The Weekly sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1872, September 13, 1871, Image 7

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Atlanta weekly g R. -finblan’fi Sons iron Works. 6 Macon Comes to Atlanta Again ! ” "sUN-STROKES. gpcakcr Blaiiie lias taken the to deny, through the press, that squired any property improper- u bad enough to “appropriate” , a deal worse to ll© about it. The LnFayette, Indiana, Journal -,th says: “ The city will, to-day, )ie a w ith the presence of Horace . >’ Hiunph; what would the Jour- i'f Fred. Douglas were to go there? The Cincinnati Times and Ohron- ■v Radical, says: “A. H. S., stag- ' ii, e success of the Couriei--Jour- AT SARATOGA £Ulauia Sttn Prospectus Terrible TriMs of a Youth. One of the Saratoga correspondents, whose name is “Lan—was very badly treated when t he gas went out so sudden ly the other night. The story is a touch ing one, and he tells it well: It was 10 o’clock. The stage drove up from the depot. Almost every lady ex pected her husband on the train. Many young ladies expected their sweethearts. Is either the stage, the driver, nor the horses were visible. From force of habit the passengers felt their way to the re ception room. I gat mixed up in the crowd. Twenty-five married ladies, sev en old maids, and four young ladies com menced greeting the passengers in the darkness. “My dear William! why did you stay so long?” exclaimed a sweet young wife, and then she threw her arms around my neck—our lips met. I wasn’t going to be a darned fool. Far different. Now, a dear, sweet, liquid-eyed brunette threw her arms wildly around me. “O, Eugene, why did you not write oftener?” she sobbed, and then she sank sweetly FINDLAY’S IRON WORKS on my bosom, on my bosom. I said, “Weep not Ju lia, ” and then I kissed her twenty-two times. It was delicious. It made me think of my first wife and my college! days at Yale. A ponderous matron ap proached—-dress decollelle, hair a la Pom padour. She took me in her arms and whispered, “O, Charles, did you bring my beautiful dog—did you?” ‘* Madam, my name is hot Charles, and I hate dogs. I’d kill every d—d—d,” but she fell faint ing at my feet. A sweet, golden-hair ed blonde now took my hand. She £j“The Couriei'-Journal says, Head of Third St., Sign of “The; Hew Flag.* M ACON,!!GEORGIA. THE LARGEST IIS 7 THE SOUTH Skilled* Laboiiiand Modern Machinery. -/All Work. Warranted.. Northern Prices for Machinery Duplicated ST£.idf os' ./.vir K/.r» « ssxe. FindTayis Improved Circular Ante Jts.Hi., Merchant Jtlitl Gearing I most approved hinds; Sugar .Milts and Sijnrp Kettles ; Iron \ Fronts. W'tndoiv Sills and lintels / Castings of Iron \ and JBrass of Every Description, and Machine ry of all hinds TO ORDER. Then she held It was hot ner cheek close to mine. witli love’s young hope and pure, sweet affection. We were very happy. None affection. We were very liappy. but a wicked man would have 1 o sadness to this sweet, pure heart—full of confidence, warm with virgin affection, and beautiful with splendid girlishness. “Do you still love me, Albert?” she whis- peicd. “Undoubtedly,” I remarked. “How much, darling.” “A heap.” “Oh, I am so happy !” she murmured, as she twisted her fingers in my auburn hair and held me in sweet embrace. This sort of thing went on for seventeen min utes, when O. Leland appeared in the distance with a tallow candle. I quietly withdrew, and mingled unobserved in the crowd, As the candle appeared, twenty- Alexander H. STEPHENS, Political Editor. A. R. WATSON* News Editor. J. Henly SMITH, General Editor and Business Manager, Of Elegant Designs, and at Pricesthat Defy Competition. f£5“No Charge for Ne' Outfit of Machinery for Saw or Merchant Mills.«SJ3 GEORGIA NEWS. EATONTON. The Press and Messenger of the 5th inatesthe following: A negro man was thrown from a horse Competent Workmen furnished upon application to overhaul Engines, Saw Mills, eto., in any section of the country. FINDLAY’S SAW -DUST GRATE BAR WiB EKIiY Per Annum a Sizsc Montlis a Single Copy ... 