Newspaper Page Text
f
The Daily Herald
a. k. axaro*. H. W. t W, Arm
ALSTON & CO.. Proprietor*.
THE GOLDEN CITY;
OR,
Uaur* Tlx® Tyrant.
BY MARCUS A. BELL.
^:.«erioos and earnest attention be drawn
t* the import of this eventfnl^story, suggest-
^ ing sabjeotB too extensive for my preeent time
or newspaper limit, and too vital to be lightly
considered by the people 'or passed over by
the body politic.
In all ages of the world a universal discon
tent ha g inveighed against the oppresaionjo
Users, the tyrant.
The painful disquietade arises from no vile
prejadgment, nor mean prejudice, exciting the
envious passions of the common people, but
from bitter experiences, condemning the mon
arch, who feels that he has a jaat claim on
“all he surveys.”
The borrower has ever been, and will al
ways be, “slave to|the lender,” from the
fact that he obtains possession of “a thing
naturally barren,” as pertly said by an emi
nent and wise philosopher, who agreed with
“the inspired legislator,” that no interest
should be exacted from the citizen on
dinm of commerce:
If the rate of interest impose heavy burdens
on the borrower, his slavery becomes abject
and deplorable.
The loan is presumed to place An instru
ment in the ha'ods; but if it be two edged,
fourteen per cent, temper, the slave grasps
the hilt ol of a sword that will gash deeply
on all sides, mortally woonding his pros
perity.
Money, per se, is not only unproductive,
but foreign to uses that supply comforts for
the body; nor can impart pleasures to the
mind, unless, indeed, the soul be clonded
with the shadowy vapors of a miserly concern.
Ah! “the love oi money;” the distate for the
fruit* of labor; the disdaiu for the quiet com
forts, and peace, of economy and equal jus
tice.
The natural resources, and the products of
the soil by labor, added to nome manufactures
wad inland and out-let channels of transpor
tation, with population, form tho wealth and
strength—prodncing power of the State; and
not the TiN P££ CENT, “gilt edge paper,”
wrested from weary hind-*, to gild the pomp
of monopolies, or charm the repose of curb
stone and cross-road brokers.
FarJxutter have no money not the fruit of
onr own resources and labor, than allow exac
tions of ten ]>er cent interest, which, every
candid, sensible man will Admit, is ruinous to
any legitimate business.
This average charge upon business is what
now shackles the industrial pursuits of the
country, depressing labor aud diminishing
onr products, thus lessening the quantity of
onr money, and inviting foreign and unfriend
ly capital to come with the gieed of Shy locks
and devour our sickly and drooping securities.
Few are the merchants, mechanics, artists,
contractors, teachers, iarmers, (or even good
editors, whose eminently useful mission enti
tles them to the highest rewards,) who can
operate on borrowed capital drawing ten per
cent, and prosper in their business; and the
exceptional cases generally present instances
of success arising from some fortuitous cir
cumstances not the basis of a sound public
economy. The average income from com
mon pursoits is less than six per cent.
Then, why allow so great premiums on
If
THE ATLANTA DAILY HERALD.
RHEUMATISM-
VOL- 1II-NO. 105.
ATLANTA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8. 1874.
WHOLE ISO. 711
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“RheumatisH”
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itaieeeu UuuRr aud AiahaAaa. *n*r»,
a. y to 0 U'oirta. y. he c&ay Nrweeall*,, i.ya4*»«
tron au Irattai flaea. *..*.:-w«r
THE SABBATH.
SYNOPSIS OF A SERMON PREACHED AT THE FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, BY BEV. J. H. MAR
TIN, ON SUNDAY, DECEMBER 6TH.
[Reported Expressly for the Herald ]
Text, Rora. viii: 1 —“There is' therefore, now
no condemnation to them which are in
Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh
but after the Spirit”
1. Obviously the first inference is that there
is condemnation to them which are not in
Christ Jesus. This is the rescuing of the
apostle in the foregoing chapters. In the first
he had drawn a terrible picture of the deep
depravity of the heathea nations; in the sec
ond he showed that the Jews had failed to
keep the law of God and were sinners in His
sight. ; in the third he showed that condem
nation before the law and tribunal of God re
sulted necessarily from the^e premises. All
were sinners; their nature and practice were
corrupt ; therefore all were guilty, that is, lia
ble to punishment. This incidentally throws
light on the question, Shall the heathen who
hive never heard of the Son or word ot God
be lost ? God has given to them a revelation
of Himself and Hi* will, in nature. It they
have lived according to the light thus confer
red they shall be saved. Bat, in the melan
choly and awtul description of their sins and
crimes in which they daily lived, which he
presents, he shows that they had not lived up
to the light of nature, and w >re. therefore, un
der condemnation; and this is their condition
still. The heathen, having the law of God
written on their conscience and disobeyiog it,
are under condemnation; the Jews having the
law of Moses and disobeying it are under con
demnation; both Jew and heathen, to whom
the Son of God has been revealed, and who
reject Him, are under a double condemnation.
So bo draws his conclusion; “Every mouth
shall be stepped, and the whole world stand
guilty before God.”
2 The second inference h, that which is
plainly stated in the text, that those who are
iu Christ Jesus are delivered from the con
demnation. They are brought into the op
posite state of justification- This is the sum
of the Gospel. “As by the disobedience of
one, many were made sinners: so, by the
obedience of one many were made ruhtoons.
The 1aw of God demands perlect obedience,
and in the failure thereo it entails death. In
the natural state ot man, therefore, it may be
said he owes a double debt to the divine law.
