The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873, July 01, 1871, Image 1

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V * HT YOL. n. ATLANTA, GEORGIA, SATURDAY. JULY. 1, 1871. NO. m THE DAILY SUN. oaciCfMMrfiiHl—4 >!■>■■>■ It*a Published bj tke AtliiU Sam ■y* il«xaa4«r B. Iteakraa, (irmly Bait! Alexaafer H. ffiepbea*, NHM Niter. A. K. Watsea, .... Hew* Miter. J. Healjr.Nmfth, . . • fnnlb* IfnUi 1. U. W. DU. I. W. W. te ta mi.OI. ta th. rate antral <* aH noiiw —t ** bf »g*ltarail Mtta, b, Eipraoa, or b, Draft, tat do* oakorvlaa. IlboMimllnn • onwIotaradtatalDtaatt moat tettataior thr person sending it. No paper will be sent from tfce office till it is psid for. end names will always be erased when the time To Oar City ■•keeriWre. We respectfully ask our city subscribers to notify b of failure to receive Tn 8m. We have recently mndo ran. ch.bf U> <*• city <Mlv«y. and ic contoq nonce of till., m>i. will probably to mtaed lor . f.v day.—until tto natraan perfbctlj tamed by those in charge. For a short time, we beg our city readers to be pa tient as they can. in casefrUare* occur. Wepsotoise them that the evil will soon be satisfactorily reme died. We are resolved to sse that Turn 8ua is frith folly and promptly delivered to every snbeeriber. ■aks mp Clwbs. We shall make Tn 8mliv«ly. fresh and inter- estioK-cootaininc all the latest news. Ws shall fill it with good reading matfe r. and shall have in each Usne as much reading matter ss soy paper tn Georgia, and we shall soon enlarge and otherwise improve it, so ss to give it a h*Ddaome appearance and make it easily reed and da. liable to have In the family. Wt uk our friends to ose s little effort to make np a club lor ua at every poet office. See our club rates. A very little effort la all that is needed to make up a large list. Ts Csrrcipoadt Hi' Mr. Stephans will reassin in Cvawfordville. connection with Tn* 8r* wiH sot change his rsM- deoce. All letters intended for him. either on pri vate matters or connected with the Po iticsl Pe- psrtment of this paper, should be addressed to hiai at Crew fordville. Georgia. All letters on business of any kind, connected with The 8m. except its Political Department, should be eddressed to J. Heoly Smith. M—sger, Atlanta, (H- Terms of Subscription t .$7 f P<*r innorn fix Mouth. Three Monthe . °t' lue Mouth •••• 7i WEEKLY PO ANNUM t Single Copy ■— J JJ Three Copiee • ~ Ten •• M On Twenty " - - J* 00 Fifty •• “ •" Mmeu * tall. wf.eklt—six months: Single Copy, 8tx Month., J ** T hre. •• •• “ > * So lubecriptione, to the Weehly. reoolvod fbr t shorter period than six months. All snbscriptions must be paid for In advance ; and all names will be stricken from onr books whan the time paid for expires. Terms of AdTOrtlsIng. i wxu 1 vcmr S wakes 11 : IToTT I T M ; t 8 ! • on 14 M lft C T M • 00 ! 11 00 t 12 00 , 14 00 , 16 00 i It 00 M oo : 22 U0 24 00 ! 18 00 47 00 54 00 64 •« 76 Advertisements In the Local Column marked with an asterisk. (•) will be charged 24 cents per line eacl insertion. Advertisements under the Special Notice head (leaded) for lees time than one week, win be charged 16 cents per line. gg- Advertisements, except for established busi ness houses, la this city, must be pa.J for in ad- No reduction will be made on the shove rst-e for quarterly, wemi-annnsl or yearly adverti entente. Arrivals aad| Oepartarvs of Trala a ad frwua Atlaata. a aruavnc (n» state) eailk >ai ..... w Train arrives J*2 a 1 Night Pasaenger Train leaves 10 i l>»\ l onseugar Train arrives., bay Passenger Train lesvr- Night V _ _ A. ('artersville Accommodatioa arrives 8:10 am Cartersvllie Accommodation tasves 6.-00 Jh n* THE OEOBOla (aOSOSTAI RAILROAD. (As D*9 »Vs4nSB FMteiayd .8:40 Night Passenger Train arrives Night Pa-senger Train leaves Day PasAenger Tratn Day Pasveuger lTstn leaves Sbme Mountain Accommodstt»»s -rrivrs btout* Mountain asoonimodsllon >:15 p. A.-Nip. ■tool axn isiau euuoad. Night Passenger Train arrivea 10:0^ p. t TENNESSEE CORRESPON DENCE OF THE SDN. AUaitei, Va—Literary IuU- twtioaa—-Tke Late Cel. Him —OfH. Jtotph E. JtkutM’l Early Home—JtanlM'i 8u- perseffureat Atlanta ie 1804 Crop Prospect — Kaaxville, Tree. — Tke New Ctetoe Heese— Keeirllle eeS Kee- teefcy RallroeS te Se SeM Lovely Seeeery Ie East Teeeee* see—Exquisite Lsatscsye Paietiofs fey Mr Fisher—See- alar Brawslsw — Maatvale Springs, Jute, Ac. Knoxville, Tknn., June 39. We arrived here to-day from Ab ingdon, Virginia, leaving the latter place at the rising of the sun—not your Sun of Atlanta—but the light- dispenser of the heavens. We had ifpent two days in Abingdon. The place is certainly a beautiful one and is celebrated for its wealth and refine ment. as also for its fi-male education al institutions. The Methodists, Presbyterians and Roman Catholics each have their large and flourishing schools. Near Abingdon is the cele brated Emory and Henry College.