Atlanta weekly constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1878-1881, October 15, 1878, Image 2

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THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION: ATLANTA, G-A., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1878. THE CONSTITUTION. PUBLISHED DAILY AND WEEKLY. OOIWl'IU'llOK BUILD ISO, St HI TI ????n??D ??TUCR. I li*h; while the fame of onr egncnltonl I implements, atwing machines, scales, plated ware and saws is world-wide. The increase during the last two years in the I exports of these articles has been from I fifty to one hundred and fifty per cent. The Dally Edition Is wired by mail or canter I The shipments of lieef, cheese, butter, at 110 per annnum. pause prepaid. I preserved meats, hope and cotton goods The Weekly Edition 1, served at t- per annum, I bav) . a ??? l>wn i???, r ease<l over fifty per r ^^t^'inereo-city. tow,, and omn- ?? n ?? wi,hin ???*?? years; and boots and ly In Utof|fai tud aurr??u inline itaid uicnl I uliiiw, ltulbtT gofi??ls, iron uul commimi.m* jmid and territory guaranteed. Send1 other articles of American manufactory for circular*. I j IJ4Ve been increased in the same ratio. Advertisement* ten, fifteen and twenty cent* I . . _ . . - ?? M - per line, aeeordinir to hswU-m. Contmct mwa M??? ">???'*??. *??? m ??P- -'".encan pr.slmers fumUhed upon applkation u, the hu>lonw oOce. | and manufacturers are waging an aggres- Conwpond????f containing important new*, briefly put, *oUriU-d from all r??rtM of the eountry. All lrttm or dinimtcti** mu??t to addr*-??*d TUB CONSTITUTION, Atlanta, G*. <T!!tc ^onstihttiou. ATLANTA, G A . OCTOBER 15. 1*7??. The Pacific until that wan wrecked on the Puenta Hi-i shore near Panama, always was an i lucky vessel. She u**il to run betw?? Charleston and Now York, an??l in trans ferring her to the Pacific coast, she grounded on a reef, ami it was many weeks liefore she was got *??ff. She is now total wreck, and the name is open to a ship-building world. warfare in the world of trade, with arving an*l promising sue*-ess. The n-stihs already reached are astonishing; and if no unforeseen drawback intervenes iuntry will soon lie relieved of the iteady drain of interest-money that has flowed for generations to the countries of the whole world. We will then as a peo- ple to imlejs-mlent and even rich, and ???nr prosperity as individuals will depend iteamship Georgia I solely ujion home legislation ami home leration and goral sens**. General Gideon J. Fill, The fleatli of General Gideon J. Pil low has toen announced in our tele graphic dispatches, and the mere noun<*ement w ill revive many sad inem ories among those who followed the flag hist cause. General Pillow was . , torn in Williamson county, Tennessee Tn* Colnmbn* Tunc*??? arithmetic man I , wag ^.entr-two >.<*??? old at the puta the average mortality of the prevail-1 tinic of dea'th. |f,. graduate.I at ing fever at 3H.38 ]wr cent. The deathly >as , lv iile university in 1X37, read rate in Chattanooga ho* ll.ua far been ???>-' few an(| , bc pra ,. tiee of his proies- per cent, or the highest of the list. In ??i??n at Columbia, Tennessee. In 1W6, New Orleans the l-ercentage ??fdeaths to v|>pn , he war broke out, he liecanic a - rase* l.aa been 2tl.:)i. No report <* the I bri(?l( , ier ^ t . n( . nii volunteers. He total number of cases was a.-eeaa.hle how- w . rvi ???, an j,. r <it ??? leral Taylor> , )Ut afu , r . ,er from Memphis, Vi.kshurg, or Gre-1 w>Bto join( ,, General .Scott???n command, ???"???i * ??? * ??? and took part in the aeige of Vera Cruz. At the battle of' Ceiro Gonlo, April 18,1847, he commanded the na>la???the three moat fatal renter* of the fever. The AAdrewi or the Mate Committee. He print elaewhere the address of the I rj g | lt wing of the army, was wounded, democratic state executive committee I an< | ???as soot, after made major-general, which, in response to a suggestion made I |n j nne> at tbc JleatI u f a considerable l.v The Coxstitctios, assembled in this I (oIve , ie ,??? oved inland, joined General city last Tuesday for pnrposea of consul-1 s-ott.andtwikjairtinthehattlesofC???he???- tation. Tlie'address isan unusually strong bnac0 , fhapultepec and Molino del Rev. papcr 1 tor*e,vigorons,palriotieandtimcly,l Afu , rthe Mexican war he resnmed his and we most cordially commend it to the I pntrt i,.,. as n i aW y careful consideration of every honest and I M lbt . i a .gi mi ' in g ???( t l,v war lictween intelligent voter in the state. It is to Ik- I , he gta|eg bu declared for the south, and hojied that every democratic paper in I waB ,.,, nim io.ione.l as a brigadier general < icorgia will reproduce it. It cannot lw 1 b , be pra> jdent of the Confederate States, too widely circulated, nor can its letter I jj,, ommanderl the forces engage.1 in the and spirit be too often impressed OP??? ,, attIe Belmont, Missouri, on Novel the people. The fact that the demo- , M . r . 1S|J| an( , was wwll(1 in TOIllllla ???d cratic party of the state is confronted by I unib . r Gramm, Flovd at Fort Donaldson s.-rious danger is not to bedisgmsed. Its - n F ,. t>nur , % 1S(a . ' i.-|??? v d refuse.! to|s-r great strength is Us greatest weakness, I g orIlv)be ???{ surrender, handed over ami in the present emergency itlKK-on.es |b( . who made it the duty of every patriotic person to Bm . km , r , w ho surrendered tl.e fort stand squarely by the organization. At F|i>vi) an<) ,.; ||ow ,. w . aI , in g with a portion protein imlepimfU-iitiHin ik Itanetl on the I ^ |j ie j r nien jssrsonality of those who, affecting to dc- General Pillow was relieved Iron, .-om- spisc nominations and conventions, luive man<] but subs ,^ nent ly sen ed under the effrontery to nominate themselves T1) ..??? u ,, t , ar ,, in the southwest. General or office; bat it will no! 1h- very long he- I>in<)W i? ^ IO buve ) m . n a man ???{ m ???. fore it win drift into a certain sort of lib-1 g . (lerable ( ._, otisI ??? on d vanity, bat his however, we pat them down as elected *y the people. We concede the election in Indiana of five republicans???Heilman, Browne r Cal kins, Cowgill and Baker. Five democrats are known to be elected???Cobb, Brick- nell. New, Hostetter and Colerick. One national, Mr. He La Matyr, is elected. This leaves the sixth and ninth districts laseificd. We have given in the table ???ne to the democrats and one to the re publicans. The sixth district is now rep resented by Mr. Robinson, repuhlican,who was elected by a plurality of 276. There were three candidates before the people ???n Tuesday, and we have seen nothing to indicate the defeat of the democratic nominee in this close district. In the *ther doubtful district, the ninth, there were also three candidates. The notori ous God love S. Orth had at last accounts a plurality of 2-11, with Fountain county to hear from. Fountain county lias long Ikvii a close county, casting one year a 'lemocratic majority an<^ reversing it per haps the next. Mr. De La Matyr, the uveessful national candidate from the Indianapolis district, was formerly aradi ???al Methodist preacher, but he received the democratic nomination,and Is claimed a democratic greenbacker. The chances are therefore good tliat the democrats will control the delegation. The result iv event, a handsome one, for the apj**rtionmcnt act of the state requires tUO democrats to elect a congressman, while 23,060 republicans can elect one. If we have, as now seems probable, car ried lioth branches of tlie legislature, this nefarious law will lie repealed. It is almost certain that the democrats have a majority on joint Imllot, which en sures the ^return of Mr. Voorhees to the senate. In Iowa, two nominees of the demo- mocratsand greenlmckers haVe broken the solidity of republicanism by carrying the sixth and seventh districts. Mr. Gil lette, of the seventh dis trict, is a good democrat. One of the West Virginia districts is dis tressingly crhjse, hut we are satisfied that the democratic nominee, Mr. Wilson, will pull through. To sum up, we have gained six inein- l>ers of congress, secured the control of two additional state; delegations, those of Ohio and Indiana, and carried tlie only legislature of tlie four states that has a ???nator to elect this winter. We have hist Ohio. the business of the bouse more promptly deplored; but whether it can be cured by a presidential candidates in the field in 1880??? perhaps than an v man that ever occupied law that makes the property of every 'he republican, democrat and greenback f. ???.. ,. , . . . aa ?? candidates. It is possible, too, that the his position. He has many friends m j socialist subject at any moment to conns- house of representatives may be called upon every portion of the state, and has made t cation and himself to imprisonment and . to elect the next president. * a reputation as speaker of the bouse on- I exile, is very doubtful. It is much more equalled by any man that ever held the ! likely to result in either a growth of so- positfon. I cialism under persecution, or else in the Hon. William A. Harris, of Worth threatened wholesale emigration move- county, is the most prominent candidate j ment to Asia Minor or the United States, for secretary of the senate. His econom-1 If the latter alternative is adopted, we ical administration of the office, in the 1 hope that at least the shot-gun part of past is a strong point in his favor. He I the procession will move on Asia Minor, thoroughly understands the duties of the I g r . and me Electoral Fraud*, office, and is personally very popular. | xhe letter of Mr. Hill setting It was a famous victory.??? ???What a tremendous boyhood that old Methuselah had! He died at the advanced ace of nine hundred and sixty-nine years, Mr. Henry H. Cabaniss, of the Forsyth {ortb his vie ws of Mr. Hayes???s adminis- about nine hundred years more than span of life. At that rate when lie was two hundred years old lie about equalled a lad sixteen. He was thirty or for forty be- Advertiser, who will he bis first lieuten ant, is one of the most efficient assistant tration will undoubtedly attract wide spread attention. His letter puts in tan- L-lerlts the senate erer had. He is not j gj b j e shape and interprets with unerring . i??? ..... ??? precision the views of a large majority of J the people of this country. Its style is M e understand there will be I Ulbl ,i rab le a n<l its conclusions irresistible, several candidates for clerk ^ i(lcas that Mr . Hm has pttt in wor j s of the house. Mr. Eugene P. Speer, j j iave a \ngue wav pervaded the public however, has claims on the office which, mind ever gince tbe positive an d nega- backed by his abilities and a large per-1 , ive revelations made before the Potter sonal popularity, will he hard for his op- committee . Ag far ^ The Coxstitctios jKjncuts to overcome. He rnatle a ??