The Banner-Watchman. (Athens, Ga.) 1882-1886, July 11, 1882, Image 3

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BANNER-WATCHMAN. z»< wjsaraiwrr:? Beak lb brat and COHFUKTABLK bed* EUd A an b« haul at H. U..Lampkta*k Don't for*o B.H. Laaraui k«rpa the finest bar-room in thecUxaitd tlittPUiualand br^tliquor*. , EddlrUm-plu alley In tlieoliy and the beat lUard andthlbltaUci at Lantpkln'a aaloan. Ir you want to bo treated Ilka a Lord patron- «the popular aaloon ol R. U. LampUn. Ir you want the beat clean sold In the city, uy «I. V>wc A Co. .Try "Punch and JuAy.” Tukbeit keg and bottled beer, porter ala, etc., alwaya Ireah at the bar ol CUE add In bard Low** Co. can and will duplicate, K notun daraell, any bill ol liquor* aold In Georgia at wooleaale. A trial la all they nak. Ot a (rieiyla from the country can get the beat ami cheapest bottled llquora at Lowe A CVa. ^ 1 ftnvialou atil! advancing. laaM. UrTbe^ity Was rather quiet yestei Drummers continue to come an BIRD'S EYE VIEW OF THE CITY. r4*y- Si* .Rve-|Wa each failing •tat’ • ialttk oui thi For liquoi ill 1 Lows &i Co'i cigars are the best In the city. No dlsortlur characters or loafers aie tolerated around the bar ot Lowo & tVefctcp there ouly our beet apd purpat llqaora-guarapteed. Whukies of the old Keutucky atyle are atcad- Uy Increasing in (avor with thow people who .eekabeofia parity Combined kriU> that fruity ulne product op-OM Kalmuck ^ Harjxr't Stl- ,wt Count* n’Mfty 1* and haa becu for years be- for.- the puMtaapd haaaa well merHeda repu tation In l<» ami' Statu as It pokaesdaa' Abroad. Sold only by JJ. D. Beusae. Athraa Oa. _ „~eaa±DMoa3B; ce. and class of work from any quarter. a fortune, outfit worth lover’s rule. Athens boast the best washerwdtnen $■*•■ cat was killed this week, private fuuiily. - It seems that Athens will escape fires this year. The threshers are winding up the season’s business. , r - Cotton -blooms are scarcer than at this time last year. Two silk pocket-handkerchiefs make a pretty tennis apron. Some of our bar-rooms took In ov| $300 on firemen’s day. Bacon continues to advance no decline is probable. .. a The Athens factories will run on full time from this on. crop will be all right is governor. for white dresses are ly adopted. A Threlkeld sold 2,700 gii ea of lemonade Tuesday. { The Masonic fraternity receives ad dition at every meeting. An Athens Invention.—! Cooper has invented and patented an appliance for drenching horses, that works like a charm. It is very sim- 5- pie, and must be seen to be appreci- the 12th she t ’ ated. <1 The Telephone.—The materlalfor the construction of our telephone has afrived and hands are now at work fixing the poles over at the >ot. It will be in complete i ler by August 1st. The matter VffigBnmUy ’Jester & Thre GEORGIA RAlLROADSr From (A< Railroad Rerietr, , ewmuwaourwwjierfcw. . . -Oubaanalerlal. ConaraMlonal tile job tavern railroad. I " KBSBm. Col. A. D.. Candler, the tireless, president, has the JuirTav- l A Co.. lOBfcUy 8U. N. 1 ■ w Agent* 10 aciit ‘ Rldeoul Pike’s Toothache l>roi«s cure In one m'.iiulu. BsXV'Tiiki Aix.-A practical .test made bv Uramblett A Bio. at FArtyth, allows that Cherry’* Fruit Kvaporator will <lo twice the work ol any in the mar ket. Write to McBride ft »’<>:, Who will give poaidve prool. ”■«■ ,, r Brtnton, X. ».. Baltl- every meeting. We notice many youngcolts on the street, following farmers. Several victims of the war of 1812 live in and around Athens. The first wife of Brigham Young died at Sait lake last week. There was a case of .sunstroke in Athens this week. Not fatal. Major John Hampton, of Attjteu, has a crib of home-raised corn. WU ill his pt^jifepf a wild native gnuw. 'Vs, AlargeerowA left for the’(MR the excursion train last evening. greatest commencement known since the war. A blast Friday evening shook dwel lings half a mile distant from the soene. JI. ' The Western Union Telegrapli com Jan^ is able to pay 40 per cent, diy^- . .The independents are doing th$fr heat to create discord in the organised ranks. —w F »m Ri»lfr*rv« Dr. Wilms more. '»' ~w » " ■*•’ "l have used CoMen’s Liebig’s,Ex tract, of Beef ami 'l'ouiu Invigorator m my practice. and have been much grati fied with the result. As a tonic in all eases of debility, wteknes*. anemia. chlorosis,"etc.. It cannot be surpassed/^ Take no fillet To TDK is cordially solicited to sepil representa tives to tiie approaeliing commencement. Ample and convenient 'arrangements have been made for their entertainment. wn, ah ml 1U years ol agb, was accident ally killed near GlUsviUe, yesterday merning vvhll# loading s double -hot gun. Both barrels went off shot him in the body, killing him rtaully. | Linus Yield.