Newspaper Page Text
A r«iriou» Idea of Liberty of
Speech.
“Many Republicans,” residing at
Yellow Springs, have written a note
to the Gazette, in which they ask
“how far a pardoned rel»el can go in
stirring up, by his addresses to the
people, ana revi\ iug the spirit 0/ re-
lielhou, without being liable to lawf”
It appears to them that the speech
of Jefferson Davis at Augusta, (la,
is “an overt act, and should be pun
ished by law.” They enquire with
great simplicity, “Can a person say
anything he pleases with impunity,
so that be be not found actually fu
arms against the government?” The
man who would make such enquiries
as these is absolutely unfit to live in
any land but where a desjiotism
reigned supreme. He has not the
least conception of what liberty ia.—
, like a
He asks, like a dunce, “if our law
guarantees to its citizens the right
use our liberty of speech to the
vident intent to overthrow them*
rnmeiit?” The practical meaning
f this is that there shall bo no free
s]ieeeh at all. The nutn or men who
are to judge of what speech i8 calcu
lated to “overthrow the government,”
have the |>ower in their bauds to do
us they please. What one man would
think was calculated to effect that
object, another ]verson would believe
to be entirely harmless. By govern
ment, too, we have no doubt lie
means simply an administration or
political party; that is, the author of
it For instance, lie believes that
Grant is the government, that the
Republican party is the government,
andiliut all men who denounce them
should be punished for their contu
macy. It is a pretty idea, too, thut
we iu the United States, who are in
tkvor of overthrowing nearly all the
governments of the world, should be
so tender-footed and touohy upon
this question of the awful Me red new
of government. 'The w riter of this
communication iu the Gazette dis
closes further bis wonderful knowl
edge, in expressing the opinion that
“a speech is an overt act,” that “a
won! is a died.” Haring the war we
heard good, ileal of such shameful
and ri'/jY talk, bv persons whoso in
tellects, If they liad any, were so ob
scured by passion anil prejudice as
to render them blind to ordinary rea
son. but since the war has passed,
such stupidity and folly are the more
unexpected. It is the opinion of the
Gazette, in response to this brilliant
writer, that “Jefferson Davis ought,
as the head of the Southern rebellion,
to have been severely punished,” but
that “since he has been pardoned
there is no law In punish him for his
opinions or for his utterances.” Our
neighbor thinks that as the Republi
cans may [vcrliaps make some capital
out of Davis’ harangues, that he
should have perfect liberty to speak.
If it was not for this, we infer that
the Gazette would agree with its cor
respondent that something ought to
lie done to stop men talking so treely,
or otherwise they might “overthrow
the government” Now. it might
witli truth lx' said that if a govern
ment is so weak that words can de
stroy it, the sooner it is destroyed
the better.—[Cincinnati Enquirer.
ow the Chinese make Dwarf
Tree*.
How the Chinese continue to grow
miniature pines and oaks in flower
pots, for half a century, has always
been much of a secret They aim first
and last at the seat of vigorous
growth, endeavoring to weaken it an
far as may be consistent with the
preservation of life. They begin at
the beginning, taking a young plant
(say a seedling, or cutting of a cellar)
when ouly two or three inches high;
they cut olf its tup roots as soon as it
has other rootlets enough to live nixin
and replant it in a shallow earthen
pot or pan. The end of the tap root
is generally made to rest on a flat
stone within it Alluvial olay is then
put into tlie pot, much of it in bits
the size of U'aus, and just enough in
kind and qMantity to furnish a scanty
nourishment to the -plant. Water
enough is given it to keep it in
growth, but not enough to excite a
vigorous lmbit. So likewise in the
application of light and beat. As
the Chinese pride themselves on the
shapf of their miniature trees, they
use strings, wires and pegs, and other
mechanical contrivances to promote
symmetry of habit, or to fashion their
|x;ta into odd fancy figuree; thus by
the use of these very shallow pots,
the grow th of the tap roots are out
of the question.
By the use? of poor soil, and little
if it, and little water, any strong
growth is prevented. Then, too, the
top and side roots being within easy
reach of the gardener, are shortened
by his pruning knife, or Beared with
his hot iron. Mo the little tree, find
ing itBelf headed on every mile, gives
up the idea of strong growth, asking
only for life, and just growth enough
to live urn! look 'veil.
