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The
Morning Sewn ban Ibe lar*e«t city
circulation of any paper pub-
nlmil'i.. -aviinnah.
Afiairs in (ieoriria.
x! ,c Hawkinsville Dispatch objects to
r ( i 0 Dooly county. Our excuse is that
change. We are informed that
f „ tin editor of the Dispatch has
1 before he was married—and
1 ' n , ore romantic youlh—he wrote it
opoofe. . .
Tlic oat crop in Irwin county is very
\[r George P. Deveney, a conductor
Line lload. was stabbed and
killed by a negro, near Mt. Airy, in
Habersham county.
JIr william K. Brown, formerly of
Houston county, died in Macon on Wed
nesday.
The Democrats of Jackson county nave
TunV.iiuiously endorsod Ben Hill for Con-
„ aa ,i Have requested the other oottn-
iu the district to concur.
Sandersville will soon have a telegraph
office.
foo much turnip doesn’t agree with
\Voo<k of the Hawkinsville Dispatch. Iu
announcing the other day the number of
biils before the Legislature, we compli
mented the member from Dooly by say -
a,,-, that his county was still to hear from.
This arouses the indignation of Col.
Woods, who turns up his shirt collar and
sns he will not allow us to insinuate that
the Representative of Dooly has en-
rro.,s-d the time of the Legislature by
introducing superfluous bills. When a
jpivmium turnip has that effect, a mus
tard poultice is about the only remedy we
Father Brown, of Savannah, holds
monthly services in Sandersville.
An Elbert county man is of the opin
ion that he has stumbled upon a gold
mine.
Mr. Wailes Lewis, son of Col. Miles
W. Lewis, of Greensboro, has been elect-
•:d to n professorship in the University of
1 Texas.
A two-story house, unoccupied, was
burned iu Macon the other night.
Au Elberton man knocks over seven
partridges out of ten on the wing.
Col. Woods, of the Hawkinsville Dis-
V'll'h. has wrapped himself around a ten-
pound turnip, and as a consequence
things wear rather a gloomy look.
M. J. L. Richardson, of Griffin, is dead.
Wood’s copper mine, near Carrollton,
has yielded a net profit of twenty-four
thousand doiiars in nine months.
The LaGrange Reporter puts us to the
blush ;<-• follows: “In publishing the
advertisement of the Savansah Morning
V v.>. we take occasion to say, what we
have often said before, that it is the best
paper in Georgia. In its editorial de
partment, whether on politics or finance,
it comes nearer being right every time,
than any other paper of our acquaintance.
It is never so slow in taking a position as
lobe behind hand, and it is never so fast
as to adopt a course that will have to be
changed. Iu a word, its editor-in-chief,
Mr. W. T. Thompson, combines more of
the elements necessary for a complete
editor than any other man in the Georgia
press. lie is able, dignified, conservative,
independent and reliable. The news de
partment is in charge of Mr. J. C. Harris,
whose weekly resume of affairs in Georgia,
is without a parallel for humor and com
pleteness. The other departments of the
paper are managed with unusual ability.
But we can not say more than is included
in the first sentence above; we commend
the News in every respect.”
The Hawkinsville Dispatch says that
Mr. hamuel Weldon, of Dooly county,has
more than lived the allotted time of man,
being now in his eighty-fourth year. But
the most remarkable fact connected with
his age is the large number of descend
ants now living. Of ten children, raised
to maturity,seven are now living,and from
these have descended seventy-seven
grandchildren. Mr. Weldon, senior, is
still hale and hearty, and can any day
ride horseback thirty miles.
The Gainesville Eagle says that Judge
0 Xeal purchased a farm in Hall county
three years ago, and planted the whole of
the bottom lauds in winter apples. The
orchard is now over three years old, and
the trees have grown rapidly. Five thou
sand apple trees on one body of bottom
land is a sight worth seeing, and unless
We mistake the production, the orchard
will in one more year yield from two to
teulusuels per tree, which will give au in
come of at least ten thousand dollars a
year. This beats gold mining.
A correspondent of the Carrollton
Tisays that one day last week the
company operating on the Chamber’s
property, near Villa liica, at the depth
of sixty-three feet, cut into a rich vein
of the black oxide and yellow sulphuret
of copper which promises to eclipse any
thing of the kind yet discovered in the
catalogue of minerals. This mine is lo
cated on what is known as the Villa liica
lead,and the leading and most prominent
surface indications are heavy masses of
copper gossan (a ferrugineous iron
ore matter) accompanied with beds of
dark colored quartz and decomposed
granite, or gneiss rock. The surface in
dications on this lead for a distance of
four or five miles, are bold and well de
fied, and when fully developed will turn
ou t quite a number of rich and produc
tive mines.
As a specimen of the arguments used
a g^iu.st free money iu the Legislature, we
present the following ‘extract from the
speech of Senator Blance. We trust the
reader in admiring the logic will not be
led to neglect the rehtoric: Georgia and
her people are poor, and day by day
growing poorer. How is this? To what
jmhappy source can we trace our woe?
there are some who are firm in the con-
'ictiou that the homestead law, in its
practical operations, has produced the
mischief; others say that their observa
tion and experience lead to the conclusion
fhat the lien law has spread the contagion
fad visited the body politic with para
ding prostration. Not so. The great
cursing, withering blight, finds its ori
gm in the free and unstinted use of
money. Gentlemen say, and with an air of
boastf ul triumph, that our national wealth
is rapidly swelling, and will soon aggre
gate more in millions than at any period
since the late unhappy clash of arms.
This may be true, at least I am not pre
J. H. E STILL, PROPRIETOR.
SAVANNAH, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1875.
Jnsurawr.