—Mr. J. K TaCnAdge] wlnMjever does things by halves, recent ly gathered ten two-liorse wagon ..i onions from l throo-fourths of an acre oi' land. Dasldss these, he had beta selling onions from the same lot all this summer. " ....... "" everal I .OM1KR ffAILMAB roads are introducing a rail sixty feet in length, and as soop tu; the new mill at CTiicago is lairly ii\C J ~ “ hundred and twenty feet in length are to Ite manufactured, and tegtedwon one -of the northwestern lines, tested on one o In order to re me iu8ff|he]m$ve talttn HIT on Is witbe ^ftiehs branch, in, •e Conductor lombard and hi mkc Cwqjuifr dailito .ynlo Oscar Wilde seems to be not -too wstlietic to sleep with his colored volet, i 4 j | Those chronic beggars in Athens should be sent by the city to the poor house. $9 that the branch will be extended to parity where it meets the Waltoh ,-jcpunty railroad, 10 miles long, OocnecMng with the Georgia railroad ' Social Circle, 119 miles west of Au- ^gusta, and 52 miles east of Atlanta. dHw main line is within 8 miles of Jef- No, definite action as to ex- ig from Jefferson to Athens has len taken: TIw At^na people, er. seem determined‘to build from Athens to Jng Tavern, which en- terprlse, we suppose, Georgia railroad company, ' company la now acroee the Oconee rl ns proper. The hich the above ro«b edby seems < lovemeptp mnted for intlficonan pee an Ape „ toe, whUe look- M»e«neet agriculti cloudoafi hum W*- At Jug Tav ng and forty of »«>«»« q«*«y »nd long vering over portions of this Tavern building [Ual to Quiney granite, that Atlantabat) A B IS ■eSNW t MUmtsscai i will bavp a road to that point, as 1 Tavern Is only 52 miles lit an afr- 7 JBne from Atlanta. riOttTHEAW EASTERN RAILROAD furnishes abundant nufc* *• ** Tallulah falls, 16 mUee roDomical study and en- north of Bnbun Gap junction, on the ibmond A Danville railroad. These of the 27th < „ power, td sj . The tprm ol as chairman Jommlttc pired by, Ing a ill all Mr. J, J. Baldwin will open his bar- -M room Tuesday. It is splendidly furn- ishfd. . . ■ t T F. Phinizy, of Athens, pays tax on more property than Senator ^ w i-95. r. u. Mauser, we learn, has one even antidating that time. Wo frequently find Spanish coins in circulation ran * 'rom one to three hundred years 'they are not worth anything Cotton year at this season, cent, better. is about on a par with last but corn is 20 per Sad Accident.—Mr. J. E. Garrison’s | There is a strong probability that congress will reduce letter postage to two cents. Mr. W. H. Jones has the contract for roofing two tine new stores at Har mony Grove. Examinations of Gulteau’s brain do riot develop anything disorganized or extraordinary. The atate belles are packing for the summer gay, season in Athena daring riext two weeks. Gann A Heaves have added a new chair, with a plow-line bottom',to i office furniture. &- ■ Mr. Mike Mattox, of Oglethorpe oun tv harvested from three acres 130 mshels of wheat. The Atlanta Herald says that after three days correspondence, the duelists cry aloud, “Give us arrest, " A gentleman from the country pro- a to one of our merchants to swap an ox for a very fine horse. Ifr is thought the Lucy Cobb will have to be enlarged to accommodate the increased patronage next year. Th® reduction of the national debt rihring the fiscal year^just closed foots ol as relics. Fine Oats.—Mr. Robert Thompson, of Osceola, yesterday brought to our office a bunch of white oats six feet four inches high, taken from a lot of forty shocks which threshed out forty befiausohe" >r rust proof e^sitch Tub Gkokui.v Kuan, dm* expel set of haudi now require force to in; l’oint. This is a hard undertaking, and wu hear a great deal of complaint about it. There is no increase In pay for this double w to,VuiolL up the handsome f •re ijJJHL 111 woiC j 1U£okt9.- injia; ’ei«£fe^yi^ nd - a Ckoi- lti foRtjfcVffe eall from Mr. O. II. Arnold, one of Ogle thorpe’* most successful farmers. Mr. A. runs a thresher this year, and he tells us that the 1 chi. , any man In Georgia, next to Hon A. Bacon. averages al but oats wllfrnn upttfabout thirty, sixteen acres, but little of it manured, he made Hll> bushels of oals. Thhbsiixr Report.