Newspaper Page Text
THE
JL W •
VOL. II.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, MONDAY, JULY 10, 1871.
NO. 365.
THE DAILY SUN
Office Corner of Broad and Alabama St's
ruMihlicd bj the Atlanta Sun Publishing
Company.
cab
►el*
Alexander IL Stephens, Political Editor.
A. tt. Watsou, .... New* Editor.
J. Hcnlj Smith, .... Manager.
ell a | Agent* t
J. M. W. HILL.
HOW TO REMIT MONEY.
We wfb be re*]>oD*iblo for the **fe arrival of *11
luonev sent a* by R*gi*tered Letter, by Express, or
by Draft, but not otherwlae. If money sent in an
unregistered letter 1* lost It must lx* the loa* of the
j*eiso«i nendlng it.
No paper will be aant from the office till it i* paid
for, and name* wiU always be erased when the time
paid for expires.
To 0«r City Subscriber*.
We respectfully uk our city *ub«criber* to notify
uh in oaee of failure to receive Tun Sum. We have
recently made some changes in the city delivery, and
in consequence of thia, Home will probably be missed
for a few day*— until the route*are perfectly learned
by those in charge.
For * ahort time, we beg our city reader* to be pa
tient as they can. In case failure* occur. We promise
them that the evil will aoou be satisfactorily reme
died. We arc resolved to see that Tine Sum ia faith
fully and promptly delivered to every subscriber.
Hoke up Clubs.
We shall make Thk 8um lively, freah and inter
esting—containing *11 the latest new*. We shall
fill It with good reading matter, and shall have in
each issue as much reading mutter as any paper in
Georgia, and we shall soon enlarge and otherwise
improve it, so as to give it a handsome appearance
and make it easily reed sud desirable to have in the
family.
We ask our friends to ose a little effort to make np
a club for us at every post office. See our dub rates.
A very little effort iq all that is needed to make up a
large lbst.
To Correspondents.
Mr. Stephens will remain in Crawfordville. His
connection with The Sum will not change his resi
dence. All let' era intended for him, either on pri
vate matters or connected with the Political De
partment «>f this paper, should be addioesed to him
at Orawfordvtlle, Georgia.
All letters ou business of any kind, connected with
The Sum, except its Political Department, should be
addressed to J. Heuly Smith, Manager, Atlanta, Us.
Terms of Subsorlptlon *
DAIIiYi
Per Annum $7 00
Six Mouth* 4 00
Three Months 2 00
Oue Moutu 76
WEEKLY PER ANNUM :
Single Copy 3 00
Three Copies
14 04.
25 00
60 00
Twenty •• .....
Fifty •• .....
tttmfU t'opUs
WEEKLY—SIX MONTHS:
Single Copy, 8ix Mouths,
All subscriptions must be paid for io advance ;
and all names will be stricken trom our books when
the time paid for expires.
Terms of Ad vert ImI
Advertisements in the Local Column marked with
an asterisk, (*| will be charged 26 cents per line each
Insertion.
Advertisements under the Special Notice head
(leaded) for less time than one week, will be charged
16 cents per line.
A#* Advertisement* except for established bust*
ness houses, in this city, must be paid tor ta ad
vance
No reduction wiU be made on the above rates for
quarterly, semi-sunnal or yearly advert! entente.
Arrivals uiulg Depurturee of T»
Mil from Atlanta.
Night Passenger Train leaves 10:30 p. I
Day Passcuger Train arrives .....2: Op. i
Day Passenger Train leaves ..8:16 a. i
Cartereville Accommodation arrives .9:10 a. r
CartersvilJe Accommodation haves ...3:00 p. I
THE URORUIA (AUGUSTA) SAII.KOAD.
(.Vo Day TVaia ca Smndap.)
Night Passenger Train arrive* ...0:40 a I
1:10 i
Night Pausenger Train loaves.,
l)*y Passenger Tram arr.ves...,
Day Paa-M-nger Train leaves
Stone Mountain Accommodatim
Stone Mountain accommodation leaves....6.46 a i
MACOK AMU WESTERN BAILTOAP.
Night Passenger Train arrives 10m* p i
^ * 9:28 p i
2: !0 p.
Night Passenger Tram >eav«
Day Passenger Tram arrives
Day Passeuger tiaiu leaves..
..6.00 a
ATLvMTA AMO WEST POINL RAlLJUIAD.
Night Passenger Train arrives ....10.07 a r
Night Passenger Tram leaves 2:46 p. r
Regular Pausenger I rain leaves 7.30 a. in
It. Louis. Memphis, Nashville aid
Chatlanooiiss Great Central
Through Line.