First, or>edien<-e, and failing to pay this, sec
ondly, death. Christ being accepted as the
sinner’s substitute, in God’s scheme of grace
and salvation, pays, in the perfect holiness ot
His life, man’s debt ol obedience, and in His
vicarious sufferings and death, man’s debt cf
punishment. This is Christ’s active and pas
sive obedience to the law ct God on man’s be
half, and this the infinite grandeur ot His
Divine Nature being sufficient to answer all
the ends of justice, sinners who are in Him,
are made righteous.
3. This introduces the third tubject of
thought in the text ; the character ol those
who are thus saved. They are first described
as being “in Christ Jesus r A peculiar phrase
ology, m the literature of the world nothing
like It is found. The disciple of Aristotle is
never said to be in Aristotle, nor ’he disciple
ot Plato to be in Plato, nor the disciple of Ma-
—! hommed to be m M.ihomtned. But it is every-
medium, offenng allurements to entice away , where p resen ted in the Gospel as the grand
tho industrious classes, to augment the now | cbarac £ ristlc of ^ trQe d Udpla of Christ
fearful “ray of non-producers. that he is in Christ. In Him, as Xoah was in
And far above all, the moral tone of soc.ety : thg ark which wgg a lype of Christ In Him
that directs the march or cirili* rtion, is pro- | b a , , sUt ns as just described, eo as to be
motedby the liberal use, not by --the love of g ' ved £ om the bUlo ws and surges of Divine
money, the root of all the evrls that mar the i ^y ralb w hieh shall roll over the unbelieving
harmony of social life. | world in fire, as in the waters of the flood it
And assuredly, it is the duty of govern- overtook aad 0T6rthrew t be ungodly world of
meat as the sovereign guardian of the peo- j 0 , d Ag goon ^ gilinerf f celing his owo
ole, to protect thun, by wuc legislation, lrom be ] p i e8a condemnation, sin, and misery be-
exactions which disturb the equilibrium bal- i for J God lootg t0 Cbrigt as his Saviour aud
Jancmg rewards due to legitimate labor j tru9t8 Jn Him> He ig bron(?ht into a state of
The tyrant, Laura, certainly is drunk with JQa tific»tion for Christ's sake. Christ’s whole
his own madness With reckless might h* J alouej work ig pU ced to his account and
invades the nghtfn heritage 01 the people; | tbas a " nion in , a * u established. In Him
destroying the thrift of the most useful and j n b a union according to the bean-
productivc employments, and disquieting the i ^ f J able of tbe vioe and tb „ branch B .
whole community; and does he not justly in- j ^ ^ yine are the brancheg .'- The
eur the displeasure of the pubhc economist ? - rit Qf God a ch ln the B i nn et'a
The sophisms of the oppressor may no j t£ art , the first effeotof which isthe looking by
oflnde a too confiding people. faith to Him as just mentioned, then leading
The wiles of the crafty despot have woven ; t a Unng npou J C hrist by faith. A mvn may
the many-colored vail, which spreads its dra- feag £ b J in Cnrigt w he u he is not, and
pery over the eyes, biding from view his | ^ en he ig cagt fortb M a brancb th *t ig witb .
ghostly shadow that haunts the footsteps of gIed gnd burnt np _ yy tbe operation of His
the riclnn. ^ ...... ! Providence, by being forsaken by the Spirit
Legion is his name, and his ghostly of God by Q Him ate banishment from the
shadow, everywhere, darkens the rugged path- nca Gjd forever . tbe falsest pro
way of Want His shadow may not fright, ^ thg fraitlega brancll is cnt 0 fl'. But he
the victim within the vail, but tho weary eye j who x i^Ueves finds Christ the life of his
of reason, undimmtd save by a tear, beholds I g0Q , ( M lhe braoch draw8 its life from the
—andthB neart vlQ6t upon Him as the Bread ot Lifer
A RHINO CEROS BATTLE.
DESPJ3BATR FIOHT BETWEEN THE MALE RHINOC
EROS “PETE” AND A FEMALE RHINOCEROS AT
THE HIPPODBOME —AN EXCITING SCENE.
Yesterday morning at about half-past nine
o’clock, while the employes of the Hippo-
diome were removing some of the animals in
the southern and lower part of tbe building,
an accident occurred which might have caused
a serious less cf life and property had it not I
been for the energetio measures which were
immediately taken to prevent disaster.
The well known and enormous |sized rhi
noceros called -Pete,’ who weighs over 4,o00
pounds, and who is familiar to all of the visi
tors at the Hippodrome, has of lats been ob-
DURELL RESIGNS.
AN INTERVIEW WITH THE JUDGE ON HIS RESIG
NATION —EXPLANATION OF HIS POLICY—HE
DISCLAIM 8 ALL PARTISANSHIP IN THE
QUBtBNATORlAL TROUBLE.
Judge Dnreli, who is now staying at the
Astor House with his friends, Mr. and Mrs.
Norton aod family, and who intends to re
main in New York during the winter, was
waited upon yesterday by a reporter of the
Herald in reierence to his resignation of the
served to\>^in*low spirits and quiTemoody Ta office of D.striet Judge of Louisiana. After
8Cl,ou lu . , nn amnu noncrul nrtnvorjahftf'. tho .Tllficro VA*
manner. A pen had been built for him 30
feet in lenght, 8 feet in height aud 9 feet 2
inches in width from the brick wall of^ the
Hippodrome tojlhe stanchions on the inner
side of the pen. Iron bars about an inch in
diameter were fastened together by other iron
bars of greater thickness, and outside of all
these were large and heavey wooden braces
that seemed to defy all attempts of the animal
to escape or break through, The flooring of
the cage was of solid brick and the entire
structure was believed to be perfectly safe,
bat it was discovered that the iron bars were
too weak to stand the strain that they were
put to. The pen of the rhinoceros “Fete” is
in the southeastern end of the Hippodrome,
but at tbe southwestern end of the building
there is confined a female rhinoceros named
some general conversation the Judge was
asked whether it was true that be had resign
ed.