ESTABLISHED
pared to assert the contrary'. But where
is our opulence to be found ? Concen
trated and confined within the walls of
cities and commercial centres. What do
we see in the rural districts ? Homes di
lapidated, farms and fields in decay, and
men in rags and wretchedness. Our cities
are overflowing with superfluous popula
tion, who, attracted by the glitter
of metropolitan magnificence, turn
with loathing and disgust from those
pursuits that promise health, ease
and comfort, and live in sickness and pol
lution, and die in the chilling embrace of
woe and misery. Let them vomit up
these sons of toil and send them forth
armed with the implements of labor, and
soon our fields will bloom with plenty,
our hills will yield up their glittering
treasure, our valleys become vocal with
the songs of contented industry, and our
rivers laugh and be made glad by the bum
of the loom and the spindle, and
Georgia, redeemed, regenerated, and
disenthralled, will resume her place
in the glorious constellation of
sovereignties, the equal of all and
the inferior to none. Sir, these
human vultures and transformed vam
pires—the money changers—who have
feasted to fatness upon our substance tell
us if we have the audacity to interfere
with their very enviable avocation, they
will gather up their delectable individu
ality and transport themselves to some
other clime more congenial with their
philanthropic ideas of unrestrained trafic.
I cannot tell how others may view this
haughty fulmination, but I say to them,
there is no terror in your threats. Go !
and before God, I declare, that I shall
hail their hegira as the breaking in of
that millennial day of peace, plenty and
prosperity. Mr. President, with all the
emphasis that our intellectual conviction
can impart, I proclaim usury a sin aud a
wrong. It is detrimental to the well-be
ing of society, abhorrent to the sugges
tions of nature, repugnant to the con
science of man, and in open violation of
the sacred commands of the living Je
hovah.
—TO—
THE MORNING NEWS.
The Little Tariff.—The bill known
by this title passed both Houses of Con
gress, the last on the 21st ultimo, but
had not received the President’s signa
ture on Tuesday last. As ten days from
its passage expired on Saturday, the natu
ral inference was that he wished to dodge
the responsibility and let the bill become
a law without either his signature or his
formal opposition. But the Journal of
Commerce explains the cause of the Pres
ident’s deliberation: “It seams that
somebody has some goods at sea, or just
in port, which is desirable for him to en
ter before the new duties shall take effect,
and therefore the suspense is prolonged.
The Constitution provides that “ if any
bill shall not be returned by the Presi
dent within ten days (Sundays excepted)
after it shall have been presented to him,
the same shall be a law,” etc. The bill
passed the Senate on the lflth aud the
House on the 21st, but it was not “ pre
sented,” it is said, to the President until
Saturday, the JOth. This, of course, gives
him ten days longer; but if the cargoes
now waited for arrive in time, it is not
expected that he will take the whole of
that period.”
Is Babcock interested in the cargoes to
arrive ?
The New York Tribune says “the re
port of the special committee appointed
by the caucus of Republican members of
the House to recommend legislation as to
Southern affairs is exactly what might
have been expected from a committee
with Representative White, the Alabama
Ananias, at its head. Mr. White’s com
mittee recommends the passage of vari
ous bills with extraordinary provisions,
but alike in that the object of all is the
recapture of the votes of the Southern
States. by the Republican party. It re
mains to be seen whether thoughtful
Northern Republicans in the House are
ready to follow Mr. White’s lead in re
sorting to such measures for the sole
purpose of restoring supremacy to a party
well-known to be fairly in the minority,
and whose representative men in the sec
tion to be affected are utterly without
the confidence of the people among
whom they dwell.”
A Victim of Civil Rights.—Col. John
B. Brownlow, a son of the Parson of that
ilk, publishes a card iu the Washington
Chronicle, of last Saturday, explanatory
of the statement that his respected father
“at the election in Knoxville, Tennessee,
the other day, voted the Democratic
ticket.” Col. Brownlow explains that his
father has not left the Republican party,
(Heaven be thanked for it'.) but that the
party had no candidate at the election in
question “because of its fearful demorali
zation growing out of the passage by the
Senate of ‘Sumner’s legacy’ and the
almost universal defeat of the party last
November.” The attempt to misrepre
sent the Senator, his son says, is “born of
malignity growing out of his opposition
to the civil rights bill.”
An Extra Session Probable.—From
present indications, says a Washington
dispatch, an extra session would seem
unavoidable, though both parties have
declared they do not want one. The
Senate lias no business before it, but is
awaiting the receipt of the appropriation
bills from the House. When they are
received the Louisiana debate will be cut
short. There are nine appropriation bills
yet to consider, and tariff legislation to
be perfected by the Ways and Means
Committee for the action of the two
Houses. An extra session can only be
avoided by the holding of night sessions
and the rushing through of the appro
priation bills without time being afforded
for their scrutiny.
The Louisville Courier Journal, in
sketching the character of ex-President,
now Senator elect, Andy Johnson, says:
Johnson has never been a drunkard,
nor, excepting the war period, what can
be fairly called a drinking man. Now
and then be takes a glass too much, and
on such occasions has been especially un
lucky in having his excesses made ab
surdly luminous, as when he was inaugu
rated Vice-President, and when he was
called out in Nashville a few years ago by
the Green Line excursionists. In the
main, however, he is a hard working man,
not given to vicious irregularities, self-
contained, dignified, and, though re
served, courteous.
Paragraphs have appeared in this and
and other papers favorable to the election
of Mrs. Mary J. Green as one of the
trustees of the Georgia State Lottery.
It may be best to state that we have been
informed there is no vacancy. The law
establishing the lottery does not authorize
the filling of vacancies, and even if it
did, the Legislature would not have the
power to fill it. As we understood it,
when the present trustees die or resign,
the lottery dies with them, and its prop
erty goes to the Orphans’ Home. We
state these facts without prejudice to
Mrs. Green, who is a thoroughly worthy
lady, but simply as the explanation made
to us.—Atlanta tfeics.
Uncle Zach. it was plain, mnch did wish again
Togo to the Senate from Michigan,
His foes wouldn't budge,
But chose a good judgn,
Aud upset the political dish again.
Noon Telegrams.
ANOTHER LOUISIANA INFAMY.
A Disgraceful Compact Proposed bj
the Conservatlyes.
FACTOR V STRIKE* IN NEW ENGLAND
Alfonso and the Carl Infs.
A SHAMEFUL BARGAIN.
Washington, February 6.—Dispatches
from New Orleans to the New York Times
and Herald report a compromise which was
adopted by the Conservatives by a vote of
89 to 27. It involves the recognition of the
Kellogg government, reseating the five ex
pelled by the military from the Lower
House. McEnery and Penn protest, and
Wiltz offered hxs resignation, which was not
accepted.
The clique here who are m constant com
munication with New Orleans have no ac
count of these occurrences.
CONGRESSIONAL.
