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VOL IV.—No. 116.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
B. M. OBME. Editor.
PV$LI$MED EVERY EVENING ,
*
a (Saturday Excepted,)
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LETTERS FROM _ THE PEOPLE,
*'
.A REVIEW OF THIS SITUATION,
Mr. Editor: li4e With your tied per
missioni'shodld to odbtjpy’a schaif’
apace 111 ’your extensively read <?pl
io a review of the situation ar'I
hat# watched it from the beginning of
this unfortunate controversy until the
adiouriMMftt' of the Convention vn
Wednesday.* sibiiityyesting There is a heavy respon
on the ah<x§d4Btj|.of same,
oo., .od i
-char
■a : ,t**nquitt and Brown—ioii
dVm Gor
his having
resignation- ab rinlnmft w
phpnlnr mipi m* i —■ n lirrini b^ iTir 1
don's successor; on Joe Brown for hav
,ing accepted the position with such a
record as he presented to the people ol
Georgia. The result was, that Gov
ernor Colquitt, from being the idol ol
tbe people, sunk into the quagmire
which was ready to engulph him or
any other man who would , thus reck
lessly fly into the face of the people,
the source of all power in this State
and in this ,couutry.
'Violent opposition was raised to his
candidacy for a third term and the
many friends of other prominent gentle
men presented their names to the peo
pie of their respective sections lot ap
proval, and Governor Colquitt soon
discovered that he had raised such a
storm about his ears it was necessary
for him to leave his duties as Govern
or to go before the people for “vindi
cation 1” He appeared in the Opera
House in Atlanta end made such a
4tvn.breaat Administration of everything connected
With that his chief
bottle washers, the Atlanta Constitution
and the Savannah Morning News an*
noupced .that it was a flourish complete "viu
with a great of tram
pets and tho sound of the bass drum
and cymbals.
Well, if that great speech was a tri
umph over those whose opposition he
had evoked, why did it not suffice?
’ W-balt Ttece^ity was there lyr him to
‘orate Wt Atlanta to repeat the same
speech in the different cities of the
State to which he journeyed? Would not 1
% *^»eoch jPrjnkmg and circulating ol that
h^ve answered all his ends were
be entirely conscious of the rectitude
of his political purposes, tbe aud kept him
at his post in Executive mansion
in Atlanta? But no! He must needs go
forth and tell tho same old yarn every¬
where kg , |||t ?; adding certain iutem
pemt$ fVwtfeioos. which did him no
good in the eyes of the moral world
and intensified the opposition to him iu
many His quarters.
pleadiugs and the piteousness of
tis appeals drew around him a certain
class, \yho accepted his fine spun theo
- nes a u4 to make his political salva
iwnjdtpbly novel ana assured, original pushed device of through holding a
W»JB4LX meetings the Cotnrention for the election ol
l a
"Wirfg firobaPifrGeo'ffffa. Iu this way
he and they managed to secure a large
majority of the delegates, who went
, thftt CouteUtiou as stubborn, as
unyielding and uncompromising .as it
was possible for men to be. It was
the party, it was not principle, it was
not with a will and determination to
preserve the integrity of the Democrat
jc party, but to force Colquitt down
tbe throats of an unwilling people,
oven if it ended iu disruption and the
surderingol the sacred ties which should
have riveted them together as with
hooks ot stuei iu view of the approach
ing tremendous struggle for national
preioacy.
The friends of other candidates
equally fit to fill the responsible posi¬
tion of Governor, seeing the disposi¬
tion manifested by the Colquitt party,
prepared to resist.. the Their first step
was to insist on adoption of the
two-thirds rule, as it was the only sure
protection to a minority in an emer
gency like this. It was adopted and
they were safe, and no matter bow
strong they cracked their whip Col¬
quitt The was debarred the nomination.
minority, while firm in their in¬
tegrity, were full of the spirit of con¬
ciliation, and our own Warren, with
other members of the minority in the
Convention, early in the session, coun¬
seled harmony and conciliation, which
was responded to by the brusqueness
that usually attaches io the stronger,
“ We have no harmony, no com¬
promise. We came here to nominate
Colquitt how and no other.” How harsh,
inharmonious, how unpatriotic,
how un-Demoeratic, in the face of the
critical period in the history of the
Democratic party!
