The Jefferson news & farmer. (Louisville, Jefferson County, Ga.) 1871-1875, July 07, 1871, Image 1

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- t _.. n NEWS & FAEMEE, Vol. 1. THE Jefferson News & Farmer r BY HARRISON & ROBERTS: A LIVE FIRST CLASS Weekly 2STewspa£ar , FOR THE Farm, Garden, and Fireside* [Pu.blish.ed. Every Friday Morning at LOUISVILLE, GA ; TERMS |2 SO PER INHUM II IBTiRCI 1 year. 1 6 months. 8 months. 4 weeks. 1 week. BQUAKES 1 ,St.OU $8.25 *7.50 sl2.oa*Bo.Uo 2 1.75 6.00 12.00 18.00 80.00 3 2.00 7.00 16.00 28-00 40.00 4 3.60 9.00 26.00 #6.00 60.00 5 I 4.00 12.00 28.00 40.00 60.00 lcoll 6.00 16.00 84.00 60.00 76.00 icon 10.00 25.00 60.00 80.00 120.00 jcolj 20.00 60.00 80 00 120.00 160.00 LEGAL ADVERTISING. Ordinary'!. —Citations lor Latter* ot ftdninistration, guardianship, &c. $ 3 00 Homestead notice 2 00 Applicationtor dism’n from adm’a.. 500 Application for dism'n of gnard’n.... 360 Application for leave to sell Land.. .. 500 Notice to Debtors and Creditors.... 300 Sales of Land, per square of te* lines 600 Sale of personal per sq., ten days.... 150 Sheriff’s— Each levy of ten lines,.... 8 50, Mortgage sales of ten lines or less.. 500 Tax Collector’s sales, (2 months.... 500 Clerk’ 8 —Foreclosure of mortgage and other monthly’s, per square 1 00 Estray notices,thirty days..i 3 00 Sales of Land, by Administrator*, Execu tors or Guardians, are required, by law to be held on the first Tuesday in the month, between the hours of ten in the forenoon and three in the afternoon, at the Court house in the county in which the property s situated. Notice of these sales mnst be published 46 days previous to the day of sale: Notice for the sale of personal property must De published 10 days previous to sale Notice to debtors and creditors, 40 day Notice that application will be made of the Court of Ordinary for leave to sell land. 4 weeks. Citations tor letters of Administration, Guardianship, &c., must be published 30 Jays—for dismission from Administration, nonthly six mor- for dismission from guar iianship, 40 days. Buies for foreclosure of Mortgages must be published monthly for four months—tot establishing lost papers, for the full space of tires months— for compelling titles from Ex ecutors or Administrators, where bond- has seen given by the deceased, the full space of three months. Application for Homestead to be published twic^iObespaci^^ei^QOnseaitiveJlays^^ LOUISVILLE CARDS. J G. CAIN J. £ PQLHHiL, CAIN & POLHILL, ATTORNEYS AT LAW LOUISVILLH, GA. May 6,1871. I ly- T. F. HARLOW Watch LI a, L. ©r —AND— xißFAinsin, Lonisvills, 4«L' - Special ATTENTION GIVEN to reno vating and repairing WATCHES, CLOCKS, k JEWELRY, SEWING MACHINES &C_ Ac. Also Agent foe the best Sewing Machine that is made- May 5,1871. DR. I. it. POWELL, LOUISVILLE, GA. Thankful fob the mbonage enjoyed heretofore, takes this method ofcoa tinuing the offer of his professional services to patrons and fiiends. May 5,1871. 1 CHARLESTON HOTEL. E. hTjaCKSON, Proprietor. CHARLESTON, S. C, ..'hi PLANTERS' HOTEL. August*, Cta. The only Hotel in the City where Gas, is used throughout. til iaj'-iH. JOHN A. GOLBSTgm Louisville, Jefferson County, Ga., Friday, July 7, 1871. SUBSCRIPTIONS Are soUqted /or. the atoofyn of a WmiEIT ]- r.~. -It *i- TO tUE •• '. ' Confederate Dead of Georgia, . Arid fix’* o Soldiers from other Confederate States werakillad or died in this State. THE MONUMENT TO COST $50,000. „ The Corner t Stone it is proposed shall be laid oft; the 4th of July, or so soon thereafter as the receipts will permit. For every live Dollars subscribed, there will be given a certificate of Life Membership to the Monumental Association. This certificate will entitle the owner thereof to an equal inter eat in the following property, to be distributed as soon as requisite number of shares are sold, to-wit: - First. Rue Hundred and One Adrea of Land in Lincoln Gold and Copper Mines, val ued at-.