Daily telegraph and messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 1873-1873, September 30, 1873, Image 1

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]>v ('i.ishv. Jones A Heese. MACON, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING, SEUT EMBER 30, 1873. XlTMBER 6,733 - TI N II II.UK' (i.I.A Ka. Inr . i m. nlli'. T»<> lilt <•*> . • - - - in I m.. : l fcir . •hnrt.'r Ial.rr.1 ml. ■ I.okrin, nn.l th. :nc ■ that thcv it with < ■ease of nkrie*. el’ll cut ilown. Iu tif rMLY TEU6RAPH AMD MESSEMER The Milica. THE GEORGIA PRESS. m *. .**.!>*( W.* h.-.. that •unit- «>rtT-Zi*a!'-Tis Con- . . T .. — 1 | A >£AN named Seaborn Bowen was way- ►uncnn., 1 near Brun-iwick bu*t Sat ur* lay night. .ai l literally tacked to pieces by another . I named John Solomon. h:in ever tafore* tu»: compensation of: T ... _ . .—■ 1 ^ John* Knott, manufacturer at the .«in - jv, J * mo t eco- i rtrautriUe factory, near Augusta, was °™ , pci—inie. found dead in -a water closet last Wednas- Tina would b»* parsimony and mean er*. utterly unworthy of a great nation. »ne reason that the courts are afflicted I i , . . j their next annual meeting at Acworth. .. .. many in*.< ...petsnt jo* -,«*• o.r.d ']’he salary of tlie Grand Worthy Secrctarv jrtnou* men or moderate mean* cannot j i *. ■* /** , ^ . . I has been nzeil at $800 per annum. ‘lay. Apoplexy. Th* Georgia^ Goo-1 Templars will hold •rent hnrre (Trltnriipll &Jflex.wtfler iR.VI.VO. the Bents still hi uiuht. Monrmry »!*■« ■ lirnTlnK. i ’ th. Thanh*!!* -• that th> iu ili'-icl.'lly . day’* liuxinrx i other* i art. upon tbum.anl >e <h-p~iu ei- i:- check.,! out. I aay they bar* nnnd forcy. r\ community, ■rifled in the :z are hocked of this com* faaji ■lid * ho in.lu.vd to hoM office, in becauae no pr .per-prrrrUion ha* n made for the -npport of public official, and their fam- ili.~. Any fair lawyer, railroad superin tendent or promdent, or life inauranee better paid. Ambition, it ill weet, but not at the coat of bread I the future maintenance of one', fam ily. Some of the pureat and giatat -i I .amen that eyer lirod rli.-i poor. II ihaaM bo rcmemlierol. alao, that the rej.reaentatiyea of a great State are ex pected to be heritable entertainer, of n iitiOnT fheir con-.titu.-ncy, and conform likewise' n -i- v u * tt U < 'H of 'polite aodetj. They i M n m,u ^ he at least respectably if not band- ]' .omedy lodged, uanally require carriage* for their families, and hare a multitude of oalta upon their purses the public wot* net of. "Tf th.-n we expect them to be pure and independent—above the temp tations of want, and bold in the advocacy of right and the indignant exposure of corruption, let them be suitably, and even generously provides! for. The enormity of the offer,.-.- of tha hock pay grabbers, does not consist in the mere increase of compensation to members, hnt in the fact that after they bad coven: ntod. under the law, to work for a given stipend, they . I violently streb.hed tha power vested in »e b ■■ ri verv hlioral and ueeom-1 • i also, to business men and m.r- themselves to.ppropnateaddifiosslsum. mwing their paper genemily. *» them own ,me Upon the same prin- to .c the string..i vof a P l0 the T »'"*«• h,ive to 0 > < * men >* bera evert/ dollar i* the Tre<wry. We are not prepared to my what sum would afford on adequate support to the meml»erH of Congress, hot the estimate should not be predicated upon tho private fortunes of individual*. Some have little or nothing of their own. and the govern ment has nothing to do with the finances of its servant*. It is presumed they are to receive silffiriont to place them in comfortable circumstances, and enable them to support the dignity of sovereign States, and that amount, whatever it may be, should not lib withheld. Probably six or eight thousand per nnnnin would !►© enough, though not an extravagant allow ance. "We trust, therefore, the proposed non- senie of cutting down to a more nominal sum the salaries of member* of Congress, will not be seriously entertained. A* certain as it is done, the nation will be made to pny for it in a hundred different forms. Meml»er* will ta tendered sub sidies to support various measures, which their necessities will tempt them to ac cept. The feeling that perquisites are legitimate when? compensation is inade quate, will also gain ground, and we shall have a continuation of the wholesale ve nality and corruption which havo dis graced both branches of the Federal Con gress. How prone men are to rush to ex treme* ? Early county has 1,370 more acres in Pay- • at, pants and Looti. It was in this fix Resumption of Spe that he reached Milieu, where a huge meuts. TNirty of la&ies *n waiting to get on the ^ WorM cootains an ai .le argument train. Imagine hi. “pheunks.. Tax Cohtmbns*’ Ehqnitex stinitnarii*. from the Apalachicola limes the lease, by the late storm at that place: In favpr tf ; th« jbeAafuvq wliirk prenot, > many cogent reasons >le- rvingof eonsid- ( eration. As the question ur.ist come up : sooner or later for discussion, and the t Kfteen thn i e-rtory brick building, en- ; , . .... _ *, ■ „„ j tirelv demolished, or mo Udly injiSed as *&* on thl ' !iu ' , J ect - « a P- not to be worth repairing; thirteen of j P° n ^ following excerpt- from the or- | the. some class of buildings seriously in- j tide referred to: jured by the Ion of the whole or portions | beg to call attention to seme NEW YORK BEING BRAINED OF MONEY. Bank* nUroutinuliiic — The Poller DrUinr the Stork Gambler* from the Street*. We find the following among the West ern Tress dispatches from New York, printed in the Nashville Union and Amor- can, of Saturday: New York. September 26.—The city is lieing drainetl of money at a pretty livelv rate. Since Saturday last the out BY TELEGRAPH. 1 *' DMom ;j>,si»atchk8. DAY DISPATCHKS. Financial Sews. IT.\ rkisbdbq, I*a., September 29.—The Xati.iu.il Saviiurs Bank li.n snspendoil j mltti-e be appointed, to whom all el: Slock Evchange Itules. Xeiv York. September 2'.*.—Th.' met again, and it was decided that mmpt out 29.—The of the nob, window, and ehntters, be- I ,'uenmstanees of the present di tr' ssing ’ firing moneys throngh the Adams Ex- sides the damage done by the water; one : position, which are favorable to immedi- on ss have Wen ab,iut $1^00,000 daily, of t’.ie CortUaaw mills entirely destroyed; ; at .. resumption. I while that coming, exclusive of whit three brick andAvo wu. J.ei »arjdM.u»e.' J<»:aian'tk.a of jnytoept, kw hyeut to tho Treasury, amounted to about entirely deatr iy.id,ai!id * yjal orter* :a- i ei A don in :■ ie-l Oidkabl-t d. *trat- | $'SS',:SS*. ThaUnitcl Stabs Company .'.rn tla.n eottoo this year, s i also has . inn-\d-ne b: ulamith Ajg u.J or.» , timil^ie eurr and.'A %;«js lAietfy h ,ve Ir-cti sending out $700,000 to $S00,- t.i'70 hogs, an l 1.9W sho p, an l only 095 I :' Phdp—the pnrate !' es a* Stat-Nl . tl" ,ir,.;.d of thia which car..’d the conn- ’ll... day for several days past, while the dogs. She planted only one-half acre in *l JOTO “ an A the following vessels: Sehr. trr to reooj] tFom t;, e eiperiim i.t . But a I- reyeipts through that modi _i, . ,a: ,.i Mary Ann, with $200 of supplier, rank; prodigions innlmUary oontraetiun has . small. Oantox. lit... Septomln Banks have all suspended. Savannah. September 29.— There is a panicky fc-ling here among banker* and merchants. Xxw Yoke, September 29—Noon.