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THE DAILY
Thcbdai Moi'vnco
—*r" '■
\~ ' ?
yjjpf JttTdraan's touch-dons tar all
June US
lion. Clement L. VilUadifl
The sudden death and tragic (all of
thia di Anguished Tribune of the peo
ple—a odl account of which haa boon
mlde T» column to-d»y will hefaand
mind throughout ths Crdicd Buta*. *» ■*" *•"» «**>■ » “ the
mind through
He hod figured prominently in public
affair* for • number of yean. An »
1 coder—end he ooald be nothing eiee in
uuy party association with whieh he act
ed—he wen not always either discreet
or safe. He wee generally, however,
bold eud defiant. These were the qual
ities which won the hearts o( tin* people,
end bound them to him “with hooka of
steel.” Wo know him lung,intimetoly end
well. His social qualities were lure and
attract 1 ve.
lute “Now Departure" Duyton
Sto, about which so much Las
said and written, wo rogardod as
him more as a pobliaaJ
XU tJS^^Btratcpi.- m.-vi-iiiriit, than assn abandoD-
KIK^W-i'-'-t of any of Ins principles.
Tin- lending fcatoro in tln.t pronuncie'
iiiff niouto M ils Ibo acceptation of I ho now
Sy^U.l'ui>' r .:i. ihc Constitution of the
funHB^to'nil- ‘I v ' ■-. as -/• f<i,h, purls of tlie or-
■HH^Han.c hot. II Lucw well ti e |s.«. 1 and
1,1 l-mnu-ge. as a. II as III,, true
The M inclnxin H/tiuC
is the '.rctujio eteriut," The devlant-
tiou tlist he eonaiib-rtsl those Amend*
In,*lils us ile/'tdo wilhotll other q inllgea*
lio-t. .-e./s,f*s the ides fo •* 'i • III’*fit to
lie eonsidcred its looking Imhu, llieui ss
if. /,o s, or rightful jairla of the 0-
positions of high trust, end tlmy should
never forget that hie principles point ont
not only the path, but the mad—the only
road to riotory In 187H amt with it a glo-
rioea rescue of the liberties of the ooun-
1*7 _
“The Cooslog Revolution.”
lie llnil . it imy, his r solution upon
this jaunt, on c.’nse scrutiny sud oriti
e tlit, was muuh leas ubj.-ctiouabl«s
the olio finally adopt, ,1 h* ''* ohioCon-
veution. The one otf.-i „u liy him was
rejected In this Convention, where
v .« iM’ie.l hi. ; ^ part on the public
*»!«•'*. li both in ki* plntform and
I I* •’ rtired nominee.
Our object is neither eulogy nor coo-
mire. Hw career in life, brilliant
ho* been, an a Jnwyer and Legislator, fa
over. It has been brought to a close most
unexpectedly find in a manner moat lu
men table.
Whatever may bars l*ccn hia
either in judgment or action, he - was a
moat ardent friend of Constitutional lib
erty, and we doubt not if hia daya had
been prolonged when the great struggle
comca, aa it will come, between the Im
perialists and the ^ouhtiLitioauliatfs
throughout the length and breadth of
the Union, he would have been found
doing valiant service in the cause of the
people, u:nl in defeune of those princi
ples upon which ia baaed the entire sys
tem of American free institutions, and
upon which alone those institutions can
be maintained and |ierp< tuuted.
Honor to hia memory and peaoe to hia
ashes.
In What Does True
menr t'onsfst? Aud
Who Should ,, **ntce Their
Steps!
Mr. Jefferrm, in his first inongurol,
after setting forth what he deemed “t^e
essential priro-ipluHof our Government,"
(as (pioted in full, the other day by the
New York World and n* published in
Tint Si’s) said:
“They should be the creed of our
political faith - the te.ii of civil instruc
tion—the touchstone by which to try the
services of those we trust, and should we
wander from them in moments of error,
or alarm, let us hasten to retrace our steps,
and to regain thoroad winch alone lends
to/wvKY, liberty ami safety."
These words, at that time, ware most
“fitly apoken," and staud now “as apples
of gold in pictures of silver." They
proclaim the great truth that real pro
gress in Government consist* is reaction,
as well as in action—in retrograde, as well
os forward movements. It often requires
the “ rtimeing of their *tej)s H by those
w ho “in m"moots (/ error or alarm have
wmubmi" from the “essential princi
ple " of constitutional liberty.
