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THE DAILY
Thursday Mom;iso. .
ST J N ' cm P®°Pk,V ih'hitj/, never hud a wporior,
’ ‘ ■■■ they ever had n rival, in all that ronsfi
. .Auuust 10.
ter New AilvertlseineuU always fauna
on First Page; Local ami Business Notices
on Fourth Page.
SUN -STROKES.
fsir Tliu beat way in which tu begin a
“Civil Service Uniform" ia by pulling in
a new President
toh great near. Thu clcvahd feelings managing tho finances ol tlie Ocroru
8©. Atmnt women—men, if they liav<
a chance.
B©. Tho Pennsylvania oil product lust
year was the largest ever known, und yet
the peoplo make light of it.
tkiF John 0. Whittier has u new book
in press called "Child Lifo”—a subject
that he can know but littlo about, us he
is an old bachelor.
A good deal has been said about the
advisability of the marriage of the Prin
cess Louise with the Marquis of Lome.
But, for all that, tho Princess appears to
toe the Marquis very well.
jffi, The Now York Tribune accuses
one of its readers of ' ‘swallowing n bald
falsehood.” The man could have done
nothing else if ho believed anything ho
read in tho Tribune.
6©. There are thirteen thousand den
tists in the United States. By making
“ a long pull and strong pull and a pull
altogether,” they ought to bo ablo to ex
tract even “the corroding tooth of tima”
I® 1 Tho combined strength of the
original Ibrdiculs, tho New Departurists
and forty thousand negro votes was not
sufficient to deliver Kentucky over to the
enemy by more than thirty thousand
votes.
I®*How must the Courier- Journal feel
to see its party defeated by 30,000 mn-
j rrity, in spito of an increased strength
of 40,000 negro votes? Poguo says it
con find relief from depression only in a
little old-fashioned Bourbon.
t&~ The World says; “Tho moralat-
mosphere of New York was never purer
than it is now.” That is probably true,
as at the time the paragraph was written,
Greeley was off talking agriculture to the
Alexandrians and Dana was off on a
Western excursion.
B©. The seeming Republican gain in
in Kentucky, shown by tho election on
Monday, does not indicato any loss to
tho Democrats. Tho negroes, 40,000
strong, havo recently been added to the
to tho voting population of that State.—
They, of courso were a unit" for
tho Badicnls. Taking this into
consideration it will be seen that there
has been littlo or no diminution oi the
Democratic majority. Tho State is true
to its time-honored record and will re
main so in spito of the efforts of tho Ton-
rier- Journal to Badiealizo tho Democrat
ic party in that State.
ay a. a. Watson.
A cripple cauic to a rich man's door;
His face was tanned and his clothes were poor,
And in the place whore was ouco a leg
Was a clumsy, thumping wooden peg.
“Come in,*’ tho rich man said, “I sec
You havo served your country maufiyiy;
I am able and willing yet, I trust.
To give to a soldier at least a crust."
“I havo a«eu Borne lights," tho veteran said,
“And was lucky enough to havo savod ray head;
But do not think i have come to beg
Because you see me upon this peg ”
••I’ll warrant you bore tho Union flag
To tho front of fight, and did not lag,
And never was false to tho glorious trust.
Nor trailed that banuer in tho dust.
“Were you with Grant when his cannon flames
Lit up tho banks of the rolling James ?
Or, when beneath tne apple tree
He took the sword of the Rebel, Lee ?
“No!" “No? You were witb.Sherman, then;
No better army of braver men
Ever fougbt to make a nation freo
Thau that which inarched down to the *ea.”
“I was not with him,” tho veteran said.
“With Sheridan then ? Oh, the frightful tread
Of his flying steed I soeiu to hear
As it dashes out from Winchester!”
“Neither with him." “Perhaps with Meade,
And saw, at Gettysburg, his deed;
Or, may bo, you saw tho rebels dance
Boforc tho gunB of Rosencrans."