—Mr. WTj. Devi port, jr., of-OgiaiiuMiie county ( -.heads ’lie list al'Aymhertien, having just cleaned bHtJ tf-nl ^iXand bushels off gniin this- scasen find^ t)aa moved .on Mr. Tdim l^welPw crop,that amounts to thirty thou fund -iutthrl* more AM \^C wheat and oats ever made Tea Clltlre in Georuia —Georgia and'Ll China can, hut itAo^si^’f twtsAh® s4me.) This is ca'isetl from the fact'tliat we do not kfifev*dfir Ififi^eyt$>|Oi*rly. the leaves arc • first gathered they UistriM, Biltl^ a email! means ing the flavor is brought out. If this is " e «lj4#iGWh44 « frcl) dlgjtli® plants the l^^meat to dling-wood. we crop of made in Georgia. I’RKcioi's Stones.—Mr. R. K. Reaves has ano^|ol| w^qqtloo 0(Vab linen uf quarts, with waves running through ir. This is very singular and will polish into a beautiful setting.’ ‘Ho has also a behrl stone that was found in the centre of a flint rock. It ia as black finish. This is one of the rarest and most wriMpiEm mineral pmdfctloaw yyfj JJ i Alpha Tau Omega.—The alumni $151,674,351. - All flesh is grass, and thnt’s why so many men now-a-days appear to have had their hair cut by a lawn mower. Mr. George Herring, foreman of the itrik factory, haa the finest beard of The post-office business now exceeds $40,000,000 a year, and what is better 11 the- department Is actually self- arlie Smith tried to ride a bycicle lling-v Jill : He has presented friend for kin- notices and communications^ recommending persons for nomina tion/will he chargeable the same as lvertisements. The last rail has Iieen laid on the ack between Atlanta and Macon, on tiie East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia railway. •O; B. Bishop, tiie great “Widow Bedotte,” will open the dramatic sea son in oar city, in his new play “Strictly Business.’’ r did so. The former t the city. The con- tylt'stop paying w8rit. r i9v”jb Rare Coins.—Mr. Alec King has a r astronomical study anden- Two fiiU moons j*iy iml very light to add beaut^to the ■ evenings. The four morning Neptune, Saturn, Jupiter and jr—will sing together as they rythmical harmony, around source of life ami night; s evening stars—Venus)" Mars aus—hanging close I ^ 1 their course, the '^peerless Ing supreme gt^er her and the grand, coo. stars. The " trail on in three suggestive topics that demand the close attention of tbe;stu- dent of the stars. The coming of Venus ranka first In as the busy aotesitf pro] echoed from every part of world, and the enthui as the event, draws tain marking!, and observations of " so-called canals as seen by the keen ey under tne serene shy pf theme for study of fUx In the third place, the fflOwi a—H - for her share in the novel celestial problems that are, scientific mind, fill' moaphei tronomi floating over one of her huge craters, revive the interest in her desolate face, and suggest the possibility that life may exist In some form in a world that seem* to have played her part in the material economy of the uulverae.— Prociilmce Journal. here congregate and the name of Co). W. J. Houston will be to the associa ted hqsts of children of America yrin ■Ueu.’w. a Bhattuo’s haa becohu ie salubrity of the climate an of the falls and scenery will . thousands of sight-seers riqriU' W> Mr. W. W. Foreacre, son of CoL G. J. Foreacre, is road master, and Is walking in the footsteps of bis distinguished father. Mg). H. R, Bernard, the energetic superintend*. everything tpwafty; { completion. TJb AVTil'Vl'A ROAD ‘ ‘ l Ua belng completed to Grecni. tlial l, ( 8« C., to President E. Verdery\ ( ev has now turned his eyes toward n r tia., and the next thing pCci tb'hear will be that the Bav; h Valley railroad charter has been taken np by him and work cemmenc- ' on a branch line from the Augusta aud Knoxville railroad. " t >jSr' honorsor itsi. 1 Liver Cure mm videuce to those kidney and liver disvnaea. Ukv. inu Bekkukim. A Good One.—My. John yfinter.the live merchant of WirimririHe, aat up until one o’clock the other night hold ing a lamp for the blind man to tune raing, The Rosy North. We had to wait for half an hour for the Waycrosa train, ap^ during that time a biaeik ntabjcaipy up to me and inquired: Bay, boss, doan’ you lib up norf?" Yes.” , *y he discovered that it was an eight-day time-piece. Bell Rivalry .