If then, Aliy portion of the Republi
can parly, nt lies time, (l)p they called
Oonsmnfivcs. i l*\ miy . *lu»r mune) have
become conviuceil that in “moments of
alarm" in the “Reconstruction" process,
they wandered from any of the “essen
tiid principb we say they lielong to u
class which «!••» -Id “re race their siejts.**
If any of the people, whether
called Rcpublicanb or Dcmourats, gee
that, "in moments of ermr,” they gnvr
hiuicIion to Uicwmraa which lead to Urn
limit mining of the t at ire system of our
free institutions, “IV w >rld's beat hope/'
and to the erccHirn f a conaolidafod
empire iu their Mead f these, also, we
s«y, day, by every coiieidt* ration of pa
triotism and love of country, ought t* >
“hasten to retrace their stejis, ”
If those “New Departure" Democrats
of Pi Ousylvania—who “iu mouenis" of
great tempUtiou, in their thirst for
otlioe, have recently
from the true faith *aod
their own words when Ut iy fall down ami
worakyfxd tho iuo«f* ni Baal (deofar-
ing, in their humiliation, that the most
monstrous usurpation* in Ihc ouuala of
history, weie all done “in the mannei
and by the authority constiintioually ap-
pointed) have not Wild 4 if** thrir minds
dcid**mMy to !.artg» rigui
toi If ». U M J*„ t
•nit" i i. Ii mI*. .lie
dutuiuiiioii . aia.-v • 4 f tbfif d yyC
and to leave it, as an min rus^c*, lor
their children after them ; uon we as^
to them, and in all •*ariieaini*i«i i ||mtabig«
too, roust likeirixe “ha*** L- * J ***eUkoic
atejto iii t input >!*i* r • ef u *^*^1 Pm
lan^tt.. ,»• •• Mi. I. hyq
to intaOi, Lktwly *jm»< *■#+*/j). - . *W«
But, to tbo thiee millions an«l hpwords
of Democrata, now enfranebisdt in the
United KLiu-a—eoualiMitisig a majority
of the voters then
earnestness, that now is thr
last utterance which has reached us from
the Ksw Yock World. It* tone is decid
edly better than any from that quarter
yah II speak* of the great looked-for
triumph of the Democracy in 1872 as a
Revolution "—not a Revolution to be
effected by physical force, or the power
of lieyonets, as the revolutions in ten of
the present State Government* were ef
fected by the usurpers at Washington,
bat snob Revolution as that effected by
the Democracy in 1800—that is, the Rev
olution of turning bad men out i/ office
and putting good ones in their jUaces by
the liberty loving mar* at the poll*.
We taka pleasure in saying that we
like the tone of this artiole very much,
sad oommend it to oar rosilcra. It
,pwk. of a rturliomiru movouieiit on the
pwt of eertain lowlir^tepublicant. Thin
in *11 right Lot thei\ heueeforth, in
tbs language of Mr. Jen.-ron, quoted
the other daj bj the ITorif, ,.:fl by na
re-quoted hi another artiole to-dar—
"litMen In retrace their
Tlria in tba rendum we wont Thin i.
the Revolution we deaire to eee taku place.
Tide it oat hope as well aa tla ir't for the
wlvation of the country. The putting
Of Lad men out of ^ilioe and the patting
of gupd m>.a, utte to tba Oonatitation,
ia ttiwtr tJMa, will be a gloriouaRerola-
tfoh.
We doubt if the extremists of the
“Beralationurj Democracy," so-called
shall tall to give this artiole of the World
a cordial endorsement The only trouble
with them will be the perplexing queetion
whether or not they be only e tab thrown
ont to the whale for the nonee. We shall
ilutie
We tofeh laxMom. "The deseenl has
Imen long, and to lovers of the Constitu
tion iijoe, painful. Uuttliere is a point
beyond which the AssMoau fieople will
not allow their lilmrtiee to be invaded,
their sufiraine law to lie violated, by any
party, under any pretext, or in the name
of any oansa, however speci<*>9 l>e-
Here that point has been reached anil
passed. The powerful wsistsess wide
by some of the ablest Republican h-ailers
to the usurpation of power by the Eicon*
tire, to the proscription of men like Sum
ner, to the abuse of patronage, to the.
refusal of a Ihqiublican caucus to permit
bills for removal of taxation to lie even
considered, and finally to the utter pros
tration of civil power at the feet of a sol
dier w ho would be dictator if the people
were as criuging and snlaairvieut as the
majority of “his faithful Senate,” proves,
we feel assured, that a large Uafy of the
Republican voters will no longer sustain
the usurpers at Washington in their as
saults ujion the rights and interests of
the people. These feeders, brave as they
may be, have not so sharply contended
against the majority, iu the face of a pro
scription never surpnaaed for bitterness,
without ample assurances of support from
the people. They are notnneu to speak
thus strongly without arousing public
attention and fixing the oonviotions -
thousands of thinking men. The meas
ures which they denounced were so extra
ordinary that only a plain exp-anre was
needed to arouse ugainst • _n deeds the
indignation of all thoe^ntful aud patri-
11,11
W1il»|fRU. TUV NEWM.
partvu uead vm,9ve-
doming wtt rou/w rr.
“Theefkfi that Breathe, awd
tVwrds <
Y AOiYft J
We beBevw the New Deporimw is at-
teriy wnu iu priurqil. and a total er
ror In pbuej, atm will no
sous for thia con notion:
now gire oar raa-
Befi
o ratio party was a <
Uoleael Flak’s Martjrrdo
A considerable hub-bub was cre
ated in and about “the llnb” last
week, all because of an application
from Janies Fisk, junior, to the
Mayor of Boston lor permission for
the 9th Regiment to serve Qod in
their uniCurms and with banners
lying and bands playing upon the
shored soil of Boston Common last
Sunday. Fisk made the application
to the Mayor; the Mayor referred it
to the Board of Aldermen, and the
Board of Aldermen got into a wrangle
over it, and there the matter hung
Are, with the impressing growing
that the Puritanic air of Boston was
not likely' to be impregnated with the
prayers and psalms of the saintly Fisk
and his pious regiment
While matters were at a dead look
is the Oity Hall of Boston, Fisk came
the sharper over the Mayor and Board,
by asking and obtaining permission
from the Governor of Massachusetts
to march his regiment through the
streets of Boston on Sunday. Sub
sequently Fisk discovered that a city
ordinance prevented the entry of any
regiment upon Boston Common with
out the consent of the Mayor. Where
upon he was compelled to renew bis
application, and it wits granted by
jicrmission of the Council. But,
afterward, such a hullaballoo whs
raided about the matter by the whole
host of the Boston saints that the
Board of Aldermen rescinded the ac
tion of the Council, and the courtesy
was withdrawn.
