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THE DAILY SUN
Tumi Mobwim... .
July 25.
Ittmi Mthariaad afent In
To Uwrtn.
W« publish in foil the deeUona of
the Supreme Court These decisions
are rendered every Tuesday, and will
appear in our paper every Wednesday
morning.
We also publish daily the order of
business and the daily proceeding of
the oourt Every lawyer who wishes
to be fully posted Ibout the Supreme
Court can be aooommodated by
taking The Sex.
The Bwtlar County, Ohio, Dem
ocrat.
Oar readers will find in another
ooltunn to-day, an article from'the
above named paper,'which we com
mend to their careful perusal. It is
from the pen of J. R Nickel, the able
editor of that journal.
There is certainly nothing in this,
which indicates the slightest disposi
tion on his part to quit the Demo
cratic party or to “depart” in any
way from the immutable principles of
“test.
i tide of the article is ** Btprtss-
ly granted iy the Constitution." Head
it. It will be found both interesting
and instructive.
The Savaaath Morning News.
This sterling Democratic paper,
in its issue of the 23d inst, furnishes
abundant evidenoe of ita very wide
circulation. We were highly gratified
at the unquestionable proofs adduced
of its great popularity. The Jfews
well deserves the patronage it re
ceive* and more, too. It is, in overy
respect—in qppeaiunoe, in mechanical
execution, as well as in matter—a
model paper in our State.
One of the proprietors of The Sun
commenced his business intercourse
with the world as a salesltoy of the
Savannah Mtcs. Many changes have
taken place sinoe then. Wo are, how
ever, rejoiced to boo, amidst all of
them, that this old organ of the De
mocracy is not only prosperous, but
remains truo as steel to the old Jef
fersonian creed. May its days be
long and its Bhadow never bo less.
MARIETTA FEMALE COL
LEGE.
ON THE WING.
Another Letter fro ns "Ogle
thorpe»—The West with its
Wealth—The School -Mailer
A broad —Missionaries from
South Carolina wanted—Val
landlfham—Pittsburg with Ita
Dust and Smoke—The Biggest
Corporation In America—The
Summit of the Alleghenies—
The Pennsylvania Dutch aud
their Barm- Girard College,
he., he.
Or. Urkk Pitm'i
Kknnbsaw Hours, Marietta, Qa.
July 24th, 1871.
Editors Sun : The examinations
of the preparatory classes of the Fe
male Oollege were oonducted this
morning by Mr. Bogers in Nioholas
HalL Considering that the inatitn-
tion ia comparatively in its infancy,
the exercises this morning are oalou
lated to oommend the school to pub
lic favor.
The classes in spelling, geography,
grammar and music, the only on<
we witnessed, acquitted themselves
with oredit. The profioienoy of many
of the younger girls in grammar
remarkable. We were specially im
pressed by the thorongh system of
teaching and training adopted, and
rigorously pursued by the gentleman
ly principal, Mr. Rogers. In those
studies, which have engaged their at
tention, his students seem to be as
well grounded as their teacher, so
thorough has been their instruction.
The sermon last evening by Dr.
Loviok Piero* on the degeneracy of
society had a large and attentive au
dieuce. It is wonderful with what
foroo and effect this veteran of eighty-
seven yean in tha cause of Christi
anity expounds and enforoas his doc
trine upon the wayward of the pres
ent day,
Tho Kennesaw House iseutertain-
iug a number of guest* pilgrims in
search of health and repose and the
delights of this mountain climate.
The Monday morning’s issue of
Thb Sun is eagerly sought here by
the oitixaui and visitor* it being tho
ouly Monday issue within reaeh.
Mon* Axon.
Tko Now Poet.
The real name of the new Califor
nia poet, “ Joaquin Miller,” isOin-
esnnatnsHinerMiUe* and his father’s
home ia Empire City, Oregon. The
poet has been inooeaeively a Califor
nia miner, proprietor of a "pony ex-
prea* over the mountain* editor of a
Democratic paper in Eugene Oily,
attorney-at-law in Oanyon City, ana
county judge of Grant county. jSe
married, about 186*. a young lady;
named Minnie Myiti* who had acj
quired reputation as a writer of rer-'
•et. Iu 1870 ho separated from his
wife, leaving her wSthtwo children
piwded for iu Oregon, and set out
via New York, for London, where he
h« sinoe reeded. He is represented
to be as impulsive and reekleas as
Myron, and predicted in some fore-
well Iums addressed to hia wife, and
published in the Oregon State Jour
nal, that he would have "a "«wm»
mwng the princely tmK ,
Philadelphia, July 21,1871
Editors Sow: Sinoe my last loiter from
Louisville, Ky., I have traveled through
the States of Indiana, Ohio and Penn
•jlvania, and am now a sojourner in the
City of Brotherly Love. Tho West,
whore it is said our oorc crib, and smoko
bouses are built, is now in the midst of
the harvest kmod, and the toil, of tillage
here were never crowned with a richer
reward. The broad field, are waving
with their golden sheave* and the vast
forest, of corn promise the greatest alum-
danos.
