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18 THE QUESTION DECIDED, AND DO
THE PEOPLE WANT A
CONVENTION f
Wm the popular vole*' hffnril all over
tiro State on Tuuislay last ? Or, wasittlu'
few who spoke while the many renmiued j
tileut ? Did th people generally turn out;
end express their sentiment* t Or wmi it
only the few fully alive for a change 1
And have they weighed the subject in their
own minds, fully understanding and com
prehending it in all of its phases, wlmt its
Objectionable feature* now are, what pa
tent defect* are embodied in the organic
law. What change* ean be made that
will necessarily produce beneficial results ?
If the people generally have investigated
this subject and ean clearly sec any Wool- j
fteent result* in the proposed change they j
are better posted than wo are. The re
moval of the Capital back to Milledgeville
is ono of the proposed changes. What
genera! good will result from that? It will
enit the Htate at least two hundred thou
sand dollars to do it. The delegates will
hsve to !>e paid, and the people will havo
to be toted to pay them; or, the property
belonging to the Htute will have to be sold j
at a sacrifice to raise the funds. It may
be thiA a few individuals at Milledgeville
triay be profited, but is the citizens of
Southern Georgia to lie benefited ? The
Capital at Milledgeville will not enhance
the value of their projierty one cent on
the hundred thousand dollars. The prin
ciple affluent in favor of the removal is
lint tlmt Atlanta is the wrong place, or
that Milledgeville is the right place, but
that there wn a groat wrong perpetrated
iu tiio removal, or rather, that it, was
done by a corrupt party. Ho the act of
the removal is not particularly objection
able, lint the odium attaches to the party
that did it. If wo wished to purchase a
house wc would look to the convenience
of its construction and the quality of the
work, and if satisfied with both, we would
never enquire, nor would wo Care whether
it was built by Tom Brown or Tom Jones,
nor whether Tom Brown was a Democrat
or Republican, nor would we sacrifice the
property and return to an inconvenient
wad inaccessible locality upon the diaeov
i ry tlint it was built by the objectionable
Tom. This, wo think would be carrying
out prejudice too far, for a man that would
sacrifice the property of the State simply
to blot out what the Buds did when in
power, must have hud an extreme Demo
cratic unction. We are in favor of blotting
a.'it every Radical net, that the Radicals did
while in power, but if they did, by any sort
•of inadvertanee, do a Democratic and
righteous deed, let us do ourselves the
■credit to let it stand, even though it was
•done by the devils.
When it was reported to Christ by the
Disciples that wicked men were easting out
devils in his name, he did not forbid its
being done -the acts being good, even
though done by bad men lie approved
t hem, and mildly rebuked liis Disciples for
objecting even to bad men doing good.
Now, if the net itself was iniquitous, re
sulting in evil, then abolish it upon the
ground that it, was wrong without regard
to who did it. In the change of the ju
dicial system was the net wrong, or was
the change right,but done by the wrong par
ty, and is it to bo undone upon suchfliniaev
pretests; were not the people everywhere
ready to give up the old Inferior Court,
the business of which was scarcely ever at
tended to, and were they not satisfied with
the changes? And, indeed, to every well
informed mind, the improvement is ap
parent. And now, the proposition is to
turn backward, retrace our steps to the
original standpoint because the progress
was made by Bidhiek and bis thieving
party. We do not believe the people of
Georgia is going to be lend away from cor
rect principles because some bud man or
men once embraced them.
But they say the homestead ought to lie
reduced. We think it is wbo’ly imma
terial wlmt amount of property is exempt
from execution, whether one thousand or
one hundred thousand,so the law bo pros
pective and not retroactive. The vendor
iknows the existence of the law and will
make his sales exclusively upon his con
fidence iu the integrity of the vendee.
The homesti ad law he* tnk< n iti course;
nil old debts are now bared by the statutes
of limitation and there will be no further
controversy about them.
The premises considered, we think there
is no immediate necessity for a change in
the organic law, nor do we believe the
people want it. It is very true that the
people look to the eost of a Convention,
and during the pendency of the financial
crisis we think it wisdom in them. If it
was only the actual expenses of the Con
vention, the people might be willing to
hear that, but that is only the beginning
of expenses—every Constitutional provision
has to tie vitalized by legislative onaothionts.
Wlmt will it coat the State to pay the pin
feathered representatives of the various
counties for their long-winded and brainless
speeches upon every subject and all the
questions that will be agitated ? The cost
will be immense.
The Macon Telegraph intimates that
Representative* are more easily corrupted
in Atlanta than Milledgeville. That the
principle legislation is done in the bar
rooms, and briberies effected and corrupt
schemes consummated that could not be
doue if the Legislature met in the quiet
old town of Milledgeville. What a sin
gular idea, that an honest man at
Milledgeville will be a thief in Atlanta. It
farther intimates that Legislators will be
more circumspect nt Milledgeville because
there are no fewer detective*, not so many to
watch and expose them. Wo would sug
gest, if that in principle Vie correct, that
the Capital lie removed at once to some
lonely spot in the Okoefenokee Swamp,
that honest Legislators may not bo tempted
above wlmt they can bear.
•too Aii, iJ:-Hid j, ~i present* the
sumo and only argument iu favor of a Con- i
volition and here if, is "The present Con- 1
stitution was concocted by Radicals, Healu- 1
wags, Yankee* and ignorant negroes. ” Not
a single argument against the instrument,
hut assert* that it was concocted by the
wrong party, Why not point out the glar
ingdefeets in the instrument that he Wants
abrogated ? And not assert only that it is a
creature of had men to excite the prejudice j
of tlie masses and drive them into exces- !
sivc extravagance to abolish the tiling i
to which there is no objection to its make
lint obnoxious on account of it* maker*.
We would like to see an argument in fa-;
vor of a change of tiit) Coustiutioß. It
may tie essential, but certainly up to the
present, neither tlie necessity nor the im
portance has been sustained by reason or
'o in
LATEST NEWS.
Washington News and Notes.
NOTES IN EEIEF FROM ALL AROUND.
MOIIK OF Civil, BIGHTS.
Washington, January 7. A House
resolution was adopted culling for the
names of paymasters of the Lite war whose
accounts are unseitled.
Crutchfield, of Tennessee, asked leave
to offer an amendment to tlie supplemen
tary civil rights bill, providing a penalty
against any woman who refuses an offer
of marriage on account of race, color or
previous condition of servitude. (Laugh
ter.) Butler, of Massachusetts, objected.