I well remember, many loDg years
ago, when the National Democratic
party, in Convention in Baltimore,
tion was laboring under just such a condi¬
of things as our late Gubernatorial
Convention. Partisans of particular
candidates were sticking pertinaciously
to their friends and preventing a nomi¬
nation, when a letter was brought in
and read from General and ex-Presi
dent Andrew Jackson, ‘'Give up your
friends and save your country I” t r , The
effect. silenced was 1 electric;, and James factious K. opposition Polk and
was
George ^ebOiueiaam M. Dallas miparalleled were nominated in'the with
his
of-Uns eountry.
Democrats in these day# were not
only Democrats but patriots, and they
hesitated not to sacrifice even a friend
wbeia ♦b*y found he- could not unite
the party. What a marked contrast
id our. Convention present, when the
w orlt f asked the majority to name
.
but <Jolqui ‘ t ' aoJ were
^be on ua of this whole thing is on
. . and all the sophistry
of
AtJanta Constitution and the Savan
to wy that because of the
of so-called Colquitt
delegates in the Convention the m.nor
dy were necessarily bound to submit
take a back seat ; and as to the
attempted to be strained from
he fac £ of ^ at preponderance that they
w f re tb ere \ } Y tke W1 ll of the people,
immaculate editors of these
two sublime sheets know, as well as 1
do - that *. t vr M al1 the work of cr088 '
ads politicians .. . and but fraction . of
r n a
the P. eo P l8 who voted at the primary
meetings for the election of delegates
to the Gubernatorial Convention,
Look, lor instance, at Burke county,
wbare ^- r : Lester was born, nurtured
and ral88d ‘ -Does any one not tainted
with madness believe that noble county
wo " ld 8° a £ ai ? 8t ker owu honored son
lD ^ av ° r Co.quitt or any other out
8ldei ! 1
1 know little about country , politics ...
a
and 1 P rofe88 tQ kll0W something about
tbe8 * Dmitry meetings and I somehow
imagine I know as much about the dear
people Ewarts, as and these I two unhesitatingly sell opinionated affirm
thftt these cross-roads Colquitt dele
R ft l es were not sent to the txmveution
by tke people, but by a fraction of the
P eo P le » and a very.email fraction at
that,
I consider this a very important
matter and will revert to it again in
order to prove that the majority in the
Convention were really the bolters and
are wholly to blame for tbe split and
for the failure to make a nomination,
aud a righteous verdict at the polls Gum. will
so decree.
The Russian newspapers report that
much mischief is being done to the
crops in Southern Russia by locusts
*
and .other insect pests. In the
district of Rasachs 5,000 men
daily employed in the work of extirpa
tion. On the railway from Tiflis to
Poti the locusts lav so thick on the line
that the trains were obstiucted.
“Your future husband seems very
exacting; he has been stipulating for
all sorts of things.” said a mother to
her daughter, who was on the point
being married. “Never mind, mamma,”
sa id the affectiouate girl, who was
ie ady dressed lor thewoddmg,
are h s last wishes*”
- ..-
A Happy Restoration.
j can truly say that I owe my
en t existence and happy restoration
t be hopes and joys of life, to the
0 f Warners Sale Kidney and
Cure, aud I say to every one
trom any * manner of kidney, liver
urinary trouble, ’ “Use this ‘
and recover.” W. E. Sanford.
Nolle!/, N. Y., ' Feb. 25, 1SS0.
---■*=* ■» * —
The ^ maiket is pretty
stocked with fruit ot all kinds,
make at: excellent exhibit during
ihours ttbeigned lor sa.e.
A LESSON IN LOYE.
