Newspaper Page Text
THR DAILY SUN.
Tvkhday Morning, Jo* 18.
w BourbOD».'”
Thin is the term now can ti ugly Applied
bj the “New Departure” Democrat*—
so-called— to all those who will not follow
them in their abandonment of the Jef-
feraouiau principles. Up-which the liltsr fbem under disguise, with the voioe of
ties of tbisoouutry were rescued from the
Centralists and Imperialists in 1800, and
to which the unparalleled prosperity and
happiness of the people of the United
States for sixty years afterwards were
mainly attributable.
Thia intended derisive epithet is taken
from what was said of the kings of France
of the Bourbon line: that they “never
forgot anything and never learned auy-
To all those who thus apply this say
hg at this time, we have a few things to
jay in calm, sober earnestness.
While it is true there are many things
Fwliich should be forgotten, and many
r more which should be learned, it is
equally true that there are many things
which should never be forgotten, and
also many which should never be learned.
Rightly directed progress in anything
that marks civilisation—in science,morals
and government—consists in searching
for and ascertaining the truth. When
this is ascertained, it is one of the things
) which should never be forgotten; while
errors of all sort*, when onoe discovered,
should, not only be immediately dis
carded, but forgotten forever, if possi
ble.
On the other hand, the ways of vice
in politics, and the jingling tricks of
those who seek the high trusts of office
without regard to established truths or
correct principles, for the sole purpose of
acquiring power, spoils and public plun
der, are among the things that should
never be learned.
These are our views upon this subject
If they make us a “Bourbon,” then we
are properly classed with the “Boar
bona,” and glory in the name. We stand
upon truth and principle, from which
we never shall depart, and care nothing
for the name by which we may be called.
The epithet of “Whig” was derisively
applied in England to those who wonld
not forget the great truths of Magna
Churta and would not joiu in the “New
Departure” from its principles under the
lead of the House of Stuart*. This epi
thet was applied to them because of the
miserable diet the poorer and larger class
of those firm adherent* to truth, honor
unqj principle were compelled to live op
on—whey and voter; but by their unflinch
ing adherence to truth, their^principlee
were finally triumphant, and they gloried
no less in the name given them by their
opponents than in their ultimate suooess.
The term “Democrat,” itself, was op*
probrionsly applied by the Centralists
of 1798 99 to the true friends of Oonsti-
tutional liberty at that time, who had the
firmness and integrity to maintain the
truth and denounce the infamous “Alien
and Sedition Acts,” as gross and palpabli
usurpations of power. It was in vain they
were appealed to, to “accept the situation,
and to recognizo those act* as “fixed
facts," because they were passed, as it
was said, “iw the manner and by the power
constitutionally appointed."
Both Houses of Congress had passed
these acts by large m^joritiea The Ex
ecutive (the elder Adams,) had approved
them and the Federal Judiciary bod sus
tained thorn. The Legislatures of only
two States—Kentucky and Virginia—de
nounced them.
But notwithstanding all this, the true
defenders of the Constitution—the hon
est laboring masses—the men of the
plow, the anvil, the plane, the saw and
the spade—the toiling thousands who
were making their “bread by the sweat
of their brow”—those iwho knew the
price of liberty as well as of labor, dared,
not only, boldly to assert their rights,
but to maintain them at the polls againsi
all these odds.
For this they were sarcastically dubbed
“Democrats”—the “Sans f oolotte”—the
“barefooted”—the “unwashed mob,” etc.
These epithets had no effect upon them
but to inspire increased energy and seal
in their glorious oause of driving the
usurpers from Power. They rallied to a
man, from Maine to Georgia—the ex
treme limits then, of the Federal Repub
lic ; and in their signal viotoiy rejoiced
in common with the honored name of
“Iron-ribbed democracy.”
This is our Democracy. This is the
political school in which we have been
reared—in which we have lived—and in
whioh v«e shall die. It is known as the
Jeffersonian shool. If in not forgetting
the essential principles of that sohool, or
for not making any “departure” from
them now, we become Bourbons, then
Jefferson, and all his associate*, of 1800
were Bourbons, if adhoring to the
truth of “right against might,” makes
any one a Bourbon, then Hampden,
Pym and Coke, and all the noble defend
ers of liberty in England were Bourbons.