Chattanooga train leaves.... 9:60 am. and 6 46 p.m.
•* arrives...2:U6 p.m. and 3:4.') am.
Memphis tram leaves 4 :fflt am. and J.Oo p.m
•• arrives 9 .to a.hi. sud ortw p.m
8t. Lewis trail have* 4.W a hi.
«• arrive 9 3u am. and t-OO p.m.
Bhslbyvflie train leaves 3:30 p.m.
*• arrive 9:40 a.m.
tffi. Tb* 1:60 am , ll ra . and 3:30 p.m. train* do
ur undaya The 4:00 am. and 6:46 p.m.
trains
ii daily.
WITH WALKER IN NICARAGUA.
ifYrai Ur /Vsu of Joaquin MiUer, the new California
l\xt.)
WALKER.
•'He was a brick and as brave as a boar;
As brave as Nevada’s grissUes are,
A Texan tigress in her lair,
Or any lion of anywhere:
Yet gentle as a panther is.
Tall, courtly, grand as any king,
Yet simple as a child at play,
In camp and court the same alway,
And never moved at anything;
A dash of sadues in his air.
Born, may be of his over care,
Aud, may be, boro of despair
In early love—1 never knew;
1 question not, as m ay do,
Ol things as sacred as this is;
I only know that he to me
Was ail a father, friuud. could lie;
I sought to know no more Uiau this;
Of history of him or his."
n all d Mgr oe, say of the dead
Ilia heart was black, his hands w
Say Oils much, aud be aatislkcJ;
That I have known beueath the sun,
Mao. maid, or saint, or Hadduoee,
As boy or man for any caure—
1 simply say he was my friend
Wheu Mtroug of liaud sud fair of fame;
Dead and disgraced, 1 stand the Maine
To him, aud so shall to the end.
BIB (IRATE.
He lies low in the levell'd Hand.
Unubelter’d from the tropic sun,
And now, of all be kuew. not one
Will MjM'uk of his fair in that far laud.
Perhapi riUH
No sod, no sign, no cross
But si his side s cactuM gr«-<
Upheld its lames long and keen;
Yet redolent a
In iny left hand I held a shell,
All rosy lipp’d aud pearly rod;
Th■■ graml songs of the s
On shell, sing well, wild, with s will,
Wheu storms b ow loud and b.rds be still,
The wildest sea-song known to tlieul
I said some things, with folded bauds,
K'-ft whisper’d in the dim. ,<•« sound,
And eyes neld humbly to the ground,
And frail knees knit In the warm sand*.
He had done more than this for me,
And yet 1 could not well do more!
UEOUUIA NKWS.
The Savannah Advertiser anuuun
tea with a flourish, the appearance o
the first mad dog of the season.
James Degnan died suddenly of
apoplexy, in Savannah Wednesday
morning.
Six feet was the length of a coach
whip snake that was killed in Ameri-
cus, one day last week.
The Sumter Republican announces
the death of Mr. A. Uongleton, one of
,tlu» oldest aud most highly esteemed
'citizens of Amerieua.
Central Railroad stock (ex-divi
dend) sold at Savannah, Tuesday, at
*117 to 117 5(1 per share; South
western at *91 50; Atlantic and Gulf
(guaranteed)at *49 50: Atlantic and
Gulf (common) at *28 50 ; Savan
nah aud Augusta at *84, and Navan-
uau bonds at *84.
From the Columbus Enquirer, 7ih.
A gentleman from Harris yester
day informed tis that Alderman Chip-
lev succeeded at Hamilton in ob
taining a subscription of 150.0(H) in
money, besides large donations in
lands! The good wwk goes bravely
on. We are glad to hear of such fine
success. It assures us that our Har
ris rounty friends are fully aroused to
the great railroad project, and is a
guaranty that the North and South
Will be built at an early day.
From Ui* Chronicle aud Sentinel, Ttb.
A gentleman residing in Gretne
county rives us thefollowing remark
able snake story: Tie says that lie
had repaired to the hanks of a small
stream for the purpose of seenring a
small fry for breakfast. Ilis atten
tion was soon utlrnctcd by a water
snake lying a few feet below him in
the edge of the water, w ith his head
resting on the bank. lie had hooked
a young alligator oneo by putting a
small lish on his hook and playing it
on the to]) of the water, and it occur
red to him that he might hook the
snake in the same way. Cutting a
small piece from a fish and baiting his
hook with it ho begun to play it slow
ly around the snake’s head. He gave
evident signs of interest in the bait
revolving around him but made no
move. Soon, by accident, the piece
of fish touched the twek of his head.
