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Raglnd 4
A »T««T ClBIMlWWI Ot f ■ Ca»tTltUTlD<--t» M»«W AMO OOOMOMIOAk AOOIMItT&ATIOM OM *KM .WnuiUf,
COLUMBUS, QL, TUESDAY, OCTOBER S9,1978.
Volume
The Weekly
MOW T9 TOME 1* MVIMMflh, '
There In
our friend* may w
tial election aa to allov '
set up that their yi
wo well know that
icnl party will. If
eel von of any
will of the
graphic con
Executive Committee,
only one ballot-box m*T h* l>mt tW
votes for
Congi
rato; in other words, that fit* WM>
niuat bo |mt into Um
and CongroMuoa aro voted for at
aauio time. Let this be aattatataad aad
acted oo throughout Um
Another matter that oofhMo be agreed
upon at onoe la Uta/Wfi of the BtartroM
ticket. The Ueket for Oieoley aad lawna,
aa auuouooed. aad pieeeM at the hpeMaef
tho Demooratio
namea of foer Maatoro lar Ibe State at
Large and Seva* for the Diatatate.
the ticket area aarotattsd the a
1 rioting bill bed Met peand tbe t^kde-
tnre. By it
into aim iaalaad of araaa Mitrttta,
throne eome of the EUatom nnealaeted
out of the Districts to wMeh they ere
nominally (resigned. It may make no dif.
fereuce whether an Eleoter raaddee hi any
perl ieular Diatrlct or not; Mrt ee
that where ho la, on tha tiahet rated,
axsignod to one llietriat end he reedy ra-
aidea in another, the taaaMaat torottaart*
luuy afford a pretext tar a daalel that ha
h. i he maa i rosrtfof rad rated lar. n
aooiua to na that the ahal affifftat
ing end votingthe ttakat, <■ vtaw of tb*
changes of the HUM, In to Mm***
Elector* ' -a-rtTOTi
they are Diatriet or
without naming nay DtaMela. Thin in
tbe form reocmmraflll IM Allbnaai, aal
ono that we heliere lo ha free from objec
tion. The ttoket for Georgia, U l
framed, would bo thin:
Fob Kusnoaa:
W. T. WOFFORD,
U. L DENNING,
JULIAN HARTBIDGE,
WASHINGTON FOR,
H. G. TURNS*,
K. N. ELY,
w. I. HCDttON,
JA11E8 II. PACE,*
H. R. CABBY,
J. N. DORSEY,
K. D. GRAHAM.
■••• “Yanina Mena” hr to* Harold.
We make tbe following entmat I
an editorial artiala of tha Raw York Airr
aid of Friday Unit
There has, however, beta a aallllliatly
powerfol aad drai * “ •
the eilatiag Adm!
rloua dices Mtion in the pnbiia naiad to
ward tha party ia power. Tbe ataangth
or tha oppoaitioa haa been Uma far taken
tailing, area W it aheeld not again rally
in a threatening meaner. WUksat any
regular orgaoiaattoa, with eld yartiaa
■haltered end scattered, artthawk nan
or offleiel patronage, it ban foeaad tbs Ad-
ininiatrntioAto allreoadiaary affoata ia
order to pcareai it from beeomlg aa oaar-
whelming aaaoeaa. Ia Noatb "inijii
ai tbe opaatajgdf the III ipitoi.ltatrooh
down tbs nasally Inigo WaywbHian
Men, and won s anbetnatlnl atata
the Liberala. la Ohio It
paired Um AImUmUm
Indiana it athievad a hriUtagt
cisive triumph; in Georgia B
strength that shook tho
in tha position of tho I
All thin was awimgltahafl, *
aartewaty bn.
ss’i
membered, la tha teeth af a MbaMM
that in becoming -■—--g-j lagnngfl
and of a moneyed power probably nan-
quailed ainee tbe Ini tut ion of political
contents in this ooastl it. While tha Be-
pubtioana hern had mflttraaaf adtaaa to
draw upon for ooatriboUoaa lo daflay
tho eipenaee of Um el actions, and hare
than been U a position to moat at alaia*
made upon them with a Uberai h**d, tbe
opposition bee — “ ’— * “
upon tho meegro mbaaatytiaaa oMadf
vidnals, aad has boon aomatinees dmtitate
of foods to oorsr area the aMat oadtomy
expensesof acampaign. Yattaapttaaf
these drawbacks aad dhadto
straggle in natty Bute, with
hopeless exceptions, haa been
maintained, and '
unsettled aad '
aeriona
winning party ia
t erljaaaa
>ua, haa baea vtocrnoaly
I > Km — H » -» - .a.
«CIM
public mind. Leaning aat of aigbt tha
U«llagatii»aa ef Audi agatoat tha
Mparty in l’aoaaylvuta, than ia
evirlaaee to aetiafy arary hapar-
ssrLtMsE
auffioient
tiol and di
eloctionn
of tbe l*r<
Uontoij.gra^
bar.
aira to impram opm
imported* < nail
tha last h. /ad of
offorta
thorn, it ia yet
duty to make I
polls end in the
These eluetng ran
a prof i
with aa arid aat ‘-to lag
ray aa anfrieadty
: doty of lbs faioada af Oaaatar-(ii
' •* this stage of tho oaatoU | aad
’ accordance with iha
lead reaolatiogof the party.
iftrewhythanogro
2* to* voter* af hta
yptodVNMMtotadto
^iPiYV
JaliL^
baalM|wft hrt often* dope*
fartieatarty? Why not
or Tsxss, all
y Simply for tha
of tha white*
lo Arkansas, end
:<p tataia their aecead-
tg heaping them diafran-
“®to the white popola-
. the negro population,
WbBa la MdMppI tbs negtona oataurn-
Yet Jeff Laag baa a par
tiality for Arkansas, and ooaaidcra it a
■tote far aaUlaluing a
aagro laprimaay than If kmiaslppi, simply
af tha bags dkffnachiawnaut of
aA Tha aaAaat of hit adrioa to
tha nogrees ia jaei tha man aa that which
prompted them to aUag^tto axel ads tbe
whitoe from tbe polla U Macon. It U not
poiltfonl ayaoMy that they want, bat po-
HtUal aapaatortly, and that aapoaioaity as-
#ad aad aaaiatainad by tha diafraa-
91m whHeu.
