Newspaper Page Text
ItWhtw
jcapb nttb Sxrntmi ^
Atlanta ring down to tbe court bouse and
militia district rings in almost everj
They will not look with favor upon tins
singling out of Mr. Bacon, from all the
j public men in Georgia, and tbls bolding
W« are in receipt of the Talbotton New
Era, a seven column Democrats weokly,
published by Mr. 1*. J. Dewberry and edi
ted by J. W. IIall, Esq. It ^ires promise
of a vigorous and manly oourse in defense
of true Democratic principle*, against tbe
policy of.cowardly compromise and time
serving expedients. We welcome tho New
Era to ths list, and extend it the right
band of fellowship.
A TEimimiK epidemic of the natiuc of
red thrush Is prevailing at Sfalmo, <n Sweden.
During tbe past week out of til7 case*, forty-five
resulted ismlly. Tbls shows *n increase of
fifty per cent. In tbe number of deaths over tbe
preceding week.
There must be something peculiar In
Hungarian women, or something very bad in
Hungarian men, when ono hundred women
arc under trial for poisoning their husbands,
thirty-fire of whom have been convicted, and
or if they did not know it, they were too of him up to public reprobation, for not
stupid to represent the pu*y. Tbe ap- following up “his letter by somo good
polutment of a committee on platform l works for the party nominee.” Has Mr.
was altogether unnecessary. It was en- Barnes, of Augusta, done more than write
tirely superfluous. It may liavo been in* a letter? Why Is the Chronicle silent
tended for effect, but the fair thing over bis sin of omission? Is Mr. Stephens
d Oirtt f? mrtimn tafia fit;
t awivfi porxr* frvssastbscrthsrs Stflpm
JcaUi. >1 so f.r Cin»* aaaUo. » for si)
smCt, *t Ctijte;
ivnprii na'.'.rlts fubvertbrx pestap
rev. •: f j % jeer Led ft Itr six taaatha.
lj*) (UwrCHnt'ja wHS be token stem
p . • (•.«-« «t wiB « c? brssfofthr
Hftlwrtm, ami fifty seats tsr saeb ■»»«
taw* i« couuwctcm
ptuy v,-t> astute eAre.-tircracd* waaW
b; >aakly.
] owT'aarr-aDoaATn’tadd fav pQMIfirtsi!
fvuC V* r-NJCir r-arM' 1 tv tho WTUOT'S DSJS*
sot f of publlseiloi* but MM
* UV»A«k *f jwl toiih.
■fjsJte' «->eu»sxWa*ri *rl3 not tv> re^VD**
The Mississippi river people are now
in a Jangle as tow tiers (be money for the im
provement of the river shallJJrst be spent.
The New Orleans people want tne work to b®.
gin below their city, while the goverumeut en
gineers think it shoubt beglu a long way above.
Tradition says that beer was first
made at Pclualum, on tho Nile, -tod D. C\; but
nowadays only a crude kind of barley beer is
made by the natives in Egypt. There is, how-
over, a brewery in Cairo, owned by a Geneva
I company, and worked on tho tiermau system,
which can turn out 400 barrels a week.
The wine business of California is no
small item In tho resources of that Ptate. About
10,000,000 gallons of %* toe r.ro produced annual
ly, and about 2.000,000 gallon* arc yearly sent
eastward, where it L« domed with foreign la
bels and sold as an Imported article. The
quality is said to be good, and even some pro
fessed connoisseurs are deceived when Callfur-
would have been
announcement that any more tbe candidate of Mr. Bacon than
Mr. Stephens had been intrusted with of Mr. Barnes ? Why denounce tbe one
** *' * **“* "* * *”**“ as a “sutker,” aud cunningly seek to array
tbe people against him, while silence is
maintained with reference to tbe other,
Th» a-de-kong bas doubtless gotten or- I
den to bestir itself; and yet It has obeyed
in a very indifferent manner. It beat the
long-roll furiously for one sad minute,
heaved a deep sigh over its sad rela
tions to political life, took a strong pull at
Rio's canteen, and struck out boldly again,
after tlo manner of Gain, for the land ot
Nod. The a-do-kong is evidently tbe "fat
boy" of the Jeffersonian dispensation.
