Atlanta weekly constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1878-1881, October 22, 1878, Image 3

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THE WEEKLYICONSTITUTION: ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1878. TIM* Mpelliws An*H'*. MCPOVIKl* **Y TKITIini. JAMES \\ ??;u In. wait* in. je little kids, and Rather mun i my kwf. And ???in.j. Utrm I** A* and f;r>t j-.t-hook*. and hear a jam from me. I kin not *unga fairy tale <??f Jinny's fierce and deceive a simple w BILL ARPS REMARKS. PRIZE PUMPKIN DAYS. Sweet j????tatoe* in Conyers at fifty centa working in the held near the bou*e when AGRICULTURAL A TRIBUNE CRUSHER. THE OPIUM HABIT. For I hold it U unchristian child; But ao (mm school yer driftin??? by I thowt yed like to hear Of a spellin' Bee" at Angel * that we organised laat year; It wara't made up of gentle kid*-of pretty kid*??? Hire you. Bat fft-nu es had their rrg'lar growth, and sotnx enough for two. There woe Lanky Jim of Sutter'* Fork and ltd of LaOmiwpe, But ear11 had ??? iu*n behind it, and???my name 1* I pretty name*, it earli had a m. Truthful Jamra. Thar waa poker Dick fro Smith of Shooter's fiend. -For li jier bushel. There are five candidates U western circuit. Large drove of wild pigeons jayed over Ihalton a few day* ago. Patau!acreek. Lumpkin county. furnish** 77 f*mnd turtle. One hundred and four ftudent* at Mercer university. J. L. Hardeman elected captain of Flovd Rifle*, of Macon. Central railroad extending their wharves Mtart/yVAi l*itUe*kid*. you think three are nor | up the Savannah river. The Forsyth fair promises to he a very large affair. Frank Gordon knows all about the theory >f sheep ranches. The address at the Forsyth fair will be male by Colonel Tom Hardeman. Tlie Columbus Enquirer is making a hot campaign in favor of Harris. How about that dog law? Is it too early the season to begin to think about it? Reported that Conyers Female college will 4 hMgun '??? "*????? I lie eold. ??n the cainptesme up to Pete's to have their | The lorn by the Talbotton fire amounts to thousand dollars. No insurance. The sugar cane crop in Troup is very good. The cotton crop of Gwinnett county will he picked out by the first of November. Ilooks of suliscription are ojien to receive the lAwrenceville railroad, ild and Brandon engaged in the gold mining business in Cobb county. Leo Melirtens. Savannah's musical genius, has returned from Euroj??e. Two hundred and fifty jicrsons from Augusta on tl??e excursion to Savannah. apple trees, in Hart county, have ???nd crop of rijie apples. Ihxrkdale county wants a board of county . they saw the fire, but it was t*??o late to save judge of the the house or but little in it. Mr. Jordan * was ginning himself, and is satisfied that a matchNt fire to hia cotton, which in a little while had the whole bouse in a blaze. There were about ten bales of cotton con sumed. Thomanville Eiiten*ri-e: General J. B- Gordon, our great soldier and senator, in making a grand fight for the democracy THE COGITATIONS OP A COUNTRYMAN ???K GEORGIA FAIRS 1H FULL BLAST. THE FIELD, THE FARM, THE GARDEN. THE LETTER OP HOH??? SAM. J. T1LDEN. Whisky Flat and a better Three fingered Jack???re*, pretty dears???three fin s'-n????? you here five. Clapp cut off twri???It ??? idng'lar. ton, thar Clapp alnt now alive. 'Tww very wrong. Indeed, my dear*, and Clapp Th?? harl ^ When aft thr mmpexune up to Pete'* to have their But hp *11 --t kinder mv! like, around the bar- Till smith got up, permiiakIn*like, and this re- mark he hov??* "Thar'* a new game down In Friarn, thet ex far ez Beat* eu* hrr* poker and van toon, they call* t!*e I -j- llln' Ife*.' ** Then Brown e.f x ??!*vi-ra> limply hitched hi* chair I oofb for me." and lanky Jiin | he wam't proud, hut be "* n??r who ucklol euchre bed hi* eduea- | up l??enny Fairchild, the achool- Ia which th# Political Exciteaut of tho Promt Day Galls Up Xaay Beaixiacerces of the Olden Tim* wtoa Whig and Domoerat Salad tho Booit???Wodgiag tho Log. Written for The Constitution. As water putteth out a fire, ao doth m rainy day dampen a harbnqu. I was a ru- Tht levui Exhihitka???A Qxaad Display of tho Bead???Fertilisort???Food Well???Peach Treoo???To H ?? ' T> i wd. T*5.14 *1.. T jX * u.i.. t. v n i. n ne iienie* tie lien the seventh district. The people will listen ; minatin??? over the effect of this bad weather and believe him, and his infiueuce will j upon the political situation, and come ti the conclusion that If any body can stand be felt for g??wd. Thoiuasville Enterprise: Hon. William E. Smith has written an oj.cn letter to C. II. C. Willingham, denying in toto the cliarge that he (8mith) favored Felton???s election. This denial was not neeewgiry here, but it may be in the seventh. When Toombs amt Stephens countenance Felton???s candi- ??lacy some men might he green enough t- it Luster can. His lungs are like a pair of heliowses and his hide like a bear skin, and then he's got the spirit of Julius Caesar, which acts like a big fly-wheel to an engine, and keeps it a movin', steam or no steam. Nevertheless. I???m sorry for both of ???em, f< imagine that Tete .Smith would, bnt Tete j they have got to keep on the war-jiath foi ??? sense and principle than to do such thing. Home Bulletin: It seems that the Rev. II. Felton, M. !>.. I>. D., M. C., in speech at Thomas' mills on Friday la-t. ??rgi>t tliat widest of ail old maxims, "that . eoj.lc who live in glass houses should throw stoue*,??? and the helalioring and foi _ Lester, the one-armed hero, said it was beneath the dignity and .here of any laxly to dabble in the jiolitical cesspool. J list at this junc ' i the audience Dock | nd said, ???wool hat,' I The doe- --I. "Shake that head atanre, take some simple word,??? sex he, - ii*e ???s. jaratr.' Now who ran "pell it?" Dog my skin, ef thar was one tn right Thl* ** t th* boy* all wild at once. The chain- W* put in row. And at the head ??ra* Lanky Jim, and at the foot wa* Joe. And high upon the t.ar itself the school master w an r*i??fd. And the tiar keep put hi* glasse* down.andratand leans breeches' and ???j.lowbov?'??? i dumb, for there sat "his???pi tetary" in the audieuce by the side of Mrs. dge Thomas. Augusta News ??? The Georgia railroad sends the road, on its first trij., this morning. Peg Woffington. No. lo, the largest road engine in the state. It is a great deal larger than the immense shifting engine, No. 21, that created such excitement in Augusta rinter. It can easily carry 30 or 40 cars. ; although new and its first trip, started this morning with thirty cars. n rained, >Mtr k> I g*s**d The first word out wa* " parallel." and It hr. Till J.*- waltaed In hi* double ire he drilled them Mexican* in Ran Jarln- flRht. ??mnder mni't no pro ??? that night - The Enterj.rise rejN.rts bilious fever of a serious tyj*e in Newton county. The Htar base hall club, of Covington, won rcenc county premium. Whooj.ing cough and sore eyes are preva lent in I>odge county. Lumjikin has a negro with ears like an hetwUt ih. | dn^ant. The Handersville fair is in full blast and is a success. Gordon county is full of Lester cluba??? got up than PUtol I II* tried m smile, then said, I and they are not stuffed clul**, either. "they had him there." tnd 14U1R v Jim, with one long stride, got up and | took Id* chair. > little kid*' my pretty kid*, 'twu touching i Mr. Henry tump, of Covington, says tliat many gin Imuses are burned because the brush-bands are too tight. New Yoek Express alludes to Hayne, of South (.'amlina, as the ???namesake" of They iaughed with glee, and shout to *ee each I Paul Hayne. A good mativ Ameritan exli- ??n I " ' tors want to lie killed. TUI th* rh*lr gave out " incinerate," and Brown If a said he???d tirdiirm-d When "phthlsl*??? v..wed the m out and hung. they nil sprang up. and o rang Wreek won! on them he taken * they mt dowif again I ??aw in Itllann'seyea flash. , And Itm'wnof (???alavera* wa* a twlotln' hi* mu* Unite. t last Brown *lipjied on "gnelsn" and llllis lie dropped ok hi* chair. ??? the chair grew very white, ami the chair chair Amffitl 1th ' 1," uid hand, and with offcml "eider-duck," and Hick lie- A Gordon county man shxit a negro the uther day becattse the latter wouldn't dance If thr man is caught he will proh- uhly have a dance that will la-t him a long time. Fjiencer 8. Brooks, a brilliant young man, vho formerly lived in Early county, wits as*a*siiiate<l recently in Texas. He was prosecuting attorney for the county in which he wan killed. Two hundrerl and forty cases on the dock- ??f the October term of Richmond superior ???urt. The |N??st-ortice at Odum, Emauticl coun ty, ha* lieen chimgnl to Marysville, John- I son county. 14ton is arriving in Hawkinsville at the laxly for dabbling in jsili-1 trict and attracted the prayerful attention talking for __ George | of pexiple all over the state. In fact, they tell me it???s watched with anxiety by poli ticians from Maine to Texas, and I???ve come to the conclusion that Jim Brown wasn't romancin' when he writ in his letter that "millions of freemen woubl peruse the un- J natural contest with mingled emotions of patriotic hoj??e and palpitatin' fear"???or words to tliat effect. Why, a man told me the other day the political gamblers in New York, who over looked the wlixile United .States, laid made uj> a j??ool upon this race and was :?? hetten on it every day. Good gakes. 1 don???t see hardly what they have got to xlo with it, but he said it would have an intlu- the next presidential election; that ... up at the liaUlw in locomotive works. I straws allowed which way the wind blows; InlaUt ljihia and is immense, but jierfectly I that if Felton wa* elected this time it was metrical in its prop>rtions. It has J ??gn that the jiarty cxmUi lie busted by pmxlerous driving wheels flanking its I union of soreheads with radicals, and tin- mammoth bxiiler, ami is triiiimexl a* ele-1 put all tlieir signs together anxl bet x?? gantly a* pissible, anxl draws a lieautifu! I what???s txi hajipen. In fact, sed he, them tender. The Peg Woffington will run a* I fellows over there will bet on anything just regular through freight engine, anxl I like sports bet on a horse race, and the fur- started out in prime style this morning in I ther x>ff the race the more exciting the bet. charge of Mr. .Samuel M. Whitman, who, in I They???ve gxit stakes already put uj?? as to wh< '(lit ion to being one of the best engineers! is to both* the roaxl, seems built expressly for his giant machine. They run well together, ami the train is conducted by Mr. J. M. I or elected to be saved. Norman. The rolling stxick of the Georgia I . Well, the time is nearly up.* Everybralv railroad is as fine as any in Georgia, anxl the I is wide awake anxl waiting. The contest has ???eg Woffington is another evidence of ini-1 been bitter???mighty bitter. It???s taken roveinent. I |**??wer of ten ]>cniiys txi nail the lies that' .lombiu Enquirer: Sin.e <lic rei??.rt ???t <old-?? |??.wer of philosonhy to endure conunittec.l?? hose clutrge Ihe North and '!??? ???* h ??? n S ?????transpired S.uth Kail road ??a-), nfusin K to n-ram Mr. ""f "* e 1 , o1 ' 1 l ^ , '' ec " Blanchard further time, or to mke. * fc ??> and democrats. Mheu the Dem.e- x xh-ed our citizens have lieen held in | l ??? enes ??* *he mountains used to foi- ii^iise, the meeting' of tlie committee I Lumpkiii on the iqand heinn- secret. Various rumors were afloat T"* 1 * 19 ?????? **???>P h, "> ln ??crythiii B ;*s to wlm would purchase it, hut on yester- I 'V *' 9 ??? a deniocratie ilav afternoon it was sold, and the commit- I 9cho ? 1 I W * >???f h . klsa ?? ??'*????? B>rl. ted. who have laimnsi so faithfully for the I ". ur buck "l' ,0 . lK ' r honorable mten- hest interests of Columhus. adjourned sine ' "" s ' !*??>??? sp.ru run high in them days. At a late hour yesterday after- | " bor ???- . rl ??? cr <' *????? l* ar, >' '???wyera and doe- the committee was called , , ors ' and 1*"!. <: ll * n,a lauenta If a together L F. Garrard, n??ad made bv J*rx??pert ussing tin* bill anxl the plausibility iif their M*lieme, the committee uwanled the road, and a deed was ordered made. This hop about Borne hate Zack Hargrove. ??ompanv is comptised of the members win* I remember the great Harnsoii jUuuw, trmexi the ???Uniunibus Company,*??? with | J* of our town hxed up for a rverml other gentlemen of mUl and are !??'?????? ' ??^2??_ n _ U " kt???then hi Ison -hrtekrd! Jo?? I rate of from two hundred to four hundted how the light lMicun | hales tier xlav. 1 nevx-r know ???->!. lor ItllNon droHss! anxl IMck be I . ... ertaln Rent* *mx*e i??l mI??I "they???ll hn*i- The Dublin IVmt say* the fever has pn*s- | trated all Ihe operatives, and ihe tnr|>eu- u distillery is at a stand-still riH*??l wm rather xlark.anx! e* the I \jr. J. P. Deadw vlcr, of Elbert county, illicit! sr** lUinp. I , : , . . . , . try'll" hen- ri??I up Three Angeit-xl Jack anxl | says he has 4Uff bushels of |a*as in Hie flehl, Cs ke.1 the.Wand yelled: 1 im*1 t??te nutther * mi?? gtiett out till that thar fflSAfepj""'*** *???* M| *- > * Krn * ,,t91 I J. I'. Thomas, elected to the legislature Anxl Mink with Wehsu on hi* hrain. determined to push the road I 2' ecch, 5 m ??? a, ??? a 'l 0 ? n 1?? , I ! cc * ,ur ???V" 1 through. We are reliably informed that , .??? orr "??? e<J , ?? cannon, and hauled it up will work will begin shortly and the road car- 4 JV*?? 01 pen, and was to lire it all day h ried to t hiplev without delav. We wish '?????? ke ??? h ?? democrats feel just as bad as |..s them every sm-eess in this new enterprise, a,b le, and that night it lymred down ram it. and trust they will not stop until Columbus j Keep sluices, and ten of the democrat boys (??????? another outlet | stole the cannon out of a back yard, ami ,?? . * v?? . * ... ??? I dragged it off about two miles and hid it i trsyth Advertiser: Mr. A. J. I bin-1 a swa inp, anxl the rain putout all tlietrack *** a *'??tinmuim*aturn to the Barnes-1 before (lay. Tvescena heap of mad ville Gazette, has this to say concerning I ters j n ro y jjf e an( j beam tell of some, but charge of fraud in the liaraesyille I nolIlill ?? was cvcr niore Ilia dder than them ention. It has iK-en charncterizx-.l whig boy?? Hie next momiu. Thev ripis-d names not remarkable for com-1 i ??? ..Li ???i ???i ... lence as a cheat, fraud, swindle. xhich he will not gather, hut turn his liogs Ih'lnn the bar iIxmIris! Poker Hick and tried I* liN>k rz he Wax- houUn' up authnrltlxsi thet no one elaeenuld And Itroan got down behind the stove allowin' I he *'wa*onld." Till it unmt mid down hlk leg* Ute elndem freely tolled. And M-veral ri-iiU eallisl "Order!" till In hi* aim pie way 1'oor smith In'icnii with "O" "B"???"or"???and he wa* donated away. O, little kl*l*. nty pretty kid*. ??k??wi ???vlillR* | And Isiir tn mind th.tr may lie *harp?? their NiN-llin' Minna-. But Hkeutw *11iiri* their Imwle knives without thotiRlit or rare??? You wants to know the rest, ray dears? Thet'* all! The^otily gent thet lived lo tell about the! Spellin' lie ceitM-d and pNoMi-d. that truthful dren went their way With downeitM lw*h and downnud hearts???but not to >j*??rt or play. For when at eve the lsmiw were lit, and snpj??e h ??- to ??H ,1 Each rhlld wa* *etit, with tasks umloiu* and le?? No in-tti miRht know the aw ful woe that thrilled | As thev dn aim'd of AnRel???s Sjw'lling lice and I Only * Mhoaer. New York Sun. lien Butler on lit* plat form stood. And o er it* plank* he strode, lit* warlike voice was "till for blood, lit- eyra like tnleflrra glowi*d. lie lookx*d upon the pine*of Maine, Ami joy wa* in his bread; ' That shower was hut the summer rain The stonno t the went. Am That Th?? i??n hisrhest and Worcester | from Burke, last week. Is the first no lex tefl in that county since 1S74. Twenty-two new members added MetlMslist chtirrh at the recent rev ington. Twenty-eight divorce cases on the equity ket of Richmond superior court. The brought suit in twenty of the cases. Mrs. K.???sh. isstillon thego,but heisalsmt fagged out. He has lieen playing a l knee* I gmite from the first. Siar-faceil" Gordon and "one-armed" Vaster will make it pretty hot for the Fel- .mites liefore the barbecue is over. There will hardly lie any more Congres- candidates this season. The plat art full. the past two seasons the fool-killer has been around with a stuffed club, and foi m the most of us have lieen spared. Nelly Marshall McAfee,who is well-known ???rgia, is writing ode* to Bob Bunle Burdette is tlie man who leads the hesfrnon the Burlington Hawkeye. K. II. Cabaniss, formerly of Forsyth is practicing law in Alalmma. He is one o the most promising young men ????f our ae juaintanoe. Aaron Alpeoria Bradley, of Savannah, ii ??re in |Hilitica This time he is j Democrat. He made a characteristic speech Savannah the other day. Returned Ettrojiean travelers carry lock* in their coat-tail pockets. Thi Improvement. They used to carry a half pint of cocktail. 'There is not a lawyer or doctor in county???not a drop of liquor is sold county, nor does a white republics there. CartersviUe Express: tVe learn that a lit tie daughter of Mr. Dttxcte, living net ???ity, wa* shot with a gun in the hip v ilav by her brother because she would not randy with him. Doctor Baker r j??ort?? Uiat she will recover. Both eliildre were about ten years old. There are some who say George I.cs. n???t be elected. Such being tin views, they can call on us for the beer when he is not. Those who know have no doubt and those who doubt have no knowledge, Whitaker, of Bike county, a leading mi of the celebrated Arnold convention, x jeeta to the Democratic party because it troubled with "wrings.?????? This is probably the best argumeut tliat lias been brought against the IVinocratic party. Stephen Williams, of Trvmp, with nude and his own labor lms, thisyear.nuule 10 bales of cotton and 3U0 bushels lie has not bought an ounce of guano, and con*x?quentl y has no such bills to settle Mr, Frank Ridley, of Trvmp coun ty,acci dentally exploded lialf a |*mnd of powdi a bureau drawer several days ago. 'W off his moustache and eye-brows and burnt bis fai*e quite badly. The exj>losi< ok off tl??e top of the bureau also. A Mrs. Mason, of <>glcthorpe county killed herself with a double barreled the realm of dead *unMrt*. *rarre darkemsi J gun last week. Ill health the cause. Mrs. Sal lie Sline. while tending a syrup mill in Greene county last Friday, let Iter right hand get eaught in the mill. The haiv ??> crushed that amputation was neces- libel on the character of the ???nresenting the sovereign will of twelve intelligent counties. It is a gross insult to the jasiple of those counties, and in their heart., they cherh.li no re-j-i t for i Ul)lT kl ???, w -,| hnw |, ~, t ' ,| iere )>r wh ??? nr> . the itftrtlc or (.inventton, who make such j, We ??? , , eU ??? , hf|1| whiB5 did ,, al ! make file avMTtioo that It" oja* I poittflulty to kiul tint nun back to Itci-a- ention repre,.nlin K vartotnidaaaau. who tur< s i???, r ,.. Ax i.??? 9tcr if ??? iev djd ,. nt . alld . hotild be the choice ha, lai wisely ana wall. da} , after he ia elected, the aame[unanimity adjusted their differ- |,i ln inaionliilenlial wav who stole it. But enccoslliatof the fifth distrtet. Ilisaiiiat- ,^,.., ??? r Jjm Alexander. I congratulation, and I am proud to I brother Tom. for I don't know exactly how of the |ia- * "The angry people w*nt ii change. They'll get U By and by." ill- ????b.-r eve on Huston town iil like ii l*smt M*on ??tnvt itw It* dovecot* duttered well Tin* western hroac blew *of id mild, nd wild. The greenback j??art> ?? W as. like its i And have we dropped lo tliaf ln v sin Ute Rrecnlsu k dtvn rings. stock they ??^tH*te. Ben Butler on hU platform stand*. Hut weak arc voice and limb; Storm signals flutter in his hand*. HU eye* are dull and dim. Twilight Monologue. an It be that the glory of manhood has passed, t hat it* purpose. It* paarion. its all jvaltsl w ith the fervor that fdl them at ??t, ??? tw tUght ennwa down with the night Is-1 have lived, dreamed, and labored In i*n-iuered jid bright. roal 1 had ali.usl at is taunting tny pain. A* the Tw ilight ivims down with the Night* The glad day*, the bravo yran that were lusty and long. How thev fade on vuage memory ??,v I lK.-tr jovnsrellk a flight I* 4 ?? . ?? sight! ???f jubilant M.ti aith tlie nigh ic wa w in??l?? A* the advent of Twilight and Night. a exhale' t the Twilight and Night. ??? orxhippcil ??? thouMHtl of all beauty and light I* in thine arm*, giv armth fnu Lift me up thy Breast. . , Ere the Tw (light hr merged in the Night I mav draw from thy Nsaun miraculous Breath; A u.t for one# on sonc * uppenmwt height 1 mav chant u* the nation* *ueh music tu death A*fbfil] mivk at the Twilight and Night. ???Paul Hayne. November Harper ROUND ABOUT XH GEORGIA. Tin* t lA^te a new coloml brass lontl v fair a grand auceew*. ??? are all the go in Rome. river unusually low. A Urge amount of shipping Buffalo Bill lias left Savannah fi tuingtoti. e??team whistle will be heanl in Kll>ert< IMh November Miss Joijues, of Mobile, Alabama, d ti-iwer'* >j*ring. Tuesday. Oglethorpe county. OgletLorj-e county will raise half ei meat to do ixer. There are fifty-eight paupers in the Rich mond county poor-house. Game plentiful in Greene county. Opoo- Miin* caught by tlie wholesale. Iron laid to four miles from Royston, on EiWrton Air-Line railroad. {savannah???s (Contributions to yellow fever sufferers. $15,000. New com coming into CartersviUe rap idly. Poultry shipping interest of Dalton very large. vannah. wa* ough two weeks longer, and go hither and thither regardluss of the wind, and tlie storm, and tlie rain, and tlie cold. I was just a t Linkin' what a big tiling this canvass had got to be???how completely it rend??? B cnlTeman| h*-" absorbed the public mind in this dis- 'oiupaiiy of large capitalists democrat got sick, he was afeurd a whig doc tor would pixen him. and vice voce. There were party stores and blacksmith-sho|is ami gristmills. The line was drawn tite between i almost everything, and they hated 8 another as affectionately as tlie* Lester itli other sweet and raved, and snorted, and cavohed/and round like wild cats and hunted cvery- 8, and sent off after some track dogs, but tliat cannon wasent found. It dident come to light nmil the next democratic victory, when one dark night it went ol right in tlie middle of the town and like t?? have skeensl every laxly to death, but n< v tliat it received the plaudits ??? glorious old democratic j*arty. ubition was immolated u|m???? In ???redilections were swallowed up ???f tlie gin ???ersoiial tlie altar of principle and liarmoi realize the truth, "How pleasant it ... for brethren to dwell together in unity.??? . The charge haslteen made tlip)iatilly, that the up|ier end of the district "bulldozed" the convention. I was there all the time, and will state with all gravity the ques tion demands, that no sane xxr sensible ???uId arrive at any such MMMt tt WMJ either knavery nr Irickerv. ami the hhi??h ??.f an ??? thc ,/ , ealie( , shame should mantle the cheek of tlwn-e who in the Maze of intellectual light, the grand and gl< deimxrratic party, honorable in the 1*0*4 tlie only liopeof the toiling millions of continent, whose fidelity to principle and party has oozed out to such-an extei ??? dude .the lioj*c of their being claimed. THE DEATH OF A HERO. | long it takes 'em to get over that sort of hing. It dident matter much in them day ivhcthcr a man was a Methodist or a Uaj, list, honest or tricky; whether he was* smart r thick headed, but it did matter a good deal whether he was a whig demxxrat. When Polk was nominated body was waitin??? for the news, and as the |M??stmastcr jerked the wrapper iff the newspaper and read it out to the crowd, Nic Am berg threw up 1* * and said he was the very they _ could have nominated, ??? catted over and axed tlie jsistmastcr what he said his name was. )mbey was a fair sample of all of ?????? a gissi man and a devoted democrat, and it would have been all the same to him if they had nominated Sam Patch. I don??? there was one in a thousanx ve_ told the difference between whig principles and democratic princi pics. The fact is, there wos???ent very much ij'cak of, except the sjxiils * Washington Post. We feel deeply grieved i I between one cliureli and another church. 1 Most of???em tire just what their fathers and that's reason enough without blitherin' TbeColutnhu- Enquirer says that General Gordon is ???losing" ground. This is prv My a fair statement of the rate, he lias been loosening it in the Seventh district; and this is the sort of ground that ought to be "looted.** The Griffin News, in s{ieaking of the sale of Wimberly's drugstore to Dr. Henry L. WiLain,says that Mr. Foster S. t'h one of the finest prvscriptionists and phar maceutical druggists itt theS.uthern States, has been placed in cliarge. Dr. rha|i not only understands his businc**. b one of tlie most genial and |x??pular gentle men of Atlan ta. A young lady residing near the Half Acre, iu Putnam county, was recently the victim of a most atrocious assault while passing between the houses of her two brothers, situ- tis| aUxit lialf a mile aj??art. The villain udklenty seizeii and blindfolded her ao as to escaj-c detection. Suspicion points to a tramp who had been seen in the neighbor hood a few days previous to the outrage. A liberal reward is offered for the miscreant, and. as the Broad-Axe and Iteniizer truly says, "If caught, he should be burnt at tlie stake ; hanging would prove too pleasant for him." It thinks that this is the third case of the kind tliat has happened in tliat county. The Louisville News and Fanner says have been two burnings in Jefferson ouncing the I brains with any other. dcuthof First "Lieutenant Hiram II. Benner, I But it aint so now, {M??litirnlly speakin?????? ightccnth ini'antry, l\ S. A., who died at I by no means. The reasxxns why a southern ksburgon the morning of October 17th. I man should be an organized democrat was a native of Pennsylvania and was a I frequent as leaves in the ambrosial vale, f the Eighu-en'th Illinois voluit- I wonts to that effect, and a man who d< March 25, 1865; ap}K??intcd second I appreciate some of ???em has got a weak , lieutenant in the regular army June is, lstff. I somewhere either in his judgment or his pa- l pnmioted to the rank of first lieutenant I triotuiu. At least, that???s the way it seen??? May I, 1875. He volunteered to take charge I tome. The other day me ami my Feltx of the relief steamer, John M. Chambers, I darkv (if he don???t vote for Luster I???ll kill fitted out under the direction of the Nation-1 him) was out iu the woods a spiritin' till ???mmission of this I her, and we cum across a tough hickory city.which sailed from St. Louis on the mom-1 log that wouldn't oj??en. The wedg<* ing i??f October 4. The Insri was laden with I would bounce and the axe would lx tunc applies for the settlements and towns along I and 1 was com|iarin??? the old log to the rock- ??? Mississippi river between Cairo and I riblxsi democratic imrty that couldn't l>e Orleans, and had been instrumental in I split. But my darkey said he bail a little, destitute ami suffering I long, t??|**ring wedge in the wagon that l localities, having gone down as far as Grand I called Dr. Felton, and lie tried that; am Gulf and relieved Port Gibson. As every-1 by the time the radical muscle had mauled thing connected with Lieutenant Benner's I it up to the head, the old log had death will be of extreme interest, we give I one end as big as your finger. But he the facts, as far as they can be learned, of I couldn???t get tlie Luster wtnlge, nor tlie Gor- the way in which lie tx"x??k the fatal disease. I don wedge, nor any other wedge or glut to On Friday evening, the 11th instant, while I follow suit: and the old log ain't open yet. the relief boat wa* lying at Grand Gulf. I and Dr. Felton is caught in tlie crack. But a Mrs. Leonard * came on board I if the darkey had a speer and a Corker and and asked i*ormission to remain till I an Arnold to drive, and little Alek and the arrival of the steamer l???argoud on I Bobuel to stand round and grunt ami cut her way up to Greenville. Mrs. Leonard I splinters, I reckon they???ll get the old log had just buried her daughter at Port I open after while, won???t they? Yours, Gibson, and was returning to her husband | Bill Arp. and remaining child at Greenville. Grand Gulf is rigidly quarantined. Rupee are ??? v.tkin* stretched acnsi tSe nails and strevts lead- Pb??fo*raplra for Nothing, ing into tlie city, and uegio guards, armed I Wa-Uington Correspondence of the Chicago Timi with shot-guns and rifles, are posted at each I A visitor lately returned to this city from end of the nqx*s, w ith strict orders to shoot I the Paris exposition relates a new device iy one entering from the country. Mrs. 1 for gathering in the residents of agricultu Leonard jossed around the town, took a 1 ral districts. The trick is so plausible tliat skiff and made her way to the Nat. Lieuten-1 it is bound to be introduced into this coun- anl Bernier Laving only a single-bedded I try. surely in time tube operated at next room gave it totlie lady, who slept on it until | year???s state and county fairs. The game is 1 o???clock Satunlav morning, when the Par-1 played first by means of a display adverttee- goud rome up. Lieutenant Benner accoiu-1 ment, calling attention to the fact that panied the lady on Nani, but in returning. I a certain photographer, anxious tc the gang plaiik slipjted. throwing him I advertise himself, will give away in the mud and water. He oecupied I a photograph for nothing if application is th* bed just vacated bv Mrs. Leonard tlie I made to him within a prescribed time, rest of the night. Sunday morning lie was I There is nothing the average granger so de- aeized w ith the usual symptoms, but during I light* in as obtaining pictures of himself the night his condition became quite x riti- I and family in tlieir best array. Such an axl- ln his delirium it required two string I vertisement never fails to draw hundreds of to keep him in bed. At noon Monday I victims who areanxionaas everybod. his temperature was 10DS. pulse 120, skin I get something for nothing. This i. dry, and tongue very bad. Black vomit I ered by some the great game of life. The seemed imminent. Surgeon Keyes never I result of tht* attempt is thus described: left his bedside. The most experienced 1 The innocent calls uj>ot> tlie photographer nurses were in attendance. At 2 n. in. their I and asks. "Is this the place where I can get efforts seemed rewarded by a reduction of I a pliotograph for nothingT??? the temperature. A gentle*perspiration wa- I "Certainly it is the place." Product* of th* Field, th* Loon and the Pea- dl???Evidences of Agricaltaral Prtaperi- ty-dooocf tk* LaQrzngo Fair. The Newnan fair began Tuesday and concluded yesterday. Poor good days of real enjoyment were had by the people of Coweta and their visiting friends. Some ago the grounds were sold at sheriff???s sale, and an association of enterprising citi zens of Coweta bought them and improved them considerably. They are now in excel lent condition. The association will keep up the annual fairs, and try to make them so successful as to be able to return tlie grounds to the county association, perfectly free from all encumbrances. Four years ago Newnan liad a famously good bur, and ever since then the public lias expected something extraordinary from our little sis ter city. The present exhibition has been all respects satisfactory. Tuesdav there large attendance, and the day was spent in getting everything ready for the succeeding days. In the afternoon ???Kim ball Jackson,??? Colonel Travis??? Griffin stal lion, beat "8am Weller,??? Mr. Bird Berry???s Newnan .-tallion, two straight heats, trotting the best in 2:55. Wednesday there was a fine attendance. The fair fully opened. All the county seemed to come to town, and. as is usual on h occasions, everybody seemed ???flushed??? and happy. All jorts of the exhibition .* largely visited, aud the general verdict that the exhibition was very good in dexed. In tlieattcmoon the track was quite inter esting. ???Kimball Jackson,??? with the lau rels of his previous victory, was quite ready for another in the two in three mile trotting for the day. He met a signal de feat. however, being left by ???Chieftain,??? a su{*erb Kentucky stallion, who will cut a dash at our fair. Private time put the fig ures of ???Chieftain's??? first heat at 2:41, and the second at 2:39???a fine record. There was very interest running??ace between some country horses just after the trot. Thurs day was THE BIG DAY the fair and attracted very large crowds from Coweta and several surrounding coun ties. Tlie number of articles on exhibition was greatly increased, and tlie fair made more interesting every day. At-11 o???elxx???k Captain Henry Persons, of Talbot, addressed a very large crowd on his candidacy for congress. He received fine attention, and was frequently cheered by 1??N hearers. The spectators seemed to take in tlie ex hibition in a sort of general round which was xjuite interesting. In the stables tliere was much to interest the lovers of fine stock. Mr. J. H. Porks exhibited some fine sheep. The show of liogs was unusually large anxl excellent. There were fourteen pens with Tty hogs and pigs in a state of glorious fat ness. The jieople of Coweta are learning the precious secret of raising their own meat. Of blooded cows aud bulls,the show was very creditable. Pa-sing on to the horse stables there was as pretty. a show of colts as one would wish to see. .A look over the stables Newnan and LaGrange would convince yone tliat the quality of Georgia raised horses is being wonderfully improved. Our farmers are learning the economy of good atock in preference to ???scrubs.???* All the colts were shown on the track at nxxm for the premium. The get of ???Sain Weller??? were particularly admired. He stood quite a jatriarcli surrounded by five promising children. This honored parent will attenxl our fair with his progeny. A handsome sixteen-year-old Weller colt, lielonging to Mr. Lumpkin, of Coweta, bore^ff the blue, ribbou over all competi tors. Tlie competition of buggy horses was very spirited. Passing from the lower stock exhibition into the agricultural hall, a fine display of the pnxlucts of the county could be seen. Coweta is one of our best fanning counties, and her fanuers are always ready to show what they are doing. The exhibition of corn, cotton, the grains, sorghum and other fanu oducts. was highly creditable. Iu the ladies??? hall the merchants of New- m made quite a display. Here there was not such a variety of fancy- work as was expected, but what was slmwii was finely executed. One notable exhibit beautiful ladies linen thread hand kerchief shown by Mrs. Daniels and pro- ???ounced exquisite by lady critics. Miss 'ulberaoii, of Atlanta will exhibit it at our fair. In tlie afternoon a coll race between Dr. Divine???s brown filly and a colt owned by- Mr. Glover, of Heard county, created quite an enthusiasm. The Divine colt won ny a length after a hard run of a mile. A jacing race between Mr. Berry???s ???But ton??? and a Covington horse was ready when rain came in torrents and iuterferrrd. A mule race with six entries created much fun and enthusiasm. All Hew the track and ran in four or five directions, but one came out a xjuartcr of a mile ahea> and won the cup. The crowd was driven from the ground: ?ry soon, and the day???s festivities had : m??1 close. At night the city was chuck full of people, all in good humor and bent l having as good a time as possible. The court-house was crowded with white and negroes to hear Captain Persons sjseak again. His effort elicited frex|uent and loud applause. He was followed by Mr. ???obb, of Carroll, and ex-Scnator Brewster, of Coweta, both of whom seemed to ???ess the crowd very favorably. Yesterday the fair closed quite successful ly. The crisp, clear day brought out every body, and the day was tlie must pleasant * ' the four. As I left Newnan, Major Moses, of Co lumbus. was s;??eaking to a very large crowd the grounds, in the interest of Captain Persons. Much of the success of the fair resulted from the labors of Mr. Bird Berry, Mr. Ar- lando Mcljemlon, the efficient secretary- of the association, and Mr. W. IR Davis, the n}??erintendeiit of the grounds, who did all that could have been wished. Dr. \V. H. White, of Atlunta was one of the most interested sj>ectators. Otis Jones, former ly of our city, wore a blue badge and slid efficient work as a director. Friday???s suc cess closed what Newnan may be sure was a successful fair. F. H. R. Make It Pay???Georgia Crop Hawa-Uaa- eral Agricultural Prospect*???Hot** of ImUmt???Wk*at Planting. Fact* and Figure*. Loxpor, October 19.???Ever since the foil ure of the City of Glasgow bank the stock exchange has ???been tilled by all sorts of ru mors raised by jobbers to raise or depress prices, Those who transmit them and cir culate them in America may possibly have the same interests to serve ax those who cir culate them here. It may be deluded upon, that anything not sent in these dispatches on this subject has not taken such tangible shaiie as would be worthy of attention. The Times??? financial article, comment ing on the official report of the investiga tors into the affairs ot the city of Glasgow bank, says the shareholders will now* have some light thrown upon the con dition of the bank???s affairs, and most sombre light it is. Tlie bank has lost, on a moderate and probably favorable estimate, six million two hundred thousand pounds. This is a most disastrous statement for the unhappy share holders, and we need hardly say that a loss of such magnitude could never* have fallen on them but for reckless mismanagement, to begin with, and deliberate and long con tinued fraud practised to hide niat misman agement. The story set forth in the rej??ort is one of the most disgraceful in the history of banking. THE BANK STATEMENT. N ew Yoek. October 19.???The weekly state ment of the associated banks show the fol lowing changes: Leona decrease ??2,011.290 Specie increase ??? l.fW.TOu Legal tender decrease ?????? 1,321.700 Circulation increase 8,100 Reserve increase... 709,150 The banks now bold ??