•Nor this, nor that 1” ‘-With whom ?" “Myscan
Wero won in tho bravest of all bravo wars,
For I fought iu Stonewall Jackson’s ranks,
That time he whipped your General Banks.”
A PUNGENT LETTER
To liou. Beni* 11. Hill.
From the Augusta Chronicle and Sentinel of the 8th.
Hon. 13. H. Hill—Sir: At tho risk
of exposuro to public criticism, I will ele
vote you to the similitude of a character
whose detestation the world’s orator lias
clothed with immortality, uud in liis
language ask,
“HOW LONG, OH, CATILINE, WILL YOU ABUSE
OCR PATIENCE ?”
Your windiug way since and oven before
the war bos gratified your enemies and
mortified your friends, but vour last im
position upon Southern forbearance, in
your late speech at Athens, robs silence
of its virtue, and makes comment a ne
cessity. Treachery, in all iU forms, its
combinations and its motives, from the
creation of Adam to the moment in
which I make the declaration, never not
only had an advocate, but never found a
defender. Even the beneficiaries under
the treason always despised the traitor.
On the other hand, Truth—and I mean
by it that comprehensive significance
which includes integrity of character in
all the social and political relations of
life, whether in business, in pleasure, in
the private citizen or tho pablio official,
in those holding power and thoeo desir
ing its possession, at homo or abroad, in
society or out of society—never hod an
enemy. Many characters arc without it
os a foundation, but even these pay hom
age to its shrine. It is not always tho
road to success in temporal matters, but
even
FitlABKOOn WOULD BARTER ALL ITS EARN
INGS
ol the statesman, the high minded prin
ciples of the patriot, and an ardent aevo
tiou to the cause of liberty and tho rights
of man, have ever been the marked and dis
tinguishing difference between them and
the nation of speculators who havo lately
proved, with the help of foreigu uid, their
supcriois in the field.
You have been pleased, iua public ad
dress, to announce to the too anxious lis
teners that
“THU SOUTH HAS BERN DRIVEN BACK
from the marching column of social and
national progress,” and you havo discov
ered the cuumj iu the institution of slave
ry. I ugree neither with your facts or
your philosophy—and I appeal to the his
tory of the Government to show how lit
tle credit cun be given to one who thinks
he lias discovered the future greatness of
Georgia in au utter ignoring of the past,
and educating tho youth to emulate the
nation whose greatness in engines and
furnaces may be traced in broken obliga
tions and the plunder of tho public treas
ury. Another item iu your bill of indict
ment against the land of your nativity is
that
“WE IONonED THE CLAIMS OF TUB ME
CHANICAL CLASSES.”
Here again you are at fault, and I cannot
account for it upon any other ground than
that to vindicate your defamation it was
necessary to pervert your facts. First,
then, iu the social relations of lifo, do you
really think tho South inferior to tho
North? In manners—how stands it?
Take the female characters of tho two sec
tions. If I could blind your vision to the
fascination of placo which you have never
occupied, but which by no means has
cooled the ardor of your desire, I would
even mako you a witness upon the respec
tive merits of the social progress of the
manners of tho two sections. My hubit
of thought, as well as tho walk of my lifo,
causes me to curb any vindictive feeling
I may entertain towards a peoplo who have
done injustice to their own kind and kin
dred, and who continue to heap upon us
wrongs innumerable, but even tho ‘ ‘chari
ty that suffereth long and is kind” makes
do demand upon mo to elevate them
abovo their deserts or sink my own peoplo
below their merit. I can readily under
stand the formation of opinion, if I could
as easily discover tho motive—even
THE DISTORTION OF FACT
can be made to harmonize with tho pro
pelling power of self-love and self-inter
est, and while truth itself is unyielding
and unbending, individual opinions may
accord with theories, based as they sup
pose upon facts, which they see through
other mediums than those who investi
gate for the truth’s sake. We are, even
in this corrupt ago, still under tho in
junction “judge not,” though we are not
‘without the privilege of examining the
fruits to discover the nature of tho tree.
