About The Weekly constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1868-1878 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1878)
THE WEEKLY C013STITT?TION: 0C?TQB53 1, ?878. We bsTra't quit feeling eorioae eboat Maine jet. Dos* Piatt oo«h. to be rubbed down art ib E moth-preventir*. Tax republican panj i of tue financial fence. The Watbmgbm (WilEea county) Gantte ccmca to oa enlarged end un proved. •arena. Tie enure section of the auto oork of fka capital to tba Treru— Hoe. la high and baaltbj.eut late lnaorocrable aosataln rancra. bctwam wUeh are Ike aw b autlfol aad Illc aJle»*. fad k» oaaj tttonaaad creeks and Keen of Iks parrot eater*. Alow tbeea tke are laxortan*. aween and hlgblr otmt- tUraa Kaecaanj la batter adaotsl to tbs rear- lag artballitaaecM aid p aod fltat-foobd trotter, con Keatucsr.e! b all tbair troaevd bttw trail A I akeyc ab at Atlanta elll do tacra to da.eiop «reea of tttr ferared rexlua tban any Uaa UtTaataarat of capital goHIBonr oognt to invt-ta kidnej pad to fit John Sherman. Ibe man is in trouble. Bmaucuira in Omo meant war. Ti e entiera have already buckled on tbeir canteens Staelet Matthew* baa Keminglj retired to bia lair. Bailer and the Pot- ter committee were too mnf h Ijt him. Win ISntiei winks bia left eje at an audience the apple ate is said to be absolutely deafenirg. Mr. SrarnEsa'a hral.b continue* to impiore. It ia probable that be will renew hie caroat* nr it week. It is difficult to aaj whether Bill Chandler ia a republican or not. He hasn't Mole enjibing in aeveial months. Tnaqueelton in the luwe campaign ia wbetber the confederacy thsll be established in that fertile eeriion. The framers of the constitution bad no Mtapicion that the republic wa erected for the benefit of the Sherman family. The Elberton Air L ne railroad will aoon be in running order. It will be gln.to carry the mails on and alter next Monday. Matos axohh na* si.oLl.er precla mation. We very much fear ha baa the disease that stuck ed Conner at Obattsnocgs a lew days Ago. Mosx colored affidavits are needed in tbe seventh district Let them be forthcoming. Has tbe Hon. Hubert Henderson retired from the field ? Wa rise to move that Kearney be yoked to a Chinaman and .ed oat into tbe Atlantic ocean where be will have planty of ard fresh air. Urcle Radix* ought to write a poem Ebon, violated pledgia. If be will get up tbe metre end tbe rhyme we will furnish tbe facia. It does not require tbe fore castings any political prophet to designate tbe three presidential candidates in I860. Tbe democrat* will, in all prob ability, nominate Thnrman, of Ohio. Grant will lead the republican bum mers end beef-eatera, and the inde pendent national greenback labor par. ty will pnt forth the name of General Bader. It is also very certain, from pieaent indications, that there ir. some danger to be apprehended from the ef forte of the independ nta and wild greenbfekera to break down the de mocrat;}. If these parties have any real strength it ia more than probable that tbe election will be thrown into tbe bouse of repreeenutivn, and in that event tbe members of cuagiess to be elected this Call in Georgia will be celled upon to east tbeir votes lor pres ident. Tbe democratic congressmen will cast tbeir vote for Tbnrman, or tbe nominee of tbe party. Tbe repnbli can* - (and there is to-day more dan ger that three republicans will be elected in this euta tban there has been (luce 1672) —tbeir votes will cer tainly be cut lor Grant. If a so-called national independent greenbteker in elected, hie vole will be cut for Beast Butler. Take this distiict (the fiitb) aa an example. If Colonel Hammond is elected, we all know be will vote fur the nominee cf the party. Mr. Markham, Mr. Freeman or any O'.ker republican ia eleeted, bis vote will be cut for Giant or the nominee of tbe republican party, whoever be may be. II Colonel Reuben Arnold ia nominated be will be boand to vote for Ben Butler. We ere thus particular in making this matter understood because it la a question of more Importance tban cue would think who bu not re flected over tbe matter carefully. Tbe vote of one congressman may endangei tbe (access of a democratic administra tion. Tna Iowa radicals labor ouder tbe impression that tbe war ia not over. They are getting ready to march on Richmond again. Kismet wants na ell to poll down our inmM-menta Fellow-citizens, aball we (occumb? (Deafening ap- pianpe, and load cries of “nevab Derail I") BillChaxm-xa'sconnection with tbe republican party see mi to be very fret' There la a rumor current in some our beM circles that Bill ought to be in jail. Tub Aduu.-ta Chhohicle will rhortly begin the publication of an ever ing edition. Title is right Tbe maltipli- cation table should be applied to ell newspapers as grod u tbe Chronicle. In tbe midst of the deep gloom that overspreads the sooth, reports show that tbe cotton crop wu never more premising. Thero are no complaints from farmers in any quarter. Judge GKoras t. Uskilett, of the Oomalgee circuit, lx a candidate for re election. He hue made a compel ent officer, and bu many friends in the state who will be gratified to see him re-elected judge of hie circuit It is hiuted that the repub] cane will nominate Andrew Sloan for congress tbe first district In this event, it Cor ker bu any strong! Ii at all, there will be trouble in the district. U ie the duty of democrats at this juncture to pre sent a solid front. Dr. Caeveb, is billed to shoot at the state fair. We hsve often thought would be en excellent investment engage this accomplished marksman fire one barrel at John She. man and the other at Bill Chandler. This would give him quite a prestige in the south in fact, be wonld be culled before tbe cartain after each act. Let Dr. Carver think over these thinee. Me. Am Sr. Claik Abkahs, who well-known in this city as a journalist, is ectively engagvd in politics in Or arge county, Florida. His active tellect bu precipitated a controversy with some fellow in that region, and he uses two columnsumd a half of tbe county paper in demolishirg him Abrams alludes to the mm u “tbe wild au • f the Apopka,” ai d nsrs otb» er felicitous expressions calculated vez and worry a lenitive person. rax lax oka. sgsnce that hu marked the sdminis tration of the repub'icans. I' has sac ceeded in obtaining control of tbe two houses of congress, and unless our peo ple, utterly given over to folly and blindness, divide among them*lies and organise factions under the lead of greedy demagogues, democratic president will succeed Mr. Hayes. The ed ministra tion of public aff-irs will be in tbe bands of tbe democrats, ard tbe re forms in car financial legislation and the management cf tbe pcblic min ers will be thorough and ccmp.ete. We will have a currency lor the people instead of for the bondholder, and queatione of finaoee will be regulated bv the will uf the people, and not at tbe dictation of Wall street specula' ton and tbe balden of inactive cap!- Bnt bow lorg - (we appeal to the intelligent and eobercecond-thonghtof ths people)—bow long will it before this bappy eonromma- tirm can be reached if the dem ocratic party is braken up into email factions aud demonl'z-.d by the unfortunate aspirations cf small politicians ? How long would it be before these reforms could be brougnt about, even supposing it were pomitSti for tbe nationals or independent greon- backersto wiu every election in tbe future? We submit this view of the subject to tbe consideration of both democrats sod greenbackera. It clear tbat the experiment of a new par ty will accomplish nothing in the way of relief, bus the effort to build' up separate otg-raixUiuu will sharpen and extend me suffering of tbe people, and, it may be, wreck our entire political system. We coi jure every trua friend of reform, every true patriot, every honest voter, tooling to the democratic party. It is cor only salvation. J CLAYTONS JiURDERESS. Tl ACHED AMD CtCGBT Ut NEW- TOM COUMiT. r 1m H men f*UK ATcik Her Iuo Spctal d Is pitch to The CocsUratina. Joxejb >bo, September 27,8 r. h.— Th*a we* M very lurprited end happ; communi ty jtstenUj marling when the newi wired THS PEOPLE A HD THS I-' DXfE3DB.Nl 8 A LULL IN THE CAMPAIGN. The absence of colored rffiiavits ir tbe seventh distiict during the pasi week is painfully apparent, but Mrs Felton’s husband's private secretary continues to keep the organa well sup plied with able commauication . Tin only trouble ab at these common : ca. lions is that they are all alike. It the col- ored affidavits have really been rxhane ted then the cause of the irdependen candidate ie indeed weakening. Tben ia nothing so well calculated to creah a charge in tbe sentiments and opin ions of the white voters of the seventl district as a series of carefully ormpoaec colored affidavits. It ia to be fearer tbat the highly accomplished Bobur Henderson has struck for higher wages, in which event he ought to be de- nonreed from one end r f the di-tr.ct tc tbe other as an unpatriotic and unfed ing wrefeb. TUM J TLaXTa FAlk. One very hopeful indication with re- *F*ct to tbe approach: t g fair of tbe Xirtb Georgia Stock and fair associa tion ia the attention which the tnrf premiums have attracted at the nortt and west. Wilkes’s Spirit of the Timer, the leading racing paperof the country, thus refers to the matter: Atlanta, tke great Inland city or the acta aad tbs cep tol at me gread Male of Georgia, ha orcw'S'.d Its taldal radca rescues. Th es&Lal tocadoa ol Atlanta It* paralalia-, as. wealth five the streaccot potelhls hops tbat he- fen ar other dacade It will b. cores ace at h tail cedr.aol the oocatiy. Harj ol GeocUa'i waalthlm and hew ef laa beaded by her pret est w-ttby reel lor, ties Java B. Oonteo, are aidcmtsdalten both of tae hwenahand bora aa<i the mens ef the tort Indeed, in Groree there I* arena. Ij a tear that the oosttol aad mao acwacaz ol ireSna wid fall into the hands o a feet than the reoet lowlltaenL reap etfu er> nUabfeta the rule, Ihej wid have >p tt. ba they will have It to rale TbrywlUe jjjit.be ocly wb. n Its raadard 1- bt.bacC In r nrtalr sore. Where there acattretals obtain ooouolb the r ve nmeat and aunattreent oC atatue ta.