Then Washington, Hamilton, Franklin,
Patrick Henry, John Hanoock, and all
the patriots of 1776 in this oountiy, were
Bourbons. They never forgot the truths
and principles of Magua Chart*—the
birthright of every English born subject;
nor did they ever learn the trick or art of
determination never
any principles
with them, make
then we are Bourbon
we believe a very large’ majority
people of the United States are equally
Bourbon, and will show themselves so
to be in the end, unless they are cheated
out of their birthright by those “New
Departure” Democrats who approach
rical V ictUms
oj
5f«S 'XffDtFti«tincm« F i 1
Jacob, but the hands of Esau.
»• d
The New York “World” Ago in.
In another column of Tax Sun to-day
we republish entire an article from the
New York World, in whioh that journal
announces much sounder doctrine than
any we have heretofore seen coming from
that qnarter.
We call the special attention of our
readers to it. Principles characterize
parties—not the names they assume
and when the editor of the World shall
indorse the principles of Constitutional
and Federal law thus compiled by his
Librarian, as fully as he has heretofore
indorsed the 9th resolution of the Penn
sylvania platform (which is utterly at war
with them), he will be much more en
titled than heretofore to be considered
ns an orthodox organ of the true Democ
racy.
We desire no better creed or party
platform for the real friends of Consti
tutional liberty in the next great civic
Htrugglo in this country, than the prin
ciples set forth in this article of the
World, compiled by the Librarian in the
office of that paper.
This holds the Btatee to be sovereign in
all their reserved or undelegatod rights.
It holds that the Federal Government
has no inherent sovereignty; that all its
sovereign powers—which are specific and
limited—are delegated by the States; and
that the States, of the Federal Union
are indestructible.
It bolds that “it would be a gross
usurpation on the part of the Fcd<
Government to interfere with State righ
by an ‘exercise of power not delegal
Of course, if this be true, it was
usurpation of power by the majority fac
tion in Congress to strike from the list
of common weal tha ten States of the
Union, and without any regard to any of
their rights, to put their entire popula
tion under military rule.
The 9th Pennsylvania reeolntion de
clares that this was not a usurpation, but
was done “in the manner and by the power
constitutionally appointed. ”
There is nothing —not a line or a
word—in this article of the World's Li
brarian, inconsistent in the slightest de
gree, with the Brodhead letter of Gen.
Blair and the Democratic creed an
nounced in 1868, of which the World has
complained so mneh. That letter and
that platform only announce the general
truth that these acts were “unconstitu
tional, revolutionary and void.
If that paper now, and those who fol
low it* lead, will stand upon the princi
pies of the article whioh we publish to
day from its columns, and make the fight
in 1872 upon them, so will we.
bes, as follows,
funeral of Ilia
were slain by
Communists:
The funeral ceremonies to-day over
the re mains of ftvp clerical victims of the
Commune were solemn and impressive.
Notre Dmm was grandly arranged. The
central object in the solemn scene was
the gorgeous eatalfalqna containing the
remains of the Archbishop, surrounded
b^ minor structures, bearing the corpses-
Novelty IRON ^
ATT.ATffTA - - - aXK>RO>X*^
WITHERS & ~TQii^jfernprifitoEa
WINDOW capk oRATkroi mremc bhATb fob
uwm AND VERANDAS* SH
HOUSES. FOUNTAINS. HIT.
cat %£? B
nrjmss? mnawri
gsaaim.
De Qnerry, the cure of Madilane;
Buret, Grand Vicar of Diocese; OeoDurt
ALL DU OF CASTINGS B BO* AH
PROMPTLY FURNISHED AT THE INVEST BATES.
CbaIi Ualii For
>»»!*
uouive Hirer cron Thousand, of is
per. were burning in sUrer oendelbra,
end the inoenae vee-el werealao silver.—
The floor waa covered with black oloili,
and the pulpit ni covered with black
e nze, bespangled with silver stars. The
inspects, one hundred and fifty feet
wide, appeared like huge
Black drapery covered every statue, <*-
ept those of the virgin and child and
I Dennis. The Urst Bishop of Paris,
in the midst of all, wore black, and the
charted remains of the Bishop's chair
and h>s throne, also half burned, from
which the Communists endeavored to
burn the cathedral. This woo, and will
be, heft intact as a memento of the crime
Along the route of the procession the
windows end streets were crammed with
spectators. Bella were tolling. A salute
of guns were filed. A strong furoe of
regulars, with reversed arms and muffled
drums, were in the prooeeaum. The
funeral car of the Arohbishop was oov '
with silver, and was drawn by six hoi
Another beautiful car, containing tbe
remains of Surat, followed. The pro
cession reached the oatbedral at 11
o'clock. The inside of the eburoh
crowded with members of the Assembly,
priests and Sisters of Charity. At 11
o'clock the priests and deputies, with
martial music, left tbe churuh and pro
ceeded to the great
draped in blook, to meet the coffins,
clionting the commi nds, and ontaide was
heard the beating of drams, pealing of
trumpets, and roaring of cannon. At the
elevation of the host the firing was re
peated. The altar was magnificently
decorated, and the serriee was long and
solemn. HcUabon. Drusev, Venoy,l’Ad-
' suit and Favre were present.
