Newspaper Page Text
>note Her hur
ried manner, and who had liked that
little lace, anxious and tad as its express
ion was.
The dew had fallen. Kate had fallen,
too, almost. A rough atone by the way,
imbedded in moss, received her tired
frame. She looked ao worn and tired*
sitting there, her tangled hair falllng^n
her hands that were clasped over ner
face. Ity the shaking of her frame the
tears were coming, too, and she was
bravely trying to kedp them back.
‘•Why, what is the dear little girl do-
ingliere?" The exclamation came flora
a pair of young ilps.
“A curiosity, 1 declare!" exclaimed a
harsher voire, and Katie, looking up
suddenly, cowered aWay from the ght
of the young lady and her agreeable
looking companion.
•‘What are you doing here,.littWglri?’’
asked Nellie Maywood, moving •< little
nearer towards the frightened child,
"Going, Miss, to Singling,' 1 still
Kate. . . .
‘ Why, George !fMd child is going to
to Sing-Sing—ten miles off. Child, did
you know it was so far off?”
Katie snook her head,and wiped away,
the hot und heavy tears, one by one.
"Why, you little goose, what are you
going tc Sing-Sing for? Have yon had
your supper?” .
Katie shook her head.
"Have you had your dinner?’’
Again the child shood hei head.
“No breakfast? ’Why, George, the
poor thing must be half starved
"I should think so," mechanically re
plied her brother, just recovering from a
yawn and showing signs of sympathy.
"I.ook here, what'e your name! Well,
girl, you must come up to the house and
get something to cat. Follow me, and
we’lftake care of you to-night somehow,
and see about your going u, Sing-Sing
to-morrow.” *
Kutle followed. What a glorious vis
ion burst upon her view 1 The palatial
house; the rocks reddening in the low
western sun; the shining river; the
signs of luxury on every hand.
"Susan, give tills chlldagood supper;
she is hungry, and tired too, I imagine.
After that I will mm what can be doue
for her."
Susan wore a mild face. She looked
pleasantly down at the poor, tired little
one, and taking tier haud, which trem
bled now, led her into the kitchen.
Meanwhile her story, or that brief
part of it which we know, was being told
in the drawing-room. The sylph-like
tigure in white, lounging gracefully in
the midst of delicate cushions, aceora
paiiled her narration with expressive
gestures, and now and then a little
laugh.
"•should like to know what she is
going to Sing-Sing for!” she said, lean
ing languidly buck. "We must look her
up something to wear—a bonnet, a pair
of slices, and then may be we can man'
age to have hur carried some distance.
Oh! such an odd little thing.”
"Who is that, my daughtor?”
"Oil, papa, you arc come home! Why,
I was talking about a little mite of a
child: she can’t be more than ten, if
that. I saw her out here, sitting on a
moss rock, the most forlorn object. She
says she is going to Sing-Siug.”
"1 met her on my way,” said the
pleasant faced cld man; "she asked me
about it, and I would have stopped her,
but she trudged on. Where is she? I t
was noon when 1 saw her."
'•In the kitchen, papa. Susan is tak
ing good care of her, 1 think, and when
she lias had a hearty supper we will talk
with her.”
A gay trio of young girls came in.
The nettings were put up, the gas was
burning brightly, and music and mirth
banished all thoughts of care. Suddenly
Nellie Maywood remembered the odd
litthi figure, and clasping her hands said,
"Oh, I've something to show you, girls!”
and disappeared.
Susan was packing gooseberries near
the pantry in the kitchen.
"Where is the child, Susan ?” asked
Nellie Maywood.
“On the doorstep, Miss.”
"Why, no, Susan, there's nobody to
beseem - ’
"No! Miss." Susan placed her pan
down, held her apron np to catch the
stems of the berries and walked deliber
ately to the door.
“Why, she sat there sometime after
supper. I turned and came In; she was
silting there, looking up, up at the stars,
1 expect. I thought she was a mighty
<iuiet child, but she’s deep, deep, Mtss
Nellie; she’s gone. Let me see, there
ain’t any silver around—I should be
afraid she’d took something; they're
mighty artful.’’
"Why didn’t you tell, her she might
stay all night?” Nell Maywood was
peeping here and there to spy her if pos
sible.
"Yes, Miss Nell, and told her what a
good lied there was over the woodshed;
hut she looked strange out of them large
eyes of hers.”
"Thu poor jhild is in trouble,” said
Nell, quite sorrowful that she could not
' farther relieve her necessities. "I’d
have given her something to wear, and
wo could ha to sent her to Sing-Sing; and
jierhaps she will come back again—if ao,
will yon send her to me?"
“If she does, 1 will, Miss,” answered
Susan, goiugtothe gooseberries again.
But little Katie did not come back.
She had been'watching her opportunity
to get off, and already been gone some
time. She slept in an open field; crawl
ed in some hay; she would have walked
all night If site had dared, but she was
afraid of the darkness. >
"Mr. Warden .there's a queer case over
at my house,” said a bluff-looking man,
meetiug the warden of Sing Sing prison.