-ata. the pcbl e Uvarubty (teal there ere dlalty, vet port the re Ubere ’y. ard eaie there mil rev ela ac. aad a heolioy praptrliy ana lead Bia followv. T»lv Sret effjet el • tl.an vbonld ha erocar ■lea by the tarfmeo of north aad South Guo ana. Oooijia, Afetwu. HtteMppl. Lontataoe V' *w, T-o scene, K-stvely, aid Oder Ha as to mereethaadwiaa. It a bjesc uraalna thaa. ■etdentgjrwthat:ewc she and snefetfe*. are belli op at d arete to add rrength to sort iwtnh at allaatn. SUALL TDB LIUOCBACY BS DIVIDEDt For tbe folly of the independent greenbtek movement to become apptt rent, it ia only neceesary to give tbe matter a moment’s seriens considera tion. We have asserted heretofore that bnt few votere can be deceived by ths men wbo are at tbe head ol tba move ment, nod we assert now tbat no man can mistakenly support the effort todi vide the party who has intelligence enough to snbatract two from ten. Tbat it ix proper to vole only for men who will oppuee the farther contraction of the currency, and who will demand from congress a sufficient volume of money to meet tbe qnlrements of trade nil will .dmit; but it is to be regretted tbat we have amor g us a class of rmall politicians wbo are aa extraoidinarily imirt about this issue aa about ail others, and tbeir smartness use taken the shape of a mania. They are politi cal economists of exceedingly large di. inenaione. Compared to these markable persona, Bentbam, Adam Smith, Ricardo and John Stuart Mill were mere infants. They knew noth ing whatever of the science of finance. It is this class of learnedly ambitious persons that is making an effort break down tbe democratic party They are splitters of political hai and they wculd not habitat to imperil tbe safety of tbeir state and section upon n technicality. They re mind ns of thoae rampant politicians who wanted Georgia to secede by an act ol tbe legislature, without going through tbe formalities of passing ordinance, and without considering wbal was necessary to be done or how to do it. The people demand immediate roiief from the oppressions that now exist. If, through the folly of ambitious men they are compelled to wait lor this re lief until a new party is bniit up ard orgau-Aod, Ibe country will be otter. ruined. There is not to-day a single man in congress, either in tbe home or in the sena'e, wbo demands financial reform outaid9 the demt cratic party. Tbe men who originated this greenback issue, and who are prominent leaders in the movement iu the sen' a'e and house bold tbeir office to-day by virtue of dome.cratic votes, and they wonld ae soon think of join : ng with tbe republicans as of uniting tbemseiees with this new independent greenback party. The result wou'd be precisely the seme. There are George H. Pen dleton, Thomas Ewing, Dariei Voor- hsee end other men of that stamp, wbo have given tbeir great abili ies aud all their time to tbe work of bring- n g about ibe reforms which the coun try needs. They axe tbe leaden of the uiov.ment. They hwve advecited ii and battled for it when they received little sympathy from the people and had hat lew followers; but they have made their fight inside tbe democratic party and tbeir fi ielity to tbe party is Ut questioned. They know that it ir utterly impossible to bring about three great reforms by meins of a new part} aad -hey have steadily relaxed to leave themselves to the supreme foil} of deserting nod demorafiiint die democracy. It ia true they have net always accomplished what they aud the people want but they have steal lastly clui g to the only hope ol redemption, the democratic party, and inside the lines ol that great organiza tion, they have looght with such sue ossa that if harmony and nnity are m-lnUined by the people not many mouths will peas before the coantrj will have shaken loose the heavy banc of the mousy power and the people bt in b<ei joyment of the prosperity tba: uitut Ueceseanly follow wise, ju dick us and reformatory legisir- :ion. Shall we faltei new, when snocsos seems to be just ahead ? Rhal. we pints now, al-er having accom plished so much, merely for the par pose of gratifying the unseemly ambi tion of e few designing men aho thus. lor promotion—men whs have demon stated by their actions their willing nees to destroy he demacra ic part t and the hopes of ibe people for rel.e* n order to carry out their own aelfiat purp we.? Whatever may be said to favor of th greenback theories (and hpnn that Un we stand with W rbeee, Thnrman an- Pendletcn) tbo truth remains that it ii mpoasible to pnt them in prac ieeaavi through tbe succrsa of the demcctmtii party. The tucceoi of tbe independ ent gTSEnback candidate in th district will do mote to prevent tbe ac comp iahment of the purposes of re form in cor financial leg alahoa lire aryttiing elto, fir the reason that i will create confusion in the dem cra ranks—a confusion that will be babe with delight by the watchful repnbli cane and that will finally ex.ee throughout the sooth. Daricgthepai tan rears, tbedemecracy has succeeds. To our mind, it wma a vary bad move oo tbe part of the indfpeidtnt green- backers to place tbe denjcc-atlt party on the defensive with respect to their methods of bringing about rebel for which the people are clamoring. How much easier it wouid have been for them to have renamed wi-hin the rat.its of tbe democracy 1 As we have said before, do inrelligest person esn have any hope of success for tbe green back party as an in dependant organist tion, and those who w e now favoring tbe movement in this district are doing so with the deliberate intent of break ing down the demc cracy. Tbe console lion is, however, that the honest votere ctnnot be deceived by the effurrs of weak demagogues and small politicians. They cannot fail to peicsive and spprec'ato tbe iact tbat greed for effice is :hs lever which moves tbe lcadir g independent green- backets to cat louse from the democ racy, end, with only m vegue hope of success, st'empt to involve the country in the ruin which Would follow anoth er republican victory. Tbe people are not fools. The; may be the victi ms of demsgf gusry for awhile, but it is im possible to deceive them for any great length of time. Neither Arnold, nor Thnrman, nor George McKinney can cot vines tbe voters of the fifth district tbat tbe organised democracy is not as tuoiougbiy iu favor o! financial reform aa the ao-caUcd independent green- backere, and, if we are to judge from tbe reports we tie receiving from the lower portion of the dutrect the people are already b.coming thoroughly die gnsted with the fallacy of the move ment, ard this fee’in; will grow and spread ae the can p£ go ; rogres*e.-. roruA roano*. the Hrinuzat of tbe save Mr. F-nncr, bal been captured and «oald arrive In town about 11 o'clock. A con-l-’erable crowd gathered to give treevp- tnrlt g part* a reception, bnt tbe prisoner wav qatetlj and lodged Ur the court bears. Tnc people bvdbeenvettllngoavali- ooa tneories •• to tbe disport ton that bed been made of tbe wcitan and the preponderance of vemlmect era in favorer tbo Idea real ibe bad been taken cat and quleuy lynched. Tbe cap ture cf the woman net a surprise to t ; ties and was a matter of rejoicing to tbe whole eoaimupltj. ths rcaim ol tba Acppcaed larlUsc bad, however, not been gtron ap end mere then one perey bad been qtrl.Uj working span severet Uiiorits as o whereaboa a It wu tbe fortnte of jcutg men cl tfct* town to drip ,-pon the -.ruth and o iocccjO in tfltcilag tbecsp.nre. One of tbifr; wu Mr Hal Darter. A shrewd end roa-sgeoas yoang man, wbo dons to Dee any danger aid wro bad set feta wit* to work to bring the mardtre-u to lattice. Tbs other Wii. Mr J tl C. Sgler, another young man cf like starling qualities wbo joined with s At in tbe tffjrs to vindicate tbe law and to prevent tbe tl md Izom etc* plitg merited punishment. Three two, by a method known only to them te'w, iaceeeli d In obtaining from a neg-o a indent data to convince them of where tbe Iren of tbe woman could be atrnck Presided with a going tom ent and all the cqni men's necessary for tbeir btsirdcm enterprise they aisued in her pnrvvib Iter encounier-ng many cllbesltles ud drawbacks they finally cime upon re cent usees ol her and located her in certain locality tn Newton cranty. Sac bad ThAVXIXn 0* FOOT to tbat county ana bad evldei tly a desire to put much epace between her and tnc jeene cf the ime u jrerb'e. From vancas sources ibe -crape of Information to xlgbt’y direct taem Were obtained by t v gltsnt partner*, iz d they besomed to e.-n*um- meti tbeir work. T. cy obtained tbe lervlceo of souther - solid cittaan " In the person of a Hr lick Tosrneoc. who agreed to salat In *p< tliug the In-itty, and putting her under ths hands of the law. ascertained tbat she wu opoo the plan- tttonol a Hr. Boyd, tn Newtrncounty. Inor der to make (are 11 tbeir work tbe per-u: re ap proached him and lough*, to engage h m in tbe capure. Aa Jnlth knew Mr Doraey, thought tbat ahould be approach her abe would fecuanlxj him, agd. takx to are beam upon another de- peiAta run lor liberty. As tbe Di-gioea in tbe vicinity were supposed to be lolly potted abcul hi r,ahd to sympathise in her effjrta to cteape, tt wu not advisable to give her an op- -.wrttmi-y to ion or them a chance to Interfere In Eu r b.helL It SI P era that Hr Boyd wre will- tut enough to Jn.ve herb ken, bu-. be did not wtah to trvolve himself In the preeecdlngv, and to Kauri fence had to be abandoned and tew tar tics adopted. finally decided to tbe field where Jolts au and to have Coeg.es and Town sou go np and ta ctrect her before abe area aware ol her danger, .site Doney remained conceded In convenient This programme wu carried out cut off even while It tottered on tbe verge ol the tomb. She lived very near tbe deereaad Mrs. Far mer, In Clayton cennty la -h ■ vicinity of Mor rows rattan on the Central road. Snsp'cltm fastened oa Ju'la Johnson soon arter the more wu committed and her precipitate flight confirmed the belie! res- eh wu at least cent- pl.c-.ted In the bloods deed Tbe cflfcen oltha few W. re as once on her track end pursued her with untiring vigilance Tbe accuaedwaa brought here yesterday nomirgand tmmeilfefely after her arrival, the cfllceea having her In charge teak ter to Isle's photograph gallery on White hat t treat, to have hkk Kernel take* A luge nbotogreph ILenees wu struck off end .