Newspaper Page Text
The Daily Herald
TUESDAY, i AUGUST 26. 1873.
PUR HERALD Pl’BLISHIAU COMPANY,
;x. 8'
ilEIRT W. GRADY
It. A, ALSTON
Krtltor* and Blanagcn.
TBE TERMS of the HERALD in u follow! i
DUET, 1 Yaw $10 00 WEEKLY, 1 Y'mt. . .$3 00
D AILY. 0 Month!.. 6 00 j WEEKLY, 6 Mouth! 1
D ULY. 4 Month!... 3 50 I WEEKLY, 3 Month!
D LILY, 1 Month.... 1 00 |
AdTertlaemente inserted it moderate rates. Snh-
ao -lttlohi and advertiaements 'ntrariably In advance.
Address HERALD PUBLISHING CO.,
Drawer 33 Atlanta, Georgia.
>Rue on Alabama Street, near Broad.
THE DANGERS TO THE PAT ROMS OF
HUSBANDRY.
Mb. T. J. Bounty is the only authorised
Travelling Agent of the Herald.
Our State Exchanges.
The or«« of Hammett for the murder of Roquemore,
w*a tried this week st Walton Superior Court, and
found guilty. The jury recommended that the prison
er be sentenced to the penitentiary for life.
The exercises of Conyer Femate College will be re
sumed on Monday. September 1st. CoL Button re
quests the patrons of the school to meet l.im at the
College at 9 o’clock on thtt morning, iu order that
they may take in consideration the practicability of
adopting a miifcrro series of books for the benefit of
that school.
Mr. A. J. Haygood Las just opened a book and mu
sic store in Conyers. This is something that that
town has long needed.
Mr. M. F, Reese, formerly connected with the West
Point News, was teamed on Tuesday last to Mrs. Ells
Haggarty. of Wetumpka, Ala.
Mr. R. A. Whitman has just returned from a trip
acroRa the country to Dalilonag* and Porter Springs.
He tella the Ringgold editor of fine corn and cabbage
crops, and that the party enjoyed the trip finely.
The Catoosa Courier says board it low in Ellijay. A
gentleman informs us that a party of four with a pair
of horses, stopped at the hotel there, all night, and the
whole charge was only one dollar, and they could not
make the change and eighty-five cents settled the bill*
Governor Smith, in reply to tbe application for a
battery of guns for the proposed artillery company in
Columbus, atates that the appropriation will only jus
tify the purchase of s single battery—the cost of which
is five thousand dollars—and that has already been
promised to the Chatham Artillery of Savannah,
winch is the oldest company of tbe kind in the State.
Governor Smith ^lso informs the committee that he
will in a few days authorize, in due form, the organi
zation of another infantry company.in this city, which
will no doubt offer the Artillery boys an opportunity
to fill up its rank.
The arms for the Athens Guards will be received in
fathers” of that place with loaning the city money—
which the writer parenthically and plaintively says
has been wrung '‘from the hard earnings of honest
poverty”—to rich speculators in Augasta.
The News says that the “ domestic telegraph” sys
tem, introduced about a year since in New York by
the American District Telegraph Company, will f
be inaugurated in Savannah.
The Columbus Sun several days since announced
that some of our gallant knights were desirous to hold
a Tournament at the Fair Grounds, at as early a day
as possible, provided that everything could be satis
factorily arranged. All knights from Alabama or
Georgia who would like to join in this proposed con
test, are requested to communicate by letter with Mr.
Henry Abercrombie, of Columbus; which fact our
exchanges will please cal! attention to, and oblige all
interested parlies.
A gentleman with the startling name of Grouse
hibita to the Chronicle A Sentinel a postal card
which he has written twelve chapters from the Book
cf Job, in all, 5,096 words.
The same paper learns from a letter receive 1 from
Monticello, Jasper county, th t the Loll worm has
made its appearance ih the growing crop of cotton io
that county. Some of the best farmers report sad
havoc from the worm to their crops, and if the* pres
ent hot and damp weather continues a few day* longer
the late ver> flattering prospect will tc very seriously
injured. Tne planters of Jasper up to the present
time bevo had good reason to hope for a full yield of
»l.o a* i • : ow they are very despondent.
The S ourt having refused a »a»J<)»4UJ in
to -eollL. lored murderer, Mitchell Cogswell,
a. • hi.-,, i Savannah between the hours of five
ana *e next T .lay morning, the 29th inst.
'it tor of :.e Elberton Gazette fays the change
t . -r. a j. i o* allnlah is said to be from the beenli*
iul ti • > it,.. ,'.e. Such maybe the case, but tbe
I asaage th- r. 1 tho “dirt read” is neither.
The ; tbe Augusta and Hartwell Railroad
Compt t r ; meting at Liucolnton one day last
■ • L. wh agreed that tbe line recently sur-
• d frvii- vud onv>lle to Petersburg be adopted
•»rt for that read. A meeting of stock-
i. i»vai 1 to beheld at the same place, in
•ert county are requested to meet
. : b .. on saleday in September pioxlmo
ration the proposed railroad from
to A;. *U. Speakers will be present to de-
.-i Thornton, a Ciplist minister, was
. ni ,.s buggy in tho vicinity of Hartwell
.3 severely bruised. His advanced
in j. ies more serious than they would
■•ot , and his recovery has been re-
?*! e cause.
T. aea is informed that on last Sat-
, Messrs. Stewart k Long, of this
< re of land in this county, mostly un
it). None of these lands were
. e* to Carrollton, and could prob-
- ear* back have been bought for a mere
r u .r .1 f round in Carrollton has been filled
he are clamoring for a new spot to
boats.
merchant-, Evans A itagland, of
revering to pnt up a new warehouse.