In your case tho public havo no fruits in
the character of your past life to discover
or determine the integrity of your inten
tion or tho purity of your motive. One
day elevated to the standard of true
statesmanship—tho next herding with
those whoso highest idea is
SELF-AGGRANDISEMENT Ar THE PUBLIC EX-
TENSE ;
one hour eloquently discoursing upon
our rights—advising non-intercourse with
tho reptiles who fatten upon our misfor
tunes ; the next banquoting with these
miserable vampires, who hold hellish or
gies around the battlements of the Con
stitution—with a corrupt judiciary ns
their associates to sanction any plunder
they may commit upon tho public treas
ury, or any infringement they may mako
to shock public propriety—you havo no
right to seek shelter undor or ask protec
tion of that charity whoso ample folds
might have hidden your transgressions,
if it claimed not to hold no joy iu iniqui
ty but to rejoice in the truth.
THE SOUTH, INFERIOR TO THE NORTH
in the social relations of life—such a sen
timent, at such a time, and from such an
oracle—its enunciation is ridiculous, its
publication criminal. The free-love and
the woman’s right section to be given tho
priority over the Southern character (I
speak not of individuals), whoso corner
stone is purity and whose strengthening
brace is a modest propriety of what is
recognized as woman’s true position.—
The opportunities made public and from
which alone tho public cun judge from,
not even a data to suggest a comparison
between tho two sections and individual
intercourse furnish us little, much lass to
justify a Southern man to hold up his sec
tion as inferior, and “driven back from
the marching column of social progress.’
BUT MANNERS ALONE
do not constitute tho ouly element in so
cial progress. Morals I um aware is or
ought to bo the foundation upon w hich
to build society. Tho comparison even
here, with all due difference to your pub
licly expressed opinion, cau never make
tho true friends of tho South to blush or
be ashamed. Individual cases of crimo
will occur in all communities, but they
aro not tho true indices of the pubUo
morality, llat tho general standard iu
which virtue is held points unerringly
to tho character of a poople, and pro
claims their purity or tho want of it. No
intelligent man, who has any respect for
his reputation, will hesitato to givo to the
South a higher rank iu tho scale of puri
ty, whether in their teachings or their
practice, than belongs to tho North.—
Take the pulpit—in what ago was it over
more degraded or prostituted than it is at
present at tho North ? With somo hon
orable exceptions, every denomination of
Christians is as leprous with the sin of
malice, envy, hatred and uucharitablcness
as was tho Israelite, with
THE LOATHSOME DISEASE,
who thought his case incurable uutil tho
teachings from the Mount discovered to
him a power wherein he might bo made
clean;and I fear the sarno newer will bo
requisite to cleanse a poople whom you
have elevated above your uative land in
social progress. The philanthropist and
tho Christian find cause to weep over the
decadence of Christian teaching, proprie
ty and practice that pervades Northern
society, and the friends of true progress
lament over the shadow of protertanism
which their own bad conduct has caused
and which will take half a century of
genuino Godly pietv to illume.