His Miakesbip took this as an insult
und showed nis resentment by snap
ping at it furiously„ond after three or
four efforts caught it in his month.
The gentleman lightened the line and
his astonished suakeship discovered
that he was sold. After nerferming
divers evolutions with the hope of
ithcr running or fighting his way
out of the scrape he acknowledged
that, although his great ancestor had
been too much for the woman, the
son of the woman had" now become
too much for him. and gracefully sub
mitted to la? lifted on the hank und
liave his head bruised. The queer
antics of the first snake had now at
tracted a second to the spot, ami re-
baiting his hook with a piece of fish
the angler let it down gently till it
touched his head a* he lay upon the
water, with his head a li' 1 elevated.
Soon as the hook touch* d him he
M i -tern Kuilro.nl of Alabama
70 a. M j seized it, aud quickly foiled himself
by the side of his ’ companion. In
i.Eavc Mosro ntL'uv
AUIUVK AT W,«*r COi.M'..
ABH1YK AT COUJMBVS....
has commenced in earnest A foroeof
65 or 70 hands has been engaged all
of the present week, uuder CoL J. B.
Cummings, in clearing away the un
dergrowth, extracting stumps, tilling
ditches, etc., and before another week
will have expired, the neceSBorv
buildings will have been planned and
contracted for. These will constitute
the most important part of the work
to he done, and they should not only
he eligibly located, nut also as tasty
in design and durable as the funds in
hand will admit of. One of the
buildings should, we think, he par
ticularly attractive in aiqiearanoo,
aud as nearly central in its location in
the grove as possible, It has been
said that a building of any sort in
the center of the grove would mar the
natural beauty of the spot. A rough,
shapeless and ungainly structure
would, indeed, have that effect; but
one of the right design, light, open
a *1 handsomely ornamented, with a
pretty fountain in the centre of it,
would add to the beauty of the
grounds and improve the landscape,
as viewed from the main entrance.
The exhibition halls will probably
ho located to the right of the grove as
one enters the main gate, as will also
the stalls for live stock, he to the right
of and near the race track. This will
!h‘ a good arrangement and very
convenient, and besides, they will
not obstruct a view of the river dur
ing the boat racing. The arrange
nieut of the buildings, as indicated
in the plans we have seen, 's admira
ble, aud they will be commodious aud
well constructed,
Our spirited and active young
Mayor is fully alive to the import
ance of the work before him, und
sensible of what the Agricultural So
ciety of the State, and the people
generally, expect of him, and we have
an abiding faith in the business tact
and energy of the man to believe that
he will fully meet all expectations.
He will have everything in readiness
for the Fair, and all gotten np iu neat
and handsome style.
From the New York Herald. 6th-
On Saturday, May 27th, while Jas.
Murphy, a little hoy of live years,
was playing iu the streets of Suvun-
uuh, near his father's home, he was
accosted by a woman, a former ac
quaintance of the child's deceased
mother. The woman took tlie child
to a store and bought him a new hat,
jacket and some candy, enticing him
in this manner to accompany her ou
hoard the steamer Magnolia bound for
New York.
The father of the child (a ’long
shoreman) on returning from his
work, not finding his boy at his
boarding place, and being unable to
obtain utiy tidings concerning him
since early iu the day, went in search
of him. ” lie searched all through
the city, including the police stations,
without avail. On Sunday the search
was renewed, with the assistance of
some friends, with more success. An
old negro carman who knew Ihcchild
said he carried the hoy and a woman
down to the dock and saw them em
bark on board the Magnolia for New
York.
The woman told the old darkey
that she was the only living friend
the child had ; that he had no father
or mother, and that., she did not in
tend leaving him in Bavanuah any
longer. -
The lather, on learning that the
cliilil wiu ou his way to New York,
immediately telegraphed here to a
friend, (a Mr. Downy) who knew the
boy, requesting him to be at the dock
when the steamer arrived and take the
child away from the woman, adding
that he would come on the next
steamer himself and claim the child.
Throngh some mistake Hr. Downy
failed to be present at the landing of
the passengers, hence the child es
caped. Mr. Murphy arrived in this
tins city on Thursday only to
learn that lie had lost all trace
of the boy. The Christian name only
of the kid-napper is known to the
father of the child, and he is ablo to
give but a slight description of her,
having seen her bat two or three
times as far us he remembers. She is
about forty-five years of age, hair
turning gray, low-sized aud tnin, aud
of Irish nationality. The boy is aged
five years, large for his ago, light hair,
has a sear on his forehead, shaped
somewhat like a capital N.