■ has presented the editor of the
■ .th an apple grown in Mr. William
i i l ed orchard, which weighed fifteen
'The peoj
* a tbe co.i
to tak< I r.
Wallis
liver :
pltf. ^lasw
improve *u
eoiy a i • w r<
Tne oh f ud
nr*, and ♦ h* p
re*‘ ibe.
Tbe entei f’.
1 iGnrgt. a.*
Mr. A. ti «*
McDuffie Jon
A. Msrtiii »
aud a Lai. r
Ike re* dec
came near fc-.
A hor** ia
9UODI4 other t
W* brother.
d*t often*, i
latter, about
if- John jL Clarke, of Augusta,
it roved by fire on last Friday.
- ay in Augusta on Saturday, and
c 4 ran over a child, seriously- crip-
As we have all along feared, the remarkable
success attending the Farmers' movement is
attracting a class of men whose connection
with it cannot fail to be moat injurious to its
best interests. Political hacks and dema
gogical journalists who live and fatten upon
partisanship are now seeking to patronize
tbe Patrons of Husbandry. Like All
new converts, they are dangerously zeal
ous. To obtain the good will and friendship
of the planters, they are insidiously stirring
up strife between the agricultural community
and tbe factors, or middle men. One journal
advises the Granges to grow cotton cheaper,
and hints pointedly that the only way of do-
ing this is to annihilate the middle men.
Another zealous scribbler advises them to
proclaim war against capital; while all the
small fish politicians who hang upon the verge
of the Grangers add their dangerous counsels
either by open or insidious appeals.
The Hkb\i,t> was about the first paper in
Georgia to advocate the cause of the Patrons
of Husbandry, and as we did so, and will
continue to do so, from purely disinterested
motives, we feel ourselves authorized to spaak
frankly to them, and to point out the dangers
which threaten them. Emancipation from
middlemen cannot be attained by a war upon
them. It is, indeed, impossible to do with
out an agent between the producer and the
consumer. The planter who grows fifty bales
of cotton would find it an expensive luxury
to go all the way to New York or to Liverpool
for the purpose of selling it If he clubs
with others and employs an ageDt to do the
work, that agent becomes as much a middle
mao as the factor who advances money on
the crop and charges a per centsge for selling
it. Besides which, if one class of middlemen is
to be abolished, all most be. Farmers must
get rid of the men who sell them plows, ma
nures, machinery, provisions, clothing—in
fine, they wonld be compelled to form a huge
communistic organization, subversive of their
best interests and dangerous to society.
There is but one class of middlemen who
can safely be dispensed with, and that is the
dealers in provisions. And they can only be
dispensed with by the planters going to woik
and raising enough food on their own lands
to obviate the necessity of purchasing from
anybody. An emancipation of this kind is
not only desirable, it is absolutely necessary
to insuie the prosperity of the farmers and of
the country in general. Nothing can be more
argent than the wholesale denunciation we
have read of this class of middlemen. While
some few dealers may impose upon their cus
tomers and even swindle them, the great ma
jority are honest, fair dealing men, whose
margin of profits is not large, and who pursue
their occupation of middlemen because there
is a demand for it It is desirable to get rid of
them not because they are dishonest, not be
cause they extort but simply because so long
as we do not prodace enough food for our
population so long will we be debtors to the
West. If even it were possible for the farm
ers to combine and obtain their supplies di
rect from the Western markets, their savings
would amount to the merest trifle in the ag-
greg ite, while the great and oppressive evil—
the sending away of the bulk of tbeir monej —
wonld continue unabated.
We shall not join in any war upon middle
men; and we shall not hesitate to condemn
the wretched demagogues who are endeavor
ing to stir up strife between the mercantile
and planting community. It is in the power
of our planters to place the South on the very
pinnacle of prosperity, not by antagonizing
any interest, but by adhering closely to those
rules of social economy which exp erionco has
taught us will add to the wealth of a country'.
To drive away the capital employed by the
middlemen wonld be to bankrupt themselves.
Every part of our business organization is de
pendent upon the others. Every branch has
been suffering for years, and our misfortunes
have been mainly due to the failure of our
planters to raise eoough food.
To extirpate an evil it is necessary to cut
into its roots. Had we raised enough wheat,
corn and meats to supply our wnnts, the
capital used by middle men for these articles
would have been devoted to manufactures
and other industrial purposes. Abuse of
them now is flagrantly unjust, and the men
who, in the hope of obtaining a trifle of ad
vantage, are leading in the attacks upon them,
Are vile demagogues, who are either ignorant
cf the commercial ruin they are invoking, or
designedly wicked.
We believe that the Patrons ot Husbandry
are a good organization, whose work is des
tined to enfranchise the Sonth and to give ns
a real independence. To render agriculture
prosperous and independent is to elevate and
to strengthen every branch ot industry.
When the planter is oat of debt and with a
surplus of money in his pockets, we shall see
cotton and woolen factories, iron works, Ac.,
Ac., spring np like magic m every city and
village in the South. It is because of this be
lief that we most heartily and without expec
tation of favor or reward lend our influence to
the Granges; but we warn them against that
demagogery which seeks to build them up by
tearing down other interests.
At the best our planters are too prone to hold
back - their crop from market in the hope
of doing better by waiting, and year after
year they have pursued this policy only to be
bitten regularly every year. Iustead, there
fore, of being influenced by the speculations of
men who ignore tho laws of supply and de
mand, it would be better for them to consult
their own interests in the sale of their crops,
and not lose all by grasping for too much.
