The Southern sun. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1869-1872, April 08, 1869, Image 4

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From tlie Xcnburypoit (Mass-) Herald.! The Conflict of Races- Wlrat a Radical editor says Abotil if. Race* of men are always in conflict whenever they come together. Thcte can be no mixture* That is not in the order of nature. If, as some believe, ail the races are of a common origan, that origan must have been so many, nijltions of years back that to us it is as though they uever # hud been one. Two of the races show no make of progress, and these two are perhaps the oldest —the African and the Australian. ..No exploration of Africa or Austrailiar have discovered any evidence of a social or civil condition among those, people above what they are now. This is „not so with any other race. No other seems to have been created and destined to live to the end barbarians, as except where a higher race not only lifts them up, but every mo ment sustains them above that level. With the Indians we find the remains of a better condition enjoyed by them long before the white man came to their country. They reached the acme and had subsided before we knety them. The Mongolians, too, of Eastern Asia, though they have made no progress iu thousands of years, yet have a civilization of their own, which, in some respects, will bear a favorable comparison with our own. In a conflict of races—as. we say, it al ways conies when two are in competition— the superior race overcomes and roots out the inferior unless the former are so weak in numbers as to have uo chance of success. Such is the case iu the West Indies, where the whites are so few that they may eventually be driven out as they have from St. Dimingo, unless arbitrary power restrains the inferior. But where they havo any chance the superior—superior in mind, thohgh edttal in advantages may be giveu. With the inferior, their language, tlieir blood, their features, and their cast of mind will disappear.—ln Africa, the negro type, with the memory of man, has not ex tended north of the Great desert, where the Arabs and the Moors prevail. They have been brought there as slaves, and been brought there as captives in the war, but they have never mixed with the people to adulterate the blood or gain the-ascendency by numbers. So it has been in the South of Europe. The Moors at one time were very numerous in .Spain and highly civiliz ed/ but in the conflict"wifh the Caucasians, •they wore destroyed or exiled, In Italy, the Africans that' were brought to Rome during the long years of Roman triumph, all disappeared. How numerous they wero we have no means of ascertaining, but it is estimated that no less than a mil lion negroes were brought there and mixed with tbo people; but to-day the Italian shows the slightest taint of African blood, ine African has been absorbed in the main stock, and, as taken food into the stomach, what would uot assimulato has been rejected and cast out. It is the same in Egypt. There from the ealiest ages the, African has been a slave; and though few mullatoes ure found there, the greater , part. 0i the people show no traces of Afri._ can blood. It will be the same in this country. There may be swamp lands in Louisiana, Florida, or other States, which wilt be deserted by whtes, in which the negro may thrive; but in those sections where the races will be in competition though the African may have the majority now, they will gradually disappear. When tlioy were slaves they were kept seperate, and the care of the white man was to have them increase; but the more they mix with the whites the fewer they will become and the less the white is bound to do for them the quicker they will sink, So we see that iu all the Northern States they have rapidily disappeared, and the blaeching progress gradually work3 South Fifty years ago Massachusetts had as many blacks as New York now has, aud one hundred years hence Virginia will have no more than New York has to-day. It is the order of providence- the law of God, that the high er shall overcome the lower, the superior occupy where the inferior have been; other wise there would bo no progress. Washington, March I.