Newspaper Page Text
j>aily jr.LsaxAPR a- jmssexoxa
it p+ f -h*hed every i*>>r-ning, (except Monday)
ct tt.f ie'egraph Budding, comer of Cherry
t tH i , “1 street*. .tuS/acrtpfu/n Ten L'ullars
#v r ). '»»*# I'oi.art fur nx 9»f>nUu, J'ico
‘jp.tii ■t and Tijty c<»tt fi.r three vnuuths,
, . i </me i> - lar p.r * >»ih f.r a shorter time.
Xi.'.O •*/£•' y AOl EUnShMKXlS One 1/,, .
. .rj.ir »<4» m xtj ten 1»or 'css for ike fir ft
, t-r-fiun, and Fifty Crete fur mli tu^tefuem:
Mi' r;t • »».«. J^Utriii rale* to contractors.
Tilt. 1ELEOMAPU AMJ MEaSEXUEH
rv presents three of the oldest news papers t»
:*>* sect, i m of (it.,rg,i and for min g years
K-ui farnn’t*-. tiu iarU.it nrict to that scope
of '> ‘rji-t. Alt. i mi ami Florida trading ci
1k.» point it finis $ ts a- ij into aim *xt carry
tnte.i+je it houithtd .i.xi man of businsts tn
that section. As am advertising medium i»
tha' range of countri
ffaeUitraph ft 4jfessui8*r
TflUlta* a i. AUGUai 21,
hit GAomu or Taxis.—'Tho Galveston
Jv>*« tuu uf li.lun nl
abju*. 2,o 4>,u0u, anduuuk* that tbe next
co .r is will givo tho atito li'teeij Congre-d-
xxi' .* T’uo caicu.aliou u t>*eoi oa tha 240,-
bll .Oloi cast 41 the ixsL e.OCUOu, tight Hi-
bx-uaaU ben*# ariorfod for each VuleT, ae
ui .uj o/ tae i-urn grouts luvu no; lived ion#
enough Ui iiu a.aio to Vole.
Tuc Coibi isToa*.—The storm on Monday
niOii.iu# u»i H^o very severest vYUamigtoa,
N. U. At 4 a. M. Hits velocity of wind Led
reichod On Ui.ica per hour. A large number
of hhxdv truce hcre prostrated aud several
llOUreB nlid tliurin WOtU UuiOofod. XwO
tiarna, Goiuinii mid Bnliati, are ashore. 1(
In foarod relioUa UAUiagu lit* been done to
crop*.
— Thu Archil acb css Christine of Aartria
who ie io Vocouij i^ovan ot tipaiu, la juat
twenty oue years ola— a year younger tn&u
Kiii# Aijibonso. she la said to he oiiroinoiy
uuWiiUu# to part from her relatione ana
friend*, and ehv wi J, indeed, nee Voiy little
of Uiciu hereafter, as .he eLqilolle of tha
bpAJoaiJ court will not oermil her to choose
ev«.u h.r ladies of honor from amon# her
A OAlU.K .CuOaa TUB UaM I iN —ThoJiUS-
aian #0Vcrauivut ia aoou; to Uy a oobmanau
cab o aoroes tho Caspian boa. Tha cab.e,
whtcit is couip.olod, h\a just arrived at rit
JL*oierehur#. slowed in tire hoats, and alien-
dtxl ny a mxih oue couiaunn# hotel accom-
iiio.uii.>na for ilu forty dve persons whose
■erviocs will he ro piired in laying it. The
ail mala will piocuod to AstraUhan byway
of ihe .Seva, the .daiy canal and tho Vol#a
Tn a l cl
ropof tin
WncaT
-To
ar, according to figures
roe ivo l o, iho nlatu Ho»r l of A.ircuiiure,
a nouuis io a total of -12.ull,*25i bushels, an
av«rn#eof 10 2-3 i udicls per acre, ani’s
Valued <d jJ7 loti 757, or an average of 3d
ooula p’ f bii hvi in iho producer’s bauds. It
is oousidcied tlio largest and most Valuable
whuat crop ever i<t.a. <i m the tiiate. The
tctal land sown to wnoat was 2,137,063 acr* s
—Auatful devico for prcVaiitm# a class
ofacctdenis by winch so many people have
born Killed ot crippled for life, has boon in*
tro.lucod on tlie Cuiawaioaud Hudson Canal
Company's railway cars. It consists of
movable steps, woioh at the station are let
lioait wi.lnu one foot of the ground. When
tho cars are lu motion the $lops are liftod
h #h, « > that it in >;up jsib.o to Jump cither
on or nir
—Groves and Goodnight, Presbyterian
clergymen, annoanrod in Texas that they
had rue irod s special dirifiO revelation, iu
which the end of the wo. Id withiu ten years
was foretold Tueir presbytery expelled them,
but they are making many couverts, and
have stirtod a eocl called tho Tabernacle of
tho Comm# Lord. They preach that Grant,
reelected in 1533, w.ll invade and eubdae
Europe, overthrow Uouianicm, and finally
meet a downfall—after which the mniemnm
—It is now oousiderod certain that tho
Km# of hpain will arrive in Vienna this
month, to make tho personal acquaintance
of iho Arch luohens Christina. Tue year of
mourum# for his late wifo, which tho King
has paused in as much retirement as possible,
havtu# expired, Ins Ministers insitt strongly
up m tho necessity of his marrying agaiu as
soon as possible. The Archduchess Chris
tine wa*« borne in 1S53, and is, therefore, ono
year younger than Kiu# Alphonso. Bho is
said to bs extremely unwilling to part from
bar relations and friends.
A lli>\ Politic!aM.—A. Rontlemau just
from Maine says Senator Maine never work-
r i so bard as now; that be is throwiug his
whole energy into tho campaign, and that
when ho is not on the stump he is writing
letter and editorials for newspapers. He
has a telegraph instrument and au operator
in his house and u abort-hand writer at his
elbow. Her ides, he is priming a campaign
paper that he calls the Honest Truth. Maine
is represented as ciaiiniug a Uepublicau ma
jority of 6.e00 at the spproaobin# election
which is rather olose figuring, when it is re
membered that 13J.U0J votes will perhaps bo
oast.
A Nov El. Hivlomatio Ahoumsct —The
Qoiman Gazette gwes some curious intimate
details of the itToits made by Ismail Pasha
to havo ins throne. Two days before bis
deposition, while the British consul was pres
aim: turn to abdioste. he offered him heaps
of gold and engaged to assume the euiue
debt and discharge it from his own resource'
if bo ware allowed to remuu. Then seem#
that his appeals wore in vain he sent to his
harem for fiftreu of bis most beautiful slaves,
and when they arrived, decked with dta-
mon Is, he said, ‘There are my favorites;
the jewels tli*y wear are worth £3 000,OOt ;
they are all y >ura if yon will omy ieava me
a little longer in peace.’
—The Troy, Alabama, Enquirer reports
that caterpillars have made their apperance
in many farm* m i'tke county, but not in
■ufficiem numbers aa yet for thsir depred «
turns to be damaging. The hopefnl say that
it will rtquire three week** for them to be in
•uSK'it-m numbers to devour the crop, and
by that time the crop will have made abont
all that will mat ore, white the despairing
expect to awak3 every morning and aee
their cotton dolls stripped of all the foliage,
the forms eaten np and a part of the bark
on every stain sKiuned off The cotton Ex-
cUange organ ba.l reports of caterpillars in
*m3st parts of middle Alabama the 2J of
August.
