Newspaper Page Text
The Daily Herald
FRIDAY. JUNE 13, 1873.
THU HERALD PD1USHISO COMPART,
A LEI. ST. CLAIR-A BRA if 8,
ilEiRT W. GRADY,
Mv A. ALSTON, , w
Editor* and Mnnasm.
IHE TEEMS of the HERALD are u folio we :
$10 00 | WEEKLY. 1 Year... $2 00
DAILY.’ 6 Moatfco... 5 00 j WEEKLY, C Mouth a 1 00
DAILY, 1 Yet
t SO ( WEEKLY. 3 Months
1 00)
DAILY, i Months
DAILY. 1 Month..
Advertisement* inserted at moderate rau*. 8ub
scriptiona and advertisement* ‘^variably in advance,
address HERALD PUBLISHING CO..
Drawer S3 Atlanta, Georgia.
Office on Alabama Street, near Broad.
TUB ATLANTA STREET RAILROAD.
It in a source of pleasure to •chronicle the
•iiiccess of this enterprise. It furnishes evi
dence of what pluck and energy can do in
public enterprises.
Two years ago three or four gentlemen, be
lieving a street railway system in Atlanta
would not only l>e a great eonveuh nee to all
classed in the community, especially 'hepoor,
but remunerative to the owners, set about
raising|the necessary funds.
It was no easy work. Few bad .my faith
in its paying. Some took small amounts of
stock, considering it as a sort of donation. As
the work progressed, and as the different lines
were finished, the necessity for additional
ones was made apparent.
Fortunately, the company was controlled by
gentlemen who were alive to the importance
of the enterprise, and bad the good judgment
and the means to push on the system to meet
the demands of every portion of the city. In
less than two years, a splendid line, 2| miles,
to West End Mineral Spring, requiring four
first-class coaches, has been completed, by
which tne ladies, children, and over-woiked
men can go every afternoon asul quad’ the
health-giving water, inbale the pure uir and
enjoy the beauties of woods and flowers. A
coach passes on this line every fifteen minutes.
Another on Marietta street, lj miles, two
coaches every fifteen minutes, along that
great thoroughfare aad accommodating the
laboring class in the shops and iron manufac
tories along this line Then another, 11
miles, accommodating the fashionable resi
dents of Peachtree street. Then another one
mile on Decatur, leading to the Cemetery.
Then another, one mile, to Taylor’s Hill, giv
ing the citizens of the western part of the
city easy and pleasant access to the centre.
The next is a new line that will be completed
in twenty workiBg days from this time. This
line will start on Whitehall, then along Ala
bama to Washington; and thence on Wash-
ton to Jones street, by which it eio?ses to
McDonough and then south to Fnlton street.
The new cars for this line will be rer» ived m
ten days.
Upon the completion of this Iffst line, the
Peachtree line will be extended to the railroad
crossing in front of the National Hotel, and
the new car house built on the old market lot,
into which all the cars will be van every night.
The company has applied for, and has the
survey of the following new lines, which will
be built at the earliest practicable moment:
From passenger depot along Pryor to Gar
nett or Fair, and then to Whitehall »ud then
out Whitehall.
Next on Pryor, in frout of Kimball House,
north to Wheat street, and along this to Cal
houn street, thence to Houston and thence to
the neighborhood of the Mineral Spring* on
the northeast Also a line along Houston
street to the Cemetery, and an extension fiom
some point on Taylor’s Hill to Tatnall. When
these contemplated lines are completed, every
section of the city will be accommodated with
cheap, safe and comfortable conveyance. The
company deserve the highest praise for
having built one of the best con
structed and equipped roads in the
United Stutes. They nse every effort to ac
commodate the people, who appreciate it by
bestowing tbeir patronage. Over $140,000
have already been spent in this enterprise.
We hope that every cne who receives this
morning’s Herald will read the admirable
letter of Hon. W. A. Huff. If you have not
time to read it to-day, lay the paper aside and
peruse ft carefully, and ponder over the plain
truths which it contain#. We have read it
twice, ami we have no hesitation in stating that
we have not seen for some time a public docu
ment which comes up so fully to tho exigencies
of the hour. There is statesmanship in it,
which show# that this gentleman has carefully
studied the question, knows whereof he writes
and writes it boldly. We agree with every
thing in it and especially do we repeat to our
people that they cannot get out of their pov
erty and trouble by holding conventions and
passing resolutions. From a successful agri
culture alone are we to get the capital which
will enable us to build up other enterprises
and we can never have a successful agricul
ture until Ihe farmer decides to live on his
farm and make it his home. What Mayor
Hnff says about raising cotton to buy corn
and feeding the corn to the mule and mort
gaging the mule to pay for the meat, is ala',
to true. Go to any village in this section of
the county on court day axd find out who are
the successful, prosperous men and you will
find that they are those who have corn to sell
and meat to sell, and who make only cotton
euough to boy luxuries for tbeir families.
Not many weeks ago in our county, we heard
that there was an old farmer trying to loan
fifteen hundred dollars. We called on him
and asked him if it was true he bad money to
lend. Tb<* thing sounded so preposterous
that a farmer should have money to lend that
we sought an interview. When he sAid to us
that he had had mouey, but had already
loaned it, we then said to him, “You must
have meat to sell?" He replied, “I have
about 2.000 pounds, but am not ready to sell
it until it gets scaieer.”
The views of Mr. Huff on cheap transpor
tation are original and bold, but nevertheless
true. We go further than he does. We do
not admit that it is even a question whether
the South has been benefited by cheap trans
portation. We deny that she bas. On the
contrary we sincerely believe, and are ready
to prove, that our farming interests have been
injured and our lauds been depreciated by
the cheap transportation from extreme ter
minal lines. Why bilk to Georgia farmers
great leading features
doubtless present a
ew of each county and sec
tion such as has never before been witnessed
by the people of Georgia. The purposes of
this appeal are, therefore, to invite and urge
every county in the State, if possible, to be
represented in some way, so that we may
have no blanks in the picture. To do this is
a plain, patriotic doty; a duty, which, if
zealously performed, will conduce to the pros
perity aud success of every county in the
State, without any regard whatever as to
which gets the $1,000 premium offered. This
premium will, of course, g • to tlio county
which shall furnish the “largest and finest
display.” But, as will be seen by reference
to the Premium List, there are three other
handsome premiums to be distributed among
other counties, as follows : .
A premium of $500 to the county making
the second best display.
A premium of $300 to the county making
the third best display ; and
A premium of $200 to the county making
the fourth best display.
There are now three prominent counties in
the State which aro kuown to be bending and
concentrating all their vast powers and re
sources upon this great contest-one in Upper
Georgia, one in Middle Georgia, and
one in South-western Georgia. Other coun
ties will report progress, and enter the list
for competition at the next meeting of the
Society to be held in Athens next month.
But while the foregoing county prizes are
intended to represent the leading features of
the Premium List, they are by no means the
most attractive. The city of Macon has
united with the Society iu the effort to pre
sent a list of rewards that will not only please
but actually recompense the exhibitor for
some labor and expense. And among others
which may be referred to with pride and sat
isfaction, are the following:
For beat acre of clorer hay $ 50 00
For best acre of lucerne hay 50 60
For beat acre of native grass 60 00
For beat acre of pea-vine hay
For beat acre of corn forage
For the largest yield of Southern cane, one
For beat and iargest display of garden vege
table
For largest yield of upland cotton, ono
For beat crop lot upland short staple cotton,
not leas than live bales
For best one bale upland short staple cotton..
(and 25 cents per pound for the bale )
For beat bale upland long ataple cot
ton
(and 25 cents per pound paid for the bale.)
For the best oil painting, by a Georgia lady...
For beat display of paintings, drawings, etc.,
by the pupil* of one school or college
For beat silk dress, done by a lady of Georgia
not a dress-maker
For best made home-spun dress, done by a
lady of Georgia not a dress-maker
For best piece of tapestry in worsted and iloas,
by a lady of Georgia
For best furnished baby basket and complete
set of infant clothes by a lady of Georgia..
For handsomest set of Monchior-case, glove
box and pin-cushion, made by a lady of
Georgia
For best half dozen pairs of cotton socks knit
by a aldy over fifty years of age, (in gold)
For best half dozen pairs of cotton socks, knit
by a girl under ten years of age, (in gold)
50 00
200 00
west than the fertile hills of Cherokee Geor-
;ia, aud the narrow valleys of East Tennessee,
had time then to write and send letters for
these supplies aud wait the return'of quota
tions before buying, i, with dur merchant#,
purchased there, at our leisure, all that was
necessary to supply the wants of Middle and
Southwestern Georgia. Now we send our
immense orders by telegraphic wires to t ie
rich fields and broad plains of Illinois and
Missouri; and if, by any chance or ill luck, a
roilroad bridge is burned or a transfer boat is
sunk and a little blockade occurs en route, a
panic ensues and a meat, bread and hay fam
ine at once threatens every man end beast
south of Chattanooga. This is our mis
erably poor and helpless condition to-day
—fearful and unreasonable as it may ap
pear to outsiders. But that annual deficiency
of fifty millions of bushels of grain in the four
States of Georgia, Alabama, Florida aud South
Carolina, commented ou so gravely by the
late Canal Convention in Atlanta, tells the
whole story. We have suddenly awakened, as
it were, from a deep sleep aud discovered the
unwelcome fact that we uie poor, thriftless,
non-producing, all-consuming, dependent
people. And just so long as the farmers and
planters of Georgia pursue their present mad
policy of buying fertilizers to make cotton to
buy corn, bacon and hay with, aud then pay
two per cent, a month for money from April
to November of each year to run this wild
schedule, just so long will they be pitiable
beggars and borrowers at the doors of trans
portation offices and Georgia shaving shops,
provided a worse fate does not speedily over
take them.
The truth is, the whole country has become
A T ^
of this paper.
APOTHECARIES.
Sri
dPi
Decatur streets.
ENBY 0. P0
^atreet^Atlanta, Ga.
EO. J. HOW.
Wholesale a
Peachtree street
AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSES.
BEN WILSON k CO.. Broad street, next door to
A full
of the
Peachtree and Wheat streets.
GUNS, PISTOLS, Rtc
munition, etc., Whitehall street, l
AUCTIONEERS.
vances made on consignments.
ind CommiKHion
• Peachtree. Ad-
snd Dealer iu Furniture, Marietta street.
BAG MANUFACTORY.
BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS.
sellers, Stationers aud Pi
tionery, 105 Whitehall Street.
BlSIJiESS COLLEGES.
Detwller k Magee, Managers. Corner Line aud
Peachtree streets. Three hundred Graduates now iu
position.
about diversifying their productions when
cotton is the only product they can get from ( For the finest and largest display of female
their doors to a market ?
There is not a better grass and grain coun
try in tho South than upper Georgia, and y<t
Governor Brown tells us that in a very shoit
time, more than thirty five thousand bales of
hay have passed over the Western k Atlantic
Railroad. Why is it that fifteen years ago
Major Hnff did not have io go beyond the
limits of Georgia and East Tennessee to sup
ply his people with corn aud bacon. The
reasons are very plain. In the first place,
our people while they raised as much cotton
then as they do now, did not depend upon
keeping their corn cribs and smokehouses in
Cincinnati and Louisville, and consequently
did not need as much to purchase then as they
do now from abroad; and the second is that in
them days it was cheaper to transport meat
from upper Georgia to lower Georgia than from
Cincinnati aud Louisville. Now the whole
thiDg is changed. A gentleman who lives in
lower Georgia, and desires to purchase hay,
learns that be can get it from a farmer who
lives in Floyd county, near the Rome Rail
road. He inquires the price, and finds that
he can purchase it at $20 per ton. He makes
a calculation on the freights, and he finds
that it will be much cheaper to get a car load
by the Green Line, from St. Louis, even
though he has to pay $23 per ton in St. Louis.
Now, wbat is this but offering a royalty of
three dollars per ton to the Missouri farmer,
over the Georgia farmer to raise hay. These
matters are so well understood that
our people have not cared to raise any
thing but cotton for sale. We saw last
season expressed in the Atlanta market sweet
50 00
50 00
50 00
50 00
25 00
25 00
counted. Deposits received. Foreign and Domestic
Exchange bought and sold. Checks on all points iu
Europe, in sums to suit.
Agents for the Innnn and Canard Steamship
Lines. #y First data aud steerage tickets at lowest
rates.
( 'I A H. 8ALG8HIN. Bankers and brokers, next to
X* National Hotel. Exchange bought and sold.
Money to loan.
rjlHJS DOLLAR SAVINGS BANK, No.
1 House. ~
Willis, cashier.
handicraft, embracing needle work,
broidery, knitting, crocheting, raised
work, etc., by one lady
For the bast combinaticn horse
For the best saddle horse
For the best style harness horse
For tho finest and best matched double
For the best stallion, with ten of hia colta by
bis side
For the best gelding .
For the best six-mule team
For the best single mule
For the best milch cow
For the best ball
For the best ox team
For the best sow with pigs
Fcr the largest mnd finest collection of denies
tic fowls
For the best bushel of corn
For the best bushel of peas
For the best bushel of wheat
For the beet bushel of sweet potatoes
For the best bushel of Irish potatoes
For the best fifty stalks of sugar cane
For the best result on one acre in any forag
crop 150 00
For the largest yield ot corn ou one acre 100 00
For tho largest yield of wheat on one acre 50 00
For the largest yield of oats oa one acre 50 00
For the largest yield of rye on one acre 50 00
For the best result on one acre, in any cereal
crop 200 00
For the best display made on tho grounds by
any dry goods merchant
For the best display made by any grocery
merchant 100 00
For the largest and best display of greenhouse
plants, by one person or firm
For the best drilled volunteer military compa
100 00
100 00
100 00
100 00
100 00
250 00
250 00
100 00
100 00
100 00
100 00
DO 00
10) 00
25 00
25 CO
25 00
25 00
25 00
50 00
100 01
100 00
500 00
250 CO
one common counting room nnd'hog. gnmb- MSSSSffSK
ling shop Wbat we once Cild With the axe J A standard institution, the largest aud best practi-
and the hoe, the plow«hear and the reaping Mi 1 B
hook, we now seek to accomplish l»y strategy
and chance, credit and speculation. As we
must, sooner or later, come back to hist prin
ciples or we must perish. We have too many
able-bodied young men in shady places; too
much tape cutting and pin selling aud too lit
tle cotton chopping aud hay curing; too many
yard sticks thrown around’ loose on srnooth-
iop counters and not enough hoe-handles and
plow-stocks; too many law books and lager
beer barrels in proportion to the rail splitting
and ditch digging; too much foolish fashion
and foppery, and not enough sledge-hammers
and saw-horses—in a word, too much whole
sale idleness. Georgia has to-day buried
in the rich bosom of her varied soil
and precious mineral beds, greater
wealth and grander results than can ever be
worked out by canal products or Congress
ional enterprise. And how is it to be done?
Not by dreamy theories and mythical plans,
but in talking corn instead of canal—in diver
sifying and developing our own vast resour
ces—in writing more about homo effort and
less about foreign immigration--in planting
less cotton and manufacturing more yarns.
In this, and this only, lies the great secret of
Georgia success —agricultural as well as finan
cial and commercial. We are immensely rich
in resources but miserably poor in the handling
of them. What we waut is work—honest,
hard-fisted, intelligent, well-directed toil, la
bor and application in developing and utiliz
ing what we have here at home rather than so
many spasmodic efforts to bring from abroad
thnt which we should not buy. Our pov
erty, like our pride, is the result of misap
prehensions and mistaken ideas ourselves,
of our country and of each other. The aboli
tion of slavery in the South has developed a
vast world of sickly, sentimental, lazy, indo
lent, stupefied, inert and ioapt population - a
population of young and middle aged men,
some of whom have known better days.
These men put on old store clothes, hang
around dirty grog shops and dingy hotels,
smoke cheap cigars aftd drink mean whisky,
affect old habits and anti-war stjle, talk poli
tics awhile, and curse destiny and lroe ne
groes more, fret and fume over the result tf
the late war, and sian up mortgage liens cn
tbeir cotton crops before they are planted, pay
two per cent, interest on money for nine
months iu the year, and theu promise to pay
annually in the fall more money per acre for
commercial manures to scatter over their
lands than some of them originally cost.
And, finally, when inattention to business
and general bad policy aud mismanagement
For tfie beBt brass band, not leas than ten per
formers
And $50 extra per day for their music.
For the best Georgia made plow stock
For the beat Georgia made wagon, two horses,
For the beat Georgia made cart
These are among the many premiums of
fered by the city of Macon, and the State
Agricultural Society, aggregating in all more
than $15,000. But it is not tu the value of
the premium that we look for rewards. The
exhibition promised nobler results Ilian this.
There will be a great moral influence growing
out of it. The political economist will here
find food for his thoughts. The artisan will
of road real estate and * . A. ' , , . „ .. , „ scan with eagle eye, the work of his peers,
in consume non oi roau, real tauue auu potatoes that were brooght all the way from Tfae t h,i(ty farmer* the
equipment The company now has in stable i New y or k, an(1 yet w0 a u know that this is '
ninety-nine mules and horse#, fourteen cars * . the best sweet potato country on earth; that
Leaving out the const motion force,
dlily employment is furnished to over forty
men. Everything is conducted on the cash
system, the employees being settled with on
every week. The chaiit-r allows the company
to charge twenty cents, but voluntarily the
fare has been fixed at five cents on each line.
The people want cheap freight, cheap fare,
cheap gas and cheap news, and individuals
or corporations who Act on this id~ft, will find
it to their interest.
It is pleasant to know that the city authori-
onr labor is cheaper and our seasons longer,
and altogether our circumstances more favora
ble for raising them. We made inquiry
about it of farmers living on the Georgia
road, Mr. Livingston among others, and his
reply was that the way freights were actually
prohibitory. The true policy of railroads is
to build up the country through which the
road pasess, all along the lint of the road, and
not to discourage production by making
freights so high to the nnforlnnate man who
lives on the road twenty miles from market,
tie. hava appreciated the importance of this tJmt he calVt afford ^ ship a barrel of apples
yreat corporation, and have given the com- or a ,,{ potatoes because be can be un-
pany a hearty co-ops ration in perfecting this , derso i d by the man who lives in Connecticut
cheap system of travel throughout the city. j Uid yj cw YotV, because it costs the latter less
The projectors of other enterprises, such as 1 10 get his produce to market. While we are
cotton factories, who have been hesitating
about taking hold, might learn a lesson by
noticing the energy, will and success of the
street railroad company.
Notwithstanding the hoary outlay of capi
tal, it is believed this company will realize
from ten to twelve per cent, on the capital
invested.
We congratulate the company, the city
aud authorities, and the people upon what
has already been dene and the earntpt of
future extensions.
THE FIRST GREAT VICTORY FOR
THE FARMERS.
If anybody doubts that the farmers are or
ganized as farmers and not as partizxns of
any particular party, the recent victory in
Illinois of their candidate, Judge Craig, over
his competitor, Judge Lawrence for the Chief-
Jasticeship of that State, will set such doubts
J NO. M. HOLBROOK, Dealer in lists, Caps. Furs,
and all the latest novelties In his line, White-
hall street, Atlanta. Ga.
HARDWARE AND CUTLERY.
in Hardware. Carriage Material aud Mill i
45 Whitehall street.
W
PICTURES AND FRAMES.
I AS. B. BANDARS, Manufacturer and Dealer in
Chromoe, Mouldings. Looking Glasses and Plates,
>. 37 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga.
TAINTS, OILS, GLASS, ETC.
hall street, Atlanta, Ga.
SIGN AND FRESCO PAINTING.
W M ,?
here orders will be attended to. Krueger k
Bro. can be found at the office of the above. G. W.
■lacks. Whitt hall street, Atlanta.
REAL ESTATE AtiENT& *
ADAllt, >Vall street, Kimball House
Cutlery, Guns,
ALLACE k FOWLElt, Alabama street, opposite
Herald Office.
rilHOS. M. CLARKE k CO., Importers and Whole-
X sale dealers ia Hardware, Cutlery, Harness and
Iron Goods of all descriptions, Peachtree street.
Largest stock in the city.
ICE HOUSES.
H r. KMiiliV, Ati.ii !a Ice Home, m Janie.' ilauk |
• Block, next to Railroad. Pure Lake Ice kept in |
quantity.
JEWELRY. SILVER WARE.
C.
W
MOWING MACHINE AGENCIES.’"
rpHE
i MAI
$ 25 00 to
Marietta street. Atlanta, Ga.
IMPROVED HOME SHUTTLE SEWING
ACHINF.. Cheapest and most Durable. Price
$25 00 to $75 00. D. G. Maxwell, Gen'l Ag’t, No. 13
« W L^LMI family favorite
TY JJJllflX EEWING MACHINE
* Office, Comer Broad and Marietta 8ti.
F No. 4 DeGivq's Opera House. The “Fast Gain-
j iug” Machine.
Jew- ~
/"'I EOBGE SHARPE, Ju., Agent, Dealer in nne.n w- ! rvnvipn i onnru .... , . 9
lx elry and Sterling Silver Ware, Parlor Jewelry ! TT SJichini' SS-fw >Vhe ~ er * Sewing
- - - In mnoii. Kimuii J X Machine Hales Room, No. 25 Marietta street.
60 Whitehall street.
Jno. T. Grant, president; Perino Brown, cash’r
JNO. II. JAMES, Banker, James’ Block.
S TATE NATIONAL BANK. CAPITAL $100,000
James M. Ball, President, W. IV. Clayton, Cash
A tlanta hatiohal bank, capital $iqm#o
United States Depository. A. Austell, President
W. H. Tuller. Cashior.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
Boots and Shoes, Leather and Shoe Findings,
Sign of the Golden Boot, 39 Peachtree street, Atlanta,
Georgia.
in Boots and Shoes, Republic Block
CARPETS, MATTINGS, ETC.
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY.
A T. FINNEY, Manufacturer of and dealt,
• Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, Sewing Machine
Wagons, kc. Send for Price List. Broadstreet, just
beyond the Bridge.
D AVID McBRIDE, Manufacturer of Carris
Wagons and Buggies, Decatur street.
J J. FORD, Carriage Manufacturer, corner Line
• and Pryor streets.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
Pryor and Hunter Streets,
acceptance, made on goods
ding accompany Drafts.
k mission Merchant, corner Forsyth aud Mitchell
W. & A. It. R. Office, 9. Alabama Street Grain, Hay,
Flour, Bacon, Bulk Meats, Lard, Hams (sugar-cured
and plain) Lime, Cement, Plaster, Domestics and Yarnsr
thoroughly in favor of increasing all the facili*
ties of transportation, we are also io favor of
seeing them regulated in such manner as not
to deprettg, but to bnild up our industries. As
they are now used, we unhesitatingly state
that they are exercising an injurious effect
upon our prosper!ty.
Read Mr. Hufl’s letter, and get ready for the
great fair. Huff has bis whole heart interested
in making it a grand success. If the counties
will only do their duty, we honestly believe it
will be the grandest exhibition ever held in
Georgia, and well informed men will be sur
prised when they go there to see the vast re
sources of old Georgia.
Home leading Democratic politicians of Ohio
have been sued by a dealer in Columbus for
pay for fire-works furnished them in the Pres-
dential campaign of 1868.
A moat remarkable cure of the desire for
, , , .. j , i ! tobacco is that of an Indianapolis Alderman,
at rest. I be defeat of Judge Lawrence has g e wnfl ^jj rown f rom his buggy some time
ago, and since then has loathed the fonl weed.
taken everybody who was not in the secret by
sarprise. He was an able, efficient and up
right Judge. He was personally very popular.
He was a Republican and lived in a District
that gave General Grant over eight thousand
majority and yet be was defeated by over fif
teen hundred votes by a Democrat.
This victory proves clearly that the Lumets
are organized and determined to assert their ]
ri E bt«. There were no epeechee in tfaU c.n- j To ^ p eopU lsnr*r titorjm
The Georgia State Fair.
API. BESS or MAYOR nr FI', or MACON, TO TBE
PEOPLE or IPPEB and OOWEE
BEOS*'
ru, no bon&ree, no barbecue., bat ever;
man understood bis neighbor and quietly
marched to victory.
When the people are suffering and when
they have borne a. long as forbearance was a
virtue, when neither contentment nor pros
perity exist], history shows that they will
rise against their rnlers'whether they are to
blame or not; and sook is now the condition
of tba farmers aJJ over the land. They feel
that they have worked and toiled to make
others rich while they have become poorer
and poorer. They hare decided to stand it
no longer. Grange after grange has been
organized, and still the work goes an. One
danger w* fear they may tall into. Petition-
era and demagogues are <jnick to scent the com
ing storm, and will seek affiliation with them.
We say to them to act eautioosly. ••Torrico
danaoa dona fenentsa” should be their motto.
Remember the fundamental principle, of your
order, and move cautiously and slowly. Too
have the power, use It judiciously aud all will
be well.
The Sew Jersey Editorial Association will
bold its Sommer meeting at the Delaware
Water Gap the last week in June. The tick
et. have been placed at (10.
As yon are aware, the Georgia State Agri
cultural Society will hold its next annual lair
at this place, commencing on the 27lh day of
October.
Every true Georgian ia justly proud of his
native State—rich iu minerals as it is varied
in aoil—wealthy indeed, in oil that sboold
constitute a people prosperous and happy.
We have here that diversity of production and
peculiar adaptation of the various sections tc
the different industrial pursuits which com
bine to make up the natural elements suffi
cient for an Empire. In agricultural, as in
everything else, harmonious action strength
ens and supports each section of the State.
Lower Georgia has her pecnliar interest to
foster snd protect, and her great strength to
boast of. Tbi ■*'
e same may be said of Upper
and Hiddlo Georgia.
The city of Macon occupies a grand central
position geographically, and her citizens
have provided within her limits Fair grounds,
any equipments equal, if not superior, to any
in the United States, for the accommodation
of visitors and for the exhibition of any and
eveiy article which may be brought here for
show. The Executive Committee and mem
bers of the Agricultural Society have evinced
a determination to make this next the great
Fair ot the State. The handsome and liberal
premium list now being circulated throughout
the State speaks for itself.-* An examination
of its pager will convince every one
fiat the Society means business. Bat
the "county displays” are looked forward
| uterprising mer
chant; the fowl iaucicr. and the stock im
porter; the horticultmalist—all will be enter
tained pleased and instructed. Here we will
learn the sources of supply and demand
in our own State. Here wo will learn
wherein our own State, each and every
article is produced, raised or manufactured.
Our people will nere be taught where in tbeir
own country they may lollow that pursuit
best suited to their interest and taste, without
being forced to hunt among strangers, ns it is
now too often the case. Exhibitors from Up
per Georgia will here find a market for the
ready sale of much, if not all, of tbeir perish-
ble articles at full, remunerative prices. In
addition to all this, mnch general good must
necessarily grow out of these annual reunions
of so many of the thinking and working men
and women of the country. The spirit of
State pride is fanned into new life by these
meetings, and we forget, as it were, our in
dividual misfortunes in rejoicing over
onr mutual successes. Let us then devote
one week in next October to the very profit
able work of meeting and discussing the
important agricultural and ' commercial
interests of the day. Let it be a week de
voted purely to the explosion of false theories,
and putting into practical operation tho safe,
sound bnsiness ideas of the times. Among
other things, let us prove, by the variety and
merits of onr exposition, the great and abso
lute danger and folly of looking to railroads,
rivers or canals for relief from “hard times.”
Let onr fair in October be the only argument
bv ns to prove the utter fallacy of that grand
idea, that ignis fatuus, called cheap trans
portation, which has so suddenly become
the all absorbing theme among men
search of relief. For it may in
time—indeed, it has already—become a se
rious question with thonghttul,observing men,
whether wr have not now too much trans
portion. Our seemiDg advantages may some
times become our greatest misfortune. That
which is oftimes a convenience is not always
a blessing. Jt may become a vital necessity
for us to inquire whether or not these im
mense railroad lines—traversing and condu-
loying, os they do, our country from moun
tain to seaboard—are really feeding or ab
sorbing us? That transportation which fos
ters and encourages onr improvidence while
it depletes our pockets, may be tho transpor
tation least of all others wanted in
thia country. And the objections now
so strongly urged against our
railroad systems, might not be en
tirely overcome by these proposed water
lines. It is not, however, the practicability
of these grand schemes for reducing freights
that we must stop now to consider—for no
matter how feasible they may be, Georgia is
in no condition to wait their completion.
The emergency—dread—is upon us, and we
most go to work, and go to work to day. We
must teach onr boys, by precept and example,
that the great virtue of life and the necessity
of the age is to be fonnd in the truth ot the
old maxim, “LaVor omnia vincit." The
people of Georgia should never be depen
dent upon any line of any system of trans
portation for the meat and the bread,
the hay and fertilizers used upon their fa rms
Koch a policy will bankrupt and starve out
any people in the world, tfhow me the man
with a fat smoke house and a well filled barn,
and I will show you one who ia not affected
by low priced cotton or high transportation.
On the other hand point me to that farmer
with a lean smoke house and an empty con
crib, and I will show you a miserably poor
and mistaken wretch, whose dependent and
destitute condition can never be reached
by high priced cotton, or relieved in any
way by cheap transportation. The truth
is, w. have been betting onr bottom dollars
so long on three fatal cards called “credit,”
‘cotton,” and “enterprise," that we now
Commission Merchants, ami llealcrs in ail
_ I Simla of Produce, No. 83 Whitehall Street. Atlanta,
have brought them and their State to the ex- Georgia. Orders and consignments solicited. Be-
tremity of desperation—when ruin and bank-1 turns made promptly.
rnptcy stare us all iu the face—we issue proc-
lamations, call public meetings, invite dis-
tingnisbed gentlemen from abroad to cumc
here and sympathize with us. We me t iu
banquet halls, drink much champagne and
discharge more gas over the great anil absorb
ing questions of canal schemes, Congressional
aid and cheap transportation, thin was ever
expended by our forefathers in discussing the
Declaration of American Independence. And
what does it avail? Will these idle and ex
travagant demonstrations ever work out the
great problem of Georgia independence ? Mo !
Never until labor becomes popular will money-
get easy. Never, until we iced fancy less,
and learn to fatten chickens and hogs more,
will want disappear and plenty step in. When
these plain secrets of life shall have been
learned, when Ihe wild mania for speculation
shall have departed from our farm house and
plantations, when our planters shall learn
from experience to abandon Wall street
brokers and “cotton futures,’’ aud come to
deal more directly iu the productions ot
square little “spots” of potatoes and corn,
when agriculture shall become the ruling
feature aud controlling interest in our State-
then, and not uutil then, will we become an
INSURANCE ACENTS
nnnnaitA KiinhuJ] I ^ o-im jurom, jso. aa Marietta street
^ | IjJtfikt style pktterui constantly on hind.
rjlHE SINGER DROP-LEAF SEWING MACHINE.
X Best Sewing Machine made. R. T. Srnilie Agent
corner Broad and Alabama streets.
H owe sewing machine agency, come
Broad and Alabama streets. As good among
machines as old Elias Howe was among men.
SALOONS.
BROi Turf Exchan „ .
Finest liquors in the city.
aud Life. London and Lancashire Fire,
ginia, Fire and Marine. Cotton States Life. Broad
street Atlanta, Ga.
tlantaTdepartment life associatIo
of America. Officers—T. L. Langston, Fro
dent; C. L. Red wine, Vice-President; J. H. Morga
Secretary; General L. J. Garircll. Attorney; Willia
i sole agent for the Old Russell
I ot liqqors mixed in the best style.
“ GIVE HONOR
TO WHOM HONOR IS DUE.'
JACKSON’S
MAGIC BALSAM
THE GREAT
MASTER OF PAIN,
A MEDICINE
Which i* caring distress and pain to as exteu
never before heard of in the annals
of medicine.
X T WIXjXj CURS
lOOTHACUK in one minute !
HEADACHE in five minutes!
V. \HAGUE in twenty minutes!
NEURALGIA ia tea minutes 1
RHEUMATISM in four days!
SOBE THROAT in forty-eight horns
THE WORST
CATARRH IN THE HEAD
IN ONE WEEK ; THE WOBST
PAIN IN THE SIDE. BACK AND LIMBS
in two days: the rrorst
BURNS and 8CADDSI
in twealy minutes;
THE WORST SWELLINGS AND RISINGS
in forty-eight honrs;
And for removing Pains and Inflammations in
any part of the body, it cannot be excelled
by any medicine ever offered to suf
fering humanity.
It will Tiiro the Worst Cramp folic in ten
Minutes.
AND I WILL GUAUANTEE THAT FIVE ONE
DOLLAR BOTTLES WILL CURE TIIE WORST
CASE OF RHEUMATISM ON RECORD.
Go to your Druggist and get a bottle, or enclose the
price for the sise of a bottle that you wish, and I will
send it to you expenses paid. Address all orders to
P. VAN ALSTINE. *
proprietor,
BARNESVTLLE, GEORGIA.
le-$Gi- Bold at 25 cents, 5C cents, $1.00, and $5 00 d
feb25wx v
GEORGIA, Fulxon County.
STOVE AND HOUSIFURNISHING GOODS.
S TEW ART k WOOD, dealers in Stoves, Hollow-
ware, Housefurnishing Good* and Children's Car-
r Alabama, —=
riages. No. 73 Whitehall street.
UNDERTAKERS.
Girard, ’ Man* : J ^HA-S. R. GROOMS, Undertaker, Hearsea nrump?-
’ | VJ ly sent when requested. y
WHITE COODS, NOTIONS, ETC.
P hillips, flanders fc co.. De,i,r, in staple
and Fancy Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hosiery.
Ribbons, Notious, Etc., No. b8 Whitehall Street, At
lanta, Georgia.
W ILLIAM GOODNOW. General Agent for Geor- j WM. RICH k CO., Wholesale Notions, White Goods,
gia of Republic Life Insurance Company, office i ’’ Millinery aud Fancy Goods, 15 Decatur street,
Republic Block. ! Atlanta, Ga.
.Etna aud Ihrcnix of Hartford, Franklin oi
I'hiladelphia, and Southern Mutual. Athens.
£ CHARLES A. CHOATE^Kimball Honse,~ corner
of Wall street., General Agent of New York
Equitable.
0SmbSa!™ Agency, office K . PECK k co WholcMle whito Good.. Notion,
No. 2 Wail street, Kimball House. | " Hosiery ,ml Gloves, Kimball Hoaae.
Oldest Insurance Agency in the city.
WOOD ENGRAVING.
i Wood, corner Peachtree aud Marietta, up stairs.
Burglar aud Fire-proof Safes, Broad street.
H
MISCELLANEOUS.
It LD PUBLISHING COMPANY. Alabama
street, near Broad. All kinds of Job Work neatly
promptly executed.
LAWYERS.
J OHN A. WIMI'Y, Attoruey-at-Law, Atlanta, Georgia,
Practices in all the courts. Special attention given
to the collection of claims, and all business promptly
Courts. Office over James’ Bank.
Law, corner Whitehall sail Alabama streets, up
i Bedding, Mattresses, Pilllows
ivuing and Tent Maker, No. 7
jar Whitehall, Atlanta, Ga.
1 /1 H. LEDUC. Manufacturer of Tin Ware, Agent
' • for Kerosene Stoves, Pratt’s Astral Oil, Triumph
Washing Machine. Clothes Wringer, etc., Belgean
Sheet Iron and Enameled Ware, Whitehall street.
vy A. SLAYMAKER, Manufacturer of School Furni-
" • ture. Office corner of Peachtree and Marietta.
H. Stockton. Charic-s Dupree, W. D. Bell, A. M. Wil
son, and H. L. Davis, Citizens of the city of Atlanta
said county, respectfully represent that they desire to
form a FIRE COMPANY, in accordance with the laws
of said State. The object and purpose of said com
pany, and the name and terms thereof, are as lollows:
1. The corporate name by which said company shall
be known ia
THE EUREKA FIRE COMPANY, No. —.
2. The object for which said company is formed is
the protection of Life anti Property iu the city of At
lanta, Georgia.
3. Thia company will have no capital stock other
than may be necessary to purchase outfit, equipment
and engine house, and to meet current expenses inci
dent to such a corporation, lor which it will depend
upon donation and assessments per capita upon its
members.
4. The term of existence of said company shall be
twenty years, unless sooner dissolved by a vote of two-
thirds of the active members thereof.
Wherefore, your petitioners pray the order of your
Honorable Court incorporating said company agrees
ble to the statute iu such cases made and provided
This 23d of April, 1*73. T. W. HOOPER,
Attorney for Petitioners.
True extract from the minutes.
NOTICE !
the Estate of James McConnell, late t f Clayton
county. Georgia, deceased, applies to me for leave to
sell a Lot oi Land, in Gordon county, Georgia, l»e-
longing to said deceased:
This is, therefore, to cite aud admonish all persons
concerned to file their objections, if toy exist, within
the time prescribed by law, or else said leave will be
granted.
Bone at June Term, 1873, cf Clayton Coarc of Ordi
nary.
Witness my official signature, the 2d day of June,
1873. JOSEPH A. McCONNELL.
raue4-law4w Ordinary.
ril 8TOBO FARROW, Attorney-at-law, No. 1 5Ta- !
X • rietta street, up stairs, practices in all the j
courts.
J OHN MILLEDGE, Attorney.at-lawj Whitehall i
street. Residence, corner.
ATLAIVT-TX A
WATER CUR!
Dr. F. Kalow.
Corner of Hunter and Belle Street
Dealers iu Paper, Paper Bag
Paper stock, old metal, hides, etc
Atlanta, Ga.
n Merchants aud
, Twines, Rope,
33 Pryor street.
S TEPHEN^ FLYNN, Commission Merchants, and
dealers in Grain, Flour, Provisions, Country-
Produce, Lime and Cement. Forsyth street, Atlanta,
JJ
chants in Grain, Provisions, Hay aud Flour, For
sytii street, near W. k A. R. R.
J J. WILLIAMS k CO., Dealers aud Commission
• Merchants iD Grain and Produce. Handles pro-
1 H duee by car load without expense, Yellow Frout, Ken.
independent prosperous aud happy people, nesaw Block, Forsyth street, Atlanta, Ga.
And wc have here in Georgia all the ele- —
ments necessary to this great end. Hers
God has blessed us with everything essential
to the prosperity aud growth of man
or best, if only worked out. Everything,
from a chicken and a churn to a cotton field
and a coal bed, from a ground pea patch on
the sand hills to a gold mind in the mountains.
These are among the rich, rare and multi
plied resources of Georgia; these constitute
our strength, our refuge and our power.
Think of it, farmers and planters of Middle
Georgia ? Here we are, iu the heart of the
empire State, tho boasted owners of
lands without stint, blessed with a clim
ate and soil where two crops of grain
or two of potatoes, or one each of
pea vines and hay can be successfully grown
ou the same laud Ihe same year, and yet we
go to Baltimore to buy guano to make a
little cotton to sell iu New York to get money
to buy hay, oats, and corn away out in the
rich States of Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois and
Missouri. And just so long as we are the
voluntary patrons of produce dealers, heart
less rings and pampered monopolies, such as
now ow n and control, operate and direct our
only lines of trade and transportation
north, south and west, just so long will we
be fit subjects for lien-drafts and home
stead laws, mortgages aud repudiation. The
South must work out her own indepeudence.
The remedy is ours, if we will only apply it.
Too often have we been beguiled by plausible
schemes for great internal improvements and
financial relief. Let us no longer be lulled
into a false security by any promises which
can be made outside of our harvest fields and
hog pens, our hay patches and cane mills.
It is here we shall find it. To this end the
State Agricultural Society throws open the
doors of her Exposition Halls, offers her Pre
mium Lists to the public, and invites compe
tition from every section of the country.
It may sometimes suit the interest of small
politicians to excite sectional antagonisms in
the State; but no such petty jealousy is to be
found in the heads and hearts of those engag
ed in industrial pursuits. AU are expected
at tho Fair in October. Macon unites with
the State Agricultural Society in a cordial
invitation to every county in the State to be
represented. It will impart new life, vigor
and energy to every industry; it will dissemi
nate knowledge and caltnro among the great
masses of the people; it will kindle a lofty
emulation among the working classes; it will
present one vast field for testing tnoories and
trying conclusions; it will cement ns, as a
people, iu the bonds of fraternal union, and
none should be deterred from fear of defeat—
for the triumph of one will bo the triumph
of all, and there will bo no rejoicing over any
defeat.
From the ladies we expect much- yes, ev
erything. Without their kindly aid aud hand
iwork we shall have no Floral Hall, and with
out that ploasing featuro in pertection, tho
Fair can never be a jrrand auecehs. The good
women of onr country saved ns here about two
yearn ago -without their timely aid the Fair
cf 1871 would have been au immense failure.
Their hearty co-operation now is all we want
to insure success.
Let us then unite iu oue mighty effort to
throw together, in one common display, the
grand and aggregate specimen resources of
have nothing left us but oar males and lands; our proud old commonwealth. Let it be
and, in seven out of ten, these are pledged to * ‘
some warehouse firm for supplies to make
this year’s crop with. And yet in the faoe of
all this crouching poverty and embarrass
ment, we learn from the newspapers of the
country that more hind is planted in cotton
this year than last, or even any year since the
war. No wooder, then, that we should be
crying out for more transportation.
such an exposition of our pride and our
strength ; such an evidence of our skill aud
our taste, our genius and our energy, and
especially of our love for agriculture #nd our
homes, as shall challenge, in kindness, the
competition of the South, while it excites the
envy and admiration of the world.
W- 4- Huff,
Mayor of the city of M&con.
CLOTHIERS AND TAILORS.
the National.
1 G. JONES, Fashionable Tailoring Establishment
f • within fifty yarda of National Hotel aud Kimbal
ouse. Full Line of ; oodu always on hand.
i Marietta street.
i and Alabama streets (up stairs), Atlanta. Ga.
attention to the prosicution of claim?
State of Georgia aud Uuite l States. Office No. 1 Aus
tell’s Building, up stairs.
at hnr, Ko.10
D
I)
idence corner Peachtree and Harris
OVAL k NUNNAI.I.Y, Attorney* at Law, Grifim
stairs, 1st floor, prmetio
EO. T. FRY, Attorney-at-Law, No.
X House. Residence corner McDouou
ardsou street:'.
H
LIVERY AND SALE STABLES.
t ^LINT TAYLOR, Proprietor of the Archer Stables,
} keeps always oii hand a large supply of Mules
and Horses for iude.
R. Kalow, well known through his rapid and
Boudcrful cures, has returned to our city, and opened
an establishment again, f r the cure of all Chronic
Diseases, and ho respectfully informs the citizens of
Atlanta and surrounding country, that he is prepared
to cure Liver Complaint, Fever, Ruxum.vTisav,
Neuralgia, Scrofula, Diseases Peculiar to Wc
men, All Impurities of the Blood, Skis Diseases,
Kidnev aud Bladder Complaints, Stoppage of the
Water, Piles of all Kinds, Strictures, Gonorrhea,
Eye aud Ear Complaint after Measles, Scarlatina,
etc., etc.
As a proof of his success, the Doctor takes pleasure
in referring to the following persons: Mr. J. W.
Rucker, of the firm of Chapman, Rucker A Co..
Major, W. B. Cox, Mr. T. J. Hightower, Gen. W. S.
Walker, John aud James Lynch, J. Fleischell, Beerman
Kubrt. Mr. Schulhat fer, Dr. M. Mitchell, Superior
Vicar, Mr. Turner, of Brooklyn, Father Marony,
Philadelphia. Rev. Mr. Smith, Macon, Col. Gaulden,
Quitman. Miss Dunwoody, Darien, Mr. White,Congaa.
Outside of his Institution he will treat ail Acute
Diseases with great success. This method of treat
ment is the most rapid, safest aud only sure cure.
Particular attention given to tho cure of 8ummer
Complaint, aud Teething Period of Children. Menin
gitis is not dangerous when taken in time. Thia
treatment gives a white and soft skin, and everybody
wil learn to treat his family for ACUTE DISEASED
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
o s v.
Atlanta, Ga., May 22, 1873. )
bUNDAY. THF o-.™ INSTANT,
out warn train b i
Leave Atlanta 8:30 a m
Leave Dalton 2:24 p m
Arrive at Chattanooga 4:2* I* M
INWARD TRAIN* FROM NEW YORK
Leave Chattanooga 5:45 a m
Leave Dalton S :03 a m
Arrive at Atlanta..* 1:15 p m
OUTWARD TO NEW YORK VIA KNOXVILLE AHD
NASHVILLE
Leave Atlanta I0:CO p m
Arrive at Dalton 3:15a m
Arrive at Cbaltauooga 5:00 a m
INWARD FROM NEW YORK VIA DALTON AND CHAT*
TANOCGA
Leave Chattanooga..
Leave Dalton
Arrive at Atlanta
FAST LINE TO NEW YORK
ft^Fast Line will put off and take on passengers only
at Marietta, Cartersville, Kingston, and Dalton. Way
passengers are requested not to get on this tnun. un
less they wish to be landed at above named places
DAVID McBRIDE,
SUCCESSOR TO
CIGARS, TOBACCO, ETC.
:
• Tobacco. Finest brands always
street, near Bridge.
i hand. Broad
Iin]K>rtcr of Cigars aud Tobacco, Wholesale aud
ported
Block,
House Cigar stand.
■§ OHN FICKEN, Manufacturer, Importer and Dealer
f J in Fine Cigars. Pipes, Tobacco, Snuff Boxes and
Smokers Articles, No. 17 Peachtree street, Atlanta,
Gs.
feKERMAN k KUHllT, Cigars, Tobacco and Snuff
CONTRACTORS
LTD
m and
fully carried out.
COPPER, BRASH AND IRON.
M iddleton a bros., coppersmiths. Brass
Founders. Finishers, Gas Fitters and Sheet iron
ers. Broad street, opposite the Sun Budding.
Ail work done promptly.
H UNN1CUT k BELL1NGRATHS, Gas Fitters,
Brass Workers, and dealers in Stoves, Marietta
Street, Atlanta.
CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE.
M CBRIDK Jk CQ., Wholesale dealers in Crockery,
Glass and FArthetiware. Kimball House.
AW k CO., Wholesale Crockery, Marietta street
L
CANDY AND CRACKERS.
( ^4 W\ JACK, Steam Candy and Cracker Mauufac-
X* tory, Whitehall street, Atlanta.
H LEWIS’ STEAM BAKERY Manufactures all
9 varieties of Crackers, Cakes, Snapps, etc. South
Forsyth street.
J NO. PEEL. Confectionory and Fruits, Fancy
Bakory. Also, Bar and Restaurant by Peel k
Knowles. Nos. 36 and 28 Marietta street.
dye-works.
■ AMES LOCH KEY, Atlanta Dye Works. Df#t#C
f| aud Cleaning In all branches. Satisfaction guar
anteed. Post office box 540.
DENTISTS.
D lt. JAMES ALLEN LINK, Dentist, corner White*
ball and Hunter streets, Atlanta, U#.
| D. CARPENTER. lHmtUt, No. 30 Whitehall
I Jm street, Atlanta, Ga.
R D. BADGER, Burgeon Demist, Peachtre# street.
Work promptly and neatly fin lahad.
FRUITS, VEGETABLES, ETC.
NTONIO TORRE, Dealer in Fruits, Vegetables
_ and Imported Wines, **
Atlanta, Ga. P. O. Box 454.
CIC.
T.
A turn
X> k G. T.
x • provisl
ell Streets, At
GROCERS.
OAHN <k DAMP, Wholesale Grocers snd
Provision Dealers. 86 Whitehall Street,
86 Booth Broad Rtnwt, Atlanta, Georgia.
J. HIGHTOWER, Wholesale Grocer and Pro-
vlalou Dealer, Comer Broad and Whitehall Hta.,
Atlanta.
- ... .. DODD A to., Wholeaala G. aoers and
Provision Dealers, Corner Whitehall and Mitoh-
Atlanta. * _ _
T. LA INK, Family Groceries. Also has a
« Bakery attached. Furnishes bridal rakes, |
etc., Marietta street, west cf Spring’s first store.
W.
Dealers, corner
LIQUORS.
AUER BEER BREWERY. City Brewe
Wholesale dealers in Foreign aud Domestic
Whiskies, Wines, Brandies, Rums, Gins, etc., aud
Proprietors of the Mountain Gap Whiskies.
[ NO. M. HILL, Marietta street. Wholesale Dealer i
R.
M. ROSE k CO., Wholesale Dealer
of the finest brands.
t ^OX k HILL, Wholesale dealers in Foi
j inestic Liquors, Peachtree street.
KADOR BROS., Wholesale Tobbat
86 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga.
MARBLE YARDS.
Statuary and Vases, Alabama
MEDICAL.
D lt. W. T. V.\RK. oflhoa Ho. #5>a Whitebait street,
P. O. Box No. 168. Atlanta. Ga. Treatment of
Chronic Diseases, Impurities of the Blood, Obatotrios
and Diseases of Women aud Children midi a spec
ialty.
MUSIC AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
STOP, STOP, STOP, STOP
No. 7 MARIETTA STREET.
R emember that george e. ward vk co I
can sell
ClotbiigGliitDerandBitter!|pj ne Q arr j
McBRIDE & SMITH,
MASUFACTI HER OF
CHILDREN’S CLOTHINC
GOODS a specialty. Don’t forget
London
Store,
Marietta Street.
NEW FIRM.
FETEKSOX A SNVDEli,
Real Estate Agents and Auctioneers.
S PECIAL attention given to conducting sales of
Real Estate in the city of Atlanta and vicinity by
auction.
J. S. PETERSON, Auctioneer.
Office adjoining hardware store of T. M. Clarke
Co., ou Line street, near Peachtree. apridCm
ages,
PHAETONS.
RQCKAWAYS AND BUGGIES.
Repairing Promptly and Neatly
Executed.
ATLANTA PAPKR MILLS,
Hook and Nrw*.
JAMES ORMOND. Proprietor
DR. J. A. TAYLOR.
Of Atlanta, Georgia.
DR. R. A. HOOKE,
Of Chattanooga, Tenn.
O L. BRAUMULLER, Dealer iu Musical lustru-
• ments, Stationery, and solo agents for Steinway
k Sous’ aud other celebrated pianos, 15 Whitehall
street, Atlanta^ Ga.__
NURSERYS.
S OUTHERN NURSERY, Irwin and Thurmond
nroDrietora. Propagators and Dealers in Fruit
Ornauieutal Shrubbery, Hot
PRIVATE IIOAKMMB HOUSES.
M RS. It. E. WILSON, South Pryor Btreer. betwet n
Hunter aud Mitchell. Largo frout roo a, with
board. Day boardora wanted.
afllH. A. K. SMITH'S, centrally located, nlcaly fur-
IyX nished, carpolod rooms, waluut furniture, neat
house, a table provided with tho best fsro the market
affords. Call snd examine. No. 7», Whitehall 8treet.
i,
ONH H. WEBB, No. 82 Whitehall, and 72 Broad
street.. Table supplied with the best the market
i>rda. ’
M RS. OVERBY’S Boarding House-Near the
bridge, oonveuiont to all the Chun boa. Poat
Office, Library, etc.
4 FEW ladles and gentlemen ran be accommmisted
with good board at Mra. Overby’s, on Broad
t. Just acres* the bridge.
T# #188 GREEN, at the “Lareudon Himes.” on
I y I Peachtree street, can furnish pleasant rooms to
families or tingle persons. Day boarders alao re-
pel red. — -
photograph gallery.
S MITH * MOTK8, FhototfrAiffil.'OAllery. a-nt
Drutf Store, on WblteheU itreet. Flr*t oleu
ehotographa. etc., executed promptly, at reasonable
s. Call and eee specimen*.
MINERAL HILL.
SALINE, SULPHUR, ALUM,
Chalybeate Springs!
mills FAVOItITK Sl'MMKR RESORT, STTVATKD
J urn ltr,n> Station, Et.t Tonnr«»ro, And nine
luilo, from Morristown. K. T. A Va. RAtlrOAd. Has Just
limn Ht'l.ENblULV FITTED UP for tba summer
of 1S73.
OUR SULPHURS!
(lied. White and Black), Alum aud Chalybeate Waters,
need no commont. as their effects sre generally known;
but wo would call your particular attention to the won
der of tho age, as a mineral water—
OUR SALINE SPRING!
better known as Black Water, which is magical in its
specific effects in cases of RHEUMATISM, HOHOFULA,
DYSPEPSIA, all Diseases of tho Blood and Skin, aud
especially adapted to the Diseases of Female*.
HOT AND COLD SULPHUR IATHS!
the cool and bracing mountain air, together with the
MAGNIFICENT MOUNTAIN BOKNKEY, tend toiuak*
this one of the moat pleasant summer reaorta In the
South.
These Springs are acoeeaible by dally hack Usee
DUS. TAYLOR * HOOKE. PaopaiKTous,
Bean's Station, East Teuneaeee.
STAR CANDLES!
PROCTER A CAMBLE’S
“Light of Day” Brand
STAR CANDLES!
Are of superior quality, aud the standard
brand sold by
AtlAUt*. Maoou
AUGUSTA G HOC BBS.
Apao-tf ■ N
Si. Louis,
— AND —
CHATTANOOGA 8.8. LINE.
SPRING SCHEDULE. 1878.
Laave Atlanta
Arrive at CbatUuooga......
•« Nashville
. 8J0 a m. and 8:10 r Jt
. <M r.H. and * AA a m
. 1I:« A M. and 1 :G5 r.M
. 8:38 A.XU and 8:30 r u
. 1:18 r.M and 2:25 A M
8:M r.M
. 8:8ft a.m. and 8:10 r.M
. 8 :#8 a m. and 2:44 A.M
. lt«i am. and 1:06 r.M
Uniosi City W:#8 a.m. and I« » r.M
Colombo*, Kjr 12:00 | |
noon. 12:00 night
fe#K r.M, and 11:20 a.m
*• St Louis, via Cairo
Short Una...
•• St, Louis, via Iron
Mountain Railroad.. 11 .*00 *• m. aud 12:20 r
ALBERT B. WRENN.
Southeastern Agent,
PoAt-o&ca Box MS.
CMkANe. 4. Kimball Houaa, Alta Ala G«orgv