The vivid piotnre of the Psalmist is a
reality in this region. The (pastures are
olothed with flooks, tho valloys also are
oovored with oorn; they shout for joy,
they alio ting.
The Western States are the granary of
the continent; and by reason of their
immense agricultural resources are des
tined to hold the balance of power in
Amerioa. The South will always bo a
■lave to tbe West till sho learns the wie-
dom which lies in the cultivation of
oereala.
I would advise no man to more to
Indiana. It ia an unproductive and un
inviting region, and the masses of the
people are ignorant, rode and fanatical.
Juat think of the poople themselves pro
nouncing their own State Ja-derimnee,
and their own oapital -Tndianorpolis.”
If a hundred schoolmasters and mission
aries oou id be sent from Georgia or
South Carolina to oertain portions of this
State, they might achieve a noble work
in the way of enlightening and chris
fasnlilag the population.
At Iudianopoli* I parted with my
pleasant Atlanta companions, the Missee
H. and Major C.—they striking out for
Bt. Louis and I turning my eyes to the
is*
In rolling through the State of Ohio,
I oeught a glimpse of the grave of Val-
landigham. With all his eooentricities,
ha was a man of great mental power, and
he will alway* be ranked among the great
men of the country.
Columbus, the Capitol of Ohio, is
a large, commanding city. Tho Brute
House looms up grandly to the beholder.
We entered the State of Pennsylvania
amid thunder, fire and smoko. In Pitts
burg, the roar of a thousand furuooes
fills the air aud a canopy of blackness
oovers the oily. Unless a citizen has just
emergod from his bath room it is hard to
decide whether he is Oaucassian, Indian,
or negro.
The Pennsylvania Central is 855 miles in
length, and issmagnifioentlinoof travel.
It is the monied monopoly of tho State,
and tho richest corporation on the Conti
nent That Railroad King, Mr. Thomas
Soott, was very polite and kind to us.—
Wo here acknowledge his generous kind
ness
Whan wo reaobed tho summit of tho
Alleghenies, tbe econo was too sublime
and awful for deeoriptiou. On either
aide of the track tremonduous obasms
J awn in their horrid darkness, and far
own in the distanoc bolt, of green fields
and oloaten of smiling villages charm the
eye of the speotator. From this lofty
eminence the proudest monuments of
man dwindle into insignifioanco and tho
soul ia subduod by a sense of tho solemn
preaaooe of lthe Great Etomnl. Moun
tains proclaim the Almighty power of
God with an eloquonco that is ovorwhclm-
% a Pennsylvania Dutoh are proverbi
al for their industry and thriit, and there
is one peouliarity about them which I
must not omit to mention : their barns
are batter than their dwelling houses.—
WASHINGTON.
The Maryland Democratic Con-
ivcntisn—Tk. views of a late
Member of Congress, who tap*
left the Radical Camp—The
Savannah Defalcation.
(gpectel Correspondence of ths Atlanta Ually Btm |
Washington, )
July 21,1871. j
Tho brief proceedings the day be
fore yesterday of the Maryland State
Democratic Convention are remarka
ble, (people at a distance may very
properly think) for the omission to
place the ticket nominated upon any
sort of a political platform. Having
been on the spot at the time, I am
enabled to say that the-failure to re
iterate the true Jeffersonian doctrine
did not originate in any apprehension
of embarrassment from the extraordi
nary “Departures” proposed in other
quarters. Tho nominations made are
indisputably cquivolent to election
according to the forms of law, aud
would have been on whateveifplatform
might have been adopted; indeed,
there is not one democrat in a thousand
in Maryland but denounces tho low
ering of the Conservative stundard
single inch.
Doubtless the silence of the Con
vention may be attributed in' part at
least, to an almost universal fairs to
relieve, as much as possible, their mis
guided brethren elsewhere from the
odenm of a too plainly expressed an
tagonism to their heresies. It is ne
vertheless regarded here by thoughful
men as a blunder; and 1 am tho more
emboldened to say that the better pol
icy would have beon to have “spoken
out,” (even if “in meeting,”) than to
havo remained mum at so critical a
period; inasmuch as I happen to be
a native of the State, the conduct, in
this respect; of whose political repre
sentatives in Convention assembled,
I unhesitatingly condemn. In the
nominees I have the fullest confi
dence, personally and politically. But
tho public must be approached in the
dessperatc struggle ahead in plain
English. Wo must lay aside all
squecinishncs* and even sensitive
ness as to others if an impres-
ion upon the mosses be really in
ended. A spade must be called
spade—a thief a thief-—a tyrant a ty
rant, and a trickster a “Bill Nye.”
