Athens weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1889-1891, December 17, 1889, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

r 5nsc?^-i rlP* .■SMW Petition for Sciro Fa- i^rfpsUtt ®* M P’-?&** ^ ,ei, - ri “-- t (JEnEGIA CLARKE fi'.UNT '*RIOR COURT K SAID COUXT The \ etlUon of II. w. Eel I ai of Jackson county; 4$ A SENSIBLE MAN. Ex-Emperor Ton Pedro of Btazil ed in Portugal. He declares Lariof the state to-wit, in uie ^TiTi £.-^ county and i>n"nf w a newspaper correspondent that SSSBSSlii I?arrvMafi.i h fni 0 iv Je S5,lH*A''^od'Uon is P to j the Jrazman P eo P le back to a mon- torvr I.:vm)>Vln resides Utc to-wit, in the *2&h*U l* considered as rum- uer- 1" ^Sid def ndants.i In open court. This Ur-,n jr L HUTCHms r ludit®. IUMl’K IS & IU RN KTT, Attorneys for Plaintiff's. ,«c! from themt-u'e- oTInrke Su- r"'li C D VINCENT, Q.3.C. rrr^TT XftBKI. >’OR DI VORCE, ETC. Uarke Superior Court. Crawford i** Vs. i -nwford FVt'iR*. tl tii • court by the entry of the >l iii titer- f ore ordered tha.sald de"- d- vl.nil nppenr in person or by at tor- la 1 St nt-xt let ill Of the Suix-riorCorrtof M i„in* liohl on the second Mun- ivh). then and tivenc to answer The. true mas&Mmem:SXSi fo °! aad D<MB Pedro kooW3 “• A little over a hundred years ago few settlers in North America de- >.u in. iuueji|iiraTiou «x r-aia twenty years t - , , ■ . r, K ,lt <0 contract «rd to be con- j cided that they had stood enough ctcd With: to s«o and he sued; to have and ' r ft . , ° use a common teal, which may may be chanced . foolishness at the hands of the Bri'— at.cny tiuiCj to make by-laws, ruleshikI reifiilo— I • , - _ tienk, idudins on their own members, not in- i ,f| b government. Going to Boston consistent with tiie laws of;his state, or of th» *-i . , , . , , . ’ United States, to receive donations w ! f‘*oy tossed a ship load or two of tea it oriy iletor.se holms lope- gilt or will to purchase and hold I ; * , , , E«wi>l ld't'1* for divorce and prayer In- -ueh property, real cr personal, as is i ll, *° the Serene harbor of that classic b ! town, and not eonlent with this, they fefn'ali'm itiiv shall be considered as lj2Sl.Il on salil defendant. In opfea '■ tSi slKt. 1‘J 1 -*»9- Granted. : t Iilism N. I.. llUTe ill NS, Judge. LUMVKIN a hurnett. Attomneys forLUieilar.t. U..- ...louw or x CI«*« fe'S, • C. 8. O. . order to PERFECT SERVICE. L Thoiup-*on vs. Henry C. Thompson, Jr rj ( ,; v divorce in Clarke Superior Court, [urTerui, 1889. \ A f [ tothe court bv the return of fiSW in the above stated case, that the Dipt dee- not reside In said county; and & annealing that lie docs no* vcildc in Jrz. i, i s i lie refoie ordered by the court CcrtlH- perfected on tbe defendant by Ecjth'ii <>f this order once a month, for ”w, u>fo-.e the next term of this court. ■Tubens banner, a newspaper published |i,.( liiintv. Georgia. II. II. Noble, [Mint, bins, Petitioner* Att’y. | Judge. |<i'c that the above is a trie extract from Cue «rf Clarke superior Court. t C. L. Pitner, Clerk. L.ttbS!'. (.tTAHDIAN’S SALK. KittlA. Ot.ABKE cofKi-r.—'Will lie sold E« the court house door in the city-of Lou tin-tii st Tuesday in Januar 18S0, itov ine real estate belonging to the minor t,„t vu r '<nc \V. JJrydie, to-wit: A five- Ijmliiitlc linterst in that, tract t.f land S«»ieainl i oimty and adjoining tan s of Uoluian au 1 oihers, beiug the land deed- r,mil la Bryclle and lier child re u, dated Mdiijroi o-nuaiy 1S73 and attested by Vi.lactson and J. D. Frierson N. P. ex I Sold for hem lit of the Estui qui mists ler of the court of Ordinary of said KUGXXE W. R ilYDIK. bna sllan of his minor children, flftt. 6r. * NOTICE BSGIA,CI.ARKE COUNTT.-John W. Ilier »nd Harvey Archer, executors of the li!i. It \Vi«r, deceased, hare made their jjtwn lor letters of disoriissiou from said tted these arc to notify all persons to Time, if any they can, at the January Ih(ii, of tlie Court of Ordinary of said b,*bv said unplication should uct be ti S. Jf. UE.tKIXGTOX, ptSm, Ordinary. iLAK KE SHERIFV’ri SALET IkfoM on the first Tuesday in January lift, at the Court House door in said wtiihin the legal hours of sale to tlie XMiicr.the f-llowlng property, to-wit: ui land lying in said county on tlie i mm Waikin.-ville road, adjoining iiW.R.Tnek, R. K. Reaves and others, mdwre the delendnnt now resides, con- t«f himdred and sixteen (tin) arras with "no" uit-tes: Beginning at a white oak •lnmningtlienreX.50 degrees, E.3I eh; ft dirtier, thrive X. 40 to 40.t25ch.to a wtt, thence s. t o to *7.52 ch to u pine tthrn v S. oti il -giees 15 seconds E., 40.31 eihrlieglnniiig corner. Said land-levied ■' imueitv of James A. Kent to satisfy p-fifn isriied fi-om the Superior Court waty in favor of Heni-y C. Potter, ai l James A. Kent, this 18th day of “,n*l). John* W. Wier, Sheriff. CK TO DKBiORS AND CREDIT0R1. “ions having demands against the estate Hinatid l , liinuy late of Clarke county A*** hereby noiiflod to render in their • . . P® Phlnlxy according tor law, »< indebted to said estate are requii«d •immediate payment. This Dec. 0.1-eJ. JACOB PiilNlZY, Executor. v NOTICB. m having demands or clnimB against JffJJ "! A, 'en K. Jo» nson, deceased, are intilied to present them to me in tenns AU such e»n be left at tlie oflico ot JEREMIaU JOHNSON Exector, JIA, CI.AKKE COUNTY—Ord nary’s •-'wemtarSfith, 1889—T. D. Jennings, *t t-vecutov ot R.,bei-t Jennings, ile- applied for leave to sell a tract of |, bum county, known as the Gunter ■^'ngitig to said deceased. This is 1“ notify all concerned to file their any they have, on or lwfore the E*“> in January next, else leave will Primed said apiilicant as apniied for. Py S, M. HERRINGTON, Oi-U’r. * 4, CLARKE COUNTY. Honceux.—H. H. Noble, Ami '*•*« Smith, col., deceased, has In Applied to the underslgued for leave Wh i-stale belougiugto the es ate of w. ami said application will be heard 'loiulayi January next. This,2ni ttlier 1-89. 8. M. HERRINGTON, _ Ordinary. IV'l l'.TORS AND CKEDllOltSl j S aving demands against the es- i»i, , ,r > 'ateof Clarke county, dc- notified to render in their de- IJr’ hndersigned Recording to the law; Iv iTJw* t . n, 'el , ted to said estate are re- L immediate payment. r®J'of November 18ta. 1 l Vi . . C. W. PARR. |A*ohdsti-ator B. J. Pair, deceased. nk-mP^ RKE COUNTY—Ordinary’s nCo". U T r* h .» 1*89—Mary A. Lip- l^mmsh-atrlx of F. A. Lipscomb, de- VsJlP'ted for leave to sell the lands of in 8a *d county. This is |Mt m* concerned to nle their ob- Fb j,;.!* )0 y f>ave, on or before the first n8xt else leave will then be r - ®i ) P'icai l t as apniied for. 3 M. HERRINGTON, Ord’y. COUNTY—Ordinary’s Phtlr }*l 4th > 18W-B. m. McAlplD, , e ' t ? teof SarahP. Seay, iWjed for leave to sell the lands ^Railroad and Banklnw Con >ijid i«i,i __ *- »Pp..c*tion will be hoard on ^ January next. j-Sij*- HERRINGTON, Ord’y. ORDINARY’S ^SsgBasawiaamaa attempt to destroy the newly-formed republic. lo tell the truth, these Ameiican republics are dangeious things to r*tM^erei > to another S p«*o iton%a!?ti I foresight of Dora Pedro and did uot S j h “ te Uie prroedent, by wbicli to bo 8» tK!®SSril , a,*aSte!ia2SaSS' feuklcd Wmeanwly betlmuolit ber 5^AUlSfcwi?«KawaSIS , 8ell ’“ f “ P la “ ° r couoh >3 lh ‘ ooionies sssamsas; ig&ss&stfssg i 10 ,aeir tm * f “W* »f nerahip and to have he lull light tq-conduct once: and proceeded without ^g- 1 -... and continue the business, unili.-r the charier | delay saidconpany * f ° r ’ in ^'used by j to put it into effect. Of the conflict Your petitioner < further desire that no stock- i w ^i y h followed, the whole world holder in said company, shall be liable, in his 1, - , private capacity, to any creditor of said com- j Rnows - How the American Cf 1 mists oy Mini siocKnoiiier m sain company, petitioners ilietefdi* pray that the said : able Court- will pass an order gramln &ittf&tsrgbsb&aga' sh ° i from hehind «*» ict-covereil livurs, sunk I be Biiiisb SSSSSP^.fe’SSSSSSSr*®!. men ot* war and finally won-ied ibnt government into a treaty of peace is ‘ well known to every reader of histo ry. And Dom Pedro has evitlebtly rrad history| He