Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, January 04, 1887, Image 1

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JLUME LVI Fbdebal Union Established In 1820 Southern Recorder “ • < t 8ig> ' Consolidated 1872, Milledgeville Ga., January 4. 1887. 'HE UNION & RECORDER, L Administrator’s Sale. . . 'ibiOIUil A. RnliKciit ( Number 26. ublUhed Weekly In Mllledgevllle, gY BARNES & MOORE. ,„us —One dollar and fifty cents a year in MIX months for seventy-five cents.— inliars a year if not paid in advance. he services of Ool.JamksM.Smttue,are en- hH *FK!)KKAL UN ION” anti the* SOUTUKRN i'ordEK” were consolidated, August 1st, 1872, union being in Its Forty-Third Volume and Kecorderin Its Fifty-Third Volume. A L D W I N COUNT Y. N Baldwiu Sheriff’s Sale. ILL be sold before the Court House door, id the city of Mil- dgeville. during legal sale hours, on ie first Tuesday in January, 1887, 10 following property, to wit: One house and lot in the city of Mil- tdgeville containing one acre, more r less, and known in the plan of said ity as being lot No. 8, in square No. 2 and better known as the home ilace of Win. Wood, and levied on as iroperty of Win. Wood, deceased, to atisfv one Superior Court ii fa in fa- •orofC. H. Wright & Son, vs. Wm. ,Vood. Tenant in possession notified n person, Dec. the 1st, 1886. Also at the same time and place, all hat tract or parcel of land, lying in ;he corporate limits of the city of Mil- ledgeviile, containing 88 acres, more or less, the same lying on the south side of Pishing creek, and known as the land bought by Willis Pritchard from Pc. J. B. Duggan. Levied on as the property of Willis Pritelmrd to satisfy one County Court ii fa in favor of Knickerbocker Ice Co., vs. Willis Pritchard. Defendant notified in per son, December the 2d, 1886. Also at the same time and place, one lot or parcel of land lying in the 115th District, G. M., of said Co., con taining 88 acres, more or less, and bounded north by L. N. Callaway and J. J. Jenkins, east by T. J. Oxford and L. N. Willis, south by D. I’>. San ford, west by estute of E. Chandler, deceased. Levied on as the property of Mrs. E, ,T. Arnold, to satisfy two Superior Court li fas, one common law judgment in favor of F. A. Hull vb. Mrs. E. J. Arnold, and one mort gage ii fa in favor of Massey & Ennis vs. Mrs. E. J. Arnold. Tenant in possession notified by mail, December 2d, 1886. Also at the same time and place, thirty-live acres of land, more or less, lying in the 322(1 District, (f. M., of said county, adjoining lands of Wyley Vinson, Arnold Baltimore, and others and better known as the ('apt. John Stevens’ mill place. Levied on as the property of I. C. Newton, to satisfy one Justice court fi fa in favor of Chambers ii (;o., vs. 1. C. Newton. Defendant notified in person. Levy made by J K. Patterson and returned to me Nov. 27th, 1886. C. W. ENNIS, Sheriff. Dec. Gth, 1880. 22 tds. Petition for Leave to Sell. GEORGIA, Baldwin County. Court of Ordinary, December Term, 1886. W HEREAS, Walter Paine, Clerk of the Superior Court and Adminis trator upon the estate of Mrs. Lizzie C. Sanford, deceased, has filed his pe tition in said court for leave to sell the r al estate belonging to said de ceased : These are therefore to cite and ad monish all parties interested, heirs or creditors, to show cause on or by the January Term next of said court to he held on the first Monday in Janua ry, 1887, why leave to sell said prop erty should hot be granted to said pe titioner us prayed for. Witness my hand and official signa ture this December the 6th, 1886. Daniel B. Sanford, 22 lm.] Ordinary. Petition for Leave to Sell GEORGIA, Baldwin County. Court of Ordinary, December Term, 1886. W HEREAS, W. H. Stembridge, ad ministrator upon the estate of Martha F. Robinson, deceased, has filed his petition in said Court for leave to sell the real and personal property of said deceased: These are therefore to cite and ad monish all parties interested, heirs or creditors, to show cause on or by the January term next, of said court, to he held on the first Monday in Janua ry 1887, why leave to sell said real aud personal property should not be granted to said petitioner as prayed lor. Witness my hand and official signa ture, this December