Fisk’s tic -.■coiiine was upon the
Mayor of Charlestown, of whom he
asked (mi-mission for his regiment to
march to that city and hold religions
services in »uv pnblio place, at the
same time expressing a preference for
Monument Square or the grounds
surrounding Bunker Hill Monument.
This request was also refused, on the
ground that a large number of Bos
ton roughs would follow the regi
ment in its march from the Hub to
Georgetown, and that would he alto
gether too much for the moral atmos
phere of the latter place.
How the matter was finally ad
justed we do not know, but the’ tele
graph has informed ns that the regi
ment did march through the
sdreet# of Boston, and hold very reli
gious services in the Boston Theatre.
There is somethiug in all this that
appeals very strongly to the rigid
righteousness of the age. The fact
that an entire regiment of men,
odloJieled by a brave and pious com
mander like Fisk, should have such
difficulty in , finding a place where
they could Mg their prayers on Sun
day with no other ostentation than
beatihg drums, shrieking fifes, thun
dering Writs* hands, flying bunners,
filming chargers and the peaceful
and pious muBic of clattering arms,
is too incredulous for belief m this
otic citizens. Tine, exposure, if nude by
Democrats at would scarcely reach
the muss Republican voters, fiat it
will re^ch them when msde by Repub
lic .u leaders so prominent sad infiuontial.
,\'e look forward, therefore, with confi
dence to a general awl overwhelming re
action against that power which bus so
misruled the country.
It is high time. Year after year Radi
haa become more daring in its ilia
regard of every constitutional obligation;
more open in its assaults upon the rights
of the people and their local self-govern
ments; more rapid in its strides towards
centralization of power; more shiiiuelees
in its defence of monopolies and con
tempt for the interests of the millions
who labor and are robbed of their earn
ings. IS tar ting with s f.di-‘ policy to
wards the South—a policy of repression,
severity, and force—instead ot that
statesman-like liberality by which u)onc
the bitterness of feeling left by civil war
oan be removed, RadtcaUam has tried
one expedient after anothor in wain.
Each measure has aroused grestor irrita
tion of feeling and ended in more con
spicuous failure; each failure has forced
the party to choose between a total re
versal of policy and the adoption of
measures still more ftarnh. Suamc to
confess that they had blundrod drove
some forward, vindictive feeling s.-me.
deeiVe for suocees others, ind pare igno
rance, misinformation and utter want of
statesmanship made many the facile tools
of dusperate demagogues. There are
men who deliberately calculated upor the
irritation and violent* which harsh um-io -
ores would provoke at the Sout i .is .1
means of reviving the war spir t al the
North and ss a pretext for resort to
more shameful abuse of power. Cuder
these inlluences Radicalism bus been
hurried forward in a mad career which,
in the nature of things, could end only
in its overthrow or in military despotism
Each new measure of tvprossiou strain .1
the Constitution still further. One afn-t
another the safegnnrds of individual li'
erty and the rights of local self-govern
ment have been brokon down. Betwee n
the Ku-Klnx hill, which empowers th
President to suspend the habeas corpu
the Demo-
end the Rnpubli-
divlded upon is r»-
oonstrootioB of tba Uoutharu Btatea. The
injnatioe, unaonstitationaUty sod gross
usurpation was beginning to he in every
section admitted, and ooaree defended,
except by arguments as weak is the
cause they were used to sustain. State
after State was rescued from the pintt
dereta, and tram Hew Hampshire to
Texss, light,
a Gnomons, oomrrmrnoskL uoar,
wss banting from the political sky. It
wss visible as the eugel [a s flame at fire
to Muses, or the flaming cross bearing
the inscription—“to hoe tifno utoaw”—in
this sign shsK thou ixmqesrl to the
ipuet Constantine. The truth that we
were freemen and not slaves, that our
[overnment was a constitutional Bepub-
ic and not a military despotism, was
by all men. We all began to appreeiate
■ ■ " U wise fore-
ihrimn'e Dcoil’s
The Printer's Devil it «<
hi creatures on «iftb—'ptag’i
printing offices bate found Gat oak. i_tus 1
He exists in every office—is commonly at six hundred, and the number of mate
unnoticed aud not esteemed. The large ye* to be tiled st emehlltiihwl nttdfon-
emoantof good hedateis.ot eppreci- ^me“nl^ toitaS^to^^lS
xng, beer- ^ n. Provinces, expect to carry
about the fifty. A gieooe at the eoesporitioo of the
the fact that the objeot our
fathers intended to saoan nad perpetu-
ate was that all general In ter seta should
be left under one oommon government,
and all local and sectional Interests
should remain with the States or sec
tions to which they belong. This was
the key stone of the areh.
