Newspaper Page Text
(EUrouicle anti £rtUmel.
WEDNESDAY, - - JDLf 4, liSTL
The friends of Dr. Quasi and Dr.
Hates seem to be at loggerheads.
Vos Moltks is reported as saying
that the Rusao-Tarkish war will be a
long one.
—
They do say that the poorer the coun
try gets the richer Secretary Sherman
becomes.
Moulton admits that he was an ass to
“ throw himself away for such a fellow
as Tilton.”
— ♦ W*
Tainted milk recently killed 117 per
sons in London. The fatsl disorder was
scarlet fever.
The wheat product of California is
estimated at 20,000,000 bushels, only
the half of last year’s yield.
Hisce 1814 the debt of Paris has in
creased from 84.0.000 to a snm the in
terest of which is over 89,000,000.
Jesse Ghant wrote one letter to the
Inter-Ocean. It appears to have about
creamed the youDg man’s reportorial
intellect. _ _ _
Bob Inobbsoll was paid 83,000 in Han
Francisco for attempting to show, in two
lectures, that Christianity is a sham and
God a myth.
Cincinnati rejoices in a fight over an
open grave for the possession of a dead
mother’s child. The uncle defeated the
grandmother.
Extremes meet. Mayor Prince, ol
Boston, wines the President, and Mrs
Livermore, the temperance leader,
whines him too.
The English have better carriage
horses, according to Grant, than Ameri
cans, bnt their trotters are no where
alongside of ours.
Gen. Badeau, for accepting the hon
orary and swell position of “ Aid-de-
Camp io waiting on Gen. Grant,” is in
bad odor with the short-hair Democracy.
Bishop Gibbons, successor to Arch
bishop Baylky, is a native Baltimorean
and abont 39 years of age. He has the
gifts of sanctity and wisdom in an emi
nent degree.
The proprietor of the Irish Times
newspaper, in Dublin, is about to erect
comfortable cottages, in a healthy die
trict, for his employes. They will pay
a moderate rent.
Old citizens of New Orleans, who
could not stand WARMOTHand Kbllooo,
are returning from exile. They think
the South will experience good times
sooner that the North.
A confidential clerk who, some years
ago, faithfully, honestly and without
compensation, administered upon an es
tate valued at 81,500,000, is now poor
and unemployed. Virtue is its own re
ward. „
Baron .Tames Rothschild is quoted
thus : “When we are poor and igno
rant we are Jews; when we are well-to
do we become Israelites; when we are
rich an influential we are called He
brews.”
Gen. A. R. Lawton and ex-Govornor
Charles J. Jenkins arc apoken of for
the Presidency of the Constitutional
Convention. Let Governor Jenkins be
honored with the position.— Neuman
Herald.
The injury to General Toombs’ cy®
has become known from one extremity
of the oonntry to tho other. Onr North
ern brethren abuse the General, but no
man in tho South is regarded with more
interest.
-■ l w
The Nashville American has taken
to panning lately. It says : Young
Bennett’s extensive travel would win
him the title of Maroo Polo the Seo
ond, if he was not already Polo marker
the first.
All strangers who have received tho
characteristic hospitality of Augm'ta
pronounce it unrivalled. If President.
Hayes should visit this city he will bo
treated to a barbecue up the canal.
Think of that!
Tight lacing killed a young girl in
New York the other day. The present
fashionable attire for females is said to
contract and distoit nearly every muscle
of the body. Doctors will thrive while
this folly exists.
Cox, Morrison, Sailer, Goode and
Blackburn will meet Hayes at the
White Sulphnr Springs and discuss the
Southern policy and the Speakership
over the mildly moving water and the
soul stirring cook tail.
m -
We have received a communication
signed “Soon,” which we would gladly
publish if the real name of the writer
was given. We will not publish anony
mous communications or communica
tions written on both sides of the paper.
The Turks have become softened by
hostilities. They now, for the first
time, we believe, permit Christians free
aooess to Abraham’s tomb. Gen. But
ler, who knows how Isaac felt, ought
to make a pilgrimage to the cave of
Maepelab. His comment would prob
ably be like Mark Twain's at the tomb
of Adam.
The Herald has been caught napping.
It recently stated that the Czar would
consolidate Ronmania and Bulgaria into
one State, to hold the mouths of the
Danube, as Belgium holds the mouths ;
of the Rhine. It happens that Holland, !
and not Belgium, holds the Rhine
mouths. Hence the overpowering de
sire of Germany to hold Holland.
One of the first things whioh the
Convention ought to do should be the
suppression of the supernumerary busi
ness. A secretary, an assistant, a door
keeper and a page are all the employes
that will be needed. There is no neces
sity for twelve or fifteen superfluous em
ployes drawing the same pay as mem
bers and doing absolutely nothing in ;
return.
Some colored politicians of New Or
leans called upon Governor Nicholls
the other dy, in order to protest
against the disestablishment of mixed
schools. The Governor very politely,
bnt resolutely, informed them that they
exhibited more fealiug than sonnd sense;
that the Courts were open to them if
they felt aggrieved ; but that the two
races should not be educated together.
Col. George E. Waring, the famous
agriculturist of Newport, ridicules the
United States Department of Agricul
ture as an old-fogy institution, which
coats more than it is worth, and which
onght to be utilized or abolished. The
Department could be made both self
snstaining and valuable if it had the
right sort of a man at its head. Prof.
Janes, of Georgia, if in control, would
create a needed revolution.
The Social Evil question still stirs the
city ef St. Louis. It will be remem
bered that at one time there was a social
evil law tor that city which licensed
houses of ill fame, and provided for
regular medical inspections, etc. Two
years since it was repealed. Last Tues
day the grand jory made a report which
says the erimes incident to the social
evil have greatly increased since the re
peal of the law. It says that under the
existing laws the police authorities are
almost powerless to suppress crimes
which inevitably flow from the brothels
of the city, and the jury declare that
the best interests of society demsnd the
re-enactment of the social evil law, with
the view to check the vice sb mneb as
possible.
the official vote of the ntate.
The Governor has issued his procla
mation announcing the result of the
election recently held in the State to de
cide whether Constitutional Conven
tion Should be called. The proclamation
gave the number of votes cast and the
majority for a Convention, bnt did not
give the official vote of each county, nor
has the official vote yet been published.
The figures printed in the Atlanta Con
stitution contained so many errors that
the Chronicle and Constitutionalist
sent to the office of the Secretary of
State to get the returns as recorded
there. Below we give the official vote
of the State by counties—with two
counties. Echols and Wilcox, yet to hear
from. The chances are that the polls
were not opened iB the missing counties.
The fignres will be of interest to onr
readers : _
§ - § £>_•
.2 *!!§!
COUNTIES. ** gj g.
I iLuiir
Whin "3591 23 336!...
rd 350 m
Berrien 254 7 247 ....
Kbb ; 62 834....
Bro ks 607... - 203
Brvan 46 68.... 22
BuNocii 504 4 500 ...
Barke 482 604 -- - - 122
KaU 366 299 67....
Call onn 374 657 ... ■ 283
Camden 14 1071 ‘’ 93
Campbell 236 449 -.. 213
Cat005a!...... • .... 128 257....
CharltoD 278 5 273 ....
Chatham .... .. 1779 607 1172....
Chattahoochee 227 157 70....
gsasr ™ S? S3::::
S&EEE g 2,7
Cold, <no 354 256 • ■ • •
Coffe e 272 24 248| ...
X, ~ 122 2 120....
coweta :;;;;;:;:::
£ rß ) wford 847 2 $ 292 1 ..
Kon.v.v.v.v:::: n
S 84..^
SS T 7.7.77 735 98 637....
DouchertV .... 301 256 45....
DoZlas 5 .... 201 269 ....I 68
Early ' 7.7. .7... 279 548 .... j 209
Echols .„
Effingham 2? qjj
Elbert 68 679 -- J 3U
Emanuel 447 ~..|'378
F“"tTe 397 496.... j 99
EKa .. 794 352 442....
Franklin 77-. 536 165 371|....
S er ::... 47 736.... 689
>S ,8.4-ii
&.-.V.g sn s t
!“ : '.:V..... fg HI
SI 12? £?.:::
5“” 8 8on •;;; 412 933... | 521
" a T 395 366 29|....
S“::i 203 133 70....
Houston "'7 9 ?° 562 408 |-"-
? r “-“ toa .7 . 96 36 60!....
San . .. 901 8B 650 j....
Ser .118 2 U 6--..
Jefferson ' i (Hi ‘ # # -
is? 8 S3:::;
P' 11611 J 99 560 | 361
Liberty. .7.7.7. .7.7. j 256 j 454 • ••• 198
vi nn k 305 220 85....
