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^Vrcklii fjleu; (Eta.
TERMS OF THE WEEKLY - :
Official Journal of the United States
nil RlrtO
'•Gnd term of Monroe';
to the reveille of ottr own. They come fifth
ulmiuis- | without reenutihg or abandoning those opli
» entertain ami express them,
apt, therefore, directly or indirectly
w socially or politically
of American citizenship,
ariauce with our professed desire to
lem seek homes in our midst
Official Journal of the State of Georgia*
CJE.VKli.AL. GHAXT,
The Pilot who can akd will guide the
Ship o? State safely through every storm.
THE NEW ERA
Will Vindicate the Principles and the
Policy op the Republican Party, and Sup
port its Nominees, State and National.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, :: JUNE 8, 1870.
Tlie Xrw Dimm vaUi IMatfmm.
In an advisory address, the Chairman of the
, Kentucky Democratic State Central Commit-
Da. F. F. Tarek is a
and receipt for Subscripts
account of the New Ei:a.
oii zed to solicit
and Job Work on
Del in
lit!*.
After the 10th we shall discontinue the Era
to all mail subscribers who are delinquent on
onr books. If you fail to get your paper you
will know why.
the Fl
it will be seen, by reference to onr dis
patches this morning, Dai the Democratic
Agent of the New York Associated Press was
mistaken in his statement that the Reconstruc
tion Committee had agreed to amend the Geor
gia Bill so as to require an election in Novem
ber next. This puts a very different phase
npon the “ situation ” at Washington.
The a’cuMoring organ (with a little o) of the
Bryant Democracy, s'coMeretb a caf-alectic
rat-aclysm of cat-achrestic wit over a fancied
mistake in the colnmns of Thursday's Era.
The x’eaMerer displays a little “method in its
madness" by heading its criticism, “A Cat
astrophe." It ctd-erwauls over the caption
“State Metes," which appeared in the Era of
Thursday, uud bumptiously tells ns to—
“x’cal r Now if tbo s’caf-tcrer docs not know
the meaning of the word mars, it is time for it
to learn. “Mews” is a noun and signifies “an
enclosed, or confined space;” and therefore
“State Mews” might,- with perfect propriety,
be used to denote a space in a paper, set apart
for State afflux*! The aW-terer is perhaps too
busy to pay much attention to words or their
significations, but if Jt would keep a Web
ster's unabridged on hand, »1! the time, it
might avoid many ridiculous errors nut typo
graphical. So, in reply, we also say “scat’
4 the s’mf-tcrer’s “cof-aatrophe.”
Tlie Grcut Roman Council.
Few some days past, the cable has had a
good deal to say about the proceedings of the
Council at Rome. A brief glance at the news
may not l>e devoid of interest The Schema
de Homan* Pontifice, embracing the Inedi
bility dogma, is still under discussion. The
friends of the dogma are full of confidence.
Absentees have been summoned to Rome, and
the Curia can now count on a majority. The
retirement of certain Eastern Churchmen, and
the protests of a number of Catholic Powers
has no effect, and Cardinal Antonalli gently
intimates to France, Austria, and Bavaria
that they may as well attend to their proper
business and leave the Church alone. M.
Venilott, the Ultramontane editor of I/Uni
verse, has presented the Pope with one hun
dred thousand fraucs, an emphatic proof of
his approbation. The Council will probably
sit all summer, or at least until the iufidi-
bility. dogma shall have been adopted or re
jected.
Tlir German Intellect In Amrrlm
There is a journal in St. Lofiis devoted en
tirely to speculative philosophy The views
of Hegel, Kant, Fichte, and other great Ger
man thinkers, are reproduced in this periodi
cal for the benefit of American readers. It is
interesting to observe the changes wrought in
our literature by the speculative intellet of Ger
many, and U is appereut that natives of that
country; who have adopted America os their
home, are beginning to exercise considerable
influence, social, moral, and political, npon
our destinies. We see its effects spiwd out
before us in tho public, prints, we hear its
voice in the halls of legislation, in the school
room and courthouse. In fact the Germans in
this country are writing our school-books and
oar law books, and are even making oar laws
Among them are to be found some of the best
thinkers in the world; and their amalgamation
with the practiud Americans, affords the hap
piest possible combination of thought and ac
tion that could be mode. The possibilities yet
to be evolved out of this subject, are of a grand
and brilliant character. That they are not mere
fancies, is demonstrated by the realities al
ready accomplished. 1
tration down to the present time, no politicaf I ions, but claiming the right, ns American
party has ever been uble to elect a President izens, or as men seeking American citizeii-
unless it had gained strength enough to carry ' ship,
the House of Representatives two vears be- j Any ntt
fore. In view of this precedent, and the rapid made to ostracl
approach of tho fall elections, the Democracy for this prerog;
is getting nervous and figily. The leaders of j is
the forlorn hojie, fully appreciate the fact that hr
they cannot elect their candidate for the Pres
idency in 1872, unless they can secure a inn- j
jority iu the lower House of the uext'Congn
Hence they are beginning to look about thi
to map out their campaign and set their
house in order for the contest.
Unfortunately, they have no National
Platform of Principles, except blind op
position to issues now settled, or resistance to
asures now part of the law of the laud,
ey have gotten so far in the rear of all the
ing issues of the day, and have so steadfastly
lived in the memories of the Post, that they
appear not to know their exact bearing. In
deed, they seem so utterly lost iu the mazes
and mists intervening between them and the
People ; so completely dumb-fouuded over the
confused visions of a somewhat long but fitful
slumber ; so startled at the strange and altered
apj>ear»nce of things, and so disconcerted and
chagrined nl not being recognized even by
whilom friends and acquaintances, that they
know not where or how to begin a renewal of
an acquaintance with practical issues or living
realities.
What is to be their platform ? Repudiation
is now odious, even in Ohio. The XVth Amend
ment is a fixed fact even in Kentucky and
Maryland. Free Trade does not possess the
charm it once did, even with Southern Demo
crats; and Secession, State Sovereignty, Penca-
ble Separation, Triple-Confederation, Wild
Cat Banking—all these issues and political
crotchets revive unpleasant associations, and
must therefore be abandoned
If therefore Democrats would hope for sne-
ss, they must relax their grasp upon tho Past
They must prosecute with vigor a therongh re
form of their party as respects its principles,
measures, its name,, and, posibly, its
leaders also. Old contests which sprang ont
of Slavery, must be abandoned. Opposition
to Impartial Suffrage and to the issues involved
in the Reconstruction policy of the Govern
ment, must be abandoned also; and leaders must
rely for success upon the strength of the Prin
ciples of their parly (if inded they have any
principles,) rather than upon a shameless pros
titution of the ballot-box through fraudulent
registation and gangs of repeaters, as practiced
in New Y’ork City. It must reduce to practice
its professions about reducing the taxes of the
people whenever, as in New York, it Inis con
trol over the public expenditures. It must de
clare in favor of the abolition the Income
Tax. It must wipe out its old record and sat
isfy the people that it stands ready to vindicate
the national unity and honor whenever the au-
thority'of the Government is resisted from with
in and from without Iu a word, “the Democ
racy" must not only abandon its heresies, its old
platform, its name and its leaders; but it must
become Republican in fact, if not in name, by
adopting, in some disguised form, the entire
Platform of the National Party.
