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About Upson enterprise. (Thomaston, Ga.) 1878-1879 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1878)
21 $ '1 JN0. F MEANS, Editor and Proprietor. "COMUNISE" BY REVI JOHN HALL, D. D. The topic of the hour, after Florida 1M.1 8 M. 16 M. | 12 M. America "THE NOBLEST MOTIVE IS THE PUBLIC GOOD.”—Virgil. THOMASTON, GA., WEDNESDAY MORNING JUNE 26, 1378. 9Squares. $Squares, % Squares, 5 Column, ,Column, Column, $1 001 $250 | $7 00 1 1000 2 00 5 00 10 00 / 1500 3 00 1 7 00 1500 2000 4 00 i 10 00 1 2000 500 11200;30 00 10 00 1500 20 00 3600 25 00 4000 3000 39 00 6500 70 00 THON ASTON, GA. 1 $1500 -25 00 30 00 s:Then what can be done v th our suffering brothers to whom the siren of Communism sings her song? How prevent the evil they may do, or suf- HEAR BOTHEL SIDES. BY BISHOP CLARK, OF RHODE ISLAND. is an old friend of mine, who was |brought up in the same school of be- This is what I said to my good but fer? Little,or nothing can be done somewhat obstinate neighbor, Alder- without their co-operation. One can |man Krustec, the other day, when lie lift blocks of stone with windlasses. • • . Men can only be lifted aa4rod has munist proper is, or was, French. He | made us, by liearts and bransedhels investigation and the Eastern ques tion, is Communism. The word is, in i, as indefinite as "Broad- churchism" or "culture." The com-i 4000 dreams of a general sliaking up of all own included 50 00 things as in a bag, r a " 8000 distribution to everybody without re 13000 - • and then an equal II gard to character or qualities, and lie allowsfor any petroleum, barricades, |bloodshed that may be necessary to !get things ready for fair division! His ,Russian brother is a Nihilist—what- |ever that means 'His German friend lis a Republican, intent on universal All real grievances of law that pro voke and seem to justify the discon tented toilers, should be removed. This is, in the United States, in their own hands, largely Numbers .Mule. Nowhere else does Labor stand so was indulging in one of his violent attacks upon something that he never liked,—“But you cugt to hear both sides." A. K.—"That is the very tiling," he replied; "which I do not care to do. lief with myself, and never not have been inserted hid such pro ceedings been impossible under the will practice 'a the various State and Teeral Courts. ‘Office first door Northof the Webb House. mch12-1y W X. BEALL Attorney and Counsellor (it aw. suffrage, universa1 prosperity, and universal peace, if only the French Austrians, and all the rest, will be good and quiet. In England he is an advanced Trades’-Uniohman, only he does not follow any trade himself. |He trades on the laborer—as a rule. IIn America Iio does not call himself Communist, but International Labor 1 Reformer, or some similar name ; and Till practice in the various’ Courts of he recognizes the difficulty of assert- State of Georgia. I Office in the ing himself here for this reason, that Court-house—down stairs, mehb-ly | we liave no kings but 111 the railway JULIUS E. F. MATTHEWS. LAW Thomaston, Ga. Office up sairs Cheney Building. J. A. COTTEN, TORNEY AT LAW; Thomaston, Ga i(them he hates), not established Ichurches, nor titled nobles, nor priest- Ihoods, worth speaking about, and the land is Wide and open, and every !man is as good as tlie next man. Of this widely-diffused nebulus in- |vader two opposite views are enter- tained. Otte,is, that civilization and I our national life will go down before it. The other is that it is a bugbear, |that will come to nothing, and is not worth thinking about. Both are er- :roneous, and even mischievous: the truth is somewhat between. The “evil |smells” may not depopulate New i York ; but they may produce much will practice in all courts in the State, disconnfott and ininrc iAnts of Prompt attention given toall business en- discomfort and injure parts of it. trusted to him. meli5,-ly | And a long way on this side of dc- — Istroying the nation, Communists may I vet work much mischief to the coun- A. C. GREENE ATTO IN EY XT LAAV THOMASTON, GEORGIA. Collections a specialty; Office in Johnson’s Building, mch5,-ly JOHN F. REDDING, LAv Will practice in all the courts of th State, mch5,-y HUNT & TAYLOR try, and ruin themselves, especially if, on the ground that every man of them lias at least one vote, truculent politicians