Judge Darell replied that it was true, and
said: “Here is a copy of my resignation,
which I sent to the President on the evening
of the 1st of December.” The Judge then
read as follows:
Astor House, New Yore, Dec 1, 1871.
To the President of the Uniter States of
America:—
Sir—I hereby and from tbis date resign the
office held by me of District Judge of the Dis
trict Court or the United States of America in
and for the District ot Louisiana. Respect
fully, vour obediant servant,
E. H. DURRELL.
rz—v r~ , . . | - Was ihis prompted by any sudden deter-
Mary Jane, who j mination on your part, Judge, or is it the log
ic of recent political events that has worked
GRAY’S FERRY PRINTING INK
WORKS,
PHILADELPHIA PA.
ROBINSON k PRATT,
No. 714 Samson Street, Philadelphia.
PBaTT k ROBINSON.
No. 8 Spruce Street, New ’York.
INKS OF ALL ORAOAS AN 0 COLORS.
(From the Philadelphia North American and United
State* Gazette.)
“We publish In another place, tne recommendations
of the Printing lake manufactured at the Gray’s
Ferry Ink Wurke. We are tiling Ink from Meairr
Robinson & Pratt’s Works, and are pleated to add onr
aporovat ot it to the many endorsement* they hare
already received. Tbe Ink is of excellent quality,
clear, and works freely.*’
bn Northern Tier Gazette, Troy, (Pa ) says of the
Grey’s Ferry Printing ink Wot s:
“ ' e call attention ol oar editorial friends to the
card of the Grey’« Ferry Printing Ink Works, o! whom
we have bean baying Ink for some years past. We
can commend ihe gentlemen who run these Works as
worthy of patronage, aa anxious to satisfy the wants
of iheir onatomers, and as saUafaoto y men to deal
with as we ever met. They, like the firm of MacKel-
lar, Smiths A Jordan, type founders, cf tbe srme
city, are men that It will do te tie to, certain of receiv
ing honorable treatment and prompt attention.
dec2d4w
~8TEEL-I aPTE» HaILKUaD HAILS.
MOST IMPORTANT DISCOVERY
age and weighs 3,600 pounds. This female
rhinoceros, Mary Jane, has quite a geutle and
affectionate disposition and tor such an ugly
misshappen beast, she is quite popular among
the keepers. Mr. 0. A. Fnller, the general
agent lor the Hippodrome, observing the
gloomy condition of “Petes mind, thought
that he might be pining for female society,
and accordingly it was determined to place
Mary Jane, tbe female rhinoceros, iu the peo—
a huge one—-with him, in order that the male
might be cheered up. I»Qt “Pete’ proved to
be a most uneallant and murderous brute, as
tha sequel will show. At half-past nine o’clock
yesterday morning it was determined to move
the wagon which contaiued Mary Jane down
to a position in the building just opposite
where the pen of “Pete” stands, and this was
doue under the order of Mr. Fuller and in the
presence of Mr. P. T. Barnum and a large
number of the employees. There was not any
audience in the building at the time, as the
matinee does not commence until half-past
two o’clock of each day.
A TERRIBLE FIGHT.
The female rhinoceros was let oat of the
movable cage, twenty or thirty keepers stand
ing around armed with iron spears, hooks and
triaents in case of any danger should result in
the transfer ol the huge beast. It was notice
able that the male rhinoceros watched the
transfer with a surly look, and began to growl
iu a voice like distant thunder as he saw the
female rhinoceros (Mary .fane) approach his
cage. A low wooden half door was let down,
and Mary Jane was pushed into the pen of
•‘Pate ” who now began to dance around with
terrific rapidity for an animal whose measure
ment is twelve feet from born to tail, and
whose circumference at the abdomen is four
teen feet, eight feet around tbe neck, and 35
inches around the ankle at the joint. No
sooner had the fem%le rhinoceros entered
the pen than the male, “Pete,” commenced
an awtul assault on the unoffending Mary
Jane, who made no fight for a few minutes.
Tbe huge monster hurled himself on his
antagonist with a velocity and power that was
simply terrible. The weapon used by “Pole”
was his huge horn, that had * een filed down
so as to take the point off. but which was yet
a fearful weapon for assault. The movements
of “Pete” became so rapid and violent that
Mary Jane fairly bellowed for fear aud yelled
until her wails of terror filled the building.
Tne male rhmocerous assaulted her on the
flank, on the legs, and in tbe abdomen, and
by this time the keepers had sprung to the de
fence with iron sc ears and tridents, axes and
bars of iron. By this time all the animals on
the south or twenty-sixth street side of the _
bnilding had become ferocious, and the up- understand, iu the Uuited States Senate, the
roar wa3 something appalling in its nature j Enforcement act, which increases the powers
given to the Uuited States Circuit Court, and
gave it jurisdiction both in law aud equity.
Now in the fall election of 1872, iu Louisiana,
out such unexpected action.”
“No, sir; I have done this of my own free
will. I have taken connsel with no one. It
has been my desire to retire from tbe Bench
ever sines the Presidential election of 1872,
but my friends urged my remaining,and I yield
ed to their request. I have now done what I
would have done then, because I think it is
my duty to put myself right before the peo
ple of the country.”
