The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887, June 02, 1866, Image 1

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A t Bcimwit M)cn\lb. NAN EEALD \\ r i io r rKN & wiat.cn, ’’ ?ropri*tor»- -—*7T Editor. % %’cflui) |J onnral;-*-^Dcvotftl to Politics, jilfw.s, SbtmiTtoc, Coinwctic, &t. o 3 "O ^v—j v ^ * * y <) U “ 1 (*d ftn extra co ibe Vol ;.r vol. ij IsEAVZST AiN\ GEORGIA. SATURDAY, JUISTE 2, 1SG6. [NO. 39. Or Hchraan fjcraO). F$7 WELCH, Publisher. Rate* of Advertising. Advertisements inserted at $1.50 per square (often linc^or space equivalent,) for first inser tion, ancf 75 cents for each subsequent in- i sertion. Monthly or semi-monthly advertisements ! inserted at the same rates as for new advertise ments, each insertion. I Liberal arrangements will be made with j those advertising by the quarter or year. All transient advertismeats must be paid I for when handed in. j The money for advertising due after the I first insertion. Letter Inc rom Gen. Shields —A Strong going the way of all other Republics on My fellow-citizens, there is but one : Browulow on Prentice and Vice Versa; like that of a dead man, who mistaking a rsement of the President. 'his continent, we will owe it, tinder God,, proposition that has been presented which ; —Two old Whig Chums drawing each I boy’s tooting horn for Gabriel’s trumpet, • .i.i.t'iN, Mo., May 1. I860-. to Andrew Johnson. If we are ever stands even the ghost of a chance of ac- ethers’ Portraits. > has got up for judgment before his time. -If sr* Chirk H. Green, \Y. 0. 15. Gilles- a g ain to have an J' tlli, ig wojdhy .of being ceptance by the people of the North, and ; A late number of the Knoxville Whig.: Ilis evil passions have killed every sern- 7 j, Tuik, Macon, Mo. called a i nion, we will owe it tp his loy- 'hat is the proposition basing representa- edited by Parson Browniow, comes back blance of human nature in his features, 1 l)ira . J deeply regret my ina- a ^i* ar M^ intrepidity, Bi^t a l o;Kii kept tion on votes; and whose fault is it that at Prentice of the Louisville Journal, for j if there ever was such a semblance there 1 Ov- to e niily with my engagement at together by bayonets, or,'what is worse, j that is not a part of the Constitution to-j some personal reflections of the latter, in j “People of Tennessee! lo, your Gov- !'r place on Monday next. The sudden by a swarm of official vern'fmTappointed day!" ^ ; the following style : ernor! '°1 «erious indisposition of a member of under the Civil Rights bill; to interfere | \Y by was it not submitted with the, George D Prentice ! the embodiment ‘With one hand clenched to hatter noses, * v family, makes it imperative on me to *Uh the 1 .vs, tribunals and rights of the amend At abolishisg'slvery ? Whose j all tha ° t is fficrceD arv, intemperate and I remain at home until it be God’s will to f' a ^ a "'l «»• hereditary constitutional fault was that? Was it the fault of An- cornlpt , George D. Prentice 1 the butt- j Hieve me Iren anxiety. I beg that you liberty of the people,^ is not worth an drew Johnson ? leUow-citizcns, have , cut of Griginal gin, the upper-crust of] will make this known to your people as " **"“ “ ' ' ‘ J. C. THOMPSON. Y. H. THOnnSOS While t'other scrawls 'bont Paul and Moses,’ IV l’ur f.iilfng to attend, and the more as I make it n po Canine Sagacity. , . • T , - 7’ ", ; : cut or urigmai ciu, me upper-crust, oi | ; , „ , hours preservation. No, let us have a only this to say: 1 have desired and a i| urines* a miserable old broken 1 A gentleman, one of the survivors of [ real Union — a Union of hearts, laws, hoped for a continuance of this great j 0 wn hack steeped to the nose and chin ! t ^ le ih-fatad steamer Anglo Saxon, gives ,t rights and privileges, or no Union. The Union party with which I have ever been ; n _ eTSonm j and pojitioal profligacy lost th^followingmarrative oi the escape or’j nt of this people will have no radical Union, with identified; but if its leaders can present ! t0 a i, sense ot - honor and shame, and blind tl,e boats through the pilotage of two, hr the pressure of over- New England for ito bead aud Texas for: nothing better than the programme of ; t0 all the obli i ga .; ona „f patriotism 1” j Newfoundland dogs : {• t m .,, 1V its tail. We will have do Union with t.he committee, I am "ready apprehensive t> r f . r* r ** . 