Newspaper Page Text
VOL. VI.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
J | BOWER E. b. jJowkr
BOWER & BOWER.
ATTORNEYS’:AT LAW
bainbridge, ga.
01 FICE IN THE COURT HOUSE.
«.r. h 23. 1871. _ 44-1 y
11. W. DAVIS, ' -
iTTORNEY at law,
. M.MN'IiRIDOK. GA.
(jT -j;!!' o over l'iittcißon & McNair'n Store.
; ES (I CAMI'ttKIX «.H. F. SHARON.
CAMPBELL & SHARON,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
BAIN BRIDGE. GA
business entni - ed to their care, protnplly at
, • 4 t<>.
,'u Court House. [julyTS, ly
DR E. J. MORGAN,
/vl'h’Eon South Broad, over J. W. Dennard’
j ~!oie, Kerideuee on West Street.
March 30 -1 y BAIN BRIDGE, GA.
HOTEL B. .
THE SHARON HOUSE,
.lOIIN SIIAKON, Proprietor
Bainbridge Georgia.
Til'N-JENr BOARD $3 PIvR DAY.
T truv. llim public are herein- notified that
J tins house has hcen t t hor >u£hiy rqpuited an<l
>■ .1. as well as rete.rnished throughout, and ren
~ I Min- <-l ilie most desirable and agreeable
.in tin-State worthy the liberal patronu-e it
„■ iii't"fn!e r ccivetl from the ers on the
• t-.'l railroad Ni pains or expenses will he
it > ir.- tl'e tii<- SHARON HOUSE all that any
cnhl (letiie. Call an</teSt its tiierftS.
jr In connection wt h the Hotel is an elegant
i* hj> whole the finest of liquors are kept.
TO THE TRAVELING PUBLIC!
fKRSBITIHBUSF,
Savannah, Ga.
-IS First-Class Hotel is situated on Brought or
Street, and is convenient to tlie business par-
I City. Omnibusesand Baggage Wagons will
'os he in attendant® at tho various Depots and
a-it mt landings, to convey passengers to tin
it- The best
LIVERY STABLE ACCOMMODATIONS
ts* found adjolnlnv the House,
mdersigned will spttrc neither time, trouble
• vnseto make his guests Comfortable, and
i. t t\\V- House, in every substantial particular
.■t*\.»W.\st, to any in the State.
lit Half rfßon ni tins lift it Btiliicn! *c?3. ihTiij
A B LUCE. Proprietor.' ‘
MISCELLANEOUS.
THOS. H. BROOME
REPRESENTS
A. M. Binningey & Cos #
IMPORTERS ANO WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
■Satolßs , mummm
WIS ES, GlsS, fy O
\0 15 KEAVEII STKEET
■a Reoapwat, - - - NFAY YORK
S-UK PROPRIETORS ANT) tMPORJf.I S OF
BS’.nmnger's Old London Dock Gin.
JOHN 11. It UWE ’ S
SHIP BREAD
AND
trackers Bakery
73 and 73V BAY STREET,
■JWDO sAV AN N AIT. GA
I-\ r »VH.MARTIN & CO., Cotton Factors
B** -iV --tmnis.-iop Merchants. Bay Street.
V '- U; '’-. v;, A Usual Facilities Extended to Cus
eepS, 187lMy
MEINHAtiD. BROS A CO.
Wholesale Dealers in
POTS tiHOES, RAfS,
Ready Made Clothing,
IfontlemcnV /mmoUimj (Stood#
111 Bou&k'on St.
SAV AX X AIJ, GE 0 R GIA.
OFFICE .
IWhard. | §0 & S2 WHITE ST. [ S. Sloinhad
■ ‘-uibard. J New York lE. A. W
kni bust
IS TOE CHEAPEST.
V Liverpool & Soiutonfi! ffilulir
Fire Insurance Co
s over S2O 030.000 in Gold. Over $3 000,000
‘imuituiiaU l) alter adjustment.
" ' r •
B 5 Sew York Life Insurance .Comply
Assets $16,000,000. ,
I ' h JOHNSTON &CO , General Agents.
K 1 b- HUN NEWELL & CO., Agents,
Bainbridge, Gr.
THE SOUTHERN SUN.
Published Weekly by
J O H. N R. II AYES,
Proprietor.