—rteu. Grant is reported, m h.s speech in
reply to the addr.es of welcome made to
hun by Li-Sang-Chang, to have exprojsly
disci nurd any part in the th.rd-term ‘boom *
The Viceroy had referred to the time when
Grant would agaiu be the President of the
United states, aud the General said in reply
‘there could be no wish more distasteful to
me thau wtut yoa express. I have held the
effirtof President as loug as it bM ever
beeu h Id by anv man. I have no claims to
tie office. I have had my share of it—have
bat all the honors that can be or should be
given to aoy citizen.’ As tho New York
Herald says, ‘this is a downright declaration
—as fa- as it goes.'
Assr^iiJt Di:0ovKRIES —The mound at
Nineveh, known as the Tomb of Jonas, was
xooently explored by Mr. Harmord Hasaam,
who is now in London. He was able to re
cover a number of inscribed fragments
bearing inscriptions of tbe reign of Esar-
bad ion and Sennacherib, as well as some
xtaiaett* in terra-ootta, which exhibit a
higher art than any before recovered. Ex*
plorations in the palaces of th^se moaarchs
have brongnt to light many hundreds of in
scribed tablets, and on tbs mounds of Ntm-
rond a number of fragments of tiles and
several inscriptions have been recovered
from the site of the temple. In a mound
oalled Jnbjuba Mr. Hasaam discovered the
remains of a large hall of very rich oonstme-
tion. Painted bricks, Indian woods, and
enamelled tiles indicated the former richness
of the edifioe Mr. Hassam’a exoavsuon in
the Btrs Nun round have brought to light the
remains of bnildings and a number of in
scriptions. An interesting discovery in con
nection with this ruin is said to have resu»-
ted from the examination of the sits, nameiy,
that its destruction was due, not io ure or
the rangeanos of an enemy, but to a voloanic
sruption, which has split the whole edifice
Senator Util’s Letter.
THE POLITICAL PUTURt.
Io bla lettar, poblnhel yeaterdty, de-
c'miog to mike k political speech before
tae Legislature, Senator Hill ban, with
*1 jgolar force and felicity, pointed out
tae great fundamental questions of free
government which will meritsbly press
memaelvee upon the American people in
me next and future general eitcioos. It
will be obseived tnat aiihoogh in a ranch
sharper and more menacing form, they
ere the same idea# which for a century
have underlain all American politic
free government against centralism and
f jroe.
A Urge portion of the American peo
pie have never been satisfied with that
patient toleration and personal freedom
t&icn belong to a popular representative
government. There are so many toi
in thoir judgment, which require to be
uuiaaded, reformed and redressed by the
ntern, fatrongsrm of irresponsible power—
ihe people are bo wicked and ignorant
and the operation of moral oau
elow and uncertain that their impatience
overleaps all bounds, and nothing pleases
them so much as an approach to absolu
tinm and force,
T fitote men were sever so happy as wbeo
sin very was swept away with cannon and
grspe-nbot, and for many years the law
of farce was rampant. They wool! like
to see ah that they consider abuses re
formed in an equally summary manner.
They cannot bear the prospect of a grad-
n d restoration to tbe slow methods of
Uw sustained by pabiio opinion. They
want to knock all men and parlies
in the head who dsre to diffar from them
•mil f-o conform the country to their will
and pattern immediately. The exist
euoe of this strong element in American
p .hticsis iliQstrated by tbe passion for
prefsing all questions of manners fend
uiorals into tbe political forum, aud the
effect was illustrated in the late civil war
l hat war and i s results fed and infUmcd
he passion which led to it, and now
when the question of a return to the slow
*nd quiet methods of oonstitniiooal law is
m agitttion, no wonder that the trumpet
stands for an array of all the legions of
an irresponsible centralism.
Added to their traditional dislike of
popular rule, these people of late have
found new arguments for “the man on
horseback" in the strikes and communis
tic movements, and force and gun pow
der have become with them the only sal
vation against anarchy and universal dis
order.
There is no reasonable question,
therefore, that Mr. Hill has fall warrant
for the assertion that the question of
free government is tbe practical issue
the pells; hut it will not bs deterrnin
by auy one canvas. Snould the friend*
of free government triumph, the other
^;de will not give up, for th'jy have been
struggling for centralism a hundred
jests Nor will the other side yield tbe
poiot cn a single d-feat—for defeat will
only postpone victory.
If there be anything certain in the
drift of human events, it is the general
progress of liberty, and though Ameri
ca, owing to the exceptional influence
of the civil war, may temporarily retro
grade, yet she is not going to show her
self an isolated foe to popular self-gov
eminent.
to be worth anything. Practically, there-
f re, the prospects of realizing anything
by levying on State property must be
dwmed very uncertain.
Tner • w juM be nothing left bat the
writ of mandamus directing the L-giila-
ture to ievy a tftX. Toe L-#ioW!ure
might disobey, or tfce tax officers might
do wnat naa often been done—r*-aort to
any of several methods of evading the
d i'y, there b-ing a general agreement
a<;unat auy coihctioo. It has been sng-
g led that in this event, Oongr?aa
; m #ht authorize tbe Court to lppoint tax
oilers, whj bhoolu apportion each man's
bhare, wfci -h would then bs a separate
deb: due from him ind vidually. To
-uppose Congress would do this is going
a great wayr; but suppose it done—or
tL&: the outre should take this step on
it.- own responsibility—the case would
then be that tbe tax-officers would be
Perfectly willing to collect, but the peo
ple none the more to pay. Already, how
ever, in two case- £Res8 va. Watertown and
Heine vs. Lrola Commissioner*, 19 Wall.,
107, G55, 1873.3 the court has refused to
under:akc the delicate functions of taxa
tion. In one of these cases, after manda
mus had been tried repeatedly without
effect, tbe plaintiff boldly rook the ground
the city autnoriues were virtually trus
tees, and all property a trust fund, for
the purpoed of paying publio debit; hence
asked tnat the federal marshal be order
ed to 8» ize snd sell any private property,
leaving: be o vner to seek redress from the
rest. The court posiuvajy rejected this
view and refused to do more tn&n renew
the ineffectual writ; in a later case, where
\ nirty t vi-payers were ened individually,
the same grounds were taken. The doc
trine urjed in the Watertown case.it will
i-a observed, is that of unlimited liability
of all private preperty for all public debts
—in » fleet, that all tax-payers are mem
bers of a general co-partnership for the
purposes of carrying on public business.
Obviously, this would be monstrous, and
only in New England—there by usige
ad practice—is private property liable at
all on a public judgment. These cas?s
are all of Municipality suit*; but, of
course, it must be supposed that wb.it
msy not be applied against the leas may
not be against the greater.
Tne procedure contemplated by the
New Hampshire law seems thus beset
with dilfieuLieB and dilemmas at every
srep, both legal and praoricxl. We can
eee no likelihood of actually getting any
mont-y by it. Nor should it be forgotten
that this oourse must necessarily raise,
iu the most pronounced and irrititing
way, the que-tion of State rights, for it
a ill b.* .t din e: attempt to have the
general government compel a State to
pay. Wnat State sovereignty is—that
is, u Stato being supreme, with few ex
ception?; within its own boundaries,
wnat arc the relations aud the limita
tions of power between the States and
the Union of States—is still a subject
all unsettled. The organic law of this
Uq;Ou forbids States to do certain things,
tor example to impaircontracts and make
anything except gold and silver legal
render; an attempt to proceed under tnis
New Hampshire law will b* an attempt
to revive tne situation of 1793, and force
an analysis of the nature of the govern
meat. It will be «n interesting inquiry^
but will it bs p-ofitable?
Thz Ja3Pzb C»NTZ.Y!fiAL.—W*j learn
that arrangements have been made by
the managers of the Macon and Brun
swick Liilroad for * mammoth excursion
in Orobtrnext ti Savannah, so that all
wqo d -sire mar participate in the cere
monies of laying the corner stone of the
monument to Sergeant Jasper.
of trusted agents to spy out the land. If
Dr. Felton doesn’t watch closely he will
find his boasted “majority” straggling
for a crust of bread in the happy land of
Kansas next year.