“You think then, that this step will enable
you to do that, Judge?”
‘I do. I have been misrepresented to the
world by the press and recently by the repub
lican party. I have been slandered day after
day. My private and public character has
been assailed, I have been represented as a
partisan politician of th« worst kind, aod I
have been cuarged as being drunk all the days
of the week, on the bench and off the bench,
and of being ia constant communication
with parties who were interested in a particu
lar political policy. Now I am tree, and the
reticence that it was right that a judge, sworn
to carry out the law, should observe will no
longer control my utterances.
•Then, I presume, you deny all these charg
es, Judge.’
•I do, sir. For instance, it is said, within
the last tew days, that I am sick, decrepit and
incapacitated by the condition of my neaith
for the performance of my duties. You can
see for yourself whether that is true.
‘Your appearance does not indicate that
physical condition, Judge.’
‘No; that is not true in any particular. It
was desired to make me the scapegoat of the
sins of a law that the republican party had
found did not work well. I decline to be put
in that position any looger. Strange as it
may sound, I am not a politician in the tech
nical sense of what is understood as a politi
cian. It was my sworn doty to carry out the
law whether it was a bad or a good law in its
working.’
“Yon have not mixed up in politics, then.
Am I to understand that, Judge
“You are. I have had nc thing to do with
political matters, except when I presided over
the Constitutional Convention of the State in
1804 ”
••Do I understand that yon claim that all
that you have doue, which has been the cause
ot t.o much discussion, has been done partly
uni simply as the administrator of the law ?”
“Yes; allow mo to explain somewhat in de
tail what has been my position. Congress
passed, as you know, the thirteenth, four
teenth and fifteenth amendments. Afterward
was brought forward, by Mr. Morton, as I
OF THS AGE.
K&Y for mskinrf steel ol a superior qaality, and
rails can be made at an additional cost ot four dollars
a ton. guaranteed to wear tv toe aa long as tbe iron
rail—thus: Havlcg a perfect steel cap on an iron
base, with a perfect weld, which rail# can be re- rolled
as easily as iron rails. This process is easy, simple
and cheap, and the right to use it can bu bought en
reasonab e terms, lrom L. SCOFIELD k 00.,
nov20 dim Atlanta, 0a.
THE
KE1ES1W ROUTE GAZETTE.
THE BEST ADYEBT181NG MEDIUM IN THE SOUTH
AND SOUTHWEST !
AT WHOLESALE OSLY!
A NEW COAL OF HIGHEST GRADE.
THE OAHABA HBD ASH
c. ^
Sf
• 2
COO-COO-COAL.
First-class in every
particular. Superior.
It ia clean, kindles
quick, burns beauti
fully, makes no cin
ders. Sold only by
8UPLE k S0N8.
s A
3 »
^ a K
_ ^ o
Pure COAL, nu- .
mixed with any earthy )
impurities. Burns up ■
elenn into dust ashes j
like wood. Sold only
SCIPLE 8l SONS,
and retail frtm our two yard*. cort.«
NCIPL.IT. A sons, Atlanta,Ga.
k-3 •—
55 DC
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NORTH CAROLINA STATE LIFE INSURANCE CO.
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HOS. KPMP P. BATTI.E, Pbibiiest; M/.J. P. B. CAMEKOS. Vick PranrKHT; PBOF B. B SMITH,
APVlsoBY AOTUAM; W. H HICKS, Secbetakt; DR. E BUBK BaYW( OD, Mu Id. Mbacto*:
DR. W. L. RoYoTJtB, A, s:..r.NT MxoiC/l. InRXcim.
Features.
1. Every deeirable form of policy issued. 2 No useless restriction of reaideLceor travel o ! ► pohoet
ore tree from claims of creditor*. 4. Its policies are absolutely sife tnd non f rfeitablo. 6.L< oooznicai
and energet’c manag inent has made it anocessiul. 6. It encourages aud IOkters home enterprise 7 Its
non-forfeitable policies have a paid-up vaine. 8. Its officers are well known lusur^tice men of Nor.b Carolina.
9. IU rates are aa low sa those of any first class insursncompany. 10. Tbe North Carolina State Life needs
no other recommendation than its large and snooeasful baiiuesa iu its own state. It s iunds are securely in
vested, and offers to the widow au asylum from want m<s.QB cf feediu i. i ietbiug and educating her ch ld:en.
GO
Till. Horn, Insurance Company, controlled by native lotelliff.nca an I en'orpriaa. aak for the support 01
the cttlreDB of Georgia WlU you uot keep tbe tbouaenda of dollar, paid am.nelly lor iururacce among our
own purple ? Good, active district and local agent, wanted, with whom liberal ccntnrta will be made. Apply
b. DaSHIE L, General Agent,
^ WITTES—^
In. W. G. OWEN. Medical Examiner. Atlanta.
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The food we eat, the clothes we wear, and
the luxuries we ought to enjov, are all perme
ated by the fames ol bis volcanic breath ; aud
the people are being consumed by the flames.
No wonder, then, that
“ Curses shake tbe Throne.
The'tyrants of the Golden City tremble
At voices heard about the streets ;
And when one softly meets
Another at the shtine, he inly weets,
Though he says nothing, that the tiuth is
known I
And gold grows' vile, even to the wealthy
crone.”
The dnty of the State is clear. It can no
longer suffer ruthless cupidity to crush among
the opening bade, and press ont the aroma of
the bloom.
tMfie. the spirit of enterprise and paral-
ixe the industries of the Commonwealth, and
ghastly Want has but to spread the lengthen
ing shadows of desolation over the land.
