Newspaper Page Text
s2Oll It ANNUM
groftssionnl Carts.
* j. G M ORRIS,
Attorney at Ijaw,
CONYKR4, QA.
‘ WM. W. CLARK &J. M.iPACE,
HAVE formed a partnership, and will trsnsiivt all
hii.ineas entrusted to them in the oountW. of
Junior Ifutte, Hunr.y, Gwinnett, Walton,
M^ r (8^ l0 n P aiid in the Dietriet Court of tlio United
gut*, at A want*. Special attontion given to tun
taß-ArupUir. w.w.outt,
■not. 3 if J M I>ACa ~
|{ A.. JONES,
T> B Br T 1 0 T ANARUS»
CONYEItS, GEORGIA.
.. , nr ana rad to put. up work in hi.
H h he fee's confident, from hi* knowledge
~ U i a?rorr n U-i.l«iv.
Jo 1.0 Who nuty f-or W»
JOHN S. CARROLL,
dentist,
«OVI*tUTOtf, G HOUGI A.
___ Taeth Filled, or New Teeth Inserted,in
he«t Style, and on Reasonable Term.
Offlie K.m- of R. K.i»g’“ Store.-l ltf
" "1 AMES M . LEVY,
Watchmaker & Jeweler,
East aide of the Square,
OVIMUTOX, GKOK9IA,
Where he is prepared to Repair WaUhes. Clooks
.Id Jewelry in Whe beat style. ParWetilar atten
ds given to repairing Watches injure, by in
worldnen. All work warranted.
planss tuned and repaired.
r ' ' p ßut i, WILLIAM FISIIER will
Idevote hi. SATURDAYS to Tuning
jj2jjtand Repairing Pianos. He will
,irft families in the country, and convenient
uoi ,t. on the Rad Road for that purpose. Ml.
*ng .xperieaoe will e iat)(e hitn to give .aba
fa.tion to his employers. Gbarges reasonable.
He i. permitted to refer to Presid nt Oir.
Covington, Ga., April 8, 1868. 20,f
DRS. DEALING & P^ISMGLE
HAVING associated themselves in the Prae
tice of MEDICINE and SURGERY, offer
(heir professional services to the citizens ol
Jfevton county. Tnev have opened no olii eon
the East side of the Square, (next, door to !*•
Dsw/ito’s Store,) an,’, are prepared 'o attend to
»1! mils promptly. They have also a eaietully
aeUoted assortment of the
Very Best c and i:c ine 3 ,
Mid will givo their p rg .nal attention to Con,
poun ling Prescriptions, for Physicians and
•khan.
Special attontion given to Chronic Diseases
At night Dr. Dkahi.ng will be found at his
rssid'ucs, and Dr. Pnwoi.a at his room* i,nm„-
4iat.lv over the Store of 0. il Sanouiis A Bsc
may 15, 25tf
BOOT & SHOE SHOP.
I would respectfully inform the citizens«jfej
of Covington and siirrouli ling country y
.lint lam now prepared to make to order --e*4»-
800 T S AND SHOES
•of the finest quality. As I work in Hung ~u:
til* Rest Material, I will guarantee satisiaotion.
Shop over K. King’* Store.
I and I y JOSEPH BARBER
JOSE Pil V. T I N s LE Y ,
Watchmaker & Jowcler
I. fully prepared to Repair b atches, do k*
and .lewelrv. in the best Style, at short nonce,
All Work Done at Old Prices, and Warranted.
2d door below the Court House.—stf
SADDLE AfJD HARNESS SHOP.
I would respectfully inform the
citizens of Newton, and adjoining
palglggylh counties, that I have opened a
SADDLE and HARNESS SHOP
Onnorth side public square in COVINGTON,
where 1 am prepared to make <o order, Harness
■ addle*, Ac , or Repair the same at short notiee
n in tiie best sty'e.
17 ts JAMES B i■•ko'.vn
H. T. HEN U Y,
DENTIST,
COVI GTOV, GEORGIA.
