The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887, February 03, 1866, Image 1

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Cg ITfii'iraii 3l)cralb. pCBU5Iir.il WEEKLY K'KftY SATI K^.W M J. A. WK.VH. THE NEWNAN HERALD j. r. woorTK':. WOOTfEN&WELCIb Proprietors. j. c. \v<k> i ti:n, Hi.rToR. TERM* op SrSfTRIi’TJOX . f) >c copy one year. payable in advance. S LOO One copy six months...." *•••*" Cue copy three mon hs. •*“ 1 Cnc copv one month. “ "" Olub of three copies one year, W On Ciuh office copies one year. 15.00 (Pifry numbers complete the Volume.) 3$totllg Journal; - • ■- getoM to Pt k Cg Heiuimu prato. F. S. WELCH, Publisher. VOL. I.] asrEwiisrivasr, Georgia, Saturday, feb. 3, lsee. [NO. 22. Rates of Advertising. Advertisements inserted at $1.50 per sqnaro (often lines or space equivalent,) for first inser tion, and 75 cents for each subsequent in sertion. Monthly or semi-monthly advertisements inserted at the same rates as for new advertise ments, each insertion. l.iberal arrangements will Be made with those advertising by the quarter or year. All transient adVertisments must be paid for when handed in. The money for advertising due after the first insertion. Important Document. hKPORT OF THF, SPKCIAL COMMITTEE ON RK CON ST KUCTIO N. Til flic folio mittec appointed by the Radicals in Con to investigate the condition of th< 'I he star nf his hope has gone down, and ' he has gone back to Boston, a wreck ofj his former self. rrcss Beautiful Lines. “ That thing was certainly more fhrm a The Emperor Maximilian af*ckthe Itur ! phantom. I could almost hearit breathe ! | hide Family. The following lines were written by May it not be true, after t.H, that spirits j haye jast rfCeivod froul Mexico, and . Your committee next went to Mont-: Tyrone Powers, the famous Irish come- disembodied bydeath can hold intercourse j transnj j t t0 vour readers, below .some iin- be Cincinnati Commercial publishes ?0 tnery, Ala., where, as at Richmond, the 1 dian, who perished on the steamer Prcsi- with other spirits that are half d.sembou- jt h ;„ h , interes , ing inteili following as the report of the Com- | colorcd citizens flockcd fo mcet us> and | ^ th. ^11 I ieJ ”> ? lec P.’ wh . lch 15 tl . ,e scmb!ance (,f gence. It i: vied with each other for the carrying of | ^ our baggage. Wc paid them fifty cents a j So’utli, and The Commercial does not say how he got Possession of this document in advance ,,f its official promulgation, but this con cerns that paper alone. We might, in deed, indulge grare doubt* of flic authen ticity of the report, but the Commercial is a leading Republican organ—as grave as a judge and not given to jokes on K rious matters. The reader will be sor ry but not surprised to see that the report is unfavorable. After the usual prelimi naries, the Committee proceeds as follows: “ Naturally, the first place visited by V our Committee was Richmond, Va., the Capital of the late Confederacy. Our coining had been heralded in the news papers there, and the demonstration at the railroad dfcpo't cM our arrival may he taken as, in some degree, indicative of the popular sentiment in that city. \V found a large concourse of Citizens of African descent awaiting us, and as we disembarked from the cars, they hailed us with shouts of welcome; minified with. “ 'i bis way to the Spottswood House,” Hcfe’S your cab for any part of the city,” “ Baggage to the hotel, gents,” Ac. It was grateful to the hearts of loyal men to he thus welcomed it’ it city so lately the headquarters of rebellion, while at the same time we began to feel Convinced id ready that the only truly loyal people of the South were of the colored race.