Madison ■ • • •
Mclntosh Jg
Miller M ?i9’- l fr,
Milton ig iJ4 137
Mouree' 7 6261227::::] Ifll
Sr ::::: SS m
Ooonoe , 222 126 96....
oZthorpe ■ 4 - H 5 147 288 ....
Paulding 7. 514 385 129....
Pmkens 120 436 .... 316
p,lk 383 425.... 42
Pulaski .’.777,. 288 34 254....
p “am" 236 30 206....
u"bZ 7.777.7... 201 42
Randolph 342 829 ..,. 487
Uclm ul. UM 870 814 - -
Itockdale . . 289 9 200...,
Sy 7.7 132 152.... 20
Seven . ..,. H 126 48....
SpaldTng 6071225 ... 618
Stewart SWI 61 177....
SSS.v.v.v.:::::. M--
Talbot . 352' li •
Tahaferro. 167 M ml.:.
Tatnatl 234 1‘ 277 ”''
Tavlor 24.,.,
Telfur ....... 4 52 1 451....
Terrell 451 360 91 ....
Thoms.::::::::.::. 4g. 145
Towns ..... lob* t)0 70i....
Troup.::.: 526 m....
. 203 ... 208..,.
0ni0n':::: 7:7.7. 213 76....
Upson 37‘2| 362 j 9•• • •
Walker U3| 713 ...,
Walton 524 22 5o„ •• •
Ware 74 133.... 59
Wairen 140 126 14....
Washington 541 196 345
Wayne 239 12 227....
Webster 174 2321.... 60
White 160 242 .... 82
Whitfield 486 110 376....
Wilcox.
Wilkes 288 2 286....
Wilkinson 448 5 413....
Worth 134 133 1 ...
llrmpitMlatlou.
Total vote 87.238
For Convention 48,181
Against Convention 39,057
9,124
An analysis of the vote shows that of
the one hundred and thirty-seven coun
ties into which the State is divided,
oighty-nine voted for a Convention,
forty-six against, and two have not yet
been heard from. The largest vote east
was polled in Chatham, 2,386, and the
smallest in Quitman, 73. The highest
majority given to the Convention was in
Chatham, 1,172; the highest majority
against tho Convention was given by
Decatur, 1,500. An analysis of the vote by
geographical divisions giyes some cari
ous resnlts. It was generally believed be
fore the election that the oounties above
Atlanta, fearing a removal of the capital,
would vote solidly against a Convention.
Yet the returns from twenty-eight coun
ties north of Atlanta, mountain conn
tins—Banks, Bartow, Catoosa, Chat
tooga, Cherokee, Cobb, Dade, Dawson,
Fannin, Floyd, Franklin, Gilmer, Gor
don, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Jack
son, MiltoD, Murray, Paulding, Pickens,
Polk, Kabnn, Towns, Union, Walken
White and Whitfield—show that twenty
one gave majorities for the Convention
aggregating 5,579, and seven majorities
against the Convention aggregating
1,553, leaving a net majority for Conven
tion of 4,026. It was as generally be
lieved that the people of Southern and
Southwestern Georgia were almost unan
imously in favor of a Convention. Yet
the returns from twenty-seven oonnties
situated in the Southern and Southwest
ern portion of the State—Appling, Ba
ker, Berrien, Brooks, Calhoun, Clay,
Clinch, Coffee, Colquitt, Decatur,
Dougherty, Early, Irwin, Lee, Lowndes,
Miller, Mitchell, Pierce, Quitman, Ran
dolph, Stewart, Snmter, Terrell, Thom
as, Ware, Webster and Worth—show
that twelve gave majorities for the Con
vention, aggregating 1,362, and that fif
teen gave majorities against the Conven
tion, aggregating 4,256; leaving a net
majority against the Convention of 2,894.
Had it not been for the mountains and a
portion of Middle Georgia the call of a
Convention must have inevitably been
defeated. The election has furnished
fresh evidenoe of the truth of the maxim,
.I lontani Semper Libert.
Mr. Dana explains that his nomina
tion of Pierrefont and Childs for the
Vice-Presidency and Ministry to Eng
land was to secure a campaign fund from
the former of 850,000 and from the lat
ter $250,000. The platform is to be:
“Obituary Poetry hath her victories no
lens renowned than War.”
THE LUNATIC ASYLUM.
We print t|tis morning a letter from
Dr. James F. Bozeman, Chairman of the
Board of Trustees of the Lunatic Asyjf
lam, written to Hon. OlalßomA SnEad|
Judge of th* County Court of Richmond
county, in reference to the admission of
lunatics to that institution. The letter
is in reply to one from Judge Snead to
the Trustees of the Asylum, published
and commented on by the Chronicle
and Constitutionalist. We are glad to
know that the Board of Trustees does
not oonsider the provision* of the Code
governing the commitment of insane
persons repealed or superseded by the
“Rules and Regulations” adopted by
the Board under the act of 1877. We
are much more gratified to learn that a
county which pays so large a proportion
of the taxes used in the support of the
Asylum will be allowed to derive some
slight benefit from that institution. For
the present, at least, the lunatics of
Richmond county need not be confined
in the poor bouse and the jail. And for
this, mnch thanks.
_m a—
LET THE PRESIDENT COME SOUTH.
The Washington National Republi
can says that notwithstanding the fact
that the President has made no positive
arrangements tor a trip to the South, it
may be set down as an event which will
happen as soon as the weather and the
exigencies of the public service will per
mit. In all parts of the South influen
tial men are expressing a desire to have
the President visit that section. It is
well known that Mr. Hayes baa a deep
interest not only in the political welfare
of the South, bnt likewise in the de
velopment of the material resources of
that region. Many Southern gentlemen
have expressed themselves as highly
pleased with the thorough knowledge
which the President possesses of the oa
pabilities of that part of the country, and
of the practical measures which are
needed to develop them. Hence their
anxiety to have him visit the South and
mingle freely with all classes of citizens.
By all means Mr. Hayes should come to
the South. It has been at least twenty
years since a President of the United
States has set foot in the country south
of the Potomac. We believe that good
would come of such a visit. Mr. Lamar in
the famous eulogy on Sumner which he
pronounced in the House of Representa
tives uttered a great truth when, in
speaking of the North and the South,
he said, “My countrymen, let us know
one another and we will love one an
other.” Ignorance is the mother of
prejudice. Where we know we love ;
where we are ignorant we hate. The
Georgians and Carolinians who went to
Boston two years ago believed when
they left home that Boston was the
natural and vindictive enemy of every
thing Southern; they came home know
ing that Boston was the friend of the
South, that her people were cultured,
hospitable and refined; that the Boston
soldiers who fought us so gallantly
when there was war between the sections
were foremost in proffers of hospitality
and of kindness when peace followed
the carnage of battle. So, too, we have
good reason for thinking that Northern
gentlemen who have visited the South
since the war have had no reason to com
plain of thei? reception. W® desire the
President to come among s ip order
that be may meet not the politicians,
not the place-hunters, not the office-hold
ers, but the people of the South. Such
a meeting cannot fail to be of benefit to
the South and to Mr. Hayes. The
President will see a people whom he on
ly knows through Northern presses and
a few public men; the peppjp of the
South will see a President against whom
they cast a solid vote at the polls but
who since his inauguration has shown
himself a wise and politio ruler, a just
jjnd generous man. We promise a cor
dial welcome. Let him travel from
Washington to Orleans and see
the country and the people of the
South.
WMR APPOINTING FpWER.
One of the sub j eats that demands the
attention at tlfo Constitutional Conven
tion is a reduction of the patronage
which the Governor now possesses. The
extent of this patronage is simply enor
mous. We estimate it as follows :
Judges of the Supreme Court 3
j Judgeepf the Superior Court 20
Judges ,ol tfte Gopnty Court 50
Judge of Atlftfltft City (Uoprt 1
Justices of the Peace.,, .
Solicitor-Generals 29
Solicitors of County Courts §6
Solicitor of City Court *
j Inepagtors of Fertilizers and Oil - 6
Clerks fteorotaries 6
Attoruey-IJeerajl J
State School Commissioner • •.- 1
State Geologist ~*
Commissioner of Agriculture - I
Superintendent of Public Works . 1
Keeper of the Penitentiary 1
Librarian
Trustees lunatic Asylum 5
Visitors to State University 10
„ to Colored 10
* W.
