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THE DAILY SUN.
Monday Mousing July 31
SUN-STROKES.
The woman question -What’s he
worth ?
9&* u There ia much waste in life,” says
a writer, but lie had no reference to the
in tuts of some of our belles.
Way* A woman in New York goes to the
l>enitentiaiy two yours for being unable to
pay her board.
BQX.. Bowen cun subside. An Indiana
clergyman lias been found who had seven
wires and there arc twenty-seven States
to hear from.
As soon as Butler gets sober
enough “ho will publish a manifesto,
planting himself squarely on the prohib
itory platform."
Hs$r “Women in arms 1" exclaimed
Pogue, laying aside the morning pa
per—“they are always welcome to be in
my arms."
“There has been nothing like Grant’s
Ban Domingo message since the days of
Jaekson, ’exclaims Bimon Cameron. The
public is unable to discern anything like
in, or before tko days of Jackson.
Way* - The New York Globe intimates
that “we have more gospel than we know
what to do with." That is true when we
consider the kind that most ^prevails in
somo localities.
&2>“- There is nothing like getting into
the papers correctly. Tho New York
Herald of tho 27th says: “H. J. Kimbull,
of Savannah, Georgia, is stopping at the
Fifth Avenue Hotel."
Some of the Eastern papers have
lmd tho report that Ben Butler was
drowned. The story was a most improb
able one, for Butler is so gassy that if all
tho spoons he took away from Now Or
leans were crammed into his pockets he
would still float.
flay-The Philadelphia Age says: * ‘When
tho cholera is raging in ono part of tho
world, tho yellow fever in another and
the small-pox in a third, it is important
that our quarantine laws should be rigid
ly enforced.” The Age appears to forgot
that the fourth quarter has its peculiar
nllliction in the official person of Grant.
THE NEW AMERICAN POET*
It is announced that General But
ler has “promised, if he should be nom
inated and elected, and if Boston should
cast its vote against him, to mako that
city os hot for rumscllers as he made
New Orleans for Rebels." He evidently
means to leave not a spoon for the “rum
sellers" to stir their toddies with.
It is said that Phil Sheridan was
made a LL. D. on account of his know
ledge of cannon law.” Pogue says he
thought it was on account of his know
ledge of the use of friction matches, to
gether with the dexterity with which he
kills old Indian men and women and
little Indian babies.
A correspondent says: “Though
Quakers do notdesire for themselves music
and singing of hymns in their worship,
yet Dr. Painter’s family, because they
find manic attractive to the Indians, play
and sing with them with much spirit.”—
Which goes to prove thnt tho poet
correct when lie said, “Music lmth charms
to sootho the savage breast."
The New York Tribune says: “Mr.
William Dugan, once a Democratic mem
ber of the Board of Education in Cleve
land, Ohio, has been sent to tho House
of Correction for confirmed drunkenness
and incurable vagrancy." The Tribune
neglects to mention that Dugan joined
the Radicals some years since, which
his first step down, and his course has
been steadily downward ever since.
Tho Louisville Courier-Journal
says, “All of the editorial articles of Mr.
Stephens in The Atlanta Sun are signed
'A. H. S.’ This is uuusal, but as the
other oditors of The Sun are unwilling
to be regarded tyi palitical lunatics, it is
well enough.” It needs no distinction
marks of this kind to designate tho ’‘po
litical lunatics" of Courier-Journal, ns
they can be traced in every editorial and
paragraph in tho paper.
Act?* Speaking of Akormau’s mission
to North Carolina, tho New York Sun
(Radical) says: “He has no more light to
interfere with tho question of remodel
ling the Constitution of North Carolina
than ho has to dictate who shall be Pre
mier of England." The Sun apparently
loses sight of the fact that Grant, Aker-
man, cl <d, have adopted tho following
couplet os their motto:
••No pent np Utic*contracts onr powers.
