The Weekly constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1868-1878, March 18, 1873, Image 1

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ftMsnutnoiL VOLUME V.l ATLANTA, TUMBDAY, MARCH 13 ntinwiaw HE , We call attention to the eiceilent fcbtace fofu investment of lutplus fund* tbit thb Slate oflera through our advertising column*. The new bond, beared per - ~ * payable semi-ra easily, and l Stale, comity aad municipal taxation. It la, in abort, a good tea per cent.' investment. Thar aeem to be partLaleriy deefaabie to IA Geer Trustee*, Gnardians, Executor*, etc. Eneb I Atlanta Cktildaii parcbarea coming from the State would re The Jittery numtaTof fbe Atlanta Medi tate among u* eo much moreteterat-monryi cal ^ Surgical Journal, edited by Dr. Jos * . and would laaee leae of the loan to be floated p.togaaesdDrW.F. WfestmcrtWcon- *7 **» Ur*, t’ames *» I uI^fXwtaggrraefuiEl3g££ SjftfflfcSS I by Dr. Logan, the senior editor, of a compli- rahrsownhom *■» I mat from the North - TUK GATE OE DEATH. ariiirsAnain. itu a m>,- ( aid at the mu or ■mil wm — -jdo lore itg&d. W*tpta* with IB ImSL OMSitOM ATLANTA, GEORGIA, TUESDAY. MARCH 18, 1873. INUMBER 48 Weboho thebe, feto ibc loan a careful lion; for they can help their client, the Slate by pnrebaateg the new bond.. It i* not expected, nor la it deairable, that I The aenlor editor of this Journal ackntnr- ■ooey should be withdrawn from actiTe one ledgee and highly appreciates the compli. intiW nr. ikuimn Tw .vh rni>b<n.(. btaf.lwlowed in hia election aaacorrcs- GnatpoLooicaL Society or Beexwr.- piiied by CoL E. J. Kiker, immedfa'teiy pro ceeded to the scene of the affair, and stun, turning a |ury in the neighborhood, held an inqnear, whlHi tetfaWli * wmt ehnolrlfifl ro^.n'fdoSI moneya be exchanged for thcae safe, rwnu- expected it fa taken aa ta evidence of the ex- f.^n» riba iterative, and in etefy te*f*ct deairable | j^»^ iathatUody of a faternal feeiinjr Batoday ni r t.r *lAda of Ibe staunch old Commonwealth. Wm. Doughertyjra. Jacob Fogle. Motion to BP . - - ■ . r —Jfffi j??°g Jg* tomeit retired, two men, Zsch. Taylor and Jim ta® Muacogee. te*ladenc% knows no North, Soutii, East or Tucker, two reck] ern characters, rode np to WABNEB, a J. Ba P na * Coait ™ originally 1? ^offitDS.to the door snd flnding created by an amendment of the StateCon of the fraternitiee of the £*^bm to site.«P ^that Court had to be to the relkf of I ADmftnilr Let os look tt thffw is s w * n considers bis coolly and calmly. Like Mr. I profession and of the compliment paid to of reconstruction, they ire apt J Dr. tx)gaa la a Tery proper reciprocation of nogood pufnort at that t&le of bight The* Ua diacreUon, withhoUT ItilidOTmt uSS to fatigue the indignation, and It b certainly | a gratifying courier. « & J?5£. . t ^± f ^. l 5 c 2* 7“ naencing her task of patrolling the island of Federal Jurisdiction.” large quantity of ammUni swrt;i, nssint. ah old aaa Ei.iaiiy StiJwM ts Sis Sera Ha body-supposed to bare been night before. Coroner D. H. Findley, secom- DBCISIONS nraerte cottar or osokoia DXiiemt iU Atlanta, AtareS 11,1873. - Jo enable the Court to do that, the power to litOe tiffle.one do ao was granted; aa we End It in the Con- OflWS. The Constitution, instead well to know whether we hare a Just basis I The Atlanta Medical Journal b a first- After attimr there for for indignation to feed upon or not. I clam medical periodical and spHsin At; of them, pointing to a The majority report oflhe Senate CBmmit-1 tahta. there wefe tire then Ih that Bed; ana they of decfaiim* that all hit on t*rivflegca and Elections, signed by —■Kgj must hare them out of three: and thn at of at theflrst teftH; Senator* Calpenter. Logan, Anthony and At- j ™ nmmmammmHH* once proceeded to remore the bed clothing. cause, now declares that «n-nn Republicans, say.: oJ^S^ta ° f ^ “f^^bST^S^^ouS SSL'teST.fter'tolrSSf.Sor'btooWh? 1 in any UghUhe otdera and injtmc- o»Cwfedreateprirateer now fliea the Span- daughter and proceeded aa before The girl. The carefatotenSmSlSSS, oaad^ntol by J utfac Dureli In Wt piaign at tbemiizen i and b now tm- Mtcr begging piteously, appealed to fire at the first term ofthe Com uScmprCTOilai - s-'i.riafei'eiiaaisa; of mleBii adovrniMKlisMsIfX'l^ ^fMrtBwsd, prqmtofy to con- tbsrn to lesre the boose. This they refused Goostitluoa tSSS tbs gSKimi ttoder the power granted to dS^sd W cter to do and commenced to abuse film. sof Ite (Jailed States ebooid hare pro-1 Cuba in quest of UberaUng expeditions. After a few words had been passed be- case ~ at the first or second term Thely^ch returning board that Durdl’sI ,OT *°^' a ° dr ^^“ d , , he oUlcr ‘“king effretto'the ami whtehftS5d“^“Sro U, 5o‘SfuSS Infamous orders brought intoexblencr, in I °^’.T! lk:h , ! ,d f p . U:d f ” a nrer enough to *e pww had flret been granted to extend region of his heart, but not near enodgh to wodace iustast death. The old man, though tMamnnMt: bfiaed »ayohaa gg ltbte»^d that Otaaleohaao. fcju amw>||t.Vw| riW^igl'dimre tens at fheOMtrt, teateadof I^dnyl^ &fed ever reliable supporter* of the ndminis-1 carriages and a byd^ing Mdws on his assaaiff. head with disposition o! the taiTte Uio fr?t taL^s “ * “ * * * * ' ■“ Wlfl <lnnn . ij.. .il_i 4 « H utku: that go as a chair, natng ail the force his failing strength was done nfidef itia would allow. Bat aodn,Tsybr regaining hia creating thb Court, ad< position, fired a second shot, which most bare slitulion of 1883 ini tho first or fecond After the work bad tieeo finished, the two ror is brought, *' ited their hones and made their escape, prosecuting the Latino, Is thtb Complimrittfcd: There ta nothing in all tile comedy of ■ _ . .. rsu h u w .K.—lldiiw of iHrtl- t, n iklHeiu ktioia with ten poilnda steam After the work Itsd teeo finiaiicd, the tTfin tealdhiA brenaMl£!»ih. I P re “ nrT . Which she has frequently done: mounted their hones and made their esc . Ihcactiif Nor-20 ° i TbVtoredwa. mtdre I 8h * euheequently became a priratecr, and sa TbeL home b in Hurra., near the lineof dential valid and existing injunctions reatraiateg It [ «uch ran np a bill, amounting to $1831)70, A^'!2i Dg !i!i 1 ’ ™.Sn i rJr :U ^ 1 l “H‘*taHe Included in the rec.nl reward of the any*Mnvam lr *not* baaed u^ GeneT * “ h: ‘ralion. 8he is said to be the the official rclnrna of the election. 8. Con-1 »"•*>«»* steamer afloat, having done on eever- csdtag the board was in exaience and had I *1 occaaions sixteen knots an hour with steam full authority to canvaas^tlre reterns. It had I and uiL Her officers expected to reach t«lfl3“b?f~7Sir committee b/ K "t** iaM bo0 ™ * fUr leCTiD * Hov^hteuel^ who^pretlcjjjjtagte tHUXMi-1 Hew Tor *- — tcrbiinetl to have a ItnputiUcan liegbtatiuei. _ nuimade thett Canvaaa IpthsUSd. The the recent appropriation of #l,&)O.OrOty bases they bad What wete tabpoaed to be P^P"* money among themselves, rmacka lee ot the original morn, iTothre cara very atronglv of the latter day notions .boat I -tbe iHHi Who roiled upon t tnothrecav, Where they i»ad Mpng| thislarlfesum of money, which bone-third Career an J cilaraccer of (lie He. (fee Spaalah Cjnraaiilt. complexion of the parish, of what -ought to hav~" 'They also i rote | borrow in the money markets, were elected to serve their constituents at <bo>g« K. Touta ta tHs Independent.] Flgnetas assumes the chief afcat in the Spanish executive at 63, in the very prime of his mental powers and physical vigor. But, ‘ far from being an old man, his beenleng in thril.iog events. At 18 he had become an ardent politician, had enrolled himself among the Eadicsb of his dential cause be equally as good a reason for native Barcelona, and had been marked as a —* The w.ril’1 Fair. there known toba foreeriaalto give more for such services; they « overatbrnredIffldavitalMd°? If" ,a ^ ect - cm to the Lynch Board while it was I Wh * 1 mor * 1 r, K ht . therefore, bed these men. In session. I the servants Of the people, to take from their Judicial usurpation that all lawyers and I masters $1,600,000 more than their rightful all intelligent men unite in declaring as ut* wages J That is the Conundrum, as we