Some of the abler and more practicable
minds in charge of the sick and sickening
Democracy fully appreciate the exigencies of
the test*, uud have boldly proclaimed for an
advance movement They did this even iu
1808; but the iucorrigibles aud impractica
ble* among its sectional leaders, could not
rise to A comprehension of tho issues of the
hour, and so division and disaster was the
result And so it will be again. The strength
of Hie parly oo*w»«l4. «*ow, «*« m *W>
lentiug prejudices uguinst the negro; in its
hostility to the doctrine of paramount allegi
ance of the citizen to tho Federal Government;
in its blind adhesion to the dogmas of a post
decade; and that Democratic leader who dares
step beyond the barricades of passion and
prejudice, will, like Judge Reagan of Texas, or
Rosecrans of Ohio, not only cast his
pearls before swiue, but place himself under
the ban of those who embody “all its virtue
and respectability!”
tee declares that “ the affairs of the Govern
ment shall bo managed and conducted by the
white race." Nevertheless, “the negroes have
been made voters de facto," saitli this oracle.
queutly, “if colored men sec fit to vote
the Democratic ticket, it is the duty of Demo
crats to enceurage and protect them ”1 Other
wise (L e., in case he does not “see fit” so to
vote) “the negro ought not to be recognized
as a political element ” in the Democratic or
ganization; and consequently “ought not to
be permitted to take part in the primary elec
tions or conventions of the. party.”
This is certainly a very subtile dictincuon.
The negroes may vote for the Democratic can
didates, after the nominations are mode; but
they may not be allowed to have anything to
do with nominating the ticket, or with con
structing the Democratic platform!
Nor is thi« position peculiar to the De
mocracy of Kentucky. The Augusta Consti
tutionalist, (one of the oldest Democratic or
gans in Georgia), holds substantially the
same views. That paper combats the propo
sition to resurrect the Democracy upon a
Chase platform. It wonts Democracy pure
and simple—issues of 1850-G0 aud all—or
not ut tdi. Nevertheless, in view of an elec
tion this fall (which, however, it says is “ex
tremely problematical,”) it behoves the De-
monicy to make war on no doss”—not even
the carpet baggers! “It is not necessary,
says the Constitutionalist, “even to moot the
question of the policy of negro suffrage;" the
least said about that is.the best; but “we can
simply claim the constitutional right of the
State to regulate the question of suffrage for
herself," and therefore (we presume) to make
the issue after the election, in case of snccess!
The same paper favors “any system of suffrage
that works fAc best after a fair trial and experi-
and hence, if the negroes should vote
the Democratic ticket, and give promise of
doing so for all time, “our people can be left
to control the block vote" without “any loss of
dignity or compromise of principle." Most
assuredly ! and the Constitutionalist never
doubted that the black vote in Georgia could
be controlled" by Democratic influences; but
it “never will admit that the negro should be
recognized as a political element,” or that
‘negro suffrage is a fixed fact”
The idea, in both instances, seems to be
about this: The ratification of the XVth
Amendment, and the late act of Congress for
the enforcement of that Amendment, make
the negro a voter. As an elector, his ballot is
not to be despised or wholly ignored. Pend-
venture he may vote the Democratic ticket;
if so, well. In that event, he shall be gra
ciously permitted to do so ! He will even be
protected in the exercise of this high privi
lege. But lest this should not be the case,
Democracy reserves to itself the right to abol
ish this Amendment, and make him “simply
a free nigger” when it comes into power. If
however, after “fair trial and experiment'
the negro manifests a willingness to vote the
Democratic ticket and ask no questions, then,
and in that case, Democrats “can be left to
control the black vote without any loss of
dignity of compromise of principle!”
John T.ntlirop .Wo*Icy.
For once the intellect and public opin
ion of the American peoplo find a repre,
sentative, at the Court of St. James, who
would reflect credit upon any nation. This is
John Lathrop Motley, the polished scholar,
brilliant historian, and profound thinker. The
course pursued by this gentleman, since his
arrival in England, has bcou such os to excite
the warmest commendations, from the friends
of the Administration, and from those opposed
to it Scarcely had the press ceased to ap
plaud the Naturalizution treaty negotiated by
Mr. Motley, than tliu telegraph informs us that
he is about to succeed in establishing nu Inter*
national copyright and Patent right system be
tween the two countries. This will be a fine
thing for iuventors; aud the tired brain-work-
mxu, who have been compelled to quietly sub
mit to the systematic liferary pilfering now go
ing on, will gladly welcome the tardy justice
which ri cognizes their right to profit by their
own labor. Inventors liavc had much to com
plain of, but authors, that genus IsrilqbiD, have
long been fretting over the State of affairs
which rendered exertion more profitable to the
idk> than to the industrious. This new treaty
will odd fresh laurels to Mr. Motley’s reputa
tion as a diplomatist.
Folly,
Two men iu Loolsfaua. went ont with their
seconds, Urn other day. to fight a duel. Ser-
geons were on hand onticijiating a bloody
termination of the affair. The combatants
didn't like tbe looks of things, and by mutual
consent, when the signal was given, they dis
charged their pistols at a tree instead of firing
at each other. They then shook hands, de
clared their honor vindicated, ami returned
home to be tho laughing stock of /fie town.
and t)l« Finnegan*.
. And now it is announced that Mr. Tweed
has “come down with the dust”—with enough
at least to defray the expenses of the remnant
of the Fenian army home, where they are
much needed for the dirty work of the thing
♦‘Democracy. Tweed is so full of the “milk of
Unman kindness" that it is continually
• ‘slapping over” and “greasing" every son of J natives of a distant clime, to come and seitl
Tammany who has a vote. Ga-lorions Tweed !! aud invest their means in our midst These
Iliimlgru* Ion-—How to Encourage It.
There la one thing upon which all men of
all parties in Georgia, LO far as we know to
the contrary, are agreed. AU agree that immi
gration is desirable. AU profess a willingness
to encourage it All are therefore presumed
to be favorable to any and all legitimate, hon
orable means of procuring so desirable an
end.