While occasionally they may gain, in nine
cases out of ten they will lose by following
the ignis fatuis of those l amed “cotton wri
ters” who grope in the dirk and never strike
the mark correctly save by tlio merest acci
dent We have no axes to grind, hence we
have no motives to mislead. We do not gam
ble io cotton futures; consequently it is not to
our interest to help impart a fictitious value
to cotton, and aid in inflating a large bubble
which plunges the planter in ruin when it col-
Cotton can be raised profitably at fifteen
cents per pound, if the planters will devote
more attention to the raisiug of provisions.
They have made little or nothing at this price,
simply because they have depended upon the
West for their food. Reports from all parts
of the Sonth represent a larger amount of food
has been sent annually for tbe past seven
years. Thus, if even the present crop of cot
been at any time since the war ended.
We must consequently decline to join in
the dismal swamp stories which some of the
papers are indulging iu. They do no good
they mislead nobody but the planter, anc
they benefit nobody but a few heaitless spec
ulators who take pretty good care that the
men who raise the cotton shall make the least
money out of their labor.
Pike, the wife of the
there is blamed for the mistake.
error was made by our night editor, who in-
Pike nnjustly. The mistake was one not
nnfrequent in the rush of business at night.
Of course it is much to be regretted, but we
are certain it will not injure the lady one iota
after our prompt and frank correction of the
blunder, and our equally frank apology to her
for what was less the result of carlessness on
the part of our night editor than of an error
resulting from the rush of work.
ATLANTA PAPER MILLS. r
A TLANTA PaTEH MILLS-JAh. OflMUNU pno- A
f\ pbietob. For specimen of - News,” we refer -
to this issue of this paper.
e
APOTHECARIES.
if JOLLIER k VENABLE, Wholesale and retail Drug- -
\_y gists and Prescrlptioniste, corner Peachtree and e
Decatur streets.
TJKNRY C. POPE, Wholesale Druggist, 27 Whitehall 9
EO. J. HOWARD, successor to Howard k McKay, k
VJf Wholesale and Retail Druggist, at the Old Stand, A
Peachtree street.
AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSES.
TT BEN WILSON & CO., Broad street, next door to <
f p * the bridge, makes advances to planters. A full
line of Agricultural Implements, Publishers of the
Rural Southerner.
"Ig AHE W. JOHNSON, Dealer in Agricultural Im-
lTJ. plements, Seeds, Guano, etc. Advances made to
planters Marietta atreet.
AUCTIONEERS.
“■ N. WILLIAMS, Acutioneer and Commission
• Merchant, Marietta street, near Peachtree. Ad
vances made on consignments.
C. MAYSON, Auction and Commission Merchant,
1 m and Dealer in Furniture. Marietta street.
BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS.
TJHILLIPS A CHEW, No. 1 Marietta street. Book-
sellers, Stationers and Piano Dealers.
TT ITCH COCK*WALDEN.Books^nd Fancy Sta-
1 X tionery, 105 Whitehall Street.
BUSINESS COLLEGES.
Th/jfbORE'S SOUTHERN "BUSINESS'"UNIvEBBITY,
ly 1 corner Broad and Alabama streets, Atlanta, Ga.
A standard institution, the largest aud best practi
cal business school in the South. For circulars, etc.,
address B. F. Moore, A.M. President
T"TASTMAN'S ATLANTA BUSINESS COLLEGE,
Detwiler k Magee, Managers. Corner Line aud
Peachtree streets. Three hundred Graduates now in
position.
BANKS.
!>ANK OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA—F. M* Co
1 > ker, President; W. W. Bell, Cashier. Paper dis
counted. Deposits received. Foreign and Domestic
Exchange bought and sold. Checks on all points in
Europe, iu sums to suit.
gy Agents for the Inman and Cuuard Steamship
Lines, tdr First class aud steerage tickets at lowest
rates.
& S. SALOBH1N, Bankers and Brokers, next to
\ JT * National Hotel. Exchange bought and sold.
Money to loan.
rpHE DOLLAR SAVINGS BANK, No. 2 Kimball
■ House. William Gordon, president; Jas. M.
Willis, cashier.
d CITIZENS' BANK, authorized Capital $1,000,000
Jno- T. Grant, president; Perino Brown, cash’r
JNO. H. JAMES, Banker, Jamea’ Block.
j^TATE NATIONAL BANK. CAPITAL $:!l>0,000
iTj James M. Ball, president, W. W. Clayton, Cash
A TLANTA NATIONAL BANK, Capital $100,000
United States Depository. A. Austell, President
W. li. Tuller. Cashier.
NURSERYS.
Southern NUBSEBY, it»m ami Ilium,oi.il
4^ proprietors, Propagators and Dealers in Fruit
Trees, Grape Vines, Ornamental Shrubbery, Hot
House Plants, etc.
BAG MANUFACTORY.
GUNS, PISTOLS, Etc.
r 'IHAS. HEINZ, dealer iu Gun*, Rifles, Pistols and
Fishing Tackle. Powder Flasks, Shot Belts, Am-
lunition, etc., Whitehall street, near Depot.
HARDWARE AND CUTLERY.
posite tbo Kimball House.
W.
PAINTS, OILS, CLASS, ETC.
»EWisio machine agencies.
GEORGIA
State Lottery
HOTELS,
THE HOME—finest machine made. Pricec low.
G. Maxwell, Gen’l Agent, corney Broad and Marietta j
streets, Atlanta, Ga.
M weed t EWING k^AClUNE |
* Office, Corner Broad and Marietta Sts.
OMESTIO SEWING MACHINE COMPANY, j
No. 4 DeC
ing” Machine.
FOR AUGUST.
FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE
; ^ II A N 11 O C K HOUSE.
WEST POINT, GEORGIA.
The travelling nubile are informed that they can
obtain First-class meals and good aooommodatiou* at
this house.
