About Georgia weekly telegraph and Georgia journal & messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 1869-1880 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1870)
Telegraph” 'mao6^^pt. » ito* ~ The French Propositi®** tbr PemeO, The new.French,Government .bis ainlfia^o illustrate the duplicity of Kings. When the war was declared, the Prussians made {wo points: The war wastnot against, the*French people, but the Erench ; g9Temtnent,. and it should never cease until they had-humbled tl^at government and seenred the most satisfactory that the peace of Europe should »©t b3 again idly disturbed by France. * '.icsucul-* The proposition of the new-Drench vCtevem- meSt, throughJulea Favre, ta-exactly snitetL to meet the remaining demand of - Prussia. He says to Bismarck—“Ybur war was against tlie then French Government, and you now hold it in chains. That part of your programme is accomplished. Von say now you want ample guarantees ageing future wirj Xou iratnm them. If you wiUteaye pur we wiir atolish ourwhole : m9ttay3[ e^tabiisbroept ana disarm Francs & jr 1foumay,8iiU kjefjp (fle^nv bristling with anns-fa-vast military camp^ehd^ we will have no army at-all. .. Whatbefter guar antee cm yoti have against- hostilities:! from, France?” u ;jJ ui ,j jo ti n i But JTules Favre'ifi‘no fool.' He ' kriows hitf proposition will be vain. What Prussia wants is land and money—but chiefly land * ahd r she means to have it ; and this,will be the'znesiA^B{| Of the war on the French, people,", 0 -, SB j letter From Attorney-General Far* . row—^rofQngatlon. - ” * " jho- Atlanta., True Georgian qf'fqdtei^ij prints a letter from: Attorney-General' H. P. Farrow, introducing fl letter to .the writer frouj Senator MattlH. Carpenter; of Wisconsin, .wjio seems to have xaqi;e,"manliness about him than any politician of that stripe in the U. S. Senate. CaTpentet felicitates- Farrow on tbs' abendan- ment by the Georgia' Radicals of the atrocions scheme qt prolongation. 'How it perished- for' 1 the mornont" in consequence of tho opposition of only eleven out of eighty-odd radical niem'- 1 hers, Carpenter does not seem to lie advised.', Farrow, in his introductory letter, yecites tho circumstances of his failure.at the late meeting, of the "Republican State Committee’.’ to.secure! an endorsement of the policy of holding .am election this Fall a^provided by the State Con-* sritution ; but he says they are going to call another meeting of the Committee ih hWeek or ten days, and. lie .will tfyeij try them 1 again.' Meantime, ho calls upon all. his .friends to use fpeir Influence-to induce the Committee to abandon this project of Fraud and Usurpation. Wo judge that Farrow fears the Prolongation ists are goingto triumph in their rascality,after all. And there are loose reports froth” Atlanta that treachery and bribery will shortly be dlsi played i>y some,of the so-called democratic members. prolongntfori ‘not Dl-ail'Yct—“Ab»eirt and Dodging- Democrats’*-to CBrry it Thronjfb. _"A leading Radical'of this State—a man hi eh in -office, and in the councils ofthe dominanft wing of the party—and, who ( knows whafhe is talking about,, stated to a prominent D'^mpcfut of Georgia, less than one week ago, and since the meeting if the Radical 1 Stale Executive Committee at Atlanta, il thdt ffldlonyntlon tcas not dead, but that it (could yet be carried through the Legislature by the aid of ab*wt and dpdgiiig Democrats." x ■ k-.:- .jit-. . o 1:1 - * We havte -quoted ; his exact words, but-wfaefe and to whom uttered, 1 wo arerfot at- liberty to "mention. " , 3; ; «« 1 « - *- - ! ,j (Now let the Democratic press of' the Stale With pne voice, x^arn thes^JOenujcratawM^afe expected to be conveniently absent or to dodge fhe issue, that if they axe guilty of this baseness 'they nfeed expect-'no mercy' at the.hands of ian .outraged people.* Let such a pressure of pub lic sentiment be pnt upon therm that they dare not thus defeat the wishes of-their constituents., ’We call upon every Democratic 1 newspaper in -Georgia to expose this infamous plot. -Let their vigilance nohsleep until the danger is. past. The Macon TEhEoisArn & Messengeb (Dem.) 'Characterizes tho rampant spirit of-lawlessness s m France as "The Democratic Lion Loose/! j *- We thank yortforthe word. -.When Demo- -'cracy prates about fta-"liona” itmeans revolu? tion. : TheteRebel; Democracy, it seems, is in full fellowship with; that infernal spirit ,which is now rearing its crested hea^'in France and - threatening to destroy peace, and good order,— _ Forewarned, forearmed.The . 11 Democratic u Bon”,Of America may as ,wcll curl his tail be- , tween In? legs and slink back into his'native ' jungles! - K - —u*-.-ai»r»»w;oe . The-obove is from"the.'AUsInfa Dolly Ne# Era ofthe 7th instant,- and it is what we'ciigit to ** expect from an ; humble-apologist fdrtoe cut- throats'of CdnstitulioriaPFre^doni' fn£&Mtfea! Wo ought to a'nticipkte that ’they'wtoUKL rise as .. one man 'against a*^a11fin£'peopl'd, 1 who,"'^nd- denly deprived of all other government, fall • , back.flg the God^gjyep tc s6vcfognty of thepeo. resolye,,.wit£(jhe help" .of ■ 1-fend theiyhopcBffrpniiptain-T^theirjiber^from - slavish rvaBsalago—their.- families, from insult 1 and violence, and their homes from the torch of. ,f ' the incendiary—orjperish in. the attempt!- A, “'•'Sfinthfehr Radical who could appreciate so-fiobjq, ' a'spirit—so ” Heaven-bom air inspiration Would befalse to his party,-and would BaSA toleaVh it. i aJ?Fho New, Exa:w>U never leayp his pmdy» i: •«» U. » . :uiUu»] i > a jd i-rpHUBCH Blinkvillp, J jmnreB: jx?ndsnt-saya 3 the negroesLpjUhere^ assign; as .< reason why the preachers ‘'holler so bad,” is the- v necessity of keeping the faithful awake; aa-this does not always accompKah .the object, they supplement lhe noise with a stick-and al p im aK follows: ■*** pin at the end of if} With Which they spur,them _ up to watchfulness. The ‘‘spirit moves ■ ’em :'X». mitrly'’ when'thcyget;a;gootl..<^inBck wjth jtbia apparatus, and-somelimc*, as brother Dorgen ^. peijBp. “lhashQijlsJdreckly." A:- Was F.'.ixcTtii. —That contemptible little ^ ^theXittfe Giint’S; private S^cxeftryi'5 who. -wen| to '“North GarolinaXo help elect. tho'Rep'tfblicjmt picket, but airily failedria- his has v * returned and tivo mansion. burned his'-dnties atthe FxeCW? tt XXUTU .-.-"CJ c. We know but one belterplace for him. 5 i ’. <•*. r ;< jy — Tribune, in respone to an advertiser -who wishes talcnolv whyiadvarliseih.OfiWfu thaf paper are charged fpratithe rate of twenty-five cents a line, wh’efi the^Woria and Times onl^ '.dr.