knows that there are even more thickets in Brazil than theifi are in North America and that the. European allies which he might se cure in attempting to regain his our Honor- _ jjTauijut ui^i their application, that they and their .associates . and successors be incorpo nted lor tliopurpoi- | es during the tiiue, and with the persons and ' privileges as herein before set forth. And your petitioners will over pray, etc. fl. H. UaBLTON, , . .. ■ ... , retitlonere’ Att’y A true extract from minutes of Clarke Sup erior court. Oct. H, 18S9. G. J->. VINCENT, . Deo 3-5t Clerk. R BOEIVER’S SALE. TTnders Court 8. Mitchell r dered at the October term l.-«9. The Horn N. L. Hutchins, Judge, presiding..I as Receiver, _ «•«>»• *®«M stand but a pniii-shim- in the wild forests of tlie new l»reel of land lyiugiusaid cojt'tyot'ciarke7and South American republic. He real— —* ‘ Tl c-.ty of Atliens.on t.ie West sideofHarberstreet, i 1713 moreover Llm’ ivni> vvoro lw, t„ bounded on the xbrth by lands of Booth Br s, , moieo * el ’ 61 vve,e ‘*0 to he reinstated, there would be consid- Lowm k M e hWaRMl-^e}^iaoe!" 8 ai^Uor^ 1 erfible danger that, after his auxilia- acres, mor"o? td tits * ^ burned lo EuiopeJie would oanbe^aTmyofflc^sVS lotf’to™ Wake U P some mornia S aad his purchaser fr the pur ose of re- throat cut from ear to ear. It is true investment. T trtns cash. F >r furtlier in- ‘ , . , lorination apply to the nnd rsigued.orto Lump- that the Brazilians have let him off km & liuruett, attorney.-. . „ w. d griffe-h, I easy in his deposition a few weeks — | ago;they even paid Ins cabin passage ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE. 1 in Kiirone and wave him -1 Hit U. >,nclr AGREEABLE to an order cf the Court of Or- j gate Mm a 1UIIC pOCK , dinary of Clarke countv, will be sold at 1 et money besides’ It is not likelv Auction at the Court Hou-e door of said county, ■ J J • on the fir.-t Tuesilav in Jannaiy next, within however, that Dom Pedro would get ; lie legal hours of sale the following property, 1 0 to-wit^ a hon-o and lot situated on Baxter : off as easily a second time. The fierv street, in the city of Athens, Clatke County, j Jf - J Georgia. The house contains four good rooms, 1 people pi Brazil helie'-e in the old all plasteiod, with hail running through; also ... , , . „ back nnd front verandas. The house is well Spelllll" book incident of US112crocks plastered, ami finished up in good style, inside \ . .. ... and out, There is a good well of pure water on ; with a veugeance,if grass won t bring the lot, good gaixlcu, fruit trees, etc. The lot „ , , , . - . • ... coutainsone (o aero, more or less, is level, aud the ban boy out or the top Of the S.p is bounded on the North by Baxter street. East 1 _i_ by B. F. Culp’s lot, South by Peabody street, P‘ e tree. {ajK^rara^ssitfre, as i »*• * eh.r.o>«n 5 tic «r a«. Ssirag.wgiaSuffS'aK nM ^ provoked, but when then they get started, thfey are, to use a purely Aipcrican piece of phraseology, “the devil to stop.” Dom Pedro, however, realizes that he has been bounced, and that there is no use kickiDg against those who have knocked him more or less, under good state of cult vation, and bounded on North by lands of E. K. Lumpkin, East by Bobbin Mill lands, South by Bobbin Mill lands and branch, and West by branch known as Cobb’s branch. Sold as the property of B. J. Pair, late of said county deceased. Terms cash. This 2d day of De cember, 1489. doc.3.w4t. C. W. PARR, Adm’r. fJEORGIA, CLARKE COUNTY, obdtnary’S U office. November 29th 183!'.--Anna (lean •ftiuk, November 29th 183!'. 7-Anna Gean ipplied for letters of administration on the . , out of a job. He will no doiibt retire therefore to notify all concerned to file their ob- j lections if any they have on or before the first Monday in January n< xt, else letters will be granted said applicant a- anpliad for, S. M. HERRINGTON, Ordinary. Dec. 3rd 1889. 6t. to some vine-clad retreat in sunny southern Europe.where he will spend the remainder of his* life in reading the history of the American republic and in uttering maledictions against Nellie Jane Teasley,) DIVORCE. VS. > Clarke Superior Court, Green Teasley. > Oct, term, 1839. - To whom Tt appealing to 1 he court by satisfactory ev- , . . „ , t . . , Ihon< F-nx.—B. H. Noble, Aaminlstra- J -ldenco that the defendant lives beyond this the originator of the republican idea • ’ ' State, to-wit in the State of Aikansas, it is or- , 0 1 dered that be be served by publication of this of govern meat, order oncoa month for four months iu the Ath- I ens Banner and that he appear and answer at ever, there IS no doubt, the April term 181:0 of Claike Si.rerior court. N. L. HUTCHIN-i, Judge 8 C. A true extract from the minutes of Clarke Superior Court. C. L. PITNER. w liu 4m. Clerk. ATHENS NURSERY. W. H. THURMOND, Proprietor concerned to file their *N»Jaim ^* T *’ °^- or the iJJJjfiJ noxi 1 said Else letters will .. as applied for.- • HERRINGTON, Ordinary. Cour t of Ordinary hX;,r rU1 , be soW Public out- ;?,uv- door of s-’d county, on ' , *2. cex wit'.-.In the 1 - more rl°V owl ?S Pt0P«ty. t-'-wit: J e 5® ‘y in F in ‘he city 11 tt ^I?u Tot Couth Rock - prin st. thepropotvof Miss sad Emory >vi -lams, U1 ‘- 1 .bis 4th day of Nov. 1889 H. H. Parr, Guardian 1 go Gus Hull farm, one and a half miles from the Court house. Fruit trees, Grape vines, Straw berry plants, Asparagus roots, and a general stock of snob things as are kept in a well con ducted Nursery. Trees and Plants well-grown, 1, 2 and 8 years old. The varieties are all tested and are adapted to this climate. Everything warranted true to name. 5,000 Hick’s Celebrated Ever-bearing Mul berry. Will mak® more hog and poultry food than anything elee that can be planted on the sune groupd. Bears at an early age, and con- tuuea bearing and ripening lor aboutthiee months. Now ready to receive and fill orders. Or ders received by Talmadge A Brightwell at their Hardware store. Also by Shackleford A Hattaway, Thomas street, vL Descriptive and price-list furnished on ap- . .. ... . • *•- a p the and plant. Instructions furnished as to planting and caring for orchards, vineyards etc,, etc., Nov23,89w3m. McElree’8 Wine cf Cardul and THEDFORD’S BLACK-DRAUGHT am for sale by tbe following merchants in Clarks County: E. S. Lyndon, Athens. O. W. Rush & Co., Athens. J. B. Fowler, near Athens. J. W. Hardy, near Athens. one ihing, how- He will not attempt lo regain bis throue, and we repeat that, in so doing, he shows that he is a sensible man. DO YOUR DUTY. An appeal is being made to tbe people of the South by the governors of the various Southern states for contributions for a fund to be used for tbe support of the widow and daughter of Jefferson Davis. To say that such appeal is scarcely neces sary is but to express what is actual ly true of our Southern people. Many times our people, actuated by love such as has never before been given by gratitude to greatness, have been on the point of raising for the support ot Mr. Davis a fund which by its pricceliness should be a fit testimo’- niai of our esteem; but each time such a thing bas beeu mentioned,the self-denying lips,now cold and silent in death,have requested that no such action be taken. Jefferson Davis is gone now, how ever, and, while we in sorrow weep over our loss, let- us remember those loved ones who were left unprovided for,as a result of the devotion of their | husbar.d and father to the Southern cause. What will Athens do? When a Confederate Home was to be built in Atlanta a year ago, Ath ens gave of her substance over two thousand dollars to that purpose, more than -any other Georgia city outside of Atlanta. Let us da as well in this equally noble eaase, to which oar attention is now called; and when in the weeks to* come, we shall see a sum amply adequate, pre sented for the support of the family of our dead hero,we shall rest serene in the consciousness that we have done our duty. A NEEDED REFORM- The Atlanta Constitution tained a day or so ago an interview with Mr. W. H. Turner, that shows a most terrible and