Mr. Qaatloy, la aaa of Ma lato apoeohea,
ladigaaaBy aMadad to fbl* proaotiptipo of
tha whitaa ia Aitnama, mad aatimated
thaaambor dliftaaibbid U the Stoic at
twenty thaaaaad. Largs m It la, tha
DaanenM tad Ooaaarratim an eon-
fldeut af their ability to carry Arkanaaa
for Utaeley aad Brawn. Without it, the
Badlcala eouid not make aa good a fight
tat tha Stats as they aaa to Ueorgia. It
foiiwwa that llg will oarer relieve the
whitaa af Aahaaaaeof their dbfnaehUe-
aaat It fattodw that aa aaarameol for
their relief olll raaalre any aid from a
Badleal Pedeaal Admtaletattoa ar attad-
‘ ^— U toatoaarery ntioaal
NtOMHOi NNm um emEmw' hi mvh |t
Waehiogtoa, aaatof whai whltodUfna-
itliiMinl data far (torn to Arkahaaa,
any toalto or aatoaraga attompU to die-
franchise whitaa ta other Southern Btatn
ia whisk their party may retain aauen
deaey next year. The eoatomplatioo of
each aa ailempi oaght to amuse the
whites af every Southern Slate to tlm
vast importance of the Impending elec
tions. Wa hope that oar frieuda in Ala
bama will giro it (hair timely aad thought
ful
The daaih af Baa. Wnxuit Dooonsn,
aaaaaaatd bp a dbpaieh eiuwhere no
ted, will grieve assay friends ta this
eity, of whkh ha was formerly a rnldeat.
Jadga Dsagharty was lbs second by birth
of three brothers who acted a prominent
and honorable part ta tha politics and
legal business of Uaorgia and Alabama.
They war* Chari**, William mod ltobart—
all ana of rtroog minds and axeellent
personal qualities, aad all Dew deeeweed.
Hon. William Dsagharty was regarded aa
the pear of any lawyer ta Georgia, and
had been saoaeated, probably, with Iha
oo adust of aa araeb of the import aat
Utigalioa of tha Bute aa any other attor
ney, Ha wa a man whoa* hoamty aad
integrity wars never questioned, whose
Judgment waa always ooaaidered valaable,
aad whom fidelity to hie priaeipiee and
hie trweU waa impHeitly railed a pan. By
bin death Qeovgla la deprived of one or
bar ripest Jartrta. aad afaat pollllciua,
aad aaatalp loam a yMataer whose aeoom-
pUehmeata aad geaiaUly gave a oharm io
aeaay aiaela la wtaah he meaed.
T|i Ai|hIi Bf^ovi tbt inlh i
ta ttrtarlty, af Mia. Bbabath Qardeaar,
mother of OaL Jaaam Gardanar of Um
(fcaiSrtwfiaaakil. Hha waa a amah veaor-
atad and beloved member of aoeiaty, aad
was probably Iha oidaat raaidatit of Rich
mond ooonty, being eighty-atae yaara
ofag*.
Only one Damoorali* paper—Iha Chica
go Tima*—advocates dropping Greeley io
flaw af lbs result of Um October eiec-
tloae.—Bane men* Iitpublioan.
And we bettor* that the I Inter' Demoo-
IHO)f k |pMfal|ll|l
The Hone Fpidpaalo ta New York—of
dhpatahaa—was esamaaaiaatod from Can
ada, whom B spy earn to have origin tied,
aad whan it randeud moat of tho harem
of aome aaetioaa aafit for aarviao. The
aymptoeu era time dmarikad by a Mont-
teel papers
“Teeholmlly by veteriaary aargoone it
ta kaowa aa aytaootia tafluenu, and ia
influence, pwo-
sttaa with the
linram, which am ao well
aeooant af their anosu-
The diasaas ia not
ao far from its
itsbagta-
bia attar-
. . 1 awaiHag
mi a titta IMtai
JtoJhmMBnaJ «
NNHma DTOWi-
tha nostrils, qaick
" , grant faahla
aymaad mn-
Vnrthtr partisalam pahtttaad bp tha
lIIaqU pipvit
itwaen Fofro a
r charging
■; that Ferns, after ag
| in Ur vicar botsaao them (ta wtaah, HI*
■d'toapi
I with a aitak; Mad
bahadlaogad Fores, who nfaatd to gtaa
'him amhfaation, aw tho pwwadNta ha
> waa not a gautleama, hot aald that ha
i woald meat Ma frlaad; that
I thereupon “pagtaT Faaaa) taafi
' Diti
qaanel, took Ua piasa ta Iha
and wai kndly ramirt ta tta
1 reported ta oar tart. Mr.
L bow npiamalod to ho hi a
imp. Mr. hm to
bat his saaoad hM
-—n a wtaf
The Nrwarh /aarthtt taOW
r the vote of aaahaemrtptaBavJmtaP
> tho PrmtdaaUol ateetiaa, aad Ma mart-
t up gives a majority for Gntliy aal
i of (,uw.
«m Waaiwumtaiial
Oar Local haa aafiypt Irtmaifi, bat a*
laatgaa hta piaaaMaa WBttaam la aUeit,
ta aaaayMa. b la from tha Xafsata
Idaa af yertudap. We haatoa totopy
B baton* tka Leaal'a ratara, m ha rapab-
«Mtt«h|mkU.amd-
Ita ataata Altar Ba M arMeiah,
Oetobar IT.-tha to
tmma beginning. Maroh 4,
to
,,, v . ... W tWil Governor
jlaaby ia a oandidato fur the tnooeaidon,
and that Geaaral Beveridge eocepted the
reoond place on the Illinois Republican
Stale tiekat with, the naderataading that
Ogleaby waa to go to Urn Senate and Itave
the Governorship to him. Pomeroy ia
making a desperate straggle ta Kansas to
re elect himself. TbcreTa a strong oppo
aitioa to him ta hit owa party. Ban
for Wilson's
BuUer is plumiug himself
■eat ta ease that veteran d»
cecda iu bin Vice 1‘realdaatlal
Senator Frank Blair, of Mlaaon
;ue auc
tions,
will an-
ngogui
aapfral
- _ arC wi
doabtadiy lie re-elected; but Sawyer, of
South Carolina, who bee oast hie fortunes
with tha boHeta’ faction in that Btate, will
not. Tho corruptionist Moses who haa
Just beta elected Governor of Bortb
Carolina has promised the Senatonhip to
Elliott, the present Bepreeeuutive from
tho Third District, a aagro of the Congo
typo aad a had, mtaohiovoae fellow. Nye
is very anxious about hie re-elaotloo. He
baa eavetai Republican competitors. The
Democrats axpeot lo aleel Democratic
Senators to succeed the present Republi
can Senators from Georgia, North Caroli
na, New York, Alabama, Arkanaaa, and
Florida. .It la understood that Warmoth
trill ha elaolad from Louisiana If the Dem
os rata aad Liberals elect the next Legis
lature, aa they undoubtedly will. There
Will be a auhriantinl Democratlo-Liberal
gain ta tbe 8auate after next Marab.
[A\ V. World.
A Dmperate **Rlralfkt.’*
Tha editor of tho Waahiugtoa Gaxotte
concludes an editorial article on the dm
fectlou of a biotlior “Straight” aa fol-
lowa:
“At tbe grand old Thormopyim light
one Grcciuu soldier lied, made hie canape,
end carried thu uewe to hie pouple. He
afterwards took his own lile tor very
alarms that be didu't perish iu the tuiss
wiilt tho immortal throe buudred. If a
publics! Tliurmopylem in to be utndo of
the present campaign, we prefer to re-
maiu with the fated three hundred."