>m-1 is t . <)nct , rlle< i we have most strenuously Intent officer and will doubtless be re- (leftnde d the attacks that have been elected without trouble. I niade upon the southern policy for the We cannot doubt that competent re#son tbat h was jas , and ???j U itabk-; ifficers will be elected by the general as- [ sembly. The restrictions thrown around and in doing this we did not stop to in- . quire into the motives that prompted Mr. .lie body by the new constitution "^h I Haves to th e southern states an op- session essarilv he very few clerkship to dispense. thfisc motive s wcre . ft was the avowed The clerical expense* of tl.e senate were (J , Mr . Haves to break down tl.c limited by the new const.tm.on to sixty ^ by organizillg anoth er party il<.liars per day dunng tl.e session, and ijrthfa section. This party was to be O.e seventy dollars for the house, and the sjiective officers of each are required to give bond for the faithful discharge of lfio8e who had ^..ved favors at the tl.eir several duties. He shall h??ve,K ^ ^ a(lnlinistrat i oll . lt wasa and the | ycr y p re ^y project altogether, but it was not a success. But the southern poli- was morally successful. It gave us better government and itelimi therefore, the most, important most economical session held in Georgia since tlie war. oral republicanism as dangerous in itsten- dcncies to the liberties and prosperity of virtues counterbalanced his faults. He was a true patriot, and was willing, like the people as the most hideo.uiformdear- tbomland|| of his fellow-citizens, to sacri- isd-bagism. This is the tendency of in- I everything he was pfissessed of for dependentism, and tl.is why the republi- ^ SU( .??? W o[ the confclerate govern- ean leaders are so anxious t.. nurse and I mpnt in tbe war . After tl.e war lie ro ister the independent candidates. What- guwpd , b) , praftice , lis profession, and was reganksl as an able counsellor, lias not of late years taken any promi nent (>art in public affairs. ever is opposed to the success of the dem ocratic party is either directly or indi rectly in favor of the success of republi ranism. Once more we commend the address to the thoughtful consideration of democratic voters. The time hasarrived I The American Life Insurance company when the people must either crush out I brought suit against Col. Reuben Arnold, the spirit of office-seeking which springs I returnable to tlie spring term (1878) of from greenly ambition, or Is* prepared to I Fulton superior court, on a note, se- Col. Reuben Ar Imk Greenbacker. accept the consequences. The heat IIoumc. ???ured hv a mortgage, for five thousand dollars, money bailed him the 14th of October, 1871. Tbe suit was The clrx-tions thus far held for mem- bn , U) , llt bv McConnell & Heyward, who lsts of congress luive destroyed the last hope of republican awendancy in the forty-sixth congress. Eight states have I Arnold liledThe plea 'of usury in the are attorneys for the American life In suranee company. To this suit Col. i monitors, with the following com parative results Owtson Veras nit... Maine (V>lonutn... Ohio liitliiuui.... 1 In these eight states a republican ma jority of twenty-three hasltcen cut down to five???al??*ssof nine seats; and in this calculation we have given that party the benefit of all doubts. We have not in cluded I)r. De la Matyr, of the Indian- apolia district, in the democratic column, although, as the democratic nominee, he was elected chiefly by denmcrotic vote?*. Nor have we include*! one of the Iowa grevnbackera-eloct, although l*otli were supported by democrats, and ls*th l??efore election were pledged to act with tlie democrats. Nor have we included in the greenback column the third district of Vermont, where there was no choice in Scptemlier, hut where Mr. Barlow, tlie greenbacker, will certainly lie elected in November. Of the members yet to lie chosen, not including the Vermont district, the dem ocrats elected two yearn ago 141, while the republicans gathered???in 97. If the democrats, therefore, hold their owm, the house will stand 164 democrats, 123 publicans and 4 nationals???affording dear democratic majority over all of " Any hope of a balance of i*??wer that the gn*cnl*ackers may have dterished is do st roved, and s*> is the last vestige of all hope of r*pul??li*-uir ast-enilancy. more than likely tliat the percentage of gains in the eight states will l??o extended t???? the remaining thirty, and that the democrats will e????ntn*l tin* next house by usual form, and in addition thereto the following further plea: ???And the said ' defendant further says that the consid- cr.it ion which the plaintiff* gave for k said note, dated 14th October, 1871, was ** national luink notes for the most i??art 1 and tlie Uni toil States treasury notes, ???all of which are commonly known and ??? called greeiilwicksj which was at the ** ilatc of the |mvment a depreciated cur- ' renev, and w*irth 12 per **ent less than par money; and that the present value ???f the currency or money at this date is worth 12 per cent more than the value ??? of the greenback currency given for sai*l ??? note, and that the plaintiff's projarty 'upon which this mortgage was given ??? well as real estate and other commodi ties of value are worth less by 12 pe 4 ecu tnow than when this loan was made 44 in consequence of which 12 per cent less money now will purchase 44 more gold and silver and real estate as ??????well as other property of value, than 44 the whole amount would have purclias- 4 ed when this l????an was made. There- 1 fore the said defemlant says that the 44 consideration given for his said notes ??? not being gold or silver, which was the 'only constitutional and lawiul money ???of the United .States, of unchangeable 1 and intrinsic value???bnt of depreciated ??? pnj**r jnoney. Therefore he says in ???equity ami good conscience that said ??? depreciated paper money should Is 1 scaled down to the real value at the ???time paid, which would entail no 1* ???on the plaintiff, bnt to allow a recovery of the nominal value of the mouew * now, would l??e to recover from the de ???fendant more than the plaintiff l??ianed, ???and thus to greatly ruin ami impoverish ???the defendant.* Tlie foregoing ph*a is in the hand- . . writing of Odoncl Arnold, and wasswom over fifty majority, against twenty-one in lobv b5m in lonu beforeG. H. Unltor- the premmt one. ^ I m , tarv public of Fulton *x??unty, on Tbe It*lance mt Trade. I the 22d of April, 1878. It api**-ars from Within the last three years thebalanee I this that Colonel Arnold is not at all sin- ??.f trade between this country and the I oere in what he says on the greenback rest of tlie world has Urn dianged from j line. He pledged himself to stand by the $116,000,000 agniust u* to $2iil .000,000 ini nominee of the Ramesville ??x>nvention our favor. great a revolution in tnule I *nd he violated it; lie says hp Ls a greeu naturally arouses public attention. Teo- j bockcr, and yet the foregoing document pie want to know wliv in>n-ad of running I shows that he is a luml-money man. into debt, we have so??? sullenly tognn to I Wlmt are we to think of the eamli.late get out of debt to all other e. entries. The I tlie bogus greenbaekers? When lie tile am-wer is of course fouml in good part in I his plea, he uuuh???**athto what he thought our latter-day economy. Tlie panic and I nlniut it, but now lie is the camlidate i s consequent distress induce*! us to lew-1 the tint money nien. M e leave the pub- eh our demand for silks, champagne and I He to judge between him and Colonel other foreign products that are not abso-1 Hammond. lately e****ntial t???? the maintenance Qf a I reasonable degree of comfort. Tlie re-1 maiuing }??cirt of tlie answer consists in | Gala* i*inl Tlie result in one or two district! is at this writing in doubt; but enough the remarkable and steady increase of I ^ nv>Mrn justiiy the statement that tlie American exports. Tlics??