should "speak them fair," and so lure them on to that punish- ment which the. Anglo-Saxon, after enduring much “fooling with,” is apt to inflict when fairly roused to a sense of danger and wrong. |It is best tlisrefere, without exag- |geration on any side, to recognize tlie i possibility of some remediable evil, and to prevent it, or at least reduce it to a minimum. Personally, 1 liave much sympathy, at times, with tlie Commuttists. When 1 to the rail way station and find tilings so fixed as to compel me to take an un-demo- cratic "palace car," or suffer much high. Mr. Vanderbilt's coachman’s voice is as weighty in politics as Mr: Vanderbilt’s own, and if there be leg islators that money can buy, (which of course is barely conceivable,) it is the fault of the coachman and his friends who chose them. The reason of the discontented must be appealed to. They feel the bitter ness of poverty, while they see em ployers grow rich—"fatten on them.” There are three classes of men who grow rich in this country largely off the working classes. There i, the to bacconist. Now ill-fed, ill-paid work ing-men have the remedy here in their own hands. They are not compelled to enrich him by buying his wares. There is secondly the brewer; and thirdly the distiller; here, as in many other countries, alone thriving, when all other manufacturers are working at a loss. Gentlemen--laborers! Why. do you n t to use your own expres sive language, "go for them?" Why not resolve "We will not buy their goods: they shall not fatten on us; and we shall choose such representa tives as will legislate them out of trade?” Gentlemen, the wealth won by railroad kings, iron-miners, and all the rest, out of yoti, if you will have it so, is a mere bagettelle com- pared to that which you here give away, with infinite loss to yourselves and yours, in body and soul. And the hearts of our suffering brothers must be addressed. We can- The question realy lias only one side. It is as clear as the sun, and as plain as figures could make it. There are no two sides to the multiplication table:.” "Certainly not : but figures may be manipulated so as to show very dif- ferent results. Perhaps, however, for certain personal reasons, you do not wish to know what is to be said on the other side." A. K.—"The thing looks straight enough to me as it is and I acknowl edge that it would not be altogether agreeable to have my convictions dis- turbed. I have made Up my mind, and that is tlie end of it." "You object, then to any investiga tion. through fear of what it might ;A. K.—"I liave often observed that |evil results come from prosecuting 1 inquiry too far. Some of my old |friends, who once stood as firm as I Ido to-day, liave been sadly shaken in their opinions: There is nothing which muddles a man’s mind so ter- ribly as hearing all sides of a question. I was once drawn as juror and knew nothing about tlie case in hand when I went into court, but after tlie examination and arguing on one side closed, I made up my mind that noth- ing could be clearer than the case as thus presented ; when the other , side was brought forward, I ‘changed my opinion entirely ; and after the judge had reviewed and weighed tlie evi- Ideuce on both sides, I had 115 opinion |at all, and voted with tlie majority on the ground that this is generally tlie wisest thing to do.” not always relieve them, for there 1‘Are we to inter from tins that it are laws of trade and capital and char- would have been better for you to acter as fixed and uncontrollable tts : have heard only one view of the sub- that of gravitation. But we can be kind, just, considerate to them. We can put ourselves in their places; We A T L A BARNESTILLE ject, and that then you could have acted promptly iud intelligently?” "I could liave acted prompt- any, rate, and conscientiously sable can meet them, their wives, their ehil- ly at any, rate, and conscient |dren, not with tlie mere charity-school | too, which was more than I was : dr soup-houses. which may imply per- | to do after hearing fill sides." manent dependence, bit with the common school, where a l stand to gether, and with the lessons of self- respect, intelligence, industry, self control, and that mightiest factor in human elevation—the rev rent regard to Itim who is Just and E ernal Love. We can thus further mitual under- •Do you, then, think that it i al ways