— Abingdon had scarcely recovered from the shock occasioned only a few weeks ago by the sudden death of one of her most brilliant song. Col. James W. Humes, Lieutenant-Colonel of a Ten nessee regiment in the late great war, occupied a most eminent position as a rising young statesman, and was al ready mentioned prominently in con nection with the next Governorship of Virginia. He delivered the Alum ni address last tear before,the Virgin ia Military Institute, of which he was a graduate. His beautiful and accom plished widows the daughter of the late Gen. Charles R. Floyd, of Geor- gta. to) PMMUger Trout 4*0* P toy Puwlu-r tain to D») Pnnuenu.i ITLOTA ADD WMT POlXL .HI M.S Night PuMnger Traio mtItw nOI u 1 N ight PnnMtig-r Train tom,. D*. t’Mn-ng. r Tnun nritTM.... Ifey IxiMnget Trsln'ta.M ....I K*, in ^gnTtoitTA m n-rniowD un-Lutx nnitaonn. Rngunr PiMHnsf T-n-n intw ...liOH R-guInrPmnpngOTTrain tom,... St. Itali, S.niykl>, SMtotU. nn* 1.ntt....... Umax (Vital ThrMfh tin.. Chnttnnoogntrain taran....I 30xn. asASiSSa 1 *' nrrtTto.. .!•■«* p.ta. to4 SMS tota U.mphfn train ta.m 4*1 n-tn. IBS SMS p m. Mriras uto win. tad«iM pra 8t Lanin tain tarn.. ...S*ln.m.s ..sMIp.m. nrrtra t*>. Western Kstlrsst sf Alafcansa. Abingdon was the home, in early years, of Joseph E. Johnston, of the Confederate service, a name intimate ly associated with the War Ilistoryof vour especial region. Mr. Beverly Johnston, his brother, a prominent lawver. and Hon. John W. Johnston, L T . ‘S. Senator of Virginia, reside there. In connection with Gen. John ston. we may remark that a friend in Abingdon related to us the substance of a most interesting conversation had in Abingdon since the war with the General, touching operations against Sherman, near Atlanta. At the verv moment of Gen. Johnston’s removal from command, he had com menced a series of field movements against Sherman's armv, which could scarcelv have failed to deliver Georgia from the invaders. The source from which we derive this information commands our unqualified belief and the details (which we feel scarcely authorized to give) display the wary and skillful strategy of the great com mander in a most striking light We trust Gen. Johnston may be induced to give to the country acomplete his tory of the military o|>eration8 of the Confederacy, in which he bore so conspicuous a part. The truth of history, and his own great name, de serve it. No false delicacy towards the distinguished President of the Confederacy ought to stand in the way of telling “the trnth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.” The Wheat fields of South-western Virginia, are now being harvested. The crop is not good; that of this region (East Tennessee) still worse. The t>at crop is better, and is just ripen iug. Here, black berries are ripening. In Abingdon—only 150 nules distant, but at a far greater elevatiou above the sea-level—the black lie fries are not yet ripe. Knoxville is rapidly improving. We had on our journey hither, a con versation with Mr. W. T. Betterton, of the extensive wholesale honse in Liquors and Cigars of McClerry A Betterton of this city, an intelligent Virginian, formerly of Lynchburg.— His enumeration of the improvement* in progress surprised us. We could see for ourselves many large house* going np. The Government is here building an immense Custom House. The Knoxville A Kentucky Rail road is the great coal-feeder of this region and the South. On account of financial embarrassments, the road lias pa-sod into the hands of the State, and will soon be sold. We un derstand the road which originally oost over li.dOO.qOO will soon be sola, bevond doubt at an extremely low ■figur,—doubtless for one-sixth it* cost. Would it not be good policy in the W. A A. B. U. to purchase it? To the eye, surely no lovelier land than this exist*. The mountain view* from this city are enchanting. It i* no wonder that East Tennessee has produced an artist competent to trans fer these enchanting scenes to