Trains stop here lor dinner. Hotel situated left
side of car shed. PAT. GIBBONS,
<an26-d3m Proprietor
LIVINGSTON HOTEL,
NORTHEAST CORNER SQUARE,
LA FAYETTE 4.
j MRS. M. MARBLE. - - Proprietress.
Board by the Day, Week or Month, st tbe most
Reasonable Rates.
Latest style patterns constantly on bund.
corner Broad and Alabama streets.
(Mans' Home & Free ScM. i
DRAWINGS DAILY, AT 5 P. M.
real estate agents. Capital Prize $7,000.00
B ELL & GOLDSMITH, cornex Peachtree and Wall 1
,treeta - i 30,316 Prizes, Amounting; to $53,253.20.
Tickets $1.00, Shares in Proportion
1EO. W. ADAIR, Wall street, Kimball House
C iE
W Block.
( fl O. HAMMOCK7 Whitehall street,
Jm roar*
W
ALLACE k FOWLER, Alabama street, opposite
Herald Office.
SIGN AND FRESCO PAINTING.
etc. -.No. 1 James Bank Block,
ICE HOUSES.
R. R. White
i porter rajs Mr. Joe Morgan shot
• •»*•. ft- Morgsn, in the head, ouTbnrs
' J-u. week, near tbe residence of the
• •• from this place. Of the origin
e know nothing. The wounded
trea msnt ot Dr. J. G. Crete, of this
•* >ver ng.
u ns taken by the editor ot the Re-
> ■ * .-Hk ot Rockinart is nsnrly three
i rettj good, he thinks, for a town
^ r rely rebukes the town Marshal for
ince a negro to arrest a white
. d to Rome on Friday, from bis
-d>ama, a melon weighing sixty-
i * is the champion melon of the
•stnbridg© u giving the decent
ty fine opportunities for them to
opinions of his character, and
•itatiow in the shape of a Chap.
Boer, and the result is a sale of
end further business for tbe U
people oi tu
tor Ml* the r p ..
tbev ml L 'ioiuv
boat* ha* *.s
Nor-;r a r- -t
Win tty without p
a Court*.
The Catania cam, meeting, four miles from Fort-
sen's «n »i«‘. Kuril and South Railroad, will com
mence CD Friday .o^ht before the second Sunday in
September Ministers and visitors will find convey.
ar ;•* Forteo*’*.
*•»# ttavannah News says that Colonel Archibald
Speights, of the Gr.i* a News, is now engaged In pub
lishing a patent plow. This instrument is six pronged,
and is haoled around by a mule. The only objection
to it te, that one plow will cultivate all the farms
within a ladins of ten miles, witbont ever blinking its
eye*-or setting down to resL It hse to be ehsined up
st night to promt U from plowing on ite own hook.
An attempt will be made in the next Legislature to
modify it. Tbe Colonel Is an ewergetie nevrrpeper
man, and weighs one hundred and eighty pounds,
more than two-thirds of which is unadulterated good
humor and cheerfulness.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
EN RYBAN K S&80N, wh ole sale dea i erain
Boots and Shoes, Leather and Shoe Findings,
Sign of the Golden Boot, 39 Peachtree street, Atlanta,
Georgia.
. in Boots and Shoes, Republic Block
Wuum luiniL-The majority ot peo
ple are not .ware of tlie beneficial effect of
wearing flannels next to tbe body, both in
cold and in warm weacber. Flannel is not so
uncomfortable in warm weather as prejudiced
people believe. Frequent colds and constant
backing eougba have left me since adopting
flannel garments. There is no need' of great
bulk about tbe waist, which condemns tbe
wearing of flannel with tboee who prefer
wasp waists to health, for in that cose tbe
flannel can be cut as loosely-fitting waists,
always fastened at the back. Then an
scarcely any of the bad effects of sadden
changes felt by those who wear flannel gar
ments, and mothers especially should en
deavor to seenre such for tho little people,
in preference to all those showy outside trim
mings which fashion commands.
DISMAL. SWAMP STORIKH ABOUT THE
C OTTO ST CROP.
The usual contradictory statements con
cerning the cotton crop are appearing in onr
exchanges. Dismal stories of the ravages of
the caterpillar, oi damage done by rains, and
of various injuries to which the crop is sub
ject, are sent out, evidently with the purpose
of bulling cotton. Our advices from planters
and others represent the crop as a tolerably
good one. Here and there the caterpillar has
done some damage; Lut take tbe crop alto
gether and there is every reason to expect
that.it will be as large as, if not larger than,
that of lost year. We write frankly because
we cauuot perceive the benefit to be derived
from an attempt at deception.
Bat while the crop is really a very good one,
it is not large enough to cause any serious
break in prices. Futures in December are
selling at 17} cents per pound and we have
no idea that cotton will fall much below those
fignres. At any rale we believe that it will
not go below sixteen oents and at thAt price
planters can reap a Mr "profit. It will not
do, however, for them to hold back their
cotton from the market under the impression
that high prices await them. Last year the
cotton otaele of “the other paper" told a
lugubrious tale of a short crop not exceeding
3.400,000 bales. The crop turned out to be
about 3,000,000 bale*, ot 600,000 more than
he predicted, sod this in spite of all the dis
mal yarns about ssterpOtars, Alabama
floods end other cotton daaircftng wHx
From our correspondence we are led to
believe that the present crop will not be less
than 4,000.000 bales, and it may slightly ex
ceed those figures. A crop of this size is not
any too large. In our local market* prices
will scarcely fall below fifteen cents; while,
it France remains tranquil and Spain succeeds
in putting down tho Oadiat and Communist
insurrections, they will be almost oertein to
rale higher. In estimating tbe ptobable
value of a crop of cotton, allowance must be
made for tbe increased yearly demand for tbe
staple. In the United States the demand for
the raw material increases steadily, while
abroad the same increase ia noted.