But the whole boundless coutiuent in ours."
ted Messrs. E. & H. T. Anthony, of
New York, have made a most interest
ing and valuable contribution to art, by
the collection nud publication of a very
large and magnificent Rories of stereo-
Rcopio views of the Yosemito Valley, and
other noted scenery in the grand Western
part of America. These views are from
photographs by an artist scut out by the
firm named above, and they are gotten up
in a style superior to anything American
or foreign that has yet found its way to
Atlanta. In the list are found views of
the famous Yosomite Valley, with its im
mense water-falls, deep nvines and high
mountains, and those vast trees which are
so great a marvel that it was long after
their discovery before tbe public would
believe the stories told about them. The
series of views is the largest ever pub
lished, and they bring before tho eye
correct representations of natural scenery
which, for beauty and grandeur, has no
equal in the world. The Messrs. Antho
ny deserve the thanks of the public for
their great enterprise, and consequent ex
pense, in getting out this set of views.
They aro large, beautifully printed and
superbly mounted, and ore worth very
much more than the price at which they
are put upon the market. These views
are for sale by Messrs. Phillips t Crew,
of this city.
Joaqiiim Miller.
Tho London Saturday Review has a
long critical articlo upon the poems of
Joaquim Miller, uu American, hitherto
unknown, who has created a sensation in
London. It says
A now poet has come to us from a now
country. Our present impression of Cal
ifornia literature, possibly founded on
an imperfect acquaintance, is that up to
this time it has been principally corn
posed of journals ami mining reports.
The pioneers of the far west nave been
much too busy’in getting gold, clearing
forests, and exterminating Indians, griz
zly bears and each other, to find much
time for literature, especially for litera
ture of an imaginative sort. “Where
this was written," soys tho author, “rhym
ing i8 conside.ed a mild tyno of insan
ity." In a preface, which is at once
modest and candid, Mr. Miller tells us
how and where his pooms were com
posed :
“These lines were written on the rough
edges of tho frontier, amid the scenes de
scribed, where I have spent all but the lost
few months of my life. There walled
from tho world by soas on ono hand, and
the Sierra Nevada mountains in savage
grandeur on the other, tho heart would
sometimes hunger after a gentler life,
and the soul go out after tho sweet
ideal, a dove ou tho waters, and bring
back dreams, and with them clothe foots
and tales taken from the lips of moun
tain men as they sat and told them around
their camp and cabin fires. Of such cre
ation are these songs.
“The city of Mexico was my Mecca,
and San Francisco to mo a marvel of mag
nificence and civilization. This last sum
mer I crossed the Rocky Mountains, and
for the first time saw Now York; a great
place for cheap books, and a big den of
small thieves."
We quote tlicso prefatory lines because
they explaiu better than anything clso
could the nature of tho, volume. What
ever tho faults of stylo which disfigure
Mr. Miller’s poems—and they are many
and flagrant—there can be no doubt that
he possesses the genuino poetic faculty.
Ho writes because ho can not help it—tho
best reason of all—perhaps the only jus
tifiable reason for composing pootry.—
Tho snowy Sierra and two tropical canon,
tho roving, adventurous borderer’s life,
tho stirring tales of hunt and foray, all
tlicso supplied materials pregnant* with
romanco and poetry, and only required
to bo transmuted iuto words. This Mr.
Miller has attempted, and tho fact that
his lines glow with tropical passion, and
that his descriptions transport ns in im
agination to the scenes among which they
were composed, compel us to forgive him
for the lawlessness with which ho tram-
pels on tho conventional limitations of
art.
Tho poems aro but seven in number,
and among them the first two are, to onr
mind, considerably tho best. Tho first
is entitled “Arizonian,” and is a tale told
by a gold digger to an English ’squire.—
Ho describes his lonely hut in tho west
ern gold region:
The pines bow'd over, the stream bent under
The cabin covered with thatches of palm;
Down in a canon so deep, the wopder
Was what it could know in its clime but calm.
Down in a canon so cleft asunder
By sabor stroke in tho young world’s prime,
It looked as if broken by bolts of thunder,
Rivou and driven by turbulent time.
And this is tho land whoro tho sun goes down,
And gold is gathered by tido and by stream.
