The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873, June 22, 1871, Image 4
THE TEMVESBEE KP-WTX. perty, thd to obviate all necessity for
1 to “Lynch law,” without
A Negro JautIce of the Peace
mu
Sunday night A J. Flown, &*|
a colored resul
resident of tbi* city, who
was ejected justice of the peace at the
last elect inn, was at Whiteaiue Sta
tion on the N. & C. Railroad, about
fourteen miles from Chattanooga, on
a visit to his sister, who is teaching
school in that neighborhood. After
he had gofte to bbaj a hand of fifteen
]>craons, masked and attired in gowns
of red, white and black, came to the
bouse and called him out.
Acoording to ’Squire Flowers’ state
ment made to us yesterday, the leader
of the bund said to him:
“You’re a justioe of the peace, are
you? Well, we have come Co initiate
you into your office. We’ll give you
til hi u t twYuty-live lashes to let you
see that no nigger has a right to hold
office in this State or the United
States. That's all we have against
you; hut there’s a band of us and we
tire going to stop niggers from hold
ing office. You needn’t think this is
nil thero is of us. I can blow my
whistle and liave a thousand here ill
a minute. You pass hundreds of ns
every day on the streets in Chatta
nooga.’’
Tiny told him they understood
Flowers ramc down to regulate the
negro school They didn’t mind
about the niggers huvtng schools, but
did not want any nigger justioe from
Chattanooga coming down them.—
They did not wont too many niggers
meeting together anvhow, because
they might form a league against
them. .
After this conversation they took
the ’JSquire about a mile from the
house into the woods, made him take
off his coat, and gave him about 25
lashes with hickory wythea.
They made hint swear to resign his
office, and told him to go back to
town and toll George Sewell and Dave
Medlow that they would go for them
next and give them a big dose.
They took a hoy down to see the
whipping.
After they had finished the “initia
tion,” they took him hack to the
house ami sat down and talked with
him a few minutes. They told him
not to think he wus badly injured,
(lull the man at whoso house lie was
stopping lied lieen whipped twice and
twice as bad.
The ’Squire returned home yester
day morning, looking not much
worse, although he snowed a few
marks. lie said it was reported that
lie had received one hundred, and by
some one thousand lashes, and that
be Was not able to get out; be wanted
the truth known: lie was not very
badly hurt, but he don’t propose to
go down there any more; he was
learned not to go this time, and if he
had Ism wise lie wouldn’t have gone.
Still lie said he did not intend to stop
trying cases nml exercising the func
tions of a justice, until the Ku Klux
fame up here ami stopped him.
The party that whipped him told
him to come to Chattanooga and tell
everybody wlmt had been done, which
lie was doing.
We consider this a dastardly ont-
i ailing in the aid of West Point or
its graduates, and we trust the day
will never come when the preserva
tion of oivil order in this country
will be dependent upon the agencies
which Senator Carpenter invokes.—
[Baltimore Sun.
JRiszrtUnum 'Jt&mtwmnrnie.
NOTICE.
Olmmm’0 Qrwtcm, I
GEORGIA NEWS.
The Roma Commercial is burning for
A Savannah negro woman attempted
aaioide on Monday bat wee prevented.
She aimed to jump into the river.
V’The profound eafngeaa of Sandy
Bottom " is wlmt the Meoou Telegraph
styles a portion of the population of that
oity.
Two toy birds had a fight yesterday in
the sight of the writer. They fought on
the wing. One struck the other sharply
and killed him outright. We pinked the
little dead bird op, and he hod a little
hole in the top of his head in the plaoe
re the hair ought to grow.—B
Commercial, 20th.
liuns?Ue.!AUMlM*rl
r appear* from the Pocket t*‘ the fiupwno Court
for tha July Tartu, 1871, that the .order of Qlr-:
oofts. with the somber ot <mn t#*ui each. Je/»
follows:
Ml UM HWir.
liUMIA CIRCUIT.
A warehouse Arm in this oity received
s letter from a planter, opening thus
graphically: “Gentlemen: When Cin
abandoned
I hit plow in the field,
not, sire, from motives of patriot
ism. bat, I
the
11 golly, h» woe running from
Telegraph.
The cotton crop now monopolizes the
labor of Monroe county, notwithstand
ing the sad experience of the last two or
these years impressed planters with the
determination to grow leas “next year.”
Somehow this anti-ootton vow takes
ringa sod a rise of ten, or even five,
isato per pound any winter in the price
of the staple sets the
i cotton fever raging
ks bad as aver. This is a great pity,
s hear;
insist cisco IT.
Baker
Calhoun
Decatur (1 ooutin*ed>..,
DourberW..., *2
Mitchell *
fioviiwmafi circuit.
Schley...
BuiuUr..
Webster..
sovrisnrar. utu public.
wriu, SB SOLD , _
S&rtSS
Wort
IRON Wor
▲TTsANTA - aBOHO*
WITHERS Sc JONES, Proprieto
IN THB
near aaunam, wmuaw oapr omatutoa rustic seats
LAWNS AMD VB*AMDAHB, WINDOW SEATS, SUMMER
aOOHi FOUNTAINS; HITCUINO POSTS, FEN-
, and rHyrotU Is a,
maBESKBas P* T HP V f
UkU CODtalttlBf Mx80 feet, Dion or Uaa. ?-Lsvift4 m.j. J ■ I f f
on as the property of BdmondaoR k Ball. te aaftafr > X—X * M I I
KUU and County Tax A. fe. flu- hie to* for tha year •
mo. Frvparty pointed oat by John M. Hacwel£ T.
OIQ| AXLE BQ3CHA WELL WHEELS,
HARDWARE, CASTINGS, Etc.
ALL mils 8T CASTINGS HI IKON AID 1
promptU FURNISHED at the lowest BATES.
Gash Paid For Old Iron.
FAfAULA circuit.
lUadolpll a-.* ''W
irt ,
,u t—s
cainiaoocsss ciscurr.
uicos ciscrrr.
si nor oar planters spend a beery per
sent of profits, even in high-price cot-
on seasons, U purchasing those articles
if prime necessity, much of whieh might
» made at home.
The staple DM quoted yesterday at
17i oento.—Monroe Ad'
dvertiaer.
The Columbus Sun of Saturday, has
his paragraph 00 railroad matters: It is
fringed mat Cook A Oo., of Atlanta, are
wtiag hi the interest of the Pennsylvo-
lia Railroad Company, which is extend-
Soathwards and that af-
nffe, and iu view of the serious re-
alts —■ “— “ — v
Milts that may arise from it, we be
lieve the jieoplc of that neighborhood
will liud it very much to their ailvau-
tage to bring its perpetrators to jus
tice.
tug its branches
Ur they have built the railroad to Co-
! ilmbns. they will extend it to Albany.
' Mien Kimball will be President of a loni
pmte from Atlanta via Columbus am
Albany to Brunswick. It is now oonsid
trad among the knowing ones, that a
sale of the Mobile and Girrard Railroad
will be preferred to a lease to the Cen
tral, unless that corporation will agree to
pay a responsible percentage. If for
sole, these some agents of the Pennsyl
vania Central may buy it and extend it
to Mobile, and thus hare a grand trank
line to New Orleans. Others s ay Kim
ball ia trying, by a concentration of
railroad intaresto, to make himself the
peat Governor of Georgia.
FLIRT CIRCUIT.
Butts.....
Henry....
Newton...
HpAldllltf..
Upeon....
TALLAFOOCA CIRCUIT.
4IH0. '**■'
he seme time s*d pleee, el that tot
ln4f atapoiRtandnmWnf with Peechtcae street LIT
feet to tbs line of i ttoMiH no m to toetude two
oek tree* standing near mid bourn. making a front
on Ivy street uf 179 feet from the Hne of pelliafts
■tending! At the point, jnMrinn «> negU oootofr
in.
lese. Levied oo u we property Of Beams oeue
virtue of wtd to Btotlmfy a morijigi A. fA toned
Fulton Superior Court, in fever ot dotbile ft Go. vs.
Holing Sells. Property pointed o*t by ptoin tiff's
Attorney, October flM. MM.
the north aid# of
U, end Adjoining the brtek I
by McBride 4 Smith. Levied on an t
I. a. Hill, by virtue of end to MtUfy tihl
from the Juatloe*e Court of the lf&th D
M., in fAvor of B. T. Grifte vu. J. R. 1
ftSdofl
ted In the Sd Word of the city of Atlanta, at the June,
u of Petero. Grew end Watr sfreeto, (rooting moth
Petera. oart on Crew end south on Mr street;
d lot containing one half oare. mom or loos. Lev
aa the property of X. A. AMah.
Un.byriria
> JagOce s C
ATLANTA CIRCUIT.
MQIfg CIRCUIT.
On Sunday afternoon, during the oe-
vsre tknnder storm, the lightning struok
the spire of the Independent Presbyte-
i Chureh. From a gentleman who
rian
was observing tbe storm, we learn that a
•eoond previous to the stroke, a sheet of
eleotricity was seen to aecend, apparently
from the gronnd, enveloping tbe tnU
spire pi a circle ot fire, and os it reached
the ball it was met by a streak of light
ning from the thunder cloud overhead,
descending in tbeshape of a spiral chord.
As tbe two currents met, they concentra
ted on tbe vend and immediately bnmt,
scattering a thousand jets of seeming
finkea
Fortn-
Fnlse Teaching at Went Point.
Senator Carpenter made an ad
dress (o (lie graduating class at West
I’nint on Monday. Two ext rads will
suffice to indicate its general style,
and the character of the counsel
which the Wisconsin Senator ottered
to the young men to whom Ilia honor
o! the United States Hag and arms is
in the future to be committed. Re
calling some reminisoences of his own
cadet days at West Point, Mr. Car
penter said:
“liut to return to Bob Garnett.—
lie joined the army of the rebellion
—that made all good men his ene
mies—and lie jiuid the penalty of
treason, and sutfered the death of a
traitor at Garrick’s ford.”
Gen. Garnett, of whom the Hon.
“Mat” Carpenter thus speaks, wus
killed in a skirmish in West Vir
ginia, at (’arrack's fonl, the firstsum-
mer of the war. He “suffered the
death oi a traitor” iu no other sense
than Geu. Albert JSidney Johnson
“ suffered” the same death, who fell
at Sluluh. or Stonewall Jackson, who
received his death wound at Chancel-
lorsvile. and thousands of others
whose fate wus indeed tlio fortune of
war, but can hardly be considered the
“penalty of treason." if a “penalty,”
it was one which they shared, at all
events, with many brave men and of
ficers who “ suffered” death on the
Union side.
“But to return to Mat Carpenter.”
lie instructs tile young meuat West
Point ns to the-'nim' arnf Object of
their professional career as follows:
“What is an army maintained for ?
Why do forty millious of people bear
molten motel, which
upon the roof of the ohurel
notoly the rain was pouring down in tor-
fonts at tbe time, which prevented any
damage being dona to the bnildiog.
The eoono aa aeaoribed, must have been
grandly beantifnl.—Savannah News.
One of the editors of tbe Telegraph
sad Messenger, writing from Oathbert on
the 19th, says: Our weekly bulletin from
this region must represent the cotton
prospect, still, to the lost degree, un
promising end unsatisfactory. The growth
of the weed has been almost inapprecia
ble for the past fortnight, and the strag
gle with grass and weeds continues,
repeat the ret
the exjiense of "bleating boys for
military service and maintaining “■*
remark of last week, that
squares are sasroer than blooms should
be, it this advanced stage of the season.
The crop in Southwest Georgia will not
average over six inohee in height, while
much of it is infested with lice, and still
eaten up by grass. Corn on the whole
looks well, though generally teaseling too
low for s very heavy yield. On the san
dy lands signs of li-nig an-apparent also,
as the result i-i.-rs-ive wet. An intel
ligent farm, r just relume,1 from Texas,
T::::::
Walker
CHEROKEE CIRCUIT.
Bartow..
CatooAA..
Lade ...
NORTHERN CIRCUIT.
auouita circuit.
MIDDLE CIRCUIT.
OCMULUEB CIRCUIT.
Putnam—1 coottnnad 1—6
KAETEBM CIRCUIT.
Chat ham
BRUNSWICK CIRCUIT.
wwk for two weeks, and send their hills to this
Removal.
Eichberg & Langgesser,
HrtIrc mnorftd thair
Plumbing&Gas-Fitting
ESTABLISHMENT,
tm l»o. ft. Marietta Street, to
32 Peachtree Street,
NEAR ORNER OF WALTON,
At the same time and place, a osrteiR lot la thd dt»
of Atlanta, ooutainv one-half aore, mors or feaa, sft-
ICllly apdkUtottMrssM. In tbs Ml - ~
■aid city, adjoining the property of James, Wood and
Dean, being part of landVot —In tkt 14th Diatrlot
of originally Henry, now fuRoa ooaafr. Lawfad on
o aatisfy a
from Pulton moiorOowi
in favor of Annie K. Carlton ts. John M B. darttoa.
out by piaintidrs rttonny,
Property
MhlgTL
ALSO,
At tha same and Diace.
Portable Engine and Boikr^Levied on aa Ilia pro
perty of Rondeau k Co., by virtue of and to aatiafy a
mortgage fl. fa. leaned from Pnlton (Mqxrior Oourt,
In favor of A. H. Brown k Oo. va. Bondeaa k Oo»—
June 5th, 1871,
ALSO.
t portion ot the oily of Aihwte known
33, 34, 36, 3«. 33.84, M, M, 40 and 41. being the saet-
ern portion of land lot No. 304, In tha 14th DltMct
of originally Henry, now Pnlton eoonto, w^blnhN
36 acres, more or less. Levied on ae the property of
Edward White, by virtue of and tosattsfy a mcipft
A. fa. issued from Fulton Superior Court, in fcvor ot
Thotuae Q. Jacobs vs, Edward White. May 3Tth.
ALSO.
ALthe game time and plaoe, the aart half of ettylot
fo. 14. in the Whitehall surrey, ft being the (decs
_ _ ^ /, ft being tt
whereon T. 8. earner Uvod or the 37th My of June,
1867; said lot being in the 14th Dtafriot of originally
Henry, now Fulton oounty. Levied on aa the pro
perty ot T. 8. Garner, by virtue of and to aahwty R
mortgage A. fa laauoa from Fulton Superior Court,
in favor of Thomas Q. Jacobs vs. T. S. Oarner. May
37th, 1671.
ALSO.
At the same time and plaoe, a city lot in tha city of
Atlanta, situated on the west side of West Peachtree
street, ou the eoroer of said West Peaabtrws and
thirty-foot street, adjoining the property of Strauss
sud other*, in the 6th Ward of aatd city, containing
"u.-naif sore, more or lees, it being part of land lot
79, in the 14th Dietrlet of originally Heary, now Ful-
ouuty. Levied on ae the property of At
A t'snaels, by virtue of and to satufy . ft. ta.
from Liberty Huporio* oourt. in favor of William T.
Buabee va. Alexander k Caaaels. Property pointed
out iu said A. As., May Md. 1871.
ALSO,
At tha same time and place, a city M in *• et* of
Atlanta, containing one-eighth (#) of an asm* front
ing ou the West aide of Pryor street. Rear the ouraar
No. 78. in the 14th Dietrlet sf _
Fulton county. Ou said lot la a two-atury dwelling
■f. Levied on as the property of Mn. T. J. Pow-
hy virtue of aud to satisfy a A. fa. iaaued from
the Justice's Court of the 1384th District, 0. M—(
30th, 1871.
AI.SO,
At the same time and place, tha fattowlaft Mi of
180 W HSia. 1
Walker county,
308, 13th dietrlet, 4th aaotton,
acraa, Nu. 879,10*% dietrlet,4th saotiOR, Walker
'T.^aoree, No. M0, 34th district, M
RH/R, from iiio MiHaimippi River to this
ids are poor, sud
point the cotton stam
much of the Tftliej land is literally nnder
water. It is now too lato to hope for
more than a half crop under the most fa
vorable circumstances.
A re ready to receive orders, they
respectfully Inform their friends that they
a.— 0.0. full gtook of
will continue to keep
m, Steam and Hln/rr Pipes,
GAS FIXTURES,
An Uneasy Tote.
8 the
organization of our army? Why,
Bimjily to prevent the operation of
lynch Jaw.”
Fortunately, we lielieve, the study
of the Constitution of the United
States is included in the course of in
struction at the Military Academy,
and the cadets, as u general rule, have
intelligence enough to understand
that the enemies whom they are train
ed and expected to fight, if ooeaaioH
should require, are not their own
countrymen. TV general of the ar
my, a better judge, jierhaps, than the
{senator ujmii such snlijeots, has offi
cially given his opinion, in wliich all
high-minded soldiers will concur, that
police duty is the last servioe to whiah
the army should be assumed. We fin
A friend from Polk oounty relates to
ns tha following “good ono.
There lives in that oounty John Mor
tun, a man of fine proportion and nearly
seven feet high, and a fine athlete. In
conversation a few days sinoe, Judge W.
related some of his own wonderful feats
of strength when in his prime, and told
how many sacks of salt he could then
carry. Morton said the moat uneasy
“tote” he ever had oooarred when he
was traveling in Alaliqina He said he
came up at a river with a man driving a
yoke of young oxen. The cuttle were
skeery, and he oould not drive them Into
the ford. The man was about to dew
pond—did’nt oare about his wagon, pro-
tided he oould get the oxen aoroas—-but
the more be whipped and urged, the
more the oxen wonld’nt go into the
water. Morton lays he pitied the
aid so noonnoitod the aitnation to see if
he oould not relieve him. He discovered
a pretty good foot log and oonolnded he
Oould am bit own size and strength to
advantage. So he told the stronger he
would put his settle aoroas the river.
His proposition was aeoepted and Mor
ton stepping between the* cattle, loosed
im thi
) army
not know how it tn in
in Mary In ml we n-fv
judges, ujamyrfesech
Wefio
- , -m aaud
graud juries, upon the police force in,
cities, upon sheriflk and magistrates
and constables throughout the 8tete,
tc give protection to pentuN -ondpso-
Ihess from the wagon, and putting his
Shotldcr under the oentre of the yoke
raised iqr the oxen hanging by their
heads in the bows and carried them
•cross ou the tog. B«t Morton says that
between the kioking of tbe critters and
the wabbling of the log it was the moat
uneasy tote he had ever had.—Rome
Courier.
A new sect, of perfectionists has
arisen ia Scotland, who call them-
telwss “The Northern fivangelicul So
ciety.” Each of them bolides him
self entirely sinless—as .holy us God
himself. They are particularly un
charitable to all whoWre not of theii
communion, behaving that no spirit-
• '• if
gal lift can exift outside thereof
From all Motions of the Western coun
try uuiuttiiir mad encouraging reports as
t*> Mm giwwiug osreal crops The recent
•"3£3t
OHATEPTOIsTlimR
Bath Tubs,
PUMPS OP ALL DESCRIPTION
Water Closets,
Wash Basins, Pomps, snd s Fall Line of
HARDWARE !
W« HOP*, BY ISTRICT ATTBNTIO
TO BUIlRin, TO BTBHIT
COM*
THWARCI OF THB LIBERAL PA-
TRONAUK wIUCU has been
HKRBTOrORft GIVBN TO Cl.
Eichberg & Langgesser,
32 Peuohtree* Street.
mh34-tm
jr o
rilOLLED Ulbre me m m «
A of AprU. 1871, bv Henry
district, Q. M., of Fulton ©on
TICE
ertrsy, on the 39th
. Brown, of ths 733d
county, Georgia, one^el-
rtght
Shoulder. Haiti rnkre has shoe* on her hind feet and
one ahon on her right /ore foot Appraised by Hi-
“■* * * “*■*- freeholders of said dis
ease/ and J. A. PlRaftr,
frtci, to be worth fifty dollars. , The owner 1a hereby
notified to appear before me. prove property, pay
notified to appear before me. prove property, pay
oort and expense, and take her sway, else «h« will
he sold by tha Sheriff of said county, within (he
lima prescribed by law, and in terms or the law.