There are consequently no good reasons for
bulling cotton by misrepresenting the yield.
Our cotemporary of tbe Augusta Chronicle
anil Sentinel is getting after “the otfce-r paper"
of this city for stealing bis account ot the
twelve million fortune belonging to the ladies
of Madison. “The other paper" denies the
charge and it is right. The article was stolen
from the Herald. True enough we were in*
debted to the courtesy of the Chronicle and
Sentinel for it, as that paper kindly sent it to
ns by telegraph at our request—for which
favor, by the way, we desire to here return
ou; grateful acknowledgements—bnt doubt
less the article in question was taken from the
Herald, hence “the other paper 1 ’ is not
answerable to .the charge of theft from onr
Augasta friend.
Alabama News.
Tbe City Clerk of Opelika deplores the moral
healthiness of the city. The reason is dearth of per-
qoiaite*-
Messrs. Edwards’ grist and flouring mill at Opelika
will soon be capable of making fifty barrel* of flour
daily, and sufficient meal to supply tLat city and sur
rounding country. They have now several hundred
bushels of corn in store.
For the banefit of those people who may t hance to
go over the Selma, Rome and Dalton Railroad, we
print the following from the Oxford Intelligencer, so
they may have a chance to study the character of a
certain conductor. The above paper says: Wc under
stand that on last Saturday, the ICth instant, an in
valid lady who had been in Rome under the care of
physicians for several months, came down to Ladiga,
Alabama, on tbe accorr modation train, and arrived to
get off the train at that depot, as the nearest depot
to her home. Neither the conductor, a
Mr. Dnnn, nor any one connected with the
traiD, rendered her any assistance; hence, she
was unable to get off; but her husband, expecting
her, arrived about tbe time the train was leaviog, and
asked the conductor to let him have time to get his
sick wife off the car. At that, the brakeman signal
led the engineer to stop, which be did; bnt this con.
ductor, Mr. Duncan, ordered the engineer
to go on, and as the gentleman -was assisting
bis sick wife from the platform of the car, the train
was pat in motion, and he was compelled to drag her
off, which prcduced serious mentaf and physical in
juries. We repeat this as we have heard it, that the
authorities of the road may look into this shamefu 1
inhumanity and neglect of duty. We fear this negli.
gence is too common arnoDg those who have charge of
the lives of others.
The Mobile Register calls upon the - Southern Grant
ger* to consider at once the following points: First.
How much laud or cottou or other aid each one can
or will give to a local imn igration society in his own
immediate neighborhood. Second. Having so consid
ered, for each one to make up his mind to give it, and
> inform his brother Granger, and aid a general
and prompt action to form snch local immigration so
ciety. Third. To confer, as a Grange, with neighboring
Granges, and to endeavor to form a simple and imme
diate baais for concert of action. Ty thus acting at
home, the Granges of the South can themselves solve
that problem so vital to them—the introduction of
white immigration.
Mr. Elbert Harrell, a well known planter of West
Lowndes, Alabama, died at his home Tuesday of last
week, of bilions fever, aged about fifty years.
Daniel Gilbert, an old and reliable citizen, died at
hia residence in Decatur, Alabama, on Thursday, the
14th instant, of pneumonia.
Death of a Lovely young Lady.—The Talladega
Reporter announces the death of Miss Theodosia
Renfroe, the beautiful and accomplished daughter of
Rev. J. J. D. Renfros, of that place.
Mej. R. C. McCalla has been appointed by the re
ceiver, Chief Engineer and General Superlntendant of
the Alabama and Chattanooga Railroad. He has ac
cepted the position and enters at once dpon the duties
of the office. Much good is expected to result from
the appointment.
A Lodge of Good Templars was organized at Rock
Springs Church, on Corn House, in Randolph county
Ala., last Saturday, with fifteen members.
Tbe Mayor of Mobile has “proclaimed” against in
tercourse with Pensacola, on account of the existence
of yellow fever in the last named city. But report
says that there have also been two cases in Mobilo.
The Evergreen Star says that Rev. Mr. Lundie, a
Baptist minister, well known in Alabama, died of )el-
low fever at Penaacola last Monday.
The city anthorties of Montgomery are also after the
vagrants. A goneral stirring up of that class is what
is needed in the Sooth.
In the cemetery at Nichols*ville, Ky., reposes tho
remains of several Alabama and Georgia soldiers. The
soldiers, thirty-one in all, died in hospital st this
place during tbs years ’62, ’63 and ’Ci. Eight graves
are unknown and unmarked, ard of course no iufor.
nation can bo obtained as to their occupants. Tho
paper published st that place says: “ Wo sro glad to
be able to publish tbs following list as designated
upon the boards. In the hope that other journals will
copy, and by tbit means the relatives and friends of
these unfortuLate heroes ra*y know their resting
place.
G W’ Tribue, T Willoby, 1st Georgia; C Richards and
W H Richards, 41st Alabama ; J B Hall, 1st Georgia i
Wm Thornton, Co A, 41st Alabama ; W J Halo, 40th
Georgia ; J M Watson, 17th Mississippi ; M E Copo-
iand, Alabama; E 8 Dickinson, 42d Georgia ; W Laird,
Georgia; L Johnson, Co H. Gtb Georgia ; H Campbell,
Wd Virginia ; J B White, 4th Alabama ; W M Bobe,
Co 10th Georgia ; John R Cox, 69th Georgia ; J
B «x*. 16th Georgia.
Many of ths inscriptions are so dim and disfigured
that it was impossible to decipher tho Htata and Regi
ment
CARPETS* MATTINGS, ETC.
city. Marietta street
carriage manufactory.
A T. FINNEY, Manufacturer of and deale
• Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, 8ewing Machine
Wagons, kc. .Send for Price List. Broadstreet, just
beyond the Bridge.