Lennox Ray sprang from the train
and hastened up the green lpne to the
wide, old-fashioned farmhouse, 1
bis valise hand. carry
iog in his
“I wonder if Nannie got my note
and ie looking for me? Halloa!”
This last exclamation was drawn
from Ray’s lips by a cherry, which
coming from above somewhere came in
to contact with his nose. He looked
up, aDd there, perched like a great
bird upon the limb of. a huge old
cherry tree, and looking down at him
with dancing eyes and brilliant cheeks,
was a young girl.
“How do, Lennox? Come up and
have some cherries?” was her mis
chievous greeting.
“Nannie ! Is it possible ?” exclaim
ed Lennox, severely.
And while Ray looked on in stern
herself disapproval, the young witch swung
“Now lightly down.
don’t look so glum, Lennox
dear,” she said, slipping her little
hand into his with a coaxing motion
“I know it’s tom-boyish to climb a
cherry tree; but then it’s such fun!”
“Nannie, you should have been a
boy,” said Lennox.
"I wish I had! No I don’t either;
for then you wouldn’t have fallen in
love with me. What made you, dear?”
with a fond glance and caressing move
meat.
“Because you’re so sweet, darling ”
self. answered “But Ray, melted in spite of him
I do wish Nannie, you would
leave off those hoydenish ways and be
more “Like dignified.” Miss
Ieham?” asked Nannie
“MisB leham is a very superior wo
man and It would not hurt you to copy
her in some respects.”
Two tears sprang into Nannie’s eyes
at his tone. They went into the parlor
and Ray giving her curls a toss back
ward went and sat down.
“I wish you would put up those fly*
away curls, and dress your hair as
other girls do,” said Ray. “And see
here, Nannie, I want to have a talk
with you. You know I love JpifoJ you,
bat jn tr uth, jn y Hoar
ijf-r'-” T 'VnnV 0 "tf5” "rriaripod
l°lX won thit rav Pieter T aura in mabino un
pis and she wtshes you to he one o.
the number.
“Are you going?” asked Naume.
"No, my business will not allow it,
but I shall see yon several times
Will you go.
"I don’t want to go. I had rather
stay here in the country and climb
cherry trees every day.’
“Nannie, I must insist upon more
self control.” he said coldly.
“Rnt But doa tlnn’E hp.hI mp awflv’’ way hIip
pie
y0 an^Zrr The bell this inslant
S uuDer Ustif;Tn^ered, rw at ’’Ye":
let me go, Leunoa,” aud ran out ot tbe
room and upstairs to her owu them
“Yes, I’ll go. And I’ll teach you one
lesson, Lennox Ray, see if I don't,”
she murmured.
It was nearly the middle of Septem¬
ber before Lennox Ray, heated, dutty,
and weary, entered the hotel where his
sister’s party were stopping.
“Why, Lenox, you here ?” eaid she.
- “Yes. Where is Nannie?”
“Sbe was on the piazza talking with
a French Count a moment ago. Ah !
there she is by tbe door.”
But it was difficult, even wben Le
drew near, to see iu the stylish, state¬
ly lady, whose hair was put up over a
monstrous chignon, and whose lustrous
robes swept the floor for a yard, his
0V * Q Nannie of thiee months
ft S°*
Lennox strode up, and , with . scarce
' a
« lauce at tiie bewildered dandy to,
she was chatting held out his
! band with an eager exclamation.
She made a sweeping courtesy and
languidly extended the tips o. hei un
gers but not a muscle moved beyond
what accorded with well-bred indifi'er
ence.
“Ah, good evening, Mr. Ray.”
“O, Nannie! are you glad to see
me ?” said Lennox, feeling that his
heart was chilled within him.
“0, to be sure, Mr. Ray, quite glad,
Allow me to present my friend,
Count de Beaurepaire. Mr. Ray,
sieur.”
Lenncx hardly deigned to bow to the
Frenchman, aud offered his arm to
Nannie.
“Thaoks—-but the music is begin
m D g and I premised to dance with Mr.
Blair.”
“But afterwards ?” said Lennox, the
chill growing colder.
