The Weekly constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1881-1884, October 03, 1882, Image 1

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V MMKaMMMaBf ' Fayetteville ga ^ ’ LBGrtggf WEEKLY CONSTITUTION. VOLUME XIV. TUESDAY MORKOtt, OCTOBER 3, 18S2. PRICE 5 CENT ••CURBSTONE ECHOES," bales last year, and the crop in our territory is twenty-five per cent larger this season than last, ♦hir three new roads ought to give us 20,000 bales of cotton this season, and mote when they are fin- ' ished.” I "Do you eee the way clear to 200,000 bales?" "Yes. In three yean or less Atlanta will receive ! in one season over 200,000 bales of cotton. That ! cotton will gee us <10,000,000 disbursed in the city in six mouths." Major Ben Crane thinks the receipts wilt teach 150,000hales, hot will not go higher. He says: "The acreage of cottoki planted In Atlanta's terri tory t* 13 per cent lest than last year, aafi there is randk less fertilisers used. The crop is much bet ter, Oiut the net gatn will not be oveeto per cent A* tor our new rusts, they will hardly *c finished tbfe year, and madk of the cotton they Iccingua will ke the aame ceTtou we have already received by wagons. I'll beaaCafied with 150,OM Wales.' "What of the erode outlook?” It U better and safer than 1 ever knew it, I think Atlakts,September 30th. R82.—Of count in bis peregrinations a man about townOs obliged Co hear snore or lesaef politics, and rihiaie what I beard a ■vcMn Observer say of the coming senata^nlrace: “Dori’inute the mistabe of 'Vrllevlng that Col ■qdRtworilbc elected. Is sc to as the legislate ie ■meets hevrill be the nen TJriKed States senator 'from Georgia All the flrsa auOabuse otn.im comes 'from a'for,- men wholwve been ti.huws him all j»e time and who rimgf y gro* bitter* every time Yhepeople arete good fix. and ’iewpe'ire abin- r. t ” .a <j ant There kittle need foe precisions and u> BUZZ AND BOUNCE. party” met at Saratoga, by the advice and consent . t of Jay Gould. The following ticket was nominated, I j and you are asked to ratify it: For governor, Charles THE GOSSIP THEY HEAR IN NEW • J Folger, lawyer; for lieutenant governor, B Platt ' YORK. i Carpenter, lawyer; for Judge of the court oi ap- ■ 'peals, Charles Andrews,’awyer; for congressman- Spicy Talks and Brtabt Amecdotea at the Men and j at large, A B Hepburn, lawyer. The “grand old DURING THE WEEK- WHAT PE- PLE AT HOME AND ABROAD ARE DOING. TtUnw* Put and Present In the Metropalla of thakfew World—The Polltkjal 81 nation 1s Xt«w York- rteatrioal Fact*. { democratic party” met at Syracuse on the following j day. Jay Gould's agent, Mr Galloway, was present ! to look after his master's interests. The democratic _ . . _ . „ ... t party nominated the following candidates,and you Spe^ Correspondence olTbeConsUtutton J Liked to support them: For governor, Grover N^vYoek September ffl -The democra have aevel(lnd ta fo * Ueutenant-gov- gothewYorktoaoertainty! The nomination of ^ B HI11> J , awyer . {or iudge of Cleveland settles that interesting £sct. Not so The Khediva’a BMnrn to Cairo—A Butruotive Storm— Pollett'a Patters In New York—An Atlanta Po liceman Sertonaly Wounded—The Hick* Murder Verdict—Tna Next Concrete. ihc beats, them "They claim thattkry'l] ber.t him rtr: time?" "They've eaid thataHl the'time—bvft they have 1 never*lone It. He bn been ovcrwhtfkringly elect ed every time andhe-is stttr iger nee than he wtrr was *• “Whydoyou tlwhn that' ’ "rtccause the num ber Of those w¥ > assail him Is lestThatt ev< r. Vtx violent abase'he is suhfested to bus made him -new friends, and •disgusted <thju- safiJa who oppose!'htm before, «f. 1 drawn bir-old frtend* clowctodslm ’‘He haa pertJlre Claluis to the -cuatiinhlptcto?” ■ “Cortalnly. 'Eo'isT.te rblon*. man In Che*race. Bf haa by faefbo greatest liatfcni. reputadcr.. He ■1s the best ktroVmmaii. Ht> has^lven the rtf*te the rtwo most prosy?tons -admlnlttaiMous shekel ever ♦had. II<- irt -Hurt and disCiiguished-coldier, ' and in a t it Ir on above reproach. As a se-neor. Cot- <iuitt will ke-wne 6! the foreran*: men inKh-.t body. And hetitDi'Uettonstnr, and wf.l be elected on the flr« balD-uu* !-by*te.‘ me majauH/.’’ I >u.krflGl»T.ry Ki diardsi«t.secretary w” die state exocutkte -rwmmfee. what he thought ttephena’s majority'Would tie HcrcplieC: "1 dowot think it will go-tibove U6*.y.0, and will probably" range be- tween if-.WJO'add that figure.•’ I ex<W2ssed some surprhtosU thesdCgures, and-he said: "In waste sections of tfcc-date the rcgrocs will ■votoaolWly against ns. TWe is ettponSfc'.ly the cast in Geaecei OgtoTtorpc and-a.ther oacntlesof Mr. Sliqrtisnlfs ofd’-f Istrict. Wrc white people are cel- lylngavxh enthusiasm, wnriw.'.ay lift Che majority to ttu: Mgberft.mlt I bao-t raggcste<t,*cut 1 do test thUrUlMtlillw: above itunV I Jmt • Dr. ‘ Henry Crolw u, of (itrrke—ashtruf -; some,-and -ffUant and tkoroughfared-looking sej etPTs-su-1 esV-d him !*.»*' '.ho CariEler-Speer o«e w»w«aing: *^>ycer'Wf!l be beatee,'"*3 r;pli«*l, “beyond all; pom-riventttTr. He willMtcarry aJ.nglc ceunCy in- tlsi tfcstriiWVl his msjsdfty of 18dt, and in Bitivi ootii tics hKVoss will he us rwhdwt.’ng. In daibe, fopet sample where be Mi 1,150 majority, be tan- noknet nowrtver 260 at -she out-14 j. For the-fits'J rinn we hues really wupatl-cd to a trry tliecoainty.; Wo Hbvwmi “working ■cevnmitl« ’ of thirtytf »c} yi« g ir.u:, .heanod *qrr r«.x-Mayor Talmadge,-for j ■tebiy aBpctr man, a»<Mfcere are many who Out! bewrtill care - the cottwty. In MtCi xju county each! nte.t.as George B. Daatidhlhavo <)U : Speer, suiC-thc' eeanty Ukt most solid tforTaudlcr. In Oconee dt-isi ttiessune-rking with VMeKon Price, always a aoetij leading the revolt. - Speerr tas lost Us-bes; an ln-wtrtost evert roaanty,..