Atlanta weekly constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1878-1881, June 03, 1879, Image 1

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“""■'jpnP CONSTITUTION PUBLISHING CO. ATLANTA. GA., TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1879. VOL. XI., NO. 50 riDIlfV I \TI\ f* ICIT I I TV »hweStory.ilinAltai.w»hddin LIlI-Mli AM) IfAoUAljl 1. custody at Batavia. The people of the re- I Kiun vherr the elopement ban occurred. Io» ' j rally kiHi«n a** “Hell** Half-Acre,” deter- A CHAPTER OF 8TARTLIKG TRAGEDIES ■ min«rd lint an Murnpir «hf.uld he m»d* of Story a- a warning to city rha|is. At ( three o’clock this morning about 75 of them A XcrdtriaF*Ir Flay, 0 srga—A Vn 0« a Ow catue to itaravia, entered the Munwn Ihiu* BETWEEN TWO FIRES. THE GIRL MURDERER OF TENNESSEE. tfce Fallr-A kujitsd Fr*tne:d«—Tks Bale;da of Mr. G. W. Hlakla-A "bury " of Ljecb Lav. Eta Apodal dispatch to The fonutltutloo. CauiNit. Ga., May 20.—-There occurred A ternhle tragedy at Fair Play, in this count*, Saturday night, which caused quite a couiiunt.nn in that quiet community. Jhe circumstance* of the affair were an follows: An old man named Berry Watts was in a quarrel with another man. They were in a heat of camion, when a negro man stand ing near interpoiesl and tried to *lO|. the difficulty. ||e stepf-cl in front of iU-rry Watt* and asked me men to desist from their quarrel. Watia then turned his attention from the man lie wan Unit quarreling with, and said to the negro: “Von owe me fifty cents.” Then lie added: *Tl—n you, if you don’t pay it. I’ll kill you.” The negro said he did not have the money. IWrry asked him for ii again, and received trie *>ame reply. He tiien leveled his pistol and shot down the negro, who died in a few minutes. ’I he man with whom Watts had heen quar reling seeing him so infur.ated. turned ami fled. Watts pursued him like • madman. The frightened man ran half a mile until he reached the residence ot Mr. Milcliam. He rushed into the yard and as Walts still pursued him he j| KTIi d demanded the prisoner at the hand* of the officer who was guardieg him. ^tory, ho is a strong and coursgeoti fellot Mitcham and In* brother interfered, and held Wails off hut lie raved atliiy and begged them to let hlrn pel at lha man. lie wa» at Iasi quieted, and then lav made a ' *3rtipefafe eltJrfT fo wRapST" ftull the yard he made for the fair h.id lieen so noised abroad l»y this lime that Ihe whole neighlrarhood was aroused and mniii a lively pursuit of the hloodthira'y murderer was begun. He was captured after some searching and made no resistance to the i»>vr. The case is one of the mist outrageous ever known, a* it pre sents a thirst for blood that was simply ter rible. The cattle in this vicinity are dying of a strange disease which seems to In? little un- dentood. It iambi to be spreading. Crops are tine, hut need rain, ItcrVAUt, May 27.—I’ie Walker was the man who furnished the details of the tragedy. Alter successfully wrestling with the eddies and current* and the rock* •ml rapids of the river for years, and aaving • score or more of |s*ixms from walcr> graves, he. today, was swept, over the American cataract in the presence of a large crowd of excurtionist*. who were scattered about, little suspecting the awful spectacle which they were so suddenly called upon to witness. The primary cause of Walker’s death was drunkenness.’ He had a lip for liquor, which frequently got the lietter of him Where he imhilM-d tinlay i* not known, hut •bout two o’clock he was ob-erved to leave Port I»ay, two miles above the head of Goat Island, badly intoxicated. It is believed he pulled over fo one of the islands, where he discussed the contents of a keg of l>eer wit aonie companions. It is then auppoaed ii attempted to reach Goat Island or lo return In Port Hay. To row a Iraat to Goat Island i* a very tlangemus and fool-hardy hut one many time* accomplished by Walker. He would row for a small purse on a wager, or even to gratify the curiosity of tourists. Whatever his calculations, he miscalculu tel Ida |Miwer* and was caught in Trap II ip- ids just alrnve tb>at ishimhand it wo* at iln> |Miitit that the horrified spectator* first might sight of him a* he came down tin- river. A man on the bank almuted to row in to the sluice-way. near the Cataract tioiure. and he tried lo do so, hut caught a crapm, hint his Italunce and fell backward into the Iraat.wherc hejay »lM|*etietl with in- toxicaiioti. The I i Iterated oar drifted away from the boat, and the ligfit skifT vva- rntight in the swift current and carried dawn until it retched a iratni about half way between the head of the island and the t ataract house, when it caught upon a r-s-k ami swung around for several second*. The situation at this time was one of the extreme horror, ami the spet in to * looked on with hated breath and beat- ing hearts. The bolt then jumj*ed U|sm its terrible journey, riding upon the er.-st «.f iIm* water, then struck a half sunken rock ami purled in twain, spilling the octal pnut* into the boiling rapid.*. The sperm I ..s on the shore at Goat island and th bridge, not less than four hundred of whoi were s|wctators of this awful ca last re pne. saw the man rise al*>ve the surface of wa ter. throw up his hand* once, and then his Ii sly was caught in the restless underflow and was swept fn m sight forever. The ferrymen lielow the fails were noti fied, a*al rowing near the cataract made scale 11 for the body, but nothing was found htu Ins hat, hadly’cut by the rocks, an oar injured, and the pieces of his boat. llie latter were eagerly sought by curiosity hunters of souviniers of the terrible aeei- denk Tin* victim was well known at the falls He was a hoat-hoii'C keeper, and was a wild. Iisruni -carom, di—ijuilrd fellow. He cared not in i g for the danger of the river, ami laughed lowam the very idea of fear, lie was credited with being a regular out law and smuggler and when in danger fr mi the law, he would seek one of the smaller i-latid'. and r« main until the storm against him blew over. He made murk trouble for his neighbor* l»y his vindictiveness ami revengeful spirit llis r»deeming featare was bis proficiency in saving human life, the result of hi Iterate daring. He was thirty years o and leaves a wife and two children. Baltimore, May it—The partienl one ot the most startling double tm tlmt ever occurred ill Mary -at d w« ctived here ibis evening. John Siinch- ottered to fight any five of them in a fair fic.d, but when a rojor was fastened about bis neck, he surrendered and begged for his life. They hustled him down -tain, and iJraggrd him with a rope around his neck and his arm* pinioned behind, along the middle of the street, a square and a half to the new iron bridge over the Little Miami river. In going to the bridge Story unfas tened hi* ham's lied behind, but kept them in fheir place a* though tied, to help him self if neces-ary. The regulators then threw him over the bridge, with the rope ' out bin n-ck, but the ro|»e either bmxe slip|*ed over his head and the man fell 40 feet into the stream below. The water at the (mint where he fell did not exceed a foot in depth, and the nmb, swing their victim to lie dead, fired two ..tree shota at him aitd left. Hu»ry hat- tered and stunned crawled ashore and re turned to the Munson bouse and pive him self up to a constable. His injuries are severe, but he will recover from them. Ilia e-ca|«e under the circumstances was almost miraculous. People of Ikitavia had no band in the lynching, ai*d are indignant at the men who committed the deed. Mrs. Atchley is a woman of lithe form and grace ful carriage, the lirat horseback rider in the courtly and the sympathies of the town people are rather with her and the baud- som© st, Louisan whom she chose to elope with. The neighborhood where the affair occurred is not far from the birth-place of General Grant. . Tire following letter, which was received lot,day. broil *III the first news of the uicide *4 Mr. G. W. Hinkle: Gasxana, Miss.. May S, 187V.—Dear Sirs: A eiitleiuati railing himself G. W. Hinkle came to >1* death at thla place last night, by suicide as is supposed, flow did he stand In Atlanta? Any nformaUou you rosy give roe will lie carefully used. Truly your*. !». I>. Muoaa. Editor "New South." One of Tit* Constitution's young men was set at work to ascertain the facts con nected with the cane, but he soon ascer tained that none of the friends of the dead man knew anything about his death—not even that he wa* dead. The di-patch given In-low contains aii the information that we have been able u» get from Grenada —a place by the way that does not seem lo lie included in the territory of any agent of the Tl niridc on 'Friday morning last. It Is ts-Ueved that he took a dose oi morphine, lay down mi th« ruilcNt-l track two mile* south of this place, and was run over by th- two o’elock train on Fridas morning. Ills laxly was discovered nu the tract l«y the north-t«niindpa>«eii*er train after daylight. It is miiHsMrd It was a ease of tt-ro|sirary insanity. Hr hod been in tirrnada alaiul two month*. He has a son and daughter in Lexl are at tin* hotel in this place. Tha I'callrctiaai of a Primer's Lif* aa StnaUd by Oolnaaa, Ite Mardertr of Mjaraxng Aaa Bell—fl* is Bull Hopafal et Ewapiag the Pans ty af Hi* Atrocity. I'd like mighty well to see the Knox ville papers. Court’s in session up there now, andi I’d like to kuow how the buy* are coming otf.” He spoke with a solicitude that implied that, "the boys” were bi» only friends, but his air of unwonted sadness told that hope of ilieir pre-peri ty was play ing no part in his memories of them. True, Ills connection with "the boys” had heeu of the closest nature; they laid eaten to gether. drank together and slept together, anil time and agaiu they bad confided to each other the fateful history of their lives. Necessity, and uot choice, had made them confiding fnenda, for there had been no other occupation with which to drive away the ennui of jail life. “I made ’em spend five hundred dollars on the jail the five year- I was there, and if I’d stuyed with the boys awhile longer they would itave had a pretty decent building of it,” he continued resuming a laughing air and sjwaking with the eagerness of one wim is anxious to tell of ]ont exploit* before the questions of a listener may divert time to *|>eak of other things. The s|*eaker was sitting in the officer's room of the guard house at McPherson barracks. in ooiu}>atiy with Captain Hay and a Oxwitiikw inter locutor. A man of ordinary stature, his unshaven face and *|»are form were of one who was just recovering from extreme emaci* lion. The extraordinarily deep vernuhou tinge of bis vit lo hi- inumjierate In The Itnlledge Tragedy. S|>« UI dispatch to The t^onstltution. KrTt.r.iMiK. Ga., May‘41.