Washington, February 6.—In the Senate,
Sherman presented a memorial of the Cin
cinnati Chamber of Commerce in favor of
granting the aid asked by the Texas Pacific
Railroad.
The House has been transacting business
of a miscellaneous character, and of no pub
lic importance.
THE CARLISTB.
Madrid, February 6.—Eight battalions of
Carlists made a furious attack on Alfonso’s
troops near Orteiza, making a bayonet
charge. They were repulsed with great loss.
A decree has been issued to the military
nav.il officers to abstain from attending po
litical meetings.
SMALL-POX.
Chicago, February 6.—Thirty-seven per
sons are suffering from small-pox in the
Cook County Poor House. An infected per
son was admitted by the negligenee of the
inspector.
DEAD.
Washington, February 6.—John Stalcup,
a telegrapher in the Western Union Office
here, and well known to the fraternity in
the South, died here to-day of consumption,
aged twenty-three.
STRIKE OF OPERATIVES.
Fall River, February 6.—The strike
among the mill-operatives continues. Nearly
two thousand weavers and spinners, mostly
females, have been idle nearly a fortnight.
INTER-OCEANIC CANAL.
Paris, February 6.—The Consul General
of Nicarauga addressed a note to Leaseps
asking support for au inter-oceanic canal,
which ho promises.
FOR REMOVAL.
Wheeling. February 6.—The Senate has
passed a bill moving the capital to Wheel
ing." It is thought the House will concur.
Railroad Combinations,
Some of the newspapers are very much
exercised about the pooling system re
cently adopted by the leading Southern
railways at the meetings held in Macon
and Atlanta. The Atlanta Constitution,
especially, empties the vials of its wrath
upon the head of the President of the
Georgia Central—Col. William M. Wad-
ley—whom it charges with being “the
master-spirit of the combination” which
seeks to “paralyze” the cotton trade of
North Georgia. This is taking rather a
complex view of a very simple question.
If there be any guilt attached to the
transaction Col. Wadley is no greater
criminal than any of the representatives
of Southern lines of transportation who
were present at these meetings and who
approved the policy adopted. In the
second place, we fail to discover any
semblance of a plot in tbe transaction or
a desire to “paralyze” anybody or any
thing. The railroads simply discovered
that between the commercial disasters
which have afflicted the country, and the
cut-throat enterprise of rival corporations,
they were rapidly losing money, and they
naturally sought a satisfactory remedy
for a very unsatisfactory condition cf af
fairs. It may be that Col. W adley’s brain
furnished them a way out of their diffi
culties, or it may be that some other gen
tleman possessed the “master-mind”
which first hit*upon the happy device of
“pooling.” At all events this was the
system adopted. Of its merits or de
merits, its justice or injustice we shall
say nothing. We only know that the
step was not one of choice but necessity.
It seems a little singular to us, too, that
w hile it is considered right enough for
the public to combine against railways,
it is thought a monstrous outrage for
railways to combine, not against the
public, but for their own protection. It
appears also to be forgotten that the
people are just as much owners of rail
roads as they are of merchandise or plan
tations. Especially with Southern lines
is this the case, each of which has a large
number of stockholders interested in its
management. There are to-day at the
termini and along the lines of the Geor
gia and the Central Railways thousands
of persons—maDy of whom are widows
aud orphans—directly dependent upon
these corporations--some of them for
even the means of existence. Witness
how much trouble and distress ha6 been
occasioned bv the recent failure of these
two companies to earn and declare a div
idend upon their stock. It is to help
these people -the owners of the lines—
that the pooling system has been adopt
ed. We should show some justice to
railway corporations. We should not
expect them to do work solely for the
benefit of the public any more than we
should expect the grocer, the dry goods
merchant or the lawyer to do business at
a loss.—Augusta Chronicle.
A new danger has arisen. A misguided
German chemist, instead of putting his
time where it would do the most good by
inventing a chemical compound warrant
ed to destroy the taste for liquor, has
willfully and wickedly discovered a
method of making brandy out of sawdust.
He will doubtless publish the process
under the title of “Drunkenness Made
Easy.” The results may be appalling.
We can add nothing to this pathetic pic
ture of them, drawn by the Dunn county
(Tenn.) Mews :
We are a friend of the temperance
movement, and we want it to succeed,
but what chance will it have when a man
can take a rip-saw and go out and get
drunk with a fence rail ? What is the
use of a prohibitory liquor law if a man
is able to make brandy smashes out of
tbe shingles on his roof, or if he can get
delirium tremens by drinking the legs of
his kitchen chairs? You may shut an
inebriate out of a gin-shop, and keep him
away from taverns, but if he can become
uproarious ou boiled sawdust and dessi-
cated window sills, an effort at reform
must necessarily be a failure. It ^rill be
wise, therefore, if temperance societies
w:ll butcher the German chemist before
he goes any further.
Vert Fbenchy.—An episode of life
which could happen nowhere but in Pa
ris : v A wealthy and respectable young
mSia, some months ago, committed sui
cide by hanging himself in his bedroom;
he left all his fortune to a famous demi-
mondane, whose infidelity to him drove
him to despair and death. But the for
tune was leagued conditional on her
keeping the fatal rope and photograph of
the deceased, under a glass case, on the
chimney of her bedroom; a friend was
delegated to visit once a week to see the
condition executed. The unfortunate
woman endeavored first to laugh at the
matter, but became haunted with the
death she caused, and concluded she
would die in the same way. A few days
ago she handed over all the money to the
poor, and has not since been heard of.
The sundry civil appropriation bill is
ftbpnt ready to be reported to the House
of Representatives by the Appropriation
Committee. Tim bill for all pqrpoecs
appropriates over $19,000,000, of whiah
amount $4,99i,M 91 it tor pubfie build*
ings.
The Beecher Trial.
[From the Chicago Tribune.]
It may well be doubted whether the
court annals of any country have pro
duced a scene which in impressiveness,
solemnity and absorbing personal inter
est, can equal that which occurred when
Theodore Tilton on Monday entered the
witness-box and confronted Henry Ward
Beecher and Elizabeth Tilton, to testify
for the first time under oath before the
judicial tribunal to the truth of that ter
rible statement which has traveled over
the whole Christian world on the wings
of rumor and in the columns of the press.