safer and wiser for a man to confine himself to one aspect of a and accept only one kind of reason “I would hardly but you will admit that discomfort: when I find that monop- standing, mutual good vill, w‘olists in trade cars charge the twice ‘ithe proper cost of something I want; when I find a cultivated, refined, and educated woman paid by Mrs. Dives mutual some questions which have Will practic. ih the counties comprising the lint Judicial Circuit, and in the Su- lu e Court of Ihe State. Office over Drug Store of J. W. Hightower, mchb-ly CABANISS & PEEPLES, TO 11 NEYSAT iA Forsyth |good offices, withdraw the good from the toils of conspiracy, and cut tlie iground from under the feet of Com- munism. —N. Y. Ledge ■, side dreamed of his becoming an apostate, but he got in the way of strolling off to hear heretical preachers, and th: t was the end fhim." A, "It is not necessary for one to test |the soundness of his constitution by ’exposing lifinself to the danger of infection, and a man T ho has a good, sound, serviceable creed is not called upon to listen to everything that may be said against it, especially if he does not happen to be endowed with the learning and mental power that would qualify him t< cope with an Iaide adversary. But one who holds .his faith in ignorance or blindness, or asa more matter ofimmeritance, has no way of knowing whether i faith or only a superstition. true A. B You Test allow however that this keeping Hie mind open to CW crytliing that anybody has to, fell u and, perhaps, keep him all the time in a sort of lazy doubt. I know a man who, if you ask him what lie thinks of this or that- of the policy of the general government, or the expediency of the Prohibitory law or the remonetization of silver, or tlie wisdom of woman’s suffrage, or Hie propriety of fencing in tlie town- common—always replies that lie lias not quite made up his mind, and is inclined to think that there is a great deal to be said on both sides. Now. what would become of tlie world if nobody ever made up his mind about anything ?" “Everything would eerie to a ded- lock, just as everything would fly off at a tangent if we should all act un der tlie impulse of our feelings and prejudices. Tlie folly would be equally great in both cases, although the damage might not be always Hie same. Hear both sides, whenever there is anything to be said in favor of either that is worth hearing; and remember that no one can real ly know where lie himself stands un- pie stand." other pee 122 S; EENE E BE 1BLE 7 While we liave not felt inclined to fan tlie flame of radicals revolution by insisting that tlie investigation of tlie electoral fraud should lie carried to its logical and just conclusion, or to give aid and comfort to tlie flap- pers of the bloody "shirt in the North bv comdemning the action of tlie House endorsing and guaranteeing that, Mr. Hayes’ title irrespective of any |condition of facts that may be di It was an public policy, because S: Fraud endanger the stability Republic." in point of "MORE COP N." In the sanctum, cold and HOME E. Home, wrote Lady Bulwer, long ago.—"Home ; place to keep wifeand children in Mutton-chops, food for the ditto." |Many a wife of to-day must smile a little bitterly over this definition drear sat the writer, weak, and weary pond’ring o’er a memorandum book of items used before—(book of scrawling head-notes rather: ite ns taking days to gather them, in cold wintry weather, using up much time and leather)—pondered we these items o’er. While we conn d them, slowly rocking, through oir mind queer ideas flocking, came a quick and next ous knocking kioc - ing at the sanctum door. ‘Sure that must be Jinks tum bore. door; .links Ah ! well do . we mutters. g at our same the everlastin we rem ul u in the walls which then confined 13, the exchanges lay behind and be- fo-e us, and around us, all scattered o'er the floor. Thought we: Jinks wants to borrow some newspapers till to-morrow, and from sorrow tlie bore.” to ( which the English lady, in her, bitter ness, gave of the word; for there are many men who actually ro- gard Home as a place where those incumbrances are to be stowed away a d where they themselves simply sleep and take breakfast. 1 do not allude to overworked men, who have no time to r st, but to those with .ample means, who bus iness hours are from say ten to three, and who have .no good reason for leaving the women they have bound fast by means of the marriage cere mony to spend their time auch more desolately than any widow or spins- Alas! for the poor, wife whose hus- band, having caught her in the mat rimonial noose, simply onges, HIM feeds her ; who dines at his club, and and goes to the opera afterwards with his friends; whose amusements are not of tlie sort to li , shared vith ‘twill be reliet jhis wife, and who seldom spends ay i"inks hour in her society, save when too much dissipation has given him a. et rid of Still the visitor kept knocking, knocking louder than be fore. And tlie scattered pile of papers, cut some rather curious capers, be- ing lifted, by the breezes coming through an open door;and we wish- ed (tlie wish is evil, for one deemed always civil) that Jinks was at tlie desires to growl at somebody. He may give her rich clotlies and a fine house, but lie has only partially kept the promise made at the altar. He |has endowed her with I is ‘wordly I goods, but he cannot be said to love, |cherish and protect her. Tlie wife of tlie working-m in who comes home devil,to stay there overmore;there to find lits level,—.Jinks, tlie everlast-. to her after his long day’s labor, and ing bore!who is glad to walk out with her on Bracing up our patience firmer, holidays, dragging the baby wagon then without another murmtny "Mr. and carrying the next youngest child, ; is a, far happier woman. Ahthomois a place to live in, a place that should not be deserted for any other by either wife or Husbarid; and a wife is not a well-dressed housekeeper, but tlie partner of her husband's life; and when you said to Ithis woman, "Will you [marry me?" von meant, or should liave meant. Jinks," said we, "your pardon, your forgiveness we implore. But the fiet is, we were reading of some cu rious proceeding, and thus it was, unheeding your loud rapping there before—” Here we opened wide th: door. But fancy now our feelings— for it wasn't Ji iks the bore—Jinks, .nameless evermore. But the form that stood before us, caused a trembling to core o’er its and me mory brought its back again to days of yore; days when items were in plenty, and where'er the writer went, he picked up items by the score. ’Twas the form of our "devil" in attitude uncivil; and lie thrust his head within the open door, with "The foreman’s out of copy, sir, and says lie warits some more. Now this, Local" had already walked about till nearly dead; he had sauntered through tlie city his feet were very sore: walked through "Shall our two lives become one Shall our cares, our joys and our sor rows mingle? Will you help me Shall 1 help you ? And shall we par .as little as we can until death parts us??l,1 Many a lonely heart beats within the bosom of a wife, and many a wo- |man, too proud to utter reproaches, bears tlie strange solitude and neg- 1lect to which some men consign their wives—in a blind depth of selfishness imposible to women— often absolute ly ignorant of their own deeds.—N. • only one closed by the investigation now pro- truths which commend them- grossing, nevertheless, we have felt was unnec- While 110 ef- to your judgement, without and still feel that action any argument at all. I once b preacifer who, of 11*3 sermons, the objections to prayer in su * able and and plausible manner A REESC OF GERAN 1 SALMEN- make his attempted refutation INTEATION. . state Beeravetssunttistaetory- It has been more than a year since | shows tlie folly of studying prime .... , the country was relieved of Grant as of a proposition." ride rough-shod over the feelings mid | President of tlie United States, and it ‘ ■ " lias been more than a year since that trying to Irra |for teaching her children, just halt find tlie Hon. B. Brassey, whose gram mar is crazy, whose breath is tobac- stated fort was being made to unjustly as- ch an sail Mr. Hayes’ title we liave been as to unable to see any good reason for a of the disavowal of such purpose by Con- This and whose 11 sides principles are an unknown quantity. "It shows tlie folly of the man gress Tlie friends of Mr. Hayes could liave no fear for tlie validity of his title not founded on the proof of W, the fortunes of good people, then I jam in favor of a "new deal," if it be possible hit would change all this. |And if bad and ft regular iiteals renowned individual set sail for Eu- big for