.. , 7,0 16
“ to Deaf and Dum *
‘A,
Total Appointees. 150&
There are other minor appoinments
that we cannot now recollect which will
swell the number of Executive appoint
ments to the neighborhood of sixteen
hundred. We have estimated the num
ber of County Judges, but feel confi
dent that our figures do not exceed the
mark. This enormous patronage is for
eign to the spirit of popular govern
ment and is the legacy left to ns by the
Republican majority of the Convention
of 1867-8. That body, anticipating the
defeat of the Radical party in Georgia
whenever there shonld be a free elec
tion by the people, endeavored to
avert overthrow by conferring ex
traordinary powers npon the Gov
ernor, thinking that a politio Ex-
ecutive would be able to maintain the
party in position by a judicious dispo
sition of his enormous offioial patronage.
They were disappointed in this expecta
tion, beoause, in the very nature of
things, the Republican party, as then
constituted in Georgia, conld not be
held together after the withdrawal of
the bayonets which propped it in po
sition. Such power was never posses
sed by the Executive in the better days
of the Commonwealth, and it shonld
not be conferred npon him now. It can
not subserve any party end at this time,
and even if it could, there is a consid
eration higher than party which de
mands that it be taken away. The
present system is an approach to the
one man power which should uot be
telersted in a Republican oonntry. It
is directly calculated to perpetuate the
power of rings and cliques, and to
thwart and defeat the will of the peo
ple. It gives to a shrewd and ambitions
Executive a band of active, influential
and zealous supporters in every coun
ty of the State, who, with their
friends, can be used as one man
in support of himself or any measure
that he may find io his interest to advo
cate. In other words, it gives to him
the oontrol of what is known as the
political “machine,” whenever he may
ohoose to exercise it. We do not say
that the present Executive would make
use of the power whioh the Constitution
places in his hands. He might or he
might not. Bnt this has nothing to do
with the question. The Convention is
not expected to frame laws to fit any
particular ease; it is to legislate for the
good of the whole people. It is to make
provision against bad as well as good
Governors. The patronage conferred
npon the Executive by the existing or
ganic law cannot be safely continued.
The selection of these fifteen hundred
officials must be committed to other
hands. We shall have something more
to say on this subject hereafter.
The New York Sun calls the Presi
dent’s order against political officehold
ers “a limited re-establishment of sla
very.”
CROP NEWS.
The frieasß of the Chronicle and
Constitutionalist in Georgia and
South Carolina will greatly oblige us by
sapdiaf, from rim* to tfme, brief let
ters showing the condition of the crops.
We would like to have a letter once a
week from every locality where the
Chronicle and Constitutionalist cir
culates.
THE RUBSO-TCRKISH WAR.
When the Russians were allowed to
establish themselves upon the north
bank of the Danube, and the iron clad
gnnboats of Turkey were either destroy
ed or neutralized, the crossing of the
great river was simply a question of
time and place. It is probable that Ab
dul Kerim will, with his inferior force,
operate on the interior lines of the quad
rilateral formed by Rnstchnk, Silistris,
Varna and Shnmla. The intention of
the Russian commander is, we think, to
mask or assail these fortresses, while his
active column moves glacier-like upon
the main body of the Ottomans. Ibe
passage of the Balkans will be
the first attempt of considerable hazard
to the invading army. Supposing these
barriers transcended, the monster diffi
culty of all opposes the Muscovite ad
vance between Adrianople and the City
of the Sultan. A writer, intimately ac
quainted with the resonrees and topo
graphy of this region, thus speaks:
“Abont twenty miles from Constantino
ple, on the west, and on the road to
Adrianople, two little bays rnn into the
main land. From the farther of these a
line of hills six hundred feet above the
level of the road frowns down upon it;
on either flank is the sea. Batteries
placed on these hills would command a
plain several miles wide ; and over this
plain the assailing army must, perforce,
march. These batteries could be held
for a long time; for reinforcements
could be added from the sea whenever
the defenders flagged or their ranks
were thinned. For ten miles these hills
render access toward Constantinople
impossible. The peninsula is, however,
sixteen miles across. A gap of six miles
lies between tho hills and the Lesser Bal
kan range,which forms theline of defense
on the other side. But theso six miles
are a mass of thick brushwood, inter
spersed and succeeded by swampy
plains, parted by sharply-rising ground
—just such a spot, in short, as would
give the Turks an immense advantage,
confronting, from abrupt eminences, a
foe struggling amid brusli and hogs.
They would bo protected on either hand
by the sea, and behind them they would
have a well-watered valley, with pas
tures running along ils gentle slopes,
through which they oould maintain di
reot and rapid railway communication
with tho capital itself. For a space of
four hundred square miles they would
have free range for their horses ; and,
should the enemy attempt to approach
Constantinople by regular approaches,
this space would be available for giving
him endless annoyances. At the same
time the Russian line of communication,
extending as it must from the Pruth,
aoross the Danube, the Balkans, and the
plain of Adrianople, would be exposed
thronghont this long distance to being
eonstantly broken ; and here would be a
perpetual danger, modified, bnt by no
means got rid of, by robbing the assail
ing army of regiments to guard it.”
If the Turks oould oount upon an
English alliance, it would be tolerably
safe to say that the Russians would not
plant their banner of the double-cross
upon the spires of the Mohammedan
capital. But this English alliance
grows small by degrees and beautifully
less, so fay ap we are allowed to under
stand it, ftnd there is £ot wanting a pub
licist who daalares that “Russia and
England to day are agreed—one takes
Egypt and the canal, the other Con
stantinople and the Dardanelles—both
from the same motive, the development
of national ambition and interest. There
ip no contract, no deed of trust, no bill
of trust, po bijl of particulars signed
and delivered. Rut the Tur|i is left to
Iris fate apfl is forced back into Asia.
Tq gepomplisb this Russia cares not for
the mouths of the Danube, which
properly belong to the Germans or the
Austrians, if the latter can get them,
bnt the Dardanelles control them. The
‘Eastern question’ will now solve it
self. Tha battle can now go on, and in
the vicissitudes of the fight hard blows
will be given and received. The hu
manitarian heart of England will be re
lieved by seeming to aveDge the Bul
garian pnfrSffcSS and actually securing
the Isthmus, The rsmafnipg phristian
people will say atuen to Russia on the
Bosphorus, and the Moslem will retire
to his original lair in the heart of Asia,
there to wait for better times or anew
prophet.”
It ip surmised J?y the same writer that
at this point Pfermsny bft 8 “ potent
voice. Iu the ffenprjl par
celling out of the Hi ok Man’s effects she
must have her share. The Emperor and
Crown Prince are said to favor the peace
policy; Bismarck and Von Moltke war.
Vie are told by our pnblieist that Ger
i* slfCj will get what she wanls
by diplomacy, thus; f ‘v !e must ; do with
gs Russia has ft7*' 7 ng '
** swap pf something WM'
land - make poyets, ip
Fnnce wants, some.-.. neutral
exchange for Holland. Stric
ity and even an earnest, honest peace
might be secured by the restoration of
Lorraine and Alsace or one of them.
She might take Denmark without even
saying to France, "By your leave,' but
she can afford better terms* One thing
is certain, matters cannot remain as they
are. The present war footing of Ger
many will bankrupt her in five years.
Yet there can be no real peace until the
Franco-German question, created out of
tho Franco-German war, is settled. Aus
tria must be paid out of tho principali
ties, and with England and Russia ‘sat
isfied,’ the European map may be el
- once more permanently; that is
to say, for a couple of generations.”
Upon paper all of these schemes look
very plausible and have within them
possible elements of wisdom and fore
cast. But who can tell what a day may
bring forth ? The English peace polioy
may suddenly change. Great Britain
never has trusted Russian diplomacy. If
England intends to maintain a strict
neutrality, why has she so promptly
sent her fleet to Gallipoli, the key of the
Dardanelles, upon receipt of Count
Shuvaloff’s admission to Earl Derby
that the attempted captnre of Constan
tinople had been determined upon ? In j
addition to this an English corps of 20,-
000 men will scon be in Egypt on the
flank of the contemplated Bnssian ad
vance. It may be that these British
manoeuvres are with the fall concurrence
of the Czar; but they may likewise mean
that the line of Russian conquest shall
be drawn by Great Britain at Adriano
ple. When the English ministry make
that an ultimatum, it remains to be seen
how Russia will receive it; and, if defied,
how the other Powers shall conduct
themselves.
Public executions, attended with gal
lows oratory and vociferous so-called
piety, do not seem to awe evil doers.
Suppose, if hanging is to continued,
that the whole ceremony be private, and
that a permanent stopper be put on the
menth of the convict. recent ex
amples, as well as hundreds gone be
fore, tha address of the Irish Judge to
the obstreperous criminal has new and
vital foroe“ What we want from you
is silence; and plaguy little of that!”