3 OO Single Copy—G Months 1 OO Three Copies ... 4= SO Tlxreo Copies “ 3 35 Ten Copies .... 14 oO Ten Copies “ 7 OO Twenty Copies . . 35 OO Twenty Copies “ 13 OO Fifty Copies . . 5000 Fifty Copies Six ZVlontli s 27 50 Single Copies of the Daily and Weehly. at the Counter, - 5 Cts. No Subscriptions, to the WEEKLY, received for a shorter period than six months. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance; and all names will be stricken f rom-our Boohs when the time paid for expires. d killed, on Sunday last, in the upper rtion of this county. lire. Duke Seymour, of this county, SHOULD BE USED BY EVERY SAW-MELL PROPRIETOR. Steam Fittings, FURNISHED TO ORDER. TERMS, CASn OR APPROVED PAPER. R.FINDLAY’S SONS, Macon, Ga, Circular S;hvs, Babbit Metal, etc. Millstones, Boltin; thrown from a buggy and killed, bile on her way home from Madison, Saturday. The Sheriff of Wilkinson county and ■ mistress, a negro woman, were taken held in her hands a penny dip. They flew through the lancers like ghosts in “Macbeth.” Eight streaks of light made a terrible criss-cross, as the dance went on. When the grand chain calne, the lights revolved like a gigantic Fourth of July pinwheeh It was a grand night for Saratoga. The young people liked it. Some prefer darkness rather than light, because their ways are evil. m their residence and drowned by un- \ra parties, bn Friday night last, so elearn. Mr. J. R. Bagley, a J. P. of this .nty, shot and killed a negro man near nms Station, yesterday. The negro under arrest, and trying to escape ns shot and instantly killed. MACON. Macon is smacking her chops over cysters “on the half shell.” The Telegraph of the 6th has the fol lowing: The religious revival at the First Street ECLIPSE Screw Cotton A Pleasure Seeker in Trouble. We got hold of the particular of a very amusing incident which happened to a young gentlemen who resides not a thousand miles from here, and who is now on a visit North. It seems that a robbery had been committed in Worces ter, Mass., in which the burglar got his clinchers upon sixty thousand dollars. Of course large rewards were offered for the perpetrator of the deed, and detec tives were on the gui vire for any signs or appearance of the thief. - Oar friend, who was the subject of the Methodist Church is still going on, How to Remit Money: We will be responsible for the safe arrival of all money sent us by Money Order, by Registered Letter by Express, or by Draft, but not otherwise. If money sent in an unregistered letter is lost, it must be the loss of the person sending it. No paper will he sent from the office tiU it is paid for, and r ames will always bo erased when the time paid for expires. Persons sending money by Express must prepay charges. is under the direction of that most re markable man, Rev. Dr. W. W. Hicks; and just here we would say that no min- i in Macon for the last ister lias been ___________ twenty years who has attracted such uni versal admiration. BARN S V ILLS. The following items were Gazette-d on the 7tli. The New Methodist Church is going up rapidly. . Extensive arrangements are being ef- To Correspondents = ntr . Mr. Stephens will remain in Crawfordville. His connection with THE SU N "ill not change his res idence. All letters intended for him, either on private matters or connected with the Political Dc-partmen- of this paper, should be addressed to him at Crawfordville, Ga. All letters on business of any kind, connected with THE SUN, except its Political Department, should be addressed to J. Henly Smith, Manager, Atlanta, Ga. Patented Peb’y 27, 1871, by Findlay & Craig, ■1. ANTI-FRICTION SCREW—a MECHANICAL WONDER. This wonderful Mechanical achievement in no‘ ! ntof RAPIDITY and LIGHTNESS of DRAUGHT, STANDS WITHOUT A RIVAL, and is destined at an early day to supersede ALL OTHER Cotton Screws, be they fabricated of Wrought or Cast Iron. _ J J 1 Con.iPAr.cHEE, Ga,, December 21,1870. R. FINDLAY’S SONS. FlnMay’s Iron Works, Macon, Ga.: ■ • _ , ■ „ . _ . Deajj Sies—Late this fall I purchased from yo i oue o your Findlay & Craig Eclipse Patent Screw Cot ton Presses, and, after a full and fair trial, d-i not hesitate to pronounce it the most rapid, of lightest draught, most powerful—in fact, the best (without in exception) Cotton Presa I evor saw. Between this and all other Iron Screw Presses I have ever seen or us.