Look at the group! On the one hand.
Mr. Beecher, ostensibly a servant of
God, commissioned to save the souls of
men, the foremost preacher of his time,
arrived at that age when the passions
cool and men give their thoughts to the
great change which is so near them,
standing at the bar of justice, charged
with the seduction of a woman whose
marriage ceremony he had celebrated,
whose children he had baptized, and who
had looked to him for spiritual consola
tion and guidance; Mrs. Tilton, the al
leged victim of his seductive art and elo
quent persuasion, whom he led to ruin:
Mrs. Beecher, stern and silent, as she has
been ever since the black cloud of this
scandal first darkened her household;
Mr. Beecher’s sons, who have grown old
enough to know the nature of the
charges against their father in their full
bearing and to feel the keenness of the
disgrace which threatens their home:
and, fringing this memorable group,
their friends and the members of that
powerful organization on Brooklyn
Heights whose probable existence hangs
upon the verdict, and who, therefore,
bring to Mr. Beecher a moral support
nearly irresistible and overwhelming in
its power and influence. On the other
hand, a young man of bright intellect
and brilliant promise, whose life began
full of hope, but upon whose head the
curse of Mephistopheles has fallen, for
every flower that he has touched has
withered, and he sits in the desolation of
a clouded home. This young man stands
alone in the witness-box, with few and
feeble friends about him save the man
who held his secrets so long and vainly
sought to shield him from the storm, and
tells the story of his wrongs, pouring it
into the ears of the woman who has de
serted him, and the man whom he charges
with having wrecked his life, like a
stream of molten lava, with his eyes fas
tened upon those two who dare not or
will not meet the gaze. Has justice ever
looked down upon such a scene before,
and will justice triumph at last in this
contest which we may well believe is
watched with eager interest even by the
powers of Good and Evil ?
The spectator of this struggle whose
issues must be so momentous to one or
the other party can now only assume that
either Mr. Tilton is telling the truth or a
falsehood. There is no middle course;
no decision which can be arrived at by
compromise; no grounds for the possi
bility of a hullucination. The terrible
narrative, given slowly and deliberately
and with the nicest circumstantiality in
detail, of the interview between Beecher
and Tilton; of the reading of the confes
sion of Mrs. Tilton giving the details of
the manner in which her pastor accom
plished her ruin; of the interview at Moul
ton’s house, the offer of Beecher to go out
of public life; his violent outburst of poig
nant grief; his statement that he was on the
edge of hell—all this black picture is either
awfully true or awfully false. It passes the
bounds of human comprehension to be
lieve that it is part true and part false, or
that Theodore Tilton is laboring under
some dreadful mistake. If it is true,
then never was man more wronged than
Tilton ; never was man more cruelly out
raged, and never wa3 there such a wolf
in sheep’s clothing; such a sleek, con
summate hypocrite and arrant knave as
this silver-haired priestly prowler in the
folds where he has charge. If it is false,
then is Mr. Beecher most cruelly, horri
bly wronged, and infamously, wickedly
slandered ; then in all suffering woman
hood there has never been a victim so
foully injured, so basely and cowardly
smitten down as Elizabeth Tilton : then
never has man before so nearly allied
himself to the foul fiend as has Tilton.
The wanton, insidious Mephistopheles
himself, sneering at virtue and making
wreck of innocence, might stand abashed
aud acknowledge himself surpassed in
vileness and baseness.
Upon what possible theory can this
testimony be explained except either
that it is true or false ? It passes belief
that all this complicated network of state
ments is a dreadful hallucination which
has sprung up in Mr. Tilton’s brain—a
chimera of his imagination, a dreadful
dream which has imposed itself upon him
as a reality and impels him to make these
charges against an innocent man and pure
woman? When Mr. Tilton says under
oath:
I told him, when he came, that I want
ed to know if he could tell me with ref
erence to the little boy Ralph, and he
6aid that the date fixed by Mrs. Tilton
was the correct one. Mr. Beecher asked
me the date. I told him that Elizabeth
had told me that the date at which their
criminal intimacy had begun was the
10th of October, 1868 ; and he said he
had no remembrance of it, but he thought
she was right.
When Mr. Tilton makes an assertion
like this of an occurrence which occur
red in the presence of a witness, is it a
hallucination ? Is it the vision of a dis
ordered mind ? If so, will some one ex
plain the tfieory so as to account for this
wonderful fabric of statement which he
has constructed and into which other
statements fit so accurately ? That testi
mony is either every word true or every
word false. Mr. Beecher is either entirely
guilty or entirely innocent. No other hy
pothesis is possible. The toils which
have been gathering about him hereto
fore are.tigbtening every day. The plot
deepens and grows more interesting.
What denouement will come from this
complicated story of misery and suffer
ing ? Will his own testimony explain all
and dispel the horrid cloud that lowers
around him ?
Savannah, Ga., January 25, 1875.
Editor of the Journal of Commerce:
Please answer the following:
I ship a bag of silver coin North by the
Southern Express Company. The same
is reported to have been destroyed by the
fire in the car on the Baltimore and Po
tomac Railroad on the night of the 7th
inst. The express company report a
total loss, and there was no insurance,
none being considered necessary by the
shipper.
Question: Can coin be totally destroyed
by fire?
Is not the express company responsible
for the coin, the metal or its value? If
the coin or metal was stolen before, dur
ing or after the fire whose loss is it?
\yhere should suit be brought, at point
of shipment or at (destination? XL.
Iiepfy.—Unless a special contract was
made with the express company agreeing
that they should not be held liable in
case of loss by fire, they cannot plead
this calamity as any excuse for the non
delivery of the money. And if the pro
perty, such as silver coin, was indestruct
ible fpd could not be seriously damaged
by fire, but was stolen, the fact that the
fire gave the thieves the opportunity
would not exempt the carriers from their
liability even if such limitation was in
the contract. The goods were not lost
by fire, but by robbery at the time of the
fire.
Suit against the express company may
be brought wherever process can be law
fully served.
