The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887, May 04, 1867, Image 1
£k poialb. 'ISLISHED WEEKLY EVEKY SATURDAY BY j. c. WOOTTEN, J. A. WELCH. \\ GOTTEN & WELCH, Proprietors. j c. WOOTTEN, Editor. I sH'OMjT LIST!! AM now offering nt my old stand on Green ville street, a new and well selected stock of DRY GOODS, &.C., Consisting of Calicoes, Worsteds, DeLaines, Red, White and Opera Flannels, Canton and Salsbury do Kentucky and X. Carolina Jeans, Casimers, Satinets, Jeans, Linseyfe, Bleached and Brown Shirtings, Ticking, 1 risii Linens, Swiss and Jackonet Muslins, Berates, Ladies’ and Misses’ Skirts, Liidie3 and Gents’ Handkerchiefs, Hosery and Gloves, Men and Boys’ Boots and Shoes, Ladies, Misses and Children’s Shoes, Hats and Cap3, Crockery and Glass IV are, Painted and Cedar Water Buckets, Weil Buckets, Tubs and Brooms, Laddies, Snap and Blind Bridles, Wagon and Buggy Collars, Buggy Whips and Haines, Umbrellas, Patent Cloth, Table and Pocket Cutlery, And Irons ana Sad Irons, Sausage Grinders, Hooks and Hinges, Screws and Butts, Coffee Mills, Sivcs, Cotton Cards, Pad Locks, Files, Nails, Collin’s Axes, Spades and Shovels, Blue Stone, Copperas, Indigo, Madder, Spice, Pepper, Ginger, Hoda, Starch, Epsom Salts, Maccoboy Snuff, Table Salt, Cheese, Sugar, Syrup, Tobacco, Powder, Gun Caps and Tubes, Cotton Yarns, and a great many Notions and other tilings too tedious to mention. Spelling Books, Almanacks for 18b7, Paper, Ink, Gillott’s Steel Pens, Cedar Pencils, Envelopes, kc. All of which will be sold low for CASH and CASH ONLY. Buy and Sell Country Produce. Receive and Sell any Goods on Consignment. Thankful to all my old friends and custom ers for past favors, and hope to see them in ;; iin, and receive a liberal patronage from all. Brick (Junior Opposite II. ./. Sargent's, Greenville Street; Newnan, Ga. J. T. KIRBY. R. L. HUNTER, Salesman, Formerly with Johnson & Garrett. November 10-12m THE TOMLINSON, I'EMAEEST CO 620 Broadway, Now York, Have associated with them HXx*. NJCToodx’TLiff, Formerly an Extensive Dealer in Carriages and ."Buggies, VOL. n.] 1STEWIN'YVTST, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1867 [NO. 34, TERMS OK SUBSCRIPTION : -v eoi.v one year, payable in advance, $3.00 j 0ac cipy six months,..." “ 1-50 j One copy three months, “ “ 1.00 \ Club of six will be allowed an extra copy. (Fifty numbers complete the Volume.) EDWARD WILDER’S FA.MOTTS Stomach Bitters. AT GRI1PJX AND ATLAXTA, GA. I 1011 the purpose of supplying Merchants and Planters at the South, by wholesale or retail, "'ih any style of Carriages,' Buggies or Planta tion Wagon's. Mr. Woodruff’s long experience in the carriage business will enable us to give satisfaction in sup plying good, substantial work, sueli as the coun try demands, at as low prices as can possibly be furnished for each. We will keep constantly on hand LIGHT CONCORD BUGGIES, the same as formerly sold by Air. Woodruff, and wbieli became so universally popular all through the South, as the best Buggy in use. THE WOODRUFF READ THE FOLLOWING HOME EVIDENCE of its medicinal virtue ana try it in your own family circle: La Grange, Ga, Jan. 17, 18G7. Edward Wilder, Esq.: Dear Sir : Having used your Bitters extensive ly with my patients for the last three months, I take great pleasure in saying that the effect de sired lias been obtained in every case, I was first to introduce them into this part of the country, and knowing their properties recommended them highly, feeling assured that neither I nor my friends would be disappointed in their effects. O Hoping they meet with the success they so richly merit, I am yours ve ry truly, L>. H. MORRISON, M. D. Cotton Plant, Ark., Dec. 4. 18G7. Jlfr. FAward Wilder: Dear Sir: It is with great pleasure that 1 say I believe the Bottle of your Bitters you gave me, in all probability, saved my life. They certainly kept me up until I reached lionie, and from their use 1 have been improving ever since. My wife has just presented me with a tine hoy, and, to show our appreciation of your Bitters, have named the little fellow Edward Wilder. Yours, verv respectfully, ' E. G. BRADLEY. IT WILL CURE DYSPESIA, LIVER COMPLAINT, And all species of Indigestion, Intermitten Fever, and Fever vJ 1 1 and Ague. And all periodical disorders. It will give im mediate relief in COLIC AND FLUX. It will cure COSTIVENESS. It is a mild and delightful invigorant fur delicate f emales. It is a safe Anti-Bilions Alterative and Tonic for family purposes. Jt is a powerful recuper- aut after the frame has been debilitated and re duced by sickness. It is an excellent appetizer as well as strongthener to the digestive forces. It is desirable alike as a corrective and mild ca thartic. It is being daily used and prescribed by ail physicians, as the formula will be hand ed to any regular graduate. EDWARD WILDER, Sole Proprietor. EDWARD WILDER & CO, Wholesale Druggists, No. 215 Main Street, Marble Front, Scornsville, Kentucky. sale wholesale or retail by HEBWIWJg & FOI, COMER WHITEHALL & ALABAMA STBS. ATLANTA, GA. October 20-7-l2m. B T. BABBITT’S STAR YEAST POWDER « Light bnsenit or any kind of cake may be made with this “Yeast Powder” in 15 minutes. No shortening is required when sweet milk is used. B. T. BABBITT, lTTI will send a sample package, free, by mail, on receipt of 15 cents to pay postage. Nos. 04 to 74 Washington