-u tun goal on the sidewalk where It waa cunt usiy lupected by tbe crowds that pasted In tbe afternoon, at f our o'clock yesterday afternoon a reporter * Ths CottiTiTCno* cent out to the Jail to lee accused woaaa and learn what she bad to abcu her cue. Er. Wing very kindly showed tbe sray to her cell red called Julia oat Into thecffleo aa n more pleaunt piece for an Interview - tbe woman stepped lightly ont c-f her 'tn we uo*ir*“* *- * — - is el we) se quarter* we no-dted bet appearance cioeely, lor —1. .1.... - « larelnmUcn about a per- — .......... .K- - . of a xreat crime. - baadr-d the won** a chair and totd her to lit down. Several spectators Sued by, and -he socmid a littie shy at drat, but aoon appeared Tbe Atlanta Republican (not Bry auL’a paper, tbe Georgia Republican,) asserts tbat tbe republic, ns are com. mit'ed to tbe support of Dr. F-ltor, anti “will vote fur him in -pii - of bin recoitl, in order tbut they may aplitlbe party in the district and break up its orgxn xui- n-AU organ xniou so com pact xud solid tbat so long Eg it rein j iuo unbroken will utterly prevent repub i can re-orgauixxiion, tbe promulgation of repub ican ideas, and the accom. plUhment uf any ropubiican work.' This is candid, to nay tbe least. Tne two republican prpers printed here—one edited by Bryant, and the other edited by W. L C-ark are not agreed as to tbe programme to be earned ont by the rad cols iu tbe seventh district, but it appears tbat Bryant baa tbe inside track, and hence supporting Hoi xclaw, and wii 1 jne^vo support him, while Ctr.rk support Dr. Felton. It is hard :o say whica ie inoel threatening to the democracy of tbe country, the disorgan isation o! the d« mi-crac.- promised by tbe republican support el Fe'ton.or he the danger of Ho' scisw’s election. Both tire tbreateuinp; both are danger cur; both are intended to pave th< way to ultimate republican :utc»e bu h are to b» deplored. What wi tbe demccrars do? Will they persist in tupturning the independent candi date in the face of tbs i' elarat.ons ol Clark and Bryant ? A MTHlABb Pi SoMWAlloy. It appears from the confessions cf prominent members oi tbe iudependei t greenback party, so called, that it war a very difficult matter to find a mac who would co. sent to be a C3ntlida’e “ Col.” Thurman says it waa offered to him, aud Judge Pittman asserts that it was pressed up„n him time and time again. It was a very font y proceeding alto gether. Ur de Reuben dcee net appear to have been tbe choice cf the conven- tion cf aeveti,if TLnrman and Judge Piltu.au are correct. Hs waa nomi nated beet use ba waa tbe only max who would accept the nomiration. Who. ia still mote pnxx'ing ia tht fact that Judge Putman, the real leaderef the mjvement, and who up tu Satutday nigbi b foie the nomi. nation waa exceeding!--anxicus to bt a candid ale, should decline to run. B; wbal hc-cu'-pccut was bis warm ambi tion qaenche. ? Why did he reluseti accept tbat which he says he was o' feted, when it ta ell-known .bat hi has bee:, working f r it for mere that a yea-? A by wast.’t Mr. Amok tbe fire,- choice oi this fine eocventiol of aevi'i 7 Why waa tit* nomiostioi •flsred i _■ Thurman before Arnold bat an op port uni-y to gr. b at i ? Thee ihi g- are very prinirgfo tbe averoir mind, mi the pubic would like t have a me light oo tbe enhjec. L?t u rear from tbe members of the coavcn ion. Evan a card from George Me Kinney w uli- be intereni g. rursw,ii-r. Tbe fiat moc«j erropiign «*-i 01 greo b cka ta k qai-A frCclj, Bnt bow to (ot tbo emerald tenp Ttl*j erbbot tall you. molly. They i*-y know warn ibe creep 1m N ad* tnafe sherd io whoop -er. A lire!* out# for heln ta whs To Cade Polar Ccoper! a HI Hl.tf -tieanxrr. Xxw Yoke, S.ptembsr 23. — Thi- Bnt on at*. m-h:p Lidu*. oi the Mei- oauUle 6teiuuabip company of 1/ ndnu, •eft here Suptembir 4 b lor Hav e, bnt nothing baa been heard of her a: ri-vaL Apprehory-ms are f J t aatrebe: exie- <*- JULIA Wa* TAKX* before she w Uiat aoj paifuer wu near. Hbe waauked “whatthe wtfidolof thereT' She replied that ehc wu from ALib>m-t ard w a hired upon the p’»ce to pick ootop, a It box fihe wu i Leu perlonniug La tht r Coagier said he wu frem Alibama.too, uid he wauled her to coma &1odr with him. She uid she had children Id the field and want ed to ace them, bat the wu brought on to where ilwl Dura«y wu with bia baggy. • D j you know that gentlem&n V* uked Coag ier * Yea, fir; that la Harao Hal Doney !*’ uid. At this pciat the took in 4 he whole alt nation stud knew that further parley, or re*Letaiu.e,wete at an tod. She w.« securely tied and taken into the bugey and. her return Jcnn.ey wu commenc.d. That 3t*i W-.ctue.-dUy. Thj same uighi aho wu .'uUy guaided by her captora. and a: twenty min- utefi tfttr ten o'clock T.arsdey the reached J>ueaboro Tbo purenit had been qaiet ^yshmaue, and th-j capture wua triumph pa'.knt aearch upon the port ci the young mm who undertook 1L They will rt-OtiTe the reward liuat by the govvrtoi, we pmume, and tbat tb> y hare earui d it handtomtl) i? b.ycnd que.fi- tlou. Clayton conn y wu much ezeitea urer the crim-j mud the escape ef the murder tea, and •be aneotaalnl exeention of their taek by theoe tyoorg men hu made them decided heroes in tue uouuiy. wa mrrTAwex wu t flexed to bri cap;nra or return to the hands of the law by aiy peiaon. The negroes on the pUuitatiau, which la three mllte ihU iMcoi Cur- ington, were aomewuat exei ed »t fit at, bat aoon i ecatbiy eoucinded that U wu r.ght to «et the take it* o*n course. Jail* wu brooght to this place and carefully jTiarded. She denied any knowhdge of crime, bat refnred to talk farther aLont any of the circumrancta attending it. She la a sharp ue> reM, and knows the value of eilecc?. \r ben asked if she wanted a trim, »he rather oppoeed to ibe idea, but raid if a trial was had abe bad awiintu whom she desired oe present. Thi* witness, she uid, wu a Mrs Adams, by whom the expected to prove that she, Julia, haa teen engaged in washing Mra Adams’s on the day'and afternoon of murder. NO COMMITTING TRIAL w.-a b* W jes.erd*). as aoon aa her capture a»Ci rtiiucd, SodcUor CenernJ B H ilill, jr, o d »wu up n the < fterncoa train from Aucnta couduc ih« inveaiigation ujon the part of nuts. After looking into all the facts surround- ug the iff Air and in ooiw*qaeitce of ihecoro* u-i’fi jur) hr viug u-turned a verdict fixing as tht. perp 'nalor ci the crime, aud upon wu oastd the wanabt o! arrest, a further trial wu deemed out euiury. Jaffa, with two others, her hueban! C > by, the tebooi teacher, supposed from strong cucuas'aticcs to hav« beta *ccjeaoriea, were takeo ia»l nUrf^npon .he freight train lodged for ea!o keeping m the Fulton conur j«ii in Auanva. This county hu no Jiff present. A D f-COrlTI' N TO HANO die viciot a hrg wu very man fesl in county, and some very excellent cii'xma weer not averse to having the exeention take p ;ce by popular judgement and consent, forts to aliay this seeling were cuooewfal, sd a great degree m de ao by the fed that the J-ais-ed icrm of the enperior court la to begin ffsia county on the reoend Monday in November. The guilt ol tba woman is palpable to all who are convert ant with the facta, and then la thtie qatstton ol her tpsedy conviction. aSSDT VOX THX WOBK. Just before the bain Otaring the prironen eft '-h s aution, it wu learned that a large crowd of people had assembled at Murrow’i •>uu in, near which tbe dutardly deed had bceo commit ed, and It wu bettered that an<ffdrl w-iu.d be mad? to take the prborers from tbe train and hang taem. They wire strongly guarded and tbe *onc-octor ol die train wu pre vailed npen to have the car aoora locked and to run through Mcirow’a EUtlon vithout stopping. The cro ad wu there, sure enough, but the train went rattling hyatarpeed which astonished the rai v. a. JulLtiand her auppo ed rccomplicca are now •fL'ely iodeed in cur jail, and there need he no further apprehensions astothffr safety. She will ba given a fair anj .mpartiai trial, aud Wi min :hossh the is, the prospects of her puff- Ug hemp before a large and appeobatire audK etee is about u good as any rearooabie mortal cosld desire. It ta believed tbat when the whole case la developed her i nsband and Colby will be txfceted through upon the aame train with her. thx worwDxn daughter, Mias Settle Farmer, whuee h* ad wu ao brutally crossed by the deadly hatchet in tbe hands o Julia, Is uow at haute ripidly rec -vering. It is hoped abe will be afea to album <he trixl iu No- ▼ember, hbe is not abts to give any inrihcr in- tarnufion ?><■« tbat already published. Jl CT TBB XSCAFE. Ju ia hu on-j to a .y tna; tfc: guards went tc> rirep aad were snoring londly whtn who steppe* ever tbeir proeirate bodies and walked out. Sh. saya aba tat awn He oa the court boose steps de bitting whether she ahrmd go away or »Uy, bu. flually oun Jaded to cuke hcreacipeacdibei •Mkk.oherbwa Up to tb s time, under all the circumstance* * a around, ng theaffrir. a large porttonof :h cl ixnmof tne ctunty have been ditpeud tc broeve -hat the guar's oa tbe right is ques’ioc sd not sated -quare Thecspmreof Ju iaasd tie i-c » brought to light thereby have aben dl-pa wd these .u»ph 1 na ard the young men an i -w throughout only to have been tmlortunat ndr.cg gent ia going uAleep while upon theL port ol daty. it la peotable that they will b< 'u!!y relieved of any tuapldoe of comp ioty ir baaaattur of the escape. From what 1 know 1 hinaltui true that trey weut to sleep unwit- Vtf*.; and nu hcughtedly aad axe iaaowh <-pocaibte ro be charged with more than care (■camia theefflrin. 8. W 8. AN INTERVIEW* Jv ifircanra WsDEia*i.or hxb o>ti,t. 8: c- t ie tall pobffcatitm of the particulars c: •herroent Cxaytrm ccmn y tragedy la TbxCcx- s rrcnoN, tbat terrible a flair has been the sab jec of very *•* axxxau. ti cmetox. idish • rJc a. Tillainy,thear- T-als of c iasefur-urth few parallel* toll, line mnsdinai*ae%JsleomautnifK > and its tteto rf auat MchtFijuBjattafiJaHi naAsaa 'SEVENTH DIS1EI0T. TO DE._FELTON- | j THE ENNIS TRAGEDY. perfectly u~co:.t» rr.ed. She is a rather emsl!,<ts/k with ir teliigent eye*. Her face U d it figured b' »t»woman. rbich appear in her prominent upper la? The reporter said to her—••Julia, now tell me all you know a bom tee Claytou county murder. * going to write srmtihing abem it and I nt toe folks to hear what yuu have to ny ” hr replied rather dotgedly: **I *ion’t know i ing to teli ’bcu; it” Rjporter—“How came you ia jail, then r* Ju It—• HJ Dpiv-y amaud me the oth« r day mfft l wu picking conou for Mr Fnak Bmiih. near 8 u«n church, in Newton county." Heporter—**Wnat did he arrest you for V' Ja m—“He ’cure? me of killing old lacy Far- i ?. acd (iod knows I it innecen ” H porter- “Don’t you liveiu Clayton county? What were yon doing *w*y over In Newtoa V’ Jaffa—-‘I beetd dey was gwine to ’rest me *1 didn’t wsnt >o be put into troub.e. Iw beared and 1 ran away.” importer-“We 1. uow. Julia, just tell all you ow about this affair, ana give your tide of the Julia—“Well, sir, 1 come to Clayton dia year. Me »&d my husband woTkt loz Mr Adams what livttaq’in(U.Tcf a mile from Mra Farmer I s.ed Mr» Fsrme. de lut lime de day be to re she 1 1. I went to her house to see if the. mo have soma eggs and ths • aid no. So 1 took my kitten* and come ht me. Next TO'-ruin* I wt-nt to'Mr Aaamson’s ati re—a pood piece eff UydmcbAud wu then Jn de fiild puiiina fodder\id Mr Adams, do man we work- ed lor. In de evetiug 1 come tack home, and a A a • white ■ Id 1 heard ci . did not to to Mra Farmer’s at tU the daysne was killed?” Ju.ta-”No sit. I kiu prove by witneesea I didn’t. ILs Adams know's Idi.in’t. De time dey soy de o!d lady wu killed I was washing la d* yard, aitd Mrs Ad uni *« d me dere. ” urter—“Did you ever have a luss with Mrs ^Juha—“No, sir. I always liked her very Reporter—“Isn’t your husband here secured ci ire: ping in toe murder ?” J dlla—* Yxa, sir. He’s here in jili, but I aint reed him. He was m de field wfj Mr Adams when de killing took place, and Mr Adams knows it” woman went on to state very plainly 1 defences she and her husband couUT e. (toe talked very dearly ou the sub jtet, and see mid to be rerfectly calm and cal tecied all ih-j while. She is a negro of mid mere t: an o:dinary intelilgenc . Amcng otbec thug*, the eald abe intended going hack to Ciayton the next day if she had not been ar* re«tid. She protests her i? nccence ve so does her hmbaud. They say . prove that they had no connection with th* mar- — Tdty pair. The husband is au ordinary luokicg dark- ekihDed negro. He Is in Jail but is not ir? the same cell with bia wife. Ue d« uirs h s guilt as a he • t&xc'cd of thedci Tfce c*ae may hi . _. Vcicpmenta at any time The ciae may hive new and interesting de- CAMPAIGN INCRAWFORD. UPLHA DID tthCitPlION ACVOlilb AD TO COLO AX U.AMUOHD. Colonel Arno ft l.*ft without au Au oftea Oe—* Hri UiiD't Warn IO 11* ml i ou 1** ilolliuM 1]P CHrlul *lor lb« Nominee. Oa Wednesday Hoa. N. J. Hammond our regular ti* m ocratic nomine for congres, had an appoio .ment to sp ak to'he people of Crawford county, at Knt xyllle, tht county Tbe people of th^t s.auich democratic strong bold lurned out in forcu to h>ar the champion of their party die. use the isiues of the ca, paiga. and rally the democracy to iheir duty the preeent emergency. A NOTABLE SPEECH. After having hud a good oui-idkhioned hand* abakluj* all aroun. with the yeomanry of t‘raw- ford, Colonel Hozr-moud was escorted to the cjurt-house aud iuiroductd to a moat enthu siastic audience. For couaideraHy ever an hour he rp.ke in his excellent and oonvincicg a.y.e, auzu uudng the g aad principles oi true gov» r* mtut and bones economical, administrative policy as represented by the lion-hearted dunrcracy of the ceun'ry at d as set forth aud re affirmed iu the pi Uorm tdop’td by the repnseiitativesol the fifoh congressioLal district. Upun tie financial question Colonel Han moud was uir^uxij *. uaibn, ic. icai and ha; py H j dtvuoped the whole aurji ciand do monriLrated the ruiuoue < fleet oi the policy pur sued f’y the radical party, when by the ccuUry had lost its wealth, industry, had been p.ostra* U d and tankruptcy brought to the doors of people. He exhibited the policy upon which thu bes- demtcracy of the country had eettled aud uaccd the TLuxmau line with such elo quence aud power a* to WIN UNBOUNDED APILAUfX from the large gathering ol farmur-democra' who listened to his glowing exposition Colonel Hammond demonstrated tbe purpose and power of the good old democratic party to bring full and fub-tantial relief to the people He arid the radical p rty would tot, and ai y new party 6ould cot do more than the democracy waa pledged to do. He urged their strict adherence to the racks tf tbat trumphirg power. Upou other subjects, Cotocd naxrmond wss squally leffciir.ua, sod the enthusiasm of the assemb age was marki d by lend and oft repeat ed cheers. In vindication of ao much of his personal neon! as a dem*erat as haa breu a«- sailed. he spoke as npen other occasions and ras g eeted with the same lokt ns of total ap pro. val. Wh.n he dca-d hfa speech, whlehwaseble aud pica- lug, he wu* ▲ scud ran nr caawrop.D. Every one prosi n' wis*tromcy impressed by all he had sxid aud the great duty rf coutalnl' „ the sapro mocy of tbe true democracy waa patrnf to a I Meu crowded around him to assn re him cf the almost unanimous support of the * They *aid th*_*y bad given Caudkr 1015 majori ty, out they wonlu roll H -mrrond up a 1 SCO j jrity upon this iura. A more perfect political k ve-feaat has seldom been seen in Crawford, a’id mere will be no divblon of the “wool hat’ democracy in this vicinity. A SET BACK FOB ARNOLD. Ool Anfcid, th- greenback n< mi ee, wu pres ent, accompanied by W Q Newman, hiving ridden twenty-eight mil** to meet the appoint • meet. When he desired to speak three cheers wen given for Hsmmoad and a motion to adjourn emptied the court home and left him withou an audience. ‘•We don’t want to hear you! ” they said and hear him they woo’d not. Co’onel Arnold was thus compelled to leave without being ao’.e to address the people. They said ttey wanted no dhorgan xatlon, and they bad refused to hear Dave Johnson in tht last canvass th y wculd not hear Arnold in thb one. Colonel Hammond tried to get them to heat hts compU'tor.bm they «aid hearing him w; r eir bminesa aud they didn’t propose to do it 9” you may c.urt Crawford aa a *‘aol!d re*, tlem-.-nt.” A Kevencit C’rrvr. Sped 1 d^oa’ci to The Ccnstitution. Halifax, N. S, Sept^axbe: 29 -Th« Saverom nt steamer Newfi: d, from •iable Uland, brought Oapt. Ardereot and a crew cf twelve from the Norwe t$iaii biric Eama, of Chrisfiaue, !oat eft :he eaat bar of tbe island July 22 J dur ing a strong brage from the northeast. Parc of the crew landed with difficult an their own bark. The remaining sever were taken cfl by tbe new lifa boat. wh ; ch was bronght from the iuain sta tior. Tne vessel went to jv ecea. Tht ere .7 a?.ved n .’hirg. Th* Emma wai bound from London to P UaJelphia. Knjrrer from Corn Stalks. Washington, September 28.-Dr. Calker, depiximacto^ agrienl u.a,ls *xxriment- ii*g in nrokirg suga- tram corn sulk ard sot- . 1 ® w A WRiaaw fgitof Uu com wj k i« 7pcnad ; weutatof -Ju *crghcm W*!h *«urut of h-j ?n ce from ths core. •Uflre ITT!; ‘orgtem 4 0 id. Ptr c? slice of ia’c In corn a av§ *s it eaa.c from tna field 21 <8 per car ; ol sorghaiu 3 5* 2*71 r oaon« of com jiucu >iei.ed 3« poonz* srrop; 4 35» pcordfi or sorzhma joxa 660 poencs •y ug. This »yrnp co_ulnel 73 par caoi of Id by i.Mcta 1l rn« Man Who W«tnld no* light fur lisa own Flmlde-Ati Appeal io the Nuldlera of the Nevestth OUirlct Seventh Dirrairr, 8'pt 27 1878. Editoks C^NsrinmoN: I had inten ded to call pnbnc attention to the frauds perpetrated in this district at the congressional election in l$7tt, by which some 3 000 iliegil votes were cast against the demi cratic party, bnt the matter is so fuily and ably treated m yonr issue of this m- rningby yonr cor?» respondent “dtixen,” tbat I pass onto the consideration of the respective da-ms of Dr. Felton and Judge Lester ‘to true statesmanship and earnest patriotsm. And firs, as to their claims to THUS STATE MANS HIP. It will be conceded without argu ment tbat ..ever in the history of the United States, and seldom in the his^ lory of any country, haa there ever ex isted each a field for the exercise of the highest, broadband truest 9ta*.e: na .- ship as tbat presented in I860 and 1861 on the occasion of the attempted secea lion of the son hern states from the federal union. Oar iberties, our lives and our property were all slaked upjn tbe decision we m ; gbt come to. Kot only the property, lives and liberties of mo then existing generation were in volved, bnt the lives, .liberties and property of our children and our chil drea’s children for generations yet to come. It is not my purpose to enter into any dkcu8siou of tbe doctrine of secession, or to criticise the action of thess who favored or those who opposed it. That doctrine lies buried in the bloody- grave with onr beloved brothers and sons, some of whom approved aud some of whom disapproved it, and yet all of whom died fighting for it. It is sufficient for the present occasion to say mat our people were divided on the question. Amprg those who advocated ^cession was D\ Fe!fcon. Amoi g thorn who opposed it was Judge Lister. Dr. Felton believed that we hod sufficirfat cause to withdraw from the union, and that it would be.right and wise, and to our best interest to do so, even at the c 8t of a bloody war. Judge Lester, while admitting our grievances, did noi believe that our true remedy lay iu se cession, nor did he believe that it w mid be right and wiae,*aod to our best interest to attempt it, at the time ard for the causes then existing. The question here arises: In the baleful light of the last seventeen years, which one was right and which was wrong, Dr. Felton or Jndga Lester ? Which evirced the truest, broadest and m n flt far reaching sfateem tashtp in 1860, the oae who voted to plange aa iu the outer darkness of seces-ion, with all its bloody horrors of death and fire, and ruin, or t he one who fore cast ing the future with the eye of a siatea- m m, advised us to “bear the ills we had rai her than fly to others we knew not off?’* I shall make no answer to this fearful ii quiry. Oa thec ntrary L 'Iahall leave it o ihe numberless graves which dot every hillside aud valley ihi oughout the south - -to the hundreds and millions of our property whl have been swept out of existence—to the billions of public and other indebtedness, which has made us a nation of tramps and bank rupta—aud to the sorrowfnl hearts aud the rained homes, and the lost rights aud liberlieB ol our once peaceful and happy land--1 shall leave it to tteje graves, three wasted millions, these mined bankrupts, these blighted Hearthstones, tnd tbe later horrors of reconstruction, to moke answer for the people who still suffer, aud whose chii dren for generations yet unborn win suffer after them. Ssceseiun presented an original pro position, free from party embarrass oient?, and there ™ as nothing in the circumstances of party or country to force men to take sides against their oetter judgments. There coaid arise no more vital occasion for the exercises of the wisest foresight and the truest statesmanship. It is the boast cf Dr. Felton's friends that he possesses abilities of a very high order. It is for the voters cf the seventh d strict to contrast his course with that ot Judge Lester, and to render their Voidict at the polls. We come next to consider the re- spec ive claims of gather m the cotton. There is no time when a tired mvn can 6st down and be ___ easy—no rest for the wicked in this) JHE frauds j* the ATicno.v' fi >d them for the trend's work of ofjsts. 1876. Who hinrf them? I do not have oo.himr to do now bnt to gather | * , «'iii**i*” *hnw - Up tn, ranmiir of ctarthat *nn^ 8 ‘ w b° do- | — in 1° » S *1 .iu **d h* F-HOU-. n.J .ri.r in l»ro- Ovrr ®i“ r “ you have spent no ranch B.p.r, on me Iron stale, of me in t _e froiix of our 1.bora ana do -,ojo iiuxui umioi. t«.i. mon.:y incampaigu parpotea who raise I <-•-> thankful and h ppv, bnt what with pn-iirg and hauling corn and picking | Hon> ffm. H. Fulton-Sir: A few on-, cotton and turning under ibe g.-aw we( - k , sgo y0 „ fl 0 dad the eeventhdie- ard weeds and sowing oats and wneat 1 . r j ct an advisory !eUer to the peo** and s*r:ppit g and entung and moping ple from the Hoo. Alexander H. S e- the surgum-.nil hauhrg it to the mill p heas. Whether the distingaishul feud gettirg up the winter's wood, it, the I gentleman'a advocacy originated in a busy lest se«s in of the year. It doe61 |j ve iy sense of past favors, or the an- seem almost im possible to carry it all I ti c jp a tion of a pcssible future illness, on at once in a felisitous manner we 3re left at a lofi8 tQ im • Bu cjnsidenn the uccemn weather and with hia real motive however material thu scarcity oi traneaent labor dnrm it might be in determining his appo- the cotton eeason. A tool ntgger had I r8m ancity we hare nothing to do. rather pick cotton at SO cents a hun- Ut u3 tbere fJ re coas;der the S 0s en8 i. dred tor the next two months and per-1 h i„ rp . „ ; ,. ‘ _ ish all the rest oi tLe winter than wke “ e rt reas ’ n aM1Sa ' :d “ ciaEOof hl8 8U P~ a good home now ai 8 dollars a month. I v %»’ o ten hona «rk. It takes a power ot work to realize Fe ^’- 6 ^ h b e “ m '“f“ 8 “. *h»» “ Dr - era anything on a farm, and “ I * el °? ha ? been tw.ee alecled to cun- body think* the craps grow ’ eat and toil and iamp »rom me naia i 0 jbo Thin < ti bB I confidence ot hi, by a very jarge majority. * • * In ztvz™* p “‘t? “* iy \ to ,he shuck it and shell it, end take it to the S 6 *? 8 ,* h, ® ! ‘ I 081 ! 1 * the su8 ' mill, and all thtg requtrea a wagon and ‘ !U:,0 “ “ ud b ? he ? “! 8t J >“ rl88 tex'.m and greasm the axils ana fnssin I mcampaigu purposes who raise so dishonoring a ensp caon. We know ^ you could not hove spent it all in a l T “° treent Ennis tragedy hns caused le^ntimato way. Bit your friends say 1 F®* 1 *! ^mmem ml nv.r the c*'uatr/. The it w s suont, and Iheii ^a^ertiors force j Tev ® u ue eCBc'rac'alin ihat. they were In the dla- ’.he qaeatiou into the minds ot eve y I ihairdntv,uni that in tht efforttoar- thinkiog etiizen, however relucruail' I rest tbe Rnaii broth, rs they were find on and and regretfully we may entertain it Is I ® fth e*»awnW faia-ly wound, d. it pnspible that any portion of that I 11 willlx* rera^m.ered ihat ibe Binisbroth- $15,000 waa Uied to violate the ballot 1 ^ T8 family p ;bUri,ei r fail sut-m^ni of iheir Ov-x— todi fraad the people and che.it I or lhe cs " e ’ ln which they ai t ^od a direct them of the representative of their 1‘J 3 j»»at<m themb: Jheofficer*, chuic ? I They further q at-y ihrilhcy had nercraipiIUed ti :r, ttisre is bnt one avenue of escape. 1 ‘ qnft? taic ®f. - .1 Thej a so aay ihat th« only splrlUjoas liquors b.d — hand at ihe tim i of the f.- h y waa a which they had Ore Enniws with .he infernal mules. And if jou P -'P^o neraano not to sell 25 or 30 bushels and hai’m t^Kchuice wMsemeu by the denoted got any corn eheller, by the time yon’ve I u , 88 ' iy t *° shucked it and shelled it by hand, and I 1 'SoSlmet' Te ?^ l a ^8 e * a truculea. hitn’ed it to market, your fingers wii. a . <=^,opi conrt, were be worn down to the quick and your fl e !S?. by X h *!°'“.' hand blister d, and you’d take five '?* r Once only ta the history of dollars a bnshk tor it if yon co ald lb,81! Sff ?" bur ^ ngUt been l nr " got it, and feel no tare of con ccc “ , ““ w88 W ^ BD science. Well, ita jnst so with 8, S““. radical knaves the most evervthing m tde on « ra ?® ^ red ° nr I, 3 hf8 " ay { farm. Its all hartf work. I sent a load ?“!* csUed >n the traitor and the thtet of wood to town and sold it for seven- * J?* 1 * 8 judgment oi the people, ty-five cents, and I thought that if Feraonal as well aa polmcal history those city folks about R .me who step- Th® a 'Idlers were in the ped ont of their offia-fume cold day ^f b fu ba 7. one,B 8le* m? d h» ti.e and Jewed a poor wood hauler on h 8 ‘™®? “ f 1 cann ? n clrcled loa-i, knew how much hard work it cost | iba capitol, Grant threatened congress, him they wouldn't do it. Grinding itia | . were afraid 11 No wonder ax, making the manl, tapering down I Hargrove is year devt ed inend. 1 theglats, cutting down the tree, cut- n “n m 7 lt ? J°?*° gsxf uponaspec'acle tirg it up and gplitting it, straining the I ft 8 - bl 2^ b m b; ' gt tints out oi him when the timber is I cb Tha°Mtl,^yonr honest friends, tough and kuottt— oadtngnp the wag .w^LA 0 !* 0 ? 108 iab.e da copied from or, straddling a sharp edg -d stick fur 'ho comptroller general’s lepoufor tha atnsUton to ride on, stalling ina mud. I -y'at report wa- mede by K hole, p: a ng and sometimes cnssiu •*““ «« 1 < 2 fflcer > “ d T out ol u, paying bridge toll, hunting L, d< i Ca “J n S and e0 - art Vi> 1 2 round for a buyer b ing j. tved like you 89 tr “.* h . ful 88 ‘he Cmgresaional Record was a common swindler, getting home I to ,'i b 'u b y° a 80 seldom refer us. Xh o ag Jo away after dark knd having t0 tab ' 88b .°^ e Ilum . bBr of P o!,s -*: > 8 f?ed and wash up and eat a bite of 81,4 colored, m etch county »nd their supper aud go :o bed and get np in the “PS"*®'®, ■“ * h ® ®nrif® • *• morning to do the same thingover I llu *f lbe80 ) .y‘ ,,8sc8 ! t ‘P eacb ! ! ® tu ' t Jj® r agein. I wonldeut like that, would yon? | ,,1,c l candidate, and the entire nggre- Bn ta m ag aint that had, though g8!8 ot th 2 ® h ° le T ote - * 1 be,t ; b 3MSF itt all hard work aud constant wora I P 18 *® J® 84 '*® 108 ® 1 ^ “““1, 388 ,f tbe co1 and it looks like yon don’t get more I amos 8r ® properly added np. than half enough for your corn and yonr wheat. Bat there is a heap of solidcomiort and independenc* in hav ing a plenty of all these products about yu-u I like to feed the bogs an’ sea ’em at j o; it and grow fat. I like to peruse . ae cattle and tee the milk cows come up so slow aud dignified _ . , with their udders a 1 on a strut. Ihkel S| Sftu233S’3$$SS?Si to see ths ca. ves and the pigs aud the 1 ua.u-g»ag»ausvi sheep a gtmhelin’ around. It makes a m n ee! patriarchal to have so many lovely era a-ur.s a lookin’ np to you and followin' you about with the bus- f t on yi u arm and dependin’ upon yen like little children. It gives a man the same sort oi comfort he uatd to feel when he owned a paseel oi dar keys aud tbe lit: Ie nigs was a hangia' around wa'chin* his movements ae he went to and iro, aud hi her and thith er, and nearin’’em tay, “dar goes! Muoh IVilli. m flap Itu ” I euppO60 I New YorX. with oar. er WeTbc*eC«*to ea «a :ed yreror isj frt fowica at poi tack las. tff&U oa aocouutot a stonr. lied to-osj ... A Disolation. Special di«pitca to Tbe Cou-titntion. Phu-adelthia, Septra ter 9.~ Oo ppMcatloc . bx-Jacge Porur s decree was tuierea by tbe common p.eaacourt N »• S dka-o.Tirg tbeeorpo titiou ol tb« Kzpire rrxusixjrutffoa ccmpasy m accordance wub oa a-^l:cittoj s-opUra by tbe stocbbaider* us; spnnu Fs’ol Expi—l-io. KrBWAtA. C», Septemlv r H —Tbe Norwa”. * •x&ANew YtrM resEri adaii-k la brerrt ber bail- r oc*« bub ffta hex dues, tat* bmkxuo*. biu-cc desad wocBdkaf aboot sweety. Tbe boi;er oew oatartbaatasfc .«ri dtoot toe aooV Fte “ 4 After sFcsssion came the greatest e vil war of ancient or modern times. D.-. Fslton, to tbo cx-oct of bio Tote and it flaence, was respo-islble for ibis war, yet he took no part in it, but like Jjb’a war-horse, “he snuff-d the;battle from afar.” Judge L»ster was in nowise re sponsible tor ii, and yet he buckled on bis sword and fought until he was dis abled. Felton was too prudent to fight for his own cpuso, but encouraged his neighbors to go forward and interpose their breasts between himself and tbe enemy. Lester had no canse, ye . as the state espoused Felton’s cuse, he made it his own end fought and bled for his “country, right or wrong.” Felton, like R imsey Sn-ffl?, exer el himself to s**& sister statfs to fighting, and then retired to a hospital or some other place of safety. Lesiqr, instead of widening the brgach, tried to heal it by pouring o 1 on the troubled waters, and by urging- is people to “agree with thine adversary in the wayvet failing iu his pe&ci fnl efforts, he sought the post of doty which was the post of danger. Which one, then, has the better claim to earnest patriotism? Which is the better patriot, the man who helped bring on lhe war, yet wonld noi fight, or the one who endeavored to prevent the war, and yet tendered his life in defence of our horn^s, inc tiling Dr. Felton’s ? Dr. Felton d d no! tight, even for his own fireside l General Toombs, in one of his im- r aaeioaed gusts of elc quence, declared that “patriotism in itb last analysis ie the blood of the brave.” If this be irne, has not Lister demonstra ed his patriotism ? Has he not shed his blood m battle for his ccnntry? He has Has Felton done likewise ? He has not What then is the duty of the This qnestion they mujt answer at the ballot box next November. Here are twocard.dates for tbeir suffrage. 0.»e cf them, whin the time came that tried men’s son's, took shelter from tt>e s’.rrm tf battle which he had in part br nght upon the couutiy, and remained at bif own snug fireside surrounded by his family and friends. He ea*d he would go, yet he went not The other said he would not go, and yet he went. The soldiers rf the seventh dietret should stand by their comrade, Jud^e Ls3rer. They have radge.l by his side on the weary marcu in the heats ci summer and the rains and snows of winter With hfm they hsve thirsted and hungered, and with him they havt stood a living wall between a ruthl-rsh foe and onr mothers, wives and d<tagh- lerr. They have felt the touch of Die elbow in the day of battle, and shared hk sympathy in the hour of sickneai and wounds. Will they desert him now who did not desert them then ? Juke Wright is reported to have de clared that it was a rich man’s war and > poor man’, fight. I know not how this was; bnt this I feel well assured of, that >he true soldiers of the seventl district, whether rich or poor, wheihe; originally opposed to secession, or in fa vor of ir, whether old wbigs or demo crate, will s’and by their feilow sol dier, and not desert him for one wht was not even a member of the “ hum* guards.” General Thomas and Admiral F*r?.- gat were southern men, yet they tough against the Eouth. Dr. Felton, Genera Lingsueet ard General K/mby an soatnem men, and yet they fi^ht th* democratic p >rty which has rescued a from the condition of corqa»*red prov irce?. What say yon, aoldierr 1 Is it Lister or is it Felton ? Cato. „ mr last ok caon the result of fraud The right of tht people to the man of I ibsyhido It is the path of honor- It is pUiu I a*4d open. While I entreat yon to en«L„ a „ ...... ... . ^ tot* and w»ik therein, I have but iitt'e ff!Lmh.iI* -th°” hone that you will re.- trd tbe counsel. . “ 01 ' ’pe: P rirt ,n o‘«t ti frauds in lhe elrciion it 1876. Direct i„ e “ e tuqT^rf^s'^S a.,ention to the localities woere thty I ihuugh ttc efforts ol oae ol its reporteig, ob- were perpetrated. Gonaemn their I tsinM afuiii.nd explicit stfOenseaiof t-ie xn*i- enoruuiy. R c rmmend the appoint- I ter from Ool Pi?x<lmons, ihe UaueJ Slater m«. tffentoi Cy.m A leva composed of good | Ehaiot Georgia. ui?n of boih parties whose duties ill Dropplcg *n yesterday m. min? st the mar shall be to challenge illegal voters ; to ] ships offic? we foa-jff ih« colonel qn et y st w itch the trains and the county bi rd- I work on official business. An apology for in- * 1-8 to see ihat ro voters are imported ; terrnpiicg him wss answered with a smile, io guard the polis to «ee that no repeat We stated iho object of our vidt ing is practiced; to iarnish the election I and the cnlone! cordially assented to our re- mAiia»;er6 at each precinct with lists of I qu« «r for partlcnlRre. tlefaulLera that all who have forfeited 1 Ia the following interview will be found the tbeir right of suffrage may not etjoy J accurate statement of the mAnhsl’s v.ewson it—to do, in short, everything uccetea I the ca*e: ty to project the ballot-box and vindi- | cate !hs will of the people. Advise I R"porter-I dare fay you h'.verccu thever- tbe pi'Ople to v te at their home pre- I Mon of the tragic affair la Hancork published cincis, and a- av id the massing of men I by Ennis. What think yon oMtf at one or two ballot-boxes in the conn- I Col. F.—I think tbe statement bears upon its ty where, a large proportion being un- I tscesa sir of pslpih'.e improbability, icmnot kaowa, repeatiug is easy to perpetrale I beilere any officer appoint'd by me would bo ttP‘1 hard to de’ecU ipdlty of such recklesss^d criminal conduct mb. Dj this. Then do yen call off Mid- I Rauih’* statement discloses Yet there will be a dloDrocka and Brown. Rebuke th ^m I tkorouch Investigation Into all the f.*cta that ex- 90 tmblicly, and with such scorn that 1 •ct l«*ffce may bo done aud hav? only the no man can auy lungtr EUS|>ec f . your I guilty tomfler. Still, li is strango lust the In- eympathy from your silence. Dj jus- I nis brothers, who claim to bow Innocent, and tice to Lester by retractiug your I to hare been eo iuihi«triy &x*at)e4 in their own abortions which l h ive shown to be I home should faff to give themselves up to ihe erroneous, if you sre honest—flatly I yttHflWfcA and when they are eoncht louuu c* if you are malicious. I ne *’nou ts'. inventus.*’ ihj puopieof Uev.-rxia D) this, and although we caunotioin I between the le lcral and atato . u in j our political career, we may I * u thorltica in this affair or la any other, applhud you for allowing yourself to be I bat ^f mtnd t* 1 * 1 crims shcuid b-j at mast forced into an honest and pa triotic action. Cm fen. Trie F -nreii Dhtrlct. Co'nmbus Enqaircr-Sun. We have two caudidates for congress in this district. Roth are democrats Nei her is the nominee of the conven tiou*. Oi the two gentlemen ti! -I t ilgsis^siiiisasi®* ii niiiiiliiiiiiiL ■ wSS! irsl§iS|2gisgll§|f Muss Willie m aar he. that the love of dominion is na!ur<il to all peoplo, and a man don’t m ud bu lo' gir.’ to another man so much if somebody or something belongs to h m. Iu slavery times there was but oae tiling a darkey cjuld own that didn’cbelong to his nmster by-law,an’I This taole shows the startling fact that was a dog, an* a dog he was bound 1 that the counties of Bartow, C bb, to hr.ve if he was allowed to keep him. Polk, Floyd and Gordon (all giving yu Well, I don’t see much I majorities) cast 2 399 more votes man difference in tbe darkeys I tht re wer.? polls wi hin the counties, b tween uow and then. Tnere’s a few 10. f this aggregate Bartow cast 384 m w<> of em stuck up by education in the big I votes than she had polls; Gordon 217; cities —just enough to control the mass I P*'lk 433; Cobb 761, and Floyd 802. es of em poliiically atd religiously, I Now mark the contrast. The poll of but most sli the race are ihe same uig I the c ounties giving Dabney mi joritiea gera they u^ed to be—they CAn’t g3t I was 9,422, while the entire vote cast by al ng without a mister, and they «lo 1’t I those counties was but 8,995. I there - — ’ * fore appears *hat the e ght Dabney counties cas 1 427 votes lees than their call em the nai.on’s wurdu; but you I P ’’Is, while fi^e of your counties cast see the guardeeu ta so poor off he esn’t I 2 399 more votes than their polls. Un do them auy good, and so we are pliy»» I f* plating and importing wa*) not done in substitutes and can do enything to I erof ire tu Dvrasy’s str oagholds. lhe world with em we want to but vote I But there is another telling fact We democrats can’t do that, wi.ich I entreat all thinking men to They won’t vote ior anybody but a re- I consider. It is this: the entire stale publican f they know it and every one I h .a tn lo/o, a04,o07 polls, while she in toy nab ar hood is a Feltou man for I cast but 180 630 votes. So it ipiieam that reason aud nothing else, aud you I that the entire state cast 13,877 votes can t mike em believe he is a demt> I than the nymber of iro r polls, ci at. I’ve got iheir confide 1 ce in ev* w**ile >our five couutks cast 2,399 ervthing else but that. They won’t I votes than there were polls wua* believe me, and the fact is they seem so I them. . certain that he aio’t a democrat, I Your entire majority in the distnc: sometimes think may be they know I *vjs but 2,462* Take off three 2,399 more about it than £ dr. But I’il tell I il votes and you are left with omy yi » what’s a fact, aud y ou may tell it I 63 im-joruy—a number very easily to the doctor, if he’ll make a speech I b ’Ugg.fed in iu tbe other counties, ia this naborhood and tell the I Ritnember, mv countrymen, that darkies he’s a democrat and ip I there were 4 1U9 colored polls within opposed to the republican party, l*ii I the distric* - . R -member that ot these b:5t anybody a hat he don’t get narry I scarcely a huaured were democratic, nivger’s vote that hears him—and its I Remember, too, that cf the entire t*ie same way ail over tie district. Ax I number Dabney did not receive over Harris if he thinks its morally correct 200 votes. Njw, take from Dabney’s lor a preacher to capture the votes of ‘ ggreirate vote.his 200 colored vote*, the nation’s wards in that way. Don’t I l* 1 *© from Felton’s aggregate his 3,900 it look like as if one of the elect wns de- colored radical votes. Wuat i.s ihe re ceivin’ the elect to be electe ! ? Yours, I ^ ' appe.il to yon. I can appeal to Bill A up. | yon, for yon are honest and tm.hful Amweriue with the fear of God in your iiearts. Do you believe that that vote of 1876 shows that Felton was The cho re of the democracy in his dis trict ? B .t this teble shows aco’her most e-gmticant facr, and one which, ia the punished when commut'd, aud hence Col Anderton, my chief de puty, had no trouble in obtaining a t om of some of the moit respecta ble cittaijDs of the state oi (to rgta to aid him in ills efforts to capture tbe Ennis brothers. Reporter-Your o^ctal dull, s, colonel, c.mr good deal over the aiate, and brine you acqutinted with the views aud feeling* ol the the I I* 0 *** 0 u P° n the p.eeent question of pnblic In- '.i'.'e w ’ V r * Z17ir^~ft»’hrtn I tertrbt I what do you belli vs to bo t he sentiment 6 ri, we des;re tlio eketioa of Hou. 0[onrIMpl(!ln J eg , B , toH4 jc; f H. R. Harris, because we believe he cjloncl F.-I: n not pxprr tti»t I should dl*. wtl- be more ueaful to hiseectioa a11 ^ I cu*. poUecat qaeatioiu .hUu occupvtrg mr country as a member oi 1 present poslU a;orat toast this is tbo into I grt‘63, aud he is, undoubtedly, the I uavo prescribed for myselL But I think there 0 unce of the district. Oi the canvass I oan bo no impropriety in my answering jcur money talks coldly, dispassionately, q.jctjons since itroia c* to what I heat others and without R siugie glow of feebng. mVk for no c *pre»ton of my own We djilb- whetuer the bitterest oppo- vleWfc i think the ’enthmnt aim »et uulvcreally Dent ci M* Harris Wat wager a dollar I entertained in Georgia, is, that the president ie ag-iuat hia wmntng the rac3. Ihere I t u good fa th doing bl« duty; not aea more rep* ia ro reason, however, for the comeat I r o*.*nutiveof a pirty, but or ih: whole people to consist ot riarah words, imputoUond 0( nu actions of me comrrr; and the south ami heated argument. Men can g‘Ve I owe* him gr*Ututof«r histoid aud snupatnot- tlicfir _ re tflon coolly and cairn-1 j c (jourue iu regard to Suuth corollas amt Louis- Tho question is^ wholly which j tuna, rwiurl j^ oncu mowTt .e whole south to ona of tl.a two will make lhe I iu wonted strength and runk in the union most UBeiui member. We believe Mr. I Repaiter-What do ihe pi-op:e, lux ssyoor Harris wi*l» aud ^etce we support him j observation bt® gene, thluk Mr dtepheno’s 1 * lie bust cf our ability. lucre is no I course in regard to tbe Patter xetolatlons ? need for anything beyond polite Ian-1 cot P—Whv ;hstit w*Bt?miu*nily wu?, oon- girv^e. The usnal phraseology of the I scrvauvesaJ jn*tss cxp:.;iuci bv Mr dt. phene, sump ought to be i.eglected and this 1 and Lhst 00i%ref* alter words «naUinei tho pa- a'lowed o b t a cum^aign cf peace ai d I ^riotism and wisdom of hhconreo. MrH'.epbenj q liet. b.uocueeo cau beivory easily 1 iagnssuy nouored and ;ovt.u by the who\o pco* eugeildtto’J, aud if ouo side tries i;, I pie of Urorgls, as he seems ic bu by the whole .-omo at least of tbe other e:d9 will give J country at latte—but i mu*t t>« yon to excuso as go d aa sent. Ic is as easy to give I me from lurther couvorrsPou now. valid reas jns, if ti ere be any, anu not I We take pieaturc iu pubitahlug ths loliowing fly off at a i»ng: nt and ruintdi. Tnere I naronr are no priuciples at pt-ke, only a pre-I cf Marrhsl Fltxdmoaa, which gives afn land icrerce oi men. Surely each car I accurate statement of thj tacts iu the Ennis vote for his fuvorite without quarreling I cau: abaat it. We have for wet)as aludied I office of Unitsd htatct Mabshal, South* bentof the Muscogee mi id and are I fi ent they prefer Col. Harris, ^ndl R«uustti*atteaas..iF. Ki.ais ,co:.dp" thu ihis couatv will give him a major- | Fusffmouro Atlani*,Ga.—t>ir: 1 AVa thehouor „y of .volee. n.’ht. iue m rihernand eastern states I pnib 8 iotiura flcciot? ud wusun, nvoc >.ffi i<iviu fiod it to their advnutt ge ID keep good 1 made by n depuiy coihoiu. of iu ,.f*.iu rovenua, tr.Mii in rM. jrrrif-ft for a l. in? neriod The I woro D^d tu my ha itta io b- ex,cut<sd. I »m* men m coi greta or a i>^i»g penou. mi , a u,*i y .wwardod ttam io Depmy Man n I ■ n tu* to hnt. tnw HiieenheB. anu I w r, ■ . . _ TOBVias VLAS TIES. Tbo Bonmsnlsn i hambrw-Tho AfT- Chnn Affair, Ete. Bucharest, Sept. 28 —The Romna<« I li^ni of all onr experience, aids ns mos! niar chainb ra met in special session I materialy in deieiminicg the locality yesterday. Prince Charles advises the I of the enormous fr.»nd exposed above maintenance of a dignified attitude rel- | In lhe eight counties which jiavc D^b ati ve to Be-sarabiapu ihe hope that that I ney m« jorities there are but 1100 col territory w 11 eventually be restored bv I ortd polln, while in the six c .unties • Me more clearly informed justice of I which gave Felton mt joritiea there are Europe. 3 009. Njw, if we bear in mind the TURKEY* I Let that ’ho negroes voted almost sol the i.iihas retreat. I idiy Lf Felton, aid tbat ihe numbei -Losita*, 8 -;ttt mbf-r 28. -A Constan- vouegfot him was over 1.500 more ittatt •iaopfo dtcpafch of toe 26th says the h,s m » lt , “ Ifiewili oi Russian* continue to retreat on Kirki- 1hritj tits white men m the H?a and Adriacople, wh**re they ex* I f® oi tb ® cutt^tte 0 * waa deieu.eo pact to arrive Oc!ob- r 2 f. h} the mgro voie. It te plain, tr», mat BBB.xiso THE tbeaty. tba negro nold* to-lsy tho bslsnce oi Lond.s, September 2S The RaF _ power m the districr; a..d that the on!} sUtts have selected Sufi t as -he capital .*»/ t ® re8tor . 8 . Acglobaxou supremacy m Rutuaria J fe tor the white tuss of the mountain* BILL A HP'S SUNDAE CHAT. Tbe Harostupa «f a Farm**- '* 1.11s- Itir setaxc or Dawlolaa — Ob* Stilus a Segro Won’t Do Wricen lor The Coosntmion. “Se^d time and harvest *h» ! l rc fail.” I used to think tbat meant ih sprinr and lall of the farmer’o year, an*' I reckon it did in the olden ' me when farming was in its infancy and folkt dident know much about the nattur ol seeda an>i plants and gnanna and agri cull oral implement?. Bat now it* ^eed time and harvest time nearly all >he year round. We sow oats fre .a Augus. to April, end wheat from September to J*HUEZ.tGd&tskAJftl<Al* J MkLMXiA of Bulgaria instehd of lisnova and are otherwise refkitig to contravene a treaty with Berlin and thwart the in ternational commission in eastern Rou- metia. THE OFFER TO O' EICE. ^Rome, S.pxmber 28.-Aa Athens di p ich 3tate9 that E .gland is in com munication with the powers with a view to attempt the secernent of tbe Greek question on the b -ftie suggested by Mtdhat Pasha, whereby Greece wen d receive the inland of Crete, ba i third less territory on the main land than proposed by the corgrets. RCSeiA S t TVER OW A'D. I>ndon, September 28 —A Reuter di-p? co from Cons an tin > pie report? that Midhat Pa^ha arrived in Corea, Crete, yester ia”. Q teen Victoria and i.he Prince of Wal^> transmitted letters to Athens, through Hob^r Pasha, ftvoringa moderate c nciliatery ar rangement between Greece and tbe porte. Rorda has promised to mp oort the claims of Greece ia the ad justmentot tbe frontier question. AUSTRIA. GOOD NEWS FROM TBB FIELD. Vienna, S.utember 28. -Th; Dukf of V\ nrtt m jnrg te egrapned ihat Lions snrrtndered Saturday morning Afret a complete in ves meat it *&& bom birded by thirty-eight ?uds, which greatly damaged the lort fixations. Tht furkiah quarter was be eiged, and the neurgen e made aevcral attempt to bie^k out. A Wor«l of Warslug toCoanterfelCeru The wide spread fame of H>stetter*< n*c*titv enoerps-tto n spa.-l ble ffez.ee ana we&w« ivs Utta * on tk t wewi.l tros. t'*n- d j hare alt ihow ?er- ao .teo afed :n re-fl ati Eut-ir second has i bortle*. •iI.uk cy use k*.i< a - osml. or in my s>nae: ou Ui--» pa ilea sifOaiook “ * w preperetiuL, potash counterfeit x or de ling in ceunte-rccit tratio attrk ood*, t* eet forth in s law re^e Ujps«*eu Df Gou je *:‘ Pice tot fi.uo or Wi sever loll to MidiM bulk, i ‘ Kut«bOvs(H)ecuU •id **"or he neck ef , :- -joriiaa tot wfuioct this binp, arscoaa erMt lo unite their voice and their protest it 3 lid defiance at tbe polls. But this table shows still another and tenu g fact. Your total vote was 13,269 D bney’s was 10,807. We win p.u- t-umo that the enure colored poll wee voted. Any other supposition makes it still more difficult for yi*u to acc mni for that awfut 2 399. Now if wo take, from Dabney’s ’o a vote his 200colorec votee we have 10,607 as his total white vote, and all democratic. If we take from yonr total vote yonr 3 900 colored votes we have 9,369 as your total white vote. Ttiis 9,369 includes every white radical in tne district, except thus* which formed part of Steal’s 187 voteB flow many while radicals th re are it. the district I am not exactly informed Probably 2,000 would be a moderat estimate. It we take then this 2 000 from your total white vole, yon a -,ve left only 7,369 as yonr total decnucra;u vote, and aU of that aw fen 2,399 stiff to come off. People of the seveuth dis rict, behold this vauuttd favorite— “this choice of the democracy 1” Now, sir, it is very evident I hat there « rd Irani in the election in 1876 » fraud that perhaps defeated the aul cf tbe people and gave y« a to congress . t-.mailer Hayes. The fraud was earn- muted in yonr strongholds, lhe peo p!e will suspect—the ceople wul be* ddve that a.i those 2 399 illegal v ne; are represented in your majority ncle*s yon unite with vonr opp nezn to pr tecttheai against the r^petiuoa of & enormous en outrage. Did yon not signify to one of yon warmest friends and supporters u Why field county that year expense, in the two previr as campaigns were e* heavy that yon coaid save nothing froo 1r salary? He says you did, an< i ta are fotced to draw up »n yon •ate resourcbs to defray ti e MHMT* c*s of thin cauva-a. Now, yen hav drawn from the treasury a* com pen he tion for yonr services n*?t lewi thai 825,000 Allowing yon $10,000 to de y your expense* while iu rVasniDi’* ton, and we see $15,000 spsnt in cam paign purposes n> man wbo claim to ur.ye tne confidence cf his canstitu ents by an overwhelming ru?joritr! Bat fraud waa committed, fio euor mm* an outrage moat have, oeen exe ented by men who were to profit 1 y if * Who hired them? Mark met ' Th - larger proportion of your white friend * are henee t uod-iaeorrcntible., ^ot ttarii , w . i . .