canvas. Mr. F. J. Fisher, ofthiscity, a yonng artist of a thorough education among the galleries of Europe, is here now with a studio filled with landscapes of indceci'iliable loveliness, copied from nature. His paintings, in oil colors, on their way to th* health-giving water* of Moutride Spring*. The water* certainly hare a magic power to relieve dyspeptics and persons suf fering from liver complaints. We understand that fhahion has her vo taries there as well as disease, and that the nightly dance at the base of the grand old Chilhowee Mountain is redolent of mirth and music. W. G. M: ADERE88 T* tk* People mt the Pali SteUae hr the Democrats To the People of tke United Staiu: Our presence and official duties at Washington hare enabled us to be come fully acquainted with the ac tions and designs of those who con trol the Radical party, and we feel called upon to utter a few words of warning against the alarming strides they have made towards centraliza tion of power in the hands of Con gress and the Executive. The time and attention of the Rad ical leaders have been almost wholly directed to devising suoh legislation as will, in their new, best preserve their ascendency, and no regard for the wise restraints imposed by the Constitution has checked their reck less and desperate career. GRANT TO BE HIS OWH SUCCESSOR. The President of the United States has been formally announced as a candidate for re-election. The decla ration of bis selfish supporters have been re-echoed by a subsidized press, and the discipline of party has al ready made adhesion to his personal fortunes the supreme test of political fealty. The partisan legislation to which we refer was decreed and shaped in secret caucns, where the extremest counsels always dominated, and was adopted by a subservient ma jority, if not with the intent, certain ly wi ’ ' with the effect, to place in the bands of the President power to com mand his own renomination, and to employ the army, navy and militia, at his sole discretion, as a means of subserving his personal ambition. When the sad experience of the last two years, so disappointing to tie- hopes and generous confidence of the oountry, is considered in connection with the vile utterances as rash pur poses of those who control the Presi dent’s policy, it is not surprising that the gravest "apprehension for the fu ture peace of the nation should be entertained. At a time when labor is depressed, and every material inter est is palsied by oppressive taxation, the public offices have been multiplied by all preoedent to serve as instru meats in the perpetuation of power. CORRUPTION. Parti ran ship is the only test ap plied to the distribution of this vast patronage. Honesty, fitness and moral worth are opeiily discarded in favor of truckling submission and dishonorable compliance. Hence enormous defalcat ions and widespread corruption have followed as the natu ral consequences of this pernicious system. By the official report of the Secre tary of the Treasury it appears that after the deduction of all proper cre dits, many millions of dollars remain due from ex-collectors of the internal revenue, and that no proper diligence has ever been used to collect them.— Reforms in the revenue and fiscal sys tems, which all experience demon strates to be necessary to a frugal ad ministration of the Gorernment, as well as a measure of relief to an over burdened people, have been persis tently postponed or wilfully neglect ed. PILE ON THE TAXES. and the sacred rights of local self- government overthrown. Modelled up to the sedition laws, so odious in history, they are at variance with all the sanctified theories of pur institu tions, and the construction given by these Radical interpreters to the Four teenth Amendment is, to use the lan guage of an eminent Senator—-Mr. Trumbull, of Illinois—an “annihila tion of the States.’’ Under the last enforcement bill, “the Executive may, in his discretion, thrust aside the gov ernment of any State, suspend the writ of habeas corpus,” arrest its Gov ernor, imprison or disperse the Legis lature, silence its judges, and trample down its people under the armed heel of his troops. Nothin'' is left to the citiien or the State which can any longer be called a right—all is chang ed into mere Bufferanoe. THE SAME CORRECTION THAT MR. JEPPBRSON ADVISED. Our hojie* for redress are in the calm, good sense, the ‘'sober, second thought” of the American people.— We call upon them to be true to them selves and their posterity, and, disre garding {tarty names and minor dif- ferencee, to insist upon a decentrali zation of power and the restriction of Federal authority within its just and proper limits, leaviug to the States tliat control over domestic affairs which is essential to their liapj iness and tranquility and good govern ment. UNMANLY TREATMENT OF THE SOUTH. Everything that malicious ingenu ity could suggest, lias been done to irritate the {teople of the Middle and Southern States. Gross anil exagger ated charges of disorder and violence owe their origin to the mischievous minds of the potential managers in the Senate anil House of Representa tives. to which the Executive has. we regret to say. lent his aid, Httd thus helped to eitdame the popular feel ing. Iu all this course of hostile legisla tion and harsh resentment no word of conciliation, of kind encouragement, or fraternal friendship, has ever been spoken by the President or by Con gress to the people of the Southern States. They have been addressed only in the language of proscription. We earnestly entreat our fellow-citi zens in all parts of the Union to spare no effort to maintain {teaeeand order, to carefully protect the rights of every citizen, to preserve kindly rela tions among all men, and to discoun tenance ana discourage any violation of the rights of any portion of the people secured under the Constitu tion or any of its amendments. ADVICE TO THE SOUTH. Let ua in conclusion, earnestly beg of vou not to aid the present attempts of Radical partisans to stir up strife in the land; to renew the issues of the war. or to obstruct the return of pence and prosperity to the Southern States, because it is thus that they seek to divide the attention of the country from the corruption and extravagance in their administration of pnbltc af fairs, and the dangerous and profli gate attempt* they are making to wards the oreation of a- centralized military gorernment RADICAL EXTRAVAGANCE. In the five yeans of peace following the war the Radical administration have expended II ,<00.000,000 for or dinary purposes alone, beiug wit in $200,000,000 of the aggregate amount spent for the same puqKMes iu war, and in peace, during the seventy-one years preceding June 30, 1801, not Mahinc Pat of Mr. DsiwIb The wit* find in Mr. Darwin’s the ories a perpetual source of fun. One of the poet* of the London Spectator, now write* “The Hymn of the An cient Man—a Song after Sunset,” r film > ” ending thus «I saloon van taiH in tkt ftoofefo Utanran* to the breexee of earing: I sold not mj wml Into bond** to prophet or I knew not the path c the Ilf hi of the eeepoe. th* top* Liner time brought i owl the will at the wl*d and the Have poo eklB to reoorer end hod the eeoea that wa* quick la min* eamf Toot arte and poor moetc, I grant, war* uakaown at the ihhuctone date; Bat where ie th* charm of th* chant the! I oang in the treea to m j mato t To poor food you take Are and etsang* tool* jam man of all ape at poor portable aire. tream that bp preoeee at greater than their*. The aeoewtaof afrreln their « the son* In roar Beal*, epeteme and orbtta and them for aught thep rnUL Teo map 1*11 which le quichaet and elowoet. whp one thing and *D thtaga are tone; Tat monieefhU thing* theleweel for man id adr- From " the Greeneboro, G*., Hamid. 28th. “The PrsMes* »f aar Dsy.» Says the Richmond Enquirer, “is how "to arrest the course of the Re publican party.” The article which contains this sentiment is published in the True Georgian, and commend ed by it* editor a* the political sum- mum bonum of the hour. To it Mr. Stephens and the rest of mankind is directed, as to the beadon light which is to guide the ship of State over the troubled waters and into safe anchor age. Mr. Stephens, of course, despite Dr. Bard’s intimation of valient battle. is quite able to maintain his own cause without aid or comfort from us; but we take occasion to join issue with both the Enquirer ana Georgian. We assert that the great,overshadLowing problem of oh r day ie in the preservation of con stitutional liberty. The defeat of the Republican party perse, might prove, we admit, a great good—but this would not necessarily remand the country I melt to good government. Nothing but a return to the oorrect principles will do this Principia non homines, was always a favorite maxim with old Democrat* and Whigs. To meet the progressive spirit of the age, we are willing to change it to “principles and men.” Principia et homines, then, is onr motto—that is, first, correct princi ple*, and second, correct men to eti force them. Indeed, we have found the two one and inseperable, in giving permanent suooess to any cause or party. Gen. Grant does a* well, per haps. a* any other man could do, on the priuciples oi hi* party. Statesmen, in founding government* do not build for a day, but for all time. It was thus with the Gathers of thi* Re public. Every stone from the base to the apex of the political edifice, was severely scrutinized, because they designed the grand old fabric should stand forever. The Constitution was put up by master bnildora—by men of rare wisdom and patriotism—not given to sudden “departures”—ac cepting no “situation” in contraven tion of popular rights and fret in stitutions. Such, in a few words, is the history of Constitutional Gov ernment in thi* oountry. Now the primarv question is, ■hall this form of Government be restored, maintained and perpetuated ? Then follow* the secondary one, what party is most likely to do this? Now we beg our contemporaries to keep these two including in either case the sum paid order we place them. Congress now adjourns without having eveu attempted to reduce tax ation or to repeal the glaring imposi tions by which industry is crushed and impoverished. The Treasury is overflowing and an excess of eighty millions of revenue is admitted, and vet, instead of some measure of pres ent relief, a barren and delusive reso lution is passed by the Senate to con sider the tariff and excise systems hereafter, as if the history of broken pledges and pretended remedies furn ished any better assurance for future legislation than experience has done in the past Ship-building and the carrying trade, once sources of national pride, and prosperity, now languish under a crushing load of taxation, and nearly every other bug- mess interest is struggling, without profit to maintain itself. Our agriculturists, while paying heavy taxes on all they consume, either to the Government or to mo nopolists, find the prices for their own products so reduced that houest labor {• denied its just reward and indus try is prostrated by invidious dis crimination. RESOURCES SQUANDERED. Nearly 200,000,000 acre* of public lands, which should have been re served for the benefit of the people, have been voted away to giant corpo rations; neglecting "our soldiers, en riching a handful of greedy specula- upon principal or interest of the pub lic dent It is trifling with the intelligence of the people for the Radical leaders If the Democratic Party have no distintire principles; if they have so far departed from the faith of Wash ington, Madison, Jeflfereon and other GEORGIA CROP NEWS. OomopuD'lnoce oi lb* Son. A letter from Warsaw, in Milton county, says: “We are having and h ‘ T ?L n V?“ thi "total and colored peepk TfaSitf weather, frequently tery wet and whfln oetton blooituby the 30th. not rainy, cool and cloudy—alterna ting with bright, hot sunshine.— Wheat in this section generally is a dead failure, and oate are badly dam aged by the rust. Corn is so-so.— Cotton—a good stand, bnt small— CoL Henry Rogers, who drilled in fif ty acre* of wheat last fail, on excel lent bottom land, bad promise before the harvest of thirty or thirty-five bushels to the acre. He now thinks it will yield him about five bushels to the acre. He has thirty acre* in clo ver which ha* produced a splendid growth. Judge Graham, who, last year, made about 2,000 bushel* of wheat, will get this year from the same acreage not more that 50 bush els. He harvested only ten or twelfe acres out of the three hundred tliat was seeded.” Correspondence ut Tke Ban. A letter from Rome says: “ Oar crop prospect* in this county are re markably fine, with the exception Df cotton. Having had too much rain, that crop is pretty well drowned out. Wheat will fall about one-third shogt of a full crop. Norway and other oat* are extraordinarily tine. T|ie breadth of land put in cotton iB about one-third leas than that of last year.” The same letter continues: “No one can tell the value of clover until it is tried. I have a small plat in my gar den which is invaluable to cows. 1 crop that we can universally bowrt on, ana that is onr i Our laborers work about ss they did last year. There seem* to be peace and harmony generally aasaag the ‘In red people. One of fhq edi tors of the Telegraph, writing from G'uthbert, says; Little apparent changes baa token plant in the cotton prospect for the pot week. Rains continue to he almost of daily occurrence, and violent wind stonn* hare swept over tome potato— of the country. - Marshalville and vicinity was thus visited on Friday last, aada gentleman residing there give* a most account of both com andeot- doleful i ton. - Grass still maintains tike I dancy almost everywhere, and hun dreds of acres have utterly succumb ed to it We saw very few blooms, and this day the average height of the cotton weed in .Southwest Georgia, will not exceed firs inches. Corn on sandy lands has lost color from exces sive tains, and will fUl far short of it* early promise. Much of tlua val uable crop cannot receive the Rat plowing, and will safer to some ex tent in consequence. The supply of vegetables is almost without limit, and of frnit there will also be Hie greatest profusion. have rnt and cat again, and still it in creases beyond all my calculations. Clover and grain are the two cheapest things iu existence, and are the most valuable. Onr country is filling np rapidly with the low country people, who think they seo in the fu ture hot beds for the eaucussian races below, and want to be relieved from negro majorities, and rale down the country. Soon wc shall have this an inviting country to employ the manufactures to our heart’s content, as it abounds in the best coal and iron, and minerals generally. Al ready companies from the North are exploring our coal fields, and form deposits aud purchasing sites for their companies. The health of this county is proverbially good, a long way* over the average health of Goor- En passaut, I will, if proper, gia. give you hereafter, a more particular ontline. My present motive is sim ply to call attention to general prin ciples. 1 will in my next, give a more miuute statement of the mann- facturinsr «* •>“ foreign companies, in agricultural, swine and fruit culture at work, and the statement of our rail road con nections as they will hereafter influ ence us for weal or woe. Floyd County. From tke ■■bouton Pr w end Meeerngrr. Corn in this section look* promis ing—more so than for yebrs, at this season—so sav a good many farmers, and they ought to know. Some few roasting-oara have been brought in of the earlier varieties of corn. Peaches, apples and pears are ripening sad will soon be plentiful in this market. Peaches oan now be bad for twenty- five cents per dozen, but the demand at these prioee is limited. From the Chronicle end fli iiMaei A correspondent writing from Hart county, gqjftr Fanners in Hart are backward with’ their wort The grass ha* got the start bo far that some farmers are turning out portions of the bottom lands. We had fifteen days’ rain here, and then the wheat harvest came on, which pnt the work on farms so far back that it will be impossible fbr some even to catch np with their work, unless the weather should be very favorable. The oat crop has the rust. I hardly think that even late sowing will hold out. On some lands cotton is very late and small, with a fair portion of grass mixed with it—still we are having very heavy rains, and the ground i* ery wet and heavy. The same paper says cditoriaHy :— An intelligent planter in Wilkes county writes to hie factor in this city: “A* a general thing the cotton crop is very poor. The stand is bad and the cultivation worse to many instances. I have throe hundred acres in cotton this year and no not think I will make as'much cotton a* I did last year with two hundred planted. This is the condition of all this sec tion. My wheat crop was splendid, vielding twenty bushel* to tne acre. My oat* I will not attempt to harvest; they are not worth the time and la- Knf * From the Sparta Time* and Plantar. We were riding out a few evenings since on toe outskirts of our village and saw a crop of cotton flagged. It is customary, we believe, to flagg crops that are taken by the grass, and as this is the only flagged crop we have seen or heard o£ we conclude that the cotton crop in old Hancock, am the field alluded to, is about dear of grass. We were shown a cotton bloom on tk* 20th inst by Mr. D. Connell, of Cul> verton, a foil blown cotton bloom taken from a field of his own cultiva tion. Thi* we believe is the first from cotton grow* this year that we have heard of. It is certainly the tout we have seen. From the Ovnofiuu btirpriai The abundant