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jEPj* Q|je0rjgin
Ml)
The lelegiaph and Messenger
MACON aA, tPR.lL 8 :879.
r.TT . _ jn\{'
TH* WBEELT
XNGHR, i> pubti- _ _
the To!»granh tuildm* odi
Bsoond Street* Subscrlteiop pi
SiXDonthi.fi; th of motit
Adveni-iug rate- | 91
insertion. J
Sfifcl^sSfe
* a-.woip baa about the finest Zoological
Garden In the w<jgd- The ool.ectkm now
lac’.adrs ihlrtee.i Ilousanl fixe tigers, mage
pifioently housed.
-Tbecxpnimentbf lighting the reading
room of the BrRT-h'Ruwntt'by'elecltMlty
■at me o bs perfectly anoosoafol Tneamal-
leat print ifux legible •• ojr-doyllght-—The
room ie s raat crctt’ar apartment.
—The band of the Twent j-fcnrth Begl-
znent, on maroblaupat of Ma.al_ ZjInland,
plsjed ‘John Brown's Hjfiy. 1 'he soldiers
xlogln? in oboru* at did tbe Moithern troops
when they left for the aril war.
—Bec»n--ea physician MbMupon pay
ment tor a tendaoo j a SHI the aide daughter
it a Beth ebem, Pa., f arrow, the latter com
muted intat-le leWriog oyer 123.000 in bulk,
bee dee a good farm
—Tho brother of the desperado Carrie,
Who reordered the actor Porter, if the mayor
Of 8hr«te^pnrt, La. So has gone down to
Marshi!!, Texas.-where the (hooting took
plaoe accompanied by a physician, to whom
be baa tffired a thousand do liar a if he can
fare young Barrymore's Ufi
—The moat magniCeiotly oenepioacus bj
Mi gallant and soldierly beating at the mar
riage of the Duke of Connaught was the
Crown Pnnoe pf Prussia. He wore the uni
form uf the white eoi'asaien which Prince
Bisma.ck has made the vulble ensign of
powir and military away
Tbe -plendM Brhcm’an estate of Tbirow,
belonging to Dr. Btronabtrg, the celebrated
railway oontraotor and promoter, both in
Germany and Una da, waa ao.d by axetion at
the end of last.month, under an order of the
Court at Prague. Prinoe OolloredoMaea-
■teld was dec'arsd the parohaier at the prioe
Of 91 075,000. h
—Ourrard, the celebrated French finan
cier, waa with Napoleon at Waterloo, and
urgedhim the sight before to makepeace.
At breakfast ie a ham next morning he gate
hit iniwar.- ‘Apves - la batailie ’ He waa
wholly Ignorant of finance, Oayrard eaya,
and bad no notion of borrowing. His great
mania was to date decrees from the capitals
of other ocnntriei; this alone took him to
Moseow. .. .i .
BontHern Forerty ana the ISea-
lon lor It.
The Tribune says that all observant
travelers' in lbs motion States are
^g«^Vltlumjtfri^49f#>nttjL.of |
people-
Hon ln-soare g!i
laws; t>
ooaQtty evi
soon display evidenoes*; of Mncreariog
wealth and oomfort aronm
The Tribunt then traoer the main
trouble to the fact that the laboring agri
cultural popniatien (the negroes) hare no
fee-simpleintereatio.theUud they onlti«
rate, bnt hold it as tenants at will, or
wetkit oo aharea etas paid laborers.
—Diokaua, whan or&i here, said ona even
ing that he always foond the people moot
like hla characters objecting to them as im
probable apdextreme. A Mrs. Nickleby had
talked to h fit in so pecnliar a strain that he
Was thinking. ‘Good Heaveni! she la going
to charge me with putting hor into my book,’
when a be began to observe on the ouaraoter
nt utterly cnoatnral. S) with eevera! Peck
sniffs. * •; *
—It ia said of northern Texas by th» Dal-
las Hera d that the tillers of the soil there
make far more provision than they bare any
sae for; always have earn and meat for cole,
and their eqttoa and eattle crops come in aa
dear profit . They are rapidly growing
Veilthy. and iu less tnan fiftetn years from
now north Texai wll bs as prosperous ae
the blue-grasi region of Kmthzkr ever waa
in its pilmieat days.
—Toe Chicago Timas cl aim j that the re*
oenttrinmph of the Democratic party, in
that city, was note partisan vtitory. Aa it
puts tbs ease it was better—a more complete
Victory for round ideas It was a defeat of
the BepnhUcans npen thair chosen issues of
'ravolntion,’ •Confederate Brigadiers,’ ‘a
solid South.' It abowsd, according to the
Times' atatoment. that the Northern people
cannot be alarmsd by the ahem cry of a
danger they know does not threaten
—Alabama's credit seems to be locking up
St last. Tho last aestion of the Legislature
authorized Gov Cobb to retiro the -tate's S
percent, obligations with a new series of
bonds, to the amonntof $1,003,000, and
drawing not more than 8 par oeut. interest.
A Boston firm has offered t j take the whole
issne at per oent above par, ba; other
bids b&vs been aa high aa 2 per cent above,
and as the State aeemato stand so well in
the markets, the Governor is thinking of
tuning 6 instead of C per oeut*.
—A game of obese in which the pieces-wiil
be represented by ladies and gentleman
appropriately o os tamed will ba play d under
the auepicas of tho Manhattan Club of New
York, at the Academy of Marie ia that city,
on the 16th instant The game will be play
ed byOapt George Mackenzie, the cham
pion chess player of America and the winner
of the foonh p izoin the international chess
tournament in Paris last year, and b/ Mr
Eugene Dal mar, a skilful amateur choss
player of New York.
—At ihs Marlborough Club. London, Count
Schonvaloff he Rnesian Ambassador, play
ed away in a few bour« a sum equal to his
whole salary, and one of th. wealthiest Com
moner e h*s been so ltsaviiy bitten that he is
going Into bankruptcy for » total exceeding
half a million pomnda Another young poll-
ticiau. heir to a hiatorio eoronat, who had
been going at a terrible paoe, waa dragged
out of the eiob tot ha smahamsnt of tho
memb u by hla mother, who said ‘yon are
not gol-g to fol.ow Hastings anlNewoasUe ’
—A strong opposMea ie developing in
N&W York to tin proposal that the world’s
fair ahea d be held in Oeniral Psik. The
aasnranoe of the exeoatiTs oammittee that it
would i i no wise interfere with the park aa a
pleasure ground is received ty the general
public wita inoredality, and pe.ltioaa
the
nt^ popalatifhi'
Bnt why do they not become land,
holder;? Land Is cheaper m the South,
ern Ststes than anywhere else in the eg-
rioaltartl M«tAoa«
attainable by every one having the email
pecuniary means neoestary to buy. Sr
ery able-bodied negro in Georgia* can, be
come a landholder here more easily than
in any other locality we know of, nod no
such work oat tke problem of individual
thrift in & climate, soil and oh crops to
whioh he is accustomed. , . e*.
The charge of the Tribune, therefore
that the negro’s condition aea farm la
borer, and not a proprietor of the soil, is
Q*» result of any effort on the pact of the
old slaveholders to keep him inV servile
condition, is mere stuff. Ee has precise
ly the same opportunity to acquire lead
as any white man of equal means; and
Georgia haa ft good deal of land. She is
out-doora a# to a very large part of her.
There ia aa endless supply of land wait
ing purchasers at almost any pnoe below
what in fairness it should command.