William Loyd Garrison has gone all
the way to England to praise Grant,
and oondemn Hayes’ Southern policy,
which has done more to restore peace
and harmony to the oonntry than any
policy that oould have been adopted.
If Grant can stawd the praise Hayes
can stand the censure. Hayes will live
in history ss the Pacificator. Grant
will obtain notoriety as the Batcher.
Garrison goes down to obscurity as a
Soold.
OUR CONVICT SYSTEM—IS IT JUST
IIIRfANK f
Editors Chronicle tnd Constilulionalist:
The policy of “firming out” the State
convicts is, to say -he least, very doubt
ful. This is evidtnt from the amount
of discussion it hts elicited, and from
the wide difference that exists in the
public mind in regard to its advantages.
While it has rallitd to its support some
able advocates, it kas on the other band
arrayed against it many persistent and
uncompromising enemies. From its
very inception it las been assailed with
severe criticism hj the newspaper press,
and by men of intelligence in various
parts of the State. Its economical merits
have been duly considered, as also the
relative security i* affords against the
escape of prisoners as compared with
the old penitentiary system. But in all
the discussions oi the question which
have fallen nndr the eye of the writer,
the most important point to which at
tention should ke directed after all has
scarcely been iouebed upon, viz: Is it
right—is it just humane t
I do not olein to have given the sub
ject very close rtudy, but there are cer
tain features vhich attend the opera
tions of the syaiem that must impress
any thinking mild unfavorably. These
objectionable features should be cor
rected, if posstile; or if they are con
spicuously objectionable on moral
grounds, and cm not be eradicated from
the system, then the system itself is ob
viously wrong aud should be abandoned.
It is an axiom that every State has a
duty to perform to every human being,
of whatever legree or condition, within
its bonndaris. Even the criminal is, I
believe, held in law to possess certain
rights whioh ‘.be State is morally bound
to accord to hjra. These rights are in
alienable from his humanity, and there
fore entitled tn as muoh respect as those
of the most exalted citizen in the land.
Georgia owes it to the law-abiding of
her population that crime should be
punished; bnt vbeu the criminal is ap
prehended and in the custody of bet
officers, she aisnmes a responsibility
apart from that of the vindication of her
own laws which must be conscientiously
and faithfully net. That responsibility
grows out of her duty to protect the
human rights of the criminal.
When the lav-breaker becomes a
prisoner to the State, he also becomes,
because of his beiug in her power and
unable protect himself, in one sense, a
ward of the State. He has forfeited
his personal freedom to her; and though
she may, in the exercise of her sover
eignty, inflict panisbment, either cor
poral or otherwise, she is under a moral
obligation to see that the penalty ex
acted is neither ciuel nor excessive.
This obligation cannot be transferred.
It rests upon the State until the prisoner
dies or becomes a freeman again; and
my own conviction is, that Georgia
commits a crime egaiust humanity when
she allows her convicts treated
with undue severity, or their physieial
powers to lie overtaxed, whether under
the immediate direction of her owii of
ficials or of others to whom she may
have leased their labor. The practical
questions that ara naturally suggested
by the above considerations are: Are the
convicts under the existing system
treated with unnecessary rigor? And
is excessive labor required of them ? I
cannot speak from personal knowledge
on these points, but if rumors that
are circulating be true, there is much
room for improvement in these particu
lars, in some casei, at least. Whether
these stories are tiuo or false, however,
we are all “just human,” as Mr. Grady
told us in his admirable lecture last
night, and it may be that some of ns are
a little less than human, when unlimit
ed power is given us over our fellow
creatures to be employed iu the ad
vancement of our own selfish interests.
Such power should not be granted by
the State to private parties to be exer
oised without restraint, when the tempta
tion to abuse it is so great as in onr
present convict system, and I am sure
snoh will be the judgment of the enlight
ened people of Georgia when the sub
ject is properly presented to their atten
tion. ‘ Sigma.
NEW YORR. FASHIONS AND GOSSIP.
Rosalind Mar's LetteiwNo Use Dressing in
Summer—The Petticoat—Fashionable Fab
rics—Competition in Bangles, Etc., Etc.
[Correspondence ChronicleandConslitutionaltsi .]
New York, June 27.— 500n, very soon,
it will be hard to find a
Handsomely Dressed Woman,
And in search of one we shall have to go
to watering places. People who stay at
home are no oriterions, for they say to
themselves “What is the use of dress
ing in Summer ?” They save over the
extra fifty dollar bills for the first of
September, and content themselves with
a percale suit. In lien of finery, there
fore, let us see how it is about these
percale suits. Really one might be
como “gushing,” for these warm Sum
mer days, they are “just the thing”—re
freshingly cqol, ip deep, solid shades of
brown, blqe, or grpen, labile ladies iu
mourning, welcome a’ relief from the
heaviness of cloth, foy we find solid
black percale aostum es especially for
them. The pljeaper varieties are finish
ed with fcpife pjaitings; ne?t come em
broidered bands ; aud lastly, those
trimmed with Smyrna lace, Tfie one
thing lacking to comfort is that iuev t
able train, which, under all circum
stances, through good as through evil
report, iu raiu as iu sunshine, every
where and at all times, must be held up.
So in counting what a woman can ac
compliah, the right hand must be left
quite out of the question. No matter
how many babies, no matter how many
baskets, mo mafter fiow much anything,
the train must be looked alter, fn view
of this
The Petticoat
Becomes of no small import, since it
comes into full exhibition. Economize,
my dear sisters, in something else, but
have a pretty petticoat. This, however,
is nop jo tfie exclusion of the Summer
balmorjjf, apd 'sinob appropriateness is
an important plewenfof t{ie grthetio,
what is more agreeable to thp vision than
a neat colored skirt, comporting well
with tho dark colored hosiery at present
fashionable for “every day.” New bal
morals are of wash poplin in shades of
gray or brown, and here the irrepres
sible knife plattings appear in finish. I
was about to say that every other lady
wears B bunting suit, but my conscience
LiiS that this is an exaggera
tion. ¥et .’tjra how many we
see,'and they offgWVeatty tfrW Pfassed
er Tide ?e tpe m°rpm?r
. *— bust in Nji material little
prising, io. " —a tikajy to Drove
to be commended, . U
trftoftitory.
Fancies.
Imagine a yoopg |*4y wearing upon
her arm attached to one ft fash,
drum, horse shoe, jookey’s cap, njinpte
glass, f#pboi*rioe, cowbell, harp, ten
cent pieee, and turtle; while Araminta
who sits beside tiCK arm
attached to her braaefet. <jl ouctior, pa
lette, crab, wreath, boat, whistle, sailor’s
cap, shell, saddle and lizard, and as they
inttrebftpgfl vows of friendship, ’tis
instructive tg pote the little de
vices by which PS# endeavors to
impress upon the otbfil ft. spnse
of the superiority of bey tfipkets.
The above facts go to show tbftt there is
some competition among the lair sex as
to who shall have the greater number of
bangles, with the greater number of
triplets pendant therefrom, and the
logics! deduction is that bangles are
still fashionable. So are scarf pins—
indeed there is qsihft a rnn upon them ;
the variety is well nigh ibuitj.eas, bat iu
view of ihe present rage for oaaotipg, a
homo shoe is a favorite device, while as
the yaebjtipg season is npon ns, ttoy sil
ver oars are quite popular. On the sub
ject of fans, one misfit feel perolexed
by what the French call sjpbarras
de richessea, for we see ao many Jd#d 8
of fans that we can say that everything ■
;is fashionable. Bnt sizes are medium,
and there is not the former rage for
feathers, for perfume, fashionables de
light themselves Just pow in Colgate &
Co.’s violet toilet watm> Whkih is deli
cions, ss it yields tha essenti^J. Miupiple
of a hundred bouquets of violets, tor
little more than the cost of ofle, aqd for
use in the bath is equally delightful as
for the handkerchief. Colgate k Go.'a
cashmere bouquet extract is also in very
great furor, and mention may be made
of the cashtnera bouquet toilet soaps as
being preferred by psr elegantes.
New Beoisw.
Strikingly novel and distingue, the
Boston basque is tightly fitting, eat
with side forms carried to the shoulders.
The Habit basqne is another stylish
design, tight fitting, with cut away
fronts over a pointed vest, and the back
in coat shape. The Celandice over
skirt shows a long, broad apron, closed
diagonally, and draped so far back that
it hangs perfectly”smooth in fiopt and
back with irregular drapery describing
a point. The Villia overskirt, in effect:
dressy end graceful, with drapery appa
rently complicated, is quite simple and
easily arranged. ’Tis beginning to be
hard to find
A Church with Opt*
Theatres shut their doors in imitation
of the churches, and actors following
the example of the clerical profession,
take a long holiday. In view of this,
we, and the strangers within oar gates,
go with one accord to Gilmore’s Garden.