Accordingly, eaoli new set. of leaves
become mure and more stunted, the
buds and rootlets are diminished in
proportion, and at length a balance
is established between every part of
the tree, making it a dwarf ill all re
spect*. In some kind of trees this
olid is reached in three or four years;
in others ten or fifteen years are ne
cessary. Such is fancy horticulture
among the^Celestials.
Historic Anachronism*.
Tlie Wane of Hornonism.
Brigham Young.
George Alfred Townsend, writing
from Malt lake, says of Brigham
Young: "With his hair nicely .oiled
in ringlets and falling around his
heavy neck, hair and beard luxuriant,
and but a little turned in color, a pair
of silver spectacles in his hand, and
his manner all bland, from his half
closed eyes to the poise of his knees
and feet. Brigham Young sooths
mankind with seiguoral hospitality.—
We are all introduced, except one
young man, who stops forward and
says: “ As there is no laxly to make
acquainted, here is my card, President
Young." "It is unnecessary! Be
seated.” We see that he is more per
fectly at home than any body in the
crowded room, and that he has a
hard, peremtoiy voice,)]' a b [t >ned
down lo reception necessities, book
ing not more than sixty years of age,
he is past that period by half a score,
and still may have twenty years to
live. Of a wonderfully robust con
stitution. equal to all the responsibili
ties of poligumy, self pride, oool self-
mauagement, and self-will, with an
education chiefly religious, and an
aptness and ardor for power and ava
rice. Young is wonderfully devised
for organizing an ignorant and sol
emn ]K'ople. and compelling them to
be productive and docile.”
Pio JVono.
A celebration, or jubilee, of a very
unusual character, is about to take
place, not ouly iu the United States,
but throughout Europe—namely, the
commemoration by the Roman Catho
lic Church of the completion (on the
16th instant) of the twenty-fifth year
of the Popedom by Pius IX. The
Freeman's Journal (an authority on
these' matters) says, with respect to
New York
It is to be grandly celebrated, we
hear at the famous old Church of the
Redemptoriste, though all we have
gathered of tlie report is, that there
is to Ik' an illumination iu the even
ing. There will lx;, probably, many
private houses illuminated, and ar
dors are already executing for fire
works, at some of them. Rockets, in
white and gold, according to the
years achieved by Pope Pius IX; and
s]x*cial pieces of design, on grand
cresses of gold and white lights, with
legends, Ac., in honor of our Holy
Father. Wc believe this will be a
•Teat day of celebration among the
Catholics of America.
The London Atheneum say. :
erto known at ' ~
ter’x testing
• ?" This qua
the person hitherto known a* 1 Will. *m
Lora of Leicester’. jesting player, 0*1
Will Bhakspeare ?" This nuestio®, which
hss been the owcssiousl xniijeet of elabo
rate argument for ao many rears, is st
' " — tlli “
length set st text. Mr. Halhwetl, we are
told, dinweivd in the private see ami
book of the Lari of Leioewter, preserved
in the Longbridge ooUectiou, in War
wickshire, sir tries which show decisively
‘Wing player” wa» not the
ynmhfnl Bhaka|iewre, birMto ifvffttpocft
mud Mul colleague, Witte
Recent accounts from Utah indi
ale that Mormonism is on the de
cline. The influx of “Gentiles” con
sequent upon the completion of the
rich mineral resources of the Terri
tory. is said to he producing its natu
ral legitimate effect, and proving the
wisdom of the policy udopted by the
Government, and uniformly advoca
ted iu this journal, of allowing the
abuses of Mormonism to work their
own cure, rather than invest the de
lusion with the crown of martyrdom.
In addition, the split in the ranks of
the Latter-day Saints, known as th
“Godhyitc movement” is rapidly
gaining strength among all classes of
Mormons.
Tho Godbyites started out mainly
as opponents of the “ one-man power'
of Brigham Young, but the treat
ment they received from the Mormon
leaders gradually widened the breach,
until now they are regarded, and re
gard themselves, as out of tlie pale of
the church, and openly fraternize with
the gentiles in their hostility to Mor-
monuom. Some have renounced tlie
faith altogether, and most of them
are opposed to ]xilygamy, and to the
jollity of Mormon exclusiveness and
non-intercourse with the outside
world, so rigidlv insisted on by Brig
ham Young. Even the young girls,
it is said, openly refuBe to become the
third, fourth or fith wife of a Mor
mon, and avow their preference for
Gentiles at the risk of all conse
quences.