tetiy Indefensible and outrageous Created the I Understand 1L Lynch board. On the certihcatca of tbb I The press are almost a unit in denunciation beautiful board, and at the bidding of {of tbb remarkable appropriation. TheLcg- tbe indefensible Daren, the President pro-1 Matufe of Ohio has already censured such eroded to establish the villainous Kellogg] of their Representatives as Voted far it cbal hr Federal bayonets, Is the govern-1 While the member* from Georgia voted con- ment cl a sovereign Btato—A government | sfcicntiously on the subject, yet, in ourjudg- that Senator Carpenter admits could not | ment, they haye committed an error that will stand ten minutes without the rapport of the lustily and doubtless will evoke the condem- Federal troops. Who then, b responsible | nation of their constituents Wc take pleas- for the murders and gaping wounds of last | ura in stating that Mr. McIntyre, ot the first tVedaaaday night? An outraged people | Dbtrict; voted against the Very reprehend tried to regain their rights; and wete MMfef ble proposition, it.iwn by mlllUry tatte, Hr more strictly, by federal threats, cminating from the centra] Esecutive power. | The American who goes abroad expecting Bot the President dodges bebind the deck- thatPSib embraces the best of European ions nr the Courts of the State of Louisian* ffUtlernnd beauty, will be pretty rare to meet in bb effort to escape the odium of bb acta. «* of •* returning fellow-countrymen who Let ta understand this, too. After the leg- kin seen both Paris and Vienna, and who Idmtnre that the Lynch board gave birth to | straightway proceeds to declare the Utter —for no one .t.tw*. that the peoplo of Lott* I city the handsomest one on the Continent, biana elected them-aftcr they had Impeach- f*** *» g»F and glittering and sinful, both td Warmoutb, and crowned Pinchbeck of «»"ehow towns,’* that U, towns built to bo Immortal men my, they then proceeded to | attractive, and not exclusively for business, abolish Ike Slate district coof, because they I like Liverpool and London. Whether Vlen- w an ted Id gel rid of a judge Whom they could I uacxceb Paris or noli the certainly has one not use. Another court was illegally conati-1 street that b without a peer fur beauty—the toted, and Pinchbeck, Who fought nobly, ap- Blogsttatse that, With the Qusbtrasro along pointed Hawkln*,of the Lynch Baud, the theUnal of the Dunbc, encircle* the dense ly crowded lanes of the old city. Ferdinand’s Bridgo, over the Canal, leads directly from the Quay to the foot of the Prater straue or street, one of the finest in the city; and thb street, by a walk of about mile, leads to the Prater-stern, a c rcular space from which diverges five great avenues into the immense park, known all over the world as the Prmur. Tho fertility of the Dannbian Valley b tuffidenily evinced by the magnificent great trees that adorn thb vast popular resort of the gay Viennese. The shade of these trees attract, on Sundays and holidays, tens of thousands of the and they attract rooiel of cheap theatre*, and amusements of ;cvcry kind and description. Three hundred acres of tbb magnificent park have been set apart for the Exposition that will open next May. And the fountains and rural walks, and pavilions and marques, aad temple* and kiosks, and palaces, not to at length the stupendous Exhibi tion Building, with a rotunda “nearly four hundred feet in height and having a three hundred and twenty feet span,” which are to adorn thb section of the Prater, read like a Fairy’s tale. It seems certain that the Exhibition will eclipse all previous international displays. The magnificent city and its central location . .. , , -..Mj-v will do much to attract a vast concoorsc of eJ bytbo usurps tioo’ of ind.viduris compos-' P»pl« from every part of the civilised, and tag it, sustained by the military forces of the even of the semwavilixed, world All the United States." If we quit here we shall avoid fatiguing our own indignation. The intervention of the President b without warrant in law, equity or anything else that b creditable. Hb beat supporters do not pretend that the government which bo has set op b either de fensible or self-supportable. Ilbagovtnc nt after a fashion just ao long as the fed eral bayonets xiphoid it, and no moment longer. Even then it cat collect any taxes to speak of; the carpet-bagger’s favorite is ao longer available, b wdeome to all the comfort that he can get out of the tangled complications and he only, b responsible for. Hb political do “ Louisiana may be the additional weight that b to break the back of Federal usurpation If ao, the people ot the not suffered in vain; bat if the public mind b so calloused as not to bead thb climax of wrong, then, indeed, the declining days of cur national 1 if tare upon dangerous personage by the agents of the Government. Wbenhe was 31 he became an the perilous role of conspirator ■Ever and anon Iroffi that time he re-ap- ■aare at iatetvab on the itarmy Mags of Bpaibh poUtita, always propagating, repnb- lican ideas, stimng np discontent and resist ance againstjthe corrupt and despotic powers at Mamid, organising UsUmctiOn*, hurrying from Barcelona to MadHd^trom Madrid to only etdeptkln^re^mfed byvjlle Comtitn- With Moody that he would be responsible prevented from prosecuting his case, for the storage,- this would be the promlre to PBtherevolir either at tile first or sbtondteriil ofibeCotirt, P»y the debt of another, and mast be in J 1 IIIII i . I 'igoeraawaa ter Providential citbe,there b nothing ih the Writing to bind the defendant. In order to in the thick of the conflio, counseling, com- Constitution which imputes to him latches bmd Young by hia verbal promise tho evi- mending, and acting with all the ardor of or defsulton that account. The act of God deuce must show that the cotton Was oMH tetense conviction. worketh injury to no one; and that b the nally stored by Moody for Wright and ■At thirty-two he found himself a Deputy principle recogniicd by the Constitution in Eagle Factory, off the promise of Yt ta the Cortes, aqit thither by Barcelona, and the ptasefcdtion of tesrt In thb Court. Un- that be Would pay the storage." Thir Hi forming with Orensi, Lorenb, and Jean a lem prevented by Providential cause, even cause the verdict a excessive, contrary to the tittle, but stout soolcd phalanx of four. Three case must be prosecuted at the first term of evidence, and stfongly sgaiflst the weight of yean later the phalanx was swelled to 21, the Court after the writ of error b brought, tho evidence. The Court overfilled the mo- who thought themselves strong enough to and most be disposed of by the Court at the tion, and the defendant excepted and assigns openly propara and vote for a republic, and first or second term, hot the Court may, in the same for error. As to the first ground after the revolution of 1868 the gartj in- its discretion, withhold it* judgment until the of error assigned ta tho record, we may in creased to 70, who have just achieved the next term alter the care b argued, under the mark, that a Court b a place where justice b judicially administered,and thatthe business of the Court should be so conducted by long hoped for victory. Through- power granted to dispose of it at tho second oat the period between 1851 and 187* term of the Court; and thb may be done Figneras continued the foremost cham- without any Providential cause being shown, plon of the Republican*—aotnetimet Thb grant of power to the Court to dis- Deputy in the Cortes, aometimes poao of the cases in ts discretion, at tho first ‘ — second term, had no reference whatever tho continuance of cases for Providential cause: that question stands under tho new Constitution Just aa it stood under the old If a case should be continued at Iho first term, from Providential cause, and just before the second term of the Court the party should Judge of the Improvised boon. the President tries to shelter himself from popular Indignation behind the decisions of tbb man Hawkins suWaintag hb own action as a Stale canvasser I But the President's main card b