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The Greoraia ^W^eeklT Telea:raiDh and. Journal & Messenger.
TelegrapK and Messenger:
mco^ stitiz 18, 1871.
Tlie Great Fair of 1S71.
The Premiattltlst of the Maoon State Agri
cultural Fair to be held on the 23d of October
next and closing on the 27th, is now out. ^Che
range and-ntuflber of - premiums are very great.;
We judge from a hasty review of the pamphlet,
that besides medals and other awards, the So
ciety offers not far'from $10,000 in money pre
miums, trhd in addition to this large amount,,
the money premiums offered by private individ
uals and associations aggregate a large sum.
Mayor Huff alone offers nearly $3,000 in prizes
for the fastest boats, horses, mules and foot 1
racirs. And there is a prize of ‘£5,000 sterling 1
(say $25,000) offered by the Governor GeneraT
of India, through the British Consul at'Savan-
nah, for a machine which shall clean ‘Sarnie
fibre'at a'cost of not more than £15 sterling per
ton. There are also numerous other prizes of- 1
fered from private sources, and altogether,’it is
the most munificent proposition that has ever
been made to the pnblic in these parts.
The lists of competition comprehend almost
everything that can well he thought of, and the
magnitude of the prices alone will stimulate
and secure a very full exhibition in every de
partment of agriculture, mechanics, manufac
tures and domestic industry. We shall antici
pate, with entire confidence, the largest and
most gratifying display of Georgia products, -at
least, which was ever put before the public.
All the other material arrangements for-lhe ex-
hibitlon are now nrno<v>nfitJ ««;*!»
greatest energy and with groat liberality of-out
lay. The new exhibition grounds are very con
venient to town, and we are sure will delight
everybody. The Fair occurs aba season of the
year when we may reasonably look for mild and
dry weather, and nothing will be lacking on the
part of Macon to signalize this display as the
best ever known in Georgia.
Tlie New York. Trouble.
The morning reports of the riot in-Gotham
are singularly unsatisfactory. Th#y givo us
not the smallest idea where and on what ac
count so many people could havo been killed
and wounded as reported on Thursday. In
deed, they indicate no adequate occasion for a
fusillade upon the people, which is a-terrible
alternative, inasmuch as it slaughters idle spec
tators as well as active rioters. And that there
was nothing in the situation to justify there-
ported slaughter, is to be inferred from the
statement that the mischievous firing was done
by the Ninth Regiment without orders. It is,
perhaps, almost inevitable to a use of undis
ciplined volunteer troops in such fracases, that
discretion is lost in excitement. But we must
writ for the facts. At present we have none.
A PRAISEWORTHY EXAMPLE.—BOV. Wm. Hc-
Koy, of the Congsregational or dissenting
Church. of .England, -came to this country since
the war, as.-the confidential agent and manager
of an immensely wealthy English Company, who
made large purchases of lands in Dougherty
county, and. embarked extensively in the culti
vation of cotton.
zfr McKay, finding no branch of his own de
nomination in this region, and anxious to labor
in his Master’s vineyard, connected himself
with the Presbyterians, and was ordained a
minister by the .Presbytery of Macon.
Aftorxar.ta.Jbia ahonsdiug zeal and liberality
in preaching the jjospel without money and
without price, and his putting energy, procured
for him the position of Chairman of the Com
mittee on Domestic Misrionc in his Presbytery.
Since then, at the cost of great personal effort
in visiting and appealing f-o the churches for
aid, he ha3 dona much to supply the spiritual
destitution of his people. All tips has been at
his own charges, too, while ZP£»y generous
benefactions from his private pturso pave been
added to the treasury of the Lord.
It gives na nnmivc A plnaanro
lio testimony to the worth of a modost.aad ex
emplary servant of God.
Ose of the Provocations.—To give some
idea of the provocations and incitements to vio
lence offered by the New Yo*k Orangemen tp
the Catholio Irishmen, we qu'Ote the follow
ing verse from one of their favon te songs, and
to the tune of vMiich they are in thff frsbit of
mar oiling:
Water, water,
Holy water;
Sprinkle the Catholics, every one;
" \7e’ll cutrtkem asunder;
And make them lie under. i
The Protestant boys will carry the gun.
(Chorus)—Croppies, He down;
Croppies, lie down:
We’ll make Ml the Catholio Croppies lie
’ down.
Is it any wonder that men with warm blood
in their veins resent such wanton insults, not
only to their politics bat their religious faith?
The Orangemen have a right to parade, doubt
less, but they have no right to do or say any
thing cricni&ted to provoke a breach of the
peace. That ie.our idea both of tho law and of
right.
UuulgniUo* to the South.
The New York Bulletin reports that “the tide
of immigration” is setting in the direction of
the Southern States, and has already produced
a notahib effect fh stimulating the industry and
enterprise of the Southern people, and infusing
a now life into many iimportant branches of
production. This (says the Bulletin) Is seen
very prominently in cotton culture during the
present season,” etc., etc. The most of this
wiU be news to the South. It is stuff. True,
fee active efforts of some of our people have
succeeded in biinging a'few foreign immigrants
into the territory, buttbeyare ameredropinthe
bucket—too few and inconsiderable to make a
riffle in the general current of Southern affairs.
It would be well for many of onr Northern
contemporaries, who are fond of dilating npon
Southern prospects and progress, to keep within
hailing distance of facts. There has been, as
yet^ no important Northemor foreign immigra
tion to the Southern States, exoept the horde of
political adventurers who will leave (with a
blessing) so soon as their occupation and pros
pects are gone; and, when they leave, we sup
pose that will about close up the • “ tide of
Northern immigration to the South” from that
quarter. Foreign immigration may be drawn
here by the active efforts of the people, bnt we
incline to the opinion that even this will prove
an up-hill work. The inhabitants of isothermal
climates in Europe are not given to emigration,
while those of colder latitudes seem to prefer the
temperature and agricultural products they are
accustomed to.
So, taking into * account our. own experience
since the abolition of slavery, and also that of
allthe troninal moioiuu>( AJuS-Xr*—^-m—~j "*“ tt
and continental, we are disposed to conclude
that the population of most of our Southern
Stales will never secure any very rapid or im
portant accessions by Northern or European im
migration. . ,
One would naturally suppose that border States
like Virginia and Kentucky, and suoh other sec
tions of the South, as combine to a great extent
the products and advantages of temperate and
tropical latitudes—such regions, for example,
as Southwestern Virginia, Eastern and Middle
Tennessee and Northern Alabama, would attract
heavy immigration from the bleak and fieroe
climates of the North and West; bnt we see they
fail to do it. These genial and fertile regions
are steadily passed by and neglected for lati
tudes of eight months’ frost and winter temper
atures far below zero.