Mormonism has now had an exis
tence of thirty-one years, the church
having been first regularly organized
at, Manchester, N. Y., April «, 1830.
The industry and enterprise manifes
ted by tho community are its only re
deeming qualities. The halt-way
house it has furuished for overland
emigration is the only service it has
rendered the public. More than two-
thirds of the Mormons, as the last
census shows, panic from Europe. Il
is reported that Brigham Young con
templates gal hol ing up the remnants
of his followers who still adhere to
polygamy, and emigrating with them
to the Sandwich Islands. If lie keeps
moving on till he lands in Asia, his
polygamic institution will lx' in its
origial and congenial atmosphere.—
I Baltimore Sun.
About flie beat specimen of bur-
lesime chroDolpgy which we have seen
lately is the following from the New
York World, inteuded as a hit at tbs
Herald for one of its recent hiataria
anachronisms. The World says:
“We are onite shocked to find *0
grave and scholastie a journal as the
Herald assuring us that it was “the
famous Bishop Berkely who said that
1 he battle of Waterloo put back tike
clock of in-ogress ball a century.” It
was not half a century, which Is only
fifty yearn, but sixty-two years that
Ibis "clock was put back,” since
Bishop lierkely died iu 1763, and
Waterloo was fought in 1815. Bishop
Berkely ia not commonly thought to
have survived his burial, notwith
standing the immateriulism of his
philosophy. The person who really
made tile admirable remark so hap
pily cited by the Herald was Bishop
Laud, who let it fall in a conversa
tion with William the Conqueror,.at
Berkely Castle, shortly after the de
termination of Napoleon Bonaparte
to marry tho daughter of Pope Pius
VII, in the futile liojie, as it proved,
of reconciling the Emperor N icholas
of Russia witli the Reformed Dutch
Church of Houston, iu Texas.—
Berkely Castle, we may add, shortly
afterwards passed by the female line
into the possession of Cardinal Wol-
sey, who established there a famous
school for educating neglected grand
mothers to suck eggs. Geu. Grant
was for some time a tutor iu this
acudemy.”
, uLQBGjA,
Daily player meetings are being held in .
the (jtyffin Methodist Church. ,
UkS'Isw? ooanty jad oontains but one
culprit and that mUprit-is a foreigner.
..amwiqlsi* wurrellteg at a night-1
fllcBtibt tt V o. ta tfcc ffobtit.
Hit J hum are—Prooibe fat th* {dyUM.
blooming oerens which uu
A Lyceum ts now _
of the Gkunetville literati.
in bloom.
the minfle
CHARTERED BY THE BTATE OF TENNEMC
C '^ABOLINA LITE INS1
OF lOIMEPHXB, TiUBIJB,
#1,088,703.96.
Offloo Ixl'o. -AS, XdCcLcUsoxx Stx-oet, iteCox>a.plxtB.
Col. Jno. D. Stewart, of Griffin, bas
been hocused to preach, by the Baptist
Ghoreh.
JEFFERSON DAVIS, President
A printer named Dpi] attacked the Or
dinary of Early ooantj last week, and
when that ftmotionerr proceeded to ram
ble through Dell with his fist, the latter
shot him. Dell is now among the peni
tent prisoners.
IN THE
JV. J. WWCMjS,
r. t. rmrvrr,
teems* met j
ir. r. monm, anretmm.
W. T. Wyly, who drive* John Ryan’s
d* avals* wagon in Savannah, has haen
arreatai *• tho charge of embosaiement
s. m. MtkJttjrwtJr, mmmmerjpsaaf,
a. wttmwJto, m. m.
C. W. JMLft*, JJmmp,
1r, m. a. MtrtJt,
What Horace Greeley Says-
The Tribune philosopher, writing from
Memphis, says:
That those who struggled and fought
for secession generally believe Urey were
right in so doing, I cannot doubt. Jef
ferson Davis' lute apeechea fairly express
their average convictions and feelings.
But, while they still affirm the right of
secession, I am satisfied that a majority
of them believe its practical assertion was
nnwise anil inexpedient. They hold that
they should have mane their late struggle
in the Union, not against it under the
flag of oar fathers, not that of the Stare
ana Bars—in ostensible defense of the
Federal Constitution, not in resistance to
its authority. They propose to reuow
tbe light, blit not with gun and sabre. r. omiui.-
They expect to regain as Demo- Ballet Ma.n i r-Geo r g*_ W^JI^Sm.th
He oolieeted 91,000 frosa Ryan’s custo
mers whiah he foiled to pay over.