« .d has made noj ■JjStf.’ *MrdttrfwRakcr, of t-asepkln.-wrunty—dhe -otharj eat 1 of therClNtrict—hringa the Sucre news. Said hej susmmlng-to speak orCyffor hisawin bs ill wick. ■ "Speer w-’Hlose a*C woscs- at fce 3t lnmyeounR^ She threartost prominent Speeccucn in Lumpkin bcvc-diev.': Beverly Kiraiun, • Je; Parker, oounf oierk lor .years, and ibis brother the ex-momber. Alii -three.af these are now. for Candler, in fant., ■ tipoer'aoaRcnizatlon aasuas to.hw e gone As tpleetr | iubumthk." lav J F «AiVxnnder. wtbc .hag-jwtt rctunsoC dm GJ.-rkavllla, formerlytspesbis stroaghold^ajK: ‘Thr uwlvcrsaliiriprcssioR thesets.that tie will be-bsntec ‘Bbvy say Csndler wifi no.-rally, rarry Habersham, suhiclt gave Speer ,s50aw»;*irlty Irf.'SO. In a puil ofu: Habershantinrand jury, wltile ix-ns there, ustone uu/i w as for .Speer; oaa^K-tiJ jury only one-was-for, Spser. 1 tai-ed with mwaherantmeti who former): debts to pay, -and the surplus money will be spdat for dry gwsds, fSnrnlture, farm Improvements and luxuries. -Our trade will be terge-and safe.’' “Has Georgia raised enough Mm to do bortfhls year?” “Yea *i the. com she rsfsed -eatld be teStfly dls- tribufcjl, no'Georgia farmer world need a<bashel of wessorn eorn this year. Thc-beauty of* ‘R that thlsemirmoi-s corn and vT-ain orop has beer raised witbemt dtserrasing the cottcuvirop at all. It Is a dear •gain’.’' I have ji ist heard of the‘m ost rent*Stable co- incMcnec>iu the matrimonial way, pec heps, ever reeerfled. Dr. R. w. Lrvettlives In Scrorrn county and Judge Thomas M. JtorKwcther llves-lr. Newton. They were schoolmates. They first framed two tenm-slattis. daughters ofdfchop Andrew. Their sriven died aud they dren married twtr ether sisters. sAso-deuchters of a bishop, Bishop iTHce. There soiree Wed and tney then -married a -third pair of rr.Tv.h because of Cleveland's inherent strength, tksugh he is undoubtedly strong in himself, as be cause he is the candidate of neither faction of the ■democratic party. Keltker wing having a lien on the young reformer, that wing will catch him that rioes most to elect him. Hence we have all demo cratic elements without exception hard at work in the same traces, and dead sure to rally up the full democratic vote. This of -course means a victory of from welve thousand to forty thousand, unless the re publicans have sane unusual -strength to oppose it with. But the republicans adhere they most need the court of appeals, Charles J Ruger, lawyer; for congressman-at-large, Henry Slocum, lawyer aud railroad president. Here, fellow-workmen, are the men for whom you are asked to cast your ballots next November. Look at the list. Kota workingman, or the friend of a workingman, can be found on it. From top to bottom it is lawyers, lawyers—pettifogging lawyers.” After reading the dodger he said: “IVe have nothing in common with cither of these tickets of Jay Gould’s, they in no way represent us. If Tammany had not re entered the democratic party, we might have joined them and the anti monopolists in putting a ticket In the field, but Tammany action rendered that unity are worse split than I have ever seen them. , , ... , ... . The halftiroeds have kicked out of traces There hopeltss - “ euce have nothing to do but to spcctaMevlcmeiteoftheporty revolt openlyagainst | stay ™ «be polls. When we demonstrme . . - . _ r L. n . our strength by staying away, both sides will see a noutlwBdon forced bytff. alliance between rail .. .. _ “ . » . i,’ road rtauopolies and the machine headed by Jay Gould and Arthur. The Buffalo Express, the most infltretrHsl republican paper In western Sew York, has pat up Oleveland's same, aud several lesser re- pnbUean .journals follow suit. Leading-hall-breeds over Che state, abandoa the republican ticket, aud the light -is iff ready whipped, unless -Jay Gould’s that we hold the balance of power and will make bids in the next election for our support.” POINTS. Very few have any Idea of the amount of wire fence sold in this country. There are 31 petents on wire feucing. Kelly, of Chicago, was the original l patentee. Washburn it Moen own the best patents, pr£crence-and opinion. Lester Faulkner, who for tMweral years has managed the democratic campaign in the -state, told ne last night <bat Cleveland would get 10,000 -more country votes than any democrat rhai -since Ho atlp Heymnir. In the city Tammany vies with anti -sisters --not daughters of Cbl-hop, bug 'two sisters- Tammany to bring out the full vote and whip up 1*011181 tbedaugbterswf MrlSmith, olktreenecounty, jitthe-old'time democratic enthu-tnsm. tWIthOtese last sistecs-they are livlug ikappilv. ! .... —1 . . ... 1 -It-may be pointedly stated that'Clevelaud’sTelec- -Les: week I printed -v. statcmeir. - that common:, wltive mud wts bcrng-csed as a cure for dyspepria. jj -1 -flwd many advocates of the wBKe sand theory, 1 •oat a lady said te one yesterday: “I cured mjiw’f oi dy-pep-la by dtewing-gum. (jjust put a pt-ase inmay mouth and-ohcw«l for an hour after dinner, ! •and it cured me." -I-atr. informed It was verr-iu- terestlng at Morefciaid’slhls summer to sec tbsikt- dies wbfti engaged in their diurnal chewing bee A-Cj 3>oung lady, vvto-is very hsavily insuref -by (Srengers in the saatrlmonial iuenrance com par tea, on the report of fiter - aiij-rt-achtw" marriage, arent with a friend intu-a dry goods store last week. Bite ■Jtnew that the clcric-who was •waiting on herbtui lxvestcd a ytart"-savings in a policy on her ooniiug marriage. Wht'c asamlnlng a piece of sSV -ehc sold to her frioiid -ia an csi£e perfectly andible: 4c the clerk: "Hince-my engrgemeut is definitely ■broken off I will have no troutaeau to buy. Ji think Idight afford tibis.” When the turned toastk the alerk the price, flro-itorl luintot'.. Of aU the ipaanhcaanade .In the pending room-' paigu, that of Ganew.l Henry R. Jackson is dneom-i ■parablj the beat. .In that speech General Jasl-sonj showed himacif -the scholar, 'he statenran,-the poet and orator,-a»dthat isu combination as rare, in these hasty-days -as it is felicitous Ladd-the- «o-jgh and tumble speeches of the campaign, It, stands out as thf.