. McBILIDB tfc OO., M 1 AN UFACTUKERS* AGENTS FOB FRUIT JARS and JELLY TUMBLERS. Thomas «. Simms, W ITH 8BBY00K A ROWLAND. Wholesale Dealers in flwr Mi Jfaeerariarel TaWr#. PUB! BOURBON AND RKCTIHED WH18K1F>. CUKBHk. FISH. CKAOKLRH. CORN MEAL, Ho MI NY, HOaP. CANDI-ES. COAL OIL. AND FANCY ORO. ERIKS. , Also—Comm leal on lferehanto for tha sale of Pork Bacon sod Lard, and general plantation aupiiln*. irtu ODuanaeaetal ehraet, and M» aud tht Norti. T. LOUIS, MO. ASSIGNEE'S SALE. 'ATLANTA INTELLIGENCER" OFFICE. )Y VIRTUE OF AN ORDER FROM THK HON- He sold fri- ou THrithDAY June. IS' at el. 16th , ■jo tY lute hall Street. Atlanta, Oa., , the entire eetabHahiuffi^t Vl-ANTA INI ELI.IGKNCKB OFFICE, riating an follow*: NEWS ROOM: * Contain** a largo font of Brevier. Nonpareil, sever al route of Display T)|»ea. Caeca, stands, Racks. Oha- ■tea, liuiea, etc., all complete and In working ordav. JOB ROOMS : Contain" tout" of small Pica. Long Primer, Rra- vier. Nonpareil, together with 10 foute ot wood type fur |N Nter a ork. about 170 fonts of types of different aixea and deecriptiou. impoaiug ateoea, aud evary • thing cumplete fur a book aud Job office. Contains a folio p**st pi ena. with l*nda and stands tor motive small Gordon Press, tables, etc., *U In wiplcto order. BOOK BINDERY: Contain* one of Hikok'e Ruling Machine*, on* standing press, two i»i»r cutiee*. on* board etttter. a complete e«t of bfoiier*’ tool*, one cabinet wMfti typo, uue work U-m b—-all - omplote and In good working order. ALSO. The liuatneaa Office furniture, consisting of Oti* *r„t Mftfa. desks, tebl a. chairs oneo>pyi»g press, -ountcra, Ac. Sold aa the pr>-perrir of Jared l.sfclV aaer, iu bankruptcy. TERMS CASH. N.R.»w«f*?\4vipy I .^rtfl. WANTED I iBlOO.OiK), lil-ANKN.. L a \v v i. u s ' IIKW «<-n'*L HI Si:,KHK IIPIJJIOI u mu. lUlllfl IHk MIN uflHw, AU.,,M. u. 1 ■,.)]> » C,». » h>UU-U UUl IWW MfltS TB3® DAILY SUN. NflMw AWflW Of Sul l»fl Alabama lit'. PflkUafte* fcj the iUaaU Sub PabUflhlna -.I'**"’- jjUsaadM Jl. AteeluBs. AWlTCnAi £ Ctgkts, J. Henly ImltA, i a « nm*» J. HENLY NMITH MAitAxer. 9. K. W. HILL. J. W. HEARD, pntffortfcpfeja^ Hake up Clwbs. Terms of fifiut>«orlptloik > P4ZX.7| Per AMmm.r^7..TX I WEEKLY PER ANNUM : KSiSftS::;:::::::"”" kd, I:::::::::::-:::::::::-:::: Fifty “ WEEKLY—fill MONTHS : Hiugle Copy, Six Months, 1 W Thite •• •• a u Ten •• *• •• 7 00 Twenty M •• ** 18 ou Fifty •• »« * 27 60 No subscriptions, to the Weekly, received for a shorter perted than M> month*. All eubMrtptiona Must be paid for in advance ; and all nanM trill be MHckeu from our books wheu fit* time paid for expires. Team* oCAdvort lelng. $ 0 00 » 00 12 00 M nO 10 00 lo on 20 00 24 no 27 00 80 00 03 00 06 00 80 00 80 00 8 WKEKM | 1 MONTH. 16 00 20 00 22 00 26 00 iCHABOD. Tlie Departure of the Moral Aid Material Glory of Paris. The Commune a Power i a Mob. At lost the reign of the Commune ie over, and one of the otrangeet forms of fi government the world hag ever disappeared amid bloodshed, fire nod general ruin. For two months the Com mune has been magter of Parig, wielded its reoouroee, controlled its in habitants and made it defy the refit of France. A concurrence of oiroamotaneee without parallel placed this power in ita hands. The Emperor chose to mfike war while utterly unprepared. Hifi precipi tation led to the disaster of Sedan, then Sedan led to the revolution of September, and the intallation of a republican gov ernment led to the arming of all the dan* geroun classes of Parig. When peace came there wag no French government able to think and act for Franoe. M Jules Fuvre. a weak-minded and emotion al republican, could not think of disarm ing other republicans, or of allowing the Germans to disarm them. Subsequently he asked pardon of God and man tot not having accepted Prince Biamarok’s sug gestion that the terms of capitulation should include THE DISARMING OF THN NATIONAL GUAND. His pardon may be easily granted, for it ueeils much lew than omuiflcieuoe to know that a gushing rhetorician raised to precurioiiH power for a moment is not the man to appreciate political dangers. When it was too late the government of which he was a member decided to de prive the National Guard of its artillery. The attempt was made in the true mod ern French fashion. Nothing wag t ought of, no