, and Pryor streets.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
reference given.
Pryor and Hunter Streets. Advances in cash, or by
acceptance, made on goods in store or when bills La
ding accompany Drafts.
JEWELRY. SILVER WARE.
INSURANCE AGENTS.
and Life. London and Lancashire Fire. Vir
ginia, Fire and Marine. Cotton States Life. Broad
street. Atlanta. Ga.
A tlanta depaf.tment life association
of America. Officers—T. L. Langston, Presi
dent; 0. L. Redwine, Vice-President; J. H. Morgan,
Secretary; General L. J. Gartrell, Attorney; Wi am
G. Drake, Medical Examiner. Broad street, corner
Alabama. P. O. Box 276.
e Company, office
No. 2 Wall street, Kimball House.
W M .
where orders will be attended to. Kruener &
Bro. can be found at the office of tho above. G. W.
Jacks, Whitehall street, Atlanta.
SALOONS.
BRO, Tui
atreet. Finest liquors
ternary combination of 78 numbers, making
7C.07C tickets and the drawing of 12 ballots, there will
be 220 prizes, ^ach having three of the drawn uum- i
bers ou it; 4,356, each having two of them on; I
25,740, each having one only ot them on; and also j
45,760 tickets, with neither of tbo drawn numbers on
them, being blanks.
To determine the fate of these priaes and blanks, 78
numbers, from 1 to 78 inclusive, will be severally
placed in a wheel on tbe day of the drawing, and 12 of !
them drawn out at random: and that ticket having for :
i sole agent for the Old Russell
I of liqu
< mixed in the best style.
its combination the 1st. ‘2nd. and 3rd drawn numbers.
j will be entitled to the capital prize of $7,000 00 1
Decatur | That ticket having on it the 4tn, 6th. and 6th
drawn numbers, to 650 00 ,
That ticket having on it the 7th, 8th, and 9th
drawn numbers, to 650 00 '
That ticket having on it the 10th, 11th. and
12th drawn numbers, to 650 0t ]
That ticket having on it tho 2nd, 3rd, and 4th
STOVE AND HDUSIFURNISHING GOODS.
riages, No. 73 Whitehall street.
UNDERTAKERS.
ly sent when requested.
WHITE GOODS. NOTIONS. ETC.
P HILLIPS, FLANDERS & CO., Dealers in staple
and Farcy Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hosiery,
Ribbons. Notions, Etc., No. 88 Whitehall Street, At
lanta, Georgia.
-yy M. RICH
Atlanta, Ga.
W F. PECK A: CO., Wholesale White Goods, Notions,
Hosiery and Gloves, Kimball House.
WOOD ENGRAVING.
I Wood, corner Peachtree and Marietta, up stairs.
MISCELLANEOUS.
H ER»' LD PUBLISHING COM Pa NY. Alabama
street, near Broad. Ail kinds of Job Work neatly
and promptly executed.
Oldest Insurance Agency in the city.
■proof Safes, Broad street.
Juo.
TLANTA DEPARTMENT Southern Life.
^ B. Gordon President, A
ent, J. A. Morris Secretary.
Mr. Karl Stntck bos published an agreeable
book on the condition of women in (termanjr
during the middle ogee.
P OPE k. McCANDLES, Wholesale Grocers and
Commission Merchants, and Dealers in all
kinds of Produce, No. 83 Whitehall Street, Atlanta,
Georgia. Orders and consignments solicited. Re
turns made promptly.
A K. SEAGO, Wholesale Grocer and General Com-
| a mission Merchant, corner Forsyth and Mitchell
W. k A. R. R. Office, 9 Alabama Street Grain, Hay,
Flour, Bacon, Bulk Meats, Lard, Hama (sugar-cured
and plain) Lime, Cement, Plaster, Domestics and Yarns.
R R. PAYNE k CO., Commission Merchants and
• Dealers in Paper, Paper Bags, Twines, Rope,
Paper stock, old metal, hides, etc., 33 Pi yor street.
S TEPHENS & FLYNN, Commission Merchants, and
dealers in Grain, Flour, Provisions, Country
Produce, Lime and Cement. % Forsyth street, Atlanta,
B OWIE & GHOLSTON, General Commi^gion Mer
chants in Grain, Provisions, Hay and Flour, For
street,
p W. k A. R. R.
Dealers
ul Commission
J J. WILLIAMS k CO.
duce by car load without expense. Yellow Front, Ken-
uesaw Block, Forsyth street, Atlanta,
CLOTHIERS AND TAILORS.
_ Gents’Furnishing Goods, No. 4 Peachtree street,
near the National.
J G. JONE8, Fashionable Tailoring Establishment
• within fifty yards of National Hotel and Kimbal
House. Full Lino of toods always on hand.
W B. LOWE k CO.. Dealer and Manufacturer of
• Ready Made Clothing, old stand, Whitehall
street.
CUi.VRS. TOBACCO. ETC.
i hand. Broad
Importer of Cigars and Tobacco, Wholesale and
B. MOSES, Authorized Agent for imported Ha.
vana Cigars, No. 4 Kimball House Block, and
Kimball House Cigar stand.
W.
B
EERMAN k KUHRT, Cigars, Tobacco and Snuff
Whitehall atreet. near railroad.
CONTRACTORS
Contracts faith-
COPPER. BRASS AND IRON.
Workers, Broad street, opposite tho Sun Building.
All work done promptly.
H UNNICUT k BELUNGRATILS. Gas Fitters,
Brass Worker*, and dealers in Stoves, Marietta
treet. Atlanta.
CANDY AND CRACKERS,
CROCKERY AND CLA8SWARE.
Glass and Earthenware, Kimball House.