Abusing Jefferson Davis.
For onrselves we say of the Constitu
tion of the United Btatee and the princi
ples of American free institutions there
in established and maintained by Jeffer
son and the Democracy in 1800, as Davifi
said of those to which he wet no more
attached when he exclaimed: " If I forgot
thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand fur-
gel her cunning. It I do not rsmemW
thee, let my tongue cleave to tbe roof of
my mouth.”
If to be dnvotcj, heart aud soul, to the
Constitution of the United States and
the Union of the States under it; if never
to forget the principles on which these
ware founded; if a fixed determination
never to depart from them; if an e<pud
The TVks Qcorgian of yesterday
copies a long rigamarole of stric
tures from the Biehmond Enquirer,
all of whioh it endorsee, and specially
commends "the teachings of the article
to Mr. Davis himself, with the hope that
ho may act upon them in the future.”
This might have come very well from
some sources, but ooming from the True
Georgian, the editor of whioh claims the
questionable honor of having been t he first
to nominate Grant for the Presidency, it
grates rather roughly upon Southern
feelings. The editor of theTrne Geor
gian was in full oo-operation with the
Radical party in its efforts to got posses
sion of the State of Georgia. He was
with it while the hungry oormorants
which composed it were fattening upon
the substanoeof the people. He labored
with his whole might to elect the first ne
gro Legislature. Ho labored hard to car
ry the State for Grant and previously for
Governor Bullock. No man assailed
Demoemts more bitterly and more harsh
ly thsu he did. This he will not deny,
and, if he has any modesty at all, it would
teach him to be eautions in censuring
others whose record he may suppose to
be vulnerable, or language objectionable
or imprudent
Whether Mr. Davis has been prudent
or imprudent—whether he is a repre
sentative of the feelings of the Southern
people or not it is quite unbecoming in
the editor of the True Georgian to be
come his volunteer ohampion assailant.
Mr. Davis is now honored by thou
sands who differed very deoidedly with
the policy of his administration, and
who, then and now, oast not a little of
the blame of the Southern failure upon
him; because he was the ohosen head
and representative of a oause whioh
dear to every Southern heart; and though
the Southern people may have honestly
abandoned all attempt to separate them
selves from the Union by secession,
yet it is not aooording to human
nature lor them while life lasts
to hate the oause which they so earnestly
and heartily espoused; and he who ex
pects Southern people now to hate end
disown the representatives of that oause,
however lost it may be forever, is simply
foolish sod knows nothing of the manly
instincts which actuate the messes of our
people.
This is the meaning of the honors
which are given to Jefferson Davis, and.
in this way ho is honored by all classes
of man in the South; and whoever enters
a tirade against him is lacerating the
whole Southern people on a very tender
point It is is not pleasant to any por
tion of the people—no matter what may
be their opinions of Mr. Davis—to hear
him abused by any one; end it is particu
larly obnoxious in such a one as by the
editor of the 7Vwe Georgian.
tfwiston, Maine, has a man 78 years
old, who never sent or received a (otter
through the post-office. Happy a
Sherman’* Letter.
Below we give Sherman's letter, in
whioli he declares his intention to not be
a candidate for President
“Fobt Sox, Camanuhv Bbmbtatiov. i
“M«y 30, 1871. |
"To (he Editor of the Herald
**I have been skirting the Texas frontier for tits
pest month, end here for the tret time I meet Ales
of eastern papers, by which I see quite en naneoee-
sery musshes been raised by s purported speech
msde by me et e supper of the Union League Club
et New Orleans, tbe night preceding my departure
from that city. Whoever reported that as a speech
by me, committed a Breach of propri* ty, for Gover
nor War moth presided, and before I consented to
respond to a call 1 was assured by the President of
the Society that no reporters wore present, aud that
whatever was said would be sacred and confined to
those present. Now as to politics. 1 think all my
personal friends know my doep-neated antipathy to
the subject, yet as yon seem not to understand me,
I hereby state, and mean all that I say, that I never
have been and never will be a candidate for Presi
dent; that if nominated by either party I should
peremptorily decline, and even if unanimously
elected, I should decline to serve.