When this stone was onoe destroyed,
the whole wondrous structure would fall
iu ruins. By the new departure wo sur
render this mighty principle. We say
Congress and not the States eon r.-gnlate
suffrage; that the Praridaut oan in peaoe
Huapead the writ of haiecu eorjmt, at in
other words, that Congress con, by an
sot in express violation of our Orest
Creator, force sn unwilling people at the
point of the bayonet into rebellion 01
the most abject servitude.
To escape (hie oouoloeioo, see to whet
inconsistencies we ere now forced by
Radical argnmeiita. We are eompolled
to say that our “accept the situation”
now, is hypocritical; or that our I .to op
position wan founded on error. Are a,
to fight on the old, well-marked sad se
lected line, or in the hour of victory to
ground uur arms and march prisoners,
bag and baggage, horse, foot and artil
lery, into the camp of the eoemy ? No !
will leap as loudly from the lips oi mil
lb 113 as (he red live lightning
leaps pnoa m run noiu.
If we accept the new depsrtore, we
surrender the right of local government
To exhibit how slippery a position is to
a Democrat, wo quoted on yesterday from
one of the ablest Demoeratio papers
South, the Courier-Journal of the 13th,
that it aooepted the amendments final))
ami fully, and that the “agitation for
their repeal is
StKPLT FATAL.**
<)o the next day, the 13th, it “agitatas'
the question in the following excellent
manner: “It is only by energetic local
municipalities that the current of |siwer
Till be prevented from dewing iut - on
.•cutra] channel and thus beoomiug « *.,-s-
d.ituqi flood. Indeed, the only su-mscy
or the liherties of this people lice in the
maintenance of this fundamental priwa-
plu. With it we are sufe; it it we
are exposed to the iiifin-tious of
•tad, sud he passes quietly along, bear
ing the blame of every wrong
sffioe, and Is made the subjeot of every
rude jeet. All this he bears in silence
nod with great peticnoe, no matter ho*
Eujust the reflection or abase that may
be heaped npon him.
We claim the credit of being the first
Pi notier the real merits of the Printer's
Devil, aud to promote him to a position
of respectability and prominence com
mensurate with his worth. W« bare pat
him to smiiittog in the editorial deport-
Stent, and find him a real genius. We
latwby introduce him to our readers in
the matter whieh follows. Heuoeforth
he is on our editorial staff.
supporting the
views of the
end use force whenever he plessos, mid u I noble military despotism. It ta
xple of tiie United St
rtcspoti
that of Russia, there is but a single r ep
and a narrow one. Let the next Presi
dential election pass without reaotmn
and rebuke, and that step will also be at
tempted.
We rejoice, then, that reaction seem*
sure and near at hand. We speak not as
partisans Dearer than any psrty is the
country. Higher than obligation to any
party is our duty to the republic—to that
riment of aelf-goTernment whi-h,
in a few ahort years, will either vin
dicate itself or end in failure. That it
may not fail, Radicalism must he arrested
in its mad oareer. If the reaction be
thorough it was of minor consequence
whether it camo under one bauuer or an
other. Poaasbly public opinion ought
have been so rapidly aroused that the
Republican party itself ooald have eia!
out its evil spirits; bnt the Kn-Klux 1 -ill
settles that question; it is the clutch ot
despotism upon tho throat of that parly
which will not be shaken off and a wise
Democracy has now but to invite and
welcome the aid of all houeat and putri-
otio men. A better day will dawn.—
Lawless soldiers will be dismissed from
halls of State, to make room fur
men who respect the lews and
know something of statesmanship. Po
litical freebooters will be warned to rock
other lands where Saxon love of liberty
does not forbid chronic revolution. Tin-
madness of partisanship will cool and
give place to a reasoning aud candid pa
triotism. That horrible apparition- tin
man on horseback with the naked s« ord
—visible now these six long years iu Un
political horizon, and growing ever n-111
er and more diatinot, will vanish forever.
Justice, with her equal balances, will one-
more appear. ,
Hasten the day. brave Republicans
who battle against ths wolves or pie ty tu
save liberty and justice from their jaws.
Hasten the day, staunch and patriotic
Democrats, whu can well aiTurd to forget
how long you have denounced this futal
wandered enlightened Christian ago, and could
” ub* posoihly he believed of any other
inly than -Boston, whose atmosphere
is not yet entirely relieved of the
snvory odor of frying witches. It lms
long been known that Kisk added
the virtual of a hero to his other fine
moral and intellectual qualities; but
no one, until now, ever suspected
him of -possessing in his portly
to* person any-nf the stufl'of which inar-
• A.JMtsAs.j.tv)-
<*yiic to tiqito a many r m
31 i a that hi; has certain I- ,
title clear to a place in all subsequent
editions of “Fox’s Book.”
not folly appreciate the peril to wkiob we
ally spi
are exposed. The Htatas an now almost
mere lifeless earns asm—s pray to the foul-
worms of despotism.”
Now we ask are the States always to
rl-iuaiu ,
“r.TFPLwai nncAasas,
it prey to the foul worms of despotism f
Are we never to hope for a political res
11 m otion ? God forbid I We wiah to
“■mitate," until a virtuous, intelligent
and indignant people will arias ia taoir
might ninl breathe the fresh breath of
liiu llito these "lifeless oarmuaes” and
they spriug to their feat with renewed
vigor- We wish to apeak with no donble
tongue—we wish not to worship any
TWO-FACED JAIVtm.
Wo believe when God places aa indi
ri-htal or nntion in a situation that a lie
uiinl be spoken or acted to save Ufa,
th n tin- time is come whan that indi
vidual or nation should die.