AW * CO., Wholesale Crockery, Marietta stree
DYE-WORKS.
1 AME8 LOCH KEY, Atlanta Dye Work*. Dyeing
and Cleaning in all branche*. Satisfaction guar
anteed. Poat office box 640.
DENTISTS.
LKN LINK. Dent
hall and Hunter atreet*, Atlanta, Ga.
T" D. OABPEltTISTDantlat, go.~<7 Whtlah!il
J J# atreet. Atlanta, Ga.
R D. BADGER, Surgeon Demist, Peachtree street.
Work promptly and neatly fin jibed.
FRUITS. VEGETABLES. ETC.
CRdOKR*.
TOMLIN. No. 604 MARIETTA STREET-FAM-
_ _ ILY GROCERIES, Staple Dry Good*. Coun-
tryTroduce at the lowest rates. Alio, a flue WAGON
YARD.
(JAUN At CAMP, Wholesale Grocers and
try Pr<
YARD
CM
LAWYERS.
i the United States
Practices in all
i rietta street, up stairs, practices in all the
street. Residence, corner.
mHOS. W. HOOPER, Attorney-at-law, No. 2 Wall
I street, will attend to all kinds of legal business.
> Marietta street.
and Alabama streets (up stairs), Atlanta, Ga.
attention to the prosecution of claims agaius
State of Georgia and United States. Office No. 1 Aus
toll's Building, up stairs.
and 22 Kimball Ho
at Law - , No. 20
idence corner Peachtree and Harris street*.
D OTAL & NUNNALLY, Attorneys at Law, Griffin
Ga.
OWARD VAN EPPS, Attorney and Counseller,
H
15.“,
No. 5 and 6 Granite Block. P. O. Box 469.
. & A. M. THRASHER. 5 Marietta street, up
EO. T. FRY, Attorney-at-Law,
R
ardson streets.
Practice in all the court*.
LIVERY AND SALE STABLES.
C ~1 LINT TAYLOR, Proprietor of the Archer Stables,
j keeps always on hand a large supply of Mules
and Horses for sale.
T.
LIOUORS.
L AGER BEER BREWERY. City Brewery, corner
Collins and Harris streets, Lager Beer, Ale and
Beer, Fechtcr, Mercer & Co., office in Old Post Office
Building, Atlanta, Ga,
_ Ga., Wholesale dealers in Foreign and Domestic
Whiskies, Wines, Braudies, Rums, Gins, etc., and
PROrBIETOUH OF THE MOUNTAIN GAP WHISKIES.
M
EADOR BROS., Wholesale Tobbacco and Liquor*
35 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga.
MARBLE YARDS.
medical.
D lt. W. T. PARK, office No. 36>4 Whitehall Street,
P. O. Box No. 158, Atlanta. Ga. Treatment of
Chronic Diseases, Impurities of the Blood, Obstetrics
and Diseases of Women and Children mads a spec
ialty.
MUSIC AND I
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY.
S MITH k MOTES, Photographic Gallery, over Pope’s
Drug Store, on Whitehall streot. First class
pho.togrsphs, etc., executed promptly, st reasonable
rate* Cull and *ro specimens.
M 1
PRIVATE BOARDING HOUSES.
KH. 11 E WILSON. Routh Pryor Street, botween
Hunter and Mitchell. Large front roo.u, with
Day boarders wanted.
nUhed, carpeted rooms, walnut furnituro, neat
bou*e, a table provided with tho best fare the market
affords. Call and examine. No. 7i; Whitehall Street.
J ONH II. WEBB. No. 82 Whitehall, and 72 Broad
atreet. Table supplied with tho best the market
affords.
f Its. OVERBY’S Boarding House—Near the
iTl'T-" •
slugle persons. Day boarders also re-
P1CTURE8 AND FRAMES.
Ohromos. Mouldings, Looking Glasses and Plates,
oh- 37.'< Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga.
of all kinds of
Bedding, Mattresses, Pilllows, Bolsters, Etc.
Awning and Tent Maker, No. 7 Hunter street
near Whitehall, Atlanta, Ga.
TjI H. LEDUO. Manufacturer oi Tin Ware, Agent
JU • for Kerosene Stoves, Pratt’s Astral Oil, Triumph
Washing Machine, Clothes Wringer, etc., Beige an
Sheet Iron and Enameled Ware. Whitehall street.
reading matter than any other paper in Gx‘orgi«
drawn numbers, to ...* 630 00
That ticket having on it the 3d, 4th and 5th
drawn numbers, to 650 00 i
That ticket having on it the 5th, Gth, and 7th
drawn numbers, to 650 00
That ticket having on it the Gth, 7th, and 8tla
drawn numbers, to 650 00
That ticket having on it the 8th, 9th, and lOtb
drawn numbers, to 650 00 i
That ticket having on it the 9th, 10th, and
11th drawn numbers, to 650 00 ,
That ticket having on it the 1st, 2nd, and 4tli
drawn numbers, to 650 00
That ticket having on it the 1st, 2nd, and 5th
drawn numbers, to 217 60 |
That ticket having on it the lBt, 2d, and Gtb
drawn numbers, to 217 60
All other tickets (being 207, with three of the
drawu numbers on, each 20 00
Those 66 tickets having on them the 1st and
2nd drawn numbers, each 10 00
Those 66 tickets having on them the 3rd ami
4th drawn humbers, each 5 00
All other tickets (being 4,224) with two of the
drawn numbers on, each 2 00
And all those tickets \bcing 25,740) with one
only of the drawn numbers, each.. i 10
CAPITA!. PHIZK
On Mondays capital will be $7,000 00
On Tuesdays and Fridays capital will be 4,500 oO
On Wednesdays capital will be 6.000 00
On Thursdays and Saturdays 5,000 00
For further particulars tend for schemes.