"If you can find language stronger to convey this
meaning, you at liberty to use it.
"1 am your obediant servant.
"W. T. Sherman, General."
Stas Qtbpertwnsrsts.
NOTICE.
BBOPOSXIjS for CLEANING, OEUBDING sod
GHADING • TUENPIKE HOAD batvaen Atlanta
and Decatur, will be received until July 1st.
Right reserved to reject any or all bids.
Junelf-ttll July lat
BREAD, CAKES, ICE CREAM,
GROUND COFFEE/ AC.
ryrmt underslgnsd would respectfully inform their
1 Friends and the Public generally, that they
(Dftrlul OihctrliatHuaiH./
A Proclamation.:
anoRxaxAi
By Harris H. Btotoek,
Govfmsr of said State.
maw
MARIETTA STREET, near SPRING STREET,
where they will oonaUuly keep Fresh Bread, Cakes,
Pies, Confectionery and Ice Creams.
Also, GROUND COFFEE*; Roasted and Ground
by themselves and warranted Fresh and Pure.
J. H. K%LB k BON.
JOHN W. HIGHTOWER,
Griffin, ------ Ga.
IVERY AND SALE 8TABLE8,
NEXT TO THE GEORGIA HOTEL.
K eeps fine .nd safe utocl ud elegant
BUGGIES, VILE TUNS ud CAHHIAGES.
Will Mod pBuppufpr, »o Indian Spring. Ohsllebl.
,te Springs. *nd V> anjr point In ppnoB or Griffin, by
print, oonveyaaoa.
Griffin t, oonnnlont to tin ibon nunad plndpp,
.nd I will tnkp pInsure in serving those desiring to
mnk. the trip.
JnnelS-tf
Camilla is not yet passive under the
treaty. Neither are the neighboring
provinces. New Brunswiok has appoint
ed a delegation to confer with the gov
ernments of Nova Scotia and Prinoe Ed
ward's Island, with a view to united ac
tion against the treaty. It wonld be
funny if these neighbors of ours were to
really get up their backs and determine
to flog both England and the United
States rather than be bargained about in
any suoh manner.
B' Ode T 'land proposes to abolish the
propt ly (B-’floation of voters and es
tablish . n •Sue tHonol test. The prop
erty test, 1., never, die proposes to main
tain when tm \olg ii upon questions in
volving taxation.
Professor Mono, the telegraph inven
tor, took the first photograph picture in
America. At the moment his statue was
unveiled in New Tork lust Saturday, the
Photographers’ Convention, in
in Philadelphia, gave three cheers.
Governon Cook, of the new temtoiy
of the District of Colombia, has thirty-
six offices at his disposal, and hoe on file
over one thousand applications. The
office-hunters sre not oil deed yet.
Jesse R. Grant is reported to be
troubled with a softening of the brain.—
He must have had an attack of the same
kind some months before Ulysses
born.
Lobelia is the Ohio remedy for lock
jaw. The friends of the patients say
they would like it well enough if ooffins
were not so expensive.
“Corooran still lingers with us,” end
has appeared on the streets of Washing
ton in his carriage. The Associated
Press reporter is happy.
Portland, Oregon, has an editor who
flourishes under the distinctive title of
“Grasshopper Jim.” It is a bouncing
title, to say the least of it
Since the surrender of the local gov
ernment at Washington to t band of ne
gro Ku Klox, the proposition to remove
the Capital has been revived.
The Riohmond Enquirer predicts that
Virginia will have a Democratic Legisla
ture next fall. They will then begin to
oaU themselves Democrats.
Joe Coboru has heeh caught wearing n
chain that did not belnug to him, and
bebn arrested.
Chief Justice Chase has announced his
intention to vote for the Democratic
ticket in Ohio.
Hon. W. P. Price will please ooHolder
himself thanked tor public , dyoanuaata
sent this oiqoe.