-speech olO C. Jones, nominating! ■Srs-erge Barnes, il-ono amid theturbolensocf the; convention—cLavtc,-serene aid starlike. ' Itl’en Hill will rt'll.-write VJr.” after his name. rommissioner ftendenson«ays Georgia te goocl for, 2|0PO,OOO bales of cnetton -this year. That’s sSSOXJOO,-' 4C0, ii it’s a oeat. tiivhu Kiser teitai fortune of full <3tMj£'00.t<with‘ orcr K0.000 inocit. ,Me-enure to Atlanta -wlfc bis; brother a few iyears- ago, -owning half oLabout- Sttowo. -Kay Joyner, the *:ty ms«hal, told aa< riha.ii the city tax books -mere - footed up yesterday .end sherred a net increase of ilke city's income of .about $f.%f W, carryiog-thsi total wety above 8500|C00. The; .iaoteasc of property valuation, real estateju»A*>er- rosxlty, goes akovs -!2,0#%f00 and in every -ward and i t every department of business Ohereiis.* -heal£ty but phenomenal growth. When the, proper ty,cfx city of 5fii#0C people, jumps at the rate, of SAW*,500 a year it may be* acid to he gravnng-fc a money ram over-balance the decided weight oi *on which they collect % of a cent per pound. This amounts to over 8100,000 per anuum. Their sales -mountfrom45,400 to 60,00o tons of wire fencing per uunum. This, together with royalty paid by other manufacturers of their wire, makes their iucotne from this source alone near 8280,000 per anuum. It is the Trey Times that tells this fanciful story “A North Adams mau, a member of the theatrical profession. Is reported to have fallen heir to 830,000 .u rather a romantic fashion. A pretty young lady faughtc* of a New Yolk banker, suddenly by mar- ,-iage in me -family became -the au^t of the actor MNasirted-Ct'ccr in lit*/^osuty,that are nou -rgaius: s»tisf»3tory mann-r. hcin.” dn New-York is tamed toward [ P«ttison. in Penit- .she felliu love with her relative, but the reiation- syivanla. I cannot sec how dhe-ttcmocnits can faff ship , ct«i as a barrier to matrimony. Recently she to-capture'Pennsyvania with two republican can- Yiedof a broken heart aud bequeathed 830,000 to dldates fOT governor iu the Held, and the two sen*- the object ol her affections." torssplit on these candidatee. Cuery! f the democrats carry both New York andlPennsylvania through -divisions in the teoub lioan ranks, don't it leokdkc - a democratic presi dent in J88T? Or, If‘the Arthur crowd, having i forced the noml»a- tion-of their pets in these two-leading states, fall to eleet them in cither, woift -it either bring Blaine and his frfeuds to the froctin the republican con vention of 1884? Or, failing to whip the republican machine tn the republican ranks, won't Blaine aud the half breeds repeat tkedessoif of New York end Pennsylvania on a larger scale in 1881 aud teach the stalwarts that bulLdotiog a convention it but part of- the programme? ■It terns that the “blo^skullind crossbotecs,” 1 ^stuut «*taiaon,at the Danger stud ^- Who tbatfs weed as a mon^mra toallkukluxrotomwii f am , llh ! 13 “ of no dmith who Is likely to pay 830,000 for a horse. The New York-fiun paid Bret Harte $1,200 for the ,Privilege of printing “Flip,” his new story, iuserial Jorm iu its Sunday edition. The Sun finds that iHurte’a western style still proves a taking card. Swinburne, the poet, is booked for New York He gets S50C a night for reading his own poems. nbis is.tb* current of :v*«.s iron- all over .-de -dis trict Won’t S|«ee- bo beaten, .ten: 1 fftat depecls! Aud de|Mn.1s on two (kenr-s: CM. His majority of 'to, «■ .tvhl-th these gsfwcxrrc! bosof, was v er 4,000. «td lhatM a long kfk to! cUml . 2d. While he will .uudimbtedly poll 41 sixallcrwhite vote than liefero, betisay balance lire loss-with a gait, in the ookmd vote. L»: us look at these two poluts: As to the dra*. one, it is heH hyt.those who ougtf to tus-tv that Speer's majority ofabOOO was * fioti- tiour.one. Them were cerialcailcments in the dis trict it-watts tied with the nomination of Bell. This proditoettapathy^-.iid the eleetiu in.tunny parts of the dktrlct wcik by detank. Mr. Bell bod too mauy oalagonlsmr.in his own oaahMo fight. The estlaatois. that Spoer’s actual Cshtlqe . majority in 1880 war not over liiX>. As tethe second point, Henry Carltor.^ays: “We can lose nothing on Jhat. The negrowr were vir tually solid for Span: before—quite as jnuch so as they Mill be this time. The negro vote ■In Clarke is dividnl toa certaiaextent. We have at colored Candler ri«f> that nuafi-ers over out huttfired, and is growing. We will get some negroes i-n every county. Under *3 the ciremrstanccs I think .