Southern weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1881-1882, August 30, 1881, Image 1

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Northeastern Railroad, SlPKRINTOrDENlH Ojtfk ic, l Alliens, (ia., August loth, 1881.1 uul after Monday. .Inly 4th, 1881, traius * ro»»«l will run ns follows: No. 1. I**nve Ai)teu*...«....••.••4:4u a.in 1 Arrive at Lula 6:40 u m I Arrive at Atlanta... ... 1<‘!36 art j UaVe Atlanta..., ~4.<>»a in I Arriye at Lula .. Arriv» ut Athena RltSa »«i | Xu. 8 8:00 ii in f>:00 p in lCtuS a m “X'JaV •WjP.m 8:4q jm Train* No. 2 and 3 run daily except Sunday. Train No. 1 on Monday*, and Train No. 4 on Satnid iy* unly. Trains Nos.’l, 2 and Sconnttt closely at Lula with i>;v4sortgcr trains on Kichmond and I)an- \ ill.-, Isith Eaatuiul West, and No. 4 with west Unnid pnaseng train on Huturday night «>nlv, when it will wait until 2.45 p. in., when hy sa doing a connection can be made. #■ Passengers irom Augusta, Charleston »ad Savannah and .point# Southcaat comiiuf via < M'urgin Railroad, will connect elo»« at Athens with train No. 3 thereby enabling them to vis* the summer resorts of Northeast Georgia with out a delay at Athens. Through tickets for sale at Athens for all Z2 m»So\“ KSAKD ’ 1 r#^xc£<nfflf’Em lien. Pass. ami FrSjrlit Agent. ATHENS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 30, 1881. i & j-fe Number 43. THOMPSON & HFINDEL, •escription ot Material Dealers in Every Description Building* Suppll eis. 310.TJaek.sou Street, 6A. : ,WINDOW GLASS , TbcUfrgest and beat assorted stockfQ lusa in|llH iL * * city. PETTY. In bulk, also in boxes of 1 to}5 lbs. Georgia Rail Road Company OUrKK1NTXNDKNT’a OFFICE, t Avgusta, Ga., Feb. 25, 1881. ) t oinmcncing Sunday. 27th iimt,thc fuliuwing 1 ‘ossengcr Schedule will opperote ou this rood: Leave-AT! U£N& 8.45 am 7 00pm Leuvc Winlcrvillo .2.15 a m 7 25 p iu 2,t ave Lexington 2.53 am 8 no p in L*’:»ve Antioch to.25 A sj 8 25 p m Leave Maxeys 10.46 am 8 45 pin Leave Woodville ..1U8 am 2 15 p it Arrive Union Point....*...*.L4oa m 2 4*» pm Arrive Atlanta 5.46 pm. 6u0iui Arrive at Washington 210 p Arrive at Milledgwillc.,.,. .4,45jp m • Arrive Macon 6.45 pm Arrive Augusta..... 3 47 PM Leave Augusta*. 2.35 a it Leave Macon 7.u0a m Leave Millclgeville 8.58 am Wave Washington 10.45 am Leave Atlanta 7.15 a m ]«cnve Union Point 1.12 p m Arrive Woodville 1.27 p al Arrive Maxeys 1.55 pm Arrive Antioch 2.15 pm Arrive Lexington 2.87 p m Arrive Winterville 3.12 p m .8.40 pm 7 80aui cennection to or from 7 oO a m 5 3o p w 8 45 p in 5 no a ut 5 15 a m 5 4o a in 6 oo a m 6 20 a ni 6 55 a in Trains daily—s< Washington on Sumlaynor br%wt;ou Macon and Uainak in either direction on Sunday nights. K* K, Dokskv. Gen., Pass,, Agt. ’ JXO. W. GREEN, G. M llicliiiiond & DanvillcRR. PASSENGER DEPARTMENT. On and after June 5th, 1H81, Passenger Train Servire on the Atlanta and Charlotte Air-Line di vision of this roail will in* as follows: U.S.MailTlTYT-Ixi.’s C sF't MU Co., which we guarantee as good as the best. Also the well known Nassau White Lead and im ported French Ziuc. Prepared Paint The Celebrated Paint, made by Wadsworth, Mnniuez it Longman, wfiicli wc| kuow to be good. finishes. A^fuII.line of Paiul and Whitewash Brushes. i -Colors. A large and assorted sjock of Colors in Oil, Also, Dry Colors, Varnishes. White Demar, ('oacb, Copal, Furniture, Japan, Asp) altuin, «&e. Eastward. 1 No. 43. ( No. 47. A. B. ave Atlanta.... 4:00a in r Miwanee.. D .. 5:18 a in Lula E .. 6:45 a. in 'Joecoa.. ..F . 8:14 a. in Senei a .. ..<» - 9:20 a. in (ireenv’le 11 ..10:58 a. in ; K .12:14 p. in ■. .. 2:36 p. ni ’ • 3:35 P- » UrS.Maif I No. 42. Sparta < faster Charlotte.M . - 3:15 p. - P- .. 6:59 p. m - 7:15 p. - 8:40 p, -10:20 p. lu -11:40 p. C. ... 6:30 p. m ... 7:4' p. ui ... 9:06 p. m ...10:16 p. m ...11.25 p. ni ... 1:00 a. m ... 2:11 a. m ... 4:31 a. in ... 5:35 a. in N Y Exp’s U 8 FT M’l No. 48. No. 50. J/veCh’lotto M -12:30 p. iu .12:43 a. t •• (•itnionia.. L|- 1:27 p. ni .. 1:43 a. t “ Apartan’g K - 3:50 p. iu - 4:06 a. i •• iireenv’le H - 5:07 p. iu'. 5:18 a. i •• Sene«H....G . 6:51 p. ra . 7:10 a. i •• Tueeua.. -F - 8:01 p. mi- 8;15 a. I •' Lula . .E*. 2:16 p#mj. 9:31 a. i “ Suwanae.D*-10:38 p. tit,-10:54 a. i Arrive Atlanta -12:05 a. ra'..12:20 p t ...12:33 a. in . 1:17 a.m .. 3:12 a. m . 4:24 a. in .. 5:47 a. m .. 6:53 a. m .. 8:09 a. ut .. 9: 22 u. iu ..10:35 a. ut Suwanks Accommodation, No.21.—Leave At lanta 5:00 p. iu. Arrive at 8uwauee (D) 7:08 p. ut. Sr wan kk Accommodation, No. 22— Leave Su- waitcv (D) at 5:40 a. ut. Arrive at Atlanta 8:00 a ut CONN KCTION8. A with arriving trams of Georgia Central and A. A W. 1*. Railroads. B a iih arriving traina of Georgia Central, A. A W. I*, and W. A A. Railroads. C with arriving trains of Georgia Rail Road. D with Latf'rettcoville Branch to and from Law- roneevillc, Ga. . • / E with Northeastern Railroad of Georgia to and 11-0111 Athens, Ga. F with Liber tea Air-Line to aud from Eltarton, Georgia. “ G with Columbia and Grt>enville to and from Col umbia and Charleston, 8. C. II with Columbia and Greeuvillo to and from Col umbia and Charleston, 8. C. K with Spartanburg and Ashville, and Sparten- burg, Union and Columbia to and front Hen derson aud AshviUe, and Alslou and Colum bia. L with Chester and Lenoir Narrow Guage to aud trout Dallas and Chester. M with C. C. A A- C. C.