a decision of the Supreme Court of the State. He claims that thb Court judicially pronounced the Kellogg gang the legal Government of Louisiana. The majority reports signed, wB repeat, by Carpenter, Ldgan, Anthony and AtcOTn- -*n Republicans, knocks that post- The only question to be fettled by thb suit was whether Morgan, the relator, or Kin- nard the defendant, was entitled to hold the office of Associate Justice of the Sapreme Court ta place of Howe, resigned, and the idea that in disposing of thb tingie question the Court had any antborily or jurisdiction to determine aa between Warmoth and Pinch- back, neither of whom was a party to the cause, which of them was entitled to exer- e ze the office of Governor, and between two and three hundred persons of the Kel logg Legislature and as many more of the McEneiy Legislature, not one of whom was a party to the suit, which of the rival Indies was authorized to exercise the legis lative power of that State, b too preposter ous a question to rtqture serious refutation. The uunfet that eon be claimed for thb de- cbtan U that the court recognised the Kel- log* government aa a government defacto, which may be conceded without touching r it has been established Aorra-noa r.v Porrrro al. — Loxdok, March 11.—Portuguese Journals any that at no time ta the hist onr of the country hare sock efforts been made to oeganixe a Repub lican party a* are now making. They com pare England’* delay fa recognizing the Span- Mi Republic with her speedy recognition of Napoleon’s government in 18SL tSP The New Orleans Republican man sharpens a fresh pencil and relieves hbmind thusly: “Women are like horses. The gayer the harness they have on the better they feei. We got thb from an old bachelor, who was early crossed ta love." ry The restoration of the death penalty is agitated in Rhode Island. Capital punish ment has been abolished there for nearly Before that it uaed to be impar- 1 on negroes and Indians. m ft courageous but masking bb operations behind hb advocate’s gown. He baa baram prisoner, an exBa, aad ect, aad through it all has nerer or cren concealed hb opinion. An open enemy from the first to the throne of Isabella, and to all thrones Whatsoever, he has extorted the respect while continually exciting tho fears of thb ttlonsfchical states- CO; MeattwhUe Figdam, eaffagteg thus active ly ta the most continuously tiubdient politi cal drama which Europe baa witnessed since Napoleon landed at tH. Brians, Baa not nan- Icctrd the studies began ta with zeal in early the Cur of Rusal* to the Shah of Penis It b understood that our second Washington it, although hones and bull pupa are not included in the (treat Show. Science, art and the various industries are to be crowded together into one colossal ex All that human progress achieved will be there exemplified. The re ports of the preparations are bewildering from the very magnitude of the intended Not the least interesting and in- lepaitmenl will be that of educa tion, wherein will be seen, in actual operation —wanting only the scholars—the school- of various countries. Let thb suffice aa aa example of the comprehensiveness of m* undertaking. All signs indi cate that it wiU beta facta* well aa ini a World’s Fair. A Letter (r i the Frealdent te the BtcHxosD, V*., March 1L—The following letter, received by Mayor Keyley, explains ittelf: ExtccnvK Maksios, Washizotoz, March 8,1873. Dxab Stn: I have the honor to acknowl edge the receipt of your letter of February ' a copy of the preamble and resolution* of the" City Council of Rich mond, extending to me the hospitalities of city. 1 most beg you to accept for 1 and your asaoebtea. my sincere for the kind offer and the invitation I dkl intend to visit several of the Southern dries, Richmond among the real, very soon after the adjournment of Coogreas, but J public dories to ta definitely postpooe anch a visit Should I be able at a future day to make the trip I bad planned, ! shall mast certainly visit Rich- I am, air, re thb county, and only a few miles from the old Constitution. The eases on the docket hive been continued twice for Providential tieredtaebcaptmwlllOTt^lylmeffretedj £whrthertireranmateti^i houn Tima. place where the murder was committed. Parties are in search of them, and it ia bc- llicrcd their capture will certainly be effected, IH and they be made to suffer to the extent of irantaf jsr&dietlon 5th* Courttn hear the law for thb moat hideons crime-Oti- them under theConatitnticS. the ex^h °*.U»e second term of the Court It Is insisted that the continuance of the cases for Providential cause dee. not take them out of the previsions of the Constitu tion before cited, which requires the Court to dispose of every base, at the first or sccondl term after the writ of error is brought; that ra Providential came aftef- the first term con- FIGUBRAS, •litotes no exception. Thb Provision of the CoosUtttioa should recdvfc treasonable ■ terpretation. Providential canfebrecogniflH tty the Conititdtion as a valid cause for not i* agood reason for not heard tog it at that term. Why should not Provi to perform against the for the moment converted the Assembly into a temple.” Guino to Rtm tdb Machine Hikselt. The Senators are taking advantage of the absence of their colleagues of the House to cany off the lion's share of the offices. They do not find Great as pliable now aa be was four yean ago. He understands himself end hb place better, and he b decidedly more in dependent. In a recent conversation with a Senator who wanted an appointment made, the President b reported aa haring said that he intended to have some influence himself with the administration daring the next four years. Even so adroit a politician as General lamcron has discovered that onder Grant’s second term be cannot have everything hb own way. In a recent effort to tarn out the United States Dbtrict Attorney for the East ern Dbtrict of Pennsylvania, Cameron was incontinently snubbed by the President, and he is now ol the opinion that Grant intends to be stubborn, and to run the machine to suit himself. b.t tor to* coxnnotuu ax Providential c The Court could not, ta qualification, that the evidence Be not repiig- nrat to or taconsbtrot with the contract I custom of business, or news Universal practice, may be admissible to ex$ traa made u the usual font Upon a sUpThtt An gfrnjaaltlig ^to tCringr^SbS WaltiactoBMitop* For tho litU« feat to ptUNf tk ® of hope To the throne oaiheecft of glen. Altri. the deffith^nifU cloee ansua HWiniHMig a ITor Htfot nor nraphlm defefidtnt’e counsel made the mnet of it ta bb argument before the^jnry. Boddre, un der the proviriona the 8668th wv- ^ stdft woold not be adabriUL Green- R^^e evidence, roL 1st, lections >03, WL In thocrae of the Schooner Recside, 8d Bum-1 laenf Rep., 567, it wan hdf that an aaraaaa contract of the parties, te riwqya adabrifate IHIIIBlIi vary or control a usage, or ens- PH""!" tttotract could not pSsSr’CS Lact, aa ta thb case, which b plate, evidence of usage and custom, is insdmis- Imble to control, vary atr contradict it Nor do we think the qaestioes propounded to I the witness were strictly legil qaations to grove s general ussgo or eastern. The ques tionspropounded to the witness were: Do mu know any ra^a,or .raqpH,ki the life nintranrn hnsterea aa total gnummtlonofl eta The proper baestion would have Keen, what ia the genets! or universal I lion of the Code, the presiding Judge may exercise a sound discretion te grant ing or refnsine new trials in esses where the verdict may be decidedly and strongly against the weight of evidence, al- thongh there may appear to be some slight evidence in favor of the finding. If the Court below had been satisfied that the verdict te thb cue had been strongly and " rraotal* And UP nt until the next term after lhe< the disposition of the cue to the second not hearing seise at the seconds* at the first term* that < “rd, we find no error in the rulings of the Court, or in its charge to the ju-y, or in its rerraal to charge u requested in view of the cridcpcc contained therein, and the verdict wu right