the 6th, 1886. '2 lui.] D. B. SANFORD, Ordinary. GEORGIA, Baldwin County, pi order of the Court of' (>rdinnry 1J of Baldwin'county, will be sold before the Court House door, in the city of Milledgeville, on the first Tuesday in January, 1887, between the legal hours of sale, the following property belonging to the estate of J. W. Moran, late of said countv, deceased, to-wit: .. £-11 that tract of land, containing •>00 acres, more or less, lying in the lOoth District, G, M., of said county, and known as the Thomas’place, ad joining lands of S. B. Collins, J. W. \ inson, G. W. Underwood, E. A. Butts and others. Sold for the pur pose of paying debts and division among the heirs. Terms of sale cash. „ C. L. MORAN, Adm’r. Dec. 3, 1886. 22 tds Notice. G EOIKIIA, Baldwin (Jounty. Court of Ordinary, Dec. Term 1880. W HEREAS, a petition has been filed in said Court praying an order making the private or neighborhood road leading from the premises of B. W. Jenkins, near the Jones county line to the old Cobb place in Baldwin County, where said private way in tersects with the Milledgeville ' and Monticello public road a distance of about two miles a public road, and tlie Commissioners having reported in favor of said road being made a public road: This is to cite and ad monish all persons interested to show cause on or by 10 o’clock, a. m.,on Wednesday the 5th day of January, 1887, at the Court House of said coun ty, why said road should not lie made public as prayed for. Witness uiy hand and official signa ture this December the 6th, 1886, DANIEL B. SANFORD, 22 lm.] Ordinary. For Sale—Land, GEORGIA, Baldwin County. U NDER and by virtue of Mortgage Deed made by Mrs. Mattie Wood, of said county, on the 2Stli day of January, 1886, to secure a promissory note of tlie same date and payable on tin* 28th day of October, 1886, for the principal sum of seventy 70-100 dol lars to the undersigned which said deed has been duly recorded in the (Jlerk's office of said county, and which was executed and delivered under the statutes of the laws of Georgia in Code of 1882, as to deeds with powers of sale, &c., and by the authority therein conveyed and given, we will sell on the loth day of Janu ary, 1887, before the Court House door in said county the following tract or parcel of land, to-wit: That tract of land situate, lying and being in the 319tli District, G. M., of said county, bounded on north by lands of W. J. T. Ray, south by lands of Bon ner, on west by lands of Mrs. Hum phries, on the east by Webb planta tion, containing fifty acres, more or less. Said land will be sold to pay the principal and interest on said promis sory note and Attorney's fees, and all cost of this proceeding aud sale. W. AJ. CARAKER. Whitfield A Allen, Attorneys for complainants. Dec. 15th, 1886. 24 tds PETITION FOR HOMESTEAD. Petition for Letters of Administration, GEORGIA, Baldwin County. Court of Ordinary December Term, 1880. HERE AS, Mrs. Minnie L. Hall, VV has filed her petition in said Court ’or letters of Administration upon the estate of Dr. John H. Hall, deceased. These are therefore to cite and ad monish all parties interested, heirs or creditors, to show cause on or by the January Term, next of said Court to oe held on the first Monday in Jan- uary, 1887, why letters of Adminis tration upon the estate of said deceas ed, should not be granted to said peti- noner as prayed for. * 'V it ness my hand and official signn- ■ ure this December the 6th, 1886, • DANIEL B. SANFORD, I *** Ordinary, * GEORGIA, Baldwin County. W HEREAS, Edward Bueb, has filed his petition for exemption of personalty and setting apart and valuation of homestead, and 1 will pass upon the same, at 12 o'clock. M., on Wednesday, the 12th day of Jan uary, 1887, at my office. Witness my hand and official signa ture. this December the 20th, 1886. DANIEL B. SANFORD, 24 4t. Ordinary, For Rent. 6 ROOM HOUSE and kitchen now occupied by M. R. Bell. Posses sion given Jan. 1st, 1886. T. L. MeOOMB A Co. Milledgeville, Dec. 7th, '86. 22 4t Liverv Stable For Sale. * A N EXCELLENT opportunity for /l an active young man. I will sell on ensv terms my stable, stock and vehicles, or I will sell stock and vehi cles and lease the stable fora number of years. G. T. WHILDEN Milledgeville, Ga, Nov. 30, '86. [21 0t.] The Milledgeville Banking Co. Of Milledgeville, Ga. A General Unliking Business Transacted. G. T. WTkdenmax, President. 