HAS ‘REDUCED HIS PRICES, so
uFc ~ "EL that all who have been so unfortu-
nate as to lose their natural Teeth
an have their places supplied by Alt, at v«ry
•mall cost,. Teeth Filled at reasonable prices,
and work faithfully executed, Office north side
of Square.—l 22tf
FI HE lASI HAME AGEMY.
VITR represent two FIRST CLASS jire In
' V alliance Companies,
The Southern Mutual
Os Athens, Gecrgia, and
The Georgia Home,
of Columbus, Georgia.
Companies which have no Superiors, and very
few equals, in the essentials of goed manage
ment, and good faith. We are prepared to take,
a:id invite the usual risks at fair rates.
J- M. Pack, ANDERSON & PACE,
W. P. Anderson. 3m2
ANDERSON & HUNTER
Are now ready for the
FALL and WINTER TRADE!
JLTcAI OPENED, a large act! well selected
stock .of
Dry a o o and. s,
of every Description,
Ready Made Clothing,
HATS & CAPS. HOOTS & SHOES,
every description of Gents’ Furnishing Goods,
groceries,
Hardware, Agricultural Implements,
And any and everything else that is ever kepi
>n a Tirst Class Store, Give us a call.—46tf
WM. H. GOODRICH y
SASH, 3LIHDS, AMD DOORS,
On hand, and made to Order.
Anguna, stfi.u Georgia
THE GEORGIA ENTERPRISE.
DR. O, S. PROPHITI
Covington (Jkougia.
Will still continue his business, where lie intend'
keeping on hand a good supply of
Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs,
Together with a Lot of
Botanic Medicines,
Concentrated Prepanalion*, Fluid Extracts. <t-e.
He is also nutting up his
Iji-voi* jMC oclictncis,
FEMALE TONIC, ANODYNE PAIN KILL IT
Ycrtniriige, Antl-IIIIIOHS I*ll!s,
and many other preparations,
|y Will give prompt attention to all orders.
rtRTKIIILtR NOTICE.
Her,-after NO MEDICINE WILL PE DELYV
ERED. or SERVICE RENDERED, except for
Ef’C Y\. Si JBL !“©a
Von nee not call unless you are prepared to
PAY CASH, for I will not Keep Rooks.
Oct. 11 1867. O. S. PROPHITT.
llnil Road Schedules,
Georgia Railroad,
E. W. COLE, General Snpcrintendcnt.
Diy P vssbngkkTrain (Sundays excepted,)leaves
Augusta at 7 am: leave Atlanta at 5 a tn ; nr
rivo at Augusta at 3.45 p m *, arrive at Atlanta «u o.uU
'' N’ioin- P \ssf.nof.r Tuatn ’.caves Augusta at 10
p.m ; leaves Atlanta at 5. W ]> in ; arrives at Augusta
at 3 00 a m ; arrives at Atlanta at 7.45 a ni.
Passengers for MiUedgeville, Washington and
Athens, Ga., must take the day passenger t rain from
Align fa and Atlanta, or intermediate points
Passengers for West Point, Montgomery, Selma,
and intermediate points, can take cither train, ror
Middle, ami New Orleans, must leave Augusta on
Night Passenger Train, at 10 ]>. m.
Passengers for Nashville, Corinth, Grand Junc
tion Memphis. Louisville, and St. Lonis, can take
either train and make elo'se connections.
TtiKorou Tickets and baggage cheeked through
to the above places. Sleeping cars on all night pas
senger trains.
MACON & AUGUSTA RAILROAD.
E. W. COLE, Gen’l Snp’t.
Knave Camak dailv at 12.40 p. m.j arrive at Mi Hedge
vilic at 4.30 p. m.;-leave MiUedgeville at b.40 a. m.;
arrive at Camak at 10.15 \. M. • t?
Passengers leaving any point on the Georgia t\.