The other evening I was fairly put
to the blush by one who had formerly
been a Radical, and even a represen
tative in Congress, from the State of
Illinois: “Wny, sir,” said ho, “your
new party attitude gives me no
chance’ at all. I am convinced by
5 years’ experience that a centralising
Republic is a thing that never did and
never can exist, it is nondoscript—
a monster; centralism means despot
ism.” I felt ashamed of myself for
tho tame manner in which I hod en
deavored, on different occasions, to
express the same sentiment “If’ he
continued, “your party shall ignore
this great issue, I cannot act mth it,
The leaders of your party seem dis
posed to pursue a lino of policy
the I>emo«r»tio Conservative party.
For the admission of such men tKe
f ates to the inner temple should be
ept wide open. I know a plenty of
so-called Democrats to whom, were I
the janitor, I should close them upon
the first look, or the hearing of th£
first whining apology.
His view that the Supreme Court
cannot take up the question of the
validity of the amendments of the
Constitution and pronounce judg
ment upon them seems to me to he
correct. They can only decide par
ticular eases under them, as they may
arise.
As to matters hero of interest to
your State I observe that au inves
tigation has just been mode by
Treasury officials into the affairs of
the Collector of the Customs at Sa
vannah, Georgia, by which it ii re
vealed that Mr. Robb, the Collector,
is entirely innocent, while a defalca
tion of about 28,000 is traceable to
Wellman, the Deputy Collector, and
several subordinates. Cato.
Expressly Granted by the Con
stitution.
The former ere generally pro tooted by
lightning rod* whilst the letter rarely
here suoh protection. These people-
seem to pleoe e higher estimate on com
oribe end hay ataoks than on their wives
‘J’ end their children,
ics The chief attractions ol Philadelphia
ore familiar to your reader* end none has
impressed mo with a higher senso of
beauty and benevolenoe than the grounds
snd buildings of the Girard Collogo for
Orphans. This institution is well
omotrod end endorsod, and has prov
en an untold bleating to the unfor
tunate class for which it was
built.
A thorough oourse of English oluc,i-
lion ia here taught, including Frcnah and
Spanish. Some of the grad nates havo
become distinguished, not only in tho
mechanic art* but also in the civil de
partments of the Government. Thera
are about 480 pupils in connection with
il at the present time. I found more
than a hundred of thorn playing boll
when I was there. Stephen Girard, the
founder of this magnificent charity, was
a miser and a sort of infidel, and yet liia
huge fortune has been made to enbaerve
e noble end for the indigent of human
ity. OOLITHO
The New New Columbia and
Augusta Railroad
which must keep honest Republicans
ks, ex necessitate. Be
Tha Charleston Nows says: Col
R. R Bridget* the President of the
Washington, Columbia and Augusta
Kailroaa, we mentioned a few days
ago, has concluded to continuo his
road from Columbia, whither he will
soon run by the short out from Sum
ter, to Augusta. With a road already
in operation from Columbia to Au
gusta, this must be considered a bold
stroke. He proposes to run an air
line, as near as the nature of the
countiyr admit* and thus save from
twenty to twenty-five miles over the
Charlotte Boad, which runs to within
a few miles of Edgefield Court House,
and terminates at Qranitoville. Tho
new road will thus havo the advan
tage in distance and, therefore, in
time. For these reasons it will doubt
less have the greatest shore of the
passenger trad* and most likely car
ry the mail. As to through business,
neither road will break bulk in Ool
ibi* and each will carry just what
brer it can drnm up at its northern
Rerminns. The route will go mostly
through a section of country hitherto
undeveloped, taugetial now and then
with the Charlotte and August* and
perhaps to a slight degree with the
South Carolina Railroad. It mav,
therefor* reasonably exjpect a consid
erable local business. There will oer-
tainly be a lively competition in Ool-
umbi* and Angnsta bids fair to be-
come one of the greatest railroad cen
ters in the land.
out of your ranks,
sure that tho principle of distribu
tive powers botween the States and
the General Government has now
four million of voters.”