I really believe we have oome quite to
loving Gilmore, not only beennse he en
tertaius us delightfully, but because he
is so agreeable himself. Certainly he is.
very popular. He lives in nice style,
everythin# within, and without evincing
a caretal attention to (esthetic is every
day life. Well chosen pictures, engrav
ings, fresh earpets, knick-knacks, eta,
greet one pleasantly; this being the'
more refreshing to the eye because
great artists are ofttfi 60 absorbed in
their profession a* to be oblivious
to every thing else. Gilmore is
not. He dresses in perfect taste,
and as he cordially welcomes a
visitor, looking handsome and fresh as a
daisy after his continuous labors, one
instinctively wonders “how one Bmall
head can carry,” etc., etc. Doubtless
much is dne to the fact that be is a mar
ried man. He has one daughter, a pret
ty girl, hardly a young lady, yet scarce
a child. It should have been mentioned
earlier that at the Garden anew contriv
ance for forcing in cool air has been
purchased at an expense of $5,000, and
is now in fall operation. Writing of
pleasant people reminds me of a visit
paid not long aqo to the office of the
Home Journal. The two editors, Mr.
Morris Phillips and Mr. George Perry,
are both so courteous that one hardly
know whioh of the two to perfer. Each
in his own way is charming, and apropos
of a fashion letter it may be added that
their paper, besides being otherwise in
teresting is par excellence our society
journal, and is filled with the doings of
prominent persons here.
Vexillo.tne new lawn game, is the
latest attraction among the fashionable.
“Croquet in fancy dress and mnoh im
proved,” as a leading paper put it. The
features of the latter’s popularity have
been carefully preseived, so that vex
illo, while it offers its own pereuliar
charms, furnishes something new to
thoes who, while they would enjoy affect,
ennui of the old names.
Rosalind May.
CONDITION OK THE CHOPS.
Tlie Crop Prospect About Midway, S. C.
[Corresp ndence Chronicle and Constitutionalist.]
Midway, 8. C., June 28.—As you in
vite correspondence from all parts of the
country where your valuable paper circu
lutes, i will give you some items from
this section. The crops average some
what later than at this season the past
year, although now and then you hear
of a planter whose crop is further ad
vanced than at this time last year.
There is a fair average of a stand for
cotton. The crop had not commenced
any honltby or vigorous growth till this
month on account of the cold nights
prevailing in the mouth of May. There
was not as much as twenty per cent, of
commercial fertilizers used the present
season in this seetion. Necessity has
induced the farmers to make an effort to
be independent of factors and merchants
in future, and they have planted full
provision crops, a great deal of sugar
cane and millet, as well as rice—which
is now being extensively and success
fully planted in this seetion in all low
places where no ot her c op can be grown.
Labor is cheap, efficient and plentiful.
The utmost economy is practiced in the
mode of living; parties who had never
been known to dispense with flour,
sugar and coffee, do not now use it only
in cases of sickness or special occasions.
Money is very scarce and business dull.
In former years much of it would circu
late through various industries, such as
cutting timber and cross-ties for rail
roads. Formerly the railroad companies
would pay forty cents a piece for them
and take them readily, now they can
not be got riil of at twenty-five cents.
But since the settlement of the political
difficulties all seem hopeful of a better
future—may we all live to see and en
joy it. L. A. 13.
THE LUNATIC ASYLUM.
Letter from tlie Cliiiirman of the Board of
Trustee* to tlie Comity JtuUre.
Atlanta, Ga.. June 28, 1877.
Hon. Claiborne Snead:
Dear Sir—Noting in the Chroni
cle and Constitutionalist your cor
respondeno with Dr. Green, Su
perintendent Lunatic Asylum, in re
gard to certain insane persons
in Richmond county, I have made offi
cial inquiries of the three physicians in
charge of said asylum, as to whether
these insane persons alluded to by you
can now be accommodated in the insti
tution. From the replies received from
two of these medical officers (one has
sent in no response), and whose letters
I enclose you, I am induoed to think
that these insane persons can now be
received, and accordingly I will advise
you to have them sent on, provided they
have been duly committed according to
the manner prescribed in the Code, and
in compliance with the rnles and regu
lations prepared by the Board of Trus
tees, a copy of whioh 1 presume you
have. These latter ipere qrdered qnder
an act of the last Legislature, were sub
mittod to sundry members of the Joint
Committee on the Lunatic Asylum
among them framer of the bill—and
have been carefully revised by the most
experienced members of the Board of
Trustees and the medical officers of the
Asylum. They have not been framed
with a view of superceding the provis
ions of the Code in force governing the
commitment of jpsane persons, qor is
it considered that tjje qct 0f1877 repeals
any provision of the Code in regard to
commitment of insane persons, but
does give power to the Trustees to
cause discharges fpm the jnstit|itiop,
not hejetpfqto aqthorijed py law. If
the act of 1577 does pepr tbp construc
tion of repealing the provisions of the
Code as to commitments the Board
would, and do, in their rules and regu
lations readopt these provisions as
properly conservative of the rights of
persons alleged to be insane. These
rules and regulations are not regarded
as perfect, but are believed to be in con
formity to the provisions of the Code —
pqnal and jnst to all applicants for the
benefits of the Asylum, and reaepnpbly
conservative of the economic interests
involved in the management of this in
stitution. Assuredly all the minds which
have been exercised in their preparation
have been singularly obscured in reach
ing the beneficial objects contemplated
in the legislative act directing their
preparation if the eflect of these rules,
as you pronounco ' ‘pjiana, is to keep
patients out of the Experience
will doubtless demonstrate defects in
them apt] spggpst altpfatipnsj am] im
provements, and I believe I may truth
fully apeak for all concerned in this
when I say for them that
a diligent consideration will be given
by ali parties to so amend and improve
them that the philanthropic ends in
view shall be most judiciously met. I
may go farther, and say that a respect
ful and thonghtfiil consideration will be
given bY‘ aB parties charged with the
great charity to sugges
tions coming any quarter, Vy**p l *
are designed ami adapted to promote its
usefulness and comfort to the insane of
the State, £ M U may bo accom
plished with the mean? at thoir com
mand. . ...
As matter of information, I will re
mark that there arc ja course of constrao-
WiOttfg *>' tne
accommodation of aboru fwo .."udretl
additional patients. I am, respectfully,
your obndiept servant,
J4S. F. Bozeman,
Chairman Board of Trustees Lunatic
Asylum.
HOBSON AND HOLDSMITH.
A Card (fain Hon. J. A. Koliton Atyont the
’ ' “ ” ffu.,
Editors Harold and Georgian :
From. your statement in last week's
paper that I would be beard this week
in reference to the State tax ft. fa. vs.
myself, about which so much hits already
been said, many seemed to anticipate a
controversy between the Comptroller-
Qoneral and myself. There is no issue
between You have read his and the
Treaß'irer r Btefoflients, they are sub
stuntially correct. It is tfue I have not
settled up with the Comptroller-General !
fdr the State taxes, and that I have
! execution issued against me but
i for £O6 reasons : I held a large
amount ’ql tixfi fas. in
favor of the Stated instances
there existed old judgment/ s#d mort
gages againsttkedefendants sufficient to|
absorb their entire effects. To have made
my settlement with the State would have
bee#, ifi J opinion under a decision of
the Supreme .Lour), to have reduced my
CBCqUCcted tax ft. fa’;, to r n equal foot
isg with other judgments an# liens. To
go into the G°W t 8 / or t k e e°?)edtion of !
my fi. fas- without iftp momof lien
given by the State woi4 Simply he, in
A large number of cases, to gat nothing
ana nay the cost. There is already a
large* number of the ft. fas. stopped
ffrom proceeding to a sale by injunc
tions, Ac., sued out upd!) the idea that I
hadf tally p.ftf off the State. U?nce the
hue and cry teat the ,execution vs. my
self is bogus, kc. just aa soon os I can
enforce the collection of my ft. fas. new
hung up in the Courts I will settle withi
the State to the last farthing. Should the
executions now awaiting trial, miscarry
I have plenty of private goods and chat
tels to the State and she will and
shall be s&tiafiyd to the last dollar with
out loss or to &17 one save my
self.
Is the State, or any eitizea of toe.
State, so unjust as to desire to rash me
to a settlement at a large financial sac
rifice to myself when I have to the best
of my ability faithfully discharged my
every official duty ? I hope not. Then
a little patieaoe and all will be right.
Respectfully, jf. A. Robson.
Personal Comeliness
Is greatly enhanced by a fine set of :
teeth. On the other hand, nothing so
detracts from the effect of pleasing fea
tures, fine eyes and a graceful figure, as
yellow teeth. That popnlar toilet article
Sozodont checks their decay, and ren
ders them as white as snow. f
NORTHEAST GEORGIA.
THE SUMMER. RESORTS AND
MINERAL >V S ALTIi OF OEOR
aiA ft i_ j
Rammer Resort* in Oeorcla-pelightful Re
treat* fJr Invalids aud Pleasure Seeker*—
Cliinate 9 Crop*, Etc. The Approaching
Convention—What It Will Probably Do—
The Public Sohool*, theological and Other
Bureaux ot Government Gold
Fields, Etc.
[ Correspondence Chronicle andConstitutionalist.]
Clarksville, June 26—Supposing
my farmer letter readied you, I write
again from this ancient Summer resort
one of the most delightful in all the
oouutry. In the halcyon days that pre
ceded the war, it was the custom of the
low couutry gentry to retreat to this
mountain region to escape the heat and
discomforts of the seaboard. Many of
them built costly Summer residences in
the vicinity, among them the late Judge
Berrieu, Judge Law, Mr. Owens, Mr.
McAlister, Mr. Habersham, Drs.Eollock
and Waring, and others. In the days
when there were no railways, it was not
an unusual thing for Summer visitors to
travel all the way from the seaboard to
the mountains in their own private con
veyances. They traveled early in the
morning and late in the afternoon, and
“lay by” during the heat of the day, un
der the beeches and maples, on the
banks of some crystal stream. They
had their regular stages or journies
varying from thirty to forty miles a day.
I am not sure that those old times and
ways were not fully as pleasant as the
present. Then tbe traveler took life
leisurely, and was not whirled along at
a break-neck speed of thirty or forty
miles uu hour, ff so disposed, he could
go fisliirg and spend the day in quiet
comfort without the fear of having a
telegraphic dispatch sent after him.
This is a most delicious summer cli
mate. Tho nights are simply delightful.
One cannot go amiss in all this portion
of the State for a pleasant summer home.
Clarkesville, Nacoooliee Valley, Mount
Airy, Toecoa, Tallulah Falls and Porter
Springs preseut every attraction of cli
mate and scenery that the invalid or
pleasure-seeker oan desire. Georgia,
however, possesses many delightfnl sum
mer resorts. Athens, Madison, Coving
ton, Griffin, Newnau, Marietta, Atlanta,
and the towns along the Air-Line and
Western and Atlantic Railroads, are all
pleasant planes. Atlanta presents ex
ceptional advantages, especially to per
sons who reside in the country when at
home, and who desire gaiety and society
as well as a chaDge of air. £O. Indeed,
a change from the lower parts of the
South Atlantic and Gulf S ales to Mid
dle and Upper Georgia is all the change
that onr people require. Summer re
sorts further North involve too great a
change for young oiiildron and for feeble
and aged persons. In addition to this,
a trip to Northern Georgia is less ex
pensive, while the distanco is not so
great but that one may communicate
freoly with his friends and agents at
home.
Visitors are already making their ap
poaranco at all tho usual resorts in this
section of the State, and a larger num
ber is expected this year than for some
time past. Wherever one goes the eye
is greeted with the j romiso of abundant
crops. Along tho Georgia and Air-
Line Roads the prospect for a rich har
vest was never better.
Tho approaching Constitutional Con
vention continues to be the pfiuoipal
topic of conversation in all circles.
What will be done with the homestead
What with the looation of the capitol—
what with the Geological, Agricultural
and Educational Bureaux ? These ques
tions are repeated again and again where
ever ono turns. The common school
system has devoted friends all over the
State, and so has the Geological Bureau,
while the Agricultural Bureau finds
most of its friends in the middle and
lower parts of the State. And yet strange
as it may appear, the Geological sur
vey numbers some of its bitterest ene
mies right here among the gold fields,
whose rapid development it is stimulat
ing in every possible way ! Nearly all
otr minerals are found jn the northern
half of the State, while the lower part
pays tbe greater share of the public
taxes. One would suppose that those
two facts would determine the position
of the mountain politicians, reported to
be among the shrewdest in the common
wealth.
It is not believed that the capital will
be changed, or that the publio sohoil
syste n and the bureau will be seriously
disturbed. These great agencies are
doing iqupense goqcj, and should he con
tinued, Tlie homestead will almost
oertainly be reduoed, and nearly all
official terms for the future will be cut
down. Some offices may be abolished
altogether ; but no very radical innova
tions will be ventured upon. The Con
stitution when frumed will have to be
submitted to the people for ratifleatiou,
and lienee it will not fye safe to venture
upon too rgany and too radical changes.
It does not seem to bo at all probable
that the seat of government will be
changed. It would not be wise even to
leave the question to the future deter
mination of tlie q* to refer
it to a separate vote at. the time the
Constitution is submitted for ratifica
tion ; for what with the oolored vote
and the large numbers who will object
to this or that feature, tho whole work of
the Qqnvejjtion, if ths capital question
were also involved, might lie defeated.
Large investments are b ang made in
mineral lands in Lumpkin, White, Hall
and Habersham counties. Very expen
sive works are being eree’ed, and great
preparations are making for developing
the gold and other precious petals
which.it is bnlio?e4, <sist in tins re
gioji. ' The old system of workiug tbe
mines has been abandoned. Great ex
pectations are indulged as to the feature
as may be inferred from the immense
sums of money that aro being expended,
aud the costly machinery that is being
employed.
But this letter is already long enough.
More anon. ITonah.
TIJH NKp (lON^KESS.
(Jeiuo; ; r!tCic! Hiijoi'liy of Nixleeu, Willi
Spye to Rear Fyoro.
Washington, Juno 26.—A copy has
been made of the pay certificates for the
Forty fifth Congress, as fnruished by
Clerk Adams to Sergeant at Arms
Thompson, aud constituting his vouch
ers iu account wi ll the United States
Treasury, amt given to some Republican
pipers as the roll of the next House
made out by Adams. T;].e list stands
pieoiaeji u|| diiT’wbOn ail 1 abstract of it
was published Ihe first week in April,
showing a Democrat c majority of six
teen, with seven members to bear from.
No further changes have been made, and
none will be uutil the time comes for
mating ..p roll. What that will be
no one°yet knows, Iu the Colorado case
the law ia *’,} agfijffilt 5 gj fo^ } W* l Pa
terson's title to' the Resit tints p# the
construction 61 an enabling act. The
Supreme Court of California has given
Pacliero, Republican, tho seat in the
Fourth District of that State, and Wig
giniou has apfiCajei], i’hp ooqtpst in
the Courts over tfie Thir‘l District m
Missouri is in much ‘the satac shape.
The roenrd of Florida, aud the Fourth
aud Sixth Districts of Louisiana are cov
ered by conflicting pertificates from the
rival Governors. 4(]ams will probably
follow the example set by Hayes in this
matter, and repognize Nichoils and the
Democratic Congressmen.
— — m --- —■■ ■
yf VMM Hiny-HANITV-
Taking Advantage of tbe .bia|’flr|np, tf
Others.
IFrom the Troj/ (S. Y.) Times ]
\ It is in times of great calamity and
public distress that the meanest ele
ments of sobiety become especially
prominent. It will be remembered
what a harvest the thieves of Chicago
reaped at the time of the great fire in
that city, and what reinforcements
swelled iheir ranks from all the sur
rounding W fiends in human
shape set fire to buildings m all direc
tion and what extortionate rates team
sters asked for their services. Similar
scenes of robbery, arson and extortion
are reported as having been witnessed
at St Johns. Roughs kindled fires in
deserted houses to help on the confla
gration: thieves took with a bold hand
whatever of furniturh am] other prop
erty tflW dpsU.ei, and teagajers pfe
cisely as at Chicago, thinjung np dopbt
that the fire was providentially gent for
their especial benefit, charged enormous
and unjust prices for removing goods.
Tf is only the uprising of the charitable
all over ‘be country to carry aid and
comfort to the afflicted inhabitants ol
lamity. ' 1
kavaoes by fire.
A Krtlnnery Burned-Thread Work* Coo
* - . earned.
Glasgow, June -89 —ifoh# Eobartson
& Co.’s spinnery, 60,000 spindles, has!
been burned. L f, Bs, $400,1)00. Cause,
friction of machinery. Five hundred
operatives are ousted.
Paisley, Scotland, Juiio 29.—Clark
& Co.’s thread works are burned. The
work people barely escaped. Loss,
$75,006.