-Speer's re-cleclion by any large majority impossible. It is improbable fn any event, except where bir.oppo nents feel kk they hare bkn beaten easilv. Then be 1s certain to recover and trash to the finish it the lead before they can gather themselves together. Tnat they will not do this Leer tain from the -earn- estnew with which they hart gone into the S'gfrt. The odds are, therefore, against Mr. Speer. I had a talk with a gentleman that I consider sht best authority on the seventh district. He said; “Stephens will carry the district by 2,000 majority, and probably S.teU. This is assured beyond doubt." “What about Felton?" "He will be beaten by quite as big a majority. His losses In Cobb and Cherokee have been large, and in Murray especially so. He will not make one vote gain in a single county over his last year’snee. The people are tired of the doctor, and of the strife and dissensions that have disturbed the district ever since he first came to the front. They will set tle the thing definitely this time." i asked what effect the disclosures of the Collins Utter would have. “It will hurt. Collins is an honest man and a republican of personal character. The people will be very much inclined to believe what he said about the matter. Once acknowledge that as true, and it puts Dr. Felton squarely in the republican ranks.” Touching Atlanta's cotton receipts for the present GoacruorColqoitUioavesoB Tuesday tosnect the trustors of the Slatan^ducasiciml fund. That Geer ; gia wl". get a large-share of. abis fund for her, color-, *,td coUrges is the last rumor that has oosne to tha ears of the Max-Aboct-E'osv.s. A COLORED. MISER. Uk.-utb-*: al'tlbldb-kk Aecrws-ho Owned aecllsn deed Ttmui Kaltar*. ■iltukac EDPHIA. Se.utatnberdO —Rev JosLtit l’ro ! orkic Boss’ Eddy died-UiiamoEXiiig in the midst of! filth itudvermin in an.uusigbAly house at.iki Southt •street, this city. Eddy *vas .a negro, eighty,four- -years .oM. and worth . over. 5100,000. He was •kntrwn.alitrvcr the avntherit .portion of the city as'told tana Eddyv-icney wa,- his god. llohad nwhfng toto with hi«ifeUow.-me.'i. He fed scant-, lv.-oiothed-r.habblly «snd only thought of money, die-did uotconceat his iiioncy.Put Invested u*. in ■hoaw.aud -lauds. Uc.owued th'.rty-seren houses, in ditt.'rcnt, parts of the ■oils', nine in Camden, toco lairosiln New Jersey, some .property in Frankfurt and -sane at Chester, lie vus here a slave in Mk- tiaia ami lcoired the bride,*! a.bart-er iu Conn-ill»- rHle.-e*. iiah-equently he .hecatne a member .of the Jiiueianqy oi oolorod j>»sachere. He was or ■leaned tulcacor and wenr.te .Nuiv .York, where he tion-is so generally conceded that public interest: Walt Whitman has received two instalments of 81,(KJ)«aeh on his “Leaves of Grass,” published in Philadelphia after it had been suppressed by law in Massachusetts. He lias discarded his historic gray suit aud wears a smart blue. He picks the sunny side of Use street aud looks as much like tho “hairy wild bee” as ever. Joaquin Milter is dabbling in Wall street again, ■He dropped $40-000 ou -Wabash two years ago, aud after do-igitig his brokers awhile, tumbles to the racket once more. .He seems to have abandoned .all high literary purpose and sells casual rot to the papers at so much a column. 1 see a cablegram announcing that Mr. Smith, .jioli American, paid £30,000 for Rayou d'Or, cations and a label for .poison, is not confined to the south. A few daye apYMr. William M. Goar, a Brooklyn minister, raasivCd a note decorated wv'th the she 11 and crossbouer."warnlng him that if he; did not quit his pulpLt attacks on the liquor sellers ' be-wohldbe found ic-bed some morning deegfieg the sleep of the nnjuat. 'Mr. Gear takes the matt- r seriously and has asked Sri-city authorities to glaee t: (rj.a’-d.around Ms i-ig.-rt.- - -Lt!' t«T The proposal of Mr. W.'Gj Bennett, of Royal HB11, Greenwich, to erect a memorial to Longfellow in England seems to be -met-with great favor by-his | admirers across the wsAer. Mr. Tennyson, Sir Frederick Leighton, Hr.'Matthew Arnold, Sir The odore Martin, Sir Jofhu llrabbock are among -the! contobujors to the tuQ-rocial. Several prominent •men-fcere telegraphed -stbscrlpUou to th. fund, wbiete was returned to thsix with thanks. Sterilng England wanted to fcuUd.'&he monument alone, as an actnowledgement-df berdebt to the great Amer ican poot. A handsetno -best of Longfellow will! bo made and placed on Westminster abbey. Thodays of dirgnising oleomargarine Is over. It! has-yallied for itself a place among tho commercial prodorjts of the countej'. A-chort time ago Mr H K Thuiber bought a sent in the-Mercantile exchange! for S&Q, and now oleasosugarine has gained a foot hold -la the produce trade and is quoted “on change ” It is now *0 longer necessary for the manufacturer to sprinkle hair through it, on the same principle that the.dentist-.plugs his false teeth. Y’estoiday oleomargarine was “called’* for the first time at this or any other exchange. There were nemcrousbids but only one sale, that of twen ty-five tubs “Always Ahead Brand’: by N I Rahan . & Co, to',8- D Hare & Ce. Mr Conklin, of H K if ,B Thttrber & Co, predksts that the calcs of oleomaagarine on the exchange will goon outstrip those of butter. It was announced Sunday morning that Dr. Rob ert Collyov-tvould preach that night at the chureh •«f the Meroiah. on “The Saratoga Convention.” The -consequence was that -tending room could not be found in file church, but a shadow, of disappoint- -Br ent spread-over the faceaof hiscougregation when they found-that instead <£ stirring -up the politi- Cx.nsnnd tiieir methods he-made —- ^illusion to the , resent repxbUcan conven&on, but Cn lien thereof those the Uiiita. ian convention held at Saratoga for his-subject. Making the best of a bad bargain I smothered my.disappointment and stayed to hear .hunchrough. IIn speakingthe pr^ress of the denomination ihe said that.-during the .convention Mr. Wade, a wealthy citizen .of Colmnbus, Ohio. was or.1aL.eii .I'.tt elder ant .placet' over eight hadogreed to donate a quarter of a million dollars churches.utd traveled over .the.cirenU from Filer-; both. N..J . to Mount Holly. -Suring .this time he married Bishop .Vlen’s daugrbter and aetiled down 1 in Golumbfa. Pa This was iu ih>20. Jn addition to hit dutiesosa.prcacher there, dte carried on his trade me a barber. .Alter a few years -spent iu Co lumbia be came to -Philadelphia ottd opened a bar. bershop in this dity. He kept -at ills trade for* number of years. ThPn came the .xtrning point in his life. His wife proved unfatthfuLand tl« couple were divorced. Eddy then became a miser. He had loved his wife, the coUted ancients say,.and her perfidy broke his heart. Be took no iwterestin any thing but money. He best all his energies te its ac cumulation and suocee-le<. Not contest like other misers in adding grain after grain to hit weakri he made bold strokes, and increased his pite in lure pa. Houses and lands were cheap then. He knew that in time their value would Increase. He invested his money in this way. and fcis speculations mete crowned with success. RmPrpcI to Dari. Knoxville, September SO.—IV? supreme court to-4ay confirmed the decision of the lower court and sentenced Milton and Samuel Hodges to be hanged on November 10. These are the negroes who murdered James McFarland, near Knoxville, about a year ago. . Three Xea Killed. Newbcbo. September SO.—Near Cornwall station, on the Middletown branch of the West Shore rail road yesterday, three men were killed and three badly hurt by a premature blast. The Pah lie Debt Kedsettee. Wajhingtok, September 30.—It is intimated that season. Sam Inman said to me: “I think we are 1 me reduction of the public debt for the month of sure of 150,000 bales, and the receipts will like-! September will be in the neighborhood of fixtecn Jy go much abote that figure. Wc had over 140,000 1 million dollars. •dor the erection -oi a Unitarian theological school andchurch. he tempered his gift with 00 consid- crations, save coe: that was that the -building -j&ould be withook a roof, ss that the light that dreaven-these to send down should shine freely into -it. Should Mr. Wade’s theological colloaium be ■biilt, we may toot for somehning new in .church erahitecitre. •IlK'liave it is the&oastof Georgia, that rote of her towns. Dahlonegt, has streets of gold. New Yoik now ajn^es to 6_e front wiii an iron seine scattered alaug one of £ier streets. .Saturday's rain washed the-atreets down About the fiowery as dealt rs anew tile.floor, and-ou Sunday tsioming scatter ed all along-Is wer BroAt£*ray could be-secn the gam ing of Gotham down ou itcir knees picking scra^ iron out from between tie: Belgian blocks of the street pavement- The afx had given, them a bo nanza in-deed, Sac between fine blocks of stone there were seeu bits of old iron aw far as the eye could reach, and these -specimen* of nether Mew York, made sharp by their poverty: and the -battle for bread and batter which they seem to appreciate with a knowledge far beyond their years, had been quick to perceive the nine beneath their feet. They hammered and pried away with an industry that brought them rich return. Old bolts, whole and broken screws, spikes, nails, big and little, nuts, files, pieces of brass and eopper and all kind* of scraps of metal found their way into the receptacles provided for them by the lad*. At a meeting of 5.000 working men, belonging to Central Labor union, at Science hall on Monday,- their chairman, Mr Blissert, advised them to take no part in the coming state election. He took for his text the following dodger, which was scattered through the audience: “ ‘On last Wednesday the “grand old republican LIRE IN uEORGlA. iBrom the-DouglanvUle Star. It has becu almost cold enough for frost. Much small grain will be sown this fall. Squirrels are numerous and are destroying com. ■Krom. the Rome .Tribune. Shorter college has 125 pupils. PoUtics isdulMn Rome—few ta,k about it. The vofee of the tax collector will be heard iu -the land. ■Erom'the Covington ■ Enterprise. Mr. Thomas Camp gets the sand to mould his east- dugs,iu, six f«et Uuder ground, ou the banks «f Yellow river, near the railroad bridge. .Krom the DeKalb Nows. .Bird huutingcan begin next Mouday. Warnings -to trespasser* uud hunters, are already being posted on every tree tnat shades a cool spring, well known .resorts of the hunter. -From the fiendenville Herald. Mosq ultoes seem to be increasing In numbers and in annoyance as the season for their ope.aions draws to a close. No barrels or vessels should toe left with water standing in them. £rom theGrimn Sun. Fourteen of Griffin's fair daughters were out dus- kadiue hunting yesterday, aud such a falling out of tnes and running from striped cows has never been t-en before. From.vue Dawson Journal. The artesian well 187 feet M Dr.. Jones mokes as good a farmer as he does -dentist, he will do to take along. Fnxn the Beltou North Georgian. Iu the pursuit of comfort, these chilly mornings, house.llies are .quite apt to take a c .five bath, and overdo the ousUiess. As we are “a liner.” we are favored with visits from Banks aud Hal! county candidates. Tne way ■they are .putting iu the licks just now is a caution from the Gaiuesuille Eagle. John T. Wilson, Jr., left yesterday for Dawson ville to take chatge of the Dawsonville Monitor. Wo wish-him much success in his new veuture. Da,wsou.county ought to support a good paper handsomely. From the Talbottoa -Register. Ourjob presses are.still humming but there is still room for oue more on either of them. A young iriend remarks that hand-holding in erowdin the moonshine is a barren ideality as thin be unkissed kisses, Colonel X. R. Lumsden has placed on our table fine specimen of plumbago, or black lead, picked up on tho Alex Johnson place near Pleasant Hilt. From the Dublin Post. Loeal polities are decidedly torrid. The first drove