And maidens are browu as the cocoa brown,
And life in a love, and love Is a dream;
W’hcre tho winds come in from the far Cathay,
With odor of spices and balm and bay,
and summer abideth for aye and aye.
Nor comes in a tour with tno stately June,
And cornea too late and returns too soon.
His only companion is an Indian girl,
who had saved his life in a desert of New
Mexico, and who had followed him here.
It is the sultry eve of a great thunder
storm, the take of gold has been lighter
than usual. He was fretted, and thought
lessly let slip iu her presence the confes
sion that it was for the lovo and remem
brance of an English maiden that he had
been toiling all these years. Hot, angry
words follow; tho storm is brewing, and
tho thunder pealing ominously among
the crags far overhead, but she
stands proudly aloof by the torrent brink
and refuses to seek tho shelter of the
cabin, till at last (but we must not spoil
the description):
(he air web heavy,
Ami hot aud thrcat’niug ; tho very heaven
Wan holding itn breath ; and booit iu a bevy
Hid under my thatch ; and bird* were driven
Iu clouds to the rocks lu a hurried whirr
Aft I peer’d down by tlio path for her.
Sho stood like a bronze bent over the river,
The proud eyes fix’d, the passion unspoken.
When the heavens broke liko a groat dyke broken ;
Tbeu, cro I fairly bad time to give her
A shout of warning, a nulling of wind
Aud the rolling of clouds with a deafening din,
Aud a darkness that bad been black to the blind,
Canle down, as I shouted •• Como iu J como inJ
Como under tho roof, come up from the river,
As up from a grave—como now, or come never!"
mol'd tops of the pines were as weeds,
d woods rock'd like to lake side reeds,
Aud tho world seem’d darken’d aud drown’d forever.
Ono fearful, dream-like vision of her, with
lifted hands aud “wild wide eyes," as tho
flood burst aud “ caught her hair as the
flax in a wheel," and then uotbiug more
till the next morning, when ho wakes
from a nightmare sleep and rushes to tho
river, whence
the flood had gono,
Idkc a thief, with only hi« tracks upon
The weeds aud glasses aud warm wot sand.
He hurries on, culling as he runs, to the
cauou’s mouth, and (hero at last ho ilnds
her lying “iu the surge where tho waters
met." lie gathers up his hoarded gold
and turns lus face eastward, always haun
ted by tho vision of that terrible night,
to seek the English girl for whom ho had
sacrificed the dark-skinned maiden who
loved him so well. After long wander
ings lie reached his native town, and
there ho sees standing at evening with
her pitcher by the old town pump, tho
form that he so well remembers. The
time which had furrowed his brow aud
grizzled his beard had wrought no change
iu her faco ; a doubt crosses his brain as
ho remembers the scoro of years that had
passed by, but bo cannot be mistaken iu
those features. He steps nearer, but she
does not recognize him :
So I lifted my voice, md 1 spoke aloud:
•Annette, my darling! Annette Maclood I"
She started, *bc stooped, she turn’d, amazed,
Hho Ht4>«*l all with wouder, with lu rcyea wild-wld".
Then turned In terror down the dark wayaidc;
And cried an ahe lied: “The inau ia crazed,
Aud cal la tho maiden name of my mother."
Thero is no need to tell tho story fur
ther, or to repoat tho woary. sa.1 refrain
of “ Vanitat raniMum," with which the
broken man introduces and ends his talc.
With Walker in Nicarauga” is a pas
sionate story of lovo aud adventure. The
poem is a very lino one, and contains ono
passage which is peiliiqw the best thing
in tlio wholo book, snd wksck it is im
possible to resist adding to our quota
tions, though we fear that they have al
ready stretched too great a length. Tho
following lines form part of a description
of a ride through a tropical forest:
The tree* iihook hinds high overhead,
ALd bow’d aud Intertwined aero*
Tho narrow way, white leave* and mom
And luscious fruit, goldhuod and red,
Through thft cool esuopy of green,
Let not one aunehait shoot between.
Birds hung and swung, green-robed snd rod.