Hade* Ufa hvri end facts of tho “ISC. Ira the judgment of tho CoUfl tJeloWbe tinned. R. J. Moses, 1L EL Blsndford„L. T. Row ing, for plaintiff) in error. Ingram A Crawford, for defendant. Eagle Manufacturing Company ct al. vs. Cthlts Wise. Relief Act, from Mus togefi. WARNER, C. J. u,i *“»e Uiis plaintiff mado s motion to withdra# his writ of error, the defendant in error Objected,* grid lUtde & tt the refofd .for Uio pL'rjioso dunigta. On looking through tfife record in thb case, we are of Iho opinion, in fie* of the previous rulings of this Court, that this s.’SW’Sj&Sft’iScJJ 1 Henry L. Benning, for plaintiffs in error. Peabody A Brannon, for defendant. - w ’“-,H-.1foung vs. Charles D. Moody. New ife tfeinhb duty, under thb section of the Code, to hate gfsnted a new trial, bat he hra refused to do so, and Wi find no er ror te that refusal. Let tho judgment of the Court below be affirmed. R. J. Moses, for plaintiff te error. Peabody A Brannon, B. A. Thornton, Blsn ford A Ckawfard, lor defendants F. McLc- or tho Toilets—A Georgta Scandal. Swift, Morphy £ Cd, 1k more, Certiorari from Mi HcCAY.J. In thb case, which was a bill of exceptions to the lodgment of Judge Jo* faring to anstain a certiorari te a warrant case, it appeared that the warrant waste three bales of cotton. That the cot ton waa made on the plantation of Mrs. Me- Leraore, the plaintiff by one Joiner and her- Colored Female Troojs at lie Ball hb interest, for advances,- etc., with a power to sHIj that latef te tho year, he had, in writing, sold trtd transferred to her bb whole inlcrcat te the Crop: that , . whilst the cotton wm on the farm, it wm "° received a private telegram from onr ienedonaa the property of Joiner, and car- Washington correspondent,' Tommy Hsuck, f* J u,t »f lCT the inauguration, announcing hb husband wm hb iteretaij^f*Btato! # ^ MIS 10 bu^m-hefia ThcnMr'simm 1 !,,? jg- a .*W to ”U»?Lisiof tiectaK; *!«. »he fat turn berate? I tried to find m , .V! 0 ." “«!■ the property wm found to tyi has—that two fm. a. Young vs. Chafl Trial treat MdacOgcb WARNER, C. i. flic plaintiff brought lib action te the Court below against the deKndenl on an open account for the storage of two hundred and forty.six bales of cotton. On the trial °l S ! .£¥ e ’ i®J fonnd a verdict for the Pjjbthff for the sum of $627,00 with Interest, ftie defendant made a motion for a new trial °nthe following gronnds: First. Betitbe during the trial of arid rause defendant bjr hb coutitel asked Charles Moody the plaintiff be being on the stand as awitneaa. “Whit b the annual ■ value of The Constitution does not declare your warehouse in Alabama?” To which the ta.Shall not be continued after the plaintiff objected, when the Court remarked, first term for Providential cause, or that no “It was obliged to admit the evidence because 2? e J$* n J , ? conl *8 ued more than once for it did bear though very remotely on the Isaac Providential esnse. The fab and reasons- to be tried. He wished .be oonld exclude it Me interpretation of the Constitution b but ho could not. The coarse of the Counsel that the Court shall dispose however, will not be likely to avail Mm Much of every case at the flat or second term after before the Jury.’’ Second. Because the Court writ of error brought, unless the parties ere erred in refusing to charge thejury, that if prevented from prosecuting the same t»y the cottone of Wright and the” ’residential radio. J Cause U the were on storage with Moody, and after the the presiding Judge as to sccomplisL that object with dignity and impartial ity- Whilst the Court must necessarily ex ercise legitimate power and authority, in conducting the badness before it, one of the first duties) of counsel is to. yield s respect ful obedience to tbst authority. The sovereign authority of the Btato b rep resented ta her Courts of justice, The expressions of the presiding Jndge. M set forth ta the record, were uncalled for. tho case Would have to be dbnllssed under the construction Contended for, the Provi dential cause of the party’s death Would not save it Tho death of the plaintiff daring the _ second tend of the Court, or at any other youth, lib knowledge of the law b inferim- time, b not made by the Constitution sn cx- to that of no advocate at the Madrid Bar; ccplional case of Providential cause, end the hb powers as s lawyer long ago ranked him Courts should not make it one, and db- smong its leading members. Hbsneccbesta regard all other cases of Providential cause the Cortes betray ■ familiarity with ta givings construction to those Words. The history, especially that of Spain, which fair and reasonable interpretation of the Con- sbould be, but seldom is, among the stftation, in dor Judgment, b to hold tbst cardinal qualifications of statesmanship, when a party b prevented by Providential In tbb department of learning he b excelled esnae from prosecuting hb case ta the Court, perhaps only Ire ChIcUt, whose knowledge that no lacbee fa to be imputed to him, and of English sod American political annals is, that the time within which he b to prosecute for s Spaniard, wonderful. Unlike moet bb writ of error docs not run against him, Radical leaders in Europe, Scnor Figucras b that he b excepted from having hb case db- a devout believer in Christianity. On one mbsedon the ground of Providential cause— ocraaion he made so impressive a declaration Broom’s Legal Maxims, 171. The cases of bbfritb.ta the Cortes, that, Oastdaraan, on the docket having been continued by die, or should die during the second term, m and ta onr judgment were improper. If the in thb case, and hb eatatc_ Unrepresented, evidence wm admissible under the law, then thb Court for Providential cause at the first and second terms thereof, sod Mr. Dougherty having died daring the second term of the Court, the motion to dismiss all suggest the death of the plaintiff on the se cond, and take such farther proceedings in the case m authorized ter the 28th role of thb Court if they shall think proper to do so. In all the other cases in which Mr. Dougherty was counsel only, the parties must be pre pared to prosecute tbe same at the present of the Court, or they will be db- niKellaacaai Items, Cincinnati’s industry 1 A. B. Culberson, A T. Akerman, to pl&ta- tiffs in error. H. L. Benning, H. J. Crawford, R. J. Motes, W. F. Wiluanu, contra. Park A Iverson vs. Tbe Piedmont and Ar lington Life Insurance Company. As sumpsit, from Muscogee. WARNER, CJ. Tbb wm an action brought by tho plain A melancholy hamlet in Maine coo'sins 55 widows. Bret Harte’s sketches have ben translated Into French. Faxes ere bunted through the streets of Anifnit, New York. Middletown, Connecticut, has ten bell fac tories, but no “rings." The lbt of s deceased Kentuckian's debtors measured eighteen feet. Little Switzerland baa to look np to recog nize Spain, but does it. Brooks’ paper fa New York strong expressions about Poland. St. Louts milkmen put tallow in their milk and tell it for lbkaoa news. Small-pox b reported in Opelika. A school of telegraphy b soon to be opened in Selma. The cotton men ta Mobile are betting purchased s Babcock Fire Athens hM s dancing school which costs • r $100 te' ’ Mr. J. R Walsh, President of the Western News Company, which in 1872did a business of over $1000,000. twelve yean ago was selling stationery ta a little chop ta Chicago. A sew Italian Open b announced, the scene of which b lrid te the garden of Eden. Tbe only unsettled matter about it, is how to dress Eve. The sophnno insists upon it that she will wear a yellow satin train and diamond necklace. Washington cattle dealers feed theta ini _ _ yon, I am, sir, re- mala for a few days on highly salted food te spectfolly yoor obedient servant, | order to excite their thirst to such an extent [Signed! U. 8. Gea.it, I that on the day cf sale they may drink to bHoa-A. M. Keyley, Mayor of Hrchmond, j repletion, therttby adding greatly to their Virginia. 