Newspaper Page Text
If REASON WHY
PETERS’
PATENT
TANNINE
PROCESS
Mrs- Woodhull’s Condition.
FAINT HOPES OF BECOV£ r Y—TELEGRAMS AND ]
OTHER MESSAGES Ol CONDOLENCE —
THE NEIGHBORS’ UNFEIGNED
SYMPATHY.
The San's article on Saturday on the severe
illness of Mrs. Victoria C. Woodholl startled
her friends, and hosts of them hastened to
her residence at 6 East Thirty-fourth street.
Many who called had never seen her, but had
long taken an interest in her and wished to
offer their condolences to the family. Tele
grams and letters poured in, and several bask
ets of flowers with kindly written notes at
tached were received. It was rumored in the
morning that she was dead, and her office in
Broad street was besieged by anxious inqui
rers. She lay motionless throughout Friday
night. Miss Claflin, Colonel Blood, and Dr. J.
M. Comins of 143 East Twenty-sixth street at
tended her.
Early on Saturday morning, Mrs. Woodholl
had so far recovered as to give directions in
whispers to her sister and Colonel Blood about
their business in the event of her death. She
added she hoped then the world might un
derstand her and know that she was not the
bad woman that she was represented by many
to be. Her physician bade Miss Claflin and
Colonel Biood to admit no cue to the room,
not even the other members of the family.
I p to a late hour on Siturday night telegrams
from all parts of the country inquiring con
cerning her condition reached the hens?, and
friends continued to call. All day ytsterday
it was the same. Her condition was much
improved, although she was too weak from
loss of blood to move her limbs. She fre
quently motioned to her sister and Colonel
Blood,* who were at her bedside and bade
them draw
of the lawsu]
and hoped that she might be able to go to Fifteen to Thirty Days for Bridle and Heavy
BANKS AND BANKERS.
ATLANTA NATIONAL BANK,
of the City of Atlanta.
DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE UNITED STATES
CAPITAL, $300,000.
Directors—Alfred Austell, R. H. Richards, E. W.
Holland, John Neal, 8. M. Inman, W. J.Garretv, W. B.
Cox.
Special attention is made to collections,for which we
remit promptly at lowest rato of exchange.
GEORGIA
State Lottery
ALLGOOD & HARGROVE
BANKERS,
Homo Croorgin
Special Attention Civen to Co lections.
Correspond with and refer to
DRAWINGS DAILY, AT 5 P. M.
Capital Prize $7,000.00
Tbe Great Uritan Milt aid Passenger
ROUTE TO AND FROM NEW YORK
Via Savannah., Georgia.
i LOW RATES as any other route. All claims for loas, damage or
PASSAGE FEOM ATLANTA TO NEW YORK, $27 50,
MEALS AND STATE ROOMS INCLUDED.
d®* SUMPTUOUS SLEEPING CARS on all Night Trains to Savannah. Passengers by this ro"J^;»onld
leave Atlanta on 2:30 r. M. train for Macon, the day before the Steamers sail from Savannah.
IS
SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS
HOWES <* MAC V
Ko. 30 WALL STREET, SEW YORK,
nov27-6m.
DOLLAR SAVINGS BANK.
No. 2 Wall Street.
Atlanta, Georgia.
W. L. Gordon, President; J. M. Willis, Cashier:
W. D. Bell. Teller.
AUTHORIZED CAPITAL, $300,000
Interest allowed from date of Deposit. nov22-ly.
: 30,31 *es, Amounting to
— i Ticke 00, Shares in Proportion
All other information furnished by application to the uud-rsigned.
P
juuell-il3
JOHN K. JAMES,
BANKER AND BROKER,
Because it pei forms the ope
ration of Tanning nnd Fin-
First.
nearer. At such times she spoke ’ ishing Leather in from TWO TO FIFTEEN! t tended to. Refers to
uits in which they are involved, DAYS for Kips and lighter Skius; and from ■
VHEN LEFT I
N TnE E SCHEME, FORMED BY THE
ternary nation of 73 numbers, making
i;,070 tickets ie drawing of 12 ballots, there will
i be 220 prizes «-acli having three of the drawn mun-
| bers on it; 4,3.71*,, each having two of them cu;
25,740, each having oue only ol them on; and also
I 45,760 tickets, with neither of the drawn numbers on
I them, boimr blanks.
I To determine the fate of these prizes and blanks, 78 ,
j numbers, from 1 to 78 inclusive, will bo severally I
' placed in a wheel on the day of the drawing, and 12 of |
; them drawn out at random: and that ticket having for \
its combination the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd drawn numbers. |
will be entitled to the capital prize of $7,000 00
That ticket having on it the 4th, Gib, and Gtn
drawn numbers, to 050 00
That ticket having on it the 7th, 8th, and Oth
di’awn numbers, to 650 00 |
CEORCE A. M’CLESKEY,
TrAveHug .Vucut, Steamship Co.’s Office, No. 4 Kimball House.
• prompUy Tllat Ucket u, V imi',
*)' ; 12th drawn numb
Tlao Iron City oJT Alatonma.
GREAT SALE 0F10T&ATAUCTION
ON WEDNESDAY. JUNE 18th, 1873.
court ou Monday, the ll>th. She wished to
have the cases tried once for all, so that she
might know her fate, and requested that
everything should be done to secure the at-
Harncss, leaving it free from chemicals.
Second.
Because while it dispenses
vith the use ot bark, and
tendance of their witnesses. Toward even- reduces the expenses of Tanning at least titty •
ing she slept, and late last night was easy. j )er cent., it may be used in combination with J
Her physician hopes she will recover, ul- bark, bark extract, or japonic*, and when so !
though, he says, the least shock at this time i used is nearlv as economical and rapid. j
mav take her off.—X Y. Herald.
A Pre-Adamic Man.
FT! Because of the superior:
A lillilK beauty, strength and du
1 rability of tbe Leather; a Sheep Skiu having
A Paris correspondent of the Tribune, ie- body and strength equal to Call tanned by
views the recent report of M. Emile Riviere, the “Old Process.”
despatched in 1871 bj* the French Minister
of Public Instruction, to examine tbe caverns A ftITRTH
of Mentone, Italy, in the interests of Arch- *
aeology. of the Leather.
Riviere pursued these explorations with
zeal and was rewarded l»y the discovery, at 1; IFTH*
various depths, down as low as cinttv-oue
feet, ot numerous fossil remains of fauna, I business,
with various human implements and orua- I
ments of flint and bone, and in one cavern 02 i ^ t YnTFf
feet below the surface, at a depth of twenty- *
one and a half feet, on the 2Gth of March, j times a year, instead of once, the old way.
1872, he found a fossil human skeleton—lyiDg
in the attitude of sleep and surronn *
Because of the superior
flexibility and softness
Bfcause it requires but a few \
dollars canital to start the
it the 10th, llth,
numbers, to 050 OC
j That ticket having on it the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th
j drawn numbers, to C50 00
j That ticket having on it the 3d, 4th and 5th
I drawn numbers, to 050 00 j
That ticket having mi it tlie 5th, 0th, and 7th
i drawn numbers, to G50 00 purchaser*. not
j That ticket having oa it the Gth, 7th, and 8th
„ drawn numbers, to 650 00
j That ticket having on it the 8th, 9th, and lUth
NINETY DAYS’ POSTPONEMENT!! 050 00
| llth drawn numbers, to 650 00 i
j That ticket having on it the 1st, 2nd, and 4ih
° I drawn nnmbers, to 650 00
That ticket having on it the 1st, 2nd, and 5tl»
! drawn numbers, to 217 60
; That ticket having on it the 1st. 2d, and Gth
| drawn numbers, to 217 60
O j All other tickets (being 2t>7, with three of the
i drawn numbers on, each 20 00
$500 OOO IN BANK TO PAY GIFTS, j now GG tick*, liartng on «licm th« l*l uid
»3W,UUU in DHUrv IU r«l Ulna, j 2uJ draw u numbers, club 10 00
Those 66 tickets baviug on thorn the 3rd and I . . _ « _ , . , .
4U.arewnhumbe,*.. «co 50 Tierces Superior Sugar-cured Smoked Hams
LIBRARY GIFT CONCERT
A Full Drawing Certain
TITLES WARRANTED.
OFFICE OF EI.YTON LAND COMPANY, BIRMINGHAM, ALA.. AiniL 10, 1-7
ceediog twenty acre* in any one Lot. Titles will be guaranteed without restriction as to time
of erecting buildings or making oilier improvements Terms of Sale—Either cash, or one fifth rash; one-fifth
in six mouths, one-fifth in twelve months, and the balauee in eighteen months, with interest. The sale will be
conducted on the premises. A map of Lots to be soTl is now iu preparation, and will soon l*e ou exhibition.
may23-d2w J. R POWELT., President.
TO CASH BUYERS.
WE NOW OFFER TO THE TRADE, FOR CASH, AN IMMENSE STOCK OF GOODS, INCLUDING
BACON AND BULK MEATS,
CLEAR, CLEAR RIB SIDES AND SHOULDERS. AUo.
10,000 Gash Gifts Paid in Full
$100,000 FOR ONLY $10 !
All other tickets (being 4,?2t) with
drawn numbers on, each
Aud all those tickets (being 25,740) with
only of the drawn numbers, each
of the
2 W>
Because you can turn your ,
money twelve or fifteen 1
Third Grand Gift Concert, in aid of the Public
Library of Kentucky, having been sold to insure a full
drawing, and the wish having bten universally ex-
on—lyicg w-w Because it is SO simple pressed that the 10 000 <a*h gifts offered should be
<lo<l with ©LV E.\T1I. nprsnn ran dr » wn iE fa " “ d l-» id in fuU wi ‘hout auy scaling
that any person can j
make Superior Leather by giving the process
a few days’ attention.
Because of its cleanliness
and freedom from offen
sive odors, as compared with the old process,
rendering the business admissible in the midst
of mercantile or other departments of the trade.
Because more money can
made in a shorter time uu
ou less capital than in any other busine.-s.
Eighth.
Ninth.
the debris accumulated by the refuse of tbe
life of each day.’
Tbe skull was ornamented with perfora
ted shells - a bone poniard seven inches long
was by bis side—and flints and tbe bones of
animals used lor food all around him. The
skeleton was almost perfect and indicated a
man over six feet high. From the surround
ings of the skeleton the explorer pronounces
him to have been the cotemporary of extinct
animal species, and as belonging cert.ainly to
the paleolithic epoch. In reference to other
discoveries made, the writer says :
But few instruments of bone or born w.re
found, and none of them presented any traces
of drawing or engTaving. Stone arms aud
instruments are counted by thousands. They
are of flint of various shades, generally rude
ly cut, and'must be referred back to the most
ancient stone epoch. All of the shafts of
long bones are split lengthwise. There are
only five exceptions to this rule in more than
10,00*) instances.
extract the marrow, which either served as
nourishment, or to anoint the body. Alter
the bones were split some of the pieces were
sharpened for use as arrows, pins, needles,
while of others chisels or smoothing instru
ments were made. While few exceptions, all
aent
i single object of pottery
early excavations, and near the surface. It j
is a fragment of a small dish, very thin, aud j
of a black color.
The skeleton reslg to-dav in the anthropo-1 PricM range from ONE HUNDRED to TWO
.... x- . 1 , THOTTSAVn nOT/TAHS FvAn-LnJv intur.
CAPITAL MtlZK
Ou Mondays capital will be $7,o<>0 00
Ou Tuesdays and Fridays capital will be 4.500 00
Ou Wednesdays capital will lie G.0C0 00
On Thursdays aud Saturdays 5,000 00
For further particulars tcud for schemes.
No ticket which shall have di awn a prize of a supe-
rior denomination cau ho entitled to an inferior prize.
Prizes payable forty (40) days after the drawing, and
subject to the usual deduction of 15 per cent.
All prizes of $20.00 aud under will bo paid immedi
ately after the drawing.
«J- Prizes cashed at this office
HOWARD & CO., Managers,
feb2lm»jp- ATLANTA, G A.
County ai Family RiiMs.
I have County and Family Rights for
This nras done in order to I sale >“ the following counties. The practical
utility of this process has been demonstrated
beyond a doubt, and I am satisfied that it will
down, as heretofore, the management, with the c
curreuco of the trustees, have determined to allow j
ninety days more for the sale of the remnant of tick- j
ets left ou hand. The coucert and distribution ad- j
vertised lor April 8 is, therefore, postponed to Tues- !
day, July 8, 1873, ou which day, and no other, they
will positively and unequivocally take place iu Public ;
Library Hall, Louisville, Ky.
At this grand concert the following cash gifts will
bo distributed by lot and paid iu full to the ticket-
holders who draw them*
LIST OF GIFTS.
One Grand Cash Gift $100,000
One Grand Cash Gift 50,000
One Grand Cash Gift 25.000
One Grand Cash Gift 20,000
One Grand Cash Gift 10,000
One Grand Cash Gift 5,000 j
24 Cash Gifts of $l,0o0 each 24,000 1 MAGNIFICENT PLANTATION. LYING O
50 Cash Gilts of 600 each 25,000 * ** * —
400 each 32,000
300 each 30,000
200 each 30,000
100 each 59,000 | At a very low price
It contains
80 Cash Gilts of
loO *>sh Gifts of
150 o-sh Gifts of
590 .’ash Gifts of
9,000 Cash Gifts of
Forest Grove
PLANTATION.
the Etowah river, five miles from Kingston,
OfForod for Sale
10 each 90,000
Total 10,000 Gifts, all cash $5o0,000
The money to pay all these gilts in full is now upon
deposit in the Farmers’ and Drovers’ Bank of Louis
ville, and set aside for that purpose, and can only be
used for that purpose, as will be seen by the following
certificate of the Cashier:
335 Acres of Fine Land! $io.
PLAIN ANI) CANVASSED, LARD IN TIERCES, BARRELS, KEGS AND CANS.
Eight Car Loads Molasses, in Hogsheads and Barrels; New Orleans Choice and Prime Svrup,
in barrels and kegs; Florida Syrup.
15,000 CDushels White and Yellow Corn. 3,000 Bushels Oats.
500 Bales Hay. I v 000 Barrels Flour.
A FULL LINE OF SUGARS, ALL GRADES. ALSO, COFFEE, FISH. TWO HUNDRED BOXES TOBACCO
Various grades and prices, just from the manufacturers, aud many othor goods usually kept iu a Wholesal
Grocerv and Produce House. We offer real inducements to cash buyers.
A. K. SEACO & W. H. C. MICKELBERRY.
OFFICE ANB SALE-ROOM—Corner Forsyth and Mitche’.l Street*.
TIME SALES,—ADVANCES TO PLANTERS.
Our crop liens, with approved security, will be made as heretofore. Also credit sales to merchant* co
approved paper and collateials.l
We have a limited supply of Chesapeake Guano and Baugh's Raw Bone on sale.
A. K. SEAGO & W. H. C. MICKELBERRY.
march 25-d&w3m. Corner of Forsyth and Mitchell streets.
Bath Tubs for the million!
WHO WOULD BE WITHOUT A BATH TUB?
WHEN YOU CAN GET A GOOD, SUBSTANTIAL AND WELL-LINED BATH
TUB. COMPLETE. WITH PLUG TO LET OUT THE WATER, FOR
OITL'ST
Omen
Faiimv.hs’ A DnovEiw’ Bank,
Louisville, Ky., April 7, 1873.
This is to certify that thero is in the Farmers’ and | there is
DU EVERYTHING IT CLAIMS!
Samples of Leather, tanned in Hall county,
of these instruments are very rudely made where I am now erecting a Tannery, can be j Drovers’ Bank, to "the Credit of the Third Grand Gift dwelling.
A single object of pottery wi found in tb^ . seen at my office. Those Rights ire being | ! , _
SOLD AT VERY LOW FIGURES!
One hundred and fifty acres opeu, and more than half
of thi* first-class BOTTOM LAND, much of which I
produced last year SIXTY BUSHELS OF CORN PER
ACRE.
^The Rome Railroad pas»es through the place, and
|Depot within a few hundred yards of the j
There are fine improvements, including !
$10.
tacky, five hundred thousand dollars, which has been
set apart by the managers to pay the gifts in full, and
j will be held by the bank and paid out for this purpose,
and this purpose only.
s - VEECH. Cashier*
logical gallery of the Moacum of Natural THOUSAND DOLLARS. Everybody inter
History here, and we await the jadgment of > 0f d e d are invited to call at my office aud see
leading anthropologists as to the significance * or themselves *
of the discovery.
' FULTON,
CASS,
FLOYD,
GORDON,
GILMER,
DAWSON,
DADE.
WALKER,
CHATTOOGA,
WHITFIELD,
MURRAY.
FANNIN,
TOWNS,
RABUN,
CATOOSA,
PICKENS,
LUMPKIN.
WHITE.
HABERSHAM.
FRANKLIN.
CHEROKEE.
FORSYTH,
HALL,
BANKS. HART.
[ and out-buildiURS — Gin House, Barn and Stables, '
The party, therefore, who holds the ticket drawing ; Qlww% ... ... .. .
the capital gift will get $100,000 in greenbacks, and so j Blacksmith .Shop and Tool*, aud all neoes*ary a„ri- j
Notes of the Day.
Commotional insanity is what the Utica
Herald calls it.
Sixty-eight married eighteen in Yellow
Springs, Ohio, one day lust week.
Mrs. Abagail Broadbent will celebrate her
one hundredth birth-day in Wethersfield,
Connecticut, to-day.
Baron Offenbnrg, the Russian Minister, is
making a brief visit to ex-Govemor Jewell, in
Connecticut.
Two Iowa boys, under thirteen years of
age, killed a wolf with an old boot and a jack
knife.
The Khedive has eighty children so far,
with several women to hear from.
Eighteen bodies have been found iu the
river at New York within two weeks past.
Carleton calls Miss Emerson a deliberate
liar for claiming bis “Betsy and I are out.”
That isn’t poetry.
George Francis Train, it is said, will sue
the city of New York for false imprisonment,
claiming $100,000.
Captain Chamberlayne, one of the famous
“six hundred,” at Bulaklava, died recently in
Dartmouth, England.
An Illinois farmer, who has kept strict
account with his corn crops for ten years,
reports that the average cost was 21U> cents
a bushel.
The first colored Catholic church west of
tbe Mississippi was dedicated at St. Louis, <m
the l«th instant, with great and gorgeous dis
play.
Forty thousand Sunday school children pa
raded in Brooklyn, New York, Wednesday,
and celebrated May day by a holiday in the
different parts of the city.
A singular epidemic broke out in a Kansas :
of the $50,u<><> gift, the $25,000, the $20,000. the $10.
iHH), the $5,000, and all the other gifts, 10,000 in num
ber, amounting to $500,000. «
The remnaut of unsold ticket* will l»e furnished to
tho*e who first apply (orders accompanied by the mon
ey always having preferences over agents) at the fol- j >ng 240 acre*, with improvements. On this place there
FRANKLIN & EICHBERG,
Nos. 14 and 16 Whitehall Street.
Also, REFRIGERATORS, ICE CREAM FREEZERS, PUMPS, RAMS, GAS FIX-
cultural implements.
The place la now ie iting for Oue Thousand Dollars | TUBES. CHANDELIERS, METAL ROOFING
' in cash, payable November 1st.
Also the plantation kuown as GLEN MORE, contain
jucel-tf
lowing prices: Whole tickets, $10; halves, $5: and
quarters, $2 50; 11 whole tickets for $100. 56 for $50<J,
113 for l.OtiO, and 575 for $5,000. No discount on less
than $100 worth at a time.
of the largest springs in Georgia, Only i
hundred yards from the source of this spring, there '
is a Mill and Cotton Gin, which also belong to tbe
The concert and distribution of gifts will begin at 6 ' plantation. I will take $2,400 fur the the property,
o’clock on Tuesday morning, July 8, in Public Library j _ .
The following TESTIMONIALS are;
from gentlemen of higb standing iu the city
where the Patentee lives :
Saint James. Mo., )
April 2, 1873. [
J. F. Winanh, Esq.
Dear Sir—Iu reply to your inquiry, I would !
state that my opinion of*PETERS' EUREKA >
TANNING PROCESS may be inferred from
tbe fact that I am now w earing a pair of J
boots, tbe leather of which was tanned by i
that process before the same was perfected
and a patent obtained; that the said boots
have now been in wear for he period of three
years—are the most pliabe and easy to the ■
feet of any boot I ever wore, and are iu a i
good state of preservation yet.
S. M. Nichoalos.
hall and. tbe following will be the order of proceedings.
1st Music by orchestral baud. 2nd. Placing of tags
i (oue for each ticket sold) in large wheel. 3rd. Placing
of gifts in small wheel. 4th. Music by orchestral baud.
| 5th. Explanatory remarks by President. Gth. Draw-
l ing of first half of gifts. 7th. Music by orchestral
i band. 8th. Drawing of last half of gifts. 9th. Pla
cing of large wheel with tag* iu the hands of a com
mittee appointed by audience. 10th. Grind orches
tral concert.
The music on this grand occasion will he the best
that cau be piocured.aud the gentlemen who count
aud place the tags and gifts in the wheels and snper-
intenc the drawing and keep the record of the drawn
numbers will be chosen from the beet kuown and
[ most trustworthy citizens ol the btate. All will be so
! conducted a* to be a perfect guaranty against com
plaint from auy just source.
| The payment of gifts will begin on Saturday, July
; 12, at 9 o’clock, a. m. Tickets drawing gilts must be
presented at room No. 4 Public Library Building,
where cash checks upon the Farmer*’ aud Drawers'
j Bank of Louisville, or tight drafts upon the Fourth
I National Bauk of New York, at the option of the hold
er, will be given for the tickets. All gifts not called
for in six months from the drawing will bo turned
over to the Public Library Fund,
i For full particulars send for circulars.
For terms, apply to
R.
ap t!20
A. ALSTON,
Herald Office.
‘ESTABLISHED IN 1354.^
Wholesale Confectioner,
STEAM
of Chronic and Acute Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lum
bago, Sciatica, Kidney and Nervous Diseases, alter
years of suffering, by the taking Dr. Filler's Vest
stable minimal ic Syrup—the scientific discov
THOS. E. BRAMLETTE,
Agent Public Library of Kentucky,
cian, with whom we are personally acquainl
has for 39 years treated these diseases exclusively with
astonishing results Wo believe it our Christian duty,
after deliberation, to comcieutiously request sufferers
to use it, especially persons in moderate circumstan
ces, who cannot afford to waste money and time on
worthless mixtures. As clergymen, we seriously feel
the deep responsibility resting on us iu publicly in
dorsing this medicine. But our knowledge and expe
rience of its remarkable merit fully justifies our ac
tion. Rev. C. H. Ewing, Media, Pennsylvania, snffer-
^HLoulavUla, Ky ! ed sixteen years, became hopeless, ltev. Thomas
Information, apply to PHILLIPS ' Mnrpliv, I). G„ Frankford, Philadelphia; Bev J. 11.
Davis, Uighstown, New Jersey; Rev. J S. Buchanan, ;
. Clarence. Iowa; ltev. G. G. Smith, Pittsford. N. York;
Bev. Joseph Boggs, Falls Church, Philadelphia. Oth
er testimonials trom Senators. Governors. Judges, Con
gressmen. Physicians, ifee., forwarded gratis, with
pamphlet explaining these diseases. One thousand
j dollars will be presented to any medicine for same
1 diseases showing equal merit undir test, or that can .
' produce one-fourth as many living cures. Any per
| son sending by letter description of affliction, will r«-
; ceive gratis a legally signod guarantee, naming tbe
number of bottles to cure, agreeing to refund the '
money upon sworn statement of its failure to cure.
BED WINK it FOX,
feb* Wholesale and retail Agents Atlanta. Oa.
AND DEALER IN
Fruits, Nuts and Preserves.
A L 8 O —
■v CHEW and BEOWINE .* FOX. Atlanta. Oa.
ATLANTA
STENCIL AND VARIETY WORKS
Cor. Marirtta anti Rrnail Sis.
DUTTON & FAIRBANKS.
PRACTICAL STENCIL CUTTERS,
Designers and Engravers,
&c.,
Toys, Willow Ware,
Whitehall Street,
Atlanta, Georgia-
niarch‘22*12m
Addhkm Lock Box 851,
ATLANTA. CA.
town Last week. Every wife in the town was j The undersigned take pleasure in affirming
suddenly attacked by an irresistable desire to tbeir knowledge of the facts, and the tmth of
present her husband with a nice little dress- : the statements set forth, in the foregoing let-
ing-case, with shaving materials complete. I ter of their fellow-townsman, S. M. Nichoalds,
An attractive young woman had opened a and also in attesting* the unsurpassed excel-
barber shop in the village.
lence and great superiority of the leather
A little girl was taken suddenly ill iu Balti- tanned by the Eureka Tanning Process.
more, on Wednesday, and died in a few min
utes, and they said it was from eating green
peas. Thursday, her sister, fifteen years old,
was sc*, t ou an errand to tbe residence of a
clergyman, and an hoar later she was brought
home in a furniture-wagon, dead, and they
have thought it time to investigate.
An appeal is being made in this country
for aid in behalf of the family of the late
Dr. Merle, best known by bis title of D’Au
bigue and Lis History of tbe Reformation.
His. salary as professor iu the theological
seminary at Geneva was always small, nnd he
has died, ieAviDg his widow and lour children
without adequate means of support and edu
cation.
Men often commit suicide when they can
not longer liva with their wives; but tbe situ
ation of William Dawes, of Lock port, Iml ,
was so unendurable that ho did mor*- he
eloped with h s step-mother.
Laura D. Fair has obtained judgment iu
$9C against the lessees of a San Francisco
hall who refused the use of their lmll for one
of fair Laura’s oratorical efforts.
John Blaix, M. D.
A. Emory, Broker.
J. Talent. Merchant.
8. H. Heaplf.e, M. D.
Wm. Tfneyck, Merchant.
J. R. Bowman, Co. Judge.
Wm. Dawson. Merchant.
with Ink *u<l UriiHh, 75c; by mall H5o. hot**l
aud key Check*. Notary Public aud Society Seals, Al
phabet* and everything in the line made to order.
Exceleior Printing Pres*, with font of tyyoa, »ent by
mail for $2.00.
Order* from a distance promptly attended
dec6-J-».
Chas. Bohnefeld,
The Scofield Rolling Mill .ompany,
ATLANTA, - - - GEORGIA, *
MANUFACTURERS OF
the department of our establishment lately dam
aged by fire, wo respectfully solicit a continuance of
orders. H ving largely increased our artistic *taff, we
are prepared to give all work immediate and cart lul
attention.
THE CALVERT LITHOGRAPHING CO..
iimv?0 Arcade Building, Detroit.
Horse Strayed or Stolen. ! warranted equal to any
Merctat and Bar Iron, Fish Bar, Spikes, Bolts, Nats, Etc.
LARGE STOCK constantly on hand, and orders promptly filled. Liberal prices allowed
for Wrought, Cast aud Scrap Irou. delivered at the Works, in exchange tor Bar Iren.
RE-ROLLED IRON RAILS!
A limited ou.uititv of NEW RAILS made on short notice.
ED. HOLLAND, Ag’t,
ALABAMA STREET.
OFFICE UF STAIRS
HERALD BUSNESS OFFICE.
UNDERTAKER AND DEALER IN METALLIC
B urial casks, caskets, and coffins of
all aisea and description*. Also agent fur Taylor’* :
Corjee preserver.
No. I DeOIVE'* OPR It A IIOUSK,
MAiilKTT.V STREET. ATLANTA. I
A ( l I "r.l.r»_pr"ni,illj ^
ICE!—ICE.
|)l 1:1: I.VKE ICE. IN gl'ANlITILS To WIT Cl'S
uners, at wholesale and retail, aud at a* l«»w prhv a* I
V DARK BAY
and Ibont mm-
borne, having been «
recently. Any info
thankfully received;
1m- paid for the hor*«<
JuimO tt
HORSE OF MEDIUM SIZE
year* old. kuown a* th« Scrugga '
»d by Mr. Bcrtlgu* until very
8.
SOUTHERN RAILROAD MEN
a* to
. IT stolen, a liberal r
ud title
. 15. SPENCER.
our Woik-
iv that the
the qu.ility
Kir RAILS, and tlm
T°
Administrator's Notice.
DEBTORS AND CREDITORS.
Capacity of the Works, 15,000 Tors per Annum.
d> fiti c o an <ri W n r o li o \i w •
n t the W r o x' lx m.
A person* holding claims against the estate
M. Arnold, late of Clayton county. Ga.. d.-eea**
requested to present th*m to me proptrly pro*
forthwith : and all pernon* indebted to * n t F.
to Id. art# requested to come forward and settle
diat-lv. Tl.i* Aptil 10. 1873.
V. W. ARNOLD Ado
L
COI-’IKI.P. 3u.,
S-ij-e: iu'end* lit aud
‘28-rf
I'tesi e t a i 1 l <