There has Imeu an immense amount of
nonsense indulged in during the cam
paign, by the genllomcu who have scon
tit to oppose the action of the Domoarntio
party iu Hlate aud National councils about
leading forlorn hopes aud tbe glory of
utaudlug firm in the face uf odds. Those
worn out heroics are uinrply nonsense as
appbed to tbe preaeut political situation,
iu politics, as in war, forlorn hopes are
always desperate and uncertain, end al
most always lead lo death aud diaaeler,
and it la certain that tha paths of political
glory, like ell others, lead but to the
grave.
It ia to be hopod that no political Ther-
mopykn la to Ira made of tbu present cam
paign, even ill Ibe eighth distriot, where
General Dubose proposes to koop frieuda
end Democrats at bay, while the rapscal
lion crow of negroes, oarpet-baggem aud
■aaiawags are to maroh on to victory,
lint if this is Ore thing tho editor of tbe
Washington Usxotto refers to aa a politi
cal Tbermopyliu, he is likoly to meet bU
political death, wlielhor it be in company
with three hundred or many mure, ami to
leavo lint low mourners over a rosultthat
inis nothing to justify or palliato its rush-
ueoo.—Htuuitintih Adcertutr.
Oetrsteeas Klerlloa Eraeds ta Pklladrlekia.
Nbw Yobk, Oetobar 111.—The great
frauds in Philadelphia ore daily oouriog to
light iu tho form of exact information.
T$e following document has appeared iu
print:
To the Reform Association of the eity
of Philadelphia—Gents: In the official
oonut of votes for Governor In tho lfith
ward it ia represented that the vote for
Governor was as follows i
Hartranft 4,490
Unckalaw it,uu;i
Majority l,f,9T
The undersigned, judges of election,
■igned no aneh return or poper, and will
be qualified that the vote for Governor
waa aa foilowe, they having eignodthe
Hartranft 4,Dim
Buekalew. 2,99a
Majority l,ao7
By exposing the alwve fraud yon will
oblige toe friends of reform in the Fif
teenth Ward, and abow how oar ratara
oleetioa jadgea altor tho rotnrna to auit
their own pertiaan way of fixing np elec
tion rotnrna.
Respectfully yours,
Joint Patina, Judge let Dir.
Jahxi Naan, Jortge 2d Div.
W. J. Muxbai, Judge 7th Div.
A. MtmraxT, Judge 22d Div.
Pmuptu-niA, Oct. It, 1872.
The Fifteontb Ward polled tha largest
Tate for the Reform candidates, aud cheat
ing woe with difficulty indulged iu, mill
there wee a difference uf two hundred
voles. If two hundred votes were oount-
ed more than polled in each ward, iu tho
twenty-uine Wards of tbe oily we have
A,800 fraudulent voice. I venture to
state that tbe Nineteenth Ward, which
to Ibe eherupion fraud ward (an honor
formerly held by tbe Fourth), polled fully
1,G00 fraudulent voice; tho Twentieth,
MO; tha Teuth, MO; Ibe Fifth, fiOO; tbe
Pontth (sold oat to Harttaafi); tho Six
teenth, whore the 10-40 gang resides, ful
ly M0; tho Seventeenth, the enure, etc.,
etc. Tbe fraodalent votes end false
counts ta the City of “Brotherly Love"
amounted to fully 10,000 voles.
The Lew with lanes* to fis*erato Ttsketa.
CoL Hardatoaa, Chairman of tho Data-
HUti Qowwiiil#N |m(
tbs following diapalch yaalarday to the
Haa. H. W. Bloeaiu, Chairman of tbe
Democratic OahgroMtonal Committee at
TViililniitnii i
Macon, Oak. 18, 1872.
lion. U. IF. SIoouih, Waohiagtou (JUg :
Does the tow of Congress require sepa
rate ballot-boxes for President aad Oon-
7 T. Hardemab, jr.,
Cb'a Ex. Coat.
To whtoh tho following aaawar waa ro-
Washington, D. 0., Oct. 18, 1872.
To T. Hardeman, Jr. :
Tho tow^rajoiro* aaparata tookaU, sot
H. W. BlOoub.
wtsrr
rVffilMMi AdntrtiM**
TUI LtmoUL BSPVBUOAlf nUDqUABTKBfl.
At Qlenkam UoUl toaduaftrUn,
ban T. 0. Evarto still preaidea, there to
jraMotedNaa -an a anal ly^dheerf at viaiqje.
Maas have sailed klM aptrtta af the tan-
tb»t MfW bvtMMft* NftolMl IlMMt hInOi*
itteBMH ibam* by
writhmtfictol d«taotloa OuU llUaoia it tort
to givt ao.DOO majority for Greeley—8»V
00U Geniiana and- a 1,000 Irishmen baring
voted for Grant foer yean age, t«ro4hirda
of whom fear* coat etaee into the Greeley
fold* A letter received from Oregon
elntea that Joe t*ane haa taken the atnmp
for Greeley. Among the visitor* were
Mr. Horrotin, of Vermont; Governor
Ashley, of Ohio, and John Pope Hodoelt,
of Chicago.
THE DEMOCRATIC HEADQtTARTKBB.
The Spioglor House hendtinartem waa
nnaannliy bnny yesterday. Quite*large
batch of correspondence waa received,
containing eome very important letters.
Among them waa one in the form of n dr.
oular, nddrettftod to tho merchants of tbia
dly aud of the North by the merobanta of
the Houth. It asks them, a ‘As they valne
tho proHpority of the Hontbern riutea to
do what lies in (hoir power to defeat the
re-election of President Grant. -They
claim that four more yean of carpet-bag
rule will fix upon them the commercial
paralysis that they now suffer from. In
supporting Homoo Greeley, they say, they
give every possible evidence ot their do-
airs for reconciliation and peace. That
four more yean of Grunt, at tbe South,
meson probably a war of raoen, certainly
a re-entbronemont of carpet-bagging, and
they express the hope that if the commer
cial men of the North value the revival
of tho industry of tho South they will
unite in saving it* people from such an
impending calamity as the oontiuuauce of
the present administration.” These cir
culars hsa been sent from every portion
of the South, especially the oottou States.
THE HXOULAU UKPU11LICAN HEADQUARTERS.
Mr. Glyddou was in chargoof the head
quarters at the Fifth Avenue Hotel yes
terday, Chandler having llowu to Wosh-
ingtou, probably to carry any news he
may have to Hiram. Amour; the visitors
during the day were General 11mhunk, of
l>nkola; Caleb Cushing, A. U. Cornell,
E. D. Webster aud Generul John 0. ttob-
iuson, the candidate for Licutenaut Gov
ernor. Tho only iucideut of the day was
tho partial conversation of a Grot ley tuau,
who on seeing General Kobinsou, with
oue leg goue aud hobbling on crutches,
declared his intention of voting for him,
bocauHO he won tho oulv radical candidate
he knew of who hau actually suffered
during tho war.—N. V. JleraM, lVfA.