—Af- ! fairs seem s<‘ttle<i. There is considerable 1 doing ill stocks. For Western Union G3 is naked. try market. • >nrider the rhaiiU of th .ell M id r The large rum of < n-nlaiion by the «C ent in anticipating , nt s, md the froc . vill rf- n pot a a I Won of thing.. Sow let our fanuei inuncial standing of i city equal to that A* a clasts, they are ..••1 in im r.-antilc to rpcculation. in eiioy thrown into inn of the govern- it. N'. vcmb.r pay- rrivals of cotton, we new free upon tin- •i. nds crowd their flissy treasure into imokct, and time n- t ,1'livli a rnbstantial harir of enslit, and en* a wtvk elapses, wo shall ree the M ril* ter lining in the cloud,” and the gird sunshine of’prosperity rusting ft* cSHl- , rut revs o'er the win 1 1 * * scene again. Let them rciiicmlHT that <*ur factors and * ureheiiscuien stand pb-dg*al not to salt a I ilt until pricea mlvam-c. and trade re- livea again. Oonfidcnce, lietween mtT- ■ hant and planter, and in the stability of i. ir banks, now beyond aperadventare, ns hi their perfii-t solvency, is all that is ■sided to nlfonl relief to tlie entire com munity. We lioalhe fritor, and affairs wear do- ii. I..II.V a more hopeful aspect. Grant’s Letter T» some New York men will bo found in i.'ir Sunday dis|ntehcs. It will bo roen that he announcer hia purpose to give them more "rrlM" hy anticipating the jviyjnrat «f tlie Novoml-er int* reit on * Ttain bonds, which will put aliout four imliiuur more currency in circulation. Wo ►hi.uld not lie.at all astnnhdicd tMm docs not yet rlW him-df to lx* driven from his |»isitiu;i of non-intorfcrence except by buying Iumds. and allow romo of that forty-four million logoi tender reserve to lieswaltowid up in the Wall street whirl pool. The money id men of tho great financial e.itora elected him last year, and If In- l.t. them goto pot uow.they may go luck on him for a third term. “Poor Henry.” ’The Hott York Times, in an article on the failure of the home, of Fisk A Hatch and Henry (Mows A "Co., saya i ••Tlie avinnathioa of the whole eon-try cm—s-pecially. w sill be vith t'l i liave made otion to tlie tie ■ tin H that' und 6 Kepliblii Clews. ■ity tlia! , If you pi »P< ,farebsde the Siiuth, illy, in your "whole Wi late ' fate vitli tin at ion. Hi an aote'iw'ry t. llnboi k and his gang in , plunder of ui.r State, slid deserve* no better fate than ha* befallen him. The mere fact that "JPooc Henry” 1ms done so much be the shaeknoaty party 1* a pos-s- jurt to the cordial detestation of thi*«ec- tion. and ibai* wiB ba no toara «M If ba p. ver get* on hi* feet again. And nevord- r* him go Tribune -Poor Henry" .n a sharp business man. That :.i.:- ■ ■ ted mill ing to th< thi likut Prerido ill canvas* in the \ 1 rief vviur Mr. Honry Clews, tho x-l«nkt*r. NikliNMsod the first political iwtir. r «>f the TnMidential campaign”* tided th oonrse of hi Iful financial which lou.-t eu- . Mr. Greeley was elected A* it happeoed* Gen. Grant T:. 1. lit, and Mr. Henry fiat on his book in the midst u ito equal to the one which ’ of ter in lU Mr. Hew talking i he )p00 of all oven putting the mr»t- iruble li^ht. how much Ln -’W Of what .he wm 1 \u>w much nonsense bNnker-politicmpi who sent deposit* and de- j^oand financial view** iponents. The fact i«, ivl I!- nn Glows havt > alme-t eveiybotly «*x- hanlaon and Grant as .hvsten. They have WseqUODWOlld power huir Government coo- >hs af th. people wbo i,-v t*> them have done eramrat did. in The Southern Cultiva- !i-r. i' rich in a great variety raad.il'! ,-ditor. Prof. W. stifle and vnter. 1 h. t gvnerous Good xVdvlcc to Planters. We call the serious attention of every farmer in tho country, who owe* obliga tion. booo,l upon tb*. deliverv of cotton, to tho liberal propositions offered totiiru, by the warehouse men of Macon, in tbeti card, published on tho fourth page of this issue. Tlie terms are such as must give satis faction to all intelligent persons. AU that is asked is. that the farmer simply rsdrast hi* promt** by sending forward the cotton pledged, for tho payment of the ad •ano.'H he lias received. Not a lain of it will bo forced upon the market without the consent of the owner, but the prtMare of tht ratio* forms a solid basis of credit to the warehouses, which relievos them from the pressure occa sioned by the scarcity of currency, and the deranged state of the finances. With the cotton on hand ns collateral, funds can, and will lio obtained very soon, and the means will ba furthcoming from the Imnks for the movement of tho crop. HU cotton duly delivered, the paper of the planter can be renewed, thus en abling him to hold his produce for better prim's, which assuredly must be realized when the present panic has subsided. Wo trU't every day will continue to witness the arrival of hundreds Of bales from the country. “Tlie Fall of Babylon.” From the author A. C. Harnesa, we have received a pamphlet embracing an "Address to th. People” and "Plan of the Temple of Liberty” in prose, together with an ode to Liberty and other fugitive (Hi'ins, as named above. Hdrw the author ever got hU lucubra- ti.ms into print through any respectable publishing house, is a mystery to ns, un less he planked the money down and said go ahead anyhow. A greater tissue of rhymithioal nonsense and incoherent twaddle never saw the light. Glimpses of reason occasionally do occur in isolated passages, but the work, as a whole, might well pass for the effusion* of an unsound, erratic mind. There is no impiety or disloyalty in the book, at least to our own "lost cause.” and this is its only recommendation. We give two sample stanzas of the poetry: ••K»rthqu*kr«l i*l»nci< lo«*t t.» M^ht, iVs.m.Nl etepuea.tumbling thrones. F*1U crmahin foIL * *»klerus plight. K«rth’» ffur a *tar* <€ bones.” *A drradfal wMtin* tnwt at Are • * l%al*m. at the dmthk*** dead. Avrmnnc flood at bNTra'i ire Meets tyrant* pale with dread." The author urgently calls for "criti cism,” and we have done tlie best we could for him. l>Uow Fever at Montgomery. Tho Mont tjomery AiivtiiN, of Friday, prints the offlcuJ statement of the Boanl of Health, to the iftcit that up to noon the ilay bafore there hiwl been two deaths from yellow fever in that city, but that no new cases had been reported in four days. The Columbus papers say the Western railroad trains Uurin£ Montgomery Fn- I dg»v and Saturday wer* filial with citi- whflot thi* year, and the same in tobacco. Th* Situation at Avar***—Ektort of th* CoMHxmne or Mkrchawts.