X Savannah negro had a narrow
cape last Monday. His friends
nounced him dead and made him ready
for the grave, and the preacher had com
otate Suiug 8tate.
Tho New York Commercial and Finan
cial Chronicle discusses at length the m
toresting questions suggeeted by the pae
sage of the New Hampshire aot for bring*
mg suit against States, as agent or rep
resentative of parties holding their dis
honored bonds. After considering the
in the ca**, which is held to sustain
the act, the Chronicle proceeds to treat of
the practical difficulties in the way of re
covery, as follow. :
Suppose New Hampshire snes, the first
step in resistance may be to plead, what
is notoriously true, tnat the State is not
the real party in interest, and that the
form of tbe suit is an attempt to evade
the amendment. This plea substamUlly
has been once made already, in the Onio
case of Osborn vs. United States Bank,
L ‘J Wheaton, 733,] 1321. Pursuant to
State law the au liter, Osborn, had
seized $100,000 belonging to the branch
of the bank in Cnillicothe, in lieu for un
paid (ares. The Circuit Court ordered
restitution ; the Auditor appealed, plead
ing tho amendment as a bar to all pro
ceedings. The Auditor urged that he
was really the State, and hence the Court
hi»d no jurisdiction. The bank contend
ed that it was suing Osborn, not the
otate, and that "in all cases wnere juris
ur Stbket Kail.t .ad a Pecmankn
Institution, the Atlanta Kuaroa Not-
withstanding.—Some days ago a report
was circulated generally, throughout the
inanity, that Mr. Hill, in passing
tbroagh Atlanta to the West, had sold
the iron of the street railroad to &. Pe
ters, E.q., of that place, who woald
ihortly ;*rooeed to tak9 it np preparatory
to being re-rolled and laid down in that
city. As tbe proprietor of the road was
absent and could not be communicated
with, it was impossible authoritatively
to deny this damaging statement. But
no v we are requested by Mr, Hill
himself to 6&7 that there never has been
the least shadow of foundation for such a
report. He not only intends to continue
to operate tne road, but if properly pat
ronized and supported by his fellow citi
zens, will make all the needed repairs and
keep it hereafter .in excellent condition.
Macon is built upon a series of hills, and
the residences of her merchants and cit
izens generally, are widely scattered over
miles of area, so that that the necessary
compactness of population is to a oortain
extent wanting, which is .a condition
preoedont to the perfeet success of a street
railroad.
Mr. Hill has only to stand his ground,
however, and keep his oars in motion, to
reap a fair percentage upon the invest-
m nt he has made by tne parohase of
this line. No one osn donbt (bis after
reading tbe long and imposing list of
baildings io process of ereotios, which
was recently published in the Tkligbaph
and Messengeb.
It is generally believed that if certain
changes and extensions were made in
the street car routes they would prove
highly remunerative, besides greatly ad
ding to the convenience of the public.
The shortest way to obtain the desired
improvements, is to patronize liberally
tbe line as at present constructed. What
It will be the grandest pageant ever be- m eQ C td his prayer when the corpse sat
" • • stared around nim and deliberately
got oat of bed. This irregular proceed
ing kicked up a tremenduous bobbsry
among the mourners, says the News, some
jumping out of the windows and tutnb*
ling pell mell over one another out of
the door, leaving the resurrected colored
citizen all alone for & time, when some
of the party, getting over their fright,
returned to the house.
Thz Union and Recorder says the heav
iest rain that ever was seen by the oldest
inhabitants fell in MiUedgeville for an
hour last Satarday.
Wx learn from the same paper that
William A. Choice died in the Asylum
last Friday and it adds :
Mr. Choice was long a citizen of Borne,
bat subsequently went to Atlanta, and in
the year 1859, we thiok, shot aud killed
a constable in that city by the name of
Webb. He was tried and found guilty
of murder in the first degree. A bill was
introduced in the Legislature at the ses
sion of December, 1859, to pardon Choice.
After a long and exnsustive debate upon
i\ the bill was passed and sent to the
Governor for approval. Gov. Brown, the
then Executive, returned the bill to the
Senate with a disapproval and assigning
his reasons for so doing. The bill was
passed over tne Governor’s veto, on the
ground of alleged insanity, and Wm. A.
Choice was subsequently placed m the
Lunatic Asylum. During the war, Mr.
Choice escaped from the Asylum, and
served ia the Southern Army. Recently
ne was returned (o the institution.
Thz Union also states tnat Mr. Thos.
Prosser's mill, in tbe eastern part of
Baldwin coanty, was recently mysterious
ly burned, together with 1,200 pounds of
fljur. Loss abont $5 000.
Then and Now.—We quote from the
Coiambus Enquirer Sun:
In 1860 the value ef laud in Stewart
oouaty was retarned at $2 242 259 la
1879 it was retarned at $777,916, showing
a failing eff of $1,464 343 tiuce i860.
Tne value of all prop rry ia the country
in 1860 was $10,117.2*08; the value of
r-UVos $5,866 098. Iu 1879 tbe segregate
of ail properly returned is $1,315,198. In
ISuO the value of property, not including
-1 .vcs, was $5 251,118, which makes a
falling of.$2,935 914 since 1850.
V su,
n^ ,bo
17*.
held in Georgia, and we.trust our people
from the sea board to the mountains, will
turn ont en masse to do honor to Erin’s
gallant son, whose blood watered the ttee
of Li: erty when first planted in Ameri
can eoil.
Tne price of a ticket to go and return*
fer a periedof fifteen days, will be put at
the merely nominal sum of four dollars.
Hundreds will doubtless avail them
selves of the opportunity, on such cheap
terms, of visiting our noble seaport and
its lions, to say nothing of the majestic
Atlantic and the great ships end ocean
steamers which navigate its baundleas
expanse of water.
Full particulars of the proposed excur®
sion will be given in a subsequent issue*
It ia enough to say that Capt. A. A.
Sharpe will engineer the whole matter*
under the direction of Superintendent
Adams.
GEORGIA FRES8.
The important fact that Mrs. Potts
has reached Atlanta on her return from
her tramp to New Orleans, has thrilled
that city for tbe last day or two.
The committee of ths Legislature to
which was referred the matter of releas
ing Messrs. Grant and Nutting from
their liability as sureties on tbe Jack
Jones bond has, the Constitution says, de
cided by a vote of twelve to five to re
part the bill for their relief back to the
Legislature with the recommendation
that it do not pass. The same paper
says when the report oomes up in the
House an effort will be tnide to pass a
substitute, “allowing the petitioners to
go biok to the ooarts and present the is
rue to a jury. Ia other words, to modify
the rule of testimony in this ca*?e eo far
as to allow a jury to hear the evidence
and determine whether they signed a
temporary bind in fact and ought to b*
reh* v«*d troin liability for the moneys du
from Jones to the State,’'
Kxfsruing to the problem of how 1 ng
the session of the L?g;siatnre will last,
the s ime paper says:
Nearly all ef the big questions that
were before the Legislature have beeu
disposed of. The peniienuary question
uas been virtually settled by tne prepar>
tioa of a compromise mtaicre in the
committee by which tbe whole matter
was referred. The substitute provides
that the Governor, the keeper and the
Dhysioian snail constitute a board of
This
non depends on the character of the
rtf, reference is made to the parry oi^J wonld College Hill and Tatnall Square
in twain and vitrified all the brickwork with
whichIbilhTnhhd flame came m ooaucii
record, not to the one who may be* Li 0 without it?
interested but is not shown by the ^
record to be a party.” To this Chief
Justice Marshall <?aid : “In cases where
a Slate is a party on the record, the
question of jurisdiction is decided by in-
Rpcc:ion. If jurisdiction depend, not on
tuis plain fact, but on the interest of the
state, wbai rule has tbe Constitution giv
en by which the interest is to to meas
ured ? If no rule is given, is it to be get
tied by the court? If so, the curious an
omaly is presented of a court examining
tne wnole testimony of a case, inquiring
into, and deciding on, the extent of a
State's interest, without having tbe right
to exercise any jurisdiction in the
case. Can this inquiry be made witboat
ihe exercise Of jurisdiction? If the plea
of lo jurisdiction is made, in the possible
New Hampshire oase, it will be on tne
reverse side. In the Onio case, tbe ap-
pellsn*, O borne, arg^d that the Circuit
Court had no jurisdiction against thb
sued tnruagn him; here the de-
fndant would piead that ihe appear »nc
t (he Slate as plaintiff was ficutioas,
ence, that there was no jurisdiction.