IN STATESMANSHIP
the comparison causes no blight upon
Southern pride. Tho Washingtons,
Henrys, Pinckneys, Jeffersons, Madisons,
Calhouns, Clays and Crawfords will com
pare with even tho Websters, Bancrofts,
Htoreys, Chandlers, Yates, Morriseys and
Mortons. Iu warriors, the first revolu
tion produced none superior to Washing
ton and Green. Our last revolution had
no character superior to Lee, among our
enemies, and our own army tolerated none
so infamous as Logan. I might allude to
the measures of our statesmen in shaping
the policy of our government and its pu
rity as long as they controlled ; but I fear
' have already trespassed upon the pa-
ence of the public in holding up your
is traceable to the exclusive benefits they
havo derived iu moulding iLe policy and
I
to have a place in her holy tcmplo. These j O pjoj 0 ns to their soorn and contempt—
general observations are made pndimina-; j mll8 t, no t forget to point you to tho ex-
ry to the comments I propose upon the in-; 0 f the country to vindicate the
fumous doctrine of yonr late speech, and from
the vile tl.udur. yon * j I0DB w.llfcl, wanton attack
people noted in the pett for too nobility
of their practical efficiency in the aocial upon their cuurgy and theox industry,
and political relation, of lifo. Tho Booth- 1 Whatever of wealth tho North
menu If you are reaUj ignorant of the
.tutiatical facta connected with the sub
ject (.nd to suppose that you aro is raoro
complimentary to your character than to
award you knowledge.) 1 would sdvise
you to give eomo attention to the work
ings of the system. You wilt bo aston
ished to find that three-fourth., if not
sevon cighlhs, of
au. run .urnoi-niAiioiu, luiut uv < okuiosib
have Is i u expended in tho North. AU
the rlu.eS legislation has inured to tho
capital and industry of the Northern sec
tion, and that often at tho expenin of
Southern productions. Your other pro
position that we ignored tho incohanieal
classes has neither the solidity or even the
semblance of trutln Every observing
lino could but notion tho apparent fact
that in the South there was less of that
distinction iusooiety than thoro wnsat the
North, or in any country whore tho capi
talists am! the laborers wero of tile same
race. That there should bo distinctions
in the ono more than whore slavery exist,
is founded upon principles apparent to
any who refloats, and to all who think.
When was it ovor known that a Northern
capitalist ever gave to a laborer the h.w-
pitidities of his house ? When in the
South was it over conceived to refuse it
to the mechanic or to the day laborer ?
INDIVIDUAL INSTANCES
may have occurred where labor wo. look
ed upon as degrading, hut the many at
the South have alwayglield it in honor-..-
hie appreciation. I regret that tho sub
ject is so prolific os to prevent full justice
iu so limited a space, but I havo given
you the general Loads, by whioh you will
bo enabled to judge of the inoorrectnees
of the defamation you have heapod upon
your own, your native land, and if you
aro not led to detract, I envy not the re
flection whioh disappointed ambition may
yet havo to indulge. I have been so out
raged at the injustice you have inflicted
upon a peoplo with more marked and
distinguished virtues in their character
than any the sun ever shown upon, that
I have found my pen verging to invec
tive, with every desiro to be moderate
and every determination to bo just.—
You
must not expect To ESCAPEcamoisM;
your changes have been so sudden; your
opinions havo so fluctuated os to bewilder
some, to astonish others, and to wound
all without any Other interpretation than
their suddenness, and totally have, at
least, tho appearance of a charm if not
the merit of a miracle.
When I read yonr speech I turned to
the first speech that was delivered before
tho societies forty-three years ago, the
8th day of this month (August), and I
was struck with the almost prophecy of
this sentence:
“What country was ever more respect
ed for its wisdom? When was the scienoo
of Government better understood ?
When were institutions more flourishing
or laid in a deeper sense of equal rights ?
When wero n peoplo more united and af
fectionately devoted to the common in
terest ? When were intolligonco, wealth
anil refinement more rapidly increasing,
until the visionary project of making a
nation of wearers maddened the states
men of America, and what has been tho
consequence of this wayward infatuation ?
All that was proud iu sentiment, lofty in
character, and dignified iu council liavo
been given up to drapers and wool-
stuplers, and wo are now drifting to some
unknown catastrophe, pregnant with ev
ery thing hut Bafety.”
In contrasting the sentiments of this
first orator with yours, I must not forget
to remind you that tho South, with all
its want of energy,
pocuirr scocEsspunnr aciainst the noutit,
with the advantages of Germany and
other portions of continental Europe,
not ouly by men and munitions furnish
ed, but tho advantages of every now im-
provemrnt in all the appliances of suc
cessful warfare, while we wero blookadod
and dependent upon onr own energies,
and our own inventive genius, and when
overpowered with numbers and compell
ed to surrender, we returned to the ad
vocations with onr capital as it- were
taken away ; in many places ou: houses
burnt; our farms laid waste; our cattle
and hogs destroyed, and our pooplo dis
heartened, and yet in less than four years
our cotton crop sustains the credit of the
Government that has robbed ns.
this Is NOT ALL.