Upon the other issues which the
World newspaper of New York, and
the Patriot or this city, (both owned
bodily by the Tweed and Belmont
clique), dosiro to put in the very
front, my intelligent intorviower put
himself upon the record as follows:
“Look at tho thing yourself with
one eye half open, and you must see
that reform in the civil service is a
meaningless platitude—that tho
“tariff” can no more be made a polit
ical tost in the Northwest than the
Christian religion. The Radicals in
that quarter go far ahead of tho Dem
ocrats in Pennsylvania, or even those
in the Mineral Districts of Maryland,
iu favor of free trade! I dare not tell
my people that this is my main ob
jection to tho dominant party. This
whole matter has been discussed by
master minds, including Calhoun,
McDuffie, and Hayncon the one side,
and the immortal Webster on the
other, and not a voter was controled
by it The ‘judicious tariff, with in
cidental protection’ dodge of Gen.
Jackson, put in the shade the whole
of such misterly arguments.”
Utterly astonished to hear from
such a source, suoh sensible and liber
al expressions of sentiment, I begged
to bo informed as to tho modus opc-
randi ho thought available, by which
the conservative party, which utterly
repudiates all resort to disordor, much
less military force, oonld avoid diffi
culty in bringing back and limiting
the Federal Government to its legiti
mate functions in view of what are
called the 141h and 15th Amend
ments to the Constitution. I must
here give his ideas in his own words:
“ I regard these amendments as void
de jure, but doubt tjje power of the
Judicial Department of tho Govern
ment so to declare them: but Constitu
tional provisions are inoperative until
Legislative authority, by specific laws,
shall give them vitality. Take, for
ox ample, (said he) the not to enforce
negro suffrage. Even by the provis
ions of tho Fftoonth Amendment the
actin transferring the jurisdiction for
offences against it to the Federal
Court* instead of the State tribunals,
would donbtlcs* upon the success of
the Democratic party, be declared void
by the Federal Judioiary. The whole
question, then, of suffrage must needs
be left to the State Legislatures. No
man can doubt that the States would
deal liberally with their negro popula
tion. At least, intelligence ana prop
erty should' be fairly represented. It
is to the unconstitutional mode bv
which negro suffrage is enforced bv
Federal authority and F'edcral bayo
nets, that objection is chiefly made—
uot at all to the rights which should
be aooorded by the proper authority
to the different classes of our popula
tion.”
I confess that tho views of this
further opponent of Democratic prin
ciples are such os to entitle him to be
received with outstretched turns by
At this time, when traitors and
conspirators are falsifying the history
of the formation, as well as the na
ture and character of the States-
Union, we should be careful not to
indulge in such loose expressions as
“expressly granted by tho Constitu
tion.” There is a broad and vital
distinction between the Constitution
and the parties to that Compact. The
Constitution contains only the enu
meration of powers, while the parties
to the Compact possess the sovereign,
inherent and inalienable right to
delegate or grant the powers therein
enumerated The Constitution grants
nothing; it is simply a compact, and
the parties to it arc each State, with
each and every other State. Each
State is grantor and grantee, receiving
from each and all tho other States
precisely what, in its turn, it con
cedes to each and all the rest, thus
forming a galaxy of co-eqiml, but
still sovereign an a independent State*
united by a common bond.
By this Compact the States created
for themselves a common govern
ment—an agent or trustee of the
powers delegated—to be exerted in
the common interests and used for
tho common purposes of all the
States equally; making the govern
ment thus created the agent and rep
resentative of the powers specified in
the compact between them.
Tho Constitution, then, instead of
granting any powers, merely enume
rates the powers granted by the States,
while the General Government is the
creature—the result—of the powers
delegated. The States are the sover
eign parties to the compaot and tho
source of all tlio powers enumerated
in it, and they alone are the rightful
authorities to grant powers and privi
leges to their agent, and not the Con
stitution, which only specifics and
defines the powers which the State*
severally and voluntarily granted.
Tho State, then expressly grants to
each other tho powers enumerated,
and agree that they will exercise,
through a common agent, those pow
ers for the benofit of all tho States
conjointly; and they cannot be right
fully bound by anything beyond or
outside of thoso terms; as allowing
others, thp Government for instanoe
to transcend tho proscribed limits
agreed upon, virtually abrogates the
contract and substitutes another in
its place.
In this epoch of usurpation aud
imperialism, and attempts to subvert
free Government, it is not sufficient,
to Bay the powors expressly granted
by the Constitution. We must get at
the source of power—tho States—as
thepunclus salient of the superstruc
ture known as the Federal Govern
ment It must bo distinctly enuncia
ted that tho States through their dep
uties framed tho Constitution, and
severally and separately ratified it, as
Mates, in opposition to the falsehood
that the poople as a whole made tho
Constitution, which is now being
strenuously advocated for the purpose
of justifying consolidation, encroach
ments upon the reservation of the
States, covering up the crimes of re
construction and the fraudulent
amendments. The heresy of the
imperialists is, that the State sover
eignties wore merged into the Gene
ral Government in tho formation of
tho States-Union, and that conse
quently the Government is sovereign,
supreme! But this fallacy explodes
itself when it comes to adding an
amendment to the Constitution, for
it requires tho same powers to
amend that created the instrument;
aud if the people of the United
States as a whole created tho Consti
tution, the whole would be required
to amend it. Yet tho Constitution
declares that a ratification by threc-
fonrths of tho States is necessary to
the adoption of an amendment.