Tbe Colnmbns Enquirer notes th§t
“a Lumpkin county man caught fk
beaver in a steel trap on Sunday morn
ing last, which weighed sixty pounds.
But bow much did the beaver weigh ?
THEJTATE.
TJ* I’KOPLJ# AND THE PAPERsJ
'Rome wants a city park. A.. 1
Wrigbtsboro abounds in JF 1
Macon has an ice factory tod.
No colored men in the Con. Qpn.
The lottery wheel still turns in At
lanta. '
Gen. Green and his cohorts liavo ap
peared.
Eastman is to have a Presbyterian
Chuob.
Crops in Liberty oounty are lagging
behind.
Savannah thinks of inviting Mr. Grady
to lecture there.
Elberton is to have a money order of
fice after July 2d.
Gen. Thomas H. Bugerliasloft Atlanta
for Washington City.
Capt. L. L. Goodwin has beeu elected
city marshal of Savannah.
Prof. John T. Graves, of West Point,
has a flourishing class of 37.
In many localities wheat has been
harvested in a damaged condition.
The exercises of Mr. J. H. Roberts’
sohool in Waynesboro close to-day.
Mr. Wm. K. Cunningham, of Double
Branob, Lincoln county, died reoently.
A case of spontaneous combustion le
oently ocourred in Macon, No damage.
Receipts of cotton at Rome since the
first of September foot np 32.446 bales.
Threshing machiuesaud gin mills are
generally run by steam in Lincoln
county.
“ Elymosynary ” is the way Prof.
Ham puts it, which, for first trial, is re
ma-kabiv good.
Rev. J. A. Monday seams to have
made a very favorable impression in
Warren county.
Mr. J. R. Christy, of the Athens
Watchman, is a candidate for Secretary
of the Convention.
The belle editor of the McDuffie Jour
nal is doing his best to keep up with
the sweet girl graduates.
The recent fair in Brunswick awarded
a premium for the best mare and colt to
the sheriff < f the comity.
A white uian named Bailey attempted
suicide in Savannah, Wednesday, by
entting his throat with a razor.
The Olympic aud Colquitt Base Ball
Clubs will play a match game at Ap
pling, Columbia oouuty, to-morrow.
The Vox Clionis, edited by the young
ladies of tho LaGrangd Female College,
is neatly printed and full of choice mat
ter.
Twenty two thousand feet of rope is
what Prof. Heudry, tho slider of Stone
Mountain, wants to descend its preci
pice.
Echols county has been finally heard
from, and shows a vote of thirty-five for
Convention aud three against Conven
tion.
Two negroes succeeded in combing
each others’ craninras reeently, in War
ren county, with hoes. Not much dam
age done.
The Eagle & Phtßnix mills, of Colum
bus, have received a handsome order
from England for their celebrated cotton
blankets.
General Hugh W. Mercer, formerly of
Savannah, died reoently at Baden Ba
den, Germany, where ho had resided tho
past four years.
Atlanta Independent : The Democra
cy wants the “dollars of our fathers,
but tlie youths of Atlanta want the dol
lars of their fathers-in-law.”
The Constitution thinks that Messrs.
Wadley & Cos. do not merit any atten
tion from tho Con-Con. This brines
the At-Con. on a pretty low level itself.
Laurens and Wilkinson counties are
very mnoh exorcised over the shooting,
by uuknown parties, of one man ami
the mysterious disappearance of an
other.
The Methodist Sunday Schools of Mc-
Duffie aud Columbia counties held a
Convention last week at White Oak.
Governor Colquitt aud General Evans
delivered addresses.
Prof. Ham further remarks that it is
less dangerous to hit a man on tbe bead
with the bottom than in tbe mouth with
the top end of a bottle. The latter has
killed somegood men.
A buck negro named Aaron has been
committed to jail nt Sawdust to answer
for the oharge of attempt to commit
rape upon the little daughter of Mr.
Conner, an old Methodist minister of
that place.
Tho Thomson Journal states that a
Lincoln county hen recently laid two
eggs, one with the name of E. Gresham,
Esq., and the other that of Mamie Mer
cier, a little pupil the former, upon
them.
Says the Atlanta Constitution : “ Miss
Claude Thomas, of Athens, Georgia,
and Miss Daisy Beckwith, daughter of
Bishop Beokwith, Rhared the first honor
in Madame So.nowsky’s excellent semi
nary at Athens.
Mr. George F. Gohe? haa been admit
ted to the bar i Siawannali. Mr. Gobor
is a graduate of the University, class
'7B, and is one of the most accurate
young students in tho State. We pre
dict for him abundant success,
I lenty of dewberries
Oats in Gwinnatt are not so bad after
all.
Blackberries are cheaper than last
year.
Fried chickens roost upon high limbs
this year.
Thnnderbolt will have a regatta on
the Fourth,
Dawson lias enjoyed a Cant at her Fe
male Institute.
Hephzibah has her commencement on
the 4t,h proximo.
Southwest Georgia is organizing a
Fair Association.
Waynesboro is t*Wu toearrom upon a
new bil'iato table.
Mr - .' Robert Baker, a Columbus wheel
wright, is no moro.
The Hartwell Sun beams clqv,iUasly
aud serenely forth.
The railroad fyemi Tatbotton to Gen
eva is being surveyed,
Tke hum of the base ball is heard
“At Arlington (Ga.)
College Temple, of Ne\j; *,<*, recontly
had a commence^ o ' l *-
The (inergia B. B. C.’s, of Savannah,
1 exourt to Augusta July 3.1.
; Horse thieves are stealing valuable
animals in Chatham oounty.
Talbot county is to have anew paper.
Keep at it, gentlemen; there’s millionsin
it.
The “Schnapper” Clubs are grinding
and whetting up their fibhhooks in Law
renceville.
Tbe caterpillar lias made ;ij appear
ance in the rice fieh*; v u the Ogeeehee
and Savanm^h.
Andrew J. Blaek, of Rockdale, shot
| and killed his young apprentice, Fiuck
Black, last week.
T. C. McDarter, who fell from the
building of Moore £ Marsh, in Atlanta,
1 died Monday from his injuries.
In Hart county the good children ex
curt to the saw mills to pick up chips
and sei the “wheels go wound.”
It is understood that Florida melons
and Georgia blackberries are being ship
ped in large quantities to Nicsic.
Mrs. V ttt8 y* Hargrove died in Burke
county a few days ago, Sho was the
grandmother of' sixty-six children.
Moses A. MoOurry, son of A. W- kt®-
Curry, of Hart county, died recently in
the Lunatia Asylui#, at Milledgeville.
A scaffold on tho round houpe of the
Central Boat] fell Thursday morning,
in badly injuring two ro/'g,
Davis, of the Athens flfttlery,ad
vertises for apajtnptp with $1,500 capi
tal. Only ladies, we presume, need ap-
P Airs. Bennett, 77 years old, lives in
Hart coqnty and never took a, pill in her
life. Evidently sffe is not an aged pil
grim.
Mr. Jq3. Jackson, of Talbot county,
has in his orchard a pear limb, two
feet long, haying on it sixty six well
grown pears.
It seemetli that two of the twelve able
of the Ah Con. are literary peripatetics.
The rest are made of stabler and sterner
stuff, as it were.
A mere boy in Chattahoochee is re
ported to have stabbed a brother enffee
in five different places. A promising
youth is the m. b.
An old negro woman and a water moc
casin had a bout recently in Dawson.
The reptile bit the 1 dust and the old
dame got dp and dnstgd.
The Clirrtenton Wapper gives warning
of a marriage this week upon the banks
of the rippling pgeechee. As yet we
have received no official advices.
Matrimony has taken anew start in
Dawson. Matrimony, 4 0WD 6re. is as
a persimmon, so to speak. It takes a
few white frosts to brtog it out.
Captain John T. Watkins, of Burke
county,' has some Afribari wheat. It is
now abqnftffo ifpet high. R #as pant
ed in May, tb be flaryestfid iff Septem
ber.
Button hole boquets In Talbotton are
composed of giant sunflowers, repcsiDg
lovingly in the bosom of an immense
collard leaf. They are often used as
soup bunches after they leave the lapel.
There is a yearling in Hart oounty
wearing ea oyster onp with a rock in it
for ft bpiL 4nd the joke is that the
yeariing frisfs aroiifud ijf 88 ,f
bore the chimes of St., Mark! upon
his bovine saouklers. " 1
Mr. 8. R. Sims, of Washington, de
livered an elegant oration betore the
Society of Mercer University
Ut The Loumville farmer says: “A boy
about sixteen years o( age named Tom
Gamble, who lived near Wadley, was
brought to this place under a oommit
ment for the murder of his brother.