—Both of tiie ex cellent hardware stores in this city make a specialty cfjchurchhfUs, and when one house hears a customer test ing the sound qf a bell across the street it forthwith starts the clerks to ringing one of its own, as a warning that it would be wise to try what corn, petitidd will do before buying. They had one of those rival ringings yester dayevening. . Oat Statistics—Mr/ B. B. llams, of Oglethorpe, paid us a pleas ant call yesterday, and in speaking of oats he said it was throwing away Ecdpflhe former he !»e gfairi is dim. larger and heavier. Mr. Wil liams made over 300 bushels from a volunteer field, having planted the GlOW produi movi ing to iu® ail upward Ant, ajtcord- Pemocrat, has h In the Griffin news says Jhrlyen through wet and dry, cold and the duelists are the laughing stock of Atlanta; that it is thought neither ty wanted lo light. We _ Now that the schools have el. _ and the period of rest for the teachers has begun, the anxieties and miseries Of the mothers will be correspondingly increased. “Hail Columbia, happy land—if here ain’t grass I’ll be d—dl ” were the ■werds printed on a board and stack Jkp ewton county man’s cottop field crops o1 bad three or four annual leaves which are free from THEvHEETOU* TUESDAY. Pursuant to the call of the chairman of the democratic executive committee the (i-n<n| »i vtsie adiV l-> Tho null ol. S. C. Dobbe, chairman of the dem- ? committee. "Ion. Howell Cobb, the Bartow, H, Ijqer, 4, H. Thomas Bai- _- „_ T itp the demo- »convention- to ipeet in Atian- “ ‘ )bo to ndtl -con- sri&ftss: and with On mi following L. Crank Rucker,’ ley were craticsts ta on vention ui questions as tu the democracy power to On mol ,-- nwM= - followinedele*ntfes: G. H. Yancey, _ T.Pittaid,T.KLester.R.L.Mom, R. of the MMhVtmWw heeeaOer called; with powsr. to appoint their own ^OnroSfcmor’Hoii; Vi; L. Mitchell, John R. White, B. ¥. Brown, John W. Brumby and Andrew J. Cobb were elect ed delegates to the senatorial convention The" Lamar Party Gone to" Macon to’Await be heteaXter called, it their own alter- ol Col. S. C. Dobb* imocratic executive eponty, having ex- ' law, and he declin- lotion of Hon. toe H. Yancey rman. .1 man Yancey to L cey on i meeUc him. . chalr- »V to Ibe chair. Chairman taking the chair thanked the ngior. the.honor.conferred upon he^heeoatheraChatauqumJToA motkm of E.T.Brown, Esq., An- ay schools of America wilp drew * J. Cobb was elected permanent ry of tiie executive committee, chairman wan authorized to ap- nt an executive committee for the inty. Ifon. Pope Barrow introduced the fol- 3® iaSB^*r un ‘ ni - "That we endorse the oandlda- of oi» - tli®ngnitbed ‘ tellow-citizen, b/ge aud i tion as one wortliy ot thb crust. • On mattoa,toatoeetiag adjourned. Pain from Savored Limbs. Manckctter Mirror. The feet of Josiah West, who met with ist terfflcvanraniK WIIIM a efi, sab, does up dar own a brick bouse wld a cupa- lo on top?” “Oh, no.” «■ “Does he walk^roou’ wid a bag of gold iMohri.han’_ii’ ahawof silver in de odder?” I never saw any of them taking sueba walk.” "Do dey all owu bosses an’ ker- ridges?” . “No.'f_,11k'ri> I ,bJ3i. ;c4 “Do dey all have diamond*, an’ wel- au’ I lib ober beyun dat pine woods. My ole woman am al! de time. stirrln’ me up to go norf, an’ she really blaves dat if rie oh truf ’liout it! Culd we do it?” “No.” . / “Could we pick up a peck?” “No.” i -i . t “Fo’ quarto T”* “No.”__. “Twp qtyrU\ ,v ^ bachMlor op arts! " A. W. VanHoose, Benoia, Ga., .1st honor; J. B. Alexander, Marietta, Ga., 2d honor; Ga., 3d bac: A. H. honor. bachelor op agriculture. A. H. Frazier, Columbus. James VgUyli received OriTBeaUn- ing speaker’s plkee. ' r ' A Former Georgian. V. It is always pleasant to hear good thing® said mbautany Georgian, a^d none more so than the following about Prof) lieRoy Broun, formerly ofoiir State University. We clip the follow ing from the Nashville American: Prof.3K0Ili(ni LeRoy Broun,.pro fessor of mathematics at Vanderbilt University, was last week elected presldetat of the Alabama State Agri cultural and Mechanical College, by the board of directors of that instltu tton, which is located at Auburn, Ala. This, the highest educational institu tion in the state of Alabama, is to be kan>i congratulated upon the accession of ! fini Prof. Broun to its faculty, and the an nouncement of his election and accep tance was received with unbounded enthusiasm and gratification, if we may judge by thefollowiug extract from a letter handed us by a former student of this College: “I must tel* you bow delighted and happy we are, hat all our doubts and unoeptotatles are at An end, and that CeK ’Broun has been elected and ac cepted. We had a perfect ovation yes terday, and we have not yet settled down. The feeling of satisfaction is universal—the town’s people were in fkyofof him; the faculty unanimous ly so, the student also, and the alum ni. ! I never saw anything like it. All "I <2 l Fy^ C ,durin ® commencement CoL Broun woiritoAf meets. Moreover the small iw become a shrub of seven ff feet high with eight feet read. A few more such plants as is would prove that tea cau flourish l)eed already 1 sp In Rockdale county the “no fence” law la working admirably, asd ita op ponents are rapidly becoming convinc ed of their error in opposing its Suc cessful execution. A St. Louis boy drank milk without holesale Stealing.— "Jffa near Athens has, months in the ‘ gro on bis place when he brouglit'lhe "Earn keys Into thehouse gnd hung them on a nail. A sliort tiinb since he discovered that the fellow Jeft the door unlocked, and taking "the chew of tobacco out Of BB the hands on the place had inaugura- mouth. The milk washed the tobac- ted a wholesale system ot robbery, ATORWLL’sriftsMpR^— 1 yi/H. i a letter to thefeavafanah News, ofthe seaside fans this"! gh to Cover one side, lb case abe blushes. Ar- nts have been made to report • b^kby telegraph if one occiua The, City Attorney contends that ofir council haa no authority ta revoke a liquor seller’s license for keeping a !h * of Athens. Fairview pree opera fresbnit-dh^vHl 1 Will difoourseIjmwlct l^verjri^trif^f dicates a pleasant affair. , iiT u , ri , Senator] "»y fWl»H WtoAKMf lege of the writer to sit aide b, nearly four years gulshed stal benelies of the. and lutqi ecu tinned in his early markable fog ory, and" “Vattel’s Mental ric," sto.j seologyofthi bore away class, and WMjegarded as a skillful debatant aridAeloquent speaker in the DoiUMthenefn, society. Since then, his record and fame are as household tongue through a lattice vmk'jaa&f a bat wil) net employ any of the stri- wuable vloious mule bit off four Intmed' of it. king hands. man, whtle the owner himself engi- J taking, mules from the stable at night to carry off grain. It is impossible to •*^^?ritja^of»lslora. Ninety Per Cert.- in Athi from o: ment swindle-- was contemplated some- reckon 1 say yes, but If anybody ’spectal’ze gwine to fool oroun* wid any slch small taters os dat dey aa eadly took? enln. I’ze kept house longenough to know dat a qaart ri’j*MMfeMNti wouldn’t keep a fam’ly In bread and meat hair de time. ’Bleeged'to ye, boss. Mabe I’ll git up dat way arter ■me of every tongue, wore an expression of itense expectancy. Wi ptief gfeat things of him, and wesba’lnotbe the In the chapel yesterday nude the announcement of hi* election and acceptance, I thought tbwpeopie-would waver-be-ihrau^» e i of him, and we know pa)iu, as tiie man dliappolnted. Wfie'd ‘him. 1 The fingers be chairman of the the arm consigned limb declared they ielt a pain from an awka’epl/txfeitton which the member waain.-, .vrfno, : -v, ; .. He cited an instance of a man who kat'an tfm Xu this city last fall. After being smpntzted, it was sent to the un dertaker’s tor burial. It was placed in a box, the back of the hand being down, toktylpitqf in this position for several boors. The owner of the severed mem ber, during that time, experienced pain intbeaflfi, whitfi grew so unbearable ltiatatlast lie asked a friend to go to the undertaker’s aud see about the limb> Ttiis urat at 5:45 in the afternoon. The friend was busy and did not start off for half an hour, and daring that time the pain had ceased, and the wounded man said he need not go. He weut, however, j found that the undertaker had jost finished caring for the arm; and it bad" becu placed in ail easy and natural posi tion in / Tfap.liuie when the arm was changed from the awkward position to the latter coincided exactly with the time when the owner-had felt the pain leave him. When the friend reported to the unfortunate man, he (the latter) said he knew just how .the arm was placed, that he coulftfeeiltS poaitiOn and correct ly described the i Another case cited, by the undertaker was about a man who lost an arm above the elbow. The member was given to the yea' dertakcr a long time had pained him a great deal, thatthe fingers cramped, and that he wanted to see the buried member. Ac cordingly it<'M044g)9 agd examined, and strangle pay^ found to have the finger?. tightly turned) dp towards the pa)m, as the man bad said they felt aud no more "trouble was experienced from it. ) at com mencement will be seen at the hop to be give* by tfw aeiilpr gffq of; (*e2{ p* t the Denpiwe opera bouse, Wednesday evening, July 19th. Many ladies and gentlemen from neighboring >#ties will be in attendance, and everything will be be done to rondel* this the most enjoyable social event of .commence ment. MAJ I4 The Alpha Taa Omega fraternity will have a reception at Denpree ope- St*’yj / Cards are out for a hop at Deupree opera bouse on Friday, July 14th, complimentary to the JqDtyr clam, of *82. Nodonbt Stria will ife aaa.af the XiK)W*H01Tkin A J c view Farm-—Mr. H. 8. of the IMMa .. .. the other parts of the works, whole the hands were at work, and caused a reg- lar stampede. It la rumored now- It few. from $60 to$100 peri UftiMd in appear- atone of thaUlie eontneton wllt ralee thelftfc^y fi n , *p*imen on 1|«.JkJC- Reavea' “ , near Athen*, and it Is thought a Al<- '.H«i; ; iv.* iTi moot delightful entertainments of the fe understand, how- \ leave the city till, ils family going with him yacancy which nderbilt faculty, ne will nuns oainbsv^Ls. L. We the undersigned have tborongh- ly tested and we can safely say . that W. Jay Me Donald’sFlre and Water proof Cement Faint feJby far$Jiobei*t roof paint *«4Aet law. 'It is perfect ly elastic and wlil no$.break or crack ofT; it is a strictly a fire and a water- gie roof from rot or decay. It will psswtratc the wood or bricks and keep oul’the water. It will make a hold vrilter.' It cannot be rhbbe T»Wlfr«WMnt- that wiU equnMHi and. pro ohiserftiUy recommend U.to eygtiriiodyaathri very beet. Wft ^ 1 LAMAR VS. alibi" Mllf I iltrtyi-j lew.i^poiiitaient,.!' itf Tlri' Ths Fullest Particular* if the Affair up to the Present Hour.—X 'Tern- ' porary Truce Neceealtated: .Il-4tl .1 .11 il l. * Mud .’> > ,».hr.i 1 AUaM *:0V2f d : i l H ,UOeWl»l It waa ascertained jeo^yjn.^he mg that the aM^^ft}/to jirgye^.^ meeting by placing the parttoa.tpqdftr, bond would be lneff^tufl, ThpfriM* of CoL Lamar a^np^oed th^ they dMnoc regard the , floqd^tW .qttbo, bond as binding tyrt^er.tkanfc^prp- vent* breach of state, and that tirigr.FMq^tiip.flghb to go anywhere outbid?, pureue the oonwwwdqaffiimd «MIM» in mortal oqmhjty >l pk9«i^!I.MNr’ demand such an'^tfifnftfr M i(iu ,[,.ji NO INTERV^tWW , It Rlsobocame:ltyp|bUyiffKW«RtiV>< the peacemaking friend a pf-^hej^,, .tlemen af.toHWi terrentlqp 1 ? W ^^, ffl Mtyifft 1 W^^ but rathc^ provoke a grpfter determi nation to sequrenlw^yjqjaeetiMv.i that a son of CoL Tamar emphatically declared thal’ u U6 amifcabld tottfement aftbemattoLtoppe»iMft” > , t . t -„i;„ 1 . Cgfr ^Wtt jMw Mar»wnll0risn#nd the Kimball duripffi th»pftfgnqqn aad evening, They wan* Wfeldgritoly an noyed by carious Menc(a and .hj tiie evident,espionage.tjie pqUcf and •tiie?pflolatyi„,iu j jji«o ,.^i . Col. Laipw appeared to d ««VRtiyendkfand.QoLpaneon puffbd, (heir qigars Wltiv OMralQfld countenances andonly^occaslontd pri vate conferences. telegrams would arr^va ■ • for one or the other occasionally,: and thee® would be considered briefly and promptly answered.- -As the telegraph, meesengerwonldhoriy opto the gen tlemen with a imespsge <the curious loekera-on wduld prick dp their ears ebelter.of tlieniglit before. They had no trouble fn.frirnisbing the boud. THAT DISPATCH TO GRADY was a simple request to let them know ff they would ran any risk in getting 'aboard the West Point train yesterday that passed East Point at 2:30 o’clock (n the afternoon, and that If any offi cers were aboard they would uot take tfie train, but START IN THEIR BUGGY for West Point, a distance of 83 miles. Friends of theirs agreed upon a signal to be mode known os the train ap proached. Mr. Hoke Smith got aboard n the car-shed and as the train roiled into East Point, signalled Captains Howell and Jaokson that there were nooffieeraaboaidandtogeton. This they did,, and were carried into the significant movement, bat they 'saW no more than a business like dispatch of private business.' 1 v.- >>.2 t.i’J - AFTER TEA; The party took tea together at the Kimball house. Col. Lockett shortly after left the hotel and was seen no more during the evening. Governor Smith remained with them until shortly after 11 o’clock, when Colo nels Lamar and Hanson walked to the hotel counter and received their valises and dusters. • They bade their friends “good-bye,” and announced that they were : “GOING H^ME." ■*< They went to the depot and boarded tiie Central trai iv, whiclt leaves, after midnight. Taking seata in,the sleep- ! ol;,MORE ORDERS TO ARREST. Yesterday afternoon Sheriff Perker- son, after consultation with Mayor EnglUh, telegraphed to Fairburn and learned that Howell’s party were on the train. He telegraphed the officers at LaGrange and West Point to arrest them on arrival, and hold them until * he could arrive. An attempt was made aLboth places to make the arrest bat the parties were securely secreted in the baggage car, and escaped the detection of the officers, and arrived safely in West Point. West Point, July 6,10 a. m.