“We found her last night in some out-of-
the-way place, and nothing would do but
my wife must t*ke Ipsr in. Wpqfn’tplQd
out her name, except that it la Kate, and
f Septet that she wanw-to see somebody
Inprlscn But we can't get anything
out of h*r«»wljefp she’s come from or
anything sboqtjt,”
“Bring hoe over heft,” said the war
den—"my wife la wautlag s liitle girl
for help; maybe she's,!ust the one.”
So Kate stood. trembHiig more than
over, In a few momenta in the presence
. of the warden and jailor. Kate was a
her hair had been nicely combed and
carted, and some one had put a good pair
of shoes on her feet.
“Weli, my little girt,” said the
den kindlyr—for he was prepossessed in
he? l avo* - —'* wfocre ^ave you come from ?**
ji convulsed,
M
come
toot?”
“Yes, sir,” said the child, fright
at his manner, which had fn It somki
of severity. ,
“And what have you come for?”
“To see my father.” The child burst
forth with one »reat sob, and for amo-
ment her little frame was shaken wlta V
tempest of feeling.
"And who is your father?” asked the
warden, kindly.
“He is Mr. Loyd,” said,the child, as
soon as she could speak for her rushing
sobs.
The warden looked at
"Loyd; there are (hi
Jim, Bondy and Bick,'
"That may not beV '
responded the warden.
“That’s so,” said the jailor, “but I
can try ’em all. Little one, was your
father’s name Jim?”
The child nodded her head, or they
thought she did; she was all convulsed,
“ ' “ n brought onb/ ' ;J ‘'~
’a a bad one,
jailor, iu a low voice; "he’s in irons this
morning for ’tempting to break jail; he
don’t deserve a little gal like that one,
the villain. Come, child, 1’U go and And
your father.’,’
He took Kate’s shaking hand; with
the other she dashed the tears away as
fast as they fell. It frightened her al
most into calmness to see the ponderous
door at which the jailor applied the
great key, and the stillness of the stone
passages; the dimness thrown over all;
tlie constant succession of bars and
bleak, black walls were terrible to a sen
sitive mind like hers. How the heavy
tread of the jailor and the tread of the
warden behind him echoed through the
gloom and the since 1 It was, in truth, a
great tomb through which they moved
—a tomb in which were confided living
hearts—whose throbs could almost be
heard in the awful stillness. On, on
they went, now through that passage
way and then through the other. Every
thing spoke of crime—of fierce passions
subdued and held in stern control—
everything, from the grim face of th*
ferocious watchdog to tho sentinel
armed. , ; jf j
Then the turned away and went up
the stairs, the jailer holding the scared
bird close to his side with a tender clasp,
the warden following. Another tramp
and at la3t they came to a stand still.
The jailor rapped at a cell door. Slowly
the figure of a man, with a harsh, hair-
covered face, appeared.
"Here’s your little girl come to see
you,” said the jailor.
■ “Little girl 1 hem 1 you’re green,” said
the uiau, in gram accents. "I’ve no lit
tle girl,or you wouldu’t catch me here!"
"Father,” said the childish voic*. It
sounded so sweet, so childish in that
terrible prison. But as his scowling
face came close to the bars, the child
hid her head quickly in the jailor’s arm,
half sobbing, it wasn’t him.
“Well! try the next,one.>j
“He walked farther on, anti' spoke
more pleasantly this time:
“Well, Bondy, here’s little Katie;
don’t you wan’t to see her?”
"Little Kate—” there was a long
pause. "I had a Kate once—not a little
Kate; I broke her heart—God pity me!
Goon, It can’t be for me.”
Agatn the sweet voice rang out:
“richer.”
The prisoner came up close to the bars;
a youthful face, framed with light wavy
hair—a face in which tifo blue eyes look
ed Innocent—a face that it looked a sin
to couple with a foul deed, gazed out.
It was a child’s earnest, pleading, tear
ful eyes; a dark expression rolled like a
wave across his brow; a groan came up
from his bosom, and with a low mdan he
staggered across his bed, crying:
Take her away; 1 can’t stand the
sight of anything pure like that.”
Katie had hidden her face a second
time as she feebly cried, “It isn’t him
so they kept on to a third cell
“Jim, here’s your little girl—Kate,
your daughter, want’s to see you."
A stupid "what?” came from the bed;
the man had probably just awakened.
"Your little girl."
There was a sound of rattling irons
that made the girl shiver. Dimly ap
peared the lace and outlines of a well-
made man—the countenance handsome
but evil. He seemed not to comprehend.
But as fast as the chains wonld permit
him*, he came forward and looked at the
anxions face below.
With a loud convulsive cry s'
dai^dt ’'Father! fatheri” ant
neatf yrenaeleas against the jailor.
".Kitto?” exclaimed the man', anti
there was a nervous twitching around
the muscles of the mouth; “Whatever
has brought her here? 1
The jailor was calling the child to
consciousness.
“Shall we let her come In there?," ask
ed tlie warden.
Jim was dashing his hand across bis
face. A smothered “Yes,” Issued from
his lips. They opened the ponderous
door and put the child within. Heranns
were outstretched, his were wide open,
,and they came together with a clanking
sound—together about the form of that
poor little child,
"Oh, Katie, Katie!” and then there
was a quiet crying. By and by, the man
lifted the little head, whose glossy curbs
were falling on his shoulders—and oh
what a sharp rattle of chains smote on
the ear—and looked In her face. After
a moment’s irresolution he kissed her,
d then his eyes fell under her earnest,
nglook.
“jkatie, wbat made you come?”
“Wanted to see you, fattier,” and the
head was on his shoulder again.
“How did you come, Katie? Never
mind the poise, they are locking up;
they will be here again and let ynuent.”
“I walked here."
“From New York, child?”
“Yea, father.”
, There was no sound save that of the
chain* a* he strained her closer to his
bosom.
’‘And how did you leaye—her,
you? mother?”
The. question was fearfully asked, but
not responded to. He gazed eagerly hi
the Child’s face. 3er little Up was quiv.
crtnfc.
“Katie, Ml me quick!”
“She died, father.”
1 A groan—a terrible groan—followed;
the man’s bead fell in the lap of hta
child, and ho wept with strong cries.
The jailor and the warden said that they
never Caw a sight ao woeful. And the
child tried to comfort him till his strength
•VbhjthUia bard; very bard; she al
ways forgave me;”
“She told me to pray for you, too;
she tola ine to ask yon would yon be
cam. out, andmeet
“InHeaven! lift Heaven?” groaned
waa better for his soul’s good than the
atr^p ^nd $e;c|tetoS. He had been
Nwwd; her little lore bed melted
down tt}e adamant; hod found the good
looked up lb its nature, and eke bod sent
her sweet smiles through its prison door.
isMteMttMmaUs heod in Its* tap of
bis beautiful, quiet child. None dared
disturb him; jailor and warden walked
3 1 A IfH i i A *3ja3W
Father, when you oome out I’ll take
bi» bead, hft eyes red with
weeping, were fastened on her face.
“Mpthet said I might,’*J
“God’s blessing on you, my precious
child; you may save your miserable
father!
“I will, father.!! ; .
1*>ored .bis i throat v the
jailor spoke roughly to one of the pris
oners—it was to hide his emotion. “You
had better come now,” ho added, going
to the cell-.
“Kate, you must go; will you come
again, my child?”
“Can’t I stay, father?"
“No, dear; but you shall come and
see me again.”
They took her gently from the dark
cell; she sobbed very quietly. In.the
warden's room stood a pleasant-faced
old man.
“I have come alter that little girl,”
he said. “She most go home with me.
I’ll take good care of her. I’ve heard
her story, and when her father comes
out, if he’s a mind to behave himself,
I’ll give him plenty to do. Besides
that, I’ll bring her up once a week to
see him. What, say, little one, will you
go with me?” And good (old Mr. May-
wood stroked her hair as he said, pity
ingly, "Poor child! poor child!”
Ten miles from Sing-Sing prison,
there is now a little cottage occupied by
an industkms man and his daughter. Lit
tle Katie is fulfilling the command of
her dying mother. She is taking care
VefTas of herself.
THE ATHENS AND MADISON R. R.
Of** ffijfo *«M i* w*tkJM»hu
off
noting Judge J. R. Lyle, of Oconee,
as chairman.
Judge Itfle staled the object of (be
meeting.
On motion of Copt. R.D. Jackson,
ol Oconee, Messrs. E. R. Kinnebrew,
of Clarice, abdM^. W. Butler, of Mor-
•gon. were requested' to act ns secreta
ries.
The delegations from the counties
lisb and his aids, th
ceeded to the First
•y- a**Bb c
the published
the pro!
_ Altar aJMUgk prayer %,'RsLh.H
Tucker, the services were suspended un
til tnejienediction should -be pCMfounc-
was a long and solemn one; As
ed its way. torOaklnnd cewei
As ft wen
(tan
the grave.
^ thk
Ind
iana cemetery, the
streets and windows along the route
were thronged densely by the sifoht and
eongwingpumlg. ►, k e—
At the grave the ceremonies were
brief, and at their close the roujAclods
of tlie valley fen upon the ktndiWR earth
of What had once been a form <* majes
ty lBumined by the grandest of human
In addition to the dgtegjttfoiurpresent
and previously noted fhere came with
Senator Pendleton, from Cincinnati,
lion. Mike Ryan, presidenkol tlie board
of aldermen, Captain E. T. Williams,
representing Mayor Means, add Hon.
Theo. Cook, president of the CifiChinati
Southern railway. They.''were--given
special assignments in the cortege.