— Wo could not decline the hospitalities so generously tendered to us, and according ly we selected two carriages from the large number placed at our disposal. Wc were driven to the Spottswood by our hospitable friends, who charged us two dollars apiece and a half dollar extra for baggage. After so much kindness from the colored race, we were unprepared for the harsh treatment we subsequently re ceived from the white oligarchs of Rich mond. The proprietors of the Spotts- wo rl gave us r 10:11s in the fifth story, Rick, saying to his clerk, ns we have br They were inscribed on the wall the Old lilanfurd Cbu?eh/’ near ascertain her Illness lor re- car pet-sack trom the depot, and they were i 1‘etcrsblzrg\ a : admission into the siatcihood of > tales, enthusiastic in their expressions of loy- j Thou art crumbling to the dust old, pile! airy in receiving the currency from us.— ! Thou art hastening to thy fall ; !n this city evidences of disloyalty met And aro^ed thee, in thy loveliness, us on every hand. A Vermont mission- j Clings the ivy to the wall, ary had been insulted a few days before | The worshippers are scatcred now, our arrival for attempting to introduce j Who knelt before thy shrine ; “John brown s Rody and “ \\ e 11 hang , _\nd silence reigns where anthems rose, Jeff. Davis on a sour apple tree” as Sab- j In days of “ Acid Ding Sv»e.” bath school hymns. A hop had just | taken place at the leading hotel, to which And sadly sighs the wandering wind, whites only were invited, and from which : Where oft in years gone by the. freed men were excluded on account Prayers rose from many hearts to Him, of color. 'J life’consequence was an indig-1 The Highest of the High, nation meeting of the freed men, at which ; The tramp of many a busy foot equal rights were demanded. A repeti-1 That sought thy aisles is o’er, lion of balls and hops exclusively white j And ninny a weary heart around in their character, \\ ill lead to Jamaica i still torevermore. insurrections and llaytian rebellions, I magnified a thousand times in their ! now doth ambition s hope take wings 1 dreadful results. At Montgomery, as at J How droops theaspirit now ! Atlanta, we met a Treasury Agent, who j We bear the distant city's din, was opposed to immediate re union, ami I The dead are mule below; warmly in favor of a territorial condition for the Southern States, lie mentioned incidentally that he had a son-in-law in New Hampshire who would make an ex cellent Provisional Governor, and a cousin who would do for a territorial delegate to Congress. Above all tilings be Imped Congress would not listen to the hypo critical cries of Alabama loyalty. He assured us that there was no loyalty in the State except in his office, and said it would be base injustice to supercede him till lie had finished the making of a hun dred thousand dollars. We next proceeded to Charleston, S. Carolina. Hero yve had a long interview with a Northern gentleman, whom we know to be very reliable, lie had res ponded to his count: y’s call in the early days of the war, with a suttler wagon fud ot Yankee notions, and had been unvary ing in his devotion to the cause ever since, except at intervals when General Grant had ordered suttlrrs to the rear.— Since the cessation ot armed hostilities he h id been down South to see what could be done Southern lands. leath ? lloyv else can they appear to us. if not in this way, granting, as I do, that the spirit lives alter death ? I certainly am in a great quandary. That being looks to me alone tor help. If it has a real existence, and I fail to keep my promise, then 1 do it a great wrong.