preparations were mfide. The government troops easily captured the artillery, but no one had reoollected that urtillcry cannot move itself. So the troops had to sit where they were until horses should come. Meanwhile the people began to talk to the troops, and it suddenly struck thene warriors that there wus no reason why they uhonid slay ore mun more than another. French society had been decomposed into thoee loose and conflicting elements which it is the one business of society to make iuto a whole. No one could see why one man or one cause or one set of theorists should be preferred to another. A few resolute men hhw their opportunity and seized on the government of Paris. What was called the government instant ly effaced itself. It made no appeal, it -j* w. ran no ^ nn ff° r - I 1 nierely walked off 27 oo I gently and prudently to Versailles and left Paris to take care of itself. The day of the insurrection had been stained by the murder of two generals in oold blood, and a few days subsequently, ei tber in a panic or at the instigation of those who wished to bring matters to a crieis, a body of armed men fired on an in th* Local Colauiu marked with ' unarmed crowd in the Rae de la Paix. an asterisk, (•) will be charged 25 cent* per line each j The effect was exactly the same as when I the same inumeuvrc Lad been practiced Notice head \ t y the Emperor at the time of Ufiitfifi klw4i (leaded) forks* time than one week, will be chargud i houses. In this eMjr, aa g ATLANTIC (OB STATS) *AIL»OAI>. Night Passenger Train arrives 1:42 a. m Night Pksseuger Train laaves 6:80 p. m ervrilte Aoeonunodatiuo arrives 10:80 a. iu era villa Accommodation leaves 3:00 p. m TBS OBOBOIA (AUOUSTAI EAII.BOAD. (JFs Bay JVoia on Sunday., SBagrgatfcr. Day Fsteifir Train leave*.. 1 Accommodation leaves. NAOOn ASP WESTS*N BAILTOAD. Night Passenger Train arrives I Night Passenger Train leaves ..7:10a. in . .H:05 a. Ill ..6:46 a. Ui guape would win, while the members of every party fieerotly chuckled over the glori ous license of partisan vengeauce in which they proposed to revel if their party happened to be successful. The balance was tolerably equal so long a*- civilian France was left to iteelf, but gradually the prisoners from Germany came up aud the army decided the con test This shows a state of things even more dangerous to France than if Franoe had really been for two months under the rule of a mob. Paris, until the in- oendiarinm began, sullbred much less than it would nave suffered from mob rule, bat it suffered lees because the mis chief of distinct fanatical parties has eaten into tlm heart of France aud each triamphant party strives to act not as a mob, Dnt as a government What is the exact creed of the red republicans and what are the principles and opinions they so tenaciously defend, it might be hard to state positively. Thev are in some de gree socialists, although socialism does not appear to influenoe them so power- folly as might be expected from the lan- of thofito who always call them ao- i, because this is the strongest term of abuse at hand. They are filled with a deep hatred and envy of all the persons who have the advantages which wealth, education and station confer. They de teat, above all things, WRONG CENTRALIZED MILITARY POWERS. This ie the link that binds together in their ranks the adventurers driven from Poland, from Germany and from Italy. They hate aud despise the priests, whom they look on as the tools and slaves of theae military powers, and they revolt from the religion which they regard these priests as teaching in the interest of des potisms. Iu their fanaticism they are capable of all the acts in which fanatics rejoice. They have burned Hhe noblest buildings of Paris, not only to gratify a momentary thirst for vengeance, but to show their horror of all the things on which their enemies—the kings, and priests, aud soldiers, and courtiers—de light. The destruction of the Tuileries, of tho Sainte Chapeile and the Hotel de Vide, stand on very much the same foot ing as the destruction of the abbeys und cathedrals of Boot laud by the follow-rs of John Knox; and it only seems differ ent to ns at first because we are accus tomed to the fierceness and vandalism of religious sects, bnt we are not familiar with the notion of an