To alter or amend a compact, re
quires the exercise of the samo extent
of powers that was required to form
it; for every alteration or amendment
i* to that extent, a new government.
The formation of a constitution of
government, or amendment thereto,
admits and implies to tho fullest ex
tent, tho existence of absolute, un
qualified, unconditional and unlimited
sovereignty. The States, being both
before and after the formation of the
Constitution such political bodie* the
power to amend or decide upon tho
validity of amendment* rests exclu
sively with them, as they alone havo
the authority to grant powers, aud
not the Constitution which rosnlted
from the agreement between thorn.—
Butter County (Ohio) Democrat, July
20, ’70.
der ? Don’t yon see those flashes of
lightning ? There is a storm gatlier-
ingl Every man to bis duty! How
the waves rise and dash against the
ship! The air is dark!—the tempest
rages!—our masts are gone!—the
ship is on her beam ends! What
next?” This appeal instantly brought
the sailors to tlieir feet with a shout,
“ The longboat!—take to the long
boat!”
OREGON POLITICS.
A Voice from the Far West.
-wu ISN, muq, msq, s. its new
UKisux.uux.mn.
Pamuian-Ooan tout and am; Bio
«ul«i and im; Oil to good reAulu, Iq<*»X,
Gate *91° NoUmm quiet without decldod change.
TrUsbu per .tenm-whltc «. qd.
Bostob, July 34.—The following in a comparative
ititBBfOt of the earning* of the Union Pacific Hall-
road: Earning* of June 1871, $728,174 84; earnings
of June. 1870,$T46.469 01. Expenses June. 1871,1*70,-
123 6G; expense* /one, 1670, $119,161 6L From Jan
uary 1st to June 30th, 1871, the earning* were $8,410,-
284 58; expenses $1,186,887 S3. From Janaary latte
June 80th 1870, ebe earning* were $8,707,818 00;
expenses 2,730,837 80.
lUiatelianeone.
AMERICAN STANDARD
SCHOOL SERIES.
SOBOOL BOOBS
PUBLISHED BY
Chief Justice Chose has formally
given in his adhesion to the Demo
cratic party, and supports the “New
Departure” with might and main.—
Of course he would, as he was the
most instrumental of any of the mon
grels in securing the adoption of those
miqnitie* It is no departure for
Chase to endorse a rascality, and we
don’t fuel flattered that he secs fit to
pat the Democratic party on the back
for the only mean thing which it
ever perpetrated.—States Rights Dem
ocrat (Oregon), July 7, '71.
OOMMBHOIAI,
Fiaaaet and Trade.
Bern Oman, July 24, 1871.
financial.
Spxcir—There is very little doing
specie in the oily. Broken are paying
•1.10 tor gold and $1.05 for silver. Not
mnch is offering.
oomnmem.
Bosoms—For the past two or three
weeks business has been remarkably doll.
There is not much demand for anything
outside of breadstuff*
Even the usual wagon trade has greatly
fallen off, owing probably to the fact that
farmers are busy with their crops ; also
to the fact that moat of them have hotter
supplies of meat of their own raising
than ia customary with them.
THE GRAIN MARKET.
Wheat—There is no wheat offering
except some lota of Western. The crop
in Georgia, Tennessee and the Southern
part of Kentucky was a failure ; hence
onr millers and merchants moat look to
tho West for their supplies.
We saw a prominent miller from Rome
a few days ago who informed ns that ho
had just returned from St. Lonis where
he had made arrangements for enongh
wheat to keep his mill going. Western
wheat in the market brings $1.65.
Corn—The stock of corn ia equal to
tho demand. The demand is moderato.
It is quoted at $1.00@1.03.
Oats—Outs are selling at 76o.
PROVISION MARKET.
Meats—The stock of meats is good
but the domnnd is very light. The mer
chants complain of very small sales
lrnrdly enough to keep the wheols of
trado well greased.
Baoon—Shoulders are quoted at 8 Jo,
clear rib aides lOo; clear sides 10|c.
Bulk Mbats—Shoulders 7|o; clear rib
sides 9c; dear sides 9|o.
Lard—In barrels 12io; in cans 13|o
in buckets 14}c.
BBRASSTCPFS.
Flour—There is more demand for
flour than there is for any other articlo.
The supply is light and prices are stiff
with an advancing tendency. It is gen
erally believed on the streets that thero
has beon an advance of 60c a barrel in
the Western markets during the put few
days; bnt the advanoe was not felt hero
to-day. We quote superfine at $6.60@
$6.76; Extra $T@$7.60; Family $8.50@
$8.75, and Fonoy at $10.
OROCRRIBB.
The market is well supplied with every
thing in the grocery line, bnt the same
dullness is felt that is common to all other
branches of trade.
Sugar—We quote “A” at 14|o; extra
‘C” 14je; New Orleans Brown 12 to 13jc.
Copfrs—Rio is quoted at 16)@18|o,
aocordiag to quality.
MARKETS BV TELEGRAPH,
, NOON.
Liverpool, July 3^ Koon.—Cotton market cp®n*J,
upland* 9It'd, Orlwaa 9»,'d.
Lateb—Cotton firm ; sale* 18,000 bale*, nearly due
from Now Orleans, 9 7-104.
London, July $4, Noon.—SocnriMee unchanged.
T*Uon 48044.
Faei*, July 2L—Hon tea S6f 12c.
NewYoee, July 24.—Cotton dull and nominal;
middling upland* 21, Orloana 21*4; aaloa 144 balog.
Produce—Flour dull. Wheat heavy. Oorn quiet
FnovmoN*—Pork dull; $ 14.60014.62. Lard quiet
Turpentine etrong; 66057. JBeein quiet and Ann
$3.12H for strained.
Freight* steady.
Financial—Stock* dull and steady. Government*
dull end * toady. Stato Bend* very dull. Money
easy; 3. Gold heavy; ll*{. Exchange; long 10\,
short 10 V Specie shipment* to-day $886,000, in
cluding 1190,000 in Hlver.
AFTERNOON.
Liverpool, July 24, Evening.—Cotton closed quiet
ami steady.
Lerd49w8d.
Lovoyolm, July 24.—Produce—Flour steady.
Com, sacks, 66c.
Pro visions—Quiet Pork, mess, $11 Bacon—
shoulders 6\'c, dear sides 8 <*09. Lard 101*011 *6
Whisky ,92c.
St. Lous. July 24—Produce—Flour firm. Corn
dull; *ack* 660.
Provision* — Pork lower; $1410015.00. Bacon,
only Jobbing, shoulder* 7, dear aides 8*.
New Yore. July 24.^Cotton quiet low
steady;sale* 1,907bales; uplands 20\e.
Cincinnati, July 24.—Produce—Flour market OB'
settled. Corn, market heavy and depressed
Urge rsosipts; 640650.
PnovmoNs—Pork, prices nominal. Lard 10.V-
Bacon, advance asked bnt not established; shoulders
8X dear rib aides 8.S'.
Whisky; 9»o.
Nsw Orleans, July 24.-Sugar in good
osmmon 0*. choice 12)4012)4. Code# dull; 1JM
18\e.
Cotton—market dull, prioas nominal; middlings
*W0»X: net reoelpts 991 bales, gross 964; export*
to Rouen 82. coastwise 8,407; sales 1.400; stock
Nrni QUreertiarmrnta.
REFRIGERATORS.
NORTH GEORGIA
FEMALE COLLEGE,
IVY 8T11KKT,
A? J^'aNNI* D. HAIL*.
Principal*.
A FIVE ROOM COTTAGE
AT AUCTION!
I WILL sell on the premise*, at 6 o’clock 1
day evening, 27th in*t„ on Loyd street betwoen
Peter* and Fair, three minutes walk from the Pas
senger Depot, a neat, conveniently arranged five
room Cottage, with Kitchen attached. The entire
promisee are in first rale oomliUon. The sale will
bo without reserve. Titles perfect Terms cash.
Jy26-3t O. w. daik.
Beal Estate Agent
ED. HOLLAND. J. G. JONES.
HOLLAND & JONES,
(Successors to the fade J. H. Purtell,)
MERCHANT TAILORS,
No. 7, Peachtree Street,
I NFORM their friends that to make room for 1
entirely new stock, which will arrive shout tl
first of September, they will sell for
The next Thirty Day* below Coot,
all their elegant stock of Cloths, made up Into Gar
ments. Also, their fine stock of Gent’s Furnishing
Goods. Jy26-3t
J. S. OLIVER & CO.,
Commission Merchants,
Corner Forsyth A Alabama Streets.
JJAVE FOB SALE AND TO ABBIYE,
Choice Northwestern WHEAT. Can fill orders at
short notioe.