John Watebum insinuates that a cargo
of member* of the late Jefforaonian con
vention baa reoeutly landed in New York, . , , 1 I
•mi .. n ». w rt | nia wine Is offered under the guise of well-
*nu wants somebody to bounce us be- J known foreign names,
ceuso of it. We have a good mind to raiae General Simon Kenton, the famous
the cry of “persecution.” It is frightful to I •cout, Indian hunter and pioneer, left several
be thn* nltnek*<l b* n fnmltu- f.i an ,i I children In Ohio, and the other day his do-
do tnu* attacked by a familiar friend in .cendanu, together with those of Exiklel Ar*
whom one trusted. John Waterman will I rowsmlth, held a Joint family reunion at
not repent; but he might lay, in ths lan- T *"‘ 4 •—»'*« «.v-i-
guage of the committee on resolutions, in
tho late Jeffersonian gathering:
bray!” To this we would respond
intrust it to him? The De
party asked nothing at b.s hands. r flTlTr|-TltTr w fcuo mmi
tboduty of the convention, mpreMntlng I who'7j" s mlly“o7'Ii,r«me omlMlon?
the party, to have made a clear and strong whore I. Col. P. Walab, the dllver-tongutd
enunciation of its position and principles. • ****** n, A .. ,
It should have met every question square-
the party, to have made a clear and strong vv h ere la Col. P. WaUb, the .liver-
antinot-tIran nf <1* n«ltlnn and n-lnalniaa I QratOr flt)m tl>0 banks Of tllO rOglll
He Is as fUent at a whole bt
ly and honestly. The temper of the rank I mummies,
and file demanded tbls. It was eminent-
the orator aud parliamen-
.... were as profitable to ask the
plain to every man of sense that Mr. 8te-1 wboreabouts of the boy that "stood on
pheus could not take issue with the Iu- I tbe burniug deck."
dependents. He was on record aa an In-i
dependent himself. He therefore struck
out this proper party resolution.
The committee submitted to his dictation, I Is not the former
and no amount of whining about sup-1 sad eyes upon tho
Where is Morgan
Rawls, the Demostbeucs of the lower
half of tbe low grounds? Where Is weep-
I lug Alfred and commercial Joseph.
looking with
sinners that
serve the devil for naught, at Mt.
Zion camp-meeting, with au occasional
Senatorial “amen” thrown in to fill up a
hiatus in the proceedings ? lias not Joey
I B., tho Joey B. that is known to be “dev
ilfish sly,” taken bis throat afar off into
I the land of the Greasers, where the help-
(lag even of Turner Is an Impossibility?
I Is sny one of all the troop of Jeffersonian
orators on duty? Not one of them.
I They are neither preaching In public nor
praying In secret for the access of Mr.
I Stephens, and yet these two sore-eyed
1 organs come sideling to tho front like
and half Republican and Independ- I ancient and mournful Pecksniffs, and de-
ent for governor, and at his dictation ra- I ciaro with mock-pious grief that Mr.
fused to say tbe evils that existed In tbe I Bacon “may not be serving his own best
psrty should be corrected luslde the or- I In to rests by sulking in his tent.” The
ganizstion,lt virtually lodorsod Independ-1 exhibition is contomplibly pitiful. It is
We Itho saddest and the shallowest exhibition
a fatherly tenderness. During tho be
ginning of the Egyptian complications,
| his attention was at once turuCdto it with
a solicitude that was more maternal than
paternal. * At tho first intimation of dan
ger be flew to its side, and plauted him-
solf firmly astride It. lie took a
I position that was at once of-
I tensive and defensive. In one day he
iKH QUIUIf HD BESSE86B
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. 1862.
i diipfttehea state the! tbe Apache, ere
tegular jamboree. It was reported
until boat containing hl» bighncM, habited as
Lohengrin, on the blue and moonlit waters of
the lake in the neighborhood of the royal cas
tle of HohpnswanFgar.!. It is understood that
Mr. Chandler is about to order a coop of swans
for the American nary.
Miss Alice Welsh, on beta* noml
nated for county superintendent of scheola in
, Fulton county, Illinois, by tho Pomonrsts. was
escorted to the platform and made* a »p*cfh,
| which was declared tho neatest effort «d the
I who thought the nomination of a woman an
| innovation on Democratic doctrine*, to declare
. jhit they were captured and would -who for
“Church fairs encourage grab big*, UW-
terieaand various other gambling device*. At a
church fair in this State not so long ago tho
young ladies sold kltocs to the highest bidder
I for cash, and that variety actors a»ii«t in iaak-
I ing church festival* a success is geUin* to be a
w W y.». W ,e l .euv.i a ^e Of til* lirgCT CU-
Us. Under thes* circumstances may not the
timo come when a soft glove matinee between
two bruiser- will bo one of the chief attractlona
of an entertainment to lift a mortgage off the
church or for somo other such charitable per
formance T”
It need to ba that the boys “wanted to see
man” or “had an engagement.” Now
boy all want to “step out
It is said that Benawr crown it very bit-
ter epeinat J. O. C. Kick, ot Aneoete, on „„ ,
account of tbe speech which tho latter I Fulton county, Illinois, by tho Pr
m&de eselnst hie election to tbo Mnator-1 'SeefiSSf'uie'M ~
ship. That speech evidanoed a oonrage I convention, and caused the
end Ability on tho putof Mr. liLcknorth,
of the admiration of Georgia Democrats. I that they
It was a manly pro tret against Democratic |
acceptance of the leadership of a return- 1
Ing renegade, aud the mistake of the de
cade was made when the Legislature re-
fased to heed it.