—Ail the |iarfies to the Fair I'lay tiagcdy reported from this place were negroes. Hcrry I'agctte, the inardere», is a negro. He claims the killing wa- accidental, hut the evident he ad vauced will not lie believed in the commu- m unity. He has I wen committed to jail, PLEASANT MEMORIES. eye marked him for a man who xphere waa a liable and coui|»auionable. He had lieen introduced to u* as 1'rvor N. Coleman, and the knowledge that he the famous girl murderer of Tennessee, ami that for fourteen years lie had been under a sentence death, lent to the story, that he was so eager to tell, more than the interest of a romance. Shipping only when inter rupted by a question, or occasionally when leaning over to spit on the stove-hearth, he began unravelling the mystery of iiis form er sentence. "The Knoxville jail was in a liad fix in’74, so when tiie civil authortt es first put me in five years ago, 1 immediately set to work hi make my cscajie. 1 sawed through the bars of my windows and had just one more night'* work to be free when a fellow in the same cell biowed on me and s)Miiied the game. You &©e his trial W’as to come oil in a few days and he thought that by in forming on me he could obtain acquittal without taking the risk of escaping with me. They then locked tue up in another cell hut 1 immediately began work afresh. There were two other fellows iu cell with me. We sawed through bars of the windows without detection and the other fellows crawled out; hut just a- 1 was getting through the hole, the guard -aw tue and 1 was transferred lo auotlier cell. One of the other fellows wa- caugiu, the other made good his escaiie. The next lime 1 attempted escape, there were seven of us iu tiie game. Some of the prisuneis hail iron shanks in their shoes; we cut them out and used them to saw’ oil the hinges of the door. When the night came that wc had set for escape the guard was sick and wa- L ing down in the hall over our heads. We heard them send for the doctor and decided to -ten across the An Incident i T Governor Colquitt’* YImII. A i one of the elegant receptions accorded Governor Colquitt in Brooklyn during bis recent visit the delegates who came to At lanta from that city last year to attend the International Sunday-school convention expres-ed their high appreciation of the welcome and reception they enjoyed in At lanta. The following extract will show* how kindly our visiPirs remember the Atlanta Indies’: Her. Dr. Talma*? opened the cercrooule* by a short nddri-i* warmly welcoming Governor Col- quit! and hi* lsdy to Brooklyn. I»r. Thomas Munson, on ts-half of the Brooklyn delegate* present, ftiioki* highly of the ladle*of Atlanta, who during the International coiivuultoti had rt*- plavrd su«-li lio-pluliiy lo himself and hi* feU< delegate*. Home of these ladle* were menUoncHt l»y l»r. Man-on. Amon* the name* were thorn- of Me-duine* John M. Kill, K. K. Kawson, J. Jack- son. C. s. Newton. G. W D. Cook. W. A. Komi. M. M. 11-UTalnon, A. N. Cuaart and Dr. J. M. Jolin- Dr. Munson requested Mr*. Governor Colquitt to carry lun k to tier home the lnnt wishes and re gard* of ihe Brooklyn delegate* o the ladle*, ever rrroerotierlng that beauuful hymn. "Blest he he tie that hitiil* our he-rt* In Christian love;” *nd a* the Oemulgee. the Flint and the < liatta- ‘ iK-hce river* Il«»w In, *o may our love and es- iii flow ••n to the broad oc*can of mutual regard d ChriMiuii endeavor. that was once pare, but seemed to have been contaminated by the scenes among which the later part of his life had been spent. A LOOSE CHAPTER TORN FROM CONFEDERATE HISTORY, The latest achievement of Mr. Edison is . Ho a. James Ljcai Narrates aa Important Private the electnicmutogrmph. Although it is yet I Interview With the French Minutw in ita infancy, the scope of its utility has! Daring the War—Roundabout Ore:- already become far more expansive than I lnPM f. cm ip, Seward. that of any of Mr. Edisou's previous invest- | tions. Probably its must striking feature ; is its paradoxical power of making the hn- [Letter by the lion. James Lyons, of Kichiaoud, man hand talk; for the hand revolves a to Colonel Vagruder, of Baltimore.] fc little cylinder, and the instrument speaks ] will relate a conversation I had at my as it is bidden, and when the hand Mops house, Laburnum, near Richmond, with turning, the instrument ceases to speak. At < Count Mercier. the French minister, iu the a siqierficial glance, this principle would ! month of Mav or early i*art of June, lsu_» i._ -* ‘ He, it will be recollected, visited Ricli&nnd by {lermi-sion of the northern government, seem to be the same as that of the phono graph ; but iu point of fact there is no essential similarity between the two inven tion*; they are used for entirely different purpose*, and are governed by separate ami distinct laws. Tiie phonograph records mud preserves the waves of sound; the electro- monograph—or, as it is called when used iu connection with acoustics, the "chemical telephone”—records nothing. Iu the pho nograph, the main principle is the inden tation of tin-foil on a cylinder, by a small needle attached to a diaphragm, which U set in motion by the waves of sound. In the chemical telephone there is likewise a cylinder and a diaphragm; but with these its resemblance to the phonograph ceases. On the cylinder of the chemical telephone rests a metal arm attached to a diaphragm and the passage of electric waves through such cylinder causes the vibration of the diaphragm. The scientific priuciple involved in theelectru-motogniph discovery is diametrically opposite to the main prin ciple in electro-magnetism, and yet it per forms in most cases exactly the same func tions as electro-magnetism. In mil contrivanc«~- hitherto used for pro during a mechaiiit.il movement at a long distance, the agency employed has lieen elect ro-iuaguetiaiii. Take lor illustration the ordinary Morse telegraph. This, aa every school-boy knows, consists in the rough of a niece of soft irou around which is coiled a continuous line wire, through which wire is passed, so to sjieak, a current of electricity. This current magnetises the piece of soft iron, which thereupon is enabled to attract a second I iiere of irou or armature. Here. then, we lave a mechanical movement, produced by energy transmitted from a distance. By means of the discovery of the principles of the electo-mutugraph. Mr. Kdi-on has made it possible to produce mechanical move ments at a distance without the employ ment of electro-magnetism. In other words, iutd the inventor of the telegraph never lived, and had electro-magnetism never lieen discovered, we might to-day ac complish the same result* by means ot the electro-iuotograpli. JEFF. DAVIS AT HOME. ■low lie Live* and Demrxns Himself nt Beauvoir. Ourespondcureof the lkwton Herald. Aligtning from the train at Beauvoir sta tion, Mississippi, and taking the half-per- ivptihie roadway to your right, ten or fif teen minutes' walk through the piuet brings you to the beach. Here you see a house built in the airy fashion of this region of |>erpetmil sunshine. This is the resi dence of Rev Hr. l.acuck. au aged Kpi-Oo- |ia ian clergyntan, ouct* chaplui to tiie duke of Cain’hridge. Beyond the reverend gentleman's estate, you nee, fronting the beach, another estate, the residence of Mr. Davis. Entering the gate, you pass acres* a lawn dotted with live oak and 1*11 into an open .Inn*™ until tbe doctor non, II 1 ,' t and lock them all nt^o^i^wWns wa. a lug buck ni^cr in ,bc crowd, and a, verandaa. At either ? ,de. a tnHe nearer the soon as we got out into the hull lie became ] vvt!n« excited and liegan to say: “Come on and i*e waiting we small building, asortof pavilion, While resting on the veranda, wailing for your letter of introduction to be handed to The lhe uias, . e r« your e >’ e token in the buspita- there’ in Softer «Tl. h«rf him mS I twsan calling to.ua ,o let them out too. Of | rt M couVae we were discovered and all put under lock and key again. But the next time 1 tried to get out I w;.s successful. There were thieeof us in the cell. We sawed the iloor off the hinges as in-fore. And one morning about nine o’clock r .«*« door and waS | ^ j hall which goes through the house is uu , .oc u.a. to th, breeze, but not b» the ardent »..» successful. Tut re wbose ra) . a are in ,crceptcd by the ve- | randa. Here, on the front veranda, sils of a morning ihe ex-president of tiie south, lo full view of the gulf of Mexico,that dazzling. glide softly, lo break In on. There wa, a negro woman out in the I “lUng L,«md upon the whiti and sparkling yard milking, and a» soon a. she »aw ns she | , „;.i, set up a yell that three prisoners had s,,e . ,,a ^ nttIked u,e I lotus-eaters, where 'tls always afternoon i.»k sixty fo old, three miU- well l farmer, result Severn station, in Anne Aruodd emm ahot and killed hia brother laouis, aged 50, W«slne-day lost, and aub-equenlly commit ted suicide. The men had Wen quarreling for son lime over a farm of ltw acres, u* which tin . were j dot heirs, and John repeatedly ac Cum d the oilier of a desire to defrau t l.iiu ot his right. On Wednesday, hearing laatis, who wa* the inwtee of the i»r.q>crty had employ, d a lawyer to sell the farm. John anmsl him-elf with a largo Enfield rifle amt pnwveded to the place where bis brother wa* working, in Hyson's charcoal miles from their ho:i oklyn. or Colquitt in ltn New York Mail. 