of homes are going rapidly. Dr. Ricks, of Quitman, spent several days of last week in Dublin, half-soling old teeth. Another beef “shot off” *>esterday and Mr. Mc Daniel and his eun again took four quartets. The oea crop this fall, owing to the wet weather, will be*, failure. But, with the big com crop, farmers will not feel the loss so seriously. From the Conyers Weekly. Muscadines by the bushel. Our people feasting extensively upon green peas. Dr. Glenn is taking orders for a great many Stephens's histories. Our fish editor paces to the front again this week with one of his truthful stories. As election day approaches the hand shaking the candidates grows more boisterous. The sportsmen are turning up their old guns pre paratory to making an onslaught on the new par uidge crop. From the Dalton. North Georgia, Citizen. Com is selling at fiity cents per bushel along the State road. ' . There has been a foolish coolness in the zephyrs for the past few days. The legislative race waxeth wanner. It Is hard to tell which candidate is ahead. The game law expired on the 15th, and bird hun ing is already a popular amusement. The apple crop is fiue, and hundreds of barrels will be shipped from this place this season The chestnut crop in the mountains is said to be a failure. In the flatwoods it will be an excellent one. About twenty five negroes living in the lower part of this county and upper Oglethorpe, will move to Atlanta the last of the year. The new Ooltewah and Red Clav railroad trill be finished la a tew days, and by next week trains will run from Chattanooga, via Rome, to Atlanta. From the Brunswick Advertiser. The rats killed a a rood of twelve chickens at tne hospital last Saturday night When middle Georgians get the bilious lever they ccme to - L Simons to recuperate. Over four million ieet of good, merchantable lumber in the yard at SL Simons mills. Lumber is cheap over here—a negro shanty at constable's tale brought only ten dollars. Some bilious fever—very mild. Plenty of salt air and a little quinine, and it disappears at once. The craxe of the “United Supreme Order of the Sons and Sisters of Jacob” has reached the island. All the colored fraternity and sistemily are clamo rous for admission. The island bids fair to become soon a social band of colored “breiheriog and sis eriug,” Oar Regulation Poem—A Cynto and Lynx— A Pointed Question—Are Holt Widows to Be Protected— The Best Work of the Beit Writers or the Periodical Pres* Co ref oily selected. Tvesday. September 2G.—On Saturday night a destructive rainstorm visited the Atlantic states from North Carolina to Maine, inflicting the heavi est damage In New Jersey, where the waters were ten feet high in several towns, and railroad travel was suspended twenty four hours by washouts ou the roads. The Franklin sugar refinery, of Phila delphia, burned. One hundred and three deaths from yellow fever in Pensacola in eight en days. The khedive has made a triumphal entry into Cairo. He has intrusted Baker Pasha with the re organization of the Egyptian army. Two men were killed on Governor’s Island, New York, while firing a salute. Alonzo Follett, a New Y’ork broker, fails for one million. Frost throughout the northwest In the City.—Officer Mike White, while arresting Spurgeon SUvey, was dangerously wounded in the groin. For a while his recovery was doubtiul. Pole, named U. H. Kineski, employed bv Oliver*Carey as book-keeper, has dlsapieared with 8500. Mr. Daggett, of Harris c enty eight years of age, has been sent to the Fulton county poorheuse Wednesday, September 27.—Lepanto, from New York, ran into and sunk the Edam, from Amster dam. The crew, 52 lu number, were saved. Dam! etta, the last place held by the follower of Arabl. has surrendered to the khedive. A letter written by the late Charles Darwin Is published, wherein he says that “Christ and science have nothing to do with each other,” and expresses his disbelief in re vealed religion. The German government proposes a canal to connect the North sea with the Baltic. Jay Gould is building a vessel to take a trip around the globe. In a railroad accident in India, fifteen soldiers were killed, the czar of Russia has been in Moscow, where it is said that he was secretly crowned. in the City—Mr Fincher’s house, Haynes street, 81,200, burned. Captain Harry Jackson is to be e.ected president oi the Gate City Guard. Mr. Stephens has been in the city all the week Politi cal meetings are beiug held every night The Geor gia Pacific is to be pushed into Anniston by lanu ary. Thcesday, September v8—The democratic con gressional campaign committee express confidence in a democratic majority in the next house. The Bonaparlists in Paris are quar ellug bitterly. Ku glneer Melville is willing to head another Arctic expedition. The khedive held a reception in Cairo at which 5,000 persons paid their homage email pox is raging in Capetown, Africa Of 2,000 cases 600 proved fatal. The Tennessee campaign prom Ises to result in favor of the republicans for gov ernor, the low-tax democrats for the legislature and the shelving of the high-tax democrats. Lor illard’s horse Aranza carried off the Newmarket stakes in England. In the City.—Rev. Dr. Strickler, ol Staunton, Va has accepted a call to the Central Presbyterian church, of Atlanta, in place of Rev. Dr, Boggs, who goes to Columbia. No. 1 engine house, which was built in 1851, was sold for $10,200 to the city of At lanta. The volunteer system having been dis pensed with, the membets are selling off all their property. W. C. Rockwell, grocer, failed. Miss Katie Wiley is dead. Fbiday, September 29.