'weight. as to tne commutation oi tne value or re- newals on discharging agents." Objection being made to the question by the plaintiff, the Oomtrastained the objection, and the de- Then I had lots of covering for my neck and arms, which I was ready to throw off if ItWMprudent to do so. Bor, oh my,yon ought to have seen the right Fust, along the aidcaof the room, wise gentlemen wear ing their overcoats and hats, and beside the atesm-hcaters were rowi of girls shivering like anything and burning theta slippers against the pipes in trying to warm their feet fite floor wm really splendid for dancing, and the decorations and building and rapper and all that Just asfinc as could bee but then the cold spoilt - * ‘ Probi it wm tbe duty of the Court to have admitted it without expressing it- wishes te regard to it If the evidence wm not admissible, then the Court shotlld hate ruled it out—the Court eshnot be presumed to bate ally other wbhea than to administer tho taw, and if it has, it is improper to express them in tbe progress of the trial. Whether the remarks of the Court in relation to that evidence will entitle the defendant to s new trial under the facts of the entire cate, is s different question. It is not very apparent what the annual value ot the plaintiff's warehouse had to do with the defeudau’tsiitabUity to pay for the stonge of his cotton te that warehouse, and that evidence, if it had any bearing at all upon the question at bane between the parties, wm ao remote, that if tho Court had rejected it wc should not have set aside the verdict on that account The Court, how ever, te the bill of exceptions, in explanation of tbe cause of the remarks, alto states that tbe jury were told by tbe Court that what had taken place between the Court and the counsel should not influence them, but that forwantof jurisdiction of theCourt they would be controlled by the law and the to hear them, should in our judgment be over- evidence. In view of the evidence contained ruled. Tho motion to dismiss the case of in tho record, wholly independent of that to Wm. Dougherty, assignee vs. Barber, ct. *1, which the remarks of the Court applied, the on the special grounds stated m the motion verdict should not be set Mide on that assign- cannot be entertained now, inasmuch aa the mC nt of error. The Court refused to give plaintiff hM oo legsl representative before the the charge as requested ta the tan Jcurt in tbst case, but tho defendants may pressed therein, bat ” ’ * The bill will.ot course,be signed by Grant, and, therefore, the salaries of the officials named above-Will be as follows: President, $50,000 per annum: Chief Justice of the Su-; preme Court, $10,500; Justices of the Supreme Court, tho Vico President, Speaker of the House and Cabinet officer?, $10,000; Assistant Secretaries of State and Interior, $0,000; Senators, Members and Delegatee, $7,500 each, with an allowance for actual expenses SSK—sssssasga^ g«5$aaaag'4gg i When General P. M. B. Young, the mem- girls wore old dresses. They knew it would her of Congress from tab Distort, and some “Jurt ruination to wear anything costly at few other DSmocratstook the "wsntof Juris- ■ time, bat there were some reslly diction dodge," in Congress, recently, to pro- cJ^HI vent meeting a plain duty, and toted M they 5“*’ , did, in the Credit Mobllier transaction, wi d “ ce J n al^perv, tuit? xwiUx bee necks found it Dieltv hard to excuse them. Men 11114 uma < ““ m J doctor tells me (did I My ppSttota&'hhjh Sa -55 £ toSriS^nSta! wJSftta, 0 trusts were by such rotes whitewashed, “■ been s *“. a !° cc ,“ 10 and a precedent established which tX- “ 4U “‘ many wfll die from the exposure I lows a Congressman to bsrttr hb vote, defraud the Government and outrage bb constituency, to any extent, so he can epon g*‘ > ™ °? > ”* 1 Young (bn t bsbrad-l manage to conceals knowledge of the trans- some 7) proposed we should go and drink a action until the session of the time being shall glsas of champagne He bffiH have passed and the case fa placed “beyond nrisdlction."» We say wo found it pretty iard to excuse our Con ,, r» , *«m«n» *h»»n,but *7#*went haring departed, we walked into when they, M the record *«ove m<s>, delta- {SjShjtaSKSSfTi j?!!?? cratdy cast theta votes to increase the pay of hanging therewhich I had seen puffedt. good public servsnts who already get far beyond 4 <*T toJbe Washington papers, (much theyl i-i... .i—:. n.. “r.it- know about art.) and which wm presented to what theta services arc worth—the csso “fati gues indignation.” Tbe people have to suffer for all such votes cast Iqr our Representatives. Tbe burden of the public debt b enormous—the taxes upon tbe country grinding—and yet our Repre sentatives, holding tho sacred trusts of the people’s welfare in their hands, deliberately p to work to increase the burden—and what s the worst feature of tbe whole affair, they rob the people to enrich themacivcs. A more the President by tbe artist, s chit of a girl whom I hive seen n good deal in the reporters’ gallery, and who puts on altogether too many sin. The picture b called “The Augel of Peace," but it b nothing more than agreat. big head with lota of yellow hair around it. Haring ont of a fog bank. How ever, we didn’t pay much attention to the lictnre. The General wm very devoted and teiped mot) every thing nice. I know the shameful piette of cool, barefaced impudence other girl* were artfully jealous, but I didn’t wo havo not known than thb voting by our care, and I drank two whole giMsse full of Representatives money to themselves that champagno—just think of it—and aidn t feel they have not earned, and which must be them* ground out of the people. dill charge the jury that, f the credit wm given to Young, he wm Ibble on bb parol promise, and if the credit wm not given to Young, he was not liable. The charge m requested assumes that there wm evidence that tho plaintiff received the cotton of Wright and of the Eagle Fac on storage for them, whereas there b no deuce in the record to sustain that assump tion. The evidence is, that the plaintiff was the owner of the cotton, bad it stored in a warehouse in Taskegee, intended to hold it during the war, bnt concluded to aeU it, sold 43 bales to Young, tbe defendant, for him self, and 56 bales to him as agent for the Esgle Factory, and 107 bales as agent te Wright, who was then in Europe; the bflla for the cotton were made to Young because be told the plaintiff that he would — _JH _ tho stonge, that he need have no tiff against the defendants' to recover s ram about the storage, aa he (Young) would of money, alleged to have been received by be responsible, aad if ptantiff took care of the them m agents of the plaintiff in the life in- cotton he. Young, would pay him good, incc business. On the trial of the case Thb b the contract aa proved in relation to Jury found a verdict te the plaintiffs the storage of the cotton. Tho question on The main question in iwue between the par- the trial wm whether Yonng agreed to be ties at the trial was, whether the defendants responsible to the plaintiff for the storage of Should he allowed theta set-off to the plaintiff any more of the cotton besides tbe 43 bales drawd. te commutation of renewed prem- purchased for himself, or whether be agreed tarns on potion obtained by them after theta to be responsible to tbe pitta tiff for the star- discharge m plaintffa’ agents. The plaintiff age of the cotton purchased by him as tbe moved by the sworn answer of tbe defen- agent of the other parties, and that depends data* that the contract between them and upon the fact whether the credit was given the plaintiff was, that the compensation for to Young te the storage of the entire lot, or theta services wm to be twenty per centum whether any port of it wm stored on the cre- ot and upon all rams collected te first ditof Wright or tbe Esgle Factory. There year’* premium insurance, and seven and boo evidence of any credit for the storage ooe-half per centum ot and upon all rams of any part of the cotton having been given reemed 5y Ottm tor continued renewals of by the plaintiff to Wright or the Eagle Fac- poticks. On the trial one of the defendants tory. Jackson, the clerk of the plaintiff, — 1 - sworn M a witness in hb own behalf, states that