st., N. York. June 16-12m. B. T. BABBITT'S PURE CONCEN U TRATED POTASH or READY SOAP MA KER. Warranted double the strength, of common Potash, and superior to any other saponifier or ley in the markat. Put up in cans of 1 poun 1 2 pounds, 3 pounds, 6 pounds anti 12 pounds, wh h full directions in English and German for maki g hard and soft soap. One pound will make fif teen gallons of Soft Soap. No lime is required. Consumers will hud this the cheapest Potash in market. ' B. T. BABBITT, Nos. 64, 65,66.67, GS, 69, 70,72A74 Washington st., June 17-12m. New York. PUATATlOy WAOOIVS! For TWO, FOUR and SIX HORSES, can be fur nished by special order. Address all orders to TOMLINSON, DEMAREST CO., June 16-12ni, 620 Broadway, New York. JAS - >t. GLASS, EOPT. W. NORTH. T. T. BOHAN AN glass, north & CO., Greenville Street, Newnan, Ga., o-moo EFis AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Ate now receiving and will keep constantly Ga hand a complete assortment of Family Supplies, Corn, Meal. Flour. Rice,Bacon, Lard, Oats, Iron, Nails, Salt, Sugar, Coffee and all tlier goods usually kept In their line, to which they solicit the attention of their friends and the public generally, and promise to use their utmost exertion to satisfy ail who may show a disposition to faver them with their patronace. Xewitau. Ga., January 26-tf. TWO months after date application will be im.’e to the Ordinary of Carroll county U -- U to sell the real estate of II. S. Turner, ■ '*. ] 0! ‘ a 1 count v, deceased. March lG-2m.-S6. J. M. GRIFFIN. Adm’r. B T. BABBITT'S BEST MEDICINAL SAL- • EBATFS, “made from common salt.’-- Bread made with this Saleratus contains, when baked, nothing but common salt, water and ilour. B. T. BABBITT. Nos. 64. 65. 66,67,6S, 69, 7o, 72A47 Washington st., Junk 1642m. New Y'ork. B T. BABBITT'S LABOR-SAVING SOAP.' c This Soap is made from pure and clean materials, containing no adulteration of any kind. will not injure the most delicate fabric, and is especially adapted for woolens, which will not shrink after being washed with this Soap. It may be used in hard or salt water. It will remove paint, grease, tar and stains of all kinds. One pound warranted equal to two pounds c-ruinary iamily soap. Directions sent with each bar for making throe gallons handsome soft soap from one pound of this Soap. Each bar is wrapped in a circular containing rail directions for use-, prin ted in English and German. Ask your grocer for “B. T. Babbitt's Soap." and take no other. B. T. BABBITT. Nos. 64. 65, 66, 67, 68, 09, 70, 72 & 74 Washington June 16-12m. st., New York. FORCE’S SHOE HOUSE. Whitehall, St., Atlanta, Ga. SIGX OF BIG BOOTA^m H AVE On hand the largest and best stock of Boots and Shoes ever brought to tqis market and as they come direct from — e eastern Manufactories will be offered to coun try Merchants at New York prices -freight added. IF W. Force, formerly of Charleston, S. C.. will be pleased to see Lis former customers. Oct 20-7-12m. Correspondence Louisville Courier. Letter from Eev. E- A. HoHand. Jerusalem. Feb. 12, 1857. A MORNING’S RIDE IN JERUSALEM. Dear Courier : As the best method of group ing some of the places of sacred interest we have visited in Jerusalem and vicinity, I will give an account of our morning’s ride. We were sitting at the table in the saloon of Herr Hornstein’s Hotel, sipping coffee, when our blink-eyed “valet-de-place, ’’ Antiqua, thrust his homely and good-natured face in the door, and said, “Masters, the horses are ready. Yellah ! come !” We obeyed, and followed our gdide down to the street, where on r steeds were awaiting us. Our route was along the “via dolorosa’’ from the point where it turns at the Austrian Hcspill toward the south. As we rode slowly over the wet and slippery stones, the old fellow (minted out sev eral stations marked by blood colored frag ments of columns, at which the weary bon of God, exhausted by the hist night's agony in' the garden and the morning’s scourge and lac eration. had fallen under his cross on the way to Golgotha. “Here,” passing an edifice, he would say, “is the house in which Dives dwelt and there, on that rock against the wall, sat Lazarus, while the dogs licked his sores.”— “Here is where St. Veronica handed the sufferer her handkerchief with whicn to wine away the bloody sweat from his brow, and here is where Cimon the Cyrenian was compelled to Like up the cross its intended victim could no longer bear, and just there is where He turned to the women who walked nigh to his side in the crowd, wailing and smiting their breasts in an guish, and spake the prophetic words, “Daugh ters of Jerusalem weep not for me but for your selves and your children.’’ Of course, we did not credit the authenticity of the spots. We knew that Jerusalem had been utterly destroy ed by Titus, and thought there was little pro bability that the modern streets correspond to the ancient. Still, this via dolorosa had been regarded for many years as the Savior’s path from Pilate’s palace to the crucifixion ; over its well-worn pavement many a foot-sore pil grim had trodden seeking peace for his soul at the shrine of the sepulchre-, and if not precise ly along this narrow and zigzag lane (if the sites of Antonia and Calvary be really known) it could not have been far off, or in a very dif ferent course, that the most mournful process ion earth has ever known marched to the con summation of Heaven’s righteous will. Besides J had not come to Jerusalem to criticise, to in vestigate localities, to bother my brain about useless and unprofitable discussions, the ten dency, if not design, of which is to change re verence into mockery. I, too, like the multi tudes who from the days of Godfrey before me had travelled from distant homes to kiss the rock oi the sepulchre, never doubting tlie tra dition of its genuineness, was simply a pilgrim, wishing more to be benefitted by faith in what 1 saw, and the emotions inspired by that faith, than coldly to debate or sneeringly to deny what, if not truth, indeed, had been rendered truth to me by the centuries of devout esteem, of penitential and hallowed affection it had, albeit error, received. CHURCH OF THE HOLY SEPULCHRE. Thus musiiug I rode along the via dolorosa, under its gloomy archways, between its prison like houses, until having made a considerable ascent, 1 paused on the summit of a hill. Why did I, why did we all, as by a common instinct pause ? There was nothing near that we had determined to visit on this trip. Still we paused. On our left were the ruins of the hospital of St. John, within wnose vast walls once resided knights whose lives were spotless as their shields, and whose shields btained not the re flection of the skies—the van of every charge, the rear of every retreat, to whom battle was a pleasure and death itself a glory. On our right was the grand old Church of the Holy Sepulchre, under whose huge* dome are the supposed sites and I doubt not the true—of the crucifixion and the entombment of man’s Redeemer. We paused because we could not help pausing, but reserving our visit to this holiest of holy places for a separate day, we then silently rode on among the venders of chaplets and relics to the Jaffa Gate, on tlie western side of the city. Here stood and yet stands the tower of Hippicus, the large bevel ed stones of the lower part contrasting with the more insignificant material of the upper, even as that antique grandeur, of which the former are representative, contrast with the torpid Turkish negligence of which the latter are a flattering indication. The Jaffa Gate opens opposite to the Valley of Gihon, which deepening southward, becomes, where it bends around Mt Zion to the southeast, the Valley of Hinnom, a profound, wild and picturesque rav ine between Mount Zjon, that rises fay above on the north, crowned with its bastioned and battlemented walls, and the Mount of Evil Counsel on the south, a desolate elevation whose acclivity is that singularly shaped tree on which remorseful Iscariot is said to have hanged himself. A LErEE. We had scarcely issued from the Jaffa Gate when 1 saw sitting alone on the roadside a mis erable wretch, his appearance so shocking to sight as almost to counteract the pity it ought to excite. His nose was eaten entirely away. His face was a hideous deformity. He held forth his stumps of hands—their lingers rotted off to the knuckles. His arms were streaked with white and covered with running sores. In fact the man seemed from head to foot a solid scab, a loathsome putrefaction. He was a leper.— There is a portion of the city assigned to these poor creatures. They live apart from the rest of mankind, unclean to the touch, as of old.— They go forth early in the day, and taking their position in some public place where there are likely to be many passers by, stretch out their fingerless hands or hand in speechless im- portunacy for alms. The alms is tossed to them and they crawl and labor to take it from the ground. They would utter their gratitude but probably the tongue is swollen and motion less. Alas, what a life must be theirs ! As to whether the modern leprosy be identical with the ancient I am not prepared to express an opinion. It is similar in many respects—diff erent in one, that of not being contagious.— Nevertheless it is so disgusting as to forbid as effectually as if infectious. It' is hereditary, and transmitted through generations with such certainty that the child of a leper may be con sidered tainted even before the disease mani fests itself. THE VALLEY OF HINNOM. A single glance at the specimen we had seen was sufficient and tossing him a liberal buck- sheesh we put spurs to our horses and cantered j down to the valley of Hinnom. It reaches its 1 greatest depth where it unites with the valley j of Jehosaphat, which lies on the east of Jerus- j alem, and divides Mounts Moriah and Bazatba J from the Mount of Olives. Jehosaphat sweeps ! around the southern extremity of Olivet east- j ward, and through it Kedron once flowed its course to the Dead Sea. Here where Jehosa phat turns to the east it is met by Hinnom. and here, or very near, occurred those tragic- rites which have made Hinnom a synonym for hell. They were performed in honor of Baal and Moloch, and consisted in the sacrifice of children. The spot was well adapted to the devilish work, well adapted to insult the tem ple that overlooked it, and to affright with its fiendish noises the populace who might not at tend, This sombre glen with its a few dusky olives, then a grove—these stern, rock hearted mountains encompassing it—that vista open ing out upon the desert, and that stream to drain the blood from the altar, all render To- phet the select tpot for the damning and dam nable deeds of idolatry. Up yonder on the brow of the Hill of Scandal was the high place j built by Solomon, the estal lisher of'the fear ful ceremony. Into what a bottomless pit of iniquity even ihe wisest of mankind may sink! I can imagne the horrid scene. Tlie monstrous statue of brass, with the head of an ox and the body of a man, is heated red hot by fires kiud- lded within the furnace of its hollow form.