him." i subject that was too fraud. If no just’cau I exists they have apprehension. .01 the street called Evans, and ill the byways running off into portions of the city, both pulilic and obscure; had examined stores and cellir, and hid questioned, every feller he met, from door to door, TO YOUNG MEN. The only way by which capital can Irope, and, on arriving there, became Hie recipient of a great many dinings and winings at Hie hands of foreign toadies and itinerant snobs. Yet, though all this time has, elapsed, still IWill practice in all the counties of made me dyspeptic, if I only knew as the Flint Cireuft, mehk-ly I much as the average miner, if I lived 7by hand-labor and could not get it "• 1 BERNER. I c. a. TURNER. I for months, if 111” children were grow-. it seems that it is imposeslid. for the BERNER & TURNER, ing haggard in face, and my wife country to 1 | were ill-clothed and spirit-broken, if ; A. K.—"On one occasion I happen ed to be in the corrt-room is Boston, when a very eminent lawyer, after |delivering tlie opening argument in |a case then pending, was told in a ! whisper by his colleague that lie had recover from tlie evil ef- | been speak ing on the wrong side, and tlie other hand, if fraud of a charac- ter to vitiate this tittle does exist and shall be made to appear, they; have no right to demand nor has Congress the power to grant immu- nity. It is justification of the resolu- fects cf tliat administration, for the A. t I were hourly meeting companions torneys L a in the same condition, and hearing in FORSYTH • GA. their stories the echo of my own mis- ery, and if, in such circumstances, "ill practice in all the courts, and give ! smart men came to me with sympa special aftedtion to the collection of thy—toe only sympathy L received- claims. Refer to Win. 11. Head, Banker and brilliant and plausible schemes Forsyth, Ga., Dumas & Allen, Cotton monster of fraud and corruption, for which it is so signally distinguished, is to.o great to be concealed or kept in a quiescent state. It will be, constant ly and persistently, raising its hide- pausing for a moment, he went on without Hie slightest embarrassment substantially as follows,—‘I have thoug lit it best to anticipate tlie posi- tion of my opponent and state as fairly and clearly as possible the ar- gument by which lie will probably Factors’ Forsyth, Ga. mch5,-tf MARTIN & MILL, Iof deliverance for me and my class, I ‘ should go in and share the toils and perils of tlie revolutionist. 1 might Ibe better, and I could hardly be ! worse. There are tens of thousands of my jfellow-men—God ploy and help them! ! —in just this condition. If is not Will practice in all the State Courts 01 ‘enough that we deplore their state; |we must aid them with knowledge, (Ft tnnrgia and the United States Courts. Office, front room, up-stairs, 1 unmingham building.inch5,-6m in and with help to help themselves. But when I am tempted I reflect To have the "Railway King” shot or hung would not mend matters. Apart |from tlie risk to myself in tlie process, , I liave no guarantee that hissuccessor _j will do better. “Then wreck the whole wife Offers his services to the public and tiling ?” But then I must travel at-still cthe pleased to wait ov his patrons, greater, inconvenience and cost till N new one is built; and of that I must THOMASTON, GA. A. M. PATTERSON, m. n. | pay my share, indirectly or directly. To demolish the Confederated Gro cers and let a Central Government Imanage all their business would hard- |lv mend the matter. Apart from the SUGGS & PATTERSON, THOMASTON, GA. 3 Tender the public their profession- services, mch6,-y DR. J. M. BLALOCK, THOMASTON, GEORGIA dieac in visit Thomaston: call at his Should be. Teeth inserted, teet filled, extracted, teeth attended to in the eof the Dental Art. Call once ou will not only call again, but will we all your friends, fact tliat a Cent ral Government might not distribute groceries over this con tinent to forty millions of people as punctually as it is now done, is it not one of Mr. Herbert Spencer’s things proved, that whatever governments do is done worse and done more ex- pensively than by individual enter prise? A “Department of Oysters, Clams, and Garden Stuff" in Wash- ington might be as costly in tlie end as our presont-plan, and its head might give no more satisfaction than many a Secretary of the Navy. Be sides, a staff of officers would be re quired at its bead, and it would not be worth any man’s while to take the worry of the place unless lie had an ous head to public view; . L The latest relic of Grantism which endeavor to establish his case. 1 has been developed is concerning have done my best to present his side Grant’s ex-Secretary of tlie Navy, of the question in its strongest aspect, Robeson. In tlie dispatches of yester- | and now, with tlie permission of tlie day morning tlie public was inform- court, I shall proceed to show how ed that the House Committee on Na- untenable are every one of these val affairs had concluded its investi gation into the late administration of the Navy Department, and finds from the undoubted evidence of the official records of that department itself, that Robeson and his confederates made way with vast amounts of money J propositions, and how utterly futile :is the only argument, by which they can be sustained,’ and so lie went on |to upset everything that lie had first said. What is the use of hearing j both sides, when they are set forth in this fashion 77 which should have been turned into I "It is very likely that tlie court and tlie Treasury, and that these sums were disposed of in secret and im- jury had a better understanding of onearts and mother-in-law. 10 A LL WARRANTED. Office, on lotand near his Dwelling, tf , L. M. WARFIELD, cotton Commission Merchant |exceptionally good salary, and so my including your dream of “equality” would be dis- turbed To make a petroleum-blaze of Mrs.Dives’ villa would do 110 good. It would only throw both governess and. waitress out of work, and 011 the Commission, 50c Per Bale. eladvances made on consignments 'onnk rates. Instructions careful- ’ e, and satisfaction guaranteed. ........ .. vas---ppcsite Cotton Exchange, common store. And as for ignorant, coarse, dishonest, sottish Mr. Brassey, why, my friends, it was not the "bloat- ed aristocrats," the “coupon-cutters,” that put him in power. No, gentle men; lie floated to his present place on the turbid and muddy current of universalsuffrage, (only it is not “uni versal,"for too many, timidly and de- sparingly, stay from the primary meetings and the polls,) and what reason is there fo think that his chance would diminish' by increasing the class that supports him? whom increase is by saving. .If you spoud is much as you get, you will never be if any tiling was stirring, anything occur ring not published heretofore ; and had met with no success; he would rather kinder he felt a little wicked at tlie ugly little bore, with his messa go from the foreman th it he richer than you are. It is not what a mill gets, but w hat he saves that con stitutes his wealth. Go, learn the first two rules of arithmetic: learn addition and subtraction. Add to your present capital any amount you wanted something more, please; sultract tlie sum which you. "Now it's time you were de art- add, and tell us if tlie last amount iting, you scamp;” cried we upstart- ing; “get you back into the office, where you were before; 0 tlie words that you liave spoken, will get your icals charged revolutionary designs | cudgel oaken that was lying on the on those who favored a thorough in- , floor), tak E our hands out of po k- vestigation .of tlie electoral frauds, ets, andplea cthe sanctum door; tell will not be the same as tlie first. Ev- ery man should, in every year, of his life, make some addition to his capi- tal. You say you get but little. Nev er mind; spend less than that little; and then next year ymwill get more, for you will have the profit upon the 1 sum you save., It is not province of Congress to leg- islate to quiet either the real or pre-; tended apprehensions of tlie Hayes- ites, and we feel very confident that in this case its extraordinary cff< ros will fail of their intended effect. There will be just as much cry of "revolution," now that the resolution of the House Judiciary Committee Hie foreman there’s no copy ugly little bore.” Quoth our devil: "Send him more!" And our devil, never sitting, still is flitting still is flitting, back and forth upon the landing just outsidej Through a letter to the Macon Tel- egraph we learn that Prof. G.J. Orr is working hard to have tlie Moffett the sanctum G’o >r. T a -s adown his from his eves are beaming, and his lias been adopted, as there was before | voice is heard still screaming, " the foreman wants some more bell punch introduced in this State- It would raise a fund that would ena ble us to liave f co schools all th year round and many more of them than now. We hope it will be introduc- ed and tried at least. tliat committee assui ted the function of the courts by declaring that there is no power any where in our govern- ment to question a title to tlie Presi- dential office based on fraud and for- gery. On this subject we entirely 1 agree with tliat sterling Democratic journal, the Bridgeport (Conn.) Far- Printer’s Circular. GEGRGIA IN PARIS. The correspondent of the Baltimore Sun has the following upon G orgia The Methodist General Conference in Atlanta have decided to hold the proposed centenary of Methodism |in Baltimore, in 1834, in stead of Bos- t in. mer, which says:tion: "Every since the suggestion tliat a / as represented at tlie great Exposi- CUBBEDGE, Hazlehurst & Co., pri- the real merits of the case than they Fraud investigation be instituted, tli proper ways. Upon the strength of could have had if the lawyer had Republicans liave declared that the this the trial and punishment of the confined himself to only one side of legislative branch of the government trading Europe wlien a corrupt king proper ways The-early relations of Georgia with vat I bankersin Micon, Ga., have fail ed. Supposed liabilities $300,.000, as sets comparatively small. ex-Secretary and his said confeder ates are recommended. It is specially unfortunate for Rob Hie argument. And here let me ask .was wrongs ly making war upon the and no less corrupt land company im- if you liave never got into trouble by Executive Department. On Friday acting prematurely and upon insuf- on tlie motion of a Republican mem posed upon her fertile domain, are not unknown either in England or esoir- that these developments have ficient knowledge, and wished, when her who was upport d by all of his been made now after he has gone out Iit was too late, that of office. Had they become public | time to survey tlie matter in a great- | tlie functions of the judicial branch while he was Secuetarg of tlie Navy, er variety of aspects? Have you of the government by declaring tliat lie would have managed, doubtless, never been ashamed of yourself for Hayes’ title was unassailable through to have gotten himself impeached, expressing a strong and positive and then the same Radical Senate opinion, in regard to some man, or which declared his fellow Secretary | measure, or theory, which you after- Belknap not guilty, would have ac- |wards found to rest upon a mere de- you had taken party assocates, the "House usur quitted him. He lias 110 such hope as lusion? Would it not liave been tliat to cling to now. A matt cafifot - wiser for you to have suspended your be impeached for acts committed judgement, and waited fo. further while in office after lie has retired light?" therefrom. So the only way in which A. K — “I do remember that not Robeson et al, can be tried is before a | long ago I denounced one of my court of justice, and the only punish- neighbors in very vehement lan- ment which can be inflicted on them guage, because of something that will be tlie felon's cell.| came to my ear very discreditable 10 1 What a commentary en- Grantism, him, which I afterwards found to, bl and what a fitting ending to tlie ad- an atrocious falsehood, and I had to ministration of Grant. An ex-Secre- make a humble apology, tary of War a confessed criminal and i I was perfectly, honest and robber of the soldiers it was his duty | when I spoke so bitterly of him." to protect,and an ex-Secretary of tlie "That may be, but this did not Navy alraedy pronounced by a Con- make tlie wrong inflicted upon him gressional Committee ef secretly any the less. You ought to liave and improperly making way with waited until you were sure tliat what vast sums of public money entrusted | you heard about him was true. I do — but. then. ancere d the courts or Congress. We are very much pleased to see tlie names of Messrs. Phelps and Warner (Dem- crats, of Connecticut), both excellent lawyers, recorded in the negative.