the three accounts shown to him 'te question wm propounded to at the trial.were made ouqhe thinks, by the di- ‘Whether he knew of any custom rectionofYoung for hb convenience te charg or usage te the life insurance business tag to the respective parties theta pert of the rato Ufa commutation ot the vitae of re- storage. Thmdoesiot appear tohavebeen anything strange or unreasonable giving the credit to Yt the storage of the cotton fendinta excepted. The defendants’ counsel purchased MSgen’,when one of hb. also asked the witneM if be knew of any was in Europe, and the other resided te a dif- usage in the life insurance busineaM to the fercnt State than that ta which the cotton wm commutation of Tataeot renewals onrtbedb- stored, tbe more especially as it appears from charge of agents, and what such usage wm the evidence that Young wm the Treasurer if there was any ? which being objected to. of the Eagle Factory. The point in the case the Court sustained the objection, and defend- is, to whom was the credit given by the plain- ants excepted. Tbe contract of the parties tiff te tbe storage of the cotton at the time te thb case wm that the defendants should the contract wm made te the stonge of it? receive lor theta services 20 pet cent, on all In view of the evidence in relation to that collected br them te first year’s pre- point there wm no error in n fusing tbe and oh I—let me sec, I forgot to tell you about the colored people: rhere were quite n number present, dressed very nicely, too. Borne girls I saw were almost white and really pretty; but when s Blackman in a swallow-tail cost and white tie came into the room where tbo General and I were, and began eating beside tts, we got disgusted and left. Luckily we were Just about through with our supper. Isaw Sena tor Hill and Senator Norwood walking about arm in arm, and they did look too funny for do something which she does not wish, to flippantly from theta tongue* with a saucy mium insurance, and 7} per cent an all rams charge m requested, and to charging the jury received by them for continued renewals of M the Court did. As to the verdict being con- policies. Thb contract ia plain and explicit; trary to evidence, and the weight of the evi there boo doubt oramtuguityMto the mean deuce, that depends entirely on the credit the ingot it, or as to the intention of the parties; bnt it ia contended the evidence wu acmissi- ble to annex an incident to tbe contract by the proof of usage or custom. But in all cases of thb son tLe rale for the evidence of usage or ust be taka With this jury give to the testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses. If the jury b dieted them, is it wm theta province to do, then the verdict b not against the evidence. The discrepancy or inconsistency in the plaintiff’s accounts, or in hb statements ta relation thereto, all went to hb credit, and it b to be presumed that the free view Into hb place Of Georgia members voted M follows: For the SSj2?SJS8'w2? «EjS£ gaujesiBw-B-sficar-s district, was absent or did not rote, peeome warm. It was nothing of the kind, Those members mthd House, whose terms b ?*?* e *} expired on the 4th instant—Messrs. Bigby, »enty of wraps. I wore my pink utt, but Price and DuBoso—will therefore come borne ‘“tesdof weartagmy pink dippers with it, with a nice little consolation te not being re- 11*?™ « pair of boots that laced over my elected in the shape of $5,000, and about M amue*. easily earned m any similar sum in our knowledge. In our Mra-McL levy—that, after the trial of the claim case, the custody of tbo warehouseman wu her affirm the Judgment refusing to order anew trial before tbe Magistrate .or to restore tho cotton to the dcfcaatilts lb the proscssary warrant. Judgment affirmed. Peabody A Brannon, for plaintiff in error, James M. Russel], for defendant. HOW THEY VOTES. And How Use Trusts at the Fesple are Betrayed OUR WASHINGTON LETTER WASHIM MMilETf GOSSil*. Ufts him to hfe* Lord, open tho* oar wm T° ««their West oitato v“ -tia is rasdis I Tie other side Math's rateT* Lina Foss lit. _A joragtal.jibout nine fan .yam ct tgc. the weight of the evidence, then Ft Thomas Hauck’d Siater Tells Of I silk, with bi.u k velvet. Ml** McIntyre wu I ta white. Mrs. Diisn.. wt>- black velvet,] wilt whtlc point-i sue M v. J >bn M. Dels- no, a I*, inpaib-tr itn -s Mil Governor I wore.* *»••« $»\hm mtin,with white! point-Mce j»nd Ur** njr t.f rrmmc. M'tt I Looke looked tov.-'r - .hi.-; *.j did tbe heantifol Miss Ediu- Fuh. Mn. Sprague I Wore blue silk. 1 ^ | Behind the chain of the President, Mil I Grant, rad tho ladies, stood the gentlemen of I Some Interesting Matters for The Constitution. The inauguration Boll nhd ltd Freeze-Out—Joslt Hill and sudden departure for Greenland, fit search of land lime. Koras I tLe tranderiD^ class, and her mother cign ladies who could brave this coldm’ght ] wl b S!?, a fliU ' wom&n - There b no doubt cl. .. .d her parents were ooor, and the- — very early „ Now I know yon would like to see what we J? P°° r > “ d they 1 «*“ P“>re has to »*v about inangun-1 SSSs! 10 ?* 8 vr Tei T ““'Y concerted S UsnJMte I Molly ’-Uevr ,. e mutt bScass lanat 1 * 1 : 0 for , llfu ln and started out to ter to the Bottea Jourasi; 1 ISACOCRATton BALLS AT WASmSOTON. there wm an Inauguration I tel, then the fsahionsble so] Mil Mad bon, (who, ns | dsyiifty the finding, JofnS, by consent'cae warmth aid surahine. It appears ho dM not SSdcntirih’i^tality'^M Jd2«5l “ of tbe dsitfisM’s allofncys, took tho cotton even wait for the inauguration ball, bntpack- ^ . nl,0 Pted. ^Tutao MS! “n*t-b» B snd started by Ute first and that he, tho said plaintiff is now the own- ,r ^?L . . ,, , , er r the present defendants being only hb Tbb Wss hardly treating us right, but our bailees. Thotfias it accustomed to warm weather, and , the cotton wm legally in wu afraid of frctiibg (o death if here- and afterward as Mrs. Todd, had beat a Phi- 5? r Ma became one of her 2 Isdelphls brita,) did much tosof ten J efitason’s Jasoftcn seen talking £ SJUhSSTsJS??’ auJ allvrwsr.U with S I [ a ,? J friS to find on°t n i£ir S h( S. Mr ' Simmon* f vaSstaxl when the hX. ^ auliful Ti »ic' 1 I re' 'hctclT:»dXS. assures ns tint ta the bsr-rocm* they bad to wtwtvuj.tunviiiciu ouu iuui ui uiv auuiuruv Joiner to take the cotton, and We therefore P Ie wcnl about the streets with icicles hang ing to their beards and their noscL Now that looks like real cold weather. How to replace our departed Thomas wo did not know, bttt m luck would have It'we managed to Intercept s letter addressed to him by bk stater, which, Ibotfgb not intended for publi cation will be found quite entertaining, runs M foil ws; Was HutaTOH, March 8,1873 Dear Tom: It wm real horrid of yob to Upon tbe adoption at the report of the V WI*?! 10 t ? ke nl * to ’erento Committee * preme Court, afid members of Oongrem—the *8TC. l 5, c g|^- I fflarttake yoer increase m to tho latter to apply to members P*? 01 <*J» OI1 I.J$IkffewyouwouldntlIke LUtoC, tTUIBK ALL of “Old Zich," near Louisville. Kentucky ; I “ffl ttat property bo CAlicd J rite has married twain. Hadamo do Bodfaco g^wbito hatas too nearly reprmented dead wu the befie of the evening, and looked “■ daughter and herlmsbandmJde “stunning" in her Russian Court dress of | •“ to get Ha property taken out ofhi! crimson velvet, with a white Mtin underskirt failed to catshUta scare of tasrai^ rad train; and a regal duplsy of diamonds | ‘T' This angered him, and when it wu all When Mr. Buchanan came forward to pro-1 ?