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ATLANTA WEFKLY CONSTITUTION. JANUARY 22, 1878.
\VKl>DISO song.
the ceremony, there waa a reception
from -1:30 till 0 p. m., and many heart
felt congratulation*! were offered the
newly-made husband and wife. The
reception was entirely of a private
nature, nnlv members of the families
and a few of the most intimate friends
being present. Am jng the distinguished
people who grace-1 the occasion by their
presence were President E'iot and
members of the faculty of Harvard col-
James T. Fields, George W.
Childs, of P< iladelph : a, and several
members of the Appleton family.
the i U of yore—
t.- »n Loti
t did Ignore.
who 1 her name
I thus they sin;-:
1 U bought.
... he a blight,
m«u‘*o Wind
AT ADRIANOPLE.
r oa tkh or mm city throws
ores 10 mm nr am a*
A HUY
or Segoilwlln • allb Coa
» fto* Iren fieri 1 pen i»»r
1 .>erM.
i« cl liar Armlatfre.
• uvry 10.—A special lo
• fr-n» l. lVU ril.iirKU)» a|«rw.u who
ii« up U.«- »rm 'slice condition* kU'xa
*r. such a* arc not likely to beaoccp-
t 7 writs. The seine di»palcb states the
f.f tha interior has initnic ed the prt-a*
<!nnu- In Ha remark* al out Auetrla and
I Timas' Pent dispa'cb has Its fol-
:• > natd the Grand Duke Nicholas, an-
•-: l.y bia iu:l and Gen. IgnaiU It, met
. .»h •!« **aies on Friday morning at a
the Jsmholi railway. The g-and
n delegates bv
liffinilty 0
' ml. 1
riage with
nuary l'i - The DUIt Te!««nr*ph’*
L at Per* lUU* that the Turkish
the Grand Duke Nicholas at T11
.and preliminary notes were ex
•• grand duke then announced that
lid to treat only at Adrlwnople.
tar immediately evacuat-d. The
,irl. Pasha to evacuate Adriano
* d« lalou U'Iuk cnmmunli at«d to
la "I A HUnople. they telegraphed
i..t.n and protect thair country
11 tied iiuea l.ef.»re A Iriar.ople,
• iu< •its are now conccuiratir g
:l: probably arrive at Alriacoplu
move Hein nti bring thirty-five
limit therefrom. Negotiation*
hr go. It la generally
to make pern** at Otim. Th 1 *
roipundcut aaya g u-en Victoria
tu.ian that he waa alteady ac-
ll.i- action of the Ulitiah govern-
rh« had brewif urg-dtnv czar
ad hn
iar<wt ooffeapowdeat, who
» lo try aisd cr<**» the D »u*
into ltulgaris, telegiapha
mortality among the Turk-
*chle i* K-arful. The atatiou
lug Into a terror to trav
barest and the Danube,
mg worn* thare than ordl-
torntllty eviGncal hy the
the plain aurioundlug the
the sppri heuaion* of
midi re digging huge
,ity Turatah oorpw-a
ustlfl.
n piled
A COMICAL Coy PEDER I TAT.
ftonas the Vrgkrlra and Vlulrat
kpeeebea af PMwaewi
Brother In Law
II. V. Redfi'-ld in Cincinnati Commercial.
Gen D. H. Hill, unlike the Hlmdrions
Hen of the name, has the reputation of
b-iiii? “unreconciled.” like Jtihal Karlv
ing “tinreconciled,” like Jubal Early.
He has no» yet erltau-d in the army of
reconciliation, so-called.
That he has a Bible class of two hun
dred is not surprising, as he is the au
thor of two or three theological works.
Before the war he aspired to author
ship, and among other “works” at
tempted to set up a southern series of
school books, which should teach the
young southern idea how to shoot a
Yankees. I Jig aiit bins lie has “prob
in it running in the following
A GRAVE SUBJECT.
MU:VAL ACTOPST BOCIE7T.
The Member* Pledge Them %elvew lo
•■bait ta Dlwseellaa After Bralb
London Daby Telegraph.
terns”
style:
“A Yankee mixes a certain quantity
ialf-r
ria Their ragg<
blow visible on their naked
It-VMv of the hardship* they
their dreadful march from
d loonier the Turkish sinbn
aud lsmdon to request au •:
protest* a«ralr.*t *c, urate
y aiiiitriaand Kr gland, and
of worsen nutmegs, which cost him
one-fourth of a cent each, with a quan
tity of real nutmegs, worth four cents
each,” etc.
“The years in which the governors
of Massachusetts and Connecticut send
t reasonable messages to their re3pec
live legislatures is expressed by fou
digits.”
“The field of Buena Vista is six and
a half miles from Saltillo. Two regi
ments of Indiana volunteers ran away
from the field of battle at the same
time,” etc.
He was an original pcceeeiontat, and
proved his faith by his works. He was
one of the first soldiers in the field,
S uing in as colonel and coming out as
etitenant*-general, through a long se
ries of well-earned promotions. His
“official report!*” were among the liter
ary curiosities of the war, and the ob
jecta of no end of fun in the confeder
ate war depart merit. Of the battle of
Malvern Hill he reports officially that
“the Yankees retreated in the night,
leaving their dead unburied, their
wounded on the ground, three pieces
of artillery abandoned, and thou ands
of superior rill s thrown away. The
wheat fields at Shirley were all tramp
led down by the frightened herd. >u
merotis wagons and ambulances were
found stuck in the inud, typical «f
Yankee progress in the war. ,f He also
speaks of 4 lifting the young Napoleon”
from his entrenchments ar rand the
city, and telling: him down on the
hanks of the J*ines river, twenty-five
miles further r ff.
The conventional style of writing offi
cial reports was ignore I hy him in
every instance. Of an attempt of a
portion of the union army to cross the
river at Fredericksburg, he officially re-
(Kirts thus: “Finding the fiie too hot
for them they fl *d hack to town, where
they were shelters) from Carter’s fire.
Hardaway continues hi pelt them, am
t'* htop his fire (as is suppos d) the
ruffians commenced shelling the town,
full of women and children. The town
was partially d-stroyed, but a merciful
God protected the offensive inhabi
tants. A dog was killed and a negro
wounded. Finding Hardaway's fire
did not slacken the pirates fled down
the river. From Ya kee c urces we
learn that the pirate:, lost six killed and
twenty wounded. Whether they over
estimated or under-estimated their
loss I do not know. They sometimes
lie ou one side and sometimes on the
ot her.”
While the severe and aacet'c Sed-
den wa- secre'ary of war the«e “official
report h” were an aunoyance, but other
memhersof the deparlineut rather en
j »yed them. He once dispatched to
Seddcn that the “Army of the I’smtin-
key, or the Munkey army, ia in full
retreat," and followed it up with the
strange recommendation that the en
gineers be put t • work and ordered to
leave their kind gloves U-hiiu). He
spoke of S onewall Jackson ns having a
great «1« at of “outcome” in lorn, and
denied furloughs to municians becanst
these privileges rhouId he er j >yed by
‘‘fighters and not by tooters.” H»-
nce gravely proposed to the war de
part men. th it his soldiers l>e allowed
to go home occasionally, for fear that
the shirking, sneaking Vlav at homes'
wouh! take advantage of the>«baence of
thesoldiets ami propa^a e a race of
owards.
According to the Paris Temps—a
grave and decorous journal, very rare-
.y indulging in the vagaries of anecdot-
age in which such sprightly sheets as
the Figaro and the Geuloia takede
light—a society has been formed in
P«ria for* the purpose
of enabling the members thereof
to cut one another up. The gentlemen
are not as might he inferred from the
premises, literary and artis'ic critics.
They are only a body of physicians,
surgeons, anthropologist a, and savants
who have formed themselves to a aiu-
tnil autopsy a* ciety, each member
pledging himself to give up his
rerr.«uua after death to be dis
sected by his surviving friends
Vt hen a member departs tnis life his
brethren meet in the salon of a restau
rant, din*- gtyly. and, after coffee, a box
is placed on the table containing a
number of glass vcstela in which the
relics of the member deceased, the
•under of the feast, are carefully
reserved in spirits. The Temps
adds a story, which has a cl'»se re
semblance to a canard, about a sick
member of the secietv who, with un*
|wrdonah ! e carelessness, called in a
brother member as a medical attend
ant. The society had been for a long
time bereft of a “subject” for dissec
tion; and naturally the patient
THE GOLDEN GOD.
THE nos nUOLDKRS EUBBAJEM
TO DRAW I MR RRMRA
TIGHTER.
me Serin Tawing up the Cry of WU
poClati-m of the Bond*-The India
nation of the Laboring Million*
(iwrlllDK On 1—The Silver BUI.
Spcc'al dltptfch to The Conadtution.
Washington, January 19.
SESATOH EATON
remarked to some gentlemen to-day
tha*. Harf jrd. Conn., had three hundred mil-
and that thej were gom* to draw it In bccauae
the wtttern people are opp *.“d to the p^jxntnt
of the bonds in gold. The money power threat-
11:1.1. hi. tuny
»l Klebarsl II. liana Non of
■I llama. Jr. no«l *ll»«
■•u«fellowr. Danthirr of the
hlge.
. T In
-The
•Ming of
. .January 10
hard H l»ii .