Ono of Southern birth holds her up to
tho scorn and contompt of her worst eno-
my on an occasion too sacred for tho ut
terance of tho slander if it had boon true.
Could shame demand a deeper blush or
infamy a deeper brand? I must not let
tho occasion pass to warn my fellow-oiti-
zens against yonr teachings. In review
ing their past history they need no com
mentation to point them to an institu
tion, sanctioned in every ago, by every
religion, almost co-equal with creation,
and authorized by the Deity Himself, as
the cause of their misfortunes. Tho only
duty of tho South is to bo true to them
selves; forego tho laxnries of wealth for
a season; maintain your own high in
tegrity of character; remember the hal
lowed associations of the post; he vigi
lant; be moderate; bo virtuous, and truth
ful, not carried away by every wind or
doctrine or deceived by every unprinci
pled seducer of your confidence or bo-
traycr of your trust, and you will yet
havo tho proud satisfaction of inscribing
upon your successful banner "per au-
gusta ail augutla," "through troubles to
“ “Geoboia.”
grandeur.”
GEORGIA NEWS.
Forsyth folks have tho chills.
Monroe county has a Building and
Loan Association.
Tho resideuco of Mr. Wm. Walker, of
Monroe county, was recently destroyed
by fire.
On Wednesday night, says the Monroe
Atlrcrliser, the bed room of Prof, R. T.
Asliury, of this place, was entered, and
about ono hundred and fifty dollars in
cash, a fine gold watch, and several arti
cles of apparel, abstracted.
The Monroe Adrcrlixer e&ys: Tbo mail
service from Forsyth, through Butts
county, to Covington, has at last been
re-establishod—Mr. Joel Hight having
become temporary contractor until such
time as tbo Department can make other
arrangements. Tho first trip was made
on Thursday last, from Covington, and
wo congratulate our friends in Butts upon
the prospect that they will hereafter be
able to Lave somo communication with
the outside world.
The Rome Commercial of tho 9th says :
Tho family of Mr. Weaver, living on Oos-
tannula street, consisting of himsolf, wife
and six children, were singularly effected
from drinking butter milk last Saturday
night. Tho milk was purchased from
Mr. Reese, and drank at supper by the
family. At about 11 o'clock Dr. Smith
was colled to soo them. Mr: and Mm.
Weaver and two of the children wore bat
slightly affected ; the other fonr children
were taken with excessiro vomiting and
purging, with burning in the throat and
great thirst for water. About 1 or 2
o’clock tho children were relieved and all
fears of a fatal termination dispelled.
Two of the children are still oonfined to
bed. It is supposed tho acid in tbo milk
produced some effect on the tin can from
which it was taken, and thus caused tho
ill effects abovo stated.
8. iinMag'a Stan tUoiks.
‘ Macon Comes to Atlanta Again l ”
FINDLAY’S IRON WORKS
Head of Third St., Sign of “The New Flag.”
MjA-CON ,r G EOItG IA.
THE LARGEST IN THE SOUTH!
Skilled Labor and Modern Machinery.
All Worlt Warranted.
Northern Prices for Machinery Duplicated.
STEAM EAVIJTES OF .M r A/.171 xr» SIZE.
Flndlau's Improved Circular Sau> .11111, Merchant Mill Hearing,
most approved kinds; sugar Mills and syrup Kellies; Irens
fronts, U’indou) Silts and Lintels ; Castings of Iron
and Brass of Every Besertplion, and Machine-
• all kinds ’«> Oft ISC It.
I It o
ry of i
IS"
BAILING
REPAIRING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES !
Competent Workmen famished upon application to orrrlurtl Engines, 8aw Mills, etc., In any section of
the country.
FINDLAY’S SAW -DUST GRATE BAR
SHOULD HE USED DY EVK11Y SA W-MILL PROPBIKTOB.
Millstones, Belting, Circular. Saws, Steam Fittings, Babbit Metal, do., dc.
FURNISHED TO OBDEB. TEEMS, CASH OB AUPBOVED I’Al'EB.
R-FINDLAY'S SONS, Macon, On.
TIIE GREAT,
ECMFSE SCREW COTTON PRESS!
iintbtoarr, Cntlcrg, ifiune, <'c i .
W. I A. W ABSWOR ri l Ac OGK,
lMPOItTJiitS AND WHOl.l SALd jlEALKftB IN
hardware, cutlery, guns,
Carriage Makera’ and Bnildcra Mutorlul and Toohs
Hutotoor and Leather Boltins,
No. 24 Whitehall Street Cor Alabama, opposite James’ Bank, ATLANTA. GA
tUiitcluo, Jcuieltp. Silver Ulure, (fit.
CHKAT INDUCEMENTS!
-:oCo:-
LAWSHE AND HAYNES
A It II
rix-Ly a’liolr Eliatlr© Stool?: fit drently
Reduced TPrloet;.
LOW Ell THAN TITE
SAME QUALITY OF GOODS
HAVE EVER BEEN OFFERED IN ATLANTA.
To Continue for Thirty Days, to
Malto Hoorn for Tholr
FALL STOCK.
£ife Jnenronre—Provibc Cut the IJrlplea*.
ATLANTA DEPARTMENT
SOUTHERN LIFE INSURANCE COMP’Y,
ATLANTA,
Georg; In.
. MORRIS,
8kcut.it.
A PURELY Southern Institution, Inventing its Money where it obtains its Patronage—more economl-
rally managed than any Company of it* ago In the country—its losaeH being over tifty per cent, below
tho average of Araorkau Companies-- its Ratio of An Beta to Liabilities being greater than any Institution of
equal business in the United Staton.
BOARD OP DIRBOTOR8.
C. H. PHINIZY,
JAMES A. GRAY,
D. K. BUTLER,
E. W. HOLLAND,
WM. JOHNSTON.
ROBERT THOMA8,
F. J. PELZER,
II. V. M. MILLER.
J. J. GREGG,
A. H. COLQUITT,
J. B. HAMILTON,
It. H. COWAN,
W. It. cox,
OAHD.
A TT. A ITT A, Ga., July 1st, 1871.
It tho Annual Meeting of tho Stockholders and Directors of the Atlanta Department of the Southern
Life IfiKciraneo Company, tho undersigned were appointed, la sooordance with tho earnest desire ot the
President and Secrutary, a committee to oiaiulne tho books, assets, liabilities, etc., of tho Department
Wo have patiently and thoroughly examined everything pertaining to the Company's business, and are
gratified In being nble to Htato to the absent Directors, stockholders and Policy-holders, that the business of
the Company has been conducted by the officers with economy and fldolity; and that onr former confidence
tho country, ban been stronglhcne<
a pofeot security as any In
J.B. HAMILTON. '
BEN. O. YANCEY, 1
A. H. COLQUIT,
Patented Feb’y 27, 1871, by Findlay & Craig
An ANTI-FRICTION SCREW—A MECHANICAL WONDER. This wonderful Meclianical achievement in
point of RAPIDITY and LIGHTNESS of DRAUGHT, STANDS WITHOUT A RIVAL, and in destined at
early day to supersede ALL OTHER Cotton Screws, ho they fabricated ol Wrought or Cast Iron.
CouArAUcuKK, Ga., December 21,1370.
R. FINDLAY’S SONS, Findlay’s Iron Works, Macon, Ga.:
Dkah 8iite-L*to this fall I purchased from you ono <.f your Findlay A Craig Ecllpso Patent Pcrew Cot
ton Presses, and, after a fall and frir trial, do not hesitate to pronounce it the most rapid, of lightest
moat powerful—in fact, the best (without au axooptiuu) Cotton Press I evor saw. Between this
i exception/*Coltm tress a i
rased, there la Juan simply
:> havo thorn, as they c
draught. ,
and all other Iron Screw Pressca I havo ever
planter should use your Prosa.
P. S. You may consider my order in for two more or the abo
for many orders from thin section : my uoighbora aro iloterminet
twice as fast as any of the oilier Iron Screw Prosao.s can by hornr
Siuco last fall, and before accepting Patent, we added Imp rot
rendering it PERFECT in every particular. The ecmw or piu, MPWHPHPHMPMI
at every turn of the acrw, follower block descends (or ascends, as tho case may bo) fl'i inches. Tho dc
vice of the tubo or nut in which the acrcw works, in such as to materially roduco tho friction, so groat lo Un
common acrow ; thereby rendering it an easy task for three hands to pack a luile of cotton in HALF THE
TIME OF ANY OTHER Iron Screw Press by horso-powor. IHoe J. L. Gilbert's certificate.) When deal ca
ble, an ordinary mail! can bo substituted for throe men without change of flxturoa. STRENGTH, DURA
BILITY, RAPIDITY, LIGHT DRAUGHT, and STANDING ROOM attop of box, eta., etc., iu short, we pro-
nounco It the BEST Screw Press IN THE WOULD, and respectfully invito a public teat with any and all
“ “ -5FUND PRICE MONEY.
to comparison. Every
JOHN L. GILBERT,
next season, and may look
pack by band
nts and labor-saving convetilcn
pitch, or fall, of <D 4 inches ; J,hai is.
other Screw Prosses. To purchaaers-we GUARANTEE >
MTOFOBFiucELuI^ra FINDLA]TS_ SONS, Macon, Ga.
CRAIG’S PATENT HORSE POWER,
>11 DRIVING COTTON GrNS.
HaliKintIon GnaraBtrail ar Money Rniundnd.
SEND FOB ILLUSTRATED CIBCULAB.
R. FINDLAY’S SONS, Macon, Ou.
The New Portable Sd-ani En«iiu'
For Drivlut; Cotton Gins, Unuting Prom a, and for any purpose requiring from one to ten horse Power.
B z _ 5? * *
P £
2 a
T
HEY l
i safe. Tho furnace is surrounded by water, except at the door. The water bottom la a perfect
X protect!oq from Are. They are safer than a stave, and FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES MAKE NO
EXTRA CHARGE where these engines are used.
There la POSITIVE PROTECTION AGAINST EXPLOSION. It la a natural “spark arrestor,” aa NO
BPAB& CAN ESCAPE, NO MATTER WHAT FUEL IS USKI>-an 1mp«»rtant conalderation in cotton gin
ning and similar work. Awarded first premiums by American Institute 1WJ-70. Send for DceorlpUvs
Circular and Price Ltai
Ag-Iumbaii'a B. k A. U. R. munaj received for old c laims or new orders.
R. FINDLAY’S SONS,
FINDLAY mm WORKS, MACON, GA.
CHARTERED BY THE STATE OF TENNESSEE.
C AROLINA LIFE INSUR’NCE CO.,
OF MEMPHIS, THNKT.
Assets, $1,OSS,703.00.
Offlcic 3Mo. -4,3. HvlKclisoix Stroot, ik/lorxx;plxle, Temi
oFriozRS i
JEFFERSON DAVIS, President
incKi,
First I'Ue President.