*** be ordered his covetous children tn gwasjs' -sf^s « gas (teSssssKPAis ftfid mine mtlft agree in tiat rpgpcct, 11 1 ****** And hia Italian charmer wrnt iw dm “ Well," replied General Taylor, “I have I Savranah, Gerngb. where they were duly been so long among Innbns rad Mexicans properly mSrik T wcro daly that I hardly know how to beharo myself, Dsrtd Simmons on tho same day executed mrrounded by so many pretty women.” Tho ra instrument whereby all his monevand beautiful banner of the Salem Taylor Club, bond* were left to hb wife. InafowXvsho b« on here Ire Captain 8siroid, wu a m c lwil b ra accident whichtajurcdhis sntaal noticeable restore ot the decorations of thb cord, and he lay down and died. Nothing bail, rad the nuisance thereof wu the drip- washrard in New York of the fete otSim- ping from the composition candles in the | mons forsomo months, and, in the meantime ' 'i ruined msnya black coat, ] lud left the country, rad vrassafely than one belle in a low-lb^t w her own sunny lrad. Tho only necked dress shriek m the melted tallow | Jbfag left thattold ofDavid Sitnmonsvras tamed her shoulder. The Piereo rad the his empty trtnk which wu found in a New Buchanan Inauguration balls were alsospelen-1 Orleans hotel. aS.iSft^, C0ntr0 " e ' ** the le,,de " of bubeen heard from. Bhchaa boalhcm ftociety. | o«n seen in Romo by ono who, like old Sim- m«M,hsd been tatatuatol with tho bare tag- Lincoln'e inauguration wu a rather solemn I cmival laumSn? 61 ^?^?.! It . w “ al Uio afblr, bat MrSeward had taken penooal .P^fflbc last days of pains to have a demonstration ofUnion ipparelM womi?bfl^vlii?7 go,KeousIy sentiment, and he wu especially anxious that ^SJoSt^tS riS^^ta^ n i t0 H cn I? lni * se f the bell should bo a success, lira. Lincoln, ramman^ thT^UnUto- JT?: 1 at ,“ ntioD .» n < 1 who wm handsomely dressed, came into the bereft eotaoMw^n ^L,i?r 1 o 8 - 1 taU-room leaning on the arm of 8cnstor l fo ““ 1 ? £c1 ,"' Duugias. and followed by Vice President and an ?j d bank* Mrs Htunlin. Mil Samuel A. Way. of Bos- J 11181 s “ tT f un ?- ton.wss ono of the most noticeable ladies,I~u— writhed in wearing black velvet, with a costiy set of diamonds, while her sister, Mil Cal wore, black velvet and pcuh. Tbe D^^e^tasta^^m^^^taaugtiratedlIThodsughtcr saw* 1 me bmSfffi 1 Italii°21S' which Jefferson attended. That taS^with “®» lib® her. Shoo^cctcd^S^ KSgsas- 1 w yBSaS-^^lSS d8y was somethln^S- modaic Ibc throng a lcmpi>rary edifice waa I, inoro hia daughter scolded ih« erected gluing the City Uril forstaiR bb room wilt flow^, rad toe SSre room. Gencral f aylor nas attended by kk] JJuiftSEi <bechoicest and rarcst^ of them daughter Betty and her husband, Colonel “Usvariou* button-hoieL He wu a wait ^yi^broe.remstea now repose near those rad hot house, though he plums the occupants of the csrrwgo' next in front or next behind bertathepro- WM unrepresented, and 'the main anti of I .£y£ y ?. d>n ” and laughed rad thb Dbtrict remained away, s'-.-i'ing for the JiS ' wl,oI 5 bc ' day-soon to arrive as they thought-when £$1witching madness ^ident Davis should come to d» White StolJSSSSSSSSt^KfSSSS The ball on the second inauguration of Mr. h^d'SSrealtarf! ^ l!^^;. 0 i n lier ?‘i ld J Lincoln wu given in the halls of the Patent .»■ nineteen, and rich Office, just completed, but not occupied. Mr. gUSgftg*- 111 .-^ A Sumner escorted Mrs. Lincoln into the ball- 0 f^e q ??® n room, which wu crowded by a gay and 1 p™,*); cct ^ on ..b“ Una fashionable throng. J bJ ^““bcnorforthwiththepreltyflower- General Grant at first positivdy declined to 01010 0ld cm P ly lrUDk in attend tbo b*U gotten up in honor of hb in- ew Jrlean3 - m SfT'ttr&o'ftre^rS - gS5T-W wise of the Treasury waa secured, and was I - . well adapted for the festivito/ although I From 0,0 8t - ****• RtpubUamj much trouble resulted from the employment I The regular weekly meeting of tho 8t. of the colored messengers as attendants in Lorn* Medical Society was held last night, in the cloak rooms. They received wrappings | Polytechnic building. Dr. F. G. Porter pro- and gave out cheeks with alacrity. But I sided, and there were about thirty members when people came later in tbe evening rad I present. nted those checks, it soon became evi- Wltstcsn we expect or hopo for? The Executive ot tbe nation corrupt—tho Judi ciary corrupt—rad the Legislative Depart ment of the Government, respective of par tita, lead on by the love of gain, have turned upon tho people to despoil them. Where will all tbb end? The future alone must answer.—Home Commercial. COBBUPTIOIt baufaht. The member of Congress who votes to anything raise hb ovra salary i» gui«y «><*»• « ta Sir. Util b such a big burly man, with couples such increase with* vote to add to iac h bushy hair rad bushy whiskers Mr.Nor- tho President’s Mlary, in order to prevent ward looked like a little tay beside him; and that functionary from vetoing the measure, he hag , mue face snd it fa 10 pslr, that be adds bribery to hb theft. This b just it made a wonderful conlrutwllb Mr. Hill’s what tho Forty-second Congress has done. m ealy complexion. I don’t think either of Its members have rewarded themselves for themidanccd, but Gen. YotiDg did. de danced their lato show of pretending to examine wI uP m e twice, rad thee left me with Mra Into the venality of some of their col- G abWe>nd Mbs Gabble, whom I had not laid leagues by openly stealing five thou- eye on from the time wc entered tbe room grad dollars apiece from the Treasury, jbehaved just as well, though as if I had No increase of pay of members of Con- had you st my elbow all tbe time, Tom; tat I gress should apply to the Congress in which era’; ssy as much for everybody. I saw one the vote b passed. There b such a thing as n^cd , * honesty and such a thing as decency yet left in the world, notwithstanding tbe practices of our present rulers are all directed toward obliterating the line between virtue rad vice, between probity rad raatalty. Nobon- orable, no honest nun, will delibwitdy fill hb pockets ont of the public chest be cause it happens to be open to him. We ex pect the colored members of Congress from loath Carolina to steal whenever they get s chance, for they are brought up to it, and be long to a class st home who live by robboy. But we have been in tbe habit ot expecting better things of the average white mraabta, especially when bo te well watched.—N. T. Sun. woman throw her arms fairly around _msn, and it wasn’t berhusband either. He seemed to like it,(f don't mean the husband, tat the other nun,) and I don't wonder, m she wss sweet, pretty sad had just tbe lovli- at arms snd neck yon ever saw. I know she bad drank too much wine, rad I think ber husband ought to have taken ber >me. I suppose you would like to know shout __tne of the dresses, ts since you bare bad my toilette to provide you have manifested tn interest in such tbingL I can't tell you much, as I wm too cold to take notice, and then lob of people were covered up with wraps to keep from freezing. I will mention s few of Slang Talk By Yeans Ladles. Yonng ladies tare tat little ides of the impoliteness snd bad effect of the slang phrases often used used in so-colled polite so ciety- An exchange s*JL in s wort of ad vice to any who sre partially or wholly ad- d ?cy^n°have no Idea how it sounds to cars (from Worth) trimmed with msreonl the immfai or adverse to it to bear s yonng lady train and tsblier of Chantilly iscc, low cor MywtaSstalsMkedifshe.irlllp>Tith?oa **E*trimmedwUhmsroonsilkand 1st*,full Mil Grant wore s white satin with flounces of black Chantilly lace Jhesded with lavender velvet. Mbs Grant wore white illusion, with white pond lffita on her dress. ”— Frey re, the agreeable wlfo of the i_ Minister, wore s pink gros grata read figures, rad the corresponding wrap- ■’— were not forthcoming. er fretting awhile some of the tadig- out grata insisted on personally hunting up their property in the room, and the con tents of tbe plgion-holcs were soon piled in heaps on tbe floor. When the managers were informed of Ibis mixing up of costs, shawls, orcrihocs, and hats into miscellane ous modley, they sent ono of their somber to endesver to straighten out matters But m he wm making hb way up tho crowded ■talrcaee he heard just above him the thrill voice >f Mr. Greeley inquiring for “one of the d—d fools who have un dertaken to manage thb affair,” with so much earnestness tbst tbe alarmed man' sger quietly pulled off hb gorgeous badge, turned stoat rad left tbo taiid- tag, glad to fleo from the wrath to corns From whit those who I thus taglotiously left behind me have since said, I do not suppose that there wm ever a more angry, more dis gusted, or more