1 bard 11. Dim, jr., and Miss
. .^t.t- r of the pin t Ivmgfel ow
mu’/.ed in Crtinhr.rlge to-day
t had l>een Ls ked t *rwar 1 to
usual n eie-t by the tnwny
wild » piamta
(General Kwlag Thlnha the 1
racy laa t arry the Conutry oa
WaNbiiiKbu: I'ort.
nbridg
.g to the happy oileuinstance* a
i; c the match, as well as to the
. ;«• 1,111 ot two Mich honored
- The weather
. ^ v di-agret«ab'e, a drenching
(.filing and converting
t..»w with which the gr,
. 1, into the m*«t ut.diitigatesl
.. : •‘slush.” The hour of ceremony
^ p.m-, and the place, the Ap-
i . impel, in the college gn
civets tw gun to arrive at about
. 1 . k. The chajHfi was lighted
n m j ifie tl >we:s were beautiful
(T..UI o!u,e po'l' t » »ronpof
.irgo hhea were arrarged on a
Kcr..imd of dark green, and on the
amt communion table were two
bouquet*, competed largely
: ,i«1s. There wa* no crush, the
- not Pei tig more than two-thirds
The floor w»is entirely reserved
e invilesl gustts, who were
mto two claw,
:-ew* owning on the c**ntml ais e
; , ivupied hv the member* ot the
id Lmgfellow families and
no number of near friends, the**
. g in full evening dress, whib
er gm sts, holding cat da of in- I
n t,. • :.e church ceremony only,
•attd iu the pews opening on tin
a - rs lhe Itodv oi the church
therefore, a very bnll ant upcci,
vi iv largely outnumbcrii.g the
, n, and wearing the most
*\ ant magnificent toilets. lathe
:., !«• were but a few people,
:.*u l.a'dof whom were students
:» u u>:.ers were busily engaged for
a .f hoar preceding the ceremony
*!Vv’aiVp. in. tl e bridal party
•1 d the ct . pc' - I be match up the
t;.e notes of an allegretto, by
mas in the followu g « rd* r:
mine Mr. li H Dana fthird M e
u,, ou the arm of Mr. George A ig
4 rttt, the “ Us: man then Miss
... h v gie low, the bride, with her
, , 4 nd i.n-ily ti.e two bridesmaids,
Auuie 1. »iigfel!ow, sis’er of ib**
.i M. s Mary Lmufelh w, c *u-
: ;:.e bride, (torn Portland. Arrived
• altar, ttie pwrty ranged nseii in
? rder : ll.e bridesmaids at the lef',
- grm tusmen at the righi.and the
: - Herat her >(:, and a little 0
The cerem nv -a mingling
» 1*., .»ccpai and foitariau —was
i by Rev. A. 1*. l’eaboly, D.
v. d by Kev. F*tber Grafton, of
...arch of the Advent, Boston
:»::.* us jhwi gave away the bri t*
.v- uaconcem- d a mien as could
ev ve edof a lather, and while thr
ga:. i .»ved the “Wedding March.
. Cn^r.es Mayer, the happy couple
*.v« d their steps down the aisle, ami
: the church. The hr d • smned
oa her fr.ends a-she carat
General Thomas Ewing made h
fi at ap|*earance since the senatorial
fight in O iio, in the house yes*' -day
ami w as immediately taken in ma 3
the ubiquitous Post man.
The conversation jpenetl with a re
mark from the reporter that the gen
* rat's late speech before the caucus at
Columbus has been the subject of con-
-iderable comment bv democrats
Washington, some of whom raid
sounilei! like the opening of another
campaign on the part of I he general
agains'. the partv. To this General
Ewing replied ; 1* simply slid in the
caucus that the detm cram « f the west
*nd south might as well mske up their
minds to do without t‘ e democracy of
New Jersey, Sew Yoik and the New
Eug'and states in the next presidential
campaign
Reporter. But can we ekcl a preai
dent without these states V
General Ewing, I think so. W
can carry the states ot Onto, Michigan,
ludianaand Wisconsin on the western
idea, and elect a president w ithout the
aid of the ea»t.
K Do you antirptte a split m the
next national derm erarit convention 1
the financial questi«m ?
Gen E 1 think it not improbab
The western and sm’he-n idea
bound to prevail in the next c mven
tion. What the east will do under
these circumstance* remain* to be Been.
Why, we can no more ca ry the state*
of Ohio, Michigan, Indiana and Wis
consin on a platform satisf ctory to the
eartern dem»*cracy tlian we can Hy.
is out of the question. The nsw na
tional party would sweep in aid cats
ture the vote* of the wes ern demccra-
cv every where.
’ U D » yon mean the workingmen
nam, *0 c* led .'
Gen. E. Yes, that is the basis of
what is now an organ xetion styling it-
M -lf the national party. And it is
growing. Lx»a at the strengib it de-
veloped the last etec:t m-in i'ennsyl-
vama alone it polled over 60,000 votes.
I* is organ-red on ideas on final ce aim-
i fiar to th• s entertaintnl l»y ttie dcai.'c-
' raev of the west and south, and will
naturally take our votes, from us if we
adopted*the eastern idea in our plat
form. , , V . 1
K Then you think the wist and
*omh wifi cut loose from the east ?
Gen. E No ; 1 onlv say tliat if w«
exnect to hold Nt w York. Conaecticu'
a tl New Jersey, we must doit on 1
plat! *rm ou the money question w.ich
wou d lose us Oaio, Iuaiana and the
r soon promoted to a bocal and a
» of spirits of wine. Our Parisian
contemporary, in chronicling the al
Jeged establishment of this strange
association, alserves that, in
view of the prevailing morbid objection
11 dissection in cases where it is medi
cally desirable, the mutual autopsy
iwK-ie'y may play a useful part.
Whether the notice of the soc-e’y be a
fact or a hoax, the idea is not by any
means an original one. betting
the numerous cases of
persons who, moved by reck leas
es or greed of gain, have sold their
alies to the surgeons, we have in the
lustrious philosopher,legist and econo
mist, Jeremy Bent ham, an example of ,
a man of learning, virtue and culture
deliberately bequeathing hie mortal
mains 10 the advancement of science,
[r. Benthsm died in 1832,*t the ad
vanced age of 85, leaving his corpse as
n legacy to his friend and physician,
Dr. South wood Smith, who dissected
the bodv secundum artem, and three
days after the philosopher’s dea'h
lectured upon him in a “ prejjared’,
state at the school of anatomy,
Webb street, Msze Pond. Foriome
years afterward the mortal frame of the
good Jeremy, dressed in bis habit as he
lived, ueed to he made the subject of
an annual oration tx fore a body of phi
losophers and medical and tcientific
men, whose place of meeting was in a
Urge hall in Great Windmill street,
Haymarket, which subsequently be
came the hahita. of Dabourg’s wax-
work exhibition, and oi that cu
rious mechanical toy, ^ the
centrifugal railway.” Event
ually the philosopher’s skull fell off ami
a new wax head, in the exnct likeness
of the deceased, was modelded by that
skillful artist. Miss Margaret Giiliis.
Jeremy Bentham’s bequest, all whim
sical as it seemed, was in
reality dictated hy the most
humane and enlightened considers
lions. At the period of his death the
enormities of Burke and Here and the
revolting prevalence of “b dj-suatch-
ing” in England had created a popular
scare and a frenzied outcry against
the practice of anatomy. Bodies for
dissection could not without the great-
e*t difficulty be obtained, and brought
ery high prices in the surgical market,
^nd Mr. Beutliam, in bequeathing his
mortal coil to Dr. Southwood Smith,
hahly thought that he was setting
example of liberality which others
1 his friends, as superior to prejudice
s he him-elf had been, would follow
with alacrity. But neither Mr. Grose
nor the elder nor the younger Mill fol
lowed his example, ai.d England has
noter j »>ed ti e boon of a mutual au-
opsy acciety.
ILL THE CrtBISCT
x»u-1 o! the fcuni th<* peo-
itr eu'ject. Ia con*.qucnc®
of wl icb the peop e here and l’i the noriii are
bee .m:a* ouGpofcen In favor of
OPEN BEPCDIATIOX.
A leading mercaant from Boston has written
to a member oi •••ngnu here tha; if the quts ion
of payinc the public debt wa* submitted prop
erly to ihe vours of M**Mchu*eit*. they would
for a trunk line to Virkaburg, and in
all other respects is the same as Mr.
S.ephens’s bill.
Washington. January 19 —The com
mittee on banking and currencv have
directed their chairman, ixen. Ewing,
to report a resolution asking power to
send for persons and papers and other
wise investigate the amount of coin in
the country available for resumption.
riEGAN PHIL.
Gen. Sheridan will shortly make a
tour of inspection of his department.
Gen. Whipple, of Sherman’s staff will
sccompany Sheridan.
*1HIS MIRED MRS.*
Charleston, January 19.—A special
meeting of the chamber of commerce
to-day was called to consider and act
upon the financial measures now be
fore congress. The meeting was attend
ed by the leading bankers and mer
chants. The following preamble and
resolutions were unanimously adopted:
by a large m-j >rily, oa ammnt of the unjset
exaction* of the mob*; power Thia 1* the all
aUoibiLg question here, and the talk cf rqaare-
out reptidiaUob can b-j hu.rd iu ever; crowd.
The weather ia hue.
will pan, and the puaideut whin
be doe*, it will paaa over his veto
In all the state* are speaking iu t
der on the money question.
: veto 1L If
The people
nt* cf thun-
LBR’S DAY.
Mavanoah Olcbralf* L»fS Blrttidiay
—Ttir iUalltDg Cvllou I.xcIihuk*-
Krimdlalrd.
rip.-cial Dispatch to the Cjr.eti ution.
Savannah, Jauuary 19.—Notwith-
•tandiug the r»ln,
l.EMKtL LEE S BIKTUDAT
wa* appropriately celebrated to-day tty a gr-ind
cnilitar., di?play. The First Georgia regiment
Colonel Anderson commanding ; the Sivannah
volunteer guards, batuliou, unler Maj Bt«-
senger; .the Chatham Artilltry. 'under Major
Wheaton, aud >hc Georgia Uusaara, formed the
hrhraie. and after
MABCUINO THBOCOII THE PRINCIPAL sTREKTS,
ma c ied to the p»rk extension, where they
phased in review. A salute in honor of the uay
wa* h;ed by the Chatham. During tala.
was thrown from lit* horse, and had to be
carried from the held. Ilia wcuud, liiou.h
paiufm, is not eeriou*.
YOUR EbIT >KIAIA
on the Savannah cotton exchacge ha* been ex
tensively read an l apuroved by cur peeplj.
The action of the exchange war due to
FOREIGN INKLCENCE.
who cannot claim to speak or vote in our politi
cal malten. They represent no oue hut them-
The closing day jl the races of the 3 tvannah
jockey club were well attended, lbe favorite*
were all teaten.
Firatracc: The low?r stake* for three y ar
olds. Bu-gundy, Jim Bell and Annie I/e starte 1
BnrgULdy won in airtight heats. Tim?, 1:51,
Third race, for
H>'mp'on and Ge
tip* won. Time, l:4e^4-
There were six entries and fiv* starters 'or
the fourth race, a consolation pure, 1 mile,
von; Fir t Chance 2d, Bargo 31 lime.
1x0*4
Ills Lwiljr mIIIi lb* Horae with
Mold.
The “Mis* Thompson of America,”
who wan described in the World few
days ago as having electrified Edin
burgh by ordering f >r her mare a xet of
hoes of solid gold, hss been identified
by I he Niagara Falls Guzette as an ec-
ceittric guest last summer of the Cata
ract house, t-he never r* gistered her
name, and repelled all social advances.
Her hills were paid promptly, usually
in $20 gold pieces, which shealo, a‘
. time of her departure, lavished uji
the atteiidanls of the hotel St;<
u!d leave the hotel without an
nounceiuent an«l l>e absent several
lays, ami upon returning seek her
room as though she had only heen out
for a short walk In numerous other
wavs she evidenced a mind decidedly
had a valuable mare
with her, which she was in the habit of
riding, usually with a groom on foot to
lead the animal. While occupvirg
iments at the CatAract the .ady
left one day as quiet as usual, and some
days after'tha proprietors received a
telegram from Bristol. England, from
fentric guest, requesting special
care fjr 1 he mare until she should re
turn. Weeks after shw retu.ued
remained a short time; then s
tot k her departure for rcotlvnJ, taking
iier mare wiih her, at.d also one of tl.
porters at the hotel to take care of tip
1 . . .1 v* ...
TJX I SO TOBACCO.
THE DOCTRINE OF THE WRECKERS.
Whereas, vital home issues cow hap
pily settled have heretofore diverted
public attention in this community
irom those questions of national policy
which underlie the measures now
pending in congress; and, whereas, it
is proper that in all matters a fleeting
the honor of the government and the
general welfare of tfie country the
ancient city of Charleston should take
an interest and ask a hearing, therefore
CHEAP LOGIC
Resolved, That the efforts now being
made to remonetize silver and postpone
resumption appears to be reactionary
in spirit and designed to reverse the
action taken at a time when the intel
ligence aud wealth of the south were
not represented in congress, but when
her material interests were peculiarly
exposed to depredation.
CF COURSE.
R solved, That without being re
sponsible for the monetary experi
ment- aud tiuanchil legislation preced
ing the present financial conjuncture
the south was the first section that
felt the depression and shrinkage pW-
duced by the laws now iu force,
and having already experienced
the full effects of resumption in ac
cepting specie prices for her products
without getting specie value in return,
she now needs stability and tranquil
ity in financial matters, in order that
her industries may revive and that her
resoutte3 may be developed.
THE FOREIGN ARGUMENT.
Resolved, That in the opinion of this
meeting the requisite stability and
tranquility is unobtainable without re-
sump.ion and inseparable from the
maintenance of national, commercial
and personal honor in the highest and
idt-st sense.
NOT HONEST TO CARRY OUT A CONTRACT.
Resolved, That it cannot possibly be
honest for the government, after what
has passed, to pay its notes in any
thing but gold, and that it is shameful
to permit by law and even to encourage
by mail legislation the payment of
public, < orporate and private debts iu
a debased coinage specially and avow
edly created f jr the \ urpose.
“influence.”
Resolved, That a copy of the pro
ceedings of this meeting be sent 10
Senator Butler, with the reepectful re
quest this preamble and these resolu
tions be presented to the senate.
JOUS DHRRMAS'S JIASD.
X snort LIme of f nilnreft and a Flea
lor More.
limal on the way.—Now \\>rk World.
Hon. .% U. »ltpkes»i»uU lb* W*
Futtr*tfl*l».
A rfeeption was given at the Nation
al hotel Saturday evening by Hon.
Alexander II Stephens, 1 f Georgia, to
the delegates to the late woman 0 suf
frage convention in this city. The re
ception from 5 to 8 p. in., was at’ended
by Dr. Lorzier, Dr. Thumps >n, Mrs.
Gage, Mrs. Lockwood, Mre. Napoleon
Crew well, Mrs. Patten, aud others of
the foremost advocates of the entrau-
chis*ment cf women now in the city,
mid was a pleasant »ff-ir. Mrs. Crom
well, <f Arkansas, re narked to Mr.
Stephens: “l am here a refugee ; my
h« me has been sold for taxes ; -he la-
di.softhe southern states rttl c; the
liberality, the chivalry,«f southern leg
is atom ’ towaid women; your ten*, r
consideration for us in the past and
present, we can afford to tru^i lor the
future; c*n stb-rd to believe that
•*outlurn men will keep ahead of all
others in securing us the r.ght of xof
frege.” Mr. Stephens replied: \«-s,
vou tnav trust us; we will protec yoi
In your right* at proper tunes at d pla
ces; your faith shall be fu filled ; wha:-
ever is best for you we wilt do at ali
times without delay.—Wa*h. 8ur.
A Brail* Bins.
wr**t.
R. Were you much ^itappointed in
the remit 0 the O .10 senatorial fight ?
Gen. K We i, no ; not at leas; after
the adop n.n of the rccret ballot. That
ended the influence by the outside
popular sentiment and defeated me.
H 11. d vou reason to *uspect that
eastern influence* were workingsgaius:
you and u»a g money to compass your
^ Gen. K No, sir. If such indueccee
were brought to bear, 1 had no know
e Ige ef the fact.
elusion General Ewirg re-
mirked : “The New Yotk Tribune
the Baltimore 8ur of Yesterday, com*
nur.g on my speech at U«tb
In our style of climate, with irs sud
den changes of temperature, -ram,
wind and sun-shine often intermingled
in a single dav, -it is no wonder that
oar children, friends ai d relatives are
so frequently taken from usbvneg-
leced colds, half the deaths resulting
dirccilv from this came. A bottle of
Boechee’s German Syrup kept *bout
your home tor immediate n>e will pre
vent serious sickness, a large doctor*
bill, ana perhaps death, by the use of
three or four doses. For curing Con
sumption, Hemmorhsges, Pneum nia,
Severe Coughs, Croup or any disease
of the Throat or Lungs its success is
simply wonderful, as your druggists
will tell you. German 5*vrup is new
sold in every town and vt! Rge on this
continent. Samp'e bottles for trial,
)c.; regu’ar size, 75c.
•as *
End c
r the t *
mcnting on mj '
made before the caucus heid prur to
he la'e senator id caucus in that city,
<• ate that 1 said in that tp.wch that the
commtteeof the pie^ni house wen
i» eked in the interest* of capush*'*,
1 1 ., » „ in th M Attitude
ade a j t-RNAu: p.ctur* 01 t»n t *.*
: muui-e, th. gnioiu beio*
■ King and hands->me, and the brv.*-
graceful, radiant, and dtc.dedly pretty
1 t.e wedding party having keen
v»liir;e\l away, the guests l»t gan
: • depart, while ttie orj*aww»t played
.V.«t*d«lsshon'i» b flat onus PrratL
At th* l»tJg*ei w h.>n«e, whJtber the
Vasily InvwW *«»: iw*<Ac4l*ktly a<t*T
TUe lAtrlllnrtU Before Cbe t'oiumlllr*
ou W*ya *ud flmaa.
TIIE LORILLABDJ.
Washington, January 19.—Mr. Seid-
ler appeared before the sub-committee
of ways and means to day in the inter
est of Lorillard & Co., of New Yotk,
protesting against the proposed reduc
tiou of the tax ou tobacco and claiming
that whereas he had orders for 1,200 OtJO
pounds in N ivember; in D cember,
after the atfitation set in, he
had only 300,000; that his estab
lishment worked 2,500 tnep; that it
had the capacity cf GO 000 pound*
per dav and tliat his orders would av
erage 50,000; that he was surprised that
the Yirgiuia manutacturers were agi
tating this subject; that the price of
leaf tobacco depended on the supply
and demand; that emsumption wa*
entirely irreejiective of the price; that
there were only eight millions oi con
sumers, consuming on an average of
15 pounds that ttie price had nothing
to do with tee nutnl er of corn-timers or
the amount consumed; that the tax of
24 cents was low as compared witli
E igl »nd, France, Germany, Sp?.in and
Austria; tliat ihe tax iu England was 3
shillings ou manufactured to acco;thar
if the tax was reduced the tariff would
have to be increased and an income tax
would have to be imposed; that if the
tax was reduced to 12 cents the revenue
from it would Le reduced to one-half,
consequently the cost of collection,
which was now four per
cent, would be eight per cen ;
business was now in a very unpr.ti a
ble condition, but he attrihu'ed it to
other causes than the t*x; that one of
the reasons why it was so unprofita
ble to V.rginia manufacturers waa be
cause it was * tripped to c .mmis-ion
merchants and was therefore s? M with
heavy charges r gainst them. Another
reason was that they did not have the
advantag ■ i the chemical nrocesses
whch *ere a ad in N w Y «ik, atd
that they were making inferior good-
for the purpose of underceliin ; tk«?.t
these were the reason: wiry Virginia
manufacturers were so depresK?d, and
not because tf the tax. The five cent
men of the west and northwest came
in for their share of these criticisms
Kentucky was not alluded to He fur
ther baid if the tax was reduced new,
it wou'd have to be restored soon. He
was further questioned by some
gentlemen present that if the
precen* tax was building up such giant
establishments as he claimed if it would
not be better to double the present rates,
lie said that the smaller and poorer
manufacturers were more liable to de
fraud the government than were the
larger ones, because from the latter
larger bonds were reqaired si
people were watching. The argument
being that ii would be beneficial to the
government to concentrate the manu
facturere in the la’g r establishments
be admitted that tobacco was very low
now, Inga in the New York or western
markets being 2 or 2A emts and in V
gmia 3 eeuts Iu order to :ave their
western trade Liriilard Jc Go, gave
guarantees to their customers, and that
iu ihe event el a reduction of tax, it
would involve them ia a 1 *s of over
$300,000 In regard to the rebate
Mr. Seidle argued that the
stock oa hand w >u d be rua h
half of the year’s supply e~»me 60 (»>,-
000 pounds at 12 cents would cruse a
toss to the government cf $7 200,000
He ssid that Mr. Kimball, cLei of the
tobacco bureau in this city, had stated
to him it wtu’d open a vast area of
perjury and fraud. Cvl Bur well was
present aud prepared to present argu
meat in behalf of Vi g nia manufacture,
but owing to tne pn tonied session he
was r* quested to furnish his views in
writing, whicn he will do early next
week.
ew York, January 19.—Powers,
Gaston & Co., boots aud shoes dealers,
have suspended. Their liabilities are
$260,000; nominal assets $265.000;
real $150,000.
THE HELMET HAT.
George L Watrona ik Co., hats, fur
and straw g ods, t ave assigned. Lia
bilities $100,000; as«ets unknow.
John Thomas, miring slock broker,
late president of the teen of tl e West
silver mining company. Has made ar
assignment. His liibilities are $88,-
0Q0; assets nominal.
FREl'ARRING f r more.
At the Maritiue exenange, yes'erday,
the following mem rial to congress,
tinned by many merchants, bankers
and representatives of leading marine
underwriters steamship companies
and hbipptng houses of thia city :
We, the undersigned, members of the
Maritine association of the pert of New
York, feel it to be our duty to remon
strate against any legislation that shall
make silver au unlimited legal tender,
as, in our opinion, such legislation
would umettle values, dietuib confi
dence, retard resumption in gold, and
impair the national credit.
X HR SEW BLOOD OR THE HRS AIR
b**ator “Grro Gunlo" Williams or
KralieEy. aud Senator Groom*, of
■ary land.
SENATOR UE&B0 GORDO WILLIAMS.
The Frankfort correspondence ot the
Louisville Courier-Journal furnishes a
full sketch of the career of Gen. John
S. Williams, Kentucky’s senator-elect.
He is six feet four inches in heignth,
and fifty-seven years old. His grand-
iather, A'alter Raleigh Williams, im
migrated to Kentucky in 17S1, and set
tling in what is now kuowu as Mont
gomery county, built a block house
upon the estate, which estate is still in
the possession of the family. General
Williams’father, Samuel W illianir*, was
a distinguished officer iu the war of
1S12. General Williams and all his
brothers served during the Mexican
war, his oldest brother being also at the
battle of Ban Jacinto with Gen. Sam
Houston. Daring that warGin. Wil
liams parucipatea with great credit to
himself. He commanded an independ
ent company of Kentuckians iu artgi-
ment of regular*, and led the charge at
the battle of Cerro Gordo. Gen. Wil
liams' gallantry on that occasion caused
him to be promoted to ttie rank of colo
nel from that of e ip tain, so great was
the admiration his conduct on the field
e ici el. T. e s ubiiquet of “Cerro G>r-
* >” was then and thtre acquired.
At the outbreak cf the civil war he
was a union man, but the moment
fighting was inevitable he espoused
the cause of the south, and served
from tne opening to the close. He wus
promoted to the rank of brigadier gen
eral, and received a resolution of
thanks from the confederate congress
*or defeating B irbridge at the battle of
Saltville in October, 1864.
He was educated at Oxford college,
Ohio, and graduated with the brightest
houors of his class in 1S40. He stu
died law in Paris, Ky., with Hon. Thos.
Elliott, and within two years after his
admission to the bar had perhaps the
most lucrative practice of any lawyer
iu the circuit. After the Mexican war
Gen. Williams practiced lawouly a few
years when he returned to his large
lauded estate in Montgomery county
and became the foremost farmer of his
community. Subsequently he went to
Europe, was present at the siege of
Sebastopol, aud did not return home
until he had visited all the civilized
portions of Europe, Asia and Africa
From his experience as a spectator of
the Crimean war he acquired such a
knowledge of that sectiou of the world
1 liat the scene of the R isso-TurkisU
is perfectly familiar to him. lie
served in the Kentucky legig'ature of
ROVSDAUOU1HS GBO MA.
1851, and 1872 73 as a member from
Uiatke county. Was deieated for gov
ernor by J. B. McCreary in 1875, aud
in this same year was defeated fur
United States seuator by lion. James
B. Back by oue vote, lie was also a
Tildtn elector.
He has been twice married, his only
child being Mrs. liollotvay, who re
sides in Montgomery county. His
present wife was Mrs. Henrietta Ham
ilton, of Montgomery county, aud he
Las two steuchitdren, Mr. A. W. Ham
tl.on and Miss Ida liamiitun. The ex
traordinary devotion of Mrs. Williams
and the general’s stepchildren to his
interests during the senatorial race
awakened genuine admiration among
every one in Frankfort, and when
Representative Hill voted for 4 Cerro
Gordo Williams, and Mrs. Williams,
too,” the applause was as sincere as it
was hearty.
SENATOR JAMES U GROOME.
Ex Governor James B. Grootne was
born in Elkton, Cecil county, April 4,
1838 He is a graiidsou of James B
Biack, one of the judges ot the supreme
court of Delaware, aud a son of Colonel
John C. Groome, who ranked as the
foremost lawyer of the Cecil bar, and
ran for governor of Maryland when
Hicks waa elected. Governor Groome
was educated at Princeton college. He
was a member of the constitutional
convention of 1867, which framed the
present constitution of Maryland. This
was about h»s first prominent essay in
political life,and on several occasions he
look an aedve part in the debates of
the convention. He took part also in
the canvass for Hon. Wm. Pinkney
Whyte as governor.
In 1871 he was first elected as a in* 111
her of the house of delegates from Cecil
county, and it was then that he was
complimented with a handsome vote
for senator. He was a member of the
judiciary committee. In 1872 he op-
|K)sed the nomination of Horace Gree
ley, out after the nomination iu Bdti-
tnore gave earnest support to the nom
inee, and was placed on the elector*. I
ticket. In the same year he was again
returned to the hcu ; e of delegates from
MATTERS OF TRADE.
Th* Oylou CVfTra* froj* - lUnrtUK
Lhii*’» l»r**l*piu* In
London, Jan. 19.—A letter from Col.
T. W. Klux dated Columbo, Ceylon,
ERY HEAVY RAINS
have damaged the c.»flee crop of Cey
lon. It is Beriouslv stated that the pro
duction a ill not exceed half that of a
good season.
The tea product is greatly increased
this year, ami preparations are making
for
EXTENSIVE TEA CULTURE.
R -coat shipments oi American goods
to Ceylon have been so successful tha
tiers have been sent f ir more.
—The Count Johannes B. G., is in
the right track- He vows he will nev
er marry a woman that can't show up
a stocking full of silver. Now, by the
good King Harry, it ia well!
—The gopher season has opened in
southern Georgia.
—The Crawfordville Democrat
down on Hayes.
—O’Farrel, ol Athens, has started a
sprightly little weekly called the Chron
icle. He plunges headforemost into
politics.
4—Colonel Gregg Wright, of the Au
gusta Chronicle, is gradually elbowing
himself into the long line of bondhold
era and wreckers who are endeavoring
to control the financial legislation of
the;country. The colontl (is taking it
by easy stages, however, as well he
may.
— Gainesville is getting to be a first
c'-ass sbow-town. The A attacks have
been playing a successful ergagement
there, as well as the B.*r^ers, and Hav-
trly minstrels will soon rattle the bones
aud tambourine in the cosy little hall.
—Col. Styles says he is willing to
head the commune if the wreckers
don't give us free money.
—Reville, of the Meriwether Vindi
cator, has returned from,Washington.
—Really, Atlanta ought to aid the
E.birton railroad. Our business men
would be great gainers by the comple
tion of the road.
—The merchants of Crawfordville
save money by having their freights
shipped to Augusta aud btek again to
their depot
—The venerableDr. Lovick Pierce
performed the marriage ceremony at
the wedding of his g.eat grand-daugh
ter. Miss Carrie R. Turner. Mr. It ch
ard C. Wilson, of Sparta, was the bride
groom.
Runaway horses are very popular
in Augusta. The lamp-posts get all
the bark knocked off of them when an
Augusta steed gets on a epree.
—A negro was droaned below Rome
the other day.
—Mr. G. J N. Wilson has bic me
editor of the Forest News, Mr. Malcolm
S alford retiring.
An exchange (the name of the
paper has escaped us) says that ore
day last week while there was a crowd
sitting in Judge Solomon's office in
Jeffersonville, there was one of the fif
teenth amendment came in and asked
lor his tax receipt, a young man says,
“give me ten dollars and I will pay
your tax.” No quicker said than the
negro pulled out the money and hand
ed it to the gentleman, took his receipt
for it and walked out The young man
then looked for the negroe's tax and
found that it took twelve dollars ana
fifty cents to pay it He payed it with
out a word.
— The Sandersville Herald remrrks
of The Constitution: There is a spici
ness and vivacity in this newsy sheet
that always renders it attractive. In
the entire makeup of the paper there
is an individuality that constitutes it
altogether *ut generis.
—The Uawkinsville Dispatch Fays
that on the 8.h inst. Miss John Dsn-
nard, of Wilcox county, was burned to
death under peculiarly sad circum
stances. She had been atil.cted with
epilepsy from infancy, and about ten
o’clock on the morning of the 8*h inst.
while suffering irom an attack, ner
clothing accidentally caught on fire.
Before the flames could be extinguished
she was so severely burned that death
resulted in about seven hours.
—The Gainesville E?gle says that Mr.
Whitehead, a shoemaker of that city,
has invented a leather awl handle,
which he has used for thirty years.
—A man named Alex. Walters was
killed by a falling limb in Pulaski.
—An Augusta cow has given birth
to three calves.
— A barber named Thomas Bmnon
committed suicide in Dub* in recently.
—Gainesville Eag’e: The LtGrange
AS IMPORTANT COS VENT JON.
A Sovemen t la Which the Whole
Month la Interested.
A very important convention is called
to meet In Atlanta on the 6th ot February.
the raocEzos or tsk public lands.
The convention will be composed of public
educator*, cMIece men, and friends of educa
tion all through the south, for the purpose of
securing sue j action by congress as will devote
part or whole of the proceeds of the sale of the
public lands of the government to the cause oi
public education.
This movement is founded in justice. It is
patent unfairness and injustice tha'
the white* of the south should be
called upon to bear the whole burdeL
of the < drciiion of the negro race. The negro
ia confessedly award of the nation. He is th<
pet of the north, and of New England cepe*'
ally. Thia section should then be willing to
bear at least its proportion of the expenn ot
educating the negro. If the philanthropis a
tbs' scctio- had spent half the money on col
ore! schools that it wasted oa freedmau>
bureaus and reconstruction expenses the rac*
would have been much better eff than it is.
A FULL ATTENDANCE 1’KOMISED
It is probable that the attendance on the con
vention will be very large Prominent met
fro a all tha southern states have promised to
be present. A very vigorous programme will be
mapped out.
A convention similar in its purposes to thi>
ae was held some years ago. Gov. Wade
Himpton wes a leading spirit in thet
b sly. Nothing was done of practical work, but
the matter was carried iuto congress. Mr.
Morrill, of Maine, who secured the land scrii
fund, the benefits of which Georgia is now en
joying, introduced a bill, endoreiog the conven
tion. The public domain ha-i been so deeply
I.eeJ into, at that time, that the bill waa not
passed
The movement will be now set on foot again
Dr. Geo Little, one of the moet sagacious and
earnest friends of education in the south, is bu*
sily engaged in furthering the interests of thia
convention.
VICTOR RMAS URL.
IIIn ebirqalrn Iu Wsahlngu
Washington, January 19— Under
the directions from the Italian govern*
meat, the Italian legation will on Tues
day celebrate an official commemora
tive service in honor of the dead king
Victor Emanuel, at St. Aloy»ius church.
A grand requiem inass will be sung,
and the news of the Italian delegation
will be draped with Italian and Ameri
can flags. The president’s pew will be
draped with American flags, and the
pews of f reign legations and cabinet
ministers will De draped in black.
A CATAFAIQUK
covered with black cloth, and white
satin, surrounded by burning candles,
will rest within the chancel, and in the
second raise of the catafalque will be
placed a coat of arms of Italy,environed
with an appropriate motto. On the
head of the coffin will be placed
TI1K ROYAL CROWN,
and the sides of the catafalque draped
with the c lors of Italy. The celebra
tion will be one of the most solemn
affairs that has ever taken place here,
having all the essential elements of an
international affiir.
| OU* MEW-YEAR'S GIFT!
A $6.00 NEW-YEAR’S GIFT
{Coin-Silver Tableware
TO EVERY SUBSCRIBER OF THIS PAPER,
E fS3L a S7&T£i;-Ei: T £i
PLATED BITTEK-kVIFi; (Hut KrUIUul trlao:
(hut 2.!
1 th* S*t mf T«
•Year** can to every sulwcriU-r
itViwTsngenicnm with the old estat.ln
MILVKU I'LATIXU «*0„
valtuihl* Silver Tab!*
his rlrennl K*I of
*rS tv I (la Marne
i'li Ku(ter>knir«
presented.
™l th* following prom;urn .»r.1«*r
*xpivs* rh»rgcs. Under our coi’ur
hv parking, postage, or Mpmucl
1* biiverware Is then delivered (a you free.
i«* following New-YearW Gift Premium .Silverwa:
. postage, o
» SlI.V
t Pi.atinu Co.. Cincinnati.
tkS-Cut out this Order, as it is worth $0.00.-\sa
\nr
NEW-YEAR’S GIFT SILVERWARE PREMIUM ORDER.
VKR PLATING CO..
out WEW-YEAR'S CIFT!
000 lari'* wjpnMAfebS
Dralh «f« Coafeden
to Naval Ofllcer 1 WILMINGTON. January 19. -Cotton middlings
Baltimore, Jan. 19.—Gommoedore 10 -« ; nct «x»ipt* 811 biles; sales 152; exports
Geo. N. Hollins died last night of par-1 colrtw, * e L809
alysis. aged 79 It was he, who in January in-cotton tnl.’dUmw io»i
command of the sloop of war Cyane,! @ ,0 N ; net receipts i,«v. hales; sales soo; exports
•bombarded Greytown, Xicaraugia, in I co ‘ 8twlM 204
1854. At the commencement of tbe| BALTIMORE. January ’O.-Cotton dull; mid
late war he entered the confederate
service. For the past few years he
has been crier of the city court of this
city.
The ITiarter Oak.
Hartford, January 19.—A further
postponement of one week was grant
ed by the court on hearing the ques
tion of a receivership of the Charter
Oak life insurance company.
Liverpool, January 19.—The Abysin-
nia, hence to-Jay, took $200,000 pounds
specie.
Annap'lis, January 18—Ex-Gov.
James B. Groom is elected United
States senator.
EPCKEH PROM THE HUB.
MovrmpniH of lb* Workingmen.
Boston, January 19.— lucre was a
demonstration of unemployed work
ingmen on the common to-day. Same
4 000 afterwards marched to the c*ty
hall and presented a series of resolu
tions to Mayor Price, who replied that
he had no authority to offer them em
ploy ment, but that the city council
would do what it could for them.
SHUTTING OFF 8TEAM.
At Lynn to-day Mayor Burbier, who
furnishes steam power to forty or fitly
shoe factories, stopped his engines and
the factoiiesJiad to suspend operations,
Burbier claiming that the engines re
quired repairs. The most of these fac*
lories refrained from joining in the
crusade against the Crispins, and Mr.
Burbier'* action in stopping their mo
tive power is regarded as
A STRATEGIC MOVEMENT
to compel them to suspend. He was
hoo ed by a crowd in the streets to
day, and the latest accounts state that
he has started the engines again.
At a call from the Superintendent
and lady teachers of Fierce Chapel, a large party
' young ladies and gentlemen assembled at the
residence of Mr. Wm. Laird, on Rawsoc street,
Friday night to form a club for the purpwe
of social interc >urse between the young mem
bers of Trinity church and congregation, and to
raise foods for the poor of the chapeL Bric-a-
brac was decided as the name of the cmb. Each
member of the club is to contribute five cents
each meeting, which will be held once a
week. The following officers were elected: K
B. Chamberlain, president; M rs Susie Pendle
1, vice president; Miss Ida Park, a cretary,
and Mrs. Wm. Laird, treasurer. Every youn*
peoon who wishes to have fun, at a little ex-
peme, is invited to income a number.
Special Disp*t?h to The Constitution.
Chattanooga, Ga., Jan. 19,13*^8
Receipts 10.000 barbels corn. 8h pments 11
cars. . oxl demand at 51k<&5t in the dei-ot.
Wm. SnraENs,
Wh< lead2 r ea’er in grain
O UR UNCLE SAMVEL.
Baying 101 | Selling
EXCHANGE—
Buying at ..par 18elHng,.„—.. ii
BONDS—
Ilia Tax Soils In Sew York.
Cecil, and was made chairman t f the J Reporter is afraid the people and tne
Jiidiciarj committee and a member ol pr, M lied about Bullock. Will brother
the wajs aud means and elections coin-I Watereon never learu the diflerenc
m1 . 1 , ir . T>; . .... 4 between tweedle-dum and tweudle-
Hon. Wm. Pinkney Whyte, then I dec? The code-politico differs from
governor, was elected United bt*tes t h e cot j e judicio, ami the m- de of trial,
senator to tucceed Hon. Wm.T. Ilaaul- conviction and punishment of one is
on, and the legislature elected Mr. , iuile disimilar to that in the other
Groome to succeed Mr. Whyte as gov- Bul'ojk had been put up an trial by the
ernor of Maryland. Hit administration people and the prees, found guilty een-
was for three years, until succeeded by tenced and punished. The f »iiy was in
Gov. Oarro.l, for whom Mr. Groome arraigning him a second time, and
SteDDSd arliie. Exeunt (inv. I-ma-t* I 1 , , ’
eppea aride. Except Gov. Lowe,
Maryland has never had so young a
governor as Mr. Groome.
before a judicial tribunal.
—While at Villa Rica the latter part
of last week, we learned of a horrible
crime committed in the lower part of
I) juglass county, on D>g river, on the
MINCING LANE MARKETS
are still affected by the deprtssion of
trade, and while political feeling re
mains iu the present unsettled state,
there appears little prospect for im
provement. Sugar aud c flee for pub
lic sale on Friday were withdrawn,
owing to the heavy fog. Su,'ar not ia
all cases maintained the recent advance,
but lower qualities now at'ract rnsre
attention. G»od to tine coloring plan
tation Ceylon ctflVe sold at full to
ra'her higher rates. AM common kinds
TESI) DOWNWARDS
with large stocks here and on the con
tinent. Rice steady, but no further
transactions rep tried in Burrr.ah new
crop. Saltpetre is dud, rather lower.
Tea inactive; some medium grades of
cttg .-ea sold by auction at a decline on
late rate*; common is uncharged. B ack
pepper met with more inquiry at low-
prices now ruling. The Economist saye
the rate of discount is 1; per cent.
TONE
TUE EAS:
of political feeling and cheapness
money here and on the continent have
caused further advance in epeculat
stocks this week. There was a tempo
rary relapse Thursday, iu conf»q ieuce
or an unfavorable interpreted n »f the
oneen’s speech ; but. tne debate in \
ament tevived a feeling cl hoptiul
The average tise in Russian and
Hungarian securities on tLe week wa
2; Turkish show little movement.