Tbe immigrant to be a valuable or desirable
acquisition, should be something more than
nu animal. He should be more even than a
mere intellectual animal. He should have on
ideal of home, and the aspirations of a psycho
logical befog. This introduces him to the
Social System, and to the Family relation. He
wiU therefore, in the nature of things, have
social and domestic ties; and, to make him a
contented and valuable citizen, the wonts
growing out of this relation mn»>t bo supplied.
His children must be educated. This creates a
necessity for Schools. A1 immigrants are not
wealthy, and therefore not able to patronize
Colleges and Universities. Many of them, in
deed most of them, like oar own natiye popu
lation, are poor but honest and worthy men.
But their very scantiness of means, coupled
with industry and economy, will make them
all the more efficient co-laborers in the develop
ment of the industrial and commercial re
sources of the State. Hence the necessity for a
Public School System, suoh as will place the
means of education within the reach of the
humblest citizen. This is a condition precedent
to any and all sacessful Emigration schemes.
Without this, we may indeed have serfs and
peons, and homeless and hopeless ad
venturers without number, but not
immigrants. Skilled mechanics, enter
prising traders and artificers may indeed
come among, us, not to seek homes, but to
make money wherewith to purchase aud beau
tify homes elsewhere—thus becoming the in
struments of depletion rather than accumula
tion. If we would have them become citizens,
we must offer inducements equal to those of
fered by the States of the North aud Week In
Wisconsin or lows* for instance, n skilled la
borer wjll work cheaper than in Georgia, for
the reason that his children may there enter
an efficient and well conducted Public School,
and complete their education free of cost;
whereas in Georgia, it would require his entire
earnings, five times over, to send his children
to some distant Academy or Boarding School
until their education is completed. And, for
the same reason, a small farmer with a capi
tal of say one thousand dollars, would invest
in a home in Wisconsin or Iowa rather than
ju a country whoso climate is indeed superior,
but where his children must either grow up
in ignorance or jvhere their education involves
bankruptcy or continuous poverty. Conse
quently lands in those Western States where
Free Schools arc established and kept np in
every sub-district, are ready sale at ten and
fifteen dollars per acre, whereas in Georgia
they are a drag npon the market at from three
u> ton.
There Is another fact connected with the sub-
ject of immigration, and the investment of for
eign capital in Georgia, that is worthy of atten
tion. We invite the immigrant and the capitalist
This last stroke of policy eclipses even thine
own audacity, and that is almost Gorganian
jn its brazen majesty.
men have their peculiar ideas of civil polity
and social pleasures, the same as we have;and
not unfrequently they hold opinions directly
Georgia Luilil Owner* and Immigration.
A few years since, a gentleman of fortune
who owned a body of unimproved laud lying
within the (now extended) corporate limits o
Atlanta, gave a poor but worthy and industri
ous man a buil liug lot on a remote “‘Corner of
his plat. This was upon the condition that
the donee should build upon and mike it his
home. Iu a few months, a handsome cottage I lueu b
was erected, the grounds enclosed and im- I
proved, aud the family installed iu their uew |
home. It was the only dwelling perhaps
within a quarter of a mile around. \ The re
mainder of the plat was divided into residence
lots, with conveniently arranged alljps, and
put upon the market at accommodating terms.
few mouths, over half the lots ifid been
sold to first-class settlers, and tastefully ar
ranged dwellings sprang up where before were
unsightly gullies and red clay banks. The re
sult of it all was, that a single residence lot of
one hundred feet by two hundred on the same
cently sold for nearly three times the
sum asked for the whole ten acres in 1865!
^fhe example of the Atlanta landlord lias
its moral. It is full of instruction to tVe land-
owners all over the State. Georgia lns noth-
ing in such superfluous abundance as lands.
We simply mean by this that there are unim
proved lands enough in the State to support
a population twelve times our present number.
Aud this population, (if it were of the right
kind,) would not only make our lands twenty
times inoro valuable, but would make the
State twenty times richer in manufactures^
agriculture aud in commerce than she now is-
Most men will admit this. The question is,
how to get this additional population^-wnd in
getting it, how to select it from the best ma
terial—for we want none but a good^cfass.of
population, not drones, paupers, vagrants
and convicts. Our Atlanta friend, just Referred
to, seemed to comprehend the subject. And
yet the manner of his solution of the prob
lem seems never to. have suggested itself to
the owners of thousands of acres now held at
from five to ten dollars per acre!
In addition, therefore, to the conditions of
school privileges and freedom of opinion and
speech, as mentioned yesterday, there should
be something like enterprise and liberality on
the part of land owners themselves. Both are
essentially necessary to induce immigration.
Our State Legislature may deal in glittering
generalities about population os conditional to
wealth. It may extend a cordial invitation
to foreign immigrants. It may even fend
agents to Europe, upon comfortable salaries,
charged with the duties of drumming up im
migrants. All this and more has been cpne,
but no immigrants yet! Meanwhile, the tide
continues to pour into Wisconsin, Iowa, Kan
sas and Minnesota in,one unbroken stream of
living humanity! Why is this? Do yon, in
deed, ask why the first cottage was built u
that unsightly and desolate ten-acre lot wil
the suburbs of Atlanta? Po you ask 1
that man’s property came so suddenly
demand; and, consequently, why hi? un
sightly community of red-clay hills and gul
lies is now a beautiful villa? The same policy
pursued by the land owners in the county aryl
all over the State would, in time, produce like
results. Do yon doubt it? Look at the
sterile plains of the Northwest, where whit
was a morass or a wilderness of last year, is
a thrifty looking little farm this!
But Georgia has no public domain? True.
Neither had that surburban village of Atlanta;
but its landed proprietor made one. That was
the starting point He adopted that species
of organized immigration, (so to speak,) that
has made Wisconsin and Iowa what they ore
and, he succeeded. It is organized immi
gration that is making the North West
Tbe **3frw Democracy” or Oliio.
Even the Ohio Democracy have become
ashamed of repudiation. They have adopted
a platform of formidable length, but they say
nothing about repudiation. This leaves Mr.
Pendletou out in the cold It is likewise a
virtual repudiation of the National platform
of July, 18G& Iu all other respects the new
structure Is fiercely orthodox. It begins by
resolving that the present tariff be denounced,
aud that no candidate for office is worthy of
confidence who is not in favor of a low reve
nue tariff. The tariff must be low enough to
approximate the old hobby, ‘‘Free trade.” It
resolves, in the next place, that the iuterual
revenue system of the United States is “un-
indnmble and oppressive in its exactions;
and, in anticipation of the passage of the mea
sure now before Congress for the abolition of
the income tax, it makes the repeal of that
acta condition to its membership! It then
wants the collection of the internal revenue
ensirusted to State aud county officers, as the
best means of evading it! It resolves, in the
next place, to “denounce the profligacy of
the present Federal administration. ” Bat here
is the gist of the whole matter:
Resolved, That we regard the act recently
passed by Congress to enforce the Fifteenth
Amendment as unconstitutional, unjust and
oppressive, an invasion of the rights of States,
snbaenive of the best interests of the people,
and therefore demand its repeal.