Superintendent Kelso has j,remised
the poor man to do all in his power
to restore his lost boy, declaring that
he will find him if he ii anywhere
within the limits of the city or State.
GK0KGIA CHOP NKIVS.
From the CarteravtQe •tender*, Tth,
While our wheat orbp has proven
almost a failure we ure much flatter-
d with the corn prospect, as we sec
in onr town this morning a coru stalk,
one out of a field of the same sort,
6 1-2 feet high. Let Its have rain
and com bread will lx* plentiful in
Cherokee Georgia.
Ftam U.. ZAriy Oaaty an
The past week has been one of sun
shine and extreme heat—the first in
a long rime when the work of the
farm has not !)ecii ini* rruphul liv rain.
Our farming friend* Ugm lii look
more cheerful, though t*wv are not
without dread that with ifrv wcu'hor
...n»
...nut. n
••
.... 4.4. '•
.... 4:10 A. M.
.... 6.40 ••
LEAVE COLUMIIDS 1140 All
AKlilVK AX COLUMBI A «■» “
Macon X Amruit i ttailrna*!.
DAT PASMRKUBE TRAIN D IRT, SUBCaTS eim<»w.
Leave Auguste a 12 0» >L
Leave Macro at fi W A. M.
Arrive at Macon at 7 40 P.M.
Arrive at Auguste at 1 46 P. M.
«%. The (tet penwignr train arriving at Macon at
f :*• P. M . and makes doe* <x
at commoting roads at Macon.
Macoa at 6 A. M., will make elm
mak with *|» day
Washington and ail points on th
Wtil connect at Atlanta with tr *~
PUM * *. JuilN
may come aickneaa, even before Uen-
i . ,, , i'T'T' ."i Wat Green h-brought under,
less than half of an hour he bail, s
caught fonr-all that he could find. „„ ***»«■ eot™*- s™.
One of them got loose after being Hie »rat-Te*rW r’OMnt ta Liver-
drawn to land and got back iuto the 11* 0 ®! show* that that port has been
water, but he readilv hit at th- hook I reporting in her statements 136,000
the second time and was caught I Luitm too Bin*. As a eoruseqaencr
again. On ‘-a good day for Aiukea” 1 oqt(on goes up. Judging by the oen-
thc gentleman thinks he would catch * ditton of affairs in Guoigia, («nd re-
them faster than some men could mi-1 P )J!* 8 ® re wor8e 'j
hook them. will be unpossbh for the United
From th, Kaeon TeUfraph. sth. Stales to raise 3,000,000 bale* with
The work of pntting the Central the very beat seasons, and they are
City Park grounds in order for i he ; hardly probable. Pcaheely has the
holding of the i'tate Fair in OctoL-r, 1 run an opportunity to dry the ground
and kill the grass before another raiay
season comes. The crop of 1871-2
will not be oa large as was supposed
it would_ be aeveral months ago by u
good many thousand bales. Corn
nas not been injured materially thus
liar, and it is not too lute to appre
hend serious damage. Things look
brighter. The less ootton and more
ooru aud small grain, the more clear
money to planters.
From the Valdosta Times.
Crops in this sectiou ure unusually
poor. We stated some time ago that
they were then more prosperous than
had been. Since that time it has
been raining almost continually.
There will be probably us much corn
made as last year, then having been
so much more planted: hut the oot
ton crop will not be mere than one-
third, even if the rust aud caterpillar
do not bother it
From the Albany New*, 7th.
A Outhbert correspondent says:—
Thu o>ttou in Randolph, Clav and
Quitman is several wtwkx behind time,
and of diminutive proportions. The
oontinned wet weather lias so favored
the grass and retarded labor that
the former has a most vigorous hold
on the crop. The latter, however,
seem to be gaining ground at pres
ent. The corn early plantod iB pretty
well made and good; but on the
whole the oorn crop (s not promis
ing.
From the S Iidvrsvi l« *i ifg *u.
Up to this writing «v Imvo had
but one favorablu report. Corn
fuiling rapidly for tho want of ruiu,
and the only hojie for un average
yield is from the large area planted.
Seasonable rains, however, we hop*
would produce a very great change
for the better. Cotton is improving
fast. Partial showers of ruiu requit
ed iu various parts of the oouutry,
though not suilieieut t > be of any
great service*. .Some Complaint o'l
freedmeu im working well. Genoml
prospects by no moans Haltering.
From tlie ('nuMtituli.*iuli«t. 7th-
Two of onr citizonJ wlm have had
much experience iu“ watching the
growth of ootton for liiunv years,
nave just relumed from Charlotte-,
N. C., and they iv|Kirt that the; pros
pect in regard to the growing crop is
very gloomy. The* stand is only fair,
tin-crop generally overrun with grass,
ami lh<- plant luuuh smaller than is
usual at this time of the year. The
wheat anil oat crop is aim *st a fail
ure, but the com looks reinarkuhly
well, aud much ni.nv has boon plant
ed this than any other year since the
war.
From Uio Americas Republican, 7th.
A Preston correspondent soys:—
There is growing on the plantation
of Professor WindBor^ln this county,
a single stalk of corn la iring otic
hundred silks and shoots 1 There
arc twelve of the former, all of which
look as though they will produce
corn, and many of the lulter it is
thought will do the same thing. The
latest accounts from the crops of this
county put grass far ahead, and many
of the tanners ready to give np the
conteat. Home of thorn have quit
their cotton and turned their atten
tion to corn and hogs, hoping to make
bread and meat onoiia-h to feed them
selves fbr tho next ftill anil winter.
From the (Jolumliae Bmi 7th,
Work as planters will, they oaiiuot
get gross out of cotton, (loud show
ers have fallen every day of tbieweek.
On the river, plantation laborers are
being hired at tho rate of 75c. and
$1 per day, and still the grass holds
the ascendancy. The pro.-|ieot of a
quarter of a dollar per pound does
not kill it very fast. On the nfilands
crops are passably clean but the pres
ent weather helps the gras* more
than ootton, Tho orop is soveral
weeks backward, here it is Jqly and
we hear farmers showing ootton
blooms as curiosities. This report is
general throughout this section. Corn
Eaa sntfbred nuioh. Nut there will lx-
a large yield. It can he hurt but lit
tle now.
From Iho Chattooga Aivert ssr,
The corn crop is now the forlorn
hope df our people. The w heat crop
w hich was early and very promising
us we thought in the spring, was al
most an entire failure. 'I lie ruins
always unfavorable to wheat, came
just at the season of the spring to
make certain the rust and a failure of
the orop. Our farmers are about now
to begin threshing, and it is supposed
that the majority of them wifi not
ret more than their seed hack. Hut
or tho lieantitul crop of last year,
much of tho present crop yet in the
field would have been threshed and
oonsumed, hut thanks to the good
ono, we liavo some old wheat and coru
with whioh to lighten this calamity.
Onr oats are poor indeed. Tbov are
tall and the acres yield an ulmnuanoe
of straw, but no’ groin. The rust
destroyed many w hole Held-*. Many
farmers, usually thrifty and well up
with their work, are, to use their
words, "badly in the gras-*.” Some
have abandoned whole fields rather
than undertake to clear them of
r ws. Cotton is mostly the crop left
go, be Iteaiil »<> tW-’good sense of
onr people.
,
New Departures >ln.| «S‘tile
Kntlre Max in .
Forney, iu bin Philadelphia l‘nm, tiyn:
"As the Dernorrery do not accept the
Ka-Klax bill, then ue« departure, ao tar
■a they have accepted it, i» vain clean.—
mend manta to the C- institution are dead
Man unleas eufuroed. To accept the
Amendment and at tba sane time t<> re
ject the law that makee it effective, is for
a party to stultify themselre.."
It wool do to nay that th - Ku-KUix
law is unauthorised by the XVih Amend
ment. The Radicals made both the
teat aud the law, asd who shall
i to instruct them in regarSlo «M
proper eoaetrustion of either. Aasapt-
ilyw^l*^lin|i DMMMTAtl BkVlt ftst (6* sq.
tire lark, root and branch, and make ae
famuli nmi, or wry faoea.aMber. '
-, July 1.
The Manager's Carmlral.
Iu many of the so-oalled Demo
cratic States of tlie North, the mana
gers of the party-caucus insist on
ering people with their protesta,
thins, notagainst, but iu favor of the
so-called New Departure. Having the
party-bugle—the noier-making, as dis
tinguished from the thinking instru
ment—in their hands, they echo and
re-echo one another all around the
horizon. It reminds ohe who has
travelled in Europe of the twilight
concert of the country jackasscs.-*-
Those inexpensive little beasts of bur
den, so much riven to inharraonioai
vocalization, hold forth urinoipally at
tlie sun-sotting, or rather between
that aud night-fall—the labors of the
day being over, and the evening meal
duly dispatched. Then come Teisnre
for all the harmonies of the asinine
orchestra; the spasm of sound soon
commences, aud cliallenges attention
from all oreated things for its hoar, to
the silencing of every other noise,
even the shrulsereara of the looomo-
tive. Kiret, some speedy feeder, who
lias bolted his beans and hay, begins.