—R. A D. and A. T. A O. for all points West, North and East. Pullman Sleeping <*r Service on trains Noa. 47 and 43, daily, without change, between Atlanta and New York. Kalsomiiic. [Hum’s Cclcbruted Preniu cdf Kulsontlue, all ^shades. Oil. Linscod Oil, Raw und Boiled. Builders’ Hardware. A large variety of Lockup Rim and Mortice Looks, Suriucc ami Mortice Blind Hinges, Al! sixes and styles of Door Butts, Inside Blind Butts (brass and iron,) A fine line of Padlocks, Yale Store Door Locks, Yale Night Latches, Screws in any quantity und every size. And everything you want in thc 4 llardwure line. Doors, Sash and Blinds. The largest stock in Augusta, at bottom figures. Send for price list. # BALUSTERS, BRACKETS ANDpIANTLES, And almost anything that can he made out of wood, we are pre pared to make it. Yellow Pine Lumber. i any quantity, rough or dressed. We pack and deliver all of our goods free of charge. Thompson & Heindel. 1)15. S10 JACKSON STREET. A FINE SPEECH. That is a fine speech of Hpn. Pope Barrow’s, which is published in to. day’s Banner, and the positions he takes are strong ones. Ho is right. The judges of the courts ought to be pl(ced_ps far as possible above the reach of popular favor. We have never liked that prevision iu our con. stiiuiioD which gives the election of judges to the legislature. The old way of appointing by the governor, was far better. The reasons why we think so, are well given by Mr. Barrow in his speech. There are some who want to have pie. VVe hope this will never be. We never went to see those whose duty it will be to pass judgment on the lives and property of their fellows, subject to the favor of those fellows: To be dependent on the people for office, is incompatible with that per fect impartiality and independence which are inseparable from a free and upright judiciary. The mail who looks to the popular vote for bis office, will be more than hmuan . if he can retrain from pandering to the power that makes him what he is. For a proof of this position, we need only to refer to the habits aud character of any one »vho is known as a politician. Look at a professional politician, and ask yourself if you would like tc have your judges do as he does. If the people elect the judges, the judges will all be professional politicians. Of the speech, the Atlanta Consti Cincinnati Southern Rail’y L.itp Athens via Northeastern R. It.... •' •* " Georgia Railroad •• Union Depot Ailauta.......... Arrive ltovee Cincinnati Jc •• •* •• mm 7.55 p. to LKAVX CINCINNATI VIA O. AND M. R. R. 7.20 p. mm.... 7.45 a. 7.20 p. 7.25 p. Arrive St. Louis VIA VANDAX.1A dink. Leave Pi uni Street D»pot...w.2....—... Arrive St Louis VIA 1. AND9T. L. R. R. Leave Plum Street De|>ot mm..... Arrive St. Loula .....mm... _ 7.02 p. l .... 8.00 a. i M« 8.00 p. MM 8.15 p. > Chit ago mm .........~. 8.00 a. m mmm.m..m.m 7.05 a. ra 7.25 p. • VIA KOKGMO.l Leaver. II. A T>. Depot ....mm 7.30 p. ra •• c. H. A D. Depot mm—m 7.40 a. m Arrive Chio:i»co — l.\0 a. m V IA BKK LINK. leaveC. H. A D. Dei*ot.,.M.....M... Arrive New York . 9.15 P .. 6.45 a. m —10.uu vqa n. v. r. and o. r. r, U ave C. 1! A D. —.. 9.20 p. m •• C. II. A O. Depot 12.40 p. Arrive New York..« m «...»MH W M. — 6.50a. VIA pknnsylvania It. R. Leave L. M.lHspot......M..MM............... m— 8.30 p. m •• L. M. Depot 8 00 p. m Arrive Baltimore —...—.mm ..m..m......— 6Aip. iu •• Washington —mm. ..~-m m.-. 7.52 p. m »• “ ...... 9.02 a. m " Philadelphia......... ...mm...mm.—. 6.45 a. m New York via ». ANDO, i lAVtvc l’lunt Street iH’pot Arrive l*arker«burg...t...M«M,.. ♦ CumberlandM.... -m..... •• Harper’s Ferry—m.m! ,m. 7.35 a. m .... 9.30*. ,m.10.35 a. . 9 15 a. . 1.50 a. . 4 55 p. WIIAT IRELAND HAS WON, Today the new Laud net, as final' ly amended by Mr. Gladstone in par tial compliance with the demands pf* it. . T —...1 • ...Ill I.a A in 1 LipAA in • a1a.A*:1w . - - - • . J the Lords, will be put in'' force ?i> Ireland, says the NewYork Son. What benefits will this measnre,whi5h Parliament has spent seven months in forming, confer on the Irish peo? pie, and wherein will it fall short of the promised melioration ? The sole provi>ious of the law which have obtained the cordial sanction ol the Iamd League, are those extending the operation of tjie Bright clauses i: the Land act of 1870, .. ^ analogous to that followed iu Russia, viz, by advancing a large part ef the purchase money of their holdings, in the form ot a government lo&n now be carried ont.on a considerable scale. The sum available for this purpose will hereafter be much larger than has hitherto been the csise; but it is .till far short of that which even the Duke af Argyll would have allotted to that end, and it can benefit, after all, but a small fraction or the Irish tenantry. We should add that Mr. Gladstone has neglected to embody in bis measure the regulations needed for reducing the preseut heavy expen ses of conveyancing, an oversight which is largely chargeable with the failure of the previous experiment in the same direction. The principal aim of the new bill is not, however, to transform the tenant into a landowner, but to settle aud A RISGI.NU SPEECH. iFrora the Constitution, we get the follotrirtgWepoit of a-speech by Hon. Barrow, on a bill introduced bs Ni AND SECOND-HAND MACHINERY. THRESHERS, BORSE-PO AVERS, FAN MILLS, COTTON PRESSES separators, Jet Pumps, Saw Mills with Semv or Ratchet Head Blocks. 4 H. P. Bookwalter portable engine In good order.. 