equal fervor of po litical hatred. Fiance is now transported with just iu- dignatian at the burning of Paris, and foreigners oan find no words too stroug to condemn the atrocities with which the Commune has closed its career. If men ohoose to fill their hearts with unreason ing hatreds, and in their blind fury to spare nothing by which their neighbors set store, it ia not because they are fanat ics that a word is to be whispered in their defence. The Commune has been stamp ed with the infamy of this odious inoen- dariarism, just as the first repnblio was stamped with the infamy of the Septem ber massacres and the murder of Marie Antoinette. But if we look at the future politics of France we are bound to con fess that the punishment which will fol low on this dreadful act will not be in all probability the ending of the present troubles of the country. If this pnnish- uiont is iuflioted in the spirit which free ly fiuds expression at Versailles, if the thirst for blood o? A BEATEN AND DEMORALIZED MILITARY CLASS is gratified, if reaction goes so far as to let tJltra-montan<sm become rampant, the hatred of the beaten party will not ill com THK COUP D’ETAT. The citizens were cowed, and the Na tional Guard could no longer retreat from their position. The reign of the Com mune was definitely installed, and it soon appeared that the ruling body oonsist4*l of two sections—a larger body, properly called the Commuue—consisting of sons elected or suppose to have been ted by the different districts of Paris; raid only be intensified, but will communicate 1 services to any named employer a smaller body, who exercised the real itself to thousands who are now more or ' any designated i * * *-* - - *:«■ , n..i :i n.: I Wages. What is labor worth ? What are hon est wages for faithful work ? What is the role by which the value of labor, in its infinite varietien, in to be estimated ? Who is to raise the plumb line aud the just guide and standard between those who buy and those who sell lat>or V— These are questions which disturb civil ized society continually. Government! are shaken to their very walls aud deep est foundations by them. Their true answer involves the rights of labor and the rights of capital. To come to a reel solution requires a knowledge of whole theory of true political econon To enforce such solutiou when put practical shape iuvolves the whole Mice of legislation and government, is the leading questiou, and we may wel! «ay the only dangerous questiou which agitates modern States. As civilization progresses, as wuuU are refined aud mil tilized, as labor is more and more divi ded, and as the employment of capital tends more and more to its own advan tage, so does the oueAtion of due relation between labor ami capital, between woik man and employer, become oontiunallv more aud more complicated and vexing, Sometimes pubdc sympathy side* with those who sell tln-ir daily laUir for scant daily wages, seei-ig that those who buy cheap labor grow rich upon the profits; sometimes, but much more seldom, the public, seeing combinations and strikes which seem unjust and damaging to tho interests of employers iu* well as injurious to society and ( Aforced idleness, lend their sympathieh to tbo*e who seem wil ling to pay fair prices for good work reg ularly performed. When these labor strikes, combinations and revolts degene rate into lioenn ■, dissipation, violence aud unwarrantable dictation, Uie popular sentiment becomes aimo.it general against the strikers and in favor of the employ- 8. A large part of all this debate and dif ficulty would be removed by a few plain and obvious oon.dder.itiims: 1. Capitol is free. The owner or rep resentative of money m»y keep it idle aud suffer the loss of increase, or he may employ it by leudiug or investing it iu manufacturing enterprise, or in any one of the numberless shapes iu which capi tal can be put so that it m tv yisftd a due return. Whether iu the form of money or of property, capital is accumulated lulior or tho representative of the values created by labor at wiu- former time. The mechanic who by his thrift saves a thousand dollas, may, at his option, pay it in wages to other mechanics, or he may loan it for sixty, eighty ora hundred dol lars of annual wage* or interest, or he may put into a house that will pay him a fair rent So he who has amassed a hun dred times os much has an equal right to use it in honorable trade, to loan it at the market rate, or to invest it in any prop erty that will pay to him a fair and safe income. If he puts his iuto u mill ho can employ just as many and just as few operatives as he needs, nor ought he to be oompelled to pay any other or higher wages than such as are fixed by the law of supply and demaud. 