* Toe Tribune't counsel and theories are
founded on misapprehension—grounded
on the assumption that the negro is just
like the ambitions young Western emi
grant—only with a dark tkia—to whom
yon have bnt to give a chance, and his
tireless industry will aoon make the
wilderness bud and bloom like tho rose,
This ia the view^ of the negro whioh
The House Controversy.
It maybe safely assumed that thej
publican^ so far, have not
on by the debate in
e MpB>ny atrei
citsmant end iU-feell
tray titfjsouihem
iual and infiamaatoi
ore; bat no important ancoeaa baa _al
ed their efforts. Their speeches hove all
been elaborated on the lowest plane of
mere party and popularpolilior. Not one
of them rises ia tke height ef In aigUcaenl
founded oo tks phOoeeptv ei
lion and principles and precedent.
This ia easy to expiam. Not only is it
a very awkward thing for a so-oilled Ba-
pablioan to iuaist on the righ'. and pro
priety of the federal government’s tak-
charge and control of eleoiions in the
ruing the aUnding army for L"f«f**ap*-~ *? ^eh mwmrr
«-hat all the older members 1 think,UeorglToSn-be made for~tte
people ef the Tribune school hold aa re- the Democratic side of tho dispute,addrea-
ligiously aa they do that other view of
the Southern white, ’bat be is' “of so ac
count”—constitu* u-ally laay, and a fa
tal bar to progrecs ivery way. - On theee
two postulates hang all the law and the
prophets ef the Bopublicaa party.
At the close ot the war, therefore,
when so many “observant travelers from
the North” had passed all over the South
ern States, carefully noting the pecuni
ary condition of the country and often
testing it with a ramrod and by digging,
viewing tho capacities and produots of
the soil and ail the conditions of labor
and production, Ihous&nda ot them
thought they saw what golden results
would ba obtained by a conjunction of
Northern energy and negro industry.
They west into cotton growing with
high hopes and great ardor, bnt the few
who succeeded ooutd be numbered on the
Augers. Ninety-nine in the hundred
abandoned the business shortly in disgnst.
The Tribune could get tho testimony of
tboaeauda or them to tell him vhy ; the
reasoas would be numerous, but none of
them would harmonize at all wi h its
views of the Sombern situation.
But there is force in wba* the Tribune
says about the exolusive devotion to cot
ton growing. That lost the South the
profit* which might otherwise have been
aooumulated from suaoessive ootton crops
whioh were sold at high prices. They
were all spent in Western corn, males
and baoon at equally exorbitant prioes,
as readers will remember. But than
where is the thtifiy West who got these
prices and yet now complains or being as
poor as we are?
The truth io, recuperation from such
total and sweeping ruin as the war in
flicted, is a slow process under the most
favorable conditions; but in the Suuth it
had to be won under such social and po
iitical disorganizations as never before
were inflicted on any people. What the
South has won for herself under these
bard conditions may sot be characterized
as splendid; bnt what she fca< contribu
ted since the war to tho wealth of rhe
country Is simply enormous. And we
shall ettll live, learn and improve—but in
all probability neither we nor car pos
terity wilt see a lime in which a Northern
sectional press shall fail to discover great
reasoas for diatresn r.r-r oar condition.
■ —
The Debate in UoDgreig,
This grand discussion of some of the
first and dearest principles that underlie
civil liberty, is exciting nnivereal atten
tion. N j wonder that the utterances on
both sides are strong and vehement. It
is the first opportunity that the Democ
racy of the Union—they who shaped its
policy and gnided so successfully
the helm of State in the the palmt
eat days of tha Bepubha have had for
eighteen years, to retrieve the errors of a
party which was the outcome of aboli
tionism, faaatics, and internecine strife.
The Augean Stable of Radicalism has
became diiguatmgiy foul and filthy, a^d
must be cl anaed. The money-cnaug-rs
in the Temple of Liberty must be driven
forth. Tire pimps and emissaries of a cor
rupt Administration should be made to
give place to better men. The ballot-
box, with Grant again in the prospective,
must be purged from the presence of
bayonets and paid representatives of the
pany in power. In abort, a general lus
tration ie needed in every department of
dugiy are in oirculaticm asking that tbs cam* the government, from garret to cellar,
moneoaacU withhold lu ooaaent from tha
application. A delegation of property hol
ders hits also had aa infoimat conference
with tha eoassiiaaioner of pnblio parks to
remonstrate again!t thsproportion.
—The first ease under the civil rights act
of 1375 that has ev >r organ in New York
took practical chape on Satnrday in the issue
of a warrant of attaohmsat against the
steamboat Vmliamitai, b loosing te the
New Hav*n Steamboat Company. Tkesom-
plalnant ia Obarliu) M. Oooper, a barber ef
New York, who oia'mi to have beat steeled
from dicing at a regular table on board tha
steamboat when travelling from New H..ven
to New York, a week or two ago, thoaghhe
had bought a flrit-olaaa ticket, and to have
been excluded from the cabin. The dama
ges oUimad for the rjaction from the dining
roam era $SM. and an additional $000 ie
claimed for exoluaion fr m thee bin The
out is pending before Judge Oboeto
CoLQtar I Ohio—Gove ncr Col quit has
een rt«et d tvaJdreaa the sixth annual ao-
ampment exd reunion cf .the bins and grip,
wldah will seen nexlAagcutat Oamb.Uga
Ohio. It wilt baa sannkmof the aolihwri
and salient of the nation, and the ettenocnoe
will be large. The feet that a Pest limn
Governor fc-e been Oboeen to auks the ad
dress. abowa that the araoeiafaoa is jsat
what it profanes to ha. It ta fealty a eon
Dilatory movemont. H>ere* viti hr a large
both from the tanks of the U.n*
and the gray . Governor Jolquitt has also
receiver tontehona 'o address impertant
pnblio gatherings in Indiana and lews next
summer. The Governor d»*s' not yet know
whether bis cffiAal daties JwiU allow him to
seoept three tontotiona
COlPODKa OXYGBN
Does not care by the substitution ef out ditease
lor another, a* Warn drug, -r* take'., Oat an
orderlr prooem ol revitalization Me what has
been uidboterr in this paper, end asms (or oar
TrtalUe gtrios toll. fblosaatloa. tv wiU «,*
mailed bee. Bm AsaBkaX A kaxaa. Ult (sir.
rd ft, Fkto. Pa. to> >V
before the country can have any asaur-
ance of material and financial prosperity.
This is i he Work which the Democratic
majority of She 46th Congress haa map
ped out to be done deepite Ur. Blaine
and his crowd, eEd we trust they will
remain ae areadfast to that purpose aa
the rock of Gibralter.
What if the pecuniary oil ie lackinj to
grease the machinery of government and
keep it in motion? Whose fault will it
be t Surely not that of a majority of the
people’s representatives in both branches
of tho gov-rnment. The responsibility
must rest upon the head of Mr. Hayes,
who would thus assume to defy the ex
press will of the nation, and must there
fore take the necessary risk of auaroby
and confusion ia the premises.
Will he, withont a following or a fu
ture, be willing to do so. Nous vtrron*.
CONSUMPTION CUBED.
An old uhfilrisiii retire 1 from practice, her
ins h,d placed in hi* hand, by an Kut India
aus»ianary tha form ait ot a simple rscetshle
remedy far the speedy and permanent osre for
Consumption. Broncbita-, Catarrh. Asthma, sad
aU Throat «nd tiuag Aflectiuas, also a positive
and radical cure for Nervous Debility ana all
Nervous Complaints, after having tested lve
wonderful aarativo pawtra m thonsanrt* U ceses,
has felt It his duty to make It known to hla
•ut-riof fellow. Actuated hr this motive and
a deiira to rode re human Buffering, I will send
freacf Charge to all who dartre Jt, this recipe,
wish full direct one for preparing and MWb in
German. French or Baalish. Sect cy maiTby
addrmrtnr with stamp, naming tbti paper, W w
tauux. Its Powers' Bloak, Boobeetsr. H Y.
tbUSas, _ _ _ . .
To tks Cesiuurnra. -VTUbe
sf Cod Liver 'Hi and I-imo. With
tha very nauseating Savor of the article aa
Wore used, is endowed by the Fhoepbareef
l.ime with a healing property which leaser* the
Oil daublydBeacioas. nemarkshtetsstlmimtsls
of its eCeeev ean bs shown to those wbe desire
‘ we them. Bsto hy A B Wtlbor, Cbemto
■Hliiw'
Bottom aed oil dryatele.
Abet purpose; bnt all the older members
are on record aadiuoauaing the practice.
The argoment, therefore, being not only
against the stomach of tbs public sense,
but also against their own' antecedents, is
necessarily abandoned, and tbs safest!
into for it ooasists purely in appeals to
No. thern distrust and dislike.
A practice at war with all the jtfme-
honored usages and maxims of free gov.
eminent must find its only apology in
Uw existence otsBoh conditions *s render
the people unfit to be free.- Ib must be
shown that popular repression by the
strong hand ef the military must be sub .
stiluted for the ancient usages of free gov
erament in order to protect minorities;
and the States can no longer ba intrruted
with the duty of preserving order at the
pott and the freedom of elections, at.
Consequently the speeches on the Be
pnblioan side are nil of one type—all in
tended to vivify and inflame the idea of
total lawlessness iu the Southern States.
Bnt we doubt whether the Northern
oountry, just now, is in a situation to be
fanned readily into a flame on this sub-
jeot. The response, so fat, ia oold. Tht
New York Eerold, of the 3J, wuifli hereto
fore haa leveled its batteries principally at
whether human life had been taken un
lawfully. If the accused ie not ready for on that subject so far as those sections
trial immediately After indiotment. the
law should require ~ MM
not oontume the ease
inquire into the facts requiring
»thkthe juc^e.hocld i
case for the ssffta, bat JMltol in
lets requiringthmdeiey, tWf^hera
and fig the estliest practicable
the trial, and repeat the same Mw, »*
each appointment until tkerejpac a
—if neoessary, coaewiagtoP extortrtMirt
for this purpose. _______
cose should atand ktomsifiateiy itMdtr
for another triaL Tbs' totoA of tBdtot-
ments for homiddw B&ertM jtote prece
dence of all other basinets, civil and
.ppeal
ild be
_ witfe-
_ ot delavl In this wav, yd in all others
practicable, let the shedder of human
Wood kno#'that the State prises nothing
for ‘rifioYacd Jr
that between bis crime and her final
judgment there shall stand no years hor
even many months with tfieir mulupiy-
never,, or at least “hardly ever” « werd
BIS eoMarncd. To bear them one would
thtolgnoranoe of the eountrt
ree rtmpls by the “rebels.”
ere ie net quite as mush "readio’,
, and 'rttbtoatio” down in Dixie at
ahoald fesa-tmc I don’t reoollect iu
the etnuse ft a Somewaat eiteodod aows-
papw expsstoaoe ever caionmg upon
e more cULMpoa felt Ulan the follow-
tog, wkjrtfc'A coapas from Baffvlo
oenuty, Nawtirtfia, had to the exsot
tiaurtiklplb? a Ihbr addressed to “Miner
Poatmsster* General” and recently re-
bis mum is Bee jam ca -debt by
Franklin H—ml sonink Andrew
ITekaou—the went dawn to the city of
Beenywbdgot torn one that knew bow to
,-awd- -git up oad ssrit a petition to gtt tbaU—
murderer about the muafost pUee on the
coatinent. >si» v -v .
'■* Every law-abiding citlxan wilt heartily
endorse the Above recommencfation, and
the Code should be «o amended as to carry
it into speedy effect.
We are glad tt? bee our public men
moving in this important matter, and the
salient utterancas o! Speaker Bacon will
attract general attention and strengthen
the good cause not a little.
! . '**■ 'mi
EDITORIAL COBBEtSPOXBKHCB.
at naathe week Mats
e «p namee tbstraaight got more. Our
its leading ooiuma to Mr- Hayea per
sonally and offioiallj; and bogs hias, before
interposing a veto 4o the appropriation
bills as passed by Congress, to be vary
eaiafni that his, reasons are ooholnaivar-
which tbe Herald proceeds to show
be be very farfftm true. It skowe that
the ebjeotton to “polltioal legislation on
appropriation bills” has bad no practical
force with the
has practiced U in oeaeroua ieataaoea—
the Supervisor and Deputy Marshal
law, which the Damccrats now seek to
repeal, having passed in that shape, as
an amendment to the oivil appropriation
bill of 1879, and then it j uatiflee the ob-
jeot of the amendments.
The contest on tbe army bill will now
be transferred to the Senate, where
more unrestricted debate and the
greater experience of members cannot
fail to present the questions at issue in a
clear and strong light. Fothouse and
ed capfandum logio will more signally
fail in the Senate than it has done in the
House, and after a thorough sifting we
hope the Radicals will be better prepared
to yield.
Hon. A O. Bacon upon tbe Oar.
rymg of Ooncnnled Wrap
0118.
8peaker Baoon, in a reoent visit to At
lanta, spoke freely to a reporter of tho
Corulilution against the disgracefnl habit
which is so general, of carrying conceal
ed weapone. He has never sought to
make tbe effeme a matter of special lsg<
ialation, as public sentiment had cot
orjstftlized sufficiently in opposition to
aisure success to tbe movement. Now,
however, be thinks proper action should
bs takes in the premises, and it is the in
tention of Mr. Bacon to introduce some
appropriate bill upon tha subject whan
tbe L-ghlatnre reassembles in Inly. The
Speaker is terribly i-r earnest about it, as
tne following paragraph, dipped from
the Constitution, will evince:
Itahonidbe mads a criminal effense
for anyone to bring a pistol into the
State, either for himself or another, to
buy one, to sell or offer to sell one, and
after a certain date it should be nnlawfal
for a person to have one in the State on
his person or premises. Give a reasona
ble time to get them ont of the State If
I bad the power I would drop them ail
in the middle of the Atlantio ocean.
Many persons whom I believe to be in
the habit of carrying pistols have warmly
approved of this measure, and said to
me they would gladly leave off their pis
tols if in (' had confidence that others
would -to the same. I believe if the
press would take hold of the matter in
earnest the pnblio would come up to the
support of tbe measure, and a great ref.
ormetion ooald be worked.”
“Would each a law be constitutional ?”
“I think there is no doubt about it
It is true that to bear arms is a constitu
tional right, bet the law haa tbe right to
regulate tha manner in which they shall
borne. It would seem to be equally
aa dear a right to regulate the kind of
arms that shall be borne. This regula
tion must,of course,not amount to a prac
tical denial of the right to bear arms.
With pistols banished we should have
very few homicides. Bowie-knives are
neither convenient nor genteel. Besides,
it would be a very rare thing for two
men to collide, each of whom would have
sufficient nerve for a fatal combat with
such weapons. It would of course some
times oocur, but generally one side or
the other would be apt to make it a ques
tion of legs rather than of bUsI.”
While in fullest sympathy with every
effort to suppreesthia barbarous custom of
carrying concealed weapons, we capitally
doubt if such a law as the above could be
enforced. There are circumstances also
under whioh a man may beplaoed which
render such portable means of defense,
not on^y justifiable, but necessary, though
the piatol should be openly displayed.
Thu in traveling ova? lonely roads or
through suspected neighborhoods, and
when one’s life ia threatened by some
man of Belial, no other weapon oan be
used with such oeloricy or ffw. To
carry a heavy gun or musket for purpoeee
of defense would be diffloultif not impos
■ib! a. -- a
A more effeotual method of reaching
the evil would be by the imposition q?
such a tax upon all vendors of ptsioU
as to make tbe busiaesa almost prohibi
tory, 1 " ’ . ^
The present lass, however, if rigidly
enforced in ail inatoaoaa, would go vary
far towards checking the exceedingly
pernicious and cowardly habit of carrying
FjumBmmmaDao0u»nx.o-wxe .NT.
* * I tin out* sufficient e-penment ot
Coldsn’s Uiu..', Hqu d Bxtiact of Beef and
Tonic In rtguracor to enable me to say it Is by
ft- the be-; of sH the preparation!, of the kind
(feed ead tonic) shat I turn arer and To tbe
oaOeror from e ironic duoa-os, or the -ouva-oa*
caul, It ia is-Sluabla. bains both noarishius and
sinufihemuj.- told by J no Ingalls, Macao.
JMDgiben
epstlw
Mr. Boom's vises upon the prompt
enforcement of tee criminal Uw* are moy] ^ n ilah
excellent. He says:’ V„ . ' 4 *’
Besides removing tbe mC-t usual means
of hMSisidf, there should be also e ltw'
requiring peremptorily the prompt .ml
of tbe offender. Jnstioe should not
aieep until it was finally .detamihed
Waskinotoit, April'3d, 1879.
* nsxnmea ahd voolish.
I know no fitter words to describe the
pending dtoenaiondn the House. -I don’t
care who aide or abets, or prolongs It,
oil the tame it deserves this characteri
sation. It might have bean well enough
for a half defan speeches on each aide to
have gone to the country by way of in
formation, bnt there the matter should
have ended, and the flood-gates of gabbla
been shat down. The oountry ought,
and t trust Mill, mike the Jaoobia mal-
eontents, and agitators smart for this
waste of time and money, and worse than
all, this fresh stirring of ths devil's
pot of sectional bitterness and partisan
passions. Thank Heaven! however, the
end is in eight. By Satnrday, at ths
latest, a decisive vote will be reaohed,
and the matter disposed ot one way or
nether. Alter to-morrow at 8 p. m„ de
bate must be restricted- to five minutes
for each gabbler, and this will be death
to many of them, aa.it will take that long
to get started. How ewest the thought
there is such s rule! Pity it wasn't iwo
minute?.
XBK OLD SLOOAN,
One thing this debate has plainly dis
closed to the oountry. It is, that the
next oampaiga will be fonght exclusively
by the Radicals on war and sectional _ ti
mes. Their gonfalon ia to be the bloody
ehirt, and their slogan are-echo of sty *h s
damnable filth and falsehood of the dark
d*ys of the past. Garfield, Frye, and all
the smaller knaves and inoendiariee who
have yelped thechoraa to their bitter,
bloody monthings have given incontesta
ble proof of this design. It ia to ba the
solid North against the solid South,
square iesas of bate, falsehood^vii passion
and bitterest denunciation against right,
reason, argument and patriotism. Frye’s
speech day before yesterday re-echoed
Garfield’s, and the answering chorus all
along the line ahowe not a discordant
note. For a man who could tar, and
with evident sincerity, what hq did over
the grave of Julian Hortridge, and than
■pertc each words of deep venom and
oloody wrath tonarda Hartridge’s section
and its eons, only proved too conclusively
what he and his have resolved upon.
The answering echo of fierce applause
which followed his most violent words
still farther demonstrated the party re
solve. I have never heard heartier
approval of bitterest partisan utterances
than Frye won. Ee is a good speaker,
practised and pointed, and holds his par
ty’s ear next to Garfield, and the applanse
that greeted him reminded me of tbe
Blame ovations in the stormy days of the
Forty.fourth Congress. Frank Hurd, of
Onio, followed Frye, and won the honors
of tbe Democratic side. He, too, is a
big-bramed man, a ripe lawyer, a prac
tised d-bater, and an eloquent, forceful
speaker. He made tbe argument of
the debate for the Dsmocrats, and
etirred that side of the House and the
crowded galleries to its depths with his
masterful logio and sweeping eloquence.
I have sot seen so much enthusiasm and
paaaion in the Hoasein many a long day
and when Chalmers, of Mississippi, anc
•id Conger collided, it jumped fora while
to fever heat. Conger habitually wears
a swallow-tailed ooat, and in answer to
one of his impertinent interruptions Chal
mers replied that as in olden times kings
kept court fools to amuse them array
ed in oap and belJa, to the Radicals kept
a clown, but dressed him in a swallow
tailed coat. Then Conger rallied and
oompared Chalmers to a monkey grimac
ing on his master’e music box, and
the Radicals yelled. Then Chalmers an
swered that he would not thus infringe
on the prerogatives of the only monkey
in the House, and the Democrats yelled.
Then Springer rapped for order and
didn’t get it, and the noise and contueiun
was delightful. Meantime this fire dis
aipated tue war cloud, and there was a
general simmering down all around.
But cui bone is a pertinent question in
practical polities, and it comes ia right
aere. What good will all this do the
oountry ? Or oommg down to a lower
>Iane ot enquiry, what service will it be
Ie ths Democratic party ? Perhaps if
Hard’s speech and others were prmteu
and circulated by the million, aa Gar
field’s and Frye’s will be, they might pan
out m votes; bat they won’t be, and
there’s the trouble. My deliberate judg
ment is that the Radicals will make more
capital nob only out of this debate, ba
•at ot the extra seesion than the Demo
crats. A think. it will be dead sure to
hurt us in the end. Others, bowuver,.
much better qualified to judge, bold a
contrary opinion, and insist that the issue
will strengthen the party by sinking all
minor issues, and oloeing up tbe ranks.
We will see, bat I am very skeptical.
old oonBurri.ii wins.
Tan already know tho result of tho
“Windy” Oiivst’s suit kgninst the au-
olent Pennsylvania Wig-wagger, and
doubtless approve tbe verdlot, as n ally
everybody hero docs. Z do most heartily.
Tho “wlddy,” to ep6ak b\ eourresy, is au
old beat, who not only ought to have lost
her ease, but been otherwise punished.
She is one of a ol-ss always on tbe watob
to grip some old chap, who bas a fat w*l-
lat and a liquorish too:h,>nd give him u
squeeN*. Washington is a favuiite haunt
with them, and no doubt many weak ok!
snaps have bueq web plucked without
either squealing or flgh lug, aadid Simon.
Th«c he hid Ob no very nw<*e. on tho so-
called Mrs. Oliver and been partially
caught In her net (here erumi n-> daub-',
oat be paid the prise like a mao and
ought to have been let off. The eult was
h'buld specniauon—ooo o' those eggs
tear would never oomie anythinne near
hitching without tbe aid ana intervention
ofromn Urge htwrted, phiUntnropto law
yer burning to redross an injured fa-
mile's wrongs and—.upturn a oumfo/ta
•ble fee.
-“They Bay” that B**aat Butler, who
pull-d old Simon through, got 96,000 ox
. 'rratev, »nd the other two lawyers, his
mi'iarante, 88 ,600 each. Adding to this
•n--i*» euni wi’u.es and detective feea
and T think it would fcx xafe to put down
tfte'dsmuge to tbe Cameron b.nk ac
count at IfBit’318,000—a rather largish
figure to pa/ *or » uttle da'Jiaao* with a
middle aged Delilah I hardly think
th- old chap will b» found footing witu
any more grate widows
BE WANTS IT BAD.
We bear - gr-H (1 ■ .1 fruui our North
ern ,ni Wosteru Radical friends about
Southern illiteracy and ignorance, bnt
post offis fonfie A—the postmaster tha
M h dishonest and to. Tha got
is atmta* Ba fifty names writ eay'enuf
mINGUii
post Blaster A— has got a big farm lota of
aaitie and bosses and moles and bogs and
evrything he wante and we are poor uo
team now cow bo bogs no nothing so me
and mi non and mi soninla dont hsv
oo thing to do so we oan tend the poet
offis and make e livin if yon will take it
from —A and giv it to me we will take
good ears or it and moke mony we wish
that yon wood j>e so good and giv me the
post offis and we will be your servent.
I hope “Dock” got the offioe for what
business bas a bloated millionaire like
ths ohep ; with the big form and “diibnu-
eai” to boot, with a post effior. He
ought to be thankful that “DookV’ pa
and “eoalula” don't demand and euforoe
a division of that farm and other posses
sions.. , ~ " A. W.R.
a ,
itelrifferaior <Jan.
• We aM glad to note that our ratiroxd
authorities are beginning to sea that it
will be greatly to their interest to p.ovide
such means of transportation for finite
meets and other perishable artioles, os
■hall ensure their arrival in good condi
tion when shipped to distant'markets.
There are thousands of bushels of
peaches in Georgia, to say nothing of
early vegetofeles, which wonld be sent to
Northern markets, ana addgreatly to the
than tha owner moat show mala tides—that
ia that the poaaesa-r bis notioe, actual or
construct'.vei, of the title ef the true owner.
4. Where bonds were taken as collateral
security ror a debt wren toe debt U paid for
which hoy were hypothesateu, the holder cf
thefh as qpilsters 1 oaimbt, retain thugmus
Bffeb payment : ana % charge to that iffaif
ia pot ssshneous in Um onto of a kmu sc-i
oouot errtent between’he p rtiee o moneys'
borrowed ISkI p* d. npuisg through Bsveral
year*, bv a firm whtefechaoged its oqimbsrw-'
and where >here wvs evid-oea goiQ< to show
that iha debt for wh ch the bo ds wmu
Daily h>pothejated war paid, and uew
MEMORIAL DAY.
Ta* Comma Ceubraciea—The Dat-
rallosi to Assist tn the Cerem .nlrs,
On the^fSsbAhstant theJtoqfaderate
soldier*’ gray^/wiil be Gtofffatelto^ rasnal,
and the ladies of tho kUhnriaMAssocia’
tioa are makifig'prepinitmn* to levs the
decorationsteorothan UBflalljrurtSreating
Arts year.
^ Tho florat attractions, it is probable
made b a changed firm, and rirnnm ffaapSi will be very fine at that date, and resting
tar ding to shew notioe to tbe holder ef tha
tnuowuerof *
me t of iheol
j firm
Judgment 'fi mod.
The Commissioner- of tho town of Thom
son va Nonls Gompl.irt, from Mo-
Duflie 1 " ■ '
J^OSsox, J —1 Ths principle niled in the
Rato Of Calloway v«. Mayor and Aldeimou
of Mi.ledgeville 48 Ga. U09, wi ; l not be ex-
tbat ease That is, toxs to where toe mu
nicipal oorporati n in granting license to re
tail opottuou* 1 quota sots wholly without
jariaaietion over tha anbjeto matter of
granting licenaa to retail. • 1 1 -
8 Where a mun\ipal corporation: Use
juriedioUon to grant such license, and spor
ty voluntarily applies therefor, and vomu.*
tani pay* thd price of th Ueense to tbe
Oiark of reandl, wtbonr the isaoiog of Si,y
execution or ocmpalaory pro eos of any kind,
or tureat to do ao, or to punish him in a y
way if be doe • sot take out tbe lioeoto, out
then suae to reoOT*« part ef tbe money so
voluntarily p*id oper and above tha tu or
license fee anthonzed by the charter of the
corporation before the pa-iiog of an uccldS-
stl.UUon* amendment to said charter, whi h
increased .be BOenae tel to the amoaot b j
paid p "’oo •* »
-. Hsid/thtosueh ptvm-nt «f t the everptee,
made by. (fee pbunbff wo ion tartly and w.ih-
out any proetos or corapdl ory ptooeedinge
cannot beyeooyered back from tho corpora
tloti. ' %
Jnd^mmt reversed. ’ r *'
. Iln .J»u. - g not -- n-.- .1: SOI
Batton vs. The Georgia RaHroad and Bank*
. ing Uo.. .Gokto' from Ooinmtu
JAdxaoN, I AOs tbe trialnf iinia esae It
tppearsd that tjis.pfai'tiff, at tbe time of
the oOaidaot. waa on. the defendeat’a act-
bankmeot wttomuUa consent either express
or implied, aad it further appeared that iha
agents of the oompany sod ail reaeou bis
care and diiigea efixrdnnmg the, train ac
cording o s hedale a ong tbe road at Hie
time of th* altef edtojeiy. aiid ’h*» plrtr.tar
was voluntarily, ouydar* toght, on tbs SCO-
bankttBPt ef defena«uf. when apnbhe rood
within e hundred fifty feet thereof ran
reeoaroes of the country, if the Yo*#ee in|.P“*U^
was going, aod whets n also appeared that
IlitoUri
wL
E,,.a.a *a ... —
transitu were not ao great ae to diacout-
age shipments. Happily this can be
remedied, however, as will fee seen from
tbe following extinct from tha Charlestou
News ani Courier
The new refrigerator cue of the South
Carolina Railroad are now here and ready
for nee in transporting fruits and vege-
bles. One at the depot yesterday ie a spe
cimen of alL It is about the size of on
ordinary box oar, being, however, some
what higher, and longer. The framework
4e of wrought iron pipe, giring it great
strength, and avoiding tue weight of
solid iron. The walls are doable, ten
inebes through, and beth aides arc of
olotoly joined plonk, the intervening
spaoe being filled with three thicknesses
of felt paper. The root is of thick plank,
and has three tuip doors for the admis
sion of ice. The floor is also of plank,
and alightly sloped from the centre. The
doors are double, the outer oae being of
thick plank, and tbe inner one of the
same construction as tbe walls. Small
bolea are bored about the sills, to allow
the egrets ot air. The oar is os nearly
air-tight as it can possibly be made. The
compartment for tke ice runs along tbe
entire length of the carabove, and nearly
across it. and is made of galvanized iron.
It will contain ten thousand pounds of ice.
A space is left clear between it and tbe
roof and sides for the circulation of air,
the principle of construction being the
ascent of warm air, and the descent of
oold. Its constant passage over the mass
of ice will insure a low temperature.
Waste-pipes aad galvanized non gutters
along the sides oarry off the water, aad
secure the freedom of tho contents from
undue moisture. This car weighs as
stands five tons, and its capacity is 350
tbirtv-t-'O quart crates of strawberries.