- $160,000 And to Seventeen Hundred and Forty-Four Shares in One Hundred Thousand Dollars of United Sums Currency; to-wit: 1 share of $16,000 SIO,OOO 1 “ «*> 5,000 6,000 2 « 2,500 5,000 10 “ 2,000 20.000 10 “ 1,000 10,000 20 “ 500 10,000 100 “ 100 10,000 200 “ 50 10,000 400 “ 25 10,000 1000 “ 10 10,000 SIOO,OOO The value of the separate interest to which the holder of each Certificate will be entitled, will be determined by the Commissioners, who will announce to the public the manner, the time and plaoe of distribution. The following gentlemen have consented to act as Commissioners, and will either by a Committee from their own body, or by Bpecia Trustees, appointed by themselves, receive and take proper charge of the money for the Mon ument, as well as the Beal Estate and the U. S. Currency offered as inducements for sub scription, and will determine upon the plan for the Monument, the inserption thereon, the site therefor, select an orator for the occasion, and regulate the ceremonies to be observed when the comer-stone;is laid to-wit: Generals L. McLaws, A. K. Wright, M. A. Stovall, W. M. Gardner, Goode Bryan, Colo onels C Snead, Wm. P. Crawford, Majors ■JOe.B. Camming, George T. Jackson, Joseph Ganahl, I. P: Glrardey, Hon. B. H. May, Adam Johnston, Jonathan M. Miller, W. H- Good rich, J, D. Butt, Henry Moore, Dr. W. E. Dear ing, The Agent* in the respective counties will retain thq money received for the sale oi Tickets until the subscription Books are clos ed. In order that the several amounts may be returned to the Shareholders, in case the number es subscriptions will net warrant any farther procedure the Agents will report to this office weekiy, the result of their sales. When a sufficient number of the shares are sold, the Agents will receive notice. They will then forward to this office the amounts received. L. & A. H. MoLAWS, Gen. Ag'ts. No. 3 Old P. O. Range, Mclntosh sts. Augusta, Ga W.C.D.BOBEBTS, Agent at Sparta, Ga. L. W. HUNT A CO., Agents Milledgeville Georgia. rpsi *ay, 2, 1671. 6m. T- MARK WALTERS mm Broad St., Augusta, Ga. MARBLE MONUMENTS, TOMB STONES-*C., &C. Marble Mantels and Furniture-Marble of all kinds FunjSedto Older. AH work for the Counts? carefully hoxyd for shipment. p M'ah IS ’76 ly; * Fehl. Vl ly Change of Schedule. Savannah, May 27, 1871. ) J-bN AND AFTEB BUN*AY, 27AINBT. v/ Passenger Trains on the Georgia Central Railroad will ran as follows; UP DAY TRAIN. Leave 5avannah...,.,.... ~7:15 A. M. Arrive at August*. A.'.,. ........ -1.5:38 P. M. Arrive at Macon 4:51 P. M Connecting at Augusta with trains going North, sad at Maoch with trains to Columbus and Atlanta. • ! Arrive at AUgUSte...... ...... —.5.38 P.M. Arriyo at Savannah 5:25 P. M. Making same connection at Augusta as above. NIGHT TRAINS GOING SOUTH. Leave Aognsßfc... —8:30 KM. Arrive utToiteigeville ......8:45P. M. Arrive at Eat eaten 16:45 P. M. Arrive at Mason. 5:15 A.M. Connseting with Inins to Columbus, leav ing Macou at 5:25;A. M Trains leaving Augusta at 8:30 P. M. arrive in Savannah ats:3o A- M. NIGHT TRAINS GOING NORTH. Leave Savannah 7:00 P. M. Leave Macon 6:30P.M. Arrive at August* , 3j30 A. M. Arrive at- Savannah... 7.. —.5:30 A. M. Making dose connection with trains leaving going over the Milledgeville and Eatonton Bbsnair wilt take day train from Ma con, night train from Augusta, and 7 P.M, train from Savannah, which connects daily at Gordon (Sundays excepted) with Milledgeville and Eatonton trains. , i • ji WILIIAM ROGERS, General Superintendent: Nfeys,lß6l. its. mumrmwL, ALABAMA STREET ATLANTA GhA- BoardL. $3 per day. Rnggagn carried to and front Depot free of charge svrtf.'f-v ; L 3a. Xedto? OW Virginia W HSWIST’S GLOBE HOTEL, ■jipll oU : AOSOSTA, Gxobgia. f. wummmm '*fteftistor itiud #* 00 per dSy " ' J JOB BRINTIIST3- W ALL STYLES & COLORS, nm a m fmct, SOUTHERN RECORDER AND Southern Times & Planter, BOOK AND JOB PRINTING OFFICES, Ivlilledgeville. AND Sparta. 