2. Capital is not only free, but its rela tions are so sensitive that restraining laws would merely drive it out of sight and out of use just so soon as the at tempt should be m ule to proscribe the use to which it should l>e applied and the income to which it should be limited. 3. Labor is likewise, and even to n greater extent free. There is nothing which can comjKd the laborer to give his »r at lake Ale, a secret society instituted for estab lishing a brotherhood of socialism and republicanism iu every country. It soon ap|H>ared. however, that the new govern ment did not govern so badly as had been expected; that it preserved some sort oi public order, und wan oourtooua to for eigners; and that it was really supported by a considerable amount of public opin ion iu Paris. The claims anu wrongs of > Puris were thus forced on the attention of Europe, und it whs generally acknowl edged that, if the real issue between Par- atlanta and wan tom. bailboad. is and Versailles had been whether Paris Nlftii TteBetiger Trste arrives 10:07 a tu Ni«i>iPteMBffarTraiBte*T** 2:46|f m k,.pt down l»y the army of a government 3J5 fffi 2*317M0 a! ui supported by the priests and peasants of \ rural France, it was Paris tb&t hqd the : best of the argument. It was notorioua- Regnlar Passenger Train tear**............7:30 a. in ly true, moreover, that the republic was not only in danger, but was doomed so I far as the Assembly of Versailles could doom it, and tho Parisians who thought Day Paaaenxer Train aettwes.. Day f Day raasenger ATXaLBTA AMD BICBMOVD AIX-LINK BAILBOAD. Train arrive* 4:30 p, Tkr*e|k Ltaa. Chatteaoof*train leavev....9:80a.m. aaff 6:46 p. *• arrive*...2:06 p.m. and 3:4« Memphis train leave* 4:00 *.m. and 3.00 “ arrives .9:80 a.m. and 6:00 p.w. 8L Loala train leaves 4.00 a m. arrive 9:80 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. n leaves 8:80 p.m. arrive 9:40 a.m. The 1:60 a.m., 12 m., sad 3:30 p.m. train* do uunVunday*. Th* 4:00 a.m. and 6:46 p.m. . . . ... r price, [f he can control, and who were either composed . less indifferent But even if things go letter wages by working on his own ac- of, or were guided by, the Iuternatioo- , on as well as can be hoped for, if M. count or in combination with other ope- Thiers remains master of the situation , natives his liberty hi do it remains with- aud undertakes the task assigned him in ; out restraiut or hindrance. He may the spirit of a statesman, it is impossible | work at his own forge, bench or loom, or not to see, in the reign of the Commune I he may join his lalmr in an enterprise and in the burning of Paris, symptoms which combines a thousand forges or of a malady which affects Franoe much benches or looms in one, with profits iu- too radically for any government to cure quickly and easily. Perheps it is some of the smaller signs of the times that is most worthy of noticing. The picture of the inhabitants of Paris filling up every assailable crevioe ou the outside of ^ wi th«ir houfleia to prevent women ao.i chil-; tioTofthe mimi, and mt«o hi'K.r i**" fro “ ' h ? > yi n 5 <, 2. wn P et r°l eunl , the ,miud alone, as well .wall intermediate and the lurin' towns of I ranoe should be firemen called by the Government pump- kjll j 8 of aki || Bn j mlIe j employment.— ing metrolenm into tha houses they were 1 — - pretending to save, the regiments of \maaona. and the disgusting insults be stowed by the women of Voreaillou on theae Amazons when captured, leave an impression of a generation grown up in an atmosphere of reokleounesu. FAHATAOUIC, TBUCHERY AND OOWARDIO0, creased by the infinite subdivision of la bor, and by the employment of the best attained maaliiuery for prying labor. 4. Lnlror of nil kinds is worthy of re ward. This inelrtde.s mere muscular ex ertion which tteareely requires au opera- of the I .,m i » republic worth fighting for had at least •rut ».