Georgia weekly telegraph and Georgia journal & messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 1869-1880, January 02, 1872, Image 2
'&P'vsmmmm ••..ii-Vvj-V’t »***wfr v .. To the People ©! MBatova-Citizens'. As Sea General Assembly, we asbi the press a brief histoijfof that body at its late acasion, its action on certain neasi withstanding the veto of th te woodwork of the ealsson a by contact with the inner < i the air within. The tempei and last measure of the Legislature » of Governor, endeavored by*Wa lilt, was the famous Bond bill. Tbl* • all persons bolding funds; of the lainoe 1868, to report the same to n [mission for registration before the ilj 1872, sad if sneh holders fail so bonds are to be deemed prima facie fraudulent. It also requires the i -tp, examine into the transfer of how they are held, and npon what jnj antttdaw prohibitR the Treasurer A Bboosx Gbbxbdus xb Ooltwbbs.- ibers was about 60 'uheomfortabl&^fjap _ .1 loSiZ We do this because •nd feel that youi print in the GonsUtnapjh Wtrft in wMch ■gents in the negWto of the»4grnnswick ■nd Albany StatwiflStnond—that they had no Other interest in them than to get tholr com missions and to act a friendly part by the Stato of Georgl8 r whIob--toeff~were-*iIIJTig tnafrifn- doing, you oouid learn in no other Only one day before the meeting of WMidJOPOttio main- ■M! uflteB ufOorerauiy TaiiVancr IfiSSaMMSOBoMW soial opposition of MA Co the Bondholder*. He and desired the interest paid of onH3o^ tailed ^teg^wt^flrattgfen- >8, and registered in the Comptroller a office. They claimed that such ao- necessary in order to sustain the credit [is. The Demoeratie Legislature pass- nd soon Policeman Barrow and Us Policeman McMTchtel, arrived and iiuiwrtnrniifii * 'W&ti.MjL-XtSZ what he thought was a dose. ium—Hog h-fffaal>odi>fep] aw Yobs, December 88. — The Gunard uner Cuba is ashoro. Her crew has relin ked the hope to get her off this tide and <t lighten her. •dfwuiTr- Broadway Bank received yesterday $20,- worthless checks. A Newark bank was zed in the same amount by. the same . A dear, cold northwest wind this «; ■ Times says O’Conner opposes the indict- E Mayor Hall. There is no trace of Tweed. Leonard has dissolved the inj (motion ; the sale of Tweed’s property. rntobfallfa? office? While a gitar-i momini ?, and we loam that the jury, igon was foreman, gave a ver* [ came to hla dealhby ajblstol . and’$5()0,obo of those' It is stated that Capt Murray, of the schoon er General Torbit, was drowned off Cape Hat- era^ The Cuba, which shoaled yesterday, U iloated ana got off*for Iiiverpooi this morning, -'/t Uohmbia,; DeoemlwitiS^n^m BnUlk-, States Court to-day, Mr- Stanbertymdved'fOTv tbat theKu-klux Cmspir^y ^c^ihiated^Sch \ justice, allow iterestion the' * show i collect Suppreffl all'clindteitont thaiavblqttanMy 4e& to be unshed under £, .1871; also moved the ground of the un- -Xu-klQX actal ■ The iler, alleged Ku-klux, pleadedguilty..! •. iber 28.—The t 8ilver party of railroad negroes on Monday last. His recovery iaconsidereddaubtfal. Did not tear bow tilO Afffrffnlfy ^ The same paper says the streets of Columbus on Monday were jammed with negroes from all the adjaopnt country. They weregenerallydo- cile, and had little or no money to spend—at least so merchants inf arm u& •-< ■s Gosensns cotton receipts up to the night of* ah arrest of iudetnent on I oonslitntionalitybf the Chronicle,-of last Satorday, repoxtoeq follows;. i *%*nr vt«v* ai i jjiv’-t 1 qg7|;-lif.n>’>ig03rQ - n Btd(£ihjMvergod3....7^lffilea 488,dOO‘<*W*f8d Sto<&taLohdofr.....'.i..:i...1 Itl.'rit^^lllpO BtoAin Qluygpw.i............. iwssAis * ^8eo> Stax* jjti&®nttfa..‘.......;..:. . li lB[914 ; '3 ; q8,€90 ines- of the field, afore, the Grant: 'of Cohkling- arid i rttbib I beeoqq 183;00(k-’ t'GiBfiOO: ‘legallyexerciseil imivbnA Biaotai i.T^tmary/.l R7BJ? vt 63,"211 b*» wthnJ frdma^pnrvisioti <41446 ' "22fiiS urnui yrmn-taa *ci -nower-to-provide 269,810 - Tio.OOO thrmH by-a'Specia 132;238 499,175 incrrffirai/epeciah 89,360 ') 109,-643 temi of BufuaB. was a bloody corpse before night from no cause which would have evoked a harsh word hadpar- Hea been sober j and just aboutthe same num ber laid the foundation for life long misery in taking life without substantial reason. Pour times as many were made wretched by these events, and a fortune thrown away in cost of trial and legal decision npon toesocases of man- daughter and assault. In few or none of these cases, had not the parties carried arms about their persons, would there probably have been any disturbance worth legal inquiry. But now it has oome to this— half the young white men, and nine-tenths of tiiA negroes, are in the daily habit of making themselves wsOdog armories, and if any of them happen to get whisky on the brain, the question of shooting somebody before they sleep it off, hangs on the chapter of accidents and op portunities. It is a most miserable condition of affairs, and whatever there is of virtuous in dignation in Georgia ought to be evoked to put a stop to the practice. The whole machinery of the law should at once be energized to sup press the carrying of secret arms. Committing magistrates, officers of the peaoe, mayors and citizens, should all aid in suppressing this vile praotioe, by complaints to the grand juries; and it should be pursued until rooted out. 'ed lead fo-a Republican opposition through the e#/-i : ■■■'* ■; Thus stood)the field -on Tuesday last, when, surveying it calmly, and finding the details of the flgfaTweU opened; Mr. Snmncreame forward and launched the Vtrand-text of the ‘campaign, in gMngaotfflfcttat at aneariy day he would ^dffnr a joint resolution, iftovidlBg tliat’Tio per- ‘Sadwto tuis'bses fiHedrthe offioe of- President uf die VattodHtatasrtiaU bold thesune again!” It is upon Uto theme, so dear to the people of the'Bnited States for many years, so sacred by the indorsements of Jefferson, Clay,-Jaekson and other sages of the republic so necessary □owtmder the fearful increase of Presidential powenr will the next campaign be fought. That will be the inspiring impulse over which the ground-swell of popular sentiment will heave, while the actual demolition of the personal po- sition of our speculating President, will be ef- feotad bv the keen blades of tho reform Kepub- licans, who already stand victors over the cow ering leaders of the administration. And this plan of the campaign will as certainly succeed as truth and justice are certain to succeed when championed by the people against fraud and error. In the first place, the adoption of the one-term principle is the necessary initiative to any plan of civil service reform, for that re form cannot begin until the corrupting motive of the President, to pat all sorts of men in office who will serve his re-election, is disposed of by the soots. In the next place, the people are not only in favor of civil service reform, bnt universally in favor of the one-toxm principle, and opportuni ties will soon be afforded to them to ex press this preference, which will practically render General Grant ineligible. The Demo cratic party will, as we have reason to believe adopt this principle en masse. It was the fav orite doctrine of Jaekson, as it was of Jeffer son; and even the most stubborn of its leaders are trilling to admit that they can stand with advantage a little more of Jackson and Jeffer son in their modem platform. One term waa also the favorite principle of Henry day, and it waa likewise the sole campaign . text npon which General Harrison was elected. ., Thus we find it indorsed-by the historic ap- probation of bothputie^ -while there can be no better paaif ‘df 1 iSiiiiftiimiPriMfadatoattttng * A©- J last year. Stock 9,958 against 12,803last year., ConuMEUs reports a bonded debt of $874,800 andafloattfijg debt of $97,600. The Council committee report that It will be necessary to' [o insurance.-' N.aS, tekSd 130,000 in bank ni ofes. raise a revenue of $124,000 next year, antin' order to do so to levy a tax of 2 to 2 J per cent on real estate and aboutl per cent, on mer chants’ sales. We find the following in the Savannah Morn ing Nows ofthe 27th: A Gabdto the Pumra—When I assumed the proprietorship of the Savannah Befmblican, I Total.. tie rriusonthyfheice. •was' burned last night- DanupjB, En, December 28.—Eev. E. J. Isoldnddgo b dttd* - - ^ NzwYoBK,E!6oember 28.—A Havana letter tys that (ha tfivil portrhh of the Cuban govern- atCaml was folly aware that it would require capital to maim jfc successful, and h«tfi understanding with friends to join me in the enterprise. The finan cial condition of the country, however, during the hnt thirty days, prevented tha consumma tion of these plans. I am unable, as a business question, to see my interest otherwise 'than In temporary suspension until I can complete ne gotiations for publishing the paper after the manner I originally purposed. I will take this occasion to return my ihanftn to the business community, whofaavo adver tised so liberally with mo, and to ihe citizens generally, for their hind wishes and encourage ment, and trust it will be but a short time be fore I shaU bo able to preseat the paper again to its readers with no difficult!es in the way of its success. Wit. A. Reid. Aaeon Aupeobia Bradley reappeared before a colored crowd in Savannah, at Middleton Hall, last Monday evening, but Alpeioarer’s race is over. The “augeance” fired a pistol at him and attempted to mob him; wherefore Bradley had some of them np before the Mayor next morn ing. Doubtful Cortpumarx.—Among the prizes awarded the members of the Savannah Club who participated in the “Fantastiquea” last Monday, was one to O. O. Parse, as the cam ple test devil of the occasion. Parse should abandon practioo in that line at once. The papers in all the Georgia cities tell of an fnwnpifti amount of pistoling osioQgbotlivbitfis and negroes on Christmas. The times are tight, and the people seemed anxious to get afely reached the Cubans. Deicember .28.—The Prince of Wales [night. The Archbishop of Canter- ig, however, duU andhomlnal, ling uplands. !ffii$ 6tioDg uii« nd movement which has pre- e most at the week is dire to a if. .confidence among holdetB., imdemble speculative demand rant, and" also by the feeling proved fal l at 20jc. for vailed durij | f -the ctimmendal 6®.—Itt the Hifited j,'John’S. KQller was aumerated, that the short interest' for this and rieXt month yet to be'covered is large. The offerings have not bean feed, even atthe advanced quotations,; although to-day there hhs been a dull market, and at the dose prices were nomizdat After, ’Change the feeling was better. Shippers have ^h*^ces^but spinnears have purchasedto a fair extent. ^ COLOBED IlABOS AHD THE COTTOK CbOP.— The Louisville Badger explains the favorite theory that the cotton-growing States owe their great wealth to colored labor, and these are the sole producers of king cotton, and but for their labor these States would be a poverty-stricken country. Analyzing the figures of the late cen sus, and deducting first the colored population of the non-cotton produolng States, next the colored populations of cities and towns who are not engaged in cotton production, and third, the colored labor employed in the production of sugar and rice, the Ledger finds that the total colored popnlation whOee support is to be cred ited to cotton culture^ numbers 1,800,000. Of thcse, it is well fcnCwn that the women and children are no-longer field laborers as in the days of slavery. The Ledger estimates the session without the >yond the forty days tanbeny’s mo ot judgment. ' ‘ «■» twlirt It Awa convicted, or who have en sentenced. John W. imprisonment and one two-thirds vote, notified th e-Legidataratin only allowed to hold his offioe for jaifew weeks for the o&e of peaces would sot» ,er, Wliam Shearer and James Shearer, ,684)b rfahtoan . inirinHiff 1 1gnw^rf»lj>wr^ • ^mrf one hundred dollars fine. Dr. Thos. B. White- sides, one years imprisonment and one imn* nize your representatives as the Legislature of Georgia after 12p.iLon^Sunday night, then the p^^^b^^elding to Mrt Sudey, or main tain the rights of the General Assembly and re- raain in session (having first oohtinuea the ses sion beyraid the forty days in the manner pointed ont 'by the CoUstituiioD) long enough to satisfy the pro fern. Executive that tds frilnre to recognize would not affect them. The General Assembly, as we belleM and as. Bower asd DeLasob.—Bowen is in Washing ton, and the.great contested seat ease from South iaordlto' Is to open as soon as Congress convenes. It is impossible to take sides in that fight. DeLarge, to the extent of his abilities, is as bad as Bowen. He is literally “a misera ble nigger.” Bowen’s papers are before the oommittee,but those of DeLarge are not; the at torney of the latter declines to file them because DeLarge has failed to pay the expenses attend ing the taking of the testimony, amounting to $1,600. This attorney says DeLarge has no prospect whatever for a retention of the seat now held by him, but that Bowen was oleariy, elected by the people of iris Congressional Dis and to avoid any claimfqrPederal interference. This measure, though vetoed by Mr. Conley, «a*nevertbeleB* passed , by » constitutional majority over the veto, and is now ihe law of the tnu^, and however it may be treated by law-breakers, will receive from all good citizens that respect and obedience duo to the law. We hope, under the circumstances attending the passage of this bill, that the acting Governor, having already contested the matter with the General Assembly and been defeated in a con stitutional mode, will make no farther contest when the result of the election is announced, but will surrender the office of Governor to him Whom tire people have selected to hold it. M Mr. Conley will observe the oath which was administered to him when he enteredupon the duties of the Executive office, he.will sur- fenderthe office. If he is a law-abiding citizen, : desiring the welfare ofthe Stato, and that “law and order” may reign supreme, he will inter- ahead of the times. The Borne Commercial, as we have been pre viously notified by the wires, is exultant over the election of the people’s ticket for Mayor and AMqwwnw, TT_ D. Qnlfonp, XTayny. T. M. Gates,' B. T. Hoyt, John W. Noble, W. T. Mapp, C. G. Samuel and P. L Stone, Aldermen. Total vote, 529, and majority about 180. Ticket un mistakably good. Negro vote divided. Tbe Appropriation Bill. The Legislature, at its last session, poaBsdtbe' regular appropriation bill for the current! ex penses of the Government for next year, on Monday the 11th instant- Acting Governor Conley, retained it till Friday, the 15fh instant. trick n Facts are now said to be neck and neck with “yaUer-Mvered fiction. Take, for example, the following Chicago stor& Ayoung man indooes a friend to go with him on a business adventure to Texas. When (hay arrive, he kflb and robs him. Ho then returns to this State, pays court to the sister of the mnrdored man and marries her, dressing himself for the ceremony in the clothing of the murdered man. He is tracked, arrested and taken back to Texas, and there oonvioted by a chain of circumstantial evidence even more remarkable than the other features of the tragedy that are rehearsed above. Such a story, told between yellow covers, would be booked as too heavy a draft upon the credulity of the reader. The South Caeousa Debt.—The Joint In vestigating oommitteo of the South Carolina Legislature, which has been setting all the past summer in New York, report tbe total lia bilities of the State at twenty-nine million^ which, of oourse must settle the question. The difference between the Committee and Scott Is only aboat twenty million^ bat the decision of the Committee will be accepted as fact At six per oent. the Interest qn this debt would be $1,740,000, end paymentof interest Is of course impossible were It attempted. The only oourse will be to repudiate all the bonds Issued by Scott and scale all the liabilities down to the’ standard of Equity. Much indignation was aroused against an .. _ ■ . m - — ’ „L. on one of the very last days, say the 39th day of the session, discovered that the aotiog Gov- emor had done the same thing (illegally indorse railroad bonds.), for which his immediate prede cessor and friend, Bullock, bad fled tbe; Stale; suppose farther, that it had, in the time above mentioned, been discovered that Mr. Conley had sold pardons of felons for “moneys num bered suppose that it had been in like man ner discovered that the acting Governor, in tbe interest of (he bondholders and for money paid hito, was induced to veto the bond bill; sup- The Cei^nd SavingB Bank, ' comer of sixth avenue anaPorty-secpndsttee^hassrapendetL MicbaelJ. Murphy, postoffice clerk, is held in throe -tiwuamd dollars bail, Cor embezzler ment ; 8r. Lom% December 28.—Annabell Hamil ton, aged 16, sutoided on account of a quarrel with her lover. •PmT.imvT,pitta/ Deoemher 28.——Br. Wolf, Howe was conseeroted. Bishop of the new cen tral diocese of Pennsylvania. ^BflSttB, December 28.—A decree Is issued In- angurating a commercial treaty with the United Ohxoago, December 28.—rA man and wife and thelr fttur children, were-burned in their shanty, ittDavisaonnU', Iowa. Tbe neighbora were not aroused,’ nor tbe fire discovered, until the next morning when the charred remains, were fonndin the ashes. Shaw. The evidence shows that Mrs.,McCoy died from abortion, but that the act wits com- mittod before she. came to Chicago. pose further, that it had been discovered that Mr. Conley, while acting as Commissioner to investigate and audit oiairas against the ’Estate Road," had, for money paid Mm, allowed nnjurt ftiftjmg to pass and be paid, would not a con struction of the Constitution which gave the Governor the right to break up the General Aa- tinned session to investigate his condnot, be received with aatouishmaat? ’ A conatruetion which would allow theExeeu- tivesuoh opportunities to defeat the General ^wjetomemyOTfih necessity? D»worts of the Constitution on the subject of extension of tho sessions are aa follows: “No session of the General Assembly, after the second un der this Constitution,. shall continue longer than forty days, unlees prolonged by a vote of two-thirds of each branch thereof.” “Every vote, resolution or order, to which the conour- pdse.no obstruction to toe execution of toe law. .The third measure which called forth from toe; aot|ng Governor an exercise of the veto gowe^vro8^elfi)Ho rep^eal the lawsauapend- past. The Radical party, which for toe last three yearshaa ruled andniined theState, in or der to presorveits power, had from time to time anapeaded toe polleotianof a poll tax, claiming, toat f 8(«|i suspension operated to deetroy toe validity of the poll tax levied’ for suoh years, and tons relieve their many deluded oolored adherents trim had not ; paid their taxes, from the ban of the constitutional requirement which makes payment of taxes a necessary qualiSca- This tax was, and is the printipal source from suance of ids personal hates and pleasure* by the'donation of eommission*ms[of foreign poBta. JIorotoaiM lring, tat be haamore pow er; and worse than a king, because, unless he be checked by toe one-term prinoiple,tha nat ural motive oCnAtogtebe upright asdiflavo • •|alaiBwaiyUihpMBiii> hirorijawntyAt. riiiilfluillaiwariiio in lm rrmlnnlili ■! ton ~t pens© of every sacrifice of oonsoienca and of These are the opinions of-fte labor men; wbo«rejnsr«isn|ngtoto8Jroni; ^ttoobehcfS* ’umreote* wd> the entire of tortalntornationai^ toatitoeR»ge.»tiQBl>wjof tim-iugiontiTO. pewr ehefarap^euaooimmtteeof peraroaJtoe unjuatiy between toe areditorB ’ **-- Nation to thei the 16th eeo: ofthe 8tat*) and the appn Clerk of the Supreme Court; tlon, are disapproved and atrii. appropriations made by this act, and not Spe cially set forth es disapproved, are approved,’ December 15, 1871. . "i BHffltWiy finvT.vfVj . :r Govemart ' It will be perceived that be goeathroanh the form of vetoing several items Infhe biti, but gives his reasons fordoing so in only one case —that of toe interest on the bonds created be fore tbe 4th of Joly, 1868—“tort it dlsoribdr . OuBA. tr « to.