Or droop’d iu curved huee dreamily,
Hainbowe reversed, from tree to tree.
Or eang low-hanging overhead—
Kang low, as if they eang and eltnt.
Bang faint, like some far waterfall.
And took no note of ua at aU,
Though ripe nuta crushed at every step.
How rau the monkeys through the leavce!
How rush'd they through, browu-clad and blue.
Like ihatUee burned through and through
The thread* * hasty weaver weaves!
How quirk they cast us fruits of gold,
Then loosen'd hand and all foothold,
And hung limp, limber, as if dead,
Hung low snd listless overhead;
And all the time, with half-oped eyes
Bent full on us in mute surprise,
Look’d wisely, too, as wise hens do,
That watch you with the head askew.
Aud walk d aud talk'd and hung and swung,
In crown of gold and coat of blue,
The widest fool that ever sung,
Or had a crown, or held a tongue.
Tho wholo poem glows with tkepossi'
aud ardor of youth. Wo aro earriod i
iu loose, swinging, vigorous lines, whioh
tell of tho victorious march of the adveu
turers, the discovery of tho hoary tempi
of the sun buried deep within tho quinine
wood, the rest in the white walled city by
the sea, the long, sweet days of rapturous
love. Then oornes the reverse; tho enemy
swoops down on tho unsuspecting oity,
tho remnant of the little band are driven
bleeding to the sea, and scarcely escape
in their boats; the hapless Monteznman
maid, who hod been parted from her lov
er in his harried flight, tries to follow bis
ship, but her tiny boat upsets whilo she
is trying in vain to attract his attention,
and it is only tho next morning that he
hears from a rough seaman of her death.
UEOKGIA IS KWH.
Augusta couuts up hor $10,651,470
worth of property and is happy.
A Jockey Club has been organized in
Augusta.
Savannah is having yacht raoee.
Ynclu’s what’s the matter.''
In the examination at the United States
Nuval Academy, A. C. Hodgson, of Ath
ens, stood third in a class of forty.
Mr. P. H. Brannon, a young lawyer of
ability, formerly of Columbus, has been
employed as editor of the Cronicla, pub
lished in Cleburne, Texas.
Tho Bainbridgo Argus says cotton is
opening very fast in that vicinity, and
thinks there will be new cotton in tho
market very soon.
Eev. Samuel H. Higgins, D. D., of Bal
timore, has been called to the pastorate
of the LaGrango Presbyterian Church,
so says tho Reporter.
Tho Athens Banner expects a largo
crowd of negroes to visit Athens this
week. They have heard that tho Alumni
are coming, and arc saving their cosh in
order “to seodat show.”
The Macon Telegraph and Messenger
says: Chas. Obediah Johnson, a notori
ous Griffin scallawag, lias sued the At
lanta Sun for $25,000 worth of defama
tion of character. If he gets 25 oents he
will realize at least 100 per cent, on his
oapital stock of that description.
Tho Waynesboro Ejiositor of tho 29th
says: On Tuesday last, a negro man, by
tlio name of Kelly, in the employment of
Mr. James Barrett, assaulted, with a pis-
pil, Mr. Haygood, overseer for tho same
gentleman. The negro was serionsly
wounded.
Tho Talbotton Standard of tlio 27th
says: Mr. Joo Williams, living near this
place, had his hands nearly burned off,
on last Sunday night, by astral oil. He
was attempting to fill a lamp near anoth
er which was lighted, and the oil ignited,
and, in his confusion, he turned tho oil
over and it came in contact with his
hands.
The Central Railroad and Banking
Company has subscribed $5,000 to the
Industrial Association of Savannah, and
promises to give $5,000 more if tho city
will toko stock to the amount of $10,000.
Tho Fair begins third Tuesday in Novem
ber. Gen. Breckinridge has been select
ed orator.
The Columbus Sun says: The crops iu
Muscogee and Stewart counties are re
ported os doing well. In Stewart about
half a corn crop will be made and a three-
quarter one of cotton. The cotton looks
well, but the stand is poor. In tho ad
joining Alabama counties rain is needed.
Corn thero is very good, cotton about tho
same as in the Georgia counties.
We were very sorry to hear yesterday,
says tho Columbus Enquirer of tho 28th,
ns we did from a friend jnst from Macon,
that Mr. Thomas W. Sehoonmaker, for
merly a citizen of Columbus, hod, a few
days ago, in a moment of depression aud
desperation, shot himself in tho head in
such a manner os to placo him boyond all
hopes of recovery.
A Pike county correspondent of tho
Macon Telegraph and Messenger says: Our
crops look well considering the disad
vantages they have been subjected to in
the shape of rain and grass. The farm
ers are generally rid of the grass, and
cotton seems to bo doing ns well now ns
it can. Tho corn in this section is need
ing rain, and should it visit us this week
there witl be an abundance of tho cereal
made. Clovor culture is becoming a sub
ject of earnest consideration with our
farmers; many aro raising it successfully,
and many nioro will commence it another
season. The writer cut a fine crop of
hay from some sown tho 22d of February
last on his wheat, and the after-moth bids
fair for another good cutting before
winter.
Bojtniar Jamils Bearing filatljmea
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Suramin!).Shipping Cine*.
MURRAY'S LINE—NEW
X ORK 6c SAVANNAH.
EVERY TUESDAY took each poet.
INBfBAKCE BY KTKAMKBHOT TltlS LINE, ONE
HALF PKlt ClINT.
OAunt rASSAOK »*>
UXCK, with lutiautuice
A
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SCHOOL BOOHS
PUBLISHED BT
foHN P. Morton & Go.,
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY,
Reading and Spelling:
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Butler's 1st Book in Spelling
and Heading.
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Header.
Butler's JTew
Reader.
Haller's .♦Vir
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First School
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VIRUO, BULKLEY, Commander,
Compose this line, and one of tlese steamship!
loaves each port EVERY TUESDAY.
Through bills of lading given by these steamships
by alt railroad connection*, aud also through hills
lading given in Savannah on Cotton destined for
Liverpool and Hamburg by first class steamships.—
For freight or passage, apply to
UUMTKK A GAMMELL, 84 Bay street.
PHILADELPHIA AND 8 A VANN AH MAIL STEAM
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FHiLJt ttF.LPHLt .t.Yn Snt-
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INSURANCE ON COTTON BY STEAMERS ON THIS
LINK ONE HALF I'EU CENT.
CABIN PASSAGE $30
DECK, with subsistence 10
This line is oomposed of tho first class steamships
WIOMINO TEAL. Commander.
TON AW AN DA BARRETT, Commander
One of these steamships leave each port EVERY
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ATLANTA DHPARTMJiUn T '
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ATLANTA,
Goor^lu.
A. II. COLQUITT*
Vicx PliubK
A h PURELY southern Institution. Investing Its Money whoro it obtains its Patronage—more
rally managed than any Company of its age in the country—Its losses being over fifty per a
the average of American Companies—It* Ratio of Assets to Liabilities being grantor than any ins
oqual business in the Uulted States.
J. B. GORDON,
A. AUSTELL,
WADE HAMPTON.
B. C. YANCEY.
W. A. CALDWELL,
D. B. MURCHISON.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
JAMES A GRAY.
~ - —TLKR.
'LL AND,
D. E. BUTL
K. W. HOL
WM. JOHNSTON.
ROBERT THOMAS,
F. J. PELZEB,
H. V. M. MILLER.
C. H. PH1XIZY,
J. J. GREGG.
A. H. COLQUITT.
J. 8. HAMILTON,
H. H. COWAN.
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For BoNton.
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Tho steamships
Oriental Oapt F. II. Swam.
Vicksburg, Capt, S. H. Mattukws.
CABIN FARE $20 00
DECK 10 00
Through bills of lsdlnfl given by railroad agents to
Bobton, and in Boston by Steamship agents to prin
cipal points in Georgia. Alaarna and Florida.
*%- Through bills of ladiug given to Provldonce,
Fall ltivcr, Portland, Low all, Lawreuto, Ac.