- ChargeIweatyjOants^linOr^laimp ^atrits cir culation is just about equal to that of tUeTimes ■ 1.and World tcgetheF-—a statement that wo take • ■^ f-.lBave to doubt. w,-<» n »rs a. a'-?a:m L 3Zt * tp j renter.: cases Ataii< Dwatioa of the Wan. It is too soon, at this writing, to avail, our selves of the Speculations of the Northern pref b upon the new and surprising aspect of the Eu ropean military situation; but the market re*, f-*,, ports sinoe the grand catastrophe at Sedan au seems to be based on the expectation that the current of trade will not long be interrupted by the violence and confusion -of- war. We, too, immediately npoh the announcement of the f*H of McMahon, indulged tb* hope t hat the parties might oomB to a speedy accomtnodation; but subsequent event* have pretty much dispelled all such id$l& J ” '! •''* d-M v iiAi bmm wot j.--a The civil revolution is, in'reality. au 'apothe- osis of the-Frenoh National; spirit—*e)f-resp«f:t And prid^ of race. It Is .that kind of a popular uprising which not only sets aside, but submer ges and overwhelms, in agrsndflood of popular exaltation all the considerations which, ordina- I ' - 1 controlState crafL--Eoiicy-rTrudMiqpri-'the” ! '‘of losbes—thepeiril of family and home am all lost night, of in agrand tempestof pjufl^nafs (lofvdbf : ra8o and oountty,' whichfinda iacpr^sitm ( ! TW Georgia Pren. Capt L. E. Johnson, of ^tbe firm of Kirksey, Johnson & Scott,', 8avannafi, who onlyrecently hots in One! sect ion of the8taJeare removed to tliat city from TallihasSee 1 died Sat- claims Of a gentleman for sonrina’ti< ,in the exstacies.of song andthe most yehement determination to vindicate'the honor-of Ujo nation and the character of the French' race; “hfonrir. pour la Pdtrie,” it the. song of'all ciasaes—men 'and women— soldiers and cidzCna^ as the, bonds in a frenzy of resolve to repel the inva der. .lb-Jr as-.- a .8 i. oMitsoo-a tnrors of this sia to pay tribute or dismember French territory. They cannot do it in their own peril: _ Admit that they have no army now which can meet the Prussians in the field—what then ? They can and will fight the invader thongb they fight him flying. .He may baftehdownltheir towns-i-de- vastate their country—destrb^' their capital} as he probably will do, in the jUamendous, assault ; and yet this jnay only add to the fierce deter mination of the l'recch to make no concessions and negotiate no purchase of their lives and liberties from the Prussian King. He who reads history laid has noted the Spirit "of the Freinch people from 1790 to 1809, p nothing to forin ahyiasty conclusions upon tho evanescence oPthis grand--dedaratlonrof the Republic and uprising of the French-NalJon to 1 maintain ( its" 5 dighfl;y.; ’ The " I flata6ris 1 it6tf gefing outin a snuff when Faria is battered’down by 1 Prussian cannon. t And tins day, although vdtS bat a head or a government -fscognized by the ; diplomats, France is a great deal more ihanlthej France of 1790. Then she was bankrupt, butl bankruptcy did not hinder her from maintaining nineteen years of'war.' Now ehe is 'rich, and- quadrupled in almost every element of power.' ‘And as no nation of- the earth even was plaoed, so suddenly i^ a situation appealing more pow erfully for .the. exorcise. of the'very last .,£11^ highest degreejof patriotism by her. sons, SO.WU believe France win be liiteiy ib display a won^ derfbl decree of energy, courage, and.constancy in, the ehdeaVor to' save hefsolfi '^So'far from being a mere evanescent enUinsiaSin—a case nt mere temporary excitement} we shall not be as-j- tonrshod to see ft'deepen - and; g?pw fiercer and more deadly -with, every, addition to 'the^^pf catalc^ue of indnmities and injuries. To turn our eyes to the other side for a mo ment, the determination of J?jruasia'fa‘ prose'etite war still farther in view of the total ci^nge ip the political situation, mu3t, we thick, /PtM' girded as singularly- unfortunate.' - The extinc tion of the Empire against which war was de clared leaves Prussia footloose to ’proseCUte all her schemes of political ambition to the great theatre of continental Europe. The new French Government is in no condition, and probably has not the slightest- desire; to interfere with any new arrangement, of thrones and dynasties outside of Jier borders. • -The fight, then, 'takes the shape of a mere war for reprisals ^spolia tion against a people-who have noquarrel wi0i Prussia, except as she mky firhish; it y and will very speedily assume, the attitude of a war, against the great doctrines and rights of popular self-government, to which- indeed-' there are no more inexorable enemies'than'thei'FrTissian Pp-' tentates. In this contest,- the; liberal sympa thies and opinions of mankind can possibly take-' only one direction; rFmssia may, indeed, iirefcyj possibly seize,' and ^O* & rime; hold; in therab-| sence of a treaty,.the" French ' Provinces of -|l-’ ~BS5g~CTTd~Lorraiire-,-imd-perhaps plnnder frqm- the French peoplnsomething looking to indem nity for the ww expei$p$i l>nt the French Gov ernment will never consent to the session, and the whole will be unprofitable acquisitions at the price of a perpetual.slate of war. vrifich will ilf serve to consolidate MBmUtnraM ia France j ’wWle thqfeiforUo foies an O'rieanist Ring on a French throne, must involve the ex pense and vexation of a perpetual protectorate of a government reduced .to ihe.Iaat attitude of inherent feeblenela^by-the veTy-fact that it if propped on Prussian bayonets. Thu-Revolatton, it is 1 clear; has embarrassed .the Prussian governmentia a great degre*, and unless Prussia pursues* cautious and forbear ing policy, ; shfr will - be likely to forfeit-all the The best view of the case we -can take, lerives ns no'gteat hopes qf ;! the speMy terminatioh of this imbroglio. Trm*, soibethrng in the chapter of accidents indy ha'pperi to terminate the War 1 suddenly, but We shall' not he surprised -to 'see it result in a long,'wearisome and exhiti&ive .gtragglg. S ^ L . -Jcayitr t ieaiZiZa | Jw - ■ -A DabtfEEN JbDGS.-—Among it* other lega cies Radicalism has left North Carolinia-is 8 Chief Justice of the Supreme. Court -who ' Is a disgusting sot. The Raleigh Sentinel -exposes JtfaMfMlOWa: •*•--» unj j A-Dwnk^n JuDM^-TJhtil yesterday we have never seeha ^ udge.firunk §r'half drpnk ohTthe bench- Yesterday folr theflrst trine'since the- infamous rule was-serted On the father of the Bar,''Benj.- ; Fi !: Moon3,-E6q.^ flaB remonstrating tgainst the active" partici- : ipafioh- of- the Dench inpolitical campaigns, 1 we were in: the Supremo Court-ro<Wr And sueh a sight as we beheld, .the .people shall know. The.f^uef J^iftifip waa htdr r^Qlfniug, half T sjt- ting’in his seat andKilf seas.l'ok'efc .With whts- c ? n; ky. ’ -Hi*drunk6himdene« bad forced -Judge Merrimookk) take.dnahkt.aad-jleaysr.