It is also provided with conveniences for
carrying meats. It is manufactured by
the National Tube Works Company, f
Boston, Massachusetts, after the Tiffany
patent, and is considered to be the heat
and surest stylo yet made. The railroad
has obtained twelve of them, which will
be rnn through to New Yerk, leaving
here on Monday, Wednesday and Tours-
day, and pxsibly Tuesday night during
the season. The rate to be charge on
strawberries will be ten cents per quart
The trucks will tie changed at Wilming
ton, bnt tbe car need not be opened until
its contents are ready tor delivery nt their
destination. The first one will Lave
here on next Thursday night. Mr. 8 B
Toby, agent of the Atlantic Coast Line
Fruit and Vegetable Express, will accom
pany it to wa oh its operation.
We trust if tho present spell of cold
weather does not prove rninoua to the
fruit of the S:ate, ere tho present crop
ripens cur own railroads will bs provided
With similar conveniences for our farm
ers and orchard men.
l A>
3 Steles army, and aMvo-l
. utong casny Bemocrto
- t H ncoob a plonj
utirj’iw. UtonG
—M ie ertimjted ttof x
totuCmoatly jtemgrVTBb
frost Texas before ffiie bat #e>
rtMBtaMer in * (IffiRjl sc
pffioes of the hero dead will be crowned
many a floral tribute from hands
er and trne to their memories.
tioa as the oocuioa, and au effort of tru«-
—Mrs kmms D E. N. Boathwoith says
that a>i* he* written oonauntly ever sicoe
•be was flf ten years tee si
her sixtieth novel
—Gen W. 8
army, and i
tine ie now on
,«,0t8co0
Wau North
gust.
t’rfetois generally 8,000,
tooaqb »om»times much larger
■—Two hundred and eighty young men
hive be»n fined 98 -0 each at Malhouse,
Alesce Lorraine for not preeentiag them-
■elves for the conec iptiou.
—Rudolph, future Emperor cf Austria,
•Mdyteg Turkish. Oeapoaue tea ieriRufgm
worth and patriotic fervor iux, oonfi- ^
Decisions of the Supreme Coart
of Georgia, Delivered Starch
term* 187#.
Summerville Macadamized Boad Company
va. -he Deutecher Scbentzen OJnb.
Certiorari, from Bichmond.
Washes, 0. J.—The Uonntv Judge, under
the act of 1871, (Code §313,) has authority to
hear and decide an application for the grant
of a private way ovor the land of another
That ao U constitutional. Whether ihie ju
risdiction ie concurrent with that of the Or
dinary, is net deoided.
Judgment affirmed.
Compball vs. Boberteon. Equity, from
Biohmond.
Bi.tcKt.xr, J.—Where a bill was filed to
subjeo: ’he expos of a trust estate to the
eluo*tion and maintenance o. the infant
ces.ue quo traat«.
Hel tost inasmuch as, under the peculiar
provisions of tout will, unborn grand chil
dren, aad. by possibility, the ohiidreu of
grn id chl dr .n, may take, to the exolusiou
of all toe ml -ors now living, there can oe
io aopuoation of any part of the fund to
naintenanoe. A farther impediment is.
that the testator set apart all of hie estate
which he intended to bo devoted to this oh-
jMt
Judgment reversed.
Jones Ye- The Georgia Railroad and B ink
ing Company. Equity, from Biohmond
BuaxLxx. J —To cancel, as a cloud upon
oomp.ainant’e title, a aeed whioh waa doly
recorded and had been upon reoord for forty
years before the filing of the bill, It ie not
enough bar toe oomplol- ant bis tha better
legal title* by reason or|preecription, etc ;
but it must appear that his ie the better title
injustice and equity If tbe main transoo*
tion hoe beoome involved in the obscurities
of time, so that it ia a mystery not now <■#
plainable why oonflioiing muniments of titlV
emanating from too same source, are oni-
■troding each party will be left to make
each use of Me deed in a court of law aa he
c-n A court of equity wtU neither cancel
the older deed, nor enjoin the grantee there-
n from *u rung it ae a munim-nt ef title
Where, on the owe made, there is nothing
higher chin ths ordinary rnlee of law to bind
the eoiiHOienoe. there ia nothing higher to
bind the oondaot.
judgment affirmed.
The Merchants and flan ten National Bank
Ya Trustees of Masonic Hall. Trover;
from itt'bmond
Jacksok, J —1 Where bond* with oonpons
for the tnteresr are converted, a verdict for
the value of the bond* and or the mature
osupcnaot ths time of toe demand, with
inter at on au h aggregate value from the
date of hs demand, ia not exoeeeive
#. Where bond* ore hypothecated to se
cure a loon to one firm, and tseh d bt is
setUed, and tbe firm being changed a new
debt ia created, i.-otice of toe tlUe of tbe
une owner cf the conus before each new
debt or loan is created, will operate to pre
vent tbe bulde of tbe bonds as collateral
seoanty fr .m a quinng title egarnst such
trne owner; end such notioe may be proven
by chcomertnoM aa well as by direct proof.
\ Possession a! me of a oecnr'ty, negotia
ble by delivery before due, ia presumptive
e.idei obot title thereto; bnt where such
s-eu-nvis yrov«n to have been stolen or
oth -rnisu appropriated in frao- of the rights
efr- -nr, tk u he eatUM ia upon rhe
in to show that betook it bona file,
an-1- a vn.ue; and upon his showing that.
agents is eontrol 'cf-lbe tofif ond trotlifr
hav- got for h«r from the track bnt for bri-
em ther*tay, reoogmzimr. as be testified
himself, the pLiee Where-hs stood aa dan-?
gerous, and where the endenoe rendered it
impossible, to say the least, that he ooald
nave be .-n hurt by the ears at such d-etanoe
from the track—the ■ me baring passed de
pute odj .oent io the spot where he stood
without striking ofcetruct'ona nearer the
traok than he was standing and where the
areata ot the company bed examined the
oars shortly before tbe alleged hurt, and
found no each timber projecting therefrom,
and where the case in the main was fairly
submitted to the jury—almost exaoUy in tue
language used by thl. court in its j idgment
on tbe demurrer—and the Jury found a ver
dict for the defendant t
Held, that this court will not control the
disosetioaof toe supe- ior oonrt iu verrul-
in- the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, ihe
verd otb-ieg in acooidance with law and
the weight or the evidenoe, notw. hs tan dug
there mar have been some laaco rr«oiee in
thy charge ot the court, not amounting to
error on any o wtrolling qu3ett>a sc issue.
Judgment affirmed
Ode Citt LojKinq Up.—The present
Board of Aldermen really seem deter
mined to do all in their power to promote
the interests of their conxtituentr.
With the single exception of the mnl.
titnde of legal counsellor, they saw fit to
appoint at a very heavy outlay, wo can
recall nothing they hare dona that does
not m< et with oar approbation. True,
the excuse given that they were threaten
ed witn litigation “world withont end,”
and hod to “fight fire with fire,'
seems plausible, but any one of three
firms who divide the honor a»d profit of
representing the city as legal advisers
ara in the courts, we think wonld have
sufficed to protect its every interest.
But ws are not disposed to quarrel
about the matter and only hope that tbe
same economical and conservative spirit
which ae present seems to actuate oar
city fathers may continue to tbe end.
The movement to adjuet the city debt
by tbe issue of uew bends, or upon some
ether fair basis, ought to receive the co
operation of all honest tax-payers.
From no partisan standpoint wo shall
watch tbe situation and do all in our
power to farther the interests end wel
fare of the entire community.
dently be looked for.