“But I am engaged to Mr. Thorn
ton.”
“What then ?” demanded Lennox,
i with a jealous pang,
“Realiv, car card is so ftsl? I hardly
I will, however, try and spare
iyouft waltz somewhere.”
SAVANNAH, SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 1880.
Good heavens ! Nannie, what af
fectabon is this ?”
^he f av °red him with a well-bred
eta ™ ;
Pardon, I do not understand you?”
And taking the arm of her escort
8ae wa ' ked away with the air of an
empress.
-^ennox “Laura, sought bis sister.
how have you changed
,^ le fi0 ? be demanded.
sbe * 8 changed. Isn’t she per
ec '^ Rerfeci? ■ Rather too peifect to suit
growled Lennox. “To-morrow I
8 Lut see more of Nannie,” he thought,
f°'morrw, to-morrow, and to-morrow, and
it was always the same; and
e ^ e 8 ant Miss Irving,as they styled
ker > wad fi l^ T ays in demand, and poor
L pQQ c>x at the distance which she kept
locked on almost heartbroken,
va Lvmg between wrath, jealousy, pride
and des P a * r ;,
“Nannie,” , said he
, vh he found her one morning,
eQ a moment alone,
“how long is this to last ?”
‘ * believe you wished me to come
here to improve my manners, Mr. Ray;
8aid to acquire the elegance of society,” she
> coldly.
But Nannie. -”
Weil, if you are not pleased with
r esuIt of your own advice I am not
to blam e. You must excuse me now,
de Beaurepaire.” L>ay; I am going to ride with Count
And with a graceful gesture of adieu,
Ieft bim sick at heart.
Tnat afternoon Lennox walked unan
into Laura’s room.
before thought I’d drop in and say good
Y you went down stairs,” said
“ J lea v® to-night."
“Indeed? _
Where are you goiDg ?”
Laura.
^ don t know, ’ was the savage
P|7* You take
“ caa a note to George for
^
“ Yes, if you get it ready,” eaid he.
“Very well. I will write it now.”
Laura leffc fcb e room, and Lennox
moodily at the window. Present
JSanme came in and
“^e.
“Yes,I am,” was the short answer.
“And won’t you tell ua where?"
‘I don't know myself—neither know
.
d.o s.-. well, »«,] and cr,r,L-P po g ctpidIv n y,
<’»
but, hennoi dear, if it you go away
“ 1 “ ’ eTiuddenlv ed 8 « dd en'y a »*’ d d ca°nuht her ^
' '•
... . cne • i onat tpi
■ A ’ ■ 1 a « nfl y,, v
y.awow.d , , only , come back to me;
1 could i ecover iny lost treasure, 1
ld ber , 0, my lost
^ biS
"I-enuw. dear, toil me which you
b -' ; Nannie you used to
““ i “ bl0Lab:le > 0UU S lld J
„ 0> dai]ing ,., ^ eM<
clasping her closer. “I wouldn’t give
one toss of your old brown curls for al!
the fashionable young ladies in the
wor !^ ■>
"Then you will take your old
Nannie back again, Lennox, dear.’
And Lennox, passionately clasping
her to him, begged to be lorgiven.aml
vowed he would not exchange his
precious little wild rose for all the hot
home flowers in Chiistendom.
Spoiled Tail’s Children.
An ludian's Id-, a ot Corporeal Punhbmcnt in
Scl.o ds.
[From a VVasiiington Letter.]