THE EGYPTIAN ST
Tb* Arabs Cut th* Vrmuh Water Canal at Fort
Said. Arrest of Prominent Xfyptlnaa. Nine*
teen Plundering Creaks Arrested, of Whom
Ten are Shot.. r ^
lytt^l^^lghiitei
and Zulakar Pasha, of tlfly'TctaAive’a
household, .who had ijtaiiAd the
cauAof Arabl Posha. qjjQJtary
polie.hssMgieiied nineteen’Greeks
who were pillaging in tba^ratavfuai
ter ip Ismaiila. Tbft or tb^pi^kaners
1- ‘ The water in fh&frrehwa-
I follows:
„ county—J. G Bostwick, P S
Reuben S&ffold, W R Mustin, P R
Thomason, P W Butler, John Knot,
BE Anderson, T L Nolan, John Sto
vall, Thomas Head, James T Stovall,
IH Foster, M E High, BH Overby,B
M Blackburn.
Clarke county—W D O’Farrell, G H
Yancey, E R Kinnebrew, T L Gantt,
5 M Hunter, J Cohen, W B Thomas,
T W Rucker, J C Orr, J E Tolmadge,
J J Baldwin, W B Burnett, George D
Mason, A Long, \V B Langford, E H
Dorsey, J Hamilton, G Hamilton.
cniintj?—T* ■MJTnddrfll n T \\
Johnson, J E Murray, Thomas Mid-
dlebrooks, W W Price, J B Lyle, G C
Thomas, L L Fambrough, J A Price,
John Whitlow, F Jackson, G H L
Thurmond, A B Jackson, RJC Jack-
son, W Y Elder, Henry Jennings,
Frank Griffeth, James Mlddlebrooks,
G P Elder, H M Fullllove, If C Par
rish, Robert Moon, W- J- Thornton, A
Jackson.
■e then made by L. T.
Morgan, Hon. V W. B.‘
ke, ’who read a' letter
Thomas to W. W.
h. Y. 'C. Foster, of Mor-
The following resolutions were then
uffisred by Mr. F. C. Foster, of Mor
gan, and adopted:
Retolted, That a railroad can and
aught tabs built from Athens to Mad
ison, and that it 1s a duty the men of
Clarke, Oconee and Morgan owe to
themselves, their wives and their chil
dren to build It.
Knotted, further, That the chairman
’ this meeting appoint a committee
r fifteenfrum sold counties to solicit
for the purpose of build-
and that sold eommit-
lmmoneiies
kMAAtlBritf
store MiftA
i wa&K'*t'pl
ILmAUMI 1 I Bit ****“« -tal* 4
jot© tna loronsic renown#
j.a*jt
Ana and win
That was li
*aw him thus
ter chan nelisfalUng peredptll
mailte. It Is feared that Aral
has lUvetted its course. "Tbrrwjmal
company have issued ancBTOs icquest-
ing economy In the use of thejvater.
The iraljs have occupied^Fbi "* i ”
miieh, and are erecting entaeacl)ments
In the * i*‘ij>tei lim i»-
mollia to Reuter’s TelegradTeompany
reports that tLe Egyptians -bave cut
tbelfesh water canal near.there, but
states that the supply of water will
suffice for somi
A system
Pasha’s camp,i
discovered.
New^ at
cles
mini
join . , .„
testing agalustthe protection
canal being confided to
Wolseley Intel
into the interior at once,
is befog rapidly lair
tion find the quay.
The Austrian .gunboat
bound front Pori 8aid to
passed Aboukir Monday,
mander seeing a white
Aboukir forte, supposed th:
in possession of the Briti
boat ashore .with
who were made prisoner!
tlans. A private toll _
ondrfa, dated to-day, si
Nile is rising rapidly, am
overflow its banks. ‘An
of low points has commem
the great chords of
the American‘heart with almost unut
terable sympathy, and its sobbing vi
brations made a spontaneous and indig-
uant wail through the land. It was fit,
sir, that Georgia officially take her place
in that funeral, and she did so from her
heart In this chsmber her legislative,
executive and judicial departments of
government—the mayor and council of
this bercapital city, and her citizens-gen
erally, assembled, and Georgia’s voice
was beard In the general lamentation.
But Garfield, Mr. Chairman, was not
Georgia’s child. He was the son of one
of her sisters, and as one of a great fami
ly she sorrowed then. To-day she
grieves with a mother’s love and a moth
er’s anguish. She stands now by tlie
b!er of her own boy—the offspring of
her womb whoee cradle she rocked,
whose early footsteps she vratohed as
only a toother can watch’a son, in whose
growth ttfe ’she ttpanded. too, in parent
al pride* idd in the altitude of- Whose
fame rteigloried o» her oWn.
Wel, W!*M» w W ! VCfoaa, mother
forget bar sucking child?” is thq ques
tion Jehovah put to manifest his un
speakable love for the children of men.
Mr. Hill sacked everything which made
him great from the breast of Georgia.