Proapects la IlllaoU—The (leraiaa Vote for
Urcelrj.
From the ChJriigo Trltuui .]
We havo all along insisted that tho re
sult in Iudiaua iu October would form tho
beat criterion of the rcNiilt iu Illinois in
November. Wo have stoudiiy promised
our friendH in Indiana that, if they would
elect llondrickH in November, wo woidd
elect Koernur and carry llliuoia for tho
cause of lleform in November. 8o far as
tho convictions and tendoncioa of tho pco-
i»lo of llliuois ore concernod, all ia favora
ble. Tho overwhelming frauds which
were practicable iu i'euurtylvuniu are not
practicable here. Out of*tho 40,000 Ger
mans in tho Hlnto outside of Chicago who
have heretofore voted the liopiihlicftn
ticket, wo have tho most trustworthy ovi-
denoo that six-seventha are for Greeley
aud Koernor. Fivo thousand mom Ger
man ltepuhlioaua in Chicago will vote the
same tiej^ot. Wo havo in every county in
the Htnte a force of Aniorican Liberals,
active, houe.4, and respected, who havo
too much couHcioiiHiioHM and conviction in
this tight to bo lightly frightened by re-
veraes in tho preliminary skirtniHhoH.
Very generally the HepiihlicniiH that woro
first in tho field—tboHo of 18."»i mid ’Ml—
are with tho Liberal movement, in the
fixed iiHsurauco that it is tho party of the
futnro.
Wa might state pretty dearly tho total
of our American Liberal force, as wo hnvu
those of the Germnu, but the cauvuH* in
Illinois can only be said to fairly begiu
with the election in Indiana. One-balf of
tbe voters of Illinois have not yet attend
ed a political meeting or heard a speech.
There ia ntill room for a great deal of
work. Thirty thousand Liberal ltepobli-
cans only are needed to overooiuo the ad
verse Republican majorities and tho new
negro vote, provided the entire Demo
cratic vote oould be counted upon. These
HO,000 Liberala are supplied by the Ger
mans of our State alone. Bat os yet wo
cannot count upon the full Demooratio
vote. Tbe problom, therefore, ia, wheth
er our accessions of American Liberal Re
publicans can l»e made to equal the Deni-
oorate who refuao to austaiu Greeloy and
Koerner. In the three towne of Bpring-
field, Helleville aud Bloomington alone,
one thousand Liberal Republicans eajh
are reported. Others abow nearly as
large a gain. On this showing, we ean
carry Illinois for Greeley and Koerner if
our people will not allow their oonvio-
tione of duty to be dampened by the
frauds in tbe Pennsylvania.
Mb. Seward's Views or Futube Exist
ence.—Tbe first time the Governor men
tioned his viewe at length upon tbi* snb-
jeot waa at the burial, on Fort Hill, of
Jodce Miller:
“His dost merely aleepe there tempora
rily;” be remarked; “but the Judge him
self U still alive.” Then in a measured
and veijr iu>premise manner he repoalod
a few lines from (ho hymn to Death.
“Snob,” he oontinned, “ia the doctrine,
the faith, and tho hope of Christian reli
gion. It ia the appointed destiny of
In the month of Jane, of 18C0, when
the sexton waa preparing the grave on
Fort Hill for Mrs. Howard, tha Governor
went there, in eompanywilh Baron Htoek-
el, General Hancock, and Dr. Morris, to
give the required directions, and aat for a
while with them upon A rustic scat on the
ground, when tbe Baron remarked that be
was enable to realise the foot that Mrs.
Howard «u dead.
“She is not,” replied the Govornor;
“she still Uvea. She still lives iu the eon-
dittos which the Church styles the ‘plsoe
of deported spirits.’ There Is no each
thing aa death of the soul of life. It io
tbe body oieoe which Bleeps, end that
only for a limited but abroveo’ed season,
oo wo read end ao we believe.”
“That,” returned the Baron, is a “very
comfortable reflection.”
*Tt ie wot oily a comfortable reflection,”
HHiMid tho Governor, “bnt it is tbe
oooaolation afforded by an enlightened
view of tbe Gbrietoin religion.”
Tbe same was advaaoed by the Gover
nor at the time of tbe bnrhJ, by thu aide
of her mother, of bis daughter Frances.
Ivtxbval Revenue —The Commission-
or of Internal Ravenna will be very brief
iDkieounaal report. The late changes
in the law woik ao faUafeolorily that no
ttoMMMHtd. f The
w** Mail anfl Uqnor* to tor(eijr taereened.
The lucUBti eoeiincd Cnue tuhAaco era
ytt tmt 9gftel .sMShiii
SSaw. HI to tart to
fingfuihc ufNoHe The preaeut
•kip
Mart, on the lfltA,
| whisk ta ^20,000,000 above Ibe figure*
i upon bjr tbe financial nntbrmtton
tbe rodnettaan went into effeek.
WITCHKN flT tH( IS ttOMII.
Report* of very strange xuaNeetaUooa
ta n bonne *t Sorrenoy or No. fi on Ibe
Huron and Brnnewiek Railroad tadnoed
both tbe Meson papers to nendtpeeint
reporters to Um neenr, and they gtv* long
tod etrsontanolxl nroonnta af tbs wonder,
fnl firings saw aad beard. Tha dtobo.
Una, or whatever It to, wan
by itieki of wood flying Into the hooto of
Mr. Burraney from direeiione ihnt ounld
not be aroertataed, rad falling aboot the
floor; then followed briekbnto, which fell
Into every room in the bonne, though tho
door* and window* wore olonod. A min*
inter who wnk ta the bonne the flnt night
got np before day and loft; tho other in
mate* remained. The gtaaeware cod.
mencod falling from tables, Ao., rad
breaking; and n bottle of kerosene oil,
sent out ioto tho yard to prevent its
breaking in tha house, immediately fell
back into tho middle of ono of the rooms.
Everything seemed to fell from above.
All theso tilings occurred, snd had been
kept np for several days, before tho re
porters urired. Wo let tbe reporter of
tbe Mseon BnlerprUe tell what happened
after his arrival;
Aa stated above, onr special reporter
arrived before daybreak snd heard the
story of Mr. Rnrrency na above. Ho soon
aa ho got through with it ho stepped up
to the
OLD FAMILY CLOCK,
sod was about relating how rapidly Ibe
hands had traveled around tha dial when
tbe ghosts ware about, on the previous
day. All eyas were turned to it, aud
mueh to their astonishment tha hands
oommenoed running around at tha rata of
about five hours a minute. It waa a INI
hour weight oiook, and after roeing it ran
at this rata tor a short while,onr reporter,
who la a watchmaker by profession, em
ployed at the store of Mr. J. H. Otto oo
Fourth street, determined to at least solve
this mystery, aa it was directly in hie
line. Ho stopped the oiook, oerefnlly
exsmined the machinery, and found it
not only iu porfeot order, but nothing
whatever unusual, inside or out. Ha
could not for the life of him boo the
alighleal thing wrong about it.