In other wards, they want the Act repealed
because it enforces a clause of the Constitu
tion which the Democracy alone opposed!
The XVth Amendment was bad in itself;
but then its worst feature is that which gives
Congress the power to enforce its provisions
“by appropriate legislation.*' But for this
“appropriate legislation” the Amendment
might be very readily evaded, os it was in
California. Hence they can get along very
comfortably with the Amendment, provided it
is never enforced!
The platform closes with a resolviT denun
ciatory of a system of National Bonks, and de
mands an immediate repeal of the law creat
ing them. In other words, it wonts the old
“wild cat” system revived. All of which is
good “Democracy!” -
Hiaily-Mndc Men.
One glance at a list of popular books affords
a pretty correct idea of prevailing tastes, ideas
and wonts. We see advertised manuals of
conversation and manners; books professing
to make orators, writers and scholars. These
publications are very popular. Charles Au
gustus buys them alL He verily believes that
one hasty perusal will make hiuj a Chester field,
with the wit of Tlieodre Hook and the speak
ing talents of a Chatham. He thinks that
they will teach him the art of writing letters
which will dwarf Bryan's, or those of Junius,
into comparative insignificance. Poor Charles
Augustus, there is no royal road to these ac
complishments. Others cannot give them to
you. Native genius must create them. Learn
this truth now, and savo yourself a bitter dis
appointment Apart from the comic view of
the subject these books and their popularity
show' the disposition of our youth to bo some
thing in the world, and this is 'a gratifying
sign. But we never expect tp see a ready
made man. “Greatness thrust upon,” etc., is
contemptible. Resolve at the outset to achieve.
Go in for action, sublime God-like action ?"
Wf«ton .
The indefatigable Weston is at it again. Not
content with the puerile feat of walking one-
hundred miles in twenty-two hours, he showed
the New Yorkers last week that it was possi
ble lo get though fifty miles in nine hours,
fiity-eight minutes and fifty-five seconds. He
propv.Nf- ii- \t t«> st.utle the English sporting
world, but in order to ipjlke a reputation there
he will have [to increase lih. iq*0cd over cue
mile per hour, or he will tell behind Capt.
Barclay.
induce immigration, create a sort of joiut
stock domain. Organization abroad for immi
gration hither, is not possible unless those
promoting it are able to speak positively in
regard to the region awaiting settlement.
Bnt Ibis can be effected only through joiut
effort agreement by and between the land own
ers of tho State.
Until some System, based upon the principle
here indicated, con be effected, our land owners
will find it necessary to moderate their expec
tations respecting foreign emigration. They
will find it necessary to await the slower pro
cess of immigration from the Northern and
Middle States, and trust to the limited coloni
zation which Northern former* and mechanics
may find profitable.
They call this aoepril affair a Tournament,
whereas it is nothing more or less than an
old-fashioned gander-pulling, with a ring
hung up to be pulled down, instead of an un
fortunate gander with his neck greased! As
the Roman gladiatorial, shows were the origi
nal of the knightly tourney, so the gander-
pulling has degenerated into tho “Tourua-
If any one doubts our theory, let him
nsult Lougstreet’-s “Georgia Scenes.”
So ancient and modern chivalry are alike in
and iu. their ridiculous features;
alike in despising honest industry and attempt
ing to enslave labor; alike' in endeavoring to
shackle free thought an I gagging free speech;
alike iu their disposition to persecute for opin
ion’s sake; alike in their contempt for the law;
and alike in their desire to keep education from
the ignorant. As the ancient Knight was proud
of his descent from a long line of ancestral rob
bers and murderers, so our modem Bayard
Sidney is proud when he is able to prove
that he had a great grandfather (few American
families can safely trace their pedigree beyond
the third generation,) though the respectable
old gentleman would probably, were he olive,
be heartily ashamed of his descendant
It were to be wished that our modem chiv
alry had some of the good qualities of its
ancient namesake, with none of its manifold
vices, and more of the virtues of modem civi
lization; bnt as tjje world progresses, we doubt
not that tho bastard thing we call “chivalry”
will go down beforo the advance of education
and enlightenment, os Knight Errantry was
prostrated before the pen of Cervantes.
The
A RACY LETTER.
id the
•nor of ldali
Road.
The spirit of “investigation” which has so
stirred the bile of local politicians for weeks
past, seems not to have wholly omitted the I
correspondents, reporters and attaches of the
SPIRIT OF
THE GEORGIA PRESS. Friday next... .Jos. D. Waddell compromised
with the Rome Railroad for $15,000. The jury
gave him a verdict for $35,000 Crops flour
ishing Sheriff L. P. May dying T. W.
Akxauder elected President of tho Building
J aud Loan Association.
TUB SAVANNAH HEWS, (DEM.)
Of the bill for the enforcement of tho XVth |
Amendment saitli:
It remains to be seen whether the Northern
people* against whom at present the Radical
- I junta at Washington has no pretext for
daily press. So now that “interviewing" has I ploying the government of the drum-head and
become somewhat antiquated, “investigating” J bayonet, and who are yet, nominally, at
Wtoy do Immigrants Avoid tbe South!
Iu a recent agricultural Convention in South
Carolina—which, however, seems to have been
more political a partisan than “ Agricultural”
—Mr. D. W. Aiken declared : “ If any man
occupies my land as my equal, he mast do it
after my death.” In the very next sentence,
he said he wanted immigration l He did not
tell us what ho meant by immigration. That
is left wholly to inference. Being a gentleman
himself, he wanted no gentleman to migrate to
South Carolina and occupy his land, either as
tenant or purchaser! In all probability, there
fore, he means peonage when he says “ immi
gration.” Any other construction would do
violence to his notions of “equality.” It is
needless to say that, as yet, South Carolina is
not seriously overburthened with immigrants
and, in view of such sentiments, entertained
and expressed by the land owners of the State,
it is not likely that she will be.
Nor is this idea peculiar to the South Caro
lina land owners. They have the same notions
Louisiana,- as we infer from this circum
stance : A large planter made an experiment
for tho introduction of German labor. “He pat
the immigrants into his old negro quarters, and
gave them rations consisting of a peek of corn-
meal, three pounds of bacon and a quart of
molasses ! ” In other words, he treated them
as he treated his servants before the war. Of
coarse the Germans became disgusted, and
left And so it will ever be. The'laud owners of
the South have much to learn before they can
reasonably expect immigration. Men like Mr.
Aiken, for instance, mast get off of their stilts
and cease to “tarn np nose at poorer men in
plain clothes.” They must learn that such a
policy will drive away men of spirit. It may
not effect the vagabonds or Chinese jugglers ;
but it will effectually keep out of the State that
class of tenants and small farmers who seek
homes among strangers.
We are glad to know that this stnpid idea
does not posses tho minds of many of our
Georgia planters—especially in the Northern,
Middle and Western portions ot the State.
There Is perhaps less of it in and abont At-
very naturally takes its place.
- Under these circumstances, private papers
will sometimes find their way to tbe printer;
and this seems all the more natural in view of
the fuct that, daring such seasons of Investi
gation, papers and private correspondence
cannot claim immunity from examination, the
more especially when the investigators are
conjured, by all that is sacred and holy, to
make a “clean shucking” of the work before
them.
Thus it was that one of the Era reporters
came into possession of the following racy
letter, which he picked up, as he tells us,
somewhere abont the Superintendent’s office
at the State Road Depot. As this letter is
very readable; and, moreover, as it is of in
terest to the public, we have concluded to pub
lish it and take the consequences;
Western and Atlantic Railroad,
Superintendent’s Office,
Atlanta, Ga., June 3d, 1870.
Dr. Samuel Bard, Philadelphia, Pa.—Dear
Sir: Your favor of the 29th ulL, with which
you surrender your free pass over this road,
given ‘you in January last as editor of the
New Era, aud in which you also inclose your
««wl as editor of the “True Georgian, "--thereby
intimating your desire for a free pass as editor
of the last named paper—has been received.
I hand you, with my compliments, a free
pass over our rood as editor of the “Daily and
Weekly True Georgian.”
I fear, however, it will be of little use to
you if you really beliti e the following state
ment, which occurs over your signature i
your Prospectus of “The True Georgian"—
‘The State Railroad, which, under former ad
ministrations, was an unfailing source of large
and constant revenue, though its gross re
ceipts have greatly increased, has almost
ceased to contribute to the State Treasury.
The road, meanwhile, suffers for want of
necessary repairs, ami is actually looked upon
as unsafe and datujerotts,” etc.
Now, if this be true, or, if you even believe
it to be true, I apprehend that yon would
hardly put yourself in a position where your
life would be in constant and unnecessary
peril. Furthermore, if you really believe
what you say iu your Prospectus, that fact
will, in all probability, preclude the possibility
of your ever believing otherwise; for I am
persuaded that no prudent man like yonrself
would voluntarily put himself in the way of
positive danger or peril, merely for the pur
pose of demonstrating to the world, and to
his friends, that the road is “unsafe aud dan
gerous,” and, consequently, that what you
say is tme! Whilst I regret, therefore, the
unfortunate state of your mind which will
prevent yon from nsing the free pass, I
hope yon will do me the justice to remember
that I consider the road perfectly safe, aind,
consequently, do not, by compliance with your
delicately insinuated wish, mediate auything
like violence to your person, or indulge the
hope that you 11 may perish by the wayside."
In conclusion, allow me to thank you for
your warm expressions of personal friendship,
and your best wishes for my happiness aud
success, aud beg leave to subscribe myself.
Your obedient servant,
Foster Blodgett, Sup’t.
least, in the enjoyment of the rights of’citi
zens of a Constitutional Republic, will submit
to a law which virtually strikes down that Con
stitution.—
[Is not the XVth Amendment a part ot “that
Constitution” about which you are eternally
prating?’!]
THE AUGUSTA CONSTITUTIONALIST (DEM.)
Has a three column panegyric upon Mr. Ste
phens and his history of the war.
ALBANY NEWS (DEM.)
Breaks ont thusly :
The spirit of democracy, the spirit of right,
lingers not for a moment; like the waters of a
AUGUSTA.
River 10 feet 7 inches Fist aud skull
fight on Broad street Saturday Randall
Beverly and John Gautt arrested on suspicion *
of robbliiB .aA-A.’sg—-
nug=snootiug endangers the lives of citizens.
William Smith, colored, has been missing
for some days, and Thursday his mangled body
was found under a pile of rubbish. A
match trotting race came off at La Fayette race
course Saturday. “Harlem Boy” won in 3:12.
Police to be uniformed in gray flannel
blouses, white linen pants and Panama hats.
The Chronicle and Sentinel claims for
Augusta an equal population with Atlanta.
... .Summer fights, frequent Recent cool
sparkling rivulet, it moves along unsilent, and I weather caused by spots on the sun. At least,
» **» the Cbronide ,na Sentinel.
by its achievements in the future. Thc teeomo Tllx .
[The achievements of tbe Democracy! Sec TU e proposition to repeal the Income Tax
the hundred thousand Confederate graves, and continues to excite discussion in Congress. It
a land filled with widows and orphans.] j occupied the House all day Friday, hut on ad-
the yumds Basssc. (nr.ir.) jourmneut was had without a vote or any defi-
Iu the lace of the Beport of the “Corruption “t* results. The debate, however, disclosed
Committee,” males this statement for the hen- the fact that the opposition to thc Tax is rap-
cat of those of its readers who may have never hlly gaining ground ; and it is not improbable
read that Beport: that members will ultimately yield to the de-
It was not the amount of tho bids, but tho uiands of their constituents, and repeal this
character of the currency that defeated Bui- f
ock*8 scheme. If he had offered greenbacks
nstead of Brunswick and Albany Railroad
bonds he might have stood some chance of
success. But what loyal Radical Senator) in
his sober senses would sell his vote for $10,-
000 Brunswick and Albany Railroad bonds,
which are to be repudiated whenever we have
a legislature representing the will of the hon
est people of Georgia.
[Why did not the Banner let the Committee
say what they thought about it? No, that
would not do. The baseless charge must be
kept up, even iu the face of the fact that it is
utterly false.]
THE LAGRANGE REPORTER (DEM.)
’.ante than iu almost any other locality iu the
3E? And whirt is th» couseauenc':? Whilst
the availability of immense bodies of land,
either , as part of tho public domain,
property of the railroad companies o»* as the
property of those large laud owners who, to
Chivalry, Ancient aud Modern.