Money cannot be truly classed with prop
erty in general, for it has no uses except as a
medium or parchastng power.
To allow the whims of the oppressor to af
fect its essential quality or office, by varying
the rates of m erest, unsettles values, and day
by day incites the craven spirit of avarice to
seize tho splendors of nndue speculation,
heedless of the wailing cnee of distress.
Wb»t the busy world wants, and tbe public
demands, is determined legislation, insuring
low rates of interest, not exceeding seven per
cent.—famishing a certain standard by which
to measure values tinder Ihe law of supply
and demaud.
Money, tten. fully understood, and regard
ed merely as a medium. with a fixed value, the
law of supply and dem ind alone, and not the
extraneous influence of fluctuating interest,
would regulate the price of property, and the
price be an index to the true condition of the
market.
The assumption that tbe law of supply and
demand will regulate tbe price of money, free,
the same as other property, shows tbe lengths
to -bicb avarice wilt go in resorting to subter
fuge for concealment ot its selfish aims, and
furnishes but an additional reason for the re
striction of this medium within certain limits:
for the sophistry is inaidieus. and full of dan
ger to the common weal.
The supply will ever be scarce, and the de-
ud urgent end pressing, so long as exbor-
bitant rates can be obtained from tbe advent-
txroue few, who absorb the great ocean of cap
ital. Wherees, by the filed standard, a more
equal distribution would flow through and
refresh tbe broad fiside of industry.
Banks, then, under tbe rational system,
would rest on surer foundations, be safer,
stronger, and more liberal. Banking would
become a legitimate, worthy calling, and a
genteel livelihood.
Very few necessitous borrowers would then
need ‘'guardians" to protect them from the
oppressions of tbs usurer. And there would
then be no lenders who could withdraw from
the industrial pursoits, end enjoy an easy
living on a small amount of money. Bat a host
of dronee in the great hive of society wonld
be transformed and transferred to the attract
ive fields of labor.
It insisted, that a legal provision insuring
low rates of inlerest wonld exile the monarch
of the “Golden City," and expel money from
out onr limits, the reply is tbis ; Let our la
bor and resources bring money of onr own ;
let ventares on borrowed capital “grow bean-
tifnlly less ;” let tbe spirit of enterprise be re
vlved, and tte useful employments multiply
throughout tbe land, until tbe Empire State
shall Moastm like tbs Isis of Ceylon.
drinks of Him as the Water of Life; is cheered,
refreshed, strengthened by the inward work
of His spirit, and communications of His
grace; finds in Him a perennial Fountain of
Life flowing into his sonl to bless it, end out
into his life to bless others. In Him, again—
according to another sweat similitude of Sorip-
ture—as the husband and wife are one, one by
the nearest and dearest of all earthly unions,
ouein heart, in pnrpoae, in sympathy, in af
fection, in all that makes up life. The be
liever loves Christ, is assimilated to Christ, is
in sympathy with Christ in His plans and pur-
posts, in His work and Mission, in His life
and death. Farther believers are described as
those who walk not after the flesh, but after
the Spirit. The Apostle leaves no room ter
misapprehension. A man may not say he is
in Christ and is safe, that he receives Him as
his life, loves Him, and has ail these experi
ences inwardly, and then outwardly lead a
Christies* life. Tbe grend and conclusive
proof is, “he walks not alter the flesh, but
after tbe Spirit.” Two opposite natures and
two opposite modes of lite are here described.
The “flesh” means tbe natural heart, and
walking after the flesh the practice of the sins
which spring from it. The works of the llath
ere manifest, wh.ch are these: aduitery, for
nication, nncleanness, lasciviousness, idola
try, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations,
wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envymgs,
murders, drunkenness, reviling*, and such
like, of the which I tell you before
as I have told you in time past, that 1
they who do such things shall not inherit tbe
kingdom of God.” The spirit means tbe new
nature which is tbe work of the Divine Spirit,
and walking after tbe Spirit means a lite ol
holiness. Tbe frnit of the Spirit is love, joy,
peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness,
faith, meekness, temperance.” Tbe believer
will live under the guidsnea of tbe spirit ot
Christ, as that spirit has revealed Christ’s will
and example in His word. It is fanaticism to
gay that the Spirit direc s us now by impulses,
motions, impressions. The will of God is
given us only in his word, and to live nnder
the government of the Spirit is to follow that
word in all things, and search that we may
follow it.
In conclusion, bow do we stand with respect
to tbe Divine Administration, with respect to
the law, under condemnation. And condemn-
nation, how fearful ! Visit the daily ixercise
of your court, as it is now in session, see
he accused stand before the judges, see
him tried, oonvicted, punished by a pecuniary
fine, by dreary years of imprisonment, by the
forfeiture. It may be, of bis natural life! An
awe strikes tbe beholder. Oh! there is tre
mendous force m Lav, in justice, faithfully
administered! And if this be so with earthly
tribunals and human law, what will it be at the
bar ot the Great White Throne, (torn whose
presence earth and heaven shall flee away?
Come, then, for safety, to Christ. Be found
in Him at that day.
something appallin;
and volume. On that side ot the building
there were imprisoned in cages Dine cimcls,
three hienas, two male lions, one tapir, one
sacred bull, who was aloost fright
ened to death; two Bengal tigers and five ele
phauts, the largest being named Betsy, and
weighing 11,400 pounds. The other elephants
weigh each about 4.500 pounds, and are
named Gypsy, Trince, Queen and Albert.