Terms ol Subscription;
Copy, one year,...: 50
One Copy, six months j gq
Out Jopy # three months .1 00
Advertisements*
ill he inserted atone dollar per square for tie
first insertion. Libeial deductions wll he made on
contracts. Obituaries and marriages will be charged
tlie same as Other advertisements.
RATES OF ADVERTISING.
No Squares, 1 Mo. ,2 M<>s3 Mos G M 05,12 Mos
1 square $4 001 $7 00l f 0 oo! 14 00 %20~00
2 squares 8 00[ 11 00 14 00120 00 30 00
I?squaies J2*ooi 15 (XT 20 00 20 00 40 00
4 squared 1« 00 20 00! 20 00 33 00 M) 00
r, squares 20 00 25 (,0 32 00 40 0 00 00
0 squares 24 00 31 00l 38 00 48 <0 ‘ 7u , o
7 squares 28 00 f37 00, 45 00 60 ( ,0 80 00
8 squares 32 00 43 00 62 00 01 0-> 90 <’o
9 squares 86 00 49 00l GO 00172 00 lOn 00
10 squares 40 00 55 00 1 08 o0;80 00 110 Oo
V column 44 Oo J 02 00| 74 00 89 00 120 00
The Lone Heart.
li? 11E L F.N IIIIUIEBT
Clouds hang heavyVer my pathway, ’
Life seems dark and desolate;
But a voice in softly whispering—
" Patience, loved one, watch and wait
For the coming day."
Memories sweet, of joys departed,
Happy days forever past ;
Years of blissful dreams and gladness,
’ All too beautiful to last.
Throng my brain to-night. *
Slpftly fading, lingering, dying,
Like the Kaf he passed away ;
Heeding not my tears of anguish,
. Heaven lias claimed its owu to-day,
And alone I weep.
Blighted hopes, and crushing sorrow
Weigh my spilt down with gtief ;
But a gentle, loving presence
Calms, and soothes, and gives relief
To my troubled heart.
♦
Y'*s ! he ir still lingering near me,
Loving, faithful, fond and true;
And his whispering voice of counsel,
Bids me walk with’courage new,
The narrow way to Heaven.
Life may yet be full of meaning,
• Though its buoyant hopes have fled,
Ar.d its brightest buds of promise
All ate fading with tlie dead, •
Mouldering ’neatk the sod.
.. Yes 1 I know that beaten will help m« *
Patiently to watch mid wait ;
Till the Angels come to bear me
Upward, through itspeaily gate.
Into Paradise.
A Fighting 1 Editor.
The proprietors' of the* Boston Saturday
Evening Express have recently engaged
tlie services, as a permanent fixture of their
establishment, of a fighting editor* They
*thns announce tho fact :
“We have the sublime pleasure to an*-
nounce to the deputy State constables, and
all otuers interested, that we have engaged
at an immense salary, one of the iudispen
gible adjuncts to an - independent newspa
per establishment, to wit—a fighting editor.
This course has been taken by us iu oidei
that we may have an equal show with all
belligerents who desire to get proper sat*
isfaetion for anything we may say. The
gentleman engaged (or this purpose in
forms us that he has been in the business
for some fifteen years, and that he is fully
competent to attend to all duties required
of him. Asa recommendation, he .informs
us that during his .carper as fighting
editor of various newspapers he has suc
ceeded in biring off some sixteen noses and
twenty ears, and gouged out nearly forty
eyes, having ihem now all nicely preserved
in a glass hot lie, which he is willing to
exhibit to any who desire it. He also in
forms us, that besides being a good biter'
he has broken several arms and legs of
liis numerous antagonists. He has also
killed six men by throwing them out of the
editorial window, and has broken three
spinal columns by knocking the owners
thereof down several flight of stairs. He
is an infidel, and has no fears of a hereafter
‘‘Aggrieved parties who desire a settles
.uent'are hereby notified to apply to him at
our « ffioe at any time, and they will be ac
commodated. Our associate is a little over
seven feet high ; his ago is and
t*. weighs one hundred and sixty pounds.
He lives on raw beef exclusively, and he is
never fed enough at any one. time to take
away his appetite for more. He was born
in Fighting Hollow, Gouge county, Ark
ansas, mid never had a brother.
-A.ri Journal —Bevoted to tlie Interests or Georgia
BAINBRIDGE, GA., THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1871.