«r p.m I the excuse of knowing that if 8h<IbxTlU<Mla 1 The Nepe Coantuie at Wash ington. The OooKOUM, of whose outrages in Paris we have heard so much, and which have drawn upon the perpetrators the ooDdimaottao of ahnoat the civilized world, is it oar doom The negro Labor ers st Washington hare been on a strike for bifrUat wages, aad the leader of these strikers is worthy of the Commune. At the labor meeting on Monday night, the 5th inti, this leader, Marcellas West, is reported by lh4 Washington SUr os fol lows : The most bloodthirsty and incendia ry ntterOnees of the Daria Commune did bottswoft ozsss I in atrocity thorn bowled oat at the meeting lost night by this fel low West and one or two oi his eolieagueH. He urged the enetted audience to go seek the oontrarinn and tbs ariotoarata, and ■strike terror into their hearts. ” “ Let aa hare their Mood I*' said this would-be cut-throat- “ Toko thair heads off their shoulders P “ Lot oar motto be blood I" he bellowed : abd then he went on to leriek Boswell, who for some " lb aland high in his favor. Another orator, Thomas Msro- ney, also invoked terrible punishment upon the hoods of the bloated aristo crats ’.ft* than thsvad or wear a in the ney, a suf- offensive attempt at superiority ‘ — nt upon the of- of the sp< > echea of the Laborer* of theae prr"r?H 1 was virnlswt dam holders, and th* moans afti moho anil comototh •atUli'SWIf'i of property- sy of Tioleut . fashion, to peoparly-bolder Thetwam forty-five buildings in the amort* totstfm ifi Dalton, many old hoaxer tMbg mpairad and to-painted, and old fenoea being thrown down ami rsplasxJ by noat white palinga. thev did 1 w hich ia pephapa more painful thou this not fight for it no onJ else could. I ol b «“ n * kb,a 1111 maJe P"' 8 * r * nd licaricg that all that made Paris grand It box Uum'natumHn"E^Und to talk 1 “ d ‘“"‘tiful i f ( ?“ ne . or n N ’ur . ,, , am wa at iva that inis Imrninir «,» Puma of the goverumeut of tho Commune as of The proprietor ami capitalist who not only risks his menus but also gives his anxious thought aud study to his mill, his mine, his bang, or his railroad ear in wages which are not to be measured by the salaries of clerkH, or the per diem of conductors, sailors or operatives. 6. The value of labor caunot justly bo measured according to tho exceptional profits or losses of employers and capi talists. In prosperous ac.ivins a reasoun- the government of a mob, and the lesson is supposed to In 8 set us by the catastro phe of Paris uot to deal gently with our own mobs iu case of ueed. Certainly English mobs should bo summarily put down with as much force an may be ne cessary. But there is very little similar ity between Till. COMMUNE AND AN ENGLISH MOB, excepting so far as that in each oase it is the lowest dawk's of society threatening the higher. An English mob is a tumuh tary gathering of useleNH, obnoxious peo ple, with no definite purpose and no notion of fighting, whose principal, if not ouly, object is too sec bow mnch the Bobbies under the direetion of a tearful Secretary of State can be got to staud. The police persuade them to go away, their leader is made a county oourt judge and the mutter is at an end. The reasou why such m«»hs should be at onoe put down is that the persons composing them are perilously demoralized by having their respect for the law diminished, and that they subject large numbers of quiet, orderly jH'rsons to inconvenience and danger. Who can think that such a de scription can be applied to the character and doings of the Commune daring the last two months ? The Commune had distinct arms, a distinct organization, sud has fought with oourage and resolution. It had a cause and a power of its own. It formed a body of enemies to those who differed from it. It had a creed in which it believed, which it was prepared to pro mulgate and to defend at every risk. It was forced into prominence by the extra ordinary accident of ha>iug a fortified city an<l an unlimited supply of warlike stores delivered into its hands at a mo ment when there was no governmeit and no army to oppose it THK RED REVOLUTIONISTS are a party in Franoe just as the imperi alists and the legitimists ere a party.