Eminently tne plea would bs strong* r
.nan tne Oaio case, because the casus
mere was tne aot of a S.ate officer, wnile
nere tne evasion and intent woald be pal
pable. The Oaio case was decided tor
tne bank, tne jurisdiction pies beicg
verruled, but tne inference test a like
course woald be taken in tbe New Hamp
shire esse is not qmte clear. Of ont
ming.huwever, we msy bs sure, that tut
Jadgts woald be well aware of the pecu
liar disagreeableness of me cass, and
woaid dismiss st if any tolerable grounds
could be found, technical or otherwise.
But suppose the aouon is tried, and
jaograent obtained? In some States it i:
neid that muaioipal private property—
that is, each as is he/d for profit and
oharged with no public trusts or ose6—
msy be sold oa exeoatton; lu other
Sutes, it is held that there osn be no en
forcement by. exeOLtxn. The (former
seems to be tbe more reasonable rale.
As to taxes and revenues, either iu tae
treasury or in transit to it, they mast be
deemed exempt, beosuae essential to the
existence and purposes of the municipal
ity. Ii woald be absurd to say that a
less liberal rule of exemption applies to
the State itself than to municipal* corpo
rations which it creates; hence only pn
vate property of a State, as above de
fined, oan be in any event liable to execu
tion. Such property, if portable, like
bonds in sinking funds, might not be
to and when wasted, or there might not
beany. Sappoee public buildings are
subject to levy, they oould be of Hie use
to a purchaser, nor could he feel sure of
getting a title which would not be dis-
puted subsequently, or of being allowed
io take possession undisturbed. Nobody
would want to bid on a lawsuit or to face
an outraged community, and this oonsid*
eration woald apply particularly to State
lands, which moat be personally oooopied
le
af AsKoland for an Oliver—Toe crock
ery dialers of Newport are so much in
censed with the tea sellers who make
presents of glass and eartbenwaie to
ihose customers who bay liberally, that
in turn they have purchased large quan
tities of tea which they retail to their
custamers at actual cost. It seems that
tt a men made each extravagant prof
its on their wares that they could well
fiord to give crockery presents, to tbe
great detriment of tbe sellers of these
oods. Hence their retaliation. Bat
it is remarked that between tbe two the
people gtt both tea aud tea cops at rea
sonable piicca.
Gold and Silver Flowing in From
Abroad.—Last week’s importations of
te at the port of New York were
$719,430 of gold and $106,276 in silver.
Tnis is a singular and sudden change in
the tide. Previous to Augast 6 h and
dating back to January 1st, only $996,693
m geld, and $5,535,338 in silver nad
been received. This looks as though our
European creditors and capitalists were
now not only satisfied with their invest
ments in American securities, but are
s.odicg over funds to make additional
purchases.
An OdioU3 Comparison.—In printing
sa article in Wednesday's issue on Com
peti iou between Railroads, the types
made us say “ihe (railway) interests are
too vast and in too concentrated a shape
to permit destructive competition like
that which used to be so frequent among
common carriers of honorable preten
sion?.” The printer substituted the
word honorable for “more humble.”
There were also other errors, which,
however, did not commit us to offensive
expression*.
Thz Ohio Campaign. — Secretary
Sherman is booming in Oaio this week,
and it is stated that a close listener can
hear the thunder of his artillery—the
groans of the wounded and the shoots of
the victors. The friends of Footer write
the Tribune that all is more than safe
and happy, and the other side write to the
same effeoL
Large sales indicate the merita of all
good articles. Druggists sell more of Dr.
Boli*s Baby Syrap than of all other rem
edies for the cure ot Baby Disorders.
pervieoiH or commissioners,
board shall overlook thing-* in the oamps,
d tha lessees shall not ba permitted to
appoint or discharge any guard without
indorsement or oous&ot of this board.
Bd«ide3 this board (which shall serve ex
officio, and without auy increase of salary )
there shall be local wardens for every
camp or penitentiary, at salaries of about
$750. It shall be the duty of these men
to supervise the camp and see to it that
the convicts are not maltreated. Ic is
provided, farther, that separate place
shall be provided for the men and
the women oonviols. These are the
main provisions of the bill, which
will pass, we prosame, without opposi
tion. Its passage will close one of the
most troublesome questions of tbe ses
sion.
Miss Sadie Elliott, daughter of the
late Bishop Elliott, has recently written
a novel which a Boston critic pro.
nounces equal to George Elliott’s last ef
forts.
Mr. Clint Taylor, a well known and
much esteemed citizen of Atlanta, died
on Tuesday of Bright's disease of the
kidneys. He was the father-in-law of
Col. Kibbee of Hawkinaville.
The editor of the Monroe Advertiser,
referring to Gov. *Colqnitt and the at**
ticks upon him, writes from Atlanta to
nis paper as follows:
He will doubtless be forced to make
the race for Governor again, to see if the
people for whom he fought and who
elected him to the high office he occupies,
will endorse him or his assailants. I
have heard it intimated that the Govern
or, tired of snbmitting so tamely to tbe
treatment of which he has been the re
cipient, will try an active warfare on his
own part, and then we will see who will
or will not get hurt.
The same correspondent strains oar
credulity fearfully by alleging thit many
legislators are tired of Atlanta and
wish to go home to look after their bus
iness; and they would be the readier to
adjourn because the pay is only fear dol
lars per diem. He also writes that Judge
Warner says the impeachment trial will
last at least four weeks, and that if it
quare '‘October will find us in session.”
The citizens of Griffin resolved as fol
lows last Monday:
Whereas, there is cow pending befor 0
the Houee of Representatives a bill t°
lease the M. & B. R. R., with a provis 0
looking to the building of a railroad from
Macon to Atlanta, we, citizens and prop
erty owner* in the State of Georgia, liv
ing on the line of the Central railroad,
feel that great wrong aud injustice
would inure to us in tne case of the pa>-
sige of the aforesaid bPl, and believing
it to be a project inaugurated by a body
of capitdiste who have grown rich io
many similar projects at the expense of
our citizens generally, and who. now with
their immense capital, desire to sap
our very existence, with a projec.
that will only benefit the proj
ectors, do utterly condemn the acc
in all its features, and pray that
the honorable House ot' Representatives
will refuse aid to these monopolists in
taking from as, oar wives aad obdJrea,
what little ia lefL In good faith we have
invested our all in lands and property
in this section of the 8tate, resting on
the guarantee of the noble old State of
Georgia to protect us in these invest
ments, made under the guarantee given
by the State in the original caarcer of the
Macon and Western Riilroad, and we do
not and will cot believe that your honor
able body will be a party to the great
fraud abont to be perpetrated on ua. We
ask onr immediate representative, and
especially tbe Legislature at large, that
they will weigh this question well, and
defeat this scheme, which will greatly its
jare ua. We request that oar Senator
and Representative be requested to pre
sent this memorial to the Legislature.