TUB MAONHftHIOnY.
It lies boon snggeated that there may
bo n large magnet about or under tbe
bouse, hut magnets do not attract woollen
BiibKlanoeH, and besides, while the clock
was running at its rapid rate Mr. L. had
his wutcli iu his pockot, which kept on in
its usual way snd was not iu Iho Ioast ef
fected, lle set tho elook right, when it
ooutinnod to keep oorroct time up to the
time ho left.
A atn hot aaicuBAT.
Nothing olae nnusual ooourrod nnlll 17
minutes before 12 o'clock, when tbe per
formances ro-opened by a pair of seisaors
jumping from tho table to tbe floor. At
that timo Mr. Lindeustruth was sitting in
a chair when, without tho slightest pre
monition a largo liriokbat fall with great
force right beside him breaking in two.
He immediately pleked np a piece of it
' it to Mason and both
and handed i
i found it
tried two or throe times to break it by
throwing it on tbe floor, lint failed. He
then laid this aoooml half on the all! of a
window in tbe ronnr intending to bring it
homo, lteenming hie seat near the front
sloop, he was ngaiu startled by lire piece
he hud plaood on the wtadow fulling at
his foot end onco more breaking in two
pieces. Ho did not pink it np ngsin.
At 12 o'olook, n smoothing iron jumped
from the Are pluee about six foet ruto the
room. It Wfts repincod aud again juuipud
out. He noticud that the iron wus also
bet but this may have been healed at the
flro.
A HUOWKB OF CORN.
At about Ibis lime dinner was an
nounced, wbou the family and many
guests walked out to tire table. Boon
a tier being sealed on ear of corn, appa
rently from tbe ceiling overhead, foil be
tween Mr. James Campbell, of Mucou,
and Mrs. Hurrenoy; striking tho floor
with great force it broke in two, scatter
ing the grains all around tho room. Later
in the day another ear of cum fell in an
other room, striking near Mrs. Kurus, a
northern lady, who at the timo had utr
infant in her arum.
Hoon after this whilst Mr. D. M. Mc-
Gaulley, Allen Walls, Koliert R. 1‘restull,
0. 0. Eason, John M. Walls, J. W. Rob
erta and Daniel Oerter of that neighbor
hood, and Campbell, Lindenslrulh aud
Mason, were standing In tire front room,
a chamber glass was smashed into iifty
pieces in tbe centre of the rooui. They
wore at the time intently watching every
thing visible in the room, lrut none saw
this until after the vessel waa broken.
THE EXCITEMENT—EXTRA TRAIN.
So rapidly had tho nowa spread, rad so
S eat waa the excitement, the Macon and
nuswlck Railroad dispatched on extra
train on Sunday. It armed at Surreney
about three o’clock in tho afternoon, with
seventy-live people on board.
Hut the ghosts, spirits, or whatever else
they might ire called, did not ebooso to
give them ray manifoataliona, and tho
traiu left in about an hour, taking most of
them back. A few remained, however,
determined to see into tho matter. There
were at least throe or four hundred per
sons on tho gronnd during Sunday, and
up to the timo our reporter left fully
hundred had visited the plooe.
OTHKB 8IONS AND W0NDXB8.
While all these things were going on in
the house, the kitchen department waa by
no means idle. Batcher knives, pots,
skillets end crockeryware were foiling
aronnd loose to tha terror rad horror of
the oosk.
Another mysterious thing occurred on
the flnt or second day. Liule tales of an
ger totally anliks anything of the kind
then need by Um family were found upon
the floors of the resided oe. In one of
these a few pins rad * steel pec were
found. There were various other inci
dents of this totally incomprehensible
mystery related to and seen by onr re
porter, but enongh have already tMtn giv
en.
WHAT IA IT F
No on* who haa na yet visited the place
ean give ray rational theory aa to tbe
agency which produoee them alranga
sights. Mr. Sorrenoy to a plain, old fash
ioned Georgia gcntleaaan, nod to greatly
annoyed end dlsgneted with tbe whole
prooeedinga. He paromtorily refused ray
compensation from ray one of the two or
three hnndrnd persona who have eaten at
bis table. If they are prodaoed by mag
neto, they mast be of a different kind
from ray ever known.
We must leave the question fan aome
one alas for eolation.
At tha time oaf Huron party lift people
were coming ta from ail direvliona, rad
we presume the excitement continued to
day unabated.
EumiAM’a Tun Forty feet Out.
Thin tea to from the Whitehall, Mo.,
liagtaiir, aad to laterally trust A few
lly flvo
day* nan,-at iMofl
west rfOnrrolten these mltask a* aid wail
wan flag tepee, end ta thndtot that wan
foM*52lMflapihsf tetefotosti
I - » X —A I—J-IJ-
Bnt MmShI of *11 to Stain thin mn
Into* watfooad a rot ef totak amt taafc
tel a half aqaam. Sunn tote*'bag,
if plilrty petrified, sad ta ta ton day
anta Bto angular areolar nrnnmm. Tha
totak aw atone, aad the ehy, am aadyeta,
proved lo be bone. The quartern to who
I ootefcrtd Utet eieptuMri im| Mink R dowfl
forty feta deep!
a boo apfnabs on ran naif Hi van-
ianjts liu a VAFCm—a ana oartaiN
TAM* * DBUnt—XU DBVtUOHT ouhtin-
can.
From pnanengew, mndnetoM and art-
com of lb* Mneon rad Brunswick Rail
road, who arrived ta the city tout night,
we learn that the bonne at Mr. ttarrraey
was yesterday lbs soene of greater if not
more oxoitement, than ever. Gnalpua
people were arriving upon every train,
each one bent npon solving (be mystery,
and all coming away more mystified than
when they went.
Mr. A. P. Burraney, the owner at the
house and bis family, are reproaantod to
be thoronghly worn ont with the etrnngo
oconrronoea and tbe great crowds flocking
to tbrir formerly puceful home. They
know nothing of tha Incomprehensible
mystery farther thu what has already
been told—that their honaebold furniture
baa been ruined or to every day being de
stroyed by an nneeen power.
A HOO APPBAUI ON THE FLOOR.
From Conductor H. H. Hharpe, of
Brunswick road, who came np thin me
Ing, wo learn that on yesterday whilst six
or eight men and women wero silting ta
the front or parlor room, a hog deliberate
ly walked in ta the door ud without
showing tha slightest signs of trepidation,
advanced to the center of the room. Ev
ery one reueiued motion teas—conversa
tion oaased—all eyes werr Inroad upon
the Btrenge visitor. The hog stood for n
moment, then made a abort oirol* ta the
middle of tha floor, ud after doing ao
walked iuto an adjoining room. Every
one followed it. Whilst some wen ta the
room, Home ta the door, bnt all intently
watching what it would do; it instantly
vanished like a vapor nr an apparition,
losving Ua andience stupefied with horror,
with oo one able lo tell bow it •
The windows were down ud ao
whatever open for eaoape.