JNO. T. COOPER.
■yUB*,- , . dark Opart of Ordinary.
' SULPHTO SPRINGS,
N«*r ttalativille, Hall Coaaty, Georgia.
mH18 DaUftfcttal 8—w H<—4 l+mam ayaa fee
± the reosiptlon of guests, having bean thoroughly
iftttad with New and Beautifhl FuraMara.
Tbe Medicinal quality ot this Water, and the Ho
ad tic Hcenecy around the Springe, cannot be eor-
paeaed In the Seutheru States.
The supervieion of the House will be under the
who are too well known to tha traveling public
need further comment.
**■ No pains will be spared to reader the visit of
ieeta comfortable and happy.
ft. R. McCAHT, Proprletoy
No. sit. toto awtrtct. Mb i
i IK’ uroo. No. Ml, loth dWtrlot «a moUae. obot-
tooga county.
1G0 acme. No. 306, 19th district, 4th aeottaa, Chat
tooga county.
. So. 192. 9
I district, 4th section. Mm
160 acres, Ho. 13. 34th district, 4th section, Gilmer
oounty.
40 acres. No. 094, llUt dietrlet, 4th section, Lump
kin county,
Mt i*t*umtt—'9tovibe fox ttje fitiplcsa.
CHARTERED BY THE STATE OF TENNESSEE.
QAROUNAXIFE INSUR NCECO
To Merchants.
OF WBMHHIR,
Assets 01,028,703.00.
Offloo hJcx 4SI Marilaon Street, LAoxnjpkxls, Ton-
500 Crates assort
ed granite and C C
Ware for $80 per
crate. Cheapest ev
er offered in State
Send for list of con
tents.
Slyer & PM fare
OF
Cutlery,
Tea Trays
Loolaii Glass Plates.
the year 1870. Property pointed out by John M.
Harwell, T. 0.
AUSOt
At the same time and plaoe, a oity lot la the oMy
of Atlanta fronting 94 feat on Oollins street, in tike
4th Ward of said city, and running back, eease
width, 310 feet, containing oov-hal/ aura, more or
less, adjoining the property of T. R- Ripley, J. XL
Wallace end i..mgntnn, it being part of land lot No.
60, iu the 14th iliHtrii-t of origiuaUy Heary Jew FuL
* *" Ou «a<(l lot is a three roomed dwelling
R a tel
tou county
Levied on as tha property • f J
fries, as trustee for his wife Martha A Jeffries, Ijy
e A hi leaned from V
virtue of and to eadsfy i
' >urt. in fsvor •
trustee, Ac. Property pointed out L
June the *Ui, 1871.
At the same Urns and plaoa, a acres, more or leas,
d. being part of Und lota BM aud Iflth the
t of originally Henry now Fultou oounty,
17th ilutrti
situated near
miles; more
couuty. Levied
Cook by virtue
Pulton Superior Court,
Jeesee M. t>*ol
attorney, June 4. 3871'
>f originally Henry now
the Western A Atianttr
»r tern, from the oity of .
d on ae the proparti of Jem M.
of and to sat&fy a A » issued from
r Court, to favor of VOmwnd Leers.
Property pointed out by piatohff’s
At the same time and plaoe, a lot containing
half acre, more or lew, in the 5th Ward ef the. city
of AtlRuta. aud known ia ihaplao of said etty at lot
No. 63. situated on Marietta efraet. o) to-afltW-
tal building i it baton part of toad toe No. 78, in
the 14th district of originally Henry now fnlton
Iaaued from the Justice Court of the 1
e April 1st, 1871,
A M. PEREERLON, I
ShrriM'a Sait fmr Ju$*, 1871.
W1UM Mid batoaa tha Oewrt Mourn dwei
▼Y the cito ot Atlanta. Fulton oounty, Georg
an hi first Tuesday In July Hast, within tha la_
statJ^uscscSs
toed <m the eomar of AMhama and Baostahsato,
Emily Robarta aa heir
June 10th, 1871.-lm.
SHOT AND LEAD.
«r«v(M€-- „
BmmaL daoaaaad. Levied on aa tha frofee*
Mia Emily Robert^ by virtue of aat to nltof a
ft. hk issued from rultou oounty court In faver of
Charles Borman va. M. U Roberts and his wiie
May 14, lffft . . ^tBd
BftO Rag. Shot, aU atoaat
3.000 pounds Bhr Leads
1.000 pounds Pl« Lead i
Whteh VB oMat 4a the trade on liberal terms.
V.L4B.J, LOWBY.
Je7-9t
KDGKFIKLU JUNCTION, TKNN. t
HAfcUK A RARNUMA
a W. FHULMAB,
1-jM-
We offer the
cheapest and
Best line oi
House - Keep
ers’ Goods in
the City. Cut
lery, Spoons,
Forks, Knives T
Waiters, Cas
tors, Vases &
Toilet Sets.
In fact, any
thing needed
in a well kept
house. Call
with the cash
McBride & Co.
JEFFERSON DAVIS, Presiden
JO. J. nrwcwt,
Ftrtt Piet President.
P. T. PETTIT.
Second
W.r.mOTVK, Secretary.
jtccjt r.
noAx, wwA»r
r. jtAaxjurnma,
• DtRUOTOns ,
O. B. Church, Memphis, Tena,
W. L. Vin. k, Memphix. Tenn.
rmna Davis, Mreaphia, Tana.
M. J. Wan, FMMtetM. AOR R
W. R Horn, Memphis, Tana.
Wil Jonas, Joyner, T—imop k Gale.
J. T. Point, Pettit k Him peon.
W. B. Gaaaauw, Feet Peoples In. Go.
B. EL PduiV, 7finhtit
F. W. Whifco, Bonrando, Miss.
F|1&18 COMPANY waft omoifted in 1867, with a Capital Stock of 9200,000,
A. baa steadily twiwumal Hi amam «Rttl now they exceed s million dollars.
F. W. Smith, Preaideut Peoples Ban
N. S. Bruce, W. 8: Brace A Co.
J. C. Fizkr, Oailbreath, Stewart t
EL W. Mcnford, Memphis, Tenn.
Napoleon Hill, Hill, Fontaine k <
ftV- AGENTS WANTED.-®* Apply to
Timron a muumr, jutameyt. «. a ^i.sto
lUmte, Hij 11, ltn.
14,000
OVBU
$5,000,000
A88KT8.
ee Co*
DR J08. r. UlflU, MEDICAL EKAJUNEB, ATLANTA, CFCJiUU.
rinOBE non tem plating Life Insane ee ore respectfully requested to •inm-
X is. la. mmm Jaa OMaamj ■ nnwuieaeit
Superior to Mum, ub4 Inferior to None, in the Eaaentinla (list
fire Sound Insurance at the Least Possible Cost.
VT. T. WATKHH, Uen.Air'l.
nso i, oreturn av i-a.
wnum.tl.c sT.,
PgUp Ban Book an& lob tpfficc.
IHE 8UN JOB OFFICE HAS JUST BEEN STJPl’l.t |-:i»
with a splendid assortment of the Latest Styles of
NEW AND ELEGANT TYPES,
PD1EBS, BOLES AND OTHER MATERIAL!
And is now prepared to do the Finest Grades of
HENHY (JAKD,
SHIP BROKER
Commission Merchant, etc.,
aoeox>oj>a*aoa tnir.
tt
jTjpDEM^for Ootton, ^Itiee, etc,, also
JOB PRINTING!
|egal
sob ot ivory
FURNISHED TO ORDER.
BLANK BOOKS, Ac.
We have made ample arrangement* to get up Blank U»'L*
AT THE LOWEST RATES;
- ^ «the very bmt «tylu, and of any desired patted -