— Rut has it any existence ? Now strange it would sound to hear people say of me, who am known to disbelieve in ghosts and dreams, that I have at last seen a spirit, and that I now believe in dreams ! No, no, John Stacey awake is not bound by any promise made by John Stacey asleep.” After a little more thought he awoke his wife, a woman of strong mind and of good sense, and related to her the facts. Site agreed with hiuTthatjhe dream was most peculiar, and the case most perplex ing ; but that it would not do for a man or his standing in the community to en gage in an enterprise ot the kind with no other assurance for it than a remarkable dream. Not wholly satisfied, however, with this decision, even when corroborated by the ! judgment of his wife, lie did not soon get to sleep, lie approached the land of forgetfulness with a feeling that all not over ; and so he found it. time he was on horseback, travelling over the weil known road, andjborne iiresisti- bly towards that now dreaded hill. There stood the spirit as before, looking at him, and expecting his approach ; but no longer with a sad or a merely reproachful coun tenance. The eyes gleamed with unearth ly fire, and the compressed lips were ex pressive of anger and scorn. 31 r. S. rode on until he came just opposite to it in the road, when overpowered by a sense of ar ‘ fear he put. spurs to his horse and endea vored to rush suddenly past. lie did not succeed, hoyvcver, in going far. II is horse, like himself, seemed paralyzed, and answered but faintly to the spur. He ice arc i darcd n0 ( j 0 ok back, nor did he need to The sun that shone upon their paths Now gilds their lonely graves, The zephyrs which once fanned their brows, The grass above them waves. 011 1 could we call the many back Who've gathered here in vain, Wtio’vc careless roved where we do now, Who’ll never meet again ; How would our very hearts be stirred To meet the earliest gaze Of the lovely and the beautiful, The lights of other days! '• A Stranger.” John Stacy's Dream. We extract the following from tide on “ Dreaming and Dreams,” by llev. T. R. Goulding in the January num her of Scott's Magazine. “We sometimes dream that dreaming, or dream of former dreams. I j oofc> p or j ic g00n h card the rush of the There was a remaikable instance of this I spcctre as j t ) ea p pd on the horse behind that occurred, some years since, to a gen- j h j m> and t h cn f Ldt j lts horrid arms twining j around his waist. When with a cry of horror, he threw is sent to me by a Mexican gentleman well known both here and in New York. This gentleman having lived in Mexico all his life, at d having witness ed all the mutations through which that country has passed during the last thirty years, is convinced that the present Gov ernment, under Maximilian, is the only one which can secure to the Mexican peo ple the blessings of peace, security of property, liberty as regulated by law, a and freedom of religious worship an l ot the press. The news, it will be seen, re lates chiefly to the relations subsisting between the Emperor Maximilian and the Iturbide family, which am now, for the first time, fully and clearly placed be fore the public ; and to the new plan of military operations just adopted by Mar shal Razine. The Emperor Augustine Iturbide is regarded by the w hole Mexican nation as the liberator of Mexico, and as the one who accomplished their independence from Spain. The Emperor Maximilian fully appreciates and enters into this feel ing, seeks on all proper occasions to grat ify it, and manifests his veneratien for the memory of Iturbide in the manner most agreeable to the wishes of the Mcx- ' .rl * can l ieo l^ e ’ a ' s be re ^ atC1 ^ below. None of the Iturbide family have any right to the throne of Mcxice. The Em peror Augustine Iturbide was elevated to that station by popular acclamation, and his dynasty knows no other origin. He was a Mexican by birth ; his family knew no connection whatever with the reigning house of Spain, and therefore his monar chy had not those foundations which are acknowledged in nil the other monarchies of the world. GREAT ATTRACTION! mm goods! HP BARGAINS! UIIIj J. LORC1I & CO., IlrtYU jfisf received af J. M. DODD’S old stand, South- West Corner Public S q