‘‘lie proposes to conduct his department
on the b irbei’s plan : first come first 6erv»
eed. All orders- will be promptly executed
ami geutlemen 6aq examine a map of Mt.
Auburn Cemetery while waiting- foe their
torn. State constables served first, suck
ers next, after which indignant members
of the dramatic profession will be attended
to. Weapons constantly on’ band, for
which there will be no charge. He will not
Undertake to give explanations after the
first interview, for the reason they will not
be required. Lost noses, eyes, ears, &c.,
will be properly labeled and put carefully
away for future reference of friends. Dead
bodies properly buried -at relatives’ ex«.
pense.
“His department is elegantly and sub'
stanlially filtel up, and is now open for
busiimsa bulb wholesale and retail.
‘•P. When not fully eugaged at our
office, contracts may be made with him by
any other newspaper that may require his
services. 14
[From the Chronicle and Sentinel ]
The Steam Wagon.
AS IRON Gt.VNT HoW IT GOES —TJIK MASTER
• PIECi OF LOCOMOTION.
Colonel's Hyde's grand triumph, the
steam wagon or load locdtnolife, was all
around town to-day. At 11 o'clock it
started across the track, bounding over
hedges and ditches, then up on the North
side, where it was guided ovqf toward the
Wa'ter works to drink. Several bundled
gallons of Hiram’s tank sufficed to slake
the monster's thirst, and away it went
again. \Ve have described this conSolida
t ion of mule, horse aml-nx teams before, but
did not Sec? its capering movements until
this morning. WHy, it appears to swing
arour and in the road at command of the steel
ing apparatus, easier than a man could.
This great, < ngine will draw its thirty or
forty tons freight in trailed vans or wagons
as readily as* it moves unloaded.
Mr. Uanscom, builder of the car, acted
as pilot to day, and surely his pride as a
mechanic must have been fully satisfied
in the wonderful work of the Overland
Steamer. Jl is the king of the road in
every way. In 20 feet it turns complete
ly around, going*itl its speed, slops wish
the touch of a valve, and when desired to
move on, takes up its march- with a step
that ordinary obstructions cannot retard.
On the next trip of the steamer, this steam
wagon is to be taken across the lake by
j Col. Hyde, and there put to work hauling
ores and freights to and irorn the mines to
the landing. vVe rejoice greatly at its
success to-day. and while Seated on its
steady frm t, close by Mr- Uanscom, wish*
ed the glory of inventing and manufactur
ing so useful a machine would sometime
be ours.—Corritme Repo r ter, June 18.
We learn that a company of gentlemen
in this city are maturing plans for the in
troduction of one of these Thomson Road
Engines, to be run between ibis place and
the Sand Hills. We have seen a letter from
the agent for the Thomson company, in New
York, staling ihatMr. Wadley had ordered
10 of these exit aordiuary engines to be run
as auxiliaries to the Central Road, iu bring
ing from the adjacent county cotton and
other produce to the riSain line of his road.
One of these steamers, we also learn, is
now in use near the Central Road, about
100 miles from Savannah, in hauliDg logs
to .large saw mills, owned by the Wadley
Brothers, of President Wadley.
• It is contemplated to put one of these
steamers on the Southwestern Plank Road,
to ply between this place and Louisville.
Negotiations are now.pending between the
parties and. the Southwestern Plank Road
Company, for the use of their franchise for
this purpose.
Grant now moposes to go to Ohio before
going back to Washington. The purpose
•f the visit to Ohio is to give countenance
to Republican meetings in prominent points
in the State, and by his presence awake, if
possible, the apathetic, and reunite the j
disaffected Radicals.
The clergymen costs the United States 1
twelve million* of dollars annually ; crim
inals, forty million ; lawyers eighty mil
lion ; intoxicating drinks, only EN
HUNDRED MILLION OF DOLLARS AN'
SUALLY.
Mrs Yaliandighara is Raid to be recovs
ering from the shock occasioned by her
husband's death,.
Over tbe Burs.
; Tw/iiistilking t:me. and the cows came up
From the meadows sweet with clover,
■ And stood iu the lane while pretty Jane
j . Had quiet chat with the drover—
Such aquiet chat that it scarcely seemed
That a single word wag spokei*;
While a magic spell with the night-dews fell
And »the rythrn c-f song was Unbroken.
