Newspaper Page Text
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RICHARD W. GRUBB, Editor <fc Propri r.
ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION $2 50.
DARIEN, GEORGIA,
SATURDAY MORNING, SEPT. 12th, 1874.
FOR CONGRESS-FIRST DISTRICT:
Hon, Julian Hartridge,
OF SAVANNAH.
OUR CANDIDATE FOR CONGRESS,
The people of the First Congress
ional District should rally to a man,
in support of the Hon. Julian Har
tridge as our next Congressman. Their
delegates to the Blnckshear Conven
tion have done their duty well and no
bly, in making a selection. Let the
people who sent them there come to
the polls on the day of the election
and support their choice. Let the
majority this year be so great for
Hartridge that a Radical Congress
cannot even have the semblance of an
excuse for giving the place to Bryant
or Wimberly. This can only be done
by every true man in the D.strict do
ing his duty, and that duty is one
that he cannot evade. Let each coun
ty organize and select their best men
to represent them in the Legislature,
but let them be of that material that
will work and not sit quietly down
and wait for their friends to elect
them, because, say they, there is a
large democratic majority in the coun
ty and lam sure to be elected. We
want no such men in our Legislature
—for important as may be the next
session, there is a Civil Rights bill
before Congress of far greater impor
tance aud if passed will not only
leave one great State, but the whole
South, in a deplorable condition, and
result in—wo know not what.
By the election of Julian Hartridge
the First District of Georgia will not
only stand one in man, but first in
ability and integrity. From all over
tbe State comes an appeal to the peo
ple of the First District to do their
duty. Georgia has an interest in
this matter as well as tLie First Dis
trict, and let no man disregard the
call. It is within our power to elect
our candidate; let us then all work for
the desirable end.
General Grant. —The St. Louis Re
publican says there is no outright
quarrel between President Grant and
the Republican party, but there is an
estrangement. The two are drifting
apart. Fivo Republican State Con
ventions have been held recently, and
not one of them has extended to the
President'the cheap, nominal courtesy
of an indorsement. This silence on
the part of the Republicans of Indi
ana, Illinois and Michigan, and these
direct rebukes from those of Kansas
and Pennsylvania, indicate not o ly
a determined opposition of the North
ern people to a third tern), but an
ominous coolness of the Northern
Republicans toward the President.
At present the relation between them
is one of estrangement, but it may ri
pen at the next session of Congress
into an overt quarrel.
*®-The Savannah News has a very
sensible article on “house rents, ’’
which perhaps applies to other places
as well as to Savannah. It declares
that excessive rents for dwelling
houses is injuring that city very sen
sibly, and that the population is de
creasing from that cause. One hun
dred and eighty-five houses are vacant
from this cause. High rents will ruin
any place.
AaT’Yellow fever has appeared in
Pensacola, and some uneasiness be
gins to be felt in the cities of Ala
bama. Two men died from it s
deadly effects in Pensacola last Satur
day, and one new case appeared on
Sunday. The Montgomery News
nrge6 immediate preventative action
by its municipal authorities.
fifc&*Admiral Semtnes, who won a
world-wide renown as the commander
of the Confederate cruiser Alabama
during the late war, is announced as
a candidate for Congress in an Ala
bama district. His disabilities were
removed last winter.
ASToJohn P. Cochran, the Demo
cratic candidate for Governor of Del
aware, is Master of a Grange in M d
dletoa, and is one of the most exten
sive r>eeb-"rowere in the State.
WELL, WHAT NEXT ?
We warned onr readers some weeks
ago that the purpose of the Radical
party to magnify Southern outrages
was already being foreshadowed, wiih
a view to the introduction of United
States troops to control the coming
elections. We urged upon our peopl*
then the utmost circumspection o
word aud deed, that no pretext miglo
be afforded to justify our enemies in
the use ol that power upon us. But
unhappily the pretext has been fur
nished in disturbances occurring in
certain localities in Tennessee, South
Carolina, Mississippi and Louisiana.
It will be borne in mind in passing
that all of those States, excepting
Tennessee, are now and have been for
years, completely under Radical dom
ination, and even Tennessee lias but
just escaped from that thraldom.