He was all Georgian. Phj sically, intel
lectually, morally he was Georgia’s own
son. In the midst of the great red belt
Which encircles the body of the state
from the Savannah to the Chattahoochee
—her rich, red cone—near the geogmph-
" nl center—the very core of her heart-
la eyes first saw the light, and the blood
hich fed his magnificent physique
owed from that heart which now throbs
dth anguish over his remains. Intel-
^ tally, he waa her own son. An alum-
ofher University, there he sucked
Intellectnal nourishment, and Athens is
tears now while Atlanta weeps. If
hung upon his Ups Georgia bees
it from her own flowers and
gWtwmig'W
_ V 7 - *
a^’wfiW-
edkfcari—and f fcioW’yUUV Mr, dhd ail
kMfj iwrttetetottfit'frajfcw rvuifere
itisNVaSliington fktriJ-'WHd oompaied
«M maflr tfithW strong?‘foa&sive dak, Ms
ktfe tothrtinmSushhd tttoder vihe tMt
claspshll ’the'tertdrils'or he? 9ovfi higher.
Young Candler Woe ih the H
visiting V certain faniliy tn Banks
county,-who lived severhl nfites frodi
his father’s home. Harvfhg to work
lrr the : field all day, AHeti gatierelly
a* the time to utake-W«
glftW-JriuJrf, thUntad&e^epabttion of
being haunted.' A half dokk tdttie
boys In the neighborhood, ufideV Uss
leSdersTilp of' a yoO«4g , ‘djku,
nSade » pit* t&ifiti ttieltfokly pede»-
tain night, and as the little fellow-tom
Wr ■PMfi-fW.flTHWP Jfrf
MS 1
Instant a figure. draped li| wpl^|, vr^i
afiffalokiy atakhed'to-
“The boys who wefo Tyttg
UaMl 'eipected- fo'Hee'Gfctlffier
take to hi* beds in afb^pAll^MIkit
•tot- »«■!*?■ Jirtdll*
hickory oidgeL TbaiMlMdl
for the fduxit, who, seeing that the
.tseenH " ‘
ials between Arab!
d Alezandrla baa been
^respondent of (he
bears in ofi$l^cir-
,t the government has di
express its
" betwi
fascinated ‘attention and
<M ,|B8gicbr ft’s
tuusic, that silver was dug from. Georgia
min^s beneath her own red htlfo If the
sword of. hla logic wielded, for her in -Die
senate chamber of the union flashed and
Cut likb'a Damascus blade, the material
wls UeA/gla steel, rnanufi
tempdredlbf Wer owix WdikS^ofie. 1H
i Steel.
lifer own *diktell<
broad shield which he raised there in
her defense, and In that of all the south,
stated aw
andwhen*h6'fell, 'She fell-tod. Alii
still the teudnls’ -clasp the dead- trank.
Poor brokert 1 , ’bruised, hlUeding vlne!
Unclasp t!>*r embrace, > The no We tree
is nottherd.'‘ A' divine hind Hah trans
planted him to a richer soli; a pUrer at-
mosphere. Lift those tendrils hptotdi
Ere long tlie same divine, gentle, lovlnff
hand Will mcA-U thee again to'his sloe,
and lie, who ,: pronounced you one hmc,
riiH WUaHw jku' taeta, togravr together
forever in therheaniy* of hoUncss-.’hi the
garden of the’Lord. ■* »’» ,l
THE ADVANC& O^.BStUg-. '
SI Brilliant Fight BatwMh th* British and Arab!
, u .•‘A’!Oeward th» jctatlty.,
LGNDOjr, August '21^-Tlife traops
landed from the taanaporte-' which ar
rived Sunday were immediately sent
sfiSteSwarg
noon along Mahmoudleh hArAl by
Thirty-eiglith, the Forty-ninth, the
Beve&tjTdftM «MB*«SMntyfoUth
regiments. The enemy kept within
hhi.intr^cfopepta^.folb^gbeHhMAhe
^ ehel teil3effe^uatiy "di the 4
of.the Forty-sixth ta tail try, u
comt IIUIU
eLDwor-r Some eevalry also app
etatataF#tw»dk»WWliH>i ttMMMMk
leisures oftbeir-borseton Ab*
iron-clad Trier sent out.a
, |^hof
:jS§|jgKaEgga
| Kbits people wonld >bokt comp meet*
o^|14 Uwt offer M
^ meeting called %
irday brought together about 700,
-^nk'Whotefwere&boiitlSO negroes.
bo»t bearing the papers read, almost
f t *iMWMmp«a vote decided that
* turtplent and dan-
? demanded hta immediate death.
® TP&^WWdlogly h«ng at 1.16 p.
wqa quiet on Saturday night.
" prisoners are ptlJl in jail to
lier developments.
1 'y $PBEM RgSWWAT!OW.
’. j. <#W»4TtU!,mrK.