The cattle stood at the lover's side,
Witlvat eny show of vexation,
As thowgli impressed that » stc bar rest
Was a part of tk/u rest oration.
And as Jane listem and to the note that came
Right under the bars and over,
Her heart took wing the silly thing,
And nestled up close to the drover.
She heard him say his home was poor,
That he had nothing but love to give •
And she smiled content, as though Love had spent
Every arrow he had in his quiver ;
She otniled content, when the evening-air
With voices of birds are ringing,
And her lips confessed that a lowly nest
Should ueter prevent-her singing;
So over the bar* tbe lovers lean, .
In the joy of the sweet communion ;
And their looks declare that poverty ne’er
• Shall be a bar to their ynion #
O, sweetest music, thread your rhymes
Now under the bars and over !
Where pretty Jnne, in the flagrant lane,
Bewitched the heart of the drover.
The Bowen-King Problem. — Tlie New
York Evening Express has the follwing :
The question is asked, provided Bowen
gets pardoned, whose husband will he be 7
Will the pardon make Mrs. King'Peligru
Soften his wife ? Will his conviction and
pardon annul the marriage of his former
wife and make hitn the Itgal husband of
one for whom he wa3 sentenced as having
committed bigamy with? It will be well
to hive this intricate matter settled before
ho is released, lest he unwittingly Commit
adultery undei cover of tho law. It is evi'
dont that he cannot obtain a divorce now
and if lie continues his husbandry fetation
with the ibiid wife, will he not be subject
to another action upon the sama ground ?
Ri-formatioa is what the law is supposed to
work in a criminal, and iT in the face of
pardon he expresses his determination to
continue the crime for which he is being
punished, it is clear that he has hot repen'
ted of his crime, and should not be par*
dom and. It is a novel case.
The law of the case i;s very pjain. Bow
en is not the husband of Mrs. King, nor
can he until the death of, or legal divorce
from, his former lawful wife. The latter
he will not probably get whhont the wo
man's consent. Still, Bowen cannot be
again prosecuted for bigamy with Mrs.
King, as the constitution forbids a second
inoietment of a man tor the same offense, un.
less he should conclude to marry her again.
It was the marriage, while a former wife
was living, lhat constituted his offense of
higanij T ANARUS, and for which he has been tried and
punished. But, Bowen and Mrs' King not
being lawfully wedded; should they con
tinue to together as man and wife, may
be prosecuted for s different crime, he (or
adultery and she for fornteaihui. And
should there be children born to them, they
will be bastards. The President may re
mit a sentenced passed conviction of crime,
but he has no power to authorize, or legal-,
ize, a violation of the law’.
Domestic Receipts. —lron rust cau be re
moved by salt and lemon juice.
Put hot tallow on ink stains before send
ing (o wash.
Don't hang colored articles in tbe san to
dry, it fades them.
Carpets can be easily cleaned by sweep
ing them sprinkled with wet corn meal.
An exce'lent tooth-powder is made of
equal parts of powdered charcoal, and
honey.
To Keep ihe hair from falling off, use
cocoanut oil gielted with a little olive, and
scented as preferred.
It is claimed that rats may be prevented
front gnawing harness by mixing with tbe
oil applied a little cayenne pepper, say af
teaspoonful to the quait.
Chat coal fed to pigs frequently, by tbe
handful, is not only greedily eatefl and
proinotive of their health, but will effective
ly ariest the offensive effluvia of the pig
stye.
Allow one pound of alamo for every five
pounds of tallow, dissolve the alumn in
water, and stir till they are both melted
together ; then run in molds and you wid
have fine candles.
The man with a poker was at
Nashville promenading in bis shirt and
drawers, and the papeis cal! them 'pnmi'.
tive toggery.’
Edgar AlLen Poe. —The conversation of
Ed gar Allen Eoe, thogiFted American poet,
was at limes, says Griswold, almost «upep»
mortal in its eloquence. His voice was
modulated with astonishing skill,' and his
large und variably expressive eyes looked
repose or shot fiery tumult into theirs who
listened, while his owu face glowed, or
was changeless in pallor, as bis imagina
tion quickened his blood or drew it back
fro»*n to liis Heart. Mia imagery was
thw world which no mortal can see bat
with the vision of genius. Suddenly, start'
ing from a proposition exactly and sharply
dt fined in terms of utmost simplicity and
clearness, he rejected the forms 6f custom'
ary logic, and by a chrystaliue process of
accretion, built up his occuiar demonstra
tions in forms of gloomiest and ghastliest
grandeur, or in those of the most airy and
delicious bean.y, so minutefy and distiuct'
ly, yet s<* lapidly, that the attention-which
was yielded to him was chained till it
stood among his wonde/ful creations, till he
himself dissolved the spell, and brought his
heaters back ‘o Common and base existence
by vulgaf fancies or exhibitions of the ig
noblest passion.