1 1 he last time I saw Captain Burgess L he-valUr atone' for this failure ft eleven States out or Africanized. j that its days will be numbered I tn2J j ^ nlKC retorls aftcr the follow,n S j (the commander of the Anglo-Saxon), he 'V , j .1 . i_ crl ’ The war, it is true, has made us a pa- lellow-eitizens, that this will not be the 7 ^ c ’ ; was assisting to lower the small boat, in r i 7. 1 f , nZ- tlirrmV'lilv tient people, and taught ns to submit to case; that it will discard hostility and its . “ 01d Governor Brown low, after keep- which were embarked twenty-two men, . j I ,] .... ,.ssitv for exer- a:, y kind of government; but tills must attempt to continue alienation between i ' n S tbe ®khy hole in his mouth shut for one lady, and myself. M e left without . tl ' , , M'i.. not lie mistaken for a blind, ignorant, or thetwosections ofthecouiitry,andthat sevcra '" rce k* > comesoutw:thanothcrat- °i f ti;:. I C m tolW be 1 submission. We will start up it will embrace those principles which | tack upon us in his Knoxville Whig, ! 1 |., this 1 i.rree wi'h ^the wideawake some bright morning, and look to harmony and to the restoration of which has ever been a disgrace to Knox- Hdent, and think it waubl he treason conclude that a rump Congress and a peace. If it should do this it viU stiU j vi»e to Tenna^ to .....i I j,rump Union at the same time are not continue to be the great and controlling ; uncmlization. lie never naa nnna do to continue silent quite the thing for this country; and so party of the country, and cover itself, enough to keep his body from rotting J. C. THOMPSON & BRO. TT7* OTTLD respectfully inform their friends \ V and the public generally, that they can be found Up Stairs, over the Store-Room of Redwine, Culpopper & Co., and are prepared to MAKR AND REPAIR FURNTITURE at the shortest notice and in good strle. IVe are also prepared to make cMfMMpWSf: April H-32-tf. ! pe to the G| men who think food, compass, or sufficient cliothing.— We were knocked about in a fog all day, not knowing whither we were drifting. Toward evening, however, we espied a cliff of Belle Isle, when we steered info Cape Race which we made. Approach and indifferent at such u crisii jears of civil war did the work \ f ... sure as we open our eves to this fact, we with imperishable glory. If it does not, | consequently he has always been a mass ing the shore, we saw a man carryin * v Ic * v , , 1 , , n • i -i i • _ i i i * „ _ j : i. of nntrprnp.linn : hf* lias never li:ul snfiR-! Vowl'iir altering character of t pc and privileged Johnson Meeting in Philadelphia. Philadelphia, May 19.—The Acad emy of Music, was crowded to-night to its fullest extent by an enthusiastic audience of ladies and gentlemen to listen to speeches by Senators Cowan and Doolittle , , , in support of President Johnson. Henry : country and to the pr.n, E 0CCU p ;e d the chair, ut.onal liberty, to sustain | genator J jj, oolittle , after treating the subject of the rebellion and the present issue before the country, declared that the man who denies the Union of the States under the Constitution is himself a disunionist. [Enthusiastic applause.] lie refuted the many calumnies that had been raised against the personal character of the President, and express ed his firm belief that no man living was more assiduously and conscientiously engaged in the discharge of his duty to his couutry than Andrew Johnson.— [Loud applause.] He illustrated the policy of President Lincoln in his recommendation of the admission of Louisiana and Arkansas into the Union, which policy had been indors ed by the Baltimore Convention, and by a majority in both houses of Congress a of putrefaction ; he has never had suffi- | gun, accompanied by two large Newfound It knew ; cient common sense to last hitn_ over | ] an d dogs. He evidently saw us, and night, so that he wakes up a miserable made a signal for us to approach the fool every morning; and this last effort shore cautiously. We followed his course of his in his Whig is the poorest, the f or some time, till lie was hid from us by feeblest, the jejuuest, the most comtempt- a large cliff which it was impossible he ible that wc have seen even from him.— | could descend. It doesn’t rise even to the low level of; The two dogs, however, soon appeared, invective. There is no more talent in 1 descending this dangerous head land, and VIRO.T3MI A TOBACCO HOUSE. D ON’T purchase until you p all at P. A. GIVER’S TOBACCO HOUSE, wtierc you will find him ever ready and willing to accommodate all ana give GOOD BARGAINS, his writing than in the scratchings of a upon reaching the water, dashed precipi dung-hiil fowl upon a nung-hill. It is a tately into the sea, howling dreadfully, mere concatenation of vulgar epithets and j Having swam out close to the boat, they f centu- will do what .Colonel Pride did with the its days are numbered, and the epitaph Taiid deterioratin ’- the 1 tump Parliament—send the rump Con- that will be written will be: •b and none butrstron«' gress to seek the devil, anywhere else ; how to prosecute the war with vigor, hut rices ever recover from i except in Washington—and bring back a it lacked the wisdom to avail itself of the ucHJcterioratien. whole Union, in all its beauty and majes- benefits of victory.” [Applause.] Most cations havo to pass through a Uy, the greatest and noblest political struc- seeond conservative revolution to recover ture in the world. 1 o effect this peacea- their lost position, and ff wo escape from 1 )! L we must have a thorough organization that calamity it will he by a violent po- of R>c people. Every man who wants to litic.il struggle, am-anting in substance ! preserve the Constitution and the Uoiou t.i a revolution. The bad passions of ought to enter a Johnson Club. Wc owe human nature once stimulated by war, j’t to the noble stand taken by the 1 resi- survive the occasion and make the period i dent to sustain him; and what is moie, that succeeds .one of bitter revenge and ■ w e owe it to the cruel persecution. It was at first hoped ciples of constitutional liberty, and believed by the friends of human I his policy so long as he sustains the Con- frccdotn everywhere, that our new people, I stitution and the Union. The Radical educated under the benign and elevated Action must be put down by a peaceable influence of liberty, would- show to the organization, or the country will drift world that the defeated party in a civil rapidly Into a social civil revolution, war would accept their defeat with digni- Gentlemen, I have the honor to be ty, and return to their allegiance without 3’ eur obedient servant, qny feeling of dishonor or degradation, Jas. Shields. and that the victorious party, disdaining 1 .. ' ' 7 the base and cowardly gratification ot re-1 Speecli of Mr. McCulloch, Secretary of vengc,and confident of their own strength, the Treasury, justice and magnanimity, couid welcome i At Washington, in response to a Sere- Iiaek their erring brethren without seek- mule Wednesday night. ing or desiring to insult, humiliate or de | The Secretary of the Treasury was grade them, or render them unworthy of next called on. Mr. McCulloch said: that hicli destiny which should be the j Fellow-Citizens: My position in refer- pride and boast of the free-born citizens j ence to the issues now engaging public of the only great Republic iu the world. ! attention is not, I apprehend, misunder- Tliis wuuhl have exalted our national stood by you. [Cheers.] I will say, character in the estimation of Christian-1 therefore, as I suppose I must say some- j ^5^ a g 0j t 0 show that the policy of Pres- ity. and like all public conduct which is j tiling on this occasion, that the general ! Jdeut Johnson was not a new one, but truly great and noble, would redound to policy of the President in reference to (jj a ^ was j Q obedience to the wishes of the highest interest and advantage of our the Southern States and people, recently j Union party. Instead of the Presi- countrv. But all of these bright hopes j in arms against the bederal Government, : j en (; proving false, the men who were now liavQ been doomed to sad and hitter dis-I has commended itself to my deliberate i i ca j; n g the Union party were pervert- appurntiucnt. 4 * I judgment, [( beers,] And although it' ; n g its grand objects and intentions—the The leaders; of the present Congress ; has been violently, and in some instances | res toration of the Union and enforcement arc giving the most convincing proof that 1 vindictively, assailed, I have a conviction j 0 p laws. a single despot, however cruel, can be i that it will be approved by the people Senator Cowan followed in an eloquent more magnanimous and merciful than the j when they shall be allowed to pass judg- argument in defence of sustaining the inflamed fanatical representatives of a j ment upon it. I suppose, gentlemen, ] aWj hy virtue of which the rebellion had free people. They are not content with j that none of us expected that at the j ^j een crushed. The President’s plan of trying to humiliate, degrade and dishonor ! close of this great war, in which much ; reconstruction relies alone upon the au the whole Southern people, en mass, loyal j bad blood had been excited, and n10 ^® thority of the Constitution—the law of and rebel, but they are determined to! good blood had been shed, we should I j an( j [Cheers.] If the Southern perpi-tua'o that degradation and fasten it have bright skies and calm skies. people had not forgotten their obedience | the hell to kindle the waging member.— upon their iniioceut posterity, by divest- ! 11 e anticipated that at the close of this Constitution there would have been j Beelzebub’s tail is forever coiled like a ing them of all political power, and in- j war great questions would come n P for 1 nQ rc ij e ii; on . He was opposed to any snake around the miscreant’s neck. There vcsliug their slaves of yesterday with full I settlement, the discussion of which would j amcn (] m cnt of the Constitution at the political power to dominate over them.— i be likely to agitate this country, to shake 1 p resen t time. [Great and continued ap- They imagine, and perhaps rightly, that it from centre to circumference; but we ; pi ause .] As indorsers of the President’s 110 human punishment could degrade the ; know also that the people had not been | p 0 j; C y fie would mention Seward, Stanton, Southern whites like that of investing wanting in uny previous emergency, and 1 \y e ii eSj Q ran t y gherm a n, Mende, Hancock, their recent slaves with power to decide 1 we had confidence that they would be an j others. [Vociferous cheering.] On upon their destiny. I prepared to cope with, and settle sati§fac-; 0 [jj er fi a nd, in opposition, he placed , God as much by his blasphemies as if he Tlicro is a coldly calculated, refined j torily. any questions that might be pre- the name3 0 f Stevens, Butler, and others, had stolen the sacramental vessels or used vindictiveness in this that would do credit sented. [Applause] _ ^ ! [Mingled hisses and slight applause.] J them in treating his congregation to ap to the denizens of a datker ri Aon than That faith is strong with ns now. lie In^conclusion, Mr. Cowan said his hope nle iack. It is a wonder that in his lies—vile lies for which there is not so much as the thin and shadowy ghost of a pretext. It is the simple raving of a broken down, infuriated and weak old man or no-man—so weak that, like the lean dog we read of, he has to lean against a fence to do’ his barking. All the little atom of sense he ever had—if lie ever had an atom—has gone to the grave be fore him, but not much before him, it is to be hoped, for mankind’s sake. He has no right to be still haunting 1 the glimpses of the moon.’ He i3 a loathsome fistula of the body politic. He is a mangy old dog—a disgrace to his own fleas. He is foul bubble floating on the surface of a ccss-pool. * * * * * _ “ It is pretty extensively believed in Nashville that Brownlow is insane. We don’t believe it. Insanity has been de fined to be ‘ the entanglement of thoughts,’ but he hasn’t thoughts enough to make a tangle. ’Ti3 a pity for him that he isn’t insane, for it would be the only ex cuse, utter mental Imbecility excepted, for the disgrace he is inflicting upon the the State in which he dwells. He calls himself a man of God. He professes to be a messenger of ‘ peace and good will to men ’ lie holds himself up or out as a saint ordained and annointed to estab lish the spirit of Chriatianity among mankind. But he has ever promoted strifes and fights and bloodshed in neigh borhoods. lie has been a pest, an itch, a leprosy, a yellow plague in every com munity. lie lias distilled venom like a human bohun upas. His tonge has ever been ‘set on fire of hell,’ his heart bein WHOLESALE OR RE i AIL. has never been any more religion or de cency in his sermons, or his prayers, or his exhortations, or his talk at death-beds, than in the yelling of hyenas, the curs ings of pirates, or of the objurgations of harlots. lie has desecrated the house of then turned close to the shore, keepin short distance from us, indicating that we were to follow them. Our singular pilots seemed to understand the danger of our position and we did not deviate from the course they were leadin without a loud howl being uttered by them. At last we arrived in a natural creek, where a safe landing was effected. No other similar creek was to be seen which caused all to wonder at the sagaci ty displayed by these dumb animals. No doubt our presevation was in a great measure attributable to these noble do. .An alarm having been raised, a rope was let down by a pulley, and we were taken up the cliff, which is one hundred and fifty feet in height. We were shortly after enabled to reach the light-house where every attention was paid us. A Wonderful Phenomenon. A 3fnn who can keen awake as long as he pleases, and then sleep as long as he pleases—He keeps awake for over one month, and then sleeps three weeks. Starkville, April 14, I860. Ed. of Wilkes’ Spirit of the Times : Sir : The following very strange and anomalous circumstance has just trans pired in our community. Mr. Gabriel Ellis, a flourishing dry-goods merchant, had frequently remarked that he could sit up three weeks without any material detriment to his health : and that after the expiration of that time he could go to sleep, and sleep without waking until the loss was made up. lie was led to believe this fact from experiments on a smaller scale. In the early part of Feb ruary he sold his store and invested the capital thus raised in a farm, which gave him leisure ; and in compliance with the wishes of several scientific gentlemen, he began on the 11th day of February to abstain from sleep. Gentlemen sat up by turns to satisfy themselves of his strange faculty; and to preclude all possibility of being accused of momentary snatches of sleep, he would read audibly all night long and keep bis feet during the day— watched all the while at his own request. He would comment in a clear, forcible and intellectual manner upon what he read — deploring the heartlessness of “ lago,” laughing at the inimitable drolle ry and humor of the “ Army Straggler,” etc. On the 16th day of March, at the earnest solicitation of friends, he went to sleep for the first time, and did not wake until the ninth day of the present month. He expressed the opinion that he could stay awake a year, and then sleep in pro portion, without injuring his constitution. Tobacco, Cigars, Snuff, Soda, Cheese, Crackers, Sugar, Coffee, Flour, Bacon, Salt, Sorghum Syrup, New Orleans Syrup, Spades, Shovels, Factory Cotton, Brooms, IVater Buckets, And a general assortment of everything kept in a Go to tlic Tobacco House at once to purchase. February 3-22-tf. NBW_€OOBS! CHEAP BARGAINS! J. LORC1I & CO., Ilavo- just received at J. M. DODD'S old stand, South- West Corner Public S ([ u a r e , NEWNAN, GEORGIA, A new and large supply ot READY MADE STAPLE COOOS, LADIES and GENTLEMEN’S 0 All varieties of CEI!.JIL£S’S SHOES, BOYS & GENTLEMEN’S of the characteristics of the cold-blooded ful passage has been accomplished. An- to t j, erUj a f ter they had surrendered to universal damnation, provided he could faction, that iu cveu gratifying their re- drew Johnson’s policy is straigthforward, t j lg j aw . ’ t, e ese mpt himself. In his black robes vengc they never lose sight of their own iutelligible and practicable, and, if a bet- j After speeches by other distinguished immediate interest. The whole political ter policy can be presented, one more in , TCnt i emel £ t h e meeting adjourned. power of the South, when once African- consonance with the principles ot the j ° B ^ . T ized, can be made available by suitable Government, and better calculated to pre-j loose Legislation agent* under their Civil Rights bill, and serve the supremacy of the Federal author- 0 such other kindred measures as they may authority, while it trenches on the reserved The case of the State vs. Dano Frown, be able to pass over the Presidents veto. ! and legitimate rights of the States, more afreedman who was indicted for vagrancy. The - -- intend bill der remomberc« — , . - petty, hungry officials are to be sent there a policy can be presented, there to take charge of the negroes and sustain 111 the l nited States who them against the whites, and to enforce lingly embrace it than Andy John; negro equality, we niav form some idea of [ Heart y <-bcers.] I oone ot Georgia, auu.or.ziug rue uup- | decpnt , e would reC ognize his prox-1 press an the pretty little Radical pandemonium I But until that better policy be presen- Court to try cases of vagrancy, was re-|. at twice that distance. He can periments and discoveries, I desist, -hey mean to establish in that devoted ted, he must be false to himself, false to pealed by an act of the last Legislature ^ dq hcmhhfcl slmnb ers-only con- Yours, very truly, vgiou. To even discuss the uneoustitu-1 his record, and must, in fact, cease to be ; and the powcr to try such cases conferred , vu]siong xhe w j, ole of the beautiful Richard L. Dante. Rooality of this bill would be treating it Andrew Johnson, if he does not adhere npon the County Court alone. I wor 'ld—sky, earth and sea-must be as with too much respect. No man who to his policy, and *ink or swim w.tn it. , 2 d. As it was perfectly competent for black as E rebu s to bis eyes. Every rstands our svstem of government j [Cheers.] _ ^ ^ j the Legislature to retain jurisdiction j n ’ SO und must be to his ears like a wad or and white cravat, he might remind one of a black snake with a white streak around his neck. “ What an infinitely miserable old man this must be. He never did a generous or kind thing in his life. He was ever . _ meditating the sratifieation of his malice, i He never gets sleepy until he closes his ever been seeking to steal upon eyes and resigns himself to slumber, at suspecting neighbors like a hungry I which time he gets to sleep almost in- a bird. Every man has a deadly stantly, without regard to the noise or ibathv to him. They say there are ; excitement around him. There are many HATS! CAPS! J. M. HOLBROOK, W OULD most respectfully inform the pub lic and his old patrons that he is now permanently located at his old stand on WHITEHALL STREET, (Sign of the Big Hat,) ’VT T O ATLANTA, GEORGIA, -LN i 1 U 1\ , With a large stock of well selected HATS Of till klllds * and CAPS, all of which will be sold lo*v for Cash at wholesale and retail. Nov. 25-l3-12m. J. M. HOLBROOK. f|> y, ty te. W «*?> yj gj HOOP & BALMORAL SKIRTS; EEDAKS, CORSETS; HAED-WARE A.JMD CUTLERY. Also a large and full supply of all kinds of ’ROCERIES & CROCKERY. J. M. MANN, > .Salesmen J. A. HUNTER, / Newnan, Ga. R. T. HUNTER, \ Salesmen JOS. NALLS, / for Loreb&Co A. W. WOOD, 1 Salesmen W. MARTIN, / Franklin, Ga. Sept. 10-2-tf. 1TKUNIX TIN SHOP, AT THE— T X 1ST TREE. T. M. & It. C. CLMtkE, WHOLESALE and RETAIL DEALERS I3J En glisli db Amorican IIA.IXDAYA.n3i:, CONSISTING IN PART OP 25,000 pounds Plow Steel; 5,000 pound* “ Moulds; Cast, Blister and German Steel; Plow and Tire Iron; Carpenters’ Tools; Blacksmiths’ Tools; Building Materials; Nails, Axes, Shovels; Spades, Mill Saws; Leather and Rubber Belting; Hemp and Gum Packing; Pocket and Table Cutlery ; Horse Shoe3 and Nails; Guns and Pistols; And all other Goods usually kept in the Hardware line. ALo Agents for Fairbanks Platform & Counter Scales- T. M. & R. C. CLARKE, Corner Line and Peach Tree Streets ATLANTA, GA. Jan. 20-20-Gm. THOMAS BARNES, Depot Str., Newnan, Ga, wai repair neatly and promptly oasa'Js-Sa rs Da ce» s: 30-4- ly. “None But the Brave.”—At the - - - ■ - - j _ -■ 1 me - — j 1 gounu in us l ue l-j uis eois » »«»,» .. - ball in Quitman a few nights ago, a y .* a - ill dare to ur-e that Congre'ss has the It is pretty good evidence, alter ail. thg £ U p er j or Court concurrently with the ibrie k 0 f tbe d amne d. Every drop of, Confederate who had lost a leg in battle ent.fr the States? select out a gentlemen, of the correctness of his pol- ; Count Court and as the Legislr' ^ ‘ * ’ ’ ’ J ‘ L ‘ . . . . J ,1 • ; D Imrinor Bppn in - .. , . t __ .u„ J. D. WATSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Ei\ st ern ag REAL. ESTATE AC.EVT, NEWNAN, GA., them pro , „ , . , . , . atureh*d rain raust hiss upon his burning head — chanced, in passing amid the dancers to, of their citizens, change their icy, that Congress, after having been in . to do so> tbe jurisdiction of the . jz ver y bree z e must seem to him a blasting! place the extremity of h s wooden substi-1 place them under special session nearly six long, dreary mont “S> g uper i or Court was ousted until restored ?irocco —every morsel of food a dose of; tutc upon the hem of the dress of one of 1 end special agents to sustain has been unable to present one which oy an ac t of the Legislature. | infernal brimstone. The poor old wretch ; the most elegantly attired and charming. citizens, and they can agree upon «s a substitute. ’ The presiding Judge expressed doubt : maM f ee l terrible remorse.' He must feel j young ladies in the room, by which “ er | g ell ; n£r R,. n ting or Buying Real E [Cheers and laughter. J ... , t v. i 51 to the rDht of the Superior Court to * as if his ribs were red-hot gridirons,; skirt was ba«Ly torn. j tate in Newnan, or in Coweta and ad It was once said. I think by Jobu V izanee 0 f t he case, bat ordered ; broffing his entrails. If every malignant I “ Dear me ! ’ exclaimed her partner j£[ ning tount ; es . ' [Oct. 28-8-ly. Randolph, that of all tinkers, the <- onsU - tfc cau ; e t0 pr0 eecd, and the defendant and accursed lie he has told'were a coal a nice young man, whose experience wi t utiou linkers .ere the to be «• „„ „„ iclcd „d M.te.cri u ttk. bb; of «„ upon hi, boJ,. h. -o.ldb.lU krf R’llO WailtS LitCrarV AM? pi„d, [Cheere.] If ««jj| in 4, ohd „ „ f.r « he rest of tin e them when necessary from under :aws and State tribunals, and place unaer the sole guardianship and tion of the General Govern ment. It would wrong their intelligence to sup pose it constitutional. President John son could not act with such men. No mo - - . . , American who has a white conscience third man at least is a Constitution tinker can. The conscience has to be blackened j [Cheers and laughter.] in America, or crimsoned in Europe, to make a Republican sufficiently black or j that sufficiently red to do the oughly radicalized fanatic rise f r om his crave, what would he say the present Congress, in which every year. a nJ twist under a taller mountain oi; room dress. It is indeed strange that the Legisla- flame than ever the old Titans did His your . ? ~ uch 1 heart is as black as ten thousand devils. Has ne . ture should leave a question ot so mu Well, no matter. The I m. c — j the He sees behind him only the mounds over | best skirt I have is not too good for a j _|_ for moderate remuneration. i^^theaddittT^Mfld^: £^v^ bu^d v4tims, and before | carpet for^-th. hero who lost a limb in : i^^shon notice. Essays ’ only the Dead feea of Despair. If this „. «-i 1 ** r Z'C-"nfaSfSnb. J* 2^* •* - < h “? h •<“ ”“*S* I , pUO 1C, L - .. , i r.-il. .T . 1 —. Ain — 01-10.1 Heav-1 defense of Dixie.” Balance all 1” exclaimed the fiddler. WILL give Literary aid in any direction I will furn- any subject. Orations, Poetical Effusions, Communication for the Press, and such like. All communica nntrv to be And they balanced.- Ui3 very face looks' aid. tions strictly private. -Savannah Her-1 jtamp, ' Januarr 30-5m. Address, enclosing A. .1. SMITH. Newnan, Ga. ■W. JVL. Hoynolcls W OULD rcFpectfully inform everybody and the balance of mankind, that he is now prepared to furnish anything and every thing in the way of STOVES & TIN Y/ARK, At the very lowest prices and shortest notice. Best Patent of Family Cook Stoves, g from $25 to $30, according to size W Kk and outfit. _ Tin Ware reduced 2-3 per cent, under any otlier market. Come, come everybody, and buy! I will duplicate bills bought at wholesale in any market in the Union since the war. January 20-2G-7m. SOUTHERN INSURANCE AND TRUST COMPANY, SAVANNAH, GA. CAPITAL 81,000,000. INCORPORATED 1861. HENRY BRIGHAM, President. J. C. McNTJLTY, Secretary. Do not neglect the security of reliable insu rance. Policies issued without delay by T. P. HILTOS, Agent, March 24-29-tfi Newnan, Ga.