Dr. J. Emmett Bladksbear, of Maoon,
will deliver the address at the Masonio
Celebration of Si John’a Day, on the
21th inst, vice J. T. Gfenn, Esq.. whose
engagements prevent his, coming. Dr.
B. is well known throughout the State,
as an energetic Mason and excellent lec
turer.—[Griffin Star.
CITY!
fAamntR vc
. J amis r. jxixxri
BOARD OB* DIimOTOHM I
Jmraaon Davia, Memphis, Term.
If. J. Wioxa, President M. A C. R. B.
W. & Hour, Memphis, Team
Wm. Jotuhh, Joyner, Lemmon A Gale.
J. T. Farm, Pettit ft Bisspeoa.
W. B. Gawtuv, Pes’t People* In. Go.
B. JL Pt iajtw, Merchant.
0. B. Canada, MsmaMAjBm*.
W. L. Vast*, MmmUa &■,,
F. W. Surra, PretoUat Psisln I
ttSOtm
F. W. White, Benrando, Mis*.
N. 8. Shock, W. U. J
J. C. Finn, Gailbreath, Stewart i
E. W. Munfohd, Memphis, Teem. 1
NarouKW Hus, ffifl. Fontana A <
There are three apple trees oa the farm
of John M. Matthews, Esq., near Dan-
iebivtUs, Madison comity, tie., remark*
hie fax their sise. The largest of these
trees measure 10 feet 6 inches in eurenm-
fereaee ; the seeond, 10 feet i inches ;
the third, 8 feet 4 inches. They were
planted by Mr. James Ware, a Revolu
tionary soldier, shortly after the close of
that war.—Gainsville Eagle.
We learn that a gentleman of Atlanta
who was afflicted with dyspepsia, rheuma
tism, and a carbuncle, visited the Sulphur
To Merchants.
T HE COMPANY was organized in 1867, with a Capital Stoek of
hM ,Chilly laWWSVt its IS* man sc* they .ICMd > mlUcs doUu*
Springs a few days since^ and was wholly
restored in 24 hoars, ffa says be
rather drink the water of the springs
than whiskey. If this should become
known we fear that Col. McCamy, will be
completely overrun.—Gainsville Eagle.
500 Crates assort
ed granite and CC
Ware for $80 per
crate. Cheapest ev
er offered in State.
Send for list of con
tents.
rloua iRAUMeutaiit
Tbe •‘Otrohna Life.” notwlthetandlng the ■lkudsroiia —BolH of fuoh ion
fork TIM. could, to-day. ro-Inaure all of IU outataudin# rlaka. and have ao
MT AGENTS WANTED.-** Ay»l/to
15,000
®f»k
In Baltimore, the “Smith Family” an
nounce that they have made arrange,
manta for their “first semi-annual excur
sion,” which is to take plaoe next Tues
day, under the superintendence of a com
mittee of arrangements, embracing
Grandfather George M. Smith, Father
Julius H. Smith, Uuole James H. B.
Smith, Nephew Charles H. C. Smi'b,
Brother William H. H. Smith, Brother
Robert M. W. Smith, Brother Thomas
B. Smith, Brother Joseph L. Smith.—
Silver & Plaied Ware!
region
The managers of the Adams Ex
press Company, when they are robbed,
always refuse to negotiate for tlie re
turn of tbe plunder unless it is ac
companied with tlie arrest of the rob-
!x>r. The consequence is that they
usually succeed in securing both man
and money. They have Ixwn very
successful in detecting those who
have undertaken to commit depreda
tions upon the valuables in tlie care
of the company, and thieves are be
ginning to understand that it is dan
gerous to meddle with them. The
recent robbery of nearly 940,000 from
their office at Columbus, Ohio, was
accomplished by one of their clerks,
who cliloroformed a fellow clork on
guard with him, and pretended to
have been chloroformed himself.—
The managers of tho company went
very quietly to work, ana in » few
days had the guilty olerk and a con
federate. who was arrested in Chicago,
in prison, and had recovered 930.000
of tlie stolen funds.