We hear much said about poUcy. Pol
icy. Policy is bnt
ANOTHER NAHS FOE DEC IT.
It has destroyed more man aud nations
■nan it ever saved. It is only the false
homage paid to virtne by vies. It is
easier to he than seem to be. If Radi-
cali-un is true, let ns "accept the situa
tion'' ia good faith ; if false, let os make
no Dew departure, lint fight it boldly to
the hitter end. We are told by the hi;
■ at uh'Viprit.y that tim end never juatil
tin- iu--aiis. However noble the end, it
should be .cirrifieed when domauded by
truth, justice and lienor.
V Screven e»unity cnrreHi-ondetit of the
Aug .it* Chronicle »od Sentinel, ssye:
I have been growing the staple for years,
. , - - - ml *5*
■PHU
Join hands both, in on- vigor
one and resolute effort, net for this portv
or for that, bnt to arouse the people 1 >f
this land to a sense of their danger n uU
their duty. Bring it to a vote whether
the "peace” which we are promised shall
he such aathe Czar gave to Warsaw —
Bring it to a vote whether free America
means to build up thirteen Irelands be
tween the Potcmao aud Ohio aud the
Onlf. Let it beat onceadjuilgod whether
all the industry of the land shall be at
the mercy of a few monopolists, and all
ita Ubertles at the merev of a few dema
gogues and one soldier.—JIT, F. WorUt
Sigalttcaacc ef the New Hamp
shire Election.
In closing sn article on the result in
New Hampshire, the New Tor* Evening
Post (Radical) says:
" The significant part of this somewhat
curious condition of afikire is that it has
been produced by s Legislature which
attains a clear workinfransjurity of tueu
sod ihust confess that the preset
1 the
13 are nmdc: hut so neu-j\ fiid he * ^o voted twice lor 'Mr. Liuooln for
'*f 'll- '' -laulnni mirl /rip IP -WWl *
■Ids oei-ii r.-omdent, and for General Pruul
ved his 11888; who supported the, Republican
' party in every election until ”
in earnest what
wwill end, bv Goii'a
(SStf
grpe--, if lie pei
Ltft Uira fiwue himself to abound iu
all stasll oftiu«s ot knsdneaa, atton-
qn. offootwautenea*, and alt tho*
for Gofl*i Me.
ag q amjomyj jf hk
IP tiuu-'fhf Mr. i jkagt tatb drowns vagrant dog*.
B 1 . „ TBHL
tration rejected reformers like Mr. Weils
sod Secretary Cox, attempted to loro*
the Son Domingo scheme upon ths party,
and demanded the removal of Mr. Sum
ner to make way for a politician like
Camerou as leader of the Ssssta. The
that they
party only so long ss it is the party of
reform and honesty."
Rome Is
of roving
r r.kl prospect I have ever seen. In
first place, the freed men did nor
tend to go to work until February,
after they coiumvnaed, worked badly.
The spring wa*-on)d end wet, osusing bad
stands. The raiu throughout May, and
up to ten days ago, has produoed such a
fine yield of gross that “caffes” prefer*
the blackberry patches, the pood* 1
lakes, and his old shot gun, to the mors
im|>ortaut article, the “ht
planter* have not yet fintahed
out. t'uttou in many plaoes hi not two
inches high, and the ground covered
with grass. However, on a few planta
tions, the 0*0ps look well, and are about
os forward as usual Blooms will soon
be abundant. The oorn prospect it
much better than tho ootton. More earn
will be made, if the sseeun oontinaat
good, than any year sinoe the war. Oat-
dens are fine; vegetables of every variety
are abundant.
The Virginia Jury tivstaut whieh al.
lows jurors to tie drawn Rom one ouuuty
to serve in another ia not found te be
“altogether lovely” in its operations. A
few weeks ago s Richmond Bourt sent to
AkEindria for jurors, and beside* occu
pying them for a number of daya with
the trial of the ease, kept them locked
up for aa unusnal _
ful attempt to force them to agree
mrxxview 11 etwees two daeries, as ks-
1-OETED I1T THR Rtm’S POINTER'S DEVIL
Jhn —Sambo, what six-lit dese New De
partment Democrat.? Is dere enay dif-
fruno at ween ’em su’de trooly foil? Some
says dere isn't euny. and some say thedif-
frunoe ia wide ss dat at ween Heaben an
HelL Wf ut’n you nay about it?
Sambo W#*II, Jim, tie diffruncfi utweeu
*•01* am ilis nigg»*r look* »t n, i* ji*i de
MUA-t differenre ilcre i* utwcou me an’
E'«M.
Jim W'lmt** dat, Samlro?
Srmfm—Wby, you *«**, he i* but
*u e*t* ut de eaiuo table, aud eat* de
a*m* ting*. De ouly diiTruuce atweeu
tm i\ he eatn it fust.
Jim - I goify, H fiat’K a go.*d nn,
Y * i'm ruh* on eoiiiiubuHHe*. You
careen I* riu‘ ami jiue Rob-
MoiiVllivemi. Ho y<m tiuk de ouly dif-
if.-uce :i'M(ur« Joe llrowu ttn’Uo New Dt-
purtiiK iit llimoenit, a ho abuMe<l him mo
itodfi* tb* ••ru-li arbor, i* dat he hwuI
lowffl it »• «?