-the Court room,;j^s^efor* ve^nteTppL^ T ~ . ^ —Hofedcbl i (lEi.' ; J5¥Siscr: correspondent df tba ChicagQ-'.Titoes wto-oH'*' j t±L a our ScAp! book for ftb rKAL£TT7J -l'i f " T " paste his turfe reference. . He says The stranger who, vmaltendoa,iirttlk8 up to a hotel bar, in Louiavillej apd /calls for a drink, runs.as great risk of being poison p d as ho doea. in P.? nninnoll ” Tn fn •-Wrn itrV ? olm* Coming IIomi-.,—Our Summer tourists are , arriving home. They claim to'have spent the - Sommer months at the various watering places, in the mountains of Northern G»orgia, in the .Lasa woods, nooks -“Bd corhei^^mteHgreeably and glorionsly. Many s, r e yet : absent. We want ail to come back, and will be glad to hear them make the same report O'Jtrtt : 143 n Jt / ^ • . r " • ... Fobnix pays that "one of the duties of an editor is to help the pnblio sift the wheat from the chaff. ” The way that Forney “sifted” that ^ ° -twelve thousand dollars out of Bullock shows that ha knows his business to a figure.—Detroit •lit fru Press. Two friends, some years married and widely separated, lately exchanged telegrams thus: —• Afl well. We have two pain of . twins. How is that for high?" “Xo . Wo have three little girls. Three of a kind in Cincinnati. In order to get 1 the whisky ‘Tj which.aristocratic.;Leuiav4Jhy.drf|iSB hei mtxst get introdnoedio.-theiMayorraud-hswp that fahe- tio: gene: nary introduce him to the, landlord. As a neral thing Lotrtsville don’t throw away its Robinson county on transient eastern. - ....ora,® New Yoke. —The New York Times publishes a list of thirty-two homioides commuted in' that city during the months of June, July and August, but fails to demand the intetyention'bf Congress to recon struct ther city. , “ I Mas. WmuAxs, late Mrs. Senator Douglas, has commenced an action against the executors of the Douglas estate, alleging fraud in the management. She seeks to recover f150,00Q wrongfully held. - - .. . ” I Thm property of General Sterling Prioe, near, ly all of which^he left to his widow and son, is valued at fl ,000,000. The widow and son were appointed executors, and have been required fay the County Court at St. Laois to give *2,- J>sru Tije Savannah News reports the following a^ei ot'd/owiM: 1 ° y ^ 1 ‘ ocratio candidate for Congress who is said-tabo dearly ineligible; and in another section that there is ’considerable; talk and : ink-westing to George, and Johann, lying at Doboy, wait drowned on Saturday,'27tb, from akifiailboat, 1 A negro named Stephen Maxwell,.wfth,]s«rre* ral negroes, were in a boat, and on their wayfp the nqlls^ * pqugll overtook thft.boat and cap sizing her,"Harwell was df owned 1 ; ttre rektrof the negroes sWarfi'iaBfito.- 1:3 stonfxii Xdt/ r.-.o: . ^ The -LuihpSirf’ Telegraph -‘report* >copIoa*.| 4rWte^y=ffiat-‘fodB-'^ a man 1 Who does •‘not 3dm6 J -equtireTy Sfid 1 rigidly- ! up to all ; ho{s WfiS &ct?oir, With no mestic affairs, rains in Stewart county which were very much needed; - There issbme ltttte* complaint of rust imedtton, b'otfttewartwill xaaket* good average, crop. . ai'u sLa. a: osti* ~ avrai o jccoo i D&* Pendleton, -of- Sparta, has gone. inore to establish a mili.fof the jnaiipfacture, of fertilizers, j 1 . mxaiio i i r-eca i nj j. "' j -The Sparta.Times and.Plantejr>saya ; : ^ . f , A small garrison of Federal troops hayoar r rivqcJ.ig.Spartaj^xidrep.ortjed.tq.the.blierifl.'Tho object of their presence is unknown. Perhaps jtney are 1 to look tftttir ihS coming election. zs±j a *TKb %e^ottsf fJt)m thtf crops-by many of out.-, leading ptentem iamot-^rery encouraging^. 3 Tjie cotton is much affected by rust, and has suffer? ed mudi from unfavorable weather. The stalks- 1 in m'any instanfces"appear to be drying up; and the fruit is rapidly dropping j ft a - j:7 , i We clip,- as ifollowa, from'the Atlanta Era of yeaterdayri s n acji-rooc n sccex<a,h b a v tie Has Becom* a LAW.rrTh0 aGpvqrpor,,: ■ day, aignctbthu JjjU.which provides 'forj vision of jury boxes in counties where 1 the Gom- mlkaion^nrfaiTed'tb tevisetEe sanle -on the first Mondaylri June. 'JEhti t a a i r fc:J j, UVfx : Bxvxsk>x.of tqb JtmXjljAW.'We Jejro that onq of the l^epnjilican Seniors -will introduce the following resolution into the Sefiate'of Georgia/ totnodify the preseh'tj jrfry systetii ofthe Staseu ■ "Besblvbd, -Timtin all casea^'civil And cripxU nal, to.batriedi tn^he-Sfato pf, peprgiaj wbfiro all the parties are w^ite. persons, the jury "shall be'white ; and where' all the'parties ate coldred ^ersohs; thd jury shall be oolorod; and where one of the partiascitrwhite and. tho other-.col ored, then the jury .shall be half white and half colored.”. , , " The Coniititiif loii Says it is ^'’thought-Blodgett is.running an eh&ng J nbuSto' 'iii , 'Wiisliihgt6'm-i2. Now we understand "fiomedings.” ;; - 3 Tih Atianfa ConBtltdiibri‘lla3'the' fofibwing JtSmk'-" x vtooscl':a w JaaiyVa- jtox ;< x its. . We learn^hat Clayton’s mill dam, aii-fhile's NoxthwSBt of Camming, in'Forsyth county, , was tthuck by Jighting on the 29ih ul4mo, r The mud .sills were shivered, and three pieces, broken off.a large.rock, at thVbottpm of the dam—the largest sm of .the pieces weighedbetwihir 1,^00 ind^OOff pOTmdd.d'The'jAr' waaiterrible/- and! the noise for ten minutes like,*, heavy storm. The. water was thrown—from appearances— ft<m fiftjr to seventyifive feet iff 'toe air. '"The’ dam was mostly'bniif’dfrofck, 6n a rock fouti- 1 dktion. «rsM a n r m t * “Gli'the-SittfriSqrprevious*-'small/: child, fell bff-'tho ctenr onxorodci bels«; masking up one. side of its head, and breaking an arin and leg. ;At. last ,accounts the child was lying in'a criticaf condition. " 1 Jl s e s sttmta that tho negro man who wasaftdSH ;J in J^ugdsfa aTew days'ago; fbr robbing Mr. Spence#, of the-'Spencer House -at, ,Social .-Cir cle,^! aboohj$3$0 - in : mon$j,, and. who . was Ipfigedjin jail.a^ Monroe, committed'suicide on Snndsy.in jail. ILr. EpenCer, werlearn, Vecdvl erodraSrar^roO;“— 70 -- ***** viwil- » j Dnring the last twelve months some eighteen persons-over fifty years old have passed to .their final account in Forsyth connty; eight of.th.erq within twelve hours after being taken; sick — Three were over 85 years of 'age? 'One' -negro women died at ths'ffdvknci'dage-bf l05. ’i j ‘ An in^ere^tihg reviVh! of - reKgioh to 'folpro- gress at Madison. Many havd - professed' con version. ' Bishop Pierce - ikh’ been' 1 in attend ance. 5 »* »dsace ». km a atome * Kt-;aII i Ci3cz:ii~....- • inn.-..,.- .rMr. Wjn. Bmtow, formerly;* citizeit‘bi*Jas per county., died’in. ClaibproV'Parisb, LoMsi- .aq^.i^mg^/ged^reawr. 1 x ° osnw ' !• Refjeahing^^jWhijpS' were have lately falle^in Morga n county. For-,th« J®*?,ending.September ist,187b, the cotton receipts at j4.ugu.sta were * 12S/65& 1 bales, against QSjlS^for the yeajpreceffing. 