No ticket which shall have di awn a prize of a supt -
rior denomination can be entitled to an inferior prize.
Prizes payable forty (40) days after the drawing, ami
subject to the usual deduction of 15 per cent.
All prizes of $20.00 and under will be paid immedi
ately after the drawing.
Prizes cashed at this office
HOWARU & CO.. Managers,
n'9p-feb21 ATLANTA. GA.
PATENT MEDICINES.
I.IVERY 8TABI.B
CONNECTED WITH THE SJCUHE.
SPOTSWOOD HOT€L,
MACON, GEORGIA,
THOMAS H. HARRIS, - - Proprietor
Board &3 Bor Day-
Op. Paasonger Depot, and Or’y One Minute'* Walk
Kennesaw House,
MARIETTA, CEORCIA.
FLETHER & FREYER,
ETORS.
GAINESVILLE HOTEL
NEWT FITTED DP
FREE HACKS TO AND FROM THE HOUSE.
E. I.. CALDWELL, - - - Phopeietob.
j urn-4-dtf
THE JONES HOUSE,
NBA It THE PUBLIC SQUARE.
COVINCTON. CEORGIA.
E. W. JONES, Proprietor.
Free conveyance from the Railroad.
april4dly
NEWTON HOUSE.
MRS. JANET HAUDROP,
CORNER OF MAIN AND SPRING STREETS.
SPARTA, GEORGIA.
TERMS:
LAOER BEE DEL.
rpo OUR
I Liquor*, i
sale of the
CRESCENT BREWERY VIENNA BEER,
Gaff kCo., Proprietors, Cincinnati, Ohio, and Aurora,
Indiana.
Thifl Beer is specially made for shipment South,
and is, therefore, the best ever sold iu this State,
livery keg guaranteed to be good and sound.
Orders Solicited.
4tir We refer tbe public to the following oorrespon-
CUTHMAN & HAAS.
ATLANTA, GA.
! 18,1873.
$2.00 per day
50 per meal
march 25 tf.
NATIONAL HOTEL.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
J. E. OWENS, Proprietor,
Lale of Piedmont and Orange Hotel, Lynchburg, Va.
BAGGAGE CARRIED TO AND FROM THE DEPOT
FREE OF CHARGE.
aprill
H O WA RD HOUSE
BROAD STREET.
Nearly iippusite Montgomery and EufaulaR. R. D«(ot
EUFAULA. ALABAMA
BOARD—Per Day £ 2
*£* The Best House iu town.
aprll ly W. J. HOWARD,Prop’*-
UNIVERSITY HOTEL,
ATHENS, GEORGIA,
By R. H.
• Ra
LAMPKIN.
*y, J2 00 ; l«er w<
, $6.00.
ATLANTA. GA.. Jo
. Mr. IF. J. Land, City: ,
Dkak Sia—Messrs. Gaff A: Co., of Cincinnati, Ohio, j *
j desire us to accept the Agency for the sale of their :
[ Crescent Brewery Vienna Beer. We have tried the j
| Beer aud find it a pleasant aud palatable beverage, but j
! before accepting the sale of it we want your profes- ■
| sioual opiuiou as to its purity, we, therefore, desiie j
I you to call at our store and draw a sample from a small , ,, ^ ,
have here. After you have made an aud- ^1 “ *' 1 * a V.‘ ' a 5 u,h * ,J Ul * 1 h t ud ,Ll * au l “.
8. of the best Lotils m the South. Porter* at all
the trains who will take care ot baggage. Term*
Madison House.
M A r> I S O N, G E O il (v I
»result.
Respectfully,
GUTHMAN A: HAAS.
Iruihi/i
ATLANTA, QA., JuiY 1, 1873.
i <t' Haas, Allarda, Ga.:
ysis let us know
of Chronic aud Acute Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lnm- :
bago, Sciatica, Kidney and Nervous Diseases, alter
years of suffering, by the taking Ur. Fitlcr’s Veg
etable Rheumatic Syrup—the scientific discov^^^^^^l
ery of J. P. Fitler, M. D., a regular graduate physi
cian, with whom we are personally acquainted, who
ba6 for 39 years treated these diseases exclusively with Gkntlemkx—This will certify that I have made a
astonishing results We believe it our Christian duty, thorough chemical examination ot the “ Crescent
after deliberation, to conscientiously request sufferers | Brewery ” Lager Beer, received of you a few days ago.
to use it, especially persons in moderate circumstan il find the article free from injurious substances,
ces, who cannot afford t*> waste money aud time on i drugs, etc., the bitter principle being duo to pure
worthless mixtures. As clergymen, we seriously feel | Hop Resin.
the deep responsibility resting on us in publicly in- The analysis herewith affixed exhibits th*' qnanti-
dorsing this medicine. But our knowledge and expe- : ties ot the main proximate constituents and compares
rieucc of its remarkable merit fully justifies our ac- ! favorably with the analyses of the l*i-t foreign beers
tion. Re.v, C. H. Ewing, Media, Pennsylvania, suffer- j »nu ales. I am, very truly, yours,
ed sixteen years, became hopeless. Rev. Thomas WM. J. LAND, An. Chen.
Murphy, D. D., Fraukford, Philadelphia; Rev J. B. ANALYSIS:
Davis, Highstown, New Jersey ; Rev. J S. Buchanan, : Extractive matter. (Sugar. Dextrine. Albu-
Clarence. Iowa; Rev. G. G. Smith, Pittsford, N. York; men, Hop Kerin, etc).. . lvt
Rev. Joseph Beggs, Falls Church, Philadelphia. Oth- J Alcohol—(volume per centage). .. . . ’. .. . . .
er testimonials from Senators, