The Atlanta daily herald. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1872-1876, October 12, 1873, Image 4

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MACON DEPARTMENT. N. C. STEVENSON MACON, GA.. SATCBDAY, OCT. 11, 1873 The Daily Herald. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1873. rilR IIKKALD PUULl»Iin» COMPANY, Al.KX. ST. (L:\IK-ABiCAMS. ilrtSllY W. GRADY. A. ALSTON. EiUMi-a mnl 9liM|rni. - _ — j car.se oi’ the delay was the scarcity of money. j THE SCHOOL FUSD AffD KIR. D. |». WARE’S CARD. Io yesterday's Hkhald Mr. D. D. Ware makes complaint of bis not being paid, and indirectly charges that all the teachers of the State have been ignored in the interest of the money lenders. We called at the Treasurer’s office and ascertained from him that the real THE TERMS of the HERALD are as fonowe : jAILY. 1 Year $10 00 I WEEKLY, 1 Y«r...$2 no remittance .. 5 OCr I WEEKLY, 6 Months 1 00 2 50 i WEEKLY, 8 Months 50 DAILY! 6 Month DULY. I Months. D 1 Month.. . 1 oo ( ■ iHve to countv Treasurers Advertisements inserted st moderate tale*. Sub- F tiption* and advertisement* 'nvsrtably in advance. Tax Collectors o4 their i .-.pcctive counties for ni'Dirn orPT.TSHT'.'n m The tax collectors bffve been slow in nankin, since the money panic. The Treasurer says, however, that lie is ready to order on the Add r HERALD PCBLISHH.’G OO., Drawer 23 Atlanta, Georgia, i AlahMua atro^t. o«ar Hmrt. TO-DAY’S HERALD ins tli*- Following Ksttrn tercst. Oeorgia Farms and Farmers. SOME GOSSOP ABOUT OCR W.ANTI»G MIXIES. Meriwether county cultivates this year 37,304 acres in cotton, and 27,SCI in corn. Ifon. Henry R. Harris, of Meriwether, member of Congress, cult-.vatea this year 700 seres in cotton, 130 in oats, and 400 in cor :. His plantation is worth about $20,003. I. T. Woodward ii the most extensive planter in Meriwether county. H* cultivates this year 700 acres lu cotton, 100 iu oats, and 400 in corn. Miller county is a close competitor of Coffee county for the title of the baoner stor k county. M r . John Davis of that county, owns 003 sheep, John Fivi- ash 700 cattle. L. M. Felton, of Macon county—whoso plantation is The (Grangers. i FOR THE FARMER? WHO ARE LOOSING OFT FOR THEMSELVES. AUGUSTA GBA3<-E. »gg^ Pursuant to notice a number of gentlemen interested in agricultural pursuits met in the grand juiy room, at the City Hull, at eleven o’clock, yes'erday morning. Rev. C. W. ( Howard, District De-pu'y Master, was pres- j flrst dcor cut, and organized a Grange called the “An- i (Ott* Grange.” The following are the offi cers of the Grange The Ki rn lit Office has been removed to IUwleUm'a Block, 1 hii the right, secrad floor. At the Fttir OrouiitU. The i Roman II ippodromc is rapidly Urav.pigto Master, Jos E Burch: Overseer, Goode j com P lcUon ’ R i* one-eighth of mile in drciimft] -I PAGE—The Grangers—Judge Hopk to the Grand Jary-Ofucal Xow* Itci riaesnen ts. ' Charge ; in cotton and 5.0 in corn. S. W cotton, 103 in oats and three hundred in coi plantation is valued at $30,000. Eighty-three fanners in Macon county plant acres in cotton, half of whi.-li number plant er 10, FGUT.TH PAGE—Editorial—MirsLal iiAxaiue’s T.iil— -'chool Fund—The Grangers and Their Organ— 'ur 8tatc Exchanges—Alabama News—News from Shreveport—A Farm anil Farmer*—Macon De- . artmeut—Advertlawneufs. tho a mount due iu each couuty for the school ! fund. This will avoid the r.ecessity ~ | of Collector s remitting the fund i to Atlanta, and then returning it to the couu- . ties, and save expense to the school fund, and thus proportionately increase the amount to ! be distributed. If the Treasurer of Dekalb count)*, or of any other county, will make ap plication to the Treasurer, he can procure an order on the Tax Collector for the amount due i $20,000, cultivates 450 acres i the county, otherwise tee teachers will be ' 12l > In °at« and too iu orn. David S. Oann cultivate. Util? People—3lia- j obliged to await yet a little while for their ' ° 0 ’ “ d tw in curn - long-exnected salaries. Bryan; Lecturer, Dr J P H Brown; S’eward, W C Jones; Assistant Steward, NY K Nelson: Chaplain, Rev H A Duncan: Treasurer, Jno worth over fcc.coo—cultivates this yea I'jii acres iu ; a Bohler: Secretary, Fro 1T Lock hart: Ceres, ! Swarms of v.oikm- cotton anil 490 in corn. W. H. Felton plants 585 acres j Mrs Cart in P Nelson; Pomona, Mrs Mary A c ither engaged ui cultivates 550 in ! Bohler; Flora, Mrs Mary F Brown; Assist* III* j ant Stewardess, Miss V J Lazenbv. HOW THE GRANGERS CAME. The Augusta Chronicle gives this overaw- | ing account of how the Grangers sprang into j Portion—Poetry—Ailvc; Morgan county tultivates this year 15.136 acres in cotton, and 10,296 acres in corn. E. E. Jones, of Morgan couuty, ou his firm worth cotton, 40 in wheat, unty cultivated .HtHS!!\!i UAZV!.%!•;> TRIAL. FIFTH Statistics— Markets— New Advertisements. Seventy-seven planters iu Morgan each more than 100 acre3 in cotton. Monroe county cultivates t;»« year 36,3J1 acres in cotton, and 23,809 iu corn. One hnndred an i fourteeu planters iu Monroe county cultivates each over 1'J0 acres iu cotton. Tho leading planters of Monroe county arc Messrs Our dispatches this morning repaxt dam. PAGE- — Telegraphic Matter — Commercial aging testimony against Marshal Baz iinc, but we fed certain that his counsel will 1>0 able j A. G. Watson, J. V. Jarratt, Alfred Middlebrocka. B, the j to refute it. We have no idea that B zaiue j M. Hatuorn, and E. Taylor. Mr. Watson cultivates proved traitor to Frauce. Ilud he been able to have cut his way through the German SEVENTH PAGE.—Madrid—Advertisements. drlillTH PAGE—Court Ohronielc— Drowned—At - tempted Suicide—D^atli on tho Uul—A Man H'»r- -.My Crashed to D.-ath—Court Chronicle—City . ‘ asiuoss—Advertisements. [ about 690 acres, mostly in cotton; Mr. Jarratt about j 750; Mr. MJddlebrook*. 725; Mr. II at horn 70J. j Mr. E. Taylor, the Secretary of the State C ange, lints (it Mtlz he would have doue it, aud with !, in,;, 2 :o .ores in cottou oad a out the same in corn. inhabited by a population ;clu»ively of bcottish nation- and will seat five thoussn 1 people. The cotton and Lay warehourc will be finished in two cr three days. The new hall is far advanced. oro busy all over the grounds the new buildings or busy in cleaning up the walks and drives, or clearing away the general surface. Every officer of the fair lupea it will rain in a few days. The grass is rapidly dying for the want ol it The dust is several Inches thick in some places, as in- FOREIGN AFFAIRS. Aid to Bankrupt American* Trial of .Marshal Bazalne. Damaging Testimony Given Interesting Cuban News. The CarliM Tielory Denied the existence, “like Minerva from the brow of j deed it is all over the whole city. But i Jupiter, full grown and completely armed:” i that no r*>n five sprinkling carts have been pro- “It came like a clap of thunder from a clear , vided for nee during tbe exhibition. Mr. Washington sending h< bort in a destitute 1 otlfcr , Tbe Western Union Company are running a wire tta«?e aid will have a battery sky. Apparently before the cloud gathered, the storm burst forth in all its fury. While j into the President’ the movement and its probable effect upon | there, the politics of the country were being dis cussed, the party was thoroughly organized in a dozen States of the Union, and in one - j among the wealthiest and most influential— -uto horror, and it is hoped that ilia Relief Com was marching town assured victory. The j of the city Council will pi o?s rigorously for*; Granges sprang into life like Minerva from ! makin( , thHr ,. oUe(tlona . u would be . T Ike lion The dispatches fron iphG. Memphis AUSTRIA. Vienna, October 11. lt*J3. lerlcan Minister, has written t nendiug provision be made for i Vienna, numbers of waiters, la Americans, who are now in the city >ndilion. Many travelers who hold ; letter, of cre.lit from siupeoded banks ill She United States find tliemeelves without funds, and are com 1 pelted to accept friendly subscriptions to enable then, i to return home. FRANCE. Pabi«, October 11, W73. e of the Municipal Council <»; _ _____ jellent j ^avc published an address, in wbich they deda the brow 6f Jnpiter, full grown, completely | ld “ fo ° r ca'.ilctioiis to bs takeu up in aU the cburche. | ,Ue A ' semW * h * 8 “a right to atien.ie tbe Nattor armed. They were bom an army, and the j whatever 1. done cta-uly be . n -ck'y. ' ' ' “ nrht manifestation ot their existence was a great victory. . j - r „ 4 . c*iioVi«t*otio.i. Granger's Mass Meeting.—At last regular meeting of Randolph Grange, the following communication was read from the members good dtnntid to-day for the better j grades of ( old have promptly overthrown Montgomery county i the September government and restored the consists almost < of Stevens Grange, at Coleman Station, which * dliu 3’ The poore was unanimously adopted and fully concurred 1 (pialitDs k ;ood cl* al of c cy, they arc still Mr. T. J. Burney Travelling Agent of tho Herald. 1 Eropi* Biz line, however, was unaWo to the only authorized j pierce tho German lines. He was surrounded : by nearly double his numbers, strongly en- ~ ~ ; trenched, and supported by the finest siege Mr. At. Clifford Sorrtu, office No. «l*2 Cedar ! artillery in tli^ world. T.» suppose that a | ali».y. The ‘ Me'#” constitute nearly half the popula tion; nad the celebrated Rob Roy McGregor has de- condants by the hundreds in these wire-grass solitudes Alabama News. et, is the agent of tbe Herald in Neu Ve;k, and is authorized to receive subscrip ts r.- contract for advertisement. Out State Exchanges. 1L- I.'awaan Herald makes an s «'t that township to step to tli ssbreveport sufferers. H.o Coiambus E; rjaiier thinks that new l.