Passage tickets sold st railroad depot, and state
rooms soenrod In advance by writing agent* iu Bj
vnnnah. RICHARDSON A BARNARD,
Agents, Savannah.
F. NICKERSON A CO.,
novO-tf Agents, Boston.
For Wow Yorlc.
Who Taliaferro Is!
Captain Taliaferro, who lately “swore
liko our army in Flanders," before tho
Ku-Klux Committeo at Washington, has
been unearthed at last. The Selma
Times' found him first, and according to
tho Times hero ho is:
Wo once knew a private in the Con*
federate army by tho name of Taliaferro,
who hailed from Baltimore, who was a
camp follower and skulker, and who
helped to murder five Yankee prisoners
near Madison, Georgia, in November,
18f>4, and we would not be surprised if
this fellow was the very man. For his
sworn statements to the Outrage Com
mittee are just in consonance with the
head and heart of a man who would
cowardly take to the woods, tied five
prisoners who had surrendered them
selves, and put a pistol to their heads
and murdered them. Only such a man
could wilfully misrepresent his people.
irwr. machke,
Painter and Decorator,
eve W
auks
f «t.
Uio same,
Business Mon Z
Al.I, persons «loing business in the city of Atlanta,
aro hereby notified to com* at once to my office and
renow their license, also mako returns on quarterly
sales for the quarter ending Juno Vt, 1871, and pay
theroou. All those failing to atteud to the above by
the r>th instant, will b« called on by the Marshal
with cost of A ts added. 8. B. lAJVK,
Atlanta, July 8, 1871. Clerk of City.
Jjio-u
Butler's Goodrlcli Headers s
.♦Vic First Header.
.♦Vic Second Reader.
JTew Third Reader.
Jt’ew Fourth Reader.
.♦'cic Fifth Header.
A'ew Sixth Reader.
Oraramaroiid lllu-torle i
Butler's Inlrodiutory Gram
mar.
Butter's Practical Grammar.
Bonncll's First Lessons in Com
position.
Bonncirs JUanual ot Composi
tion.
A.x*ltlimetloM and Altfcbm i
lowme's Primary jlrtlhnietic.
Toirne's Intermediate .trilh-
mettc.
Towne's Jflental.trithmette.
Toume's Practical otrlthmcllc.
Key to Same.
Tonne's JHgebra.
Key to same.
Miscellaneous :
WEBSTER’S SPELLER AND DEFINED.
NELSON’S BOOK-KEEPING.
KAVANAUOH’H ORIGINAL DRAMAS,DIALOGUES,
TABLKAUX-VIVANTH, AC.
BRONSON’S ELOCUTION.
BARBEE’S GEOLOGY.
BUTLEIt’H COMMON SCHOOL SPEAKER.
GOODRICH’S ANCIENT HISTORY.
GOODRICH’S MODERN HISTORY.
WHATELY’8 LOGIC.
WHATKLY’S RHETORIC.
clclrotyprd,bound ami printed
» tho work of 'Southern au
thor!. Ours in the ONLY Publishing Houae South
of the Ohio engaged iu the publication of ochooi-
to a conclusion. We invite a careful comparison
with others, feeling satisfied that our publications
will more fully meet the wants of our people than
those of any other house. They are now in us<
tbe most important schools of ViftalNU, Kkntlv
Nunn Caholiha, Tenvkmsee, Missouri, Ukorgia,
Alabama, Mississirri. Louisiana, Tf.xam aud C’su-
rouiA.
%* 1'rincipalt of Schoolt and College!, and Mem
ber! of Hoard! of Kduration, are rnjueited to lend ui
ther catalogue! and School Report!. Correspondent*
inviitod.
_ • Book! tent Jnr examination, on application at
special rata. Favorable term!for fret introduction,
Address
JOHN P. MORTON k CO., Publishers,
150 and 138 Main tired, Fonlu llte, My
To Parties Desiring to Build
rpHE undersigned would respectfully inform the
Mini Clan House they may with In
Mired.