n a r e', NEWNAN, GEORGIA, A new and large supply of READY MADE AND . tleman on the seaboard nf this State. lie in the vr.xy of mining j j realllC( j chat he was on horseback, passing He bad found toe poo- j a ] on ^ a well known road to his little coun- pl« South Carolina so rebellious at, towu of no great size or note. On heart as to refuse to sell their plantations | R . ac]jing the su ,huiit of the “ so-called |nr twenty cents an acre in hedeial CU **T i Htll^ ot* that flat country, his attention •iced us that ail nrmc riued by a faithful African who hlack- «m| our boots for a quartet a pair, that they were goo 1 cn iugh for ) ankee raid- <ts. 'l'lie same spirit of disloyal bate was manifested to us in the dining room, where, in re*-p >nsc to our repeated calls fir co-1 fish and pumpkin pie, we were ■served with nothing but bacon and hot cakes. We asked why this was done, an I were tul 1 by a loyal waiter, to whom we had just given a postal halt dollar, that Mr. Spottswood had said lie didn t ikeep a hotel for the accommodation of \ atikees, and, therefore, persistently ex ■elude 1 codfish and pumpkin pics from •the bill of fare. “ Your committee do not deem it nc- K-essnry to dwell upon loyalty, nor to com pare it with the hastily formed opinion ol Gen. Grant respecting Southern senti , .. .. incut. Our object was to get be,eat!, | ?here they foundI disloyalty manifesting , in? God for father anU j the surface in the South, to find the true j ^ unmistakably on all sides. -U c | 0U; .ht not to be afraid of any spirit, wheth- ■ehnr.ictor of the social substratum. We ! : * n v \ , lhc 1 roed,I,an f S f I / urcau ’ j er in the body or out of it, he mustered d in Richmond a few days, to ! wl ’° h r; * ve !t as lns °P !nlon ,hat the WJ,r | courage enough to approach, and was ad- was only half over, ana that unless the | dre?ssd j n these words, powers eif the Bureau were enlarged so i «* John Stacy, I am the spirit of a mur- as to give him control of the cotton cx-1 dered nian. I met my fate on this hill ported fioin Savannah, the glorious em- j My murderer can never be discovered, bleni of our national liberties would not uu i css y,, u undertake a certain float unmolested very long. He had not himself, as he supposed, from the saddle, ” but on awaking, found that he was stand- in the middle of the floor. Horse, road, spirit, all vanished. Rut one thing fur grey over bln ', which extended itself even to the ladies’ petticoats, many of which your committee carefully examined. It. is proper to state that the articles thus | scrutinized were hanging on a line to dry and had no ladies in them. Your Committee next visited Savannah, seemed to him the evidence of senses. There teas a ghost; he saw it. as , ... , . i a clew to the first step, or ter there was no disputing what now j t „ his own | P ' , ,, N. R.—It is hut just to state that Mr. ... , ” ,i,„ f, i S. was a man of great sobriety and truth- plainly as he ever saw the nuurc or a i *• J neighbor. Debating the matter with himself, how- conclusion tha fulness of character, and was a prominent TITLES CONFERRED ON TIIE CHILDREN OF ITURBIDE. The Emperor Maximilian, whishing to honor the memory of the Emperor Itur bide, the liberator of Mexico, conferred the title of Prince on the two children, his grandsons, and the title of princess on his daughter, Miss Josephine Iturbide. These titles are to be held for life, and are not hereditary. THE ADOPTED ITURBIDE NOT MADE THE HEIR TO THE THRONE. The Emperor Maximilian adopted one of the grandchildren of the Emperor to be educated and cared lor at ,-eminent. Rut he to the throne.