T I very common
Mannidal IIauldi is reported to have re-1
oently landed on the rock of Gibraltar. I
Ilia appearance there caused no oomment j
whatever. The stores were not closed, I
minute guns were not fired, and the flags
were not pnt at half-msat. The matter I
will not be iuquired into. Hannibal Ham-1
lin ean be treated with impunity by any
foreign power. Alas 1 when a man U old I
and “colored,’' be need expeck no consid
eration at the hands of the United States
government. Ilannibal ought to return to
Bpnln immediately. Gibraltar has treated
him badly.
While somo malcontents are abusing Gov-'
ernov Colquitt, that gentleman is, during lion.
Thomas Hardeman's sickness, filling appoint-
meats, making speoches aud helping on tho
Democratic cause generally.—Auautte Chron
icle.
We are not aware of the fact that any-
body!« “jbaaing Gov. Colquitt.” It ia “all
in the oye'* of ths nervous and be-blowed
Ths free-thinkers seem to
a groat deal of stuff! Just
thinker la, and what he belie^^
know*. wfl
Tms other day tbe New York^H
P< irter Interviewed th* Sultan. By\
stand-off, the Sun has interviewed S;
at Oanonobet.
When Joey’s throat gives out, wo t\W
ot there will be another “capital un\Jj
landing.” to which the people of .Georgia
rill not be direct parties.
Ur. Stephens knew this.
cnt'vsro. _
believe bo understood and intended thie I of.Pharbaiim that we have over yet wit-
to be the result. If tbe psrty has been I nessed in Georgia politics—full as are Its
inveigled into a surrender of Its organiza- records of the masterpioces of Joe Brown's
tion and an indorsement J Independ-1 Ollygammooism.
entiam, let the men who perpetrated the I Mr. Bacoa will, perhaps, be able to take
folly bo held accounts for Us results. 1 care of his own future “interests,” what-
-■ — I ©Ter they may bo. We aro not their
a Part of the rrograinmu. keeper. Ho will be able to see to that
The effort to create a boom outside of I wiidh he returns to Georgia. His future
Georgia in favor of Gordon's return to the I is between himself and the people, who
Senate, has very much the appearance of I will not be apt to Join In a hypocritical
a patent medicine affair. The slmulta- 1
Two great evils—headache and consti
pation, afflicting nearly ail humanity, aro
side the party. The tried and tmo men, n
who had fought its battles whan the con- tl
sclousness of duty done was the only re- ti
ward they could expect, had loo strong a 1
hold upon the gratitude and affections of s
the people to allow him any chance what- p
ever. U* understood the situation, v
Position he was bound to have, and It 11
tliis could not be obtained by an appeal
to the people It could and must be ob- I
tained In some other way. ’
Tho resignation by General Gordon of i
his seat in the United States Senate, and i
the appointment of Governor Brown by (
Governor Colquitt to tbe same, is fresh Iu i
the memory of every Georgian. Tho t
storm of indignation that swopt over lira t
State on that occasion has no parallel,
oven In the eventful days that intervened i
between the close of the war aud this ap- i
pointrooDt,which,under theclrcumatancoa, \
was an outrage upon the living who '
had fought for the civil rehabilitation of i
the State, aud the dead who had fallen in 1
defense of the lost cause. It was an iu-
suit to the manhood of tbe oue and the
memory of tbe other.
If an election had been held uue week
alter the nows of this transaction was
£«.*V'd 07«r the State, and Colquitt had
1 been In the race, bo would bavo been do-
; feated by a hundred aud fifty thousand
r majority.
The convention that assembled the fol
lowing summer to nomluata a candidate
for governor was composed largely of
j Colquitt delegates. How this ic#uU *ai
* brought about Is too well remembers .l.