S-tmln 1 »ut’8 de only diffhiuce, Jim,
I .t I Met- »lw« eu ern. P. D.
“OUB MOTTO—VICTORY.
“ The daily True Georgiau will ftghi it
out nu the Aooepttbe Situation pint form
at »<ll hasards, at auy cost aud at ail *ea-
MtllM."
T«im i* tin* NtaDding motto of Dr.
B.trd at the h«*ui of the leatliugeditorial
cmlnimi of the “True Georgian"—so
culltnL
Aud why should it not be—ut leait for
a time ? Did he uot help to bring it
altont ? Did he not help to elect Bul-
ltH-k on it, whom he afterwards wished
might “/ l by the way title ?" Is not his,
the distinguished honor of having first to
nominate Giant for the Presidency on
it? Is he not now trying to get the
Democrats to join him upon his platform
ft• nrulo the niischie/ that he hoe done,
it- tin* vain hope that somebody else,
11 Mm t bn Maine platform will do better,
tuid saVti him and the country from de
struction V
The trouble Doctor, is not so much in
*tbe rnuu a* iu the lan 1" in this case.
Better go hack to your old motto and
\eep your “rear open." P. D.
“the departure.”
A farmer, whose oorn field wo* protected
by a oloMe, Htrong fence, found a pig in
hit field every morning. The mysteiy of
the visitor was explained at last by the
fact that a hollow, elbowed log commu
nicated with the two side* of the fenoe,
aud as soon as discovered, it wus placed
under the fence, so that both ends were
outside of the field. The next day the
farmer amused himself by watching the
puseled pig entering the log at one end
and emerging from the other, and
vering in his attempt to return to the
field. “A new departure," if he oould
have effected it, would have turned one
end bock to the oorn-side of the fence.
The Ohio Democracy have been trying
to adjust a crooked log, in order to get
into the State cornfield once more, but
we are afraid both euds are outside of
the fenoe.—Jackson Daily Democrat
So do we. P. D.
Aiweiahly will show what a hatorogane-
»o* mixture at parties and faction* M.
Thiers ha* to deal with. The Asaaathly
i follow*:
lta. Hifirel* at “Rada.” 3d. Bapab-
lanaof rerion* ahodaa M. Moaareh-
itaa inolining to Ortaaaitaa. Uh. Open
and avowed partisans ot th* Orleans tarn
for. 6th. TimilllllUta sol “
Count ol Osatbeyaad ths
Ultnmoataatata gth. b.
Finally, there are about a hundred mem
ber* who make no avowal ot poUtiaal
preferences, bat *to here, tho* for,
voted sometimm aa ane tide and enme-
timea on OOOthsr. A part of thta float
ing vote whieh, «o tavatal ennattans has
held the baiiuuwof power, ta cata by men
who are goided solely by thsir rnrnvio-
tions of light; hut by far the greetaet
number of anrlsaaifted amttihtaa « mad*
up of delegata* wkoaeinatinetsarepurely
■Utah, and who, like Mr. Mimwbar, are
waiting for something to turn op." It
i impoaaibU to state with aecuracy
the numbar of aaaeibvr* eo rap using the
different section* of the Assembly. But
imsiiliiins the sopplseaentsty eteotionx to
result asit tabtatned than will, the Jot-
lowing rough rstimata wifi be found to
opjiroxtmato very nearly to (rirrserins*
HepubtlcSDA
M Mutatit
Orimatita...
LestttaAs.
fniarfllav'
Oglethorpe Uaiversit
C+MMMJrCMMMJ<rT MX Mt Mr in A
thorp* Dnlvwttity vlli 1
•nd *bd ou WedutJtjr, Ju)>
*• follow* ;
SOUSAT MO
>omm«ncmnset 8*vinou ■
a Cburtti bjr Her. a. L i
D*clMB*tluB ot th* rntsluu.
OrmUacui by th*r*pro*>.uiti* Ut«
■label, by ll«»tr Dfovitl
OiUverMty of (j*ur«ufo
tfcMholeUra' .t rt mg faUtd—l
Georgia H’
i meettog of the 1
I Kl\e notice* I - tin
uity. food that the i rieud»
difaUj luTiled to atlmuri th
acribe for atock aud graut
urn Mo It.
rd of IHractdn of f
rd. Iirilvi thin day, I m
From the shore table, it will be ob
served that the Legitimists have
Htrongmt representation in the Assembly
and next tu them the Monarchists and
Orleenista. In the votes whieh have
tieen taken an measures looking to the
future form of government, and to the
relief of the Princes from the _
tive laws whieh subjected them to
the partisans of both House# hove thru
far acted ih unison, and have thereby
been olile to ooutrol the action of the
Assembly. This, too, they were aapebli
of doing, without the assistance of the
floating vote, although a considerable
part of that his, sometime*, been thrown
iu their fovor.
Bat whilst the friends of the tin
branch** of the royal family have anitod
for the protection of theii common inter
ests, it u not so oertain that the fusion,
of whieh so much has been said of lata,
has beau aotnally oubrummoled. It u
indeed difficult to ace bow it ia poasibl
to bring about a hearty accord between
the Legitimists, with tbeir theory of Di
vine right, and th- Orleaniata, with Un it
repeated declarations in fovor at popular
election.