— Tlie minority, 21 on tlie Burchard res- olution and 14 en tint of tlie Judica- ry Committe, was not so large as It should liave been. - We had supposed tliat there was more courage upon the Democratic side of the House, and find it hard to credit the fact tliat tlie Republican shriek of ‘revolution’ has made cowards of so many Dem ocrats. If these invertebrated Dem- ocrats think that by voting as they did, they liave hushed the partisan cry of -revolution,' they will speedily learn their error. As Mr. Tilden’s |conclusive letter on Southern war claims only increased the Republican agitation of that false issue, so tlie House vote on Friday will only in crease the volume and persistancy of France. But a few days agoan intel ligent French baker show ed me an old parchment deed liberally adorned |with immense, royal beeswax seals, and carrying many coupons of sec tional warrant grants to land in Geor gia, sold aiid resold here in days when the savannahs were sought by the Hu- genots of France, and the burly loyal ists of Briton. Those “land grants” have been tlie bete noir of titles in Georgia, and served to reflect on the unquestionably good titles. Now, by tlie intelligence afforded by tlie press more than by tlie legislature of Geor gia, her land titles are properly un derstood. Her very rich sources of minerals, timber and agriculture, to say nothing of her streams and water 'power for manufacturing, are topics |that the French and English take 110 small interest iff. The coming week a lecture party embracing the value of Georgia's kaolin alone for Ceramic and China industrins, will be deliver- 'ed here before a manufacturing sci- !entific body, and I hope to be present. The woods exhibited here from A MOVEMENT is on foot for a milita- ry encampment of the volunteer com panies of the State some time in Au- gust, in tlie vicinity of Atlanta. ANTI-FAT to his care, while his own future con- not say that we are never to speak fincment in State’s prison is not im- sharply of other people, but when we probable. Yet, even now, the Radi- do, we should know just what we cal party is seriously talking of plac- |are talking about." ing the head of such an administra- A. K.— You have asked me quite It was an error in a partisan way, home and ahr ad, tion again in nomination for the Chief a number of questions, and now let because it will not effect the object pounds to the bushel and some 6 fee Magistracy of tlie United Stites, |me ask you if it is always safe for a sought. That it was an error in point high in stalk, her cotton, her tobacco the Republican howl of ‘revolution.’ The Democratic members erred, no of migrants |mat er how tlie question considered. vef be the inducement to a new class and industries of Geor- very important subjects at H r wheat of 68 J .sought. That it was . - man to fsteu to arguments directed of law must be conceded when we her timber and her minerals, to say THE Far Fair of the Southwest against what lie has been accustomed turn back to tlie electoral comprise nothing of her glorious Georgia Industrial Association, will to regard as tlie most sacred and vi- bill and find tliat the eminent law- women, make my quotation of "Geor -‘‘‘1vers, Republicans, and Democrats, gia, proud Georgia,” more apt to day ALLAN’S ANTI-FAT is purely vegetable and perfectly harmless. It acts upon the food in the stomach, preventing its being converted into fat. Taken in accordance with Jf sections, it will reduce a fat person from two to five pounds per week. "Corpulence is not only a disease itself, but the harbinger of others." So wrote Hippocrates two thousand years ago, and what was true then is none the less so to-day. Sold bv druggists, or sent, by express, upon re ceipt of $1.50. Quarter-dozen $4.00. Address, 1 BOTANIC MEDICINE CO.,4 - Proprietors, Buffalo, N. B law- men and women, make my quotation of "Geor open at Albany on Tuesday, Oct. 224, tin truth,— -arguments which howev- |yers and continue five days. ' Extensive er false and untenable, may be pre- who preparations are being made, and as sented with such skill and plausibili Albany understands getting up a Fair, i ty as to disturb, if not entirely over a good time may be expected, throw, his faith? Here, for instance Republicans comprised tlie committee than when tlie blind old king repeat provided tliat tie bill should not ed in regret when this hi debar proceedings to test the dential title—a proviso that would signs of TRADE MARKt PL00 rs° 0.” Barham’s Infallible FILE CURE. Manufactured by the Barham Pile Cure Co., Durham, N. C. : it never fails to euro Hemorrhoids