3a- INVITE THE ATTENTION OF the Publio generally, to our extensive and well-fitted Jpafi (Offices.. Our facilities for Executing BOOK AND JOB PRINTING-. are as good as those of any Office in the coun try, having a large lot of types in our two Extensive Establishments. CARDS. wBBDma, VISITING, AND EVERY OTHER KIND. OM €&&Q8MB, m IEIEA@dDHAIBIL.IB TPMCIBS- WE keep on hand all the time a frill supply of Legal [Blanks. Sheriff’s, Ordinary’*, Clerk’s, Mag istrate’s, and Law Blanks, of every kind Printed on the Best Paper, and at Low Prices. B o o k' Printing. AS we have a FINE lot of the BEST TYPE and a No. 1. Power Press, we are fully prepared to ex ecute as nice Book-work as any one. Call and give us a trial and be con vinced^ BILL HEADS, ETC., In the line of Bill Heads, Letter Heads and Circulars, we are prepared $s heretofore, to execute neat work, on-favorable terms, and we guarantee that bur work will be equal b> that performed in any of the larger cities: so that our Law yers and Merchants need not send off to have such work done. Send in your Orders. POSTERS, PROGRAMMES, HOUBI-BU.LS, Ac., These Offices will be found to be equal to anything ih the State. Par ties have but to call and Examine to be convinced. GALT. ON OR ADDRESS R, !| f Swrison & Cos. MrTT.tttiiatt*m.T.w U 7 * ; ? r c *"*■' OR : ; ‘ a* Posts** The following pathetic poem, says the Gal axy, is probably out of plaeein our Club-room. But then we have so much space: THE XOSUON WIDOWER'S LAMENT. And she is dead ! and she is dead! My Multitudinous bride! No more my weary bead may rest Her many forms beside. No more her sixty gentle bands Shall fondly rest in mine; No more orouud her thirty waists My loving arm shall twine. For she is dead; and from those eyes Os black, and bine, and gray, And various intermediate dyes, The light has passed away. And eighty little orphans’ tears Are mingled with mine own, And eighty hearts of tender yean Are motherless and lone. Ten fevers seised her all at onee, And appoplexy too: With corns, hysterics, and the mumps, And dread tic douloureux. A dozen doctors made her worse; They physicked and they bled; And though she lived with thirty lives, No wonder she is dead ! But ere she died, in countless throng* Her relatives drew nigh. And waded through each others’ tears To bid my love good-by, Yet even then she thought es me. And sought my grief to quell; And summoned me beside her beds To say a last farewelll. “Good-by, dear John,” she feebly said; "I’m going soon,” said she; “But oh 1 don t marry widow Smith, And oh ! don’t mourn for me. For widow Smith is forty fold— Too many, far, for you; And she is artful, sly, and bold. And quite designing, too. “And, John, don’t leave your flannels off; And don’t catch cold, my dear, Don’t die of grief, but calmly live; Your children need you here. I shall not want you over there, I’d rathei be alone; I’ve had you here quite long enough; You’ll stay away, my own!” And then she closed her eyes in peace, And tell a sleep and died; And left me here to mourn her loss, My ten times triple bride. I know I ought to bo resigned— I know my tears are rude; But when one’s loss is thirty fold He can’t feel /orfitude. Oh, Mary Anne and so forth Jonca, Thou wert a model wife! Thy virtues, like thyself, were too, Too many for this life. There’s no one now to mend my shirts, Or hear each infant’s cry; I sew my buttons on alone, And sing the lnllaby. I’ll have to marry widow Smith; I can’t get on alone; The children need a mother’s care— You don’t know how they’va grown! > You left me for a better world, Your souls are free from palm I must relieve my own despair, And try my luck again. F. W. Clark*. BlistdtoMSv The Last of the Seminole* The Seminoles were supposed to be entirely driven out of Florida as the result of that most famous of our struggles with the aborigines, known as the Florida Indian War, which cost us years of military hundreds of millions of doUiatk in money, a vast amount of corruption, extravagance and army demoraliza tion. When we had picked up the majority of the brave Seminolesvaoe by one, a plan was devised aod car ried out successfully, of bufitw up the consent of the remaining Indians to removal to lhe Indian Territory at the West. Two bands, those: pf Billy Bowlegs and Sam Jones, were supposed to be all that remained, and they were negotiated with. Bowlegs and hia followers were bought up at from S4OG to SI,OOO a head, and removed. Sam Jones, who was 120 years old, declined at first, to sell himself, his birthri and his people, declaring thrit One hundred cartloads of gold would not tempt him to forsake his familiqr haunts; but he finally yielded, and the round sum of $50,009 carried him, and what was supposed to be the last remnant'of Seminoles, fVrifn Florida to the West. But there are those who still lin* gered in the Everglades. They took refuge in the swamps of the lower Eortion of the peninsula, where-they ave since remained—some, three hundred in number—-in entire seclu sion, no whites, excepting one e*r two Methodist missionaries, btHtffc penetrated their settlement, and sub sisting nO otvfe cap hardly trilf A late report of a missionary de scribes them as at tea#| a mwm|> gioua. people, keeping the Sabbath' and exhibiting moral and intelligent traits of character; in personal ap pearance, coming up to the old type of the red man, of which the Semi holes are good specimens. In pur suit of a more salubrious residence and better hunting ground, they are moving southward, from which fact au inference is drawn that the tow»f portion of Florida is gradually ris ing and becoming more capable of haman habitation. An enterprising editor has started a paper in the Fiji Islands. Sensa tional paragraphists are looking for ward to his early talking ofT so as to make a brilliant tale headed “Eating an Editor.” In Galveston, Texas, there are three newspaper men named Jones who are constantly getting into Uouble on each other’s account. Week before last one of them was assaulted in the street for wiitiug an abusive article he had never seen. And, a few days before, the wrong Jones was accused of deserting his second wife, though he had never been married. The three Joneses threaten after the Milesian fashion, to exterminate each other to establish their identity. A few days ago the agent of an accident insurance company entered a smoking car on a Western rail road, and approaching an exceed? ingly gruff old man, asked him if he did not want to take out a policy. He was told to get out with his poli cy, and passed on. Afldr ridihgf a bouthalfan hour an accident oc curred to the train, and the smoking car ran over the sleepers, causing much consternation among the pas sengers. The old man jumped up; and seizing a hook at the side of the car, cried, “Where is that insurance man ?” The question caused a roar of laughter among the passengers, who for a time forgot their danger. As the Israelites were forbidden to have any God, except Jehovah, who brought them out of the land of Egypt, so Christians must not seek for happiness ia any but Him, in whom they stand indebted for re demption from eternal death, and sanctification to eternal life. This first commandment then, is a warn-: ing not only against open infidelity, but also, against the more Subtle a postacy, which would substitute an other notion of God for the Jehovah of the Bible, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, the Holy Trinity ia the ado rable Unity. The Chattgpqga Times asks: “Whither are vye To which ihq Knoxville Whig replies: “It would be profane in U3 to say.” An Indiana girl, when asleep, re cites Greek, but when awake is ut terly ignorant of that language. This ia an Indiana euphuism, for SSW/WfSW «,UI oil ham j M. Rudolf Gollscfiall, one sjkhe most “ F 1 fllßjljffil and poet3, expresses in r a article on American poetry, his sur prise at the popularity of Bret nSrte’s pfririuri.tidjju* * , ** ' * ■ Until the Ist of July, IS7O, OBe hundred afidjtwoi persons had com mitted suicide by jumping down from the now de3troyea''VfehcWhfe column.. -- 1 " iolewtut'-Hiogtetj Short-hand writers in Germany -command compatitively large sala ries. The stenographer rof the Ger man Parliament receive tea-ddfiars daily. K. „• '.--hoi *rf» ufowsrit« ; The woman who mafkethwgofld pudding in silence* is belter than one that makelh a tart reply. ■■ us Castelar, the leadt* iff the Spanish republicans, has recently inherited ,as very large fott*nsv> - o A parly by the naftre of Jones has The United -‘States fg the, Kingdom iof Heaven. - •»»*«» . A contemporary “says of a very prohifhentmilitia gehefaj,’ (Hat ‘%is swotd was never never d'awn but rineo*—and then.iii a ruffle,’”* . ] s*Msjhao mb soum* mu osi What are “poqple,of the Artesian sort?” A recent writer aeya : they. ate bora. . u-c tidsrf A judge in Indiana has mod “(Wd because rih cessity knows tiolaw. ' ►lmd oiw /:! n nil so ; A Kansas politician writing a lat ter of condolence to the VOdown«| a “country member" who had been his friend, says; ‘?I am. pained .to tear Vfe were bospm . fneqd** h«lnnow we. shall never meet<§gi»i«4 ? odb b«» j '“'■Fiffttr is the bleSsecl produces the noble and divfrfo ffui(s ■of #fSdom, l ßut Jt Willpbt grow anjd barren hoi! of man’s heart Without bis incessant care rind industry. i 7 f brawi ttufctelriabwtjgt, Ibt, wetchzvtt’tvgoci «90«kA isrfH 'h , corn oafe ye mane f” From the Bicbraoud Enquirer. Political Self-Righteousness. There are a class of men who are al ways too good to co-operate in any prac tical! movement. Their occupation and position in life ia «nch that they are not forced to an active decision, nnd they accordingly indulge that disposition to Pbariseeism which is so powerful in some natures; or there is a cold and selfish calculation that others, and not .they, shall incur the odium which is to attach to certain necessary measures. We have.no patience with these people. They deliberately throw upon others disagreeable work which they want done, and then pretend that it is discreditable to do it. We say prelend, for we have no manner of .confidence in their sinceri ty. It is sheer hypocrisy. These philosophers always manage to be “better” than other people. As South ern politicians they are always “sound er” than everybody else. They are too dainty t? mingle in the work of South ern reconstruction—‘*Oh, no! never! never I” They would die first—so they say. Bat they know that somebody has -got to do it* and they think they caa do bottccti)y preserving their records. They have aspirations; they look forward (af ter things have settled down) to the time when the coast will be clear for them to rnn for some office; aad (the Yankees being out of the way then) they expect to tell the Southern people how badly they have been treated, and they preserved their integrity! This is the very acme of meanness. We all know that we have been shamefully treated; we all know that we have been moitified and humiliated in every form; we all know that we have had to ask for the pardon of Andrew Johnson ; to ao- Cept negro suffrage; to vote (here iu Virgiuia) for the