3 , * 1 ’ j,: Letters, f05 EUfajej^jibompson and jtjh’attis .Crafjt, ofvMacgn, j^^.aje held for' pdBtage 3 in the Savannah office- " “ 1 ‘ ’ jrz..o m ei , u ttntHKi 3ii’-ei 1 :Two -thousand six. hundred^and. forty-six -voters.have registered .iq, Savannah, .against 4,713 in 18C9.o The. registry clqsed ^ogday," , j The City Council .«f .Sfiyannalt adopted; the plan off* new 'market-Jiouse,., .which,, js to ooSt$r4;000; t jorxrz-ai't- 3 *■ j... The Mail - route oen .the - Souto .J^eorgia^ jnnd: Florida Railroad •floraiAlbaqy tp.ThongaBville,. went into operation on the 1st inst. , e -, u tl • ■: -Albany usceived 25,059 bales, of cq^ton the ptet-saasom ci i t L e.usit j j, , The bridge across the Flin t rivex a|,Alb any^ built by the South Georgia and J’ioi^d^ rajiroad, 1 wafrflnfehed'iast -Thursday. ( .The railroad .bridge will be finished by the middle iqf.JRfioben. i Tbs‘Albany. News.aeye. the latefajns ; sf em to kahm stopped-thee:xust and. .burning, oi^'cottyni and the crop is now.doing w#lh. j | t "The ErftofctonPreBk mid Mesa eager phfpntcles the heaviest rain' of' the seasca ion Friday last Some Putnam county farmers think their cotyou good opinions 1 wito which- shewent into ; the b« beennnt off at l*aat pne fourth by the late war, 1 ^ * J, f V* tz> L3n:jrj (h.i ix iiTijA-a • 1 ' ^tdiy i*j j „• „oo*.j l j | i stand, and would not have beetfhwlay^ocpros.- hold of them to make oannon: bart.ofj ibut the. y6UBg-Siuabi»had ne notion of giviqg.np theyr. -meroaatilp jntpr^ta to.Griffip, and 'resolyed to m^e their esoape. TThis tneyala with great diffiehlt^. - THe' ybnngCT SiiifdnskeacltedrGriffin: last week. - The elder is in-. New York buying goodsjmd. win, he here ip 9 few.days. Sebious Aiebat.—We regret to learn that' qtute a serious affray obcurtedSitTrerifefelifircB, mst’Bhddiyi' VSiidyfdM dtorg&g&heriBg there foKthe pdrpese of-singingi-jr-jFouj. youpg 3 men f^pm ( GrifiBn got.into a. fight about some !old , grudge or olhdfj'^fid One 'gofi f Blightly‘ :i W6tinded ‘ wlttr arpfefefl jiatra two gob pretty badly-.bruisad y nf with sticks. xfWe diet not hear.- further., par ticulars. tut ao-oe j n jj . Ul 0l ,j 1 The Monroe Advertiser saysj^o cprn.cij^p of oonsity.fiM,-^qellent.Foddef ,ppllm'g : ‘nearly finished, and cot top BiQktoggwng «jn vigorously. r.Mesarsc L$ban Turns; an4 r Burwgl^rfeh, diedjin Fike.-ooputy, ,laft.wegk c 3 The,^grmer wbs79,.apd t^e^tter-^3-yoara,of age^"^nd jhid t <o}Jiycd;to thatpojiptyf9riy ? y§aVv n.obi o Y ‘ 8 . TteAdjontife; ij 5^spqn^)la fcn^thp foljlow. k - e»-ocj 1.-. n texa; tta.ro -. ■ J{ The Eos-seys: “W-e »ejd- a,Jgggl reform/' . 1-* _v ‘ V the ^ j^laniif' tions kndbvfeifiess-Ietters frdm the pfenitetitiary. ” 1 -ARadlcrd-pftper in4bi8-8tate,.in bringing for^ Bollock dxpef 'toe artr-of lying with as much anfQess,as tpe ed itor* ji< t fj.. will w fifth Congtessronal District. We- hope Isham will get snch a Fannin out in toe contest as will convince him that .Democracy, as welj as hon- > z: 1. • -j -Fifteen 1 ax’ll 1 Terrible Fire at Chicago is*;Titos J: l dttWeaXeatC A fire broke ont Sunday night, in the Drake block, Chicago, which consists of-twelve of the largest and finest stores in tost oity, sll of which were totally destroyed. Tbs loss is estimated at $3,000,000, with probably $1,500,000 insur ance. The walls of one of toe stores fell in, and fifteen persons were buried in toe blaring mass. One of the stores destroyed was occu pied by J. V. Fsrwsll 4 Oa, the largest dry goods dealers west 01 New Tosh. Uiss;.: Bad Policy. .Du«ia.-v -*v,f j<ol.J<Mt.*. Boynton,.of Sp-aldlng, for, th© French amt «he U W6 boo by our exohangeo that certain red o.-t ConfreM. - .• .pushlugHm _LWf?oE»^?^.S^I^Hthe present emergency,'when ihiiV''stronger cbm- i^tiofis tods'V binations will be made and their best men fid’ - ‘ jyj the Democratic party to 0 kdbpVM isame^bli'cy yemsgthtofihag»wer.9f rodiay>ytfoB»»» thp., and put f- ’ " ‘ -its rants policy-strike:! ns as' unwise in the extrome-'ead botibd to boar* very bitter fruit in theehd'fbr GI conceixtedf' The'people of : the tw^idblkidf in question would do-'Well to take the matte* into conrideratfbn abfl ‘moderate the caloric 'of these' re&fioStouts. 1 '-We ; are'Very sure theydb'^iot: ro£>reseiit too -SiSjof iiy ofthbse-to- Wboidthey. give %uohr ‘ coiuisel, And a hintP-frOtn'-tlie latter Will be sufficient. WhSt * is wanted'* Sbw-ia no® hSafe TSabonntry heeds calnJ, -c-iob judgment And a wisdom-bornof toe i»erilk aOd'nefceSSiliesof the hoftr; It needs ‘a ‘laying-aside of . all con- |gid erat ions of' passion and - pre jndi oej » Passion is' very -well sometimes,: and in its way/ bmt it is; mors out of place • now than’ n-thnixof-pesdec .would be* in the cellar of a. blazing housez-- -We havo tried it; before, and boen-rhoistediforjonn painB'everyfinie. -It has-ns ver failed 4o 'do thakn . We must resolve that we have been up. our Jarir time by its agoneyvv Thw talk‘about being‘nn*< 1 represented/etapiA-very fine; and reada.xveiUin r an editorial,fibnt'iit-'won't:wash; ills- the very thinnest diet in:.tho world, for men: who have material interests atnstake,:and'jneed-All tost* strengthfcritoeiflgbt.’-sc:notneirx- ii U9U > We-hope that all- sueh ‘talk: will: cease, .and that thetepirit that prompts;ib .willgo to.: sleep; ■We-know-the high courage,-the fiery czeal and earnest devotion of-roanyr who-, cherish--it, -If ^eiwefe free,it is-jte.ithem thei people Jweujjl look and listen for counsel and leadership. Bpt we. are not free, ThatirpaliLy ia toq, stern, ,500 terrible,-too,eve*:ptesent -toi bejiguorgd^,:^# Sraenvifoned-by perUs.that perphimao 4“ ay .-jet destroy us, despit?:allopur..care .and;,wisdom; Let 9sset op^ojL opr march.through toe,wilder ness with Jiejrtennd ^tuns toged $ojnj to«to ? steady, coolness thpte mcels de^t, oj. victory with the same equanimity. .Let us .sirip'oui should era. of- eycry fngtgfynapfa jy^,*^uj. i fpjt of .every.^-ight piayohiug,oyder ,is, our policy.and onr^afety., . *^nd if wq should,come to a stone wall in our path, let us not drive onr heafisagainst it.wh^anuther v^ay;- f of ; gefling oyer o;,-aroun^ it offers, itsqlf to, ps) Therein lies the whoie secret of spcc.ess, pud we itoink, ^ifP^P^hav^Jqamediti, . . : Wliipped.ky f’oriiflcations.. ia ,, t Editors Telegraph'd!)# 4feqfenge^ : Fyaqro, has been whipped byfcer tonifications, ; §Q.w?ra) the Confederate States.- So. wfil any natiqq, ( be[ in our day and time. They used to servo a,gqp,d purpose in-the olden time, and may.be of good service m'faturc-againstfloatmgJiAUoR^.jhiili for defending a conntxy. inland -agaiqst .mqderq strategy "and modearn. akms they havethf: opppj site- effect.-*-)!j ;■ ■ jc--n>-j 1 s J bzm .• Fxanw had plenty, of .to?