Therefore, the party which holds and,
for a length of time, has held the pow
ers of government, is alone responsi
ble for the condition of society under
that government. But there is no
evidence that any disturbances exist,
which are beyond the control of the
local authorities, to suppress them.
The powers at Washington have
not waited for that evidence. In fact
in the face of the most conclusive evi
dence that the State authorities are
adequate to tho suppression ol these
disturbances by their having been
suppressed, tho government in ils
zeal to make partizan capital, has
proceeded to measures well calculated
to arouse feelings of insecurity and
alarm throughout the conn ry. Car
pet-baggers have been flying to Wash
ington, or burdening tho telegraph
‘•with wars and rumors of wars,” which
have no existence except in their ly
ing mouths. Williams, the immacu
late Williams! has gone post-haste to
Long Branch and after interviewing
Grant returned with plenary powers
to employ the army of the United
States “to protect the whites against
the blacks and the blacks against the I
whites “or otherwise. ” The fact that
this man was rejected by the Senate
last year, when nominated by Grant
to the office of Chief Justice, for steal
ing public money, and appropriating
it to his own use in the purchase of a
carriage, doubtless carries his highest
recommendation to lire Republican
party, for the exercise of the tremen
dous powers which have thus beta il
legally delegated to him. Grant’s re
cent associations (he had just return
ed from a visit to the Rev. Calumnia
tor Haven) had left him in a fitting
frame of mind to perpetrate official
deviltry. To have done this to per
fection, it would have only been neces
sary to have called into council H W.
8., Elizabeth TANARUS., Susan i>. Anthony,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Victoria C.
Woodhull, and a few others, who have
been for so many years the leaders ol
the “advanced” moral ideas, govorn-
mg the Republican party.
Tlmre is e\idently a lack of some
of these lights in the consultation
which took place at Long .Branch.
Otherwise the lies would have been
concocted wii h a little more attention
to plausibility. As it is, there is just
as much reason and stronger evidence
lor the United States G ivernineut to
send troops to Brooklyn to protect
Moulton m ins civil rights, against
the violence ot Plymouui Church, u,
to solid them to Georgia to protect
either whites against negroes, or ne
groes against whites. There are ltifi
o o
nitely stronger reasons why troops
should have been sent mouths ago io
suppress the disturbances, murders
aud child stealings in Pennsylvania,
which have continued in defiance ot
local and State authority to the terror
ot whole coinmuuitties and the de
privation of a large class of honest
aud industrious citizens of tin ir civil
rights, to labor and earn bread, than
to send them now into either ot those
Southern States, where transient dis
turbances, fermented by Ranical ras
cality and negro insolence have oe
cunvd and been quickly it pressed by
the law abiding elements ot the popu
lation. But Plymouth Church is com
posed of “the saints,” and Pennsylva
nia is a Radical State and lienee the
reasoning and the rule does not apply.
Wo have written these words to again
warn our people not to afford a pre
text by word or deed for the interven
tion of Radical fraud and farce in our
domestic affairs. It is only necessary
torus to be patient a little longer
The day of the Radical party is past
and these are but. its death stiuggles.
It never was aught but a party of
faction and hate It never composed
a majority of the people *>t these
United Slates. The majority of votes
cast against Abraham Lincoln in the
whole country was one million.
The Northern people are them
selves becoming weary of the arro
gance and corruption which have
marked its career. We only have to
avoid every occurrence which will
shock prejudices, too easily aroused
against us, aud with a very small per
centage of the vote of that secliou
added to the Democratic vote of the
past, we will sweep the field in the
coming elections, and see con.-'erva
tisrn, law aud order once more estab
lished in the land
AFFAIRS IN GEOR3IA-
Several of onr Georgia dailies wiil
not exchange with us; however, they
always lake great pleasure in copying
articles from our columns. Fiieinls,
if you call this fairness, tiieu ke< p ii
up.
Hon. L. N. Trammell, President of
the Georgia Senate, has been nomina
ted for Congress from the 7th Dis
ui t. Hon. A. H. Stephens is the
nominee from tie Bill D.strict. It
seems the people of the Bt.ii will not
let “Little Aleck” retire to the shades
of Liberty Hall.
The Democratic candidates for Con
gress lrom the differjnt districts in
the State, are busily engaged in can
vassing their respective counties. We
are waiting patiently to hear tho elo
jueut voice of our noble standard
bearer—the Hon. Julian Hartridge.
There seems to be a large number
of independent candidates running
for the Legislatuie in this Suite. May
t very one get beat—and that badly—
say we.
Macon is going to have anew daily.
Ditto S ivannub. Wo wish them suc
cess.
Sam Bard, tho Atlania postmaster,
has removed a gentleman from the
post office to make room £ >r liis-broth
er. Great Hsavensf has Sam Bard
got a brother? We thought lie was
the only one of the Bar I family.
The Marietta Journal is in favor of
Hon. Wm. D. Anderson, of Cobb, for
Governor. The press speaks in the
highest terms of Mr. A derson, and
we doubt nut he would make a good
Governor.
The Brunswick Appeal lias einered
upon its seventh volume.
From the Appeal we learn that the
“City by the Sea” is looking up, aud
there is a probability of the coming
winter being a busy one.
It is highly probable that Georgia
will send nine Democrats to the next
Congress. This Civil Rights business
is what’s the matter witu Hannah.
Jim Blue, the most ignorant and
worthless negro in Georgia, has beeu
nominated for the Legislature by the
Radicals of Glynn county. Demo
crats go to work uuu defeat the Hon.
Jim Blue. „ _
Griffin is well supplied with persons
who would like to go to the Legisla
ture.
The whole district ic pleased will)
the nomination of the Hon. Julian
Hartridge, for Congress A good aud
true man has been nominated, and
now the Democrats of the First D.s
trict should go to work in and ad earn
est and elect him by an overwhelming
majority. Let. us show Julian II n
tridge that wo love him and want to
see him elected to Congress.
Valdosta whipped out Brunswick in
a base b ill match, the other day. The
Brunswic k boys played under many
and sad vantages and consequently, were
beaten. They now proposech ,il nging
the Valdosta boys for a game before
long.
Bob Toombs wants to be Governor.
Georgia would be in a devil of a fix
with Toombs for her Governor.
The defeat of Hon, B. H. Hill in the
Ninth Congressional D.strict, is gen
ernl'y regret Ud. The pimple of the
ninth district ought to have nominated
Ben Hill for Congress—for no better
man can 1 e found.
The Marietta Journal says we have
not seen our warmest days. Now we
would like to know what the* Journal
knows about it.
The people all over the Slate are
indignant because Grant has conclu
ded to send troops South. Wouldn’t
it be a good idea for the Democratic
papers of Georgia to ct eft hi ir abuse
of Grant ? When the President fa
vors the S mth he is abused for it.
Don’t abuse Gi ant and see if a change
don’t take place.
“Ex-Governor Bullock, of Georgia,
is living in poverty at St. Albans, New
York. He did not get any of the
money which was stolen from that
St a t e.” —Frank Leslie's Illustrated.
That will do to tell the marines, but
the honest people of Georgia will
never, never believe that Bullock is
living in poverty and that he never
stole auj* money from her. He was
Governor; he- bad charge of the mo
ney, aud, of course, was responsible
Too thin, entirely. The idea of trying
to make Rufe Bullock out uu honest
man 1
RADICAL MEETING IN BRUNSWICK.
Special Corruepondet.ee cf The Darien Gazette.
Brunswick, Ga., Sept. 7, 1874.
Editor Gazette :
Ou Sj.tur.lay l ist the R publicans o
Glynn county, marshaled their hosts
ou Hanover squ ire. At intervals be
tween the clatter of drums and tin
sljfil notes of a fife the Modocs of th
party addressed the gathering. Aftei
quarrelliug and contradicting one
another the sable company retired to
a hall,, there to decide which of the
five aspirants should be nominated.
Jim Blue was the favorite candiuate
tor Representative. When the decis
ion was announced there were many
cries of “Jim Blue, treat, Mister Blue
bring out the hard-tack, Mr.
Blue failed to comply with the wishes
of his friends.
The party returned to the square
and J. T. Shelf ton spouted to his own
satisfaction, vindicating that he was
no interloper; that the present candi
date was not competent to fill the
office; that their was danger stretch
ing over the party; that ho was a
part and parole of the State; that
in the darkest hours he ha 1 baen
with tiH-m, and lie assured them
lastly, that “we are all niggers.”