—ln executive session to-day there was a long discussion over Gen. LongstreeiV nomination. John Allison was coufinncd as a Register of the •ffreasbr^. General Stoncman has been relieved of the command in Virginia and ordered to the Parcific. Texas and Georgia delegates visited the President, but reports were excluded. The members of the Georgia delegation, Radi cals, «ay the President, in responding to tUp Georgia AUomcyvfieneral Farrow, said he thought Congress would take some ac tion regardiog Georgia before adjournment, and that be himself favored restoring the negrpes to their seats. It is stated that the Mexican mission i «- bus beea tendered to General Sickles* It is thought that President Grant will veto the Tenne-of-office bill, as it is not sufficient exact in its language. It is reported that Gen. R. S, Granger has been assigned to temporary command in Virginia. The House Committee on Foreign Affairs have unanimously agreed to report the fol lpwiog resolution. Resolved, That the people of the United States hereby declare their sympathy with the people of tho Island of Guba in their patriotic efforts to secure independence aud, to establish a republican from of gover ment, guaranteeing the personal and equal political rights of all people, and that Congress will give its constitutional support to the President of the United Stales whenever he may deem it expedient to recognize the independence and sover eignty of sucli republican government. The Pivsideut to-day nominated the fol lowing Postmasters: J. O. Hawley, War* renton Virginia; Josiah Daloach, Memp his, Tennessee; Henry Ransom, Marshall, Texas. Secretary Boutwell has ordered the dis missal of all special Treasury agents. The debt statement gives fully in detail the various items included in the govern ment indebtedness, and shows a decrease of the debt nearly $2,600,000. The cash balance is $104,000,000; $24,000,00 being represented by certificates The currency balance is 7,000.000- This statement, which embraces only the receipts received up to 12 o’clock, noon, of the Ist instant, would be reduced some $4,000,000 addition al, had it been with held until the 6th or 7th, as heretofore. > * [New York Weekly.] The Old Bachelor. J -4 ... ■ - ~ .j<* * .> . li BY JOSH BILLINGS. ' rjyl. $ A chronick old bachelor iz invariably ov the neuter gender, i don’t care how much he may offer tew bet that it aiut so. They are like dried apples on a string, want a good before they will do to use. 1 suppose there iz some of them who have a good excuse lor their nuterness; many of them are too stingy to marry. This iz one of the best excuses I kno ov, for a stingy man aint fit tew have a nice woman. old bachelors git after a flirt, and kan’t travel so fast as she doz, and then konkludes awl the female group are hard to ketch, and good for nothing when the are ketched. A flirt is a rough thing to overhaul un less the right dog gits after her, and then they are the easiest ov awl tew ketch, aud often make the very best ov wives. When a flirt really falls in love, she iz as powerless as a mown daizy. Her impudence then changes into modes ty, her cunning into fear, her spurs into a halter, her proning-hook into a cradle. The best way to ketch a flirt iz tew tiavel the other way from which they are going, or bit down on the ground and whistle some lively tune till the flirt comes round. Old bachelors make the flirts; aud theu the flirts get more than cv-cic hy the old bachelors. Ajnajority of the flirts git married fin ally, for they have a great quantity of the most dainty titbits of woman’s natur, and alwus hav shrewdness to back up their sweetness. Flirts don’t deal in poetry and water grewel; they hev got tew hav brains, or else somebody would trade them out of their capital at the fust sweep. Disappointed luv must uv courae be all on one side, and this aint enny more excuse fur being an old bachelor that it iz for a man to quit all kinds of mannal labor, jist out of spite, and jinea poor-house, bekause he can’t lift a tune at one pop. An old bachelor will brag about his free dom to you, hiz relief from anxiety, hiz in dependence. This is a dead beat past resu rection, for every body