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■MPa i
ATHENS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, M
1 Business and Professional Cards.
COBB, ERWIN & COBB,
attorneys at law,
ATHENS, GA.
Office in tlie Denpreo Building.
IF B. LITTLE,
Attorney at £aw,
CARSESVILLE, GA.
J. S. DORTCH,
Attorney at JO aw,
CABN ESV1LLE, GA.
A. G. AleCVRRY,
,itton.re r jt e jit,
11ABTWELL, GEORGIA.
riu, jive strict personal attention to all business en
titled to tus care. _ Apq. 4—4U—ly.
it M. Jackson. L. W. Thomas.
JACKSON & THOMAS,
Attorneys at Law.
Athens, Georgia.
A. LocaasM. John Mills doi.
1.0CBBANE d- MILLEDGE,
Attorneys at Lawi
Atlanta, Georgia.
Office No. 2,s Pryor street, opp. Kimball Hoote.
June S, 187S. SI—tm.
JOHN IF. OWEN,
Attorney at Law*
TOCOOA CUT, OA.
Will practice in all the eountiee of the Western Cir-
sit, Hart and Madiaon of the Northern Circuit. Will
hu »i*cial attcnlon to all claims entraatad to his care.
[octSJsrly.
P. G. THOMPSON,
Attorney at Law,
cisl attention paid to criminal practice. For refer-
i apply to Ex. Gov. T. H. Watte and Hon. David
ptou, Montgomery Ala. Office over Barry'a Store,
Feb. 8—tC
ffloptou.
Athens, Ga.
JOHN T. OSBORN,
Attorney at Law.
ELBERTON, GA.
Cl practice in the counties of the Northern Circuit,
he'd. Krankliu and Ilabenliam ot the Western
ireuit; will give apecial attentiou to all claim, entrust-
i to Lie cate. Jan, 10, 1874—ly.
FRANK HARRALSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CLEVELAND, GA.
til practice in the counties of White, Union, ■ Lum-
Toms, and Fanning, and the Supreme Court at
eta. Will give special attention to all claims en-
und to hie caie. Aug. 111875—tl—tf.
E. SCHAEFER,
COTTOX BUYER,
TOCOOA CITT, OA.
I H'nlieat Cash Price pud for Cotton. Agent for Win
- ”-i and Press. octgQwti.
E. A. WILLIAMSON,
PRACTICAL
tatciimaker and jeweller,
.King’s Drugstore, BroadBtreet, Athens,Ga.
>rkdoQ«ina tnperior minntr and warranted to
F« "Btuifaetion. J*n- S—tf.
MISS C. POTTS,
1 ashionable Dressmaker
l n ( ° W UnlTenl, 7 Rank.)
\Broad Street, ... Athens.
“A r **P*ctfhlly inform the Ladies and her Mends
,Bd Tictaity, that (he it now pre-
1 to do Dkm making in the Neatest and moat
fashionable styles.
k«r einenenct in tht basinets, aht feels sure of
1 wMtetwa. May 14, WS-M-tf.
[General
HI BN.
»T EAST 0. OcaiXT.
God of tonderett love and pity,
Thou whoa® power alon® can aavs,
Bend Thine ear to cror entreaty,
Bead ca now the help ws crave;
Bleaaed Jeans,
_ Mighty Saviour,
Thou an all the hope we have.
Bound ua Seija are whits to harvest,
1 Waiting but the brtak of dawn,
And the reapers pali nt lub-ir;
Bid ths night, dear Lord, begun t;
Let Thy Spirit,
Now ucocf-nuiiig.
Usher in a joyous morn.
Sinful sonls arc longing for Tlicc,
For Thy gentle, healing skill;
Only Thy sweet, precious preaenco
Aching voids like theirs oui All;
Loving Master,
Thon art able
Every wave of grief to still.
Bid ths homes that bless oar nation
Now Thy gospel’s grace receive ;
Have in Tuj most holy keeping
All who on Tliy name believe;
In Thy mercy,
Lord, revive ns,
That we better lire, may live.
Thon Thine everlasting gloty .
Dost to countless world* display;
We i e being® of a moment,
Fading as a leaf away:
Great Jehovah,
Strong Redeemer,
Be our comforter and stay.
TWINS.
; ....
RELATIVE POWERS OP NATURE ASD
NURTURE.
May Thy free salvation know;
Everywhere,
All toes subduing,
Lord, command Thy won to grow.
Gxoeoxtowx, D. C., Nov. 8th.
[From the New York Observer.]
THE LAUGHING PHILOSOPHER.
I know a funny little boy,
The happiest ever born:
llis (ace is like a beam of joy,
Although his clothes are torn.
1 saw him tnmbln on his nose,
And waited for a groan;
Bat how he laughed ! Do yon suppose
He attack his funny bone I
There’s sunshine in each word he speaks;
His laugh is something grand;
Its ripples overran bis cheeks,
Like waves on snowy sand.
He langbs the moment he awekes,
And till the day is done;
The school-room for s joke lie takes,
Ilia lessons are but lun.
No matter how the day may go,
You cannot make hi cry;
He’s worth s dozen hoys 1 know,
Who pont and mope and sigh.
He’s plump and round—he once was slim;
1 have not told yon half;
I soon expect to hear of him
Exploding in a laugh!
[From the Saturday Evening Gazette.]
WRITTIER’N AUTOGRAPH.
A young lady reqneated the poet Whittier for hie
autograph, one way last week. He responded by return
A. A. WINN,
—With—
1R00VER, STUBBS & C0-,
Cotton Kactors,
—And—
Commission Merchants,
Savannah, Ga.
May 80-tf.
UVERY AND iALE STABLE
ftmaget, Buggies and Horses for Hire.
TERMS reasonable.
^WRTOHEAD’ Washington, Wilks, Co., Ga.
LVth
MEDICAL notice.
^^tolicitatioa of m»ny of my former patrons,
practice of Medicine
»? '‘^Ms sL W rn.?5 r •WWW attention to the dia-
w Children, and the Chronic Diseases
WM. KINO, M. D
d- GARDNER,
and General Jobbers,
’fi'' To oad!S'2* i, ' , «rvieaato the dtiaene of Athens
’"'repel rferiy. Location, two doom east of
^retrictt u?!’ opposite Mr. L J. Lumpkin’s
wr budding solicited.
March Sd. 1876—ly.
T. A. SALE
[wgntoJ»® glv.^1^
«»ar 81
frtoaWa Terms. Very Low For
SlogePB. M. CrSce.^Claytoo,
ft*** b tsician.
s " Yie “ - him ho
*"^.5*’ time."
WHY.
I did not love him. Long ago
Instead of yea, I gave him no.
I did not love him; bat to day
1 read his marriage notice. Pray,
Why was I sad, when never yet
Has my heart known the least regret
Over that whispered no I And why,
Keadiug the notice, did I sigh f
No analyst can guess the cause—
A woman’s reason laughs at laws.
6ure, I am glad to know tho wound
I gave is healed, that he haa found
Love’s blessedness and pence; and j et
A woman never can forget
The man who once has loved her; and
To-day 1 soem to ace him stand,
With every glance a route caress.
Still pleading for the longed for yes.
His early love for me is dead—
Another lives in that love's stead ;
And if he loves her well, aa men
Should love their chosen one., why, then,
He must be glad that long ago,
Instead of yes, I gave him no.
Perhaps that ia the reason why
1 read the notice with a sigh.
Idiosyncrasies of Duplicated Humanity,
Mr. Francis Galt on has in the November
number of Eraser s very interesting article
entitled the “ History of Twins, as a Cri
terion of the Relative Powers of N tore
and Nurture.’’ The materials on which
the article were based were oblained by
sendin j circulai s containing thirteen groups
of questions to twins or persons intimately
acquainted with twins. Mr. Gallon dttttin
guishcs three classes, those strongly alike,
moderately alike and extremely dissimilar,
adding that when the twins are of different
sexes they are never closely alike.
In eighty, reported cases of similarity,
thirty-five entering very tiilly into detail,
there were « few where not a single point
of difference cotihl .be s]>ecifi<'d. fa the re
mainder, the hatband e*WI|WBW t
ways identical, and the height, weight and
strength, general'y very nearly so. The
manner and address are usually very simi
lar; the intonation when speaking, com
monly the same, though it frequently hap
pens that the twins sing in different keys
Similarity is very rare in the handwriting.
Mr. Galton cites many mistakes made
by ne r relatives. Notwithstanding the
tying of distinguishing ribbons to them, one
is often fed, physicked or whipped by mis
take for the other. In rne case, a doubt
remains whether the children were not
changed in their hath; in another, an ar
tist engaged to paint the portraits of twins,
had to lay aside his u ork, and when he re
sumed it, could not say to which child
the respective likenesses belonged. In
many instances, tutors could not distin
guish between their pupils. One twin sis
ter would take two music lessons on the
same day to give the other a holiday. Two
twins were fond of playing tricks, and com
plaints were frequently " made; but the
boys would never own which was tlie
guilty one, and the complainants were nevet
certain which of the two he was. One
head master used to say he would never
flog the innocent for the guilty, and an
other used to flog both. One twin brother
visited another at col ege, and the porter
refused to let him out, because he did not
know which was entitled to depart. Other
brothers constantly changed partners at
balls without discovery. Children are
usually quick in distinguishing between
their parent and his or her twin; bqt Mr.
Galton found two eases to the contrary.
He knows four or five instances of doubt
during an engagement of marriage. Thus:
“A. married first, but beth twins met the
lady together for the first time, and fell in
love with her there and then. A. managed
to see her home and gain her aff-ctions,
though B. went sometimes emitting in his
place, and neither the lady nor her ; arents
could tell which was which.” One lady
remarks that kissing her twin sister was
like kissing a part of herself—as her hand—
and not like kissing another person The
author suggests an experiment—to try
hour far dogs could distinguish .between
twins by scent. Of strange mistakes lie-
tween twins in middle life, two cases arc
cited—one where an officer returned from
India after four years’ absence was ad-
■ "
condition of tiieir lives
change of conditions.
most variations?
ft
*—i mi
O J-il-oiiivU mil i>»oio|. ,«*-«ji,ii' r.
.to Vi ini*! .
.’jHTBsifftn -i .w ah*
““ “ aft
,t..i
cbb-jC!. U ulT
M limit•!■*»
J'GODV CHOSEN <PEQPt£P*d
v»i«cr. .f41
(f.Ii
rti.reE
larity being.fiBJJldusto
tion of many small innn
many small intlaences,
casq is it largely, much less wholly,
to that cause. In' hot a single “
there a word about the growing
ity being due to the action of the
will of one or both of the twins wj
triumphed over natural tendency
Mr. Galton last exatniries
where there was a great dissii
first, to ascertain how far an
nurture in childhood and youth t
assimilate them. Ail these cases i
lutely accordant. Their evidence is
effect that nature prevails‘enormously
nurture when the differences of.rjfttit
what , is commonly^ tb be found
ns of 'tfiq same eank of society
and in the same country, for where in twins
a strong dissimilarity, m taates and hab.te | ^ peculiar talents of the race,
has been noted in early childhood, it has
never been lessen d or removed by identity
of association, influence or education.
• C^ The S UM Canal—Mr. Disraeli.
[From the Baltimore Guxitte.]
Nothing more startling has happened in
Europe of la! e than the radical change of
policy avowed by the Briti h Government
in regard to international, but more parties
nlarly to continental, .affairs. The Glad*
stone poliey of non-intervention has been
abandoned by Mr. Disraeli. It wa9 a poli
cy of humiliations. It sacrificed the honor
and dignity <>f tlie nation on more than one
occasion, and notably in permitting the dis
memberment of Denmark, after protesting
against it, and allowing Russia to repudi
ate the Treaty of Paris in its most essen
tial features—the prohibition of naval sta
tions on the shores of the Black Sea, and
of Russian war ships on its waters. All
through the Italian, the Prnsso-Austrian
and Franco-German wars England re
mained passive, profiting commercially by
the needs of the belligerents, hut isolating
herself from continental poli ics. She saw
Austria weakened ; the little Kingdom of
Prussia expanded by t e absorption of all
the pretty German principalities into an
Empire; France, torn and rent, and
stripped of two of her finest provinces;
and all her sympathy was expended in of
fering her good offices with tlie Conqueror,
when his victim lay' prostrate at his feet,
bleeding from innumerable wounds. She
saw Bussia steadily pushing her legions in
t’-e direction of India, taking possession of
Khiva, Bokhara, and Khokand, and only
halting before the frontier of Afghanistan,
the one barrier now remaining between
what is, for all practical purposes, Russian
territory, and British India All these
things she has seen, and has contented
herself with writing diplomatic notes, and
receiving diplomatic replies, and with fee
ble protests that have bcecn answered
courteously, hut treated as if they had nev
er been made
8oifie cotMOit ttdtt dmUxmAemf.
inhhijt ■BiHukpi mtm fcalj ftfh n—W
aad published ia a Fnaeb papJt’MNMftlM
the Jeff*.,, AUhoitabiltf Israelites hud such
^important place in. tnwhbliowmwi^ad
i rfavt .rttluawiMf» - ,a—.-.nr. (
' 8e?cr© oi the EpiieopelUiis. r.
.x, , ' XT Im iM gotd-ane on the jSpiaooptf uijij
S1- which, so far as the writer is aware, has
... j.. sever yet appeared in print, and therefore
he contributes it for the benefit of the
Drawer.
Away out West in State, in the val
ley of the Mississippi, at a time not very
rem«U, when men were more intent on
than in securing an
zealous missionary of the persuasion afore-
, 8hafc : the censud'of 1 'the Whole race
fiHaihnrttelh fiMMti at ■ '>
; In France; *he»lilMr»«kHt»ttfl6 drehtte
of the stdptd raid
tbe Jdwi which pmiwda-qn some Countries,
and where one would think there was a wide
there are only forty-six thousand Jews. In all
America, apparently a still more favorable
country, there are only one hundred and
twenty thousand Israelites. On the other
hand, in wretched, unprosperous and down
trodden Poland, the Jews are to be found in
greatest number, one out of every seven ot
the inhabitants being a Hebrew. One can
understand that there should be few Jews in
Spain, but it is surprising that they should
be almost as rare in Belgium. In Sweden
there are comparatively few Jews; but they
abound in Hamburg, Austria and Rou-
mania, in the projiortion of one to every
twenty-four inhabitants. Iu Hamburg and
Austria there is abundant employment for
their talents, hut in Roumania there cannot
be any great scope for their commercial and
financial instincts. Ireland is always boast
ed of as being the only couutry in the world
in which the Jews were never persecuted—
and, indeed, whether at home or abroad, the
Irish always mauifest a certain respect for
the Israelites—hut Ireland has hardly had
the opportunity of persecuting the race, for
even at the present day there are not three
hundred Jews in the whole country. Nor
way stands lowest after Ireland on the list,
there only being twenty-five Jews in that
country.
An interesting addition to these statistics
(if it were possible to secure it) would be the
amount of wealth in the hands of the less
than five millions of Jews that abide upon,
if they do not inherit the earth. Consider
ing the enormous wealth possessed by only a
few well-known individuals of the race, such
a return would doubtless show a high average
per head.
-OLD *
fUE “ORTHODOX” PREACHER. : <
W ,1W zealous missionary of the persuasion afore-
PWfiiPf'jaaid fourfd himself in a community whose
views were no less manifold and
[Rory than was to bo expected from
y person* Representing every phase of denom
——. Jjjjj.j Finding out the three or
mnnicants belonging to his church.
the'ttSsifonanr gave notice of an “Episeo-
pal service 1 * frii 1 that evening in the school-
hoiffyttndikaaimHy ■ia**ifrd everybody to
attend. Of course to the large majority of
the inhabitants this was something entirely
novel—indeed, the passage of a circus
through the village, or the actual halt of a
i the following:
11 Our lives are albums, written through
With good or 111, with fiilse or true;
And as the blessed angels turn
The pages of oar yean,
the good \
govina, joined to tlie restiveness of the
populations of Bosnia, Montenegro, and
Servia, has brought the Turkish question
dressed l.v his father: “I thought vou 1 ,n " re lo . tl, . u , 'r: ,nt ': ? ve , r fii ” ce ! he
were in London ;” another where an a^ed Cn, ' K ' an "/V 1 been slowh’ dawnmg
mother had nervonslv expected the return1"" l ' u ‘ " ,wh ™ ,,,d ,1,at ,h . e erf,,rt t0 -»? Ve
o! her son from India, his ship being over- Tu, k "- V trom the “""oacliments of her
due. and when he entm-d, said to him,
The Whisky Ring.
[From ths Southern Home, Charlotte, N. C-]
The fact that nine-tenths of those con
nected with the Revenue become rich, has
long excited suspicion. The developments
at St. Louis show that the most enormous
frauds against the Government have been
pr diced by bribing the loyal officials. It
is as well known as any met can lie, t' at
Arid now the' insufrecliSn fiFThe'HftfifiriftP nl^ky ^f«d Andy Johnson
* ■ from impeachment. The recent exposure
mints to the White House, to Grant’s
mistaking him for the brother who lived
with her: “ No, no; it’s a bad joke; you
know how anxious I am.” As a curious
feature, Mr Galton notes he apparent inter-
neighbors was, at best, a costly business,
and it was coupled with the ltvquently-
reourring doubt as to whether, alter all,
Turkey was worth saving. Baukrnpt now,
with disaffection spreading even among
I ® li her M‘.sVetn subjects, and chronic with the
charaT r o^.rcss.on and Christian, the dSubt is gradually changing
In seven of the thirty-five cam of close i ^
similarity, both twins suffered from some X P“" ® ‘ 1 ^*’ t “ rl ” E '';
special ailment or had some exceptional ye- ffii.HjHKtfJll J , P lon ^ y .’
irother, Orville; to his boot-black, General
Balicock, to his most intimate and cherished
friends The whole R.-vonne system is a
sham and a shame.:] It g vijs a living to
thousands of whisky smellers too lazy to
ork, and that is - bout all. These loyalists
ill get soldiers or detectives and go on a
raid in the country, will nose up some
racoon branch until they come across a pic
ayune distillery. This they will heroically
destroy, then come back to town and write
off a flaming accoiuit_to Washington of ashamed of yourself, ani
God
grantt
And bli
pages'
read i
lot the ill with tears!'
WONDERFUL MEMORIES
with smile®,
Test of the Corsican Law (Modest.
[From Scribner’s Monthly.]
Pliny says that Cyrus had a memory so
prodigous that he could name every officer
and soldier in his armies, and that Lucius
Scipio new every Roman citizen by name
when that city contained more than *200,-
000 capable of bear ng arms. Seneca speaks
of a friend, Pontius Latro, who could re
peat verbatim all the speeches lie had he rd
declaimed by the Roman orators. It is
stud that Joseph Scalliger committed to
memory, both the Iliad and the Odyssy in
twenty-one days. Sir William Hamilton
tells us of a strong young Corsican of good
family who had gone to Padua to study
civil law, in which he soon dislinguis ed
himself “ He was a frequent visitor at the
house and gardens of Muretus, who, having
heard that he possessed a remarkable art or
fiumlty of memory, though incredulons in
regard to reports, took occasion to request
from him a sp cimcn of his power. lie at
once agreed; and having adjourned wi h a
considerable party of distinguished auditors
into a saloon, Muretus began to dictate
words—Larin, Greek, barbarous, significant
and non-sigi iticant, disjointed and cou-
nroted, until he wearied himself, the young
man who wrote them down and the audi
ence present. We were all, he says, mar
velously tired. The Corsican alone was
the oue of the whole company alert and
fresh, and oontinually desired Muretus fur
more words, who declared he would be
more than satisfied if he could repeat the
half of what ne had taken down, and at
length he ceased. Tlie young man, with
his gaze fixed upon the ground, stood silent
for a brief season, and then, stud Mnretns,
* Vidi facinns mirfficissimnm.’ Having b<>
gun to speak, he absolutely repeated the
whole words, in the same order in which
they had been delivered, without the slight
est neritation ; then commencing from the
lost, he repeated them backward till he
came to the first. Then, again, so that he
spoke the first, the third, .he fifth, and so
on; did this in any order that was asked,
and all without the slightest error. Hav
ing subsequently become familiarly ac
quainted with bira. I have had other and
frequent experience of his power. He as
sured me (and he had nothing of the
boaster in him), that he could rotate, in the
manner I have mentioned, to the amount
of 86,000 words. And, what is more won
derful, they all so adhere to the mind that
after ayeafa interval, ho oonld repeat them
without trouble. I know from having tried
he conld do so after considerable
culiarity. Two sisters had the defect of not
being able to come down stairs quickly,
which was not born with them but came on
at the age of twenty. Another pair of
twins have a slight congenital flexure of
one of the joints of the little finger; it was
inherited from a grandmother, but neither
parents, brothers nor sisters show the least
trace of it In another ease, one was bom
ruptured, and the other became so at six i*- > \ , ,
’.j 2 defiance to all who sought to dislodge it
twenty-three Jere aUackcd In W** condition.rfBn-lmy-Xid
vio’usly Inevitable
would hot be worth the cost of a war. *.
The traditional policy of Russia ever
since the days of Peter the great lias
pointed to the occupation of Constantino
ple as the permanent capital of the Musco
vite Empire.
. Tlie power that holds Constantinople
commands the' Mediterranean Sea, and,
once fortified on the Bosphorus, could bid
and the. same tooth had to be extracted .in
each case, r \ * s,(r,i j •
There are curious and close correspond
ences mentioned in the falling-off of the
hair. Two cases are mentioned of death
from the same disease; iu one, a brother
died of Bright’s disease, and the survivor
died of the same complaint seven months
after .vards. In nine out of the thirty-five
cases, it appears that both twins are apt to
sicken at the same time. There are also
cited the recorded instances of pathological
resemblance in twin brothers afflicted with
iisthma and rlienmalic opthalmia (Trous
seau’s ** Clinique Medicale,” quote in Dar
win’s “Variation under Domestication”),
and in two insa’ e brothers (Dr. Moreau’s
PsvchoJogie Morbide”). In the latter
ase, both brothers considered themselves
subject to persecution by tlie same enemies
w o adopted the same means, and even
when confined in separate asylums they
would, at irregular intervals of time b: t
usually on tlie same day, rouse themselves
fi otn their prostration, make the same ooni-
■laiiit of detention and desire liberation
dr. Galton sent the facts in this case to the
ironiinent physic ans to the insane
England, asking if they had ever witnessed
anything similar, and received in reply
three noteworthy instances, though none
as ex; ct in their parallelism. Another cus
riou French cose of ins nity iu twins Is
described by Bauntt in the “ Annales Medico-
Psvchologiques,” 4th series, vol. 1, 1863,
P 31&i
In eleven out of tliirty-five instances,
similarity in the association of ideas is noted.
They make Die same remarks on the same
occasion, begin singing the same song at
the same moment, and so on; or one will
commence a sentence and the other finish
it In one case, one twin, who happened
t-> be at a town in Sootland, bought a set
of champagne glasses which caugh hie at
tention, as a surprise £<r his brother, while
at the same time that brother, being in
England, bought a similar set of precisely
tlie same pattern as a surprise for him.
In sixteen of thirty-five cases, the tastes
and deposition* are de*eril>ed as closely
similar; in the remaining nineteen, they
were much alike, but subject to certain
named differences, which were always those
of intensity or energy.
From all these facta, Ur. Gallo i deduces
the conclusion that the raseaMa:ee be
tween twins is not superficial, but extreme
ly intimate. The twins were,.in the cascf
summarized, reared exactly alike up to their
I early manhood and womanhood; then the
to arm her Christian sublets, impoverished
and harrass'-d both within and without—
the contingency of a fresh war and another
“ rectification of frontiers” has to be stead
ily kept in view.
It is evident frqin the cable reports that
England is taking-time by the forelock and
nfeparing for the change. Two things she
las to do: She has to protect her I .dian
empire and to neutralize as far as possible
the control which a strong power seated at
Constantinople would have over the com
merce of the Medi er. anean. The step she
has tiken to accomplish displays both
sagacity and boldness She has bought the
Suez Canal and thus commands the nearest
water route to India By tftis'act she has
riven notice that if the Sultan loses his
told of European Turkey, she intends to
assert a protectorate over Egypt and con
trol the route of India.
The importance of the purchase—looked
at in V political aspect—cannot easily be
overestimated. Any one who will look on
a map at the configuration of the Mediter
ranean will see at a glance it had originally
hut one outlet—that by the Struts of Gt
bndtar. The second outlet, made recently t
is by Suez Canal. By the holding noth
outlets, no belligerent could pass from the
Mediterranean into the Atlantic, or from
the Red Sea into the Indian Oowui, with
out being challenged by tbe British works
of Gibraltar on tbe one side and by those
at Perim on the other.