'obpiitt, of ttronris. Will apeak i IMymouih ehureh Sumtay even in*, in Mr. Heeeli- •'* aiisciu'V. New York llerwld. Governor and e -General Colquitt, of Gaanrtx, it «*n the p atlonn of Mr. Bets * -* *■ ——- nlajr. Tti » ebun b yus- New York •“ Colquitt, of Georgia. I the Sunday-M-lio bow eo*y I* iborrient o( xflioualUm. If the ncnlimenL* whk-h hittemf could Had permanent kalxmeut In the |t»rra» , s <>f our pditietaus, there would be no ot— ■ton for the pn>(e—hand uuion-saver. St. Louis Republican. \Ye rise to Inquire whether our tieloved an is a* Mate as ll might to be? ttov. Colqultt.l - hsirgia. a man of pmnouncvd southern pnw-Iivl- os mill one of toe most proiuim ut leaden of •ulh.ru « pinion, was invited to oddres* ihe fAroerii-an Sunday-school union in Brooklyn, and loowpicvttheiuviuUomTbDnoUwimiscvr^ell sand The breeze is laden with the strangi U ,l,c had milked early in tlT« I r rf u..w df U ‘f ^ >' « ‘he landoitK !»rtghk'“wc»«r. WO r.'r I Siuingnn ,hi, veranda, in«o iha, reverie, and for a few* minutes nobody paulanvat- tentUm to her. But when the alarm was t “ w (^ h , had the’dream* of the south- raised the whole town set out after us. 1 | —. .statesman lieen realized, would liav see them running way ahead of 1 .TV. ,UiiL. n running way 1 all sides. I ran alxmt half a mile ..d got tired 1 didn't want to escajie much anyhow. 1 needed exercise and did it more for that than anyiJung else. S»* w< all three jumped over in an orcliard and sat down to eat some apples. Well sir, 1 dou't ] believe they would have found us then (fo they had almost give up the chase) if a li tie boy hadn't told them that he saw three men jump over in the orcliard. So we were 1 carried hack to the jail again, ft was ■ account of this attempt louscajH: that they hebl me after tlie federal court had decided *, until my case was brought up moned to the little pavilion to the right of the mansion. This building is divided iuto two parts. The rearward is occupied bv an ancient and favorite negro servant whose idea of housekeeping is to display his fur niture and tools on his little veranda. The I rent portion of the pavilion U occupied hv Mr. Davis a* a library and study. Here 1 found him, slightly mdispooed and lying H|M»n a lounge. His manner is genial and very kindly, with that charming characteristic of high-bred southern gentleman Seventy years of age, Mr. Davis lias yet i fresh ami vigorous look, lit* hair. but*was interdicted, :rom holding direct tcrcourse with President Davis or any iff his cabinet, and he afoul nearly two days of nis time at my house in Henrico. In point of fact, as the sequel will disclose, he was sent here (by Mr. Sewaid) with a view to juake tieace. In the course of a day’s diactwion in my library, lie asked me a great suany «|uestions; among othera. the «|ue»tion: “Can you whip McClellan?” who .was then lying with an army of two hundred thousand men within MX miles of Rich mond. confronted by General Ue. 4 I told him in reply that 1 felt sure we could and would, and i the emperor of ihe French would open the ports and keep them Often, we would march to New Xo k, and not ask the loan of a man ora dollar. With great animation lie sprang to bis feel, and said iu French: “If such l»e the temper of your jsH.,.]c tit are invincible. But why do you mink tu will whip McClellan ft’ . . i 1 answered: “Because the presiden and General Lee tell me they believe we vj 1.” Then he added: “But do you kn-.cV^ many men are bearing up.>n Kk himn^.' I replied: “The president thinks there are 200,000. Genera; I^e thinks not so many, but more than 150,000. To which he replied, “they are both mis taken. There are 225,000. Gen. Burnside's force at Port Royal is a part of the f tree bearing upon Richmuud—sent to Port Royal merely in the hope of induciug Gen. Lee to detach a jcirt of hia army to meet it. 1 am just from the war office, and have all the statistics here” (holding up a patter which he drew from his pocket); hut he added. '•Can’t this war be stooped? Can't you come back under the old flag?” 1 said: “I suppose that is impossible, for Mr. .Seward would not permit its to do so without tiie abolition of slavery, and it would Ite useless to proftoee that to the men from the extreme south.” To tlmt he replied: “You are mistaken. If you will only return and acknowledge the flag, Mr. Seward will permit you to re turn without any conditions.” “What!” said I, “with the institution of slavery T’ “Yes.” he said. I then said: "But there is yet one tiling mot e to be considered. To use the phrase which was so much hackneyed with resfiect to the northeastern boundary question of ’indem nity for the past and security for the future,’ we can't ask, 1 kuow, indemnity for tbe past, but wc must have security for the future. We cannot live hereafter in the state of harassment and excitement in which we have lived for some years past.” Then drawing his hand across a piece of (taper lying u(»oii the library table, upon the opposite sides of which we were sitting, he said: “Mr. Seward will allow you to write your own guarrutees.” 1 expressed my individual readiness to consent to th<jse terms. I had been in favor of the southern convention with which South Carolina proposed through Mr. Mem- mi tiger, hercommissioner.believingasl did. in which 1 am now confirmed, that if all the southern states met in convention, as promised by South Carolina, such guaran tees would be asked of the northern people as they would grant, and which would pro- lectus. and in tlmt event there would be no secession, and l certainly did not wish seces sion if we could be protected in tiie enjoyment of our constitutional rights, and that I believe was the gen eral sentiment of the south. 1 believe 1 have given you now almost, if not exactly, ver batim, these conversations to which I re ferred in my conversation with you. I wilj add that the day following the conver-ation with the French minister, a large compaay of gentlemen dined with him at my house, and he left there after 10 o’clock at night in a rain, in order, as ho said, to send a tin- l»atch to Norfolk to lire up a steamer which could take him or his dispatches. I for^ei which, to New York before the next Allan c steamer sailed. ' Tbe battle of Coal Harbor and the other battles around Richmond occurred not 1 afterward, and i had no doubt of our kuowledgment by the French government. before tiie supreme court of Tennessee. 1 | : . _ „ , * us tm ' Iut rt l.nt vr 1 “,r"* *• ie&x 1 was there, though, I assure you. 1 i* almost severely intellectual, hut “You also escaped from the military au- I ,| ie j, lu i| e which lights up his mouth and t lion lies in ‘G5, just after you were sen-1 (,}„ q U j e tly cheerful laugh dis|>el the first fenced to ileath, did you not?”put in one oi j impressions of coldness. Few of our pub his auditors. I lie men have the quiet fascination of man- •No, sir, I did not,” he replied, decisively. I ner. the old-fashioned grace and the chann- sentenctAf to death, but j ing conversation:.! [*»were of Jefferson Da inquire around, I vis. AltlHHiKh hi* subject v d ioMPMMPI lie **mtrived to *llp mark* and thereby ma loyal noil, r” uim rujuil (a-niH. little politics into hi* re ared the needs of treason in reta-Ui are known to lie desperately fellow*, ready U> i»ro|*a*aie their irinca In seasmi and mu of *ca*on. J throw hot *hot inh> tha union camp from the m<M *aervd gun*. Fortunately for the poace and la-risrtuity of the republic, Brooklyn ha* a first- class navy-yard, and any attempts Gov. Colquitt may have iWrcd to make to disturb "the result* of the war” could have be*m promptly auppeeaed by a tile of marine* led by a K*Uant comnwalore In everv re-pect equal Ui the famous "Sir Joseph Porter. K. C B." We feel relieved to know the pious governor has spoken hi* piece and *one Uoiue. Meanwhile we tie* Senator t^andh r to remember that "eternal vigilance i* the price of liberty.” __ ______ Greeley and JefT Davlu. PhiladelphU Time*, lnd. Anottier of Horace Greeley’s old letter* has Just been pmdLhcd. with thr interewtlna *u»ry «* the when the officers began t< they found that 1 was Bell’s blood. So on* *1: down to the guard In.in. my discharge from the •C«»Iema:i, you may go; you are fiee now I stayed around home then about G luoiitii; and then went up to Illinois. 1 came buck to Knoxville in ’•?»; stayed there awhile ai.d then went to Arkansas. I came back to Knoxville again after a few years, and stated tliere until i was arrested by the civri authorities in ’74. ami was again victedof murder. My ease has now been beiore five courts, but I’ve never bad a wit- sutumoned in tuy defense yet.” ¥ memory is ca|>acious and reten iniuwent of Miss j live. One migiit. with a facile piiono officer came I graphic pen. collect great stores of retuiiiis- d handed rue | oence from his lips. 1 saitl FINE VEGETABLES AND GRAIN. Tbe Produrta or Koutbwent Georgia, I)r. Janes, the state commissioner of ag riculture, has received from the Albany fair some of the finest sjieciuieua of vegeut Jes we liave ever seen. They are now or xhildtion at the rooms of the department. _n thecapitol, and the public are cordially invited to drop in and see them. There is ,. a fine display of green com, tomatoes. • That is rather a strange circumstance of and potatoes. A mammoth cabbage vour case.” half inquisitively ’uterjKoed I j,(, own ihere weighs twenty-two and Btirroogb went to Morris and informed him that lie wonld have to pay a fine or be nr- re-ted. Morris paid the fine, hut few words ware pa.t<eiL They met again soon after this at the depot. Morris said he thought he could get the line remit tod could he see the mayor, and iuquiredof Bnrrough where he could find him. Burrough replied: “He 011 the • 1 her side of the street, and damn it if you1 luivoanv more business with him than I du„ «all him.” From this angry words ensued from both sides. Both ad vanced facing each other until they were very near together. Burrough raised his stick in an effort to strike. Morris placed his hand on Burrough’s shoulder and said, “Yourstick ain’t worth a cent; twelve men can not put me in prison.’' Burroughs re plied, “I can get upeix that can put you in,” drew a six-shooter quickly and commenced firing within two or three feet of Morris’s breast; fired two or three shots at Morris be fore he drew his pistol and commenced fir ing; Morris being mortally wounded, bred «t random. About tbe lime the firing commenced —perhaps just before. Joe Morris, who liad just returned, having been out with the pic nic party all mornitig, came up, and seeing his brut tier's* danger ran up and said, don’t • s hoot my brother, if you do you w*ll have me to shoot too.” Burrough after fireing two shots at Thompson Morris turned quick ly and shot Joe Morris through the bow els, inflicting a mortal wound. Burrough seeing he had done his murderous work -commenced his retreat and was pursued bv the reeling and dying men, until they fell in their tracks. Joe Morris had uothitig but a pocket knife but after he and hi- brother was fatally wounded picked up rocks and threw at the retreating mur derer. The father of the unfortunate young lompeun dead and Joe sinking rapidly. The father approached hi* dying son in tears, aqd said, "my boy what have you doneT’ The boy replied, “father I ‘did nothing before 1 was shot, hut asked the man not to shoot tuy brother.” These words and words of like character, were Joe Morris’s dying words. The people of Acworth and the whole Country, an* painfully shocked at this sad occurrence, and sympathize deeply with the family. . Acwobtii. The Presbyterians. Special dispatch to The CoustituUon. Saratoga, May 27.—The Presbyterian as sembly to-day adopted resolutions denounc ing the habit of many church members attending the theater and opera. The following was also adopted: _ Resolved, That the general assembly be lieving that the practice, on the ]>artof the church members, of reading secular pajiers ou the Sabbath day is alarming and on the increase, and believing also that it is a grievous injury to the |>erso:ial piety of the readers and a serious obstacle to the cause of Christ in every community, would de(»- recate the practice, and urge 011 ail who love the Lord and desire the spread of llis king dom in the world to do ail in their power to discountenance it. Regarding the oveituro against recogniz ing Roman Catholic baptism, the commit tee on overtures reaffirm the action of the general assembly of 1873. leaving it with the iiastor and the convert to decide wheth er a re baptism shall lie made. The report attacked by Elder C. D. Drake and Rev. Dr. Prime and defended by Rev. Dr. Patton, chairman of the committee, who declared, had done in his opening that the Roman Catholic is a branch of the church of Christ. He said that in the fight against materialisiu, otherwise communism, and other enemies of Christianity, the Roman Catholics are of the (Wrongest allies^which the church has. The Rev. Dr. Prime denounced the decision of the committee as emanating from the cloisters of the olegical semina ries. He said that while claiming hold such doctrines as liau lieen stated by Dr. Patton that the Catholics had apostacized from Christianity. Rev. Dr. Gautz then offered a substitute “that this assembly is not prepared to decide the invalidity of all Catholic baptism, but prefer to leave it to church sessions and (tfMtors.” The Rev. Dr. Patton gave a his tory of the overtures of 1835 and 1875. Wiu. E. D-.alge opposed any recognitiun of the Roman Catholic as a Christian church. The Rev. Dr. Prime moved the overture of 1835 Resolved, Thxtit is the deliberate and decided judgment of this assembly that the Roman Catho lic church has essentially apostacised from the religion of our Lord and Saviour Jesus thrift, and therefore canuot be recognized a* a Christian church. Rev. Mr. Lewis opposed the overture moved by I)r. Prime, and upheld the Cath- CHINA ONCE MORE. ABOUT THE LITTLE BROWN MEN. About Tkair Farmiag—How They Liv*—Tk* Shop- Keepers—A New 8eerst Uaiom—The Qeeeip of the Crowded Load He tailed Oat to Barbarian Ears. olic church as Christian. earnestiiess strangely in contrast' with the | pounds. A squash weighs 6 pounds, and a jutwesir in whicii or' ' ' * orraxn) 1 that called It oat. Three private *ol- Idiera and tent-roasaa of the army of the Potomac, retumlnc trow * terrible iqcotino|o*nce.through a »liter VinrinU Mona in tha wluter of B*W, foil to spcvulsting whether they could not do eome- thln* more decisive toward put Jn* down the re- t>elllou than trampln* amend in the uwl of the od dominion. After a com! deal of talk they concluded the best thing Ihcy OiulJ do would lie for two of their number to escape a* deserter* t» the confederate*, work their way to Richmond. I and end the war by killing JWT Davia, the thlni to I remain hetolud In or-cr to slate the fact* about the desertion an.I tha mtaUn* one* right *u the eye* of. their friends. IMit before any scheme, the one ‘ mbcivinp* —. > ,^ - - nf it, and insisted that they should a»k the to feel miaKlvinrs aa lo whether any pwd would pit, atxiut two miles front their home \\'ha; followed can only lie inferred from the marks oil the surrounding ground and h rubbery. John is thought to have rested his gun on *i*in:ril scrub, and taki. g deliberate aim at alts brother, whose back was toward lim>, to have liml, killing him instantly. He returned home, and, without entering the house, called loudly to his sisters, who ran out to the lawn. Sttnchcomb. who wa* greatly excited, informed them lbat he bad shot his brother Lotus. The terrified ladies a*ked him if he wa> deal, wLen he replied: ”1 expect he i», and I’ll be gone, ou, •Uon.” The ladles started to run to a nelghW* to>eiulasL>i*:aa4*c to Louis, when John t-allcl after them, "good-by!” Before they had gone far they were startled by the te- |oirt of a gun’, and. immediately recalling toe words ai d a. :ion*of their brother, they ran haatily back to the house The unfor tunate lain. - were horrified to find their brother Ding '.cad on the gra-s in a pool or blood, wldvu was flowing from a la.ge wound in his right sole. After they bad left him the fratricide and suicide had taken off bis right shoe and stocking, and placing Ihe butt of the gutt on the ground, with the muzzle against his side, pulled the trigger H, I with his toes. ou the bail-bond of the xraat rebel ehtef. »mt News of the terrible .ragedy spread ewlkd upon to dtwvuioge a plot * quickly over the county, and a large crowd * lm - jHM.n Iw-gan to congregate in the vicinity. | j* r . mil n* n» rniw«ptnn r opinion of somebody who knew more about the situation than they «1M. They W— J '*■— head* a long time «o dcs-ide whom - ^ .Mn»ult. and at lout they fixed upon Horace Give ley. A letter waa therefore *eut the editor of the Tribune setting onh the scheme and asking hu advlee. The reply wa* prompt and to the point I He told the amUriotis soldiers that they nude *' great mi-take m »uppo>ing Davis of any spevi*’. ( oiuvqnemv: " tbe mo*-ster that l* devouring u* i* slavery.” And lor advice be gave them thla: " Trust God in all thing* and work by hi* mean*. ! submit that MMMsinarion is not among tbwie.’ • a taply could of his attentive listeners. "Yes, it is;” he said, assuming s a half pound*; a Uoet weighs six and a half: of I one turnip weighs fij», and another 4 l A had told of his si-or-1 cucumber 1 hi- All llie vegetables are very pranks in jail. ”lt Chambliss hadn't 1 fresh and fine. They came from a region have been killed I would never have suf- I where such products are as thick as Itops lered what I have. But 1*11 tell you finst I and a* cheap as dirt. Dr. Janes says it how the crime was committed. Chambliss I freights could (inly be made cheap enough had left the army at Nashville and gone I Atlanta could get all Its early vegetables home to get married. He jot me a joss I front southwest Georgia better than from ami a leave of absence and 1 went with I any other quarter. rixx OATS. and was very much surprised that it did >t come. Some time afterward the French con-ul. Mon*. Paul, drove up to my house 0:1 S »u- day afternoon, and very soon entered into conversation about the acknowledgment of the confederate government by the em(ieror of the French, and asked me if we could not pass some bill for the gradual abolition of slavery in fifty or sixty years. May be it might do even if it was longer, and said that if that were done the etuperur would immediately acknowledge us, hut that the French people would not be satisfied.with out such a provision for the abolition of slavery. They did not care bow distant was, so the fact was secured as the price < recognition, and the emperor would be fully justified. 1 expressed my individual wiUinenes* to accede to those terms, and promised to sec the president upon the subject next morn ing when I went into congress, and if he agreed with me I would immediately intro duce a bill for the purpose. "But,” said 1, “Monsieur Paul, what guarantee can you give us that, if we take so imiMirtaut a step, the emperor will ac knowledge us?” He replied: “Mr. Lyons, nobody cat guarantee the emperor, hut you may be sure that the eut|ieror will do what 1 tell vou he will do,” which 1 considered as hut auotlier mode of saying that he hail been authorized to do what he had done. It is due to Mr. Davis to say that I him next morning, at his own house, before congress met, as soon as I went into town, and told him what had passed between the French consul and myself. His answer was: “I should concur with you in accepting these terms but for the constitutional diffi culty. You know that congress has no ju risdiction over the subject of ilavery.” “True,” \ said, '‘hut that difficulty may be gotten over, in tuy opinion, without any icral Grant and the Figure*. New York Sun. A good many zealous republican* • fii-ct to tie eve, and perhaps really think, that with Gram for a candidate, and with tmoiis at the poll*, and with plenty of supervisors and deputy marshals, they cau surely carry the next presidential elec tion. sous, and gather wisdom from the same. .. .. . . . yotpskL refer, and indeed • idi . - . . igl< in the southern states, and that hi sole reliance must be upon the north. The northern state* which went for Haye* iu He lived about twelve miles from Knoxville, and one night, just before dark he catue down to a still where I and *01111 friends were drinking, and wanted me ti go to Knoxville with him. I was pretty full and didn’t want to go. but finally he persuaded iue and we set out Aft rinr eling quite a while we came to a hou There is also on display at the depart ment the finest specimen of oats seen there in many a day. The satutde was nought from Forsyth by Dr. J. S. Lawton vest* nlay. It w*« from » field of Mr. Watkins at that place. The oats were six thafl liad never seen before but that 1 af-1 feel * nd beaded superbly. The ficrem, her folk*. Chambers said he was Of conrae nothing *l*e than »uch 1 have r ’' ” ” odd* * have been expected from Ho iquesl ( h of lire liar man held tbe bodies, and verdicts it the facts were rendered, buried to-day side by * uniter a largt tree, within a few hundred yards of the spot where John shot himself. The fu conducted by the R< ith 1 large Louisville Courier-Journal. The radical mvms l» uow declaring that Senator Savage, of »bi* crowd of several i.utum neb.no three sisters ->f i»ie d«.ve»-c.i are o |m»tnit«d wi'ii grief, and *ertou- ttie life of tha cider one arc »n Both men were unmarru d. and : iaiiad in the outtutj since cbiidli wyitlel known and greatly neq-c*; Rider ire of a *i. w ere jof the wont fire-eater* and disuuloi.lst* of the wrath. happen to know that thi* charge ts not true. Coloert Hil w,-t,i in 10 the state coeven unci In January. IS6I, [ and made for one hal f.tb, product of tliai acre and was ret used ax the owner liel laves the acre will vleld at least seventv-five bu-diels. Such oats beat “Carter's” Dr. Janes y terday brought from his farm in Greene county a snecimen of ripe wlitat which for beauty and size is rarely equaled. BAIN BRIDGE MATTERS. going in and gat me a glass of sweet milk; that f was drunk and it would do me good. 1 stood out iu the road waiting for him to come back, and pretty scran heard thei talking pretty loud in the house and kne thev were quarreling. 1 went in then j the'first thing that caught my eye was old man stretched out ou the floor and Chamblis* standing by armed with a club. ,(.v drunkenness seemed to vanish at this sight, and 1 caught Cuamblijw by the arm and dragged him out into the yard. The I lUixnuimx. May 23.-—K i-*ch Roberts, women i,there were three of them in the | while driving sheep last week, near his house) followed us to the door and still kept J home in this county, stumbled, fell, strik- talkiug to Chambliss, saying that he ougut | ing his breast ou a small pointed stump, not to tre.it them that way. Chambliss >ud-1 and died. denly whirled Tound, drew his pistol and I Two young men, Elton Smith and George shot right iuto them; one fell dead. Not j E. Donalson. were returning home from hesitatirg a moment, he rushed back,seised 1 town last Thursday, b »:li drunk. The lat- mnother by the hair and was cocking his re- J ter had an open kidfe in his hand, against volver in her face before I could reach j which llie former fell with such force that violation of the constitution. Let the bill for the gradual abolition of slavery also provide that it shall not take effect until the states have, by acts of their respective legislatures, duly passed, approved and ratified it, which you know will be just as good as if passed beforehand, authorizing congress to do the thiug. 1 will not hegqilty of the'^resqmp- tiou of offering such a hill upon my simple responsibility, hut if I may say that vou concur with Ute l will introduce the bill to morrow.” H« then asked tue why the French government could not deal \v»th ’ tiie states in the matter, so as to avoid all constitutional questions. I told him I had put tl»at very question to the French con- s*ui. and his answer was: “France.does not know the states, out she knows the confed erate government and President Davis.” Mr. Davis then said: ‘Well, I mu»t ©on- jult the cabinet, and if they agree with you 1 will send for you.” And there the matter ended. THE OTHER SIDE. Some time ago we published an interview upon China, its habits and customs, the in terview having been had with a missionary who had spent several years there. This interview created a great deal of interest, and was discussed on all sides. We ntet on „ . jterday a gentleman who has spent much of his life iu China, and who lias lieen al ways interested in anything that pertains to the Chinese. It would be hard.” he said, “to find .uore solid and reliable information about this strange people, in the same space, than was contained in that interview you pub lished. It b almost impossible, however, for an American to Itave any intelligent idea of the Chinese and their country with out seeing it” LIKE AM EVERLASTING COUNTRY FAIR. The first thiug that strikes the stranger with wonder is the marvelous iuauner in which the people are crowded together. In this country, in even the must populous states, a man may ascend a high mountain, and look over a vast scene of almost per fect solitude. He mav look for miles and miles on every side and hardly see a human being, and very few signs of life. In Chiua it i- different. Let him ascend any sort of eminence and he will see literally thou sands of busy men and women on all sides of him, engaged iu Ihe various avocations of life. The scene reminds him of a garden, and the groups of laborer* or- loiterers remind him of a perpetual country fair in progress You can find. In till the vast do minion of China none of the solitudes that we know here. Here you can go a half day without meeting any one—there you meet people at every step.” “This great crowding of them together must influence their lives; does it not?” “Of course. It learns them to ecouonme everything, and especially space and pro visions. For instance, they have learned that while a horse can do the work of five men, he eats what would support seven men. This margin between product and consumption, as narrow as it is. has led them to almost eutirely do away with the horse, and you find very few of them iu the kingdom anywhere. •They economize everything. A China- in will raise in pots in his windows almost enough vegetables to do his family. If he has au old |toml or lake he will cut the battilxMi reeds on its edges, tie them into a raft, and with a dredging shovel will raise soil from the bottom ot the lake and spread it on this raft. Ou this artificial patch, floating about in the lake, lie will RAlMK KKTTKK AMI FULLER CROrS than many a Georgia farmer will on a ten acre field. A farm of four or five acres is a vast (rasession iuChina and will make its owner rich. As an evidence of how they economize s|atce you may have noted that in this country when they rent a room the first tiling they do is to make two rooms of it by running a new floor Iietween the ceiling and the regular floor. They will then live on each of these two fl.rars. “Are the Chinese honest?” ‘‘Yes, sir, to a wonderful degree. To begin with, burglary is a capital crime. The man who steals has his head taken off, and that too with very little delay and no equivocation. The result of this strict code is that stealing b almost unknown. A China merchant will have his shop open and go to dinner witti not a soul left behind to guard hix wares. You may have noticed that every jiackage of tea or tire-works that you ever saw iut)rarted from China had the price marked on it. If any oue passes one of these unguarded shops aud sees an urticle that he wants, lie climbs upon the shelf, gets it, and leaves the money and retires. The shop-owner comes back, scrapes un his money attd balances his accounts. Now, how long could an At lanta merchant run his business on that schedule T* HOW THEY FOLLOW CONFUCIUS. ‘Are the Chinamen people religious to great degree?" “Blindly so. T ke the figures. In thb country, which is thought to be thoroughly Christianized, we find that probably ten tueu in every hundred are devout followers of Christ, and only about twenty even pro fessors of the Christian religion. In China we find ninety-eight out of every hundred devout followers of Confucius, which is the God they worship. If the Christians only added to their enterprise and intelligence the directness and zeal of the Buffdnists, they would soon plant their white banner on every part of thb globe.” “ Are the Chinese advancing rapidly scientific pursuits?" “ Not as rapidly as would be exjiected by a superficial spectator; aud yet 1 think rapidly enough. You must remember that these Chinese have been wedded for thou sands of years to their peculiar belli fs and that every truth announced to them is 1 innovation upon their old beliefs. 1-Y instance, suppose that a foreigner for whom hands; several refused to surrender their tickets and were Enocked down; subse quently saw military, nineteen men of the Eighteenth infantry, march into the court house yard and form into two lilies; the voters were required to pass to the polls un der fixed bayonets; on cumplaiut lieing made to witness that voters were interfered with by the military, he issued a warrant for the arrest of Lieutenant Hinton, who commanded the detachment; the sheriff made a verbal report that Hinton stated that he had been summoned by the chief deputy marshal to bring troops to ti.e polls; that there was no breaches of the peace except such as were committed by deputy marshals who had taken ballots from voters, and further that Hinton de clared he was informed that violence was imminent at the polls, and that there had already been a breach of the peace and asked to be saved front the disgrace of ar rest, promising that he would remove his troops to the rear of the court-house. Wit ness (this having lieen done) instructed the sheriff to take no further action. Several of the deputy marshals were en gaged in distributing tickets, and charged colored persons with having democratic tickets in their hands and in a line with the whites with betraying their race. AU the deputy marshals, with one exception, were colored men. Their instructions were >igtted by the United States marshal, the words at the head of their commissions be ing. “Stand by your party.” The witness saw in three or four instances democratic ballots destroyed by these officers. The conduct of llie marshals did not fall tinder his observation in 1878; but he knew of one colored democrat who was threatened to be cross-examined by Teller. The Hayes and Hampton ticket embraced the democratic nominee* fo**office; and the Hayes and Chamberlain ticket embraced the republican candidates. It was declared by Representative Saylor and other members ' the subcommittee ot the house of .•rcsentatives on the third of January, that Haye» had carried the state by front l,00t> to 2,000 votes, and such was the belief of witness. Hampton was elected by 1,100 majority. He suptrarted the Haves and Hampton ticket amiall the democratic 110m- inees and side by side with Hampton he canvassed the state for Hayes, but lie voted for Tilden. indorsing on his ballot a* a rea son for doing so that 1 nyouets were brought to the polls to secure the election of Hayes. The troops did not interfere ns a bodv with the voters, but one of the soldiers cursed a citizen and threatened to bayonet him. The only rea'oii given by the citizen was that he was on his way to the polls. The troops were at. the polling place for an hour. He, in 1873, saw a voter shot down in Charleston ami thought that the shooting in jhat case was justifiable. In conclusion of his testimony, witness wished to say that, a jury of the’state court composed wholly of republican* would convict the most prominent republican who should wrong a democrat and a demo cratic jury would convict a most prominent tlcinocrzl who should wrong a republican. 1876 cost 16»» vote*. The number inf.) short of a I we have very little respect should come ”gF ,f ^ty..K o urDqrthernstateaw c nt.IorTIMet i — | . llu | inform*an American town that the any all — —id then where is he to make un the deficiency of 19 vote*? It will be remembered that the wlwile south 1* conceded to the democratic candidate. And upon the theory that Grant would carry all th- Hayes states, he must get the needed 19 vote* from the fonr states that went for TUdeu. Where can he And them? Indiana is a* sure to go fir the democratic nominee In 1880 as 1* Ken tucky. Connecticut may vote for the republicans, and there U a bare possibility that New Jersey might b*» i“ the same direction, though there is farles probability that these two states should take that course than there is that Oregon, Cali fornia aud Nevada should throw their twelve votes for the democratic candidate. But give to Grant tiie fifteen votes of Connecticut ana New Jersey, and he would still lack four of a majority Of course, (f Grant could secure all the northern stop* that went for Hayes, and then add to them the votes of New York, he would be elected. The result would give a total of 2U1 votes. But If he would carry New York and all the northern Hayes states except Ohio, the loss of Its 22 vote would reduce his total to 179, which would be si short of a majority. We advise the friends of Grant and the bayonet to carefully study these figures. The South 11ms Overpaid. Louisville Courier-Journal. Senator Bell, republican senator from New Hampshire introduced a resolution recently call ing upon the secretary of the treasury for lnfor- CHARLIE TO LEAD WHILESHERMAN PATS HIS SHOULDER The Meeting of the Republican State Convention of Ohio In Cincinnati—Charlie Footer Nomi nated on tbe First Ballot—Tbe Plat form Indorses tbe Vetoes. Cincinnati, May 28.—The republican state convention met this morning. Alien T. Brismore, of Cleveland, was elected tem porary chairman and 8. M. Fields, of Columbus, temporary secretary. Recess was taken and after reassembling ex-Gov- ernor Dennison was elected permanent chairman. Alonzo Taft, Charles Foster and General J. W. Keifer were nomi- naled as candidates for governor. Foster was nominated on the first ballot, the vote being: Foster, 2805-6; Taft, 2711-6 and Keifer, 2. Foster's nomination was made unanimous The following nominations were made for lieutenant governor: Hon. Lewis Season- good, of Cincinnati; Andrew Hickenlooper. of Cincinnati; General Samuel 1L Hurst, of Chiiicothe, and Colonel A. a McClure, of Wooster. While the ballot was progressing the name of General Hurst was withdrawn, and at the close of the ballot McClure’s name was also withdrawn The announce ment of these changes caused a transfer of a number of votes, and when the final an nouncement was made the ballot stood: Hickenlooper 390; Season good 131—total 521. The nomination of Hickenlooper was then made unanimoua The following is the remainder of the ticket nominated: Forjudge of the supreme court, W ..t t m .. 7 IN GENERAL. —Hooray for Mr. Beecher!—Princess Iran- iToiild like to he.— for Tilden— 'tes, fonnw-tlcm with Wtta n ot round, hut flat—that it diu not turn un its axis—tlmt God was not God, hutau impostor—why, how many of your people would believe hint? None. It took the direct tax of the old scientist his life-time t< our ancestors tlmt the earth did move at all, and he was imprisoned for that. So with the Chinese. Wheu you tell them that the rain is vapor collected in the clouds and is not made to order by the gods, and tlmt thunder and lightniug are simple electricity and are not the flashing eyes and roaring voice of the great Deity, and that this earth is a part of a great universe of world*, and that the comet 1 weeps through a regular and well defined orbit, you strike at the faith of their lifetime, ami they disbelieve you. Of course there are some who yield their opinions at last aud these are usually the must intelligent. The government printing house at Pekin is now turning out enor mous editions of English school hooks translated in Chiuese and printed in the Chinese language. This work U being done by Dr. Young J. Allen, who has been for years a missionary uf the Methodist church thb country. He b also editing a paner Pekin that nas a large circulation, ami is doing very much towards enlightening the people.” A WOUKIXUMEN’S LEAGUE. Are there any labor troubles in China or any parties?” —Your candidate I John Sherman. —Mrs. A. T. Stewart finks very youth ful, and hasn’t a single silver ha'.r yet. —A Mississippi planter says that he will be one of a thousand to give $5U a year to send southern negroes to Massachusetts. —Victoria is 60, aud yet the prince of Wales is not likely to get the throne until he is too old to enjoy it. —Mr. Tims. W. Eichelberger. late of the Keokuk Constitution ami Toledo Commer cial, has settled down as news editor of the Des Moines (Iowa) Kegbter. —Sigh no more, boys, sigh no more. Girls were deceivers ever. One foot in sea and one on shore. To one thing constant never. —Erie Herald. —St. Louts* one hundredth season as a summer resort is about to o|ieu. ller proud position as champion sun-stroke region of the United States will lie fully maintained. -Chicago Times. —In India from 20.000 m 30,000 |iersons perished from cholera while returning from a religious fair; and an eastern exchange in fers that church-fair ice cream is the saute l over the world. —Count Beust is said to lie the wittiest ambassador in Euro|ie. He has that great charm of the humorist, a grave demeanor— for he was originally intended for the mil- } iit—and his conversation is full of bril- iancy. —Of William Lloyd Garrison’s surviving children. William Lloyd is in the wool busi ness in Boston; Wendell P. is connected with the New York Nation; Frank the Houghton publishing house, and the daughter b the wife of Henry Vi Hard, well-known railroad manager. -Sir Garnet Wolseley has every reason to believe, he says, that in the mountains of Cyprus, at a height of five thousand and five hundred feet above the sea, bis troops will be quartered throughout the v« as great safety to health as at Malta or any place on the shores of the Mediterranean. —The funding association exjwcts to be- S in funding the debt of Virginia early in line, and it is believed tlmt fully $9,000,000 will be exchanged by July L The terms of exchange adopted are to give $112 50 of the new “average fours” for each $100 of the consols surrendered, and $75 of the “aver age fours” for $100 of “peelers ” —Dr. Schlieman wri es to a friend tlmt lib wife lias siuce their marriage, ten yean ago, perfectly mastered nearly all ihe Eu ropean languages, learned nearly all the Homeric poems by heart, and constantly assists him w : ith fervent zeal in nil his un dertakings. He says that sooner or later they hope to reluru to America tnd make W. W. Johnson, of Lawrence; forattomev- general, George K. Nash, of Franklin; for auditor of state, John F. Oglcsbie, of Clark; usurer; Jamo Turney, of Cnyaho- Ity; for commissioner of public ork*, James FuUington. The resolutions reaffirm the principles of the republican |«arty, and pledges it anew to the maiutenaceof free suffrage, equal rights and national union and supremacy. They declare that the majority in congress seeks the establishment of state sovereignty, and assert that the present session of congress, forced by democrats, is prolonged beyond excuse to the detriment of the country’s in terests. They point with pride to the finan cial administration of the government by the republican party. They declare that Ihe democratic legislature of Ohio is fraught with scandals ami mischief. They protest against the dismissal of ox-union soldiers from public offices, and congratulate the resilient and remiblican members of con gress on the stand they have taken in op- position to the designs of the present con gressional majority. Sjiociiil (li.qmtoh to The Constitution. Dfjj Moines, May 29.—The state green- 1 vent ion inti yesterday. John Por- elcctcd president. Two elements ere present—the straight greenbackers, 1 favor of paying the bonds in legal-tender ites, and an element in favor of paying them in gold, silver, or legal-tender notes. er party prevailed aud thereupon the Wap|tel!a county delegation withdrew from the convention. Daniel Campltell, of Clark county, was nominated for governor. For lieutenant- governor, M. II. Moore, of Dubuque. For supreme judge, M. H. Jones, of Davis. Two Words. SL Louis l'ust-Dispatch. Two short and simple word* explain the object ~nd aim of the republican party, explain the rad ical chance in the fundamental principles of poli tic* wrought by republican rule. What is the object of a political party from the republican standpoint? \\ hat the first duty of the { •resident, the cabinet, the administration or party cadcr* generally. D h to preserve peace and promote prosperity throughout the land? Is it to administer the laws of the land with honesty and economy? Is it to restore a real union and national feeling among all section*, by restoring love of country id patriotism? Is it by observing the cardinal doctrine that this is a common country, with common interests and a common desti y, with perfect equality between by A briber he signed toe ordinance of **vv^4 ••( dt< r he n« that hi* motBOiO were u-.iavailtii : we do not know, nor A* we think, let the fact be a* it may. that »t u|wet» hia owu 4c- i laratiou In the great speech ha* *1 *urred ulb vnub'.