—The” Biario de la Marine, the gover. .ac-nfc organ in Havana, is much In- eetuf^byite'iftik of the American press over the bntehr .y of the sohoolboys, and taUcs thus- ly: * -■ ■ b, ‘r mtemplates the existence of separate king* rats with constitutional satisfaction, he elwms tat its sots are in the interest of the whole oapire as well as of individual SUte^ General Johnson,-^ -leans In a v toOfirsmoM arw r-K .sinWot ml i- AArotMkte .SfeJsw^thn nates unjtotiy between the cromtoiH- State.” The meaning of whioh is, that 1 interest on Bullock’s fraudulent and - issue* he would not allow tha htetit j * those that are known to be honestly due State, if he oouid help it This is the! | of t^ if wo understand it rightly, and, If correct, he has clearly'identified Jdmai Che interests of the plundering Bond Ri: Kio flection of tlio bill* ivliidi is vetoed, provideflfor tbe payment of the i of the Governor and State Judges of Supreme and Superior Com Tho printing fund named 'ih tho sec V8ngU«1i tnMffstttU fUT <m awia trifiling misdemeanor, a pauper, ninety-five years old, to one month’s imprisonment with haxd latiar. PabUo opinion has mollified since it waa discovered that toe pauper was but eighty-nine, and that he scaled the walls of his prison and escaped the day after his ineaxoero- tion. tiie chums of the French <dt- of this nature is entirely avoided by !v> hsijil vJt »s, Mm t< iencenoone /- as though m. UseSim- id .avoid such feelings iciion. WMgLfjfti f your catarrh and Sage’s Catarrh yaU odor and ar- dee27-eod<fcwIV. Ov EvxBYBODsVSsSur.-Eulogiiuiia of toe great national regenerator of health, Pl^totion Bitters, are on every body’s tongee. This gratuito viva vooe advertising la better torn aU toe paid for paging to which the owner? of bogus bitters « to resort It bae a spontaneous &*“*“** H it which earrie. conviction to the migMg auditor. Bat it is aweU known fact that tbepr^ nttotorsof the Plantation Bittern have never ream upon newspaper beirtertag to eetahtish toe • , ,jj< whitoowee its eetanehmg poi^ who have either experienced or been the news of^toe'immaasephyeical ^ toe length and breadthoftogj^l--. Sevebe.—According to the World, some part-' nero ii| the house of Jty, .Papke djCft^Pifila- ■"‘Viinj ntaitrfl a pnptiritinoffiiiiiiiillng illuraif der E. MeUhm tat fttfrOMnattob to^lWifr Senator In oae«it Whereupon Gen. Grant wrote to the house to atop it OTfite-anriUtoe-attay aUwAsRfiaanti this fund under the old law is $26,(KKk—riti<mto San, ' . ?«> • ...tto * Faumuh Movzhestb xh WAsmsoros.—The lndepertdenjaBepnKBean members of Uongress held a meeting at toe Ariingtan HouB* -<n E ingtoh m tfiv^m ago, andagtoed tomoet after the holidty* The Democralie memT iavewIaelyreBoIved to keep quiet. There Remedy will speedily die.” The resolution lithe intention of. the. to be to forty day* aeti '-) .j.-.-Ti-r-- t.if ft, * . . • t : - j Was fob Gbaht’s Bx-stEcraoN.—All our : was. the bill tore- rom mue to seven i consider that. Mr. s, has, from his ex- ohnoxioua laws passed ia’1868, 18G9 and 1870, $$,986, this vetoklaosB him in amost ridiculoue attitude. His veto of this bill was in pmt founded on the idea that as the existing law enacted by himself and Uis friends gave mem- )k,’mafce. not to tub e leh Grant’s: ;6 no eliusion to we should voluntarily Jboiler-plate ;.8heowi.tak •r- ui. Themosticuriouspartof itistoattoeworb was mostly crabby those who were once‘“field Jurnd*”- ^-'' ■' ; - * . •’ with ga* entitled toitwast he lines of