Those eager connoisseurs of art who
are flockjng to Europe under the expec
tation that tbe deaolation to which Fnnoe
hat been subjected, will throw upon the
market many Waa—res at a iow p*ioe, asw
.loomed, apparently, to dieapyeintment
A letter from e gentlemen engaged in
this quest bas recently been Famished,
iu which be says ha had just paid 910,
000 for “three lltti >• Yaiawiulcre, only 5i
tor 8 iucfjeN—a deab-r refusing A1.200 ter
a larger one with two figuree." He Hilda
dealer “auhl a Uerotne far
figure," At
_
petition oertetn Amorhmn artiste, for
t Uiurr l
UulUrai
TOD gitoera ow tingle
thrae rates it will not be
nasi ra—ting of Ooograra t
\>Ti »tectten^adiVitkHrai doty again** ex,
orate, tlirough electious the power they
lo«t a« rebels tnrough the war. They
herein evince that wiadom which profite
by tbe Icaaon of experience. Here and
there a hot-head may talk of renewing,
at Home more anHpicionR season, the
struggle for an indejieudent Confederacy;
but the great majority have had enough
war. I feel sure that another Southern
Secession is all hut impossible.
That the South is steadily recovering
from the calamities and losses consequent
on our late civil war, is very obvious.
The process might be more rapid, but
could hardly be more substantial. The
cattle and swine which were eaten up du
ring the civil war are steadily reproduced,
aud are already twice or thrice as numer
ous as they were six years ago; lands are
going back into cultivation, which have
long laid waste and idle; farm buildings
arc undergoing renovation; cities and
villages are extending their borders;
factories and furnaces are widely pro-
jso>tis and some are in process of con
struction. It were irrational to expect
that all the bitterness engendered by
twenty years of sectional collission, in
cluding four of bloody war, should be ef
fected in a day, and of course it is not;
but the tendency is right, and Time will
exert its healing influence if no nnto»
ward event should interpose to prevent
it With a mingling of firmness in up
holding the right with kindness to those
who were miscducated into wrong, the
recementing of tbe Union will be thor-.
ough and enduring.
Tl:e Honorable Bigamist.
Speaking of Christopher Columbus
Bowen, the celebrated Bigamist, one of
our Northern exchanges says :
“A stranger, whose knowledge of our
politics was confined to such information
as might he gleaned from Republican
that the
apers, would naturally infer
Hon. Mr. Bowen is a “secessionist,” a
“rebel” aud a “disloyalist.” He would
not dream that he belonged to the party
of “groat moral ideas,” and was a worthy
and by no means singular leader of that
party in South Carolina. But snob is
the melaucholy fact. He is very like the
Rev. Mr. Whittemore, the cadetship
broker, and Republican member of Con-
s differs very little from the
gross. He
three prominent members of that party
recently sent to the State Prison for three
years, for stuffing the ballot-boxes in that
unhappy State. He only differs in the
character of some of his vioes, and that
very little, from the members of the Re
publican Legislature of South Carolina
who have plundered that State of mil
lions drawn from the estates of honest
and virtuous citizens. To be sure Bowen
can read and write, whereas a majority of
the Republicans in the Legislature of
Carolina cannot.
South Carolina cannot. In this he has
the advantage of the rank and file. And
yet, it is for the express purpose of keep-
* ** “ $0,
mg just such men in power at the Soul
and through them controlling the elec
tions that the legislation of Cougrera has
been shaped. It is for this purpose that
the President of the United States has
been armed with tlie power of sending
the military foroee of the United States
into the South. Such is the bitter, re
morseless and shameless treatment of a
conquered people. Such is the oharao-
ter of “recoustruotion,” and 1 imping
the fruit of the war”- aud such the agents
by which it is accomplished* Fit policy,
lit agents, for the corrupt and unprin
cipled party which tramplee upon every
principle of law and decency in oidor to
secure its lease of power over th* ponntry.
The English think they have outdone
Krapp altogether in the matter of henry
and efficient pine. At Woolwich n solid
cylinder of iron weighing 700 pounds
was thrown from n Fraser thirty-five-ton
cannon with the velocity 1,370 feet per
second, and At a distance of fifty yards
buried itself thirty-three deep in an «n-
bankincnt of earth and turf that bed been
prepared for ita reception. The eharge
of powder wua 130 pounds. The Fnuer
gun lias a steel bore surrounded with
wrougkt-iron eastings.
A Judge of Memphis was reoentty soil
ed to preside us chairman at a public
meeting in that city. Daring th* pro
ceedings an exalting disoiisstun eptwng
up, aud amid the ooufumon of teud
Hpeechoa, motions and crass wot jane, en*
speaker celled out impatiently to knee
his motion potto the meeting, “Baa
your motion s second ?" inquired the
chair, fit, sfi 1 ; it has fifty stoOndz. at
lotto I" “Tben let it Jiav* tsn saorsand
th* shsir will make a minnto of it”
i of work* of art
Gainsville made the firet shipment of
i cotton to Admit* lastTfmreday. ^
The music is to he bv “Smith’s cele
brated band,” aud oil the “Smiths,
Smyths, Sobmitts, Schmids, Sohmidtre,
Hmulte aud Smitts” are invited to atteud.
OF
DR. JOS. P. LOG AH, MEDICAL EXAMINER, ATLANTA, GEOBBU.!
A male thief was captured a few days
•' — ■ “ ~ Pit,
ago about forty mites south of Fort Sool
in Kansas by a party of five men. While
in oustody he stole two revolvers from
his captors, and then, taking tbe best
horse in the party, rode jauntily away,
firing several sho's as he left by way of
parting compliments.
A Proolimini ion.
Cutlery,
Tea Trays,
fTIHOSE contemplating Life Insurance are respectfully requested to <
JL in# the merit# of Lhi# Oompenj. They wilt find it
Superior to Many aud Inferior to Mono, in tho Essen til
give Sound Insurance at the Least Possible Coat.
W. T. WATERS, Oen.-A.grft,
orr/cn st i-e. run muli »r„ Atlanta, a*.
nSO It
OHOROIAi
By H ufus B. Bulloch,
Governor of said
W E
HE REAS, Official information h
lxttu r#ngiv#d at Uii# Bepirta>ciit Uist
murder war committed in tbe county of JMckuonou
or about the Oth of M*y last, upon th« body of Mat-
coUum W. Park, by one Matthew Harris; and
V
Fronting Passenger Depot,
TERMS 98 60 PER DAY.
«- CO ,
Th# Sheriff of o#id county certify# to
th»t h# h#D made diligeut M#roh for the Mid
Harrla in tbe county of Jnckaon and th# counties ad
jutant thereto, but bM fad' d to apfrahetyd him. #nd
therefore #UKge#U the offering of a auitablo re wart 1
iiiHurlng the arrest uf Mid Harris: .TV
Now. ther«’forp, I haw thought proper to i##ue
thia. my prtx 1 iiuatiou, hereby offering a reward of
ONK THtjl s 1.' 1> DOIsLAIiS for the apprehension
and deliver}’ ot the Mkl Matthew Hnrri#, with ert-
denoe duUticnt to coovn-t, to the Sheriff of aud coun
ty of Jaokaon, iu order that be may be brought to
trial for the offence with which he stands charged.
QJyen under my hand end the Greet Seel of the
State, at the Capitol in Atlanta, thia 8th day oi
Jane* In th« yew of our Lard Eighteen Hun-
dred end Sertnty-one, end of the Independence of
the United Staten or America the Ninety-fifth.
mmm b. bullock.
By tbeQoveruur:
David O. Cottimo, Secretary of State*
Junl0-d3t-wlt
tyGICMKST AMD BUST KOUTE
Looking Glass Plates.
dailfi Son Book onb Job Office.
f|»HE SUN JOB OFFICE HAS JUST BEEN SUPPLIED
“ with a splendid assortment of the Latest Styles of
NORTH EAST AN I, WT3IST
Via XaOUlfllVlllo.
rfNBRBE (tally ■ Express traini
JL gra*|S bvm NwhTlIto to Xonlmlto,
doee connection# with Treine end Boat#
INTO Oha^eofOars
raou LouisviLxjtvo
St. Loals, Cincinnati, InllaaapeHs, Chic
ago, ClcvrUud, Pfttnbnrg, Philadelphia
and New York. -
OMLT on OSANan TO
Baltluere, Washington and Reeten.
qnnrer Um. V thl
deiion^ thenbflMf o_
when traveling, by taking (or ticket#
itornraviUjii.
Hurengh Ticket# Md leffkff* Ckaaka
max be procured at tbe ofboe of the Weetern end Ah
lenttclMUroM et Attraftn. tad at Hi th*et oMoee
Arwig^aitlie South* ALBEKT I
w. *. KINO, - (NMBffMMHai
H—
G BOROIA-PUIoTON CtHJIlTV—OBDIN-
« ■ OAoe. May J6, 1811—Robert Hi Jenkine,
hM applied for exemption cl petwoneUy end setting
apart end vehifion of liomeetMd, kiid 1 will wi
eeioch. a. m.. «• June a. »7i.