He has at his command a picked set of hands, snd
feels confident lu glviug general satisfaction.
nr REFERENCE—Col. John L. Grant. Longluy
k Robinson, and Fay k Corput, Architects.
joujr c. jnenors,
Til OS. HAMPTON, R. D. SALMONS. W. A. BA
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Tho first class steamers
Herman Livingstone, Clieeseroan, Com.
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Will toil os follows:
H. LIVINGSTON Juno 1st, at B, p. M.
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GEN. BARNES..
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Juno 8th, at 8,
" 22d. at l, r. m.
Bills of lading given hereon cotton snd wheat thro,
to Liverpool snd Hamburg via New York by first
.. %. passago or freight, apply to
WILDER k FULLAKTON,
No. 8 Stoddard’s Upper Range.
class steamers. Foi
I^or Xliilt imore.
OAIUD.
Atlanta, Ga.. July 1st, 1871.
At Uin Annual Meeting of the Stockholders and Director* of tho Atlanta Department of the HoaUmn
Life Insurance Company, tho uudoraigued were appointed, iu accordance with the earnest desiro of the
President and Secretary, a committee to examine tho books, onsets, liabilities, etc., of tho Department.
We huvo patiently aud thoroughly examined everything pertaining to the Company's busine**, and ore
•stifled in being ablo to state to Lhu absent Directors, Stockholders and Policy-holders, that the business of
the country, has been strength! i
J. 8. HAMILTON.
CHARTERED BY THE 8TATE OF TENNESSEE.
AROLINA LIFE INSUR’NCE CO.,
of Memphis, ■mnsnsr.
Assets, # 1,038,703.00.
Offleo No. -TO, Ivtrvdieoii Strcot, TVIoxxxjolils, Tonn
c
JEFFERSON DAVIS, President
m. j. irrcKs,
First Met President.
F. T. PETTIT.
Second Hk« President
Ir. F. BOYLE, Secretary.
e. r.
McCJtr, Stiumy,
m. s. Jisrsjr,
Stmt, Seat, MUmlm, Urn
MEDICAL
BOARD OX* DIRHOTOnS I
Jkefei’SON Datib, Memphis, Tenn.
M. J. Wicks, President M. & O. R. It
W. 11. Hunt, Memphis, Tenn.
Wm. Joynkk, Joyner, Lemmon & Gale.
J. T. Pettit, Pettit A Simpson.
W. B. Greenlaw, Pee’t People* In. Go.
B. K. Pullen, Merchant.
0. B. Church, Memphis, Tenn,
W. L, Vance, Mempnis. Tenn.
F. VT. Smith, President Peoples Bank.
N. 8. Bruce, W. 8. Brace 4 Go.
J. O. Fizer, Gailbreath, Stewart 4 Co.
E. W. Munfohd, Memphis, Tenn.
Natoleon Hill, Hill, Fontaine 4 Go.
F. W. White, Henrando, Miss.
rjpnrs COMPANY was organized in 18C7, with a Capitoj Stock of $200,000, and
has steadily increased its a
until now they exorod a million dollars.
Boforo Mr. Davis accepted the Presidency, he required every policy to bo valued by an actuary of his
vn selection, and thoroughly satisfied himself of its soundness and the fidelity and ooonumy of Ua pre
vious management.
Mir Tho Baltimore snd Savannah Steamship Co’s.
Steamers soil from Savannah during Decombcr as
follows:
Saragossa Thursday,February 2d
America, .....Thursday, *> i>tb
Saragossa, Thursday, •• 10th
America, Thursday, •• 23d
Saragossa Thursday, March 2nd
JAS. B. WEST k CO.,
nov0-tf Bay street, foot of Whitaker.
SAVE YOUR FRUIT!
F. A.
CO.,
Change of Schedule.
OFFICE MASTER OF TRANSPORTATION,)
Macon * WnvTRaa Railroad, {
Macon. July 12, 1871.)
DAY PASSENGER TBAIH.
Leaves Atlanta 7:55 AM
Leaves Mscon 7.56 A M
Arrives st Atlanta 9:10 P M
.Arrives at Macon 1:40P M
WIGHT PASSEWGER T*AIH.
Leaves A’lanU
Leaves Mscon
Arrives st Atlanta 'S SSES
Arrives st Macon • • • ; *
Ths above schedule goes Into offset Sunday,
'■SS&r H. W. BRONSON, K T.
j )KALKR* IN
FLOUR,
MEAL,
k SHIP STUFF,
NU.VAM.V, SB.VTVCMt'.
HI0HK8T PRICE PAID FOR WI1F.AT. -*»
All proAuo. dellTeriKl At tlio depot tree or cU.ru*.
J, J, KNOTT, M. 1).,
^FFICE OVER JOHN KEELY’8, comer White
hall aud Hunter streets.
RESIDENCE—Collins stroct, between Cain aud
KUI*. my28-3m
( It,At MS COLU-XrriSD, - Utrln,
J formed tovorable connection with a responsi
ble Attorney st Washington, D. C., I will filo sad
prosecute all claims entrusted to tnj care against the
United States, before the Southern Claims Commit
sion, or auy Department of the Government. Office
on Marietta, near Peachtree ttreot, Atlanta, Go.
D. P. HILL,
Jyll-lm Attorney at Law.
SAFEST, CHEAPEST AND BEST
FIIUIT JARS
Iu tlio markot.
MoBBXDS tto OO.,
M ANUFACTURERS' AGENTS FOR
FRUIT JARS ud JELLY TUMULEllH.
The Palace Dollar Store
L. II. riKE,
PROPRIETOR.
if. B,—GOODS SENT TO ANY PART OF THE
ni3- ny4 jyltMm Rax
LANDSBERG’S
LUMBER YARD,
OPPOSITE GEORGIA RAILROAD DEPOT.
ATLATVTA.GA,
SawocI Sliluclosi ond
Wliito Pino
SamIi, Windows dks
Blind*
jtn Hinds ot Dressed and
anting Lumber,
feb21-ly A. LANDSDEBO k CO., Proprietors.
half million dollars.
fi®- AGENTS WANTED.-l* Apply to
TMGjrOMl * HULSEY, Attorney*. H. A. ALSTOJU
Atlanta, May 1W. 1871.8m.
ovn
$5,000,000
ASSETS.
ce Co.
T HOSE contemplating Life Imraronoe ora iwpectfallj reqaoeted to exam-
ins the morlta of this Company. They will find it ♦
Superior to Many and Inferior to None, in the Kuential* thnt
five Sound Insurance at the Lout Possible Coot.
W. T. WATERS, Gen.Afr’t,
nso lr omen 37 l-a, wairansLi. st, ATTANTA. ua.
Dailg 6»n Hook and fob ©ffirt.
T he sun job office has just been supplied
with n splendid assortment of the Latest Styles of J
NEW AND ELEGANT TYPES,
BORDERS, RULES AND OTHER HATEBIAL!
Ami is now prepared to do the Finest Grades of
JOB PRINTING!
LUMBER 1 LUMBER!
_ have on band a large lot of Lumber, Shin
gles, Laths. White Pine Doors and Hash. Also,
•oiling at reduced prices. Office aud yard ooruer
Forsyth and Hunter Streets
June 27-dim.
MURPHY k MERBIAM.
E H. MARSHALL,
• DRFfTIHT,
Corner Marietta and Peachtree St*.,
Over Phillips k Crew’s Book* tore,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Steam Pump and Boiler
FOR _SALE.
A WORTHINGTON BTKAM PUMP. BOILER,
and Piping, all complete. Apply )o
A, it. KEAGO,
Dealer In Real Estate aud Planter*’ Time Bonds.
jy2Mw lltonia, Qa.
TURNIP SEEDS.
house, on Broad street.
I my Agricultural Ware-
Mark
JXM-»
W. Johnson.
|egai |i$nh si |vtry |efaiptioa
FURNISHED TO ORDER.
BLANK BOOKS, &e
We have made ample arrangements to get up Blank Books
AT THE LOWEST H
LEDGE*,