Jim Blue next addressed the con
vention. He stated that a man run
ning a race don’t feel pleasant when
he gets b a;; be warned them to keep
their door steps clean and thanked
them for the honor conferred upon
h im.
Braxton spoke to the people saying,
“I was offered as a candidate, but 1
was too much of a gentlemen for to
go and max wul the degraded and de
moralized officers, I mink too much
j. mysell, i ..ou’t lake aun.mosities uL
wmat people sir. s. You dun i eaten
me spousing about weal 1 can do. 1
can uuiiensLuUu ic.a.aua U no Sill i ul
me. Vv e want io be mo.e uuibti auu
sing union forever, &c.” ioueli L. briel
was a few of tue run ales m.. ,e on mo
st and. Not a single Willie man mixed
witu the party, or addressed lile
meagre gathering, i uo not evt-n
mink a single vvuite scam Wag or car
pet-bagger w a i pre. eul.
“i'/i.c Government LOXi made by while
men, for tue bemjU oj wnde nun an.
their poderuy forever, and s/taU oe ad
ministered by while men, and Oy none
other whutsu&er. do s.*i • a s.inesuian
and Biesidoui, or ante beltum days.
Could ILIiU Bresldaiu, t 1C li a.mus ul
Liie Goclaratiou ul in iep. initmcc, and
other distinguished in.-u of tue old le
iaie letuiii vciuuUiy vvhihjoS Mif
scenes to-day enacted, wuat then V.
Could mey sec the sanctimonious vts
s.iges ot tue carpet-baggers who as
sumes tue lobes ol God to scare tue
devn in, j Jin the negro in tneir h uses
of worsnip, “git religion,” uomiuati
themselvcs lor office, nave tue credu
lous negro vole tor them wuile they
baud. Lueir “all' castles, all.l die on
their dre uns ot gol ian 1 glory. But
“blood will tell,” and those ot dung
hill origin irequeutly learn t i then
sorrow “that there’s manv a slip b -
tween the cup and Ip.” The negro
naturally suspicious—soon donuts
the ll un-sty of tie renegades, who
are social outcasts among tlieir own
race, and bring out a candidate ol
tlieir own color. Tue poor, crest-fallen
sc.d.twng’s r digious l<rvorsoon iiu..s
urn y negroes below z z<>, ami the
Amman meeting hens k ,ows i.im no
mole; at least not till too approach
of another election. With shame 1
akuowle Ige there are few, a very few
wiio shed their blood in beha.f ol
the South, who in the hour ot h r
utter prostration have dessertetl her
hanuer.s and affiliated wi. h the carpet
bag whit s and tue negroes in iln ir
pursuits ot • flesh pets.” They have
been foremost m robbing tue dre sol
the laud ui the habiliments of tlicit
higli-tone i ami intelligent predeces
sors. Some of the Radicals, like rats
leaving a sinking ship, have ahead}
left the polluted ci'jitt, well knowing
that by no amount of mirigueing can
ihey procure “fat offices.”
lu the coming eleoti m I feel quite
hopeful of Glynn county, lor the
people, i. e the people ol character
are awake ait.il uonig. Amlthe pi ess,
let the conductors of every join nut
and paper wli > f el that they are ac
tually wnai they ghoul I be, the uith
ful Sentinels 1' the p< ople, c 1 ttien.
to a Sense of tn tr duu, and , ■ met
the mass in relation to tin ir ulnic
servants. Let them t> ach the well
nigh forgotten fact, that ofli •e-uolders
are the pet.pie’s servant* an i not their
masters, and that the will of the peo
ple wheu properly enlightened, is t ie
liw of. the iaud. Knowledge, must
rule ignorance and insolence, come
what will, and the whit* people of
of Gi \nu oouuty can control the ba -
lot if they toil. Not by thtir superior
ity of nuuibeis, but by their gr liter
knowledge. Let tiiem write nil des
perandum on their banners, take a de
term. ned stand and put forth every
exertion, every faculty in behalf of
their land. Let. them remember that
if we cannot overcome them physical
ly we can trampie them under our]
feet mentally "Warrington
[CORRESPONDENCE OF THE DABIEN GAZETTE. }
CLOSING SCENES.
Boston, August 26, 1874.
Editor Gazette:
“Tney come, they ecine.
Like (lowers fresh and fair,
Leaving Iheir sweetness on the evening air,
Sweet memories ul departed days.”
The time for our departure is draw
ng near and before it comes we con
•luded to t ike in one more New Brig
and institution, and that is the an
uual uius er of the State Militia,
accordingly we embarked yesterday,
the 25. h, on the 1:30 p. m. train for
South Framingham, in company with
CTlpt.D. W. D ivisand Capt. Malcolm.
It was iuteud and that Tom Wheeler
should be of the party, but pressing
engagements called him to Paw
tucket.
One hour’s ride through a fine
country brought us to the scene of
action. Hero on a level plain of some
seventy acres, are pitch and the tents of
the second brigade of the Massachu
setts Volunteer Milif
of the s;h, 6th and Bth regiments with
one company of cavalry and a bat
talion of artillery, under the com
mand of Brigadier G moral George
H. Pierson, of Salem. On our arri
val in camp we were recieved by Col.
Walter Everett and his aids, Lieut.
Col. Trule and Surgeon Foster, and
tendered the freedom of the eump.
We then paid cnr respects to General
Pierson, at headquarters. Hero we
found the General and bis stuff, con
sisting of Mayor Eben Sutton, Major
Joseph IngalK C-apt. Loving B. Mus
sey and Capt. I). W. Lawrence, and
by a series of flank movements weie
initiated-into the mysteries of load
ing and firing liquids bv hydraulic
pressure. On leaving headquarters
Capt. Davis presented Capt. Mussey
with the remains of the man who was
tallied to death in Providence, R. I.
Capt. Mu-soy received t in a felici
tous manner and immediately bad
the remains bound in “red tape.”
Later in the afternoon we witnessed
the da iss parades of the several regi
ments, and tlieu proceeded to Colonel
Everett’s quarters, where we partook
of it splendid supper and listened to
the strains of H irv. y Brown’s band,
which tru’y remined us of departed
days. T e bam ifnl moonlight eve
ning was tp mt in visiting old friends
of the a id' -helium days, and fit. 9 P. M.
amid liquid testimonials we took our
leave of Camp Talbot.
To- lay we devoted to getting ready
for the home stretch, and in our trav
els ran into several Darien-, friends
who haver just arrived in Boston.
Eight p, m. was the hour set for our
departure, and the party for New
York was a gay one, for at the depot
we found Dr Shannon, Francis Con
way, Esq., t lie Irish Consul at Darien;
Win. Wright, Wm. Jay B k -r, J. H.
Hogan, and Capt. Thomas, of the
steamship Grace, all b uud for New
York.
The end omith; the last cigar is
smoked; Ibe last bell rings; the cars
move. Good bye Bill and Henry.
H>! for Darien; while I murmur to
myself sweet memories of departed days.
Yours, Traveller.
fasT"According to the newspaper
biographies of him, Theodore Tilton
was born in twelve places in Massa
chusetts, seven places in Connecticut,
two places in New Jersy, and all
over New York. He was more born
than to l>e borne with; yet withal, to
judge from *‘t'ie great catalysis,” it
would do him no ii mu in the world
to be boro again. lnter-Ocean.
ESU Little Bdly wa -very cross and
tired the other night, and be wanted
his father to take him on bis knee;
but father was tired or pretended to
be. “I want yon to bold me on yonr
knee he whined. I tell you I cannot
do it, I am ired,” replied his father,
impatiently. “Tired! Yon wasn’t
very .ired last night, when you held
Mary on your knee in the kitchen.”
&sP“‘Goldsmith maid’s 'great feat,
ain’t half so big as a Chicago girl’s'
J^“Tuis brief chronicle was writ
ten by the editor of the Philadelphia
Ledger: ‘ Lowol—Satmday. Two lit
tle boys and a pistol. Now, only one
little boy and a pistol.”
—A burglar lately went through
nine houses in C harleston, S. C., and
all he “realized” was oue old watch
and one bite from a deg.
®aP“\ln lowa newspaper, the Fair
mont Chan, has suddenly discontin
ed publication. There are some fears
that it has been devoured by grass
hoppers.
•
—“lf I should die, dear, where
would you go?” “Go after your in
surancejpnoney,” was the reply of a
fond wife
fi@“Youug man, pay attention.
Don’t keep a loafer’s company; don’t
hang around about loafing places.