He is slow and faint at first; but
soon ascends to loftier and mightier
notes. The air shakes with the vibra
tions ; but before the highest point is
reached, list! another ass emuluous
or wanton from the fullness of his
stomach, chimes in with his sweet
and variant voice. Then, lo! anoth
er, aud dowu the horizon auother, on
its verge auother, and still another,
till the ilisoourse becomes so perfect
ly frightful that human ears ore all
too weak for the trial, aud cun nut
licar it at the moment nor bear to re
call the infliction, till both time and
distance have made amends for such
a strain upon 'patience and eudur-
unce. Any one, especially a stranger,
can uevur forget this funons smiting
of the sir; it has no pumllcl in the
round of nature. Tho authors of it
*li> not suffer from it; nay, they are
not only equal to it, bnt they take
daily pleasure in it; deserve to he
they ure, not only asses themselves,
hut the progenito'i's of usxos fur gene
rations.
We are re.niiulod of this rustio dis
play every few days by tlie idle reso
nance of the eauuus 'declarations in
our own and mightier States, as ono
after auother they pluligc into tho
cheat pasture, now known and exo-
crated of all good men, called the
New Departure, which was started a
month ago at tho St Nicholas, in this
oity, by Mr. Vallandigliam.
It has a most uncertain, most dis
cordant, in brief, a perfectly asinine
sotftid, which intelligent men loathe
and detest from the bottom of their
hearts. The echo has. gime at lust to
tho jiunping-off place—that is, to
Augusta, in the .State of Maine, whore
five hundred of the Democratic man
agers were assembled on Tuesday to
go through fh<5 sinister perform
ance. These harlequins resolve first
and last, on hnryitig old issues out of
sight, on addressing themselves to the
living issues of the hoar, on deter
mining these latter by the liviug prin
ciples of Democracy—aud as a sequel
—according to the folium. Now, the
old issne was and it is betwocn the
limited powers of the Federal Gov
ernment aud its utter despotism—in
oue word, its right to fix tho line of
division betwqou the delegated and
the reserved powers aooording to its
own will and pleasure, or what isstiU
mere descriptive, according to its own
interest—that is to say, the pecuniary
and other profit of the people's - Ser
vants who ooudaot Federal atfoira, hut
who are bent upon making it high
life below stairs, not for themselves,
but fur the masters of the house,
while they hold high carnival abovo.
It is the most repulsive thing in
tho world to behold this official Demo
cratic (?) sound and fitry signifying KH
nothing, repeated by five to six nun- “
dred fellows in each State, for their
own misorablo pnr|>usec,' It does not
signilY anything to them whether the
mass of tlie poor are roasted alive at
the slake by Die slow process of tax
depletion and caloric, which oon-
sumes them aud their families, or Sot
They themselves hold that the masses
have no intelligence and no character;
but that front a more fitfulness of
chaugo, they will run after something
new, and tlie more superficial the
bettor. Consequently they propose
to overlook the difference of races,
and violate the letter and spirit of the
constitutional protection which the
States gave themselves in tlieirsofomn
mutual oompaot, aud more than that,
to forgive—to condone the outrages
called amendments, so that they, the
managers, shall iu their turn wield
desjwtlc powers They waut to in
terpret the constitution liberally, to
give Congress absolute power; such
as has been exercised by Stevens and
Butlor, with their" owu noble selves
for administrators. And then, they-
are going to be so very abstentions,
not to my virtuous, in the rile of
tyrants. They will rival the Dutch
ladies who came over with George (.)
from Hanover to rule England with
out any constitution, written **i
otherwise. Dutchess Killimiiiscggi-
vowed pulriidly to flic uiibcllrwns
sailors and laborers ah..at the dock
where the fended that she aud hor
friends came over from Europe for
the good of the British people. She
said in her aoarest approach to the
vernacular. •‘ItVroinr tor your goods,”
which th# crown .oa.ue advantage of,
improved so as to fully express the
idea, “Yes, by G—, for our good:
aud—and chattels, too,” which the
Duchess thought very satisfactory,
not understanding the change of
meaning. The telegraph makes the
five hundred Maine Democrats say
that they recognise their binding ob
ligation to the existing Ubnstitution
of the United Htatee; and they de
nounce the means by which the smti
became the supreme law of the land,
but it is uotlikcly to be literally true.