^ be news that Spotted Tail, one of
the Sioux chiefs, bad taken his boys
and girls away from the schools pro¬
vrded for them by the Government is
no surprise to those who heard Sioux
chiefs talk on that subject when they
were l.ere recently. Spotted lai., with
Red Cloud and others, paid a visit to
the Indian school established at
j Car lisle. Pa., on their way here, and
caked their on their return to their
Western homes. Spotted A ail, next to
Red Ctoud, is the finest looking Indian
who come-here. He wa3 very much
j pleased with the things ho saw at Car
and so expressed himself.
talking to the superintendent of
school and the teachers fo?. a while,
called his boys and had a talk wub
them privately. He learned from
j boys that did the rod was they used should, when
boys not do as known
when they talked, for be it
it is just as natural for an
young or old, to sulk as it is for
distinguished politicians who were
suU-r-d at Chicago,
S; tted Tail, after 1 5 tr
* a k: with ’he superiote! r,
tcid him whai he had heard. He
was trat. Upon “neither being f' - hat
was he answered, my Days
lgins shall ever be whipped by
one with my'consent. I will not
them at a school or any other
where the whip is used. .A whipped
boy is apt to grow up a whipped life mao.
Unless he has some spirit or in him
it is better that he know nothing. A
whipped man has neither “spirit
life.” He then turned to the Indian
children and said to them in the natin
ral tongue : “Don’t let any one whip
you, teacher or any one else. You have
no master. Never allow any one to
strike you a blow.’’ An effort was
made to satisfy Mr. Spotted Tail that
the whipping administered at Carlisle
was the same as at other schools and
was only a slight affair. The idea of
“sparing the rod and spoiling the
child” was suggested to him, but he
said be did not believe in whipping in
any way; that any man who struck his
child had better keep out of the way,
and that he would soon draw his child
re n from any place where they were
liable to be whipped, it mattered not
bow slight. The withdrawal of his
children is the result.
-«» —
Narrow Escapes,
“ ~
Some Recollections . of the War^-Life Saved by a
Canteen, a Plug of Tobaeoo and.a- Caudle.
-
Many computations have been made
of the number 0 f bullets fired in battle
every man killed. The following
stories, collected by the Detroit Free
Fress > 8b <>w how near some pf the stray
bullets came to doing fatal work:
battle of Peach Orchard,
wb ee McClellan was making his change
of base > a Michigan infantryman fell
to the ground as if. shot dead, and was
^ J y iD g Ihe aa tbe ball regiment which hit changed him first po
struck the barrel of his gun, glanced
& nd knocked a button off his coat, tore
^ be Wft t c h out of his vest pocket. He
wa8 unconscious for three-quarters of
an bou /» and was a tull montff be
^ ore ^ be b ^ ack and blue spot diBappear
ed
At A , Pittsburg r ,.., , T Landing ,. a member , of
down to give
bullet aimed at his breast struck the
e :ln ^ 6 ']’ tQ / D d aside > and passed b rled through
1 b » d 7, of , .» m “ n “ 1 8elf
ln the leg of ahorse. The canteen
”3k °h P a “ d r0PP ‘° ‘ e
°? aWes
the second batt.e of Bull Rnn.; as
a New York infantryman was passing
f tobacco to a comrade, a
MM struck the ping, glanced off, and
buried itself in a knapsack. The to
vingTand rolled up like a ball of
eh b carried a hundred feet
. Directly iu line of the ball was
the head of a lieutenant, and had not
“° h ?d ^ tave^receivedT b een deflected he certainly
woura u nave rutwv u iu As n. it was, wa , ue he
^ ^eyea filled with tobacco due,
tr^»^a^a^ grapeshot, which passed bo
^ b ? a
‘“ tb fredTot
aismountoa to ascertain the nature of
his injury and as he he,it over a bnl
knocked his hat and killed his hors^.
J ri Die same fig it w *a a trooper who
b -R- suffered seveial days with the
tojthacbe. In a hand to hand fight be
r f ce \ ved a fhe right
cheeK It knocked out bis aching
d ouble tooth, and passed out of the left
band corner of his muuf ), ta klD g P iir t
an upper tooth along. The joy of
oein g J ld l be toothache was so great
that tbe trooper could not be made to
go to the rear to have the wouuu
dressed.
An object, no matter how trifling,
will turn a bullet from ihe true course.