„ * ■ uitiuixioiT tiirwinHxi iuiiu to wpmy 1*0 ~8C llflltJJiS tO but I8W Hpeecnes, and I y p t Liiu.*<leii. AL IIacd., »viUi }*ur.; th»*y mast be extraordinary. I ptmcii ns tote p;ounni> but with ,»iid Tn thu rnmmittpn rooms 111 uelem'anUwere .epuitoa ,o i•*• ti c In the ^ committee rooms i vlojenco ^oam ki*y atiempi. t. tinence tells, aud he ,^ho I Wll ri 0 ta arrest Dt'puty Lutns.. h .a be n there lungftdt haa most weigh*. I at n, with fhre.* n^is ams, pj.tjewi u, via 1! >® “ er ® »•«* of >'|V witttUnewvi^- ?. proving thesr member every two Jtais HAaoock «m-iy,u«r»r ilc imeil u i:w.u.:unln* u iv«8 hitn potential W* ight—mnen I hu amval howtn get there W*:i Afr-jr o.vk v more than would be ob'Bmeu by a new ^ nac of equal<.r far mure brilliant qual lwoot W( .ms , (LrneyWU fco re)oui*lde . ties. Why, Knott, of Kentucky, was I roirienc;«.urc.»iia HfUouciu* t» ujg g WO years iu the house before he ^ b J t cw ' c l ^ g llll £ L hl1 ^ 1 could get rtcogniaon of the speak* I w lb , ir q ie;y *. r w bt mvr . r e P ,<Hi er. Io ii not the choicest I ’yet*!” t-.wouJed '»y ihe tervaui. i.mntd-r mint’. *ntm* maXe Ui. beat . ngra*.- JJ;* man -tbote who ehtpo measure!* aud kin>b-iw itqrored, Mt iv-li V* lnimut. really lay the plans by which the gov- | »r. »ua unyUibis more waa hs-joi f^T^nhhtfo! 8 ‘h™ U w.th nmetlude 8 US Iho thottehtfal—.hose with quiet juag— l uturiy seven ug uatthoc bow. u.puj nteuts and'clear brains, tempera.o and uea man aiew blspstol «na fljedooc i,u ctual to duty, who can neither be P*ny uie door who nan litecuorse i i L 7 i j ii'u 'L ‘ ^ I K QQ AcoUieroI iheiielemDintaspjo.nrig, aiiU betrayed nor cajoled, these are I uj t . firing atthi»offlc« r*b«iugcun utoi,Lin*y, the men who t ccompiieh the I wao was oominz io ibor rcsar,. w«« tbo. irr «ror*ri not rhe erratic ffd- I ^wo* Lnujs.'.tnta pistol rcturiuij to work. u c 8 1 i 8 ° n V„v ,, ,™" c 8 „. wraoblltfesfio retoml.ilti hi* wuomfedrom. unses who filHh amid flume **na I r *4ieauj ibe licarom Availably point .A&crehur Mucke. bring forih cheers avd plaudits, I *;k*l sue-tion could bo procurej. Rt-acnin? jhen fcink back iuu> apathetic mdiffer-1 Kua- e* ca ;.nd are heard of no more, nnlese J orewdird from tbe «fleetb ui dis woud .* sc-rne Bimilar orcision educes a like I roltex tbeir at.ivoi. ijiLtjHirjurn* proviuL „ ( If rt. TUEse Excepatnal on« he»rd ta-rnffemrai w’m.Li’^* 01 at lonu lntervotB are not tho men I mumxl lut-li.rge of Kuntt w-Bbudj- whose ait vice is eought wheu a great I mo corouvr’s inquest, aitci wbicb bo measure ia prepartng, uoraid asked in ^ nB 8 rt , m » ltr ^ Qn Lvmtoa us pussage. The said Eubstanltal men, I Kttempt havingeatujd sm? local cxcitemeir, I I ke Mr. Harris, who are invariably | cuu«iar.red tt my duty io uka imuu diAto stops II throir nroain am ihrun whnnn munrelv I EO prevent lire caCap<t of tbeoefend nta and ee it tneir posieare ino^e wnosecounsels curt . me exe co ton or ibe wsiwnuu a^rtiiv are valued. Pheiiumem 1 uatutes ; who I (0 r .Muicdgovnio on the tsih I arrived mere he only dibUn^Uish the-uselves uudei I following day, aud alier coiisinntion wiih the strong exciramedt had best ttay .1 home. Wo do not mean, however, | haitdo, apwss speodiiy secured, u»« mod thnt any of these master orators who I pro minem«ffictala of the cuuut>^b.s *ai at oil htortle the wt-xried «.ngre«.man are running >n this district. Mr. Harris 1 lestdce rwto tniii’a« to the fu.xst ex mtia h 8 all the faculties vh ; ch go to create I vindlcAiinx the majesty of Uie i w. Iu this a rithfnl, useful legi B lator,a9 his record f^SItSKfre”'S e “‘’fh’Ti-“t*C and votes nave proven. I pi rate crimluAis areitabi*' to -cm: ar any time Angry passions, hard words, enviom I inwisscuocsoi the conmry) tncerowt osawoI fetijng, exunotsray the jnemrabfo i «o S ’JSc’.'Sm ^ tn the brief canvass in this dittric- au J w« may need in «xtcutt*gthe iitocuiboi the s .ohld strive to cultivate and maintain 1 ** **•'" —— * ■* — in discussion in private circles, the newip p*r, or the hustings, the most courtec us of amicable relations. sotupunied by t Bo suchi Apoaincy. i Drhlouei a Signal. Ten years ago tne great organised ddtnoc/Attc party was in the minority guice theu it h«s had a brilliant serire of aucciBaea. Ai<d just as this saint great parly is abt ut to reach forth hei uand and receive the pr as for whicl sne x.as struggled, is it puhaible for any ft”.-, of men - who have helped her U fight th j grent battl s—to dijintegratt aer, and foil her 7 Men are not ye i^dy to tear down this party whiefc has saved the country from utter ruin We do not. believe there is any such ipjfatacy iu the land. Tise 'twill CoiamnnlBts, New York Graphic. The tact that no will of a rich roar es by uncontested stamps the lawyei cUss as the real communists In thu country-the people who diotribuu esi'.atefc, whi rob and plunder the pos® disToos cf the rich, both alive ant dead. That Truly ttood Han. BaioaPat Daacon Richard Smi'h attended < S ohain school in New York, ent ...oked so pionB and meek that the tcholars in.bio k him for one of th • postieo. Tii© CnroriHURiy ftsitaaal Baslu. CiuciuasU Enquirer. To the ) atioaal bank*: Wanted- “P curtiary asuisiauce in larg» moan s ” Alarets the re^ablicai . .ie eicca ive committee, Columbus, Otio. I asrue If Auricular Oryana Wmshiag oa Post. It Is not true that E igene Hale wa tried entirely out of a gat H'S erne •e * tii i ibor.’ gr ,und, swaying so ana iro in the soli* aa.amn breese. Vucle Dicta snd III-* Mad.scow. BosUfu Post It Thompat n .Cita spare the navy i 1 t'e while, R besoa would like t- tc rrow it lorg ©n» ugh to satl into con y.rtke. ■ Too By Hair. Bjfttm PoH. Hayee isao g^ -d >nat he h i»e3 to so feooequjio k»U.**d. —By every c,n.i: r*t ‘»ii of pre fif. il ot of propriety, tr.at which sustain: i d strengthens the system ehou.d te .xDbO utely'pure. B >Us, pimples, «rap* » onb, etc., indi :Aie impovorishment -and poisoniog oi the* blood and abculd be removed by Dr. Ruff’s Blood Mix rt* of the IT-.jiog SUt- s HHiMPI potaeof iweniy. 1 proceed d to wrthiu cn© hsif uii.e oi the Cefciid oj ’* house itieu. CUvldiuic, Ihe posse, nirnmnded the pisce with several prumuieut judicial officers ol t*.o ooun y, 1 wcpi to thd hocsu and alter a in or. u^h seaicu of the preraises and me neUttiboitoou ctoid Dud neUi^rra*( thuCefMidaiiis,aua fromlDivimauoa * » sathfled tnat they hAveltfithe irasuaie ih.ir and d Jno. W. andeuscv. Ghlei U. a. Deputy .ait|i4* CoDkUmpllOB Cure*1. An old phytician, retired from prre- t ea, havii g had placed in bit hands ny au East India missionary the formula of a simple vf gamble remedy fur the speedy and permanent cure for con** sumption, bronchitis, catarrh, asthma, and all throat and long affections, nlso a positive and radical cure for nervous debilit y and all nervou-* com plaints, after having tested its wonderful cura tive powers in tl ouaands < t cises, has file it his duty to make it known to his suffering fellows. Actunted by this tnonve, and a desire to reUeve human suffering, I will send, free ‘J.charge, to all who desire it, thu recipe, wffu foil directions f)r preparitg and nslng, in German, French, or English. Sent by mart by addre^ing witff an mp, earning (his piper, W. W. tiherar, 149 I’owars’ B'ock, Rochester, N. L 000 juIyl,:S7J.>ww)wlyi 1 Imperial Endorsement. 0«ring to the peifect pnri*y of Deo- ky’s Yaaal Fowler,an 1 Ua superior excel tuse In every reap cl over ell other prep ratio:.*, it hu beer aucp'ed a:d ureJ In the Ruyal xoo#e- bo:dsof the fOilowluE couuVrics v x: Oermaoy, E.uji*nf, 8^alt, Ruse la, Denmark, bVed c, Italy 4od fhrcil It was lorg agoadopjod ud is to* day used by iht:u-a&ds of royal Acnen-ta house- hjd* scattered *11 over the wcutcra a (rid, ard the Utah esteem io w itdi U is held ia ;hS> coun try fa'.ly J uutrs t* tatroductloa adIukm Obcee stated. - No one can lougabaBehsstHbvyith- t suffering gsnerai'y wlthb'se ! d.«- ies. K tep the blood pure by using Dr. Bai/d B'ood Mix'are. To the PsbCe. As James Buchaoan Fjwl«r de- nr trace* as s Uetke ffliavl. which Hanaah Mi* tlldi Baritaon fll d<ta to tn* hai chancer of N»jc cm ow _r, I d:* ro: to idslaly *Ute t > Uu pa*})K ths; the *smc • the truth oedcan he fly oven. Danjxl V. Bumus n. of Ptctraa c..anty. Dfllelon* loohtry. Ll’<ht, white, whiles »qje bVfcu’ts, Is bread,ande'e-tart c k*. crol*rs, mfllta, do .gbcuts muffins, and vnudie C-k -i of every •re a‘»a*# povtlWe t^evciy tab by cel g Dooley s 2 east l ow-en —Mothers will grow weary ard sigh over the baby’s trouble* when Dr, . . . Kvmp wia.da«.iaT« tot feire. x-fatek utrSDgaiam tfce Mood Bod- .efciid aud tkareejtfv* tie V.tt j it «i»a?s RBae * -*- 1 —“* imiSTINCT PRINT f