R hv D-vv Passenger train, will make closeeonnee
tion 'at Camak for MiUedgeville, Eatonton, and all
intermediate points on the Macon * August* road,
•in«l for Macon. Putschstctp lunviiur MillftlifeY ille
at (i.45 A M., reach Atlanta and Augusta the same
day.
stOUTIT CAROLINA RAILROAD.
H. T. Peake, General Sup’t.
Sneeial mail train, going North, leaves Angnsta at
a arrives at Kingsville at 11.15 a in; leaves
Kingsville at 12.05 p ni, arrives at Augusta at <.-•>
p. m. This train is designed eapecinlly for through
f I’ll Vpi
Tlie train for Charleston leaves Augusta at 0 nm,
and arrives at Charleston at3.o pm ; leaves Charles
ton at 8 am, and arrives at Augusta at 5 p ni.
Night special freight and express tram leaves Au
gusta (Sundays excepted) at 3.50 p in, and arrives at
Charleston at 4.:i0 a ra ; leaves Charleston at ~-j0 p
in, and arrives at Augusta at 0.45 a m.
WESTERN <fc ATLANTIC R- R
Cot,. F,. lluf.beut. General Superintendent.
Dailv passenger train, except Sunday, leaves At
lanta at 8.15 am, and arrives at Chattanooga at 4.45
p m ; leaves Chattanooga at 4.40 a in, and arrives at
Atlanta at 3pm.
Niglit express passenger train leaves Atlanta at 0.45
pm' and arrives at Chattanooga at 4.10 a in ; leaves
Chattanooga at 5.50 p m, and arrives at Atlanta at
M ACON cfe WESTERN RAILROAD.
E. B. Walker, Gen’l Sup’t.
Day passenger train leaves Macon at 7.45 a UK and
arrives at Atlanta at 2 p ni ; leaves Atlanta at 8.15
a. n, and arrives at Macon at 1.30 p m.
Ni<*ht passenger train leaves Atlanta at 8.1(1 p m,
and arrives at Macon at 4.25 a m ; leaves Macon at
8.30 p in, and arrives at Atlanta at 4.30 a ni.
Hotels.
PLANTERS HOTEL.
JO (’ST A GEORGIA.
wTEWLY furnished and refitted, unsurpassed by
i > any Hotel South, is now open to the Public.
T. S. NICKERSON, Prop’r.
Kate of Mills House, Charleston, and Proprietor of
Nickerson’s Hotel, Columbia, S. 0.
United States Hotel.
ATLANTA GEORGIA
WHITAKER & BASSEEN, Proprietors.
Within One Hundred Yards of the General Passcn
get- Depot, corner Alabama and Prior streets,
A E R I C AN HOTEL,
Alabama street,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
Nearest, house to the Passenger Depot.
WHITE & WHITLOCK, Proprietors.
W. I). Wiley, Clerk.
Having re-leased and renovated the above
Hotel, we are prepared to entertain guests in a
must, satisfactory manner. Charges fair and
moderate. Our efforts will be to please.
Baggage carried to and from Depot free of charge
FARE REDUCED
AUGUSTA HOTEL.
THIS FIRST CLASS HOTEL is situated on
Croud Street, Central to the business por
tion of the City, and convenient to the Tele
graph and Express Offices The House is lar
an <l commodious, and lias been renovated anti
newly painted from garret to cellar, and the
bedding nearly all new since the war. The
rooms are large and airy ; clean beds, and the
fare ft* good as the country affords, and atten
tive and polite servants.
Chabiies.—Two Dollars per day.
Single Meals 75 Cents.
I l ope to merit a liberal share of patronage
fiom t|ie .traveling public.
Give me ji trial and judge for yourselves.
S. M. JONES, Propr-
PAVILION iiote i*.
QJiarJcston, S. C,
UOARH PEAt DAY, 83.
I i BvTrKRHSLO, Mr?.,FI. L, Bltterfieli.,
! ' Superintendent Proprietress
COVINGTON, GA., DEC. 11,18(18,
The Veil O’er Futurity.