Also. COBN, BACON. LAUD, HAY, te.
AgenU Marietta Paper Mills and Howard LIMB.
WESTERN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD.
QN aud after this day, July 23, Rchedule No. 11,
leaving Atlanta 3:46, r. it,, will run overy day, Sun.
day induded. Palace Sleeping Cara attached. ONLY
ONE CHANGE TO NEW YORK. Passengers leav
ing Atlanta 2:45, r. M., by this routo, arrive in New
York at 4:34, p. m., forty-nine hours and forty-nine
minutes from Atlanta—over three hours quicker than
any other route.
Schedule No. 4 will run Sundays from Dalton, ar
riving at Atlanta 2:20, r. u
Jy24.2w
THE ATLANTA
Ice Manufacturing Co.
18 NOW BEADY TO SELL ICE
AX THEIIl DEPOT,
At the Bridge on Broad Street,
Where all orders will be received and Tickets sold.
MCE SEJTT BIT RAIL
TO ALL
CONVENIENT POINTS.
TERMS CASH.
AU orders should bo addressed to
EPHRAIM TWEEDY,
GENEBAL SUPERINTENDENT.
P. 8.—Orders for tbs delivery of Ico at roeldonoca
RospoctAilly Wolieitod.
Jy24.2w
John P. Me
)HN r. moRTON & Co..
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
Reading and Swelling:
But ler'sAmir ican Spelling Book
Butler’s 1st Book in Si>rlHnr
and Beading,
First School
Second School
Third School
Butler’s ATeu)
Header.
Butter’s -Tele
Header.
Butler’s JTeie
Header.
Butler*. Goodrich Itoadcn,
JPete First Reader.
ATese Second Reader.
JTete Third Reader.
•Few Fourth Reader.
APew Fifth Reader.
JTew Sixth Reader.
Grammar and XUietorlo,
Butter’s Introductory Oram,
mar.
Butter’s Practical Grammar
BonnelPs First Lessons m Com
position.
BonnelPs Manual of Compost,
tion.
Arithmetics and Algobra i
loienc's Primary Arithmetic.
Towne’s Intermediate Arith
metic.
Towne’s Mental Arithmetic.
Towne’s Practical Arithmetic.
Key to Same.
Towne’s Algebra.
Key to Same.
Miscellaneous :
WEBSTER’S SPELLER AND DEFINED.
NELSON’S BOOK-KEEPING.
KAVANAUGH’S ORIGINAL DRAMAS.DIALOGUES.
TABLEAUX-VIVANT8, AO.
BRONSON'S ELOCUTION.
BARBEE’S GEOLOGY.
BUTLER’S COMMON SCHOOL SPEAKER.
Our school-books are cleclrUyptd.bomd and printed
in LouittilU. They are tho work of Southern au.
than. Ours is tbe ONLY Publishing House 8outl»
of the Ohio engaged in the publication of school
books. Those tacts should incline teachers of the
South and West to examine our books before coming
to a conclusion. Wo invite a careful couipariKou
with others. feeiing satisfied that our publications
people than
e fully meet the wants of
7 “
V iruinia, Kentucky,
.. ”, 7 ” iiTOMituw srnuut
iMiiUj aU>ffUe * ami &Ch001 Rep0rU ' CbrrojwnJrMci’
%* B
tpocicd r.
JOHN P. MORTON & CO., PnWtehcrs.
130 and 13 8 Main street, £+nisei lie, Ky,
Sold by all booksellers.
Represented in Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi
by Mr. ISRAEL PUTNAM,
Jy6-lm Formerly of Qriflln, Ga.
J. J. KNOTT, M. D„
QFFICE OVER JOHN KEELY’8, corner White
hall and Huntor streets.
RESIDENCE—Collins street, betwoen Cain snd
my23-3m
Steam Pump and Boiler
FOR _SALE.
A WORTHINGTON STEAM PUMP, BOILER,
and Piping, ail oomplete. Apply )o
.. K. SEAf *
TURNIP_ SEEDS.
1 OOO T.'RW 0F CHOICE VARIETIES
IjVVV -Ul >k3. at my Agricultural Ware
house, on Broad stroet
Mark
Jy22-2t
W. Johnson.
pt.AlMS COLLECTED. - a. Tin «
\y formed f«vur»tjlo connection with > rc,i>on»i-
Me Attorney .1 WMhintfton, D. 0., I wilt Me nnj
prosecute ail claims entrusted to my care against tho
United States, before tho Southern claims i*
States, before Uio Southern Claims Coin mis
slon^or any Department of tho Government Office
“ oot, Atlanta, Ga.
D. P. HILL,
Attorney at Law.
l Marietta, near Pcacbti'co a
Jyll-lm
PROPRIETOR.
H. B,-.GOODS SENT TO ANY FABT OF THE
m ’-nr* JjltMm Hi!
IB OOLUllnuB
For Sale.
One EIOHTH INTEREST
8TEAM PLAINING MILL,
apply to n. w. champatne,
WMm Colombo., On.
Georgo Whitfield was once preach
ing to a seafaring audience in New
York, when, suddenly assuming a
nautical air aud manner that were ir
resistible, he broke in with, “Well,
my boy* we have a dear sky, and are
making fine headway over a smooth
sea before a light breeze, and we shall
soon‘lose sight of lantL But what
means this sudden lowering of the I
ftiTm dark f C, T ari8in ! raw *.-Oc*,n. and—;—-
from benuothj the western horizon t aim* ux.u*;art is* apwt, rata
Hark! Can t you hear distant (bun-1 *»;•»*«», •umasms.
Amum, ratj M. -CoUon morlwt
MX hi Liverpool middllnct; Mb* 10 Ulc; re-
ceipts 10.
Cittunw, July K-Cotton, middling* I9* e;
Mi rsosipts Uli exports coestwlss 886) sates B;
nok 3019 bate*
Mona*, Jaly 24.—Cottop market dmO, nominal;
it*r
Business STotixts.
I AM GLAD HI Hill COME.
•*—* ruswHmmp* Im tha State ml
•nr chairs, and make them look
SMI® you! Will pey for a bottom. No
chsrg^forjanaahingchalre whan l cane them, and
lySoMertnf, Kami I me Mrpmirinf, ,t e .
five satisfaction. Furniture covers cut, mmA*. ---
a fit warranted. Hair and spring mattresses made is
2JJ*4srT^iii n 2r s! tonxiture and up-
£3.5-22**
LUMBER! LUMBER!
W E hive on hand a lsrgo lot of Lumber, Shin-
glen. Laths, White Pine Doors and Sash. Also,
wires hundred thousand (300,000) feet of Southwest
Georgia Flooring thoroughly aoasouod. which wo aro
selling at reduced prices. Oifioe and yard oorncr
Forsyth aud Huntor Streets.
June27-dlm. MURPHY A MERIUAM.
A. JTUAttALHON,
corner of Marietta and broad streets.
1 AND COMMISSION
rurniture nt> ^ wbolo# * le ud retail dealer in
Consign merits solicited. Cash advances on oou-
Julfildlw
Gordon, Willis k Co., Bankers.
O. Bs HOOKS'
CONTRACTOR FOR BRICK AND
^ OI ^* all classes, plastering and
Business Men!
A.U. ponona doing boaliMu In Um dtp of Attain,,
aoUltad to com. Mono, to my oaico «n,l
Kn«w thalr licnae, al«o m,k« rafturn. on quarterly
■alrObr “‘•S'terter .ndln, Jum.«0, 1871, mid p.y
t *°**frU l ng to attend to the above by
> °-H-d on by tha Hanlul
with oust oi fl fa added. 8. B. LOVE,
Clerk of City.
HITCHCOCK A WALDEN,
WB0LM4U AUD UTUL MUUM a
Books, and Stationery
M PEACHTREE STRUT,
(FOWELL’S BLOCK,)
ATLANTA, GA.
XT'EBP on hand a lane and decant
JPL ■tmhofgTATlONKBT.arh m IWlS,.
nm tfank at tnltet netted Burn Boota.
S2rS
E. J
cnnsttehn
mbni
»fm. mackie,
Painter and Decorator,
J* 04 '*. Whitehall atroot, it-
v/jtorn,thank, to hi. old patron, for former
IkVMs, aud hopes by attend *
continuance of the same.
To Parties Desiring to Build
T HE undcmlrnod would rMpactfollT Inform the.
dtimn, of Atlanta that ha U now prepared to.
**. CHS MnUAl.r, ~-
~ mpwrtmn,I Ml,. W mil
™ rimm amm (key auu mfeA la
0V$la
^“e* 1 W® command a picked eeto# hands, and
J??. 1111 < lTl °8 general satisfaction.
. Sfr.***^*®**^® - J°hn L. Grant, Lougky
* Robinson, sod Fay A Oorput, Architects.
JOH.T C. -TtCHOl. S,
O^FlCK^IN AIK-LINE UOUga, PRYOR STREET
YHOS. HAMPTON, B. D. BAUCOHS, P. $, BOBSOCM.
Drake's fYrrk Jfttm.
F. A. B A ll li 0 U B it CO.,
jJtALBU IN
FLOUR,
MEAL,
* SHIP STUFF,
my.ratAY, nwreraF.
ft
frtlki