—The Chronicle and Sentinel of Saturday an nounce* that the financial condition in Angunta on Frvlay was but little changed from that of the prevkvu *h»y. The Na tional Bank oi Augmtta j>uid aU chvvk > pre- aezited. a* uxual. and expected to continue to do *o.. A number of deposits were made during the day. Mesura. J. J. Co hen k Sons had resuminl the payment of check* for small arno mU. The other hank* continued about on the nme status as on Thursday. At the meeting of the bn tin—* men of the city the following re port of the committee appointed to confer with the railroad directors was read and received: The committee appointed to confer with tlie authorities of the Georgia railroad, be* to su^trert to said authori ties the followin'? plan for the refief of the pr»»sent monetary premure in this commu nity, which they believe to be feasible, safe, and liable to prove profitable to raid company and calculated to relieve the present stringency . in tho money market and afford material relief to tho agricultural interest dependent npon thii city. 1. The issue of $400,000 in short date bond* in sums of $100 and $50, in form similar to the 7 30-100 note* or bond* at one time issued by the United St * tea government, but bearin'* only one- half that rate of interest, when not pre sented for redemption until the expira tion of six month*. Said bonds to be convertible at the option of the holder into preen hack* or national bank notes, ujion thirty days* notice, but when so con verted before the expiration of any six months, to be converted only at the face. 2. To issue $100,000 in $1, $2 and $5 notes, receivable for all dues to the rail road and honk, and convertible into the above named lionds whenever presented in sums of fifty dollars or its mutiplc. 3. To be leaned to such parties and upon such terra* and security ns may be avias ide by the lioard. General Stovall offered tho following resolution, wich was unani mously adopted: Resolved, That we, the merchants and business men|of Augusta, rf«pard the tanking institutions of this city as solvent and entitled to public con fidence. Th* Constitutionalist of Sunday says : The National Bank of Aupusta, W. E. Jackson. President, throughout yestenlay stood the pressure just as if it were a veri table financial ‘'Stonewall”—meeting all demands of depositor*. Among its heavi est payments were $8,300 to the Augusta Factory, to pay the operators of that es tablishment ; between $5,000 and $0,000 to the city of Augusta, to pay the canal hands; and $1,200on a check of the Or phan Asylum in favor of W. II. Goodrich. In addition, a number of chucks for smaller amounts were paid to merchants and other depositors. And yet, at the close of tho day’s business, the deposits of currency were $7,000 to $8,000 in excess of the amount of currency with which the tank commenced business in the morn ing. The Georgia Railroad Bunk remain ed firm and unyielding as Gibraltar, wax ing still stronger in currency supply, while honoring all checks of depositors. The Merchants* and Planters* National Bank, ex-Governor 0. J. Jenkins, President, re sumed. the payment in currency of small chocks yester*lay. and effected settlement of larger amounts by certified checks, now current in the citv. This institution «• -oexa to Im» tiHwJ* —• *“* * ' doing t>usin«*<a :n usual. The National Exchange Bank. Alfred Baker. President, continued to pay small checks in curtency yesterday, and make settlements with de positors desiring to accept first-class se curities. Messrs. John J. Cohen A Son, tankers, paid in currency all demands inode on them yesterday, and will grad ually be prepnn* 1 to pay currency to de positors dolls? for dollar depositel with them. They will resume business on Monfloy under the same schedule as run yesterday. The Commercial Insurance and Banking Company continued to meet all demamls of depositors. Th* Bainbridgo Democrat, of Satnr- «lay, gives the details of the damage done by the storm the week lx?fore. Tho un finished Episcopal Church was blown down, as were several houses or parts thereof, and many gin houses were de molished. Cotton and sugar cane suffered severely. Communications signed “ Planter ” and “ Factor,” respectively, appear in tho Columbus papers of Sunday, urging a general suspension of all Southern tanks. We dip, as follows, from the Columbus Sun of Sunday: Tremendous Falling Off.—Sine*? August 31st to Friday night, Montgomery had received only 3,102 bales of cotton against 0,830 last year, showing a de crease of 0,638 bales in twenty-six days. The papers expect the crop to fall off one quarter in that section, and these figures certainly indicate it. How a Lawyer Went for a Grocer.— Some two years since, during the summer, a lawyer of Alabama applied to a grocer of this city for about one hundred dollars’ worth of provisions to run his place till the fall of the year. The grocer refused him credit, but said if he would make a note, endorsed by two men, named, he would let him have the goods. The re quired endorsement was obtained, note given and goods taken. Pay day came at last, when the grocer says to lawyer, “your note for $100 is due, and I would like to have the money.” Lawyer to grocer—“My note! Why I don’t owe you anything.” Grocer—“I am surprised that you Have forgotten it; come in, and I will show your paper.” Here the note was handed the lawyer, who, turning it over and over, finally says to grocer: “I remember, now; I wanted some goods and you refused to credit me; you cred ited th*M men (the indorsers) and not me; they owe you the $100, and if you will put the claim in my han-is I wifi make them pay it if I have to sue them.” scHr. Glide, total loss: sloop Bonita; sunk; -loop Fawn, dismantled and sunk i schr. Belinda and cargo, sunk; schr. Victory, total loss; sloop Red Hot. dismantled and -unk; sloop Clara Reese, total loss; sloop Storm King, total loss; sloop Red Jacket, mast sprung, bulwarks carried away, and driven in upon the loga-and lumber about the Curtis mills (got off without much £i™tates •lifficuKy); tug Flu-’ - n PeET'with Jha not wiser hull of the:tug*EUa (undergoing repaiis) and a bargtHn tow, driven into the marsh —will be saved. Apalachicola Mills lost smoke stack, about sir hundred logs, and sustained some other slight damages. The Tie Mill lost smoke stack, a large number of logs, and lost the roof of the drying house. The other Curtis mill sus tained little or no damage, but lost fifteen hundred logs and a quantity o? Inmtar. No one killed but several reported as badly injured by fallen buildings-.and flying bricks and tinfbprt*. As far a* learned, we oxuld get but kwo naipdbVMiXBgi Si- garee, arm sprained seriously, and George Miller, colored, knocked dewn by flying timber. What it Reminds Banker Op- dyke of. The New York Sun, of Friday, has th 8: The policy of the Government in un dertaking to ‘ purchase bonds at first, rather than supply, the xleAfijd currency for the emergency by* temporary* loaris, has been severely criticised; but haring adopted the policy it did, more severe criticism is indulged in now that it with draws before the trouble is fully over come. Tlie Hon. George Opdyke. who has always been esteemed one of the most reliable and steadfast friends of the pres ent Administration, said to the writer yesterday that the policy adopted re minded him of th»* old f|rmor who told his son to cut. off the dog 5 taiL TKb’ijfrV kept up a horrible yelping for a ^k>ng® time, until the old man went out to see what was the matter. He foand hU son busily at cork chopping off the dog’s tail piece by piece. “ What are you doing, Bob ?” said the old man. “ I’m chopping tho dog’s tail off. as you told me to.” replied Bob.. “ Well,” said tho old main, “ I didn’t tell von to chop it off inch by inch.” “ But yon see. father.” returned Bob. “ I’m chopping off dittV? at a, tiuie so it won’t hurt so bad.” So, said Mr. Odpyke, the Government comes to our relief. It doles out its r*?lief piecemeal, thus contributing to prolong our trouble, rather than end the panic at once by giving all the assistance needed. We are also reminded of something: That Mr. Opdyke was one of the fore most men in that Wall street