11. T. Hethune, Cashier. Directors.—W. T. Conn, D. IL Sanford, A. E. Ileudrix, G. T. Wiedennmn, L. N. Callaway, T. L. McCorab, C. M.Wright. Milledgeville, Ga., Oct. 21st, ’86. 15 ly Dentistry. DR. H iMtGLARKE- .. fl WORK,";Villi'' kind performed In no- VV cord ■' •‘‘Hi tl» tin* latest and most lm- roved i \| „ i * 'awav’s New L'.i. ' ng. Milled# * pa., May 15th, 1*83, 44 nnd Wld»kcy Ilal). its cured at t-.nmo with out pain. Rumc P«r- tlculars «ent F U EE. - mavoolluv. m.d. Juuiu. Ga. Office 0.V-. Whitehall St. Dec. 14,1886. 23 Cm The New Year. In the cycles of change another year has been cast upon the shoreless ocean of time. The past year lie- longs, now, to eternity, and all the living are destined to follow those who have gone before, to its shoreless end. De-it'.i has dissevered kindred and friends, and we, who have lived to see the new born year, will like oth ers in due course of time, cease to elicit the sweetest and dearest emo tions of our hearts. The places, the scenes and landscapes, so dear to living vision, will soon vanish, and those* who loved to look upon them, will be laid away to dreamless rest. We are taught that, there is ati in finity of life, but not on the planet we inhabit; and we are told how that in finity may be an endless time of un speakable bliss. But our readers are aware of this, and ite is our purpose briefly to refer to that life, under the Providence of the Almighty Father, which is allotted to us on this worldly sphere. We still live while many a cheek of rosy hue, and many a heart that beat in love and friendship, are pale and still in the cold and silent dust. Yet those, who still live, have serious duties to perform and it be comes them to act well their parts in this brief section of sempiternal ex istence. The great, the old, the young, all are accountable, we are told, for the deeds done in this life and as we sow so shall we reap. In looking back, the lives of the oldest seem but a span in the sun’s bright pathway. Still, in that short time, some reach a deathless monument of fame; but un happy for them will it he if their worldly monuments are stained with blood and crime. But there is a prize greater than earthly monumental fame, and it is held out to the lowly as well as the great. It is the prize of virtue and honor and a happy immor tality. In the few words which flow from our hearts and pen, we trust that the pathways, of our respected patrons and those connected with them, may be strewn with flowers, and above all with the sweets of affection and '. he blessings of the Almighty Father. We close by saying in the poetic language of another in which our readers will join us: “Again far A well: Off shall I press Imaginations aid To call tlice hack to me, and tell , Of scenes my heart shall cherish well— Not leaving thee nejrleetedly Like things forgotten where they die. - ’ Solicitor-General DuBignon. It gives us much pleasure to copy from the Savannah Times, the follow ing laudatory and graceful tribute to a former honored citizen of this coun ty; SOLICITOR-GENERAL DU BIQNON. The following from the Savannah Times is a tribute to Solicitor-General F. G. DuBignon, which will be read with pleasure by his many friends in the state: On general principlesthe way of the transgressor is hard, but in the judi cial district of the superior court it is pretty tough, to say the least. Since Solicitor-General DuBignon was select ed to fill the position, criminals and law breakers have had a serious time to disentangle themselves from the meshes he weaves about them. He allows no lawyer, no matter how sharp, or shrewd, or cunning he may be to quash one of his indictments, and he leaves no loopholes or tech idealities open through which the legal cart can be driven. When lie has a man indicted by the grand jury that man has against him an aray of facts which he will have difficulty to successfully combat, and his attorney will have his hands full to defend him. Solicitor-General DuBignon has lost but two cases this term of court, either in Chatham, Liberty, McIn tosh, Effingham or Bryan. He has had remarkable success, and although some of the young lawyers think, when their clients get sentences from five to fifteen years in the peniten tiary, that his legal positions are untenable, yet he manages to con vince the juries that he is right, and the court usually falls into the same idea. A Times reporter was in a gathering of lawyers a few days ago, in which the able solicitor general was a mem ber. A young lawyer named Way, one of the most promising of Liberty county's young men, and one of tlie most eloquent young men of the state, remarked that the lawyers had no show in defending criminals against Mr. DuBignon as solicitor general. It is certain the state has a brave, fearless, zealous and eloquent prose cuting officer. He is impartial, and when in the performance of what he considers his duty knows no man and has no maudlin sentiment in his com position. The butcher does have some funny expressions; he told his assistant the other day to break the bones in Mr. Williams' chops, and put Mr. Smith’s ribs in the basket for him, and tell Mrs. Black to take Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup for her cold. Legalcap, foolscap, letter and note paper —pens, pencils and ink, for saio chcujflat the Union & Recorder office. GRADY’S TALK. THE BRILLIANT YOUNG GEOR GIAN IN NEW YORK. His Speech Before the New England Society of That City. New York Sun: When Mr. Grady arose to speak he was received witli rattling cheers. He was the first out and-out Southerner to be invited to a dinner of the New England Society, anil he spoke for the “New South” with warmth and frankness. He was repeatedly interrupted by the cheers of the New Englanders, and when he sat down his speech was accepted as the speech of the evening. Mr. Grady said he would take for his text the words of Benjamin II. Hill in Tam many* Hall, in 1806, “There was a South of secession and slavery—that South is dead. There is a South of union and freedom -that. South is living, breathing, growing every hour.'’ “I bespeak the utmost stretch of your courtesy tonight,” he said: “I am somewhat indifferent to those from whom 1 come. You remember the man whose wife sent Him to a neighbor with a pitcher of milk, nnd who, tripping on the top step, foil, with such casual interruptions ns the landings afforded, into the basement, and while picking himself up, had the pleasure of hearing his wife call out: ‘John, did you break the pitcher?’ ‘No, |1 didn't, but 1 be dinged if I don’t.!' said John. ‘The Cavalier as well as the Puri tan, said the speaker, was on this continent in its earlier days, and he was ‘up and able to be about.’ But both Puritan and Cavalier were lost in the storm of their first revolution, and the American citizen, supplanting both and stronger than either, took possession of the republic bought by tiieir common blood and fashioned to wisdom, and charged himself with teaching men government and estab lishing the voice of the people ns the voice of God. Great types like valu able plants, are slow to flower and fruit. But from the union of these colonists, from the straightening of their purposes and the crossing of their blood, slow perfecting through a century, came he who stands as the first typical American, the first who comprehended within, himself all the strength and gentleness, all the maj esty* and grace of this republic—Abra bam Lincoln. He was the sum of Puritan and Cavalier, for in his in dent nature were fused the virtues of both, and in the depths of his great soul the faults of both were lost. He was greater than Puritan, greater than Cavalier, in that he was Ameri can, and that in his homely form were first gathered the vast and thrill ing forces of this ideal government, charging it with such tremendous meaning, and so elevating it above hu man suffering that martydom, though infamously aimed, came as a fitting crown to a life consecrated from tlie cradle to human liberty. “In speaking to the toast with which you have honored mo I accept the term* ‘The New South' as in no sense disparaging to the old. Dear to me, sir, are the home of my childhood and tlie traditions of my people. There is a new South, not through protest aguinst the old, but because of new conditions, new adjustments, and, if you please, new