The Children’s Department—a fediirre
of “Andrews’ BazaF^— is unrivaled. The
designs are alwaye new and
ing excellence. Mothers. ex
ception, should see the Bazar. W. n.
Andrews, Cincinnati, publisher,
' SOUTH CAROLINA.
F FAKMRTTO news leaves.
Anderson revels in base ball.
Newberry wants an ice factory.
CoW peas are abundantly sown.
Some hydrophobia in Abbeville.
Whwtpiug cough still in Chester.
Fine stards of grass are reported.
Doncaster has a Munchausen Club.
Yorkville will not ’rah on the Fourth.
The oamp meeting season approaches.
Much interest centers in the fenoe
law.
L’Esprit du Corps grows all over the
State.
Rowing.parties are numerous in Char
leston.
Union wants a narrow gauge ropd to
Chester.
Tho new market at Ridgeway baa been
finished.
A severe storm passed over Newberry
last week.
Newberry wishes to refurnish her
girls’ school.
The Moultrie monument was unveiled
on Thursday.
The troops are still ebbiog forth from
Summerville.
Aiken dou’t throw much “soul” into
tho fenoe law.
Tbe colored Baptists in Aiken have
beeu reviving.
Chester and Union are in earnest
about their road.
Matrimony seems not to have melted
away in Abbeville.
Sumter wants to fill her vaeaut chair
in the Legislature.
A mule tried to kill Mr. Philip Dunn,
of Union, last week.
Tho Newberry College will be erected
upon a beautiful plan.
Col. Coker walks over in Darlington
and goes to the Senate.
Nearly every State editor wears anew
cotton bloom in bis coat.
The King’s Mouutain military sohool
has closed for tbe season.
Barnwell is compelled to quarter her
prisoners in the market hall.
Fairfield will have a County Demo
cratic Convention, July 14t.h.
Governor Hampton lias appointed sev
eral ladies as aides on his staff.
Mrs. R. N. Chute, wife of the Episco
pal miuiater of Sumter, is dead.
Ex Lieut. Cleaves has been appointed
a Trial Justice by Gov. Hamptou.
The slung shot villains of Charleston
are fair candidates for the gallows.
Mrs. Carson, the wife of Rev. W. B.
Carson, died at Allendale, last week.
Gen. H. G. Worthington, Collector of
Charleston, will be removed, it is said.
The work of the Fraud Investigating
Committee, in Columbia, goes bravely
on.
Last week Francis M. Rhea, a York
ville blacksmith, was found dead in his
bed.
The Marion artillery looks to an ad
mission into the State militia at an earlr
day.
“Juba Tattings” are iu full blast
among the sombre religionists of Charles
ton.
Ju lgo Mackey, next Wednesday after
noon, delivers a literary address at Due
West.
Tho Abbeville Banner cannot see how
the people will be beuefitted by anew
oouuty,
Mrs. Elizabeth Hammond, of Ander
son, died last week in the 78th year of
her age.
Barnwell will organize an infantry
and n cavalry company or perish in tha
attempt.
The Herald thinks that there are
many fraudulent debts hanging over
Newberry.
London Brown, who shot aiid killed
Sam Hayes near Barnwell, liv.t week, is
still at large.
Capt. A. A. Dickson, on nged and re
spectable citizep of Anderson county,
died last week.
Mr. T. J. Darby, arrested on a charge
of forgery in Chester, has been honor
ably acquitted.
Highland moccasins and little negroes
in some instances, oocnpy the same
couch in Abbeville.
The Grangers last Monday planted a
tree iu Edgefield boaido the grave of
Col. Tlios. G. Bacon.
Judge Towußeud, of the Fourth Cir
cuit, will hold the October term of Court
for Edgefield county.
Pigeon shooters stalk abroad in
Charleston. After all, pigeons are bet
ter marks than glass balls.
Liberian emigration is still disoussed
by the colored troops. Where, oh,
where is Marshal Douglass !
The Washington Light Infantry and
Artillery will get up a brigade parade
on the 221 of February next.
Kawlos Anthony, oolored, Monday
evening, was run over and killed, near
Sumter, by a construction train.
Seventeen new buildings, says the
Journal, have been erected in Aiken
since Hampton has been Governor.
The Barnwell Sentinel announces wed
dings twelve days ahead of time. This
i insures the printer’s fee at any rate.
A local oowhiding occurred recently
in Columbia between Richardson, of the
Register, and Orchard, of the Phoenix.
The workshops of the Chester and
Lenoir Railroad will be moved from
Yorkville to Chester, says the Reporter.
Tlie editor of the Newberry Herald
gives notice that he is living upon black
berry dumplings. Fortunate maD, he l
What’s up with the Barnwell Senti
nel ? At this, the dullest season of tho
year, sho fi>ly beams with local news.
The Anderson Intelligencer notes that
i the tide of Summer reoruita to tbe Caro
lina mountains is greater than ever be
fore.
A desperate fight between a dog and
an alligator recently came off at the
Georgetown wharf. The ’gator was
killed.
Columbia wants Henry Grady “over
there.” Grady, in fact, would make a
good thing by traveling around over tho
South.
I '1 he thermometer now finds out that
there is “plenty of room at the top.”
It licked the hundred notch Tuesday in
Charleston,
Tho oolored Y. M. 0, A.’e, of Charles
toe, disclaim all intention of misrepre
senting the Columbia Orphan Asylum
to tbe public.
James L. Orr, Esq., of Anderson, has
been appointed a member of Governor
Hampton’s staff, with the rank of Liera
tem\ut-€)alonel.
The Newberry Herald thinks that the
State officers of South Carolina are
equal, if not superior, to those of any
State in the Union.
Gov. Hampton will probably organize
a polo, clmb upon his return. A good
game at the base of Moultrie would be
appreciated just now.
A colored woman in Aiken oounty,
while picking huckleberries near
Boyce's mill, was bitten upon the throat
by a rattlesnake and killed.
A difficulty occurred 00 Saturday, in
Spartanburg, in whieh Mr. Jack Abbott
received a serious blow from a stick in
tbe hands of Whitman.
The negro Davenport, of Newberry,
against whom a coroner’s jury found a
verdiet of guilty of killing his step-child
three weeks ago, has not yet been ar
rested.
Says the Abbeville Banner : “While
the Charleston and Augusta papers are
the very best in the Southern States,onr
people do not take as many copies of
either paper as they would if they could
get them on the evening .of the day
that they are published.”
Tho Charleston News says: The sea
board, at last, has answered the bngle
call from the mountains, and the enter
prise ah# life for whioh the np country,
with its long term of Democrat ic rale, ia
noted, will soon be seen and felt in re
vived and regenerated Charleston.
HOMICIDE IN BURKE COUNTY.
A <'stored Clan Milled ia Heli-Orfcaae.
[■ special to Chronicle and Constitutionalist. J
Waynesboro, June 28.—A difficulty
which ended in a homicide occurred
this morning at Munnerlyn, a station on
the Augusta and Savannah Railroad in
this (Burke) county. Mr. Simeon Bell
was attacked by a well known desperate
negro cksnictpr najped John Carter.
The negro' assiujtefl Mr. TBell with a
drawn dirk and Bell, in self-defence', shpf
and killisd him. “Bell has Signified fiis
willingness to surrender hiquiel] ‘to tfle
prpper aqthorifies, if.
|N MEJ.F^IEFpNSE.
Mr. Simeon Bell, af Burke County, Juetltyeil
In Killian t|ie Negro, By the Coroner’*
imr __
f Special to (he Chronicle CpnsliluliQnalist. j
‘ WA ¥ NEspopq, G 4., June 88. - Tflfi
jury on the inquest at.Munueriyil, t|)i
morning, returned a verdict that tbe
negro, John Carter, oimeto his death
by a pistol shot fired by Simeon Bell, in
self-defense. ■
THE MAHSHALSUIP.
Mnj. Smyth Discover* that Hl* Deputies
Won’t Do.
The Atlanta Constitute, cf ygjter
day, says: Attorney-Gtoerjal DeveuW offb
cially states that, after a carefnl exami
nation of the charges contained in Col.
Withers’report to Gov. Colquitt concern
ing the conduot of the Georgia marshal’s
office, and of Marshal Smyth’s reply
tbereto, he finds that Marshal Smyth has
been brought to tbe flotffig of-thu De
partment of Justice.” We learn' tlfc't
Marshal Smyth has notified his deputies
that their services will npt longer be
needed in his department. This action
admits no exceptions, we understand,
and anew, acceptable tore* will be se
lected for future assistance to the mar
shal. Tis well!