—Hon. George T. Barnes spoke on the issues of the pending canvass in DeGive’s opera house. Complaints have been made in Washington from various parts ol the south about the tampering of the mail service by south cm postmasters. Iu the explosion of an ammuni tion train at Cairo, Egypt, thirty persons were killed, The disaster Is attributed to the Arabs. A cholera epidemic is raging in several sections of Mexico. Matamoras held a grand ball over the disappearance ®f yellow fever. While the ball was in progress two persons died from the disease. The Mormons (Utah are giving organized opposition to the en Jorcemeut of the Edmunds law. In the City—In a feud between two negroes, one shot the other. In the ase of the murder of Hicks, In Gwinnett county, by United States officials, the evidence was closed, and will be found in another -column. Six thousand nevt residences are in -course of erection in Atlanta, v he Young Men Christian association have inaugurated a move ment in aid of the Pensacola sufferers. Saturday, September 30.—Judge Wylie, who pre ■sided in the star route cose, narrowly escaped death from being run over by a street car in Washington. The fertilizer manufacturers ask for an increase of ■duty on the chemicals which enter Into their busi ness. The eastern cities are being supplied with western meats, to the indignation of the local butchers. The supreme court of Illinois has de cided that the railroad commission of that state has the power to regulate the freightage during its en tire transit out of as well as Inside the state on all fr ight taken on throngh bills of lading from a point in Illinois. Two brothers named Walsh have been sentenced to be hangi-d in Ireland, .lithe Irish suspects have been relea ed. John Kelly has been made a member of the New York state central democratic committee. Mr Blaine has subscribed fifty dollars toward the monument fund to the late Senator Hill. A new steamer, the Nacoochee, is to ply between New York and Savanmah. Twelve thousand dollars' worth of diamonds have been stolen from a show case in the Cincinnati exposi tion. In the City—An interesting meeting was held in Trinity ehureh on the occasion of the departure of Rev. David L. Anderson and Miss Anna J. Muse for China. They go as nnssianaries from the southern Methodist ehureh. The loan and building associa tions are prospering finely. They build an average oi thirty 12,000 houses every two months. Two negro boys were shooting at a mark with toy pistols. One accidentally shot the other, inflicting a painful wound. Sunday, October 1—The steamer R E Lee, the fastest on thq Mississippi river, was burned on Sat urday. Twenty-one lire* were lost aud 500 bales of cotton were destroyed. E. Dwyer Gray, imprisoned for contempt of court in Dublin, has been released by Judge Lawson. In the Chatham county legisla ture race, Messrs. Estill and Ballantyne have re tired and Messis. George S Owens aud J J McDon ough were named in their place. In the trial of several star router* In Philadelphia the prisoners were ail acquitted. Secretary Lincoln is a candi date for the senate from Illinois. Subscriptions to the Hill monument fund now amount to 82,862 65. Mr. Stephens made the last speech of the campaign in Grawfotdvil e. In the City—The jury in the Hick; case has ac quitted the prisoners. The jury first stood eleiea for acquittal and one for conviction, but in ten hours time came to a verdict on the basis of an ac quittal. The oldest sign in Atlanta Is that of John Neal, attorney at law, which was first hung up 60 years ago. Work on the belt railroad around At lanta Is now progressing rapidly. C. J. Oliver, a rather well known occasional preacher, has been suspended from the Firet Methodist church for in delicate conduct. The Day* fine By. From the Chicago Tribune, the days gone by! 0 the days gone by! The apples in the orchard and the pathway through the rye; The chirrup of the robin, aud the whistle of the quail! As he piped across the meadows sweet as any night ingale: When the bloom was on the clover, and the blue was in the sky. And my happy heart brimmed over—In the days gone by! LIGHT MELANGE. In the days gone by, when my naked feet were tripped By the honeysuckle tangles where the water lilies dipped, And the ripples of the river lipped the moss along the brink, And the tilting snipe stood fearless of the truant's wayward cry, And the splashing of the swimmer, in the days gone by. Xtrilll Bat CyalcUoft. From the London Queen. It was a saying of Oliver Wendell Holmes that iu every dialogue between two persons there were in reality six present—two as they were, each as he be lieved himself to be, and each as he appeared to the other. It would not be difficult to add two more, and to say that there were present each as he de sired to represent himself to bis neighbor. An Unmannerly Lynx. From the San Francisco Chronicle. Four women were bathing In Cedar creek, near Redding, Cal., last week, when an animal which they took to be a lynx leaped across the creek near them, climbed a tree and from a limb sprang down gathered up a poodle dog left on the bank to watch the women s clothes, and disappeared in a hole under a stump. The bathers made tho best time on record in crossing. Who D Mortal From the Burlington Hawkeye. Who is Maria?” was the question that startled Mr. Brown (who talks lu his sleep) as he waked the other morning and found Mrs. Brown sitting up iu bed with an interrogation point in one eye and an exclamation point in the other. “Maria? Maria who?” “That’s just what I want to know; you repeated the name over and over again last night.” “Let me sec—oh, yts; that’s Parker’s dog-a splen dl t animal. I’ve been