— One French party was inside Paris. This is probably the explanation of tha curi ous mixture of apathy and hi! mell'ii are we sure that this burniuK of Puris l>le maiRiu must H, l..fl for p«t or ami- will not have a xort of faxcinatiou iu time »>P«ted loams. Obaup* iu ratos of wages for some of the French themselves.— I should be made with much cAre, but struggle. borderin lr looked on with sometl However much they have nominally dis approved of the Reign of Terror, a large class of the ItUeraUur* ot Franoe have al ways shown a sort of pride iu the exces ses of Jaoobiniam. They like to think that Frenchmen dare to do aud dream of doing things which it would not enter iuto the hearts of other men to conoeive. The burning of Paris is but the end of a senoatian novel on the largest possible -calc, and the countrymen of Eugene Sue aud Dumas will relish tbe thought of a catastrophe so dialmlicaliy grand. A French journal published in the interests of imperialism a few days ago indulged in a series of sneers at the Commune, aw a mere pigmy by the side of tho Revolu tion of 1793. It did nothing strong, ter rible, and worthy to he called revolution ary. It had not the orqiwU du mol as the journalists expressed it—it had no proper pride in being tranacendantly wicked.— The Commune will be no longer sneered at as a pigtty. It has graven its terrible history on Paris far more effectually than if it bad sent some hundred priests and aristocrats to the guillotine, aud the Frenchmen who ask for signs of the or- yurtl du wutl before they oan worship and admire anything will admit that in this respeot the detested Commune has shown itself worthy of its country. The Cincinnati Gazette claims to have trustworthy information from Columbus that at tha lata Democratic convention, General Ewing was realty nominated in stead flf McCook. Up**n the final ballot, as announced, McC'>ok had 2'2o und Ew 191. Two persous of prominent* in the party, who kept full and careful tally sheets, agree that Ewing really received 243, and McCook only 221. The mistake is said to have arisen entirely from unin tentional mistakes in counting up the datoflwtiooa. By a blunder of one of the secretaries the tally sheet from which the announcement wa* made was used twioe, and hence the difficulty in ascertaining tin) exact cfBoial e.>unt. Th.' State Dem •eratic Committee will meet in a few days [ering ou equanimity to whioh pari) n* ooneider tho matter. they are often slri -:l\ n.vcsNary. Con cert araoug miners and mine-owners on to tbe wages they oau afford t*> pay arc just as natural on agrt euK Lts mid pledge* among operatives us to the rate* at which they will work. But in each caae these agreements should be tcniporarv and en tirely voluntary. The l«« Nt rule ia abso lute freedom oa b »>.h Nidus. 6. Labor for fuir and living wages is not a hardship calling for sympathy.— The actual suff erers ure those who caunot find their fit work, or finding it, cannot get paid for it according to its full value. The profits on large enterprises which enoourage the employment of extensive capital aud which give scope to tin' lu st of administrative toieut, arc not with drawn from the just rewar Is of tlie labor of operatives, but rather represent the enhanced value of labor resulting from its wise and methodical employment. A thousand operatives, employed underouc roof, with all the ndvautug.* of the most improved machinery, can produce au ag gregate annual value many times greater that, they could all produce is operating singly; and just in proportion os they can produce more can thev turn better wa ges. It.i8 the aooaimilation and employ ment of capital which reml-reach results possible. The greut bUNiuesa of men ia not to get rioli, Tmt to make a living; tho nii'ans which reuder the HU(*cesHful and ooutinued solution of that problem easier than before are certainly to be welcomed rather than rejected. owns a remarkable caif. Ir is i tie over thirtceu montliN old, been giving milk for twelve n more. Every duy it gives ( of milk, which is very rich. li* uni hns _l'iitbs or i a ipiart /Ir ndd**r ia well developed, though it coutinue* to anokle its daiuu. If rhut calf grows to be a cow, and ita flow of milk continues to increase, what a quantity of lacteal fluid will it give in it« years of maturity ! it is, indeed, a wonderful calf and worth ^woiug.—Mutton Hidden,