A Fatal Dose.—On Sunday evening,
in Philadelphia, a young man who was
a drug apprentice in the pharmacy of
Mr. Spannagel, No. 1607 Ridge avenue,
during the temporary absence of his em
ployer, mixed up a dose of medicine
which he took for a cold from which he
was suffering. He was soon taken ill,
and died before medical attendance could
be summoned. From the effects on the
nqpilf pf the eyps of the depeespd, whioh
were dilate, and from ether effects on
tbe system, it is presumed ha took tinc
ture of aoomite root.
Wild themes of Expenditure.
The condition of affairs in Congress is
extraordinary. The Secretary of the
Treasury reports that on the 1st of Janu
ary the public debt had been increased
four millions for the expenditures of the
preceding month, and again on the 1st of
February there is another large increase
of the debt. The Committee of Ways
and Means are holding daily sessions in
which measures to accommodate the reve
nue to the expenditures are anxiously dis
cussed. In addition to the monthly in
crease of the debt, the Treasury is largely
in arrears to the sinking fund. While
this committee is thus deliberating how
to increase the taxes to meet current ex
penses, and cut down expenditures, and
stop the increase of the national debt,
another committee of the same House is
maturing a bill directing the Secretary of
the Treasury to indorse the bonds of Tom
Scott’s bankrupt wild-cat railway com
panies to the amount of one hundred and
twenty-five millions of dollars, and to pay
the interest thereon, six and a quarter
millions of dollars, annually, in gold, for
forty years!
Another committee of the same House,
with a knowledge of the sore straits and
embarrassment of the Treasury, and of
tho necessity for increased taxation to
keep the wheels of government revolving,
proposes to begin the improvement of
the Ohio river, from Pittsburg to Cairo,
by artificial works, and dams, and other
contrivances, which, if practicable, will
cost $150,000,000. But even the Scott
subsidy and the Ohio improvement are
eclipsed by a series of resolutions to be
reported to the Senate, which proposes
that in addition to the ordinary appro
priations for rivers and harbors, there
shall be appropriated a sum adequate for
Jhe beginning of tbe following Darned
works, to complete which will cost at the
lowest sums affixed:
The improvement of the Mississippi
river from St. Paul to New Orleans,
*100,000,000.
Mouth of the Mississippi, $10,000,000.
The construction of the Wisconsin,
Fox River, and Hennepin canals, $25,-
000.000.
The improvement of the Ohio river,
$100,000,000 to $150,000,000.
The improvement of the Kanawha
river, and the completion and enlarge
ment of the James river canal to Rich
mond, $125,000,000.
The excavation and other improve
ment of the Tennessee river from its
mouth to its headwaters, and the con
struction of a canal over the mountains
of Georgia and Alabama, and its exten
sion by slack-water navigation to Sa
vannah and Mobile, $100,000,000 or
more.
The improvement of the Missouri
river to its headwaters, including making
navigable the Yellowstone and other
livers, $75,000,000, or double that sum.
Th»* improvement of other rivers and
construction of other canals to be added
to this scheme, $150,000,000.
While the Secretary of the Treasury is
unable to meet current expenses, has to
borrow money to pay the interest on the
public debt, while the Committee of
Ways and Means are devising new taxes
to enable the Secretary to pay his way,
the Senate is proposing to begin now the
appropriations necessary to commence a
series of internal improvements which
are to cost, at the lowest estimate, $300,-
000,000. Where is the money to come
from to begin even this stupendous series
of jobs, of which, except the improve
ment of the ^mouth of the Mississippi
river and perhaps one other work, every
item proposes a waste of money on im
practicable and useless schemes ?—Chicago
Tritnne.
Schemes of the Radicals.
A Washington correspondent of the
Baltimore Gazette,in his letter describing
the proceedings in the House on Tuesday
last, says:
“The carpet-baggers, under the leader
ship of Ben Butler, threw off the mask
to-day, and revealed their real object in
securing an amendment of the rules. It i§
not the civil rights bill which is near to
their hearts, but the legislation outlined
by their caucus committee for securing
control of the electoral vote of the South
and of defeating the will of the people at
the polls. Among other measures look
ing to this end is a bill empowering tbe
President to suspend the writ of habeas
corpus at will, and a bill re-enacting the
iron-clad oath. The latter measure is de
signed to deprive the Democrats of their
majority in the next House, as a large
number of the members elect from the
South will be unable to take this oath.
The Clerk, however, is bound to receive
the credentials of these gentlemen, and
upon the Speaker, when elected, devolves
the duty of swearing them in, and he
may then elect to administer the qualified
oath. Then, according to the Louisiana
prscedent, Phil Sheridan may put in an
appearance with Federal troops at his
order, and eject the Democratic mem
bers. No one can doubt, after the ex
pressions of the Radical majority to-day,
but that this, and even more revolution
ary proceedings will be resorted to by the
carpet-baggers and their allies, in order
to maintain their supremacy. The fact
that the civil rights bill is a mere cloak
for partisan legislation was»demonstrated
to-day, when the rules, having been
amended, the House adjourned, pending
Butler’s motion to go the Speakers table
and take up that bill. Mr. Sener, of Vir
ginia, deserves credit for the manly stand
he has taken and maintained against
usurpation and wrong, while Mr. Lowndes,
of Maryland, who went against the civil
rights bill last session, has been whipped
into the Radical traces, and voted yester
day and to-day uuitormly with the ex
tremists.
Tilton’s Testimony and its Recep
tion.—The Brooklyn Eagle of Monday
afternoon gives the following description
of Mr. Theodore Tilton’s first day’s ap
pearance upon, the witness stand, and the
manner in which his testimony was re
ceived :
Mr. Tilton spoke in measured, mod
erate, distinct and unbroken words. His
manner was very grave, and was devoid
of gesture. A Tiltonianism of inflection,
and a toss back of the head, characteristic
of his public address, would now and then
be noticed. The audience listened in
tently. Mr. Beecher looked Mr. Tilton
square in the face with such a glance of
wonderment as it is difficult to express.
Mrs. Beecher looked at him freezingly,
sneeringly, and at the point where Mr.
Tilton said that Mr. Beecher did rot
have “a satisfactory wife,” Mrs. Beecher
fairly laughed. Mrs. Tilton looked
straight at her husband from the first to
the end of his story. Her eyes were on
fire with anger, and her face was set in a
sternness which was noticeable for the
first time in the trial. Mrs. Shearman
and Mrs. Field bit their lips as if they
had been caught in a scrape, and must
listen to the most primitive expressions,
whether they wanted to or not.”