trying to buy her.” “Y’ou ought to own her.tcertainly; you are so ex cessively fond of her. Y’ou asked Parker’s dog to put her arms around your neck and kiss you. You eveu went so far os to tell Parker’s dog that you loved her with all your heart, and that when you came to die if you could only lay your head ou Parker's dog's bosom you could breathe your life out sweetly there. Then you asked Parker’s dog to have another plate oi ice cream, and if the watch you had given her kept good time. During the night you kissed Parker s dog a dozen times, called her ail the pet names known, and proved to me conclusively that you ought to live with Parker’s dog aud not with me." Mrs. Brown has gone to her mother. Are Half Widow* to Bo Mott Pitied l From the Detroit Free Press. “Mr. Peter," said Dan's wife, “would ye like ttt see me a lone widder, with a stone dead husband?” This idea startled Dan, and be looked uu from his whittling kindlings with the carving knife. “Of course not. I’ve got a heart for yo as bigas a born and as open as er saw mill.” “An’ don’t ye pity er woman as Is er whole wid der?” ■' am ■* _arali«iwsnlsrnka t “Sartin." “An’ don't ye half pity er woman as is er half widder?" “Sartin sure.” “Au’ which du ye pity the tvust er matriageble widder or ODe that can’t marry nohow?” “The one that can marry is less to be pitied, ’cos she may git a better husband’n she had afore.” “Then why don’t ye pity me?” “What!" “I married ye fur er man, an’ ye weutlookin’ an* actin' like er man at that time. But now yer more’n half dead. Y’e ain’t spoke terme pleasant ter-day. ’Fore we was married ye’d gabble to me all the chance ye'd git Ye hain’t showed me no attention kinder perlite like what pleases us women. Ye was wonderful perlite when yer used to come a courtin’ me. Y6 don't show me no deffereuce in yer manners. No defference showed ter a woman when that woman's yer wife ain’t never lost, but alius pays big interest; it kinder sweetens life as molasses sweetens ginger bread. How’d ye like it if I was ter leave all the sweetness out’en the cake jes’t 'cos we're married? Yer dead, Dan, in yer sense of the pleasantness yer could disseminate aroun’ ye. If ye’d be for jes’ one week as perlite an’ attentive as ye was afore marriage, I’d feel better than if I was at cir cus seeiu* Jumbo all of the time. A man makes the great mistake of his lifetime when he drops his pliteness in his own family.” Firing on Sumter. M. Quad in Free Pres. Daylight is breaking over Charleston. It is the morning of the 12th of April, 1861—' the most momentous morning in the history of America. Fifteen thousand citizens of Charleston have crowded down to the esplanade, and every man has his face turned toward the sea. To the right, as they look down the harbor, is Morris island; to the left Sullivan's, and midway between Is Fort Sum ter, grim and silent, and not even showing a flag. The great crowd trembles with excitement and speaks in whisper* A bloody civil war is about to open. The young men are ready to hurrah over the prospect, but the older ones look grave as they realize what war meana Now tiie gray mist creeps up from the waters of the harbor and floats away, and the eastern horizon becomes tinged with red. You can see more plain ly now. At the head of .Sullivan’s island is the floating Iron battery, and it is to fire the first gun Its echoes will awaken the huge Iron monsters asleep in Forts Moultrie and Johnson, at Cummings point, at Point Pleasant, and other localities. There is a flag over each confederate fort and battery, and with a good glass you can see men on the ram parts. Silence now! In the floating battery is an old. gray-haired man—Edmund Ruffin. He has sought the privilege of firing the first gun of the war. The lanyard he holds in his hand is the rope which will ring the bell of destiny. When that bell strikes a mighty republic will fall in fragments, and It will take the blood of a hundred battles to cement it. “Boom!" The bell has struck. At the word the old man has pulled the lanyard, and a solid shot whirrs across the water and strikes the brick wall of Fort Sumter with a heavy thud. For a long minute no oue speaks. The echoes of that gun are fraugh with mighty issues-the whirr of that shot meant death to a quarter of a million soldiers. As the thunder rolls up and down the harbor and die* away twenty tLousand people cheer. The war ha* begun. Th-re can be no backward step now. Old and young cheer and shout and shake hands and feel a glad relief. A M*n ament Defaced* Richmond, Va., September 30.—The monument recently erected in Hollywood cemetery over the grave of a daughter of Ex-President Tyler was de faced last night. The drapery of the statue of the Madonna was broken and the worde: "This Is botch job,’’written underneath. Folger Will Accept. Albany, September 30.—John A. Smyth, chair man of the new republican state committee, said to a reporter of the Argus: “You can say In the Ar- *ub that I have no reason to suppose Mr. Folger will decline the nomination. There is every reason in the world to conclude that he will accept it.” ON THE BALCONY. Come to the bale., Otnaw, this minute’ Here’s the proceah , and paw is in it! O, butit's mag.. Taking the rag Of ev’ry procesh! There’ll no way to thin it! There they go, maw! And there is dear Gus! Isn’t he sweet? O my, what a fuss! And there are some men. Looking perfectly splen., On horses—why didn’t they go in abas? O I’m so glad! I wish I could hoL! That would be wrong—in fact, 'twoutd be fol. I’ll wait and I’ll read (Intellectual feed!) 11 about the procesh. in the ’sciety col. —Louisville Courier-Journal. INDISTINCT PftINTi