— ! Tlie crowd has gathered—fathers, mothers, j children. 1 hear a whispeaing of wonder as to i what family will be bereaved by to-day s obla- ] tion, what woman's soul be torn and harrow ed by the cruel murder of its strongest love.— ' Tlie moment of the offering approaches. The superstitious multitude are now wrought up to a high pitch of excitement by the prepared stimulants of priestcraft. I see them now, conspicuous by reason of aspect and station— livid, haggard, trembling—the mothers of the victims. They stand nearer the idol than the rest. They press to their bosoms in farewell embrace the innocent victims, smilingly in hap py unconsciousness of their coming doom. Oh the torture of that sweet infant smile, the light of heaven to that mother’s eyes. But she must give it up—stand aloof ami witness its writhings, hear its shrieks, and behold its blackened and cindered corpse. Site would willingly die in its stead. She now tightens her embrace as the priest approaches, and feels she cannot ref T • the child from her arms. Tie kisses it again and again, and then starts to surrender, hut cannot ; she draws it closer than ever to herself, and repeats the kisses more wildly than before. It is inevitable.— The child is taken and placed within the glow ing arms of the brazen statue ; another and another of the victims are added until the hec atomb was completed. The drummers beat their drums to drown the cries of pain on the one hand, and the lamentations of sorrow on the other. The inultitude also shout with the frenzy of maniacs. Chcsnosh .is propitia ted. What better term coukl the Hebrew writers have employed to express the inexpressible, the infinite woe of future punishment, than that which ever called up before the minds of the people the fearful scenes they had witnessed in this vale, Gehenna! THE TOOL £F SILO AM. Leaving -Hinnom, wc kept tlie road that winds around Mt. Zion, and soon came upon limpid brook, softly flowing between high banks, green with luxuriant vines. An over hanging rock shaded it. We traced it to its source, a rectangular reservoir, down to whose waters decends a flight of stone steps from the level of the ground.’ It was loam. Its situ ation is beautiful, just where. Tyropeon falls gently between Zion and Moriah, into the Val ley of Jehosaphat—a terraced declivity which in the days of Ariel’s pride was the King's Gar den. Full of the poetry of travel, I hastened to the fountain’s edge to drink of water, and lave therein my brow and C3 r es. Poetry speed ily changed to nausea. The,water had washed the rouge and powder from her face, and the sallow, wrinkled witch, whom I had clasped as a nymph, grinned spitefully at me disclosing in that, her sea-green and decayed tusks. For dear Courier, I had not much more than fairly swallowed the draught, when I saw a blind Arab feel his way down tlie steps, strip him self. and wash in that self-same fountain, whose dulcet name was now to me as the little book the Apostle John took from the angel’s hand and ate up, which “in his mouth was sweet as honey, and as soon as he eat it his belly was bitter.” Sd much for Siloa's brook, that flow ed past by the oracle of God. Had I remem bered the Savior’s command to the blind man, “Go, wash in the pool of SUoam,” my recol lections of that pool would be far more palata ble. ASCENT OF OLIVET. From Si loam we con Fed oui ride around Mt. Moriah, some of the foundation stones of whose original walls still remain, to the pool of the Virgin ; then crossing the Valley of Je hosaphat and the rocky bed of the Kedron to tombs of St. Janies, Zacliarias and Absalom, we began the ascent of Olivet, among the countless tombstones that whiten its western slopo. These humble slabs, destitute of orna ment, lying flat bn the ground, mark the rest ing places of that miraculous people, whose de votion to the very dust of Jerusalem has kept them peculiar and distinct through ages of op pression, of protracted and cruel persecution, of universal prejudice and contempt. Of what ever land he may be a native, under whatever influences surrounded, whether bronzed, by tropical suns or bleached by tern erate climes, or chilled through his furs by tie long winters of the Arctic, a Pole, a Briton, a German, an American—still the Jew, unmistakably, proud ly a Jew. The keen eye, the acquiliac nose, the sad visage imprinted with the story of his wrongs, ever stamp him with God’s seal of prophecy. He lives and perpetuates in his singularity an incarnate argument oi the divin ity of that very Messiah his rejection of whom is the origin of his misfortunes. His exile in to all nations is God's method of publishing to the world alike that the truth that Jesus is His son and the anathema entailed by the denial of that truth. But the Jew. amid all his trou bles, a vagabond in the earth, nurses one su preme desire, and that is, when the wandering foot can stray no longer, and tlie weary breast is tired unto death, they may both find the repose the} could not find in life, in sweet sleep amid the sacred dust of the Kedron valley*. be neath, the lofty cliffs of Moriah, and i;igh un to where that temple, whose magnificence was their type of Heaven, lifted wNh the pride of a Pharisee its lofty pinnacle in the air. Here their fathers sleep. Here David and Solomon, the Judges, the Prophets, and the Kings, sanc tify by their remains the soil to holiness. Here the Messiah himself shall stand at the Resur rection to call the atoms of decay to pristine form and glorified beauty. Here shall be the first to awake in the newness of everlasting life. Filled with these thoughts, from every part of the world, when the burden has grown too grievous much further to be Lome, the sons ot Israel have toiled hither to deposit the weight that has bowed them to the dust, anil stretch their aching limbs for a loug and blessed rest a rest beyond the pursuit of contumely, in the society of their regal ancestors, with the calm belief that their awakening will be in the ce lestial radiance of Jerusalem restored—God their own God, reigning upon Zion. Look at these tombstones, extending from the very l>ed of the brook high up the acclivity of Olivet, and literally paving the mountain, thousands upon thousands of them. “Look at them,” did I say. Nay, listen to them. Verily, their voice is in the breeze and speaks to the soul mysterious, awful truths, truths of God, of his justice, truths of a Redeemer and His judg ments, truths wliich I would were heeded by the race whose name they utter in the melau- choly but unfaltering accents of a judicial sen tence. A MAGNIFICENT VIEW We continued our ascent to tire little village of Tor, on the central summit of Olivet. It contains a mosque, from the balcony of whose minaret we obtain cue of the finest views in Palestine, limited by mountains on the north west and south, although commanding entire Jerusalem, but reaching on the east to the mountains ef Ammon beyond the sea of Sodom and spreading out beneath us as a map the wilderness of St. John and the fertile valley of the Jordan, the course of the river itself being distinctly marked by the dark foliage of the of the trees that shade its banks. The eye ranges over a desolation, the tremendous sc ir of Jehovah’s curse. Bald, bleak, barren, gashed and wrinkled hills, their sand fi nning in the sun, shelve down from our feet in succession, down. down, and then, as if demon possessed, plunge with a final bound, into the Deal Sea, almost four thousand feet below us and thirteen hundred below the level of the Mediterranean. There its. its drear, abysmal cauldron it simmers as it over the very embers of liell. There methinks hell did once open its dragon jaws and breathe volcanic fire upon Sodom and Gomorrah and swallow the wicked cities from the face of the earth. The utter death solitude of its bitumi nous waters, the leafless, withered trunks that strew its sandy beach, the terrified aspect of the mountains that closely compass it like sav age hierophants, who, singed by the altar flames which consumed the victim whose ago nies they were intensely watching, and quick - witness bis execution! There is no faith in tyrants. Threats of confiscation are futile.— Almost every one has been pardoned by taking the amnesty oath or by spechd application.— 'Hie Southern people may be robbed and mur dered, but their property cannot be confiscated, i c.LY JU/U In order to debauch prominent Southern men, oilers have been made in Congress to re move their disabilities, and, it would seem, not Rates of Advertising. Advertisements inserted*t $ 1.50 per square (often lines or space equivalent,) for first inser tion, and 75 cents for each subsequent in sertion. Monthh* or semi-monthly advertisements inserted at the same rates as for new advertise ments, each insertion. Liberal arrangements will be made with those advertising by the quarter or rear. AU transient adyeptismcnt3 must be paid for when hauded in. The money for advertising due after the ly petrified in their alarm had retained till now j without success! Threats to the many and that “look a hast.” then so suddenly arrested bribes to a few. is the policy adopted for radi- and immutably fixed in stone, these all attest calizing the Southern States. With universal that a supernatural tragedy has been enacted ! negro suffrage and debauched politicians, we in thi.ir midst, so ineffably dreadful that the may bid farewell to all hope of republican in- recoliections of it will haunt and keep them : stitutions. Virtue and intelligence alone can thus deliriously wild until comforted by message of a “new heaven and a new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness.” Then shall rights, and property to make him feel an intcr- they dress themselves in flowers and sing forth terest in the proper exercise or them, he should praises with the voices of birds. I will not be allowed to vote. This principle has been now endeavor a description of the view on the adopted in most of the Northern States, and is west, as it involves Jerusalem, its sanctuaries wise and just. But it is wicked to put ballots JUJlUgg POWELL & STALLINGS, Attorneys s&t Iia w, NEWNAN,... GA., XTT ill practice in the several Courts of Law V V and Equity in the Tallapoosa and Cow- the sustain a republic. When the negro has ae- 1 eta Circuits, and in the United States District arth i quired intelligence to understand his political j Court for the State of Georgia. and immediate environs, and would require of itself a separate and not very short letter. REFLECTIONS. Descending from the minaret, we are shown, j in the Chapel of the Ascension, a footprint in a rock declared by the monks to have bet-u ac tually made by the Lord wh ... he’sprang from j the spot into the clouds. Is it not a pity that , the fervid emotions the place kindles into be- i ing should be put out by this dish-water of non sense. Nevertheless, Olivet lias few rivals among i the holy places of Palestine. With its terraced j slopes thickly dotted with thegnarled and veil- j erable trees, from which it takes its name ; with Gethsemane on one side, sweetly nestling at j its foot, and Bethany on the other, clinging to i its robe of verdure, half hidden in its folds ; eminently fitted for the closing act in the earthly career of the great Captain of our Sal vation, that in which having planted his heel upon the neck of Death and Satan, and unfurl ed his cross-blazoned banner from their strong hold. He takes a farewell survey of the prov ince so dearly won, gives to his faithful subor dinates, who he has called about,liim, iustruc tions for the grand campaign of its total con quest, then leaps into his ethereal chariot and rules home to nis throne above the stars. R. A. HOLLAND. Policy and Duty of the Southern People. LETTER FROM EX-GOV. l’EREY, OF S. C. “ The United States shad guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of gov ernment.”—Sec. 4, Art. 1 F, Constitution of the U. S. of America. Under this authority the Congress of the U. States, after excluding from their seats the Senators and Representatives of ten Southern has established in the hands of those who will be the passive tools of thei. employers, or the mischievous agents of Black Republican emissaries. Nothing can be more unjust or iniquitous than the discriminating disfranchisement of the military bill. A Union man, whose life has been spent in trying to maintain the inter est of the Union, but who was a member of tlie Legislature or a Judge ten or twenty years ago, and who. after his State seceded, fid or clothed a son in the Confederate army, is dis franchised 1 But the man whose whole life may have been spent in treasonable efforts to ! destroy the Union and involve the country in j a bloody civil war, who was a leading member J of the Secession Convention, and afterwards a distinguished General in the Confederate army,* j hurling his command against the army of tlie i United States in a hundred bloody fields of ad pre- Constitu- many iglit be justice and folly of this disfranchisement. It is believed that neither Generals Beauregard. Hill, Magruder, nor General Lee, himself, the illustrious com mander-in-chief of the Confederate forces, is disfranchised. Rut the bumble Union magis trate, who relieved the distresses of a son in tlie Confederate army, is disfranchised! There is not the remotest hope or probability of the Southern States being restored to the Union till after the next Presidential election. Why, then, shall we voluntarily degrade our selves, and give up our dearest political rights for a delusion ? If we are to wear manacles, let them be put on by our tyrants, not by our selves. If a man threatens to kick you, self- respect Would forbid your exposing your person to him and asking him to kick you at once and be done with it.' We have lived already two years under military rule, in great poverty and distress, and have been cheered all the time hy the consciousness that wc arc not q degraded, though a conquered people. We can continue to live in the same way two years longer, or, if need be, ten years, and feel a pride in knowing that we have maintained our honor, and made btates, has established in ail of the excluded j States a military government, absolute and every effort possible to preserve our freedom unlimited in its powers. It is well known that | and constitutional rights. A man who feels these States have exhausted their power and j that lie lias dishonored himself, is lost, and so resources in a gallant’ and heroic struggle for | it is with a people. independence and self-government. They now j Let us live quietly and peaceably, attending have no alternative but unoualified submission diligently to our various vocations in life to the military despotism thrown oyer them. It is to be hoped, and it is generally believed, that tlie military commanders in the Southern States will exercise their despotic powers wisely and humanely. It is the administration of a government, and not the form of a govern ment, which makes it odious and oppressive. A despotism, wisely, justly and virtuously ad ministered, is the most perfect government that can be established. It is the government meat of God, established by him for the gov ernment of the universe. Five or six months ago South Carolina, with all the other Southern States, rejected with scorn and indignation the constitutional amend ment-, which proposed to exclude from office their leading men, and reduce tlieir represen tation in Congress unless they permitted uni versal suffrage. Now it is proposed by the military bill not only to exclude this class of persons from office, but to disfranchise them and exclude them from voting