V. T. PETTIT,
Second Flee President
F. BO FLU, Secretary.
J. H. ttn.no.VHOjr, UaurmlJrml, C. r. JgtCJtr, Jelurnry.
k. u-ooinrjnn, js. a., M.t. nrsmimr, u. J. gzsrojr,
*««. Stmt* Jiff*1, JffMfe, 41m
Jexfebson Davis, Memphis, Tcnn. 0. B. Chtbth, Hcmpliia, Tens,
M. J. Wicks, President M. k 0. R. 11 W. L. Vakoi, Memphis. Tcnn.
W. It. Hunt, Memphis, Tcnu. F. W. Surra, President People* Bank.
Wh. Joynkb, Joyner, Lemmon & Gale. N. S. Bbuob, W. S. Bruce £ Go.
J. T. Pettit, Pettit & Simpson. J. C. Fizkb, Gailbreath, Stewart k Go.
W. B. Gbeenlaw, Pea't. People* In. Go. E. W. Munfobd, Memphis, Tenn.
B. K. Pullen, MorehanL Napoleon Hill, Hill, Fontaine k
F. W. White, Henrando, Mis*.
rftHIS COMPANY was organized in 18C7, with a Capital Stock of *200,000, and
,S_ Iim iU^dilr lncroMoS It. MMt. until bow Uujr .xcd . million dollir..
JL baa steadily increased its assets until new thay «
Before Mr. Davit accepted the Proeldonty, he required every policy to be valued by an actuary of his
own selection, and thoroughly satis fled hltnaclfof its soundness and the fidality and economy of Its pre
vious management.
half million dollars.
its outstanding risks, and havo a surplus remaining of i
AGENTS WANTED.-** Apply to
TIOJtron H HFIjSEF, Attorneys. B. A. AESTOJtT
Atl.nU, M.y 10, 1871, »m.
15,000
$5,000,0041
ASSETS.
ce Co.
June28-
A. J. HARALSON,
Corner Marietta and Broad 8t**eeU
GEJrERJiL J ffCTIOjr
cojmjttssMOjr
^XD Wholesale awd Retail Dealer iu FURNITURE,
t*. Consignment* solicited. Gash advances on
asms. Gordon, Willis * Oe, Bank
ers. Wall Mreet, Atlanta. angfl Un.
Georgia— Fulton County.
( Libel (or Divorce in said Court.
GVouna A. Hyah. )
It appearing to the Court, by the return of the
hb- rig, that George A. Ryan, the Defendaut in the
above stated ease, does not reside in said county of
Fa Ron, and it also appearing that ha does not reside
In aanl Kteto of Goorgin, it is. therefore, ordered by
Liu? Court that service of saM libel bo made on said
George A. liyau, hv publication of this order in any
public gazetto in this gtato once a month fbr tour
QK-ntlas, previous to the next term of this Court—
Granted by the Court.
J. M- Calhoun * Bon., Plaintiff's Attorney.
A tree Extract from Me minutes of said Court
June 1st, 1871,
Juuc6-lamina W. R. VENABLE, Clerk-
p'p j.
OU. JOS. P. LOUIS, MEDICAL EXAMINER, ATLANTA, OESKSIA.
rflHOSE contemplating life Inaoranoe are reapeotfolh raqaaaiad lo nan
JL ine the merits of this Company. They will find It
Superior to Many and Inferior to None, in the EaaentinU that
live Sound Insurance at the Lead Possible Coat.
W. X. WATERS, Gea-An’t,
n.vo lr nrr/rnjiT i-». wmrKmjLi «r.. a iI.anta^|^ ,
B. X. DUTTON, |
I'EACTIOAL W
STENCIL CUTTER, DESIUNER AND
ENURAVER I
NOTICE.
CmmuLTtAiLBOAD and Bankxvo Co. o» Ga-
Ravannah, 6a.. km
MAMUTACTT7RRR OR
B rass alphabets, dry
FLUID 8TKNCIL IN KB, BtMScil Di
ping Dies, Railroad and Hotel Checks,
I)rands, AC.. No. fti Whitehall BA. a flaw d*
Huiiter street.
DistiUerai also."
which will ban
let, 1871.)
. . , to the
»w prepared In receive heavy cargoes
of freight on ita earn direct from the wharf for trans
portation to the interior.