— made him heir to the fertile brain writer: PESIOXS GRANTED TO THE SONS OF ITURBIDE. Don Augustine, Don Angel, Don Sal vador, and the other sons of Iturbide remained m Lie stu-ly the character of the people. On -al 1 hands we f-uind evidences of d stinc- tion on account of color, except in a Treed man's colony, where the blacks re ceived the whites on an equal footing ,'C j.mg^t ayr j y j a ) ‘ r C at " t l | 1 g i member of one of the oldest and most in-, have received large sums of money from ' t t r> - . 3 chri' tian man h iv i fluential churches in the State. The | the Imperial Government, not as a coin- Other and ' protector, he j ?uthor of this article wishing to be exact pensation for having renounced any rights Jorious em-1 liberties would not i which 1 will point out to you , .. 1 l ! !». I t . .. oim.lA tou.rmvfr Yll AlKrli I loyal disposition Jackson and Gen. J,oe m terms ot prni and commendation, while Gen. Rutier's name was only mentioned in contemptuous connection with silver spoons and occa sionally a lirile plated ware, and he him- ~ jself seemed to be better known as the Bottle Imp of Bermuda Hundreds, than in any other way. “Our next visit was to Atlanta, Ga.— , . . . . , , , , t , ,, Tore we had a long consultation with a raised his parricidal hand against the old Treasury Agent, w ho had had ample i^P- Here was a preferment for services * - - ' - rendered to the rebel cause, and there course Jo it are in his own account of the dream, compar-1 to the crown of Mexico, for they had cd notes with a son of Mr. S. and was in-1 none, and never professed to have any, formed that the above account is just as; but because the Government of Maxiuiil- the son had often heard from the the father. lips of with themselves. W e also noticed a dis-. . , . , . - • . - . _ ... to speak of Stonewall 1 been invited to a single tea-party, though | (ls [ rr p and you hnoic it; but will you . Li e in terms of praise l' c h«d lived in Savannah for a year, while | su l enin ]y promise that, when you awake, returned Confederates were cordially grec-; you vv jjj pursue the course I now mark t.-d by brothers, s'sters. mothers and ( Jut ?» swee hearts. He himself had been on ; He said he would promise; then the intimate terms with a yong lady who | sp ; r it went on to detail very clearly, as represented many thousand bales of cot-' j JC thought, the steps to be pursued ; the ton, but of late a one-armed rebel had interview ended and the sleeper awoke, come home, and lie of the F. R. had \] r g relates that his thoughts on this been discarded in favor of him who had su bject. after awaking, were very perplex “ : '' , ‘ 1 ing. He said to hiuiself: “ I have made a promise while asleep. ian, or rather the Emperor himself, wish ed to grant them a sum of money in the nature of a pension, and thus acknowl edged the claim which they had in equi ty against the public treasure. This ac tion on the part of Maximilian, was done Thad. Stevens and the Devil. A few nights since a friend of ours, while wrapped in the slumbers of mid-, . . - „ . . . ni-dit, “ dreamed a dream,” and imagined | the spirit of paying tribute to the mem- that he was on a pleasure excursion to! ory of their honored father, who is be- the infernal regions. His sight was galcd with many scenes novel, s'range; and undreamed of in the philosophy of that when awake I would pursue a certain man. While in the reception room of His Majesty, the pleasant little imp who acts as usher, announced “lhadcus Stevens ! ’ “ What, that noisy fellow from Penn- Jyvania “ Yes.” responded the u-her, “Send him back! send him back rc . 1 loved by every Mexican. LETTER OF MADAME ITURBIDE TO THE EMPRESS. There was no plot to take the adopted child away from his mother, Madame Iturbide. This lady willingly signed a family compact, while she gives up her sun to the Emperor and Empress, to be educated and cared for according to bis rank and title This compact was sighed her husband and two brothers- LADIES Ml GENTLEMEN’S nuri All varieties of CSI&BSSSTS Bums, BOYS & GENTLEMEN’S NOTIONS, Of all kinds; JIWIU HOOP &BALMQ3AL SKIRTS; CLOAKS, CORSETS; HARD-WARE CUTLERY. Also a large and full supply of all kinds of GROCERIES & COLLEGE TEMPLE,” T HE xercises of this Institution will be resumed on Monday, the 15th of Jany. RATES OF TUITION: Preparatory Department,-per annum, §50 ^o-tlegiate, ...» 75 Tuition fees desired in advance when practi cable. The Music Department will be as heretofore under the control of Prof. Seals. WALKER, Principal. Prof. Walker having taken charge of ““CoU lege Temple,” 1 most cheerfully recommend him to the full confidence and patronage of all who may desire t0 : secure fbr their daugh ters a thorough aud complete education. M. P. KELLOGG, Prcs’t and Proprietor.' /.in. 13-19-tfi GRAJTTVTT «T H i g li School. Male and Female Collegiate Institute, LEONIDAS JONES, Principal, Professor Mathematics, Jirwit Languages, <J-c. THOMAS J. GIBSON, Assistant, Instructor in English Branches.- Music Department. Exercises begin on the sccortd Mortday in January, 18GG. Course of Study and Bates of Tuition per Scholastic Month. Primary Department, (Spelling, Read ing and Writing,) ,...$2 50 Preparatory Department, (English Grammar, Geography, Arithmetic,Ac.,) 4 00 1 Commercial Department, (English' Grammar, English Composition.-Arith-, metic, Book Keeping, Penmanship, A7- gclira, &c.,) 6 Colleoiate Department, (Natural Sci ences and Belles Letters, Declamation, Latin, Greek, French, Higher Mathe matics, Music, Ac.,) 5 00' 00 J. M. MANN, Salesmen INN, 1 J. A. HUNTER. / Neivnan, Ga. ' R. T. HUNTER, 1 Salesmen JOS. NALLS, / for Lorcli&Co. A. M. WOOD, ) Salesmen W. MARTIN, / Franklin, Ga. Sept. 1G 2 tf. JOHNSON & GARRETT, DEALERS tN G eor a°lo va 11 v!''' I Ic ‘cave it'^hisopin'- <^1. <^cs which your commit- co^rsT" But am I bound by this prom-j cried Satan, “ There is no place here f ” r ! {* !his arran-e- ,i it ibo ^.lnthern 'Matos to i lce rogret to find General Grant has ndse ? Has there been any murder?— him.” j m-law. A 3 . . ° 10n th . hi, • i.uld be omitted entirely. j Was ' that carnest-Io-king and solemn-1 “ Rut,” responded the little devil who rnant nad been consummated,Madame Uur- IdllhTy injudicious lie did not" believe Your committee do not deem it neoes j speaking spirit, to whom I made this seemed to enjoy an event which wromisod bide wrota a ‘gr c^rdi t 1 iT highly injudicious. m g( ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ j nf0 fartlier particulars to show pUiseTa real second party, to whom I | to knock the sand from under h.s tmpC-; lot te, u, which she thanked her cordially, that the spirit which animated the rebel- .-unbound? or was it a real phantom ere- rial Chief, “you must receive him, he . and expressed her grattude for l.oii still exists in the South, and that; atcd by my fancy ? The dream is most! can ft go anywhere else/’ j ‘»°n o f T . w* r the time has not yet pome for the re ad- remarkable, but of course it is ouly aj Satan walked tho floor with rapid can no c oppon - _<• >p- mission of the Southern States to the dream.” Union. there was a white native of the loyal enough to take his place, and asser ted that to remove him and others simi larly situated would be not only dangerous to the welfare of tho country, but would also be the height of ingratitude to im n who had risked character and reputation for the patriotic cause ol cotton and ten or twelve thousand dollars a year. \ our committee concumd entirely in his opinion. “ While in Atlanta your committee ■ heard many expressions ■ f sentiment which goes to show how far Gen. Grant is mistaken in what he says in his late ie- port. pn one occasion especially we heard what convinced us the lava of seces sion still burned in tho S uthern bosom. Sovereigns of England—An Ox ford correspondent desires us to state the roll of the sovereigns of England. Y c will commence with the present one and go back : Queen 3 ictori.i, M illiam 1\ , George 1Y. George III, George II,George tion of her child. The Iturbide family Satan walked tho floor with — r -_. .. - ; 'trides for a few moments, when sudden- ; imiiian because they have not now am With this conclusion he composed ly-he stopped and said, “I have it! he j never had any party or party popularity himself once more to sleep. Rut scarce- j may have a few bushels of briinestone -lexteo. Jy had he become conscious of having and a box of matches, and go off and . *■** T ’** passed into the land of visions, ere he start a little Hell of his own.”—Xatchez' A Start IN THF. World.—Many a found himself again on horseback, travel- Courier. j p ron t works hard and lives sparingly all iug along the same road as before, and j ---* ~ — ' i his life for the purpose of laying up enough T)TTfU \T IY Tl\ QIIllP aliproacbing tl.c scene of lit. dream. And, Cuimese Tejhmony -It» nid that ch! u re „ .. Js(ar , .UckotH." lH(LMA HA AUU1 , ill ere a^-ain stood the spirit, eyeing hnn ; the Chinese, when brought into court £Sj l<J o 1 "' . and beckoning i witnesses in California, are sworn in the j This kind of wordly wisdom u great lo.ly, j —at THE— General Merchandise and all kinds or COUNTRY PRODUCE, Brick Front, Second Door from Herald Office, NEWNAN, GA., Will keep on hand a general assortment of ?urh goods as are needed in the country, which they will sell Low for Cash or Country Produce. November 11-10-Stn. TO TO'£ IPOTM(B. The above School will consist of two Terms —six months for the first, and four for the second. Students entering either of these will be charged from time of entrance until close of the Term. Tuition payable at the clost of each month. Board and lodging Can' Be had at $20 per month. To yonng men preferring to board themselves, Maj. Moreland and others have offered to furnish timber, anil allow them to build rooms on their land, near the Academy, free of charge. “Christian Associmtion” every Wednesday night. Lectures on Bible subjects. 11 Literary Society” — important subjects discussed—every Friday night. Respectfully, LEONIDAS JONES, Principal. Maj. R. 0. Moreland, 1 Rev. W. B. Smith, j Rev. E. Stafford, ' Trustees. Thos. C. Moreland, | John W. Arnold, J [Dec. 2-13-2nr. MALE SCHOOL. T HE undersigned, having rented the “ Phi- lomathic Institute,” respectfully announce to the citizens of Newnan and surrounding country that they will open a HALE SCHOOL, Monday, Jan. 15th, I860. Tiie room3 are commodious and well ar ranged for the comfort of students. Spelling, Reading, Arithmetic, Algebra, Ge ometry, Trigonometry and the higher Mathe matics taught. Also the Latin and Greek Languages. Boys prepared for a College course. Ztatofli of Tu.ition. Spelling, Reading, Geography and Arithmetic $4 00 per month. Other branches 5 00 “ “ B^,Due first day of each month. Those desiring to send their boys or wards would do well to see W. S. BEADLES, Nov. 4-0-tf. W. T. FREEMAN. Who Wants Literary Aid? I WILL give Literary aid in any direction, for moderate remuneration. I will fnrn- isli, at short notice. Essays on any subject, Orations. Poetical Effusions, Communications for the Press, and such like. All communica tions strictly private. Address, enclosing stamp, -A- J- SMITH, January 20-6m. Newnan, Ga. and Marv, James with a sad, reproving U-k. Rim with asiVJCt ot li Commonwealth of" to him with an aspect of authority. { manner peculiar to their country. An j especially where it leads to the negject of j Queen .'lary, Henry Y III, Henry Ylf. Richard soon as III, “ vou have tth, written in Chinese characters upon mental aducation. ribed ashes. Nay it is often fullow- Setting TIN T EEE. myvr x hxi I, Queen Anne, William II, Charles II, (th „ . . Cromuell) Cluries I, J jme& I, Qucui . Junn . Licey^ the f f ^ i t i s *ue paper, is subscribed with their; ed