phalcnx, headed by “Poor Henry” Ole;rs., who de clared that (Greeley's eUvt'on 4»md ■result' in a financial row. 1-ion. and who raised large sums of money to defeat the Gree ley candidates in North Carolina, and to carry the October State election in Ohio. Pennsylvania an/1 Indiana. It is proba ble that Banker Opdvke and hia associates entertain different views on the subject now. •' . * r\* ? t v > It is said that the Prevalent hiul about twenty thousand dollars on depout in Jay Cooke’s tank, but that on tho morn ing of the failure a tin box was sent from the tank to the Wh'to House, Poor Andy Johnson tad about sixty thousand dollars on deporit in the Find National Bank, but no tin tax was >*snt to liiuL Of course not. What did Andy over do for the Cookes {fiat they should send Met a tin box ? He was out of oiSee, with no power, no influence, and no nothing that could help that extremely loyl and pious firm; and beside* ho was a bitter enemy of Grant’s. It would have been absurd, nav. almost disloyl. to have re- turn»*d him his money. The Cookes, bouyant or “ busted.” have even l»een pot terns of the troaiA Wily tta country could prpduce, and Grant Vmj the/foun- tain head of that holy quality. If Andy and Grant had been in reversed positions, now—why then they might have seen the matter in a different light. What nuts' for Grant Andy’s tad luck must be. Sure ly it almost consoles him for “Poor Henry’s ” misfortunes. now taken place in spite of us. an l since we are compelled to pay the price of re sumption, is it wise to reject the benefit? After we have stood so long timid and shivering on one* bank of the stream | which separates us from a sound cur- I rency, dreading to make the cold plunge, and a sudden tornado pre- I p far.into the* water,.js _ it ' to buffet the -tr-'.ua and swim acro-\-.‘ttan to* make dni w almost equal difficulty to tl Good Tiling in Sing Sing What Jay Gould Thinks. The National Express Company Nkw York, September 20. An illicit! is carrying away an amount about three j di.-tillery has been discovered in Sing Sing times as large as usual at this season of j prison. Tho convict dUtiller say; the j the year, and the American Express Com- j keepers of the prison were among his 1* is doing likewise. tack' with | shore of in- I THE GI TTEU—SNIPES STAMPEDED BY THE POLICE. Wall street was much less excited to day. The crowd of bankers which have hitherto blocked up Broad street in front of the Sr«K-k Exchange was much 1< tliis morning, owing to the energetic of‘the captain of the second pro- flation ? There is less money in circula- j .-inct. who directed his men to disperse tion now, and, do the b<pt wx can, tin will be less money in circulation for quite a period to come, than there Would he on a healthy specie basis. In' the slow pro cess of returning from this extreme point of depression to a more abundant cur rency, we shall reach a stage at which the'amount of available money will be equal to the amount required for trans acting^ the business 6i the tapntry [on specie values. Why cannot wp resolve to stop at that point and not pass it ? We are going through, all the distress and convulsion—and more than tho distress and convulsion—that w«uld have attend ed specie payments had they been forced by arbitrary legislatio*. Having paid this great penalty, is it lot folly, is it not madness, to go back to the same condi tion at the cost of pa$s«ng through a similar calamitous exper.ence at some fu- future time ? We canjnev£r again such a re- markAole 1 ftmibinrition fnd concurrence of circumstances favoralle to resumption as exist in this distressing conjuncture. The high prices of the great staples of England, the country with which we chiefly trade, obstructs and curtails im portations; while, on the other hand, we have an abundant grain crop coinciding with short harvests in many parts of Europe, and a superlative cotton crop en couraging all groups which threatened to interfere with sidewalk traffic. The brokers w< by this means dr von in th© road. J they fared no better here. The police ordered trucks to be driven through tho crowd, and so compelled the brokers to scatter in all directions. Driven from Broad street, some of the most inveterate speculators and curbstone brok ers adjourned to the Gold Exchange ‘•court and held high carnival there for fifteen minutes, when the sergeant of the police, with half a dozen men, drove them helter skelter from their refuge. BANKS DISCOUNTING—CURRENCY FOR WORKINGMEN. The Loan Committee of the Clearing house has issued about $1,500,000 in loan certificates to-day, making the entire issue about $18,000,000. Mercantile paper fall ing due at the banks is being paid with remarkable promptness. In one institu tion where $10,000,000 was due in Sep tember, $14,000,000 hail been paid up to Thursday afternoon, without asking ex tension. Other tanks have been dis counting. The result is, the banks are ready to pay currency to meet pay-rolls, laborers, family and business expenses. * . , . - < , rue inuuni*. ui rri ouraging foreign buyers to lay in large . t , locks aguiii't (&tingcinp!(ffpd&i- situation as follows: >le scarcity of'cottbn next vcair Large The danger of pan: The Postmaster a Defaulter. Pittsburg, Pa., September -2G.—The Pittsburg port-office was token possession of this afternoon by P. Ethbridge, Chief of Special Service Bureau of the Post- office Department, and Col. John IIJ5tow T art. Postmaster, was W* >a d^ T fanlter to a large amount. Numerous complaints readied Washington from business men in this city that a large number of letters containing Remittances wef© lost at differ, lit times. Iflvcstiga- tion was orderea by the PosUmM* partment. There was found to be general disorganization in the working force of the office. Tlie first evidence of defalca tion in the Pittsburg Post-office, amount ing to $16,000, in favor of the Pan Handle Railroad Company for mail service were returned to tne Department protested. At the time, according to the postmaster’s accounts, he should have had funds on hand to pay the draft. This caused prompt action in taking possession of the office and suspending the postmaster tins T: Tf are Wiit-ved to be deficits in postage stampi and money exportations of eommo<lities accompanied by moderate importations, is the very state of trade which all good judges have insisted was the necessary condition and prerequisite of specie peyments. That condition exists now as perfectly as it is ever likely to exist in our time, and it synchronizes (which it may never do again) with such an enormous contrac tion of our available circulating medium ttat.AU expansimi, reaching ^he amount of currency wnigh* would Jjeriised on a specie basis, would be a great and com forting relief from the present depression. The condition and immediate future outlook of the country are favorable to resmmition in another important respect. We t ike it that all wild and venturesome railroad enterprise.- have come to a stand, and ttat- none of them will be resumed for at least a year to come. Tlie same will prove true of all doubtful enterprises qL ffgfliT. kmd- ff 5 e?r 0I ? CS • 1,e . rffarbM. norold-dnes revived. -For awhile; d*. a spirit of sobriety, caution, and even timidity* is likely to prevail. Money will be wanted only for safe and legitimate business corn! lifted on a safe, conservative scale. This is what always takes place for th© first year or two after a great financial crisis, and it is reasonable to count upon it now: We are not therefore JikoJy to,have* for ten years to come, a Wriod wliua sbliftle’money willta wanted for speenlnfavp <m»<>rpn*f- ;i. in tho p*- iHUige.-tinii. ^ wV ir-;T.T ipg drawers of foceigR hills than upon any previous <hiv this wedk. We trust tlie improvement will continue to-d;i Importer's can hoiv settle tbeir indebted ness abroad by transmitting first-class bills, which can bo purchased at lower rates than they are ever sold for except in panic times. The money paid out by the importers will speedily find its way to the exporters, whose drafts the bankers would gladly purchase at the prices for which they are now offered. To do this, however, the bankers ra'nst have money, and to get money they must have a mar ket for their own bills. The weekly value of the merchandise exported from this port Is about six million dollars. Though prices have fallen and freights «are lower, nl serious shrinkage of this vast stream of trade is threatened unless a better mar ket ean be obtained for foreign bills. The improvement in the demand for them must be accepted as a most favorable sigh. ■ ■ The Sifuation on Thursday — Oue Good Sign. The Tribune, of Friday, sums up the riid .yjig t’ i • ■ •mi ] Tilings ft to -’..•fi.* p:iv O.t •. not ‘.lit to th'Ull. Tlie contraction U already jpbch greater than Is required for that purpose, and ex pansion to tlie volume of a normal cur rency resting on tqiooie would ta a relief. . One,of the. stock iigaiiirt re; piuuption that it woUld b» ar hind nrsm the 'lebtor But thi^ is not nffirery an argnmciit against l'esumptioa at any particular time, but an argnmen’ against reoamptkm at alL It Is conceded that we tuust resume at some time, and this argument might be urged with the same force at ttat future time, whenever it shall arrive, as at present. The evil which resumption would bring to the debtor elms has always been overesti mated.'*; Almort every man in active business U both debtor ahd era lit »r, and wtat he might, lose in the one r datura ho would gain in the other. The merchant buys.goiids’mi eretl^inonler that hy qiay sell theui oiy credit. jThiJ manufacturer: bcbm ‘money at h bank 1 to enablh hhii to accommodate his customers. C col lects hia dues of A and B that ho may. discharge his debts to D and E. This is the usual course of business, and is the proper reply to the argument ttat resump tion would oppress the debtor class. Another stock argument againrt re sumption has always been that there is not gold enough in the country for the purpose. Gold is now being shipped to this country from England, and our great exports of cotton and wheat are a guar antee ttat the tide will not run the other way. The returns of our foreign trade will bring ns all the gold we need. We were never, ho favorable a position for wiping what W4 have and gamnifAtr we want. On the specie basis, the same as on the greenback basis, the business com- munitv. will make the greater part oU their i*tym»»nte in checks and bills of 1 exchange, which are the practi cal currency of commerce, and are always good when the banks are sol vent and ready to pay money on demand. After resumption very little gold will be used in payments, even in the retail trade or in purchasing produce of the farmers. Paper redeemable in gold will form the actual circulating medium for small transactions. The argument founded on the quantity of gold has therefore very little weight. There is, or would soon be; *JoIJ enough fojft^e tank reserves, and tk» necessity for col ports in coin. The greater part of the panic seems fully past* Wall and llroadstiveN remain greatly de pressed. and they have reason. It is foolish to fancy that nothing but “confi dence” is needed to put things back to where they were two weeks ago. There hasT>oon an enormous shrinkage in val ues : and the shrinkage has passed from stocks to grain and coal and foreign ex change. Business men may as well face tho lower figures manfully, and prepare to go ahead on that basis. The Govern ment seems to have given about all the aid it dares, Tlie effect of our New York suspensions continues to return to us from the country; and the banks, under such circumstances, naturally hesitate at some of tho requests of the Stock Ex change. The brokers are most wise in resolving to force clearances among them selves, and get into such position that they can tell wtat firms can go on, and what must suspend. Meantime yesterday brought us o more cheering sign in the direction from which our gravest peril has been threatened. The entire internal commerce of the coun try will sustain serious damage unless there is a freer movement in the business of foreign exchange. Exporters of pro duce must be able to sell their bills, or they cannot purchase grain and provis ions on the Exchange. The dead lock which has existed in foreign bills since Saturday has nearly produced universal nepers of the prim ustomers. j Jay Gould thinks the panic is over. Factories Stopped Work. New Haven, September 20.—Several large factories being unable to get cur rency to pay tlieir hands* have stopped work. The Same Old Story. St. Louis, Septemtar 20.—Curry A Kerber, hankers at Jefferson City, and two banking bouses at ChiUieothe have suspended. All Right for the Boys. Charlottesville, Va., September 20. In consequence of tlie money crisis i the cities, the University of Virginia li;i made arrangements for credits to all students temporarily embarrassed hy tin same. Wool Too Short. Philadelphia, September 20.—Benj Bullock & Sons, wool dealers, have failed. Eric Breaking London Brokers London, September29.—Three brokers failed on account of tHe Erie decline. More Coming. A half million sterling for America is engaged this week. The demand for di. counts at tlie bank and in the streets is heavy at five per cent. Six hundred and thirty-eight thousand pounds were drawn from the Bank of England to-day—T124, 000 of which goes to America, and the remainder to Germany. The Fever at Memphis. Memphis* September 29.—Sixteen yel low fever deaths yesterday. Dead. Philadelphia, September 29.—Jas. Gibbons, the late president of the Fenian Brotherhood, is dead ; aged 75 years. A Well Known Novelist Dead. Berlin, September 29.—Louisa E, Mulilbach, the celebrated novelist, is dead. ill be referred, and noe'ssury, will K* mad* of publicly. Three di granted before eases jfo into the h of the committee. The Situation in New York. GleJihain A Co., a fifty year old es sire firm in tin* woolen mills, have pended. Wall and Broad streets are eomr tl y is hbpefuL It is anticipated, however, ttat tlu my be quite a number of small firms j ho will ta unable to meet their obliga- 6ns, even under tho rules adopted by the overoing Committee to-day, and doubfc- ss several within the next three davs ill be sold out under the rules. There , however, no panicky feeling, and there raldisp ' a PI ottlo ents dido Hard Cash. Tlie WflwiWigtBn correspondent of the St. Louis Democrat, telegraphs the fol lowing under date of Saturday: Dr. Louderman. the director of the bu reau of the Mint, who has made a life- study of finances, and one of the ablest of the government officials, predicts ttat the effect of this stock panic will he to hasten the resumption of specie payments. He says he stall not be surprised if with in a month silver coin will be a medium of pironlation at currency rates, and that if a*still greater crash instock follows the opening of the Stock Exchange, a thing he regar<ls as very probable, that the full resumption of specie payments cannot be longer dellyod, as everything, even stocks, must come to a gold level. He does not think the panic will be dis astrous, as the recuperative power of this country, with its wealth of grain, cotton and crude bullion, will ena ble it to retain the advantage of foreign pountrie3. He says he is getting ready, and has issued the requisite orders to all the mints for largely increasing the coin age, ami that more bullion will be coined during the next three months than at any previous time during the same period. No exports of crude bullion* will be made for several months, owing principally to the unfavorable rates of exchange. Large thfrj would' be/ne further ^he unfavorable rates of exchange, targe ooleAUglthe (Uitios on im- j orders have been te^graphed to London order a.vounts. The whole amount will i,ablic de'.>t i« held-in EurorVand the reach about $33,000. Stewart has given ... . bail in the amount of $40,000. These little incidents succeed each other in such rapid succession that it is al most impossible to keep pace with them. government would procure rnonov for pay ing the interest by purchasing bills of exchange drawn on foreign houses. None of the holders should insist on actual coin instead of its equivalent in the pa- from New York for the importation of sovereigns, which, at the present con dition of sterling exchange, will giro a large profit. Bridging the Bloody Chasm. This is the way they do it in New Eng- The grocer. A-ratching his head, then j _ . .. f* y .. „ , ' 1 per money of their own country. Credit- , janj. At a recent reunion of the 46th Mas- offerinu hU hand, says: "You hav, got j Krzt it». revrememra.next. ooDrator ora are rommonly satisfied when paid in ; me. whenever you want anything to j of customs, then a postmaster, then some drink come to my store and call for the j other patriot with tar on his "fingers. Really this record of rascality is getting montonons. But then we have the con solation of reflecting that all these poor unfortunates have always been devoted to the party of great, moral id-we—loyl men—wla “stood byjthe glorious' Union in its darkest hours.” etc. mint Calks M btofit ift ms Ropubli ,.".i.huMtt.. • Worrart w unt-i to •uld have enrenUon 11 Urn h**M in» l\K>iofiu-.* buillin^ftor- by UniUrt Stkitn*.-tretIjk^. :in*l only t;,. r jukmittol.*’ It woold lutvc w«*ia;lu k d much what Mxuuuu;hu- ••i untight of it ** tong tho troopa • j * pi.-u tay<>n« t> fixt^l. \ jvr> iu W^atcliAsW county. N«»w V.irl, r.«. .-iit ly a war.ta! bn thousand dol lar- .Uiu.t£ftf to A little u>y. two yearei. • i. who w:u* run ovor by a horse car and i hi., h-c hurt *o ttat it tad to be om- J.iUto.1. I’hk H.-raM, of Friday, sayi gTOund » u* ttrwken for th«* firrt railway in Persia* r.*.«*utlv, in tlu* prafbiuv of loading l - r-mti tiffic«tat, uld |Ui thy/mvi^n coD- ruL. z< nsof bound for a healthier region. Many come to Columbus, while others stoppexl at Opelika and went on beyxanl to West F*>ict, where they were uu t by a quarantine. We sincerely tru^t Montgomery is not to stare the fato of Memphis ami Shreveport. ••J*'inanoial llucliu.** Under the head of “Buchu Banking” ‘ tht* Herald declares there is a financial | t'Uchu as well a rntnlitTal buchu, and ^in F best.” The Camilla Enterprise says Mr. M. J. D. Culpepper, of ttat county, was dan- ireroosly if not fatally stabbed, last Fri day, by Mr. W. L. Davis. The boat on Friday brought up a lar^e number of oranges blown from the trees in Apalachic''*la by the recent storm. Thirty-five hundred were sent to Abell & Co., who sold them by the box at one and a talf cents each. The New Cotton Factort.—We are informed on authority that on the sub scription books of the’ factory to be erect ed on the site of the boned Palace Mills, reliable partie-' have entered their names for $90,000. Besides there are $70,000 or $80,000 promised by men whose sub scriptions can be obtained when called on. “Clover Dale” farm on the Coosa river, five miles be' 720 acres, vm sold Howes & Maoey's Correspond ents in Georgia Am! Alabama. tank notes redeemable on demand. NIGHT msPATCHES. Action of the Charleston Chamber of Commerce. Charleston, September 29.—At meeting of the Chamber of Commerce this morning, which included the largest as semblage of bankers and business men that has met in Charleston for many years, the following was unanimously adopted, as an indication of the policy thought most likely to facilitate the movement of Southern produce to market, and enable Southern debtors to settle promptly with their Northern creditors, thus relieving the money pressure all around: Resolved, That the President be in structed to prepare a memorial to the President of the United States and the Secretary of the Treasury, praying that the Secretary place and maintain on de posit with the Assistant Treasurer at Charleston, the sum of five hundred | thousand dollars, to be used by him in the purchase from the banks of exchange on New York, and that such memorial be forwarded ot once to Washington, with the name of tho Chamber of Commerce of mat meanwhile, tne presi dent of the Chamber of Commerce be authorized to forward the subsffince and purpose of such memorial, by telegraph, to the proper person in Washington. Latest from Charleston* Charleston, September 29.—At the close of business to-day all the banks had received more money than they paid out. Currency is scarce. Assistant Secretary Sawyer telegraphs the President of the Chamber of Com merce, that Charleston will have all the relief afforded other places. Capital Notes* Washington, September 29. - Gov ernor Kellogg, of Louisiana,-and Collector Casey, of New Orleans, are here. Secretary Richardson declines to advise a New York financier that he should drown (?) himself. A special agent of the Post-office De partment is in charge of the Pittsburg office. Hon. Thomas Parker Scott, Chief Jus tice of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore, is dying from disease contracted by long imprisonment in Fort Wairen. Judge Scott refused to give the parole required by President Lincoln’s order number one, regarding State prisoners, and remained long after many of his fellows left. In true manhood Judge Scott was stubborn. Resolutions of the Stock Board. New York, September 29.—No. mem ber is absolved from the rules. Members solvent at the close of the board, failing to comply with contracts then existing, stall be settled by certified checks through the Clearing-house. No demand for greenbacks or currency shall be allowed. The November interest disbursements, which commenced to-day, is nearly $13,- £00,000, mostly held abroad. The Situation in Angusta. Augusta, September 29.—All the banks here have partially resumed currency payments; but the cotton market con tinues dull and nominal. Only 52 bales sold to-day. Defalcation* Boston, September 29.—-A $40,000 de falcation has been discovered in the Bing ham National Bank, Savannah Banks Continue to Pay* Savannah, September 29.—The Mer chants National Bank and the banking- house of John W. Anderson's Sens con tinue to pay currency. The Charlotte Banks Paying* Charlotte, N. C., September 29. The tanks are paying as usual, in order to move the cotton. Y’ellow Jack. Montgomery, September 29. — One ieath from yellow fever and five cases the circumstances. Money could be ob tained this afternoon on stocks at 7 per rent- per annum. The highest rate was I por cent- per day premium. Sterling quiet at 51 for prime banker-’ bills at GO 'lays; <»£ for short sight. Some sales were made as low as 4* (a 5. Com mercial bills 3, and some lower. Cable transfers 7(a 7U This afternoon was more active in im provement, consequent pp:n the anticipa ted action of the banks with a view to buying sterling. This action was as fol lows : At a meeting this evening of the Clearing-house Association Messrs. Daws and Humphreys, in behalf of the Pro duce Exchange, made the following proposition: That the Clearing-house Association appoint a committe of five, representing as many different banks, t buy commercial bills, with bills of Iodiuj attached, and make a requisition on th loan committee for the issue of Qlearing- liouse certificates for the benefit of ship pers. Tlie proposition was referred t tho loan committee, which will probabh report to-morrow. Money to-<lny closed at 7 per cent. The Moneyzooty In New Hampshire. Concord, September 29.—The banks have suspended, except for local purpos LIVER MEDICINE. GREAT UM FAILING SPECIFIC Jaundice. BUh Cota, Dcpressi Heart Hum. •*! Bcxulatc tl.** CHILLS AND FEVER. Simmons’ Liver Regulator FOR RENT. rpBB 9T0BB not my nlllo- in - WMhingb X Block,’* also two desirable rooms over it. FOR SALE. AN IRON SAFE, ns good as new. sep.’3-4t J. M. BOA RDM AN. Bar and Restaurant. OPEN ALL NIGHT. OT, VALENTINO, his entire pre prepared ■ with everythin* pertaining to a first-rli nuit, whi« li will l>e served in ill always have on hand ry best style FRESH FISH, OYSTERS, GAME, ETC. Strangers visiting Macon ihnuld give him a call 1 will open on tho 1st of October, nt No. d Gheny street, next door to my present restaurant,: Ladies’ Eating Saloon. JOHN VALENTINO. icp7 tf Macon, Ga. Z. B. WHEELER. Saloon and Restaurant, Fourth Street, opposite Express Office, MACON, GEORGIA. Meals Served at all Hours, DAY OR NIGHT, A First Class Establishment* STOCKED WITH FINEST WINES AND LIQUORS. 4 FIVE t 1 a? inn of 31 r. K. 1 out Dwelfin,sr. with tlm *j, on Square, DENTISTRY. TVR. EMERSON 1J will resume anted to Macon, a •tire of Dentistry MTMtBuny streot. Coal. Coal. ^ITTE will sefl Coal nt rammer rate until first of >> October. Orders left at Messrs. Winxhhi Sc Callaway’s store, Post Office, or office of A. G. Butt’s Esq., will receive prompt attention. Yard >pporite Ruck Mill. sent! BUTTS & ROSS. E. B. POTTER, M. D. HOMCEOPATHIST O FFICE TTooiF, Block. Sc it utrwt, lliinl (Itx.r b'-l<i'.\ Julm-tuM j-uv! 'tahlidiment. toMwiCB Lanier House. julylS tf For Rent. fTHE residence of the late J. R. Butts, on First JL street, occupied at preseat by J. L. Sauls- lry, etagbly located and‘convenient to business, obsession given October 1st. Applv to A. B. UO>S. weplOtf Or CAPT. A. G. BUTTS. 'rakes the pin kind. Contains tlm reofQu ;iuipl«*>t Simmons’ Liver Regulator, the Great Family Medicine, ufaetured only by J. H. ZEILIN & CO., MACON.GA..and PHILADELPHIA. Price §1 00 jH»r package; clao,prepared ready for sin bottles.$1 00. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.- Beware of all Counterfeits and Imitations. K It SOX A L. attempt It may Is? obwrred that hunt up out-of-the-way, find names * ~ ULATOR. Hon. Alexander II. Stephens. .1 no. W. Bockwith. Bishop of Ga. ile to wSlilM()NS* UVliR KEG- ?ral Johi i. Jno. (Jill Shorter, ex-Govemor of Ala. ’. David Wills, D. D., President Oglethorpe shop Pierce (of Ga.) an. James Jackson, (firm IIo Jackson) Atu.rncy.sat Law. 31a John B. Cobh. R. L. Mott. Columbus, Giu Yellow Fkvkb! . Yelp i b Asti dote ? Reader, tirntdy use of Simmons’ I vgmwIb cathartic and to PREVENTIVE and c •r and Bowels. CnOLKRA.—No danver from Cbol< rFsml Where ts •a will find it in the This i itself a Rcarnlato J nil <li» a if the liver lence in diet «tt>imu Uin |wooer order, and ordbv observed. The occasional ta kin: er Regulator, to keep the svKtem healtliy, will irely prevent attacks of Cholera. jqjytBpodOWly 'XKTnr.l ^ s -r Tl - —vvlO U\J 11W Tfio Thirty-sixth Annual Session WILL BEGIN OCTOBER G. 1S73. For Catalo dress REV. E. II. MYERS, D. D, Vrt THE NEW FEATURE Photography! PUGH’S GALLHRY. > BTOUC111NO THE XEOATIVE.bj which nl feel unred Special Notice. Rooms For Rent, ^^V’ER office of Southern Express Company. Terms nuHlerntc. Apply to T. H. HENDERSON, >*p1S tf * At Express Office. Stores for Rent. street, ne: 'ven imn se[Q tf id the o: of Cotton Ave wliately. Ap]»Iy to A. FARMER. HENRY SCHMIDT, FASHIONABLE BARBER. Huff’s New Building; Down Stairs, >UL3 sept* lm T HE su ' HOPSON inti! furtlaii all the de J. L. WARREN. C. P. ROBERTS, epterobe JONATHAN COLLINS, COTTON BROKER JOHN P. FORT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Macon, Georgia. n A € O G A. J > ESI'E*’fFl-'LI/ THE BEST Cathartic Mineral Spring AT SARATOGA, ! -TTTTTHOUT e.v; tion. i-' the H.thom aralr^ yy < f t':. - Hu'.,'i'ir i S[,nn;', S;,i CHANDLER, Columbia Cottegt sachusetts Regiment, “nine months men, at; Springfield, their Colonel, one Conwell, i TR inpnv iv PUTT ATIFTPHI* ! ^ us characterizes the gallant Confede- I ^ 3ave < >c curre< i m the last 48 hours. A TKAUBDY rHILAJiLLrHIA | , * ^ aZU . i More Men DischanreiL HIGH LIFE. lint !•' » • Pi* -f. « . ! . School of Jliuet*: Chloride oi l Chloride of I Bromide of ‘ Special Notice, I DEMRE torell wm at nay store. Ti n prime order, and c jds to A Man wJtli ail Income of $SO.0Ofl 8lioot» Hb Wife, and then Kill* HtiB'rlf. T TfTmLMT We-4nd the • tolloWifig in the Tribnne of Thursday: Philadelphia, September 24.—Thom as B. Parker, age 42, shot his wife this morning, and then shot himself, dying rates and true men of the South: More Men Discharged* Books and papers were crowded with ! Patterson, X. J., September 29.—Tlie the tales of hellish carnage and awful | ^ ocom ^ 1 1 T ti 3 01 . discharged atrocities. The air of Virginia and the the list of oofvespozidents of instantly. The wife s wound is very se this New York noose, whose suspension Carolinas seemed loaded with the conta gion, so that murder and battle were greedily sought by all who drew their breath within those boundaries. No death too fearful; no torture too acute; no out rage too awful, and no evil too startling to find its normal home there. And we, | » ent Ingates, Niraa who, in 1862, read of them, shuddered « “JJ* have left Allcant ‘ was announced last week, but which, it is positively asserted, will soon resume^bus iness, we find tie foil* iwing, prnEted in the Tritane of Thursday last .* Georgia.—Allgood \ Hargrove, Rome; Dickson A Stegall* Ba inbridge; IV. M. A Rome, containing H J- Lowry, Atlanta; Southern In^ur- wc« k for $19 000 I Trui-t Comjttny. Savannah ; rious. the ball entering near the right eye. • over them, wept over them, cursed them Mr. Parker was formerly a member of a j by day, and took imaginary part in them tr £ 1 \J* vh, B The sale includ. Eight thousan. the first brought flftfO. The Chronicle and S- u lent Wfldley stock, implt-ments, etc. lollars cash was paid tall rn rmt. Ten acres tal tells this of the Central fort ur . . pa> vf i ti-ty j pntit.ou,:: l I t-j this s igned the trageoy.’ He and his wife move«l in high social circles, and lived in an elegant villa at Kingsessing in the suburbs. Mr. Parser was enjoying an income of $50,- * Tt - - , . . ,, rp. - ^ .. j 000. was a son of the late Isaac , Wright A St l ill 1 uumasvHle: City Na- Brown Parker, who left an estate worth ■ffin. #50.* ■ *0. } fully $3,000,000, to be divided among two Co., Mont- j sojjjj aa< j three daughters. This estate comprises qome of tta twnt n$lu^l/lp large iron establishment near Morristown, as victims, in our uncertain, restless slum- N. J.. and recently retired, taving^^fluired > tars, had, perhaps, a deeper impression alar: nd far greater dread of them ttan those who were the real sufferers therein. 175 men, and the Dan forth works 100. More Suspensions* Caieo, September 29.—The banks have suspended currency payment. The Failnre at Alicante. Madrid, Septemtar 29.—The Insnr- and Mendiznu- for Cartagena. The commander of the Xumanciu admit* that there was a serious loss of life on his vessel during the bombardment of Ali cante last Saturday. It is generally be lieved that the failure of Insurgent* to ,-apture Alicante will cause the iinmedi- 1 IffaerideofCalrium J ISrarbaaste uf Lithj ! liii-r.rV ri.-it.-" I . } KarbanMeof Maen Bicar»M>f««:.- of Bicarbonate of Sulphate of P»» Phoaphate of :■ Bitonto of St* ■ Altunina Silks ■ - Organic matt*-, Total no!H ; Til.* fixtu Tlie “isood wfll” i .. ., x . - , . , , , ate surrender of Cartagena, thus ending \enly, ourNotirern mends have a novel . n * tne intransigent insurrection. raal Bank, i Alabama.—Farlev, S: g- mery; Ista-U A. Cpu TUlodaea: P. F. M.-Orarj, Gre. u>UH-o: J. G. L. M irtln A •S>n. Enfaula: Moms A Co., Montgomery; Morrison & Co^ Selma. way of winning over their Southern breth ren. And dqn’i they succeed finely? How such language makes us venerate the old flag and court death in its defence. Horrible Death or ax Aeronaut.— _ _ Ilape/lo, fa., September 25.—Professor J. property in Phitadelphht, breluding tta | W. Bailey advertised that he would make ground upon which the Continental Ho-| an ascenqion in a balloon to-day, and tel and the Grand Central Theatre stand. The will left by the father, who tad >RKK8FOsrPRXT of u Montreal jour- 1 amassed this fortune, provided that the peaking o: the lately deceased Duke i heirs were to enjoy only the inc their qualitta arv ideatioal. \our Jay p^d: Cookes and Clews are* your genuine buehti Sunday CoL Wm. M. Wadle tankers, the charlatans of the finan**ial ! !iis usual energy, {K*r.-onally superintend- | a! Brunswick. »ays; “ One of th** ugliest } their i\?sp**et»ve shares in order ttat the .. , .. . * viti, *h.- i »*d the work «*f reparatzon at th«- «iiffer--nt m.-n, he was aoeostomed to tave himself j princii»al might continue to be enjoyed fa».ly. ud *ra f«uil«r »>«»• «»• L* bT the .norm of Fra... j-inted and cnam-l.-d. ud -iWoup' hr th«? ^3ron.«dif any dic-1 trick* of the trale. Talk to them about ; fVh - lJt . thus en ^^jd his which he ; with all the artffidality of the patrones- 1 out issue their shares were to merge into -H Gas iri 1 prllon, S75.747 Inch© W. For sale by RANKIN. 'G V^HNBURO a < JUST ARRIVED. Lord Mayor Elected, London, September 29.—Andrew Lusk j has been elected Lord Mayor. , Important Arrival, Ltverpool, Septemtar 29.—A vessel with cholera alxxird arrived this morning, j Synopsis Weather Statement. • | Office Chief Sionai* Officer, > ; Washington, September 29. > Protabiliti.es : For New England and the Middle States, cloudy weather and J rain will prevail to-night, the winds grad- ; ualJy veering to fresh and brisk north- j westerly, decidedly lower temperature, 20 TIERCES NEW RICE (Ve REAM CHEESE. NEW COD FISH, the •oliility and i alar practitioner They know how to lette portability of the reg- I taken off. h^t. J Stuff and nonaewso! ; ta«ots became ^vvered ,r the ruck, Mild th« £■'] ^ l^' 1 nd his jo t.f M.tdai Ute and After Mr. Wadiey j of thirty, etaagftl , Uwireieti it and parsed on to Millen. Be- j taring jmetothe walU and border the gutterc. | fort . arriving at ttat punt, however, he They are up to a move or two in securing , off his pants and tail them washed j just cropj>ed by the Ixirtar, u«w<ipaper puffs. They understand the ■ and hung on the tack of the car to dry. | two being a tr:de long* His taM head 1 the general estate for t! -black wig, one » others. Mrc. Park' hirtv, ctaag^l every day, uni- » Bota-rt Majcrdgor, flniwia much ycuiger. from which he was suspended ng tne gr-*wnj of tne ha:r; wig man- . than her nust«an«I.* THey hu-VKeen uuir- atsd ta fell, reaching the one being • ui clo<e, t*:* imitate a head i ri.*<l twelve Vears, and leave only one ! quii.'ter of a mile from the point c verzal reowJy. tencui t tack th«m uij. | hjlve , u bliteM , ^ Wowu . .a- ,vu*t.»,i t. thing about the language c»f the duck?— j 0 y p* the wind, and the railn«*d monarch j their • ng Imi.- v ieft in a sad plight, being tat, 1 * mu*t really tave hia hair cut. ^ quack ! quack ! quack l ig number ( child, a tav, ^ i JWfeer still survi.,-' rien the Duke ap- j wound is believed to be mortal. ■nty-nice and thirty, he run his fingers through j A mertino of conservative th the remark that be i proraiaefi a raajarfty of.twenty . #lrew a large crowd to the Fair Grounds. Tlie taU»*on was inhale* 1 with hot air, and loft the ground with Bailey Imaging oy his han't* to a horizontal Uar taneath. Just a* it started it took tire, near the mouth, and Bailey did not apparently notice the fire until he was too high to let go with safetv. but hung on until he and very generally clear weaklier on Tue«- | benefit of the j iunl reached an altitude of 1,200 or 1,500 day ; for the South Atlantic States, part- ! was a daughter of ^eet. when the canvas ttat held the ho*>p ly cloudy weather, lower temperature, r - .... • ’ burned ! winds veering to southwest and north- ! t-,*rth a | weAt, and rain areas; for Tennessee, the f ^ f start- Ohio Valley an<l lake region, very gen- 1 iqg. Hi-« boidy was frightfully mangled, j eraliy clear weather, low temperature and ’ and his legs were driven into the hard j northerly to west winds, diminishing in j ground up to his knees. , NEW HERRING; kit* NEW MACKEREL, , LIVY HINTON TOBAC CYPllESS SHIiVGLES I IXST a n»nsivnnn-nt <>l J SUING LEremed »«•! draw u. A Superior Article ! B. If. WKIULEY i CO. ELDER 1 [OUSE, Indian Spring, Ga. , WHITE liix K POTASH. ffiictf SEYMOUR, TINSLEY A CO. • vi'sit the Spring (or health ur pleasuo uat.fl iH'nrer the Sprin* than any otli. ou.-c. and ih spacious nr A com/ortahh. ihle is supplied with the best the nwrke her ! i Assembly in favor of monarchy. » : THrStateBaukof New Brunswick, N.J., l * appended on Friday because $250,000 had i been ’’misappropriated” by its cashier. LATHS! LATHS!! force ; for the Northwest, winds talking [ to southerly, and rising temperature ; | r HAVE recently «s»nne«U'd a superior Lath for the Gulf States east of the Mississippi. A Machine to hit mill at Kastman, ami am pre- ^therly ««*. {ailing te»p«»tora 5L j (drauing weather, with coast rains. aepcMrtawlm* A. MURPHY. to tlu- RATES OF BOARD. Per day $2 0© Pe r week 10 to Per month - at* to Liberal deduction made for lanre familim. W. A. ELDER a SON, augtf Proprietor*.