Mr. Di-raeli has moreover, publicly de
clared that in the settlemesit of lids Tur
kish question, England proposes to take a
part. His dosing declaration on tho sub.
Ject is strong and forcible He told his
countrymen —it was at tie Lord Mayor’s
banquet—and through tbe journals the
Government of the Continent, that “the
interaa: of the three Powo«8 y be m/imi
dire t in this question than those of Great
Britian, but they are not more .•nnsnlerable,
an t those to whom the conduct of affairs is
tercets, and thvae British interests they are
read red to guard and maintain. 1 *
yon ha
knotty, but it's nice,* 1 said (be.
their famous exploit. The next thing is to
go to the Whisky Ring and draw their
for hiding ep their frauds' It appeare
evidence Under bath, in the Si. LMiibutib,
that the Whisky Rrirtg'paid the Supervisor
and other loyal officials 88,5Q0 every week,
as hush money. One week, however, when
backs, the Ring paid them $75^0^0. >F ftalso
appeared in evidence, that through the sale
of “ crooked 'whisky, 1 ’ that is, whisky un
stamped, large atm* were raised by the
. SaJical party folr eiectioneering pui _
: low tquch ofi ta fbu d its-way down here
at the rebeftt election,- we cannot say; nor
yet,‘whether Boutwell raised in the same
way the $260,000 spent in North Carolina
to beat Mr. Greeley. But it shows a horri
ble state of morals 'tek the Government to
connive at frauds against itself in order to
raise a corruption fond to defeat the Demo
cratic party, '
We have nerer beKeved that the people
were debauched by these corruption funds.
They were used to buy up speakers and
editors. Tho Whisky Ring at St. Louis
had their ofgan to puff them, praise them,
and to conceal their frauds from tbe wcrld.
They also had power to corrupt judges and
juries, and had alt that power which money
and {latronage always brings. Theyals
had a potent mend at the White House to
inform them of any contemplated raids
upon their strong-holds. A telegram in
cipher was produced in Court, ana traced
to General Babcock, Grant’s right hand
minstrel troupe, could not have created a
profounder sensation—and so at an early
hour they commenced gathering in knots of
two or three, discuss'ng “as to what kind
of a dum’d thing it was a goin’ to be.”
Prominent among the female portion of
tho throng was an aged sister, who enlight
ened the others by stating it was a reg’lar
sarmi t they were a-goin’ to have, and no
confounded nigger tumblin’. But the
•sarmint” was to be after the “ ’Piscopal”
fashion, of which she had beam tell when a
girl, but had neverseen; and as it wassome-
thing bad, she believed, she was there to
nterrupt him if he didn’t preach orthodox.
Seating herself on the front bench, she
eyed the preacher closely, and just before
he commenced the service, and while ar
ranging his robes, she beckoned him to her,
and informed him that she was there to in
terrupt him if he didn’t preach orthodox.
“Well, madam,” he replied, “you won’t
interrupt me if I do preach orthodox ?”
“Oh no! that I won’t,” she earnestly ex
claimed; “but if you don’t, though, I’ll in
terrupt and expose you for sure!”
Now to make the exercises go off with
some degree of Episcopal decorum the con
gregation was liberally supplied with pray
er-books, and the few communicants were
instructed to circulate amonj* the people,
‘find the places” for the uninitiated, and
lead in the responses.
Then rose the minister, and with the
prodigal’s resolve, “I will arise and go to
my father,” etc, commenced the service,
and won the old lady’s heart, for it was
her favorite passage, read and prayed over
often because of a wayward boy. Next in
order was the “exhortation,” in which she
heard nothing objectionable; and then
came the confession of sins. Right behind
her one of the communicants aforesaid
united his voice with the minister’s, and had
gotten far as “We have eired and stray
ed from Thy ways like lost*’sheep,” etc.,
when the old lady turned, and in an audible
whisper saidy “ Hush 1 hush 1 that’s all
right.; let the inan have a chance to.apcalcl”
Lowering his voice, he kept comparatively
quiet until the creed was reached, and here
he thought, “ In the credo I must set an
example, and confess Christ before men in
the magnificent yet simple * I believe ’ of
all the Christ an centuries.” .
By this time the self-appointed conserva
tor of orthodoxy was in no mood to be
trifled with, and so, while her hand firmly
grasped her umbrella, she said, in tones
sternly emphatic, “ Look a-hyar, you dum’d
cuss! didn’t I tell you that was all right?
an’ hyar you have been a-chatterin’ every
blessed minit since. Now you ought to be
irid I don’t
But while the great cities and the little
cities have been manufacturing crooked
whisky, with the counivance of the Gover •
raent, every mountain gorge and every
racoon branch haa been raided over by de«
tectivea with money in their pockets pud
by the city Rings to secure their silence
The small disliueni are sent to the peni
tentiary. The big distillers, when caught,
forfeit theirbpadamod g° clear. But”**-
money to bribe supervisors and detect
these big distillers are hardly ever caught,
uid when caught, they have ft chanco with
judge and jtiiy.
I;
; wan you
to jaw any more to-night. That's orthodox
enough for any body!’’
The minister took in the situation, and
>eing a practical man, “ pitched in,” and
gave them a red-hot extempore discourse,
which the old lady, before she was aware,
had indorsed with a whole series of honest
amens.'J r
At the conclusion she folt bound toapolo-
^ < ?- nrij ? g l , he
service, and so, seizing both his hands, she
thanked him for lus Gospel sermon in
language as unique as her manner was
heartyf * Yod See, mister, we warnft sure
of yonjj we, ; only had beam tell of you
’Pisi’opals afore, an* we were kind of skeer-
ed like ; Wt it’s all right now, an’ I want
to tell you that I had nothing to do with
those rowdife* back there who interrupted
the service: Now we’ve had Locus preach
ers here, an’ we’ve had Circus preachers
here, but we’ve never had any of you
’FUCopu* preachers afore; an* you do
ireach orthodox, an’ you cut come back
lere any time you want to, an’ preach all
night if you choose—if you do wear your
shirt outside your breeches.”—Harpers'
Monthly Magazine.
Death or Ctmnt THOA Wlr. BMMl.
WoJ&foinA* : gajiawto Ommno
tice of the death of Captain Thomas Was.
Brent, s distinguished, naval officer, who
was in command of tho xanrSavanhah dup
ing the war, and upon the occupation of
this city by the Federal forces, blew her
up at Screven’s ferry. The Gazette says:
The death of the old an honored citizen,
whose name is given aboye, surprised few,
bi& paine i all, who knew him. A suffer
ing invalid for years, he endured his ’.rials
with exemplary fortitude, which indicated
. Stolen Georgia Bonds.
■ [St. Louis Corretpondane® Atlanta Herald.]
The citizens from Georgia in this city are
considerably exercised over a report put in
circulation since our arrival in regard to
$100,000 of lust State bonds, of which the
public generally haa not heard of yet. We
get it here from good authority, and there
is doubtless something in it. It runs thus:
Years ago, probably thirty or forty (those
who recollect the time can tell about*it,) the
State either took stock or indorsed for the
Central Railroad Bank to the amount of
$100,000 eight per cent bonds. By some
arrangement or enactment of some law these
8 per cent, bonds were ordered to be
by the same amount of 7 per cent. Bonds.
The holders of the original 8 per cents re
fused to* man to exchange them for the new
ooea, and eventually, at their maturity,4he
8 per cents were paid. Tbe 7 percents were
all duly signed, marked and sealed, and laid
away id a package in the treasury at Mil*
iedgeville. This was during the administra
tion at Governor H. V. Johnson. When
Sfiarman's army marched through Georgia,
tbia package of what was sipposed to be
worthless paper was abstracted, with other
plunder, from the State capitol. Recently
Trammer Jones has been paying the oot *
on bonds Sent from Cincinnati, Ohio. * At
last Isa refused the-payment of a certain
coupon which had been sent him, and wrote
*w\ i[. 'iiuisilffiwn ni i mUnl W>
THE NEW APiWlli»i1<fflL ’ '
A Brest WprqvemeJton the Old Tenement*
House System. "
[From Hew York World.] "’#>*■
The number of apartment-hottsea or
“flats” in the city has been materially.ip-
creased during the past summer, and should
prices of labor.. And, malarial rule as low
next year, &e .imprpyeqmt to up-town
real estate will be afrnoet entirely in the
way of flats, at least where speculative
building is done. Below are given descrip
tions of such buildings. t . . v _. ...
A “MODEL FLAT.” ' - * f J
Mr. S. D. Hatch, architect, has iust cora-
E leted planB for an apartment-house, which
e claims wiH be a model. ’At fire-proof
construction has .beep aimed at, in heavy
brick wtils extending from top to. Lotions
of tM ftractnre. Instead or'the usual iron
H girders for beams, railroad iron will be
used, the ordinary T rail placed at intervals
of two feet. The stretches between thtt
various walls being shoi^not over eighteen
or twenty feet in the longest, no difficulty
has been found in the use of this style of
beamB; flat brick arches or artificial clay
fillings will be used between the rails. The
rails are also used ns girders, being laid
snugly together, side by tide, from pier to
pier, and tne floor rail laid upon them.
There will be six stories above the base®
ment, the first floor being on the street
level. On each floor there are five com
plete flats, very much broken in arrage-
ment as regards the whole, though each
group of apartments is well concentrated.
Tbe main entrance will be in the centre of
the Broadway side, and a long hpll will be
carried nearly to the rear of the building,
a corridor being carried over tho court in
the centre of tho block to the main stair®
case Here the passenger elevator is placed.
The conrt has several arms acting as light-
shafts, and in these are situated threoof the
five sets of servants’ staircases provided.
These service stairs in each case start from
the basement and pass up to the floor on
each story opening into the kitchen or ser
vants’ corriders. In two of the tiers of
apartments the servants’ sta rcases are car
ried up between brick bulkhead walls, with
stone step. In the basement all the heavy
work of the establishment will be carried
on, and here the janitor will be provided
with quarters, having also an office near
the entrance on the main floor. Five dumb
waiters will start from this stage and rise
like the servant stairs to the successive flats
above. The whole really amounts Jo five
columns, of six flats each under one roofj
and having the connecting link of one prin
cipal staircase. The outer walls are two
feet thick and the inner court walls twenty,
inchea Each set of apartments, covering
an average area of8.00Q square feet, is pro
vided with a parlor, dining-room, a ldtcnen, ‘
four chambers, a servant’s chamber, bath
room, trunk rooms and closets in plenty.-
The kitchen will receive careful attention
in the construction of the whole. It is In?
tended to have it serve also as a private
laundry; stationary wash-tubs being pro
vided. Behind the cooking range is a ,tall. So
narrow bnck chamber, built the width of
the chimney case. Irf 'this will befitted
up slides with racks for hanging wet linen,
constituting a drying closet y the beat fkSoin
the flues, it v. judged, will be suffittentiy.
s rong m this confined ?ppoe to make »,
powerful.drying agency.' . The kitchen floor
will bo finitiied in tile hud bn cement, and 1
the sides also will be carried up in like
manner as a wainscoting. This, will make
the whole water-proof, and careless scul
lery-maids may spill ad libitum without
deluging their neighbors‘below. Tho floor
of the living rooms it iiintended to liyin
marquetry or ornamental wood work. The
halls will be flbored-witb
ofifihhard frood, as vOI’dnffisstaircases.
In the dining-room a'device, riot frequent
»if the better class of private htmses, is in
troduced—a wall safe. This is »double
closet, fire-proof and comparatively tiilef-
proof. The outer compartment is open to
the ierfrsfft for tho dtorageoftaMe silver; 11
tho inner compartment is under the excln-
sivo control Of the matter of thehonto.
The estpnor is in Phflfdelphfr hritiu ,,
with Ohio stone used for lintel‘and sill
courses. Black brick stripes are used pro-
fosely, while the spaces between the win
dows are in many parts filled up with panes
of colored tile in fancifol designs. < 3V
— rr*- — \ * ,,*■ ■
Fihst Impressions in a Balloon.—The
impressions of a first aacensjon were very,
striking. It is like the earth falling away
from the balloon. There is no vertigo; but
the earth sinks, becomes flattened in ap*
pearanco and finally concave. The position
of the balloon seemed to be between jtwo
concavities. The prismatic effects pro®
dneed by refraction arc very beautifol:
fairy scenes present themselves, and the
mind becomes aroused .to the glorious privi-
_ it enjoy*. To look down through the
broken clouds was to witness a tight sur*
ig in beauty the magio eaves de
scribed in the “Arabian Nights Enter
tainments.” The profound, solemn, and
awfol stillness which prevailed above tie
clouds was also remarkable. Even while
moving at the rate of a mile per minuteL
the aeronant seemed so ntterly becalmed
that a suspended cobweb. moving with the
balloon would not be agitated- In speak®
ing of echo and ozone in the donds, ’Prof.
Wise said the reverberations of sonrid
among clouds Were tremendous; and in
explaining the echo which exists among
them, he told a story of a conversation
which he had with nimselfi instead of a
person upon the earth, as he at first sup
posed.
• -ft- *
We have, in tins declaration, something 1° *h® ®ud the traits of character that had
akin to the bold utterances the earlie? h5 “‘? e *5 d Wm useful and respected during
statesmen, and, aa marking and a hfe °f *ventful experience* Die frags of
- Mg. the different Vice-Consulates; and various at mice
Jnai signal ensigns about the tity and. harbor
affirirs, itiftat this lime of peculiar signifi- were yesterday lowered to half-mast wV
• Capt. Brent’s d. ath was Aqnoutced.
samel tribute Is accorded to-day, aad the
My fkce is rugged, butTm wealthy; will funeral services at St. Michael’s chnreh
have me ?" mid he. ‘?Yes, indeed; it’s
suited, I suppose, in an overhauling of the
old records,, with the above result. How
many of the coupons of these bondA have
been paid it is impossible to tell. Bat it is
retailed here airaong Georgians aha fact.
A seedy noRnpetioo—!The florist.
Calling thx Roll w Heaven.—An
incident ia related by a chaplain who was
in the army daring one of our hard fdnght
battles.
The hospitals had been filling up fast as
the wounded men were brought to the
rear.. Atfkmg them was a‘young than
mortally wounded and unable to speaffi&ilil f n:.
was midnight, and many a loved one from
our homes lay sleeting on the battle field—
jS^ 8 3^toem 0W8 WaldDg
to the man to send hitafrw’liitf#Sand for[ertsdafafr^c-rol” ***** ^
the foes of it that it was illegal and the issue “Nothing? said H “they are calling
fraudulent, m words to tljat effect, thereby tbe *oH fo^iven, and I was^nswe^g’g
a cancelling its yaitw. tne owner my name.” •' =>-*»
ituted suit for damages, which re- He tnrned his head arid wfis gonor-gote
washed white wfith the bloOd Of the lunb.vndt
Reader, in the great roll call of eternity, ab
^*®rs of Christ, the great captain of our *1