, Tbe Indignant protests of tbo people
against tbe reelgnat ion of Gen oral Gor
don aud the appolutment of Governor
* Brown to succeed him by Governor Col-
1 qultt were met with the cry if jx*rsccu-
1 tlon and appeals tog vindication.
i That convention adopted tho two thirds
rule, and It was announced by th* trlemSs
of Colquitt that he would not accept auy
* other nomination than one made under
0 this rnlo. They were coLlidenl that they
* could bring tbe requisite number of votes
^ to his support to ari^mpiish this result.
Tho ailenro of candlilnn* on aiiy i*rm !‘-a!
r pertinent Jmuo should only intensify Mi-
Jam w* Rtan and Thunaa Eads had n
tlttlo Sullivan and Wilson affair in New
York. Ryan knocked Rada out in ono
ronnd. The funeral was one of tbe largest
ever known.
I crusade against him because, lu common
neons appearance, in various papers all I with all the respectable Democratic lead-
over the couutry, of the prediction of his I era in tho State, he has failed to join In a
going back to the Senate, leaves no room hearty canvass for the still-born issuo of
to doubt that there Is a deliberate con- tbe gubernatorial travail of the lato self.
A ux the ontaide newspapers deadheading
Gordon's Senatorial advertisement, or does
its pay for it at so ranch a line ? In either
event, il ia an attack on tbe Democratic
party of Georgia.
Oscas W'ildn leaves for Japan on Sep
tember 4th. Tbedayooght to be pnt in
the calendar, or made a tort of apodal day
in some way or other. Why not put off
Thanksgiving till then ?
in our own laud. There is at once simi
larity and striking contrast between the
courso of M. de Lcssepe and our fellow-
citizen, Governor Sprague. De Lesseps
fought for abstract prindples; Sprague
| fights for home and tbo right. Do Leseeps
was open to argument and conviction;
Sprague means victory or death.
For years Sprague has been tbe victim
Young, rich, socially
taking up bis Insipid and ridiculous rec- j own; why do they not send then out to
ord as a Senatorial Solon where be drop-1 proclaim the nlghneas of tbe great politi-
pod it In the day of the “capital under-1 cal millennium? Are they, tow, sulking
The object of this Is doubtless j In their tents, or snoring out on their
Tie Ttow Dictionary.
Exchant*.
In political slung, “sympathy” means cam-
>altn funds. Tharefera when sympathy is ax-
5 rested at Washington for an lndt-peude-it
onfTMHonal l andluato at the Uouih, it means
.hat ho Will get money.
grows out of the fact that Mr. Bacon was I
not nominated. Nothing could he more I
unfounded; nothing could be more ridic-1
ulous.
Tho convention was put on notice,before I
it made Us first foolish step towards the
nomination of Mr. Stephens, that there
were in the State thousands of Democrats
who have no confidence In bis physical
ability to discharge the duties of the gu-1
bernatorial office, who have not forgotten
his Indifferonco to tbe Confederate govern-1
meut, who have not forgiven him for
being an idler lu the trying days of “re
construction ,’* i
standing.” 1— — —...» ~~~ ..
toexcRoau interest In thle tune illrec- b «*‘ porcliee, or ••commg-to”ln their eo«l
«on, on the part ot th. people of .M, ^ d “r. .honht’l™ k to *"- " ^ ^
veryooon. As it warms up to the work, 1
they will bo denounced a* “traitors.” Bot
where did “the defender of the faith,” on
tbe Chronicle, learn that Gov. Colquitt is
“making speeches and helping on the Dem
ocratic cause utueratlr ?” Ia that what tho
Governor ia doing at Ml. Zion oamp-tnett-
lo r ? Tbe Chronicle onirht to he ashamed
to make such insinuations Again*t him.
PERSONAL,
—Gen. Wolseiey Is said to writo his
own battle pictures.
—Schuyler Colfax Is writing for a Chi- j
cago religions weekly. - - ^
—Ex-Secretary Blalno Is said to appear
stronger than he did two years ago.
—tYe kindly but firmly nominate Mr.
Charles A. Dana for governor of New York.
State, by leading them to believe that the I for Uio performance of aomo of tbo labon
whole world, otitaldo of Georgia, is wait-1 appertaining to a dead campaign,
lug In breathless anxiety to see Jack I
again decked ont in Senatorial array. I
Whether these notices were inserted as I
advertisements, at so much a llue, or |
whether they constitute the mere floating I
and yet cemcldeut vagaries of I
widely scattered papers, matters but I
little. Whether of accident or of I
design, this incomparably Inefficient
Senator, of tbo reeent past, will not be I
apt to get an opportunity, by vote of the
people's Representative*, to again illus
trate tbo unhappy workings of sixth-class
ability In a first-class station. The trick
of outside announcement of a sort of hun
gering and thirsting for Jack Gordon's re-
turn to his graed Senatorial high-stepping
Malnrlis on Onion Creek.