rain* which hava made the corn prospect very prumis ing, have been rather a drawback upon cotton generally; though the * LJ-. f tka 1_ .i 2 questions constantly in mind, in the warm sunshine of the last few days to pretend that this vast sum ha* been j great political lights, a* to subordinate honestly expended. Hundreds of the principles upon which MejtTonnd- millions of it has been wantonly squandered. The expenditures of the Government for the fiscal year end ing June 30, 1861. were only $62,- 090,000 ; while, for precisely the same purposes—civil list, armv and navy. 1 pensions and Indians—Ilii-l.ooO.noo were expended during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1870. LIBERTY AND LOW TAXES. No indignation could tie too stern, and no soom too severe for the asser tions by unscrupulous Radical leaders that the great Democratic party of the Union has or can have sympathy with disorders or violence iu any part of the oountry, or in the deprivation of any man or of his rights under the Constitution. It is to protect and perpetuate the rights which every freeman cherishes, to revive in all ed the Government to brief party success, we concede the point that the great question of the hour is, how can we defeat the Rs lteals ? By how manv and how wide “departures” from" the faith delivered unto us by the fathers, can we get a grab at the flesh-pote, at the loaves and fishes, upon which our political enemies have so long regalea themselves? This seems to be the prominent idea of our dejmrterl and departing friend*. It means nothing more, nothing less, than a temporary aliandonment of principle to expediency. But let them bear in mind the case of Esau, and read in his fate the doom of the Demo cratic party, in that day, when it sells its principles for a mess of pottage.— They will in vain try to woep book their birthright—“the goblet it broken and wasted the wine?’ Departures has produced a marked improvement on such ero{>* as have not suffered too much for want of work. Diligent attention ha* this year been more beneficial than imported fertilizer*.— With one month more of seasonalde rains, the corn crop of this section will bo nnneually good, hut a few weeks drought just now, will out off the prospect now so promising. We have "had during the past week a few days of good weather, of which our farmers dnly availed themselves.— Corn prospects are splendid, ootton looks as well as could be et pouted.— The wheat wheu Irrosliud, turus out very poor. Oats are not much to brag on. Grass and weeds were never better. Fra. th. Beta Ion* segis of those safeguards of personal by ^thcr* of the Republic.— liberty which the fundamental ll ** s l d re *„*boro Herald. of the land assure, that wc invoke the aid of all good men in the work of peace and reconstriction. Wa invite-their generous ao-opera tion, irrespective of all former differ ences of opinion, so tliat tile !uir-h voice of discord line Th' silenced; . itaa* "»f"w mm --f .re as far snperior to the finest chro- the finest ! u» h. I inos a* the light of day to ti ,T iimkts gas light. His nortraits of ! arealso remarkably fine. _ ' , have him in Atlanta to paint Kenne- ■iron A Aagtadt lUHroa*. w all( { .-^tone mountains—especially nun d ni. imtn nn*-™ 1 * • ARRIVE AT MOXTOOMSRT LEAVE COLl'MBI S ta ARRIVE AT jCOLCMRUS persons You should 1 the former, immortal in history. We saw here last evening, passing the street in a buggy, Senator W. G. Brownlow, of Tennessee. He reads* here. Hi* appearance betokens great — . r— ill health, but not worse than he has WMtUDftuu’ amT AUptaSlMM been tttbjcct to flit BCV *T*1 . wuictaae,4«A«tata wtatrauijtatajWta^^ , vt\- find here a number of Georgian* MAeoa 44 • A. M . will tors and lobbyists, who are thereby . ({, at a *,<‘W and dangerous sectional A Gallant Freaeh Bsj. A Pari* correspondent tells this story: A boy of thirteen, found fighting. taken to be shot He took a silver watch enabled to exercise a most dangerous | Station ra ay be checked; that the j A -nmmliaa taSnatiap over St ill. I J ..f .... ...1 ii.li aO W SW t*RS Hui U»U toa menil ■Captain, and corrupting influence over State and Federal legislation. If the career of these conspiritors be not checked, the downfall of free government ie in evitable, and with it the elevation of a military dictator on the ruins of the Bepnbuc. USURPATION—DESPOTISM. burdens of taxa'ion, direct anil nidi- I . i botrowed it” “Oh t yoo rect, may be reduced to the lowest __ p w ^ a,, officer, “I undereUod point consistent with good faith to, y OU _ J(>n want to ran off.” “My word every jnat national obligation, and of honor, I will come Link again,” laid with’ a strictly economical admitiistra- the boy, and the C.ipt .m, aeeiug it waa tion of the govemm mi, and that the a ohild L waa only too glad to get (id of Under the pretense of paeeing laws to enforce the Fourteenth Amend ment, and for other purposes, Con gress has conferred most despotic pow er upon th Executive, and provided an official machinery by which the liberties of the people art menaced, State* may be restored in their integrity and true relation to our Federal Uuiou. (Signed by the Democratic mem bers of Congress. Fas ekeap printing go to th* Boa Job Offie* and hava It asatly and ekeaply assented. A Glaat HsatfSiy. We are glad that the planters hare been able, for several days past, to clean their crops; they are beginning to look more cheerful, and another weak of sun-shinc will enable them to defeat Gen. Greene. Upland corn is looking fine, aud cotton, though small for the season, seems to hare taken a good start to grow. Prom the Heron Telegraph. A Telfair county correspondent savs: “Rains have been so constant with us that onr crops have been greatly injured. In many places th* ground has been too wet lor the plow, to that the grass lias greatly injured the corn; but still our com is better than an average, and there will l>* about 45 per cent, more of it made than last year. Onr farmers intend to use. hereafter, ail the manure they ran raise at home. We hojvj to have provision* enough next year of our own raising.” A Crawford county corrcspohleat savs: “I am sorry to say that njaro badly behind, owing to the The New Tork Post thus describes the Pennsylvania Central Railroad Company: With propsrty in its band* to the amount of two hun dred and fifty million* of doBun; with a gross income far greater than that of (he United States Govern ment twenty years ago, and greater than that of any State Government to-day; with at least three St islatures ready to register it* will,and others greatlv influenced by it, and with all its achievement* regarded by the boltixui able men whs control it merely as stepping stones to a greater future, what is to prevent it from be coming also the greatest potitioal power? The Philadelphia Gazette is com pelled to acknowledge that this is a true bill, aud only exensoe the tion, greod and rapacity of the sylvauia monopoly, by the allei that it was “the desperate it^b of warfare by the two great roads of luffi York that compelled the Pennsylv*- abundanoe of rain we have had. and it doesn’t cease to fall. D irk eiouds In ton minutss the boy n*m* back llow overshadow the earth, as if loth And te uk hi* stand with hi* bee to tke waUL "Here lam, fire!” Does Bomaa history tsfi us anything braver ? The Captain boxed the little h*ro’* earn sad ordered him nevzr to Shew hie face there again. They oould not fire su Go to The Sun Office for printing. to disperse without again sobbing our drowned crops. Cotton Is sipail and grassy, and the stand gen poor. If "we judge from th* pi pro«poct% ws would eqy the yield be poor. Corn is looking well ojy the < red land*, but the re has been too much. nia company to pat forth the exer tions and seize the powsn it bus.” But while scknowledging the danger menaced by that great monopoly, the ffi fid 1 * Penagylv*- Guzettis pride iu it as a niu institution overcomes eveiy feeling, and it thns complacently adds to the list of it* triumphs, my- Vhc Evening Poet might have sta ted " ' “ coni AGtafr. in another seeking the north JPhcific, tape all the commerce of the lakes, taps tliat of the Mississippi nod tribu taries at several point* is oonbemed in a great Hue skirting the Atlantic litoral hence southward, will have a voice and hand whenever Cincinnati achieves its purpose of reaching Chat tanooga, ana is the mpporter of * K" of European steamships to be run from this port And even such $d- dition* would fail to exhaust the cat alogue of resources and powers be longing te a corporation that, wheth er considered in its positive posse* sions, it* terminal and way connec tions, the business along its line and at its eevefyi feeders, its relation*, te power is enormous. The cou pon* is unau|Mtionab(v to be wed with apprehension ana th* in- rain for the swamp. There fs onff* fhtence to he jealously guarded.