Many of the largest end moUsnpCe—
ful houses in Okies gw taw abend cued
tbe “drummer" eystim, end lekwlod to
a easeful system of advertising, in whioh
they exhibit e commendable degree of
gtxgl sense. Tbe “drummer” expenses
Counted ousts first-class houses from 810,-
«C0 to 830,000 a year. They purpose
spending that amoobt in advertising.
KIMBALL HOUSE
DANCING ACADEMY!
Entrance on Railroad street.
Boom for inetruel
‘POLITE AllT,
AMD GIVE LKMAONB AS FOLLOWS:
Ivery TUESDAY, THURSDAY and HAT CRD AY, at
8 o’clock f. m., for genUemea.
■vary MONDAY. WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY, at
10K o’clock a. M.. for ladles, and four
o’clock F. M-. for children.
Classes to rommfinoe Thursday, June 15th, for
gentlemen. Friday, Juut* 10th, for ladles aud chi'
dren.
JVPrivates loneons given when desired-**
*7”For further particulars call on
PROFESSOR ROBISON,
JunelX-M At tha B. I. Kimball Housa.
murder was oommiU* <1 Jav tha
on or about the 13th of Jaunary last appo tha body
of Jack Williams, by unq A bort <Jhrtetten, as is al
leged. and that said Christian has lii fnm JM— sai
I have thought prop**, therefore, to issue this, my
proclamation, 'hereby offering a reread of
THOUSAND DOLLAR* for
Mrary af tha paid Christian, w*fc-proof sufficient to
emivtet, to the Bberff of said oounty of Muscogee,
in order that he may be brought to trial toe tha of-
fense with whisk ha eta* charged.
Given under my hand and lh* great real of the
at tha UMlsJUe thi» *lr day of Jana,
in the year of oar Lord Eighteen Hundred
and Seventy-one. and of the Independence of tha
United Btatee of Aurewten the ntnety-fiAli.
■OTTSB. BULLOCK.
By the GoveraoaL*. * '
David G. Cotubo, Secretary of Mata,
duscrTptioji,'’
Brlcht mulatto; bttok lmir. Miiy ttndghl ; iboot
or M jf»r, of «e ; ao»»*mltoo»; wttfk. About
13U pound* ; originally
JuulOdJtwlt - 1 *
tine Watches, Dii
Chains, Jewel
Silver Waj
BRONZES, <ioep & .
Ts r.
We Cinaot Be Underso]
American Watches—Different Mt
WE AU8IBP <»n WBOLXBALE-AOAfiTS IN »A.
E. HOtfARhA Ctfij Bouton, Muss
AMERICAN WfSrfcn Co^WaUham
ELGIN WATCH'CO-, Klgtm, III
Wa have on hand
OVER ONE HUNDRE
Of there Watchee, in
Bold and Silver
Au Proclamation. MOIT MaflUlI, 813111116 OUT \W
GBOHGIA.
blloY
Hume B. B
•‘•'Premiums for Fairs 1-
YMTHF.RRAS, Official information he*
J T been received at thin Department that War-
U* i-roil. oouvicted of burglary in the night IMne.
hiker, of voluntary manslaughter, have
tbe oommon J*tl of DMMOV VUUOVfi'
iey have been con Aned awaiting their retnov-
State Penitentiary:
FINE
Aliactllaneong.
WATCH REPAIRING.
WI HAVR ACCUSED THE AES-
VIOEA OF MS. O. A. TAIT, AN EX-
PESIENCED WATCH MAKES. BUT
NECCNTLY FNOM SCOTLAND. MS.
TAIT HAS WOSKED IN SOME OF
THE FINEST WATCH MANUFACTO-
SIEA IN EUS OPE. ND IA PSCPASED
TO DO ALL KINDS OF FINE WOSK
SUCH AS REJEWELLED. MAKINC
NEW ESCAPEMENTS, AND ADJUST
ING FINE WATCHES OF ALL KINDS.
ALL WATCHES LEFT WITH US WILL
NE PROMPTLY AND THOROUGHLY
DONE, AND SATISFACTION OUA-
NANTEED IN EVERY INSTANCE.
•1*10et SHARP A FLOYD,
RAILROAD MEM
TAKB NOTION.