- chiefly consist I democrats have made handsome gains, of raw ??vtton, breadstuffs, pr*>-1 f our states are represente*! in the visions an.l t..Wo; bnt outside I pW9cn , ,engross bv thirty rvptiWioans of these sivat staple, we are on the up- and fiiMen democrats; in the next con- srade. Ibtrins the Vast two years we thcy wi U be represented by twenty have sold to the luelhgerent nations of I one ,bniocn??ts, twentv-two republicans Europe no inconsiderable amounts of I an< , , wo nationa i s ??? a republican lora of fire-arms and ammunition. Turkey alone I e ij. bb a democratic gain of six. U pmvhase.1 $37,000,000 worth of guns and I oar aw the delegations cartridges. We sen*! j Petroleum to every I w jjj . civilize*! nation, and American car-1 ??? ivm. Rep. N??t. wheels, cars ??nd K??comoti%*e?? are found | on almost every railroad in the world. | io*??. ??? The use of American hardware is annu ally increasing, an*l our nails are now I Total- used in every civilized country. So with | In Ohio we have elected* McMahon, our glass-ware. Even American cutlery I Lefevre, Hill, Hurd, Finley, Converse, is beginning to bold its own against the I Ewing, Dickey, Warner, Atherton and products of tlie best English and French J Geddee. The two Cincinnati districts manufacturers. American pumps are I were carried by the republicans by very chiefly u>ed in .South America, the Pa-1 slender majorities???majorities that were eifle islands and the West Indies. Amer-1 the outcome of colonization, deputy mar- ican paint has long been used in Mexico I shals and general frauds. It is very and South America, and now a market is I doubtful whether the house will, after being opened for it in Europe. Our clock I investigation, seat either of the and watch makers are making great in-1 who will receive certificates of election roods on the trade of the Swiss and Eng- 1 for these two districts. In our table, a man of great ability, and dispatches A LeMon from Ohio. We do not care to analyze this morning the results of the recent elections. There ill l>e time enough for that when full ???turns are liefore us. In the meanwhile e an* left to contemplate the reversal of dcinocratifi; majority of over twenty-two tlioiisaiul in Ohio in the course of a sin gle year, and the defeat of the Ohio idea in the state that gave it birth and that to-ilay overwhelmingly opposed to a sin- ;le gold liasis, to a forced resumption and to farther contraction. Tlie total vote of Ohio Is over 650,000, and there is no rea son to doubt that the greenback vote of Tuesday exceeded 75,000. Add these figures to the democratic vote and we have a majority against further contrac tion and in favor of the substitution of greenbacks for national liank notes, of sixty thousand. And yet the news is bulletined all over the country to-day that Ohio has repudiate*! the Ohio idea and adopted the hard-money theory of John Shennan and the eastern money lenders. Tlie Cincinnati Gazette de clared almost before the smoke of the conflict had been cleared away, tliat it was a victory over, what it calls, ???a scheme of false and slippery money??????that is, over greenbacks, and in fa vor of bank notes and a gold basis. Why is this? How is it that the ene mies of currency reform are able to nul lify in Ohio a j??opular verdict of 60,000, more or less? Why has the state been turned over to the supporters of John hennan and the bondholders? Tlie resison is as plain as the nose on nan???s face. The friends of currency re form were divided, while the enemy re mained compact and harmonious. With folly almost incredible, men left refused to join tlie only party that could carry into practice their ideas, and threw away their votes on party that alisolntely had no chance of gaining a control either of the state federal government. Tlie very reforms they desired have thus been stifled, ami their own consciences must tell them that they are primarily responsible for the reverse they have encounter**!. Tlie monopolists an*l money sharks from one end of the country to the other are this morning exulting over their unexpected *-scape, and they will doubtless proceed without delay to re-establish their shaken authority. But the triumph of the gold bugs is not ill. The third-party folly in Ohio has riven the party of corruption and misrule u new lease of life. Hope and vigor hav taken the place of despair and apathy. And the grcenbackers did it; for every vote cast for the greenback ticket in Ohio was a vote indirectly cast in favor of the party tliat opposes home rule, supports the centralization of federal i??ower and upholds the gigantic fraud of 1876. If the republicans have secured a majority of the Ohioand Indiana delegations,through the diversion of votes to the greenback tickets, tlie election of a republican hard- money president is possible in 1880, thus jierliaps bringing hopeless defeat home the *lehtor class and untold injury upon the country. It is just such a pro gramme as this that tlie greenback movement makes possible. It is just such a |??eril that it leads up to. Every vote cast in ??>hio or in Georgia, or in any other state against tlie democratic nom inves, operates <o lengthen the rule of the moot fi-omipt party tliat the country has ever known, and to rivet the chains that tlie east have put upon us. There s no help for us (tolitically or financially, ???xoept through the democratic party, am! the re?-tilt in Ohio ought to fully ???pen the eyes of every intelligent man the dangers of the situation. T*??e Mew Lejrtnlatui Tlie general assembly meets on the 6th ilay of November, and the session that will follow will be one of tlie most impor- i nt held in Georgia for many years, wul assemble under new auspices, and its duties will lie new and varied. One of these will be the rearrangement and readjustment of the law under tbe new constitution, and this will involve grave responsibilities. From present appear ances Hon. Rufus E. Lester will lie elected president of the senate without opposi tion. He is an excellent presiding officer, prompt, alert and thoroughly fa miliar with parliamentary law. He made many friends daring the last sion of the legislature by his fearless im partiality and his methods of dispatching business. When the last general assem bly met be was eleete<l for two years, but the calling of the constitutional conven tion and the adoption of the new consti tution made it necessary to elect a new legislature for the government of which new officers will have to be chosen. Hon. A. O. Bacon will be re-elected speaker of the house. He is one of the most expert parliamentarians in the state, and one of the most popular of onr public men. During his recent European tour he took occasion to frequently attend the sessions of the British parliament, thus fortifying his own experience and confirming his practice. Major Bacon expenses that it economical, attending the will to nec- and there portunity to re-establish home-rule, and to appoint honest, efficient and respecta ble men to office. We all know wliat outcome of administrative leniency, and to to organized and kept in trim by Tae*d??y*?? T* A very few words will present the I nateil the military satrap and the cor- meaning ami effect of last Tuesday???s! rupt carpet-bagger front our politics, elections. The bare facts are sufficient, I These results were actual as well as and they are these: the greenback vote 1 hopeful. They were substantial. VI was not increased; it was large enough I ing the matter from this stand-point, we however to prevent the complete success I conceived it to be our duty to defend of the cause of currency reform; both of I that policy which, whatever its in ten J. the old iiarties will therefore go into tlie I had produced such liappy results. W< November elections with the iletennina-1 knew that we were sustained by the lib- tion to contest ever} 4 inch of the ground. I eral sentiment of the south. The best information in our possession I But tbe developments of tlie Potter leads to the conclusion that the green-1 committee, the attitude of John Sher- back vote of Ohio will fall below its last 1 man, the shuffling attempt of the admin ???s figures, or 75,000 out of 650,0001 istration to shield the knaves of the otes. In Indiana it may reach 35,0001 Louisiana returning board, and out of 400,000 votes. In neither state I tlie remarkable apjiointment did the third-party gain any strength, I offices of trust and profit although it went to tlie polls with the I of all who had any connection with tlie prestige of Maine and jiopular enthusiasm, I confessed frauds of 1876, have all con- ami tlie advantages of very hard times. I spired to create the most profound dis- The result is disastrous to the new party. I gust in the public mind. Mr. Hill???s letter An old party can stand defeat after defeat, I is therefore something more than reada- but when a hew party based on questions I |,i e an d timely. It goes to tlie very core of teinjiorary policy only, cannot under I 0 f public dissatisfaction, and expresses favorable circumstances command more I with extraordinary aptness tlie feeling than ten per cent of the total vote, it is } that has taken possession of the honest clearly done for. Its dissolution is at I voters of all parties. The politicians may hand, and each member of it will soon I reconcile themselves readily and easily go to the old party tliat the uearest repre- I the circumstances that have grown out of sents liis ideas on the currency questions. I the electoral frauds, but back of the poli- And why not? There is no chance of I tician stands the voter, as silent as fate, remedying the evils of which tlie green- I \\ 4 e have defended Mr. Hayes, backers complain, no chance of stopping our readers know 4 , with some degree tlie course of class legislation, no chance I persistency, and we have protested of substituting the people for monopolists along against the