.^Axubijs,. August 34,—The references
'R m JpU .latter to Dr., Speer’s resigns-:
*fSR> ??Wi!fl¥F^ io vP^diPP. kttlc comment,
ftefc die Doctor in-
flpe.WRfct* and if spJ. wopl*
;f*t I .taMngd frum
P T M° ft® j students tbet bonevqr
< , etfi4Jee.t»res to bi*. classes. This
J W[ WiV ffW-1: PReftdie otlier points
be no mUw
iJtejm ew’.regwt more thaw I
ity ,for making these facts pub-
r wS5S&Lum swiaa-a*,**!,
of «Mb oad oH ot aoid committees to
mgybefovoiOUe totbla
Amended by inclnding Walton find
W1NTERV1LLE
Acquilla pftard is the ‘'Ireuku
Travdler.” _
Mr.J. M. Sims we learn bos been
down on a visit.
Phil Davis will get a gqod vote in
Madison county. j j,
Tlie army worm has attacked acorn
field of Mr. John Winters’
The weather is si
derwin be cured wl
The exhibition of
my will be held'next Thu:
nlng.
Mr. James GunnrisdfM'vdl
ty, who has been criucz^A^, Is im
proving.
A Thanksgiving sei4fm »1
st Moore’s Grove cbnrcbfDta
dsy morning at ten o’ck&c.
Cotton is feeling the efffc-ffc of the
hot days wears having, Infoheddlng
fruit and opening prematurely;
Rowland la a devout young {pan.
He attends church regularly in this
section. ButQeorgsfoever jjgasCTfcd
McAlpin will ItavsTbe
lished in the county papers of Morgan,
<■ J. R, LtvLa, Chairman.
in heightqrosi
1 France to Jean Lameau by hfefath-
i to.ba sxUWtsd fo a booth. Hta
iideaiufestab-
Uks tigers, and giving fire dwarf
.compiled him by kicks and
ineiiimdtfored twin: shells upon .the:
(. wb.oendeavqred to execute.
frustrated, fired towards Kafr el Dtor.
Egypttawt.repltad ,iwith sholl*i
JvJSBaasar
pfodediihstaiXM train between/*!**
trettred withe
«i^.tbi« ^ret Guovgion wm
4> together Gtomtgtan, and while
tristhm <M eapaffd sndeptapon’ ttjr •
union in itawtato hisire, ids ■ heart
strings Clustered closest to the metbex
who was all.foall to him ! ’ ^
• True patriotism always dld r and always
kill, burfi brightest at the fireside,
rhence its rays will shine over all the
lahd afi4 Ktatm all the home within the
reach of its radiance to the remotest’vetgw
'jflwr Otaiitaasssmtoa. Jfcil bnraasti
>^at home, It will warm nothin
. Hill was Georgia’s own s«
church, under Gear;
i sparlfjroni[heaven felGr
I kindled tbpt humble faith
1 to hi;
I in i
Htheaoy with the Psalmist: “Thy
> run „ . T7 /s splritTnto . T ,.
own, mode the greater grandeur ottbe
.Sir, his career Was not uhlikd'l^e
course of the son in heaven—its morn-
of its ligttJuiMvuMMHm'uwrn-
>4#Huai9WtW iMWfiWNb bokUttte
W 0 ** 1 ^ 6
—.clarnjo at.reaerahile nomea—watched
fSHf
■ H“t I!III rMt!wnW*J»Wti “ IiTt m
and
the direction of Abou-
Ate. The oartaspoodent of Bsstarla
tefogtaWcomPapy at Alexandria tfd%-
tlon oft* ministry says: “In a troubled
time like the present, tho direct ate.
tlqnpf the aovefqlgu^plbooty sbteB4
3 mble the couneil of ministers under
y own presidency, os supreme chiqf
if the Egyptian, forces,- J alsq.lm
ffil
of war holds
m
which thdmi
i mo.’.’ A (dispatch, to
at Damahour, and that'
‘ eucbed ctunp dtiffustah, to which
>ace bewi}VmW>vp his headquartere.
)Urcre.<The-6ulp<^at Ra«nleh
tataretaffwp this'aftdrnhoi
A, fl Au|^w»«0,'7'#M.A
Cairy. firing It fiCrw-gattfij-on i
&&$nume
isPi.ilta'W 1 **4M iwlUiiai'f
JOMT
“There hasbouoa sw> with no spot
upon |ts disk
the son set
ly scenes. I
clouds
he draws the
couch,' ^
log’s'
is the IBM tt
clouds which
lei - w
Ir.
ig came, and
Port Jkrvis, August 21.—Chauncey
tade^Ilfe,' ttwvyoiifli totalv who -wait
shdt’yetaeifiaSr SffOMboSPtHhOte'rtafid-^
iaghrltasto>ffttariiqpaq«a]Jpte tt
tlie qffethsdgim hrifocb-bT a trth
Philip B. Ettlhg’s orchard, fiedf this
vttUg<pt«Mt tat-'Khta-thW* mottling
iltitofcameie\‘ftlent-Uist
bvififfreitoM mt aittst roof was 1
* \S5SESm
Maadfevilltftw
mevi
We
'st this place,
public improvements, our
the sldwest coach on the road.
fiSJJSEJte; to0 “"' fcr “
J^r^fipetr.fo ,!p» letters and Emory.