In the course of his speech Butler said,
if ho might be allowed to speak for the
Republican party, lie would embody the
doctrine in a sentence, not that ell men
were equal, but that every man bad a right
to be the equal of every other man if he
could. All constitutions, all laws, all eu
nc'mi lit , all prejudices, all caste, all cus
tom, ell thought against, that, in contraven
tion of that, were unjust, wicked, unchris
tian, and certainly must bo brought to
naught. Tins'hill only removed ull irnpe
dimi nts to every man to lie the, equal of
every other mat), if God had given him
tie'power to lie the equal.
Mr. Monroe, of Ohio, from the Cotn
mi tee on education and labor, reported
back adversely the resolution offered yes
terday by Mr. Hvplier, of Louisiana, di
recting nrmy rations to bo issued for the
relief of the starving poor in the Southern
•States. The committee had talked over
the matter fully and freely, and tlie result
arrived nt was that the committee did not
regard in as the proper sphere of Congress
to enter upon a General system of pro
viding for pauperism in the States. If
t,h' precedent were established it would
soon Vie found that Congrees had entered
jon the whole business of taking charge of
! pauperism generally throughout the States.
The report was adopted and the commit
tee was discharged from the further con
sideration of the subject.
illicit distilling in ououoia.
Washington, January 7. District At
torney Farrow, of Georgia, with the en
dorsement of all the representative men
from that Htate cognizant of the facts,
han secured the acceptance by the Com
missioner of Internal Revenue of the
proposition of ex-Bepresentativo Price
in the matter of illicit distillers in North
Georgia. The proposition involves a lib
era! settlement, approximating to general
amnesty for past irregularities, and looks
to tlio pardon of those in prison. Tlie
! latter class, however, depend* upon Kx
! costive clemency. There are about thirty
live in jail, and over three hundred
eases unadjusted. Th ere are also about
three hundred distillers against, whom no
proceedings have been instituted, who de
sire to avail themselves of tho settlement
proposed.
THE EDGAR STEWART.
New York, January 8. Zinori W, But
cher, the owner of the steamship Edgar
Stewart, yesterday said to ft reporter!
“I am the sole and exclusive owner of the
vessel Edgar Stewart, and she shall rot at
her wharf before she shall be used in vio
lation of any neutrality laws of the gov
ernment. 1 have broken her charter
and retaken possession of her, and reques
ted Colonel Agnra to desist from taking
any action in respect to the vessel, ns her
reputation is had enough already, and I
desire to redeem it,, as far as possible, in
using her in legitimate employment,”
STOLEN DRAFTS.
Washington January 7.—No Execu
tive business was transacted to-day affect
ling the South, except the theft of about
eleven thousand dollars worth of drafts
for refunded taxes, mostly belonging to
j the people of that section. Those drafts
were in a tin box in the refunding division
of the Internal Revenue Department,
THE EKEEDMEn’s 111 REAP SWINDLE.
Washington, January 7. A supple
mental report to Ihe House from the Sec
retary of War shows tlmt the Freedmen's
Bureau swindle was carried on bv false
reports of money deposited in United
States depositories and of amounts cov
ered in tlie Treasury.
QUESADA AT KEY WEST.
Key West, January 8. Senor Rafael
Quesada arrived hero yesterday from New
Orleans, Iu conversation he said Spain,
whether Republican or Monarchical, was
; tlie enemy of Culm, and the Cubans in
tended to be free at any cost.
congressional.
Washington. January 8. Tlio Senate,
by a vote of 45 to 14, rejected Pratt's
j amendment to tlie salary bill, compelling
members to refund tho back pay received
: since March 3d, 1873.
The House is engaged on the Educe
[ tionid bill.
WASHED AWAY. ,
Poughkeepsie, N. Y., January 8. Tho
bridge on the Hudson Ilivev Railroad be
low Gloton has been washed away by a
storm, and the trains are delayed. Land
slides have occurred on the Poughkeepsie
and Eastern aud the Duchess mid Colum
bia Railroads.
- ♦♦♦•--
It is an 111 Wind that Ivu>ws Nobody
Good. -Tho panic brought a hcndsnme
hnrvent to tho legal fraternity in New
York. Every merchant, banker or broker
who whs in trouble was obliged to retain
it lawyer, mid in many instances more
than one. The Grin noil bankruptcy case
brought six well-paid lawyers into court.
The fees required by these men on such an
occasion would not be less than SIO,OOO,
and the cost of the entire Grinnell suit
will probably equal five times that sum.
The best lawyers value their time from
S4O to SSO per hour, and some of them
honst a practice worth $50,000 per year.
O’Connor, previous to his retirement made
mnnally nearly four times that sum. In
deed, he was probably paid $200,000 for
tis services in the Jmmd ease, lie is now
worth more than a million, nil of which he
hat: nu*,dv by Lis own gcuiuiu L^Ly.
GEORGIA NEWS.
There arc four hundred ami seven granges in
Georgia.
The Quitman Manner has entered upon its
ninth volume and expired upon its entrance!
The employ com of the Gem gia Head have
formed tiiem**dve*h*to an association.
The job office of the Augusta Const UuHoualisl
was destroyed by fire on Sunday.
Dr, F. G. Caution, formerly of Macon, was
found In his bod at Griffin l*t Friday dead,
TJppincott A Cos,, of Philadelphia, will shortly j
publish a novel from the pen of Mr. Marcelhm *5.
Thornton, of Atlanta.
The explosion of a gas pine demolished tlie !
dining-room of Mi s. K. It. HaHioen’H hoarding- j
house iu Atlanta on Monday,
Mrs. Arifi’cHfic Ilo.id, of Hanks county, hong j
horse l f witu a hank of cotton. A love affair is ;
supposed to have been the cause.
Henry Denver, an Irishman, wan ahot and
killed in ifawkinsville during*Christmas week, by
special policeman Thomas Jones.
During tho year Den ion county produced 1,335
bales of cotton, (59,030 hunlx 1m of c0rn,,15.150 bead ,
of hogs, ami other articles in proportion.
Hon. It. H. Hill is in Albany. Tho AVir* says
he bus lost ono hundred thousand dollars on his ;
planting interests in Dougherty county.
On the 90th of December Edwin Stubbs wan i
shot and fatally wounded, two miles i. orn Han-|
delHvllie, by his brother-in-law, Zacliarisih Gray, j
Putnam county raised nine thou Hand three
hundred and Jive bales of cotton last season, j
against one hundred and sixty-live thousand aud j
eight bushels of com.
Twelve rases of small-pox have occurred in the i
male department of colored patients in the Luna- ;
tie Asylum, five of whom have died. One case 1
has occurred in tlie female department of white i
patients.
Haiulersvillft Herald: Jack Newman, a tenant!
on the home place of W. C. li’ddlo, Esq., the past
year, raised on a one mule farm, 5,034 pounds of
cotton, nuking fourteen halos, 128 bushels of
corn, 2.00$ pounds of Bidden aud 00 bushels of
potatoes.
Mr. Joseph Ad ford was killed at a bull in Bar
tow countv recently by a man named Thomas
Dawson. The difficulty grew out of the fact that
Al’ford slapped the face of Dawson's nephew, who
persisted m throwing fireworks into the ball
room among the ladies.
A horrible accident occurred in Murray conntv
recently. A Mr. Johnson, in preparing to hill
hogs, liad sunk a large hox in the ground, filled
it with boiling water and placed a blanket over
it. His little son, three or four years old, walked
on to tlie blank* t. ami into tho scalding water.
He lived twenty-four hours.
One Frank If. Hall was sentenced to the peni
tentiary from Atlanta, for “shooting at anotner.”
He has recently had the chief witness against
him, a colored moke, indicted and convicted of
perjury, and it is likely he will go free. Hall's
sweetheart said on the witness stand that she
intended to marry him as soon as he came out of
the penitentiary.
Augusta announces the probable murder of
another of her residents. Mrs. Agio s Lewis,
wife of an engineer on the Port Koya l Hoad, who
hits been living apart from him for some time,
was invited to a neighboring house last Friday,
where she was frightfully cut by lie**husband and
his female companion. Her injuries are fatal,
and both assailants are under arrest.
The OiluinbliS Enquirer wivm the shipments of
Columbus manufactured cotton and woolen goods
over the Alabama Western ftabroad in the past
two weeks has been immense. We head yes
terday (J several large orders from the West
one of which wan from Memphis for one hundred
bales of domestics—filled by the Muscogee Manu
facturing Company. Everything is now being
sold for cash.
A correspondent of the Monroe Advertiser,
speaking of the lien law, say#: The law is good,
itepoal is not the remedy. Ketrt mlinunt is the
wool. Enactment!- will never fill yarn* barns and
smoke-houses. Lien laws, granges nor Patrons
of Husbandry will ever speed your plough.
Make small calculations ami “tote your own
skillet.” Then we will need no law. and ail
will be well.
From the Htate Treasurer, Colonel Jones, the
('nmifitidhm learns that the entire issue of the
twelve hundred i hemaand eight per cent, bonds
of the State, known as the Nutting bonds, have
| been sold and exchanged. Home half a million
j have gone North. The rest have been sold and
exchanged in Georgia. Colonel Jones says be
could dispose of more of them if bo had them.
The fact is a very gratifying one for Gcoigmn*.
The bowls have all sold or been disposed of at
par. The achievement of their sale is one of
which Colonel Joijch has reason to be proud.
A New York correspondent is informed that
the holders of the fraudulent State I wind m have
determined to make one more effort on the
Georgia Legislature, and fa Pi lg to effect a re
cognition of tho validity of the bom s by that
body, to bring the State into the Urbted S.ates
Supreme Court. )t is stated that a pool lias In eu
formed of all the bonds and ten pec cone, of their
par value subscribed to effect mvumldo legisla
tion. As these bonds aggregate soue seven mil
lions, the corrupt!ion fuim must amount to seven
hundred thousand dollars.
Albany A* irs: Fur the last ten days our plant
ers have been industriously engaged in the an
nual pleasantry of hiring label.* We have wit
nessed some interesting instances of affectionate
demonstration, ami some cases of disagi enable
antagonism; but the great majority of planters
have mastered the art ofmaniptfl ting ’Treodmir'
aud have no difficulty iu haodloig as much rk
they want of it at fair figures, fining has been
more easily accomplished than heretofore, and
there has been less changing about it. The
negro has learned to remain contented with tho
man who foods and pays.
Eatontou had an extensive conflagration on
the morning of the 6th iust., and the loam s are
estimated as follows, which we copy from the
Messenger * J. A. Martin V Cos., #3,000; M. Mor
ris, #2,000; Henm & Cos., $1,500; C. J). Leonard,
$1,000; A. Phillips, $3,500; G. W. Boss, $2,500; J.
A. Champion, goods saved; Palmer A Denham,
$3,000; 11. H. Handera & Cos., not bmnt out but
moved their goods and lost heavily, while moving
out and hack. Several of these parties saved the
greater portion of their goods. We have not
learned the loss in building*, but suppose the
nine houses destroyed were worth at least #IO,OOO.
No insurance on any of the goods or buildings.
Tho Columbus Enquirer toffs a lit do joke.
There is a station on the Selma and Meridian
Railroad named Cuba. A few nights since as the
train, with an emigration agent' at a crowd of
freedinen going wist, reached s point, the
brakesman put bis head inside the car door and
sangout “Cuba !” One old darkey rose, and as
liis wool straightened out, said: “bur! ‘tb'v God,
I knowd it 1 Heab we is in Cuba; an’ Pat ‘ar
white man gwino to put ns in the war, or si ll ns
’fore day. Oof! I’se gwino from heah.’ Aud
he, with about thirty more, limed off ido the
woods', leaving the agent to use big “cuss words''
about Cuba, brakesmen, and the unccrL iaty of
the “nigger.”
Tho Augusta Chnmicle says that a genuine
specimen of the backwoods' country girl was
taken in charge at the Union Depot, on Friday,
by a policeman, and escorted to the Citv Hall,
mien the policeman informed the officer in
charge that lie had arrested his prisoner at the
depot, where she had been loatimg for several
days, cracker bonnet very calmly and with a
smile that was “child like'ami bland” hovering
about her lips, sai-l: “You lie, young man; you
found mo in the hear shed!” The girl said she
was originally from Jackson conntv, lately from
Athens; name. Myra Duncan; had no home and
didn’t know where to find one. When asked if
she intended to go into service, she very con
temptuously replied: “Ketch mo at that; it's too
much like a nigger.”
The Hawkitisville Dispatch gives the Georgia
Land and Lumber Company some very hot shot,
pronouncing it a swindling* and laud* grabbing
concern. Tlie Dispatch says: “Their agents and
attorneys have been on double duty for the last
three weeks, preparing to make a grand entry
with several suits in the United States Court
against citizens of Telfair county. The amount
involved in any one of the eases would barely
exceed the Jurisdiction of our justices' com ts.
Legal cap lias been in great demand amongst
their attorneys. United Stales Marshals have
been perambulating the rural districts. Great
excitement lias prevailed with the weak-kneed of
this section, but report says they have hit upon
a crowd this time that will take pleasure in an
swering their summons in the District Court at
Savannah without ever even offering to com
promise.”
LaGrnnge Deportee: “It was the good foidune
of the editor of this paper to receive n present on
the Christmas tree which the Methodist Suudny
School had on Christmas eve. The present was a
white mbit with a red flannel tail. Wc have not
the least idea who made the present for us, but
we will say if there was anything in the world
which we craved with unutterable lougiug just
at that particular time, it was a white rabbit w ith
a red flannel tail. And vet we were surprised:
wo did not anticipate such* a present. True, wo
hoped some good Samaritan would think of us
and make ns a handsome donation; hut our most
ardent imagination never pictured such a gift
as a white rabbit with a red tail. In our dreams
we may have thought ot yellow rabbits with green
tails, or of red rabbits witli sky-blue tails, or of
black rabbits with tails like a barber's pole, or of
Hofferinorabbits with “moon on the lake” tails;
but the wildest vagaries of our (Vended imagina
tion never *'o:rrf”' a 1 a white * m l rabbit with
a red flannel *il. ” Wop Wif *he editor in bis
freo/v ever saw 1 yards and monkeys with loug
tails.
i
FLORIDA NEWS.
John \V. F-tnicy, Jr., la loafing around in Flor
ida.
Christman trees bloomed and Imre fruit in va
rioua portions of Florida last week.
The itcpublicans of Pensacola elected their en
tire city ticket on Monday by a large majority.
Hon. C. ft. Mobley, State Attorney of the
Fifth Judicial District, died in Tampa on tho
30th ultimo.
A contract has been let for all the wo*k on the
Great Southern railroad, between Jacksonville
arnl King’s Ferry, except laying the iron.
William Keene was on last Monday sen I diced
to he hanged for the murder of Wiek’in Valen
tine. He received his doom with a smile.
Tho last Florida invention is that of if 'g a
tallow candle to the city gas burners of Jrc.;s.t>-
viile, in order to increase the light. It wo**k
charmingly.
The customs officer# at Jacksonville seized
two hundred dollars worth of shell work, recent
ly imported from Nassau, N. P,, on Saturday hist,
having been fraudulently invoiced.
The Marianna Courier says that Richard Dukes
was convicted qt murder in tho first degree at
the late term of the Circuit Court at that place,
and Willis Dukes was tried and acquitted on the
Harm; charge.
A cutting alfray iu Tallahassee on New Year's,
between Messrs. Sampson H. Butler and Dr.
John H. Bond, resulted in the latter's receiving
two cuts, on the arm and head. They will not
prove fatal.
On Saturday, the 27th ultimo, Wiffiam Mad
dox and Micajub UiehurdHon, of Taylor county,
met on the public road, six miles from Shady
Grove, and after some altercation, Maddox shot
Richardson, killing him instantly. An old quar
rel the cause.
The grand “Learned Pig” combination troupe
on Saturday morning,last took passage ia a small
schooner for (hqphdfupc, W. 1., accompanied
by a strapped jour printer just from New York,
and a moke that speaks nve different “huulg
widges" after a fashion.
The Trustees of the Internal Improvement
Fund, by resolution passed the 29th nib, have
placed in market again the hi-ids provisionally
granted to tlie Jacksonville and Ht. Augustine
Railroad Company to aid in the construction of
said road, and also the lands contracted to be
conveyed to the Southern Inland ami Navigation
and Improvement Company, said lands having
been restored to the Fund by a decree of the
United States Circuit Cos act.
Jacksonville JirrmMif 'n: A. F. Kenney, mas
ter of the brig Uric Mac, at Fernandina, in a
letter to the Obm rrer, complains that Justice
Wood and others, of that place; Induced his men
to desert, and says: “I have been laying idle for
one week, at an expense of forty dollars per day,
and have managed to pick tip three men by pay
ing very h'gh wages, and am compelled to give
the same scoundrels tnat c impe l my men, eight
dollars a man for tho privilege t being robbed
of my crew ” Tins is not the firt complaint of
a u< st of land pirates which infest Fe -u.oidiiia.
We hope for the credit of the State that Justice
Wood, Constable Wilkumou and their tools may
le brought to speedy punishment.
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS.
A rooted sorrow—An aching tooth.
An imaginary quantity a lady’s age.
An old settler—a blow between the eves.
ChrhitttiftH carol for New York CLy Hall
“Ring oqt the old ring, iu, the new.”
“Say, Hal. did yon obey see do Cats kill
Moiuiiaina ’t" “No, I neber did; but Ila ve seen
dem kill mice.” “Yaw, yaw!”
I slept in an editor’s bed last ni ;ht,
When no editor cbmieed to be nigh;
And 1 thought, as I tumbled that editor’s nest,
How cattily editors lie.
A Denver minister wan ma-rylng a couple
wbt u a dog fight iuierruptod, and the bride
called out, “Drive ahead; the yaller pup has got
him by the fore paw !”
When one Mr, Sparks was appointed to a bish
opric, a rival Candidaie consoled himself with th*j
reflection, “Man is born to trouble, an the sparks
fly upward!”
It wa* one of tho numerous Beecher family
who used to pray, “O Lord! keep us f"om des
pising our rulers, and keep them fj\ m acting
so that wo can’t help it.”
A smart voting Duly wrote to a idee young man
the other uay thus: *'Come. and play gou-ear
with me this evening.-’ She meant euchre, but
the simp'c-minded youth “got mad - about it.
Ma'k Twain in apeak mg of cundbalism,
grows serious for once, and solemnl" deck* •<;
that, for his own nrrt, “Vie would go hung-y for
two days rather than eat an old personal friei'd.”
A gentleman who rath or suspected someone
was peeping through the key hole of lis office
dom investigated with a syringe full of pevper
s:\nee. and went home to find his wife had Been
cutting wood aud a chip hit her in the eye.
A young man out in search of his fatlie'-'s lost
pig, near Scran on, p coos ted an I isfivna i
along the road with, “Have you seen a s ray pig
about here?” “Faith,” said Pit. “and how could
I toff a to."ay pig from another?’
“So von don’t ciue about donkey-riding, missy.
And why ?” “Oh, I’ve got a pony, and one doesn’t
ca* e about donkeys after ,lm, you know.” “Has
a pony got more legs than a donkey, then?”
Minay-’ “Yes; exactly twice as many us son e don
keys that 1 know of.”
“Yes, t;ike her ami welcome,” responded an
IllimsH filmier, when a young mu i asked for
his daughter. “She run away with a school
master, eloped with a show man, shot a vrffd cat,
and whip ie<l her mother, aud the sooner you
take her t c better.”
A witty clergyman accosted by an old acquaint
ance by the m ine *f Cobb, replied: 4 l don’t
know you, sir.” “My name is Cobb,' rejoined
the man, who was half seas over. “.Mi, sir.”
replied the elergyiimn, ‘ you have so much corn
on you that I did not s e t he cob.”
A lisping mother, who had presented her infant
at tho baptismal font for christening, ni being
asked by tno clergymen, “Wh. t u. me?” res
ponded in a whisper, “Lucy, sir,” when, to tho
horror of ;he whole congregation and the eoe
stmiAtion of the mother, ho christened the baby
“Lucifer.”
T 1 o shortest and most emphatic editorial val
edictory on record was made by Frank M. Myeis,
u California editor who parted from his readem
in these affectionate words: “Having sold out.
niv connection w-'th the Forest Grove ludepeu
ceases w ith this issue, and I am d—d glau
of it.”
Boswsll once asked Johnson if there was no
possible circumstance) under which wuieiuo
would l>e justifiable. “No.” said Johnson.
“Well,” said Boswell, “suppose a man had been
guilty o fraud, and that be was certain io be
found oak" “Why, then.” was tic reply, “in
that case let him go to some country where he is
not known, and not to the devil, where he is
knowm.”
The question was pet to a candidate for in
stallation bv an excellent brother: “Could not
i God have chaug*ai FUiaroahs heart;” The an
swer was slirvwd but evasive. “I insist upon
nn equivocal answer,” cried the questioner.
“Uoum not God have changed Pharoah’s heart ?”
After thinking a moment the answer came : “If
ihe had neglected everything else, itnd given his
| whole attention to it, 1 don’t know but he might.”
! Near Worcester an old man had been in town,
| and, imbibing freolv, >vas returning home in hri
i and, losing Fis reckoning, perm it led his
I horse to take the railroad track. Jogging along
I leisurely, it was not long before a train of cars
; overtook him, and the locomotive striking: the
wagon sent the old man “fluking” ami killed
I the horse, without, however, injuring the man.
The train was stopped, and the conductor re
| tux ued to ascertain the damage. As he approach
|ed the scene of the accident he inqaireti of the
; old man if he was hurt. “Hurt ?” he replied. “No;
j but I'd like to know what you a**e running your
: blasted old cars on the turnpike for!”
“An effeminate man,” says a recent writer, “is
j a weak poultice. He is a cross between table
[ beer ftim ginger-pop, with the cork let out; a
j fresh-water mermaid found iu a cow* pasture,
1 with her hands filled with dandelions. He is a
j tea-cnp full of syllabub; a kitten in trowsers; a
| siek monkey with a blonde moustache. He is a
| vine without any tendrils; a fly drowned in oil;
a paper kite in a dead calm. He lives like a
; butterfly—nobody can tell why. He is as harm-
I less as a penny- of sugar candv, and as
i useless as ft shirt-button without a hole. He is
; as lazy as a slug, and has no more hope than
j last vear’s summer-fly. He goes thro, gh life on
! tip-toe, aud dies like’cologue-water spilt over the
j ground,”
In the southern part of Massachusetts thero
j lived a good-natured poor man who was known
| to the neighbors by the simple name of “Jimmie.”
i He was engaged to saw some wood, and was on
| hand at an early hour to make a full day. It so
happened that the lady intended visiting a
friend that day, and at noon she said to Jimmie:
“Will it make any difference to you if yon eat
| your dinner and supper now, as 1 am going off to
spend the day ?” “Oh, no,” was the answer. So
; Jimmie went in and commenced his attack on
j the food. Affor satisfvmg his appetite the lady
! saw him with saw and Iwwse going to the gate.
“Where are you going?” asked the lady. “Going
| home,” was the answer. “J’uiuiie never works
SUMMARY OF LATE NEWS.
The of (',ri**ef Hyo ciratnrHd hv ;
axnlt and burned tha outlying fo-t oi l,'aiv*rio.
The court m.ir<i*l all Jnj{ t VerauiUe* fir tlie
trial of ( uranium,ta haa uonJemoed aix more of |
them to death,
'l7ie Treahiirer of tho National Bank of
Concord N. H., )im oonf< Mod to einbea/J.ug an
amomit of aixty thotiHand dollara.
A man, yiviux the name of Andrew Downlu,
broker, of Auntin, Texaa. anrreudereil himself to
the New York no lice on the 2d inat., statinß that
lie abaeonded from that eiiv on tlie 15. h of No
vember, with 12,0011 Wfirtli of C. 8. honda en
treated to him by a firm iu Austin.
The debt ta*emeritop to January 2d allow* an
inereaae of the public debt during 'December ofj
f 145.272, and an increase Mince June 30, 1073, of
m,49f1,812. Currency Increase ia the 1 tea*
urv. f 1.277.351; coin. 101,470,103} coin ccrtitleate*,
C 37,453,300; outataniluig legal tendera, $378,401,-
702.
A Havana letter aiyn Intelligence has reach
ed there that the Kdj’ar Stewart is fitting out for i
the Cuban aervlee. The Tornado has left the
port, aud it i* generally reported that ahe hna re-!
coived ortfor* to pursue the Stewart, and if she j
proves to tie of the name character an the Virgi- i
ulna, not to take her but to sink her.
Nathaniel French, a prominent Mason of Nas
sau, N. H., who lias been missing since his artl
val in New York six months ago, investigation
shows, was brutally beaten am! robbed within
twenty-four hours after liis arrival. He was a
ken to Bellevue hospital, where lie died, and .he 1
body being unrecognized was buried.
A dispatch from Madrid on January 2d say*:!
On Tuesday night a shell tom the besieging bat
teri. i set lire to the Insorgenis' irou-elad Tetuan
in ihe harbor of Cartagena. After burning for
three hours the tire reached the magazine,
which exploded with tremendous force, damsg
ing the vessel seriously.
Two unknown drunken men, strangers to each
other, quarrelled in the street in Bi. Louis on
New Years night, when one knocked the other
down and plunged a knife through his forehead, !
breaking the blade and leaving a nart of it in the
man’s brains. WhonthC police arrived the wound
ed man was dead. The murderer eseaped.
The Southern Claims flummisarin, to whieh it
is proposed to refer all war cla ms pending Ik--
foro the Quartermaster Gcneial and he War
Department, has now hr fore if claims to the
amount of $22,000,800. The average amount
tlins far awarded by this Cc oiniissirm is a’.iout
13 per centum of tlie sums els in' ed. Last year
only SBBO,OOO were allowed in eases in wltieli f j,-
OOOjgK) were claimed. Tin term of the Commis
sion was extended by the last Congress for live
years.
A dispatch from Louisville, Kv., savs: Thru.
Cook, aged twenty-eight, stabbed his wife, aged
eighteen, live times yesterday. ittSicdug mortal
woiutds. His mother-in-law. Mrs. Itutlcd p , a
- to interfere wlien Cook stabbed her i„
the back and then ent his own throat. Mrs. Itut
ledge died iu a few minutes, and Cook and his
w : b am in a sinking condition. The stabbing
was done with a pocket knife. Cook 's under ia- i
dictmeut for setting lire to hi own house, and it
is strongly suspected that he set lire to a house in
which several negroes were lie nod to death some
time ago He alleges that his W ’fe h.s been un
faithful to him.
A dispatch from New York ooi'ie 111 inat..
says: The reguirr services of ihe Reformed
I’piSCOpa! Church will begin to-mormw, when
Bisiion Cummins will preach. Disliop Cununius
says the iti formed Episcopal Church is founded
on the principles for winch the low churchmen
have been contending, and about (tie validity of
of ils orders there can tie no qm si ion. Ti would
be premature to give tlie names of well-known
laymen and clergy nan in this ci.y who may bo
e ipeoted to giro m their adhesion to the New
Church, bat there is abundant proof that tile
spirit of a considerable portion of tlie Protestant
Episcopal Church in New York is ripe for this de
pasture. Tile accession of he Rev, I'r. Qotldard,
Rector of one of the largest and most important
chnrehes on Htateti Island, ia good sign. Nn
merotts offers from Cter.gy Ulan of other denomi
nations, expressing llteir readiness to skepart iu
the w'or*., havi i.fell read. Presbyterian, Meth
odist a ni Baptist ministers have expressed a de
sire to take charge of new organizations in this
move,ne.it. From men of note in other Chris
tian b. .lies, there have come sn-ggentienalooking
toward tim probable or possible understanding
between the"New Church and portions of such
Christian Isviics. A t >r< uitiuen t Dive'or of Divin
ity among tlie New England Baptists, and tin
editor of an impiiriant religions journal in Balti
more art among those who have written favoring
such a step. Ono of the foremost Methodist
preachers in Illinois, the President of a college
there, lias given utterance to Ins cordial approval
and unreserved sympa.hy with the nnivetnent.
-
Tire Parang ManTaA-— YV> worn n
plnftftant party who boarded afc M s.
Sinith'n last summer, and there were very
f,-\v evening when we did not sit for
hours engaged in pleasant conversation.
There was but mteexcention to the (J *ti
(‘ra! rule of goodfellowshtp. A yoi'iig Kti
giish geutlemau PttU’t'd B'-mv i. w.iilo he
enjoyed our society fc.tled eutirttly in mak
ing his own company plt“isa'it. His insu
lar prejudice* wore too s' oog to ho insu
lated and liis snpeteibooNtir (wbic'i I be
lieve was only iu his tea i rer) was super
silly.
He had one weakness—he could not
hear a pi! n, and though too much of a
gentleman to reiro'isi'ute, he always
seemed id at ease for several minutes after
Hiiitv Forsyth had i ulnigetl in his ins
sion for playing epotj words. Ha y and
I “ put a job” on him one evening as we
sutt on tlie balcony with our pipes. We
resolved to subject him to severe punish
ment at breakiast the next mar ling.
“Preserve me, if you please, Mrs.
Smith,” said Harry, as we sat down to
table the next mo'-ni.ig.
“Why, Mr. Forsyth, wlmt do you mean?”
said good Mrs. Smith.
“Nothing, ma'am, only I mn in haste,
nnd would like to be served first—-pre
served, if no one objects. ”
“Yon must be in a pickle, Harry.” saidl,
“instead of a preserve, or you would re
member that 'no one objects’ is bad gram
no •. Yon should suy ‘no one object.’”
“I was always averse to bad grammar,”
said young Joslyn, ‘‘since my gra'nia died,
and willed her property to an hospital.”
“A verse to your bad g a'ma, be'ore she
died,” said Harry, " might have secured
some of the properiy to y©u, if sue were
particularly inclined. ”
“Perhaps he didn’t think it proper to
get property that way,” said J, "anyhow
I never heard a verse joke iu my life.”
Here Mr. Brown who had been growing
ghastly by degrees, ende vored to hide
his confusion in his coffee cup and choked
promptly.
When he had partly recovered, Harry
said to me. “Well, John, I sympathize
with you. I never hen and a worse cho ;e
either. I never saw a man cough, bicorp
and strangle iuhis coffee cup in that ma -
iler. ”
"I’m not averse to jokioy,” said my
wife, “but you are outrageous, gentle
men.”
Here Brown started to leave the room
gasping us he went, and in his pt .< ixi
tion ran against the open door.
“Beware of evil-doers, Mr. Brown,”
said I.
“Be-where they are not,” said Hurry.
“O, Lord," was all we heard from the
’all, as Mr. Brown disappeared.
• 1 .V. V. Mercury.
The Cost of Collecting Internal Rev
enue in Georgia. —During the year 1873
the following amounts were collected by
the internal revenue officials iu the four
districts in Georgia:
First district, 51)0,471 20; second district,
801,320 55; third district,Bll4,3o7; fourth
district, $222,052 56.
The cost of collection was $21,916 21 in
the first; $19,435 60 in the second; $21.-
765 27 in the third; and $20,935 12 in the
fourth—being 24 per cent, of the amount
in the first. 30 1-5 per cent, in the second
19 per cent, iu the third, aud 9J per cent,
in the fourth.
Which shows, adds the Macon Telegraph
and Messenger, that this business of col
lecting Federal revenue is a most refresh
ingly fat one for somebody.
Tlie dinner bell of George Washington's
mother was recently sold at auction. It
has a sweet-, silver sound, weigl i six
pounds, and bears date of 1007.
HARRIS ISMS!
Tlie racy editor of the Morning News
is responsible for the following rare wit
ticisms. We have this to say for Harris:
if he is kept unde* the exhilarating in
fluences usually imbibed during the Christ
mas holidays, and which he must have
used pretty freely before ho gave birth to
the foregoing litter of witticisms, that the
Morning .Neats would be the raciest a*
well os one of the ablest conducted papers
in other respects in ihe State, We would
privately suggest to the proprietor that
Nature has done a great deal for Harris.
It Tins given him a brilliant head (both
inside atnl out), and all that is needed to
make him excessively brilliant is a litt'c
com oil in his intellectual lamp. We
think his Ridary ought to be raised for he
is a smart fellow, and wc have often won
dered how his mother ever raised him !
The Atlanta man who hilariously tempt
ed hi* raothor-iTi-law to hold a fire-cracker
while he called the children, is now tem
porarily boarding with his uncle.
The pet bull-dog of the average Miicof)
household succeeded in undermtnitig sev
eral pairs of distinguished pantaloons on
New Year’s day.
Tlie constables in Cherokee county in
variably arrest colored criminals by snap
ping the fatal derringer. They say isic
ounce of powder is worth twenty warrants.
Attorney General Cocke, after playing
the 1 mlly by knocking MeLin down in the
stree Wl di lit Wed a Holiday school address
a few days afterwards. Another Christian
statesman ! ,
A recent census of Atlanta shows a
population of thirty-three dollars, not in
cluding the three or four hundred thou
sand innocent men who have been invest
ing iu the newspaper lotteries,
A dog, with a tin-cap attachment, ran
between tho legs of a prominent citizen of
Calhoun the other day. When restored
to consciousness he acknowledged that he
had a'l the Christmas he wanted.
A negro girl in Sumter county played
with a pistol very seriously the other day.
The splenetic weapon, remeniliering tin t
it was the holidays, suddenly unloaded
itself, and pretty soon after that the genial
eoroocr waltzed in with the usual crape on
his but.
lt was remarked ns a singular fact in
various parts of the State during Christ
mas that whenever a torpedo was exploded
in front, of a mule ridden by a negro, the
intelligent animal invariably made an ef
fort to explode the negro by dropping
lu n just, w here the torpedo fell, and some
thin s with groat success. Science has not
ie< yet given flic mule credit for a very
bill) order of intellect, but evidence is
acciin*uiiil.iiing to show that injustice has
been done the B'limal in this respect.
It is hard to convince a woman. A
Wilkinson county man carried home some
firework* for his son and heir, and liis
wife undertook to superintend the display.
The husband protesed that he would fix
the tricks, but a sarcastic remark from the
partner of liis joys, to the effect that some
men thought they knew everything, si
lenced him. Tho women then proceeded
to ionite it. The fuse was damp, and to
faeilita e matter* the woman fanned the
spark into life by blowing on it. The re
sponse of the candle was too sudden to con
template. The front hair and eye-brows
nf the adventurous female disappeared os
if by magic, and the candle fell into the
collection of fireworks, anil proceeded to
fire itself off with great exactness, ignit
ing the Other projectile*. A casual sky
rocket skimmed along the grass, causing
the family cat to ascend the nearest tree
with great violence, while a fiery serpent
took refuge in the husband's bosom. The
author of all this trouble, disc iverfng tlmt
her clothing was on fire, sailed around
the house with as much emu. stars* as the
liveliest pyrotechnic, and it was some mo
ments la-fore the fright uied husband
could arrest her wild career. Later, the
son and heir was found under the house
with the hack of his jacket burned out.
The woman is now nn invalid, and the
man writes to a friend that lie never had
a quieter or more enjoyable New Year.
Butler Euchered.
A Washington letter writer says: Fur
the past twenty years, there has been a
elaiiu before Congress known as the “At
oche claim.” Gen. Atoehe, who presented
the claim in person,was a handsome Mexi
can officer wluisuffered in some way dur
ing the Mexican war, and was compelled
by Sauta Anna to leave the country. His
losses were secured to him w hen Mexico
paid our government indemnity. I say it
with regret that w hen money once passes
into the possession of the government, it
is very hard to get it hack again, for the
policy appears to be to avoid the payment
of every just debt if possible. Thus we
see pereons with indisputable claims spend
ing a lifetime in the x'aiu effort of (Adain
ing justice, and bequeathing tho claim
ns a legacy to their children. Gen.
Atoehe has been dead for years, but his
widow nnd two daughters survive. The
eldest is the wife of Captain Ammon, the
most intimate friend of the President.
Madame Atoehe lives with Mrs. Ammon.
Before Congress adjourned last March, the
Atoehe claim was allowed, but when Mo
.Tannin, her lawyer, went to the Treasury
to draw the money, Mr. Cushing nnd Gen.
Butler were on hand with nn attachment
for tlieir client, a wealthy Mexican named
Bandero.
Randero’s claim covered the entire
amount, near two hundred thousand dol
lars. After attaching the money, it was
necessary to allow* certain length of time
to elapse before either party could draw
the money. That especial day occurred
about two weeks ago. The first persons
who entered the Treasury upon that im
portant day were Madame Atoehe and her
lawyer, who proceeded to tlie auditor’s
• ffice, where all the papers were ready to
he signed. This was quickly done, and
proceeding to the cashier’s office, the mon
ey was duly counted, receipted and deliv
ered. The parties left rejoicing. Two
ht u s afterwards, Mr. Cushing and Ge-,
Butler entered expecting to carry off great
piles of greenbacks. Imagine their con
sternation when told that the money was
paid. I have heard that Gen. Butler made
things lively, for when had he ever before
been outwtted ? He said they did not come
before 11 o clock because he thought that,
even if Madame Atoclie got tiiere nt 9, it
would take hours to make out the papers.
The question is, who was the friend that
hinted to the auditor that it would be well
o be prepared to receive Madame Atoehe
ns soon as the office opened for business ?
Mr. .Tannin gets a fee of thirty thousand
dollars, and Mr. Cushing and Gen Butler
are minus about that sum.
A decline iu the matrimonial market of
Minnesota is anticipated by a contempo
rary. Many of the young ladies there are
i joining an Anti-Nicotine Sisterhood, and
, solemnly pledge themselves to m irry only
those who do not indulge in smoking.
Per Contra, the young men have formed
themselves into a Natural Hair Association
, and have solemnly pledged themselves to
marry nobody who wems false hair.