A Horse Thief in Congress —Henry W.
Barry, the drunken carpet-bag vagabond,
who claims to represent the 2d District ot
Mississippi in Congress, has repeatedly
been denounced as a thief, a swindler, and
a forger by a General in the Federal army
and recently the Brandon Republican de
nounced him as a horse thief. That paper
of Thursday says
In a late issue of our paper we ofiarged
the carpet-bag Congressman from the Go'
lumbtis District, 11. W. Barry,' with hav
ing tried to steal a noted ‘yallar pony'from
Hon. Frank Lynch, of Texas, and asked the
Pilot to add this item, together with spV'
eral other Charges, to its biographical}
sketch of the infamous scoundrel. Neith'
er.the Pilot, BaTry himself, or any of llis
friends,- has disputed the charge, and as
Mr. Lynch is now in this place, we renew jt,
•and dare the carpet-bag scoundrel to dis'
piite it, We may, at some future time,
give our readers a few more items in the
history of tliie Yankee * villain, who was
kicked out of the Federal army for being,
as a brother officer expressed it, the d—
dest scoundrel unhung. .One of Iris spec,
illations in Texas was hiring his negro
regiment out to pick cotton on shares for
the people in the neighborhood of his quar
ters, while they were being fed at the ex'
pense of the Government. He received
over fifty bales from one widow lady as
his abate, and a great deal from other par
tk*B.
The Case of Jimpsey A. Hunter. —The
motion for a Dew trial in the case of the
State vs. Jirnpaey A. Hunter, was argued
before tho Supreme Court on last Thursday
and Friday. On Tuesday the Court "ren
dered its decision, sustaining the conclu
sions arrived at by the Superior Court, and
overruling a motion for anew trial.
The decision of the Supreme Judges
leaves but one snore resort for the friends
of Mr. Hunter, and that is the pardoning
power of Governoi Bullock. Whether
they flrilf avail themselves of this last re
Course for mercy we are unprepared to say (
but it is presumed that no measure will be
left untried to save the life of the con
demned. —Quitman Banner.
Sad Occrrence —A Noble Bot.—A v»ry
sad accideilt occurred- in tho -rillngo of
GraniteviHe yesterday. A little girl, the
daughter of * Mr. John L. Atkinson, while
attempting to crosß the trestle on the Char*
lottc, Columbia ffnd Augusta Railroad 1 over
Jhe Gra'niteville Canal, fell in. A small
boy, only-ten or twelve years of age, named
Dempsey Gilliland, saw ihe child when she
fell and immediately leaped into 'thre canal
to her rescue. The gallant little bero,
though he was only a few years the seuior
of the girl, and of a very delicate organi*
zation, succeeded iu swimming with hqr
nearly to the bank, when her struggles and
convulsive grasp caused hlra to sink with
her, and they were both drowned^—Augus
ta Constitutional ist # .
Louisville boasts of an eighteen year
old belle who can lift a tub of clothing
rom the giound to an elevation of four
feet, and the cloites line white with tbe
results o’s the labor of her own liftle hands
in a short while. Meantime her mother
siLs in her parlor, taking her ease in her old
age. As soon as this becomes generally
known tbe railroad running iuto that city
will have to run extra trains.
A girl in Wisconsin swallowed forty
percus*io4e3ps, her mother refrained from
spanking her for fear cf an explosion.