Better work than sit around day after
day, or stand about corners with your
hands in your pockets—better for
your own health and prospects.
Bustle about, if you have nothing to
bustle about for. Many a poor phy
sician haq obtained a real patient by
riding after an imaginary one. A
quire of blank paper, tied with red
tape carried under a lawyer’s arm,may
procure him his first case, aud make
his fortune. Such is the world— “to
him thrt hath shall be given.” Quit
dreaming and complaining; ket p
busy aud mind your chances.
Debt is a miserable compan
ion. When you see a man contract
debts where ever he can, and with auy
body*that will let him, you can put it
down as a safe rule that man never
intends to pay those debts. When
a man spends money foolishly, or for
pleasure, when he has debts hanging
over him that he ought to take that
money in settling, Lie is nothing more
nor less than a thief, for he defrauds
his creditors. Work to keep out of
debt, if you would counted honest
£gS“Will gentlemen never learn bow
to manage the moustache? saucily in
quires Miss Sparkle. These lip dec
orators have been long enough in
vogue to be understood. But no; af
ter every sip of soup, wine, or water
out goes the tongue for the first brush
at the mustache, and next follows the
■napkin sweeps. If there is any thing
funny in this world it is this constant
moustache performance at dinner.
figyAfter the orosecuting attorney
nad heaped vituperation upon the
poor prisoner without counsel, the
Judge asked him if he had anything’”
to say for nimseif. “I ask for a post
ponement for 18 days, in order that I
may find a black guard to answer
that one there.“
fi®*At a recent marriage ceremony
at Jevington, East Sussex, England,
the wedipg ring was placed on the
third toe of the bride’s left foot—be
cause she had no bants.
—lt is said that Brigham Young
has made his will and given his friends
ten children each.
—
|??sg“Tf anything will impress the hu
man mind with awe, it is the expres
sion of the man’s face who has just
been aroused from snoring in church.”"
gjaf-An Oakland young lady entered
a drug store lately and wanted to see.
tiie papers for week back, and ti e in
telligent clerk showed her a roll of
sticking-plaster.
fSST'A Western moralist seasonably
remarks that it is pn'nfnl to hear an
ungodly man say, “It’s as hot as gin
ger, “when yon know he doesn’t mean
“ginger at all.”
£'§r*A litt’e shaver who waited to
boa good boy, was told by his mother
to pray. He said lie had prayed, but
didn’t get good. lie was told to
keep on praying. “But,” said ho, “I
don’t want to be teasing Him all the
time.”
the small hoy ot Massachusetts
develop into may he inferred hv the tact that
of the last eight convicts placed in the
Massachusetts State prison not one was over
twenty-one years of age. The Courier-Jour
nal thinks that at this rate of criminal
growth the old Ray State may he relied upon
to keep the country in rascality until the
less favored States can approach her boasted
altitude.
,£sg-“How’s business now?” inquired one
merchant of another, yesterday. “Dull, fear
ful dull.” was the reply. “The fact is, no
body buys anything just now but provisions
and whiskey—the bare necessaries of life, as
it were.”
NOTICE.
CONSIGNEES of the STR. CAKftIE will please
1 take notice that on and al o; Jnly 2d. 1874. all
goods MUST BE RECEIPTED on the wharf, and
all goods stored will be at the- risk of the owners oj.
consigecs.
3. H. - MITTT.
Captain Str. Carrie.
June 26—tf.
NOTICE
A LL advertisements will hereafter be published it.
-r*- the Darien Timber Gazette.
R. E. CARR, Marshal of Darien.
Darien, Ga., July 4th. 1874.
J. B. L. BAKER. m7di
LAFFERS his professional services to the public
Special attention given to diseases
OF CHILDREN.
JSsT- Bills presented first of each month, ‘f&\
July Illy.
D. B. WING,
MEASURER ARID INSPECTOR.
—OP—
Timber and Lumber,
Respectfully solicits patron
age-
DARIEN, - - - ga.
May-2-6m,
L. E. B. D LORME,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
AND
NOTARY PUBLIC.
DARIEN, GEORGIA.
TVTILL practice in the Brunswick and Eastern Clt
’’ cults. Patronage solicited. Office next 4oo>
to Wilcox & Churchill's store.
July 4-ly.