™ along Mor T froa tiers. Jt wasnfices^ary.t^garrisopnnd defefic them, i Therefqre tJje fiest artillerists,. ,a?d f tf choicest regiments had to be shat up in.jtj -linesjtoudefejBddhem-: Thosjs plac^Ubj^ame inf vested^ besieged} then, it. hecapio .a,popt.o» honordfco resent* the gay rjsop r „ 7n t :uo ., r-.The nationaljannies- were thua^BcajjtQrgdan^ frazeeled.out,-. -Hereji .portion J|t c Sras^eUtg— another jdivirion at; ; Pfal8bJu:g u; ,^iipihey_ £ a,t Touh another-atilletz,.another, M,y^r|np^at Montincdy, at Relh^,. at Pari% and 1 i0anypt^.Qr points;. Thdenemy had nothing tp (to .^pt.mass bar-whole forces and take toem.in detail—wljip- ping andeaptuxing untiljiotbing sava ailanged disorganized mob is left without hpd, famj r qr rear. 1 . . >3 1 11 nuie c: jz a rsa O. O K *.-» j .■‘‘Ppncfip.tr/kte tq,fig^t,spatter to fora^e,^ said Jhat gamps whp,gavoFrf«ice her military'prek- ■Meb ? l following this^randjPrinciple of \var._ Tne pre sent Napoleon should have gathered “every .fcrajjfed roldier aro$in$.him on the Prnsaioji fron tier, kept .them well in hand, and did tho very y I. tiiki.T * «-*ri—aiUliDl 1 j T. 'lunzliTi JrTjLfttf | ^r^SBiuns^aYe done Bucoessfdlly— jbpij,e^_large.,ma'^ea .'against exposed" Pqr.G^cqjsral Beauregard wrote'to* Bragg'jdlii as; the iajtpr was 0 stajtirig upon the 'mbmoifilile: Eenbapky t campaigu :. r Always, rememb'er ihis gw4xP5inc®q.of .wprsHass'yonx ^o^s; against wea^e^djyisjopg of tlio enemy. ^ . j ;l Moilshqn^i Sed^q campaign was‘a.gre^; t mia>« .tske.. .Re shgnldhayqleft Razaine to his fate,- .... . — • • '• -* "Tola j-1 army i-ltr 7 f J. Aloof J frpm.every. 1 p^oljabilify o^ sjegp, hegt’itj in.a.w«ri,i»ctivcij.iq ) ^fcie < field V; hung upon tho invading Prussia. . • • . It y^s hardly possible for France to havCshc- .cesgfnliy contended against Prussia"iff thfis war; any way; but she would have ma&fi 3 b§ttor about her. broke-JOfit she million ^-xnon heized France by toethroat.- kVhailittioetvesigtii Francdbad has tieefl literally wasted dbfexidiDg ‘fdHa^niS fortified'towns.: And l seSqme. fafkl-blander is to-be committed at.Pajis, , j ' f tit neat t j c abfcij- h-. Gi^yo^. Wafttiifi to u -lWafr'iif«Ku the . llMited « x £ cwzgto c usciti**.;. h-j xl ai,«, Pa The French Republic waits, in breathless, ex pectation, tojhoa^Jh@.voice <i|'..r9/^gnitj o q,. ,brotherhj»d sBd-goqd pjUl frotp the go^prnpient OBIU^U fAUf rMUU^UUU .UW U|JU a UUUGA* stand, that the .gq^ronient of ( the United States, is ^o yrhejej^n pa^hgulaj:, ji^t pojv." That Grant may probably be engaged^ja.a^g^jnp qf poke^ ?tiJiPm * .sppr.ting.gr snoozing.at-lfis.vtilagepp^tl .of <jn. .o’arqs ja.,ifa^achu9etts—fi(?X ..sampling' ne.wj cheese in Ohio—Ak^pnfj^"fixing u^ Etom^ian pqfclicayriggerg. ' is > B Btarving v x;]pji^Jn ; AVas^ingt9ii,, a"ii^, J indqed, if ; tho. Y-'holo.,Cabjoet. ww'9 u »f,,l'he Capital, they --would nqidqro tos^anyjhingejtprefsiv^f the sense flfiAmerisWetofiPnWPt). l?uft judge of cigars and horse,gg^a^. ^ Jqles Favro.- JiigrfQpin^Oft^^?.; pcint8 t 'i| Thai is probably %eeitiee*hey haJe not studied: would be pf some, valuer but as k tp hiSj ideas on; toe political situatipn pf^xanoe ayd the duly esty, is the best policy. *A carpet-bagger in Augusta insulted a gontle- manjrecqntly, and when b® picked himself up' from the pavement," he was' fike, 0 a c le^al- mart- ticket over there as their candidata-fierBedreta- gaged—regularly Stamped. ; v xhi -1 - v #?E weU graven.image.. RognbHoans.jril^agtqnjgtly.. ; Akout to be Gbcnledi.. v The Montgomery mail says 1 toe negrp^ Ra pier, wbcwasTecetrilyput-anitoeiRadioal State ry of State, as a sop to the negroes, ianbont to sell out his place for $10,<fe0 andi retira from: toe -'canvass.' The ‘white' Rada of: North Ala bama swear they will bolt if b* don't ajekwat of the way. And tint's toe way tha txooly lof supports ? stand by "the loyal blacks.” in >r, ' m - -’ . r The Ritualists, separate the s^xes, in church. Paterfamilias writes to a paper complying of this. He has been in the habit Of sitting by his wife for twenty-five years, "and who,” he pite ously asks, “is, under the new plan, to pinch me when I snore out at the stupid sermon 1” Tbs slfsgy «ut to ass to Rri% mons will be made wad their best men US All Capital in France oentesliaeste Parts. The put forth 6y the" Radic&ls, it ceftaihly behddves supSHer power-there of reteBtiim .is so much conaequen- the atrenglh/ablinytola fitness of'“the man^ obtain meatm toreatore to kte.soii the-qualittea, r-1.-?-' V.. txJlSSen’ni- T.m^, criAj^itan^td 1.17 EL* M-nna TKii agricpltoral stl^r. France to be thstthW kv j average proauci 01 vmw u omy iw-r bntiltU tor 1 ! per 4ferd‘ While-in 'Bngtand it is twenty-seven is-j bnabebt '.-Asia oonacquenee, too French peaa- aniiy grew from -infancy half,Starved, badl; Col. ‘Bbjhtdii of zsal -and requisite' amount fh _ Of energy and perseverance to..Witt his*way tp any dmighfe that h|s fiopes ang, jfjjfifgtipns might point-, .. In his profession, he occupies/'a'eserv- ediy/ aiiign 1 p'ositiori; thefb 0 blrng 'fdW lJwyefk in his Circuit if more-extensive; practice.-Being n man -of vigorous mind and close and judicious study,: he stands, as a debater, and. souj^d moral And political thinker; and speaker, amohg the most promiiifcnt bf "tbib ^rising 111 rheri dt Mld3W Gioi^Wf and being 4 wnrm'and etaloua.-Detno- crate thorongWy t and. pc?verfujly ; tonubued wito. ithe principle« r of Jtbe parte as it now. crisis: with a inind to coinprehend ' itnd * appreciate, and a -will and an elcquen&'to maihtein’ and defend these principled; with-* knowladge.’of lhftrifl- ities of thfeparty jn toe pj-esent crisis^, e., ,to. save.the cowtev from the rule and ram of the' Radioals,7 and' an Unlalt oriug raith' itfthe-pbWer of the party, Colonel Boynton- -willietaisg, with-him-in- his - candidature,i if i.-hCc is pom- • iqaUd, an ardor r and, intelligence equal to - any demands that, the most warmly contested cAmpaign"Inky" Ire^uite fif ^its champion.' 7 Cdli* Boyntoh eferved With diettnction.ilrUita i-wM-fom Southeia) righted but.-hia political disabjlitieft havw&heeq revp<fftd, an$ frferipghegg brought Henry* J&sper and xliftioniii vafldtta pfibiicrposittens of ferust-and honox, he tarings arfi acquaintance, apd- peraonal infiuence to hear ip thasq. Sftv^alcogqtia^ Jthat-w^dal- mqst , poritiyeJy..as8_ura his_ election over the mdst rormidable'tippon e n t?' ‘So c'ftTcmelir ifiarfe'CoI? (t B6yfite'D;' ifi tbe -connlies of Bnttky Jasper, Spaldingthnd Bike,-that.- he would,,um questiojp^aly,'; carjy .wUtabjm j» strong and in fluential colored vote and'supporf m thosAim- portaut ebu6tietf. T: ' iii 01 ? -• ® 1 Withbut prejudicing r)r disparaging toe claims of olhew who may be., emineptiy fitted forihe qQinination, it i* confidently helieycd^by many that.the ntune ot CoI. 