methods which would when privileges are to to given out, ex- | subject him and the men he has seen cept through tlie democratic party. The I proper to call around him to impeach- elections already held have determined I Ul ent. We have insisted tliat the ques- tlie complexiou of the next congress. It tion of fraud should to remitted to the will be controlled by the dem-1 people, not only because tlie fraud was ocratic party. The greenback- I committed with the full knowledge of the era as such will not have a repre-1 people, hut because such a settlement sentative in the senate, and not more I would avoid the confusion of a formal than six or eight in the house. They I prosecution of the matter before congress cannot, as we show in another article this I or before the supreme court, morning, gain even the balance of power I Tlie status of parties and the culmina- the house. Every man of sense and I tion of events render it unavoidable that honest purpose will therefore put his vote tlie fraud issue should to tried before where it will do the most good. He will I jHjople in 18800and any contingency tliat not invite another defeat like tliat of I stands in tlie way of such a trial will Ohio, but he will unite with the party of the result of unpatriotic and unworthy practical reform for the purpose of de- motives. This is what we have contend feating tlie party of contraction and class I ^ f or a [] along???tliat the great issue legislation. Such a movement will to 1SS0 should not to unduly embarrassed by felt in the approaching elections of New minor issues; issues that cannot succeed York and Pennsylvania, where the hope- ??????tn the success of the democracy is lessness of greenback ism begins to to ap- sure d. Whatever the result may preciated. I however, the name of Mr. Hayes cannot But the Ohio result has nerved the 1 be disconnected with the villainous elec- friends of hard money, and therefore of I toral frauds which disgrace our history. Grant, to a gigantic effort in tlie elec-1 Whether he is utterly under the control t ions of November, when no less than I of such men as John Sherman or whether twenty-nine states will take a hand I he has been moved by his own desires, in the grand preliminary presidential I it is certain that the appointment of the campaign. They believe that with I very men who stand indicted by facts the aid of the banks and other branches I well as by pnblic suspicion is not to of the money power they can stay, if not I overlooked by those who take note reverse, tbe jiopular tide, thereby gain- I current events. What will to the out ing a living chance in 1880. They will come of the trial before the people stake all on the November fights. They I mains to to seen, but it cannot to denied reckon on a division of tlie opponents of j that the position Mr. Hayes occupies the Sherman plan, as in Ohio; and it I the public mind is altogether unenviable, must to confessed that unless the green-1 We are willing to give him credit for backers put themselves on the only plat- I southern policy, but we are not willing to form that can give the country relief, the 1 step between him and the indignation calculations of the radicals may hold I those he seems to have knowingly good. We have faith, however, in the | frauded. intelligence and horse sense of the Amer ican people. fore liis parents bought him a rattle to play with, and lie didn't have the measles and tther infantile diseases until he was over a hundred. ???Vesuvius is beginning to put on style, now that it can fling tire 300 feet. It is to have an inclined railroad on the American ???lan, like those at Cincinnati, Niagara or laucli Chunk. It will differ from the Mount Washington railroad, a* no locoiuo rill climb to the crater. The cars will wn up by wire rojws moved by sta tionary engines, after the fashion of the in clined planes at the three places mentioned aboved. The plans of the Vesuvius railroad are complete, work will begin at once, and railroad finished within a year. ???S. Z. Bowman, who lias been nominated i??r congress by the republicans of the Fifth Massachusetts district in the place of N. P. Banks, is a young man, and has been in liolitics only a few years. He is a native of Charlestown, and was born in 1840. He was graduated at Harvard in 1860, and three years later was admitted to the bar. He has toen a mem tor of both branches of the legislature, and in the senate rendered ???mportant service as chairman of the com mittee on the llousac tunnel. He has gained putation as a successful railroad law- d last year mode successful argu ments before several committees of the legislature. ???The commissioner of internal revenu rules that all persons who sell, or offer fo sale, the articles known as Hostetter's bitter and Drake???s plantation bitters, either by the drink or in unbroken packages, are liable to s|??ecml tax as liquor dealers, hut directs that inasmuch as this ruling is a revocation of a former ruliug, it shall takfc effect on and af ter Novemtor 1, 1878. Heretfidore these bit ters have been sold as medicine when sold tlie broken jiackag**. The mnnufueturen* ???OLD. SI." Bismarck and Sorlallam. The Political Value or Barbecue*. . ??i ?? i... . \ i i Old Si come In to borrow * quarter. When The German chancellor has al?? ays had ^ why hc to inluu ., he ^ faith in repressive measures; in an emer- I .. ^ gwine ter be er barbekue down hyar geney he almost invariably resorts to the I my fokei???s settlement an??? I'se gwine down iron hand; and vet his success has not I ter-morrer.??? , . . * . . | ???What sort of a barbecue Is it to be? been of a nature to encourage farther ef- .. welLyerjes, orter come down <tar ud**-. forts in that direction. The Falck laws! yerself. Deole times hex come agin, fererfack, against the ultramontanists jiad no other I an??? foke* ar??? gittin ter be fokes agin, sho* ???naff.' effect than to strengthen and solidifv I ??? Is il * political meeting . a Ta . r ??? I ???I tinks dat politicks ar* mixt up in it some- ???hot party- It 13 ????? e of the growing par- ^ but er subddjnwaiJ: .. nlrrat in ties of the empire, and has to-day more I a (r*r! So far ex I kin lem de dinner table ar 4 power in tlie reichstadt than ever before. I be de prinserpel intraekshun ter de people, urre- .Still the chancellor???s faith in repressive I Tecktif er race, culler, er preevus kondishun of measures remains unshaken, and his | you ???reg.tagr anti-socialistic bill is more obnoxious to I **x ow , look here, boss, 1 ain???t on de witness tlie tost friends of German liberty than I Stan??? an??? restin' under enny desideraahun ob dis- anv measure he has devised. The chief I eliminatin' myself, but jess twixt us two I aint ' cornin??? ???way fmn dar bongry!' 4 ???I suppose you sue not alone in your intended saultr 4 -No, sah! De lark is when er barbekue am pro- But whether Courtney suld the race We never could make out; But everybody said.??? quoth he. dent is not entitled to any thanks for his southern I , beaause the withdrawal of the troops from I Carolina and Loui.??iana was a necessity of I nation. It may be that the day* of bayo- I mination had almost drawn to a close, hut I .?? ??? ???\denUble that Mr. Hayes might have pro- I traded them long enough to do great mischief to two southern state*. It Is undeniable that a for midable faction if not an actual majoritv. of the L republican party, would have sustained him in | the recognition and support of Packard and Cham berlain, which would niro resulted in the post- sof the political redemp- I thanks of the southern people. Clottiea to Correspond. K noxvllle Tribune. Wc have omitted to note the fact that The At lanta Co.Nrrnmox. which readies Ki far that it has yet worn. We have long thought that so good a paper ought to be better dressed. The Constitution an a Battler. Dahlonep* Signal. The Atlanta Conktiti-tion ha* appeared in its > ** * * * ltd sprightly and I? south. We wish il n*l we Impe it will , rattle the dry hones of tbe independ- Conkling, Thurman and Hendrick*. Boston Globe. Conkling *is very reckless in some of the state- A Practice Fall of Danger. Washington Post some of the state-1 Western radical papers are warningtheir party meats in his Saratoga speech. He charges Senator I against the danger of ???'scratching.??? The ground Thurman and Governor Hendricks, as well as the I of apprehension is that When a voter begin* to leaden of the western and southern democracy I scratch a radical ticket, he can see no good place generally, and a portion of the eastern democracy, I to stop nor any good reason for stopping, so long with being inflationists. This is not true so far as I a* an original name is left on the ballot. the two democrats mentioned are concerned. They are not inflationists. Boih have recently positively declared their sentimnet* in speech) which have had a wide circulation. They ai both opposed to the existing national bank *y tern, and in favor of sulwtituting legal-tender is sues for national tank bills. But this measure is a* far from inflation as the equator from the pole. where it is. Everybody knows that the .. ??? of taper currency for another i ; of A Pnsale f rom Mew York. lloraell Daily Times. The Atlanta CoNwrmm*** comes to ua attired suit of clothes from head to foot, and is of our most attractive daily visitors. The ConstrrmoN, under it* present able editorial management, has really but one equal and rival in the whole south. Thank You, Nlr. Cedartown Record. One of tbe Be*t in the Land. I The Atlanta CoxsrrrrTiox has come out in v- | new dress. The CoxaTiTi Tlos is the leading Northeastern rrogrera. 1 newspaper in the state and is always up with the On the 1st instant, that staunch an ft sterling I times. It is almost impossible for the country ed- daily. The Constitution, of Atlanta, appeared in I itor to get along without this journal. ???w dress out and out. The Constitution is 1 of the institutions of the capital <*ity. and this w departure??? is another evidence that the thrift and energy of its proprietors is being duly recognized by an appreciative jwbli * *??? outfit this enterprising journal looL . pin???mechanically speaking???while the arrange- I sayings of ???Old 8i," gives evidence of ment of the matter in the general ???make-up" of I * ??? - - the paper h??u> a "fine effect,??? and the impression 1 is at once made on tlie mind of the render thnt he | patronizing those whose motto is ???Kxcelsioi. nil they undertake. To s|<e*k ????f the worth of icle ICcmnn aa a Poet. Baltimore Gazette. In addition to Iteingone of the most pungent nnd haul-working paragraphs * ** ??? ??? ' Harris, of The Atla ~ a poet of no mean prop between the sherry of Sn _ npwgne <??f Colonel Iielanevv Kane to dash off I i-c&sional Ethiopian song of great power. Hi* [ f these bitters are declared to to recti fiers. ???The man who, but for revolution, would ow to tycoon of Jai>an. is a student in ???uris. living quietly ns M. Tokugawn. He small, litheand well dressed, liis income $200,600 a year, of which he spends a lit- __c on himself, and sends the remainder to liis followers who were ruined by the rev??>- lution. Very few of his fellow-students know who he is. He will learn all he can at the Sorbonne, and will then go to London to continue his studies. Eleven years ago, when the Jajianese embassy went to London, he, then a little bov, headed it. as brother of the tycoon, and the prince of Wales Dover to welcome him. ???Mr. William Astorhns protested istomhou.se tliat the collection of $1,800 in gold on the baggage that he brought from Europe on tlie steamship Germanic was not lawful. He asserts that the baggage com prised i*ersonal effects in use. liis case expected to decide what is meant by ???jm sonal effects in actual use.??? Ijist mon the government got $42,060 in duties from |tassengers in cases similar to that of Mr. Astor???s. The amount is nearly one-lialf of what was collected in all of last year.???New A'ork Sun. ???A special cable dispatch brings the rn- lorthat Dr. Petennaiui, the well known geographer, whose death at Gotha was re- ra>rted a few days ago, committed suicide by hanging. According to this story there is a herediturv taint of insanit} 4 in the fuhfKi- lv, others of its members having died by their own hands. It is also alleged that un happiness in Dr. Peterinann???s domestic life pposed to have prompted the act, and a ??? : t: ,l. n 1,1. e eolumiih are enlivened by the humorous BILL AIU???S TALK. WHAT FELTON ITES ARE MADE OF. The Bigoty, tbe Bpity end the Finicky-Why Ste phen, end Othen Hate DemocraU - Keeping Hill in Heroess???A Good Field for the Fool Killer ??? The Coming Drew Parsde. vtenslons. He find* time | Sneak Sherman anil the Sew and Airy. Carroll County Times. The Atlanta constitution on the 1st inst. came in a bran new dress, and is one of the neatest paper" to be found anywhere. As a newspaper the Constitution can not Wsurpassed, and wTth on, has quite a metropolitan air. llow Bier Took It. Keokuk Constitution. They say that when Hampton???s letter was pub lished, Massai-husett???* ltice swelled up and tioiled ???er, and spread all over the floor and had to be Ltliered up on a shovel and put hack in a wash gathere* toiler. Meeting madrigal, but il is finer than anything I timpani ??? . ilitions. could play it, wor??ls nnd all. the woTk of I IMipiilarizing tallv-hoing in this country would be I greatly simpliliod. llrnrjr U. llnrris'a Strength In the j Mew nan Convention. Columbus Enquirer. Some of our readers may not be aware of the I majority Hon. Henry R. Harris representeil In the I ???* 'iilion. We append the numerical I ??? h candidate, taken from the official! returns of the election of 1870: Harris???s delegates represented 8.XM votfK Smith's ??? ??? 2,157 ??? Pewons???s 44 ??? ....3,306 SThis gives CupL Persons the Muscogee delega- * tlrni, which even a casual observer know* never j beUmged to him. and which we risk nothing in 1 saying will not go for him Uie day of election. llntlcr 4 * Fiat Promt***. New York Tribune. Butler is being worried by the numerous promt ??? * 44 - - ??? .t money, t to be re- Vcry Bonutirul. Elmira Advertiser, p have the strongest suspicion that The / .a nt a Constitution hns coine out in i Jress. silk. dress. It looks more beautiful than satin or new There i* no More Attractive Paper. Hartwell Sun. Superb! Magnificent!! Beautiful!!! The At lanta Constitution lias donned a new suit en lire. No paper h?? the United States presents a nearer or more attractive appearance. I* S imply Per fool. Fairbura Star. The Daily Constitution is simply perfection I -ince it has stepjn-d into its new clothes. have no improvements to suggest. On the Burning: Deck. Samlcrsville Herald. The Ati-anta Constitutu*n In Its new dress, just like the t??oy that stood on the burning hound nnd liappy. Baltimore Gazette. The Atlanta Constitution, the brightest and I newsiest daily paper in the south, ha- donned a L ???W suit oi clnw-luiinmer ??-lothes and now looks I i happy as a jour printer going on hopadsu-k t???? I ???. v iiiarr>- the ????nly daughter of an asUimatie famd- I ??????i.omntiful and brichL??? holder. In addition to taing sound on the i????liti-1 ??? l ^ u ?? II>l unyDU cal questions of the day. The (k)NSTlTl~roS (as ' aniutidefil) is unanimously in favor of popularizing ??? .buiel lK-laneey Kune and bis guy, white ???cady,??? d hopes to see the day when even the humblest citizen of the United States will drive to and fnan his place of business in a tallow-lioe with red wheels. Written for The Constitution. The Gilmer ami Fannin wagoners ain???t mi gito*l to camp at my branch. Some times 1 go down and dtoiinr?-** ???em about craps and politics, and I haveut found the first man of ???em yet that will touch Emily Speer, as they call him, with a ten-foot |h??1c. They say she won???t get nary vote where they live, and Dr. Felton nor his secretary wouldn't do any totter. You see those people are denmerats, and they like the gtHtd old way* tliat McDonald and Cobb tuugbt ???em some 30 or 40 years ago. They are not going to kick out of the britehin. You ought to hear the old ones talk ntout those two old governors, and about John Henry Lumpkin and John l ndcrwo**d. And I???ve noticed everywhere in this re gion that all the old line democrats are in line now. When you hear of an old man being for Felton vou may In* shore he use*! to to a whig. A heap of ???em took whigorv so had they have never gotten over it, ami never will. They???d vote tor the devil before thev will for a democrat. There???s Alck .Stephens and Dohuel TiNiinto call them selves democrats, but they would resurrect the old carcass to-morrow if they could. That's the rca-on they are for the parson. They can???t help it???you see they fought democracy so long and abused it so eh thev liave never got reconciled to the iituation in which they find themselves sit uate*!, and they take their revenge when- they can. Why, you may talk as much as you please ntout Alvk's patriotism ami large* nationality, but don't you remem ber that, about thirty years ago, he had every democratic postmaster in his district turned <*ut of office? He swont ???em as clean as a dough-touch, and he???d do it again hc had a chance. Well, ???l\*oinhs would* ent do it that bad quite, for his heart is right smart bigger, bin lie wont work in harness with ???em to do any p>od, and when lie hears of a man like Felton abusin the l??arty it does his ????ld soul goml way down in the holler, and it don???t take him long to Loose between the |*arson and our Gotirgc. Well, there's our Ben, who was another old whig, hut you know he is a heap younger and dident have it so long nor so bad, and l think with g<*od iiursin is likely to get over Out of abundant cant ion. however, we had totter keep him in office a few years ' nger, for I don???t think he could give se- ???uritv for graal tohavior if we should drop. him. Do you? I see you keep itiggestin that some other prominent democrats had totter follow General Jordon's example ami blow n few tellin blasts on tlie democratic bugle in this dis- t, and I???ve supposed nuiyto you had i in your mind. Well, he inout come and he nuiutcnt. It???s a jsiwerful strain on him to do which or tothor, f<*r it???s a contest wliigist instinct and democratie filmy 4 , and nobody knows which of the two will whip. I don???t tolieve he knows it If exactly as yit. hut my ho|??e is that he has *got through with his Haves letter he will find time to display a tew talents on this missionary ground. Well, there's another class of people that's supportin the parson???the dissatisfied conijdainiti sort???them "hat???s bigoty and Count I tut tonal ttunlltl**. Dublin I*o*L For witerorisf. iq>ke, news, humor, soundness ???f view* and sledge-hammer blows for organise * lemocracy, commend us to The Constitution. Poetry that Ih Better than Political I THE CIPHER DISPATCHES. Amendment*. I The En* Over Which Whltelnw Held Elmira Gazette. I 1?? Caekllnc Ho Load. We give place to-day, at tin* hewl of our column. I N ew York, Oct. 8.???The Tribune???s anex- to * poetic production of Samuel W. Small, of I purgatfi^l translation of the cipher corres- The ATLANTA CoNSTiTLTloN. It is otie of the I H.n.iotH-e ??,f Tilden Marble A Go was inter- objections to the original bill were the I illimitedness of its operation, its retro-1 active feature, and the nature of the I pecial court of -appeal and the mode of I n?? un <*d l 8C aIu *-??? s f f un ??? ln m *^ orily ' ^ 1 siimmes??? perliterkal pahty *?? reference of questions arising under the bill to it. Tlie bill made Prince Bismarck jess goiter git full dinger in de wood* (er count hitself in! Hon- himself the head of the court, virtually I gry fake# *int no pohtok* ??n 4 dey???Il holler giving him the control of its decisions. I ter euny speaker dat beHersin heeriu???^stince ??b ???in : i , , i-xs i .u I the feed board. Er feller feelln??? fer bbkits an??? This clause has been modified so that the brfled sbote ^ to stt)p u . r when chancellor will not to able to absolutely I de rigixel am glbben fer tree cheers control the court; the retroactive feature I at his end ob de table of the bill has been stricken out, and the I ???Ttoti )' ou consider the barbecue a happy po- operation of'the bill will he limited to a .11 ter d>uck,. W time namefil???probably, to 1883. With I foke* can???t feed on win??? an???afford ter holler, ter these changes it is thought the bill will I boot! 1 members in deole times how dese barbe- command the support of Germany???s best I kuesf uscd *?? dt ???feckt de foke*, De fates??? an??? big- friends, the national liberals, which would ensure its passage. I pey-g come in er mougbty good time. It is very doubtful indeed whether I ???Kase ef dar???s one thing dat <Se nigger hez even the modified bill is desirable??? I 6in peerin??? inter de fucher arter de bum sense de whether it woald not strefigthen lite X ~ the r alck laws, the party attacked. | j jre ,i ,i* n j n forty flatforms an??? when de lick- Tlie sociallrts can poll to-day 600,000 I er sircufaua de only freed urn dat de nuely votes, and their organization is almost I irancheesed wanu fa er cfar track ter de votin??? perfect. They ??re not altogether led by tie qu^er.nd ,lii fanatics, as are the commnmsts of Franee, for their ranks include many political economists of high and even favorable | _J d Ute the diabolical stora that I repnution. They ostensibly seek an I am en^iged to Webb Hayes. Hannah amelioration of the condition of the la-1 Boggs may to, for all I know,???Susan B. boring classes???the times being very hard I Alll lon - * in Oenwtuy but beyond that to have h -ijTntai???pr^ncI !T.??? no anthontauve programme. This of I .hom he had b??n devoted, lie discovered itself lets in hard suspicions and gives I that she was engaged to Webb Hayes and weight to ill-considered utterances. These | t utterances are generally intended for the half-educated masses. They are fre- I i??rSs stei?? out. So says a cable dispatch, quently attacks on the rights of property, I wlt k ?^ e * onslaughts against religion and family _ _ _ ties and love for the fatherland, and ap-1 wr over to * frien<Tin America, and says peals in favor of an upheaval of state and I that so long as his jwospects are as bright as ss. . I rhev are at present in the old world he will society. They are often spiced 'rnk I of coming to the new. He also threats. ???The Nihilistic dagger and the I aavs he does not understand the tastes of Xobeling shotgun,??? nys Bismarck, are I d*' Americans and that he might not please held np before the eyee of the law-makers. I ^^senator Bayard is accredited with say- All thii* ig very bod and very much to be * ing that in his opinion there will be three IN GENERAL. -The ostrich-feather business increases, the supply isgcttingsadlv short. Tw< ty-pairs of ostriclies were lately sold South Africa for breeding miriioses, a fetched an average of nearly $1,000 per in As much as $1,425 was j??aid for one |*air, while the lowest price |??aid was $????50. It was only a few years ago that ostriches could to*procured in South Africa for the catching, and for exhibition punioses tondon they sold at a mere trifle. Eveii Zoological society of London, remarkable fur its collection of foreign birds, does not l>ossess a single ?)??eciiiteii of the African os trich. At a recent sale of feathers a choice } ??arcel realized $340 per pound, or about $4 or each seperate feather. In 1860, the ex ports from the C???ape of Good Hope were 2,207 ]>ound.s, valued at 96,300. Ten years later the quantity had increased twelvefold, and the value fivefold. In 1873, 31,581 iMiunds were c*x|>orte<l, at a value of $798, 395, and last year the exports had reached in value the sum of $1,9m,030. ???Meng-Dfi>n-Meng was the name of the lute king of Burtuah. He catue to the throne in ???53. He was an absolute desnot, hut had a jp-eater desire for civilization than any of his predecessors. Hc employed British soldiers to drill liis army. ???The princess of Wales took lessons on tlie zither last year, and all the daughters of tlie nobility, and all who can afford aj??e aristocracy, are now waking weird strains from that instrument. And horrible thought????sup|>ose Mrs. Wales were to take lessons on the accordeon this year. The result would be too dreadful contemplate! This country would to over run witn English accordeon refugees, and millions of dollars would have to be raised for the sufferers at home. If there is one thifig in this world worse than the yellow fever scourge, it is an accordeon epidemic. ???The ameer of Cabul has concentrated an infantry force with artillery at Ali- Musjid, the famous old fort in the Khytor Pass, twenty-five miles from Pesliawur. The fort is on a rock 2,433 feet high. Jam rood towanl which the English troojw are re- (Mirted moving, is a small town at the trance of the Khvtor Pass, ten miles from Peshawur. Carufahar, where the main Af ghan, army is concentrating, is cm one of the four great roads centering at Cabul, and 2??Xi miles from that city. It is an old town, originally founded, it is said, by Alexander the Great. Duetta, the (mint threatened by the army gathering at Candahar, is in Bc- bxichistan, near the Afghan frontier, and ??m!y twenty miles from the much-talked-of Bholan Pais, which the English expect to utilize for a railroad. In 1842 it was the headquarters of the English army ojierating against Afghanistan. Hayes t* Guilty. New York Herald. Mr. Hill???s indictment of the president fa good as far as It goes. It fa too true that Mr. Uavea has toen weak enough to appoint to office, no fas as fa known, every man of all the disreputable crowd which in Louisiana and Florida manipulated the election returns in 1H76. Black or white, obscure or prominent, a vigilant search has failed to dis cover a single man who had anything to do with this disgraceful work who ban not been given some office, large or small, in hfa own state, or oftener in Washington or in some distant locality. They tell a story in Florida that among the tmlitical small fry there It became so well known that con nection with election affairs In 1876 would bring office in 1877 that some ingenious scamps confessed falsely to misconduct, were promptly ??????taken care of,??? as the saying fa, but were as promptly dismissed when later it was discovered that their confessions were unfound ed. There fa no doubt that Mr. Hayes alien- which was given him by such republicans as Charles Foster, Gen. J. D. Cox, Wayne MacVeagh, and others of equal prominence and high charac ter. who urged upon him tbat such men as Madi son Wells, Anderson. Steams and persons of simi lar antecedents and character could not property be recognized by him, and lacked the |>rincipal qualifications which he had declared necessary in ??? public officer. When, therefore. Senator Hill severely arraigns the president for the gross mis use of pannage it fa impossible for Mr. Hayes???s best friends to defend him. He fa guilty and he has sacrlflcefil hfa own character and reputation in a way which has surprised and grieved all who placed confidence in hfa early promise. .Major R. J. Mom Come* Down. Columbus Enquirer. Major R. J. Moses announced on the streets yes terday that he was no longer a candidate for con gress in this district. This leaves the contest be tween Hon. H. R. Harris and Captain Henry Per sons. The first has been a member of congress nearly six yean, fa among the first named on the most Important committee of the house, and has immense influence in committee rooms, w here the the legislation of congress fa transacted. Mr. Harris has influence where Captain Persons fa un known, and the mere fact of hfa. being elected four times will give him greater weight. We do not claim for him that he fa an eloquent speaker. We don???t suppose Captain Persons friends will claim such a distinction for him. Mr. Harris fa a man of ability, of sound sterling sense and judg ment, who has made a success of life. He has ex perience as a congressman. He certainly ran get recognition from tbe speaker when members are demanding to be heard, as has been the case more than once. .Speaking does not shape legislation. That fa done fu the committee room. Untried members arc not placed on important ones. Can there be any question, therefore, which of the two men will most advance the material interests of our section? broken, and the heart is touched with svintathetic offers of assistance in time of trouble. Such Mines as tlK-M-scr\etobiiul ^ ???jjJjJJJi I pat dies. Under the circumstances they oniiug. The rest of the republican press t* of course, profoundly sorry tliat they, in tend of Mr. Reid, were not the proud liohl- first mortgage on that barrel of dis- - - - ??? iU loige for J iiot to very elatorute in their comment, at least until the entire history is everybraty mon country cl< ???. amendments ambitious iiolitieians years to come. ??? I pnqKirty. The Dost au??i the Commercial Decidedly Complimentary. I {<>-uiglii pave only a brief |>aragraph or two Brooklyn Times. I on the subject. The democratic press ar ire pleased to note, as an evidence of sub-1 as mum as owls and await further develop stantial prosperity in the south, that our brilliant 1 ments in dignified silence. The prominent and esteemed eonteinporary, THE A??? ,OT ??? 1 * ^ ... ??? .ntemporary. The Atlanta t>??N-1 dennK-rat.s about town do not give any satis- stitution, lias torn, to use its own phrase, ???re- | : tltal ??.5 A uii,. tl <1... wnllto-t 'ril.lon vised and amended, so to speak.??? In oUier words, | factory interviews on,the su Inject, lilden, it gives token of the phenomenal success that has s usual, is frigidly silent, i ?? Uur- uud withal most litoral of southern journal*. was privy to any attempted fraud in Florida, and claiming that false inference liad toen The Beat nnd the Rest Looking. I drawn from the telegrams. About all the ???hilaulelphia Times. I democrats in general are willing to say??? Georgia bus another new fionstitution. It is 1 that there is no guarantee that the Tribune The Atlanta Constitution, whk-h, not content I has not manipulated tlie material at hand to ^rifitoiug the best newspaper in the mtith, fade-1 suit its own puristse. From the general dri termined to to the test-looking also. In its new I , .rirtto.ilt form the paper fa exceedingly attractive, being I ??? cinnnicwt it isnot difficult Uiget an iuca... de up after the most approved model of the tin* attitude of the democratic party, and As to the retMlablencsw of The Constitution I press of the city are likely to assume t- ???nly neti-ssary to say that ???Old Si" is^the rsv | the allegeil culnrits in the crime. They say and do little or nothing until the whole lory is out. Mr. Tilden and the rest will then to exj>ccted to find some spacious filoorway or convenient knot-hole through which they can emerge from under this cloud of accusation. If they fail to do this, the Times corres|M>n<lent was told to-day liy .several prominent partisans, the democratic party will virtuously pitch them overfaiard ith ... liticul editor, ???Uncle Remus??? the financial writer, and Colonel Grady Uie religious man of all work. These three have done ns much as nearly nil the editorial fatemity put together to redeem sou the journalism from the dominion of platitude. Tbe Can*t Itntion 4 * Special* Appre- elatcfil. Newnan Herald. TnE Atlanta Constitution apjienreil in dress a few days ago. Though it has donned an I and pursue its beneficent career without suit, it still ??? ......Unties to furnish ifa I them. Everybody says that a policy readers with the latest news up to the last hour of I ??ill to eouivatont toanlcaof miiltv in ??Hv??nre| oinraeKoon Kelly is inwardly .(the great nisjorily of the city dailirsaml lenders | ?? a?? the story is damaging lo Tilden put The Constitution several tom ' ifrcat majority of the city dail of the most popular journals his Bitterest enemy in the j??arty. ,-ilI interest the west to know that H. Smith cuts some slight figure the dispatches. liis name ap|*ears only the innocent and unsuggestive telegram: '*??? a '*~ '??? dance, informs Gramcrc Attractive in Form and natter. New Orleans Dem, One of the Democrat???s most valued exchanges fa I Marble, The Atlanta Constitution. Ably edited and I i,j ir k that he was very glad to see>Sniith,and newsy always, in its new dress it is us attractive in 1 ?? lir . i.:, ....... form as it has heretofore been in mutter. Its style 1 !" ??? n ??? t, ??? e , r . " e and make-up are in keeping with the progress of I i????iiy??f i??f*licv by saying that Smith thinks *?????? ich matters, and its apiiearance is I t??a??. Tliere is no doubt that he was favont- i d relfabl ??? '^iT I impresae*! with Smith. the times in now as uleasln, . ble. The people of (ieorgia evidently ap- pnsdnte a good |siper, for The Constitution bears all the outward sigus of prosjierity. Mr. BUI** LI Ter Oat or Order. Chicago Time*. Ben Hill, one of tbe most irrepressible of the blatherskite* sent to congress from tbe Confederate State*, has written a letter favoring hfa constit uents with hfa opinion about Hayes's title to the presidency. Andy Johnson became president through a great crime. Mr. Hill says, bat Johnson punished the criminals. Hayes obtained hfa title also from criminal practice*, and he has rewarded the perpetrators, what Mr. Hill proposes to do about it fa not dear. The dispatches ssy the let ter ???fa regarded as the keynote of an attack on Hayes???s title to be made in the senate. 4 ' Proba bly it fa merely the eoosequence of an unhealthy condition of Mr. Hill???s liver. With *11 bis ten dency to incontinence and intemperance of speech, he fa not such * hopeless idiot ss to sup pose that any political profit can be made by himself or hfa party in seriously raising or at tempting to raise a question as to the conclusive character of tbe action of congress in March, 1877, which awarded tbe presidency to the present oc cupant of the white house. Mr. Mmjem mt Altogether Bad. Augusta Chronicle. However just Mr. BUI???S criticisms upon the re- r??? ???-??? ay be, we cannot agree with him An Unexpected Application. Columbus Enquirer. i able editor???long in the harness, e pcrieuced, well-trained. Does the Times think it *1 to thrust him aside And put We opine not The forty- grass winn * J and able would pay the journal to thrust him aside and put I 1; ??? " Seventeenth street. New ' ??rk: My hope . -??? ??? -- ??? The forty- ??? ~ ??? ?????? ' "* experienced THE PRINCIPAL TRIBUNE DISPATCHES. The most inijMirtant of the alleged cipher dispatches printed in yesterday???s Tribune we copy below, to be taken for what they are worth. It will to noticed that Mr. Tii den himself nowhere appears os sender >f these disjiat Taixahassek. Dec. 2, lK7fc???Henry Havollfeyor, 5 West Seventeenth street. New York: My hope small. Votes about as reported yesterday. Africa The tariff will to a focal fastie. | Send back a man thoroughly acquainted with his duties and who lias had this tariff matter in charge I for some time i??st. Onr flnill Driver* net a Boost, Monroe Advertiser. The Atlanta Constitution came out last week in a new dram, and fa now one of the very hand somest printed impor* in the south. It fa newsy enterprising ami always interesting. In stands it. Nothing but cash will avail. Answer iy first of* to-day New York, De< _ Fla: Telegram received. Unless reived will remit again. II avexevejl Talla., Dee. 2.???Col. Pelton, 15 <iramerry Park: Have just received a proposition to hand over at any hour required Tilden decision of lioard and certificate of governor for fiun.000. Marklk. New York. Dee. Man ton Marble, Tallahas see, Fla: Despatch here. Proposition too high <??? more than ourselves. ilid opinion there fa editorial talent employed on I , w .. The Constitution, which fa umurpuKd In the I Tallakaehee, uec. did new outfit of material is Seventeenth streek New \ork: Board fetch may ttsausas * York, Dec. 1.--C. W. Woolley, Tallahassee, Telegram received. Will deposit dollars agreed; (you) cannot, however, draw before vote member received. H. New York. Dec. 3.???C. W. Woolley: All here have perfect confidence In yon. We cannot pri- vent needless.- No other has power, and ail application declined. Stay and do what you tcle- ;raphed you could do. Private. Answer. W. In tbe Front Bank. Eltorton Gazette*.*. The Atlanta Constitution came out last Tuesday clad in an entirely new costume. With one of the ablest editorial combinations to to found in the south, only this step was ne* place The Constitution in the front journalism. Drawn closer to Atlanta by roads, we have a greater interest in the p Tallahassee. Dec. 4???Col. W. T. Pelton, rosneritv 1 Grameray I*ark: Proposition received either giv of L t . r lnutitutions and none fa more worthy oil ln ff vote of republican of board, or hfa concur- succtM lh.n its brililan. morning p??rrtT. ' | JS? States documents. (For Zj0.??XW in U. 8. note*, i Marble. The Atlanta Constitution i West Seventeenth street, N. Y.; May Wc office with a handsome new dress, which a*l<ls I hundred thousand dollars less half f<??r Tilden ad- as much to iLs appearance as a new silk drew does I ditional board member? Lieutenant to the appearance of a lady. Ever since we have I V toen in the newspaper business we have consid- I N. Y., Dec. 4???C. W. Woolley, Tallahassee, Fla.. ered The Constitution the tost paper that comes J See Israel and act in conjunction with him. You to our office. It fa the tost papeT so far as we are I must coincide, or you will [unintelligible] each aware. In the southern state*, and we are glad to J other. Have telegraphed him consult von. Time notice that its circulation fa still increasing. [ important Divided councils may lose aH^ Dec. 4???0. W. Woolev, Tallahassee, Fla.: Re ported here that board have given us one vote. If ... v Wienyuie raprew. I ho you will not need to use acceptance. Advise We have so far neglected fo pay a compliment I f u ity TNoslg.l THE Atlanta Constitution, which came out | Dec. 4.