There is no danger, then, that the Southern
people will over see their individuality buried
under the flood of a mighty Northern or foreign
immigration. We shall never be “Yankeeized”
as some so badly feared—nor Tentonized—nor
Gallicised—nor Criticised. Therefore, it be
hooves us so much the more to put forth the
arm of self-help and independent effort and
seek improvement and progress by our own ap
plication and economy.
The Southern people can rebuild their own
waste places and repair thrir own shattered
fortunes, in a .very brief rime, if they tciU do
it. What ought to be the fortunes of a coun
try which can annually turn- out market crops
-worth four hundred millions—as we can do, in
cotton, rice and tobacco.? We have but to prac
tice even a loose general economy in order to
accumulate great wealth in a few years. If we
would feed ourselves and supply, as far as pos
sible, the common necessaries of life, we should
soon be armed with the tremendous power of
surplus capital for our own defence and for fa-
tnra accumulations. Our people are a frugal
people; but the error they commit in a-vital
one in suffering their simplest food necessities
to come from more luxurious countries, where
labor is high, and at an enormous cost of trans
portation. So long as this is done our crops do
not enrich ns. Stop it and a few successive
harvests would give us abundance of money.
A Poos Speculation.—The papers say the
oost of advertising the new loan which has been
withdrawn from the market as a failure, was
right hundred thousand dollars, exclusive of the
expense of Treasurer Spinner’s and Assistant
Secretary Richardson's trip to Earope in the
proposed interest of the loan, which, it is said,
will cost fifty thousand dollars more. This
movement, which, at an expense of eight hun
dred and fifty thousand dollars, has eventuated
in the sale of seven millions of new bonds,
must be classed under the head of poor specu
lations. The Badicris, who boast of their great
financial ability and suocess, must shut their
eyes to this operation.
Foet Yalletavd Pxbbx Railroad.—WO un
derstand that all the preliminary arrangements
have been made tot the immediate construc
tion of a-railroad from Fort Valley to Perry, a
distance of twelve miles. The Central Rail
road has the matter Vt hand and has promised
to complete# in time Co transport the present
growing crop. Jt will rnn through one of most
fertile countries Inhabited by the most solid
men in Georgia. Tfo«v ought to have had a
railroad long ago, bnt having grown rich and
.careless they don’t oare lgaai: about such things.
■ - ■ 1 -*•
Kev. J. L. White, recently a graduate of the
Theological Heminary, at Columbia, S. G., hav-
ingaccepted a call from thePreabyterian church
of Americas, has entered upon ihe discharge
of his duties
Mr. Whlt6 ii q young man of .prominence,
and has steady .created a most favorable im
pression.
The Law akd the Testimony.—YVo are under
obligations to some friend for all the documents
relating to the Atlanta Medical College ea-
broglio, and could a tale unfold by the publica
tion of the same, without championing anybody.
Will either party give us a bid for the job ?
Cost of European Trips.—The Herald calcu
lates that $120,000,000 are annually spent by
European tourists from tho United States, and
thinks the oountry could not aland the drain,
except for its wonderfnl resources end constant
ly increasing productions.
No Holidays fob the Poob.—The in
the New York post-offlee are in dudgeon 07er
an order stopping all vacations and holidays.
These are luxuries belonging to the President
and heads of department
The Rise in the Price of Wool.
The New York Sun, of Monday, says there
has been a sudden rise in the price of wool and
an —In. — J <»■ ■» » <w«> •*«“ "rf—
have yet reached its maximum.
Common Mexican wool, whioh used to sell at
from 18 to 20 cents a pound, is selling at from
30 to 32 cents. Carpet wools, usually quoted
at 30 cents gold, are held at 37 h cents. Cape
wools have gone up from 35 oents to 40 cents;
Australian wool from 42 cents to 52 cents; and
what are called extra fleeces, which are a stand--
azd in the wool market, like middlings in the
cotton market, are quoted at from 61 to 64
cents, os against 47 to 50 cents six weeks since.
Even shearings, which are the short wool which
grows on sheep between the time of their shear
ing in the spring and their slaughtering in the
fall, and are used for making hats, sell- at 40
cents a pound, instead of 25 cents, the old price.
The various .woolen manufacturers have re
sponded of course.to this rise in the raw mate
rial. Carpet yams .haTe advanced from S7£
cents per pound to 60 cents per pound. Two
and three-ply carpets are 12} per cent, dearer
than they were, and Brussels, which reoently
fetched $1 05 per yard, are held at $2 15. All
kinds of woolen doth and clothing material have
advanced on an average 10 per cent, with an
upward tendency. •'
The Son says there are several causes/or this
advance, among them a short crop last year,
the extraordinary demand for woollen goods,
caused by the war in Europe; the yellow fever
in Buenos Ayres which stopped the shipment of
the article from Brazil; and the abundant sup
ply of water which enables the woolen mills to
run constantly, and thus practically doubles the
demand for raw wool.
The BI©dgett-Sea«©Dirt-Throwing Match-
BlodgeU’s Dander .Up, and » Fight ora
Foot Race imminent—He Dismisses the
Subject from “Further newspaper Publi
cation.” 1
In response to Seago’s answer to Blodgett’s
card published by us Wednesday morning—and
which contained'little else than a square denial
of all the allegations made by B in that article^
Blodgett lets himself loose in another commu
nication which we find in the Atlanta Era of
Wednesday. He says he has proven Sesgo to
have been guilty of a readiness to swear false
ly—of foul practioes to secure the lease of the
State Road—of using false weights to defrand
his neighbor—of an attempt to swindle, and of
“wilful and corrupt falsehood,” and winds up
with the following broadside. If the weather
wasn’t so hot up at Atlanta—95 in the shade—
we should certainly expect startling events with •
in a day or two. Says Blodgett:
Convicted of these oharges, you now attempt
to escape by throwing yourself on your dignity
—u*e dignity of a oommon cheat and swindler,
a person ready to swear falsely upon a mere
pretext—the dignity of him Who is publicly
proven to be gnuty 0 f falsehood.' I denounce
you as a common oheat and a convicted liar,
and leave you to enw tho dignity of your dis-
honorable and degrade* position. You have
won that dignity by your base conduct, and yon
are entitled to enjoy it.
I again reiterate my firm purpose to hold on
to my interest in our company, and\o fight the
present lessees as long as there is any ehanoe
for onr suocess. And I am ready, at any time
to pay my part of the expense necessary to be
incurred for that purpose.
In conclusion, I feel that I am due the public
an apology, which I hereby offer, for having
permitted myself to be drawn into this contro
versy, and having been compelled to soil my
bands -with the base creature who Is the subject
of the castigation I have felt it my duty to ad
minister, and I now dismiss him and the sub
ject froCi phy further newspaper publication on
my part. .
The Fibst Ope? Boll.—The new crop of oot-
ton is on its way and near at hand, sure enough.