knows there aint a mere anxious dupe than he iz. All his dreams are charcoal sketches of boading school misses; he dresses, greases his hair, paints his grizzly raustach, cultivates bun yons aud corns, tew pleas his captains, the wimuain, and only gets laffed at for bis pains. I tried being an old bachelor till I was about twenty years old and came very near dieing a dozen times. I had more sharp pains in one year than I hav had since, put it all in a heap. I waz in a lively fever all the time. There iz only one person who has in-* habited this world thus far, that I tbiuk could have been an old bachelor and done the subject justice, aud he was Adam; but I hold.it is every man’s duty to solekt a partner, and keep the dance hot. A ycung man gentleman, in a certain business house, having tarried much long* or at a boarding house than was thought necessary for the morning meal, was asked, on his return, in a joking way, “what he had for breakfast?” He replied, candidly. A enp of coffee, a mutton chop, and some mystery!” “Mystery!” said the employer, ‘‘what’s that?” not having been thoroughly enlightened in all the “mysteries” of board ing house fare. “Why,” answered the oth er hash. a v :. . ■ »»» ' “W hat's that ?” asked Mrs. Partington, looking up at the column of the Place Ven dome during her late visit to Paris. ‘‘The pillar of Napoleon,” she was answered “W ell, 1 never did!,’ she exclaimed; “and that’s his pillow—he was great man to use that! But it’s more like a bolster. Aud its made of iron, Ido believe. Ah! Isaac, see what it is to be great. How hard his head must have rested on his ironical nils. low. t 1860. iB6O. ~ IT T'Mt Q, s ,s ahofcl ! lo mm ia»u, - UPUHjIIL l ApIVfVQL 1 row. H HI HI'S n | S ™ |m I Is IV _jr6cc b„,., cmii 1l JttL ,'JL All m gV fII* g*S m £<.. * 'bAtN BRIDGE.jj| KMi JML At .. . tn-S P* ", a >, rr>4 j.v. LLII t «F. ! m O, l n " tout' I- • " rlor Courts cISp(IMM‘ Bab V 111 J* Jt U Clerk* of saH l '{“ * 11 k avt* failed - »>nJ \ V . . Act v to incorp. - July Ma \ Vl®? TSJS ESTABLISH m rl K-\ - \/f : *«! w i V** N v- ' • • o. Pra Printer of Is under the^ v Supervision oi a rra and be anseoivcd aTif v * '.Kiy.'foli'- < ' y-j? ,r • * y- And we Guarantee to Execute as Good JOB PBINTIKG As can be Done Anywhere WITH THE SAME FACILITIES AT HAND. . We Use Nothing but the Best Article of Paper * * «"'• •>' i * ..itwl i\ v vlkj ■ And the FINEST INKS, i ■. " V«£ «u-~ V •••■“* iW ,» ' F i Tjr r y I yf * Thus Giving A TONE AND FINISH TO OUR WORK, Which No Other Kind of Material will Produce. Are Strictly j ? CASH ON DELIVERY f r . . .J. *-i -f -Ti And our Rates ** r As Low 3sthosC |Of Any Establishment, In this Section of the Country. OBBBRS SOLICITS®. Westcott U.Col email PLAIN AND FANCY Films ill HAIIU. Shoo Corner of Broad and Broughton Streets, BA IN BRIDGE, GA. - HAVING permanently located, auJ mf* interests ous of identifying hfmm.ll with thg of the city, respectful y asks at the MU _‘ J erous public only such e*t his entitles him to expect. He will afso execute SIGN WRITING in all its varied phases anTstyles; i -jt, PAPER HANGING, FRESCOING, &c. ■' ' Feb, 11th, 1869. ■ _.II- - I, X, L, inWBENT! The best Medicine in the word. Will affect more, in a shorter time than any one compound ever offered to the public. . . It will cure in from one to twenty rpmutes, Headache, Earach, Pains in Back, Chills, Neuralgia, Palpitation of the Heart, Enlarged Spleen, an many other diseases not mentioned above. Price from 60 centsto $1 60 per bottle. Liberal deductions made to dealers. Address Q. D. GRIFFIN, Baiubridge, Ga:, or L. H. Peacock, Attapulgus, Ga. . Feb. 25th, ’'69. 