It is sometimes an interesting study to trace
the derivation of words, and the signification
which becomes attached to them in the ccnrse
of time. Thus, in the case of the word
“chivalry,” at first signifying riders on
horse-back or cavalry, it came to be
synonyme for ’ generosity, bravery, hu
manity and other noble qualities. Gentle
men in the olden times went on horse-back,
the commonalty on foot—the one clad in
armor, the other in rags. The knightly vow
of service to God, the King and the ladies,
which bound all gentlemen, Aed a sort of ro-,
mance abont the ancient Cavalry or Chivalry,
until at last, qualities were ascribed to the
rider on horse-back which in many cases he
did not possess, and a respect was paid him
which he did not deserve.
With some good traits, ancient Chivalry had
many of the meanest. It did something to
redeem the world from the pandemonium of
the dark ages, but nine-tenths of the old
knights coold not read or write their liames;
and the knowledge of letters would hav« been
wholly lost if literature had depended on
them for its preservation. Yet they were after
a fashion honorable, faithful to their words,
true to their equals; while they were false,
treacherous, -tyrannical and cruel to their
brother men, if they counted them
feriors. Chivalry was but another name for
an oppressive Aristocracy which the world was
well rid of.
But we have a modern “chivalry" which apes
tho ancient in all but its few virtue*. The
new-fangled article has all its prototype’s
meanness, vanity and blood-thirsty vindictive
ness, all its disposition to tyranny without its
power, but none of its honor, none of
its truth, none of its courtesy and litde of its
courage. It robs by slander better uien than
itself of their characters; it murdeis when
assassination is a safe operation; it lies, and
is fearfully indignant when told that it lies.
It. oppresses all whom it dares to oppress; in
sults any who are not in a position to resent
insult; tramples on the weak, and cowers cow
ardly before the strong. It turns its dirty
pen aud wags its filthy tongue against the
reputation of innocent women what it eau
do so with impunity; and its most (valorous
crusade is .against “Yankee school-tuarms,”
Its highest exploit is to proclaim through the
newspapers, to tho universal public, that it is
going to violate tho law' by fighting a duel, and
then to proclaim that the quarrel is eided “by
the interposition of friends.” As the knights of
old had their Tournaments, which were serious
affairs, aud in which kings were sometimes
slain, and broken ribs and cracked skulls were
common, so our modern “chivalry” lave what
they call “Tournaments,” in which youngsters,
clad not in weighty iron armor, blit in a fan
tastical costume something like 51 circus-
rider's umble around an enclosed yard and
try to poke long sticks through a brass ring!
th»i consequence?
Charleston is rapidly degenerating iuto a third-
class city, Atlanta is rising from her ashes with
rapidity that astonishes even Chicago!
Charleston has lost nearly one-third her pop
ulation and more than half her business, with
in the last ten years. Atlanta has doubled her
population and perhaps tripled her business
within the last four years! In many sections of
South Carolina, lands are not worth the tuxes
paid npon them, for the reason that nobody
will either buy or rent them. In Georgia we
have an increased demand and an ascending
scale of prices. The State bonds of South
Carolina are next to worthless. Those of
Georgia are ninety-five and ninety-eight
higher than those of any other Southern
State.
Whenever thc land owners iu South
Carolina learn to forget their prejudices, and to
successfully solve the problem of Free Labor,
the crisis will have been passed. They will
then realize that it is a community of small
farmers, composed of spirited, industrious
and frugal men, that give wealth and power
to a State. Large plantations now wholly idle,
or else badly cultivated and without respecta
ble improvements, must be ent up into small
tracts to suit the wants of purchasers. And
when a transfer is made or a lease negotiated,
it must be without any of those feudal heredi
taments which impose upon the neur purchas
er or upon the lessee a species of. social peon
age. Otherwise, worthy settlers will become
disgusted; and betake themselves to other lo
calities, where no such peculiarities attach to
the soil. ’
' The “Middle Purty.”
The “third party” in Tennessee is having a
sickly childhood. It is still in its swaddling
clothes, and is being literally dosed to death
by the wet nurses that have \\ in charge.
It lias been christened three times by distinct
names, and now it is awaiting baptism under
a fourth. It was first “Conservative," then
“Union Conservative,” “Conservative Demo
cratic,” and now it is to be known as the ‘^Peo
ple’s Party,” and to be organized (by old Dem
ocratic leaders) under the disguise of “Fann
ers’ Clubs.”
All this is simply nonsense. There are but
tw'o parties jkr'Tennessee as in Georgia and
elsewhere, the Republican and the Democratic.
There is no middle ground, for the simple
reason that there are UP Hying issues not
made by tho former or opposed by the latter.
Soured and disappointed leaders, out of office
and position, want a third party; the People
do not
Doicil with Tliclr Own Phy*le.
Of course everybody expected the Demo"
cratic press to oppose tho bill for the enforce
ment of the XVth Amendment, just as it op
posed the ratification of the Amendment itself.
And a party that deliberately violated the
XTVth article, even in the face of a solemn
oath not to do so, would not hesitate to evade
the XVth, if oppostunity should offer. This
was not unexpected. But then we did give
some of our Democratic friends credit for
more prudence than to threaten a violation of
the last named article in advance of an oppor
tunity to do* so, and thus hasten the passage of
an Act which they now condemn!
Marriott Women in England.
The liberal protection to the rights of mar
ried women under the laws of Georgia, has
been the subject t>f much invidious comment
It is, therefore, interesting to note the fact tbit
there is now pending in the British Parliament
a hill which gives to married women exclusive
control over their property, acquired before
aud after marriage. It has passed the second
reading, and will probably u Tho
tendency, the world over, seems to bo in favor
of recognizing married women as entitled to
justice as a matter of right, instead of letting
it go as kissing does—by lavor.
C. A. PlllVbury.
The readers of The Constitution have doubt-
-!«. ss beru ii.-'-U edified if not instructed
the Washington correspondence of that paper
in which a “penny a line” correspondent over
the signature of “Argus" has made the most
reckless, extravagant and false charges
against Governor Bullock. We simply give
the testimony in full of C. A. Pillsbniy alias
“Argus” before the Judiciary Committee of
the United States Senate, to show how a
Bohemian can write the most damning
charges, and when put on oath, testify that he
knows nothing of auy facts to sustain them!
A “hired scribbler’s” conscience is very easy.
Charles A. Pillsbnry sworn and examined.
By the Chairman:
Question. What is your business in Washing
ton?—Answer. I am the correspondent of the
Baltimore Gazette.
Question. Are you the writer of the article
in the Baltimore Gazette of the 19th of April,
containing Hm following paragraph: “Rumors
of Bullock’s lobby schemes liave at last
reached the ear of the Senate. It is a little
singular ibis body should have been so long
finding ont that Bullock was bargaining for
the votes of its own members, and hat.
stated in this correspondence of Friday last,
offered bonds indorsed by the State of Geor
gia to a Senator for his vote against the Bing
ham amendment On motion of Mr. Edmunds,
the Judiciary Committee has been authorized
to examine into the matter. There is under
stood to be ample evidence to convict Bollock
of attempted bribery. ”—Answ er. I am.
Question. State upon what you based that
statement—Answer. Upon a paragraph taken
from ills-Washington ounaapondeane of: the
Richmond Dispatch of somo days previous.
By. Mr. Stewart:
Question. Who is that correspondent?—
Answer. I do not know positively. The
Richmond Dispatch contained this statement
from its correspondent: “Railroad bonds in
dorsed by the State of Georgia have been
offered to secure votes against the Bingham
amendment to the * Georgia bill. In one in
stance this can be proved. The Senator who
was to have beep influenced has declared his
intention to vute for the amendment, and the
party proposing the trade was promptly ex
posed to the friends of the amendment”
By the Chairman:
Question. On that statement you based your
letter to the Baltimore Gazette, containing
the extract which I have read?—Answer.
Upon that and a paragraph in tho Evening
Star of this city to the effect that the bonds
hod been offered to two Senators or relatives
of Senators. I do not recollect exactly the
tenor of the article.
Question. Have you that article?—Answer.
No, sir.
Question. Hud you quY other basis for this
article in the Baltiniarc Gazette than that you
have stated?—Answer. Nothing more than
that, except that it has been a general sub
ject of comment here that Bullock was
lobbying, and I supposed he woqlil buy
anybody he could.
Question. What makes you suppose that?—
Answer. From his own character.
Question. Do you know any fact going to
show that he Las used or offered to use means
to influence votes?—Answer. No. I do not
know it of my own personal knowledge. I
have no acquaintance whatever with him.
Question. Ilnve you heard of his having
used means in any direction other than from
these newspaper reports?- 5 ” Answer. Only these
reports aud general statements made at various
Question. Have you any knowledge from
information or otherwise of means being
used by anybody in respect to the Georgia
question?—Answer. No, sir, I have not,
otherwise than by distributing pamphlets, and
such things as that.
Question. Have you from information any
knowledge which you oould give that would
put the Committee upon the trace of any facts
going to show that any means have been used
m respect to this matter?—Answer. No, sir; 1
do not think f could.
Broadway Brigand*.
Brignimls are not confined lo the classic
soil of Greece. They live and move and have
their being in the great American Metropolis.
A few nights age two men invited a diamond
merchant into their room at the St. Nicholas,
promising to show him some diamonds, and
then and there robbed him of his money and
personal ornaments. All this was Jjone in
one of tho first class hotels of tho city! Tho
scoundrels succeeded in making their escape,
and their bold adventure is the talk of the
city.
Is still troubled about its social equals. That’s
a private matter—not political.
THE ROME COURIER (DEM.)
Says Conservatism is synonymous with Cow
ardice. It says the right place for every man
opposed to the Republican party Is in the Dem
ocratic fold, os there are but two parties, the
Republican and the Democratic.
THE.SAVANNAH NEWS (DEM.)
Says of the Act to enforce the XVth Amend
ment:
This is the vilest law ever enacted, because
it practically abrogates all State authority over
the personality and the manner of voting, and
indeed, almost everything else. It prescribes
duties for State officers, it annexes Federal pen
alties, to be enforced by Federal officers in
Federal Courts. It obliterates the last vestige
of State Rights and establishes The Empire.
Bat it will be overthrown. The day of deliv
erance is dawning.
[The prediction is rather indefinite as to
time, bnt we presume it is satisfactory.]
THE SAVANNAH REPUBLICAN, (DEM.)
After quoting extensively from recent emi
gration statistics, says:
The Germans ore moving in the matter.—
What are onr Irish fellow citizens doing to
wards this great and desirable accomplish
ment ? What are the Southern men doing to
encourage our German and Irish fellow-citi
zens iu the work ? Iu climate, we have at the
South almost every variety of the Temyerato
zone—from the mountains to the seacost. Iu
soil we have, without exception, every variety.
And in products of mines, agricultural staples;
water power/or manufactures; railroads for
transportation; and seaports for commerce,
we could maintain ourselves without any ex
ternal aid. All the advantages-are to be de
veloped. For this, the element we need is
population.
THE NEWNAN lnaau), (DEM.)
Iu the course of its remarks on the “Georgia
Bill,” says:
We would suggest u> the people of this
State, in that event, not to grow restive, as
delay increases our chances for ^investment
with all of our political rights, becalm every
day witnesses increased divisions in the Itoai.
cal ranks, hastens the hour of that parti’s de
mise, and the consequent return of Demo
cratic rule.
Radicalism was born with the negro’s
proiuiuent adveut iuto political measures, aud
will naturally die when Cuffee leaves the
sfage. He is hastening off, the Democratic
Columns are advancing, and what Georgian
w'ould not consent to n delay in Congressional
action on the Georgia bill, if, thereby, our
friends and not our enemies should have the
power of determining our fate?
Democrats, delay, iu this matter, “breeds
danger,” but not to us!
[We have often expressed the opinion that
none but The revolutionary Democracy now
stand opposed to the admission of Georgia
without restrictions. The men who represent
the material interests of the State desire au
ending of the wrangle. None hut disap
pointed Democratic leaders and adventurers
desire u perpetuity of strife.] •
odious aud unconstitutional import.
Tho resolution of Congress in the first in
stance, in obedience to which Incomes are
taxed, was simply a war measure. At the time,
there was doubtless a necessity for it, and all
true patriots yielded a cheerful compliance.
But now that the war has been over more than
four years, and consequently that the exigen
cies which called the measure into existence
have passed, the Tax itself should be repealed.
There is no longer a necessity for it; conse
quently no longer any valid reason for the ex
istence of a measure so repugnant to the spirit
of the Constitution. The revenae of the Gov
ernment is ample, without this tax, to liquidate
the public debt iu a very short time; but if it
shonld be thought desirable not to diminish
the public revenue, then let the duty be in
creased npon Imports not of prime necessity,
and thus afford protection to Home Manufac
tures os well as relief to the citizen from an
odious species of Inquisitiod that contrasts so
strongly with our free institutions.
“Onr Boy*.* T
Elizabeth Cady Stanton has a son, which
fact is not universally known. This son has
just completed his Collegiate course, and is
preparing himself for tho lecture-field the
coming winter. His name is Henry, that is,.
Henry Stanton. His snbject is announced to-
be “Our Boys,” from which it would seenn
that he does not propose giving ali hi*
time and talents to the “woman question..*'
although he is a single man.
If he has a tithe of his mother's talents, en
ergy and courage, he will make his mark. The
same intellectual qualities that have made heir
the foremost woman of America, will make
Henry one of the first men in America. We
Jliall therefore look for the report of kis. first
intellectual effort with more tbAUoc<&m*y u»- ?
terest, the more especially ok tho title of his
forthcoming lecture would seem to indicate
his purpose, take “tho man-side" of the ques
tion !”
Lolft Mont ex nuit ln-r Daughter.
New York always has a senation on hand.
Edith, the pseudo-daughter of Lola Montez:
and King Ludwig, of Bavaria, is lecturing to
the Gothamites on the wrongs of her mother..
Whether Edith is the daughter of a King is a
question. Her notorious mother was for some
time tbe mistress of Ludwig. Her influence
converted the dull uud respectable capital of'
Munich intobne of the gayest and most im
moral cities on the continent. She had a;
nice time there with her pet dogs, until at.
last the enraged populace rose in their anger *
and kicked out king, strumpet* dogs and all!!
From *hat time, her career is familiar, enough:
to every on*, if the daughter has the mother w
genius, she will am^^eed in creating a sensa*-
tion; but if she expeew to create sympathy'
over the wrongs of Lola, she » perhaps sadly
mistaken.
Another Spanish Oatrugr,
Oscar Cespedes, the son of the Cuban lead
er, has been executed by the Spanish com
mander De Rodas. And thfa is lo be the fate
of every Cuban who falls into the hands of
the Spaniards. How long fa that to Iasi? When
will the United States, the natural champion
of liberty in the New World, rise, lion-like, in
the path of tyranny and proclaim that the
Old World shall plant neither foot nor princi
ple upon American soil?
STATE NEWS.
By Lut Night** Mail to the Era-]
AUGUSTA.
Judge Levy granted an order releasing
Hoepler on condition that he paid the jail fees.
River measures 11 feet 3 inches. .. .Weather
warm... .Fifty-three dogs shot in one day by
the police... .Steamer-Swan arrived.
THOMASTON.
Wheat crops good. Moor rain. Superior
Court meets July 11th.
COVINGTON.
Fine rains. Crops looking well Jesse |
Lamb lias returned to his family. He was
pardoned by the Governor,. ..Warm weatlior.
The Crop*.
Crop accounts from Louisiana are extremely
favorable.
Com from wagons sold in portions of South.
Carolina last week at $1 CO per bushel
Refreshing rains have fallen in nearly every
section of Alabama during last week.
The cotton crop on both sides of the Ar-.
kansas promises fine. The com is not so prom
ising.
The drought has b^fen very severe on eafetn*
in some parts of Georgia, especially in the red
lands, where it is dying out
It is feared the hail storm in Southwestern
Virginia hist week Injured the wheat crop, as a
great deal of it was headed.
New potatoes in Savannah are worth $4 per
SANANNAH.
Ray street is to have a wooden pavement.
Colored hospital to ho built.,,. Richard
son & Barnard cleared the ship Rivfal for Liv
erpool with about3,000bales cotton... .Mason
picnic on St John’s day. JJ;In the Wade Col
lins case, the jury hml not returned a verdict
Friday night River 8 feet 4 inches Cho-
The Georgia oat crop promises to be a
failure.
The Valley of Virginia has never presented
a more flattering appcaranco than this spring.
The wheat generally is fine, the oats looking
well, tho grass luxuriant, and the com prom- ‘
ising.
Reports from Plaquemine Parish, La., say
the rice crop this year will not reach 60,000 «
barrels rough rice; the demaud is active; the ,
stock on hand is about 3,000 barrels.
A Texas paper says the weather in that sec-,
tion has been delightful. The fields present^
ral Association Concert a success “Irene’ j the. appearance of newly-swept parlors, th.
bought by Tatuall Boat Clnb Money draw
er of T. B. Chisolm robbed Markets full of
everything.... J. W. Lathrop building an ele-
gaut private residence German Immigra
tion Aid Society have a meeting soon....Peo
ple going North in large numbers... .Chapel
of the Sisters of Mercy nearly finished.
BRUNSWICK.
Town improving. People coming in to set
tle. Weather fine. Crops promising.
COLUMBUS.
Cotton market dull J. M. McNeil ad
mitted to the Bar. Opelika train with Pres
ident Wadley and Staff ran off the track Satur
day. .. .Saturday the hottest of the season
Tom. Moore bitten on tho nose by a dog,,,,
Vegetables doing well
BAINBIDGE.
Adam Hines dead after two hours illness./
Firemen’s parade last vcc-ek a graud affai* r>
Survey of Baiubridgo aud Quiuey
completed.
MONROE.
More rain. Streets muday..’Small Pox in-
creasing. ...Corn doiug veil. Oats gone np..
Cotton improving.
J .YME1UCCS.
Rains. Crops promising Much interest
manifested iu the Railroad, from Americus to
Newnau... .GoodTemplars flourishing.
ROME.
Dr. J. M. Trotter lectured Saturday. Ho is
looking out suitable locations for Virginia and
European colonies.. Excursion down the Coosa I
com to tassel and the cotton to form squares.
An enterprising Knoxville firm, in the
brOom manufacturing business, being nnab) 0
to procure a sufficient supply of raw mater*
have leased a farm and planted it all iu > room
com, which is now looking well. T’, e ^
also sent out a largo quantity of t
the country, ami tUo produet
East Teniiesaea xvUl bo
r To® ondentof the
Eouisville Journal says, . .£ orn promising.
Oottou m up with* rot d sUlDdandwo) h L
Labor iu this part ot UncIe ^o^et-
™-dant—no scarcity. Not au
Tuf° vvn r 4 y .il lies uncultivated this year.
25 1 ^ * .eudments, under the healthful
^ a considerable quantity ot whit a
rjyJRjf' o^ntly imported from Kentucky,
P.vw <eo ant \ Georgia, are doing remarka-
Crops all .planted in the best of
V/ .er, with a reasonable assurance of good
-dlturc."
The Baton Rouge Sugar Planter says: “A
peculiarity particularly noticeable about the
weather is in the cold nights we now have.
Toward daybreak a blanket or heavy coverlet
is necessary for comfort, and from that time
until the sun is up it is quite cooL Of course
it has an effect upon the cane, retarding its
growth, while it is of no particular beuetic to
cotton and com. The writer has a vivid recol
lection of the chilly nights of the month of
May, 1833, when as late as the 20th, the
good people of this vicinity had not entirely
! thrown aside their heavy spring clothing.
The year proved fruitful, but it was a sickly
one.”
The crop news from oil parts of the country,
except California, is most encouraging. Cot
ton, wheat, com aud oats promise au abun
dant harvest, and tho indications are that fruit
will be plentv. Even grapes are said to bo
earlier and better than they have been for -
years.