WE HAVE RECEIVED TO-DAY
E TRSOT FROM TBE MANUFAC
TURERS A FAROE ASSORT
MRKT Or FINE AMERICAN
MATCHES, IN GOLD AND SIL
VER CASES. OF PERFECT
WORKMANSHIP AND NEW
DNEIONS. OF THR FOLLOWING
America* Watch Ce.,Waltkai
latlaaal Watch Os., klala)
(7. I. Watch Ce., Marten, If. J.i
ttftiee Watch Oa M alee the Celebrated
Stem Winders or Keyless Watch* -
THIM MTOOK IB OFFBMBD AW
VBMY ATTRACTIVE FIGURE A,
AND YOU WILL FIND IT WILL
P T TO TARE A LOOK AT THE
GOODS AMD THE PRIORS, AT
SHARP * FLOYD'S JEWELRY
STORM. ATLANTA. >01-11)1
IT QIVE8 US PLEASURE
TO ANNOUNCE THAT WE
HATE ADDED TO OUN CORPS
OP WORKMMH A FINE EN
GRAVER, RMOENTLY FROM
TIFF ANT Jr CO.'S, MEW TORK,
AMD AMR NOW READY TO DO
ALL KINDS OF J
PLAIN* ORNAMENTAL LETTERING
CIPHERS, MONOONAMS, AO..
IN FACT, ENGRAVING OF ALL
KINDS IN ELEOANT STYLE, AND
AT SATISFAOTONY FRIGES.
ALSO, THM ADDITION OF A
FINS MANUFACTURING JSW
IG, AND A SMOP WITH
NEONS A ARY TOOLS AND
MAOHINRRT, WILL ENABLE
US TO MAKE TOOSNOMR
ANY STYLE OF >. .
BADGES, NINOS, FINS, A ALMOST
ANY ANTIOLfe WANT BO,
AND TO DO REPAIRING. HOW-
MVMR DIFFICULT, PROMPTLY,
AND IN A SUPERIOR MANNER
PATRONAGE SOLICITED.
SHARP a FLOYD,
jpdy.1V STONE, WHITEHALL ST.
1 have thought proper to lame this
hereby offering a reward *f iFJTK
KH each for the apprehension*bad
■aid Warren BarraU wnAJJftyji W*-
tipal Keeper of the Pewitmtte?*
Oivcd uydtt my hand and 41»0reat SmUf fee
State, at the Capitol, in the city of AttantatUa 10th
day of Jana. (n Jip»*e«x<*
Hundred aud Seventy-One. and of the Indepen
dence of the Uuitoddjtates of America the Ninety*
&nh - I .
B. MULLOCK.
By the Governor! > '*
David G. CoOT., >«d*W <* **•.
mayl8 d8 wll '
■ ■ . ■ i ...hi—
Wt Can It "
,Pond,
my39 tda.
The
Assignee’s (Sale.
ATLANTA NATIONAL HOt*L
FURNITURHt
B Y VIRTUE of an order imued by the Honorable
United States Court for the Northern iMtrM
of Georgia, will be told at nubUc iwlw|. toaafeam-
all eucumbrauoee, at eaid Hotel, on
TUESDAY, the MM, Ag of JUNE, 1071.
commencing at 10 o’clock, a. m., and oontlm
from day to day, all the effects of said Hr*-’
ifeag of
160 Walnut
Sop), 160 wall
Premium List !
We late Gold, Silver, Bronze and Nictle Medals. la
. finish and Quality, equal to any House is the Country.
We Cannot Be Undersold 1
2 ’ ALSO,
Speoits. Torts, Cp, Goblets, Milt, Ice and Cream Pitchers, Ladfe,
and another Articles needed for Premiums at Fairs. All
least is a trial and a Chance to mats a Bid.
We Cannot Be Undersold!
We Refer the Cards below.
_ _ iron
De«k, 3 C'lo. kh, 1 ]
or 1«hm. lot ot laco
■A are. an till* ('ro
Fikturv* ;l s bow
nituTO) Bk) yaj'.ls Oilcloth, nmre
Vurfcltaic, ;l KuigM.» Bollere. EuKiae,
numerous otlier arttolre.
The Furniture la uniform in style and finish
ireth-ut quality, soond and in good order. T
tel occupies the renfeu of the City and can he
for a t. rm of fear years. The fund tore wfll
in seta, as it is, in safe room. No ptoparty v
delivered until paid ror. Removal at onoe will be re
quired to make room. Bold M the property of Edwin
5Tp -
m. Hold aa the property 0
iptcy. TERMS CASH.