The Vicars of Bray, in California, as
we write, send their pacific bat stupid
echo from other live hundred throats
across the continent, so that shallow
answers shallow; os formerly, “deep
uuto deep”
Now, we hold it for certain, or we
should despair of the republic and of
free institutions,'that tho Maine con
vention nor the Ohio convention, u*.r
auy of the other lulso-departure con
ventions, express the opinion of their
respective peoples. They hate each
trimmed tho party sail to the popular
wind; they essay popularity, and try
to calcli the breeze: bnt tin- constit
uents will not lend themselves to the
cheat.
In Ohio, there will bo a light vote,
for the true Dcmoorrey contains hun
dreds and thousands who adhere to
tho old Issue, and who will not be
used for the personal advancement of
candidates, if’there were anything to
olioosebetween them, ns there is not-
Thay go to the jiolls as they take an
oath in tho court-house; at least they
will not cull un the most solemn
sanctions to enable them to profit bv
a more deliberate lie. They know the
amendments are the resnlt of fraud,
of duress, of force, of precipitation
and the absence of good faith. They
kuow that they fire fatal to tho whole
Constitutional system, by inviting the
mailed hand of Congress and its gen
erals, and the sword of the President,
now made the armed interpreter of
their aots, iuto the very heart of the
States. They do not want to be as
sured fidelity and good works by such
models of patriotism as will be ad
vanced by military means to the sn
ored planes of trust .for good, and
wise civil rulers. It is a most fantas
tic, aud we repeat it, almost asinine
exhibition for inwto make, all over the
North iu tho rotten and debauohod
assemblies, called State Conventions,
which, in tho interest, and at the
book aud nod of County Court At-
torn-vs. proclaim cemetery honors
for the vitals of the Federal com
pact
Of another thing, we may fir I as
sured, viz: That no Democrat ram
possibly lie elected President unless
hejiave every vote of every State
South of the Ohio river; and the
New Dcpn rtnro candidate, whoever
he is, will not be able to mint on the
first one of them all. Let the asses
to the other asses bray.
_ - I _ _ ®ei
of the Unit**! Btatoa Di*triot Court nt
Treuton, N. J., lost Week, tlie twenty-four
Kr*uri jnrorN confronted frini. Weighing
6,491 pound*,or an nvem^ of ifOpounds
The lightest wa« 160 and the heaviost425
pounds.
Wtttta & (V« hinarpool Cotton Circu
lar, of t he litli n Haut, says Hid »ukm*hs in
the viniMt* mippljr over that of last yoar
war on t^nit date 351,236 Indus. The
week previous it wan 406,680, and Uw
week before that 440,780. Eight weeks
ago it was 657,000 Lulus. This nhowa a
gain io consumption equal to over forty
thousand hales a week, or nt the rate of
taom than two nHHinn hide* a year.
Onsim-sa Notices.
AJfKKICAX ffTAKDARO
SCHOOL ERIE!.
SCHOOL BOOHS
John P. Morton & Co.,
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY,
Reading and Snelling:
Hut ler't.lnur Iran Sptt ling Book
But Ur's lit Book In Spelling
and Heading.
Bulletins .fete Fire! School
Header.
Butter's .fete Second School
Header.
Butter's .fete Third School
Popular J’anutn tiamng IHiulpnco
*25.00 Saved! *2.>.00 Savedf
PRIOHS AND TKHMH OF
WII>40N HIICTTLK
Sewing Machines.
, pin hi
ftu’jr
UHPEEFBKD
No. f, Plain '
No. 6. ti*1f-M
No. 7. do
\ MffUif cover
Me. 9, Fnll ( »hin«t. 100 110
No. 6, Ful< li iu{ Owvor. 120
W6IUIAVTKD rtVEVKABMDY
WTL6Q*J 8LW1HO MACHINE CO.
We wish it diaihictly under*tuod that those *rn onr
rm* from which w* never A«vi*te. sn<\ we gnMsh-
tee «»ur M—hioes Io h*ve ovary point «t n>■« ll.m.e
bo found in Ui« Undi*Tl*j:d ShiiUle Mavliiiio, and
durnbi*. made <rf** qna,1 niaturi*!** *0j Machine
wofl.l. and Ibst It will do ss el*g»ot work.
W. II. UtltVnM. (ion. Ascut.
32 Hi.
N O T I O 3EI.
Oollego ComnK'iiocinc,
zcpt’s orncx omRou bailsoad.
An.,,.,., Inn, ms. 1»A).
'UK COS-41, l .l)XT KX) B< Inrc ■ r «
L»tK* bv .4
COV.X iT.jX. Junil lSUi. Ull.
nxroRU. imj Mih. u;i.