Underwood constitu tion; to sit on the same platform and in the same legislative hall with Thomas Bayne and Joe Cox ; to humor Yankee officials ; to be on onr good behavior gen erally ; we know all these things ; and the man who dares to charge us with a forfeiture of our self-respect is almost certainly either a man who has no polit ical responsibilities—who can afford to stand.off an£ ittorwliKe and mock ;or a man who, excluded at present from pub lic life, is saving his record, We bavq not forfeited our self respect. When the Enquirer counsels iu that di rection, may we lose all the respect of the community. There is no dishonor, after »full trial of strength, in submit ting to physical [force. The conquered may often be mortified, but they are nev er degraded, by surrendering their arms to the eoriquerots. We fought as long an we could fight, and it has never oc curred, to anybody to call us cowards. By superior force they have dismember ed “the State of Virginia; by superior force they imp6sed upon us the iron rule -of Terry amd'Ganby; by srqierior force they represented the sovereignty of the State m yonder Capitol by a motley crew of carpet-baggers, soalawaga and negroes ; by force they compelled us to receive the Uudefwood constitution; by force they b»vo cut our count!ee np into township*, and trampled out all that was traditional in the Statp by force they superintend our elections, and arrest and punish our commissioners of election; by Wrce they have incorporated in the Genstitnfion the 13, 14th and 15th a mendments; by force they,h*ve given us the Ku Klnx bill. If we eould have it these things would not have been done. Is there any taint of dii honor attaching to ns because we were helflcnsl Ought we to have died! Onr critic* stilllive. Was Austria degraded when she sub mitted'to the superior force of Prussia! Was she wise, or was it cowardly, to shuity np a peace after Sadowa? Nations do not court destruction. And if any .people ever did peraiat and hold out, the South did in the late war. We fairly : exfarist«d the virtue that there Was in ijtrffg.qs Hot or bun *hig jiff] w Os course it Is always eaty to flatter tb% mohi -t* appeal to thafr angry feel ings and their prejudices. People who have unpleasant duties to perform often lofik out for subjects on whom to expend their isl ifolfWH -’ and -demagogues find it tiMcasutfkrhsagia the world to embar .MSSfod tosloe tho&B who, have ”*- s* r mm ’ a { the mem bers of the Versailles Government, has Mini kltcrrvkldge of the <3er twa«4arifnag*?r? According to the State geologist of Galifortlra, the view from the Diablo istiie finest in Alps. £ ,■ I TLVAtkasta Gdtmtitation, in response to a reqnest fiete Ske-fiavannah Ncws, ciseorYno pardoning power. It Sijs: “ fh*&lMM«<§ ha# aetod on 4»6 appli eatieto fisr phtdea since August 29,1868. Os th***,*s»> enbbs, involrteg $46 offend e rewire pardffliedr73*pplic*ti»e* Were refused and puaiehoreuts eomsauted. At tfeil’ttiee 14$ npplieaiiens fsr pardons te¥%4fdre««be Governor. The follow- Ae efessificasion; Murder, par -44iM,149f mrder, commuted, 18; ei«l etttfid>eiW».ittfihfoeed; T6t ether Uree merrier; 20; burglary *W*f*ih|*t,*9T burglary, to the day, ««telsrtfchten lfi; assaOU,9o; a* teetilt virnp* #; homfcside, 1» cheatiug H ho*^ 3Aaai!9k&3saxi jtrfwgt Tftj^Mwitoeeiea ony, other * the 346 an minor offenses. No. 10. Weston's Walk. FOUR HUNDRED MILES IN LESS THAN FIVE DAYS. At 11:47, last evening, Weston completed die last round of hi* four hundredth mile, and was enthusias tically cheered by the great con> coarse of people that had assembled to witness the completion of this ex traordinary exhibition of human'en durance. Weston started on his tilth day’s walk at 4:43 A. M., hav ing slept a little more than lour hours. He had then just