Moreover, it i* cmphstinsUy
by tile opposing factions, both Imperial
ist and Republican, that the feeling of
the country at large, iu respect to “
pretensions of the Orieai-ists and
Legitimists, is by no means fairly repre
sentod by their strength in the Assembly.
There is ocrtatnly reason to beli
this is true.—-Baltimore Gazette.
A gentleman who he* been visiting the
northern pert of the county for several
-la ns yesterday that the grain
Tor several years
Mayson &
4IIANKMAL AUCTH
M£RCfri/.|
CORNER MARIETTA
AT Li AN 1
S PECIAL fottooUou giv. i i
Htuck, Ac. Cider. f*-|
urtMnptiy atteuded to. t
be Bold M ttUtAluu. M 1 •
jnnlMlw
m ih* Dlatrlrt Cuu. * .
for (ke IVorflltei it Jl>
gl«-ln U.> •• h 1
J Jtc aadergigotttl benrhj |
_ ultitmeotM AMiguee fur (•
county of Fulton, faud b ..l
LHtttrlct. w 'id hive benu j
the petition uf their Ore-.
»f Mid Df
days, L
crop* are better
yesterdev
tt tluiU fu
put The acreage in porn is be
lieved to be twioo **gr—I n atony
time ainoe the war, end* whet ia more to
the paipoae, ia m good aaoan be. A fine
rain felt Tuesday evening, and the crop
is oonaidered made.—Monroe Advertiser.
*4 PEACH! iu
(POWELI/h I
ATLAM
K EEP on hand tt
•lock of HTATlO
.e Pen*. Ink. Iiu»i»i...
ot Books, Kuitm, etc.
Flue stock of lultiuJ rttjt-
Also, 8UN0AY SOHlMJl IB
Oholcto lot of ALUUM > a.
ttdsptsd for 8onds> 8cl> -
•us sud TbsoioMu-..
bobt. u. HOWS.
HOWE & i
£MP0RTKR8 OF AUD l»i
FOREIGN AN.
XjZQCJ
SPECIAL ATTESno: I
.»*. *3, aa mm* i
c'ijrcM.w.t.
rugEMn
Li lct Court
. L OEN, 1
- ui
.oaery,
UMKT,
The Alabama and Chattanooga
Railroad.
In the Chattanooga Timet of Tuesday
we Had the following proceeding ot a
meeting held in Tuscaloosa, on Sunday,
the 18th, by the 'employees of the Ala
bama and Chattanooga Railroad :
On Sunday evening, June 18th,
targe body of^employeea assembled at the
depot and held an informal meeting.
OapL N. F. Towne was called to the
Choir, and James D. Howe was elected
Secretary,and a committee was appointed,
which drafted the following resolutions,
unanimously adopted fay the meeting :
Whereas, We the employee of the
Alabama and Chattanooga Railroad, hav
ing read with the utiuuet gratification tile
meeting of creditors of the aforesaid
road, eo tire 14th instant, therefore
That we heartily endorse
the sentiments of the aforesaid meeting.
Resolved, The* we recognise in Super
intendent John 0. Stanton a man who,
In hi* unaided abilities, has risen from
the driving of dump oart to the ehief
management of one of the most import
ant railways on the American Continent.
Resolved, That by hia previous pay
ments and his many unostentatious acta
of sympsihr sad l|h«ral kindness, Super
intendent J. C. Stanton boa won our en
tire oonfldenee and respect.
Resolved, That, although suffering
keenly for the oommon necessities of ex
istence, with tills imphoit faith in the in-
of J. 0. Stanton we
steadfastly at oar posts,
rtoogniziug no authority but hia, and
boldiug no other allegiance until oon-
viaoed contrary wise by infallible proofs.
i, A
of the
FUMERAL_MQTtOK.
Th. Mna out uqn.lDU.os at Ur. US Mr*
OaargaJ. Vsrdwr sr*ttvlMS Is ■*■! th* f*
al their loan! d*ufh<*r. LILLIE, tram Uermliaacr
at Hr*. Hare. o« Fmw.lt Hnst, *1 • o'oluch, Thi.
Morning.
QUICKEST AN i
NORTH EAK1
Via Iio ..
r | THREE doilv I
JL through from n’»*1 -
iKm r Xinrerti*r*init».
THI IXTIMIVI ttALI OF
FINE CLOTHING
ia* (Uy and night,
iM MOEOEGBB OOUME!
C. POWELL,
G. W- Atlitir, Auctioneer,
Biur Rood! Fixtures.
r WILL aall thia morning, EM InatAni, at 10 o’
clock, far cash, nil thorn hudiumi barrooin Ax-
clock, for cask, all thorn h udaomi barroom Ax-
Urea. But h u counter mirror nod all thr tricks of W. H. KING.
**" *“ ' the Oloba «ul«on, Dscutur at., opposite
— harguina mag ba axpacted.
No Oliail: -C
FROH Lol-lht -
SI. Lonis, Clnrinnai , I-
ego, C'leretaad, fil l. ,
•nd Ni--.. i
ORLY ORK .ill
Baltimore, Wimlmi.
Qnlckar time by thia r •• •
daiiona, than by sny oth- r -
whan traveliug. by making ,
dot: .
Thraafk Tlckata ah
imj ba procured al the
lantteF
iiOUTE
He.
•IS I klc
V . LiIjIL
Kimball House.