in all elections, and at tlie same time enfranchise their forme, slaves, ami give universal suffrage to the negror Strange to say that there are many persons in the Southern States whose high sense of honor would not let them adopt tlie constitutional amendment, who are now urging the people to voluntarily swallow* the military bill, regard less of honor, principle or consistency. I am happy to know‘that they are secessionists, and never were Union men. obeying patiently the powers that be; but never think of voluntarily voting away our rights as a State, or honor and freedom as men. Let us trust to a returning sense of justice on the part of our oppressors, which sooner or later must come. Have patience, forbearance and long suffering. Tlie Southern States fought four long bloody years for what they believed to btjtta. sacred right proclaimed by all the AmciWan people in their Declaration of Inde pendence. Can they ’not now afford to live four years longer out cf that Union, rather than sacrifice their honor, their rights as States, and the great republican principles of freedom ? B. F. Perry, A Pretty Tough Story. George Kendall, of the New Orleans Pica yune, tells the following story: “ While talking with jJapt. Wilson, who is an old salt, and a good one, I find, in compar ing notes, that I sailed or steamed with him some sixteen or eighteen years ago, between Charleston and Philadelphia, on the Osprey, then running regularly in that trade. Hhe was a slow steamer, but a staunch one. We had a species of adventure on board which I shall not soon forget. The first -morning after crossing Charleston bar, somewhere off Georgetown; if Special attention given to the conn .omisin t and collecting of Old Claims, and Administra tion, Conveyancing, &c. All business entrusted to them will receive prompt ami faithful attention. JOHN W. It;■WELL, J. y. STALLINGS, Newnan, Ga. Uchoia, Ga. March 9-12m. SCHEDULE OE THE A. & W. P. E. E, L. P. GRANT, Superintendent. DAY PASSENGER. Leave Atlanta 7 2Q a. m. Arrive at Newnan - - - - 9 31 “ Arrive at West Point - - - 12 10 p. m. Leave West Point 12 50 “ Arrive at Newnan 3 33 “ Arrive at Atlanta 5 50 “ NIGHT PASSENGER. Leave Atlanta - - - - - - G 00 p. m. Arrive at Newnan 9 00 “ Arrive at West Point - - - - 12 25 a.m. Leave West Point- - - - - 1 45 “ Arrive at Newnan - - - - - 510 “ Arrive at Atlanta - - - - - 8 15 “ GEORGIA RAIL ROAD. E. W. COLE, Superintendent. DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusta 6.30 A. M. Leave Atlanta 8.30 A. M. Arrive at Augusta 6.00 I*. Y. Arrive at Atlanta.......... 5.30 P. M. NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusta 9,30 P. M. Leave Atlanta 6.30 P. M. Arrive at Augusta 1 6.15 A. M. Arrive at Allan fa 7.00 A. M. URGE FRESH ARRIVALS!! my memory serves me, we were all, a good The inquiry is, which, then, shall we do?— number of passengers, quietly enjoying our- fhilst I have been writing, the telegraph selves under the awnings, the weather delight- \Y brings the glorious news that Mississippi and Georgia have appealed to the judiciary for the protection of their constitutional rights as sovereign States of t he American Union. Would to God that South Carolina stood by the side of Mississippi and Georgia, in this tlie last noble effort to maintain their dignity and honor as States, and the just rights and liberties of their citizens. If this last grand effort in favor of freedom should fail, then the South will have to quietly meet the tyranny of CongTess ; but in meeting she need not embrace tlie hide ous thing. When the military order is issued for tlie registration of voters, let every man not disfranchised go forward and register his name. When the election is ordered for a convention, it will be the duty of every voter to cast his vote for the wisest, best and most trustworthy men, who are eligible to seats in that convention. This much he is forced to do for self-protection, and to keep the State gov ernment from falling into the hands of un worthy and base men. He need go no further. Let him then emlorseon Ids ticket “No Con vention.” If he is a patriot and ail honorable man, he cannot desire the change which the military fill contemplates, and he should not vote a lie! With the cunning which always characterizes the tyrant, Congress has enacted that the peo ple themselves shall endorse the call of a con vention, in order to give legal validity to its acts. Without this indorsement, the whole proceeding might be regarded as forced on the States by the military government, and there fore null and void. Hence the trick of making the people endorse the cal! of a convention.— It is to be hoped that they will not be caught by this cunning devise, and that they will be able to influence the freedihon to act with them.. . _ ... Bat should a majority of the votes be for a 1 drawn on deck and taken to Philadelphia as a convention, then it is to assemble, and not j trophy. The carcass, which was thought to otherwise. When it assembles, the honor and j weigh some eleven or twelve hundred pounds, destiny of the State will be hi its keeping ful and the sea smooth, when suddenly tlie bow of the steamer struck some hard substance k’cliug, checking her up suddenly, causing her to quiver from stem to stern. All rushed to the sides, both larboard and starboard, expect ing to sec a huge log or piece of a wreck pass by ; but nothing could be discovered—not even a limb or a piece of plank. There was excite ment and wonder on board, and, as the steamer passed on, many eyes were cast astern, expect ing to see some kind of drift turn up ; but all was smooth—not a speck came to the surface. The passengers soon returned to their books or cigars, and in half an hour all was forgotten. “This w.is about *10 o’clock in the morning. After dinner, while I was talking with the captain, the engineer came up and quietly said that something was wrong, lie had on his usual head of steanfi but the Osprey was running a knot or a knot and a half slower than usual. He had examined every part of the machinery, had found ail right, and could not account for the falling off. The mate was called, and he, too, was at a loss ; had noticed that the vessel was not up to her usual speed, yet could not account for it. But in looking well over the bow, the whole thing was explained. The cut water of the Osprey, rank and deep, had struck an enormous trunk turtle directly in the side, had gone about h df way through him, had fastened to him, and was pushing him through the water ahead, to the great detriment of her speed. A church door, shoved sideways, could not have impeded the steamer’s progress much more than did this huge turtle, who was, of course, lying fast asleep on the surface when [ struck. Nor was it an easy matter to disengage him.' A number of men, with hatchets and J axes, were sent down, and first cut off the tur- j tie’s head, which, as large as a bucket, was t But if the people should vote “No Conven tion.” what then ? The honor and dignity of the states will, at least, not be thereby sacri ficed by their citizens. Wo shidl remain as we are, under military rule, until there is a reac tion at the North. It has already commenced in Connecticut, and will, sooner or later, sweep over the whole North-western and Middle States. Then wo shall be restored to our rights in the Union, with lion-a- unsullied and the right of suffrage unchanged. Let us wait this Democratic triumph, be it a hundred years, rather than seek new associations with our Black Republican tyrants and oppressors, and i>e guiltv of the baseness of abandoning our was next cut away, and when once loose from her strange companion, the Osprey sped on at her usual rate. In all my nautical reminiscen ces, I do not recollect haring read of a similar occurrence. ’ ’ Death from Pbids.—A distressing case of 'oolisfi yrclding to the dictates of vanity oc- : carred in Dayton, Ohio, a few days ago. A young lady had been in the habit of lacing ! very tightly for a long while, and h id caused I a book to be placed in the wall of her room, j and she would fasten her corset strings to it j to enable her tc draw her corset tighter. She 1 had done it so long with impunity that she rew careless, and the other day in repeating friends at tne North, who have nobly detendea fv , . . ., - r me .... u -i . „„ ( . i the torture, me turew herself too heavily on onr cause for two vears past, ana saennted j . ’ , . , , , , - - - 1 =»-.«.« o-a broke a blood vessel, from themselves in the struggle for Southern rights | and constitutional freedom. If we are unwilling to bear the ills to which we are subjected, for the muintenace of honor 1 and principle, then we deserve our destiny. It j is said tliat, if we do not accept the degrading j terms now offered, worse will be imposed!— I Have we any assurance that worse may not be ! imposed if we do accept ? Like the woman j who consented to her own dishonor to save the strings and which she died in a few hours. A sad com mentary ca attempting to make the form, from a mistaken idea of beauty, different from what it naturally is. A fashionable thief iu Washington escorted the wife of a prominent Congressman to the theatre, and after having seen her home, stole her valuable velvet cloak, which has been the life of her husband, and was then made to * found at the pawnbroker’s. A.. K. SEA.GO, ATLANTA,; GA.. AS NOW AAECEIVINO 34 casks Bacon Sides, Shoulders and Hams—- all new, well cured ; 6 tierces canvassed sugar-cured Hams ; 34 casks bulk or salt Pork, ready for the smoke, cheaper than Bacon, including clear sides, clear ribbed sides, shoulders and hams; 60 barrels and tierces new Leaf Lard ; 40 kegs new Leaf Lar i ; 50 cans Lard ; 1000 bushels Oats ; 300 bags Liverpool and Virginia Salt ; 500 barrels of Flour, all grades ; 5000 bags Corn ; 500 bales Hay * 1000 bushels of Meal—fresh ground — bolted and unbolted; 100 bushels Barley ; 70 Tons of Baugh’s Raw Bone Sup&r Phosphate; 40 barels New Orleans Syrup ; 20 hogsheads Cuba Molasses : 10 barrels “ “ 40 bags Rio Coffee ; 40 bags Sugar—various grades ; 100 boxes Chemical Olive Soap. ALSO FACTORY YARNS, 8, 10 and 12. A. K SEAGO, Fire-Proof Building, Corner Mitchell and Forsyth Strs. Atlanta, Ga., March 16-tf, ■mo. C. WHITKUR’S General Insurance Agency. Fire, Inland, Life & Accident, Insurance Effected and Losses Promptly Paid. Office at McCam? & Co’s. Drug Store, Franklin Buildings, Alabama StFt., Atlanta, Ga. Refers to Rev. Jame3 Stacy, and J. J. Pin- sox, Esq., Newnan, Georgia. Aug. 11-50-ly. ► JACOB BLACK, Commission Merchant AND WHOLESALE DEALER IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC LIQUORS AAD CIGARS, (Under Planters Hotel,) Alabama Street, Atlanta, Ga. Januarv 5-tf. mt