« lli t > s .12 cotton. TLe same paper says: . be people of Atlanta think the proponed hu; will be su immense here. They arc running the water question into the ground. *jic.aa Thurman knows what ho is doing. He is « man of penetration. He goes to the bottom of things. He is a wtl! digger. As a “whole” lbe well V m ban I -g thing. Col embus had t,265 iuhabiUnts ia le:W. The Sun cays: Twenty thousand dollars in green- The Congregational Methodist of Opelika pajs tho ! following tribute to Mr. Fletcher for vegetables : , Mr. Fletcher dropped in on us tbe other dr»7 with which could not possibly benefit his Imperial ! some- sugtr ciue and roasting eir**. man, who had a’.lained his reputation, would deliberately sully it by a piece ot treachery, j master, is to snppo39 him a fool —which Ba- zaine is not. TIIK GIIASGES AND TIIK1K UIU.W. The Constitution published on yesterday a fiamieg .statement that the Convention of | Grangers in session at Griffin had elected the li: Georgia Cultivator “ their official organ.” Be that as it may, the Herald is tbe official paper f« r the State Granges. It is not their organ, because it is nobody’s organ, but it is the paper, and the only paper in which offi cial Advertisements of the Granges are pub lished. Only ou yesterdav we received a hire pri ss ruling bore to liil ord9rt*. I'rDJUthe same paper of Thursday: Thus far the present week Columbus hat received 078 biles against year aama time, showing a decline o Sin i August Gist C,60S balea have Lie 6gax9t 7,728, showing a decrease of 2.120. • iruebna extends a warm welcome to thi o tat). j ?orgii Press Convention, who a« i:oav.uti:u there on the 12th of November. , hellgerent natives of Valdosta had a mhunder- thirty dollars; where th*-y canno‘ pay all in adv the ualanco payable iu thirty aud sixty days. The Observer, i-peakin * of ths progress of tho Sa vannah and Memphis Railrcal, says. A few days ago all the hands employed b> ttc masonry contrac- NYo believe in the ' *° rS of tlie Ta,!a P° CSi Itailroad bridge iubibed the 1 panic and suspended. Th»y have all since returned If . to work with doubli energy, and wc are reliably in- if 4J baka. ! organ," that is a un til matter. The farmers j farmed the eu a ine will whistle beyond tne river sev- a received a u read the Weekly Herald, because it is the 1 eral times before the lath of next month. AVe hope s W15 cent to Eafani* yesterday to buy cotton, tLe heavy advertisement from Mr. Taylor, the .sb;:n; unable oa account of the comparatively stt|Jc s L .,. re | arv “Little deeds of kindness, Little words of love, Make our earth an Eaen, I.ike the Heaven above.” The Advertiser and Mail of Montgomery says : No trains from Montgomery have been allowed to enter Selma for several days. We hope that in a day or two everything will ^dvj in tin regular channel. Our city was very quiet yesterday, and tho impression mostly prevailing was that tbe worst was over. The Montgomery Advertiser has the following: In view of the stringency ot the time?, we have been re quested by tbe rajulty of the Stnto Uuiversity at Tus caloosa, to announce that ariangements have been Coleman Station, Oct. U, 1873. J. P. Suiclell, Secretary liandolph Orange : Dear Brother—By request of Steveus Grange, I send you the enclosed preamble and resolutions, hoping you will publish the same. Whereas, It is believed that a meeting, ert iwssc, of the different granges of this section j board will tend to unite and strengthen the ties that j *mavi» bind us in a common cause, and thereby re- i suit in much good to our Order; therefore, be it Resolved, That Stevens Grange, No. 17, extend a cordial greeting to the granges of Randolph and surrounding counties, and fra ternally invite them to meet us, masse, in j Shipped to any Powell’s Hall, on Tuesday the 21st day of Oc tober, at 10 o’clock, a. m. ignty, and affirm that tbe majority of peopG reject the claim of Count Dj Cbamborti \p the throne of F»an< ?, and request the I> ‘putiea from the Depart meat of tho Seine to declare Lankly how they pro. iton at sixteen conta for New York mid- i p38e to VoU *’ whcn the question of a change iu the gov neglected. Wbilat : er “ rceut is *> ro «libt up in the Assembly. Among Ihe document* read at tho trial of Bozain ' tc-day. was ono allowing tbit there were 17.900.00; cartridges at the arfeual of Met*, of which only oc*- million bad been uaed when tbe place capitnlate<V aud that when Biz xiae sail he had no ammunition, the fact waa, he had no intantiou otMghtlag. Among the spectator* at the court martial cf Bi. uo* to-day were many Americans. The reading of the re- ply of llie defense to M. Itiniere'a report will begin next Monday and probably las* until the middle of the buyers have short in all they require. The receipt* continue heavy. a\ waging 500 hales per day, and the shipments about 050. Tbe weather ia perfectly splendid for picking, and evt-ry hand upon every plantation in tbe State is tusy in Ihe fields gath ering iu the crop. Never, pe haps, did we see such uniformly fine staple. Poor samples are rareiy ever found upon our Another fact is remarked, that it if much tils than a y year for a long time. I Stock i Received to day ! Received pro Cotton State hand Srpt. 1, 187G ! Shipped previ< | Stock « 2*1. That a copy of these resolutions be sent ’ u.. Cf brother Sawlell, with a request that the same ^aies be published in the Appeal. O. A. Barry, Secretary Stevens Graugc, No. 47. j The 'The Omhliii Herald, speaking of the farm- n baud thi* evening.. pts up to the same tim ir 1.CC9 more than this Cilmtr There is a rumor here that Baroa Sc had 1 Las W:. : arrested, bat it is thought to be premature. 1,322 j I’rince Frederick Charles, aad o.her Gcrntaa ofii cere, will not appear before the court as witnesses fo; ^ j Ba’aiue, unless his counsel think their testimony in 2.8*29 ; dispensible. It is now reported that Count Chambord will go to Hainnlt. Belgium, oa the frontier of Trance. 5,215 | The German aiubortties have refused I'uke Lv * 10,399 j Aramaic permission to visit the- battle fields iu I.or- .1,232-4,611 Denial i Naj oicon made to admit applicant) oa c.rali payment of only i ^rs’ movement, says : But this is nil stuff. Granges, and like them. As to being “ their ! largest and best paper published in the State. The cld Count de Chambord be moving towards the- French frontier, where icdlng the other «l»y aud adjourned to a fie d,where, he will doubtless await the action bf the Na- , tional Assembly. Meantime it is evident that Gambetta, Thiers and the Bonapaitist leaders , are arriving at an understanding that will prob- | ably disappoint the Monarchists,expectations. ILL surgeon and sccoads, they Lad a rough and turn le f. ’bt. One min h vd a fiag’r hitten oft', and th?n, 11 '■uly then, did peace reigu. TLe ria bouse of Mr. Wm. D. Ftancia. of Watliing- to_ :ointy, was accidentally burned last Friday, tc- „'cth?r with flffeeu bales of cotton. The loss ia rsti- ; Besides, all the Orleaaists hare not yet been xuatad at between fifteen, hundred and two thousand secured in favor of Chambord. A small por- i.alUr*. The “Governor Smith Dcagions” ii the name of a a.Utary orjrani/. ition iu SandcrsvUlc. T he uacil aoiree with knives and pistols occnrr.d . i Joatlcy* Court ground in Pulaski county rceasily, isms cf the parties were seriously puncture*!. Trom all sourcoa Augusta has forwarded in the litIghbcrho'Kl of $r. io to the Memphis an t Shreveport mffererF. Tfci R.ixo Comanrc-.al aanouaoss the return of Mr. Robert T. Hargrove, one of their city bankers* York. H repo-ts things still blue n Gotham. TLe Cciiimercl&l soyi: ‘’There is a bet in the city ol Iiletr- three dollars to three that Col. Waltermire i* not raarrled—tLe assertions of the Atlanta Hecalp rteme papers to the contrary notwithstanding *V£ re^ivod our information from the Hesald— ".ndcobted authority, generally, upon such subjects. li the Herald has been misinformed, we supposi tiou of them is said to be a trill* suspicious of Legitimism and to fear that if they he’p to restore Henri V. to the throne of his Bourbon ancestors he will not be likely to remember them—or rather that he will be likely to re member only their ancient hostility to his party and to his claims to the throne. THE 8BKAT CATTLE SALE. I — i To the Editors of the Herald: Presuming that the attention of some of ; your wide circle of readers may not have been arrested by articles in other journals giving the almost fabulous prices of the herd j of short horn cattle which the Hon. Samuel Campbell obtained at public sale, at his farm, rest barn: U done. Tbe parties ought to feil flit- ! New York Mills, New York, on tho tenth of tcrol a*. *.h' good opinion entertained of them, as ex- 1 September, 1873, we simply propose to givi presse 1 though tbs cewupsper*, whether married upper.f rsn is to h. Work or tho name, age and price of the Duches-es, with a summary of the herd of 109 head, etc.: ( First Duchess of Oneida, 3 7-12 years, r be:?. Their only chance of getting > $30,GOO. Seventh Duchess of Oneida, 1 1-12 years, $19,000. Tenth Duchess of Geneva, C 4-12 years, j TulboUon Standard is not altogether >metenou* now. There ia a yellow-jackets’nest in t'ae t3rk-yar . *n*l it is not uncommon to see a dc- i x ire competitor auspend work and endeavor to puli • l; all bis cl :hes at ooc«-, a<xompanying that pro- 1 $35,000. Eighth Dnchtss ol Oneida, 10 months, ! ; $15,300. .. . ... i Thirteenth Duchess of Thorudalc. 6 7-12 1 . ^cdlr.g with a i lutAmimc aomewuit similar to a Mo- 6ir. (win -Ha, ri-. I '“irS Tbe Advert - :;’-R?publican, *jf Savannah, stales that t v ) young me* who were native Georgians, raised in B-irk rt county, sod nephew* ot ex-Gov. H. V. Johnson, v\ arc killed roc* :tly by a desperado in Roberson coun (^)0 ty, Ter.a«. ure is asaigned for the act of tbe dcs Fourth Duchess of Oneida, 1 8-12 years, $25,000. , not only for tho vast country that tho completion of that bvidge will open to the enterprise of ihe iner- reported Io I cl, “ nt8 of °P» likl - . The Jac ksonville Republican eays that the cotton in Choocolocco and Ohalchee valley* will not make more than a half crop. News from Shreveport. Through the courtesy of Mr. Phil. Simms, conductor on the Texas aud Pacific Rail road, we are enabled to publish the following letter from Dallas, Texas. Also gives the names of all who died on Saturday, Sunday and Monday: Dallas, Texas, October 0, 1873. Dear Simms: Not knowing your address this may not reach you. If it does not there is no harm | done. 1 Stay where you are and don't c -me buck ; yet. Most every body we knew in Shreveport ' have passed iu their check*. Hurry Flournoy was buried at Greenwood on the 21st Sep tember. Mr. Brooks, Col. Hinson, little Smith, of the postoffice, Hy. Rogers, Harry Lee, Dau. Ackerman, and a great mony more whom 1 cannot recollect. Joe. Hubbard was buried at Dallas to day. He caught the dis ease in Marshall. It is reported that Bill Jacket aud John Dillon have died recently. From twelve to twenty die daily iu Shreveport. Morrow is well: so is Logan. No regular trains are running now. Fever in Marshall not bad. Lemoni aud Coff.-y. with others of the ring, are still in Dallas. Ged. Wright, Capt Tay lor Crosier, Giliman and Poiter not yet re turned. Brigs is here, but not working. Let me hear from you soon by telegraph or We run no father east than Long view. Times dull. Kind regards to Mrs. Simms. I remaiu your friend, Lou. Forrest. The following deaths occurred Saturday and Sunday, in Shreviqaort: Julius Or in and, Lewis Waltz, Fred Corivep, The Grangers are making rapid progress in i Mrs , Duke , h „ s b( ,, D bjl[wl Nebraska. At Lincoln there was recently a gathering of the “hard-handed,” at wbich two or three hundred delegates appeared from the neighboring counties. The meeting was one for consultation and a mutual inter change of opinions. P w»»s agreed that they would make a common cause with the farm ers of Illinois. Missouri, Minnesota, and oth 1 Kntea. Themis A. Gray, the Fort Valley murderer, ha* >eeu denied bal*\ and put back in our .uil to await the ction of ihe grand jury. He don’t seem to care much about his situatio of $2, The testimony as elicited upon Ihe preliminary ex- animation is decidedly against he«*. She frequently commanded her eon to “shoot the d— d ecoundrel,” and used other ve»y profane aud obaceuc language j drvd during the affray. They were a hard set all around. . killed Doalevy ha* not yet been arretted, but it is thoogbt ; still that he will r ?ve himself up in a few d*y*. No The re: ■tint, ne Mariouf day *U, er States, on all questions affecting the farm- j reward has b ed for him either by the Mayor the Governor. This seems strange to many pco- W. C. Gordon, Deputy for the org.mization ! P !o - rhcre ar0 oue or ,wo <,th ' r i™ 1 ™ 0 "’ murderers — -- • - 1 who have recently escaped, and for whom no rewards ere* interests. negro who committed the rder of the year ii. Son'll Macon Borne five 1 York to- eeks ago has not been apprehended and no effort made to catch him. It is said by the police of Macon that he will not surrender without a despc rate resist ■nco. . Tho i itian Summer, g our regulat aud beautiful Indian ( nings are cold enough for froat, Mrs. Harwell, I but there is so little moisture in the atmosphere and : ; so little dew upon the grass, that Jack ba3 not a3 yet made us his first visit. By ten o’clock each morning the suu is called sickly on a»id chill- uld occur at phis and Shreveport. But the doomed cities w have to revel iu tbe great c irnival of death for i weeks to come. ill yet everal Twig* [ *f the Twiggs C< Moral iy n. xt it. aid Ci -^rado, From t’u* X< TLo following iog Ntv.*, of Savannah: mtribations havj been received at oftlre for tbe ralief of the sufferara at Shreveport aai Memphis « HVtrr.r.-. nonrr. St. Jehu’s ,Epl*co.»«M $5d 00 Christ 57 00 St Patrick’* (Catholl* > S8 CO fLvannah Biiptist loO 09 Trlni’y Methodist 05 00 HratFreebytcrian 82 00 VvcaleyChap*!(Metbodi*q 11 oo lienal Berith Jacob congregation 75 25 oru£C konu r.s. <^>c.tral Railroad car shop 17 25 trtbntiow*. C « OSOKLGATTONs. .*t Baptist 'Rev. W. Houston) 22 00 ■aMiUe Liptiet, * •* 12 00 eth'xliat 'i:cr. H. M. Turner) 22 00 r jor and N-edy Soohrfy, (Georgia A. Kelly, President, Ann Wilaon,8cc-retary 20 CO ^3ond Africdi Baptist Chorth 21 10 Bethlehem Church. (R v. Frank Lloyd 20 00 H:. Stephen’s (KpOnsopai, 14 35 $1,0*4 70 ilcmilted Rev. 8. Landrum, Memphis $402 40 Remitted Howard ApbocIhI'd, 8hrerc- pert 592 ‘.O $1 084 70 contributed in printing by Savannah Morn- in’ New* $30 25 Contributed by Adi*rtieer Republican 57 75 Contributed by Savrnnah Benevolent Ae*oci- atlon to Shreveport iOJ 00 Mtmphi* GOO ou Eighth Duchess of Geneva. 7 ye,.r s , *f0,-i Elstner J S. Taylor, SI .Kelly Ben. 0 all, Whitt McKellar, King Calle, S. Rose, Tenth Duehe.-s ol Onaidn, 5 months. S27,-, “ cC “ l ‘- S ' ^! e r5 U ' 000. I Mttltie Work, C. Wolf, H. ! Cantla, E. F. lfierson, ller Rogers, W. M. , infant, ltev Ninth Duchcsf of Oneitla, i» months 7 days, ! i?f Aier ^ n » "» . $10 000. Biller, S. Ellen, Brent B. Baker, E. L. Cal- Twelvth Duchess ot Thorndale, 78-12ye.irs, 55.700. Third Duchess of Oneida, 2 2-12 years, $15,600. Eighth Duchess of Thorndale, II years, $450. SUMMARY of the herd Eleven Duchesses, sveragiug $21,789 each —$238,800. Seven Oxfords, averaging $4,514 eicii $31,COO. Seventy-four other females, averaging $1,- 080 each—$80,375, making the number of ninety two cows, averaging $3,813 each. honn, Dan Williams, J. Homes, J. Garity, J. S. Ashton, If. Prescott, H. G. Coyle, Becky Douglass, T. A. Garrett, Max Wanner, Ellen Bewlaugh, M. Lee, W. S. Carper, Jus. Arnold. * Shreveport, October G, 1873. Wm. Faggart, nge 30; Gm Cook, age 27; H. Chilling, ace 22; Saui Cham, age 38; Em- nntt Rankin, James Merely, colored, Richard Thomas, colored, n child, colored. of Farmers Grangers, organized a Grange at i Dadevilie, Tallapoosa county, on Monday, i have been °ff erc ‘ 1 - T1 ‘ the 22d day of September, 1873, with the fol- i J <•*»-- lowing officers and members: Luke Deavenport, Master; A. G. Hutchi son, Overseer; Wm. Porch, Stewart; W. O. Massey, Assistant Stewart; Levi Turner, Chaplain,Dr. E. W. Dawson, Secretary; K. C. Goodman, Treasuter; Asa Sanford, Lecturer; Briant Porch, Gate Keeper; Mrs. L. Watts,! We are Ceres; Mis. M. Goodman, Pomona; Mrs. j Summer. Fannie Hutchison, Flora Lady Assistant Stewart. NEGLECT OF DUTY. Editors Ioica Granger—1 fear that some of us neglect cur duty as regards the assembling j hot, and so it is; aud by noon each day it ia oppress or ourselves together regularly; or in other i ively so. It i« fine weather for words, we are not as punctual in attendance j do wish that a first -clas* free/, at our regular meetings as we should be. This is decidedly wrong, Bnd cannot be view ed in any other light. Let me ask what was our object in ioiniug the Patrons of Husban dry ? Was it not that we might improve our condition, morally, socially and intellectually ? And perhaps I might with truth add finan cially ? Most assuredly it was. But this cannot be done if we absent ourselves, and neglect to do “the things which 60 nearly concern our temporal salva tion.” Then let us press on in the good begun work, and never “weary iu well doing” until we reach the goal, for which the order was first organized. As respects non- attendance, I “know how ’tis myself.” We are very busy sowing wheat; or we have com menced plowing corn; or we have some fence to build or repair; or this or that, and the other thing, that requires our attention, and v*e don't see how we can leave them all go to the Grange. But we surely can attend, I twelv at least once a month, if we only think so; be sides, we are pretty sure to heir something to our advantage, which we would have misl ed, if we had staid at home. It is all right and proper to work, for we have to “earn our bread by the sweat of our brow,”1mt should we j not economise a little, even in this respect, if by so doing we can improvo and elevate our condition ? The most of us have a way of our rrning; but if we attend each meeting, arid bear tho subject ‘talked up’ in i all its bearings, perhaps we will hear of a , had plan that will suit us, and we will adopt it in i Boy *oliloq«y—“That’* neat but uau^hiy.’ preference to our own. Therefore, brother 1 If thtai* thagrpeatree wha*. miy we'apect in tU» Patrons, let us endeavor to be worthy Patrons j dry. in deed, as well as in name. The remark is true that ‘we have no way of judging of the skiit hiui Ghyicrtl future but by the past,’ nod judging from the : Open tbe ekow season here to -bight, with a full aad past, wc think we had just cause for an organ- 0 »mpiete company. They will be followed ou Monday ization of this kind. Then let us do our duly i au«l Tuesday night* by Dupre?, and Bancdict * Mir.- cheerfully in every respect, that we may j atrel*, and they iu turn by a locg Hue of ctber exbi- come off conquerors m the end. ; i,ition*. in nud on of door*. i to the report o; the so, ;re ol Prince * photograph*. SPAIN. Madrid, Oct .ber 11, 1S7^. -ort of tbe Carlist victory oa the si^tb ia- r Carrufi, is «ffi;ial!y declared falee. decora’, •eparls tint be had an cn agemect on that i the enemy, who wer«* defeated, driven back with a los* of one hundred killed and five hun- nled. Of the lfepubliaans, only nineteen l '»ne hundrel and forty wounded. Madrid, Ortober 11,1873. A Qjvernm ‘ot ndroa La> anrhore.l four miles oni Cartagena. ENGLAND. Ix>sdon. October 11, 137;:. ehipr^l from Liverpool for K*« A lulf million v. Signal c Ifices this morning harbor are getting up steal Ih v.\\, O*tober it), vaittcg here for the tt the United Slates i all steamers in the «xpectatioa of a borri- aui \tiv»buyi. Tbe Hkbilu newsboy* and carrier* are notified that the paper will retch the Dapot at half part 6ix o'clock, next Tuesday, and every morning thereafler. The Vinevilio and the Wndtor ci*y edition* will be thrown from the train—the first at the Y/neviUc depot, at aix o’clock, and the other at tbe bridge, near the residence of Col. W. .T. Aderhold. «l. ul | Ralston Blm-k, Plenty of Kliotv*. The walls and bulletion hoards ol the city a.e lath ered aud plastend with vkow bills, f ome of the do- uld do ertdit to Iijrby. It is considered vul- i ^ gar to atop aud look at a show hill, but the trvth is J help it. Aud whilst doirg so the other diy j ^ ■d a small boy luiuntely t xaiuining a heroic n about farming: but if we attend oacll | illusUut.cu cf the Gnat l.iclcrn. Ihe horse was trav- ‘ ... t least sixty unit s an hour, and his fair ridor . ic foot on Li* head and the other on hi* back The wind is very heavy aud a ceasting ecnccner an chored at the month of the harbor broke adritt aud has gone out to tea, which is very high, and the wares are breaking over Moro light-house. The water ia rising and scrotal etrert* a e already inuudated. Tbe Valley City bound to Key Wert has put back. Official reports stale the io6urgents, one thousaud st ong surprised ihe Spanish column near Hiiquiu During the ergagement the Spanish commander was wounded aud taken prisoner The Spanish loss in killed, wounded