Cleanse ms Skin. —lt ia a curious
illustrating .the necessity of cleanliness,
and of keeping the pores of the skin open;
that if a coat of varnish or other substance
impervious to moisture be applied to tho
oiKterior of the body, death will ensue in
about six hours. The experiment wai
once tried on a child at Floreuce. On the
occasion of Pope Leo the Tenth's accession
to the papal chair, it was desired to have a
living figure to represent the Golden Age,
and so a child was gilded ail over with
varnish and gold leaf. Tho ch’ld died in a
few hours. If the fur of a rabbit or tho.
skin of a pig be covered with a solution of
ludia rubber in .naphtha, ihe uniuinl Ceases
to breathe in a couple of hours;
Mr. Daniel Yorhees, one of the lead'-
ing Democratic politicians, who lias rtpres
seated the Sixth Indiana district in Cons
gross for several teims, announces that
after tlie close of the present-term in Con*
gross he will leave politics and public life,
lie says that his only political antbition ia
to help elect Mr. Thomas A. Hendricks
President of the Uuited States.
Narhvili.e, July 4. \ passenger train
on the Nashville and Northwestern Rail**
road, which left here at 8:50 p. in. yester*
day, composed of two -coaches aud a aloep*
iyg car, met tviUr A terrible accident at
Harpeih run, eighteen miles from Nash*
ville. After the locomotive and baggago
car bad crossed the bridge over tho river*
the bridge gave way and tho remainder of
the trail) fell into the stream. Fifteen per
sons, as far as known j*t present, were
killed and twenty-ttireo wounded.
Mas- Fair Declining —Mrs. Fair's pbysi*
cian, who has been fn constant attendance
upon that remarkable woman since Iny con*
,viction, has addressed a letter to Sheriff
Wliite, stating that her health is declining
rapidly, and that she is suffering from tus
bercnlpsis, and advising that she be re
moved to a more sunny and better
ted room. The room prisoner
desires to occupy is over the main en
trance, and presents such opportunities sos
sudden departure, that the Sheriff hat- Con*
eluded that she'njust remain wbeie she is*
The "Water -we Drink.—Tho writer of bB ar
ticle in the Saturday Review argues that pure,
clear water is not always the healthiest, hut that
mud ly water, although unpleasant to the eye. and
to the palate, is much more beneficial to ’ tho
health. In illustration of the argument, the
writer states that in Glascow, Scotland, where the
inhabitants aie sup| lied with pure, clear water
from Loch Khtrine, the death rata is unusually
high. The cause is ultto Cited of Manchester,
Bn gland, which has pnre, soft water, afld ydt is
more sickly than Birmiflgton, Which, unt ft re
cently, was supplied from a small stream, run
ning through the town- Clear water, jt is true,
may contain in solution invisible substance that
will affect the health, but muddy water, with Veg
etable matter in suspension, is undoubtedly high
ly injurious, and should not be used until after
all the impurities have subsided and have been
removed.
Th* Oomino Bonnet —The Nest York corres
pondent q{ the St. Louis Republican gives the
following interesting information upon ft Very
important matter:
BcNNiTa.—That’s the only word that look* liko
the awful things—great- coal scuttle front* that
will project over the face at least six inches on
top. Then the an< iont cap crowd is to be re
vived. For the first they will be made without
capes; then tho elopes will creep in, and we shall
be back to tffe sky scrapers of 1858-9. This is a
device of the enemy, the milliners, who are di*-
t?a<st»*d at the mxtes of hats.that any lady can
trim for herself. The fall ones are to be of silk
and velvet, and it will require more room to build
one in than can be spared in large familh s. And
oh 1 the cloth it will take to cover ’em. I’m going
to get a neat little door plate with my autograph
engraved upon it, put it up in front of mine, say
“farewell vafn world,” and retire within the re
cesses of my fall hat. 'lien, of course, the hairy
top-knot we have been throwing up on our heads
have got «o come down to get our big bonnets on.
1 hose ladies who have got four hairs on one fide
and six or eight,on the other, can’t go the “sim
ply brushed back” style. That class will stick to
the round hats like a shipwrecked mariner to his
hen coop.
. Tire Grave of Gen. Polk.— T noticed in
yonr paper a few days since an allusion
to the grave of Gen. Leonidas Folk, in
whicti i- was stated that the body was
goon ter be fetrioved to Louisiana, from it*
present place of interment in Aogosi*, Ga.,
where it had remained cxmabsed sirr ®f **
was first buried. It affords me
lion to state that the place of burial of the
great Bishop General is marked by a Deat
marble slab, appropriately, inscribed, and
that fresh flowers have been every morn
ing, winter and summer, placed upon tlie
tomb by a lovely woman of Augusta.—w. -
R/chmoud Dispatch. ’ {
NO. 8: