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A RELIC 6f THE PAST.
Ajut»rt«nfc*c«»ww;i
-IV hat We tl»e» Export*! i
Where l» wnaSent.
Probably one of the moit anoient
and interesting dooumenU connected
with tlie pest biattirv of bayonuali ta
a book, which was kept at the cus
tom house as earhr as the year 178fl.
when Mr. John Habersham was col
lector of customs for the district ot
Savannah, which, through the kind
ness of Messrs. Washburn 4 Silva,
we have lieen permitted to examine
The I took is amine of information
upon the commercial transactions of
those early days, and is arranged in
verv peculiar style, the several dif*
rent branches of the custom house
Virn having been recorded in this
igle volume; which, like all the
blank books, bound at that time,
ists of thick, unruled paper, ar
ced bv tbe look-keeper with pen
pencil', to suit his own ideas as to
most convenient method of mak-
his entries. ...
/| H . first or earliest date of entries
made in this old record is in the year
1789, on the 22d day of August, and
is a “Ileturn of goods, wares and mer
chandise exported from the district
of Savannah, itt the Stato of Georgia,
mmeiieiug on the 22d of August
d ending on the 30th of Septem-
•r 1780.” The exports of that early
uv were to the French West Indies,
and to the English West Indies, con
sisting of "horned cuttle, Indian corn,
flour, horses, lumber, ranging timber,
scantling, shingles mid live o- ■
knees,” reaching a total value
$-4277.99, in exports from the 22d
August to the 30th of September.
'j'Jie first shipment of cotton that
we find recorded here, occurred lsi-
tween the 1st of Jan nary and the 31st
of March, 1790, where an entry is
made of 3,845 pounds of cotton,
valued at »87fl.G5, sent to England.
Tobacco constituted a principal
article of export at that time, the
quantity exported during the quarter
ending 31st Deccmlier, 1789 being 173
bogheads, lu the next quarter, 1826
bogheads, and in the first quarter of
179t, 2,038 bogheads.
It is curious and interesting to
road the innumerable articles of ex
portation recorded in the book. The
minutest trifles, apparently, were
sliip)icd from here direct to Europe
—to England, France, Germany, Por-
I ugal, Ac.—such as poultry, beets, po
tatoes. )>eas, wild decr. und al
most everything one oould think of
as being raised in this part of the
country, in 1794 a “cotton giu,”
valued nt *1,200, was shipped to Af
rica.
It is impossible to give, scaroely,
an idea of the amount of infomation
in the commercial and custom house
transactions connected with the early
business history and pretentions of
this now grown and flourishing city,
then in its infant state, but with only
direct communication with European
countries.
Other highly interesting portions of
this old volume is the record of mo
nies received and paid out by the
Collector of Custom^; the monthly
schedule of bonds given for duties,
the duties paid on merchandise re
ceived at the port of Savannah, and
the general Custom House ac
counts, all kept in the one book,
whose nji|iearaiiceliears the unmistak-
ible marks of old age. It has come
lown from the generations of the
|>ast, and is interesting and valuable,
vs lieing connected with the memo
ries of our forefathers. The dust of
long years has gathered upon its
pages, and the old, well-worn bind
ing has resisted remarkably the de
caying influences of time and usage.
It is now the property of Mr. Wil
liam Neil Habersham.—Say. News.
Josh Billings on Strawberries.
The strawlierry is one nv uatur’s
sweet (lets. She makes them worth
fifty cents, the fust she makes, and
never allows them tew be sold at a
mean price.
The culler uv the strawberry is
like the setting of the sun, under a
cloud, with a delicate dash uv the rain
bo in it; its fragrance is like the
breath of a baby when it'first begins
to eat wintergreen lozzingera; its fla
vor is like the negtar which an old-
fashioned goddes used to leave in the
bottom uv the tumbler, when Jupi
ter stood treat on mount ida.
There iz many breeds ov this de
lightful vegetable, but not a menu
one in the null lot.
I think i have stole them, laying
around loos, without any pedigree, in
somebody’s tall grass, when 1 was a
lazy schoolboy, that eat dreadful easy,
without any white sugar on them,
and even a bug occasionally mixed
with them in tlie hurry ov the mo
ment. Cherrys is good, but they are
tew much like sucking a marble with
a handle tew it. Peaches is good, if
you don’t get enny ov the pin feath
ers intew yure lips. Watermelons
will sute ciiny body who iz satisfied
with half-sweetened drink ; but the
mau who can eat strawberry, bo-
sprinkled with crushed sugar and be-
r lteied with kream (at somebody
s expeuse),and not lay his hand
on his stummak, and thank the Au
thor ov strawberries and stummaks,
and the phellow who pays for the
strawberries, is a man with worn r.’-t
conscience—a man whose mouth
tastes like a hole in the grouud, and
don’t care what goes down.
They have a aew way of paying
old debts in Philadelphia. One
Schaeffer called on John Conrad for
his rent Friday last, and was rude
enough to persist after John had told
him that lie "dou’t got ’em." There
upon Mrs. John came out with a
f un, and asked if she should shoot
ini. John thought lie oould doit
best, and taking the weapon per*
formed the ceremony with much
grace. Twelve men will shortly de
cide whether the Conrads shall jsty
any more rent in future.
Peaches sell at one dollar » pack ia
nun asnew.
nmn u. s. cmvmrm Ktrru, mtoua ntmt.
asr. c. a. a*-am*, riw*.
fen.—“Jim! they brought yriMf children mmto him /
mmi he took Ihcm «• mhmarwunnd bUmmi lhem."~
Pert* of tbs lath uni lotto veree* of the H*h3»ep-
tei at Mark.
Jem a, by hia pure life nud sublime teach ng, Im
pressed the Jewish people that e Wonderful Prophet
*m in their midst, aud they brought their children
to him that he might teach them.
Human nature at thia time, differ* little from what
ta/asirratiixis
not have been fed tornttetyout ot theater* hoagat
placed >t hie diwpoftt. I*t maid til thl#
lgn/% M p
momrui of temptation, he yielded.
tag of the parental heart for their children's welter*.
We may not know precisely when the Infeat mind Is
capable of receiving religion* impression* ; bat thle
we do know, that when the Jewish parents brought
their children to Chrlat he Messed them.
Christ bed been displaying hi* heeling powers
upon men who were sorely diseased, but the chU-
jrau had no infirmities to be healed—no sorrow of
hwt to be comforted. It wee the intense desire of
the welfare of the souls of their children.
There (a great difference between bringing and
trnding. Bringing obligates ue to go ourselves—
must aeoept Him aa our Savior. Than the Introduc
tion to Him ia a high honor which he graciously ac-
oorde to u*-
It may be that we may bring our children to Him,
and they afterward stray away, bat we have the
precious promise. If we are truly faithful lu all
things, that they will not forsake tbe right way.
Show me one, If yon can. who has been brought to
Christ when young and has been faithfully nurtured
In the way h« should go, who lias ever brought hi*
mother to shame, or bla tether with aorrow t»* K “
* Tbe happiness of the parent, as well as the
e per
sonal welfare ohf the did. Is secured by bringing
them up from intency In the right wgy. Walt not,
therefore, for your children to attain the days of
manhood, but in the dawn of Ufe-la the morning of
youth—bring them to tbe Savior. m
lu the very Intency of Kdeu the Serpent colled
himself among the flowers, end the same Serpent
entz-rs the hearts of our chlldrsn at the tondereet
age. seeking to lead them astray.
We are anxious to introduos oar children t
pleasures and amusements of the world, eohdtoue
to cultivate tbdr minds, and prepaie them for high
positions lu society. In this we often let them
glide gently along the current of sin and death, for
gutting their eternal interests.
There is no event in the lifo of Christ more calcu
lated to cheer tbe parental heart than this one.
We love to think of Jesus as a Sovereign rebuking
the strong sea. and it obeys; asaliod, standing
the grave ol Lasarus, gwnmandiug death to relax
hold; and «s a riaeu Lord, when ha break* the bond
of t 's**sr and tramples upon the grave.
Jiut Jesus Christ is the friend of the heart of
when He coudesoeuda to visit our houHeholds and
win the affections of our children. He Ukea them
up in His arms and blesses them.
CENTRAL r RES BYTE XI AN CHTRCH—RRV. I- T. L*rT-
wica RERROR.
The pulpit yeeterdsy was idled by tbe Pastor,
whose sermon was preached In view of tbe commun
ion to be administered at its close.
TMxtu—The precious blood of Chritt.—1 Peter, 1:19.
Tbe preacher said tbe value of anything was grad
uatod by tbe difficulty of acquiring it; that wealth
was difficult to obtain, yet many became wealthy
and knowledge oould be acquired by all personh o
ordinary ability, by application and energy in it*
pursuit.
Hut with all his power, salvation was unattainable
by man. Christ's blood Is precious by the redemp
tion pun based for man; by the honor aud diguity
giveu it by hi* character ae a man, by the reflected
glory of Hia divinity.
It Is precious to-hear as the only escape from
wrath, as the introduction to ths purity and bliss of
Heaven; aa the bond Which unites him to Christ.
The preacher drew a lesson of oomfort to the
Ohristian in the immutable purpose of God; for he
gave his own sou; will he not freely give ue all
things f
To the ^uncr, it was a leaeon of warning. If He
spared not His own sou, what will beoome of him
who la In open rebellion and wartere against His
authority? If to the innocent and the holy he
showed no mercy, but exacted the punishment due
ein, what will become of the vile and the
:ked ? The door la now open to all, but will soon
be oloeed forever.
The sermon was one of special comfort to the
Christian, but of fearful warning to the ungodly.
. R. CHURCH, 1
XNOWLXH,
STREET—REV.
PASTOR.
TEXT— Who oaoe himself/or ut, that lie might redeem
ue from all iniquity, and purify unto Himeetf a pe
culiar people tealou* of good %oorki. Tit 2:14.
In the Apostolic age the reigning idea of Christian
experience was embodied in the representative word
•growth;” that "the path of the Just is as the shin
dig light, that ahincth more and more unto tbe per-
feet day;" that at no advanoed step in this upward
shining path could the saint exclaim: "Here t will
rest; I see no heights beyond to scale, no more fbee
conquer; I hear no bugle note ot Satau marshal
ling his forces to fresh combat; I stand on this mount
of aecurlty, rest and triumph.”
But this representative word, growth, absorbed and
Included auotber, with lta coguate, equivalent, and
explanatory phraaea—the, word perfect. “He gave
some apostles, and some pastors and teachers
for the perfecting of the Saints—till we all come lu
the unity of the faith and the knowledge of the Son
of God into a perfect man. Il.o the measures of
tho stature af the fulness of Christ.”
In this shining upward way of oooffict and oontrite-
ness, of trial aud triumph, of watching and working,
there la a standing of maturity, of manhood,of habit
ual godly temper, of holy outward actions; there
experience of the “ full corn in the sap,” of a love
that passeth knowledge, out of a "pure heart a good
oonacience and laith unfeigned.” There ia a conse
cration that coiuca of a broad. Intelligent apprehen
sion of God’* r ght m us; s humility that delights to
hide st the Master's fuel an evangelical fulfilment of
the Savtor's command, "Thou shall love the Lord
thy God with all thy heart, with all thy mind, and
with all thy strength, and thy neighbor aa thy tel'.”
This standing of maturity is gaitted by tbe living
word, by the power of tbe holy ghost, by prayer
and godly obedience.
It is retained upon one condition; growth ui Me
grace* rf the spirit—especially charity— long suffer
ing. goodness, meekness.
Many who have longed to possess these greoea,
who have gone Into the furnace carrying In their
hearts the holy promise; who have thought of God
as the "refiner and purifier of silver," first melting,
theu molding ; have oome out of the furnace exhib
iting in all their character a maturity in charity,
long suffering, goodness and meekness unknown to
borne, while waitng end looking for the Holy fire,
are lifted, aa in a moment, from their limited views
of consecration and duty, to each road and rich ap
prehensions of privilege In Christ Jesus, aa eye had
not seed nor had entered into the heart to ooncelve.
Talent and learning are not to be despised, but
diligently sought; yet this standing maturity la es
sential to ministerial usefulness, as nothing else can
be.
The benefits of Chureh organisation, the social
meeting, and all the schemes of evangelisation, are
not to be despised; yet this Christen maturity la
ittal to growth in the membership ef every
Thia beautiful Christian manhood baa many lllu*.
tretious. The dosing days of our beloved Kiahop
Clark, so recently called from teber to reward, were
filled with expressions such as oould only oome from
e heart rich |R the experience of this hisses a mete-
rtty In Chrlat,
WEHLRk <B ATRL M. *. CHURCH ROUTR—RRV, ARMtXtUfi
WRIUHT, PASTOR.
muledtf th
te be tempted the devil
The subject of Mr. Wright’s disoeuree, as Judies-
ted by the text, wee ths temptation of our fiarior.
The preacher wee evidently not in hie accustomed
health, and wm unhbleto pursue the fine train of
thoughtful a> gument suggested by the theme to thet
which would have been gratifying to
u Hie sermon wat brief end ©on-
fined to tbe sentinel tbeotugfoal potats of tbeaub-
Jecfi, without any ornate remaning or rhetoric.
Moment!sued tws thrilling lacktooto la whfeh
aigfeliim had been used to operate vepm the tfaeti-
ay ef tbe entire
OhMat He hold. With eehrietian writer ef these-
the aasritauee of godly attributes.
Utia enables a oontraat between the two who warn
tempted. The vehicle of temptation was lu t*>th
cense, the earns.- fidaot wm tempted ten* alt tbe
With the e*«md Adam (Christ* the <
were very different. He had Just been subteottng
himself to a severe physical humiliation by *
continued through forty days and nights. The*
when hia body was weak with hunger,
wee led Into a most antoeekly place—proimbly the
wilderness ol tenet-and there tempted to the lari
point ef human endurance Being, by his tong
humiliation, induced to the uttermost strait of hun
ger. poverty sad humiliation, the wily temper aa-
sailed him by tempting hi* appetite, avarice and
pride, yet he withstood It all. and oame out triumph-
sat, aud proposed to be the succor of
when they are tempted.
Tbe weakness of the flesh the preecha
ae not apology far tboee who yield when tempted —
Christ had resisted, even when reduced to the '
strutt of physical weakuaes; and hia example should
encourage and stimulate Christians, knowing that
they could rely for succor upon Him who was tempt
ed iu like maimer.
tfJMT asKMoT CHURCH. WALTOS ftTREET
WARMER, PASTOR.
By request of a large number of member) of this
Church and congregation, who were prevented by
inclement weather from attending the previous Sab-
b*tb, when the Pastor dellve. td his discourse on
close oommuukm, teat sermon wee again preached
yesterday. The day was fine, and a very large eortt-
riRMT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, MARIETTA STREET —
RJCV, JOHN S. WILSON AND REV DAVID WILLS, PAS
TOR.
The pulpit yesterday mdruiug was flllgdby Dr.
Wills.
TMXt—TheU they may be one at toe arc am. John 11:
17.
The general subject was the unity of the Church of
God.
The great work which the Father
perform waa on the eve of lie accomplishment. He
prayed with fervid eloquence, aud Hia prayer
forms his valedictory.
Infidels point to divisions In the Chureh as an evi
dence that it ha* departed Into Christ’s eommand-
nients, or tbatHe was* f-tee teacher; and that It ia
Impossible to toU which sect la right
But In what dote unity censJstT It Is geogrepbi
cully impossible t»» unite the church lu all tbe world
under one geveromeat le It meeut that ell Chris
tum* should have the aaoie gifts? Divers gifts
necessary. The Scriptures tell ue that to on
given prophecy, to another divert tongues, ho.—
Skeptics confound unify with uniformity. A bulld-
iug may be of dlfforcnt kind* of stone, yet all the
walls and pillars parallel. Uuity in tbe midst of di-
vesity Is a law of nature. Tbe branches of a tree, lta
fibres and foliagt, are diverse, yet the tree le one
organic unity.
The human body is a striking example of unity In
the midst of diveraity.
Of all unities, God is the greatest in the universe;
yet there ere three persons in the Godeoad. There
is unity from the lowest forms of animated existence
till we soar away to the sublime mysteries of the
Deity.
The life of the Church throughout the earth mani
fests Itself in three forme: iu Doctrine, Worship and
Government.
L—1st. There Is one Ood. 2d. On* Mediator.
These two grand propositions are the common
heritage of the whole household of frith. They all
agree that man is a sinner, fallen under the curse of
tbe law, and needs help.
The doctrine of fhtnre rewards and punishments
is accepted by all Christiana.
In relation to public worship, the Evangelical
Churches differ as to oirtminstances, but in essentials
they are one.
He whs preaches the* any one Chinch ha* th* ex
clusive right to dispense th* sacraments, ia sc hi* mat
ic. The essential of a true Church la the inhabit*
tion of tbs spirit A man may never be admitted to
the Church or be baptised, and yet be saved.
II. All true Christians ought to combine to resist
the march of infidelity and poperey.
The land of Luther is darkened by transcendenal-
ism, Switzerland draped by socinisism. The tendeo
ciea of the English rated la to fractarianiam. the
French to materialism; the North of this oountry
to universaltsm, socialism, mil tartan ism, and radi
calism; and even in the 8outh there ere Rome of
these evils. It is the duty of all Christians to lock
shields and stand against the foe. German Infidelity
Is assailing th* send ty of the Habbatb and marriage
relations, aud a Chinese temple has been estab
lished in New York.
In view of thee* things we ought to eocustom our
selves to look over denominational walla, and take In
the Christian world. There is more good In all
denominations than we ever dreamed of. The
Methodists are the grandest pioneers of the Ohristian
frith ; the 88 articles are a noble system of frith ;
the Baptiste have borne a sublime testimony to the
truth of the Gospel. The blood of her ohikbreo has
streamed like water. The Presbyterian Church has
stood like a rock in the midst of the ocean.
[We regret that our space forbids a more extondad
report of the remarks of this eloquent divine.]
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH—LOTD STREET—RRV.
THOMAS O'REILLY PASTOR.
The eervioes at this church on yesterday were par
ticularly interesting. High Maas was sung by th*
Pastor and Confirmation was administered by Right
Reverend Ignacioua Perrioo to 100 children and 16
adult*—among the latter were several converts.
The Bishop gave a very good discourse explaining
the uature and effects of confirmation. Tlie chil
dren showed iti their sppeumnoo the good effects of
early Instruction, particularly the little girls who
did gnst credit to the good sisters of mercy by
repared foi
whom they were prepared for receiving confirms-
Oixaniiallan of tbe North Geor
gia Agricultural College.
From th. UhloiiH* Upul. «h.
In aooordonoe with a previoua oell the
Trunteee of tbe North Georgia Agrienl-
tural College, met in Dahlonega, on Mon-
X Jnoe 6th, 18TL
motion of J. W. Woodward, June*
0 called to the Obaii,
was requested to act
as Secretory;
On motion of W. P. Price, the Trno-
teea held on election for permanent offi
cers of the Board ; which resulted in the
election ot W. P. Price, President: Jos.
E. Wood, Vioe President; A G. Wimpy,
Treasurer, and R A. QuiUian, Secretary.
On motion the obsrter granted by 4he
Saprerior Court of Lumpkin ooanty wee
Rooepted.
Hon. W. P. Prioe, PraSdeut of the
Board wee instructed to inform the Hon.
Geo. & Boiitweli, Seereluv of the U. R
Treasury that the Board of Trneteee of
the North Georgia Agricultural College
had been organised according to
the lam of the State of Georgia, and
to reqnaathim to Conroy to the Truateea
the U. 8. Mint et Dahkmega, and ground
attached thereto, io aooordonoe with the
late act of Oongrear.
On motion of Her. A Martin, a com
mittee oonrieting ef W. P. Price, Bex.
A Martin and ft. A VfniUian, was on-
pointed to prepare a memorial to he aa-
d reesed to the Legislature of Georgia,
asking lor a portion of the land grant
from the general government.
The following ware appointed a com
mittee to draft suitable by-laws for the
gnrernment of the Board of Trustees;—
Col. Wier Boyd, N. F. Howard, AmxL
Rudolph, J. W. Woodward and W. A
Burnside.
On motion the Board adjourned to
meet at ths call of the Peraident
J. & Woop, Chairman.
R A QuiLLton, Secretary.