Proposed Change in Duties on Sugab
—Taxing Petroleum.—The Washington
coiiespondent of that excellent commer
cial journal, the New York Bulletin, says:
“Mr. Sheldon, of Louisiana, proposes
to demand, in the Committee on Ways
and Means, that an increased duty be put
on sugar, and that the classifications be
changed, instesd of a duty on coffee. He
proposes to raise $8,000,000 that way.
Messrs. Kelley and Waldron favor the
scheme, and Messrs. Foster and Roberts
probably favor it too.
“There is a strong effort here to put a
tax on petroleum, on the ground that it
can easily stand taxation, because it is
three times as cheap as any other oil.
The simplicity of the manner in which
such a tax could be collected is in its
favor. The proposition £s to bond the
pipes leading to the railroad cars in
which the oil is carried away, ^he trou
ble tliat is usuaily experienced in draw
backs on exports is a difficulty in the
Way, but the Southern Congressmen
rather like the idea of taxing petroleum,
instead of collecting the internal taxes
from whisky and tobacco.”
The Civil Rights Bill.
I It is the desperate expedient of ft reck
less party to rebuild its sinking fortunes
on the ruins of the public peace and or
der. This seems to be the almost uni
versal opinion of the country, and gives
the public judgment of the utter de
pravity of the Radical party. That
wicked faction is confident that the folly
of the negroes in pushing their preten
sions to social intercourse aud equality
under this bill—stimulated by the active
intrigues of their ptrtisans scattered
through the South—and the harrassments
of vexatious suits aud persecutions—fines
and forfeitures, must result in a general
social disturbance throughout the South,
which can be used, not only in overthrow
ing the remnant of local government
here, but in reviving throughout the
North and West the sectional distrusts
and hatreds which were ihe outgrowth of
the civil war. It is to be a grand experi
ment in national irritation all round, and
there is great danger that it may succeed.
If so. tyranny and corruption, synonv
raous with Radicalism, take a new lease
of life, and it may be that free govern
ment will be lost for generations, if not
forever. The only weapon of self-defence
left in our hands is simple—stern self-
possession and endurance. The issue can
depend on the South alone, because in
the other sections there are scarcely ne
groes enough to constitute an appreciable
element of agitation—not enough to form
combinations to provoke disturbances and
riot, or to keep each other in countenance
in fomenting schemes of public disoider.
The whole issue of this grand experiment
iu public mischief, therefore, rests upon
the South; and our people should in
stantly be informed, counselled, advised
aud warned in relation to this diabolical
plot and the supreme importance of foil
ing and defeating it by a mighty effort of
self-possession. The Governor, and the
Legislature of Georgia, now in session,
should immediately take measures to im
press the people with the magnitude and
delicacy of this crisis, and let the foment-
ers of civil disturbance also know, in very
plain terms, that their schemes are appre
ciated in their true purpose and value.
The trial will not be a long one. The
negro himself would soon learn the folly,
futility and emptiness of the social equal
ity enforced by Congress. A little ex
perience will tire him, and every com
munity will find that it can easily punish
and repress troublesome people, without
violating a single requirement even of
the civil rights bill. Where, as with us,
every negro must draw his subsistence
from the whites, the latter, if they find
him impudent, offensive and disorderly,
can plead with him through his bowels.
They can let him alone severel}’. They
can never interfere with him in the
smallest degree to his great sorrow.
Then, again, it is to be hoped that
well-tempered negroes, seeing the great
perils of the situation to their own in
terests, will do their best to restrain of
fensive demonstrations which might re
sult in violence, and co-operate fully with
whites who wish to maintain friendly re
lations between the two races and pre
serve the public peace unimpaired. The
whole of this business will require great
caution—great address—gTeat self-re
straint—great good sense—and we sum
mon the people, one and all, to be up to
their best behavior aud keep out of this
Radical trap.—Macon Telegraph.
(Sift (fonrert.
Whole Tickets. $50. Halves, $25. Tenth, or each
Coupon, $5. Eleven Whole Tickets, $500.
For Tickets, or information, address
TIIO. E. BKAMLETTE,
Agent aud Manager, Louisville, Ky., or
R. R. BREN,
21 Bu i St. aud Screven House, Savanuah, Ga.
dec!S-MAF&wtfeU23
PUBLIC LIBRARY OF KENTUCKY.
Death of iiov. Bramlette—Action of the
Trustee**—A Successor Appointed—No
3fore Postponements—Drawing Certain
February 27 th.
j At a meeting of the Trustees of the Public
Library of Kentucky, Jan. 16, 1875, it was re
solved that C. M. Briggs, Esq., who under the
late Hob. Thos. E. Bramiette was the real busi
ness manager of the gift concerts already given in
aid of the Public Library of Kentucky, be aud he
is hereby author zed to take the place made
vacant by the death of said Bramiette, in the
management of the affairs of the fifth and last
gift concert, ana that the drawing announced for
February 27. Ib75, shall positively and nn*quivo
tally take place on that day without any further
postponement or delay on any account whatever.
R. T. DURKETT, President.
John S. Cain, .Secretary.
The Demon Business.
The leading tragedian at our little
theatre is named Hammer, and he has
gone away now on a sick leave. They
produced, a week or two ago a piece en
titled “The Demon of the Hartz,” and
Mr. Hammer assumed the character of
the demon. Tbe young man upon wliour
devolved the duty’ of opening aud shut
ting the traps was also instructed to flash
crimson flames up through the hole at
intervals, for the purpose of creating the
impression that the infernal regions were
immediately beneath the stage, aud were
in a condition of terrific and perpetual
combustion. He was somewhat inexperi
enced, but he seemed to pluuge along well
enough for a while. Iu the third act,
Mr. Hammer, the demon aforesaid, had
to go down the trap, and his purpose
was to descend to eternal August with a
sardonic laugh and a fiendish smile upon
his forbidding countenance. The young
man below concluded that if there ever
was a time when a display' of diabolical
fire-works would be appropriate it was
when the head of the demon was coming
home after a hard day’s work; so when
Mr. Hammer was about half-way down,
and was laughing his very sardonic best,
the pyrotechnical person lot off half a
bairelful of red fire, in which the home
ward-bound Spirit of Evil was entirely
enveloped. The rest of the way he went
down suddenly, and then they laid him
under the fire-plug while the water
played on him. As soon as he was ex
tinguished, he rose up and sought the
fire fiend, and at the conclusion of the
encounter the latter was carried round to
Dr. Stone’s office on a stretcher by' the
carpenter and the low comedian. Mr.