ideas and as pirations. It is to this that I address myself. I ask you, gentlemen, to picture, if you can, the footsore sold ier who, buttoning up in his faded gray* jacket the parcle which was tak •n, testimony to his children of his fidelity and faith turned his face southward from Appomattox in April in 1865. Think of him as ragged, half starved, heavy heart ed, enfeebled by want and wounds, having fought to exhaustion, lie surrenders his gun, wrings the hands of his comrades, and lifting his ttarstained and pallid face for the last time to the graves that dot the old Virginia hills, pulls his gray cap over lus brow aud begins the slow and painful journey. What does he find—let me ask you, who went to your homes eager to find all the wel come you lmd justly earned, full pay ment for 4 y*ears’ sacrifice—what does he find when he reaches the home ho left four years before? He finds his house in ruins, his farm devastated, his slaves freed, his stock killed, his barns empty, his trade destroyed, his money worthless,JliIs social system, feudal iu its magnificence, swept away; his people without law or legal status, his comrades slain, and tin* burdens of others heavy* on his shoulder. Crushed by defeat, his very tradi tions gone; without money, credit, em ployment, material, or training -and besides all this, confronted with the gravest problem that ever met hu man intelligence—the establishing of a status for the vase body of his liber ated slaves, what does he do, this hero in gray*, with a heart of gold? Does he sit down in sullenness, in despair? Not for a day. Surely* God, who had scourged him in prosperity, inspired him in his adversity! As ruin was never before so overwhelming, never was restoration swifter. The soldier stepped from the trenches into the furrow; horses that had charged Fed eral guns marched before the plough, and fields that ran red with human blood in April were green with the harvest in June; women reared in lux ury out up their dresses aud made breeches for their husbands, and with a patience nnd heroism that fits wo man always as a garment gave their hands to work. There was little bit terness in all this. Cheerfulness and frankness prevailed. 'Bill Arp’ struck the key* when he said: ‘Well, I killed as many of them as they did of me, and now I am going to work.’ Or the soldier returning home after defeat nnd roasting some corn on the road side, who made tlie remark to his comrades: “You may leave the South if you want to, but lam going to Handersville, kiss my wife, and raise a crop, anil if the Yankees fool with me any more, I will whip’em again.’ 1 want to say to Gen. Sherman—who is considered an able tnan in our parts, though some people think he is a kind of careless man about lire— 1 that from the ashes left us in 1864 we have raised a brave and beautiful city; that somehow or other we have caught the sunshine in the bricks and mortar of our homes and have bnild- ed therein not one single ignoble prej udice or memory. ‘IBnt what is the sum of our re mark? We have found out that in the general summing up the free no gro counts more than he did as a slave. Wo have planted the school house on the hill top and made it free to white black. Wo ‘have sowed towns and cities in the place of theo ries and put business above politics. We have challenge*) your spinners in Massachusetts and your iron maker:! i*i Pennsylvania. We have learned that the $400,000,000 annually* receiv ed from our cotton crop will make us rich. Then the supplies that make it are home raised. We have reduced the commercial rate of interest from 24 to 6 per cent., and are floating 4 per cent, bonds. We have learned that one Northern immigrant is wort h fifty foreigners, and have smoothed the path to the Moutbwnrd, wiped out the place where Mason ami Dixon’s line used to be, and hung out our latch to you and yours. We have reached the point that marks perfect harmony in eveny household, when the husband confesses that the pies liis own wife cooks are as good as those his mother used to bake; amt we admit that the sun shines as brightly and the moon as softly as it did before the war.” “We have established thrift in city anil country. We have fallen in love with work. We have restored com fort