by the most ruinous results hilizabcth, Queen -Mary, Edward \ I, soon as he " ^ omiscd nam es .ml burned to ashes. The pur- 3 y0 J ng man afloat with money which he j »oke, you would pursue | port of the oath is, that if the witness ne ver aided in earning, is like tying Had-, arv to reveal the circum- J docs not tell the truth, he hopes that his under the arms of one who never; w }i en you soul may be burned and destroyed as is learned to swim Ten chances to one he j the capacity of a treed man's school teach- VY, Richard I Henrv II Henry I 'awoke' vou resolved that your promise the paper which he holds iu his hands, will lose his bladders, and sink to theshot- j , s . lie h«l ( »8i lorincj t!'eaetjuuiu- wiUiim RmV, Willum ‘the niWi.il, that !»■ ‘in SL .^‘.^1^11 not nee.l the kind-: tanceot a beuthern l.Jj ol no score caIrics tho historr of E.iuland ■ reaird it. Rcronniber that nnte. jw- ° } a „„ reliable A! Tr.c parent who gives hi, child a- and ten. whose hush md had Inlloo nodrr , ,,, c ri „., ? f , ht X„ rma o r ,u Stwcj,, undermko the' R-or ler 5 is often ^d e-luct oo, who trains him t, IndM-l ,ho rebel fla- t leavm- her a widow ol st . „ hi .. h »„‘ s nbottt right hundred rny ntnrder nmst rym-a.n ~ '^^o disehaLe prisoner, n^lSS, habit, Ld base, his principles] years ago. Since then some thirty-four Now, will you promise n:e a^am . "kings have worn the scepter.— Cincin- LnQtlirCr. | I nnU UIMTCKUCICS WUItU -tit. ,n — - U<IU1U man — I — , , , , ■ o J n f- fh ‘ covered iu their testimony. j insures a succcs.- fni career. Other kiuds | Tin Ware rciueet-oper^ceii . Governor Patton, of Alabama, informs could be uttered m w..rds : *• bei a - , - — , of 4 start ” make ‘ fast young men,’ who! c<m c ' OI ' c ever vb,«iy ; a 'nd buy! be buried I the editor of the Montgomery Mail that ful. the second inter, lew c. -c - - . \ eotcmnorarv says, “The first Ur'.n- not oniy ‘stick fa-I by the waj, but oc- j ^-ni ,iu;.Iicate bill? bought at wholesale in soldiers will certainly dreamer awoke. . . ' Titaiis.” There are a iiaod i come utfcrly worthless to themselves aud j anv niar ket in the Union since the war. school teacher no longer fli. s Ihc rod of| he w.thJrawn trom that Stale as soon as j ]»'l£ to d. ! man, " .i S Ut uns ” wnnan;; :heu still. uUma 1 chastisement to refnictor, frcclmeu.—' the militia t, propcil, or-nuizcd. and he t» 0 M u.n. , t The cause was that of a young gentleman jej <rard y, Edward IV, Henry VI, Hen- that, when yon awi Irom Massachusetts, of poor but h uicst rv l] 0 u r y jy. Richard II, Edward III, the corns‘ necessary to rei parents, who had come to the South in jg dward U, Edward I, Henry III, King stances of my murder; but handsome estate. The young gentleman, desirous of m itrlmony and p!a nations, pressed his suit, and was progressing, as lie thought, most favorably, when one evening tiie widow told him at a te.i-p. rty. in the presence of a large number of people, “that she'd rathe alive than marry a Yankee.” The pairiot; the United States soldiers the rod of i be withdrawn from that State ns soon a W. m. Koynolds TT T OULD respectfully inform everybody 'V am! the balance of mankind, that lie is now prei-'irC'J to furnish anything and etert thing iu the way of STOVES & Tirr-x. ryrn AX JL'xxxxi) At the verv lowest prices and shortest notice, of Family Cook Stoves, to $50, according to size THOMAS BARNES, Depot Str., Newnan, Ga., Will repair neatly and promptly <£33.c2>C!30s.S3a Nyy S3 -AND— <£T (B Hljpy Seutember 30-4-ly. NEW BAKERY. Fresh Bread! The undersigned is prepared to furnish FRESH BREAD EVERY MORNING. If liberallv patronized, customers can have bread sent to them before breakfast each day. Oct. 28-8-3m. W. B. CHAPMAN. J. C. WOOTTEN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, NEWNAN, GEORGIA. IrZ Sep". i itlic: in the Herald 011ice. c =5ja a -1—tf.