profane crowd in thb city than those,who had to trttdga to their bold* or their homes that cold night without their wrappings. To tbb day General Cbipman, who was on the responsible sub-committee, hM not heard the last of it, and has an oc- CMional intimation that ta should replace s shawl, an opera cloak, or a great cost. TBE FBEKCU HIKlSTEB’s BECEFTION. I attended tbe last reception of the French Minuter snd Madsme is Marquise, and found it one of the most delightful of the season. The French Minister hM thrown two bouses into one. Tbe arrangement wm admirable to have Ibc guest* come up one flight of stain to the dressing-rooms and go down another to the reception rooms Tbb wm all very well before supper, but after supper It got a little cot-fustag. Old Admiral , who leans with great regulsrility after bb "feed,' M be csib II, attempted to do so on this De cision; but ta kept going up rad down the same stairway and asking the French Minis ter tocall Li* carriage. That gentleman, supposing the Admiral wm in search of refreshments, relieved every descent by some more champagne: Tbe Ust I saw of tbe Admiral he wm bring boosted np the right flight by Pay Director Cunningham, assisted by the robust Robeson. All three disappeared, and are supposed to have gone borne by the right stair-way. Your friend Jones says be will remember that entertainment to hb dying day. Mbs Rosa Frey re wore a pate pink silk, hear her sav "’can t see it.’ trimmed with the palest shado of bine bro- “**£-“75 y ’ » * cade and Valenciennes lacc, low corsage, and - - y in speaking of a * rare and costly Japanese set of gold beauli to Vo for fully carved. _ _ her sbter asked tarastfa- Miss Victoria Freyre wore a psle bine dress £d r, £S£gA £££ of “Now, young ladies of unexceptional char- pe*ri» *od torqnobe, ear-rings of handsome acter and really good education fall into thb peeri*. ’ ’ ^ta^pta^rit“ 2K Lta f „Worthington..nriee of the Secretary of War, wore a light Mae silk. pertneM that b neither ladylike nor becoming, trimmed with .vt&nriennra ; • jewdtey, SfeMastfgSjg? drily life, ^tatag.haadown fro, ttajwd- Urendersilk, Un. Hallett KUbourne wore a Paris mtulin trimmed with rich white Valenciennes taro. CF* The authorities of the town of Bter- Mbs Kilbonrne wcw a lovdv ptrtatae ailk, ling. I linofa, have resorted to a novel expe- end Mim Bella a becoming whit* taririHU dieot to reatrata intemperance. They have Mil Fbh won a lawqder aMq.wjthpajat passed an ordinance which imposes a fine of dbmrod. Mil BoutareU woreade from five to twenty dollars upon the keeper an iait colored fa ray otaro wayjrankt a rt-Hhj. diplomatic friend of bb told him confldcn tiallly that the French Minuter had gennine ate de foie ynw, and Jones ale a pound or two; indeed be cleared away alt there wm on tbe end of the table, and b now In the buds of the Board of Health bowling. THE LATEST DIAKOBD SWINDLE. I cat thb item oat of a New York paper. I thought u you write for a Georgia paper yon might want to see it “Mbs Bella Thompson, young, beautiful and stylish, has been stopping at tocNcwark Hotel, Newark, for a week. She told the proprietor that she wm from Georgia, end wm waiting for friends from that State. On Friday she showed the clerk and several ladies a act of diamonds, saying that they cost her $5,000. In the presence of one of tbe ladies she pot them ta her bunk. On Saturday she charged that her trunk had been broken open and the diamt nda stolen, and demanded pay for them. Suspicion wm di rected toward a guest or the house, when a letter wm received at the house addressed to the woman. Tbe detective opened it and read, “Deer Bella, can’t you scud me $10,1 am d—d hard up.” The arrest wm delayed, rad it wm found that she had obtained the diamond* from a Broad street jeweller, exhibited them and sent them back, telling the jeweler she did not want to buy them. She acknowl edged the swindle, rad after paying her M b quit the house. : There, I think I have written enough for one day, don’t yon? Pray come home aooa. Somebody I know of will cry ber eyes oat if you don’t. Your losing sister, Minnie Hauck. ,Dr. Montgomery read nn essay on a dfacacc of the brain and sninc, known os cerebro spinal meningitis. In the absence of minute descriptions tt wm not known whether it had been Epidemic in tbo old world in pMt cen turies. It waa epidemic in thb county,parti- cu'ariy in tho New England States, from 1806 to 1816. It wm limited to certain localities snd neighborhoods, without their being able to account for such nrcdcliclion. Although it often appeared among tho dwellenof filthy snd mud streets, soldiers’ camps rad jails, yct-thc residents of salubri ous localities were not exempt from it. Speedy prostration wm one of its prominent symptomL Tho functional disorder balwsys evident and well marked. Sometimes itwas ushered by no premonitory symptoms what ever. Ho had known several cues which I terminated fatally within thirty-six hours. The patient bad pains in the head, neck and extremities, grrot weakness snd apilby. There seemed to be a poisoning of the blood. In fatal caeca there were acute nervous symptoms until convulsions set in. lie quo ted the treatment pursued by different phy sicians. One wm for leeching, purgatives, blbten and quinine. Another favored ton ics only, and another administered brandy, Ibccf-tca, and quinine. Some believe quiniuc b the main remedy. There are different types of the disease in different localities. In the case* of young persons, ho was op posed to opiates ta ray form. There should bc good ventilation, the beat hygiene, rad good sanitary measures. Dr. M. M. Fallen alluded to tbe difficulty of accounting for tho origin of the disease, and asked if itwM due to barometric, electri cal conditions of the atmosphere, or malari ous taflucnceL It wm found on mountain tope where tbe atmosphere wm as pure as could be, m well as where malaria has Us in fluence. There arc some vegetable substan ces that enter the system snd cause scarlet- fever, cerebrospinal mcnigitb, etc. It wss kdbease tint played fantastic tricks. On jone occasion at Gibraltar it attacked bovs from three to fifteen years; at Stnsbuig ‘it wu limited to recent recruits; st another to females and sometimes to negroes. Dr. Edgar read a well-written paper, 'n I which be described the symptoms of thedii- ease, and said te was most prevalent in win ter rad early spring. He thought it was o! the nature of a malignant fever. Dr. McPheeter* requested Dr. Prcwit*, resi lient physician at the City Hospital, to state Ithe results of hb experience: Dr. Prewitt cited some cases that had come under bb notice at the hospital. The treat ment he punned wm repeated cupping at tLe back of the neck, free meenrial purga tives, and large doses of quinine. Dr. Alley wm opposed to ra exhaustive or depletive treatment. 09W on arooont of the war indemnity. How Dm Jones Treats Ozoena, the Most Dbaobesabui or all Diseases (ui tbe Nosl) Extract of a letter from Mra. a E. Lumpkin,of Lexington, Gl, one of the most intelligent and rcrncctablc ladies in tho State, after tar niece' had teen under Dr. Jones* treatment five days: Dr. Jtnet: Dbab Sir-I write to tell you of the progress your prescription b making ta my niece. She b getting on finely, and says her bead feeb clearer rad better than she ever remembers to have known it The db- sgreeable smell hra enterdy left her note. Her father seems more than delighted with your treatment Wc follow your directions lierfectly, which fa easily Cone. I am, most respectfully, Mel 8. K. Luxfkin. Lexington, Ul, February 10. Dr. Jones bat been persuaded to extend bb stay at Brown’s Hotel, Macon, until the 21*1. f3T The lumber ha tin can of the pine-belt country of the South b getting to be immense. Georgia aiooe (hip* about one hundred snd seventy-two millions ot feet, most of which goes to foreign markets and yields a fair priro, bringing nearly two millions of dol lars into tbe Bute. This business must in crease because Canada and alalne hM been comparatively exhausted. E36* A laJy of Mr. Si lion, ta London, (Mra. BiHc-ciaee of 9<w woman.