1 GEO.Pfe ELL^ Advertisements forwarded to all Newspapers. SNo advance charged on Publishers prices. Ml leading Ncwpsaper kept cm file,. c, *Ymation as to Cost 6f Advertising furnished. ■M><» jpaiat' w#n •areful attention. S AS, l 1 .eietj .promptly. Wl’iiryts of Newspapers for sftlo* • «* • Customers. READY TO fifc.nd NotU-es;secured} specially solicited. few FI«U w . WlNKS.BßA^«l»l^|.p WE have julTreceived a SQgjgfcmfe 1 Ladies and Gents’ Shoes— C(nt ' ment of Children and Baby Shoes, Dcfltinßic nd Gaite «, all for which we sell for V «£i T. B. HUNNEWELft^Ji^N Hoop Skirts, LADIES and Misses, of the latest style, just re~ ceived and for sale l*y T, B. mjNNEWELL & CO. REMOVAL. BOOT AND SHOE MAKING, msz* ms* STILL con tinues to offer his services to the public generally in all. departments /rnfiei* of the Boot and Shoe Milking jaMMS; He is confident he can turn out as good a ltnot. nr Shoe as /jEsfejS can be made, or will be brought to this market, and mfjmt those who patronize him will 111 fp'/W&f] be guaranteed entire satisfac* Shop on Troup street, in the new building imme diately in rear ol J. R. Hayes & Co’s store, Bain bridge, Ga. ‘ jar. 29-44-1 v REMOVAL. THE Office of the -Pr'intbus’ Circular*’ and Printers’ Furnishing Warehouse formerly located at 86 Hudson Street, lias been Removed' to 515 Mjnor Stkeet Address all orders for material to R. S. Menami.n 515 Minor Street, Philadelphia. Penna. ' [3-5-t f.' AGENTS WANTED. $75 to S2OO per mouth!! Or a Commission from which twice that amonn can be made by the latejMt) UiMioVED : COMMON SENSE FUDLT BVK HtCIH PR CE SIB.OO For Circulars and Terms adrcss C. 80W1316S «fc fO 320 South Third Street, Philadelphia p a Dec - IC . *8(58 37 in SAVANNAH ~~ MORNING NEWS FOR 1869! —o— On the Ist of January. 1860, The Morn in-? New entered oil its twentiety year. 58 kn ,° w tfc o«ghont this section / f the Southern States, that a recapitulation of its unnecessary!* 8 c P mions or its standing is simply The efforts that have been made dnring the Past year to make it newspaper worthy of Savanah, hTve haring h BUCC€ * 8 ' and to ' il) addition to its THE LARGEST Cl RELATION IX THIS CITE ! it can be found in cverv citv' orA ..:n„ Southern Georgia and Florida, hesidvi having'll eral circulation throughout this AnSltborl&?l’ P ' ho effort wdi be spared to make The Moiniun, News a comprehensive medium of * 11 *; ° General, Political, and sped., I*3s36®®^ vaunah and ITS LOCAL. DEPARTMENT is a speciality, and more attention is naid ten? i sr~ zz N 11 ' The latest Sews by Tele-raph’ and Mail “ D,,,ete ' ,t M|| at all ifflp9 ; tanl It contains a full tmd accurate Dally Cotton and Produce Report or Tins market Terms of Subset-ip 100 for. ig«Q (payable to carrier). t>6 cant* ° ot ‘ - Wt ' ek ’ cen+a ■ ” cants, Single copies, 5 ’aTSSttu?"- ** MMZ *3)00; .. 00. the Weekly ] L a ‘ ,v - rtiseinenfs i n Orders by mail addressed to J. H. ESTILI, Feb. lltb, 'OO. Qa. 42-ts. 5 1 4thi' J'riraiitir the bes t taeeß av the 1 TANARUS).» 1,1 lc: |l.’ \<«U 1 1 \ ,<**'. Aj C xi J riims splendid -newspaper, greatly enlunj I improved, •is one o* the most reliably, uylM a „d interesting-journttls published. k Ui| fl jer ife beautifully printed, ami elegantly ■ A-ith several oiighml angitViugs, rcpierttgj, invitations, novelties iu. .mechanics.. ag)i (ill J chemistry-, photography, lnanu lac lures, eugh K JH seieitcc and art-' ’ . ,Farmers.mechanics, inventors, engm,. m Ml Lsts, manufacturers, and people in every pro^Jl liftf’ will find tJTe gbtftriific American to 1„ value iu their respective callings. Its conn*]* suggestions,will save them hundreds of doli ar(i^M nually. besides affording them a contii.„ a , ■ knWjeflge, the value of which is beyond p, cllli ß estimate. All pateiUft. grAU.tcd, with the C | u 9 nubhsliedd'eukly- . . ■ Every public or private library should Kav ( ,H work'bound and preserved for reference W The yearly ntrmrbers-vf-the Bcientifiic Anietjß mak«/ft ipl«'»dH of nearly one tU,,J quaiiio pages,.f^uivalt-^it *tQ nearly four tl.o^B ordinary'book 'pages. volume Jan 1,1808. Pubtisherf weekly • Terms—Oneifl $3 ; I epeciuwa copies groAifcJvs! , '■ Address MUNN & CO, I 85 Park Row, New T oj }H £BZ; The.publishers of connection yrith the publication of the paper,* aqted as Solicitors of Paffents for twenty-two J Thirty thousand-a^pUdlttions for patents have S made through their agency. More than onehuniS thousancliuvwitors lmye sought the counsel^fl proprietois of the Scientific American their inventions. Consultations and advice »«■ ventors,” by mail. free. Patnphletsconcerniinr f J Jaw'sof all count!iea, fnea. mi ‘d J A handsome bound volume, containing chanical engravings, and the United States cenmß counties, with hints and receipts for nrechatfl mailed on receipt of J 2& cent#. .. _ jan29-!!» • IMPORTANT JOX)XER*4)F SFGCK, ■ IIIE AMERCAN STOCK JUURN.I AND • J Farmers* a 3 j O. -s A. i/iR • 'i't Vl/I J t»flj* o) £f'vh + -iiil ONLY $1 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE. 1 A First-class Monthly Journal, devoted toFull ing-nnd Ktock Brefedihg.; Each nniiiber large double coliiimt pages, illustrated with nuitiijJ ous engravings. Specitnen Copies free, for sluebV with list of splendid Premiums to Agents. ' • s •*•/ „ . -f % . ■ HOUSE A.VD CAITLE PoCTOft FREE. The publinhers of the American Stock Joutll hay,} established a Veterinary Department In t| columns of the Jonhial, which is placed tinder tl charge of a distinguished Veterinary Pro|esJ whose duty it is to receive questions as to the tl Thents or injuries of all kinds of stock, and to il swer in j»ri«»t, iu connection with the question, h they sliould be treated for a cure. These presc* tions are given gratis, and thus-every • subscriber*'! the Journal has always at his command a Veterjil ry Surgeon, free of charge. EVery Farmer «1 Stock Breeder should subscribe foi it. | C Bent Free, 2'hree Months for Retiring. Every new subscriber for 18G8, received by ill first of February, will receive the October, Novel, ber and Deceuibqr numbers .of I8(j7, frey maiit; over 500 large double-column pages of nfaafkgnil ter in the 15 numbers’. All tor the low ptktii SI.OO. -Address’-no'; &(utiuml oik! ilfc.evaili»ifl ■ -Nj P. BOYER & C., Publishers, % Gum Tree, Chester Obutity, Pt-misylmiil | June 3, 1808. Dem oiiEST’s monthly magazine. sally wHn.r#MHftti J H«rMo(le] Puili»r Mjigariiij of America : devoted to Original Stories, PiwuJ Sketches, Architectpre and Model Cottages. Houwl lie Id Matters. Gems of Thought, Personal and LittJ ary Gossip j;including special departments on ions,) Insti-uclions'ott Health. Music, Amusemer!.; etc , by the best nnthors, and profusely iHustnhi with costly Engravings, (full size.) useful and rslji ble Patterns. Embroideries, and a constantbticcti sion of artistic novelties, Avith other useful and ei tertaining literature. No peisoh of refinement, ecofibrnical lady of taste can afford tv, do without the M| Monthly, tiiriglt copits 30 iieijts ; back numbnl as speeiuiens, 10 cents ; ejtjiei mailwj free. Yeabl ■ ? 3. with a valuaable pieuiinm ; two copies, $5.5* 1 three conics. $7.50; tive'eopies, sl2 and splendidj premiums for clubs at $3 each,^with the firstp, uiimna to etndi subscjiber. A naw Wheehd Wilson dewing Mad.jne fm 20 subrciibtrs atH| each. ..Address, W. SENNI'nCE DFMOTIEST. _ ’ No. 473 Broadway. New York. Denmrert’s Monthly and America, I gether $4. with the. premiums foruach Dec. 12. 18c7'. ag-tf tii irn ffiwn Is now publishing a Nru*s?EitiAfc Prdkf. to »M t hrough a large pai tof tlie next volume, entitle ‘‘Mr. Brownings PamfoH **t All New Subscribers will ee't tire StorV <?omplel’ We sfentl (Wovdi ft ISUL&W SSO Bc*?n* Madrh for 18 Now Siibt era hers. . -to , In order to introduce, th* Observer (o new reador* 01 ~lfll,c“ c e > we “#> the foitowitf New Subscribers: We will send the Observer for 011 c vear to q Bu hscrrbers, one or both being nett, for ' $6 Off J *, iVo( >r oil f for $8 (0 nr lo * ihrteor ”U “ for $lO tX ur, to any person sending ui jivk or more M* eacli ÜBERS ’ WC Wlil all ° W ” K: do!,ur commi.sior. 0# * * S ? nd b y check, draft, oriPost office order. *0 nn!| > e Co T' lo . R a ° d Circulars w^i|, free. > TeW* 1 a.Wvtv55'5'..,,.,..... VK OF SCHEDULE. or-Fif’ i Atlantic and Gulf llailrchij . Qw . 1 r. October 28th, 1808 ) \,'* nd aft '‘ r Sunday November Ist., tlie Scbe run Lcav« «»v;m ! ~.h (Sm„t,iv,fee,.,,(.,!) ,t T.OO a . Arm eat Bmiibridgg )f : iAp .-•* 1x*.20 r x Loave Bainbiidt>atj t l»i.-*-*r4 v 7t .w, . • ’rjtO f * Arrive at Savannah at 8 00 A. X H S. HAINH.r, Nov 4. Mfe at ' nfi ' al . ui to w Kmt riofj.-, - ■ .. ! v .Beef and Stock Cstflev»fftf Sale The Subscriber has for-aMe in’ Ornls tfmil FIVE .«°rW«h STOOK SS¥ ?, UD ot HEEF and Hl7N^UtwV*i?Jh? J ’ H»ere. can he. had about ONJ; wbd^tSS 5 A : N P FIt ' T Y »EAf> OF BEFFCA'ITLh appiy to “ der STOCIi - For fnrther pwtteul*!* F s’ Quinct - Fiuiupa. o« t® “‘"'sTe® r~ 1 * 1 11... TZ+Z*" blanks. A ltufV oi and other Kg*' Ut ‘™ for sale at tli» C«Q.‘ ■*