Murder of an Old Man. — The good
people of New York had already given
themselves up to the delusion that New 1
Year’s day had passed without a murder,
when yesterddy news reached the coron
er's office that an old German named Pe
ter Greveningi residing ill No. 421 East
Fifteenth street, had died ffittb the con
sequences of a severe lieuting teceiVed on
New Year's night.
It appears that Orcvening,went on New
Year’s with his two sons-ih-law, Franz
Sehiel, a German, and A. P. lie Hay, a
Belgian, to meet some friends In fbo
Seventeenth Ward. AI Hint 7 o’clock p. m.
they returned home, and passing through
Avenue A, between Sixth and Seventh
street*, heard some persons who were be
hind them pass some offensive remarks.
Sehiel turned around to see what was the
matter when one of the men attacked him
in the most brutal manner, knocking him
| down nnd jumping upon hitn,
DcHuy, when be saw the predicament
liis brother-in-law was in, concluded to
take a band in; but he fared no better,
haring hi* face beaten almost to a jetty',
j and hi* clothe* torfl. Old Groveniag, who
I lmd been walking ahead while the tight
was going on, then went up to the crowd,
laud in broken English asked why his sons
i were as*a ilted. The ruffians answered,
| "What have you got to do with it ? Go
about your business,” dealing him at the
same time several Mows in the face anti
ion the head, which felled him to tl.e
[ground, causing V‘.*v severe injuries.
DeHay tried to raise the prostrate form
nf the old tnaj; but tlie crowd, which by
thia time numbered some twenty men, n
l of whom were in sympathy witli the as
sailants, would not permit him to do si A
littering reported threats to kill him if he
1 would interfere. Finally an officer made
- liis appearance, and the crowd dispelhi-.1,
lint no effort was made to arrest anybody.
The old mua was picked up by his sons,
who took him to the Fifth-street station
house, where the police-surgeon declared
that the wounds were insignificant. Ore
vvuing was taken home and died yesterday
morning at six o'clock. Tho deceased
was a Bavarian by birth, and a tailor
by trade. He leaves a wife and six chil
j dren, two of whom are married, while the
rest are small children, depending upon
the deceased.
Officer Mark, of the twenty-second
; street Station, last night went to Staten
Island, where he found both Sehiel and
DeHay. The police expect to arrest the
assailants.
By order of Coroner Croker, Doctor
McWhimiie last night made a postmortem
[examination and found that death had
been caused by a concussion of tlie brain,
the result of violence. The inquest ia to
be held in a few days.
•*
Prince Fred. Mr. Fred Grant is like
that other, older, and fatter soldier, Fal
staff. Never a dangerous action ean show
it* head but he is sent upon it. Hardly
lmd lie returned from over running Rus
sia. Turkey, and the Caucasus than a
grateful War Department heaped laurels,
with the rank, allowances and pay of a
brevet Lieutenant Colonel, upon him.
For months he drew liis pay with vigi
lance and con rage at Chicago, till be was
detailed to do picnic duty on the Yellow
stone. There was one fight in which a
Lieutenant Colonel himself,
lint it was Lieutenant Colonel Custar, as
Lieutenant Colonel Grant, just before it
took place, made a flank movement upon
! Chicago which to this day has not been
satisfactorily accounted for. There lie
: covered himself with fresh rations, till tut
admiring fathercalled him to Washington
to lead Germans and do recruiting duty’
That no censure of Lieutenant Colonel
Grant’s conduct in the West is to be in
ferred by his translation to Washington
sufficiently appears from the fact that he
draws pay as a Lieutenant Colonel and the
obnoxious word “brevet” is omitted,
through kindly and thoughtful deference
•to certain scarred and gri zled old Cap
tains and Majors who miglit otherwise ho
nettled at the rapid promotion of a yonn
[ ger and more influentially connected sol
dier. The hereditary genius of the
Grants displays itself in the somewhat
sappy chip of the old block, who is run
ning up the army list with the rapidity of
a monkey ascending a ship’s rigging and
promises to be at the mast Ipiad ere the
| men who do the work have toiled up to
the main-yard. —A 7 . V. World.
Ex-President Davis delivered a brief
address iu Vicksburg last week, in which,
according to the Vicksburger, he said that
| the masses of the jieople, in all sections
of this couutry, were not interested in the
! corruption that prevails—the Credit Mo-
biller, the salary-grab steal, ete.—and
were always in favor of an honest admin
istration of the government, nnd that
while the politicians might disregard the
sentiment of the people for u while, with
the expectation of either defying that
sentiment or deeiering tho people by
their watch-cries and political programmes
the truth is mighty and will inevitably pre
vail; that the cry about tlie degeneracy of
the times was an old one, but that the
muss^if^lii^ieojilejvere^onml^^^^^^
MISCELLANEOUS AI) YKH TIS EM EX TS.
Notice.
mm? T7NDKRSIONF.D OFFERS FOR SALS
1 liis valuable plantation, in Brooks i.-onnty,
seven miles south of (piitman, on the public ros>l
leading to Madison, Fla., containing 6FO acres;
tan acres in cultivation. Also all the stock,
farming implement*, and the present crop of
grain and forage of every description. Ail offered
on favorable terms. Parties desiring to pureliaso
will be shown over the premises at anv time by
ang23-tf _ _ _ JAfc. tVILSOA
r. m. noaorons. j j. i>. win or
BOROUGHS & WING,
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
TOBACCO,
CIGARS, SNUFFS, PIPES and
SMOKERS ARTICLES,
14 Decatur Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
J. T. JORDAN, Traveling Agent.
jonS-lv
QUITMAN HIGH SCHOOL
HAVING been called by the Board of Trus
tees to take charge of this institution, the
subscriber would respectfully give notice tlmt
the Spring Term wjli commence on MONDAY,
January 12th, 1874, and continue twenty-four
wicks. Due notice will be given concerning the
Fall Term.
Being determined to make this equal to any of
the schools of the country, he confidently appeals
to the citizens of the town and country*for their
support. The discipline will be rigid, *and those
who expect to “run a fast schedule” will do well
to go ewew|iere.
Arrangements will be made for Music nnd
French if desirable, and such assistance will be
procured ns the wants of the school may demand.
Tuition for the term of twenty .four weeks will
lie $lB 00 for the first class; $24 00 for the second;
and for the third class S3O 00, payable at close l
term.
For any further information, inquire of
dec2.o“tf K, V. FOIiBESTSft, Trim