1 DABTHL FimtAB. Ordinerv.
WANTED.
TTiTKBt OKI TQ NOTICE tMt the Fickeo fiouee
rjnenrrae center of the <9M| wffl open on Mon-
A Superior Cook eontfMntly employed to serve up
in the beat manner whatever the mariNteOngd*
Terms-* per WMk. etriot^^rimej^
I WTU
koill
number
. A BABOAIM IN A IfBWTABTILT
FXN AX. NOTICE
i gfnfiul t/te M\ *
Ibth OF 1 JUNE,.
on T*At m SAMI VUJ. KOt UHIH
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. Call
with the cash
Ce.
NEW AND ELEGANT TYPES,
B0RDESS.R ULES AND OTHER MATEBIAL'
And is now prepared to do the Finest Grades of
JOB PRINTING!
THE PLANTATION
J. Jrmn-vl w„ki. * m*■«» r. r «.
Published iu Atlanta, ««.,
EVERY SATURDAY.
rmicm—ss pn-J.mm.tmr smfUCrnpp.
$» so tmr CM, W JUpM.
M tmr CM( W IM,.
IHmBu)OTl.Mlto<n>T ltoT. 0. W. Hov.pd.M-
" “* el to any
point of
Removal.
Eichberg & Langgesstr,
Having removed their
Plumbing&ffas-Fittliii:
T HIS paper w . ,
stated by Ool. R A Alston, end
Journei of the kind Ui-the United 8t
A# eu edvertising medium it hM few ©quel#, M it#
bone fide circulation i# Five thouaend, end ateedilv
increasing.
SEND FOR A SPECIMEN COPY. -«g
tr GOOD AGENTS WANTED. -I
ADDRESS,
MORRIS A HOWARD.
myte-im
Dmwer M, AUente, Georgia.
Auction & Commission.
hereby notify the public end btnincM men
ff»nereUy thet we have opened ea auction
TMe Degee Billdl^ee HfU street.
where we will be pkeaed to aerve those who mev
ne*«i our service#. We propoee to sell any aperies
of irrorrertv firei ..4 S*2a. j specie#
ede ou good# iu #*n~ -a—T"*
i day#. Weoi
J. A. CHERRY, Auctioneer.
OBIfTDI, Oi.. lbr IS, lS«“ 0D0W “i£S£
HITCHCOCK A WALDEN
HEN RY O AR D.
SHIP BROKER
Commission Merchant, etc., Books and Stationery.
U t
ST AIL DBALXM I,
tOOOlHOD.TIOI WHARF.
CHAHLBBIPM, S C.
” V1ACHTRRI RUST,
(POWELL'S BLOC!,)
ATLANTA, GA.
EBP< ■ - -
"> d ofqgAnt
^OTJTATTOJBV,mrtj.
, Enfvee, ato, ^ "etoe. Peek-
ESTABLISHMENT,
H*. *. HirKH. SSMt
32 Peachtree Street
NEAR ORRER OF WALTOS
reepectfttily inform their fi
will oontlnue to keep e fulletookef
GAS FIXTURES,
OTTAILTT^mvr . Mite
Bath'.Tubs,
PUMPS OF ALL DBBCMIFTIO*
Water OloeeU,
Wash Basins, rupa, aad * Fill Lire •*
HARDWARE!
W« HOPS, IT STAIOT AtTglt* 1
to tciihrm, to narr a <*•'
nniAsci of thi i.nnwut» * k '
tioiam which iu
Huuiorou SIVU TO Ote
Eichberg & Langgesser,
8« PMotrtrv* RtrMt.
Ompmu >■
HSMteTR** to* an*
MM SMU* “*
HBopAa,
fls. Hwk ot w aim BmAa
Atao, SUitOAI 8UHOOI. BOOKSud SEqClSTm.
ul AUlfH. uid MonuBtenJTlw.
sore. I sows. *kss resp*
HOWE A HUBBLE.
JMPOXTKXS or AID DIALS** «« Of V* ’
PORIIOR ah©
ZjXQUOIUL
nntr,.
•te. « | 1.1 metf M,
mvMvturf. i