AN OLD BALT TAKES A STRANOX DUNK.
Among tho numaroua viaitora yesterday
waa au old sea Captain by the name of
Karas, who has been around the world
three or fonr times and wh<7 was deter
mined tu unravel the mystery if possible,
or at least aome portion of it. Galling
into the house, he was told of the smooth
ing iron trioka and aeleeling that aa a par
ticular objoot to watob, ha aat down be
fore it. He watched the iron for a long
time without seeing it move, and getting
dry he longed for a bottle of whiskey
which he knew Mr. Burreucy bad ta an
adjoining room; no sooner had ha
thought of this than the bottle fell ta hia
aide; he pickoil it np and helped himself,
sot it down and continued to eye the iron;
it did not inovo, bnt tho bottle left as
myntorionuly na it appeared.—Uaeon AV
feiyww, 22(7.
Fally Heard Fran.
8p('.'lai tu Coiirii.r-Journal-)
Indianapolis, Oot. 18.—The following
ia Iho official majority for Handrioka in
Indiana: All tha rotnrna an ta except
Delaware and Tike. Delaware gave
llrowno 1,1411 majority, and Pike gave
Hendricks 12(1. Mr. Uendrtoka’ majority
iu 1,1 Nil.
Mr. Kerr was defeated by 140, rad Mr.
Eddy was defeated by Go votes.
There is some talk of contesting tbe
election, aa it has been ascertained that
in oue township in Doone county the
judges and elerka were not sworn in nt
all. If this proves lo be trna, rad that
township is thrown ont, it will elect near
ly nil tho Democratic officers. I have no
doubt but a recount of (be poll all over
Iho Htale will be ordered.
The Legislature elands twelve Republi
can majority on joint ballot.
The State Road.—The Htate Road
lease, it is now believed, will not turn ont
to be so good a thing aa tbe lessees sup
posed. A railway man, of intelligence
and integrity, who waa in Chattanooga
last week, says that bo did not see one
freight ear there from Nashville or Loato-
vilie; whereas heretofore tbe track was
crowded with trains from those points,
Tho eouiiilotiim of Iho South and North
lioud tu Montgomery haa diverted the en
tire Western business uf Alabama from
tbo old routo ovor tbe Htate Road, ud to
that oxtout tha freight and pnaaenger
truffle uf that road haa lieon curtailed.
Nearly all the western bneincM of Ala
bama, its heavy shipments of ixrrn, wheat,
liaoou, buy, horses, mules, Ao., formerly
passed over Iho Western and Atlantio
Railroad, and contributed largely to its
profits. Tho loss of that baainesa must
materially diminish the revenne of the
road, and Urns depreciate tho valne of the
louse itself. The oouipletiun of the Air
line Road from this city to Charlotte, N.
0., will also have an injuriona effect upon
the business of the H'ato Road. Shares
in tho leuae do not rate ao high now ee
they did a few months ago.—Atlanta
Corretpondenee Savannah Newt.
Gbantibm in South Carolina —The
following paragraph, from the Ulioa Ob
server, forcibly illustrates tbe result of
the rule of carpet-baggers end negroes ta
South Carolina nnder the protection of
Grant's administration:
A gentleman well known ta tbe nontb-
ern part of this Htate, M. E. Harmon,
purchased a plantation in Booth Carolina
iu tho year 18US. In 1HII9 he paid thereon
$40 in taxes. Iu 1870 the taxes were
$1NU. In 1871 the taxes were $840. For
Iho yexr 1872 taxes to the emount of
$1000 were levied, whereupon Mr. Har
mon abandoned the property. This sim
ple feet illustrates batter than ray argu
ment tbe ayatem In vogue under Grant's
Itontenuta in tha laokleaa Southern
conntry. Aud out of all tha money galb-
erred by tbat shameful process not ona
dollar baa been applied to tbe payment of
tbe pnblio debt, to the support of charita
ble instilntions, or to the nreinlenenen at
pnblio improvements. The Superintend
ent of tbe Insane Asylum lately pot forth
a touohing appeal, saying that with 400
pattouta on hia bands ks had not food
enongh to last them forty-sight boat*.
Charitable cittaaaa meat famish ronpli
la than any nan wire dean ata believe
' ' a a Greeley, a Bepnhiiean, will
Ohio
did lot
K*™ iha Keuubttoea party
mar* -rotas ta every townaM* lit l
than tta* Drortmtort ffwnni SHtoy dk
Brorottayrtttfotafoam *h»> par ‘
notrerouuabtatowwppqrol A
two tbontand township* this n<
a Chang* or twenty ibtrussed,
km from Wihott, tie NipnhriaiM tenta
ry of State, end added on to Greeley,
upon it that the
BepabHenn
Greeley in November to going to be far
heavier than It wee lot General Wiley ta
Ootober. We bear on every hand of men
who voted for the Republican Bute ticket
now anamaetag that they will vote for
Greeley. But, anyana objector, wo don’t
doubt that Greeley wiU gain largely on
Wiley from Ibe KepnbUoaim, bnt won't
he liras from the Democnatio aide of tha
hones 7 We do not believe b* win. There
to among the rank aad file of the Democ
racy the strongest team that oat govern
meet will be destroyed if Grant to re-
elected ud the present reign of tjrruny
rad corruption to non tinned fonr yean
morn. In addilioa, there to an aversion
and dislike to Grant personally sarong
the Deni oorate which excels their hostility
to almost ray other mu In the ooantry.
Morton, Bimm Cenraron rad Bnttornre
not more generally hated and despised.
No Damootta to gotag to vote for Urrat.
Democrats are loyal to their organisation,
and, aa it has prononneed for Mr. Gree
ley, aad as be to Grant's only competitor,
they will support him with unanimity.
The Freeidentul vote will bring thouaande
of Democrats out who have not been out
since 18(18. Ho we ora reasonably axpeot
in addition to an inereaeed Republican
voto for Mr. Greeley • much larger Dem
ocratic vote than waa thrown iu Ootober.
If there arc nuy Democrats so foolish as
to reiuse to support Mr. Gteetoy, they ab
sented themselves ta October ta order to
do him an injury. We ran count a* firm
rad rettable nil of General Wiley's vote,
and that will be tnongb, with tbe Repub
lican reinforcements we are bound to re
ceive, to give ns tbe Btate.
A lase Ceesplrery.