Texat Sitting!.
r are tho colored voter* coining on. ont
>n creek t” ask*l an Auatiu candidate of
with a load ot hay.
* a h tap ob sickness* out dar among do.
fatWa >'
It is a little strange that only six dead
mb* have been found on the field ot
ionor. After reading the slowing oablo-
;rntns of the last few days, we thought
here would be thousands dead.
of circumstances.
| powerful, he meets the cold, scheming,
i but fascinating, Miss Chase. She calcu-
I tales how far his name and money could
be useful in elevating the fortunes of her
own family, and married. Sbe goes with
I ,Msr husband to Washington, and plots,
stalled*/ and"who have I combines and conspires, a only a woman
a feeling recollection of him as only a I ' * *"-*• -*•
marplot, a chronic grumbler and an Inde-1
pendent in the party lines, since his re-1
turn to public life; and it was warned I
that his nomination would be fatal to liar-1
rnony In the party—that he could not
command tbe united support of Its mem-1
bers. And now that the effort to thrual 1
him upon the party has met with tho very I
resistance, within tbe party, of which we I
spoke, we are greeted with the whine that I
“In case of Mr. Bacon’s nomination, Mr. I
Stephens's frlsnds would not act as some I
of Mr. Bacon's friends are doing ” |
It Is an Insult to common sense, and I
an outrage on fair play and Justice to Mr. I
Bacon, to pretend to believe that the tin-1
willingness of thousands of Democrats to I
support Mr. Stepheus grows out of the I
failure of Mr. Bacon to receive the noml-1
nation, or of any disappointment connect-1
cd with U. It Is a deliberate attempt to
deceive the people, by purpoeely misrep
resenting the cause of the opposition to
Mr. Stephens. The Chronicle knows
very well that there are thousands of
Democrats In Georgia who, uuUer uo cir
cumstances, would vote for Mr. Stephens
for any position, and U knows that
the reason* for their not doing so have no
connection whatever with Mr. Bacon's
present or fJture prospects. Ills an In
defensible outrage upon him that a Just
and properly Irremovable oppositions
Mr. Stepheus should be laid at the door
ot friendship for him.
I.etua De Grateful.
To-day is Thanksgiving Day, by ap
pointment of tho Governor. We do not
j propose any discussion of tho propriety
of these appointments by the civil rulers
of a country, it may bo true that tho
province of calling the people to thank*,
giving or to humiliation, as the case may
be, belongs to the church rather than tho
State. It Is not our purpose to enter upon
I that field of inquiry.
I Men are not mere machines, though, in
I these latter days, the tendency toma-
I chine action In religion as wsll as In poll-
I tics Is unmlstakablo. It la net seldom,
I now, that Individuality has to struggle to
, - - - I maintain Its existence amid the rush of
will not decel.e tUe people of Georgte* II ffi odern tendencies to terre Code, well
be return, to the Senate 1«-will there „ b onu|<]( , .
as Joe Brown originally did—by jpcxcusa-1
ble and ontrefeoueexecutive appointment. I Hen ou*bt not to nMn from tend.r-
After all, that rnxy ^ * be 1 ing thunk, unto tbe Qlr.r of life, belli,,
Uoveraor Colquitt m.y be rolled on to do lnd p| (ol , until died to the duty
anything to ariv.ne. tho polRld fortune. by 0IMtlUro proel>mUloI> . 0 od'. m.r.
oflho meet In.mdent SenAtor thu tl» C le, ,lw.y. .u,pu.oor.blllly tom.be re-
State buererhut,orerer will havenntll I lurnlj whun 00r
hehlm..lfgoca up, without bcalutlon or tud0 „, kls , wllh ln - tko “ orn .
tremor, to occupy the aaat that w« dlgnl* J , nd tn)mbI „ ^ „
(ted by Georgia', gro.teat B.nMor, Beojv „ K fcIdt , rm ^ D „ d
mlnU-J 111. TUa Lydia l-|ubb«u nue dlJ 0 „^ unlold blMllog , „ lt „ „„
will not decalra tbe people of Georgia. wandering footstep.. The .bower., tbe
If G.neral Gordon imagine, that >U I .unablne, tbt Mad lime, tte h«T M t-.ll
'.bat la required of hltn to secure the Sena-1 cll | n p 0n for llrM of conltant , nd
tonblp which be recently .purned, la gr , uftll remombrwee. Th. man who
.Imply to notify the people of Georgia „„ h, tb4nl[fal only onc , , „„ for
tbatlwl. willing to go back, bo It rery I bleulngi of llfa—aud by proxy enn
much mUtakoo. They bestowed the tben.wlU (lnd bit journey to tbe grare
onto on him once, In a .Imple, open-1 0 . <rcloudad „ tb , luU A merry, thank-
hearted way, and be treated It and them 1 ^ gynteflrl heart la the beat of guaran.
In a moat cooWmptuou. manner. l>be|t wtof bappiooM her. an d# f «fet y bam-
again returns to Senatorial fife, It will bo I
by lha .ppoinlment of Colquitt or Stephen. u ' t u , h, tnlly gr(l4 ful to-d.y, and to.
— sot by meaua of an election tt the j mo froW| . nd d4yj And ^ on Ll] fl
hands of the Legislature. Wear, strong- . s d e f our Journey. We will be hippier
“I roek&u dal’* de name o! de *lnlf. HU
am lumQii what ha got from do druggerjr
•hop.” ^
''WhaUtnfTar*^^ talking about?”
“Do Stull a whwPman out dar putslnhla
walermllllon* to. keep d# colored folk* from
t mlstakln’ 'em for dar ownVaUtmilUous.”
To-DAT ha# been set apart by the Gov
ernor a* tbankvgiving day. Right-think-
li g people aro thankful, day in and day
out, for Qod's goodneee. They do not wait
for perfunctory proclamation*.
W k. have seen several hend-Unee reading,
“Tho rreaident’a Sunday” or “Arabi’* Sun-
d*). ' I/ong time ago we got an Idea that
•it* Sabbath wm» the property of a higher
ower than either Arthur or ArabL
engrossed ln politics can. Ulgb spirited
and ambitious, she atrikea out boldly to
captlvato tbo then leading spirit, and ere
long Roscoe Is in chains.
Spraguo wakes up at last, aud arms
himself with a double barrel shot gun,
and begins his warfare. Roecoo flees to
tho sea coast, and tho popular cry Is,
I “What U the wild Sprague saving
ltuacue, tbo whole day long 7’ r
I But tbe Iron has entered Sprague's soul.
I Sprague bath murdered peace, and hence-
I forth it la war to the death. Almost
I damned in a loo fair wife, the tide of his
I fortunes change. His riches tako unto
*w.w*iiwi ui .'iw aura.
Platform—No real for the wicked.
—Charles Resde’s hair Is sospsrteai
the top of hi* head that vary faw men would
\ A J ■rwaeuNiAX got homo the other morn-
V: a little early, and after trying to un-
\ -I tk the window, and striking a match lo
Ml the lamp, explained to his wifo that
^ ler-yee-er, be'd-er been down to help
Cornell made aorae money outet JajrUonld.
and that fact show* Cornell to be an able man.
—Mr. Blalna, of the nodding plume,
will march down to the Maine footlights and
shy twelve glittering lance* full In the fare* «,f
hi* foe* In that Htate. Doraoy ami t-eason
will hide behind a log timing tbo perform
ance.
—A man of swell appesrance, who an
nounced himself at the de*k of the Fifth Ave
nue Hotel In New York to he the Duke of Rich
tnond. was detected m a ewindler itacauso of
hi* Isoot* being hopelstwly down at the heel
do you want to lie registered ?”
It*N Hr, Hawt
New York Tribune.
I One of the pleasant features of Watch Hill
Is the children. They ar* all here, unless l
am greatly mistaken, and their noma is legion.
They usher in the day and drive away the
night. After supper they take possession of
the hotel*, and thru liter* la no pcac* for the
wicked. “How your children have grown 1”
■aid a lady to a blushing mother. “Yc*,” re
plied a bystander who had been occgpyingtho
next room, “amt they've mad* me groaa.”
| When the light* are turned down and the
| tlma ha* come ftw peace and quiet to reign
I over liia hone*, then the trouble begin*. The
I following dialogue and concluding remarks
I were one of the watnresof a reeent midnight
I in one of the hotel* here:,
1 “Mar*
| “What, dear?”
I “fs that you. mar’
I "Ye*, dear.”