French advanced moderately; Spanish
higher, on specia 1 political grounds In
vestment purchasersare naturally much
restricted at a time of so much tension
politically, but doubtless g eat ease oi
money bad effect in raL-ii g prices in
this department. Also a further rise
in United ^tate band a has been a fea
ture of the wiek.
AN A I. IKE AVALANCHE
In the summer of 1864. a partv of I 24 h of December. A mother wiih two
tourists, while visiting tne Alps, climb- children, ageu respectively two and
ed, with great difficulty, to an elevated four years, deliberately carried them t«*
aud snow* covered plateau, in order to the river aud drowned them, aliegii g
obtain a bettor view of Swrisi scenery, that she was not able to supp rt th* m.
and contrast the beauty and richness of It seems that she was seen by Mr. Kit
midsummer below with the b eaknees Morris of that county but not in tune
and sterility of midwrinter around and to prevent herefrom consummating this
above them. In play they rolled the terrible crime. The woman w as a widov
moist snow into large bal’e, the crowded audit is sdd in very indigent ciicuin
ver the edge of the plateau. In stances. Tne only charitaote construe
lalnigit struck softer snow, which im- tion we can put on her action iu the
mediately gave way, and soonanava- commission of this atrocious ar d uu-
ianche was tearing down the mountain natural crime, is that her mind most
side burying and destroying everything I have been unhinge 1, and that she mutt
tn its coarse. As the Laudful of snow h>vs been demented when she cun*-
became the irresistable avalanche, so miited it.
the hackingcough with sore throat and _ R-> mo Courier: We learn that on
Catarrh, if neglected, speedily develops lMt vVVJnemiay night the hotel ami
into that dread destroyer, Con samp- I gtore, with the Masonic hall over it,
tion. In the early stages. Dr. Save s belonging to H. D. & R. N. Cunyns, and
Catarrh Remedy will effect a cure, t b e su>re of J. C. A J. D. Lanier
though if the blood be affected or im- A \\ burned, w th most of their
poverished it must be purified and en- ^ mts. The fires in all the hnilditigs
died by Dr. Pierces Go:den Medical originated al about the same lime,
ihcovery, and the liver and bowels ant i cou bi not have accidentally
Kept active by his Pleasant Purgative I communicated from one to another.
Pellets. Many, who despaired of life I jjr. S.evens’ stables were fired a few
and had been given up to dte by phjfl- I weeks sine; and that community is
xians and friends, owe. the r rcstora- j considtrab y excited upon tfie aul j .ct
ion to the i-beve remedies. I of incj iGiaryism. Tfie Cinyus' are
Ely, Linn Co., I jwa. May 8,18 7. 1 repor.ei to have been partially insured
l)r. Pierce, Buffalo, N. V: but our informant did not know as to
Dear S.r: I w’as prostrated three years I 5be Ltuiers in this respect. S.nce the
since with pleuro pneumonia, which I above was in type we learn that Dr.
1-ft me with a troublesome c ugh, that I Beasley's office was burned, co itainirg
gradually grew worse uutil physicians $3 500 ia gree ib?cks. Also, that Joel
v;e me up to d;e with consumption. Conyers had $1 200 cash burned. An
tried several remedies, that are ad- I unoccupied dwelling house was also
vertised to cureconsuinp ion, but with-1 burned- The lire was discovered about
oat obtaining any relief or be etit. o o’clock Thursday morning and two of
Seeing your Golden Medical Discovery j ^be stores were then in full 11
and Pleasant Purgative Pellet* adver
tised, I concluded to try them, and 1 j _ Too moch ^unot be said
New York, January 19 —The often
adjourned case of Gov. Tilden’s alleged
unpaid income tax came up bef>re
Judge IS atchfonl in the U. S. district
court to-day. O 1 the argumeut on a
demurrer to the complaint, Mr. Aaron
J. Vauderpool appeared for Governor
Tilden, aud District Attorney Wood
ford lor the United States. There are
NINE COUNTS
in the complaint, to all of which de
murrer is made on technical grounds,
tne merits of the case not being gone
into. It w-'s decided to take up each
count separately. The first count
charged $3 000 back taxes for the fiscal
years ot 1861 62. Mr. Vanderpool
claimed that tfie law D 'ssed about that
time was recognized a*
A NECESSARY WAR ME \SURE,
and annulled the law nquiring the
payment of income tax iu that year.
Judge B atchford sustained the demur
rer, giving Tilden the first victory.
Georgia 6* _ ,
Georgia 7a..... 10.S«106
Georgia 7s gold.106 A107
Georgia Ss ....10*311*
AtiaataWater.. *8 *9*
ANOTHER RAILWAY KILL.
Washingt* n, Januiry 19.—General
••Grrtssa Njmp,
No other medicine :n the world was
ever given such a te*: *f its cunxtae
qoadlie* ** Boechee’a Germen Syrup.
In three years two mil.ion Lur huu-
jlred thousand rmall bottle* cf this
medicine were distributed free of c ha rge
bv druggists tn this country to thuoe
♦ i.eted with Consumption, Asthma,
Croup, severe Cough?, Pneumonia and
other d'.setsee of the Throat and Lungs,
giving the American people undenia
ble pnv f tba T German Syrup will cure
them. The reeult ha> been that Drng-
Chalmers' bill for a Pacific railroad
will b • introduced Monday. It pro
vides for a trunk line to V.cksburg with
connections to St. L uis, Memphis and
New Orleans. The new features of
are that the Me mphis connection is
be made bv the Memnhis and Vicks
burg road down the Mississippi valley
Tnis avoids the objection to aMemphi*
connection raised by the lrox
Mountain road, and passes
through the richest lands
Ind iher* f re place me in the attitude
of attack.ag bpecker Rmdwll. W 1 at 1
did say iu tnat sj>eeH h was that in the
bouse, under the former organization,
the committees were constituted *0 *s
to be opposed to the re; eal of the re
s .niption act and the remonetization
ol mlver, but that the c 'mmittee on
banking and currency, under the pres
ent otgtp x ition, fully represented the 1 ^tsin every town and villa ga in the
views of the d« mocracy, and prx^mpt | United &ate* are re< amending it to
and sni abls anion was tfie re*uiu 1 gjeir cm-tomers. Got* your Druggist,
tar from mv rtmark* reflecticg on the I ^ what they know about it Sample
ofttfi < fleeted bv Mr. Randall, 1 Bottka 10 cent*. Regular size Touente.
they w*re highly ecmm*T**s*ory Ucr+ 1 ihrw* doee* will rr.iet* an-* .
ed* 1
of Mississippi. It also provides that
the government shall
1«L-UE GREENBACKS,
receivable for ail dues except int- rest
on the public debt, and allows $20UU0
per mile to the respective roacs to be
bmlt on b )nds of the ri-Ad, payable -
United bui ? ee currency in fitly year?
and bearing five per cent interest, and
seemed by a first mortgage on the road*
and %ii tfitir property and eainLgs,
and provides for
A SINKING FUND
to b* invested in United Slates bondL,
to be held by the secretary of the treas
ury to meet the bonds cf the roads.
Mr. Iausat** bill will probably be in-
a - ' nr* Wi9>* day.
— Tae raciest foreign letters written
to America have been contributed bv
Mrs Lucy Hamilton Hooper from Pap*
is. This c* arming writes ta a contribu
tor to many magazines ard papers, and
her artic.cs are in eager demand. Mrs.
Hooper is one cf the writers for“An
drews' Bazar,” published at Cincin
nati, and her comments on the theatre,
opera politics, fashion and society
-cintilatediamond like. This is* _
samwte of the care which the cocduc
tor of “Andrews’ B z*r” cater for the
tfie public taste. Inere is a depart
ment devoted to fashions well worth
eu times the price in information and
suggestion.
—What glorious acLitvcn:<xt6
possible to us if we only possess goed
health, with its oeoal accompaniment
of a cheerful mind! Therefore no means
should be neglected to preserve
vigor, and restore it when impaired.
Bear in mind that Coussens’ G>mpcu
Honey of Tar, which relieves Whoog-
ing Cough, Sore Throat. Hoarsened
etc., is also an infaiiibta care for Con
sumption. That dreadful d seaee
which consigns so many gifted men and
women to an ear’y grav
An interesting explanation is given
o'thep’&n o' the next drawing of the celebrated
Louisiana Lottery
The numbers from 1 to 103,00), corresponding
with tho e num' eri 0*1 the Tickets, printed on
eep rate ellpe of paper, are encircled with email
india rubb-r tabes, and placed in one wh®ei ;Tbc
first* 0 Pr *;•, similarly prin ed and cnc'.rded
i plac d fr another wbccL The whe Is ar
,civet, m.u a I.umber Is drawn from the wheu
LUJibiri* and at’he same time a prize is
drawn fr m the oih^ wheel. The number
prize drawn out are opened and «xhibtted to thi
ice, and registered by the Ccmmissioi
the prze tx-ing , lactdagainet the numberdn
Thin opera*ion ia repeated until alt the prizes are
drawn cut
Tn* next drawing takes place on Tu*a lay, Feb
ia*v ilih, l<7ls, and any farther intormation
will b» given by a dressingM A Dauphin, P, O-
Box »*, New Orleans. 8ie echjme In another
column Jan19..dltsat &wlt
1 praise
:oudi1 them to he al that yt a claim for of ;hat reat c00gh remeilv , (V a „ ...
them. My rehtorauon has rematne. ^ d Hon *, oi Xar / , Wli
complete for two years Inclosed hod .^i/a-lord relief in case of si, ..id..,ar,
tf ’ r 1 a | L ‘ 'I’- v of vour Common bense t0 , , )Ut t ^ e fcU flf arer Consamp
Medical Adviser. | ^ on , na y re jy on it as a perm.inentcure
if taken in time, and according to di-
Ever gr»tefullv vours.
JASON C. BARTHOLOMEW.
182 jiulfl iVUlt
reclions. To j*erbons efll -ted with
chronic cough, which disturbs their
rebtat night, it tff.rds sweet
freshing =leep, and for Coughs, Gilds,
Vees.uu.es January l!t. -Evening.— I Croup, Wh-oping Cough, Sjre Tiiroat,
It is understood tliat the meintiers ot Hoarseness, etc , it is simply one i f .he
the risht were deliberating at the com- | greatest medical blessings of ilia age.
A»ulllng ElretloBM It> Frunre.
A HVHG lBIAS SENSATION.
Lond >n, January 19 —A great, nensa-
tion is cauped at Peeth by the convic
tion of high treanon, and sentence to
five years' imprisonment of Dr. SveUF*
zar Mfletic*, member of the Hungarian
parliament, of Servian nationality,
head of the Omeadina or young Servi
an party, and leader of Pausloviat agi
tation. Dr. Mi levies lias appealed
againet his conviction. The Daily
News has a special from Pesth saying
that his conviction will likely be
quashed.
"A penny waved 1 ♦ a prany earned
Prudent and economicil people will
not only zee to the purity and ftrengt. of the
Vox* Powicr they u«, bur, in buying it will
also fee that it h fall weiitht Home Baking
Fowd n ar* S0p:r c-n‘. others 25 and 30 per
c*nL zhort wei 1 hL Doolet'b 1z warranted to be
absjiatciy pare and l« always fall weight.
meucement of to-d -.y’s cession of the Use Gr.ua eus’UcmpoundH iley of Tar
chamber of deputies, whether they Price 50cents a bottle,
would resign en masse, or simply enter I E. AL Berry and Collier a Co., Atlan-
a protest against the invalidation by I ta, Georgia,
the majority of the election of' 4,1 ■'
many of their party. The subsequent
arrival of conservatives caused them to
delay action, and their decision
not be made known till the next sitting | Montreal January 19. -Mefsrs. Be-
411 AitfU donariwlvdSwoo* ly
The Fmoc ui u iiKUHChald
L of en depemlent on the culinary and
domestic zkill of the houc£wiG. Ladies know
thlf, and, by using Doolby'z Ycazt Fowuzb,
iu*ure themz Ives the most perfect bread and
p*i>try pwiub'.e Ita uze ia economy al«o,
every c m is ab oiutely full w*Uht, aLd it is
h rong an I pure aa to demand the use of a much
•.mailer quauti'y than > hhL
Let 1
•111
dllnRS ll>i; groes receipt« 1SS btlca; sale*
fplcner 73; cxix>rit> to continent 350; cuat-twiee
189 bales.
BOSTON. January 1*).—Cotton qui t; mid-
dlinga 11^; nct receipt* 1.131 baler; grora 3,0*2;
export* to Great Britain *.fft4
PUILADE* Fill A, January 19 —Cotton quiet*
middlings U3£ net receipts 40 bale*; sale* to
spinners 38*.
MEMPHIS, January 19—Cotton qni t andewy;
middlings 10%: net receipt* 2,353 bales; shipment*
*,335; sale* *.000.
AUGUSTA, January 19.—Cotton quiet; mld-
4ings 10%&10Xt net receipt*959 bales; sale. 1,280
Senator Groom.
Atlanta Piodnce Market.
EGGS—144115
BUTTER—Choice22: fair 17: conmor KV&12V,
POULTRY-Chickens dull at 7(^8. Tuikejs
500090. Dressed Poultry—Turkeys 8^11. Chick.
314; apple* 2
Llv* Stork Market.
Sherp 3^4S; common cattle good oatUc
choice cattle . 5;_cxtra aatle5«5j<
North Georgia cattle 2)^3; Tennessee
rjr Market.
WHEAT BRaN—$1 00
OATS—60; seed 55075
HAY—Timothy fl 00««1 10; Clover *1 00.
MOL 4N8E8- Barrels 33: no tierr«*; no hhds.
COFFEE-Rio 18m*22V4. Java
BUG \ R—Standard A 10; wh‘t« extra C 9^;
extra C014; yellows 8r<$9%; New Orleans Sflalti.
P» OUR Fancy |7 75: extra ramily 57 25; fami-
Uy 56 75; extra »tt 25; superfine *5 25.
SMOKED MEATS—Tennessee, clear sides 9)4
BULK MEATS—C'car rib side* 67fc long dear
sides, none; should-rs none; pork strips none;
gn«n meat* dear rib sides t%.
HAMS—Bulk iH>nc; sugar cared 12)4.
cans and buckets 10&11.
FINANCIAL.
CONSTITUTION OFFICE, I
AtlanU Jan 19. Iff*.
Atiaata Moasy Market.
Atlanta City 8a. 97W1C4)
Ga A Cent HR (9^1(2
[ootAWPRR
1st mortgage. 96^100
Savannah City^ 30® 6C
Macon City 73® 7*1
Ga. R. R. 7a 100*11*
Ga. R. R.6e 91^13
A.A W.P.R.R..I
Central R.R.7s~ _
— BR7ft. 98&1CC
90OIM
So.W«
MAW. R.R.7Z. 1
WAA RRLea-
Kfi.
BY TELEfiRAPH
law Yobk, January 19 Noon—Stocks weak
f<&7. Gold 101H*101% Exchange-lom
•4 Six; »bo-t $4 83)4 Government* Heady. 8U»<
Bonds quiet.
New Yore, January 19.— Evening.—Money
easy at4^5. Sterling dnl at IM Gold 101^
10154. Govornmente steady, new flvae 6,'4 Star
Bonds steady.
Stocks dn 1.
Y. Ce. tra’. ^«..1C3>4 Pittsburg..
Erie 9*^ Chicago A N. W.___
Lake Shore «0 < Preferred ..... fi3)$
Illinois Centra] 74 Rock Island 99
Sab-treasury balances:
Gold 1101,972.8>5 Currency...$31,044,0C8
Sub-treasury payment*:
Interests. ...gMagBOO Bonds_ 1301,09
Customs receipts to-day $212,000.
Bank statement -Loan* decreased f3,00'»,C3J.
Specie increa^d 51,375 000 Legal tend*re In
creased 5*,:i75,000. Dej*o tits increased *2,250,000-
Reserve increased |375,000.
London, January 19. - noon —Con so'e 95 7-16
2:30 r M.— Console 95 9 16.
Panis, January 19 -Ren’ea 109f 17)4
COMMERCIAL.
DRIED FRUIT—Peaches, peeled, 7(®9; rough
CORN—new 65(cpi7.
MEAL 65.
GRITS—«4 75.
WHEAT—51 25<4*1 45: seed 51 63®51 75.
^10.
ie; clear sides none.
medium, 11-inch, old S0&55; good 11 inch old
55(860; fine 11-inch o'd 75; Grovcly $1 00; Calhoan
tl 25; natural leaf $1 00; Durham, smoking,
assorted, 00.
LIME—fl 006U1 25.
NAILS-$2 75.
LEATHER—Uemlnrk sole 22' *8; white oak
10A40; Georgia apper 2S(*i .; lining skins f4 00
00 V do*
HIDES-Dry
green 5: dry salted lltkl2
HIDES—Dry flint 12K®13; wet salted .708;
IRON TI-S-V ».rndl-t2 40.
POWDER—Biantlng 12 25; rifle $6 40.
Dry Uouds.
Ticking 64*90; strip
„ . ripes 9312)4; osnaburgs 9)4^
10)4; cambrics 6A7; print* brown sheet
ings ?<£7K; *hirtings 6®7; bleached sheetings
7s7)4; *hirt1ngs 4)4913 Ilomesrics 4-1 7)4®8;
7 8 «>4; 3-4 5J4®5K: yarns 85^95.
ilia mad Confectionaries.
6 00; oranges 5* 50ag3 00; cocoa nuts S5 5<la
36 50: RaWns, layers, whole, per box, new S2 75;
•Id t* 00; half fl 75; quarters 80&I0: currants in
bbls 10; Cntrori, Lrghorc
-elected F "T “ ‘“'J. '
Prune*, tn bbls, V fc 14al5.
NUTS—Almonds, 1 anguc loc, 22a*3; Tantgoea
I-*. Or Til .fi.l- Vt, ,lUVl VV-.1 lit*
Attest
ot'on quiet.
Idlngs
v Midilings..
Middlings..
<ow Middlings
Good Ordinary.
urdintry and Inferior —
EXCXim TO DAY
By wagrm
Air-Line Railroad
Georgia Railroad
Central Railroad.
Receipts previously...
Stock on hard September!, 1877...
Grand total .
...82,569
.8^000
shipments pmriouaJy
Total
(9,640
Stock on hand— 13,1
Atlanta Comparative SlatmansL
Rcce pt* to-day...
corresponding day last ye«
Increase
2,151
- 1 i L. u. —.urroio. oc-
The elections of three deputies were vere ,jj, e ^ H-ltiwell, importers of wool-
annuileo yesterday. J eQ fiave been attached. Their
liabilities are $73 OX)
NO HOUSEHOLD IS COMPLETE
ly tquipped till Fs kitchta is supplied with
Dooley a Yeast Powder, known the country
aa the d~*f d'oeuvr* of baking powders. It
tde ol the rarest cream-tartar, so difficult
to get even at the druggist’*, and it makes the
p. oducuof teikirg surpassingly good.
SntliM ation. | Gape In the Jmw
Boston, Jan. 19.—A young marrit*<l caused by the decay and Iofs of the
couple iu Melrote, Maw , were teeth, are prevented by SOZODONT,
last evening by friends who called , 1 I
upon them, in theirmttirg room,where wh,ca ‘borodghiy cleases them, and
Mrs. Br^pdon wag ljicg dead on a sofa check? and corrosion. It gives a per-
and her husband lying unconscious on fume to the breath, which it could
the floor, but living, and seems in a I acquire from no other dentifrice.
fair way to recover. Their condition I
is supposed to have been brought about I
by coal gas escaping through a regta- I
ter.
ac!5 deodlw&wlt
Xarrla<«y.
Jacksonville January 19 —M rria-
sey is cheerful, and the prospects of his
—“Andrews Bszxr 5 ands atnoDg l recovery are favor«f»!e.
fashion periodicals about as the Atlan
tic Monthly does in everything high
class litemy magazines. I s columns
—Reliable help for weak and aer-
}U9 sufferers. Chronic, painful, and
men, uu full o! the best reading, and its 1 prostrating diseases cured without
» UU ic U . u «i«. * , „n he cured I news on ti.e fashions, illustrated with medicine. Pul verm icher’s Electric Baker's Cod Liver Oil, Limb, and
bv Cooesens’ Compound iionc v of Tar. 1 plates, ia simply indispensable to the 1 Belts tfie grend desideratum. Avoid Wnj) hz^kt la idaitt 4 by physician* to be
P’rce 50 cents a bottle * I woman of taste. Any lady can thus | imitations. Book and Journal with 1 tteprev* rnioa ottbe fcnd in tbs market-palat
E. M Berry and Collier AOg., Atlan* • ^ HVe h4>r ta -’ e studied bv .the best of I particulars, mailed free. Address Pul- I »bi« atd efficacioia. Jno. a Bakzb a Oa,
t. G^orria. * standards. It ta publlsi ed at Cmcis-1 vebmaCTZu Galvanic Okwamy, Oin-1 pbi adeipbia. sold by dmggiit*.
' - - iNr i, lor ti»e cf one dollar a yha*. 0***- I SO octM.^d4 mt a wfte^>ni9.
UT TELEUBAPH
LIVERPOOL, January 19 -JWaow-Oottou dull
and easier, middling uplands 6 5-16; middling
Orleans 6)4: C,C<j0 bales; epeculatloc and
export tOO. receipt* 2,130; American 1,500: futnres
sellers at 1-32 decline; middling uplands nothing
•low low middlings January delivery 6)4: Jana
ary and Feb nary delivery 6J4; Fa-rrary and
Marcb delivery 6)4; March a d ApiL deiiv, ry 6)4;
April and May delitery 6 9-32; May and June
ddiv-ry 6,5-16; Ju^e and July delivery 6 11-:
LIVERPOOL, Janu try :9 -3H0 F M.—Future*
quiet bat steady; middling up'ar da nothing below
low middling*, new crop, t hipped in December
per sail 6)4; sales inc ade 4,400 bales Am r can.
NSW YORK, January 19 - .Voo*—Cotton do
middling uplands 11)4; Orltaaa 11 y H \ rales 169
bales, futures easier.
January 11 15A1L18 April 11 47^11 49
BV TEI.EUK.11*11.
NEW YORK, Jannary 19.—Flour quiet; pr;c»
generally without decided chant*; only llmi;cd
ha Bin im for ex port and h me nee; comm m to fair
extra southern 85 40^85 90; good to choice extra
|5 95£18 25. Wheat, spring lc b:ttsr, winter
graiicn 2j3c higlr.r; m:» crate exi>or: demand;
large tpxu aUvc Larne**; ungraded wint rrad
M 40®$! 40)4. Corn J401c better; inu icratc
expatt and home trade inquiry; yellow meste—
51^52 Oatedull md unchanged. Fork lower. *
512 15Zi * 3t)4. Lard lower at 7.750.7 80. Fe
in It am higher; n-fiitd Ctiffec, Rio
quiet.. Sugar quiet atd Arm. Rice quiet. Mo
•a'aee, fo-«iga qalet; New Orletne »t a^y anl
fa rly active Frcigh a duJ; cotton ea 1 J4
per steam *4.
CHICAGO, January 19 —Floor quiet. Wheat
fair y active a*ha ehigher; No. 2 Ch'cago spiiug
*1 €3)4 ’ll 01)4 CiBta; 81 0 5^|1 0334 January;
f 1 C4 February. 81 01)4 Ma:e.b; No. 3 Chicago
-prlug 51 Cfl Corn fairly ictivc and a shale
higher; carh and January 4i»V; February 40;
March 3 54 OaU firm. Rye steady. Barley
firmer at 53X/A7- Fork inactive and lower; cash
810 8Jr«6|10 H» Lard dull and lower; cash 7 :i5;
February 7 37)4; Mart li 7 45 a7.47)tf. Hulk Meats
easier; shoulders 4; short lib 5£4; thort clear 5)4.
Whisky f i 03
—Flour 12,000; Wheat 179,00); Cera
98*300; Oats 66,000; Rye 6,500; Barley 28,000.
Shipments—Floor 9,501; Wheat 122.000; Cora
,000; Oats 16,000; Bye 4.0; Barley 14,000.
ST. LOUIS, January 19.—Flour da 1 and un
changed; buyer* and selkra apart. WheJ, No. 3
red faU 8113*081 13)4; Fo. 4 red fall 81 Ot; No.
spring |l 04)4 Corn, No. 2 m xcd 43%: new
dal; No 2 5% Rye inactive at 51)4.
Barley doll and uactum d. Whisky 81 03. Pork
active at fit Oijfll 25 Lard dull and nomi
nal. Balk Meats q >iet and weak; car lot* loo-o
shoalders 3.60^3 62)4; clear rib sides 5 6 <&5. ( £;
ckar aides 5.65#5.70. Bacon nominal. Hogs
steady and anr hanged. Cat lc and hherp, supply
not anfficient to make a market; demand
. IfibL
CINCINNATI January 19.—Flour dull and un
changed. Wheat dull; rcl $1 15@|1 18. Corn
dolla-jd low.r to aeli at 383 ». Data nom’ni'ly
unchanged. Rye dull at 5 QG0. Barley dull and
unchanged Porkdall;epot 811 *5. Lard qalet;
steam nominally 7.3»3&?.40; kettle 7.75(38. Balk
Meat* in fair demind aud lower; shoulders 4;
rib 560;q5.75; la»tcr ful’y cored; abort
dear5 87K Boxed Meats In fair demand; shoul
ders 4)4; rhort rib 5%; eho t ckar 6; long and
short clear 5%; Camber ands 5J4- Bacon scarce
nd firm: sb alders 5)4; dear rib 6 80; clear sides
Whisky quiet and steady at 81 02. Butter
dull and drooling; prime to cbo'ce western rc-
20(3*2; central Ohio 15(5(18. Sngar steady
andu changed. Hog- st ady and i a fair derm 111;
pA'klng 4.0 *31.20, receipt* 9/45; shipments 10.
LOUISVILLE, January 19 —Flour d li; extra
|4 00®*4 25; family 84 50^85 00 Wheat doll;
red 81 *3, amber aud white fl 25. Cora dull;
white 45: mixed 42. Oats dull;.wh!te 32; mixed
Rye daU at 65. Provisiona unchanged.
Whisky qni X at fl 02. Tobacco quiet and un*
chang d.
ON ONE SUBJECT Phyaiciann
agree, the supreme value <f Hygiene and the
preveatiou of il.s.e me ia preference lo curing iL
Accordi; g y they have recommended Dooley's
Ycut Fuaozz aa the best in use, for it causes
the most Uei.doa*. pare and digestib'e breed,
biscuits cake, pi*try, etc., to come from tie
New York, January 19.—It is re
ported tfiat Owen Murpby, the fuifltive
exercioe commi^ioner, ia dangerously
ill atOt awa, and fita wife insane.
A Heavy Carso.
Galvptw, January 19.—Thesteaml
er Australiau cleared for Liverpoo-
with 6 806 bales of cotton, the largest
cargo ever cleared from this port.
February.... 11 1*31190 May II 6!&'1.<
March. T._11.33 (.11 35 Jane 11 74«11 7b
NEW YORK. Jauaary 19
dntl; uplands 11)4; Orleans 11%; sales 169 bale*;
consolidated n*t receipt* at all p>rta 18,520.
Great tritala 12,3.'*; F auce 1,709; contl
neat 8.037 net cceipti today 497; gross 1,42.1;
futures cioead barfly steady; sales 41,000.
January. . 12 *4 May ll.68All.f9
Fabruary._
..11 *7 June U.81&11
March— -- -li 42 July.... . _
April 11.553.1.56 Aagafl 11 93411L95
GALVESTON. January 19. -Gotten quiet; mid'
diing** 1054; nct reoeipta 2,613 bates; gto*a*f.55;
2 O' 0; exports to G eu Britain 3 878; coast
wise 3,3 0.
NEW ORLEANS. January 19. -Cotton ca*
w^i^diinga I0J4; low middlings 10; good ordinary
9)4; net receipts 4,»2 bale*; gross 7,006; sales
9,090; exports to Great Britain 5,789; continent
4,50*.
MOBILE, Jauaary 19 Oottor, better grades
steady; lower grades ve k; middlings 10)4; net
receipts 2.174 bales; sales 1.000; exportsooaatwfce
3,039.
BA VANN AH, January 19 —Cottoc assy; mid
dling* 10 13 16; net reedpta 9,619 boles; sales
2100; exports to '.cnUnert 8,195; c mstwlrc 1,3*1.
CHARLESTON. Jauaary 19. -Cotton middling*
ir.net receipts *,**» bales, sates 1 (Otf; exports to
- § *
i a?:
S •= J 5 '■= = S tJ
i htUUVMAri S Ij
" !
9Gtnovli-.wL3t 3*ip
GEORGIA, Umpbfll ronotj.
Ordln»ry’sOfflc?, January 19,1878.
npo all whom it may coucf ro, William T. KnaC
X having In proper form apnlled to me f<
permanent letter* of administration on the e
State of William’71. Henry, late of said county.
Thteis tocitc, ail *nd slngu'.ar the creditor*
srd next of kin of William K. Henry, to be and
appear at mv office within the time allowed b--
law and show came if any they can, why perm*
neat administration should not be granted
William T. Mead, oa William R. w»rnf< ram
1 r. C. rr AVEIWi
\TJ JaaJO—W4~. t.ranjLry