ATHXX9, hi) :««1>, U71.
Uutlur'a Uou*i rlab UnaOen i
■fete First Reader.
Jfetc Second Reader.
Jfttc Third Reader.
A’etc Fourth Reader.
Jl'ete Fl/lh Reader.
JTetc Sixth Reader.
amuimarnml Ilhctorio ■
Butler's Introductory Grant
or.
Butter's Practical Grammar,
uonnetrs First Mxssons in Com
position.
Bonuelt's JHanual of Composi
tion-
APltluuoilob and Alae\>rt) i
7 oime's Primary .trlthmettc.
Towns's Intermediate Arith
metic.
Towne’s Mental Arithmetic.
Totene's Practical Arithmetic.
Key to Same.
Totene's Algebra.
Key to Same.
Miscellaneous :
WEBSTER'S SPELLER AND DEFINES.
NEIAON* BOOK-KEEPING.
KAVAH AUGH'H ORIGINAL DRAM AS,DIALOGUES,
TABLEAUX-VIVANT8. AO.
BRONSON B ELOCUTION.
BARBEE'S GEOIjOOY.
BUTLER'S COMMON SCHOOL SPEAKER.
GOODRICH'S ANCIENT HISTORY.
GOODRICH'S MODERN HISTORY.
Our school-book* are electrotyped,bound and printed
fa LouiaeiUt. They are tlie work of Southern au-
Own. our* Is the ONLY Publishing Houae South
of the Ohio engaged in the publication of achool-
hCMik*. Thomt i*. t* ahould lnclint- teacher* of the
« •- - - oxam i no onr b<H>kR before coming
comnrieon
- _ fttUMna
fully i.iM-t the w*ut* of our peoyle than
South and West
to a conclnaion. We Invite _
with others, feeling Hutinflcd that
the most Important m boola o
Noutr Caeoltna, Tkneemmkl.
Alabama. MiMiwirri, LouiHriAMA, Texas and Oau-
, Uumovnt, OEOROIA,
Uter calaUtpnet and School Repo rtf. CormpOndencc
JOHN P. MORTON * CO., Pnblfsl»r».
16(1 A 1 HAW. Mainak, Louisville, Ky, Sold bj all
bookaailerA Haprescuted in Georgia, Alabama and
Miaaiatippi bj Mr. 18BAKL PUTNAM, formerly of
Griffin, ua. lyi-lm
Chalybeate Springs,
MERIWETHER COUNTY, OEOROIA.
place, beg* to aunounoe to the public that it i*
in thorough repair and ia now in perfect readme**
f »r tAe r*v option #f guests. To the old patrons of
the Chalybeate it I* nereUes* tc apeak dT It* merit*.
To.othors we will state that th* main spring 1* pro*
uouuced by competent judges to be the finest chaly
beate spring in tba United State*—tuning from th*
North aide ot Pine Mountain, and dtactuwgtaff MW
gaUotia per hour. It 1* remarkable for " ’
rtitea It ua* effected. We have three if
milphur, magneaia aqd freeetone---tie whole t
bracing a mostvaliublerombinatiou of tninggR
tar*. The piece ia handsomely lighted with gm.
KKATING irilVTC.
LADIES' 3WIMMINQ BATH,
ui'It in a beaiitiftal, sparkling atream, rushing froo
he monutelii. Tt i* 7ft f*'®t long. 19 feet wide, and i
•ptb to be regulated i.y tii* betbora, well eoelnaad.
vblcd with i-ionty druMing room*. A beau
veldiv * * —
UfUL level
the mounb
afford picaaarv
Stable on
i* hors**
KINK
nlsh t
onstructcd along th*
unding In pH turesqui
thoa* Who like that exert,
the place will be prepared
and carriages.
BAS’D ■
uealf to make his u
reduce toe price of hoard to 916 per
- - 1 reasonable andf Uniterm
lenient * ill b* provided ter
Uio» in health, tb* kindest attention will be yaidfe
in valid*.
C. B. HOWARD
PROPRIETOR.
Henry Bischoff & Co,,
WHOLESALE grocers,
XXD CBAUB8 III
Ulo«, Wine*. Llqavva, *r-
gnrs, Tobaooo. Ao.
Ho. 107, East Bay Stre*t,
CHARLESTON, fe. C.
1MWTS ANDSHO^
c. ju giiks At eon,
will be continued in all tta branches aa ]
S > himarli at the old stand. Freah i
*J and the best workman o
i at* inter* are mvitad to mm .
uew ones te coma and give me a triaL*
1