The Athens Banner, referriag to &n al
leged remark of General Toombs, that
he couldn’t sing Sunday-school songs, or
make agricultural speeches, shoots this
sharp arrow:
As respects agriculture and Sunday-
schools, General Toombs’ education upon
these subjects has evidently been greatly
neglected, and he oertaioly has not lived
np to his duties and privileges. But then
the General, joa know, is unanimous on
railroad speeches, and wears tbe belt
when it oomes to singing temperance
songs.
At the last meeting of the Railroad
BenevolentiAasoc a ion of Ssvannab, $5,-
q00 sold at 42 per oenL premium.
The Exodus Fzvxb in North GzcbS
a la.—The Rome Courier says:
There was a large and enthusiastic
meeting of the colored people held in
the City Hall last Saturday for the pur
pose of discussing the exodus question.
There seemed to be much enthusiasm on
Correspondence Telegraph and Messenger.
From ihe Mon a tains.
Editors Tc'.egraph and Messenger: After
fwo woe kb’ waudering in Now England,
I returned to the mountains of Virginia.
I spent several days at the pleasant vil
lage of ChristiAnsburg. Here I met sev
eral old friend;; among them Mr. Tom
Noel aud brother, who used to be con
nected with the Southern Express office
iu Maood; also with the estimable lady
of Captain Fletcher Saeed, of Oglethorpe,
Georgia, and your correspondent J. B.
W., Jr., with his brother Albert and sis
ter, Miss Osie Wardlaw. They are sum
mering there with their aunt, Mrs. O. S.
Pollock. I shared their kindness and
hospitality. Their surroundings are
most delightful.
Chnstiausburg is the county seat of
Montgomery coun‘y, ab »ui one mile dis
tant from the A. O. & M. Railroad. It
hau about 1,200 inhabitants. There are
two churches, Presbyterian and Metho
dist. The business dane here is consid
erable, drawing a large trade from the
edge of North Carolina as well as from
the Virginia mountains. The people are
generally cultivated, and old Virginia
hospitality prevails, rendering a visit
here at any season of the year extreme
ly pleasant. It is remarkably so in tne
summer season, the remarkable purity of
the atmosphere, the elevation being 2,100
above the level of tbe sea, makes this
point desirable as a summer resort, aud
many are testing its virtues this year.
Several of the prominent watering plaoes
are in easy distance—the Yellow Sul
phur, Montgomery, White and Aleghary
Springs.
The most charming spot in the town
is that chosen by your friends, tbe Fe
male College buiidiog. It is located on
the highest point and is most command*
ing and beautiful, with an extensive
flower garden in front, the product of the
energy and taste of Mrs. O. S. Pollock,
who owns the premises, and with a large
garden and meadow in the rear. The
whole as a picture would be hard to ex
cel. If the mountain breeze, so pure and
conslaot, which play over these hills,
fail to restore wasted strength and re-in-
vigorate the depressed mind, it will be
useless to go farther in quest of health,
Recuperation i3 rapid iu most cases, and
I hope that our esteemed friend, J. B. W.
ill return to ua this fall as strong in
body as he is ia mind.
I found Mrs. O. S. Pollock one of the
most entertaining, as well as one of the
most cultured Christian ladies that I have
ever met. She is eminently fitted for tie
position she occupies as Principal of th
Montgomery Female College. She has an
Experience of over twenty years in the
instruction ami trainiog of young ladies.
She seeks to act toward them a mother’s
part, as well as that of teaoher, and if
Georgians will send their daughters to
Virginia to educate them, they oannot do
better for their daughters thin send
them to this bracing climate aud place
them under the oharge of tbiB excellent
Christian woman. Sue has associated
with her an accomplished and competent
faculty.
At the railroad station, which is now
called <c Bang9,” quite a village has
sprung np, where there are two good ho
tels, which are full nearly all tbe while
with aammer tourists. There is also an
excellent Baptist ohnroh at this point.
This is the railroad station for Yelioa
Saipbnr Springs, whion is three miles dis
tant northward. Informer days this used
13 be tne most celebrate i resort in this
section. The bnrning of the large hotel
sometime ago limits its capacity now, but
it h*9 had a very good ran daring the
reason. The virtues of the waters are
well known all over the Sjuth. Tne^e
waiers are peculiarly adapted to children
and children's disease. Amoug the Ma-
eon visitor* are Dr. F. M Kennedy and
family and Miss Etta Ciidby and brother,
all of whom are doing well, and eojoyiDg
the health-giving breezes aud generous
diet of the miuntams.
Bangs is also the starting point for tbe
Greatest cf natural wonders—Mountain
Lake ia Giles county. Ic is twenty-seven
miles distant and is reached by stage
coaches. Hundreds of people visit it ev
ery year. A lake 4 000 feet above the
eea is a sight not often indulged in. The
magnificent mountain scenery of this sec
tion have attractions for every lover of
the be4Utiful and the grand. The stream
of summer travel increases eaoh suc
ceeding season, end no one wearies in
their enjoyment of the uplifted
peaks, rugged and weather-worn,
tbe smiling Tallies, the winding
stream?, tbe glassy lakes and the dashing
cascades with whica the mountains of
Virginia abounds.
In this region tbe visitors are all
Southerners with but few exceptions.
At Mouotain Lake there are a few la
dies from Cambridge, Maes., and one or
two gentlemen from tbe Norib. The
transition from New Hampshire to Vir
ginia ia very marked, and in nothing
more than in the faces and the manners
of the people with whom yon meet. I
feel at home here. Tonder I was a
stranger.
I go benoe to Tennessee, and after a
short so j onr n with friends, my summer
wanderings will have an end.
Jack Plane.
Christian burg, August 9, 1879.
•r will bs Doing
Then.
Philadelphia Timet)
Congressman Weaver, oae of the Iowa
Green backers, has beeu interviewed aud
says that so far as a n mination for the
Preridency is concerns 1 ne is in the hands
ot his friends By uex year, however. Con
gressman Weaver mi be arcuud with a mi
croscope wondering hat has become of his
friends.
Kadtca consultation.
Washington Post.]
An eff-year Democratic majority of about
45,000. iu Kentucky, is the only consolation
ilia. the Repub.ican party has had for the
last week, except the happy escape of Sena
tor Conklicgs diaphragm from being pep
pered with bird ihot No. J, by Gov. fipragae’s
m .nature howtzer.
A t'hesrfoi Story.
N. Y. Graphic.)
I x-United States Senator John B. Lewis,
of Virginia, who is stopping at the Gracd
Central Hotel, said >hat the Republican par
ty in his State was almost dea i. Democrat
ic majorities were so large they could not be
overcome. Nearly all the Virginia Republi
cans favored Gen. Grant’s nomination for
the Pres dency in 1880. thongh Secretary
Snerman had many mpp^rrers. The Demo
crats were temewhat divided on the Utate
debt qi.stion, bat were otherwise united.
THelltall Kot Told.
Philadelphia Sptc.al to tbe Cincinnati Com.
Ramsdell, the Washington correspondent
of the Times, writes a scathing letter on
Chnkliag aud the lady, as seeu from the
Capital. Occasional y a sly suggestion found
its way into the paper's, but out cf regard for
the two families, nothing of const qaence
was ever said. This immunity only made
the couduot of the two more reckless and if
all tho facts ever oome cut, you may be
eare that Rome will howl. Not the half has
been told or even hinted at. If a divorce
suit is ever begun, look out for music by the
full bind, with fog-born attach * out There
has apparently never been any effort on
their part to conceal their fo duess for each
other They walked together, tode together
far into the night, and frequently, e ther
from the lateness of the hcu. of from other
c&nat-s. Mr. Cockling has remained ait night
at Edgewood, as it teems he has dona at
N*raganeett. The coup e have tie wander
ed off tt gether in the woods, and they have
had frequent lunches together in the Sena
tor’s committee room iu the Capitol. I have
on two or three occasions seen them togeth
er on a New York train.