We saw, yesterday, an open boll, which was
pulled, Wednesday, on the plantation of Mr. Sid
ney Boot, in Mitchell oounty, about seventeen
miles from. Albany. Twenty-four hoars more
on the stalk, and it would have been folly’ ripe
for picking.
y THE GEORGIA PRESS.
The Bainbridge Argu* says complaints about
the crops are “becoming encouragingly less” in
that oounty.
We should judge afew Good Templars could
find steady employment in Valdosta just now.
Men have the “jim jams” on the .streets and
insult and abuse the police and' citizens gen
erally. P. Si—We don’t think the Elberton G,
T.s would do, though. Sm Jri^.s , sSStS
The Bainbridge Argus says:
Tm Fourth of. July IK Decatur.—If the 4th
fast, was observed by a citizen of Decatur
county, white or black, we have not heard of it
Not a pic-nic, nor barbecue, nor school celebra
tion, nor publio address, nor fire-cracker, nor
pop-gun, distinguished this national jubilee
from any other day of the year! The havoo the
Radical party hats made’upon the liberties and
constitutional rights of the Southern people has
well nigh c raffled out all regard for the once
universally celebrated day which declared the
Amerioan Colonies'free and. independent States.
Jubilating over that stupendous blunder, the
first Revolution, will hardly ever be in ojrder
again in this part of the vineyard.
Mr. Jas. Holtzendorf, an old citizen of Glynn
county, was found dead on the road side last
Friday—supposed from over exertion and heat.
Columbus real estate is looking up. The En
quirer says lots in the lower part of the city
have doubled fa value within a year.
We quote as follows from the Columbus En
quirer, of Wednesday;
Opening of Bids.—The opening and reading
of bids for contracts on the North and South
Road occurred yesterday. Owing to the oon-
tinnea illness of OoL McDongald, no'contracts
$u?M) b £ P number‘ of bidah—some of them from
-very responsible parties to take entire contract
to Rome; others for the' 20 miles leading out
from this city, and still others for short dis
tances. We suppose we shall soon know who
will be awarded the work. From what we could
learn'from outsiders,-.the narrow gauge, though
generally favored, had not been positively de
termined upon. Before it is, we should like to
know whether the State aid can be reached on
that kind of a line.
A Live Church.—The Baptists of Eufaula,
after completing one of the handsomest churches
in Alabama, last week raised $1100 to fresco it.
Thos. Kennedy, a ooal passer on the steamer
Wyoming, that arrived at Savannah, Tuesday,
from Philadelphia, died at sea the day before,
from being overheated.
*~The three engineers of the steamer Rapidan,
plying between Savannah and Boston, weigh
260, 350, and 240 pounds respectively. They
serve as ballast, and in case of disaster .would
make capital life preservers. This is*the Bos
ton notion of utility. -
Mr. W- M. Watson, a patriot from Vermont,
who came South after the war to help the peo
ple of Savannah develop their resources, is
very much wanted by his partner, Mr. Crom
well, just now. Watson and $1,700 of the firm
money disappeared Sunday, and Mr, O. says he
didn’t leave even so much as a photograph or
lock of hair, as a memento.
Jas. Haliigan, a gentleman who has, for sev
eral months, been loving Savannah benzine,
“not wisely bnt too well,” and who was getting
up quite a reputation as a snake hunter, jumped
from a window of the .Savannah hospital, Tues
day night, and broke hja left leg just below the
hip, besides fearfully mutilating the muscles
andfiesh just below the knee by falling on the
spikes of the iron railing below.
The Savannah News of Wednesday, says:
The Bubglae Winslow—His Release on a
Wbitof Habeas Corpus—Final Discharge-
Departure, etc.—The noted burglar who i3
known by the name of Winslow in this city, and
who haa been in confinement at the police bar
racks for the past six weeks or two months, was
brought out on a habeas corpus writ last Thurs
day, aud upon an examination of .his case be
was finaly discharged.
For some time past Winslow has been de
sirous of being released fa one way or another,
and fa order to obtain his liberty, he has
made several aoknowledgmants. He stated
to Lieutenant Wray, the Chief Detective, a
number of facts in connection with his opera
tions fa this and other cities, bnt every stato-
gjfiggfcqasg srSZZ£ i 'S&
against him in a court of justice. The parties
who have been the victims of Winslow s bur
glaries, were placed in a condition to recover
their lost property, or institute proceedings
against him, without a shadow of proof as
to the guilt of the man, except as we have
stated his own confession extorted from him
under promise of reward. It is not difflcnlt to
see which course wonldbe adopted by every one
of the losers, and the consequence is nearly
every* article Btolen from the house or person
by him while operating in this city has been re
covered and returned to the owner. Not a sin
gle article was obtained from Winslow in per
son, nor was a letter written to any one by the
officer working np the case. Writing material
was famished the burglar, and he did his own
correspondence. In due oourse the article
would be forthcoming and Lieut. Wray enabled
to deliver it to the legitimate owner. Only a
few days ago a fine gold watch and chain, the
property of Mr. Theodore Crane, Jr., was re
turned to hfaf, having been sent from Chicago
to the deteotive here. .
In this way everything of value was recovered,
and no ono appearing against the man to prose
cute, he was discharged. But all this was ef
fected upon a promise that when released he
should leave the State, never to return to it.
As soon as he was free again he was shipped
for a voyage to Liverpool, and placed aboard a
vessel with some one to keep a strict watch over
him until the vessel left the -port, which was
several days ago.
Herman Dreyer, of Angnsta, was found dead
fa his bed at 353 King street, Charleston, last
Monday morning.
We olip the following from tho Constitution-
alist, of Wednesday:
Singular Freak or the Storm King.—The
storm which passed over our city on Monday
afternoon played wild antics on a gentleman's
plantation fa Beach Island, South Carolina.-*-
Two adjoining gelds, each containing one hun
dred acres, surrounded by a high; strong, and
perfectly new rail fence, were planted one in
com and the other in cotton, both of which were
in splendid order and growing finely. A perfect
hurricane, accompanied by a deluge of rain and
hail, swept over these two fields, leaving the
surrounding country literally untouched. The
com was completely riddled by the hail, the
fodder being rendered unfit for pulling, and the
cotton battered and beat down In suoh a man
ner that the owner is afraid that it is ruined
past redemption. The fencing whioh was as
subtantial as rail fences can be made, was pros
trated to the ground, while a large hiokory tree,
whioh had stood fa the field formanyyears, was
torn up by the roots. Several other trees were
blown down, and the area presents the appear
ance of having been swept by a besom of de
struction. Not a drop of rain fell fa the neigh
borhood.
Dr. R. B. Anderson, *of Roswell, had two of
Ms ribs broken, a day or two since, by being
thrown from a buggy, ' i ? .
The Atlanta Sun, of yesterday, has thefollow-
fag items: ■
The Atlanta Street Railway.—Its Pro
gress, Route and Early Completion.—This
new enterprise is progressing most satisfac
torily for the stockholders. In about ten days
more the track will be laid from the comer
of Alabama and Whitehall to the railroad cross
ing on Peters street. It is being construct
ed fa the most substantial manner, with rock
and cinder ballast, which makes the bed per
fectly solid. Tho iron used is heavy and strong.
It is the old style, wMch has its objections, bnt
not serious. V' faiR 1- \rirf
A gentleman who came up the Selma, Rome
and Dalton Railroad Tuesday night, arrived in
this city yoeterday, and informed us last night
of a most atrocious rape, committed by a ne
gro man upon a woman near Cave Springs, in
this State, a few days ago. He esoaped for the
time, and made his way to Cross Plates, In
Alabama. Before he arrived there, he got into
a fight and fatally stabbed another negro near
Ladiga. He was pursued, and his retreat dis
covered. One of the party entered the «ahfa
where he was sitting and remarked, “John, I
have caught you,” at the same time drawing his
pistoL As he did this the negro made a spring
at the weapon, bnt his captor was too fast for
him, and M missed it He then picked up a
chair with the intention of killing his enemy,
BY TELEGRAPH.
New York,. July 13.—The Orange demonstra
tions throughout tho interior yesterday were at
tended with little or no disorder. At the close
of the procession in New York, the Qrangemen,
putting their regalia in their pockets and leav
ing their banners with the police, mixed with
the crowd and escaped unnoticed.
CoL Clark, of the 7th regiment, reports that
and as he raised it to strike, the man fired at
Mm, the ball entering just below the eye, and
ranging backwards, lodged, as the negro says it
felt, in the back of his head. He was secured
and parried to the depot, and as the up train
came Along, was put aboard, where our inform
ant saw him and learned the particulars. He
begged Ms captors to kill him rather than take
Mm baok to the scenes of Jus first crime, pre
ferring death he said, .to meeting the vengeance
of an infuriated neighborhood,R*hesaid.
We clip these items from the Hawkinsville
Dispatch, of yesterday:.
Crops in Dooly.—We.teoelve; conflicting re
ports of crop prospects in Dooly county, _ Two
of our citizens have'just returned from visits
out there. • One state's, thjkt (the upper'part of
the county will produce an-abundance of oorp.
The other one says that craps in the lower por
tion of the oounty are damaged badly. Some
fields of com are htteily ruined, and ootton is
scarcely over ten inohes high,
j Great Destbuction of Hogs.—We learn that
a new disease has attacked the hogs of portions
of Pulaski and Dooly counties, and that the
mortality is very large. Jt is not believed to'.be
the cholera, but is equally as fatal. Farmers
are at a loss for a remedy, and unless tho disease
is checked it will entail a serious loss upon
Imprisoned on a Charge of Infanticide.—A
wMte man named David Wright, charged with
fafantioide, was brought to this place Saturday
last and confined in jail on a warrant from
Coroner Luke Sapp of j Dodge county." There
is also a warrant against Wright’s wife), whose
condition will not permit her removal'frote
home. An inquest was held over the body of
the child, whioh, it is said, was found wrapped
in a pantaloons*leg, and buried a little beneath
the, soil near a stump. The accused parties
have been married about three months.
Sickness.—Chills and fever prevail to a limit-
ed extend in the surrounding oountry, and some
a heavy business this'summer and fall, in con
sequence of suoh an unprecedented fall of rain
the past few months.
A Quondam . Texas Field'Hand on-Carpet-
Daggers—He thinbs They are “TooWeak
to Plough, and too Small to Breed From”
and that “They-will Wear Ont onr Mn-
h JorRlea.” *
We have been very much entertained by
-speech'made by one Matt Gaines, a negro State
Senator, so-called, representing WasMngton
county, Texas, in the Legislature,-and wMch
we find fa the New York Sun, of Monday, copied
from a late Houston paper. The extraot ap
pended will give some idea of Matt’s line as to
the O. B.’s, and. how he proposes to deal with
them hereafter. Said he:
- What is called the Repnblican party, is not
the Republican party at alL Tho black men of
Texas are the real Republican party. Yon put
the black men on one side and the Democrats
on the other, and tho scattering wMte men who
call themselves Republicans in the middle, and
they would not. he strong enough to lift a flea
into office. I refer to the statistics of my own
county. The white vote is 1,553, and only 25
of them vote the Republican ticket. The colored
vote is 2,745, and they are all Republicans. It
is time to look at the great power we possess.
It is a sin to have power and not use it. We
could put a bull in office if we wanted to. John
Hancock said that when negroes voted, jacks
and mules ought to vote. We have the strength
in this district to send a jackass to Congress.
Yes, jack of jinny, if yon like.
CARPET BAGGERS.
It is time for oolored people to woke up.
Little fellows like Clark came down here from
Conneoticut when everything was in a state of
distraction. We were unorganized, and did not
know what to do, and we took them up, bob
tailed coats, tight pants, little gold-headed cane
and all, and we have fed them long enough on
our own eMcken pie. They are untljriftystock.
There is no come-out in them. I am better
fitted for Congress than Clark, and there would
be more propriety in my being there by the
side of Greeley, and Stunner. These grand Re
publicans, like Ruby from Maine, come down
here, and would make yon believe that they
fought tho whole war through by themselves, sons passed the dead for tho purpose of iden-
’ “ ’ ' ’— ’— “— -;eir -trucatiou ancrcurrosuy.' Occasionally a woman
after the Orangemen had'passed the spot, his __
regiment was fired upon, killing Lieut. Page, [ such currency had been also received from’such
and that they tore Vicksburg down with QB
own hands for your freedom, and they will
sleep in your beds with you, no matter how
lousy. No more pulling wool over our eyes.
There are some old black men here who have
danced to the musio of the dinner horn, and not
much dinner at that, and who deserved chicken
pie, and are better worthy of position than tho
imported little worms that have crawled into
so many offices. Thoso little fellows are too
weak to plough, and too small to breed. Givo
your pxuvender to better stock. They will
wear out our majorities, they never had a decent
suit of olothes till they came down here from
Connecticut, or thereabouts, and got office.
They used to hang around my desk at Austin,
and use my stationery, and eall mo Senator
Gains. 'When they got office it was Mr. Gains,,
and after a while it was Matt. I am tired of
such fellows living at our expense.
An Unpopular View or Crops.
Editors Telegraph and Messenger : I have
been in some of the counties below Macon for
eight or ten days past, and for the life of me I
cannot see just and suffioient ground for the
universal despondenoy so outspoken by your
selves and your correspondents. Take coin and
cotton collectively and the crops, so far rs I
saw, were np to an average of the past five
years. Cotton is not so good, com a great deal
better than in 1870—both together are assuring
that tMs, after all that has been said, will bo a
good year.
I cannot appreciate that class of people who
loudly declaim that wears rapidly going down
to rufa—that the devil’s claws are xeacMng ont
and will soon draw us into his red hot oven 1 It
is not true. The actual truth is, we are more
rapidly progressfag in wealth than we ever did
before in our lives. “Ob,” says ton thousand,
“ootton brought nothing last year—didn’t bring
near as muoh as it cost, and everybody will have
to run in debt for all they want until another
crop comes to market.” That is not so, either,
for any warehouseman in your oity will tell you
that he has not one-third tho applications for
advances now that he had a year ego. This,
then, iB the situation, the crop is comparatively
unincumbered with debt—it will be so brought
to market—there will he no occasion to force
sales of much of it, and the New York and
Liverpool gamblers will stand a poor chance
this time to get up comers.
My advice to planters is to make the most ex
traordinary exertions to keep their crop fa their
own hands, and demand 25 cents per pound for
it. I make the prediction, that before the close
of next February it will be worth that in your
market. • V
I thins upon the whole, that whilst the cot
ton crop of 1871 will reach only3,250,000 bales,
we will produce nearly, if not quite enough
corn and grass to do ns. Some sections will be
short—others have more than enough, asi3
often the case. But better than all, our crop
of warehouse papers will be shorter than ever
known. It has been a hard year for your 2 j
percent Shylocks, but will, I think, be a good
one for the bone and sinew.
Judge Dryasdust.
actment October,:1S69, providing for the organ
ization of juries together, all previous exemp
tion of parties from liabilities to jury doty
on account of age, profession or connection
with fire, or other companies, were repealed,
and, under the present laws of this State all per?,
sons otherwise qualified, over the age of twenty*
one years, irrespective of such exemptions,
either by special grant or general law, and who
are in the opinion of the board of commission
ers, under the act of 1869, upright and intel
ligent, are liable to jury duty within the terms
of that act; and the right to excuse jurors from
the performance of suoh duty is vested in the
wise discretion of the judge in whose courts
suoh persons may be drawn or summoned to
appear upon legal grounds applicable to each
oase. - •
Judgment affirmed.
G. J. Wright for movants.
when the 9th regiment commenced an indis
criminate fire, without orders. The 9th fell
back, crowding the 7th-on to the pavement, and
the firing was kept up some time, although an
adjutant begged Lieut. Col. Brain to hold Ms
men -
When the 7th regiment reached the oomer of
27th street, Bhots were fired from a window. A
single shot was fired at the window by a sold-’er
acting under orders, and several more shots
were fired from the same spot. Several volleys
were then fired into the window. This, Col.
Clark claims, was all the firing done by the 7th.
The 22d regiment did not fire at that window.
Members of the 9th regiment say that they fired
no shot till Young Page was killed.
Several futile attempts at riot occurred du
ring the night, but were easily suppressed.
Washington, July 13.—Hon. John H. Clif
ford has been elected President of Harvard
University. ... > ,.r. — . .
Austria has an army of 500,000 men.
Von Beust said, in supporting his estimates,
that now is the best time to reorganize and
strengthen the army,.as it would excite no dis-
trust.
Oaori was hanged to the 3’ard arm of the
steamer Neptune at Neuvitas. Cebralino was
bntied with pomp. j-W . •
The Porto Rico and Jamaica cable is inter
rupted again. Steamer Barangjella has been
'ihe court-martiaIs.for the Fxenoh Communists
sum indefinUelv-tKlstponed. ::)
Provisional correspondence of a German pa
pers says: “Germany,-confident fa her own
strength, watches, with calmness and sympathy,
the redevelopment of Francs. Her only deeire
now is to bring about, as speedily as possible,
the re-establishment of friandly relations.
Twenty Papers Started lu Five Hoars
New Orleans, July 13.—Alexander J. Phil
lips, another victim of tho Maginnis Oil Facto
ry explosion, is dead. The Coroner’s Joxy find
A. A. Maginnis, the proprietor of Baid factory,
guilty ofgross neglect in not providing proper
and safe boilers.
A Radical press convention is being held here.
The object is political. The New dileans Re
publican states that 37 journals were repre
sented. The Times says “the newspaper enter
prise exMbited yesterday will perhaps eqoal, if
not exceed, any journalistic attempt that has
been made in a year; for we are assured no less
than twenty full-fledged papers sprang into ex
istence in the spaoe of five hours.” Of course
they found their origin in the Republican Press
Convention. / ,
New York, July 13.—The steamsMp H. A.
Webster, of. Baltimore, for Aspinwall, put in
here leaking badly. She will probably repair
and sail to-morrow.
Philadelphia, July 13.—The steamsMp City
of Port-au-Prince was wrecked on the Bohamas.
The crew were saved.
New York, July 13.—Arrived: Risfag Star.
Washington, July. 13.—The duplicate orig
inals of a convention, establishing an exchange
of postal money orders between the United
States and England, have just been reoeived.
It has been executed on the part of England,
and now awaits the signature of the Postmaster
General and the President. Each order is lim
ited to ten pounds, when issued in England,
and fifty dollars when issued in the United
StateB. McDonald, superintendent of the money
order system, who concluded this convention,
has gone to Berlin for a similar convention
between the United States and Germany.
Dr. Joseph Bell Alexander, of .Mobile, is dead
—aged 47. He died of heart disease.
Boutwell has returned.
New York, July 13.—All quiet to-day. The
laborers are at work. All disquieting rumors
prove unfounded. Heart-rending scenes oc
cur at the dead house. Seven-thousand per-
Dccislons ©F the Supreme court of
Georgia.
DELIVERED AT ATLANTA, TUESDAY, JUDY 11, 1871.
From the Atlanta Constitution. 1
Alexander Murray vs. Wm. Walker. Equity^
from Union.
Loohrank, C. J.—Where a bill was filed for
speoifio performance of a contract made relative
to the pur oh as# of lands, and the notes given
for the balance due had been deposited with an
agent, who received Confederate currenoy, and
- :q i
would throw herself on a coffin containing
kinsman.
New York, July 13.—All the workmen who
left the Boulevards Park yesterday, contrary to
positive orders, have been discharged. Ger
mans and Italians have been employed instead.
At the time of the eall this morning, but few
laborers were missfag. Two regiments remain
on dnty. The police have resumed their regular
lino of duty, but can concentrate on short no-
tioe. All who were arrested with arms have
been committed for examination. The others
were discharged.
San Francisco, July 13.—Mrs. Stanton and
Miss' Anthony are here. Miss Anthony’s re
marks on the Mrs. Fair case were received with
storms of Msses from the audience.
Chicago, July 13.—Jacob Hemmings, fibarged
with murder,was hanged by a vigilance commit
tee at Oceola, Missouri.
Saratoga, July IS.—The first race was won
by Oysterman, time 6:50. Second by Ecliplie,
time 3:10£. Third, Ortotoh, time 1:17J
Philadelphia, July 13. — The first narrow
gauge engine built in America was sMppad to
day for Pike’s Peak.
Washington, Jnlyl3.—Judge A. R. Wright, of
Rome, Gal, ex-member of both Houses of Con
gress, was before the Ku-klux Committee. He
believed in the Ku-klux, butit.wasa police, not
a political organization. The negroes behaved
better than expected. Enough witnesses are
hero to occupy the Committee to the end of
next week, when it will adjonrn.
New York, July 13.—Over '400 Mormons
who arrived at Castle Garden yesterday, from
Scandinavia, in the steamer Minnesota, leave
this afternoon for the West.
New York, July 13. —The United States ship,
Guard of Darien, with a surveying expedition,
sail from Aspinwall, June 30, for New York.
Capt. Selfridge is a passenger on - the Rising
Star.
Cleveland, Ohio, July 13.—The Red Stock
ings, of Boston, scored 12, and the Forest Cities
of Cleveland, 8, in a game of base ball to-day.
Pabis, July 13.—The Government has dis
patched a representative to England. He en
deavored to induce the British government to
consent to a modification of the treaty of com
merce between France and England, bearing
date of January 23d, 1§60. A grand customs
conference is suggested to be held in Berh'n,
and embraoe delegates from all the European
States.
Alexandria, July 13.—The difference be
tween the Egyptian Government and the French
Consul General has been referred for settle
ment to the French Cabinet. ~
Fireman Liable to Jury.Dnty..
On Tuesday the following decision wa3 ren
dered fa the Supreme Court in Atlanta. It af
firms that all previous exemption by statute
from jury service, axe set aside by the constitu
tion of 1868 and the aot of 1869 providing for.
the organization of jurieB. The eonrt holds,
however, that the law vests in the Judge a wise
discretion in exempting from jury service:
R. J. Rost, et al. Ex parte motion from
Dougherty. 7o
Lochbane, O. J.—Plaintiffs in error in thi3
case filed their motion in the.oourt below to be
excused as jurors, on the ground that they were
members of a fire company organized in 1868,
and exempted by the Legislature from jury,
duty. In the opinion of the oourt, taking into
consideration the constitution of 1868, article 3, eye witness, so I have oome to the conclusion
section 5208 of the Code and the legislative en- Messrs. Editors, that ootton down in Dodge is
not dercoptible,tO| a “sheep’s eye,” or that dif-
. From Macon County.
Oglethorpe, July 11, 1861.
Editors Telegraph and Messenger-. In one of
your last week’s issues I noticed a communica
tion from a gentleman writing from Chancery,
Ga. (Not wishing to be too personal I give no
namo.) He has a “word for the farmers.” He
says a farmer in the vicinity of No. 12 M. & B.
R. It., whose cotton crop was considered almost
ruined by grass, turned some two or three hun
dred sheep into his fields and, strange to say,
they were not injuring the cotton by tramping
on it, but were nipping the grass closely to it
and had not been known to ever taste of the
cotton. I was an eye witness to the scene on
the 26th, and they were doing wonderful work
fa the destruction of grass, etc. Haying a field
of ten acres fa the same awful fix, (drowning
men catch at straws,) I determined to try the
experiment, having a flock of 60 or 75, and
highly eIatMt.over the new disoovery down in
Dodge, I at once put my cotton choppers to
work. In a day yr two I went back to see how
the ovines were progressing, but to my grief
found that instead of their “nipping the grass
close to the cotton” they had oleared every cot
ton stalk of its leaves! The discoverer of this
new mode of cleaning ootton says he was an
ferent sheep have different tastes.
1 advise (with all due deference to my friend
fa Dodge) cotton planters not to employ sheep
cotton choppers when it brings 19 cents per
pound. , acn ? :
Several days have passed without a shower,
and those who are skilled in toxicology predict
a great amount of sickness if - we have a long
dry spell. The doctors are replenishing their
medical chests, going on the old maxim, “In
time of peaoe prepare for war.”
A great deal of excitement is now prevailing
among the female persuasion of this vicinity
over the pamphlet^ haileg from Cincinnati,
known as “Actila,” or “Woman has no Son].’’
We advise Mr. Actila, if he should ever come
down this way, to change his name or have his
life insured for $50,000; for the females have
sworn vengeance. Yours, eta, 'Grabs.
agent by the principal and used by him, and
the jury decreed that the title should be made
to the complainant, and defendant moved for a
new trial, which was granted by the Court,
Meld, 'That the taking of the Confederate
currency by the principal, and its use by him,
was a ratification of the act of his agent, and
that the verdict of the jury was sustained by
the evidence, and so rule of law being violated
in submitting the ease. It was error in the
court below to grant a new trial.
Judgment reversed. i fniisoj.tec
■n Welborzl & Fain, H. P. Bell, for plaintiff
error.
Goo. D. Rice, for defendant. ' ,q :
A. L. Reid vs. Wm. Godwin. Foreclosure
mortgage, from Dougherty.
Lochbane, C. J.—Where A and B befag part
ners, executed a mortgage in the partnership
name upon all the partnership property to A,
one of the partners, and A transferred the mort
gage to R, the plaintiff in error, who was pro
ceeding to foreclose, the same on the individual
property of B, the other partner, and upon the
trial the Court ruled out the mortgage as evi
dence and a verdict .was taken for B:
■Meld, That individual property is not embrac
ed by a mortgage executed by partners on their
properly, exoept it is . specifically set forth and
described, and that the oourt committed no error
1U Judgment^ffirmedJ 116 faCtS ° f this Ca3e ’
Hines & Hobbs, for plaintiff in error.
Yason & Davis, for defendant.
Sarah E. Kilgo, et aL, vs. M. H. Y’an Dyke.
Equity from Lumpkin.
Lochbane, C. J.—A and B entered into «
oontract of partnership, by which A was to
furnish goods to B who‘was to sell them, and
after the first costs of the goods were paid the
profits were to -be equally divided, an'd after B’s
death, A filed his bill against his widow and
heirs to recover the balance he claims due to
him, and set up that inasmuch as B, daring the
copartnership had used funds arising therefrom
in improvements,; etc., on certain property,
which the widow had setoff as a homestead
under the laws of the State, Ms debt had a lien
thereon. A demurrer was field to the bill wMch
was overruled by the court.
Meld, That the court erred in overruling the
demurrer, as the debt due by B in Ms lifetime
to A constituted no lien on his property that
would deprive the widow of her right to,home-
stead as against his creditors therein, nor was
the use of suoh funds, under the facts, witMn
the exceptions in said act, for money borrowed,
labor done, or material furnished, etc., and that
the claim of A against the estate of B was of no
higher dignity or more equitable consideration
than other debts due-by him, and that hi3 rem
edy is complete ot law; and the administrator of
the estate of B is a necessary party to the en
forcement of suoh ordinary debts against the
estate.
Judgment reversed.
H.P.Bell,R. A. Quiliian, for plaintiff in error.
John A. Wimpy, J. N. Dorsy, for defendant.
Jimpsey A. Hunter, vs. the State. Murder,
from Brooks.
Lochbane; O. J.—Where in a criminal case
the defendant applied for a change of venue,
upon making affidavit that an impartigl trial
could not be obtained in the oonrts where the
homioide was committed, and the court over
ruled the application, and went on wit£ the
trial, and obtained a'jury:
Held, first, That this "was not error in the
court, and that'the provisions of -the Constitu
tion olothes the Superior Court with power to
change the venue when the presiding Judge is
satisfied an impartial jury cannot be obtained
fa the oounty, and while the Judge may, fa his
judgment become satisfied of this fast by ali*
evidenaa^atilLwa hold that the most satis
factory method of arriving at such conclusion,
as well as the most within the contemplation of
the provision of tho Constitution, is- to-test the
question by tlying to get a jury in the county
where the crime was committed.
2. Where the witness for the State admitted
npon cross examination that he had given-a dif
ferent statement, upon examination at the in
quest, and stated Ms reason to be fear of the
accused with whom be lived as a servant, and
that he had made a similar statement to that,
then given, to the brother of the accused; and
aliunde evidence was admitted to show Ms con
duct and appearance upon tho former trial as a
part of the original evidence offered by tho
State.
Meld, That tMs testimony, under the facts in
this case, wa3 properly admitted and the theory
of the defense, let in, npon cross-examination
by them, the facts disclosed by the evidence fa
this ease.
3. When in an indictment for murder the evi
dence showed the accused to be a rejected suitor
and the deceased an acoepted suiter, rumors of
the approaching marriage and of such engage
ment was brought home to the accused and was
offered and admitted by the court as a fact to
show motive for the orime.
Meld, That it was properly admitted, as a
fact or circumstance in the case—every faot or
circumstance shedding light upon the transac-
fion will be permitted to go to the consideration
of the- jury, either in attestation of innocence
or pointing to the perpetrator of the crime, and
the facts of tMs case show its importance and
materiality.
4. When in the argument before the jury,
counsel for the State contended that confessions
were the Mghest species of evidence, and the
counsel for the defendant insisted it was not,
under the role laid down in the Code, and the
eonrt refused to charge the jury that it was not
the highest evidence, but charged the jury in
the very language of the Code on the subject of
confessions.
Meld, That this was not error—it was not the
duty of the judge'to classify the evidence as to
its weight or consideration, or intimate any
opinion thereon.
5. When the evidence in the oase was mostly
if not entirely as to its material parts, circum
stantial, and the judge charged the jury, as to
their rights under the facts, if they found their
verdict upon circumstantial evidence, reading
from-theCode:
Meld, That this was not error, for the reason
that the jury by suoh a charge were only in
structed as to their legaljights in the premises.
6. Where, upon the trial, after some of the
jury were in the box, but the whole not empan-
nelled, and in the presence of the Court, those
sworn were seen by oonnsel for accused reading
a newspaper wMch contained an article reflect
ing npon the counsel for the prisoner, etc., and
no motion or notice was then taken in regard
thereto: _ * ‘
Meld, That this was not such irregularity upon
the part of the jury as would be sufficient to set
aside the verdict, and that such acta transpiring
in-the Court room and in the presence of the
Court and of counsel, when not objected to,
will not be favorably regarded after the verdict.
7. When a jury upon a criminal oase has been
placed upon trial and accepted by the Court,
and is afterwards impeached by affidavits, and
counter affidavits sustain him and Ms co-jurors,
and show he was the very last to find a verdict
against the accused:
Meld, That the juror appears by the proof
exculpated of any prejudices arising from pre
vious statements made by him, and tMs court
will not set aside the verdiot of the jury upon
such point.
8. When all the facts in the case sustain the
verdiot, and the.law has been fairly given fa
charge: --
Meld, That the Court will not interfere with
the judgment of the Court below refusing a new
trial.
Judgment affirmed.
Hansell & Han sell, J. L. Seward, W. C. Mc
Call, C. R. Harden, and A. T. McIntyre, for
plaintiff fa error.
W, B. Bennett, Solicitor General; and H. G.
Turner, for the State.
Mom* PopnlaiioB law the Snnih
From the Courier, MiSy 13,167X1"}
In ant advertising columns will bfe fonns
announcement of a omns 06 tt*
which the amount of half a **
wiU be distributed by the LSh Zol Jf*"
and Immigration Aslociatfam ^ ^
citizen of the State, “dSjS^g^j
saloon and store jJKfiSSfcfeSiS
a tenant The halls above ® IW *J s fow
mend, and the tW,t v. L? r » 6 ^ constant de.
SS th ir dd0!kr9 is ®t 8 no P rime toll
to lie given Tarvin^f** 6 * °- her priz€s “ 6
$5 000 $1 000 A 0 ® $25,000, $10,000.
gif’tT’ * 1 ’ 000 ’ i3 ’> amounting to over 2,400
The eharacter^ the gentlemen who ate a:
the-head of this enterprise is such as to satisfy
every one that there can be nothing unfair ii
the transaction. Moat gift schemes are started
by irresponsible, parties. This one is, on the
contrary, conducted under the auspices of Gen
M. C. Butler, a former Major General of the
Confederate army, and the candidate for Lieu
tenant Governor at the last election - a man
whose name in South Carolina has aW 5 s been
synonymous with MgU-tone honesty and intee.
rity; Mr. John Chadwick, a gentleman who has
invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in the
State, and who is honored and respected by the
entire community, and' Gen. Gary, the honest,
brave, manly and popular gentleman, who
novor lurorr-Am, Anri whose character Standi
without reproach.
addition to the Mgh tone, character safl
responsibility .of the managers, other safeguard!
are thrown around the scheme wMch would re
commend it to the most skeptical, as will appea:
by the advertisements. We feel sure that tht
only difficulty, wMch will be had in a few days,
will be the obtaining of tickets, as they will bj
eagerly sought after fa every seotion of tht
country. ' .
Midsummer Maladies.—The hot solar rays that
ripen the harvest generate many distressing die
eases. If the liver be at all predisposed to irrogn.
larities, this is the season In which billions attach
may be anticipated. A weak stomach, too,
weakest in the summer months, and the loss of vi
tality through the pores by excessive perspiratic:
is so great, that a wholesome tonic, combining alec
the properties of a diffusive- stimulant and gentlt
exhilarant, is, in many oases, necessary to health
and under no circumstances should be dispense;
with by the sickly and debilitated. Of all the prep
orations intended thus to refresh, sustain, and for
tify the human frame, there is none that will com
pare with Hostetter’s Celebrated Stomach Bitten.
They have been weighed in the balance of experi
ence and not found wanting; have boen roeom-
mended from the first as a great medicinal specific,
not as a beverage, and fa spite of interested oppo
sition from innumerable quarters, stand, after i
twenty years’ trial, at the head of all proprietsij
medicienes intended for the prevention and cure ol
all ordinary complaints of the stomach, the liver,
the bowels, and the nerves. In tho unhealthy dis
tricts bordering the great rivers of the South asl
West, Hostetter’s Bitters may be classed as the
standard one for every species of intermittent o:
remittent fever. The people who inhabit those dis
tricts, place the most implicit confidence in the
preparation—a confidence that is increased every
year by the results of its operation. .
As hitters, so called, of the most pernicious
character, are springing np like fungi on every
side, the public is hereby forewarned against the
dram-shop frauds,. Ask for Hostetter’s Bitters,
see that the label, etc., are correct, and remember
that the genuine article is never sold in bulk, hut is
battles only. '
CONSUMPTION,
Its Cure and Its Preventive.
ByJ. M. SCHENCK, M. D.
' IT ANY a human being has passed away, for whose
. -VA death there was no other reason than the neglect
of known and indisputably proven means of cure.
These near and dear to family and friends are sleep
ing the dreamless slumber into which, had they calmly
adopted
DR. JOSEPH If. SCHENCK’S SIMPLE
TREATMENT,
and availed themselves of his wonderful efHcacious
medicines, they would not have fallen. Dr- Seherck
has in hia own ease proved that -wherever sufSoien
vitality remains, that vitality, by his medicines acl
his directions for their nse, is quickened into health-
Jul vigor.-
In this statement there is nothing. presumptuous.
To the faith of tho invalid is made no representation
that is not a thousand tidies substantiated by livicg
and visible works. Tho theory of tho care by Dr.
Seoeaok'o medicines is as simple as it is unfailing.
Its philosophy requires no argument. It i3 self-
assuring, self convincing.
■ ThoBcawood Tonic and Mandrake Pills are the first
two weapons with which the ckadol of the malady is
assailed. Two-thirds of the cases of consumption
originate in dyspepsia functionally disordered
liver. With this conditionthe bronchial tubes “eym-
path’ze” with tho stomach. They respond to the
morbific action of the liver. Bore then comes the
culminating result, and the setting in, with all its dis
tressing symptoms, of
CONSUMPTION.
The Mandrake Pills are composed ot one of Nature’s
noblest gifts—tho Podophillum Teltatum. They pos
sess all tho blood-sesrohing, alterative properties of
calomel, but unlike calomel, they
“LEAVE NO STING BEHIND.”
The work of cure is now beginning. The vitiated
and mucous deposits in the bowels and in the ali
mentary canal axo ejected. The liver, like a clock, is
woundup. It arouses from its torpidity. The stom
ach acts responsively, and the patient begins to feel
that he is getting, at last. .
A SUPPLY OF GOOD BLOOD.
The Seaweed Tonic, in conjunction with the Pills
permeates and assimilates with the food. Chylifica-
tion is now progressing without its previous tortures*
estion becomes painless, and the cure is seen to bs
jand. There is no more flatulence, no excerbation
the stomach. An appetite sets in.
Now comes the neatest Blood Purifier ever yet
given by an indulgent father to, suffering man.
schcnck’a Pulmonic Syrup comes in to perform its
functions and to hasten and complete the core. It
enters at once npon its work. Nature cannot bo
eated. It collects and ripens the unpaired anddis-
sed portions of the luces. In the form of gather-
Dige;
at ha
The Georgia Company vs. B. J. Gastlebery.
Certiorari, from Lumpkin.
McCay, J.—A corporation, though of the same
name with a partnership, doing business by the
same agent before the grant of the charter, is
not the same person, and to make it liable for a
debt due from the partnership a parol promise
by the President, without a new consideration,
is not sufficient. There must be a writing
signed by the party to be charged, or by its
agent expressly authorized, or it must be shown
that the incorporation has reoeived the consid
eration.
Judgment reversed.
George D. Rice, R. A. Quiliian, for plaintiff
fa error.
John A. Wimpy, for defendant j
m rotten
throne that it occupied is renovated andmadenew,
and the patient in all the dignity of regained vigor;
steps forth to enjoy the manhood or the wom&nhoGu
that was
GIVEN UP AS LOST.
The second thing is, tho patients must stay in a
warm room until they get well: it is almost impossi
ble to prevent taking cold when the lungs are dis
ease!, but it must be prevented or a cure cannot be
effected. Fresh air and riding out, especially in thi3
section of the country in the fall and winter season,
are all wrong. Physicians who recommend tn a.
course lose their patients. If their.lungs are badly
diseased, and yet, because they are in the house they
must not sit down quiet; they must walk about the
room as much and as fast as the strength will bear, to
get up a good circulation of blood. The patients
must keep in good spirits—be doterm ned to get we.i*
This has a great deal to do with the appetite, and is
the great point to gain. To despair of cure after such
evidenco of its possibility in the worst eases, and
moral certainty in all ethers, is sinful. Dr-HchenckS
personal statement to the Faculty of his own cure
wai in these modest words: .... ,
“Many years ago I was in the last stages of con
sumption, confined to my bed. and .at one time my
E hysieiana thought that i could not Hvea week; then
ko a drowning man catclnng at straw*. I hoard cf
and obtained the preparations which I now offer to
the publio, and they made a perfect cure ofmo. It
seemed to me that I could, feel them penetiate my
whole system. They soon npenedtho matter in my
lungs, and I would spit np more than a pint or offen
sive yellow m atterevery morning for a long time.
As aoon as that began to subside, my cough. ftv*>r,
pain and night sweats all began to leave me. and mY
appetite became so great that, it was with difficulty
that I could- keep from eating too much. I soon
gained my strength and have grown in flesh ever
s nee.” .. ,, i
“I was weighed shortly after my recovery, added
the Doctor, “then looking like a mere skeleton; my
weight was only ninoty-soven pounds; my Presets
weight is two hundred mid twenty-five C225) ponndlj
Sohenck, Jr .stui continue »
office. No. 15 North Birth street. Philadelphia, every
Saturday from 9 a, h. to3r.n. Those who wuha
thorough examination with the Reapirometcr will o®
charged 15* The Kespirometer declare* th® exact
condition of the lungs, and patients can readily team
whether they are curable or not.
The direetions for taking the medletne* are adapted
to the inttUigenoe even Ota child. Follow thesei di
rectioz&a, i
compeer them • create appetite# Of r®turuio<
of thousand* of families. As a laxative or
the Mandrake Pill* are a standard prepared. - .- T -
the Pulmonic Syrup, in enrer of coughs and eedas.
may b* regarded as * prophyiaetene sgalnst oon-
For sale by alf druggists and dealers.
bottle,
i a box
10L
(No. 8 College Plaee.Kew York J