end piieouors is one hundred and twenty-five. The remainder of tho column was retu- forced and pursued the insurgents, encountering them in their encampment in the cbappereL Tbe in surgents were beiten and obliged to abradon the camp. The Spa-, ish loss in tU* engagement was 110 killed and several wounded. The insurgents loss was double that number. Tbe body iueurgent*4n the Central De partment. under Maximo Oomrz, attacked Scuta Cm - /. Del Snr, but were repulsed, leaving 13 killed in the village. The Spanish loss was one cflloer and five *ol' diers killed, and one soldier wound* d. Merchauta’ DilL »u*pende«\ tc-lay—sa;J soaped, sion only temporary. Some damage was done by h g’i water ia the etrce*s near tho shore, and luaar houses wore flooded, the sea breaking iu doors and washit g the furniture away. Several persons were drowned and most all the tele graph lines ou the Island arc down aud communic tiou very much interrupted. Oa the night of the 28th ultimor Gninumam > was ctiuck by the tail ol a hurricane. All the ve**el* In port were driven ashore. The rooms of maiy houses wero blown off aud other damage resulted to Personals. Something to Hat. A letter from Giba) a dated 2nd instant saja the Spanish forces, four hnndred strong, under the command of Col. Dirquese, was d*ft «t*d at Cam- a doe* on, by united Insurgent band*. On tho 29 uit. the insurgents attacked another vT* lags, but were repulsed with considerable loss in killed. Two hundred and seventy men of the column of Piegucre reunited and joined the lorco of Espando. Firing v. - aa Inard on tho 21 inst. at Giqua, between Calderon aud Niu Cristoval, when F«p*ndo came up with the insurgents. The icsult oi the engagement is unknown. IVecuutiouaiy measures have been taken flow a wife was swapped lor a sborse is thus told l*y the 8ui Francisco Chrouicle: ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Comstock, the man who took all the prestige Seventeen bulls and bull calves, averaging • discovery that bears bis name, bad I «ar. 0 M s.h—sm 91»; I lots cr money, bouses and lauds, aud he set s Francis Arinins beads the list of j elioicen oj.te»». H.lt. i It is really tempting t > look a*, tl S’Of t)’.«! ; nuu*uallj largf $1,83C each -$31,21U Herd of one hundred and nine, averaging $3 501 each—reaching the grand total of I $381,990. With these figures before ns who i out to find a loving companion to share his j worldly goods with him. A Mr. Carter, liv- ! ing near Comstock’s camp, was poor, but ho was possessed of a young wife, and upon the witu tnese ngures before us who can say i * , . V . “““ — that cattla-rainng is not profitable Though « roun ' 1 - l [* n \ * , “‘ ,BD 8 e no r °V bcr y Georgia fanners may never record snch prices ! msilc a had. 0 linstock gave a horse forthtir choice breeds of cattle, they c in, val “ ctl at *f 2 .' «nd seventy-flye_» money, j without doubt, make stock-raising largely profitable, and now is the very auspicious pe riod for making the effort. making $300, /or the wife; and to make the matter still more biuding Comstock gave Oerter a bill of sale of tho horse, and Carter Can it be that Georgia is to be dependent i ga™ Comstock a annular document with t.ie for tbe next generation on other States for I nsu, | l 8 naran, ''“ , iat ‘he annul,1 was sound, her supply ot beef, m.lk, butter and cheese? ' k , m i ftml •™e, and jviuianted not to kick in For cattle, we must have grass for grazing and I * be harness, lln, thenoielty ol atransaction . i . .* i ° ° . . ! cn rovnltniif In <• tcniinm rti n It V MMirif Utfin Among the presents at the wedding of Col. lYbitfordof Concord, and Miss Mabel, daugh ter of 8ergeant-at-arms N. G. Ordway, at Warner, N. H., last week, was a grand piano, ooeting one thousand dollars, presented by an intimate friend of Mr. Ordway, well known in New Hampshire, and now traveling in Eu rope.’ 5 His name is probably ex-8enator Pat terson. The caution of the New Eoglandtr in giv ing an answer to a direct question was illus trated to me, saya a correspondent the ‘ for tbe sufferers? Other day, when I asked an Emtern friend of mine, whose family were not noted for very active habits, “Was not your father’s death very sudden?” Blowly drawing one hand from his pocket, "and polling down hia beard, the interrogated cauiiorsly replied, “Waal, rather sadden (or him.” lor hay ; and who will pretend to say that grass cannot be grown in the greatest abun dance on the soil of Georgia? Will not one or more enterprising men in at least one hun dred counties in the State lead off in this in dustry ? T. so revolting to a woman of any spirit soon wore away, and Comstock’s wife and money left him about the same time. Soon after she left him Comstock told the writer that lie could compel her to live with him if lie chose, and m proof produced Lis bill of sale. O I'AIIOUK. Nobody has occasion to be troubled about a third term for Grant. The Cooke and j Clews and Biss Sheppard business lias final- Editokh Hf.bald : Iu view of the suffering hu4 desolation trotu ' dis.iossd of him. The people r< the ptHtilenoe in Memphis and Shreveport, plwwant Intihs slowly■. The hardest kiud of would it not be well for our Churches in At- i n< ds nny eventually l»e inbh d into tlnni. Mr. Cbarh Quincy, Mass., tax-pavers. Dr. Strauss, the author of the “Lite of Je sus,” is so i'l that his recovery is doubtful. It is probable that Senator Sumner’s frieuds will succeed in inducing him to abandon bis lecturing tour this season. The furniture for Senator Stewart’s new residence iu Washington has been ordered iu Paris. The Senator's residence will doubt less be the most finely furnished in the capi tal. The Utica Observer states that Senator Conkling is the only member of Coogress from New York who has left his back-pay- mouey to his own credit in Washington. Ac cordingly he is tho only one to whom the res olution upon this subject lately passed by the j Republican State Convention can be applied. ; Mrs. Ben Holliday left a will disposing ol *t tne Empire stone Work* this *fie an immense property, including 12,(MX) acres 1 bauly aud another siiKhtly injured, of laud near White Plains, twenty buffaloes, j Gweruor Hiuitii wm m the city i several autt lopes, wolves, elk, deer etc., and jib, Hun*wivk R»br now notice is given that there is another will. Mr. Holliday’s will i» recorded at White Plains, anil there will 1>*> a contest with the have game. d tli3 ft->h C3.1.M the coast, and i *• luxurh-t (.-) our bu’clmr* are -nts of Leef from the green pas- aud ho rt s from Kentucky. The j ah to m*ke them all Bplocdid age, tripe, chitlin^*, lu addition to th getting large atliipn ture* ot TVuneaare weather i* cold enouj Hackbouts, span-rib*, fl*h cortaiuly mako up a bill of fare upou which we can make out, if not grow poiitlvely f;i*. The dealer* have all made artatigemoM* to have extraord>uary ehipmeut* during the Fair, ai.d we think our visitor* may rest assured of one thing: that they will have pleuty to «at. The German B.-ig Speculant. from Pensacola f> r Dromon, has arrived bore with lo*a spar* *nd boa- sprit, ar.d leaking badly. She ene.ount* red the an>rtu of the r,(h and 7th at sea. Several veaaels went aahore aud wore wreck* *, All the villages along the coast suffered severely from the flood*. The Spanish steamer Ma:rt v.as lost during tho !a‘e gale*, near the lale of Piue*. Of her crew, number- •ler*. | 35, only 2 were.aaved. TheKugliah Schooner M.scLiet wa* wrecked and is total less; crow saved. NEW YORK ITEMS. At the i»i - < mature explosion of a gun powde day looking in‘« road triad) Thi janta to set apart a day for fasting and prayer “ * Will not onr ministers an- , rtti Conline it A B 3aton letter •The attack upon uouuc; it from their pulpits to-day, and let j Prof. Agassiz in tho Popular Seienc • Monthly, tbe people mvet together at one church ou j from tho pen of Prof. John Fmke, is likely the <1 *y appointed for prayer? While we of to make .something of a tlutt i here ACauta should be thankful for our exemption from the hcourge, we should be foremobt i our aympithy and prayers for tho snfforers. Himpathy. tohl that w tlmu the modi st Dr. A*a tempted pulling down which we a e*c al'ogeth* r Shortly after the it v* nt illness of Hon. John lin kman, Hon. Washington Townsend called on hiui, and wishing to encourage him, remarked: “Well, liickir.uu, 1 can’t see that your sppenrauco need trouble you.’’ “No, Townsend,” quickly replied the invalid states- min, “it doesn't; i’ is my dw-appeamiige that troubhs me.’* Mr. Win. II. l’uiicli ot Ncwpott, Kcnlt-Civ, , it is mi at-I tired ot hearing funny remarks about bis tioui pedostsl for - name, bus h id it legally chnnirtri to Wir. II. , iiuprepared.’ I Guthrie. $8.00) the U*t fiscal year over expense*. It i* * j pveted that it will make $12,t > 0) this y«ar. j A t*e;:ro ium< d Plea Henry wa* Srtc*t«d < Htruft last mabt iu the and win lemandid for a warrvLt by the May Tbe inouey to day l**r cotton ran stunt, aud h i*li w»ld. Sew Yoke, October 10. Total imports for the week amount to $7.il^,107, of 1 which $5,127,585 were general Merebaujise and ; $2,091,112 dry gooia. '■ Tom Uowliag won the two milo hr it at Jeroma blast i*ark. Time, 11:37**. Proakues* won 2*^ mih* race, ) waa Tune. 4 8)8\. Gmnstead won three-fourths of ink's j race. Time, 47\. A rtorni on the Florida Coast ha* interrupted tele- si Lie commueicatioDa with Cuba Kropcan ateamers take nrnrly a ha If a miUion M> xi dollara and specie to-day. Seveuty thouaaud pound* baa beru reoeiv* d at the luui can, J bO' When r man but little cent*. Skill . M Wc t burglary from a house, 1 ! Assay ofllcosiuce Monday., amt C5),000 is expected to iy. All from England. Tho Kochautrcaa won tbe 1st, l*dot 2d and Kcgu* The t*eat brought aixteoa j ikl fries in the yacht isco. I Death* for the week. (51. ijlord opened the tb*-aUical season htre Kiel this art*rn wm i-i sped-1 m * *!vrd *»• i etl loti tbe Ex »rt ** Comp uy a tlie c dlretiouM. but t • let draiUc me • nyiiUr b*i,k ciunae!i » nail l« not deal. j Two more juror* have beeu obtained tn the Strkos I ciae, making eight in all. At Jerome Tark Springbok wou the mile heat time 14:3) a ; 14:6; 14:6 ,. G.-ay PUnet won th* l*i 1 iuil»* rao*. time 20:S\. ! The 1 uebautrena pasted Fort Haru.Uon Th* othet* • a i« not in si»;bt