—Cap tain Howell and party arrived here yesterday afternoon. At seven o’clock yesterday evening they were on the ground agreed upoa, and are there now waiting the arrival of the Lamar L. West Point, July 6,2 p. m.—Cap tains Ho veil and Jackson are on the west side of the Chattahoochee river near West Point. The Lamar party are not here nor have they been heard from, though they were notified by wire and mail lost night. L. The Latest—We received the fol lowing telegram from the Evening Herald at 7 o’clock lost evening: Atlanta, Ga„ July 7.—Lamar is in MaSon; Howell returned to the city this morning, after staying in Ala bama twenty-four hours. No further developments. It is thought they will make a new appointment and fight later. Two tickets to be voted for here to-morrow, one headed for Stephens and the other for Judge Bleckley. - 1 Snilca8ton«. Ail immense water moccasin was killed recently near Albany. Ga., having in ills month a ratfish eight inches long. The snake had seized the fish by the head, unfortunately for him. There are two 'Mg fins on the head oi a catfish, and this fish -tuck these fins into each jaw of the serpent, which was thus rendered pow erless to either swallow or relinquish its ptey. , Two racers five feet in length attacked a Mrs. Camden, of Lexington, Va., while on her way to a spring. One fastened itself arouud her ankle; the other en deavored to reach her neck. She fought them off with a bucket. Her cries brought her son to her aid. One ofthe shakes then attacked the young man, bnt he speedily killed it with ids hoe ing oar they »talked together,, until *nd then went to the relief of his mother berths were prepared, when they appa- and killed the othei snake also. refitty “turned in” for. a good, sleep daring the ride home to Manoa^ ,1. ON the watch. Ut In 'the toeatetitiieilayi* "English, | coiled ready to spring. Noticing i . •NSDfeij.'Ln-"’LL'-Li toil'llall 1 I ihfil fhfl ornilru Irmlfm! nnonmmAtiltf lowm A' Georgia paper says that Sanders Hyatt, of Covington, some years ago Shot the head otf a rattlesnake which hall'. Alderman l)owry came in for a Phased the squirrel, which running close few moments, but held no converse- | tiie snake, had been snapped up just tion With the It was moOted- one tinae to' send | before Hyatt arrived on the scene. NEIGHBORING NOTES. Front the Hartwell Sun. Mr. John W. Scales is quite sick and "officer® upon the same train) armed witli authority to^WjutiS^Coliff La mar and Hanson should they endeav- , ,or to lrave the train getWeen Atlanta hot expected to live long. Since the and Macon, /and .take conveyance above was put in type, we learn that Mr- across the country in the direction , of Scales died last Sunday. West Point. This, was abandoned, 1 Uncle Billy Manley is 80 years old,and however,-and the tralnjpulled out of j goes to mill on foot, a distance of ‘"three miles, carrying on his back a turn of two bushels of grain. the shed without any'officers being on | board. c-i "til*-JhIL 'idi sisii **•—*•«*■,-oh.™,-™,*.*. eraon were, at ‘odist church will convene at Flat Kock, We learn that Mr. Winestock, of j ] Greenville, S. C., contemplates opening I a new store in Hartwell soon. late as midnight, but could geVna ntr rAugust 17th plies to the:telegrams.sent ,to -LS'I ^ a Grange and West Pointand intended | to cause the detention of the Howell | party,' io ai,ii«a->iaiv .I-.. .1/rats morning u<<y i, ,i| Hon. A.G. McOurry,of Hartwell, will there Is deep anxiety., tu hear what be a candidate to represent Hart in the the parties are doing and on every aide [ next assembly, are beard regrets that there cannot.be !