Itv MRS. Jlf 1.1 A L. KEYES.
The flowers that deck our garden lied
Would bloom—but could not gladden,
The fragrance which their petals shed
Alas ! would only sadden.
Their bounties could not rapture eyes
That never re>t from weeping,
And never gassed in pleased surprise,
Nor closed in tranquil sleeping.
The verdant woods would he hut drear,
And e'en the streamlet, gliding
So merrily and gaily near,
Our grief would be deriding.
The cooling summer winds would bear
No healing, soothing power,
As soon would scorched Sirocco air
Revive a drooping flower.
No blessings Heaven lms ever given
Would gild for us the morrow,
If from our heart the veil was riven
Which screens all future sorrow.
\ Romance.
A Wife spends Twenty eight years in search
ing for her husband—she finds him in Cleve
land, Ohio, and comes to his home in Cin
cinnati.
One of those cases in which woman's con*
stancy, under the most trying circumstnnces, is
exhibited, came to light in this city on Friday.
The story certainly has the imprint of the
romantic more titan tiie reality, and borders
close upon the imaginative; yet the manner in
which the facts were told by the two interested
parties clears the mind of nil doubt, and seems
to stamp it with tmth. The circumstances, as
related to nte are substantially as follows:
In the beginuing of 1840, Henry Leffingwell
was a [well to-do mechanic, liviug near the
suburbs of London, England. In the month
of March, of that year, a larceny was commit
ted near his residence, and circumstances point
ed to him as the perpetrator. He was arrested,
exam it el before one of the stipendiary limgis
ratis, and fully committed for trial. A month
after, he was convicted and sentenced to hard
labor in the penal colony of Australia, for a
period of ten years; and in less titan a week’s
time thereafter, he was on his way to the far
off land. His devoted wife, who all the time
firmly believed in her husband’s innocence, at
once made preparations to follow and remain
near him during his confinement, so that she
might be the first, wlien his ticket of leave
came, to cheer him with g-od counsel, and
comfort him with wifely love.
The ship containing the convict arrived safe,
and her cargo of living human beings was at
once transferred to the Govei nnien t work houses.
Not so, however, with the ship upon which
Mrs. Leffingwell embarked. \\ lien about half
way upon her journey the vessel encountered a
fearful storm, and, after buffeting the waves for
two days, foundered arid went do-vn, the crew
and Mrs. Leffingwell barely escaping upon n
raft hastily constructed when it was found that
the ship could not be saved. After an expo*
sure of several days, they were picked up by
the American ship North Wind, bound from
New York to China, where Mrs. Leffingwell
was at length landed, only to find herself fur
ther than erer from her destination, and with
no immediate prospects of reacning it. After
several months of patient watching and wait*
ing, she was enabled, through the kir.d offices
of the American Consul then residing at Yeddo,
to procure passage to Cuba, whence the pros
pect of reaching Australia would be much
improved. Passing over a space of a year and
a half, in which Mrs. Leffingwell passed thro'
many scenes calculated to try firmer resolutions
than hers, but through which she clung to her
resolve with true English obstinacy, she finally
found herself on the shores of Australia, but
as much at a loss concerning the exact locality
of her husband’s whereabouts as she would be
of a needle for which she was hunting in a
hay mow.
She persevered, however, but four long
years passed away before she was enabled to
obtain the slightest trace of her husband, from
the fact that when once landed from the ship
each convict received a number, by which lie is
only known to his keepers. Mrs. Leffingwell
knew not her husband's number, ami when she
made inquiries for him she was always baffled
with the question, ‘‘His number,ma'am7” At
the end of the *imu spoken of, during which
her means had become exhausted, and she had
been compelled to resort to menial labor, she
one day picked up a Sidney paper in which
wns an account of her husband’s release, the
real criminal ol the larceny having been found
and exported. The account gave her husband’s
number and the facts which convicted him, in
so precise a manner that she could not long
doubt as to who was meant. Her course was
marked out at once. Going to the prison au
thorities of Sidney, she at length learned that
“ticket of leave man No. 186,” her husband’s
number, had left the island for the United
States of America, two weeks after his release.
The next thing for her to do was to follow him
Scraping together her scanty means, she found
she possessed barely enough to pay iter passage.
She seized upon the first opportunity presented,
and in June, 1847, she found horself once
more upon tho ocean, bound for the land of the
free, with her mission still unaccomplished.
In due time she arrived in Now York City,
where she remained until the civil war broke
out, not having in the mean time heard one
word of her husband, though she had made
every exertion to find bis whereabouts. When
the war broke out and at the first call for
nurses in flte hospitals she responded, and until
peace was declared there were none more
faithful in the care of wounded than Mrs.
Clara Leffingwell. While in one of tho hos
pitals at Washington, she nursed to life and
strength a man who knew her husband in tho
army, who had been his mess-mate and boon
companion, and who, in his delirium constantly
called upon his comrade to come to his assist*
arice. When the crisis whs passed and it was
known that the soldier would live, she ques
tioned him concerning her husband, and as
certained that he was in n Pennsylvania regi
ment, having enlisted from Pittsburg two
years before. She at once addressed Leffing
well a letter, stating in full her efforts to find
him, and detailing at length her disappoint
ments and troubles. With the usual perversity
of army mails, that letter never 'reached its
destination. Mrs. Leffingwell waited and
watched, but still no answer came, and at
length when tho war was over, ehe set out
once more in search of her husband.
A visit to Pittsburg revealed the fact that her
husband’s term of enlistment had expired long
b'fore, and his identity was once more lost.—
She inserted advertisements in a number of
Pennsylvania papers, calling for information
of his whereabouts, and then sat herself
to watch nnd wait. Time w ept slow ly on, and
still no tidings of her absent one.
A week ago, when she had given up all
hope of ever seeing her husband again, she
very unexpectedly received direct information
of his place of abode from one who came across
the advertisement of three years before. The
paper containing it had, very providentially,
escaped the destruction which usually comes
upon the dailies of the different cities, nnd now
was the means of uniting two persons who for
twenty eight years had been separated by a
cruel fate. Our heroine at once made prepar
ations to go to her husband, who lived in or
near Cincinnati, and who had been apprised of
her coming. She accordingly left Pittsburg on
Friday morning, and arrived in Cleveland in
the afternoon of the same day. What was her
surprise and pleasure on alighting from the
cars at the Union Depotto procure some re
freshments, to be confronted by her husband.
For a moment they stared at each other, nnd
then with a simultaneous impulse they rushed
into each other's arms, all unconscious of the
gaping crowd, who, with the usual curiosity,
had paused in their hurry to witness the scene.
The years that had separated them, though
they had silvered the heads of each and left
lines of care upon their brow, had not eradica
ted the love they bore one another, or torn
from their hearts the memory of the olden
time, before relentless fate had so cruelly thrust
them asunder. The trials of the past were for
gotten in the present joy, and they took the
train for home at 7 in the evening, happy only
in each other’s company. It was while they
wero wairing the departure of the Cincinnati
train, and through the kind offices of one of
the Cleveland and Pittsburg Railroad officials,
to whom Mrs. Leffingwell had revealed a part
of her history, that the above was obtained.—
[Cleveland Herald.
The Hartford Com ant is tin inveterate wag.
It says that the Radicaljpartyjhas shown itself
more capahle'and efficient in the management
of public affairs, than Democrats ! As, for
instance, they took this government from the
Democrats when it was out of debt, without
taxes, prosperous and united. They have
deluged it in blood, loaded it with debt, put
negroes over white people, trampled on the
Constitution, and are degrading the South !
There's where the difference comes in.— Col.
Register.
The other night, up in Dayton, Ohio, the
Grant Guards were out on parade, when the
sweetheart of one of them threw a soft tomato
from her window, which struck him in the
mouth. He imagined himself the victim of
Ku Klux malevolence. He threw himself in
to the arms of a comrade, and, fainting away,
exclaimed ; “Tell my mother that I perished
ter what I thought was, right. Oh ! comrades,
avenge my death!’’ As may be imagined, he
had a big scare on.
The Cincinnati Gazette* good and strong
Republican authority, has [at last discovered
that the Frecdmen’s Bureau is not so much a
means of protection to the blacks as it has
been made a source of enormous plunder for
the profit of individuals. These things, one
after another, are coming to light. All that the
Democrats have charged against this and simi
lar swindles will be proved to be worse even
than was imagined.
Charcoal for Swine. —ln every hog pen
there should he a trough, in which there should
be deposited, weekly, a quantity of charcoal-
The hog eagerly devours this substance, and is
greatly benefited and strengthened by its con
stant use, It prevents many unpleasant dis
eases, arid contributes largely to the [fatty se
crelions.
Our country, in spite of politicians and
knaves; has cemented a peace and got rid of
her slaves ; but still a small contradiction re
mains—we havo thousands of bonds, although
rid of the chains.
The Copper mining interest in Michigan, it
is stated, employs a capital of $50,000,000, and
from 30,000 to 40,000 persons are engaged in
working the mineral deports.
A writer in the Wilmington, N. C., Jour
nal estimates that the shipments of peanuts
from that port will reach 100,000 bushels this
year.
Prentice says there arc at least forty Radical
members of Congress who could yield their
places to “tho forty thieves” without disad
vantage to the country.
The sieve through which the man strained
every nervo is for sale at less than first cost.
How Peebles Asked Consent.
Realties had just asked Mr. Mcrriweather's
daughter if she would give him a lift out of
bneholordom, and she had Raid ‘yes.’ It there
fore became necessary to get the old man's
permission, so as Peebles said, that arrange
ments might bo inadc)for hopping tho conjugal
twig.
Peebles said he’d rather pop the interroga
tory lo all of old Morriweather’s daughters,
and his sisters, and his female cousins, and
his aunt Hannah in the country, and tho whole
female relations, than to ask old Merriweath
er. But it had to be done, and so he sat down
and stndied out a speech, which he was to
disgorge to old Merriweather the first chance
he got to shy at hitn,
So Peebles drooped in on him one Sunday
evening, and found him doing a sum in beer
measure, trying to calculate the exact number
of quarts his interior could hold without blow
ing his head off him.
‘How are you, Peeb V said old Merriweath
er, as Peebles walked in as white ns a piece of
chalk, and trembling as if he had swallowed a
condensed oarthquake. Peebles was afraid to
answer, because he wasn’t sure about that
speech. He know he had to keep his grip on
it there, or it would slip away from him quick
er than an oiled eel through an auger hole.
So he spoke right out:
‘Mr. Merriweather, sir: Perhaps it may not
be unknown to you, that during an exten
ded period of five years, I have been busily
engaged in the prosecution of a commercial
enterprise—'
‘ls that so, and keepin' it a secret all the
time, while I thought you w«re tending store T
Well, by George, you’re one of ’em now, ain't
you ?’
Peebles bad to begin it all over again to get
the run of it.
Mr. Merriweather, sir: Perhaps it may not
be unknown to you, that during[the extended
period of five years, I have been engaged in the
prosecution of a commercial enterprise with a
determination to secure a sufficient mainten
ance ’
‘Sit down Peeb, nnd help yourself to beer.
Don’t stand there holding your hat like a
blind beggar with paralysis. I never saw you
behave so in all my born days.’
Poeb was knocked out again and had to
wander back and take anew start.
‘Mr. Merriweather, sir: It may not be un
known to you, that during an extended period
of five yeais, I have been engagod in the
prosecution of a commercial enterprise, with
tho determination to procure a sufficient main
tenance ’
‘A which-ancc ?’ asked old Merriweather ;
but Peebles held on to the last word as if it
was his only chance, and went on.
‘ln the hope that I might some day enter
wedlock, and bestow my earthly possessions
upon one I could call my own. I have been a
lonely man, sir, and have felt that it is not
good for man to be nlone ; therefore ’
‘Neither is It, Peebles; and I’m all fired
glad you dropped in, How’s the old inanF
‘Mr. Merriweather, sir,’ said Peebles, in
despairing confusion, raising his voice to a
yell, ‘it may not be unknown to you that, du
ring the extended period of a lonely man, I
have been engaged to enter wedlock, and be
stow all my commercial enterprise, on one
whom I could procure a determination to be
good for a sufficient p- stesßions—no, I mean—
that is—that, Mr, Merriweather sir: it may
not be unknown ’
‘And then again it may. Look here Pee
bles, you’d better lay down and take some
thing warm ; you ain't well.’
Peebles sweating like a four year old colt,
went in again. Mr. Merrihcw, sir: It may
not be lonely for you to prosecute me whom
you call a friend for a commercial mainten
ance, but, —eh, dang it—Mr. Merriweather,
sir, it -’
‘Oh, Peebles, you talk as wildly as a jackass.
I never saw a more first-class idiot in the
course of my whole life. What’s the matter
with you, anyhow?’
‘Mr. Merriweather, sir,’ said Peebles in an
agony of bewilderment, ‘it may not he known
that you prosecuted a loDcly man who is not
good for ,-mercial period of wedlock for
some five years, but ’
‘See here, Mr. Peebles you’re drunk, and if
you can’t behave better than that you had best
laave; if you don’t I’ll chuck you out or Pm a
Dutchman.’
‘Mr. Merriweather, sir,’ said Peebles frantic
with despair, ‘it may not be unknown to you
that my earthly possessions are engaged to en
ter wedlock five years with a sufficient lonely
man who is not good for a commercial main
tenance ’
‘The very deuce he isn’t. Now you just get,
and git, old boss, or I’ll knock what little
brains out of you, yon have got left.’
With that old Merriweather took Peebles by
the shirt collar and that part of his pants that
wear out first, if he sits down much, and shot
him into the street as if he had just run
against a locomotive going at the rate of forty
miles an hour. Before old Mr. Merriweather
had time to shut the door, Peebles collected
his legs and one thing and another that were
lying round on the pavement, and arranged
himself in a vertical position and yelled
out:
‘Mr. Merriweather, sir: It may not be un
known to you——’ which made the old man
so wretchedly mad that he went out and set a
bull-terrier on Peebles before he had a chance
to lift a brogan, and there was a scientific dog
fight, with odds in favor of the dog, until they
came to a fence, and then Peebles would have
carried the dog borne, if it hadn’t been that
the meat was so tender, and the dog, feeling
certain that something or other must eventually
give way, held on until he got his chop of Pee-
VOL 4, NO. 5
bles calf, who went homo half a pound lighter;
while Merriweather asserts to this day that
they had to pull all the dog’s teeth to get the
flesh out of his mouth, ‘for he had an nwful
hold for such an animal.’
Os course, Merriweuther’s daughter heard
about it, and she was so mad she never gave
tho old man any peace until ho went around
the next day to see Peebles about it. Peo
bless looked as pale as a ghost, from loss of
blood and beef and bo had a whole piece of
muslin wrapped around his leg. Merriwether
said :
‘Peeb, Pin sorry about the muss last night;
but if you didn't behave like a raving maniac,
I’m a loafer. I never saw such a deliberate
ass since 1 was born. What’s tho moaning of
it anyhow ?'
‘I wnsTrying to ask you to let mo marry
your daughter,' groaned Peebles.
‘Great—wbat 1 You didn’t mean to say
well I hope I may be shot. Well if you ain’t a
wooden headed idiot—l thought your mind
was wandering. Why, of course you cun have
her, my boy; go in, nnd I’ll throw in a bit of
first class blessing in the bargain.’
And Peebles looked mournfully at his de
fective leg, and wished that he had not been
such a fool; and ho went out and married the
girl, and lived happily with her for about two
months. At the end of that time he told a
confidential friend that he would willingly take
more trouble, and undergo a million more dog
bites to get rid of her.
The American Bustilc in Ruin l
Fort LaFayettc was destroyed by fire, lact
Tuesday, P. M. The Albany Argus announ
ces the fact, with appropriate running com
mentary, thusly:
“Simultaneously with the casting of tho
Electoral voto of New York for Seymour and
Blair, Fort LaFayette was given to the flames
and destroyed. It wns the work of accident;
but the coincidence was providential.
The Fort had been constructed to defend
New York against invasion. It was turned
into a Bastile, to which free citizens of the
State were consigned upon the arbitrary re
script of President Lincoln's Secretaries, and
held prisoners by military force, in defiance of
Law.
The pretense of ‘* public safety” and “State
necessity,” was used to justify these arbitrary
arrests. But they had no higher motive than
the caprice of a despotic nature, the hatred en
gendered by partisanship and the insolence of
office.
Scwatd and Stanton gloricl in copying tho
devices of European absolutism. There was
nothing in the le tires de cachet which constitu
ted one of the chief accusations against the
monopoly of France and brought it to the scaf
fold, that was more offensive than the man
dates by which citizens were seized and im
prisoned during several years of the war. Sew
ard aped the airs of despotic power. He as
sumed to be a Richelieu or a Metternich. Ho
boasted to a foreign Minister that he had but
to “ring his little bell” and he could arrest
and assign to instant prison any citizen in the
Union.
He made the war doubly odious by bis in
solence and tho indecency of his violations of
law and right. Any pretext sufficed for the
interposition of his usurped power.
At Last he became frightened at the excess
of his own license. He was in daily fear of
the retaliation of the law, and of private ven
geance. He passed the latter days of his min
istry in cowardly fear and in humiliation. His
own party cast him out from them. lie lived,
by false pretenses, on the charity and credulity
of President Johnson, and abused both.
One of his first victims was Flanders, of
Franklin, yesterday an Elector, who united in
casting the vote of New York for Horatio Sey
mour. Reeves, of Suffolk, just elected to Con
gress, was another. The offense of each of
these was the discussion of the abstract ques
tion of State Sovereignty from a Constitutional
point of yiew.
These gentlemen, one living on the northorn
border, and the other on the extremity of Long
Island, were as far removed as possible fro*u
the seat of the civil war. No question of pub
lic safety entered into the accusation against
them. They were seized in order to make ex
amples of them ; and to initiate a system of
terror, and to cow down public opinion.
But the old Bastile is burned to the ground.
Let it perish. Let it be forgotten, and let the
memory of the crimes and the wrongs associ
ated with it bo scattered to the four winds with
its ashes.
A Timely Suggestion. —The Cincinnati Ga
zette (Rad.) in remarking upon the proposition
to set aside the suffrage plank of the Chicago
platform and amend the Federal Constitution
so as to establish universal suffrage, suggests
that it would be a good idea'to first determine
what is meant by “ awiversal ’ suffrage. This
i» a timely suggestion. Thsro is a great di
versity of opinion among Radical statesmen a*
to the precise character and limits of that suf
frage. The weak minded men and the strong
minded women understand it as extending the
elective franchise to females ; nine out of ten
of the negro voters of the South think it is a
*inule or something to oat; moderate Radicals
regard it as embracing only male bipeds of all
colors over twenty-one years of age ; ambitions
youngsters in their teens do not see how they
can be ruled out under it until they become of
age ; and soon until the end.
It is said that the earthquakes are working «
Northward from the tropics. Could not one
of them be induced to make a call at Washing
ton about next week?
Law is like prussic acid—a dangerons reme
dy, ami tho smallest dose is generally suffi
cient.