A apeoisl dispatch from Washington,
together with other Information uf tbe
moat indtoputablo clraraoter, leave no
doubt uuou onr mind, that an effort to be
ing made, at Washington by a number of
Radical oarpet-baggem end renogadae
who havo gathered there, to induce Ibe
Administration to make Ibe effort to Inti-
nrida'e end overawe onr frieuda in Ibe
Fourth Dtotriol, by an armed invasion of
that portion of uar Bute. We shall await
the result; bnt give here open ud pnblio
notice that we shall hold tbe ooncootors,
aiders ud abettors of this outrage and in
sult, should it be attempted, to a proper
acoount. The endeoity of throe wretches
pease* all oomprahraaioe. On* would
suppose Ihnt the people of Alabama were
tbe slaves of a Turkish or Ralston despot
ism ! One would suppose that we only
lived lo be insulted. Bat the Conslitu-
tioa to not yet entirely dealroyed—there
are law* yet to bo enforaed—
there are some righto belonging
to the Httaee yet to be r rape cit
ed, and there are aouie righto held by tbe
people that corrupt power osnuot assail
with impuuity ! We unit the Washing
ton Government will inform the lUdieal
K lilioiuua who are nhlapeting the vilest
sehooda in Ua ears, tbat it sees no law
io justify it to Invade a peaceful oonnuu-
oity with tbe v«ew of Intimidating the
people and controlling elections. Thera
is no pretense of the least disorder iu Ihe
Fourth Diatriet. No one attaches any
troth to tbe Mnnohanaen revelations of
Win. B. Jonas, ud if what he states were
true, it to clearly a mors ptramal affair
between lrimaalf end others. The canvass
to psoeaeding ta every county in the
Fourth District without the slightest In
terruption. Mon of all part lea speak
whan rad where they will. There will be
a full rad we donbt not a fair vote polled.
It is ona of onr grievwoes (hat whenev
er the worthless Radical creatures have
given np all hope of popular onoceae, they
think they have the right to go to Wash
ington, rad coins back followed by tha
military to obtain by fores rad terror
what the free popular an If rage refuse
them. All the troops ta toe United
Bletee, however, eunot JVnntgltaniaiie
Alabama. Without violence, in ahaolote
obedtoaoe to the lawn, ta n spirit of obli
gation lo Um whole country, Alabama will
toy and protect herself with her rightful
ballots against degradation ud rata.
Bba ha* th* right to do thin ud the whole
army of tha United Stales (except by di
rect tyrannical force) eannot prevent it!
Moot. Ado., Hind.
Iillirt'a ink,
We have received an “Addreas at Ra
tes B. Bullock to Um People of Georgia,”
which be styles “A a Review of the Revo
lotionary Proceedings of th* Late Repu
diating Legislators, aad “Th* Blander*
aud Mtoropreaanlnllona of Ihe Commit
tees Exposed;" also, “A Republican Ad-
luiutatraiioo Con treated with the Corrupt
rad Rookies* Action of tbe Present
Usurping Minority node* the Land of
General Toomba
Tbb address of Bollock's to a pamphlet
of fifty-nine pages, slowly printed mat
ter, ta targe double odlonia pages, ud
contains tha nraal red our unlade so char
acteristic of Knlloeh.
He reviews bin financial policy, the ao-
ttaa of Ihe eomasiueae which investigated
him aad Me administration, hi* taros ot
■a
or tbe demented inmate* would be
loose on tbe rommanity. He eoald not
get n dollar from tbe Btate, for Um treas
ury waa drained by the high-beaded rob
beries of F. J. Moses. And thin man to
to writ* bimwlf Governor of Booth Car
olina for th* n*xt two ywre.
Hibid to xa Honist.—Th* N*w York
Triboos **j*: “Nothing b*U*r tliwtrate*
th* nu*r degradation into whtah Sooth
Carolina polities have faltoa, than tha
fact that it to a*rionely aaggntoi among
reputable banker* and bnareaaa man, that
Mows, if slootod, should be hired to bn
honest. Tbe plan talked of, we are in
formed, to to offer him flAO.OOO a year to
place the fineness of the Btate under the
direction of a committee of men at known
Integrity. The sum named to euppoaad
to be about what he will require to main
tain tbe style of living b* ban k*pt up fa*
th* past four ywre on hi* mlanr it $1,200
* year aa th* Sp**k«r of tha Homo.”
Affray at Wooten Btation.—The gen
eral traveling sgrat and aorreapoadaU ot
th* Telegraph ud Hroroagar write* the
following from Bmllhvilto:
SionvnxB, Oa., Oct *0,1872.
lUtffnA rtui
mmiU night at Ws
W. B. £, MWtart Ml
Lo*h and Mason ud * **gr*,D*v* l
Th* young m*n are otoita ta
at***, udlrtardark D*v* J*M*
dLtorimiM* teMter*mn££*lo W “ t
Mm rot. In attempting to do ao^Itav*
Jodm eat Mr. Loto Vary badly ia tw* “
east and out Mr. Karon Mvawly batons
kn**. Mr. Leak's wwnda *s* wanart
to b* mortal. Th* **gro mad* Ua «*.
i. 7-
th* State Baad, repabhahas Ma late tattai
or*** Oretiey, da alarm Me pesfar-
for Grant (notwHbaimuling it to well
>a that Gen. Groat tested and re-
known ihat^l
pndiatod M»ta and tor Ms tart
led Haltoefc's must «fflein**e
which his heart KH^rt
lying on! of which
on hia throne of ro|
hr
ttoalll Mia
would have kept him
rtoeality
'.Knot longer)
oiks* future* uf mere orleaa
winds op by mylng “these are facta,
rad with them I swbeeribe myself moat
reepeetfwUy, your fottaw ettteea.”
BeaartM fattaw rtttaaal Absent from
th* Stela ■ aa ahmnaliJ Governor—ro
ta * foreign non* try to aaoape th*
of Me arMria*! eoadaoi! Pel-
cithien, tadndl—Atlanta Ban.
in* aims
a ta i
cat
tom
Taa Panama Attoay.—No Keg* have
yet beam Uk*a, *a tar a* w* know, to
arrant nay ef thaaarte wgsgat la th*
odBentoategfb
arrest any *f ,
r*o*nt riot and rooottag affray at Pair-
barn. Battto* aad Brotaahaagh haradia-
anpasred, and it to haitovad they have itod
ta* tuna try. Thro* *r* two of th* party,
M will b* tsm«mb*»«d, whe lirod bmr
Rad Oak, w*at to Pairbaro aad eraatad
aneh a dtatartranca, which taaaltad ta
yaaag Griaaaadh death.
Mr. Thamaaoa, who waa ao as rarely
lad ta th* artray ta front of hi* bar-
ia at ill ta a vary artliaal eondtrtow,
to faarad Ma wasted* wHi pruv*
Aadeaw
affi*
Prom th* moat nwUsaa tta aaahn
ear pet-bag aosirem w* laara that I I. ■ _
troth ta tha ramoa that w* matobahaa-
ored tar tha praaaaaa ta ear aridrt at Gaa. ■
Giant* preaeut—aa wa war* rsitatly with
that of hia lata legal adviaar—Attorney
General WiUtoms.
What he aotut for map hr rotated,
partly from the warning and th* proof*
ot tbe Custom Hone* end Osrpat-bng Plot
which the Republican ben tain beforoonr
peopto before and sines the rlsrttaa; and
tbe aeemnntaUag evltsasm at tbe emu*
filed pnrpoee on the put of onr paternal
Administration, aad moat fraternal Gov
ernment Official* bare, aa walla* from th*
significant Mata of tha Northern prase,
which ha* long ataoa dataetad the tafs-
irpaaaa of tha Washington Ring
The Now York Evening Exnrem say*:
“Th* Raaonatrnclico of uaorgia to
threatened by the Groat prior am array
aid**, which only mean* this—
“The packing of a State Legtatatare by
Acta ot Congress, whtoh will adapt Iha
Bollock Wall el reel bonds.
“It to to aton this aort of iatorfaraaee
by Iha Federal Government, ta Um inter
ests of carpet-baggers nod tha bondhold
er* ont of the Htate*, that tbe election of
Greeley becomes indispensable for tha
pnblio nance rad pnblio omarity."
Possibly some light may be thrown on
the objects of Hr. William’* mission be
yond bis exhorting “th* faitbfnlwhite,
blaok ud mixed, to “rota early and voto
re nritadein
often" in November, on the
ilphta
plan, by tha subjoined significant threat
from “Grant’* own,” th* New York Times
of Saturday. The dispatch from Atlanta
reforred to to a long on*, fnU of fabrica
tions of “tha old willow pattern.”
Tha Tima* say* r
“In onr special dispatch from Atlanta,
da., will b* found aome additional in
stances of tha kind of “reeoncUtotion”
which was practiced at the reoent State
election. The party whiob made nt Bal
timore n pretense of accepting all the
Constitutional Amendments snowed at
the Georgia election that their ideal of
negro suffrage was to stand over gangs
of oolorad voters, and threaten “to eat
their hearts ont” unless thev voted the
Demooratio ticket. It the Federal Gov
ernment to he incited to itand quietly by,
and tee ovtruqct like thin repeated on the
Dth day of Moeember.
The Fafkrresrret Art.
fbokral officials on the bamfaox—two
ornxxNa arrested, and otuers to nn
arrested.
Mr. Henry P. Farrow, United States
District Attorney, mart hia appearance
npon the utroets yesterday morning. Hia
niovemenlH indicated that there was some
thing in tho wind; but tb* worst tbat
«a* apprehended waa that ha waa hare to
revive tho fading fortunes of hia party,
and endeavor to secure at least, a tolera
bly respectable vote for Grant rad other
Radical candidates. He waa seen in com
pany with lending white ud blaok Radi
cals, ud thru suspicion was aroused as to
th* purpose he had in honoring Maoon
with hta ragust presence.
Toward evening, however, tbe real ob
ject uf hie presence was brought to light,
by tho arrest of two oitixena of Macon.
Tb* parties arrested arc Mr. Geo. W. Gas-
tin rad Dr. A. P. Collins. Tb* chargee
agminst- them, it to stated, to violation of
the Enforcement Act. Tbe specifications
arc not given; bnt will be mad* known
when tbo oases eome np to-dsy before J,
C. Bweyxe, U. B. Commissioner.
It to farther stated Hurt warrants an
onwfor some twenty or twenty-five other
oiUzene of Maoon, whieh will be served
■ft rapidly oa possible. Who are to be ar
rested is not known; but as th* work haa
been began, the pnblio will not b* left
long in doubt about Um mfttter.
The cause of these arrests, sa stated
shove, to not known; bnt tbe supposition
to that they grew ont of the recent elro-
ti >n troubles, whiob were brought on by
insolent rail overbearing negroes who
attempted to take possession of th* palls.
Farther developments of this politiesl
movement will be awaited with interest.
The Radionls adopt singular means to lid
in onrrying elections their wey, end there
to some curiosity to sec how far they wUl
rooecd with this new movement.—Uaeon
'digraph, 23d.
A New Insurance Movement.—The cli
max of novelty In the I nan rone* business
hen been reached in Austria, where n com
pany recently proposed to inure people
against getting married. At least, that
was about the effect of the arrangement,
whieh woe, in other words, that the sora-
pany would pay n oertata snm to th* poli-
oy.holder whenever he took to himself a
wife. Upon a little reflection it doe* not
mem that there to anything aboard ta this
plu. A mu era make provisions by
whiob he will be compensated for tb* de-
straetion of hta property by fir* or the
lorn of a limb by aocident,and by whtoh hi*
family will be compensated for hto re
moval by death. Why, then, should b*
noth* able to provide against another
very oommon call—coni
would be Interesting
attagraoy I But it
_ to know how tha
tariff of rate* was calculated, though it
was probable that tbe oharge was adjust
ed, by aome mysterious process, to tho
age, personal appaerraro, rad anaoapti-
bility of th* polioy-boldar. It would bo
gratifying to report tha an cocoa of th*
Anatrira experiment, bat tb* facta will
nut permit it. There were numerous pol
icies ironed, and th* boataaro seemed to
be In n thriving condition, whan th* offi
cers of tb* oompray all got married at
one*, rad abaorbad tha amnia, leaving
tb* outrider* to b* preyed npoa by hand
some woman, without nay hop* of paon-
liny oomoUHon
Th« Okl« BlrtetUa.
Columbus, Oetobar 20.—Tha ofltatal
return* far th* entire State show the foL
loving majorities for Btate officer*:
Secretary of Btate, Allan Wiokoff, 14,.
OS#; Bo pram* Jadga, John Walsh, 10,-
189; Member of the Board of Pnbiia
Week*, Richard R. Porter, 10,4m.
Th* total v«ta east for Secretary of
Btate waa C20,037, tha torgaat voto avat
east ta tb* State for any offioar.
Th* following are th* aamaa of Ura
Congrammra abated aad thalr majorities
With th* distriot they rep reseat:
Disk Nam* of Bep'Uv*. Maj.
1 Mflton Ihylor, Dam 3, gets
2 H. B. Banning, lib 1,803
8 John R. Smith, Bap 1,329
4 L B. Gnnakto, Ban. 1,1—
5 Chan. N. Lam Iran, Dam
C Isaac K. Sherwood, Bap....
7 Lanreooa Naal, Dam
8 Wa. In wren ca, Rap
9 Jama* W. RoMnaon, Rap..
10. Ohartaa Port**, Rap
11 a tt. Bandy, Bap
12. HaghJ. Jawitt, Dam
13 .aY Southard, Daro
14 John Bany, Dam
15 Wa. P. Spragoa, Rap..
1« Laranno Baa ford, Bra.
17 Is D. 3 w
18 Jj
19
3,303
1,089
1,273
4,043
427
729
.. 2,907
... 4.A7T
... 2,471
... 3,648
... 991
... 3,299
... 2,268
... 4,364
...16,983
... 2,724
J. Dodd*
Mttll * vacancy ta th* First
W—t VnnnuA. Snow foil, on
to th* rtfth of 3 taehra
iy region for ndtotamwof
.from tha OhrotRforoto
af PiadmoM. SR* fom
it myethaia* flsmMmi. P*..
1C o'ataek Mraday meratng. thatptoo*
am vhdtad by a aavar* anew atarm.
— or* tax'Inch** ef mow apo* th*
aad all oatdaoi path had baaq