The Fifth Georgia Battalion will be ot-
dered out iu (Al£.,{in>&'-'ji, J&Ja
earnestly hoped that the employers of tbe
young gentleoMm anna posing .bar eitisao
soldiery, will allow them to join in with
their comma*is sod help toswell the pa
geant of tha oceseioo. „ Foe Ballwin
Bines aad ths Patovn RifUe are ex-
peo'ed, and th- lftteheil Light Guards
wiU probably joia in the oeiebratioa.
Tbe whole S^uth u making prepara
tions for the proper commemoration
the day. The pteas of every city teem»
with patriotio'wor-js about the day, and
in wvery city, town and hamlet in which
a form that cwure tbs gray ts lald, will
be offered up the inoeaM-of patriotic
devotion to their v«lor and heroism.? n ,
•¥*.***&■&*•!*
ABKiber et.tfee Mprchlsen GnrGsrera
• -On. r ««uy.
The feuperjor tiouxt of C^qwford oounty
last week woe sngogwd in criminal nsat.
tera The cases which attracted meet in
terest were the trial of the negroes
ch -rged with tbe murder of Mr. Murehi-
soa. Thq cocviotion of Joe Hail was
mestioned ia these columns several days
since. Srooe that time another one ot
the accused .has been on
alto found guilty, with a recommends•>
tion to the mercy of the Court.
Tax Tmh ot Talkaox, in the publio
judgment, is likely to result in a some
what general conviction and condemna
tion. It is melancholy to observe how
irrascible and belligerent the whole court,
including judge, jury, witnesses, prison-
er at the bar and spectators have become,
Ths children of this world often confess
tdly make a bad mess of it at bench, bar
and legislative forum; but it is not often
they move with reins altogether alack.
Controversy has taught them, in some
degree, tbe necessity of self-command
and self-restraint. Bat the children of
light, aooustomed to deal ev cathedra
from the pulpit, cannot bear to have their
points and positions called in question
and so are often surprised into down
right ill-temper, of which this trial haa
furnished numerous illustrations. Bat
there is no question that oourta ecclesi
astical ought to furnish bright examples
of justice, decorum and Christian eharity,
Tbe Soutxexn Medical Kxcoe*.—Wa
have before ns tbe March number of this
valnable Southern journal, wbiob is pub
lished monthly in Atlanta at the low prioe
or two dollars per aanom. Tho editors of
the Record are Drs. T. S. Powell. W. D
Goldsmith and R. C. Word. Dr. Word is
tue managing editor, and an intimate ac
quaintance of fifteen yean easbles ns to
say of him that sot only is be a med osl
expert and enltivsted gentleman, but few
men of his profession wield a reedier or
more Balient pen.
Theoontentsof the present number
cover many excellent articles upon Inter-
eetlng eabjecte, which are well worth the
attention of the medical faculty. The
people of Georgia ought certainly to be
able to establish upon a permanent basis
this enterprise, whioh ie so essential to
the sanitary welfare aod hygiene ot our
citizens.
lev.—F-id.y morning brought a tem
perature variously reported at 82 to 84.
The strength of the wind prevented any
notioeable deposit of frost on the high
lands, but there was plenty in low and
sheltered places. Ioa ie also reported.
All day Friday a strong northerly wind
prevailed, and the temperetnre wonld have
sunk bnt for the counteracting Inflfienos
of a bright sunshine. After sundown
however, ths meronry will sink rapidly,
end. we fear, Sstnrdsy morning will dis
close a signally vegetable-killing temper*
store. At half-past four o’eloek Friday
afternoon it is still blowing a ten-knot
breexs or more from the North, with ev
ery promise of a acid night. ^
ELKtlTBIC BELTS.
A sum ear* for nervous debility, prom*taro
momj, exhaustion, etc. Tbs only reliable care.
Circular* moiled free. Addrsts J K KbXV10.
M Chatham St. NY. febll deadAwSm
Tor npwanti oi imn/ years Bn irulowW ■
Soothing S/rup has been used lor children. It
erevent acidity ot tbe stomach, relieve* wind
colic, roselates the bowel*, cures dysentery end
Dtsrrhssa. whether arising from teething or oth-
ereauses. An old and Weil-triai remedy
cents bottle
^mrnons pronoaaced a sentence of
ty-nias years in Abe penitentiary on
both of the defendants. Joe Hail ml] go
to work on hi* sentence in a short while.
Tho other ease will be carried to tho
Supreme Court,. Hall haa - made a oon
feasion of the deed. The two other color
ed men, eons of Green Thurman, were not
tried but discharged.
The cases created a profound sensation
throughout the county. The brutality of
the murder, the mystery shrouding the
crime, and all the attendant circumstan
ces, make it cne cf tbe most interesting
which haa occurred in steady, unsensa-
tional Crawford county in many years*
Judge Simmons throughout the court*
presided with becoming dignity, and dis
patched much business.
Ksbhm or tile ficsbup’s Residence
AhsTtiUfEscapes on ike ntenmakip
Saragossa.
The following, taken from the Savan
nah Newt, will be read with interest by
our Catholic friends:
Some time sinoo mention wa9 mode ot
the myaterious robbery of Bishop Gross’
residence, corner ot Perry and Drayton
streets. Since the ocourrence an investi
gation has been quietly progressing, and
yesterday morning, at the instance of
Father Cafferty, a aearoh warrant was is
sued and placed in the hands ot Consta
ble Greene for execution. The officer
proceeded to the residence, and entering
the servant’s room, commenced a sraren
of the trunks of Mary and Eugene Pres
ton, employes of the house. The search
proved successful, as in Mary’s trunk
were discovered several artioles belong
ing to the priests. Eugene was at once
arrested end lodged in jail to await tbe
action of the grand jury of the Sopericr
Court-. Mary, however, managed to eiad<?
the officer, and, it was ascertained after
wards, bad gono to the wharf and taken
passage on the steamship Saragossa,
which left at 3 o’clock in the afternoon
for Baltimore. A telegram was sent to
the Chief of Police at Baltimore to ar
rest the woman on the arrival of the
Saragossa and send her back to Savannah
by tho next steamer
ALDERHANIC ELECTION.
A «cumt Election—Mr. Hayne Ellis
Ghvsen. ”
Yesterday the election to fill the vacan
cy in the City Oonncil, passed off very
quietly and there was very little - excite
ment of any kind. £ he fosr polling pro
cincts of the oity were open, but the vote
cost was very light.
Mr. Hayne Eil» was elected by a ma
jority of 227, over the highest candidate
and made a capital ran.
The following is a statement of the vote
M taken from the official returns:
TDttX YTAXD.
HsvnellU* - 78
—Now tost toe editor of the QksZoas
Soa-.tM*8 81*0, kh« sbb..kt9 0od fftefoath
hai explored ths ospitol, hte >>eea dis-ovor-
— ‘* ‘i p-T" taatihsme - --»i—
gan regisMDt. no ia eimply o«t-hfroding
Herod, or, whatie more 'ikely, ha ia engaged
to famish hopantacac »xt|iui)ition
- AK-IsOttXAsx*ov txx Pxxlic Debt —.The
total of the publio debc, reported on the 1st
instant, principal and latent, ia 9i.447.-S7,*
7X1 IS, o*ah is Us* Treasury, 943 787 468-
39 O.-br, 1 m oatth iu the iresaoty XJ,Ui7.-
*00 388 33, on ioor sae of 9693,724 17 during
tbe momti of March
, * **** “ 1-ouisivKA—The New Or*
Isum Time- •*>*: -There ia a Chinese oota-
pfh raiu Now Orleans and quits a Spnuk- ; i
Hng-vf them throughout tha (bate, but ws
have liavat baaid any aomplaiutyter We do
bare eowpUiu W about the uscresae of ir-atps,
bpi.wbo ever aaw*tiiuause tramp. *
, _~Mr^ Hi0%-uudi» nFauSai^a .and ”
ifes.UarSidot ^hat pttop ssys that ‘e-raft *'“* 1
fureuboa sb* oefitet a ewrisg*, L 'ix<j; aeooml o >»
puitafilby"hit-'tomA, takes »dm» : in th* »••*
epuntty: Ha Lord U euprob in hts attnc-
tion; ana ie, of oourro, tbabbaeurod af-rtl o«9
Of *i-M X«JM v-im.w,,*
—The Waebwfitou Post of MtewA.*,
hr appsrentiy wubt^p Voice pf rotbeiity, V,
a*ys: - -The e will be no mors extra eewiona ‘ 0 *
of Cot frees If Mr Hsves ve.o** the spl.
pr- -pnauoD hills, rteete ’ Wl-i be taken detfl' - -
Daoeai&er, and no proetkaisrtoo con sail the -
two XBUn* together ogrtn But Mr. Havre
will u L k twice *udn.n them' a. ae x -J
Oooax to ax aocoktoksd to hATotunsj?.
—Tue dprtugftrtd rttpahuoau asy* -A.t>vo,u-
lipa’ ie in the air agoiu u Washington xuk °
is toe third time in torde years. Toerevru
one when Hayea urtedre* the troops- ana
•ban the Dtoocrete-pAssed the Fetter re* -i
gaiutfim, *MT bow Mr a GteffsfcL waves art
red leg at toe approach ofeoothar TevMB-
wMPflj *• |!» *^.«. A* ,OM1 Uy-d i .. I
—Senator Kellogg tails tha Waahiagton
Total,
sacosn waxd.
Haras Bills
OT Holms* —m
Jtfi tong
LX Fite
Total......
Hsyue Bills
OT Holmes.......
fsff 1
LB Pike
SBISD WAX9.
s
.81
, 84
.... 8
, U
Total.
Hayne kills..
94
XOVETK WAXD.
0 T Holmea....,
JeB Long
78
7
L B Pile .MM—-MM——— X
Total-. 95
Ike entire vote ot the foar wards will
foot ap 239.
Mr. HolmeB vlrtaally withdrew from
the easiest before it opened. Mr. EUi-
box been an alderman several years sines,
end served the oity well in that eepsoity.
He wiU msk* a good offioer now, with
the expetlenoe of hM p-n- services.
As TO txx XvoLUTiews discovered by
theSodicois there needs must be ■ greet
many of them. Every mother’s son of
tbkt party bas an ‘‘ax to grind,” and then
mast be many a revolution of the stone to
do the bueinaea. The Radical? say that
the Democrats are taming tbs stone for
them—which ie kind in the Democrats.
Aopaxoaia to the World, a leading Re
publican statesman Ot Washington de-
dares that be is ready now to cross the
Long Bridge in hostile array with fire
aad sword. Ah, that is bad. Let the
brother bring bis table knife and fork and
a lighted cigar and he shaU be welcome.
The Beath ae«da immigration.
hi amttnoau er irngHah ninety ‘And u
foe the firtirchixf’YkuOte^* 1 etaHented Mr. -A
Kellogg ‘ths* een ho tented on by two firms, .1- s
Oudtipoffocd. oagbi wbj pautirtaa enough >-a w
to know!%»,-. I,, woo# •»*? i ., . - .... >iw
— °“r ffMEdMi l 11 1
corrsopoBdeDoe of too fialUasors bun, ssys .. ,,
a tialifertiia airocoo ia exnoonoed, wbiob de
layed tho Southtra Facifia Lahti for fifteen
burn* at Corson Pane , tor agh which a sand
storm poured with rssistlsu violence upon '
the sdvano ng engine, enforcing the taw,
‘thus far, ba- ne farther ’ For mils* the
traok waa buried beneath MVtrol inebes of
■and For over on# hundred miles this
railway traverse! a sonoy desert, where it
must ever be exposed to such contingencies.
Too gb sands nukes ugly drifts, the track
ie easy to clean.
bTAXEmo as a Cos* —A child *t Fart
Wayne Indiana, had the misfortune to tack
a kerne! of ooniteto its windpipe The doc
tor waa sent foe to haste, and announced
that it would be neeoesaiy to perform the
operation of tracheotomy to save tho child’s
life Tho Hootisr mother, fam ilia- with a
practice of domeetio surge-y of a different
sort, and not pleased with tbe idea -f hav
ing he child's windpipe oat open, seized the
sufferer b; one ltg, and holding him up,
bead downward, adu,L titered eanaryretoan-
ding spanks. There woe a sound not unlike
tbe rei or. of a popgun, ana tho kernel :f
00m was ejected with great force. The
child woe at onoe relieved, and recovered,
of oonrse.
—Simon Cameron is brlieved to be o!d
■non h to do be.ter. Tho fiiilsdelphfa
Times e*ys the Oliver woman bo-* loei her
emtagsinat ex-denuor Cameron as it was
right tiut she should, and thus far every
body will be giad Bat th?xe would nave
been much more reason for rejoicing had the
aged polit.ean been able to aho-v that she
hid no basis for her scheme of blackmail It
oonno be said that Mr Oameron hoe come
out of the trial with a reputation nut allied,
and the utterly disreputable character which
th > woman ia shown to hate had only puts
the worse appearance upon his association
with her Those who keep each company
must expect to pay for it, and though Mr.
Gomel on wiU not again bo called upon ta
pa> in money, it most be owned that his
fuliy has brought on him a heavy penalty.
Tn WAucnra W’oam —Ths sys eai*iIo
toi tare of women Uuder (he guise of pedes-
tnanum, a.ys toe Philadelphia Times, ie
already showing its natural result! The
wre-ched woman B-rtel, who was dragged
orou-’d Coucert HaU for ten days poet, gave
up before she had apparently suffered any
very aerious in j ary. bat the women who have
been w Ikmg, ae it is called, to New York
have not au been m fortunate. There were
eighteo- of -hem at the emit but, thirteen
h*ve already falien on; of the <ace One
withdrew volautartly, bet the others because
they ooald not hold out auy longer Oae of
them, who had been lying in au exh-msted
ata»H tver since Saturday, was yesterday
thought to be dying, Another, an e'derly
woman, was ao lame that even her employers
had to take her from the track A third was
ia such a ootid.tion toother physician* say
she will »nffer for the remainder of her life,
and - et another, a Boston woman, basgoss
stark or»Ej 1 oar sieeplessnu. s aud exbaus-
ti-n. Proper rest no doubt, will restore
her mind, bar it ie 'osblfal if she or any of
the other wetne a will ever fully recover from
th-* natural physical consequences of this
infamous experiment.
Pxsvoznra.—“Mortar architect” for
Booster architect, is <he way tbe intelli
gent spmpositar put it yesterday. Tbe
same “expert” printed ‘‘reverend*' for
revered, though the oontext showed that
it mad* BOMensw; and ogam, “good’*
for Red, which came nearer the mark
These or* trials all editor? ore oaoaaion-
ally stibjeatad to, aod they oan only rely
pen tbe commeo sense of the render to
correct such preposterous mistakes.
pours time t
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