I “rar
| “What, dear r*
only dined, but slept under hi* own roo,*. The
Intel keeper* were angry at tho heron, per
i a pi, but other traveler* had reason to euvy
—A gentleman who recently traveled
the *ame car with Hon. Denjamin flarrh
■water. Attorney (leneral o. the United
itca, say* ha wa* much pawled by the fact
it Mr.Itrewster carried *ix hat* with him.
e on hi* head and five plied upon tho rest I
hi* *!de.. One of them wa* a century old In
rle, being of light brown fall, very high, and
rry. For it Mr. Brewster manlfiwted a strong
rtlality, alwav* wearing it wh«n h* left the
i hod been repeated at interval*
for two hour*, when an elderly
[acrid room, who had fou try •
> that time, rolled ont of bed
wiih a thud, climbed up Into the transom,
and. putUng his head out. shaureq at the top
of hi* long* “Ye*. If* no maw. and U'» me
paw; now go to sleep, yon little or I’ll
come In there and chow you w»” five min
ute* later a Indy ralm brooded over the bouse,
and no sound wu heard savt th* Un #o'» of a
wrary wav* telling iu story lotus smooih pob-
, ble* of the beach.
the smoker avow.
Borne day, no doubt. I’ll marry;
Home day have a little pet;
But my darling sliait be nary
Ulrl who smokes a cigarette.
The fashion of tracing the veins with
blue peste is gaining In favor in London.
A drunken Denver bnrylar blundered
A PoACltjr, Crcrentx Itomanee.
“Over the Brink,*’ h Mm mi Beltleed.
“Welcome home. Pansy.”
Dapblevale wa* af tt* preulret this sweet Jane
day a* It neatlad rosily among tha hill* that
towered above U on every able. Down in the
i shady glen where the Tillage chnrrh stood, a|.
most hidden by the eyt*»* teres 2wh»*e great
boughs of green were ewept caressingly again*
tbe side* of the mods*! *troctare, Pansy Perk
in* wustanding,eed as LtheiUrt PettlngUl
■poke the word* with which this cknnter opens
her face lighted up with a radU/M xxl smile
thAtwaabeeatiJfafiniteaad expoue of Uni-
which la dependent on the election of Mr. |
Stephens. Joey B. may be relied on to j
resign at tbe proper time. As we have
stated before, there is something, !
which does not appear on the
surface, In the anxiety of tbe
Into hi* own boose end robbed hlmaeU of e
watch and ffo.
“Fool* make feast* and wi«e men eat
them.” kind whether It is the fool* or the
fcaste that the wise men cat
Tux number of Immigrants who have
arrived In this country last month we* 65.0IU,
against fBjun for th* saws monrh last year.
Col. Setii STeldt, the Tall Butternut
ot Hocking, has written a lengthy and vinegary
card explaining why he wu nominated for
tnded Colquitt“Yor
The star of tbe Democracy iu this State
ing went down with that convention. Tbe
i of campaign that followed and th« result* cf
al- that campaign art freah ln tbe memory of
■old every man who baa sufficient sensibility
dar to keenly feel tbe pangs of political die-
*** The same men who managed tbe whole
business, from tbe resignation of Gordon
'en- and appointment of Brown to the re-elec-
i in tion of Colquitt, have put Mr. Stephens
tors upon the party, and brought it to what it
nr * Is to-day. They reasoned, no doubt, that
if the people of Georgia would submit to
*** the acts to which we have alluded, and
would furthermore give Colquitt a char
acter in the shape of a formal vindication;
Mies Ida Si’ENcsr, of Brooklyn, while I
frolicking on Wedn?*Uy. fell and drove a I
hairpin Into her aralp ao firmly that the *re-1
vlcaaof a surgeon were necsHerylo remove it. I
CoL'XTT CnUMI, I ‘lnXER O'XEKII.L.aM
at th* Chicago Brown picnic; “I am rejoiced I
to *ay that lliav* seen to-day colored men and I
white girts, ami white men and colored girl* I
•lancing on this Boor.”
Military critics express a doubt
whether the English cavalry wilt be useful in
Sir Garnet Woloricr • • ampaign. and liter* la e
general belt J that their horse* wlU be killed
off by tho aand flic* and the tun.
White Thunder, chief of the Brule
•Iaux. ha* written e letter to Chiof Red Cloud,
ndvising him not to go lo war with the pair fam
people. The letter begins frankly tkns: “My
Mend. I hear some bad news about you that
makes all your friends here ashamed of you.”
I arva vagabundus Boptrpia perd'dit
X-XSrrt. , Uimi. loci;
BclluU. Mill. .'.MU; Ml pMcu. note ftilltaat,!
ft ndwx. cau-U, i«rt mu Urf. m.ml
—JrntJtM Cmm.