Hammer then went home to see what his
wife would think of him without eye
brows or hair, and then he retired to the
country for a few weeks, until they grew
again. “The Demon of the Hartz” has
been permanently withdrawn.
Hereafter all communications relating to the
5fh (’oncert should be addressed to the under
signed, and I pledge myself that the drawing
shall come oft February 27th, or that every dollar
paid for tickets shall be returned.
C. M. BRIGGS, A<reut and Manager,
Room 4 Pablic Library Building, Louisville, Ky.
jan22
^almtinrs.
VALENTINES !
AT
Estill’s News Depot.
A Large and AAried Stock of
VALENTINES
Is now open at the above place, comprising
SENTIMENTAL,
FANCY AND COMIC
VALENTINES.
—ALSO —
VALENTINE CARDS.
PERFUMED SACHETS, &c
febl-3w
ST. VALENTINE’S DAY
FEBRUARY
14th, 1875,
IS COMING!
buy your
Comic and Sentimental Yalentines!
AT BATESON’S,
Corner Congress and Drayton Streets.
MASKS
Of All Kinds at
RATESON’S.
febl,3,«,S,10,13
Rewind -JHarbtofs!.
One of the pleasantest pictures in the
new “Life of the Prince Consort’ of
England is found in a letter of Men’
de ssohns. The composer was admitted
as a friend, aDd both tfie prince and the
Queen were ardent students of music:
“I must toll you,” Mendelsshon writes,
“all the details of my last visit to Buck
ingham Palace. * * * It is, as G.
says, the one really pleasant and thor
oughly comfortable English house, where
one feels a son aise. Of course I do
know a few others, but yet on the whole
I agree with him. Joking apart, Prince
Albert had asked me to go to him on
Saturday at 2 o’clock, so that I might try
his organ before I left England. I found
him alone, and as we were talking away
the Queen came in, also alone, in a
simple morning dress. She said she was
obliged to leave for Claremont in an
hour, and then suddenly interrupting
herself, exclaimed: ‘But goodness, what
a confusion!’ for the wind had littered
the whole room, and even the pedals of
the organ, with leaves of music from a
large portfolio that lay open. As she
spoke she knelt down and began picking
up the music; Prince Albert helped, and
I too was not idle. Then Prince Albert
proceeded to explain the stops to me, and
she said that she would meanwhile put
things straight.”
The Dower-R^GEr of an Adultbess.—
The suit of Samuel Shiffen against Thos.
Pruden was brought to enforce an agree
ment by the defendant to purchase cer
tain property, bought by the plaintiff
from John G. Dietz. The defendant re
fused to take the title because Mrs. Dietz
had not conveyed her right of dower.
Mr. Dietz brought a divorce suit against
his wife, nnd she made counter charges.
The referee found both guilty', and on
that ground the divorce was refused. The
plaintiff claimed that under the wording
of the statute “whenever in a suit for di
vorce brought by the husband, the wife
shall be convicted of adultery, she shall
not be entitled to dower,” Mrs. Dietz had
lost all right of dower. The Superior
Court, general term, Judge Speir giving
the opinion, holds that only divorce de
prives the wife of her dower-right, and
gives judgment for the defendant.—Al.
T. Tribune, 1st.
Magdalens Taking the Black Veil.—
A New York letter says: “Eight addi
tional magdalens have taken the black
veil at the House of the Good Shepherd.
They left the altar with crowns of thorns
on their heads, and will be required to
rise half the year at a quarter to four,
and the other half at a quarter past four;
bedtime at nine. The only literary stim
ulus their minds will experience will be
prayers, learning daily a sentence of
Scripture, the recitation of matins, and
the listening at dinner to a lecture read
from a book, and to a chapter from the
role. Solitary meditations, work and
short recreations under supervision are
to fill the rest of the time.”
WHAT MORE APPROPRIATE
Christinas Present
—FOR—
Wife, Sister or Mother,
—THAN A-
WHEELER & WILSON
■i the as *-■
ROYAL
INSV K A N€E(DMPAN¥
ti>t —fni ;•» ufi'iy
Liverpool & London
ANOTHER
OPPORTUNITY
TO INVEST A FEW DOLLARS, WITH POSSI
BLE RETURNS OF THOUSANDS, IS OFFERED
BY THE POSTPONEMENT OF PUBLIC LI
BRARY OF KY. TO THE 27th OF FEBRUARY,
NEXT, OF THEIR FIFTH AND LAST CON
CERT AND DRAWING. THE MANAGEMENT
ARE PLEDGED TO THE RETURN OF THE
MONEY IF THE DRAWING SHOULD NOT
COME OFF AT THE DAY NOW APPOINTED.
One Grand Cash Gift $250,000
One Grand Cash Gift 100,000
One Grand Cash Gift 75,000
One Grand Cash Gift 50,000
! One Grand Ca^h Gift 25,000
5 Cash Gifts, $20,000 each 100,000
10 Cash Gifts, 14.000 each 140,000
15 Cash Gifts, 10,000 each 150,000
20 Cash Gifts, 5,000 each 100,000
25 Cash Gifts, 4,000 each 100,000
30 Cash Gifts, 3,0(4) each 90,000
50 Cash Gifts, 2,000 each 100,000
100 Cash Gifts, 1,000 each 100,000
240 Cash Gifts, 500 each 120,000
500 Cash Gifts, 100 each 50,000
19,000 Cash Gifts, 50 each 950,000
CAPITAL AND ASSETS,
$15,000,000 Gold.
Losses adjusted and paid here nffhoat refff-
ce to Home Office. ' fails
JNO. If. McLaren, Manager.
WiC.COSEM’Co
AGENTS.
febS-tf
FIRE! MARINE!! LIFE!!!
INLAND!!!!
G erman American insurance co.
1’OI.AK A KEITZE, Agents.
M
M
G
M
AN H ATT AN FIRE INSURANCE CO.
POLAK & KEITZE, Agents.
OBILE UNDERWRITERS. *
POLAK & REITZE, Agents.
REAT WESTERN (Marine) INSURANCE CO
POLAK & REITZE, Agents.
ORRIS’EUROPEAN SAMPLE EXPRESS.
POLAK & REITZE, Agents.
ROYAL
Canadian Insurance Co.,
OF MONTREAL, CANADA
Capital, *<>,000.000 (Five Million)
DIRECTORS.
EUGENE KELLY, of Eugene Kelly & Co.
RICHARD BELL, Agent Bank of Montreal.
DAN’L. TORRANCE, President Ohio <fc Miss.
Railroad.
DAVID DOWS, of David Dows & Co.
JOHN D. WOOD, of Wood, Pay son & Colgate.
POLAK A REITZE, Agents.
feb2-2w
Jurtcls aud Restaurants.
1SRESA AN’S
156, 158, 160 & 162
BRYAN STREET,
SAVANNAH, GA.
'IMIE Proprietor, having completed the necoe-
I. Bary additions and improvements, can now
'.ffer to his guests all the comforts to be obtained
it other Hotels at less than
HALF THE EXPENSE!
A RESTAURMT
ON THE
Several new and elegant styles in
GOLD AND PEARL
JUST RECEIVED.
OFFICE:
New Masonic
dec!4-M, W&F*fc wtf
Temple.
$fcdmnal.
VIRGINIA
BUFFALO SPRINGS.
A MONG the most remarkable cares upon
record, whether by medicineor mineral wa
ter, are some made by these waters in diseases of
the KIDNEYS and BLADDER, in DYSPEPSIA,
in DISEASES PECULIAR to WOMEN, more es-
l**cially in Leucorrhea. They have accomplished
the mos! gratifying results in GOUT aud RHEU
MATISM where dependent upon uric acid in the
blood. In CHRONIC GONORRHEA, SECOND
ARY SYPHILIS, Gleet, and ALL KINDRED
diseases, they are regarded by all medical men
conversant with their effects as decidedl> supe
rior to any remedy in the range of medicine or
among the mineral waters of the country.
They are put up for sale in cases containing
one dozen Half Gallon Bottles, delivered at the
Scottsbarg Depot of the Richmond and Atlanta
Air Line Railroad at $6 per case. Address,
THOMAS F. GOODE, Proprietor,
Buffalo Lithia Springs,
dec21-M4Th4m Mecklenburg County, Ya.
Sorsfs aud PuUg.
100 Head Horses and Mnles.
O N hand and 311st received from Kentucky and
Tennessee, Draft, Buggy and 1 lantation
Stock, fifty (50) of which received on consign
ment, to be sold without reserve and regardless
of cost. We will &lso take November paper with
approved city acceptance.
HEN LEIN A BAR, Dexter Stables,
jan22-lm Cor. West Broad and York streets.
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED
FROM KENTUCKY,
ONE HUNDRED AXD TWENTY-FIVE MULES
AND HORSES.
S UITABLE for pUntatkn we, that we win wQ
on liberal terms for cwh, or November time,
with*approved city acceptance.
jaulMf HENDRICKS * DARN ALL.
EUROPEAN PLAN
Has been added, where guests can
AT ALL HOURS
Order whatever can he obtained in the market.
ROOMS, WITH BOARD,
$2 00 PEE DAY.
Determined to be
Outdone by None,
All I ask is a TRIAL, confident that complete
satisfaction will he given.
JOHN BRE8NAN,
PROPRIETOR.
febl9-tf
^Utiiwry ©oodji.
At Cost for Thirty Hays
uon CASH !
I AM now offering all my Stock of MiHinery
Goods, consisting of
PATTERNS,
BONNETS, HATS,
SILKS, VELVETS.
FANCY PLUMES,
BIRD FEATHERS.
FLOWERS, RIBBONS,
FURS AND CAPE,
at New York cost, to make room for my Spring
Stock, for cash.
I have jast received a large and beautiful as
sortment of Imported TIES, for Ladies, the
handsomest ever brought to this market.
A full line of Ladies’ and Misses HOSIERY al
ways on hand, of the best brands.
Convisier KID GLOVES iu all sizes, the best
Glove in the market.
My line of Ladies’ UNDERWEAR, made of
the best Muslin aud Cambric, is always complete,
and the best assortment to be found in the city.
Real Hair Switches, Hair Ornaments, and Fancv
Goods.
keep constantly on hand a large assortment of
Ladies’ and Gents' Silk Umbrellas in ail sizes.
Ladies, call and examine my stock. You will
find it the most complete in my line of goods in
the city. Yon will get the beat quality of goods
at low prices.
H. ۥ HOUSTON,
feb3-tf 22 Bull street (Masonic baikftug).
liquor, grrr, Air, &r.
HEADQUARTERS
—ANIY—
Bottling Establishment
-FOB—
Lager Beer, Ale and Porter.
(Established 1S52).
BERG NEK A EXGEL’S CELEBRATED PHILA
DELPHIA LAGER BEER,
Known as the best used in the South, in kegs at
wholesale.
P HILADELPHIA Beer, Pilsen Beer, Milwaukee
Beer, Cnlmbacher Beer, Rochester Beer,
Massey’s Philadelphia .Vie, Kitzinger Beer. Mas
sey’s Philadelphia Porter, bottled expressly for
family use, restaurants and shipping. Orders
from the country and city promptlv attended to.
G. Ch. GEMUNDEN,
Wholesale Dealer in Lager Beer, Ale and Porter.
novll-MAWly
FRESH LAGER,
FROM THE LION BREW ERY, CINCINNATI,
PI. SANDERS,
nov23-tf Cor. South Broad A Jefferson Sts.
©as littiag.
JOHN NIC0LS0N,
Gas & Steam Fitter,
Plumber and dealer In Gas Fixtarca,
DRAYTON STREET,
SECOND DOOR ABOVE BROUGHTON.
Houses fitted with Gas and Water, with all the
latest improvements, at the shortest notice.
WM. M. MeFALL,
Practical number and Oaa
N*. 40 Whitaker MtiwM,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Bath Tube, Water Ckweta, ChanddfeM -|—1'ilki
Tlxtarea of every daeer'
Jobbing done at the t
Mm