Wall street is attacked by a very
bad disease, and that is nothing Jess
than so much money that it does’t
know what to do with iu The oity
bonks hold flfh-cn millions tfgnH
and sixty-five millions of puer mo
ney in their vaults. No reuse it like
ly to oome from abroad, for t))e Bank
of England bos an deposit the enor
mous earn of one hundred millions,
Hiid thq tirtroun f/zc'.'HStsn l ly increas
ing. So.New Mofkgroans under her
i»oia'"Mil plethora, and ncyer thinks
of sending of her treasure*
Sooth. _ , .
cam-
-
of a gentleman'(hot if he were ten
years younger he would never have
known the truth of those times, be-
cause, without having witnessed them
himself, he would never have believed
their history. During the heat of
the canvass, conversation among all
classes, to the remotest settlements,
among men, women and children,
wss mixed with politics, where it was
not politics unmixed. No ohild
that oould hallo ** ineligible to
political fellowship, or insensible of
hie or her status. Wornr; hail lo,
cabins printed on neck-ribbons am
bonnet strings, and sometimes eoon
tails appended to their reticules;
while no male person not willing to
be classed a “Looofoco” appeared in
public without a buckeye cone, by
way of bravado and ornament. Like
wise Democrats sported hickory walk
ing sticks, with green hickory ants
bigger than hen's egg* banging to
the knobs.
Processions of the “British Whins”
were always headed Ire a real log
cabin on wheels, in which the pio
neer settler wonldbe simulated, with
the hunting shirt on, rifle in hand,
wife at wont about the house, and a
baby rollicking in a sugar trough,
the typical cradle of the fir West of
early days. A barrel of hard cider
was conspicuous; buck horns strad
dled from the stick and mud chim
neys: coon-skins were nailed on the
outside of the walls to dry, and from
the clap-board door a large leather
latch-stringalwayshungout, in token
of hospitality. In tbe way of bunt
ing, no piten of loyalty daring oar
late war ever so oovered the sky of
noon with the snnset hnes of our na
tional ensign. The country, in tact,
was frantic. The outlay of money
was lavish. The aggregate, especially
on the part of the Wings, must have
been enormous. The honors paid to
their candidates were so absurdly ex
travagant that old Whigs to this
day are twitted by old Democrats, os
if they had been caught in some ex
cessively puerile thing. Suoh was
1840. In this year, 1871, at North
Bend, Ohio, the aged politician may
go to measure the folly of partisan
excess and the vanity of partisan
honors.
Near the oentre of a field a simple
brick structure, mostly below the
surface and rapidly decaying, with a
door having a Broken hinge, secured
with a shilling padlock, contains the
remains of William Henry Harrison.
There are several receptacles iu this
vault, in three of which are the Gen
eral, his wife and his daughter. They
are rudely closed with brick, and no
inscription is unywhere about the
place. The arched roof is about to
fall, and the whole will then be a
shapeless pile of rubbish, the bones
of a President, and the bricks
gled, as if it had been a chief of
oldest aborigines; commemorated i
the savage simplicity of a pile
stones. But on suen mounds,
great trees growing attest the
which have not obliterated the ma
of veneration, while here it was
esterday that a milliou of ns wore
ladges of mourning over the death
of our chief, and to-day we carelessly
leave his body to the plowshare qf a
few years hence. Will the white-
haired men who, in their prime,
poured eloquence into the loud en
thusiasm of 1840, and who recall with
mournful pride these days of pure
life aud loftier intellect among public
men, permit this disgrace ?
A Proclamation.
amoKaiAi
Sir Ratal B. Bullock,
Governor of told State.
Official in formation line
boa rveatvod at thia Department Uiat a
murder wm committed in th* county of Jackson oj,
or about th* 6th of May last, upon the body of Mxr-
oellus W. Park, by on* Matthew Harris; and
▼■■MM. The Sheriff off said county certifies to
l« that he has made dlUffunt march for th* aid
Hants in the county of Jacksoo sad tho oountte* *d
Jaoonfi (hereto, hut has felted to appreheod him, and
tereJoremgfaete the offering ol amttahla reward
> e mean* of insuring th* arrest otfasid Harris
How, therefore. I have thought proper to issue
this, my proclamation, hereby offering a reward of
ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS for the apprehension
and daUrery of the said Matthew Harris, with erl-
euffUeat to oonviot, to the Sheriff of mid coun
ty off Jackson, in order that be may be brought to
trial for (ho offense with which he stands charged.
Given eadee my hand and th* Orest Beal ef the
Stole, at tho OEptotliH Atkata. this «h day ot
June, to tho year off war Lord Eighteen Hun.
died Md Berea ty-on*, ead of th* independence ot
tho United States off America th* Ninety-fifth.
SOTOS B. BDIXOCI.
VOafloiawi
Dated Q. Oornwe, Secretory of State.
JmaM-dM-wit
QUICKEST AND BERT ROUTE
WORTH EAST AND WB9T
VI* ZooulevUle.
nHB&E daily Express tofctas no
L through hoar KMhrrttU to Loulartile. making
m Mitiiwaii wtth Train* and Boats for the
■th East and Wert,
No OTLajaereojrOaxs
m. Lvata, Ctoetnaatt, Mwtfrib, Chic
a**, Cferalaafl, PlUobarf, PhiMeipUa
ori Naw IorA
max ma aura* sp
WsdtaHtis stod Bsslott.
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We offer the
Cheapest and
Best line oi
House - Keep
ers’ Goods in
the City. Cut
lery, Spoons,
Forks,Knives
Waiters, Cas
tors, Vases &
Toilet Sets.
In fact, any
thing needed
in a well kept
house. CaJJ
with the cash
fWIHE SUN JOB OFFICE HAS JUST BEEN &UPPLH It
■fe with a splendid assortment of tbe Latest Styles of
NEW AND ELEGANT TYPE?,
BORDERS, RULES Al OTHER IATEBIAL!
And is now prepared to do the Finest Grades of
JOB PRINTING!
I0A.
THB PLANTATION
EVERY SATURDAY.
—»■» in iHflerfrh«fe<fop»»
M SS tier Clwte of JNg-AI.
fTTHia paper ta edited by Bor. C. W. Howard, ee-
1 sterna by Cat. K. A Atoton. and Is equal to any
Journal off the kiad in the United States In point off
Merit.
fi* an advertising modi urn tt has few equals, a* It*
txma fide circulation is live thousand, and steadily
fife. S|in> FOE A SPECIMEN COPY
ffV GOOD AG cm WANTED.
MOUUB 4 HOW ABC.
fete!f M, Ittonto, ffeorgjR.
Apotiqn Jb Commission.
andaonuntotoRtthnsktone
Ttoa Dn««h Wwildl-t*, ns» Din street,
• whs stay
Mil aaanalala<*«%■»OaaoM
HENRY OARD,
anr nnoAKh Tv.
Commissron Merchant, etc.,
auOOMMOD.TIOll fill*.
' OMARUBSSOir, R O. ,
Maaara. oaarea a WMbate * are. OkaaMM
i^SJalJ,SI**.,s. 0.irkartaa
than. Xaq.. l/auluu. taiial. Maaan. I. aj¥
'nlf a u»., Uv.rptwl. flaalaud; *1.1. t. a*
SaWlUara talaa a<
MITOMOOCM * WALDEN,
waoLaoaia am ama aan aaa „
Books and Stationery,
oornti BLOCS.)
ATLANTA, GA
and elagmnt
HOWE & HUBBLE,
JtDOBTBU or ax O BBMSB* la an Mala *
SOR1ION AND DOMRRY ,C
oMPoaH- - V *- 83 *5 a.W amain *►"'•
Hemoval.
Eichberg & Langgesscr.
Plumbing&Qffs-Fittir g
ESTABLISHMENT,
S'ram (Vo. 4, Marietta Street. •*
32 Peachtree Stret',
NEAR OWNER Of WALTON,
A UE READY TO RECEIVE ORDERS. TU '
cv raopoatfuir Inform thetr frtenila that i I
wfU contlnaa to Reap a fall otock oi
«eu. Meant amt Outer JPU> ’•
GAS FIXTURES,-*
AND
OHABnOSOiXBR 4 ,
Bath-Tubs,
PUMPS OF ALL DESCRIPTION
Water Closets,
Nook Borina, Pnmpa, no* a FhR Uw *
HARDWARE !
W» HMA ■* ITEICV ATwnai ire
TO Itimn, TO HEKIT A «- v
tutoawob ow the umu- r *‘
TROH1UK WHICH HAI •**<
heutovohi mvh to I®'
Eichberg & Langgessef,
Stroot.