-Manton Marble, Tallahassee. Fla. All that Could bo Deal red. Cartersville Express. n Tuesday, October fat, adorned in i bran new I Telegram here. Proposition accepted, i! done 14 'only once. 4 4 In concert i to rial stair comprising some of the most gifted stars of the profession, who get ur?? a paper that fa . w#i *n hf??or to Atlanta, Iinrt h all that could be de-1 tt K , ,._h. Havcmcyer. Sew York; Power sired in a b rat-class daily. 1 ??? * - ??? - ??? trust him. Time very Im portant and there should to no divided councils. [Nodi' Atlanta* Representative. Christian Index. Tax Constitution has put on a new i ... ceedingly handsome drew, and typographically, fa j now one of tlie handsomest journals in the eoun- L try. Its prosperity fa self-evident, and it is, in I ???h-. . . ri - . . every respect, a first-class daily, a worthy repre-1 gg** ?? knew already. .*??.?????????????> sentative of high grade southern journalism, and | Blackstone (resort to legal proceedings.) tf the progressive, wide-awake metropolitan capi ??? * ??? jal of Georgia. joined with Board against contnu t from Saturday. Will to prompt and advise you farther, if neces sary. Jane Charles W illiam. Woollkt. Talla., Dec. 5, ???76. Col. Pelton, 15 Gran Park, N. Y.: Proposition failed. Finished . terdav afternoon responsibUity (as) those. Last ight Wolley found me, and said he had nothing, hich I knew already. Tell Tilden to saddle Liver I* King. The Liver is tlie imperial organ of the whole human system, as it controls the life Air. uraninas at last awaxeueo to the require- I r.f man When it ' ments of the time* and contributed to the yellow I ne ^L L uiquly anil finiky; wh more nlhuit everything ami won???t w*??rk anywhere ox??f|??t in the lead, and won???t pull a \**??und even there, hut want to |imuec along ami blow ,,ff urn! make a hig show, ami if you don't humor ???cut they???ll sorter |anit and go off on sonic other slMN.it. Why 1 know*! seh*s??ll>oys ???ti 1*1 do that, and it was the hardest mat in the world to git along with ???em. If u dident play sweepstakes or .shinny or !??iill-pen their way they wouldn't play at Well, them sort of toys made the same sort of men, and they are now hur rah in for the independents. You can find every community???in every church and masonic h??dgc and Isiunl *??f coinmen-c, and they are the first to kick out of the britehin??? or rise to a pint of order or ap|??cal from the chair or file a protest or carry the case up to a higher tribunal. If you want to manage'em you must consult with ???em firstly ami make out like they are doin??? of it along that way right easy sometimes, for as a general thing this * ss of people ain't afflicted with sense to r alarmin??? extent. It???s amusin??? to hear i jine isshu. 1 jist remarked to one of i tliat ???in unity there is strength??? and he jined isshu right strait. 1 don???t know about that ses he???my opinion is that it???s better with a scatterin' gun, for you???l kill in*??re birds by it. Then there is a hateful passel of fools who made character in the late war and they???l ???tc for Felt*m. They don't like a g*N??*l war record any totter than he <b *os. One of ???em the war was a great mistake, attdjic diden???t blame Alck Stephens for doin' the cause all the damage he could; and when l told him we had more provocation to light than our four-fathers did in the revolution, he said the revolution was a mistake,and we would to totter off if we were under the Brit ish government now. Well .you can???t talk to a man like that ; you can???t do nothin hut wait for the frail killer to come along, and it looks like if he don???t come soon be need- cut come at all, for the frails ami the lilis- tincs w ill take the country. But there is a heap of leaven in the old land yet, and many a wool hat, (I don???t alloral to the secretary.) and you???ll hear from ???em in a few weeks. You see there are 1,200 young men who eouldent vote two years ago, ami over a thousand of ???em are for Luster Young men may In* foolish and reckless al Hint some female things, hut they ore the pride and hot** of the country. They have not seen t rouble enough to make hereve ie at Silver Creek who toy, but he t**)k the pi and liascut got over ting man has it so bad * him. A Hint for Jfr. la Aye*. Washington Post Mr. Grant has at last awakened to the require ments of the time* and contributed to the yellow ??... . , fever relief fund. We commend thfa fact to the 1 disturbed tye*. who. we think, I ailments * . ??? to the same purpose I tion of food, the movements of the heart certainly Mm ueh of Resident Tilden* money as | an d blood, the action of the brain and ner vous system, are all immediately connected NnmMhintr ??m. i> rAlu i ??#* I with the workings of the Liver, ft has been .Something to be Frond of. SUC ceHsfully proved tliat Green???s August WarhingVin I????t. I jrj ot| . er - w unc*iuall??d in curing all |ier.-*ous Constitution has indulged in 1 aft ii cti .,i v%itli Dvsi*.|s.iaor Liver Com plaint, what might be called a new dress, which sets off I ... ?? mntnm . that result all its inherent beauties fo advantage. To my I the numerous symptoms that raratit that The Constitution fa ond of the brightest, 1 from an unhealthy condition of the Liver newsiest journal* of the country, a paper of which 1 * u ??? 4 ??? the whole south may well be proud, fa but to state a self-evident fact, apparent to alL Grant Ntill Cincinnati Enquirer. Here and there some distinguished republican pops into prominence, and hfa name fa at once as sociated with the republican nomination for the presidency; but hfa light lasts for a short time only. The real candidate the radicals have fa General Grant, and the democrats might as well make up their minds fo face him in ISO. What Every body Nhoald Do. Dawson Journal. The Atlanta Constitution has washed its face and now comes to us in a brand new dress. It is a paper that everybody ought to read. Western Continent. Three doses will prove that it is just what you want. 378 june22...d*twly eowdtweow Blanket*, Shawl* and Cloak*. If you will be kind enough to call and examine this de] art ment, I am confident that you will to satisfied that it is no spec ulative puff???when I say that I have the largest stock of these goods to to found in the city. It seems that I can almost hear you say??????but what of the prices???? Of this I propose that you be the judge. My motto is big sales and small profits. 324 oct!3 d&w lt D. H. Docohekty. I did s*ir was a nausy Felt bigoty .several year it. It aint often a and mi long. But if you want to have a goral old- fashioned democratic love-feast, come up to our barbecue. We are going to wind np the canvass with a dress-parade at C???artero- ville, and all the. world is invited. Governor Colquitt isacoming, the man whom the ]??co- I dc love and delight to honor. The governor ias considered the political situation prayer fully, and is shore to come if he???s well and there???s no Sunday-skool in the way. Yours, Bill A Hr. I*. S.???Tell Harris to come and bring a sack ding with him. He always lra*ks to me like he was hungry. B. A. THE COMING MEN. A Return that Doe* not I.ook I.iko Democratie Detent. Washington, tietotor 10.???The following is a rorreot list of the new congressmen as facas is definitely ascertained: THE OHIO IiKLEOATION. First district, Butterworth, republican. Second, Young, republican. Third, McMahon, denmerat. Fourth, Keifer, rejoiblu-an. Fifth, Lefevre, democrat. Sixth, Hill, democrat. Seventh, Hurd, democrat. Eighth, Finley, democrat. Ninth, Converse, democrat. . Tenth, Kwing, democrat. Kleventh, Dickey, democrat. Twelfth, Neal, republican. Thirteenth, Warner, democrat. Fourteenth, Atlierton, denirarat. Fifteenth, Geddcs, democrat. Sixteenth, McKinley, republican. Sevente*.*nth, M??*nn*c, republican. Kighteenth, lT|<*lcgraff, republican. Nineteentli, Garfield, republican. Twentieth, Townsend, republican. Democrats, 11; republicans, 9. THE INDIANA DELEGATION. First district, Heilman, republican. SecondjCobb, democrat. Third. Bricknell, democrat. Fourth, New, deimirrat. Fifth, Brown, republican. Sixth, Myers, democrat. Seventh, Gilbert Delmatvr, national. Eighth. Hostetler, democrat. Ninth district, G. S. Orth, republican. Tenth district, Galkins, republican. Kleventh district, ifowgill, republican. Twelfth district, Colerick, democrat. Thirteenth, Baker, republican. Democrats, C; republicans, 6; greenl>ack- ers, 1. THE IOWA DELEGATION. , First district, McCord, republican. Seciind, Price, republican. Third. Ftidegraff, republican. F<iurth. I leering, republican. Fifth, t???larke, re|??ublican. Sixth, Weaver, greenhaek. Seventh, Gillette, democrat. Eighth, Sapp, republican. Ninth, Uaqienter. republican. Democrats, 1; republicans, 7; greenbaek- ers, 1. TIIE WEST VIROIX: .is entirely democratic. , IiKI.LoATloN BiHhop Wfghlman'n Ewrape. Bishop W. M. Wight man, of the M. E. rhurch, south, recently had a very nar- niw ?????>?? ;i|k* in Montana territory. He had just liecn to hold a conferemx* at Denver, Colorado, and went, thence to Montana to hold the conference there. He was, of course, on a stage, and one bright, cold morning he reached a breakfast house to find it in flames. The Cheyenne Indians had just made a raid on the place, and had destroyed things generally. The good bish op found a joor Methodist preacher sitting a uite disconsolate near the ruins.. The In- ians had robbed him of his horse and wag on. The savages had not toen gone three hours, and the bishop was luckily date enough to escape. At a recent concert, it was the subject of remark, that in what ???fine voice??? tlie singers were; in commending his good judgment, the leader will pardon q<* for whispering that he always recommends Bull's Cough Syrup for clearing and strengthening the voice.