This was shown one day in the re¬
mount camp in Pleasant Valley. They
had a “bull pen” there, in which about
500 bounty jumpers and other hard
cases were under guard. Once in a
while one of these men would make a
breflk for liberty. Every and sentinel in
position would open fire, it did not
matter in the least if the man ran to
W ard the crowded camp. On this oc
casion a prisoner made for the camp,
an 4 ad maD y ft3 six ehots were fired ut
hi m without effect. One of the
; entered the tent of a Captain ia the
■ Twelfth. Pennsylvania Cavalry.
t waa lying down, and the course of
bullet would have buried it in his chest,
Fortunately for bim the candleby
be was reading sat on a stand
him and where the bullet entered.
WhH struck and end cut dropped squarely iu the two
the lighted 6nufh cl to The
without being out.
j wa8 deflected, and buiied itmrIf in
pillow under the officer’s heed,
0 ut of that and through bis teat,
tered one behind it passed
two men ami brought up against
C amp kettle,
Never tell a go y u iove her,
i knew her pa i? willin',; tfy-r t-li
i r-;-n hr”s hO;, rst -a hen you fliuk
l villain :.e\> Link ybC "are
Lj that year w.t wi ivc fofever
C V er use that hardly old expresaion, weak
au l weary, ever.”
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Buslness Cards*
JAS. McGINLEY,
OA^EPEISrTER.
YORK STREET, second door east of Bull.
furnished Jobbing promptly attended to. Estiraatea
wben desired. _ je 1 4-6m
_
BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER.
BUTCHER,
STALL No. 66, Savannah Market.
A LL other meats in their season at lowest
XX. market rates. Orders ^promptly filled
and delivered. ,,
Give him a, trial. ooJU-tX*
_
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
T PHILLIPS, Butcher, and dealer ifiial
q.a. l qprxiko,
Iu Outtiif, iiit DtffliM, CsiHm ad
SHAVING SALOON.
SOT AND COLD BATHS.
‘ Bvyan street, cpposlte
der Planters' Hotel. the Market, un
man, and Kngltsh spokon. Spanish, Italian, Ger
s«i«-tr
W. B. FERRELL'S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basemen
(Opposite Llppman’s Drug St re,)
lanIStf SAVANt 1H. GA
Pl mnMnfl and Gas Pit ing,
V CHAS. E. WAKEFIEiD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam fitting,
No. 46 BARNARD STREET, one door north
oi South Broad, treet.
Also, Agent of *• BACKUS WATER MOTOR-■
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to
and all Work guaranteed, at low prices. aep7tl
_ _
W. H. COSGROVE,
East side of Bull street, one door from York,
Practical Plumber and C-aa Fitter
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
143 - Prices to suit the times. mh7tf
Paints, Oils and Glass*
JOHN~0. BUTLER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer ln
WHITE LEADS OOLORH, OlLfcJ, GLASS,
VAHNIbli. ETC.
Ready Mill Mixed Paints, Solo R'liir.md, Georgia Steamer Llm an c.
Calcined Supplies. Plaster, Cemeuls, Agent lor flair aud Lan &«
Plaster, JaulBtf No. 'll Drayton 'lA’.M street, .N.VH. GA^
,
1 mm* l^nley,
—Dealer in—
floors, folios, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement,
STEAMBOAT,
j Railroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oils, varnishes, glass, ao.
No. 6 Whitaker ft 171 Bay St.,
SAVANNAH, OEORQIt
myiKi-if
JOHN OLIVER.
— Dealer ln —
Steamboat, flail Road and Mill Supplies,
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, &c.,
DOORH, HASHES. »BLI ND*. MOULDING
Balusters, Biind Trim.rCngs,
No. e. w m.L aker bt„
SAVANNAH , QK 0 RQ 1 A
VL
& x
m 'N* rW
3
•
Sfa BTOWTCH ^
Defensive Medication
Is a prfeearjM'vn whl<-h shnn’1 never l,e n»®.
lecte-1 when r 1- prose o', and thfrefor*
s course of tUr i’ f,< .J. ujIk set>-on U par¬
ticularly 4 - Ir.i *.m. osp-'clntiv hj.'iou Air flm fer-bla
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