Speer in his speeches, openly charge the
bflsnljtf ftruafees gifo using their power
•to! 3 wMjteBywf** foe purpose of perse-
So for as the board'
«^telU»OTIbtaO cpnawred, they ,u* able
t<hteJte«rwf tlremreltea Among the
WW»teliPW«Bt»nd who voted tor Dr.
t<*apv*i,wre GoorgePieroe, th<
‘ _ i’fGtSgri;
Tnflofoe. 4, B- Eawton, ;Dr. I|. V, M
MWWnWtafea loading in-
< J 8RCfl^ent,and tl|« venerable Mark A.
CftOfter- lav ni halo#!# t }>,.» •*<*.,. •*<• : --.tt
charged tbese.gsn-
^“PPuPiib^pipkfog tter pockets or
Jfebin* thjfir.hsmrposts, methfoks thep
w «iW IffJusivMi TOt.to be believed., -,A
igWfmiatbat Abe charge
•blWiMff A*»tunws campaign in tho
1 . onigefiqSmosy,. nod to
1 >*VY# necessary that
intedCdlhff Jtastote made- public, if.
thopublfoaUoti of thorn injure Dr. Speer,
he bsahis sontothanktorit- Of Emory
htrinot^hvtawUis-rewtotelte-pcraecu-
fotjigff
‘ABelvitt
once attacked,and pat to flight, Ulik
karetaiff th h'l—Iwi'iiiiiPtoi ^wp.4n-
tamwaf ffkya AHog iqommteM jnp-
ttl>h4 hadmot'itod vrhjpped,the loot
one oi the plotters, Vfbooe names he
made his vanquished foe divulge wfajto
ho.was left unmolested.
- fclJSsv
scW' with A^ten ? Candte*^h4'h4
was one of the brightest Uoys he ever
skw. Cafadler wok always a little
dwarf, but ad lntellectakt gtatrt. When
4 little shaver bs has seen him colled
upon to address luge meetings, wad
he always responded In a style to bring
down the bouse wWh MfoJ**!*®* * r -
Hudson soys be ta hW® if meet any.
man on tbe stamp, and, jt. is a matter
Impossible to get him doyn. Hf dqpT
weigh much more, than t .hundred
nds, but half of tbat hundred is
ne and brains. Mr. Hudson
toys be knowii that Cfcl. Candler earn
ed with hta own hands motley to gt*d
himself h qrfendid education. d
Our nominee domes from OttVdug
the people, and the people Intend :t»
honor him. i Col. Csndlw is one man
in. lOrhons Mr. Speer and bis organ
can't find ai single.flaw. He bas.qver
been a democrat of the strictest sect,
and both bis public and private life
is, beyond reproach. ’ Wlille 'a mem
ber of the Georgia senate .Wwa? a
l.q*d|er bpdy, anfl wfeeh the
gentleman .from Hfll aroqe' lii ms
chair a perfect silence prevailed; for
tlie members knew they would have
the subject, unfdsr discussion. thor
oughly analysed. Whatever beiuur
dortakes ta well done. AliiCoL Gan- .
dtof-needsto insure aROvenrbslming
vlftot* to to go befoie thf people, that
‘Thte place, as to wsll known,
a ted about thirteen, mile* from,
vfiie.’ -.jk.ifiresmtiKWtaiofi.ataHit, tbre© ;
hours :ovecia rnftdcnttely good,wag,
road, tarings,y$u: in i sight, qf. tbto littfe
garden of Edea>tlbft fiiftobjcct to atj,
was lacompetency.
1
I
ikid
V glittering stream, stt sbsftdowed fere
* gggi^tah,Kygntatataiffitol amiiil
tstofs around. Farther bwifidhc distance -
^Wta^<.Ptai:la ( ,Gfoigtawoul4i 1 re%fca.«|tart»«
hayesver known that ^teal-csum, Nichols, and on ntaziag rt.'wd
aright Biy, placed in ft bed otflower8. Th
JDA Speer has greatly Injured himself' the left we see Uw old* Indian mound
" l I ' ‘ ‘ J " jl which has stood for ageft; bow contain- ,
ing jl summer house, and nrobcvbl v used
tegptoue.qi4utotwto«f tv-> «i ,„m„
Directing our steps but* *bor(,dto-
tapee: W to® tothoright, Mount Yon^b,.
towerjng farobove all «]se. Wf.go bft
a little way npt ita .ragged riope, *ndflui; ;
horses are exhattoted „ Wf (4^ from
our vehicles; seeure each s staff, and
commence our j
But ere tve make many
tlons kre affored, first by one then by 1 1
other, that 'fiiejf' will remain fintfl we re
turn. At last when our party iftafta;'
we haVe id' reality, a few Jentldmen, ‘
some chilfireii; and just to think, tW6
ladies, who alone are dxnntleas and dar
ing enough to brave the fatigue.--One:■
Miss M. T., a delicately mode girl, (and ;
fby thd way quite a pretty branetas-). -
takes the lead. Her companion, Miss*
I. Bo; not less fair, with cosy cheeksi*nd >
’the freshnesssf youth beaming on bar'.
face,.foUows close in the rear. Stcg af-
ter step, aud rest after rest, bripg^ u* ^|,
" ^ to “VaW'WWRis
by liis course-in thb matter. ' I enclose
you-atdflcbMr which he bas had printed
and distributed over the state. You Will'
sea frou-it that 'he has written to his
students-that be-Was “forced to resign by
a small minority of the ’wholeboard.”
I hove no fault tb find with the young
men for replying ks favorably US possl*
,ble^.influff;! do not well see how they
coulddowthnrwtoes ■ I hardly think Mr.
Gunn, Wfas to only a Junior, and not a
very large oneatthat, should claim that
be-“krio«* better than Shy of Uie trus
tees cat! know,'* and Mr. Hunnicutt’s to
p similar tatataffe// with the judgment
.of-the board of trustees ouone side, and
[that Of'these boys on the'other, it will
, not be difficult for the public to hrrive
. oti* eonehnloh.-.’If Dr. Speerreally
aiaTe-e.iar.Ti-n (Want* to Uy th«f focts before the public,
htthas vm ete I wooid suggest) that his nett cirfcttUr
include that famous Jutfior Colloquy. 1
would advise him, However; no! W'allow
a oopy to fafffo under the rye of Mr. AH-
thony CoMstoWd' Vi 0 * *i! i vf j ( - >«
(WFCttaCreiSfokfsr rktd U I regressing
adffllHlSly;" Fb^fhe flrit 'flme Surer Is
ohtata5a«eW»V« ‘Hewfil nwA- '—
tf ta#«^ufeV!th tffe loi
beable
eruirouguwitn tne loau he haS
V - Bjra"Wrenge coincidence liis
lit, Candler,: received the wound
.HUE CCSt’bim ills ejie in theoVlly battik
L? - *i«i h^WTiSpWr v-ks eve? ’in bfering of
WaHfatofbnh.' ^jieei' tori Vldfng along
with GrWfiV ttiW btfttefAillk rab-
ge/S-wha» i shot from a Federal ticket
siritehtfiArtynyink. This WaSfit Tones
boroiWltBeyMkythat'aftor that shot
tohUtataHtavk’piiyida g*m e of diafbietf
hfitaUffiWto '’tohtttalls'anywhere
thOto'nbB'Bttobif.-Inhtt firstraceSpie?
ififtYttfirbonstakBOWt fiffinillltary ser-
It aii ubbklStOd in’the aBoVb bril-
tfat&A * iaU U«JU* t Aa. »i
tlie
^pon.arocis wc ; fsat ourtail!v^ t j|ff^’ > ‘
toqgjffl 4 .frtflkjJjSwte
when! how,tantaitofog. Justjbeyopd cur t .
lock we discover a sparkling stream. ‘
flolribg troma wbk bfeiow, but alter nd
UidHal hand could rreCh it. f fio KkUHte 11 '
loi! slid'the groped; 'we thfok beaf’to* -1
l«j heave'It 1 Mbhe. ' l «W turning eif 1 ' 1
thoiigiitto thb'tofeherjr'OrOiind we cjiA' ;
ibictaiffi: Ob! how beaatifuVhOw* 5 '
Itoignlffidint, snbllmC. btit none of •
words sewed to sxpteH.ons.^fr
ligh^saUksiliUfoohitorennifriapped.
ourihaod*, afldwifoAUnaniniettt .votes* ;■
•totateda-aNotl for. worids nftoqMlVtei
itta missed, ifo? Jwst thlsky ta frqat ot ^
■tandstoioftntsiii; oitev ftMVstain'. ,To.,ri
„ the lofts gold mine. ^Utos kill and gawis
,fe‘r 'lines, and on every tide btuetah no,.for i
I' 1
ioi 1 tnilesand miles, the plains and volleys.
the Infuriated
youngmenfrom Athens to settle In our
^ Wst- He U looking aronnd 4 sndto
l ench we have plenty of rooff-
. Composed of the best kno
win . . I Itupif ^wtaftnd inchons, with veiMuunu
aromatics, is Brown’s Iron Bitters. It
troubles.
sufferer say, as be srid to me, never had
i presidency
uud two deaths.
&<Chhi« J '#eMf
yejlow fever
l stiintanttll astasibi i:
rhUw ttarir sws-.,X
i WULshMUi jrnnoa ltofia »,# iad«
Uni stoiSq* xto I** * - ' : irtfto-i
ut ThfoMS sstpsnt,. Whtoh haa-aot beeuild
seenle Atnwicanwstsrs tors year pata, tf.
to again being vo«Mtadd|tar by pstapafttt :
where, veracity cannot be impeached,
Ki