'James'S." Boynton unites the'stroDgest elfemetita 1 of 1 polftictleligibilitydK the presentjniihftrte, 4rh%n :, 8tK5ccs3 to the party is BO oesenrially.flad. imperatively necessary far the general good of the country. His name, therefore, is. suggested and his nomination urged upon the DemJcrh'flBPpart^dif f t!i6'4to District. "Bibb.”/ tieiieral l^oii Gteeltq On' A ‘Spoiling ■ ’Tbfiiri 4 * *" c-:-nxoi» o- r ' 1 ; A ^NewYtaict'drifes^ondeiSt thtB describes a sporting tonr indulged in by this: distinguished military oh'ife'ftain df the Prussian:.blue .stripe up amon^ the* Adirondack- hunting grounds. .• -7 Parties who write *hp in the Adirondacks,t.» few Weeks ago,, when Horace wa^-toerej give queer accounts of his conduct^ - They say it was tne, mosj; astonishipg thingeve'r keen iii that region. “Ho wentbatnshihg'one day and came near being polled ontof the boat by akigtront. The trbut got *way fronfchim at lapt, taking his leader as a memento,*nd.he s^ore ( fearfujly. when he.jreelqd ip and found the lea’dbr gbne.' The b oat man told "fiitn if he’'did not stop'swear ing he wonldnot catch any fishp ond theu:he> broke ontift^such’a way thafe the h patman,,, who may. have-.b^en - superstitions, rowed ashore at once. He afterwards said that ho W6hld’ xfbtr take "the cussin’ loonatic” but' agaia-for-afiy-1 ■thffigl ''AnOthet tlmehewdUiaffiioishOQkdeer, and acted in the most outrageous manrujj—es- ■peclAlIy In' the handiing of his.gpn. 7 His com panions were in imminent danger all the time, ?amd:atltetetoayitp<?fc-toa.ignp^ffflrp..h.i,tn lAfo 1 > ft gether. When Horace found fumselftidafe'd in this way he refused to go any further,.and^ when 'Ke ootiipehioUs returned to ti»n hotel,(hey found him.^abusing .the-.ladlor^, t)epauss fie;did not. raise strawberries, on a piece bt laha coVerkd wito scrub " ~ in a el MetTZi ' * “Why, 3n said -fhe-lahdlofd,< "that pHteh ain’t fit for anything.” ail . * •T!Kn' s"a»xtie -philosopher.tu <‘-Jhat’^.d—d nonsense: :Why: the d—d dont you try i - Have you ;eaA‘^hat*! Know About Fatihrog’’?’‘'"' ; ' ," To which the'irreverarit lariSloifd 1 ; : •-*Nd,-rir,‘ I fi’aint, and I don't witit to. We: haint gat fiindfdfid-ad : f0oKshi»ss:up7heres.”:iai.-y. c : Horace left toe Adirwjdojjfi^ that xucfit.and does cot mean to go. the.ro any mare. “ Butihe k/’W • tioh ofaaepitaliim-Paris.-dpateoyaAfip 0 |ffij;sjqu§ of the peafantryj-'jrJmform toe large gropo'r- tionof the rank ana file lor trie “ftench'aVrdyV 1 wnile of'thiA'sysfdni'of livirr^'cta tobd/aittefUbein l-iaders/thit-H -destroys ‘.thecheat brpipa, and, energy ofiihe offioera wfio.must cqmmpn^ tfiia weakened peasantiy.. Apd,, the whole French na|km is enfeebltd end' efi’erVafe'd by fills 1 ida- tinue'd centifaSiation. 1 - 1 - - l ouooa.-c to to cstuni Now turn to Prussia. We find here a wall ' * ' tion. * A eupAnsion, growing ont of their strong, powerful oopditiop, gThq Goversmentrof,;Prussia- i^,,centralized .an(j ar- bitrary; but th^., material power which IS" the real, strength of Ja natibn is de-edhtrslized and dlstributed’among ; the people.^ In: Prussia: the people are stronger than the go.vapgppjri,, an^ control toa.go.v^rnmept cr .*lth9)igh it iaMani- nally and seeipingly arbitrary.' In France, .however, the peoplevrir edtSielf in^spabie df reilslingdbe all-COntrifilihg oeAtralizing-'Don- dition. . cxauti tt h*i-il ! ; - J-Thdi financial, system, of Prasaiaprovides for the decentralization ani'distribatiou of Cap ital by adequate agencies through ont -toe whole realm ; : wb8reaS j: that bf-France codtaiuS no such provision, and everything flows to Paris. ThePbtosians Waging an Uncivj r-f-The jBostonr.F« st i dftcl.area.toat,,toe .Prussians •are wdgiug.uncivilized w^r, ; and.that the'fact is olearljndamqnsty^tinJha wy u are coh- dnCting the,siege of-Strasburg. 1-The prisoners takpp ^rop> toe gamson are compelled to workin thelrenches against tfidirl .09jn.countrymen, and to receive their fire from th.otrail3j £ %ed-h'ot Bhofter-'petrolenmc bombs- ^xb-totWrUPintcftoa city be m*ke destflWriCUAvith ,«fiji;che3, r liliraries and museums.. The women and'children'kra fe-' fasedVn opportunity To fid traSisporfed "Beyond the limits, in toe expectation that their suffftr-t dhg : VriWto'e L Beoner-tfoi'De:toftcgarripfln, or the citizeoisto OApito-Wo, . Such, violations of tfie customs of /no^egi ; V^Tjisire.a"fe propfefbr stig-" .matized in France as wholly bA.Tlratian £ and- r ixi-* 'defensible!' Thiy’do more f6 show up the pur-i poses of tho invader* tour all: too .God-fearing- announeemenia fif. vlptote-r by-. hftJpj 6f -' weariI1 H iKwg.mitiw The prof anation or churches'find cathedrals, id the towns th^y ‘Btiiscesfeively- occupy,- seems i to ffiffiruSpeoi A! pastime .with theJ!rasslans, as if theyjhatedithe **iy .refigipP; of„tho pe^lo.tem- {iporarily WHSmtJdaZastLMaaUi J .'i ^ .. Btiiic l&rAl'h'trysail-to* tlier Horitlk Under this head the St. Louis Republican] of Fridayjkays r rl U-It 4 T- 1 Wabn.M - XTIwKk'XliVl f . Messrs. MarmSdukV $ Brown, commiaEfion die re bants,‘have toelhonor-of: pipiiug^he. first experfinent a - through shipment by rail oi bulk grnindo the" Sonth/ To-day, 1 ‘th6y £ uift'6rir tik, ttmt 'tfieyBentPfbPWifd^G^Aagasta.'-Ga., a ' * car‘Of bulk tbe JronMcnairtaia, Mobile t i«nd Ohio, 'NaahsdUe **d-. NorthwastarUj and .: ; Nashv41q.ap4 Chattanooga RaUroada,. "This has open rendered praoticable.byTh'&.bbmSletiSh at" Cblnmbus. Kentocky^of 1 the ! ittb}flie ) , c By ,r -Which, the Iroti'MbnntaHi Railroad:enabled to-oop-. neat; witooixtibiesking ibulk, wito too of of tho United States! - Alas, they do not .under-.. ro}id reaching- many important points in’the gtaryl Jh^jritiiatioti he^-. . .^hey flo. n^t ^unSer- South.'‘ In‘con3ideratmii r bf : itls : pionc0i't}harac-:: ter, it was taken free. The expe«iS(Rtttproim8a% ,,, PerCrf fbHowed*^-* targe imsineas m.Ralk ship- ( j^ r uients of grain to.toe^putoj* W^snaai] - , >a the drfiJe’AsS PsiNiira'?-*^The Her- 7,^ %£f'iiya : : 97 4,100 " v l ln '--ot A ic t. 'he'rotiim of tfe O’ri^ans^rififieiitopfi^et isncP lobgct a ra*re- pbshrbitityi'' ffitwifcrotusn is iano ' -Of the: necessities of.: the ;aitua|jpp. -, Qrlpanif t contentment, not Bonapartist ambitio^.is what Frgnf^,henceforward irill imperalively neodl— In some'future age", bnt°flfit : nSWv Ginacquhn '^iflvfinhss'mayt&kh fPimw jpdinfc wf'-dephrUire. Would it be wonderful if, uthila anotfiajvBopa- " f .pSffa.goes.iifio inyolnntary exile, and while tfie dome of ‘ St. Peters's fades'a'fciy fronSthe eyes of Itho last 1 fif 'this Rmhab Pontiffl-tbe to-eatm of M. Guizot should: becoma aueality .and toe de- eendante of Louis Philippe should reign at once in, Paris and ^idrid. The .whirligig "of time works wonderous cnanges. ' 11 ' i • • ,i‘V' L ^ : ■’ —' "• •• - --‘"U - - V As , .Dkpkoted b y THjats^v^ rCftliHttbta Uttarfiianeays u j,. 