8 H. P. Wood. Tiber A Morse portable en gine in good order. . 1011. P. Washington Iron Works portable engine in good order. ... - 10 II. P. Starbnck Bros, portable engine in good order. 4 II. P. Stationary engine in good order. _ 80 inch Georgia water wheel in good order. 1 17 1-2 inch Jos. Letfel wheel in good order. 1 15 inch Eclipse wheel good as new. 110 inch Tltoa. Leflel wheel. 1 Johnson Smutter, new. 14 Spindle Drill. 2 16 inch Iron Lathes 6 (l shears. 1 40 inch Fan Blower. Shafting, Gearing, Pulleys,'etc.? ATHENS FOUNDRY & MACHINE WORKS, Athens, Georgia. tution says: ’The speech of Mr. Bar* improve his relation to his landlord, row on the appointment of the judi- In its original shape the bill uihjuch ciary was one ol the finest efforts of the session. It was what was ex pected from the clear-headed man who made it, and its effect was not lost on the house.’ The Augusta News says: ‘Ou this bill Mr. Barrow, of Clarke, made what was, perhaps, the best speech ot the session. He is a clear reasoner and a very effective speaker. No man in the house oxpres.«es himself more forcibly, aud uo man is considered purer in his motives or firmer in his purposes thau is the gentleman from Clarke. The Ninth Congressional District would do well to look al Mr. Barrow., lie is needed in a wider held.’ A IllU RAILROAD MOVEMENT. There are some startling reports from Atlanta. It is said that Gen. Gordon has received 8700,000 cash tiouably would have secured to hiiu the three precious privileges for which Mr. Butt contended —lair rents fixed tenure, and freedom of sales. As much cannot be said of the law iu its amended form. The rents, iu deed, w ill still be fixed, either by agreement or by the arbitration of the Land Commission, but the value of a landlord’s interest will not be promptly or easily deter mined under the altered phraseology of the act, and the judgment of the Commission may be set aside by the Court of Appeal, which is unlikely to favor the claims of tenants or coun tenance doctrines at variance willithe law of contracts. But it docs not ap pear that, the rent onee fixed, the tenant can be subjected to any serious interference with the free sale of his tenant right, while iu the provisions giving tor the charter of the Georgia Pacific | him compensation for disturbance, as A Lecture to Young Men on the Loss of Railroad and all lands belonging to him, his brothers and Gov. Colquitt aloug the line. Of this amount Gov. Colquitt, Eugene Gordon, aud Wal ter Gordon, get one hundred and five thousand each, and Gen. Gordon gets the rest. The Richmond & Danville has purchased all the franchise of the Georgia Pacific and taken full charge. A surveying party of two hundred hands for construction has started out this morning. Two other parties are now at work. The Richmond and Danville do not propose to stop the road at Aberdeen, but will push it on to Texarcana, where it will connect with the Texas Pacific and Iron Moun tain Railroads. The success of the road is undisputed. Gsn. Gordon re mains President at a handsome salary. A Lecture .on the Nature. Treatment, and Radical cur* of Seminal Weakness, or Sperma torrhoea, ndue d by Self-Abuse, Involuntary Emissions. Imp »tency. Nervous Debility, and Impedimenta *o Marriage generally; Conanmp- jion, Epilepsy, and Fits: Mental and Phiaical Incapacity, etc.—By ROBERT J. CULVER WELL, M. D„ ni tuor of tlie ‘Green Book, 1 etc. The world-renowned author, in this admira ble Lecture, clearly proves from his own expo lienee that the awlnl consequences of Self-Abu* may be effectually rt movea without dangerous surgical opeistions, bougies, instruments, rings, or cordials; p icting out a mode of cure aioncc oertan and effectual, by which every sulft-rer, no matter what lib con Ji* ion may be, may cure himself cheaply, privately and radically. JJfThis Lecture will prove a boon to thous ands and thousands. Sent under seal, in a plain env lope, to any address post-paid, on receipt of six cents or two postage stamps. Ws have also a tens cure for Tape Wont- Address THE CDLVERWELL MEDICAL CO Ann St. lNew York, N. Y« »». o. 4586 , mchi-829 .... Sotithem Mutual W aahington .... Hait i more.-M- •««•» ......MM 1-65 p. IU 6.30 a. m . ...mmm 3.05 p. m . 7.4(4 a. u «• Philadelphia..... —.... «•» P- " 1.15 p. n New Yurk.MMMM.MMMMM —. 9.20 p. 1A CANADA aOUTUK#lN BAlLWAXri i/ncu; if. a D. — s.aoi.ja. •• C. H-. A l>. “ 2.45 PIU A rrlw K ew York 1 Pi in •• ......m^.m.im«.mmm—mmm14.00 pi W ’ vu omf vutxk!) muviT. jV iMnu’ll. All. Depot... 9.20 pi u •• o. II. a 1). “ 2.« p> y.rrltc New York..™. W.ou p. Lraee Atlanta »» p. aa. sleeper open at 9 p. m.. .Ivin: upiiortuiuty to paaa oeor antiiw If no of road In tlar lime, for farther information addraaa II. M. UOTTINUHAM,, .. Gen'l Southern Agent, Atlanta. K. P. WILSON, Gen’l PiftaVralxVTick’t Ag’t, Cincinnati. B T. J. BURNEY. tlunta. Jl ATBE»a GEORGIA. YOUNG L. O. HARRIS, President ^ NTEVXNS THOMAS, Sefretarx- Zi lima Aaaeta, April 1, IHII, • - *5S4,5Sf tii Resident Directors. Youwo L. O. Harris, Stktexs Thomas Ions H, Nkwtos, Kuxra L. Nkwtok, la. Haaar Hull, Faanaata Pemizr , P. Iucauho, Da. J. A. HcamcuTT Bobcbt Thomas. Joint W. Nichouuk GENERAL DISTRUST. The public mind is filled with a very general distrust as to the condition of the President. Nearly every day the bulletins are sent out, saying that “he passed a favorable night, 'and fiat taken more food than formerly.” And vet here is the stubborn fact that the President is much worse off than he was at first. For a time public confi dence was strong, and the people bad buoyant hopes that under the treat ment of several physicians who are supposed to be skillful and accom plished, the distinguished patient would be snatched from death’s door, and restored to his people. But hope disappointed, like hope deferred, has made the heart sick, and now there are few who do not regard the case well as for improvements, he bus strong guarantees tor fixity of tenure. Vet the most important, undoubtidly, of the Three Fa is the fairness of the rent; and the conditious governing this fundamental adjustment are, as we have said, much less definite and satisfactory than they were in the orig inal bill. The clause authorizing the use of public funds for the reclaiming of waste land can, if judiciously and vig orously carried out, be made to ren der good service to the Irish people, ft is to be hoped, however,-that under thiB provision money will not be lent to landlords on the pretext of assist ing them to reclaim part of their es tates, for, as Mr. Charles Russell has conclusively shown in the case of Lord Lansdowne, most of the landlords would contrive to make a profit out of their hard-working tenantry from the sums thus advanced. As to that lea' ture of the bill which contemplates *State aid to emigration, if is vehe mently denounced by the representa tives of tlie Irish people, aud has found tew advocates in any quarter. On the whole, this plan of. reform, which has cost the British'Legislature seven mouths stf harassing toil, and has involved a revolution in the forms of parliamentary procedure, does not promise to meet the main end for which it was devised, viz., to satisfy the bulk of the Irish tenantry. But it esn hardly fail to leave the tenant- farmer in Leinster, Connaught, and Munster, if not in UIsterTUetler off than it found him. Now let the Bri tish Government suspend the execu- the constitution ‘sii as to have judges of the Superior, court appointed bv the governor Mr. Barrow, of Clarke, said fbSt if Mlheeleu liever did one thing but oflbr this bill, whether it pass or not, he would.mflpt the p’audit ‘well done, good and faiihlul servant.’ The cry- ing evi!«'orf the present ' system def- uiand speedy remedy. < In the first place, the present system, is exiiOn? aiye. ;It cost $1?,00Q Jo elect .the (’resentjudiciary of Georgia! . Thip iysteni degrades the high office 1 ‘of Men oom» haiitaAd 'msA.fhS i,’ and are compelled to' owe fa vors to men before they sit where one breath of predjudice or one touch of passion should never come. We have seen meu of high character, of state can and of national reputation, laid aside because they did not come here aud drag the ermine in the mire of ooliti- cal maneuvering. Over them have been elevated men who were not bet ter judges of the law, but better poli ticians. The. present system endan gers men good and bad. Good men will have the liveliest 3tmse of grati tude. Bad men will lie readiest tt> gratify prejudice. If I could fix for- ever the judiciary system of this state I would make the judges appointed for life above all change ot politics or personal favoritism, and removable only lor abuse or failure to perform their duty. The federal judiciary system is u monument to the founders of this government. The most august tribunal on this earth is the supreme court ot the United States. It is said that this bill puts too much power into the bands of one man. The founders of this government fixed bulwarks against the one man power, tint they never dreamed of danger from the people; of the tyranny otone part of a tree people over another part of a ■ free people. Tb< re is a danger in the rear and we need bul warks there. There are now clouds smaller than a man’s hand which may bring storm and terror, and I would raise above their reach the judiciary of Georgia. There are thunders which the attentive ear may catch, already telling of the danger that may come before you know it. You will ask the law for protection and it will say, ‘I belong to the people aud when the people are wrong I am wrong.’ These are not new views. I had the honor to sit in the convention of 1877, and I tried then to fix in the constitu tion ot the state the principle that the judges of this stale should hold office tor life. And as I know myself as God is my judge, 1 would suffer this right arm taken oil at my shoulder if that were the law ol Georgia to-day. They ceuce - tell us that there are depths in the ocean where there is perfect rest and the waves never sweep or make the slightest motion. I have heard phi losophers say that there are heights where there is perfect rest, where an atom might float forever in perfect rest. I would fix the foundations of the judiciary so deep that passion could never stir them, and I would raise its head so high that it would reach the eternal calm. [Applause.] Look at the difference given to a de cision of a judge of the circuit court or the supreme court of the United States. 1b the other branch of this legislature a decision of a circuit court THE PORTERHOUSE STEAK. , rlinrlington .Hawkeye. , T , At’ 'tWjfjMtaiiranui^his is the porterhouse, is it?* asked the sad pas- senger, sitting a't t¥e~cornertable 'iff the restaurant ‘Yes, sir;’ said the \vaif«r, with.the wejry air of a man who was tired-bf iArHing the same lie ii thousand times a day, ‘porterhouse stedk, pir. sameas'ybu ordered, sir.’ ‘Do you cat porterhouse steak from between the horn3 this year ?’ asked the sad passenger,'with the intona- GW oiJ&Vhnti who wanted to know. ‘Sir?’.said the waiter. ‘It seemed to bo a trifle tenderer last year,’ the sad passenger went ou, with the air of a tired man indulging in' pleksint rem- iiriucfenffiek of the past, ‘but ! •remem’- Asti—syilSiiWuutWiSiiftiJlBw judge has recently been used as no 8Cene * as hopeless. This is, perhaps, too gloomy a view to take of it; there isj tion of the Coercion act, and see to it TriVellui Agent, Atl H. H • CARLTON, jCTTORNRY AT LAW, i a, ATHENHi .CJA,.,i rtJTlUHWAraik *W<et, nfaiainU Eulraoct door abova T^Ba’aDrag Store. Will atl«n4 promptly to all business entrusted to hai u»r. Cll V—Thousands of! •annually robbei , violins, livoa ( , sand health restored by the use of the F IF7IG0RAT0R, W bich positively and permanently cures luino* toner (caused by exceeacs ol any aind), Semin al Weakness, and all diseases that follow aa a sequence of Self-Abuse, sa loss of enurojr, los memory, universal lassitude, pain in the been dismueseof vision, premature old aue, and mauy other diseases that lead to insanity or oonanniD- tioo and a prematura grave. Send for cirealara with teatimuniala tree by mail. The IN Vltit IRATOR ia sold at «1 per box, or six boxes for gi, by all druggists, or will be sent free by mail, securely sealed, ou receipt of prioe, by addnaaiag. K.J. CHENEY, Druggists, 187 Summit 8t, Toledo, Ohio.!. Sole Agent for the United States. B. T. Banner <fc Co., Sole Agents, Athens, - mavted&w some ground for bojie, but. not much. The President may get well, but the chances now seem to be against him. \Vk qre tired of seeing the word Bourbon’’ bandied about by some papers and politicians. If to lie & “Bouibon^ is not to acquiesce' in‘ all' the • unhulhwcd and tUMriiolesonte. doctrines which latter-day “loyalty” would force upon us, then the beat people ot the south may be put down as “Bonrlmns,’’ by a large majority. that the new reforms, such as they are, are promptly and properly carried out. AVe are quite willing to: brieve that the intention of the Gladstone Cabinet was better than its perform' ance, and thhre will be amjile in life bourse of the'nettt? months for the demoaStrixtion.of its good feel iog. “A scan at Bangor, Me.,- finding that his eaves trough was highest at the end which ought to have been The death of Ker.-F.-R. flawliia. I »J”9[ 5- f ™ en ’ toreoul T , „ „ „ , . , ” the foundation, and rd-ed one corner at Roswell, Ga., on Monday night U announced. He was an old ani highly esteemed PrCwbytcrian miuister, and the author of “Young, Maroonera,’’ Mitooner’a Island,” and .severaloth- the young men and boys ot the Sooth are familiar. [ Judge Amt M. Jackson and hi* wife have gone for a abort trip iuto Northeast Georgia- -HeJwill be back in time for the September term t ftlie Ordinary’s court. of the bouse until the trough was all t yfK r rp Of i r, Ile' is4he same man probably, who tried to drive his cow up on the roof to eat some grass that had grown ... M LmL— i ‘Young man,’ said, an orator im- pres-iiVely, *tfo you want to go to a drunkard’s grave?* Well, replied the young man, with the careless grace of a man who. isu’t accustomed to relus- u g, *1 dou’t cure if I do, where our grave ?’ _ them Last year you cpt vour porter house steak from the curl in the fore head, and sirloins from the skin. But I think this comes from between the horns. I used to live in a boarding house where they cut the porterhouse between the horns and, and this ' one reminds me of them. Animal dead this steak came Irom ?’ ‘Dead,’ ech oed the astonished waiter; ‘course, He was butchered sir.’ ‘Butch ered to make a Roman holiday,’ sigh ed the sad passenger. ‘He would be more likely to make a Roman swear. Well, it was time he was killed. He hadn’t many more years to live on his earth. Ah, here is the .brass tip from one of his horns. Dropped into the steak, no doubt, while you were slicing it off. What do you do with these steaks when the guests are through with them?’ The waiter looked puzzled. -‘Why, sir,’ he said, they ain’t nothing left of ’em, sir.’ Possible ?’ said the sad passenger; what becomes of them ?’ The waiter looked nervous. ‘What?’ be said, the customers eat them up.’ The sad passenger looked up with an air of in terest. ‘Incredible,’ be exclaimed; ‘cannot accept your statement with out proof They must hide them un der chairs, or secrete, them in their napkins, or they may carry them away in their pockets to throw at burglars, but I cannot believe they eat them. Here, let me see one ot them eat this and I will believe you. Tmst me, good waiter, I ’ ‘But the waiter pointed to a pla card inscribed, ‘positively no trust,’ and went to the chahier’s desk to tell the boss to look out for that man at the corner table, as he didn’t seem to be satisfied with his steak aud asked for trust. How Newport Belles Urns for the “Daunce. 1 Correspondence New York World. The younger people wear short dancing costumes of white and pale evening shades, and occasionally one accents the scene with scarlet; hut there is ouly loveliness, not inagnifis It is a pretty fashion among them who wear hats. These hats have enormous areas and are laden with waving plumes ; within they are lined with blue, red or gold, and surround the face with a nimbus of color like young saints of the world or a iresh picture in a frame. A vivacious young married woman wears a great Mother Hubbard hat lined with blue, and a slip of white muslin over blue. It is belted iu front, hut in the back hangs flowing from the full gathering about her shoulders to the hem. . A wide golden band clasps her neck and her baby sleeves are spanned by gold and blue. The costume is quaint, and gives a fancy dress party air to the decirion of any superior court judge could have leeu used. Mr. Sweat, of Clinch—Don’t you respect as highly the decision of out- own Chief Justice Jackson as you do decision ot Judge Bradley ? Mr. Barrow (with emphasis)—‘No, don’t; no I don’t, and Judge Jack- son dou’t himself. I can take the gentleman to the supreme court ot Georgia and give him a decision front the supreme court of every state in this union, and I will carry one decis ion of the supreme coprt of the United States and it will outweigh all your authorities, and that, too, when the supreme court of Georgia is not bound to respect tbe supreme court of the United States any more than any .oth er court, except on federal questions.’ Mr, Barrow concluded his able and eloquent speech with a strong appeal for the bill. 1 — > i A KISSING SPRING. A Remarkaijle.Stfeam of . Water; Discovered etiMilA anTh-kansas. Lhtla.lfock. OyjiSlite.1. We are credibly informed, that fif teen miles northwest- of Witherspoon, Ark., on Greasy Creek,- One o|i !the greatest and most tnjrnculous springs has recently be)Bn discovered on rec ord. We have not been to see 1 them, butour informant, a good citizen and a Baptist preacher of celebrity tells Us what he saw.,: Parson. John R. Yealts was at.tho spring, and says that it flows from a mountain tfbout 400 hundred feet high, comes out Of the grbund abouDlOO feet -from -the top of the mountain on ;,tbe north a«iw*nd,fluws, .gal lons per minute, and it is .the color of apple cider and tastes just like apple brandy, and has the same effect. Those under the influence ot the water are perfectly ecstatic, aud hugging and loving every thing they meet. He says: “I never saw tbe like; children and boys and girls hugging and kiss ing every one they meet. Old men aud old women, youug men and young ladies, embracing each other by hugging aud kissing. I met an old white-haired man and woman—I suppose about 80 years old—and they were hopping and skipping like lambs. I saw hundreds lying around the spring so drunk that they could not stand up, and they were lying and laughing and trying to Blap their bands. The people call them the ‘Millennium Springs.’ ” A SHIP’S LOU. The speed of vessels is approximate ly determined by tbe use of the log and logline. The log is a triangular or quadrangular piece of wood about a quarter of an inch thick, so balanced by a plate of lead as to swin perpen dicularly in the water, with about two-thirds ol it under the water. The log line is a small cord, one end of which, dividing into three, so that the wood hangs from the cord as a scale-pan from a balance-beam, is fastened to the log, while the other is wound round a teel in the ship. Tbe log, thus poised, keeps its place in the water, while tbe line is unwound from the reel as the ship moves through the water, and the length of line unwound in a given time pives the rate of the ships-sailing This is calculated by knots made on the line at certain distances, while time is measured by a sand-glass of a certain number of seconds. The length between the knots is so pro portioned to the time of the glass that the knots unwound while the glass runs down shows the uttmber of miles the ship is sailing per hour. The first knot iS' jflUe&T-fiWlflr ffve fathoms from the log, to allow the latter to get clear of the ship before the reckoning com mences. This is called the stray-line. Pm- 4 most as- e*«jfiaita is said to he In ]WdH« flrffeveloptnent in the in lion consequent on the 'Skeen tl.ln the Treasury Department. S&eeh -ha* been suspended pending the investigation, which involves yeveral other and . higher officials jff the Trutfqor; Theses pffohUs are, as' has beert stated in these dispatches, apparently very anxious to acquit Skeen of any irregularities with re gard tc women in the department. _ Tho reason given for this is said to be Affffpenoarmcm; It appear* that "ikeen has a p private room in ihe base- njnt ‘of the Treasury, and it« charged iv those who profess to know-,, and who certainly have the means of knows ing, that this room has been tor' a long time habitually used as a crimi nal rendezvous during business hours by members of the Treasury ring heretofore alluded to. It is alleged that Skeen would leave the key with these officials at convenient times and keep out of the way. The room is the onffussdduring.the Pitney investiga- in this conn'eeSSoB ate too outrageous for publication and transcend reason able belief.” A Drunken Woman. ” Knoxville Trlbuue. The vborst sight that has met our gaie for some time, was a woman whose gray hairs betoken an advanced age, in a state of intoxication. She was siandiiig opposite the Custom House, and was not to be persuaded to leave by her sober companions. She was at least 60 years old and has chil dren, and probably grand children. It is bad enough for nien to drink, but when women begin to get on terrible tares,' it Is time to shut up shop and enlist in the temoerance cause. “Koumiss.” Oorrcapordenoe Food and Haaltli. Into one quart ol new milk put one gill of buttermilk and three or four lumps of wnile sugar. Mix we'l and see that the sugar dissolves. Put in a warm place to stand ten hours, when it will be thick. Pour from one ves sel to another until it becomes-smooth and uniform in consistency. Bott'e and keep iu a warm place twenty- four hours, it may take thirty-eix in winter. The bottles mast be tightly corked and the corks tied down. Shake well tor five minutes before opening. It makes a very agreealle drink, which is especially recommens tied for persons who do not assimilate their food, and for young children may be drunk as freely as milk. In stead of buttermilk, some use a tea- spoonful of yeast. Made-front mare’s milk, it is the standard beverage o the Tartars,who almost live upon it in summer, aud is also used largely by the Russians. Caution.—The richer your milk, which should he dnskiramed, the bet ter will be your koumiss. - 1 Patent Applied For. Bill Arp in Constitution. IIow we didlove those girls. One of ’em kicked mo three times, but I a'.ways did believe she loved mo and I.ain't right shore but that she has sweet and tender thoughts about me yet; may be if I had tried her one more time she—but I won’t allow my self to indulge such a thought, for then some other fellow would have got Mrs. Arp, and that’s a picture too hor- ible to comtemplate. I’m content with my destiny, and wouldn’t change it if I could. Those Athens girls kept books, they did, and every time they made a victim they put his name down. My friend Cole told me his name was down on the same book nine times, for die loved her to dis traction, and popped the question every three months until finally she made biru promise not to ask her again. So just before he quit school be went to see her, and in the agony of his soul, says he: ‘Miss Susan, heavenly creature. I won't ask you any more to have me, but as a last parting favor I want you just to put my name down again,’ aud she put it. The Hethodist Ecnmenlca 1 . London;-Aug 22,—The Times says the Ecumenical Methodist Conlereuce, which is to meet in this city next week, promises to be one ot the most interesting and important religious gatherings held since the days of the Wesleys. The various denominations of Methodism number over four mil lion actual communicants, and the Methodist population is computed at eigbieen millions. The members of the Conference number four hundred, half of whom represent British and Continental Methodism and half the churches in the United States and Canada. Tho conference is composed of lay and clerical delegates in equal proportion. Its main object will be to devise means for prosecuting home and foreign work so as to result in the grea’est economy and efficiency, to in crease the moral and evangelical pow er of common Methodism, and to se cure the more speedy conversion of the world. Lovtly Woman Ahead. Nantuckot Latter. Yesterday three of the six pulpits iu the city were filled by wome.. The Rev. Miss Louise S. Baker was at the Congregational church, Rev. Mrs. Phebe A. Hanafotd at the Uni tarian, and Rev. Mrs. F. Ellis (color ed), of New Bedford, at the colored Baptist church. This is the normal condition of affairs in a community of women like this, where the fomales outnumber the males in the propors tion ot sixteeu to one. The flagman at the railroad crossing is a woman. The restaurant at Surfaide is kept by a woman—and it is needless to say it is well kept—and women hold many positions usually held by men. Temperance Legislation. Thu Cartersville F,re# Press calls my paragraph about members >vl«i introduce temperance bills and tht-tv >o out and get drunk, ‘a wicked joketi t may be’ wicked, but it is no joke. I am pained to state that I was in dead earnest when I wrote the para graph, which m'ght be made much stronger in the light of more recent occurrences. —-k-' I have Beyer Been a movement so badly‘condauted daring thirty years observation in. Legislatures. Whose fault it is I cannot say, but what at one time promised to become a grand reform has, to all appoar.-tnoes, lost its cohetfive power and destroyed its best friends: uun:i >, ..-t x The defeat of the Convention’s bill in the Senate is but one of .the many drawbacks to suocess in any general movement against the liquor traffic. The whole subject seems to have been left without a strong, prudent, soisi- ble guiding hand. Enthusiasm is a good thing, but common sense is bet ter. Preaching is powerful, but,prac* lice ie still more powerful. The tetn; Love at Long Taw. ! ‘i ■ " 1 Middle Georgia Argos. A young school girl at Lutherville was recently.married to a young man of Flat Shoals. The girl is to finish her education, and the youug man is to attend a Course of medical lectures before they take up tlieir abode to gether. That must be a very unsat* istactQry kind of a honeysmoon. Love at ,fong taw,.as it were. pera”ce movement it an enigma ip rnafiy.—At. ‘Cor. Augusta Vhrotu ■ : j ;=• j ■ ;• l-ai A piBL at Lynn, Iowa, ,wert to .Tom.’ Milner,of Bartow ePuiity, 6he of the committee, that went oilt to inspect the convict camps .of Georgia, said, in a speech on tl>4 subject, before the Legislature : *1 saw, a white young man in Dough erty county with a negro on one side, a negro guard on tbe other, and a ne grtf guard, behind hint, and behind titn a negro whipping boss. I asked that boy, as iny-blood grew warm, ‘.las'that man ever whipped you with that lash?’ With . an eye flashing wiih the firw ot hi* young manhood, hei^itjtL. ‘Ye^ he has; anti, if I ever escape from this place I’ll exercise mv rights.’i ri ' ; " - ' ” There is an awful state of a flairs in a little Michigan toWn where t type-setter substituted tjie word ‘wid ows’ for J WmdpW’‘ The editor wrote: '■'Tbil windoWb-Of the church need washing badltvs -They are too dirty for any use and.a disgrace, to our vil- [agej •' • .' . , '. Nat Necessarily With Thanks. 7 Ml , t Washington Star. f ‘ Can this country gain anything by allowing Hartmann, the Nihilist, to become one of its citizens, as it is re ported he desires to do ? Clearly not. Why then should, he be permitted to become one ? A people have as good right to say who shall be their nat uralized fellow citizens as tbe house holder has to say who shall be ad mitted as inmates of his house; and Mr. Hartmann’s proportion ought to be declined, with.—no, not' neces sarily with thanks. '' : crystalami large rock masses 1 and & petrified fqrpsl are distinctly, visible at the bottom. 'The branches of the lira* J &re ot dazz'ing whitene.-s, :u thoogh cut In-marble. Salmon and treat swim among tpetu. Li places the lake is 200 feet deep. picnic with her lover instead o‘ going to a prayer meeting, as her lather hat I ordered. The parent tied her to a post on her return,, and gave her such; a whipping that she died next day. .W’ifEira’bpy"walks with a giri as though- 1 'lie were afraid -some one Tub lake that hat the highest ele vation of any ip the world, is Greep Lake, in Colorado. Its surface is 10,- 252 fet t above the level of the sea'. Pine forests kurround it, and eterna snows deck the neighboring mountain tops.' One of. these, - Gray’a , Peak, has an altitude of 14,341 feet. The water of Green Lake is aa d^sr-ras .trOtdd^raHimjJthn girl is Ids sister. If, he walk* so dose to hetj as to pgfiriy crowd her against th^e fence, she is the sister of some one else. v As long as: :o,tr own conscience does not upbraid.us,,,.we,,gugjp not lcar the criticisms of others. Ladles as Bonkers. Thompson's Bank Note Reporter. In our list of banks we find the fol lowing named ladies holding posi tions as bank officers: Mrs. E. C. Williams is president of the State National Bank,.Raleigh, N. C-; Miss Jennie Coombs is cashier of Bowu & Comb’s bank, at Middleville, Mich.; Miss .Sarah F. Eiok fills the same of fice in tbe First National Bank of Huntington, Ind., and Miss Annie M. King signs as cashier of the banking house ol Springer & Noyes, at White Cloud, Ivan.; Mrs. M. H. Cotvdcn carries on a banking business in Iter own name at Forest Hill, Cal. i “As the Crow Flies.” .. . i Hawkeye. , An Ohio naturalist claims to have discovered that “crows fly zig-zag, and not as has been generally be- lie'ved, in a straightdiUP.’’, Oh, well, maybe they do fly zig-zag ip Ohio It depends a great deal on the condi tion of the man who is looking at them. Now, in Texas they fly round and round and r6und; in Missouri they fly about five miles going aerossi a twenty -acre field; in Mississippi hey ; can’t fly a rod after four o’clock in the afternoon, while in Iowa and Kansas they fly as straight as a chalk line any hour between'twelve and twelve. , ,, - Ought to Have the Vacancy, • Waalfintou Star. Jersey City has a police jp?ticp who under a popular rote would unques tionably be catted to the vacant seat on the United States Supreme Court In tho case ot a complaint of disturb ing the peace, by the use of a so- called musical instrument,,at a late hour at night,' he. pronounced' thin eminently humane judicial opinion “Any man who will play a concertina on a stoop at 11 o’clock at night de serve* the, severest puniihmeut the law allows. I think he ought to .be sent to the state priaoii !oi five years.” • ■»: . .i .• ti ,1'!-. b>K) ' Hl ! ed lu>/U*a*w«*iT> .(.*1' *»di A reci|>e fbr 'l’jnioh pie 1 ' vaguely stonily. Judge James Jackson delivered Sunday school speech at Snwanee ott the 6ih inst. We dip the follow•» ing beautiful paragraph from the ad dress. j Twe tty-one years have passed by since I stood face to taee ■ before the icople of this county. Tnese have >een eycntlul years. Immoital his tory has been written with an in n |teti on paper of granite never to per- sh. The sobs of orphans and tears of widows have softened the granite that the.pen might write more retdi- ly. Brothers, husdands and fathets have leit the country never to return, and their bones whiten the soil of the south from the Potomac to the Rio Grande. The Hawkinsville Dispatch says if Mr. McWhorter’s bill, making the manufacture or sale ot fertilizers a mis demeanor, should pass, it “hopes the legislature may go a step further and make it a misdemeanor tor a Georgian to buy we-tern corn] after 1882. Then destroy all communication with the Yankee nation, and let the people of the South starve and go nuked, or make and manufacture their own food .and clothing. One of Houle’* young ladies, who i* ju*t a little inclined to corpulency, remarked to a friend the other day that whenever an elderly married gentleman sees n voiirig lady of her fighrd, hy i Balya io himself, ’There and-stir goes.tfftandsotue, well formed youug lady.’. But. ’-he. a young society fellow would exelaiiu, ‘Gewhilikins l what a fat gal 1’—Courier.