deplorable' state of affairs with regard to'the prisons of our State. Mr, Turner bas the duty of carrying, from the county jails tothe penitentiary, those con victed of penitentiary offences ; and with the rare opportunities which he has had for observation, he tells a story which is a blot upon the eivili zaiion of the State. Mr. Turn« r tells qf jails in our State, oh which vermin crawl over the fldors and over the unhappy prisoners, where snakes drag their slimy, lengths over tbe terrified forms of those awaiting trial in the courts. He tells of jails where the prisoners are allowed to go for hours without water, and where they can obtain this life-pre serving fluid only by goiDg to the grated windows and asking the passers-by to take pity on their burning thirst, and to bring them a little wheiewitb they may relieve their suffering. An instance is given of a party who upon conviction was told by his attorney that he could get a new trial ; but he refused’ saying that he would prefer to go to the peniteutiary, rather than spend another month.in the county jail. In mauy of the jails the 'lood, and even the water-—the cheapest of all God’s gifts—are foul beyond de scription ; and men and women are huddled on a common cell, without regard to the laws of decency and of the State. The sheriff or jailor, in many cases, lives miles from the jail, and before he can reach it, the pris oners have been known to lose their lives by fire, or to suffer horribly from thirst or hunger. Filth and pollution abound, and Ibe floors of our county jails are often cess-pools in which scurvy, revolting diseases of every kind, and death in its most horrible form, lurk for their victims. Tbe whoie affair is too terrible for contemplation. NOT TO BE AVOIDED. 1 liere are indications at Washing ton, says the Boston Herald, of a de siie to put the tariff issue in the background. The President, of course, does not treat it with defin iteness of committal. He avoids doing this as regards all public mea» sures of great importance where courage of opinion is required. The secretary of the treasury, who is less timid in his treatment of points gen erally, can find nothing more explicit say concerning the tariff than to Eoough that a human being be subjected to severe punishment, when he has been proven guilty by the courts, but when be is confined in jail, awaiting trial, and when he may thus be as innocent of the crime charged as an unborn babe, it is re volting, it is horrible, it is unpar donable that he shonld be made to undergo terrors and tortures such as even the days of the Inquisition and tbe Bastile would have been asbams ed of. When* Dives lay suffer ing in the depths of hell, be raised his eyes to Lazaros, reclining in heaven, and asked for a drop of wa ter to cool his parched tongue ; and this most terrible punishment, that of thirst, which evfp hell itself re^ sorts to as an extreme penalty, the Georgia jailer, by his carelessness and criminal negligence, inflicts up on tbe prisoners in bis charge. Just tice is mighty, but it derives its strength only from its twin sisters, Wisdom and Moderation. When it begins to lose these latter character*, istics, it becon^ps but a shadow of its former self. We Tejoice that Clarke county has a jail of which none of the above is true. Let us hope, however, that steps will be taken by out Legisla ture, whereby penalties shall be at tached to those whojare negligent in the case of the prisoners in their ckarge,.thus becoming criminal in tbe highest degree. Let us have a prison inspector appointed by tbe State, whose duty it shall be to ex# amine all tbe prisons of tbe State, and to make changes, radical though they may be, whenever it is neces sary for tbe good of those so vitally affected. that protection to home industry should be a governing consideration in adjusting its amended details. Very different kinds of taiiff maj' be arranged under this rule. It does not necessarily endorse the tariff biil introduced into the Senate of con- tbe last Congress ; while on the o.h er hand there is nothing in it to in form the country as lo the views of. the secretary uppn the imporianl features advocated by taiiff reform^ ers, such as the freeing of wool, iron, lumber and salt, from the heavy tax es which now are put upou them. We find symptoms that the leading men of the Republican party appre ciate the rebuke that their tariff poll- icy has received in the late elections. They seem to have reached the con clusion that the Senate bill, which was supposed, when it was introdu ced, to be a panacea for tariff trou bles, will not now do. Beyond that they have not advanced. Legislation on the subject of the silver currency and on that of the elections in the southern states is in the mean time brought into-a promi nence which, in the opening of Con- giess, seems at least to be interded to place the tariff in the background. We doubt if it succeeds. These are subjects to be considered, and they have their ow;n importance. The country is likely to take a considera ble interest in them, and it is alto gether desirable that they shall be intelligently discussed and acted up on. But they cannot push the tariff question out of sight. They cannot make it of minor importance. It is tbe previous question in thisjrespect. It is the question which has been longest neglected in legislation. It he question that most closely af fects the business of the country— the general welfare of the people. This includes not only the men who control the production and conduct the exchanges of the land, but those also who labor in the work-shops and on the farms of our nation are those to whom it appeals. The tariff must be settled, in tbe first place, because the tariff is over taxation. The history of the world doe3 not afford an instance of a peo ple gratuitously overtaxed as ours have been. They have been, and they are, taxed to raise money that neither the government nor any one else wants to use—money which leg islators have to exercise ingenuity to waste, or, worse, to appropriate for mischievous purposes. The tariff must be changed to dispose of this surplus. The President finds this so plain that he ventures to commit himself upon that point. He pro poses to get rid of it by going into the internal revenue. He will posi tively have tobacco relieved of taxa tion, and perhaps he will have a por tion of the tax on spirits removed. But beyond these there is still the revenue from customs. No one bas the hardihood to say that in dealing with the surplus only the internal revenue is to be drawa upon. Aside from this, the tariff question has reached a stage in which it has become more than a question of disposing of „the surplus revenue. In that point of view the tariff should have been changed long ago. But, as the present tariff has continued to operate, it has become more bur densome with each yfcar. Always oppressive to the people generally, it has, of late, been found to bear with peculiar heaviness upon a class whom it was ostensibly framed to aid. Tbe manufacturers of the land them selves have suffered from it. The essence of protection is, of course, partiality. There may be a reasona ble partiality, which will chiefly pro tect the American manufacturers against foreign competition, or there may be another kind of partiality which kills the business of one class of Americans by affording undue protection to tbe business of another kind of Americans. All extreme protective tariffs are sure to have this latter effect, first or last. The present extreme protective tariff has at length reached a point at which tlie American manufacturers against whom it discriminates can endure its effects no longer. The tariff ques tion will not down until their claims are considered. The attention of the people gen~ eraily has been drawn to the tariff ia the last two years as it ha3 not been for a full generation. Their interest in it has been increasing with every month during* that period. In the study they have thus given to it,they have had an education which is of the highest value. Its effect is shown in the groat change of public opinion that has been wrought dur— ing that time. All this cannot be set aside at the fiat of politicians who find it an inconvenient or em barrassing issue for their own pur poses. It must go on to its legiti mate end, which is the reform of the tariff bn the liberal principles of modern enlightenment in political economy, and in accordance with tbe reasonable claims both of tlie bnsi* □ess and the labor of the country. The silver question is not one in which there is any wrong in which any portion of the people are suffer ing. Ibe national election move ment is chiefly a political Behemc. But.the tariff* is a vital present issue. It is an issue for which the people have been preparing for years, and which they^are in a temper to insist sfcall be settled. The politicians will do well to heed the people’s at titude with regard to it. LET IT BE RAISED. There can be no doubt now, bat that there will be a monument raised to the memory of Jefferson Davis in tbe South. The fund has already, been started, and is increasing in. wonderful proportions each day* There is no telling what city will claim the monument, but flfibm the present outlook it would seem that Atlanta wilL lay a just claim to it. This city has brought upon itself a great deal of applause for the prompt manner in which it took up the fund, and the liberality it is showing in the furtherance of that fund. But wherever it is placet!, let the mbirtiment be laised. It will stand not only in memory of Mr. Davis* but of the Lost Cause, of which he was chosen leader, and for which he suffered mneh. We have no doubt but that the ne cessary amount to raise a monument to the memory of Mr. Davis, could be raised easily in almost every arge city in tbe Southern States, and this we would like to see acconi- plished. The press has pledged its support tothe work, and will further the effort to raise the fund as far as its power goes. Let the people of Georgia do their part of the work. Let subscriptions be opened all over the State, and let the people of the South raise a shaft that will in some way represent their love for the grand old man. THE DAVIS FUND. The Boston Herald has the foU lowing to say with regard to the fund that is being raised in the South for the support of Mr. Davis’ family : hind that has been so promptly started down South for the relief of the family of Jefi Davis, who, it appears, have been left in rath er poor cireumstances, is likely to reach a handsome figure ia*a very short spice of time This is scarcely to be wondered at, considerini; the chivalrous feeling that warms tbe bear’s of the people of the South,and if the fund shou?d be locreaa d by subscriptions fiom the North it would be all the better. The proposed snb- scnptmn for a monument to the departed chief ablescheme. Ctconfederaojr ifla less commend- These are kind words from the editor of the Herald, and will be ap preciated .by fSoulbern patriots ev erywhere, coming as they do from a Northern editor to a Northern people without prejudice. CONSUMPTION CURED. , 4 n physician, retired from practice, hav- had placed in his hands by an East India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedv and permanent fnre of Bronchitis, C’atarrh, Asthma and all throat and Lung Affections; also a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and all Nervous Complaints, after having test^ ed its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, has felt tt his duty to make it known to his suffering fellows. Actuated by this^0° tive, and a desire to relieve humansufierinsL will send free of charge, to all who desire if *“■ '?• Ge ™ an > French or English with full directions for preparing and usim? — Sent by mail by addressln/with stamp. niZ bScIXSS^.Zy*- *”*■ “»fcSS dco‘3i-lycow. Lyndon’s Planing Mills.—We learn that this industry is doing a driving business now, and that the de mand for dressed lumber iu Athens at present is hard to keep supplied. So much for the building boom.