1 J. Tim Hurley, the Brightlummaryind mas- 1 Party,'biys: Of course we steal: Wb came here J t(f get Votir mopey. TOgct £>feg: to con-'. ‘ 'I tibne to-^t-lf,_qifed'you lle4brnK'rscan’t help 1 you rselvesm: IfyfimihinkThat tenth end hon-c esty will bring, suep^ ypa are .mighty mis- n ‘ S* 1131S a ? ago of jirogress and ^flpSf toi)g lo ol4 fogy notions aDout'hoL^Mv, . an^ such stuff. The niggers haven’t any sense; you uatff heat a'hew idea into- their heads, and The* am goiog' -to vote as : we tell them.” Is thfit tho pMty that General Grant Tf.~.Z~, C • .-j,.- -jco ah .1:.... .* 1 . , .ThbSkbikb AT fAif Bdvxa.—The strike hVl Biver, riift continues, the strikers be ing unyielding in IhcSr detertofnation to hold out until the mill owners accept their terms. The Spinners’ Association has $1,200 in the treasury, for the support ofthe families ofthe members. No attempt has yet been made to remove the spinners from their house* rented frosa the mill owner* , p&Qfj clothed",.and without education"; so that when organized into armies,' although TeSeiviBg tbU‘ in cist* perfect military discipline^ and: possessing | Ail-that soieuoe has discovered in arms and mu- hitioss of war, yet the men.thus disciplined, and.wbo are to use these arms, tire without the' stamlbii to ifuslam fhemselveSitiidir the burdens bf ^greAt w-ar. ^ Tbis accounts for the effeetive- ness of the first charge, and U)0, sabseqoent dc-, feats of the Franch army... * , There is another element 'of the French army "which ddfis possesS’lhe-'bi^hest'toquisiteS'OC tf It-ood Soldiery, Mit it is a small—b .aosali por •centage jof . the;; .whple. army-. The,-™ feliows’b drawn from I e cities", and a portion of the Iiiipttial Guard, coftSiifdte .this elehmit. c: - Jaa5 3 v 1 ;xoauoutircaT Another fianaabof. -weakness ia vthU French et unmnrxnaringi, he rabmitfed^S" Uoi «V 1 benng ttat^wiys fif ‘ though'’ often -te^oref.'kodJ tuhiiegrc/aJu 1 | ao»th AemMids sorrow from .ev^v t"' though w* so deeply xnomn tl« W W [ fit the same time^eerindyeubmittQt^^- joff living on, tofi.nart of-its officara, effected by I «0f»*ly.heasetoifg^HkgJ^pteos a residence in Paris,'aiid by ihS 'exfimplfi'of' Brother upon one who shall biar itnntir^ 011 ' Parts ‘ lif b and mil fibers. 'This is‘the veason the conflicts of life» ani} .yawiled, lajj- tbore-ta 1 nofie of thafc-hard-headeilneaa .-among s Whereas, Ah the praiio we co* 1 .! 1 • Itoo officers; Such aSiifiifwu^Jn-.Eoglfmd,^ ynamp wopld be useless;besides ^‘^^to'Eu focTmu'ch" Himfr? *» c«nswa«c «iituniua: ^.4KfiffildfdUVSL !ThWit t tviil T ‘b«'6S«B thatiU»:conceatralfztf-: cor ^ 8 .* nd M*hf' the J -frtA chtfatiiiii^Dirii ‘ * whose litowAsspent'intoecMseofZic^. * ItesolvM ish'-TbUlndhe rieithof Broths t-. iT ^ ^1“ Mtive member - ^0%^ 'dervoted- fatter, tfloriug. bK)ttojw^ n /*T C *r* ‘friend whose.inflnnpa^ UJJJJJJJJAJW lory will be cherished so long asi^Z^ l^TBEMlOteggP* which he helped to SlN (for wbchh^sofrithfriny hibj?^'^.^ 00 * Twhtotl aH/iftitHrlfile ire tioiirn tfitninV Totri, we°tfiriikflbd : ffiat m fah Ukm kZi , tliie worH of ttenhfc to' a load W n»b r. , Z Reaolvsd-'Sd;. That- thongh o*r- deputai Bratiu. canXMt return to ,tis t -.by tha-hatpot Qo4 vZ I daarotite day we may join him in singing^u^'^- esf aMr^sraiidtiaaer tKem"-erf syfetaUarita efitonit them tenths Binda'of :thi(t Ood sfco u, their VenerAbtir father so calmly Vnifcnin::( ax lit . 0 .non t .13:0 ^osl '• -I marked characteristic is in toe sqciafkeli^Irins —a unity of family.' All who are’efa^aged in farming, or other industries, find remuneration — find orofitable occupation^—amp^'snffic^it to restoro-the ^xfiaustiem,.WV.fik.toe ppa-^ Tfie diversified, industries'tofirs hire more easily created an- anywhere else, and find thefS' (heiryeatesi surifiesA t a zH. 1 ! ?ccx 11 ion rr mix u * severest _ jes; to every member"of his famitj. f,i ^3fi is made possible'of executi'orobydho prosperous oobditiom of the. cooniry ia#^ jta people.-.^ hundred.snohj; tavra-mjght^riat_iu Franco, but owing to the want of means in' 1 the' populate there, it would be impossible for the peopie’Cri OomplyvMtH tfietnf- rl« to tonot iz lahmih fi *: Men drawn !rom suoh a population as that of Prussia are early fitted to sustain Ihe hardens an^trials of war. 'When possessed, as now, of armamid 'aih!trraiu£ioii ! ‘equid : iii evtay respect to those-of their opponenta, and organized «nd disciplined in accordance -wi^h .thor, h^st. and most, approved., prinqiplef, and Ted by bffiOen who. have not'b'een "weakrihed 'BjrtHe- : ltrrfiribus living of a great cebtralized’capital,! tbey be- •riotne irresistible; •: _s aic, s,; t ,f:jnr powtjf andklrength of -the people growing ont of "their great prosperity.! These tigpypmfntaj toward France come—as the previous move-. itirely the 1 the present'xtKViu Eiteopei; : We'are traveting in f " same de- exliiliitioh of power jti Ffitfce -^oiKp%aSat4 for ndir ^resenP9bvhifiilW nuniKu<7 c s-i rr s nl - . -n“»-'-ate tf«»WNWwtama m ante « vJ , iiMuo-.M&mm w.FtalJdJjsJHue^ In the Qoupa, recently, .a member,‘ tailing 150111 some Npr*''— ——■ u " nn 1 "griituia'te upon is said to suffer from examination, madd ,a %pbech -nrglng i that -th#i-Espiiepiiiary, ..should hrve belter accommodations, .With h sagacity peculiar to adven.tnrers, he ddnbtioss foresees thnt ere long the'Peiietfcntisfy-Vill -bef his post office and residence; and he therefore-.wants fo mftkfetoisfuixire jquarteraoMawfqrtablo.., If he igate his severities. . I: h 'erTy'iiig-"' ’"‘'Mfi'EaHe, of‘Atlanta;-.bnsr made -some im- ; ^ r '■ ‘ r^To.vemeats ip photography, Jmt there is'.rqom fomiore. - For iaatanc-j we want some ariist'to; invent a dnbsfiinte J frirtfiat’ lhsIWainehtfiP’ltir-. fure—that reHc hPtfce'ifaqhiBW on,; which ispnt behind the head to hold k riraighi. - A-lady -of our acquaintance; pnea leanjed. nar head a gainst said instrument. When the" photograph' 'was taken, she rose from her seit;'but *tfie - prongs. vc 1 rjl 1 ipiietly retafned her chignon, iltia very unpleasant that fetn'alee sbouki th^a ' have , (he larger pafit .<?£ ,fheir. head*, ^^ely ..wrenched .. _en'SK. Atkins^atftried‘f6ri ! brib*iy;ik)me bfotheTtherfiber moved that he should: have no 1 ‘' back pay.” If the ine-vertoad ^eflected that AtkinB backpay would have been a few handred lashes with a .bastinado, hi toe motion. Tfie Wame’ - i -.,. - n «. r- JBHB-j.«R . . — ■— ^oibef^SrtMtMl to rk to-day, thejrimrifm' -’fhfie'AMriiis'his'taffeftyK Par- the pleAsure; of /a-, „ kisifi^himjtheHansaioouldTaftowlmto.