About oo. tiDwtrart bIIm .Uetite
T nllnudanaow laoiMnttim ft, Com^-aiia
■Mb BMC I* la fnwic oteoutnutkM.
'* Tbe aTWWt* I.,'kLI ot lb. Hocm
Frttu
tB^aj." A. prti
!«;;.> ' , ‘
Accortlm, to New York Fiiwad.il
Ckmuctt ot Auftut 26tb, Um tout i—-
ealpta ot cotton boo September lu, 1881,
up to tart Friday oiglit* Acgnat S-’ib,
wer. 4.88I.W3 balM, a(alu« S.8t4,i!0t
bales In 1881, and again* 4,638,004 bale.
In 1880, showing a falling off ot l,t.VJ,-
688 batec as compand with 1681, and a,
compand with receipt, of 1880, of 473,
lOMtly groan- If they would .met Got. Brown atmo*
lordon Puha I unanimously to tb. United Stair,
irren Bey, in ttenate, after alt that bad
William Arp, been ,aid and don.. Urn U might be na-
>f tbe atmane. peeled that they con Id ba forced by th.
th. anriawnd- <n» man and thn same mHhoda to ratify
-It U enough ^Mdr contract with Mr. Htepben,, by
_ which, laying hU record aalde, tlie lirmo-
i tr-*d and In. I cratre enter, of Georgia worn to be dclir-
moocat,* and I end to him ilk. ao many sbeep or cmiK
en It is inft I They treat with contempt exety prouu
ot thorn who | of men—who an bone* and lincera—
*a—who bar. I again* tb* policy of taking a man of Ur.
Io'Ui«wifo»l-1 Stephen,', record and placing Uo uandard
So ^*‘ I of tbe party la hi, fcando They aro ,o
the draft of platform lo Mr.
Stephen,. Why? Wa* Mr. bupbMa
Um Democratic party?
. . Wa, bo Um
Democratic contention? Was bn tb.
eemmittMoopUllorm? If not, why (ah
um th. platform to him? Was tt n part
of tb* agreement mad. by Um bom. tk*
Ihe party aboutd net only nominate him,
bntihoold nominate him on Jo* web
a platform aa ha •hoaM dictate,
or no platform at all, which erer
suited him be*? U U reported, with-
coo.—CmTimriM. I baa many ,lumpen, why doe. ilnota. d
Yea, tbt Chronicle U troubled about n I lB ^ adip- «-
great many thing, (including tb. mlulter-' J * Iei * " "
alien of |Fnncb wine, and brandies)
mom than it la about its own lim, and
lb* tins of its gubernatorial barter and hit
special snppofUta, and tbe Atlanta organ
l» no tetter. Thb ,ptdal canaurc of Mr. _
Bacon b nncalted for, and U ontragwtuly I lh.t the Afrtean -Oetewayo ahonld b.
utJjnw. II b a deliberate attack opoo|P*^( «> th.lrbhthroor."wn.intemlad
Tte receipt, for tbe week ending Fri
day night la*, am grt.diy in rxco, of
them of la* wmk, being 11,331 balm,
again* balm In* waek, and again*
um week of 1881 U^TiS balm, aud
agate* ISttl UM date of 21.123 baba.
IHocka ia interior town* on te* Friday
night, were 14,327 telm, again* «l,4'rj
baba in 1881. Tte Hack *
Mama oo Friday nigfat was 806 balm,
again* L>iff balm in 1881, at eorrmpond.
biendarinw bis absence from " ■ o.n I m a nrateltowa Inmlt to Ite Irubpeotd.of
for not doing wtet aeocm of mmfwte I oowab?* W. would«Hw tte coming.
BM JImmIw ,.,nn iltilm i’ir ikn nnmln. ] Ot A DlPOttl tO MS I V(!l-MBipud lOQ Of
ore direct if ret pou* i Die for tne dosusa- l ,,, . _ 1
hmul | Erin dmm off tb. bbckgmard whoin-ilu
Uooof Mr 8u^tMte, amboa doing,though a in tte .id* of tte IcrW-
Itey am la tte State, and am in retry I ontraffm width Engtend
way mpnhb of doing-good work forth, .pattern. BmU mite work of nmn*
Party nominee.- poiitimlmwm rat, and tte IrU,will mtttt
Tb. pmpl. at Uwrgia Ilk. fair deaUng. I u to pam.
not the plank that pledged tte party to
correct the crib th* cabled In It laaid.
the organisation. Why Mrike this not ?
Wm It not pertinent and nrcmmry? Did
Umt examinee, or did the ermrenuon,
doubt that the mil. of riag-rnb, for in-