{ M*ine»nd bl» tu poUtktl i*H*UT. ■ ol.md HUI.ro AmM. _ tike his uidwiiiitriad.'Yvtowl H«..uu>r. ■ Tatww, who wa* onwlol In th, tell o( 19K. May as—Th, little town ot «ud njmited wivpo« t„o««wl Ron-two. M Untnrin, dUunt!.*»«. twonty-rh, mil.. : fn»i .. „ w’iih K-.uweau he »*Jd: •‘General Rou*- . the im-pcrvatWi iff this union “ him. I wnoted his arm away from its aim, and cried: 'Chamhi ws, tor God's sake, wha: do y*>u noauT “*I've killed ooe woman.’ be yelled, ‘aud I don't propwe to leave severely though not fatally wounded the left brea»L They returned to town, where Dr. \V. J. Harrell dressed tiie wound Mr. James Ponder, of the Democrat, and 'tnjggled with | William Meirandon, druggist, celebrated another to tell the tale,’ . _ him; but not till 1 had pu-lied J their bi.*th«ia\ at the edit .rial nram of the him out of the yard could 1 indace hi .1 to I Democrat !a»t night. U was a plea.-ant at* leave the place. We didn’t go to Knoxville j fair, appropriate toa*:* filled the air. and that night but went hack home. I gave I wine ami cake fifteen persons present U> cel myself up with no fears of being accused of | ebrate tbe auspicious occasion. that $2,730,000 is due from the southern states and must he collected. Of course everybody under stand* that Hell's resolution Is for a political pur- pewe, and the republican organs have now taken up afre»h the hue and cry I against the south for not “paying her debts.” The New York Tribune of Wednesday contained a] scurrilous editorial on the subject, aud from now | on the organs of fraud will have a good deal to I say on the subject. Before John Sherman under, I I takes to collect that tax he will have to credit the south with about 820,»«),0 0 cotton tax paid, t» I rather forced from her by the government uncon stitutionally, cs decided by the United State* su preme court, so that the south has overpaid her |tax some 517,000.0).and is thus far ahead of the north tn that respect. The republican organs hod better keep quiet on Hell's revolution. The south has paid her share and more of the tv».000.»*»).and U cannot be collected twice. If that is the game,I let Mr. Sherman try hMMjrafcghmMBHMilM all the states and all tiie people, regardless of the olntn of the couqiass? Of course, to ask these questions is to answer ’ Idea ever enters the minds of the ttennen” of to-day. With see the starting point of every politi- . ill lead to but oue single object. It is to preserve power. How can this power lie preserved? Only by a solid north. And so the indirect object, aim and end of every republican siieeeh or step, of every veto and svery address and every republican poliey or edi- .orlal, Is a solid north. These two simple wools are the key to every thing that has been done ami will be done from tills till the day of Ute presidential election in 1880. There is but one object, and that is to pre serve power, and there is but one way to accom plish that object, and that is through a solid north. But the plot will fail. Twenty years of power will lie enough. Grant Must Kef ire. New York Herald. Grant catino* tie a candidate without permitting its friends to fight on his la-half for the nomina tion and he wo dd have to eat all his own words and the words of his particular sponsori before he might iNishibly, though reluctantly, accept, ■■.'-ht-rmnirsappcaram-e in the field as a con- b-sfnnt, mid the certainty that his example will be followed by other rsmUdates, necessitates the re tirement of Grant iiuU^s he is willing to have an ntry would regard os grotesque. flow tiie Late Kingston Killing Origi nated. Acworth, Ga., May 26.— Editors Coh- ktitution: Please give the following a (dace in your paper. We notice an article in year issue. 24th inst., on Kingston tra gedy, headed “The work of thuse Acworth Roughs.” We do not stop to reply in de tail, but will fgttkwvdr to correct some of the errors of the writer or informant case mav be. Doubtless it w» an effort to tore-stoek public opinion. The statement b partial, u just and false—at least to some extent. * Thompson Morris, the atlrer of tbe unfortunate young men, is a re- .pretabie, worthy and highly esteemed citi- A Lucky Man. About five or six years ago a G'unadian named Tabb was in Atlanta working for McNaught Ac Scauu-hin, for a titnderaffi sal ary, ami was just like any other eierk in tbe d»>. The oilier day this sa 1 ” ary, ami wasjusi ime any outer cierx in : . t .,„ Tl.JL „ iltt!#. tbe cir>. The oilier day this same Tabb ^al the mctuallv^ inherited u equivalent to ^ um (, na ji. The* cashier explained that it 6?e million dollars in our currency, and a “w-minu” left hv some Chinaman tu dukedom thrown Into the bargain. He is ES *2*5 zen of Cobb county, largely a*d respectably connected. Thompson Moms, jr.. on* of tbe unfortunate and elder son, was the uiar- B »hal ox tbe town of Acworth—1 high-toned the crime,but Uhatub! is* loafed anmnd and I Our crops are looking vigorous and I geutleman. a faithful and efficient officer, when they tried 10 take him was*!*™. His J healthy, notwithstanding the late season i Joe Morris, the other victim, was a very testimony would l»ave cleared tue, bat I and heavy rain storm* Planters are hav- peaceable young matt—sober, industrious wlien 1 wa- court-martialed 1 didn't know j ing great trouble with tbe grass. We are j and of high standing—ever good-humored. »f the women that wa- tip I having too tuut-b rain; it prevents work in j generous and kind; never had a difficulty there tluit night and hence they were not J the hi r mo. The wheat and oat crops are J with others *-■-*- r fife. I iStgbt naffiScaUoolo j summoned My defense in all my other j very fair, and the planters are reaping. over a pteture-que lynching winch !«»>k jrrc.J hiw >n mt un> » »"«»■» n, ■ —— ^ . . . place about three oYim-k Uri-morning. The tv;: to.iighi f»ie the ocuprowtise measures of i trials has been 011 the ground that the Ufareshtugand bousing, affair rrew out ,-i an c.openienL On Su - . I f.i .gtit wwewffun i*» WML hU the lost civil authorities had no right to try me ai. ———•- 3£«Saa» chirtEau-w-v , h ... ,is*”'-1 *•>«*»»--»•»««." am.■*—*<>«<..,n.«. tlKtiw «rifr •>( » thrifty and indtotriou. j aadOcn aaotlwr. and aaodter. I "*hat are your hogea now M to the dis- farmer of Clermont county, left her 1 utd finally they all got aboard. I looked down 1 position of your case. Ira me with a 8l Iamb sport named Wil- the bank and mid. ’buy. VU gt food with ; I’ll get out, I suppose. If I don’t !!r?Tl lmS,.| Wt ^i,| to h.rt"' l Wir turkinc ” y 111 d ” °ut after- neighborhood and liad been lurking upon thousand* In the math. We are very | while. almut for sonic time ostensibly to j >nre that it exactly represented the pelittral post- i ‘-What has become of the Bell family rri.it tb,m. bur ivallv to |*y curt tun ot colorrd HSt i daring the pa.t fonrwra y«ar.r we «sk«A ,«h. young wtte, -bo btel Uren a f-unrer ^ 1 dTn'l know,” b. »id. noueba. Montezuma Weekly. i Untiy. “Old man Bell dropped dead m the Tbe Mveat city la the south Is Atlanta, and. * »treeU of Knoxville, a »wy fj” likewise. Twx Atlanta Consttyttion isibeUreas ; be came down there to testify against me. nrgnr or r.o- ,-.r wreraarrj. rurj ..re rn- £££J 1 < *" n ' t kn °' Wl ““ h “ be ~ n " 0f tb ?5“?- v Krcepred at Cincinnati by a tel^rau. sent' I Such ww the story of Ooiem^-toW inth to the police here and returned to Clermont kuke a* two praa. —*” • hnBW sweetheart of his. The lovers had been | haring frequent meetings in the very pre— , ence of the |mtiem husband until at !a-t mere Was aa explosion, followed by the flight of the pair westward. They were i Providence. May 21.—Miss Manr Greene, who is now living on Brown street in this city, will celebrate her centennial to morrow. She was bom May 22.17711, in tbe town of Old Warwick, K. I., and lived there until about four yearn ago. when she was injured by a fall, and was brought to Providence to be cared for at tbe boose of a relative. Mr. W. H. Owen. Her general health is quite good, and her mind seems unimpaired. She is wonderfully preserved. i old. k 100 years old is be- hia life on his own account drinking when the difficulty oc curred: indeed, va never known to drink at all: did not hare a pistol, — never was known to cornr in his life; never earned anything more than a common pocket-knife and has always been free from dissipation. Neither of the other brothers were in King ston at ll* 1 time. Oue was out with tiie picnic party, a mile from town, and knew nothing of lira trouble until he was in formed of tbe killing <* hts brothers. So much for the “roughs.” We are informed by reliable parties who witnessed tbe whole of the difficulty from beginning to end, and their statement - — tlmt Rarer,n 1*1 >*a nmnt ‘None at all. The laborers never think of resisting any outrage that is put urran them. Indeed submission is one of Ute strong iraints of the Chinese character. In this country they are forcisl to hand together for protection. 1 heard an amusing story once of a gentleman in San Francisco trho hired » Chinese cook. The fellow stayed With him three days and then quietly left will rant a word «» wanting. He got an other Chi aman. This one Stayed only half a day, when he .melted from view. A third one stayed a week and then left with lii* half-cooked dinner on the stove, ritili an other was secured, but he went the way of all the rest. The gentleman then feeling that his house must be possessed of spirits, went to a very intelligent Chinaman, win. was cashier of a bank, and asked what it nieauL The cashier wax unable to say, hut stated that he wuuld coll around iu the af ternoon and examine the premises. He did so, attd after lookiug for some time ex claimed, ‘Alt, here it ia!* at the same time reported happy in his honor, and while tuns friend-* ure as plain and j congratulate Mr. Tab!*, ever-bis-name- is.” * bargain new wealth a u of his Atlanta »|Kior as over, we jr “Duke What- <Jj*rrJ*o»’» funeral. Boston. May 28.—The funeral of Wtn. Ltnyd Garrison look place at Roxhurv this afternoon. The orier of the exercUraa em braced the reading «»f the M-riptures by Samuel May. and an address by I.ncy Stone, an address’ by Rev. Samuel Johnston, au address by Theodore D. Wild, aud an ad dress by Wendell Phillips. The choir was ^ composed of a colored quartette, and the sensimv applied in America, if there musical selections were designated by Mr. | only enough horses. notify his countrymen that be bad been badly treated in fhgt bouse. The geutie- tiian r investigato4 and found that his pre decessor in the house had lieen engaged in a fuss with hb Chinese servant and had dis missed him. The crafty fellow “doomed” the house by a few scratches and tlltftt (eft it. In the conversation with »L* gentleman qlludrd tu, w* learned nvauy points of itt- tarest about the Chine-e, only a few of which we have transcribed above. One tiling that he said may be noted. “When a child speaks disresiiectfully of its parent*, they quarter it between four wild horses.” A, very sensible rule, and oue that might be their home in Indianapolis. —-Tliere is to be an investigation by the grand jury of the District of Columbia into the manner in which the late Congressman Douglass, of Virginia, came to his death, it will be remembered that he died very sud denly, about the holidays, of inflammation of tiie stomach.' Some nights Indore begot into au altercation with another southern congressman in a disorderly house, and the ntelee was kicked in the stomach, Some of his friends, believing his death t- have lieen caused by this injury, have lieen investigating the facts attd itave laid the suit before the grand jury. —-The Chicago Times, of Saturday last printed interviews with eighty-six promi nent business men on the presidential question. Fifteen had no preference forty-seven were republicans and twenty four democrats. A large majority of the republicans favored Grant, six were for Blaine, three for Bherman, one each for K. It Washburtte, Beu Harrison aud Ly titan Trumbull. Of tbe democrats eleven were for David Davis, six for Tilden, four for Hendricks, two for Bayard, one for Palmer nd one for the field. —On and after June 1 subscription* to newspujiers, reviews anil periodical publica tions will be received in all the post-office* of France on condition of a commission of three per cent. The subscription, with all the necessary details, will be forwarded di rect to the publisher* who agree to the terms by a s|KN.ial )rast-office order. The various irast-ofticc* will hold at the dis|MjHxl of the public all information relative to the publi cations, The post-office* will also forward Mth-vriptlon* to publishers who do uot ac cept its conditions, provided the subscritier pays three per cent ooiututsrkm iu addition to’the amount of the subscription. —The following analysis of the vote on the final passage of the Warner silver bill is worthy of ctneful examination: Maine, yea* 2, nays 3; New Hampshire, nay* 3; Vermont, nay* 2; Massachusetts, nays it; Connecticut, yea 1, nay* U; New York, yea 1, nays 16; New Jersey, yea* 2, nays 3; Penn sylvania. yeas?, nays 12; Maryland, yeas5. nay 1; V.rginia, yeas 5; North Carolina, yea* 7; South Carolina, yeas 4; Georgia, yeas 7; Alabama, yeas 5: Florida, yea 1; Missis- sippi. yeas 4; Louisiana, yeas 3; Texas, yew* 4. nay* 1; Ohio, yeas R, nays B: West Vir ginia. yeas 2; Indiana, yea* 5, nays 2; Illi nois, yeas nays ft; Kentucky, yea* 9; Ten- neseco. yeas 8. nay 1; Michigan, yea*8; Wia- instin, yea i. nays 7; Minnesota, uay 1; Iowa, yeas 2, nays 5; Missouri, yeas 8; Ar kansas. yeas 4: Kansas, nays 3; Colorado, yea 1; Nevada, yea 1. Plain gat Greatly Needed Talk. Philadelphia Times. The New Orleans Times has Just given iu read- The Warner Silver Bill. Savannah News. The effect of this must he to create a fresh and popular issue for 1880. and lo drive the radicals Wk to their old position of not only favoring a tnilitarv despotism and u destruction of the free dom of the ballot-tiox by placing federal overseer* over Amcrii-an citizens while exercMng their in alienable rights of suffrage, hut also of allying themselves against the people and in the Interest of the iMindholderx on the financial question. This will be certain to secure the honest green back vote to the democratic party, and it will also citable tiie people to discover, still more dearly than ever, who are their truest irlends, and to whom their Interests can lie more safely entrusted. Kennlor Hill’**Speed* in 1 lie Campaign. Hartford Times. •‘The republican* oi Wisconsin have ordered KKMKio copies of Bun Hill's recent speech in the sense* for circulation ns a campaign document,’’ nsys the OouranL Yesterday we offered the Con tent Si00 in gold If they would publish Mr. Hill’s speech in their dully and weekly editions. If it is s good republican campaign document we are willing to aid in its circulation, and the Courant ought to assist. The Courant has made no re sponse: and we are authorized by Mr. Samuel Mather, of Windsor, a resisatsihle gentleman, to add $50 to our offer. So that the Courant can get •150 for piihlifthing this ‘‘republican campaign document.” ft fs a candid speech, gentlemanly and argumentative. More Revolution. Chicago Times. What insolence! The south and west is de manding quinine duty free. This is revolution ary. Have the couple of manufacturers In Phila delphia no rights? Are they to be refused further protection to their adult industry because some poor devils among the ipeople don’t want to waste tu 1 pocket as well os shake in tiody? They have mane some millions already, but !§ a manufactu rer to be hailed at millions? Let these audacious hou th westerners shake. They deserve nothing better. Coming Home Too Soon. Baltimore Gazette. Grant l* coming home too soon for the welfare of the l*»o*n manager* He experts to reach Hon Francisco about the 20th of July. This will In? rather hot weather for tinkering with tbe entire- Miasm of the people. Perhaps the old gentleman can be quarantined at Hon t'nnciaco lor a couple of months. Ill* health would doubtless be Im proved by a bit of seclusion. Good Logic. New Haven Register. To the rem.irk ot the. Hartford Courant that lOO.onn copies of Bert Hill’s This is logic of the most Garrison before bis death. CONGRESSIONAL. T. J. Mackey, circuit jutigauf Muutii t'aro crat the notional advantages of tl Csqgressmaa Hull Acquitted. Jacksonville, Fla.. Mav 28.—Tbe jury in tiie election case of tiie United States vs. N. A. Hull came in this afternoon at two o’clock with a verdict of “not guilty.” Arguments ciuseil in the railroad cases. The papers are all in, and Judge Bradley thought he would be able to tender his opinion in the morning* if not. he wonld then state when it would he ready. A Reeelver Appointed. Special dispatch to The Constitution. Mexfuis, May 29.—Judge Baxter, of the United States circuit court has appointed Daniel Russell, of Hayward county, re- ] disregard the broct** of the state ceiver of the city of Brownsville, whose j court; at 2 o'clock the chief -* ebarter was repealed by the late legislature. | marshal at the head of a band of * public. It point* . . . J tiie city’s location. insists that it ought to be the outU-4 for the. whole surplus of the Mb»i*UM«( valley, iucludfng the harvests of IUlnoh, fudiona aud Ohio quite as I much os the sugar oroottou iff Iraublaua, and ddetases that U not only ought to be, but might lie, the second city In the United Htates. And then 1; answers the question why About tbe Fair Thing. Washington Post. It 1* only a trifle of 90)0,000 a year that the British government giuiroiitees to Yakoob Khan, (kmqiared with the usual pay and perquisites of uaeles* j«ot**ntate* of the old world this ia not much. And eoinjured with the $50,000 which Mr, Hayes is permitted fraudulently to draw it wemH alraut the fair thing. Curious Ideas. IraulhviUe Courier-Journal. The gist of Bayes’s theory Is that the federal government hn* to protect itself from the people <ff the United States at the polls. Curious Ideas of a republican form of government these repub lican statesmen have. litta. testified hefuretbe VYttliave outamittee Tuesday that he was in affinali^hi with re- iK*bltcttfi V*rty until 1876, when he left it: Vss tireaent at an electtmi for state officer-, presidential electors and congressmen, in Chester in 1876, and was called on to inter-. . „ r . n _ r _. t pose official authority u» i h*-ck interference thrived ^Bul'udoea noTbalievs there Is any need’ by military and deputy mar-fud* at tire : of New Orleans continuing to justify such a dls- polls; several deputy mandutls -vrlsiwl i on the <Mtw. «ho»4s their pa’pwe to wry lU election for tbe NpaUiOkta; exhibited a circular purport- . ™ - ^ has been content, from the b>-gl'mUtg, Ui sit down under the reputation of being the fever nest and ies*-boleof the United mats*.' 1 .-•> i-.ng os this reputation exists, the Times rightly Itolds that it it- aielcta to talk aLoitt the resources of Louisiana or the commercial adrouta^es of New Orleans; leople won't go there to live, and budness j —» . very different so tta»t «< BssrTGugh , e n»outh , yood doubt, end she bids tair to lire some | piece. They »uueihuThomrfoo llornslired Jndge Baxter holds the act repealing the 1 wen assaulted voters at Carmel, tearing „ many flashes of a grim humor—a humor yean longer. a pistol within the incorporate limits, charter unconstitutional. Hayes and Hampton tickets from their Kentucky. Small trut* pay, and pay well. poses to do iu share toward stirring the public np Georgia’s Kmall Fruits. Memphis Appeal. Georgia Is ponring peaches upon New York. —. sfrmt,,— — Very Impolitic. Washington Post. It is understood tlmt John Sherman believes is wonld l«e impolitic, under any circumstances, for ...— ■-*- nominate a presidential the republican party candidate for a third Demoersts Need not Apply* SL Iranis Globe Democrat. The republican party is able to choose iu own ■anner-bearen without *' *"* ■*"* * .rax or peace democrat* cover in alraut a year. A Competent Witness. New York Herald. Governor Colquitt wonts the north to under went* More or tbe Ha use Sort. New York 8tar. If the south has any more such impressive and and very soon west Tennessee will be pouring winsome governors as Governor Colquitt, of Geor- them on Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, aa well as gin, it will be greatly to her advantage to scatter them occasionally through the north. ,■■2 n. C., ana reazruu. _ -o. JAMES W. RAlNWATtR, £93 majJO wtd Deputy ShexiflJ