eighty miles to walk, twenty qf which he finished at 10:5 A. M., when he stop ped for breakfast, and also took a short rest, in all occupying abodt 20 minutes. At 10:25 A. M., he stirt ed again, and did not make another rest until he had completed 50 mites, which he made in ten hours andi fif ty-three minutes. This was at 2:17 P. RI. He then took a hearty ship per, and exchanged the velvet suit, in which be had so long walked, for silk lights, with ornamented tunic. During the last five miles, both Weston and the audience were' a roused to an intense state of excite ment; the latter cheering almost continually, and the former winning applause by walking backwards, running, jumping and performing many playful tricks in order to dem onstrate the large amount of physi cal force be yet held in reserve. The Rink is one-seventh of a mile in cir cumference and during the 396th mile he made this distance, walking backward, in 3 minutes and 30 sec onds. The last five miles wpre made at the following rates : 396th in 13 min. 40 sec.; 397th in 13 rrfm. 40 sec.; 39Sth in 12 min. 66 sec.; 399th in 12 min. 45 sec.; and 400th in 11 miu. 7 sec. At the conclusion of the last tound he had 18 minutes to spare; and as he turned to the assembly, .his glowing with success, he was seized by two men, who, placing him pn their shoulders, ran with him round the place over which he had walked 2,800 limes. When brought back to this dressing-room the crowd gath ered round him, and Prof. DorertWs, who had acted aa his medical advi ser, having succeeded in quietifag the uproar, said that the feat, which they had seen thus successfully coni'* pleted, was of immense importance to the scientific world, ana in the name of science he thanked h|r. Weston for this practical trial of en durance, more severe than anything that had happened from the time of Adam to the present day. It was also a temperance sermoft, preached in an all-powerful man nek; for if what is ordinarily known as stimulus had been used, the lait would never have been accomplish ed. In response to loud calls, Ms. Weston said that from the appear ance of bis person, as his lrfends were carrying him around, they might think that he was tiipd,,anp not able to make a speech, but ip that they were mistaken. In the ate, complishmenl of this undertaking he felt that the praise was tfae to Amer ica for its inspiration, more than tb himself; and to God more Yfatfh all, who had given him strength. He was not conceited eaeugbsp think that in the mere doing bed*- *®rved,p4 thppredit, as fif,# was due to his trainer, aXtanditptfV judges and others who bad interest ed themselves in the matter. He should not walk again unless sofee foreigner beat his time, befßM°tt became 36 years old, fn which 'ball he should try to “warm” him; bA in future be should turn Ws atte*S> lion to-bis profession of jourMdfesn Some of the spirting papers had spoken against him, and henMM glad to aay thgt they bad tot.i& ifc Still, he bore no ill-wi11.,10 and with that he bade them good «swov-«iiii .j‘. ;.i,ab-q«9h a yl An ingenious German has gained * great reputation far NewYoVr bf TO anseeas in training coach hasaari'tpm gr*»d gait. Ha used °Q see bow he did it, until it waafii^lt^it aee^wMchaawrWi^^^^iwn—t'Whk bowidera, and tbay aeqniracL a«6afeA traad fay,faying ttMtogiem The whole noflMLsi fit horse eats and stages dally 'ftflfw York is 388.500; in Brooklyn, 184 SM; total, 607,000. Aotoaak oollaoMd tartMa tw« cities, *31,920.!,.The UfeplfUWiefe on.-girth «... tu musUmßS railroad alofee eatHed aStlkliy' tWwttt paamapaae par day taat’ntafcfet tMldhfei powdfefe*»«f:»lW Iprfcfe tiHHilli,* a<ll 1o M)od »!»«• *dT Hsf the EW '■TSr&uglfWbmSm ucrtcy moil lannunieQ tut wmwni wi grand jury. TfeUliat-apfas|Msab aix feat aij^M shout 870 pounds to saok man.