New Yerk Ladies Who Drluk.,
Hartford Conrant.)
A sherry cobbler wonld bo considered a
mild decoction by a g« - eat many New York
girls, and not fast gins, either. I have stea
young ladies oat eliopping stop at Bigoi’j.
or Puraeli'a, or even DelmonicoV, and order
a hot Scotch with as Hale hesitation as a
Boston lady would order a cap of tea Every
time this subject is brought cp in iho papers
there is a great hue aud cry r i-ed. and ihe
thing is denied. Bu^ nevertheless, it is
true. I do not say that New York ladies
drink to excess, but ihey drink a great deal
of both wine aud spirits. I have very ael
d m seen a woman intoxicated, except at a
Xaederkranz or Alien ball, but I have seen
women dunk protty freely. Iam not talk
ing of diunkarda now, bnt rimpjy of worn n
who drink. That there are women drunk
ards there is no denying I kr.ow another
woman who will steal a bo'tie of cologne, if
your back is turned, and have its contents
down her throat before you hxve time to
look around. I know ot still another wo
man who has been twice in the inebriate
asylum, and who is only k*pt from drinl iLg
medicinal tpirils by their being labelled
‘ poison*’in oig letters. You may say that
I k 6w a queer lot of people perhaps I do,
for I know a great m »ny ; but vou will find
that others know almost as many drinkii g
women. Beer drinking is not called ‘‘drink
ing,’’^ believe If it was, ladies would not
do it so public y. Beer is the most popular
beverage in Now Yori to-day. and if you go
!o Roster & Rial’s, the Madison Square Gar
dens, Thiess’, or any of the public and pri
vate gaidens in this city you will see as
many women enjoying the foaming cop.
Again, I am not referring to common wo
men, but women of respectable position.
The Follilcal Outlook
The next Presidential campaign will
have one important feature—it will vir
tually express the people’s verdict upon
the questions at issue between the lead
ing political parties. For behind our
government, behind our politicians, be
hind all the legislative machinery, rings,
and petty partisan organizations, is the
real ruler and director of our govern
ment—the sovereign people. Every of
ficial will be brought before the inquisi
tion of the people’s tribunal, and all
unworthy will be ignominioualy sent
home to tend to their own business.
Tbe people will endorse nothing
whatever, be it a president or
pill, that hss cot proved it«
self a genuine article. That the
American people have so long acknowl
edged, by both word and patronage, tbe
genuineness and value of Dr. Pierco’s
family remedies, is proof conclusive that
their use folly justifies their discoverer’s
claims for them. No other proprietary
medicines sell so largely. The Golden
Medical Discovery is a sovereign remedy
for all scrofalons, blood and skin diseases.
It baa pretty well superseded the old
time sarsapariiUs. The Favorite Pres-
cription has no equal as a remedy for
those chronics weaknesses and painful
affections peculiar to women. Pleasant
Purgative Pellets, sugar coatei and hard
ly larger than mustard seeds, are now the
popular laxative and cathartic. Sold by
druggists.
How Siie Hleacbetl Oat.
Philadelphia Times.]
The story which came all tbe way from Ar
kansas the other day about a negro whose
black body was gradually but perctptibJy
becoming white, thus making a long delayed
but Affirmative answer io th** scriptural ques
tion of tbe prophet Jeremiah, seems to hive
found a fellow m this end of the world—
New Jersey. The Western story styled tbe
phenomenon as “tha greatcfT wonder of the
age ” Egg Harbor, noted for gr*pes aud
watermelons, h*s jast another such a fresk
ot nature as that of an “ Ethiopian who cxn
change his skin.” Bbe was in htr early yomh
very black, bat is now almost as white as a
O&uca^sian. This Mrs. Emeretta Rowling,
abont 28 years old, is Jiving with her husband
in that wine-growicg community of Germans
that h ve made-the sandy soil of the Jeteey
blosscm as a rose. Bowiii g was of negro
parentage, born Dlack—a color which she re
tained uutil the age of fourteen years. This
ph nomenon of nature then made its appear
ance on the back of her reck in peifect'y
white spots; thfcbce i: extended to the back
ot her band, whence fur nearly a dezen
years it gradually continue] to overspread
her entire person in every direction, each
spot being abont the s Z9 of a copper penLy
and eo ciose together as to almost entirely
eraaicAte tbe blackness wmch once distin-
gaished her. There is now on her body bat
one narrow black strips about tbe lower lip
and oue also ab ac tbe neck, both covering
not two square inches. These stripes are in
such striking contrast with tbe common
WLiieness as to look like sores, for which
they are almost always taken.
FOB’S EITBACT
THU GRBAT VKGRTABLK
PAIN OESTROYcR AND SPECIFIC FOR IN-
fiamhatiqn and hemorrhabes.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia. ^*52
tion has cured so many cases of tho»e di*ir*s»-
in* complaints as the Extract. Our Pla»t*r
ia invaluable in these di-eas.^. Lumbago, Pair.*
in Back or Side. Ac. Pokd’s Extract Oist.
mart (53 cents) >or use v*hen removal of cloth-
iiu is inconvenient, is a great help in relieving
intlammatort cases. _ Y
Hemorrhages,
any cause, is sptedily controlled and stopped.
Our Nasal String*- (35 cents) and InhaLBRs
(50 cents) are great aids iu arresting interna
bleeding.
Diphtheria and Sore Throat,
ll9e the Extract promptly. It is a sure cure.
Dela.\ is dangerous.
Pofor-T-V. Th*« Extracti* the en!y specific for
Ldudi I ll. disease, Cold in Head. Ac. Our
r‘Catarrh Cure,” specially prepared to meet ae*
‘ious cases, contain** ail the curative properties
of the Extract; our Nasal Syringe is invaluable
tor use in Catarrhal auctions, is simple and
inexpensive.
Sores, Ulcers, Wounds,Sprains
RrnicAO 11 18 hu » 1 ' n * r - cooling
cLIlCl onuses, cleansi »ir. Us* our Oint
ment iu connection with the Extract; it will aid
in healing, softening and in keeping out the air.
Burns and Scalds. j£dS5?u& 1 SS
rivalled, and should be kept in ererv family ready
iorune in case of accidents. A drearing of our
Ointment will aid ic healing aud prevent scar
Inflamed or Sore Eyes. &
without the slightest fear of harm .quickly allay
Ing all inflammaiion aud soreness without Dam
Earache, Toothache aud Face-
ache.
perful.
p-]pq Blind. Bumping om Itching. It i*
j liGS. greatest known remedy, rapidly
curing when other medicines have failed.
Pond’s Ex tract Medicated Paper for closet use
is a preventive agaiust Chafing and Piles. Our
Ointment is of great service where the removal
of clothing is inconvenient.
For Broken Breast and Sore
NinnlpQ ®**ract 18 80 cleanly cfli-
A! ippico. caefams that mothers who have
once used it will never be without it. Our Oiut*
mentis the best emollient that can be applied.
Female Complaints. JV&SiSi
in for the majority oi female diseases if the Ex
tract is used. Pull directions accompany each
bottle.
CAUTION.
Pond’s Extract
has the words "Pond’s Extract.” blown in the
glass, and Company’s trade markon surrounding
wrapper. None other is genuine. Always insist
on having Pond’s Extract. Take no other prepar
ation. It is never sold in bulk.
PRICE OF POND'S EXTRACT, TOILET ARTI
CLES AND SPECIALTY.
POND’S EXTRACT Stfo. SI acd *1.
Cathartic Pills
Combine ti
edic
•lioicest cathartic principles
in proportions accurately
:ure activity, certainty, and
effect. They are the result
oilet dream ..$! 00
Dentnflca 50
Lip halve 25
Toilet Soap (J* jak’s) tO
Ointment ,... 50
Catarrh Cure .
Plaster
I dialer
Na»al f
Medicated paper..
PREPARED ONLY BY
POND’S EXTRACT CO.
NEW IORK AND LONDON.
S Id by all dmwiit* I w 11 »Vr
45 Years Befoi-e the Public,
THE GENUINE
DSL C. MeLANE’S
CELEBRATED
LIVER PILLS
FOR THE CURE OF
Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint,
DYSPEPSIA AND SICK HEADACHE.
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver.
P AIN in the right side, under tha
edge of the ribs, increases on pres
sure ; sometimes the pain is in the left
side; the patient is rarely able to lie
on the left side; sometimes the pain
is felt under the shoulder blade, and
it frequently extends to the top of the
shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken
for rheumatism in the arm. The stom
ach is affected with loss of appetite
and sickness; the bowels in general
are costive, sometimes alternative with
lax; the head is troubled with pain,
accompanied with nr dull, heavy sen
sation jn the back part. There is gen
erally a considerable loss of memory,
accompanied with a painful sensation
of having left undone something which
ought to have been done. A slight,
dry cough is sometimes an attendant.
The patient complains of weariness
and debility; he is easily startled, his
feet are cold or burning, and he com
plains of a prickly sensation of the
skin; his spirits are low; and although
he is satisfied that exercise would be
beneficial to him, yet lie can scarcely
summon up fortitude enough to try it.
In fact, he distrusts every remedy.
Several of the above symptoms attend
the disease, hut cases have occurred
where few of them existed, yet exam
ination of the body, after death, has
shown the liver to have been exten
sively deranged.
AGUE AND FEVER.
Dr. C. McLaxe's Liver Pills, in
cases of Ague and Fever, when
taken with Quinine, are productive of
the most happy results. No better
cathartic can be used, preparatory to,
or after taking Quinine. We would
■»dvise all who are afflicted with this
disease to give them a fair trial.
For all bilious derangements, and
as a simple purgative, they are un-
equalcd.
1IEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
The genuine are never sugar coated.
Every box has a red wax seal on the
lid, with the impression Dr. McLawe’s
Liver Pills.
The genuine McLane’s Liver Pills
bear the signatures of C. McLane and
Fleming Bros, on the wrappers.
Insist upon having the genuine Dr.
C. McLane’s Liver Pili.s, prepared by
Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the
market being full of imitations of the
name JIcLaue, spelled differently but
same pronunciation. "*
Chalybeate Surings.
• r pHIS noted Georgia watering place, situated
JL in Meriwether county, Ga, 1,600 feet above
&t-a level, will b<s opened 1st June next, there
are lour Springs -Iron, Sulphur, Mugnesia and
Free Stone. The ncediciual properties of the
waters are well known all over the South, hav
ing made wonderful cure* in Djap-psia, Liver
and kidney Complaints. The mountnin scenery
in Erand and climate pure and delightful, b.ank*
etn beimr desirable through the entire Summer.
The comforts of home extenned to in-
alids. We have engaged Professor Ke^s-
Band, of Macon. for the season.
Prudent 8 ck ftptcuiaifong*
The Stock Exc ange never presented t-ach
an admirable coo anion for pr.fiiab.e and
rapid stock opera.ions. There never Defore
have been so mu fortunes made by quick
Carnations and tk ifnimanipularioLS. Care ... , T
fnl and reasonat e people only operate I Have large Ball Room, Ten Pia Alley, Billiard
through the combi a atioo system of fc esers. ,r ,K1 ‘*" ~ , l *
Lawrence <fc Co , tv ica enableu tboee with
large or »mall meins to invest and le diza
handsome profits, which are dividedp ro r&ta
among the shareholders every thirty day*.
New combinations are constantly form ini;.
From $25 to $10,000 can be safriy invested
with sp endid opportunities for quick profit.
An I'hnois gram dsaler made $13,22.) 4l in
two investments A,Michig&n farms invent
ed $50, which yielded $431.14- He mace by
thiee reinvestments over «3,< 00 A Wiecm-
sm country merchant made $4,2*9 16 in lonr
combinations; aud others have done equally
is well. New explanatory circular, witc
‘unerring rules for success,” mailed by
seers. Lawrence A Co, Bankers, 57 Exc
hange Place, New York City.
gentleman from the provinces went
into the shop of a Parisian tailor to order
some clothes. While his measure waa being
oro>utii w cuiiiuai ^ taken he said to the sartorial Aristarchus:
tbe part of some in favor of the move j *Tou mnst find that I am very badly dreeaed.’
Our personal appearance is a matterin
which onr friends and acquaintances have a
right to a choice whether we eh>11 infiio' up
on them an exterior uncared for and unat
tractive. a countenance maned by a neglect
ed grizzled beard, or a crown guiltless of
cove.ing, h»lf covered, or thatch .d with
white hairs, or whether we shall in deference
to onr feiiowe, pay due regard to oar own
persons, and make them presentable and ac
ceptable in society. There are many be:p*
for tboee who desire to do this, and there
are none among them more acceptable then
Hall’s Hair Renewer and Baching barn's Dye
tor the whiskers. Both these preparations
are kept for s>le at all our drug stores, aud
if any of onr friends are looking a little the
worse for wear, we advise them to make a
note of it—North Star, Danville, Yt.
Tables, tine drives, etc. Plunice, shower and
tub Bath,—hot and cold—and no extra charge.
KJct:r-;0.1 tickets at ell the Central Raiireal
Offices at reduced rates. Sprints can be reached
via Geneva or Ibomaaton—sp endid line either
way. Round trip $5. First-class Bar Room on
the campus We have everythin,: in ordrr, and
vou can live as cheap as you can at home, and
put yourself in perfect trim for the Winter
months. Board—D»y (i, w.cs t'j, two weeks
?ld. three weeks ,21, month ,25 CoiJdren a"d
colored servants halt rates. Horses—l),y 75c,
month $15. For particulars address
ALLEN A THOMPSON.
iulecdSm Talborton. Ga.
adjusted to:
uniformity <
of years of careful study ana prat tieni ex
periment. anti nreth” most effectual rem
edy vet discovered for diseases, caused bv
derangement of the stomach, lit er, and
. bowels, which require prompt and effectu
al treatment. Ayku’s Pills ar»> specially
applicable to this class of diseases.* They
net directly on the digestive and assim
ilative processes, and restore regular
healthy action. Their extensive use by
physicians in their practice, and by ail
civilized nations, is one of tbe many
proofs of their value as a safe, sure, and
perfectly reliable purgative medicine.
Being compounded of the concentrated
virtues of purely vegetable substances,
they are positively free, from calomel, er
any injurious properties, anil can lie ad
ministered to children with perfect safety
Ayer’s Pills are an effectual cure f,
Constipation or Costiveness, Indices
tion. Dyspepsia, loss of Appetite
Foul Stomach anil Breath, Di//lnev
Headache, Loss of Memory, NtiniK
ness, Biliousness, Jaundice, Khriinia
tism, Eruptions anil Skin Diseases
Dropsy, Tumors, Worms, Netted
irta, Colic, Gripes, Diarrhoea, Dysen.
tery, Gout, Piles, Disorders of the
Liver, and till other diseases resulting
from a disordered state of tbe digestive
apparatus, is
As a Dinner Pill they have no equal.