Ai*
fathe .neuter of mOJTDKelV Jr
VO.,
rttHIS la to give ootloa that I wMl aall. anhtset to
X locumbraarea, aa tha aapsrate sauRart, of Hi*.
Xoir H. Sella, one at tha portoara orBoadaao h Oo..
lianknipte,
49 Lots of Wild Land.
la ine
Hsaoae a. thala. Lodqata,*Um«i
oml rioyd. Th. oaoabara. aecttooa ana dlatrlet. of
wh ch lota coo ba aaaa at nr oOce. oonaar at Whlto.
holt and otahaiao atraat, Atlaaaa, Oaocfla. ua tha
lltt D*T *r JULY, 1871,
Ot It.-doah, 0. H , at tha an km Door of
Fulton County, tieorgl*.
TimiuH.
InoaTVlawSw W. E. HAHHORD. Xaalrr-ee.
togrity of purpose «
will still remain stei
Resolved, Thai slionld the accusation*
would-be rival* and enemies of J.
The Live Auction House
T. O. MAYSON,
NO. 11)OGIVE’S OPERA HOUSE.
Aarttoa iota totataa, Msra-g toutak.
Y LARGE larTOFDRTOOOD* XTWHOLESXLA
^Ki l'.e^nDtaoo.^t^lfo.ot Varoon aad
““tow "to—, todtort oh* Other
BnuiS*** UamT ’ sad other
uu-stama. jeaoe. Chaota. Shasta, Bohooot gklrto
and e general Hue ol Dry Qoo>U, too uuuirrons t*t
mention. Atey-A Urge lot of Household end mtohen
> iirntture and a variety of other articleu.
_ T. 0. MAYSOH,
Fr«»p. Live Auction House. *o. % DeOlre'a Opera
Soman tnaAMamr.
Joulldlt Aooaooeoc.
(k< District Cow •
tor the Northern
«l*—In H>.
A T ATIaANTA, QKOIU..
June, 1871.
The unierutgned her l-
patnuiicutse Assignet- i
Uliaing Compeny, in th. •
Jun2 l*w3w.
Lwf.rw i
> Ar»K8 FOR 8AJ.I
AthuiU. nrar thr
»d sud wrll wet- r*.,j
bfitygHi
in k*
For purticuien cell <j
JanlWlw
ful attempt to fore* them to agree upmi
a verdiot. Alexandria has rsliiifislad iu
a way that provoke* * w*U (torn th* eity
uf Richmond. The sergwut of Ih* cor
poration oourt of the fiM city
hi* apgaswtwi ou Wednesday,
with i "
and
— Me q< retaliation, that |
s enjoying the visit of a band authorities will not
mare eve □nig, hiving It chorgw two doe-
en ot the taxiing bool non am uf BM-
moad. The act opaWtod to tba Enqui
rer damgned to do as -raneh karat m it
ootid, Sfid if tt tm* prnaiptad by atfriit
•psr doss hops “oar
•end to Alsaandiia
a St-oiton prove (Hirrect, and if we are
taru> d adrift penuili-ss. tr.- will dn-l-m- i
dtth voice, with Him of old—“Now
let tit- -v-rv-oil dt*ji,< iu j-. .!-■ -, ” for ax-
have . hp- ni ueed n Y-uk.-e trick whieh
beat* the devil and all hi* hosts hereto
fore.
In tha some issue of the Times we find
th* appended paragraph:
The train which wss mint down to Tus-
coioos* to bring bock foe runway-Walw
returned on Sunday night, wiili the sol-
dies* who wsut down there, but without
other train. They alas bronjhVtjtek
OoL A B. Moe who bad been
tser up the troek at Tnaseioue*, aad wiio
was sought after by a bond of men who
E cu him with srope. Not fancying
opsntMH particularly be got oat of
HAVING TAKEN THE
•aloon No. ii,
Al. VMAMA ITSKIT,
J 1NTF.NI> Iu keup the Bete
Alep,
Wines,
Liquors,
and Cigniv
That oao bo bosski la ta* aorfeta. VtarasUlUM
bos
’ FREE LUNCH ’ •
•arraco, *ravj tar a* » Catota. t. .*Uch ^
ooa to haartllf oHmma .* /f f\ {
Joatiatf job* HoOKX
A Proc-1
GXIORG}
By Rufat B. Bull.
Uovfini..
W HEREAS, ibr-re -
the Superior Cuu t ol
of iudictineot charging Jui.
Cloud and George P- Not mu
Craur, with the crime of rail
been committed upon the b»>
In sfoid county of Cherukt-v; sl
The said Jurat * b.
and George p. McCrawr slu
hare been arrested and court'
and subsequent'v made their
torsaking therefrom, and sre i
ths dauger of the peace s.t i j,
mouUy;
Mow. therefore, in orti t
trial for tha ertmo with w Lull
Rare thought proper (o iantr «
beraby offering a rswwM ,
LAM* each, for the apprvlten*'
•aid Jamas B. Cloud, W.n. t.
Craw, atlas IaFayatte il-Ors
l'’toroki e couuty.
Given oiitler my hand .
Mate, a tho Capitol, in
Wh day of June, iu th. >..
Hundred and Hsventy- >u<
danos of the United HUU h i
hi
•y the Governor:
David O. Corrura. Beci*
Jane 18th, UT1.
t , Ifid- F-«*
.% iirtk.
bl'islAH , <*