■ Frontu jacUon limid. either an amicable settlement OK even * BUI Davis, a bottle of rot-gut whiskey, 'forcible prevention of:tiW[a0»ire-,,i., 4, ^ tiie Harmony Grove mail got so . CHANGE of TACTICS. »ij ,. V | 1 badly mixed up last Tuesday that we straightened and Macon< July fitbi Ma^iPrHJol- fm- failed to get it off here. W. H. Heard, B' , aiu to the ground‘d x*ar and Hansou i arriVSti itoto. this I who is the regular mail agent, althongh ’ morning from Atlanta,: and,, both are la colored man, has given satisfaction, iniheclty.., J am unable to wirp you but when he goes off on a pleasure tour whether or not,; they, jee,V0 .for Weet I imposes this reprobate of a Davis on us, Point to-night? i-tv.,! .) il ell /. H- j and it is intolerable; we have Justus The oonductor of the train which 1 much of him os we can bear, left Macon early thlDtnornlng Informs The contract to build tho Hurrican the 1 Herald that fie met Col. Lamar Shoals bridge was let out on last Mon- at the Brown house in that dty this | day. It was knocked oft" to Mr. Cheely mbraingl '‘Col; Lamaf- hod -Just ar rived on the train from Atlanta. - It seettU frokff the infonhatlon’atl hand that CoL' taifair , k l friends 4 de- for Saratoga Springs, New York, mat ed of hfs being able- to" leavC At- tend the National Teachers’ Association lahta Mfely'ahd ^et/tb the klipblnted of America. He has been selected as plkco withoutafrest. It trai'the Nap 1 rone of the orators of that Important ocea- for fourteen hundred and ninqty-three dollars. ProC. Glenn will leave in a few days on determim the Hbwell he >haa kn ax to grind. jnsu.eeslawyera (felling a whole poor darkey has been moving mday,:and .the lawyers cannot slLidlf by and see the Sth command- inentvtotated witboattreating. When yon see afannar In town wo often, that you hardly miss him from' the streets, to communicate with sion. and 'arrange for a r time and place: to Macoh'dnd a Wait Married, Mr. M. C. Roberts, of Hall county, and Miss Armlnda Armstrong, of this county. Messrs. Fred and Jeff McCleskcy, of commencement. trie It 1 , , Of his Intention,'atid that both‘{ferrite propose to bariy the affair to the pro- poted'end;-'"--' 1 iSfemliw inluuiii wi' Howell anH jaokson’arrested. In *tlie : Herald yesterdaywe stated tllite' i efent»iW*" , ritostofil‘toRl»> < Iittoiii>i l WEto pwriilitedfroin taktng’the'nigfat I lustltuto commencement leaned towards train at'EaSt point, foy^the tiinely ar-1 the (esthetic. Mitimffpp noilfolnff #li he abates nothing A ^ hen8 ’ tookinc I'fL.t -fedh'til.Ii.,* I- The death of Mr. W. O. Hood was a sad and unexpected occurrence to most of our citizens." The hack line betweeu hero and the railroad Is doing a good business, i fend’ yeekbon | The decoration of the stage at Martin rlvfil thht thW Offitere itesto lntiw train tot artrtet them. The tnessstigeffiplfoted shelter where they from fer off come to WaLi g PP n yon‘mast know that tire Will Jookcteaner during her sUy to? ^ff- .fimlia post no ooi working at some wagJeoifrl 3lBlk2Gi>«re»te better afford to give onpr dollar cents tbs hamisi twoo’t^do^ •o much work here. They were working with a hearty and seem determined to loet time by putting In extra licks. mry assumed «htf telegiEphJ Office at Rast Botnt by negro,driver. gfUBosnjiteatedyol JbCMa) Herald. Mr. Richard Green, of this place, haj4 pened to tbe misfortune of having his they j left leg broken last Thursday. He was jpaorp-1 kicked by e horse which he was driving, lover- being at tbe same time seated in his buggy. ’’A considerable rain fell at Clnrkesyille last Tuesday evening. -Dr. A. P. Houston has the handsom- est residence in Clarkesvllle. Lightning’s Freak*. , -A* Joseph Hall stood admiring his _ . cattle neariTallabassee, Fla., nine of b* ptetyu [, Hwatetognlz^d-j them Ml dead, struck by lightning. .IJghtnlng splintered a big oak tree If front of George Beddlnffeld’s house Rt Charleston, S. C., and hurled a half ton frmgmeqt througn the house. ifo, oi iJMpfea Howell by edroitlyfoltawfeigths<negaD<iHe gr- K thetfeHyjCsifeiHalMto Ijeeu » “the ^aUiyteUoB), J3toy-de* km ~AD, 7T" TTAM •; *»twbi8ii cotititffion innn g»nwnw phu*'& e,> ’ di8,nfect w,th til™ 0 ’* 1801 * , rhlto ploughing Rear Opelonsas, La., a few days since, struck a ten-gallon jar, filled with simmmi uuius of-rene of tme rftm amount Is estimated at $8,000 to $10,- ooo, rTfer*AW.n(ife4»iiM:'. m m. / j London, Jtdiy ' dispatch to Ren- Iffjtffijdril ddmpsny from. Moscow -a tbe sadden death of General £ the fambna Russian general^ aVthb hotel DrfBssux there. to be carrledite a rasjistral ,The brad of tbe soldier that sur- “ | mounted the monument in. the state ^ house grounds at Columbia, S. C-. was I out off. by lightning on the 22d inst., 'andthe base of'the monument was ,d in thesattV 11 ". A1; JJ ox tJI m it;, l! q, FIVE HUNDRED EACH. listed) And with^sn «* t to red They "Wallace Hill, of Paris, Texas, drove | his horse under a tree in a storm. Lightning struck and killed him.' A I picture or the branch of the tree under I which he bad taken shelter H I iaiy photographed across his V I the 'hKiliiuTiMli i was vi v- bresstia