It was fortunate that there was no audi
ence in the Hippodrome at tbe time, as great
alarm might have occurred among women and
children who might have been present. The
mals rhinoceros made the most desperate and
ferocious attempts to kill the female. Not
withstanding alt the effirts of over twenty
keepers and assistants the fight continued for
an hour and a half, and at last the fern xle
rhinoceros was gored and torn in a frightful
manner, and wallowed on her abdomen with
absolute fear. Finally a barricade of joists and
planking was erected through the bars of the
cage, and a large sailcloth was thrown over it
so as to hide the female rhinoceros from
“Pete,” the male, and when this was done
the female was extricated and brought out of
the pen, and “Pete” lay down sulkily in a
corner badly beaten, but still full of fight.
The lemale was then taken to her cage at the
other end of the bnilding, bleeding lise a pig
and evidently wishing that she had never seen
“Pete.” The iron bars were bent and smash
ed and the woodwork was torn to splinters,
but it is due to Mr. Fuller and his assistants
to say that they never lost the mastery of the
furious rhinoceros, and the other animals,
which were greatly alarmed, were kept nndei
full cont ol.
I)
Y
E
S
T
l
F
F
S
THOMPSON’S RESTAURANT!
HATE thoroughly renovated my RecUunnt, and sin prsp&s-ed to lurnish
EVERY ICACY OF THE SEASON COOKED IN THE BEST STYLE.
AT THE
M oat Popular Prices.
I WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND
O y sit ora, Gr a ra e>;, and. I F* i *=
i'Aiuilw supplied,*ith anything iu the market
R. C. THOMPSON
sep?A 1 m
ADVANCES ON COTTON.
uum; or to
BUY AND SHIP COTTON,
T11>* held ou very reasonable margins, either in COTTON or MONEY. We are also prepared to bay or
Contracts for FUTURE DELIVERY iu either Augusta or New York
On a margin of five dollars per bale, to be kept good.
CLACHORN, HERRINC & CO.
AUGUSTA. GA,. October 2S. 107*. oc31_
YV
thl? t-Ky where
The ®alv«*ton Sews Is in error whan it says that
ibis paper baa ‘rndeaTored to repress m prid# of its
dt) 1 Sidra.” Every subscriber la allowed as much
pride aa ha can rtaad sp nodor. aod special indi
meets are offered to ftitotonp of elnbe.
B ss Twkbd’s Chancr of LiIbebty.—H* is
now to be brought down trom the Island on a
habeas corpus, noon lhe ground that the
legal pnnishment’for the crime of misdemoam
or has been expiated. This is, of course, fir
the purpose of having the decision of Judge
DayU, that Tw^ed coaid be sentenced one lor
every foar of the Courts on which he was
found guilty, reviewed by a higher court.
His counsel claim that ho could be sentenced
only once for each indictment. After the *oc-
ond trial of Tweed all the many previous in
dictments against him were embraced iu one
indictment, known at the time as the ‘Omni-
baa indictment.” So that while be wasjeharg-
ed with 220 different offenses he was indict
ed for only one. .Such is tho claim of hie
oeunaeL
They claim, moreover, that previous con
structions of the Uw justify this view, and
that Judge Noah Davis himself, who sentenced
Tweed, bad previously held that the ‘omni
bus indictment’ covered only one offense to
be pnnished by a single term of imprisonment.
The following is Judge Davis’ langnage at the
time, the question having come up whether
the indictment covered one or more offenses:
In my judgment the party who is thus
charged with a variety of misdemeanors in a
single indictment instead of having forty or
fifty indictments against him, is greatly re
lieved from the consequence* of the cfians?s
from the very fact that they are brought in a
single indictment. In this case there might
be 55 indictments if these counts were all
true and there were 55 indictments found,
while the single act of uniting them in a sin
gle indictment, as I understand, will reduce
the punishment to a sing la one.*—N. Y. Tri-
bone.
•Hire was cotton-picking hiar Fine Bluff, nigh
before last, and about one o'clock yeeterday morning
Isaiah Lewis, a colored boy about twenty years ot
•ge, slipped Into the stable and stole a mule. A white
man, who eeeme to hare been e ••batty” of IsaUh
ntoo stole n mule at the seme time, and both “slid
ior this c ty. The theft wsa discovered In
short time, aod the bereaved owners end foar friend*
followed on the Ml, end arrived here jeUerday
morning, eotne hoars behind the mule-thieves.—
Little Rock Republican.
1 was required to act under that statute. The
United Stales Court has ceriau duties,
aud among others is that of the appointment
of commissioners to watch over the polls. 1
was required to go over and open that Court,
by Judge YVoods, of that Circuit Court, he
having been authorized so to do by the
amended Enforcement act, and it was within
his jurisdiction to require tbe United Statis
Judge to perform these duties. That went on
and was continued until the day of election.
After the polls were closed and the day
of election passed away Mr. Kellogg, the re
publican candidate for Governor, filed a bill
in Cnancery, on the Chancery side of the Cir
cuit Court for the district of Louisiana. The
object of this was the preservation of evidence.
This bill alleged, among other matters, that a
large number of citizens of tbe State of
Louisiana, who had a right to cast their votes
at that gubernatorial election had been exclud
ed from voting on acoount of thtir color and
former condition. He stated further that the
retarns were held by unlawful parlies. He
asked, tli n, that tbe proof as to these fac s
might be taken and deposited in the office of
the Clerk of the C iurt. Such proot was to be
used at any action of tbe law for tbe office
of Governor. At the same time a certified
copy of all the returns had to be taked for the
office of Governor at the election. I gave
certain interlocutory orders for the purpose
of carrying ont the objects of the bill, and al
so for tbe purpose of securing tbe evidence to
be used in any action of law. I declared,
among other things, that the State Coart hftd
declared, certain men where the returning
Court, and I followt d the State Court for that.
And here I stopped. Nothing more was done.
Nothing else has been done, except running a
race lor tne G over not ship,
As to taking possession of the bi&te House,
Judge? ’
Mr. YVarmoth would not give up tbe returns.
If they had not obeyed my orders and hand
ed those returns to my clerk there would
have been an end, so far, ot the United States
was, certainly. I took possession of the
State Honae (the Mechanics’ Institute it wa6
then) in order to get at the returns. They ran
away with them and they have not yet been
produced Now, I understand, they say they
are in Baltimore. This case was conducted
according to the proceedings in other cases.
Now that is all I had to do with it.”
■Neither Kellogg nor MoEuery or their par
tisans brought personal influence to bear upon
ALL AT BOTTOM FLGURES.
A. & S. ROSENFELD,
great redueUone in the price of CLUTHTNG, and r»n e.ff ly nx th*t th«
MEN’S AND BOYS’CLOTHING
i be bought He cheap a* of \
r tend your orders to
HUNT, RANKIN A UMAR,
; Our Goods arc First-class in Quidlty and Style. ~sa
An cxuuinatiou of ■
stock *ill be sppm-1&t<il l.j
jfgr We ere sole agents In Atlanta foi ST. LOCI*
triotly PURE WHITE UlAD.
guov28-n'
J. H. WiCNOK, O. A. WITHE US,
Late of B. i. Payne & Oo., J Formerly of E- M. Bro
Atlanta, Ga. & to.,Augusta, Ge.
W AGN0N & WITHER8,
COTTON BROKERS
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Oorue.* Alabama aud l’ryor Street*, Atlanta, Georgia.
A DV *N made on conalpnaae^tB to ourvelvea or
r.-rroe..oudeuu at the dill rent norts. Buy and
sell Futuies ou N^w York or L.verpool. d3tf
A. 6l S. ROSENFELD,
36 Wliitoliall St.
A. LEYDEN,
Warehouse, Storage and Commission Merchant,
WILL BUY. ttJtLI
USE THE GREAT
C O TP O 3BST i
"N his large rock fireproof warehouse, situated Immediately on the railroad, thereby eaviDg l.is customs*
the expense, aa well aa injury eua’atned by draymen bandUng xL
Charges for atoreiug, selling, buying and inauriDK *Jl be aa low aa any responatbie house In the city.
Hhipmenu matte to my correapoudeuta !n the Northern, Eastern and Liverpool market a. on usual teima.
Futures bought and sold at beat rate*, lhe naval cnou^yed facilities extended my customers.
Consignments t.r bacon, bulk meets, rye, ierd, corn,wheat, oats, hay, flour, salt, fertilizers, cement, pleatST
etc., offered at low rates to prompt i*ayers.
Warehouse—17, 19, 21, 23, 25 and 27 Bartow-st.. and W, & A. Railroad
j^lOR ell Du
CHOLERA,
of the Bowels such a*
DIARRHOEA
OOLIO,
PAINS IN THE BACK,
SIDE AND JOINTS,
TOOTHACHE AND NEURALGIA.
The Proprietors In putting this GREAT REMEDY
before tho pvblic, do so with the firm belief that it
will cure all t\* above diseases it is recommended to
cure. And VI we i sk is a fair trial.
It this M* Value does not perform what we claim
for It after a fair trial, according to the directions,
then
the appHeatlene for charity tnrkaya on
Thursday, was a well-dressed worn in who wanted a
turkey because “she mlgfc* as well hare one aa say
body a'se,” and kept boarders. Anotbsr, who was a
nan with diamond studs and a gold watch-chain,
waited a tujfcsy lor a brother who Wat sick.-*-Boston
Advertise.'.
Binghamton produces the meanest man, to far. He
went to a fair, bad supper, received aeaiduo is a
tloi from the ltdits, bought no end of dolls* night
caps baby jackets, and chaiicss ia prlo chairs, aod
paid for everything with a twenty-dollar bill, which
alas, when the distinguished stranger disappeared,
proved to be acounterleit.— N. Y. Com. Adv.
The ell punch,” invented to keep car oondtetor*
honest, has bwm beaten. Two klnda of spurions bells
have seen made and sold to lmlUto the «• true ring.”
One of these la carried la the palm of the 1» ft hard,
and thi othar up the sleeve. Several conductors have
been foond using these article*, one of whom con
fessed that he kept two bank aeoowuu! Tbe compa
nies will have to try again-ingrained or onflnued
dishonesty Is ba*d to beat. When, moreover, men
with two or three aliases are found as conductors on
the New York Third Aveuce road. It la a pietty good
sign that there Is something wrong .—Brooklyn Argus.
A California lawyer has tees fined one hundred
dollars for calling a Judge a fool. It la no wonder
that Oahforula lawyers have so fittie ragard for truth,
when ft*? are oQtfged to mm ft! fp«tttnglt.
yon.
Mr. Kellogg never consulted with mo
about anything. I never consulted with him.
Daring tbe progress of these proceedings no
one communicated with me for the purpose
of influencing my coarse except the gentle
men of the bar who were engaged in the argu
ment.”
Then your course in all this nutter,
Judge, has been simply the natural conse
quences of your judicial position.”
■That is all. If the law worked out badly
and was a mistake for tbe party, if ihe En
forcement act, with its amendments, were
practically a mistake, obliging me to take
the declaration of a voter that he bid been
prevented from ousting hie ballot and also to
count the vote. All I can say is that I was
tbe administrator ol the law and not the ma
ker of it.”
“Tbe law was intended to be enforced, was
it not, Judge, or it would not have become
law, would it?”
“I preeame so; bat it is easy, when a law is
unpopular, to say that in the mo !e of its ad
ministration the mischief comes in, and nor
tbe law that ii bad.”
“Yju iulend that that shill be no longer
said about you, then, Judge?’
“I do, and now I shall be free to express
my opinion of iu policy and of those wno
have rendered it necessary to send a military
power to enforce it.”
This concluded a pleasant talk with Judge
Darell, but it was evident that the Judge
means to keep on talking to the publio lor
. W. R. D. Thompson**
888 East Fair Street,
Atlanta, Georgia.
• For sola by all Druggists. Price M cents.
SUMMER SCHEDULE.
Atlanta & MioM Air-Line
RAILROfD.
To Take EUfcct Monday, June 1st, 1874,
at 4:57 A. X.
SIGHT PA88BNGEB TBAIH GOING NORTH.
xjuvk. Ajsnnrx.
Atlanta 6:00 p.m. | R. O. H. B. Junction.8:14 a.m.
DAY PA88ENGER TRAIN COMING SOUTH.
XJCAVK A.MJUVM
N. 0. B. B. Junction.6:00 Am. ) Atlanta.....9:\8p.m.
TOOCOA ACCOMMODATION.
LOATH
l Atlanta at »:48 u.an.
some time jih-JT, T. Herald,
Whole sale Hardware.
McN AUGIIT
SCRITCHIN
IMPORTEB3 OF
Hardware, Cutlery and O-'una
86 Whitehall Street - -
iMUf
ATLANTA, «J
N OTT OJEJ.
r
DRUG
rpHK UNDERSIGNED ARE NOW PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS OF
WHOLESALE AND
RETAIL
P
§
HAVING largely inoreaaed our {acilitiea by devoting strict personal attention to the detail' S
of our business, we feel confident that we can giro general satisfaction. I •
QIVE US A TRIAL IEF0RE PURCHASING ELSEWHERE.
COLLIER A VENABLE !
ZE3I _A_ -R, ID W _A_ IRE.
WHOLESALE AND KETAIL.
MN AUGHT & SCRUTCH1N,
K
8
er.
cr
9
o
86 & 88 Whitehall Street.
Atlanta, -
Croorgia
rjlIOKalh FOB THE VARIOUS DEPABTMKRTH
or T1IK
GRAND EXPOSITION,
FOE TBS lUCMSfXT Ok' THE
YOUNG MEN’S LIBRARY ASSOCIA
TION,
At DeGive’s Opera Souse,
DEO. 11 TO DMO. IT,
WUl be ready for sale 1c a few days. 44 3t
At LltU* Rock. Adolph MoB Un aa l SC att Glass beat
a fellow named William HaMtng, from Texas, Thanks
giving day, oat if $365 In gold oo -‘bunko.” They
were arrested and disgorged $S06, sad betide* were
tael ta tba polio, ooart jMtord., Morales lor ta*p- I MTtH P, B. HALL, BOOT corns, of fiquore,
ia, s (usMIng d.Tlss. Ths chief ot potto* sftsr. I r ^ „
maei h*a ftsm snstm nr Kwry, isaurgBge, wn.
HOTEL
IRON, STEEL, NAILS, ETC.
LA&GKiT AXP FTNUST STOCK IN TUK SOUTH
Carriage and Wagon-makers’ Wood-work,
AXLES, BOXES, THIMBLE SKEINS, Eto., Etc.
Saddlery and Harness Hardware, Horse aad Mule Shoes
OFJTHE BEST QUALITY.
**■ a<iknmFoato*aatOKbopoNrscyixsbctkdRinataNotutawmvowoim -*»
53*
Ladies list Not Rial his.
f^OMK. aUy*the*»r* »wy and he- ff NAkoT
am! have th«-dark an. uiwtkj • Ooai dl*>
celled ft-osu o’er your XnaAH hwla. by .lAndTag W
o*iim to tb# wlurx nowueU Ai LANTA ATLNO'aAKl*
VARIETY WORKS. Whin-hail fttrvet. Atlanta. «*..
frr one year’s eubecrtptlon to a budget of fac «4M*0
••lhe AUaiuu Nt«noU* H
B. Z. DUTTON* Editor aod Freprlete*.
Do thta. and the bright rar« of joy and gledti.-** srfW
-blue forth upon your one* cloeded ocaatenai*'*, Uha
rtie gUtterln* planet* In lhe l»mevens that cAxevie the
tort wanderer out on the lonely Desert of Sake a
Then 1*4 voor U*bt so atotn*--a> cent* worn Sffnt
von will make other* happy while they are walL* g Vat
tO*ir iffggod paths while uaevtatg through «hto Aaie
dan* aah*ML *- • m
A OARO
Te a 1 w to are soffartng fro** the ervers at J lndfc
orrttoa* o* youth, nervous wi atom a enrly der^^asaa
of mmbo id. ho., 1 will send % reeefpfl Unff win owe
yoa. rata or caeffiiK lukagrert r**oda ww flown r
•red by s mtssleoecy to South AnuST)Kd7I*£
fldiOffAioevetope n *h ♦ Htt. JfScsVs r tx^Vc gib
Off* b. Btfrt* Buowt.New t-wb Ofty