-d, there is just simply no comparison. Every planter should use your Press. , JOHN L. (jffiBMU. [ t>. S.—You may consider my order in for two more of the above Presses .or next season, and may look formally orders from this section : my neighbors are determined to have them, as th-y can pack by hand, twice as fast as any of the other Iron S,-row Press is can by horse power. ... , , _ G. Since last fall, and before accepting Patent, we add-:,! improvements and labor-saving conveniences— rendering it PERFECT in every particular. The screw or pin, has a pitch, or lad, of G.,* inches ; that is, at every turn of the scrw, follower block descends (or ascends, as the care may be) GL inches. The de vice of the mbe or nut in which the screw work-*, is such as to matcriaUyreduce tlie friction, so great in the common screw ; thereby rend-ring it an easy task for three hands to. pack a bale of cotton in HALF THE TIME OF ANY OTHER Iron Screw Press by horse-power. [See J. L. Gilbert s certificate.] AA hen desira ble an ordinary mule cau be substituted for three men without change of fixtures. STRENGTH, DURA BILITY. RAPIDITY, LIGHT DRAUGHT, and STANDING ROOM attop of box, eto., etc., m short, we pro nounce it the BEST Screw Press IN THE WORLD, and respectiufiy invite a pubuc test with any and *11 other Screw Presses. To purchasers we GUARANTEE SATISFACTION or RU UND PRICE MONET. I SEND FOR PRICE LIST, ETC. _ . Is the CHEAPEST DAILY NEWSPAPER in Georgia, while it gives as much Reading 'fatter as any. Its price has been put down very low, for the purpose of placing it within the reach of all who would like to take a Daily Taper. £ Cliisolm, for §2,700. Mr. James Tinley, of Bibb county, Dominated by tlie Radicals at tlieir Con vention in Forsyth, on Monday lost, to SU the seat in the Senate made vacant by the resignation of T. J. Speer. We Is a large, 8 page sheet (in quarto form) filled with the choicest reading matter. It contains the cream . ----- •—‘-* ’ —t. All of Mr. Stephens’ of the Daily—everything which appears in our daily issue that is of general interest. Editorials appear in the Weekly THE SUN is the organ of the People, the Advocate of Justice, the Defender of Popular Rights, and the opponent of burdens heaped upon a tax-paying people, and Oppressions of all kinds. It will adhere to the old, safe, time-honored landmarks of the Democratic Par ty, and sternly oppose any “Departure” therefrom. Mr. STEPHENS is thoroughly enlisted in the Work, and will contribute to its columns almost daily. CRAIG’S PATENT HORSE POWER FOR DRIVING COTTON GINS. « d Beet ever yet invented. Requires no Woodwork. Sets npon the ground, and can be put up WITHOUT the aid of a Mechanic, .g* n t e e <i or Money JES.eixui.ded. Satisiatiou. Guara SEND FOR ILLUSTBATED CIRCULAR. We ask the friends of liberty, everywhere to aid in extending our circulation, cheap paper, and its Club Rates are particularly, favorable. The Presidential contest for 1872 will be the most important in the history of i volred are momei-tous, and all that patriots hold dear is at stake. Brigham) Esq., and Major W. S. Basin ger, Delegates to the Southern Commer cial Convention, which holds its session in Baltimore on the 25th hist. We are also informed that Maj. John O. Ferrill nnd J. R. Saussy, Esq., have been ap pointed alternates. The number of de'.ths in Savannah for the week ending the Ith was 20, of which noon .the noise, dust and confusion at tne depot is almost intolerable. Between those hoars the State Road arrives;^ about, the same time the Macon & W estern trains gets in, and also a train from the West Point road. Before the dust is settled from these arrivals, tha lightning express on the State road train leaves: the Macon train goes at the same time, and also the W T est Point train—making for For Driving Cotton Gins, Printing Presses, and for any purpose requiring from one to tonhorse Power. To disseminate truth, sound doctrine, and correct principles—laboring earnestly an’. zt-n FORE IT IS TOO LATE ; utterly repudiating the do-nothing, say-nothing, be-qqiet. d advocated by some, while we are being rapidly borne down the cnrrentwhicli is rushing i: of Radicalism, Centralism and imperialism. ' , T , - The Radicals, with the aid of bayonets,, have thrust upon u6 the unconstitutional and wh measures of the BO-called 11th and. 15th Amendments to the Constitution and the liecon the majority Faction in Congress. The Radicals have asked ns, as Pembcrats.jto pledge cept, indorse, stand by, defend and build upon these measures fore. _ pledge of course must “depart" from the faith of their fathers. Some of them have air ickodly oppressive usttuctiou Acts of „ ^ J6 ourselves to ne wer. Those Democrats who give this piru^c vi vvuaov ua«ao« uo^oi v - Hum uio uutu ui Hswmupii. owl ~ ~—- ready gone over to the enemy’s camp ; and wbile they and the Radical cohorts which they have joined aye calling out lus- til) for us all to go with them, a few others are advising us to hold ourpeace lest we do and distract the counsels of the Democratic Party ! Veiily, if we should held our peace, “the stones would cry out. thus counsel onr people to accept and welcome their own ruin, a. It is of the utmost importance that these issui s be discussed now “ departure ” by the General Convention of the Party ivi 1 he, not jodgment it will be fatal in policy. Fidelity to the Constitution Is the true lest of Democracy in every State of the Union. nr..l one who is a true friend to that sacred instrument, as a co-worker with ns in the great Liberty. The rights and liberties of the whole people are jeopardized—not any more ; in the North; and we of the South have no interests at stake in the mom intous .ssues are not common to North and South, alike. We respectfuUy ask a fair share of public patrongc. number 12 were colored, . The Atlas of the 6th furnishes these items: During the equinoctial gale last week, tue barn of Mr. Alfred Dyer, who resides m the southwestern part of this county, struck by lightning and one mule silled. From a private letter received from S°l- W. K. deGraffenreid, President of the Macon and Knoxville Railroad, we •earn that negotiations are still pending tor the building of this road, with a good Plospect of success. The officers of the r oad are laboring zealously to place the *°ad on a sure footing, and do not intend to move a shovel fall of dirt until they are prepared to complete it. :t.” W& cannot remain silent. Wo cannot and thank <»od for the privilege ! ; for the adoption oi a time-saving only wrong in principle, tut in our *‘?ni*c every if American Smith -than day, which- Yesterday each train ari ted contained a fair m and coming. par sengei-s, going When the new depot gets its touches, conveniences there w much improved, and much tr viated. t t ( — The Dfatrict Coori: was en] terday in the case of H. Kar will be concluded to-day. except at the door. The wmter bottom ir s perfect ud FIRE INSURANCE COMPANIES MAKE NO ! pROTT5CnoSrAGA1NOT EXPLOSION. It Is » natural “spark arrester,” as NO wnMATTER WHAT FUEL IS C3ED-m important consideration in cotton gin- NO MAHKK premiums by American Institute 1869-70. Send for Descriptive received for old claiuo^or new rpHEY &rs safe. The furnace is X protection fro^o f EXTRA CHARGE whe Th^r* i* POSITIVE SPARK CAN ESCAPE, uing and similar work Circular and Price Lis— ftyKimbJtH’8 B. A: A. K. R* money All communications or letters on Business should he addressed to itftrUy o--k our Weekly ExchawgeAo publish or notice ibis prospectus. FINDLAY IRON WORKS, MACON, GA. J