While gentle in their action, tlieso
Tills tire tlio most thorough and search
ing cathartic that can be employed, and
never give pain unless the bowels aro
inflamed, and then their Influence is heal
ing. They stimulate tlie appetite and
digestive organs; they operate to purify
and enrich tbe blood, and impart renewed
health and vigor to the whole system.
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.,
Practical and Analytical Chemists,
* Lowell, Mass. -
.OLD EV ALL EBCGU1STS EVERYWHERE.
Hunt, K&Lkm & lunar
Wholesale Agents,
febl» MACO NT. v—./5v.
GREATKEDU
HOT
Signature Is on ev< rv bol tl« of the GEMJINB
WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE.
It imparts the most delicious taste and xcstto
SOUPS, yews EXTRACT
If a LETTER from
t MEH1UALGEN*
TLEMAX at ha-
tints to bis brother
_ _ »t WORCESTER,
FISH, May, 1851.
•Tell LEA 4 PER.
r>nTT> B/0-77CP.2 i N S tli.'.t their
COLD g*?’W , 3‘‘ > |. ce ia highly «•
W .’M * n IWtf*
£aad is in my opt
ion, tha ieonI i a!at»
hble as wtll r.s tbe
most wholesome
Sain* that is made.
Sold and us«d throughout tho wo:ld.
TRAVRLKRS a*D TOURISTS FIND
GREAT BENEFIT IN HAVING a BOTTLB
WITH IHEM.
JOHN Dl/IVCAX'S SONS,
Agents for
IJvA & PKFE N.-:,
26 COLLEGE PLAGE AND 1 UNION SQUARE,
feb26lswly NEW YORK.
JOINT8,
GAME, Ac.
TO DRUGGISTS.
' - aa*JK.
r |^HE firm of Ccok A Chester is tliri day dii-
.Jl soIvh! by mutual consent Huh ;r partner
is authorized to coll t acd receipt for the .*>ame
Juno 1st, 1S79.
J L COOK.
jun71m J W CH ESTER.
HALE OF CITY MfflL
o’clock, Jots 1, 2 and 3, in square . ..
the southern part of th.i city-adjoining Mc«
Kenna’s gardens. Term- raa«ie known on day
of sale TOHKND1X.
1yS9tds Chm’n Cora on Pub Pro:*
WARM SPRINGS,
MERIWETHER COUNTY, GA.
S ITUATED on a spur of Pine Mountain, 1 S f, 0
feet above the net, a fountain eu«hine forth
1,-tuO vallous per minute—temperature PO de
grees Far.
Th© atmosphere is unexcelled for purity and
dryness, and the continual mountain breeics
reuder it always pleasant.
RaThs of board.
Per day. T -,-, ,$ * 00
Per week: * 10 00
Per month SOW
Children and servants half price.
Hacks to meet each train at ii»n.iiton, Gemrs
and LaGrantre.
For further ixfoimation address
J L MUST I AN.
uull* wgod proprietor
'1*0 JrCKiN'l'.
O NE STORE en Third street, near Seymour
Tinsley A Oo’a old corner, with a irood «*N
lar and upstairs. A new ©levator iu :>-*tore.
Possession given October ltt. Apply to
_ f H B OLIVER.
July 22.1679 inriSlw
CliW T
EUFAULAi alaba&a.
^j.OOD BOARD mxI Rooms aud the Beat At
'W.T.m’NS A MOTS
42nd At nuil Session
o»
Ms Cilisffi
Will begin on
WEDNESDAY, 17th September,
th a full corps or experienced Professors and
ichers.
.’r e very best advanta*:- ,s m Literature.
Aucieut atai Modern Lauzuages, Music sed
Art.
Domestic Department nnsorpa^eJ for com
fort and care.
Expenses payable <
anco in February.
3 half i
September, bal*
Board and Regular Tuition in two Lower
CUs<i6* $250
Board and Regular Tuition in three Hither
clast»e*. $;*).
Board, Regular Tuition. Music »nij F-e" ch
or German in two Lower t.l *w*. ..$323
Board, Regular Tuition, Muvr, and Kreucri
German in three H:gner Clashes.
i Cash
t tor Bowl
Ten per cent discount
and Tuition.
No credit except on eood bankable pap‘ft
end for Catalogue to
W C BA?
un25Sra or CW SMITH,
Pre ;
ment, we learn from thoee present; and I ‘Oh, no/ replied the artiit, ‘yon are not dree-
it wm resolved to send forward a couple * eed at all; you are simply oovered.’
Whleh Is cheapest
A package of DUKk’s Durham, containing
twenty pipo-tull* of ihe beat smoking tobacco
made, or oue common cigar f Each costs 10
cents. anS8 dkw
ANCHOR LINE
UNITED STATES MAIL 8TEAMB&8,
8*il from New York for
GLASGOW. every SATURDAY;
And REGULARLY to LONDON direct.
Passage to Glasgow, Londonderry. Belfast
Liverpool
8ALOON CABINS, $GOto $80. CURRENCY
SECOND CAB»N. including all requisites, 040
8TEKkaGK 828.
TO LONDON BY DIRECT STEAMER,
No Hr#*er*ge.
SALOON CABINS, 855 aud 895.
Excursion Tickets at Reduced Rates.
Paa*en<*e- accommodations unsurpassed for ele
gance and comfort. All Btaterooms on
m&m deck.
For Books of information, Plans, Ac,
Apply to HENDERSON BROTHERS.
1 BOWLING GREEN. NkW YORK.
or to T H HENDERSON, MACON,
my *27 3m
he Voice of Worship
Fob Choib8, Conventions and Sisoi* 0
{SCHOOLS.
BY 3J. O.
Thin splendid r ew book ri n. arly throng** the
esa.and win be in grett deman j. Full co >c-
*n of ihe best Hymn lune-* and Anthems fer
Choirs, numerous G.-es lor Soci -1 and Cl«*
nring. nudagu^a {ringing school cour>e It*
attractive contents with the low price ($100 or
9 00 p-r dozen), should make it the m.'bt pwpulxr
of Church Muric iSoor.u.
FOR RENT,
0N8 FOUR SOOM ROVES on Plant itreet
between First and Second streets. Two room
Kitchen and good well of water cn premises.
Apply to CHAS CRAIG,
au9l7 if No IS Cotton Avenue,
W O PERJt.ss. Wi.\ be rt
First crias book for Sin/ir.t
collection of rilees and p!*-i
and Anthems Price gluO
Although Suiting Clasps
Tided for, both the
rboi's-
y in a t«*w day»-
;hools, with l- r,c0
d flynu. Tone*
$9 CO per cuvru
t specially P^*
red Mo
FAflNITZA
nder it one of the best Convention fei-d C~oT
book*.
* o— * ■
The new and very favonW
opera, is now ready* 'V 3
werdb in throe anguaires, all ih»* Mu-ic ana Li
bretto complete. Price $2i0 paper, $2 ’25 board*.
PUfAFOBE. SSBsS 1 “a-ti
ore told fur a dollar. Con ple’e Words, Lib*^ lt0
and Music. All ready for stage.
Any book mailed for retail price.
OLIVER, DITSONdt CO.. Boston.
C H DtTSON ft CO, 845 L'aw9j > »•
THE MADISONIAN.
__ Madison. Ga,ai.d edited b.v Dr J C C
BCR9. being tbe < nl paper pobl »h u io * fcd
Official Orgtn of Morgan county. I** one oi i-
best advertising meaiumi* in slidd.e M-r?.
For terms, address B M BLaCKBUR>-
her. Modi son, G*.