(,240.750 in excess of legal requirements. CLOSING STOCK QUOTATIONS. Stocks closed quiet as follows: .110*4 Chicago A N. W 40% ???.U% Preferred 71% ...67 Rock Island 114 ...7x5% Western Union. TO MAKE IT PAY. If farming is engaged in for profit, fhen be sure to lay in a supply of good tools and plenty of them. Discard the worn out, old- fashioned plows, broken hoes, and all such implements of agriculture, and procure ones of more recent invention, tliat you may do more and better work. Make ail the manure you can. and deposit it in your land; it will never go to protest. Adopt a rotation of crops, and rotate only on tlie amount of land you can fertilize liberally, and plow thoroughly. Providence has given us a good state to live in; has diversi fied it with hills and valleys, woods and lains; intersected it with rivers, and the most beneficial means to supply the wants our nature and guard us against the in clemency of the seasons. It b wrong that much of the state is not in the hands of men who would improve iu The unfruit ful appearance of the red hills and pine thickets, in many localities, is a tacit re proach of negligence. If diligence, skill and liberality were exercised by many of ners of these lamb, their laNjrs would be crowned with success. They would be clothed with the refreshing ver- due of grain and grass, orchards and sliade trees, and be enriched with such abundant cgetables as are conducive to our suste nance. FEED WELL. We advise our farmers to feed their hogs well liow, and fatten the pork os soon os jus- sible. As a general tliiug, many persons put off the fattening of hogs too late. If you wish to have good fat hogs gp to work now. It b poor economy to keep too many slioats over through the winter. Save a few choice sows, and when they go to breed ing, with care and m>od management tlieir pigs will make fine hogs next winter. WHEAT PLANTING. In some sections of the country farmers are raising wheat by what b called the English method???that is drilling the seed. The seed are planted in rows two feet apart, and the grains are put three inches apart. The wheat is cultivated twice???once as early as practicable in the spring, and again when the wheat b about six inches high. Some think the rows should not be so far a)art. This plan b being tried in Virginia and Kentucky and some other states. READ. A fanner should read and study his busi ness just as any other man would* hb biisi ness. Nob only this, but if he cxjiects to keep liis boys on the farm, there is much to lcam that would not only benefit them but make them more cheerful and better satis fied with farming. There are facts in plant ing that the cultivator of the soil should know, aud when he knows these facts, lie can discover better ways of doing things, and he will find out tliat there are easier methods to arcomplbh the same results. When a fanner picks up a hoe. a plow- harrow, and knows he is providing the xlitions of chemical changes, he b apt to do hb work intelligently and is dbi??osed more than ever to fall in love with liis call ing. FERTILIZERS. gratifying to state that frequently letters are received at The Constitution office making inquiries aNiut fertilizers, and particularly of home-made anicles. We repeat, as we have often said, farmers shoula rely as much as possible upon their animals for manure. The manure pile cat be added to in various ways. Farmer, d< you keep any sheep, and do you salt them on the worn sjiots m your fields? Do you keep hogs, and do you fatten them in tlie pea-fields? Are your horses, and mules, and cattle kept in littered stalls -or yards at night? Is tne decayed animal ana vegeta ble matter about your farm added to the manure mile? Is the waste from your kitchen, the water front your tubs,* the muck from your swamps, or leaves from yonr woods put on tlie manure pile? Now see how large a manure pile you ive manufactured on the farm, and will be surprised to see how much you have to help bring up the cotton yield, and how much to assist in tlie production of bread, fruits and vegetables. PEACH TREES. It b just as easy to grow a good variety of peaches as a poor one, and it certainly is profitable to have nice fruit. Tliere more delicious fruit. There is but little trouble or expense in raising peaches, and it is ea*y to have healthy trees. After setting out trees, keep the middluof them trimmed so that the air can circulate freely through the heads. Never permit dead limbs or diseased ones to remain, but cut them close to the main limbs or branches. leave snagson the trees, as they work harm. Some fruit growers complain of the injury to tlieir trees from borers or grubs, who accumulate about the bar, just below tlie suface of the soil. By examining the trees they find the grub some six inches below the ground. Keep the trees pruned and kept low; ocpasionally stir tlie soil around the roots, ami every spring apply superphosphate of lime, spreading it around the trees as far as the roots extend, forking it in lightly, then tlie peach orcliard will be in a nice fruitful condition and not apt t< be troubled by borers or by disease. GEORGIA CROP NEWS. Crops in Johnson county are good. The chestnut crop b very promising. An abundant apple crop in Whitfield county. The broom-corn yield of Whitfield county very fine. Large wheat crops will be put in in Cobb county. Crops in Walton county are turning out well. Frank Flynt, a Spalding county boy picked 704 pounds of cotton in one day. Wheat sowing commenced iu For county. Cotton aud com crops of Worth county are very tine. A tremendous crop of sugar-cane in Ter rell county this season. The Wilkinson county apple crop b very fine. Mr. J. A. Hickson, of Houston county, will make 12 bales of cotton to the mule. Mr. J. Clark, of Montgomery, made fifty- live bushels of com on one acre of land. The hot and dry weather has caused a fail ure in the turnip crop in Johnson county. The farmers in Terrell county are prejmr- ing their land for wheat and oats. A large crop will be sown. of Wkitolaw Reid???s Box of Diapatehoo, and Xzkaa a Few For- finest Side Remarks la Relation Tkeroto. A Doctor Take* 180 Grain Morphine and 300 Groins Chloral In Forty- Eight Hoars, and Yet Elves. For some vears past Mr. R M. Woolley, of thb city, lias been preparing a cure for the opium* afflicted. 1 This remedy was introduced to tlie public ) with tlie startling announcement tnat it ; was not an ???antidote,??? but a "cure.??? In New York, October 1G.???I have read the other words, that it did not simply assuage publication, in th. Tribune of the Mh in:, ^^.^u^^^^icn^f purporting to be translation, of cipher tel- aU d( -,irc for it. He 'claimed that it rente- egranis relating to tlie canvass of the votes died the deficiencies of all other ???cures,??? in Florida at the presidential election ???f i ??"d instead of leaving tlie patient with a ib-?? ??.wi i _ ??? i , ??? i ??? . a . : craving for the antidote quite as fatal as the ???8.6, and have looked over tho* printed in cravi ???* for |he drug itse V f , stored him .ib- the Tribune of this nioming relating to the ! solutely to hb usual condition of health canvass in South Carolina I have no knowl edge of the existence of these telegrams, any information aNtut them except what has been derived from or since the publication in tlie Tribune. So much for these telegrams generally. I shall speak yet more specifically as to some of them. First, those which relate to an offer pur porting to have becu made in behalf of some members of tlie state board of can- assers of Florida to give for pecuniary compensation the certificates of democratic electors who had been actually chosen. None of these telegrams, nor any telegram communicating such offer, or answering such offer, or relating to such offer, was seen by me, translated by me, or the contents of any manner made known to me. I had no knowledge of the existence or the purport of any telegram relating to that ubject, nor did I learn the fact that such offer of Florida certificates liad been made until long after the Ctk of December, at which time the certificates were delivered, and tlie electoral vote cast, and when the information casually reached me, as of a past event, it was accompanied by tlie state ment that the offer liad been rejected. Secondly, as to the publications in tlie Tribune this morning, purporting to be translations of cipher telegrams relating to the canvass of the votes in South Carolina 187G, which I have seen since 1 wrote the foregoing, I can s{ieak of them no less defi nitely and positively. Not one of such FINANCIAL. GOLD??? Buyl"* EXCH Buyi BONb CONSTITUTION OFFICE. Atlanta October 19,1878. ...1001 Selling. 10! Ueorgia 6*... 101*102 Atlanta City T,.. ! 7a... lOiglOO Atlanta City 8a. IU, Georgia 7, goW..107(.??tm Atlanta 10a.:. 1121 Oeon!ia(h......_..lioiill2 Augusta City 7*.. ~ T?? 85 Savannah City... D|)100 Macon City Ga. R. R. fa ...^----- .-I?? 108 Gst - R - *??? 6*. \\cetera R. K. of a. A \V. p. R.R. n( telegrams, either in??? cipher or translated, was ever shown t???? or its contents made known to me. No offer or negotiation in behalf of the state canvassers of South .'arolina, or any of them, or any dealing with any of them in resjiect to the certifi cates to electors, was ever authorized or sanctioned in airy manner by tue, directly or through any other person. I will add that no offer to give tlie certificates of any returning board or state canvassers of anV state to the democratic electors, in consid eration of promises of office, or money, or property; no negotiations of tliat nature in behalf of any member of such U>ard with any such members, and no attempt??? to lufiuence the action of any .such member, or to influence the action of any elector of president and vice-president by such motives, was ever en tertained, considered or tolerated by me or by anybxjdy within my influence, by my consent or with my knowledge or acquies cence. No such contemplated transaction could at any time have come within the range of my power without that power be ing instantly exerted to crush it out. A belief was doubtless current that the certifi cates from the state of Florida conforming to the actual vote of the fieople, were in the market. ???I have not the slightest doubt in the world,??? said Dr. Suite ns tall, who was in Florida at the time, in a recent interview with the Herald, ???tliat that Florida vote could have been bought, if Mr. Tilden liad lieen dishonorable enough to desire it done, for a great deal less than $50,000 or $20,000. It was known that either one of the two members who composed the majority of tlie Florida state canvassers could control its action and give the certificates to the democrats. Either one xif them could settle the presidential controversy favor of the democratic candi dates, who lacked but one vote. How ac cessible to venal inducements they were ..i the testimony of McLin, chai. board of state canvassers t in his examination before the I???otter committee in June last He admitted tliat the true of tlie people of Florida was iu favor of the democratic electors, and that the fact even ap;??cared on the face of the county returns, including among them the true return from Baker county, notwithstanding the great frauds against the democrats in some county returns. He also confessed that in voting to give tlie certificates to the republican electors, he acted under the influence of promises that he should be rewarded in case Sir. Hayes became president, adding that ???certainly these promises must have lmd strong control over my judgment and action.??? After the certificates x*f ** ~ Louisiana returning Niard liaxl lieen peatcdly offered to Mr. Hewitt and others tor money, they were given favor of the republican electors, who had been rejected by a large majority of the voters, and members of this return ing Niard now jkjsxcss the most iuqiortant federal offices in tliat state. The pregnant fact always remains that none of these cor rupt Nanis gave their certificates to the democratic electors, but they all did give them to the republican electors. I had a perfectly fixed purpose from which I never deviated in word or act???a purpose which known to or ussuiued liv all with whom ls in habitual communication. If the presidency of the United States was to be ais)Mised of by certificates, to be won from corrupt returning boards by any form of venal inducements, whctherofficesor money, I was resolved to take no tart in the shame ful competition, and I took none. The main interest of the victory which resulted in mv election was the expectation that through the chief magistracy a system of reform, similar to that which hud been accom plished in our iiietroiiolis and in our state administration, would lie achieved in the federal government. For this object it was necessary that I should be uutramtiieled by any commitment in tlie choice of ??? . "Certainly it induccdT His kidneys acted freely, and at I "Well, 1 am ready the hour of 10 p. m. the crisis was ran* "All right, tidently stated t*?? have been tossed. I Then the victim is posed. He drops into and lie wa* considered out of danger. I the usual attitude of grim consciousness He had a relay**, however, and yielded up I and suou the preliminary work * his brave young life at 2:30 Thursday m ing. It is???a matter of deep regret that expedition, so noble and beneficent i ends and achievements, could not have been supplemented by a safe return of every man who accompanied iu We trust ??????* 1 '- ' ???* jrtims to the^rourge. shown. "Ah. I am glad that The artist disapj-ears. 8x aith i he savs "There dollars? dollars. TI: packet of photographs, i the hands of the caller Sve dollars to fa liaih her victories no less renowned than | charge for priming a dozen photograph: d this gallant young officer, wlm I "But I thought this was the place where laid down his life in succoring those stricken I photographs are given away for nothing.??? down by disease and famine, is entitled to I "So it is. Count the cards you have in the grateful remembrancx?sof a whole nation. I hand ami you will find vour dozen contains and wherever unselfish heroism and a noble I thirteen. The odd one we give you.??? .... .. Here is something the average visitor can | not surmount, anxl a* he has a lot of phot/ graphs that lie would not have other*is bought, he never refuses to pay. Tue device is one tliat is outsixle c the law, for the photographer claims to give value received in the shape of photographs. Bleak, chilly March and November are the two worst months of the year for thc*e suffering with pulmonary diseases. Keep Dr. Bull???s Cougn Syrup near by and sufferers will be able to brave this rough weather without danger. ICE AND FROST. Tier First of the .Season. Yesterday morning early-risers saw a wel come sight. There was a very heavy, white, killing frost. It covered everything and re sisted the sun rays until 8 o'clock. Not only was there fix*!, but there wa* ice. A gentleman on Haw son street says he saw ice in a pan. Another gives a similar testimonial. Three citizens of Decatur say their thermometers stood at 32. The ther mometer at tlie United States signal office went as low as 36. There was ice in Decatur, and it was seen plainly in several places. county. On the 29th of September the The frost was one of the heaviest ever seen house of Mr. John Scott was destroyed by in the city. All (lay it was very cool, fire. On tlie 2d of October the gin house Lookout for another heavy frost this??? mom- and fixtures of J. G. Jordan were burned ing. N. Y. Central.. Lake Shoie.". ~ 67* Rock Island... Illinois Central.... Pittsburg GENERAL HUMPHREYS* REPORT. Washington, October 19.???The annual rei*ort of General Humphreys, chief of en gineers. was submitted to the secretary of to-day. In the course of his rejH.rt he recommend* that the following amounts, if appropriated by congress, may be profitably ;pended: Virginia???James river. $188,000; Norfolk harbor. $100,t*j0; Appomatox river. $30.1*i0; Great Kanawha $500,000; Little Kanawha $8,700. N'-rth Carolina???Cape Fear river. $50,000. South Carolina???Charleston harbor, $500.- 000. Georgia???Savannah river and harbor, $150,000. Florida???Pensacola harbor, $20,000; Cedar Keys. $50,000; Apalachicola river, $20,000; Black Warrior and Tom Bigbee. $100,000. Alabama???Alabama river, $100,000. Texas???Galveston harbor. $150,000; ship channel. Galveston hay, $200,000; Sabine ios-i. $30,000. Louisiana???New Orleans harbor, $200,000; removal of obstructions in Red River, $75,- 000; improvement of its mouth, $150,000. Early County News: Farmers say their present prospect for pork is more flattering than at any time since the war. Gilmer county will ship some fifteen thou sand dollars??? worth of beeves, hogs and sheep to Atlanta this season. Mr. W. B. Bostwick, of Newton county, lias old-field peas, the hulls measuring eighteen inches and containing eighteen full J. Kinsliew, of Pulaski county will make sixty bales of cotton and two thousand bushels of corn with six inulra. He will also make about one thousand gal lons of syrup. Mr. J. J. Hazier, of Eastman, owns 1,000 head of sheep, of which a profit of $1.????00 realized during the past summer. The expence, of keeping his flock is about $2u0 a year, including shepherd's salary, salt, etc. By next spring, he will have a flock of some 2,500 by the addition of 1,000 lambs. Judge Wright, of Dougherty, on alarm of 70 acres of open land, made this year l.-Yil bushels of corn. 150 bushels of oats. M bushels of wheat, 300 bushels of peas, 250 bushels of potatoes, 10 bales of cotton and $100 worth of cane. He also sold from his farm $800 worth of oak and hickory \ Jonesboro News: Mr. Fullerton says lie has the best crop of com and cotton ever made on his farm, and a section of country one and a half miles wide, and five mile- long, never suffered for rain during the r Fever ??? As Light as Ocean Foaw " is a simile often used. But ocean foam is light weight, deceptive and vapid; Quantity vs. quality. Ladies, use Dooley's Yeast Pow der, and vour baking will be a delight to the eye and the palate. Cake, bread, biscuit, jot- pies. and puddings all bear witness to its magic. Dr. WUhefT* Antl-Periedle and Ague Teak! Wilhoft???s Tonic has established itself as the real infallible Chill cure. It is univer sally admitted to be the only reliable and harmless Chill medicine now in use. Its efficacy is confirmed by thousands offeertifi- cates of the very best people from all parts of the country. It cures malarious dis eases of everv tvpe. from the shaking agues of the lakes and vallevs to the raging fevers of the torrid zone. Try it! It has never been known to fail. W hexlock. Finlay Co.. Proprietors*. New Orleans. For sale bv all Druggists. ST may I d&wUxn octl9 dAw2w THE CROP PROSPECTS, A General Walk Over the Field* In Cultivate Washington, October 18.???The official agricultural reports place the average dition of the com crop at 96, an increase of 4 over the September average. The New England, middle and Gulf states show small decline. Tlie South Atlantic states maintain their September condition, while all other sections indicate improvement. The outturn of the crop will not vary largely from 1,300,000,000 bushels. The October returns of wheat do not terially change the statistical aspects of the crop. The final returns will not be made until tlie December returns have been tabu lated. The New England and middle states indicate a slight advance upon the p yield. The gulf states indicate more decided advantage. owi . the superior crop of Texas. The south At lantic states ana the southern inland states show a very heavy decline, which, how ever. is more than compensated by the gen eral increase in the Mississippi valley and on the Pacific coast. The yield, on the whole, will be in an ad vance of last year, and from present indi cations will exceed four hundred million bushels. The indications favor an oat crop larger than the crop of 1877. Tate can save Money by using Dooley???s Yeast Powder, for less butter, flour, eggs, etc., are required to ar complish satisfactory results. This is not needless hap-bazaru statement, but a fact verified by the experience of many thou- execute the official trusts of tlie govern ment and untraiutueled by any obligations to sficcial interests. I had been nominated, and I was elected, without one limitation??? my perfect independence. To have sur rendered or compromised the advantages of this position by a degrading comjtetitiou for returning board certificates would have been to abandon all tliat made the victory desirable???everything which cxjuld liave sustained me in the larger struggle that vic tory would have imposed upon me. 1 was resolved to go into the presidential chair in full command of all my resources for use fulness or not at all. While thus abstain ing from , an ignominious comi*etition for such certificates, I saw these certificates ob tained for the republican electors, who hud not been chosen Dy.the |*eople, and denied to the democratic electors, who had been chosen by the jieople. These false and fraudulent certificates, now confessed and proven to have lieen obtained by corrupt inducements, were afterwards made the pretexts for taking from the jieople their rightful choice fur the presidency and vice-presidency. These certificates were declared by the tribunal *to which congress had abdicated the function of deciding the count of the disputed electoral votes, to be the absolute and indisputable conveyance of the title to the chief magis* tiacy of the nation. The state of Florida, hicli had united all her executive, Iegisla- and judicial powers to testify to con gress, long before the count, who were her genuine agents, which has by statute caused recanvass, the issue of new certificates, and the formal sovereign authentication of the right ami time of electors to deposit the votes entitled to.be counted, was held to be incajiahle of communicating to _ gress a fact which everybody there knew, and which cannot now tie disputed. Con gress, though vested by the constitut with authority to count the electoral v?? though unrestricted either as to the time when it should receive evide to the nature of tlie evidence, and sub ject to no ap{??eal from its deck'* declared to have no power to guide count by any information it could obtain bv any authority which it might accept from the wrong and betrayed state vote was about to be falsified. Tlie nion- ???trous conclusion was thus reached that the act of one man, holding the deciding vote in N*ard of state canvassers???for without his concurrence the frauds of other returning hoards would have failed???in giving certifi cates known at the time, aud now by himself confessed, to be false anxl fraudulent anxl confessed to have lieen obtained by pro of office???certificates wh*r>??* character known months liefore congress could liegin PROMISED SO MUCH was received by the public with uiativ mis givings. But all doubts were soon cleared away ny the prompt success of the remedy. Certificates from all classes of the jieople came (touring in, and Mr. Woolley was jus tified. There were pa(iers from clergymen, jiracticing physicians and jirofessionals. all testifying to the absoluteness and perma nency of the cures worked by tlie remedy, under tlieir own (personal knowledge. But, as seldom liajipens, there is one test that covers all the (stints of the rest in the opium cure. If Mr. Woolley had never re ceived a single certificate but this???if he had never effected a cure but this???his med icine would stand as the best in America accredited by this one case. tue history of the cask. Years ago, Dr. A. A. J. Riddle, of Alaba ma, received a terrible wound. While suf fering from this he was forced to use mor phine in pretty good quantities. Befxire he was aware of it tlie awful habit had en slaved him, and, unable to resist it, he sank dee(??er and deeper into its power. He neg lected his business, became wholly unfit for the attention of his large property, and fell into a fearful condition, tic rested in a deep stupor for month after month, and gave up everything in life. He was a wealthy man, jirotninent in his state, and surrounded by friends. Of course, they tried everything that was possible to break the dreadful habit. He tried remedy after remedy, but of no avail. The habit only settled the closer about him, and held him more heljiless in its embrace. Hundreds of dollars and inontlis of heroic endeavors were spent in the effort to reclaim him self, but all hopelessly. At length, in desjieration, Dr. Riddle came to Atlanta, determined to try once more and finally txi cure himself or Ilie in the effort. When he reached the city he could not walk. He had to be carried up and down stairs. He was then taking morphine and iiloral regularly as follows: Thirty grains of morphine in the morning. One hundred grains of hydrate of chloral at toon. Thirty grains of morphine at Rundown. One hundred grain* of chloral about ten o'clock. NEXT morning. Sixty (60) grains of morphine in the morning. Fifty (50) ??? ?????? chloral at noon. Sixty (60) 44 44 morphine at sundown. Fifty (50) > ??? ??? chloral about ten o'clock. ( Amounting in all to one hundred and eighty (180) grains of morphine aud three hundred (300) grains of chloral in forty- eight (48) hours, and was in a truly pitiable and critical condition. He went to a most excellent iimtitution in the city, aud ap plied for relief. The managers received him doubtfully, telling him with admirable candor that they believed his case was hope less. After a few days of trial and intense suffering they tolxl him they could not bone e him. He was then lying at tlie . (mint of ilcath. Every condition of his life was abnormal and artificial, and it seemed impossible tliat human skill could restore all tlie jarred and shattered forces of his system to their natural and hurnio- nious action. It was thought that the fitful flare of life would flicker out at every ment. In this conxlition he (Woolley) took charge of the case, feeling tliat at last his metlicine was put to its supreme test. Al most immediately I>r. Riddle began to yield to his treatment. The worn and broken system resjionded promptly to the magical remedy. It is not worth while to follow him through all the stages of recov ery. It is sufficient to say that to-day he is perfectly sound, healthy and vigorous, and lias left off the antidote, and now has no desire for either. We could hardly be lieve it if we had not ourselves seen it, the jiiarvelous cliauge effected in Dr. Riddle ii so sluirt a time. From the trembling, help less imbecile of a few months ago, then weighing 109 and now 165. lie is a sturdy, steadfast man???strong, clcar-headcd aiid eager. His old ambitions, hojies and ener gies have come lrnck to him, and he ' anxious to get at his work. He savs ti last ten years seem to hint a horrid dream, blurred and dim. He looks hack on them with aversion, and lias no more desire return to them than a traveler, standing revived and refreshed in bracing air and sunshine, would go back into a musky cave in whose foul vajiors lie had well-nigh lxist his life and reasou. ?? It is a strange physiological fax???t that the cure ha* not only restored Dr. Riddle's sys tem to its normal working, leaving not a single organ out of harmony, hut has re stored even his old-titne habits. For in stance, it was liis invariable habit to arise at 4 o???clock in tlie morning aud go at the su|??ervision of his farm work. After years of .stujmr and oblivion, lie finds his old habits restored, and after a night of calm restfulness he awakes every morning at 4 o???clock. In short, Mr. Woolley lias built a new man out of the heljiless and inert ass of nervous tissue tliat came to him a w a months ago. I)r. Riddle is a prominent citizen of Ma rengo county, Alabunia, and is well known all over the state as a man and jihysiciati of high character and absolute integrity. Those who doubt the truth of tlie above statement, or any j??art of it, can write to Dr. Kiddle and learn that we have tolxl but half the truth. This cure has been witnessed by some of the first-class physicians of At lanta. Dr. Riddle desires to express his everlast ing gratitude to Mr. Woolley and hosjiitablc family for their unwearied and tender kindness to hitn during his days of lielji- lessness and suffering. He was taken to their home anxl given all tlie kindm>s.s and syuijiuthy that he coulxl have had from his own jieojile. ??? As for us, it has given us jileasure txi record from I>r. Riddle???s xiwn lips the story of tliis wonderful cure. Mr. Woolley is a inxist excellent man, one of our best citizens, anxl the cure he has efix?cted in this case is simjily miraculous. BY TELEGRAPH. NEW YORK, Octotier 19.???Stock* strong. Money 6@7*4. Exchange???long $1 79N; short *4 85??? 4 . Governments quiet State Bond* strong. LONDON, October 19.???Noon.???Consols, money. 94 5-16; account 9* 7-16. Erie 16. The national bank of Bx4gium has raised its discount rate from 3%u>4% percent PARIS, October 19???1:30 p.m.???Rentes 113f,25c. COMMERCIAL. CONSTITUTION OFFICE, Atlanta, October 19, 1878. Atlanta Cotton Market. Market quiet; middlings 8%c; low middlings 8J4c. receipts to-day. By wagon 201 Air Line Railroad 228 Georgia Railroad Central Railroad 2t Western and Atlxintic Railroad so West Point Railroad us 701 -23,719 .27,430 Grand total 27,521 SHIPMENTS. Shipments to-day.. -21,841 Stock on hand....-.??? 5,680 COMPARATIVE STATEMENT. Receipts to-day.??? 701 Receipts same day laat year. 843 Decrease ??? 142 Receipts since September 1 .27,521 Ala. 2d i ??& Cent. R.R...101(3106 M. & W. R.R. 7*.1C Mont A W P R R W. A; A.R.R. Le*- Atlanta Water... 5 . 980100 South Wee R.R.. 92?? 91 7U0 73 Atlanta Str???t RR 940100 Shipments previously Total Corresponding xlate lost year...???, Increai -17,940 5,680 BY TELEURAPIV. LIVERPOOL, Octxdier 19.???Noon.???Cotton easier tion and export 500; rex'eipts 400; no American; future* 1-32^1-16 cheaper; upland*, low middling December delivery 5 21-;??!(??5%; January and Feb ruary delivery 5%; Man-h delivery 5^; new crop shipped iu November and December per mil LIVERPOOL, October 19.-3:00 p. m.-Sak* to- 6 1-16; October and November xlclivery 5 23-32: December and January 5 19-32; December anxl January delivery 5 19-32; January and February delivery 5 19-32; March utid April delivery 6^6; May and June 5 11-16. NEW YORK.October 19???Evening.???gotten mar- ???t quiet; sale* 796 bide*; uplands 10; Orleans 10^4; net receipts to-day 181; gram 4,002; futures Novem U>r 9.77m+K 78 March 10.03&10.0I December. 9.79^9.80 April ..I0.12ttl0.ll January 9.86^9.87 May.- ... 10.22 Consolidated net receipt* ??? .???.22,500 GALVESTON, October 19???Cotton in good de mand ; middlings 9%; low middling* 9; good ordi nary 8%; net receipt* 2,812 bale*; gram 3,482; mica 3,208; stxick 58,909. SAVANNAH, October 19. - Cotton qnix>t; mid- stock 108,743. NEW ORLEANS, Ortolnsr 19.???Cotton .quiet; middlings 9%; low middlings 9%; good ordinary nominal; net receipt* 1,012 lialcs; gross 1,CG0; mica 1,500; stxick 40.302. MOBILE, October 19.???Cotton puiet; middling* 9%; low middlings 9; good xirdinary net re ceipts 880 bales; grow ...; sales 250; stock 14,559; export* coastwise 666. CHARLESTON, Octobx??r 19.???Coton quiet anxl nininal; middlings 9%; low middling*9^; good ordinary 8%;net receipt*5,420 bales; gross ...; sales 15,00; stock 83,075. Atlanta Produce Market. RU TTER-^Choice 20022; fair 17018; common JLTRY???Chickens, cocks, 12%al5; hens, 20; spring chickens, large 18; medium 16; small 12*14. BEES W A X???23a23>4. bring Ga6%; unpeeled 2*: apples, t Live Stork Market. Sheep 3a4>4; common rattle X%*4; good cattle 4a4j4; choice cattle 4J??oi; extra cattle 5*5%; North Georgia cattle 2}??u; Tennessee 4a5. Grocery Market. WHEAT???95??$1 20. WHEAT BRAN-80. OATS???40a45: seed 50*00. HAY???Timothy90a$l 00; Clover nooe CORN'???Scarce at 72%. MOLASSES???26. SYRUP???New Or! t:OFFEE???Rio 1G 129. SUGAR???Standard A 10; white extra C 9%; ex tra C 9%: yellow 8a9; New Orleans 8al0. FLOUR???Superfine $4 25; extra $4 50&S4 75; family $5 00; extra family *5 50a$5 75; fancy $6 00a BACON???Clear sides 7^; sugar-cured ham* 13. GREEN MEATS???none. BULK MEATS???Clear rib aides6J4; bulk stripe LARD???Tierces kit 9%; kegs and cans 10; rc- ned 9. CRE IM CHEESE???11. Mlweellancona. SALT???Virginia 81 40; Liverpool $1 IS. LIME???fl UOhSI 25. KAILS???$2 50. LEATHER???Hemlock sole 20*25; white oak 30a ??; Georgia upper 28a40; lining skins 4 00*89 00 31 HIDES-lOoll. BAGGING???Jnte 2 Ihs 13; l%ltal2& IRON TIES???Y bundle 2 35; P.C.T65. POWDER???Blasting 3 50*4 00; rifle 6 4a SHOT???Drop 1 75; buck 2 00. Trade active and prices fully maintained. Man factured Tobacco ??? very common and unre liable 40c; fair common 11-inch 42*45; medium 45a50; extra medium 11 and 12-lnch 50aC0; fine 11 and 12-inch Cua75; extra fine and fancy styles 75a What la Portaline? This question is thus briefly anxl truth fully answered. Portaline, orTahler???s Veg etable Liver Powder, xlerives its name from the fact that it regulates those jxirtals of the body through which tlie most dangerous xliseases make their entrance into the human system.. Simjile roots and herbs, for which we are indebtexl to bountiful nature, have lieen scientifically cxmibined, and jiresented as a cure to all suffering with Constij??ation, Biliousness, Dys*'??????" ! * ??????* ???*???**???*?????? ??? : - ing from torpit Package. For sale by Collier & Co., Pinson A Pea cock, and Hutchison A Bro. 411 apr25 deowl yAweowly Consumption Cared. An old physician, retirexl from jirartice, having i>lact*l in his liatixls by an Fast Inilia missionary the formula of a siuijile vegeta ble remedy for the sj*ctHly anxl jieniianent ??? ire fur consumption, bronchitis, catarrh, ithma, ami all tnroat anxl lung affections, alsxi a jixaxitive and raxlical cure for nervous debility and ull nervous complaints, after having tested its wonderful curative jiowers in thousands of cases, has felt it his xtuty to make it knxiwn to his suffering fellows. Act- uatexl by this motive, and a desire to relieve human suffering, I will send, free of cliarge, txi all who desire it, this rex???ijic, with full di rections fxir i*rejtaring and using, in Gentian, French, or English. iSent by mail by ad dressing, with stamji, naming tliisjtajier, W\ W. Sherar, 149 Powers* Block, Rochester, N. Y. 000 ju 12,78 weowlyr Mother Most not Forget t Da. Moffett???s Teethina (Teething Pow ders) Regulates the Bowels and makes Teeth ing easy. Teethina Cures Cholera-Infaii- tum and the Summer Complaints of Child ren; Heals Kmptions aud Sores; Removes and prevents the fxirmation of Wonus. No mother should he withxmt it. Hunt, Rankin A Lamar and all Druggist* keep it. may2G riAwfhn d son wexi fri 00; Brown???s extra or Ixig Cabin 1 00; Leather wood 1 00; natural leaf 100: Calhoun 1 25; Cook???s extra fine fig 85; fine cut in Toll*, 75*85. Smoking Tobacco???Common assorted sizes 45*50; medium 50*55; Durham best standard brands Ticking Ga20; "tripes 8; osnabtngs 6%a9%: c brie* 5a5^printsjJ%a5J4; brown sheeting* ?; tings 6; blenched sheetings fall; brown .. bleached shirtings 4*8; checks8al 1*4; yarn* 85. Fruits and Confectlonarleu. FRUIT&???Lemon*, Oranges Malaga $7 00; Pal ermoSS 50; Menton 19 50 $ box; Apples, north- $2 25*3 00; Oranges, none; Coeoanut* none; Raisins $2 25*2 50; %box 25; box 75c; Cur rant* 7)4*8; Citron 20a2Sc; Figs 10al4c; Almonds 20a22r; Pecan* 7)4*12)4; Brazils 7)4*10; Filbert* Yonj Buckeye a Take That Buckeye C Pocket S tliat the medical projiertieH of the re are clearly estalilishexl.aud utilized r me cure of Piles, why not make a direct application x*f its healing virtues in the form of Tablcr???s Buckeye Pile Ointment and be cured? This jirejmration is maxle from the alkaloid x*f the Buckeye, or Horse Chestnut, and. extinbined with other ingrexliexits, offered tx> the public as a cure fxir nothing else but Piles. Price 50 cent* a Bottle. For sale by Collier A Co., Pinson A Pea cock, Hutchison A Bro. 411 apr25 deowlyAweowly sand families. Try it and prove the claim, the strength can always b^ trusted. the count???must jirerail over all the reme dial jiowers of the .state of Florida, and the congress of the United States combined, and most xlisj**-* 4 of the chief magistracy this rejitiblic. S. J. Tilden. Well-Toned Myatemn. Systems toned and renovated with Ilostet- ter's Stomach Bitters are nixist effectually de fended from disease. That supreme iiivig- orant soon overcomes that distressing feeble ness consequent ujion ailment" which im* iioverish the blood and relax the muscles. Vigor, appetite, sleep return to the wasted frame, and every physical faculty gain* greater activity through its benign influence. Nor is this all. for tlie Bitters liave a nix * genial and cheering effect'???upon the mind tlie desj"indent invalid, which is the natur al effect of the increased bodily vitality which they produce. Nervous symptom* disapjiear in consequence of the u???se of this .edicine, and the evil consequences sure to result from a premature decav of the jriiysi- cal energies are averted. Dyspejisia, liver complaint*, rheumatic ailments, urinary and uterine irregularities, malarial diseases and many other disordered conditions of the system, are remedied by the Bitters. oct22 d3t tues thur sat Awky oct22 Good Measure i* the Watchword or Hone??t Trade. When you buy Dooley \ east Powder, for sale by all grocers, you Spring bring* the blossoms. Autumn get jierfectly full weight, just as marked on brings the fruit???and also serious colds, etc. the cans, and besides that an article made fo* which nothing superior to Dr. Bull'i of the very best and purest material, so that Cough Syrup has ever been offered to the Am ITiMleniafcle Truth. You deserve to suffer, and if you lead miserable, unsatisfactory life in this* bx.iuti- ful world, it is entirely your own fault, and there is only one excuse f????r you???your un reasonable prejudice and skejiticism. which lias killed thousands. Personal knowledge and common sense reasoning will show you that Green???s August Flower will cure you of Liver Comjdaint, or Dyspejisia, with all iti miserable effects, such as sick headache, j??al pitation of the heart, sour stomach, habitual costivencas, dizziness of the head, nervous prostration, low spirits, etc. Its sales now reach every town on the Western Continent, and not a Druggist but will tell you of its wonderful cures. You can buy a Sample Bottle for 10 cants. Three doses will relieve you. ??? 378 june22...deow!y dfcwkyeowlr public. It always cures. PROVISIONS, GRAIN, Etc. Wheat dull. Corn moderately active. Pork steady at $8 50. Lard quiet at 6.60. Turpentine 285$. Rosin $1 37)4. Freight* firm. ST. LOUIS, October 19.???Flour unchanged. Wheat opened easier: closed firmer; No. 2 led fall 81)4@*1)4 cash: No. 3 red fall 70)4; No, 2 spring 70%. Corn easier at 32 cash. Oats quiet at 2U cash; December 20%. Whisky steady at $1 08. BALTIMORE, October 19.???Flour, more inquiry and firmer, but not quotably higher. Wheat, southern firm and lc xx-nt higher; vextem buoy ant and higher; southern red 90&98; amber $100 firm and higher; southern white 50(351)4; yellow white88$93. Com in fair demand; white 44: mixed 41. Oats steady; white 24; mixed 23. Pork steady at $8 75. hard quiet. Bulk Meats easier; shoulders 4)4: elcwr nb 5.40; dear able* 5.90. Bacon steady; sbou Idem 4)4: dear rib aide* 5.65; clear sides 6.12*4. ???Sugar-cured Hams 12&13. Whisky firm at $1 08. In thi* moist and variable climate cold* are the rule rather than the exception. Dr. Bull???* Cough Syrup is just the remedy for every one to take when Muffering from a cough, cold or any throat trouble. 243 f\ EORGIA, DOUGLAS COUNTY.???ALL PER- VJT sons are hereby notified that Richard Latham, 01736th District, G. M.. of said county, tolls be fore me, Ordinary of said county, a small sorrel mare Mule, about twenty year* old; white sad dle marks on eiu h side of the back and lump on left shoulder. Valued by J. E. Heudlcy and W. A. Brockman, frecboMer* of said county and dU- trict, at forty dollars. The owner of said Mule Is required to come for- 436 octl8 w4w *f this county, I shall intro ??? . hly of Georgia, ..... unpin number of citizci ducc a bill in the ??.>neral Ai * ??????, to rvjK-a! an Act entitled an Act to provide for a Board of Roads and Revenue, for the county of Douglas, approved March the 1st, 1878. w. N. MAGOUIRK. Representative. Douglasville. Ga., October 11th, 1878. 436 OC118 w 4w of said State, at it.- n notice of my inter, tion to apply to the 1 of said State, at ib next session, for the passage of a bill for the relief of the estate of John Harris from liability under a fl. fa. issued by the Comp troller General^ on the 11th day of Marrb,'l873, m favor of the ^tate of Georgia against Inmc P. HarrLs, principal, Jx>hn Hams, tCcurity^eL ala. Executor of John Harris, deceased. October ICth, D78.454 oct!9 wlm A; 25 $60 per moC L- * Co.. Ciaciaaati. *tag. 000 oct22 wlw address of every one 1 until HABIT. Privacy gua information sent each FKE1 Woolly, box 389, Atlanta, Ga. 508 sep22...d sun <fcwtL