NOAH R. rOWLRK, Are
Kiir mr a , m
PHILADELPHIA. J8th fieptembm, D7ft.»
Mamas. Krldbh * Ciddbb. kUnuXacturera for Gao. Sharp. *
of Atlanta, Ga
Dbar Snu>: I have this day areayivl your sample of R<' 1
and found itto contain 9*7 Thousandtlia of *11
which is even higher than the English sterling Standard o ” 5
n In quality. Respectfully, Your*,
JAR. 0. BOOTH, Meif “
Z Tha Silver of which th« above is a . _
pings taken from each melt made for the Georale f
A BIDDLE
The
Hu BnaoraJ lo
OOPT or TSB A.WARD. j
J TLaJTTJ. jrmL 1H, 10T»-
f—Th. ntmt* Mr Jfi li-tlm -l Om-GIj, rmllrd ter hid* l. AinOtt Pi .mlemeh-
stlmtm 4rn <Hilg mssrt. The Md mmd* b,p pss hsm ireenijiMi «
bstHs s€ grewr enrrtncp bid for Mtrtlmf Mtosr—045-1000 tttsj— rrsmimms to bs doUosroJt U ,v
- fWsomes IpMslaltopsf •alaber, 1ST*.
1,1
A-merioan
Froetip, op trier Nibol,
Vbara he SoUotto a OontbrnaBO* *803
tronojA
Dutch Pete’s Restaurant,
Under JamrU R,on»,
J£A8 HXXN BH0ENTLT IWIMB WITS A
zero. 1 cook,
AaOaUpffipr modem apiillpii-opi
OS. HEALS SUPPLIED AT ALL HUUNh
Offi. BEGULAJI BOABD »> l*Q ,*f •
SS. TOE BIST THE HAHEET WOKM »ISL
ALWAYS BE POUND AS SIS TABLES
Danolm Olasuil
T>EOFESSOR NICHOLS RESPECmtlAT A*
I NOUNCEO to tor—.|0> W <*s th* pobBo
Ottierplly, thpt Iw.wlll cttuwae, OlpflMOAt
CONGOKDIA HUX, WHITEHALL ST.
Ob thubsdat, fn« lpt, u o P.», to, ppptp.
opnttniM tor PM ppmIpb of two BaontOp. r
TBurpApy PDd FrldpJ.
Olpop fur Lpdlpp PPd uuidtPB PTPTT Frldpj Aftpr-
Po,.. .tp\ p. M., end tplPili, monttiwpt IP Br.
^ for pprl PBtaB. .pply Pt the HpH. Or it A
rumberland JHntty,
EDGKFISLM JOTOftOlr, TtNN.,
■AHLm h BAENUHS. ’*•
O. W. PHEBMAN. OENEKAL AGENT.,
Q KEaT TVdPtJ of (TBit PBd orBPMotPl ITPPP,
. l—ihtttl.
Sterling Silver Ware!
togtgoe oomretrior am exhibition—George Sharp, Jr., of Atlanta. They were info?*
Premium offered in thia department there were othm entered, but have
fcrl
iey hare, after a earaful examination of the Watob-s. Jewelry and SUver Were, bw-
inotto* that the exhibition made by George Sharp. Jr.. Is of the highest order. Tt (
- Verity of metal and quality of precious etmee, they ha -e never eaeu the dtf^iT JH/
mid in oar oplnlaa. onasUtering the quantity re well re the qtality of three goods, the exhibits |
•Mporienee.at any fair we have attended in the United States. Wa would y f
fe be avnftled to Mr. Sharp, tor the beet exhibition of Watchee, Jewelry and H0|rJ
EDWARD TIIOMAH. C
IWhst OW Oily Council of Attantn Mm-T m ’
^ feaOUf OooneU of Atlanta Ga, tbe following reeolatkm wea on ten**** 11
***«» ot thia body are hresby tendered to George Sharp, Jr., for the prompt.
furnished th<> Premiums for the Georgia State Fair; m’
i who “•> d«*lre hia aerviore, aa agaotlairei
Atlajita. ga.. Ootober L 1870.
Secretaries of Fairs,
ALL TOUB OOMMUKICATK )Na WILL B1
ERGMBVWr AN8WKRBD YOU WILL HAV
MOHfijr FOR TOUR BOCIJ5TIES BY GALLING O l
oh wurrlRb to m
Nl CiNNOT BE UNBIBSOID. _
Sharp <k Floyd.