to homes from which culture and elegance never departed. We have let economy take root anil spread among us as rank as the crab grass which sprang from Hhermau’s caval ry* camps, until we are ready to lay odds on the Georgia Yankee as he squeezes pure olive oil out of his cot ton seed against any Downeaster that ever swapped wooden nutmegs for flannel sausages in the valleys of Ver mont. Above all, we know that we have achieved in these “piping times of pence” a fuller independence for the South than that which our fathers sought to win in the forum by their eloquence or compel on the field by* their swords. It is a rare privilege, sir, to have had part, however hum ble, in this work. Never was a nobler duty confided to human hands than the uplifting and upbuilding of the prostrate and bleeding Mouth, mis guided, perhaps, but beautiful in her suffering, anil honest, brave and gen erous always. In the record of her social, industrial and political illus tration, wo await with confidence the verdict of the world. “We understood that when Lin coln signed the emancipation procla mation your victory was assured, for he tlien committed you to the cause of human liberty, against which the arms of man cannot prevail, while those of our statesmen who made slavery the corner stone of the Con-1 years. fetleracy doomed us to defeat, com- . In 1876 convicts were leased to perr- mitting' us to a cause that reason itentiary companies 1, 2 and .( for could not defend or the sword main- twenty years. A copy of that con tain iu the sight of advancing civili- tract was transmitted giving the zation. Hair Mr. Toombs said, which j names of the lessees No subsequent he did not say, that lie would call tlie | 1'*“'* " r o»»traet <>r transfer of niter- roll of his slaves at the foot of Bunker «►'* appears of record and no author- IIill lie would have been foolish, for j *ty *'y ttn >’ executive for such transfe lie might have known that whenever ■ appears of record. J. B. Uonion, one o the State fused on the a hundred farms for every plantation, fifty homes for every palace, and a diversified industry that meets the complex needs of this complex age.” In closing Wr. Grady said: “This message, Mr. 1'resident,'comes to you from consecrated ground. Every foot of the soil about the city in which I live is us sacred as a battle ground of the republic. Every hill that invests it Is hallowed to you by the blood of your brothers who died for vour victory, and doubly hallowed to us by the blow of those who died hopeless, but undaunted in defeat-sacred soil to all of ns—rich with memories that make us purer and stronger nnd better—silent but staunch witness in its rich desolation of the matchless valor of American hearts, the death less glory of American arms—speaking and eloquent witness in its white peace and prosperity to the indissolu ble Union of American States and the imperishable brotherhood of the American people. Wluit answer has New England to this message? Will she permit the prejudico of war to re main in the hearts of the conquerors when it has died in the hearts of the conquered? Will she transmit this pre judice to the next generation, that in in hearts which never felt the gener ous ardorof conflict it may perpetuate itself? Will she withhold, save in strained courtesy, tlie baud which, straight from his soldier's heart, Grant offered to Lee at Appomattox? “Will she make the vision of a restored and happy people which gathered above the couch of your dying Captain, filling his heart with grace, touching his lips with praise, and glorifying Ids path to the grave —will she make this vision on which the last sigh of his expiring soul breathed a benediction, a cheat and delusion? If she docs, the South, never abject iu asking for comrade ship, must accept with dignity its re fusal. But if she does not refuse to accept in frankness and sincerity this message of good will anil friendship, then will the i 'oyi’tr ■ ' ' r delivered to this very .sociuiy iorty' yeary ago. amid t remeudous applause, be verified in its fullest and final sense, when he said: “Standing hand to hand and clasping hands, we should re main united, as we have been for sixty years, citizens of the same coun try, members of the same Government —united, all united now and united forever. There have been difficulties, contentions and controversies, but 1 tell you that in my judgment “ ' I'm sc oppose I forces. Which like t lie met cursor a t r* uh'ort heaven All of one nature, of one sufis- hiicc fired, Dirt lately meet In l fie Intestine shook, Hhall now. to inu‘ >i;il ivcii.fi,*8„Hiiiinir ranks. March all one way. ’ ” + . The Convict Lease. Gov. Gordon sent in a message with the accompanying documents furn ishing the information asked by the resolution of Mr. Huff, of Bibb, touch ing the convict lease. The Governor states that the convict system seems to have been inaugurated by Brevet Brigadier Gen. Thus. II. Roger when Provisional Governor. In May, 1868, he leased 1(0 able-bodied negro con victs to Win. A. Fort. In July fol lowing he leased 100 to Mr. Fort and J. A. Print.up. In June next Mr. Bullock leased all the convicts to Grunt, Alexander & Co., for two years. In this lease reference is made to a former contract of November 1868, but the contract is not on rec ord in the Executive Department. The act of 1871 authorised the Gover nor to farm out the convicts for two i«l slav mu human very became entangled in war i, : of the ..rigiiml lessees, endeu st perish, and that the ehatt’.o in ; lw ‘'’ to return Ins interest to unman ilesh ended forever in New but the Governor refuse* England when your fathers—not. to j ground that he had no power to re- be blamed for parting with what' [ease tne lessees us appears in the let- didn't pay—sold their slaves to our! ter of the bill in the Executive De fathers -not to be praised for know pnrtment. Accompanying the ink ing a paying thing when they saw it. j sage arc copies of tlie reports of the “When Lee surrendered i don’t prmcipa keeper and^physician of the say when Johnston surrendered, he-1 penitentiary of the Attorney General •* .... , -*ludt*s to and other officials. 1 lie reports con- cause 1 understand he still all the time when he met General Sher-1 man last as the time when lie deter j mined to abandon any further prose cution of the struggle- when Lee sur rendered, I • say, und Johnston quit,' the South became, and has been since I loyal to this Union. We fought hard enough to know that we were whip vey in detail the information asked for bv the resolution. A Fair Division. “Joe, ad and in perfect frankness accepted bachelor quarters. ^ is final the arbitrament of the sword ^ All rigiit, JacK. to which we hail appealed. The J® 11 South found her jewel in a toad's head, j The shackles that had held her in mir- j * e8 *. • row limitations fell forever when the ipaii [Harper’s Bazar.] we’ll have to give up our as final the arbitrament o. ..... .... . to which we had appealed. The “You bought the stove, didn t yon, hpii.fl.! Joe?” Jack.’ paid for having the hole cut in shackles of the negro slave were the chimney.” broken. Under the old regime the ’ 'iL „ m,- „ negroes were slaves to the South, the. .'Y'* 11 ' a South was a slave to the system, division. I’ll take t ie stove and you Thus was gathered in tie hands of a j take the hole, splendid and chivalrio oligarchy the: substance that should have been dif- Sixcitcmcnt in Texas. fused among the people, as the rich blood is gathered at the heart, filling j that with affluent rapture, but leav ing the body clinl and colorless Tin* old South rested everything on slavery 1 and agriculture, unconscious that these could neither give nor maintain healthy growth. The new South pre sents a perfect democracy, u* oli garchs leading into the popular move ment—a social system compact, und and closely knitted, less splendid on the surface but stronger at the core— Great excitement lias been caused la the vicinity of Paris, l ex., by the remarkable recovery ol Mr. J. E. Corley, who whs so helpless he could not turn in bed, or raise ids heart; overybi dy said he was dying of (;onsuti>piion. A trial bottlo of Dr. King's Now Discovery was scat him. Finding re- lior, lie l>ouvfit a large hotMo and a box of Dr. King's 8ew Life l'ills: by tlio time h<< had taken two boxes of Fills and two bottles or Uio Discovery, he was well and IiikI gained in flesh thirty six poun Is Trial Uottl' d of tins Groat Discovery lor Consumption fre< at John M. Litis 0.