-tPayihis 1 Af veaojn ia tciaiteso;; r. The bonnets of the day are so smalf (though theirjitice increases as their size d8creas5sj iiirat wri'-cannot wonder at the aristakoj made • at the Springs ;tbei othep:. «ee)m,-A*^dy , who ; uaad. poqia'.um Freely on her hairw'a3 going from her cabin to toe hotel at ffie fiifrn'SrihonY,'a ; butter fly alighted on her head and becamw -rtec* iV the pomstom. An old bachelor—a,- grgat flat- hii gfnc8 leSrfifelHhkteiWiile'Iherai is - Mo. differ ence between a bonnet and butterfly,to. thc-teas a difference.iu-ottpiiAaapegts, , ’ n: A, Wisconsin editor,,of ; theE"utier otaipp an-v nor,uces.that hestoall use every effoK'tri'TEw out toe" ydWtessrftMafebgfeeStof-ffie Etatfei- Hie •friends shbilld hold' him:; ror, bec.will commit suieideuuooii. cl sov-l n't r fiwrv wo 41 URJ Torumo, 'and'feffitte'Ksrve fount) to* place wtteri we left off ths last time, it pula US geatly^tet pleep. - ; • L : - AV«: ado)if%, jha,.gj(ample8, of ^ncieat great men. Lycnrgus, having been a Wish ruler, men. Aiyeurgu.s, .having Been a Wise ruler, voluntarily lefthik'coufitryi intoe fipinibfe ‘that his'absence worifMne better’ tbos his presenop, Wfl oommend him to BullOck for imitation. -The ■fr^htirgus never "caoie bPCStV “-We hope his Ft., ceUsncy-willcupyLyoargui strictly .in, this last item-, ■ -- . r L, .Mr, Jno. J, Newton and other officials in At- Ifinta seem to be 'BflGandefincthe Btate'stnonev . , HtteHdefingtoblftato’ffmbney JL- - =~ TnmTr - wtthfi' liberality ^>eenliar < to- those Whose Iiber> rents. . But an alfjw^e ^od •Mty costa them nothing. If they- don’t run pose fo tfccomplkbL hyfhi* PF“°‘ v te # the.machine.on atoeaper sohednle, the medic, uiapenaation.. Thaobject of such erm ^ " - sa ‘Ute-. from tbh rough world or sleep hi toe arini of ~k Mmri and of the wfiaimity^ Yea, to# darling boy tigoita, and Ute moitac to W** , axed mri wfflae* *• '7*?L 0 iip r thosextoodie in tatam' to rest in Heaven aboT*, f<* ao te or yiti^' little cfaUdren to oocoa unto f oc of enob la toe Ktngdom of Md you tion of Artemua Wafd will come true, and "too t honesty Goddess of liberty in less than a year will be seen dodgin g itf tf pawnbroker’s shop, with her gown done up ln'O-hundle under her arm.” ; . c:.j. 1 .'.' •» 1 No Place Lxkb Ix.—We have been told of a boy who accompanied his father as a summer tourist. After going sbfiM from resort to resort, trying the hot cars, crowded hotels mid other delights of For a youngster his question showed sense.— Boston Transcript. A BAcnxLoa reporter doces a glowing aooount of an exoaxrien by saying that nothing ma'd the Ttovtetohl . tftibrrE op eevtottyear UluhHaasfigfj^^“ "• .^.deacon for more than a quarter of _ Whereas, "God W J on3 a | ne ri ' Ttito unknown WCrida «ribe «tam*Uy w IkSSSSSSSSI iQf his Dime Master toatp-e ^efaU --..^J love for his oamf, and to honor J Lv' qu^church book ascribed'to his m 6mo ^ ^ Whereas, The death bf On^ who U bo ^ a4 " ind zealously in Ibe' ctuthof 'Z to n 0 fi e ^ *” wefe ’fit dose comumnfon-with- his m h 1 *** whbmww eould ffo-ta timeef.ttmnble L « -x f alm for eve(y wound; one whose Resolved 5th. That a copy of these.XMoInita •> ::' iIojuJ Hobne, 0 "^ Mjj.k.i .v# h rr {- G. Andmivs: ; 3>1 ’ ' 'T.'Mr G.ftitfc tint i -Dl£«T; ! tf DHij; ‘Mrti'fin&L 1 W. A. Davis. :<a xatiit'ca rCoBHgUkft ___. JR '-ABriUst 28,1*50. • / Whereas, Under the sad andinscrctiUs I sation'oftanaUi-wiaePmdidsnoe. car, tetiwdBtt J?- • ijiumiii^ae yicAut in' our Lodge room, And onr fonts'tiki with! mtxptesstble sorrow. 1 f Feeling thstitis due to the memory of cede I ceised' Brritoer, that the nfemben of tla Irip, •hall in some way give an expresuoa of (hair fed- Inga, as a fesblS testimony of the high eueemis which he was held .by the fraternity do, tiierelon, resolve j.r .t dob c icactp ‘-ttSuk »»«. First, ThlltjBjlJinjkntJhrf our Brother YcDti- aid,,wft raefitpize toe chastening hteri bf Oiijlil bo,w in humfile'submission to his holy inif 1 " will,.knowing tiat'he doeth »lt things figlK that'All'thlhgii'work tegether for geod’loXhutthi I love the Lord. -itiiou.-.: an Secfitrd-, $ha<-~tirb«S'deAta ourlndg^Nltei •gfood and- utefuk rmsmba-; and; wj^vhotciri cot | ilia principles'of the Qrder as yearly isjwmII Third, Tb»k in hi* desth we are ag»in »!m: :cdjof .toa-owtoinjy o^d^b. and tlie'uiMwfia^ I lif^.Whiqp^willLfetfi^aUWelUgerit foiiiti,tot I icons slialf comei "eath to earth, iskes ft' uta I dust to dust,Widch' fo-tbe unetangraUe:« - J God, and to it, as did our deceased BrotterP I must all soonerror tatar. submit- I , Fourth, That our.Lodge room and jewels 1*I clothed in mourning, and that every blotter rat I the usual. badgef or thirty d»y«>; and s ^[7^1 t hese resolutions be fttmisbed tho family of tl»»l ceisedBroilie-f,' asidi a copy toaitoedlhoX6lags?l ihdl&^sk'Hi^er’ffi# publteAtioni 5 it is Hid (pm lx a d ; zzma -.t iG; R.\FAUh5i -m k tjaa o x v q\ rfjjA. Seifiuos, . •'*!** "Dto**c: xr k-i JafiDV Iu»,'-:. .t.tecoui iiaofcsehri 3 yf. O.'DAxm: - 1.- (oa. -iiia— »>,.T-.iomuM-t j-j: --•mc?r .-nr.-i.ol o- s»fe '.M.-Trirr-.iro -THIBb'TE OF KEtiFFCX' .Died, of par&ly sia of the brain, Sondiy, Se^* 4,1870, Nathaniel PinkhaM, Libraiiin «1 ^ tant Seqrepuy of .WaUop.liodge, No. 23. klrp®' ent Order of Good Temptira, and PreiiW 0 ’ * Msoon Typographical Union, No. 81.' " r So teada" too sad u fietico whito'.'*a*** K "^ stricken relafi ves 1 and friends thst * soa. kou* and fririhd- has departed from amongst ta 'more cWr : earth. An ^affectionate ,son ini Whnse every hslMttrtorqb beat for. the ; at home,”.a -truefriend, an.»We craftsnak*^; l—we bow with sub-..— . insofutable decree^dmt our “Circle of I . whilst narrowed here On eirth, iaroot I t ending one of'its lifik^A'crilss tile rircri tin I that great beyond, loVlttg Sands and "* ! leap id its ftlfoWahip. al* -S tErtvws U«• * r recfirtTfS' wtittew Ousflrotliei with it into-toetamptic : ilsy it tfitotofemorpapctfiarj^ig i it-therefore,. r .. v.fKinldi^l Besfilved, That in the deslh of V fh _ J haul, S3, t OK**;*'* lost an. able officer'and member, wh tlM will *8ver l>e cherished df its members. - Resolved, That ‘weeitriid'OTf hew- _ (hlea to his bereaved rtlattv»s; fn«dA #»h- efaftsuwfcf May too widowund 3 tendtothamHis o««edtftion:ie.tl‘ifim >e “ ™ >nced.i ^insiuarata-d v *arilih"c b 1 • ' —-*««*■*-*-* ‘ — *— 1'»f T- S* * . 1 Besoived, That.% pageof- .WtiiJ'T 5 ' _ dedicated toQH&eyo&i 9 l l and that the members of this Lo-lg3 ^ al baiota of nionroiDg 1of fwfcty -rt flefeolvJd/ttat our' SeWtM7-fbiw«4 ftisi, Hhftiffirtdft Of Xtepecf. tobiAtsl^^ : Resdlvbd,: ThU a copy be sent to te« paper*, witliavreqaMttota.pnWy 10 ^' 1 ';; .- >.eonc. oi t au ja jiia jjUdS?o»ns,-^ 1 oraa. a -ia u - uario ce s 'a fxvnoaan at i^vKolri tit y-Vrr.ntoy • rtirx.. .or..; : Departed this life August SthyDAX-*^^, child of James B. and BaiMa year of his age. :Bs was * moat ■-promising child,-,whQ was /^doalyM* from the fond amtaaoe-of loving »nd * B0asmrnui t t %i»^" 0.^ *r. ‘ * - * mnwttm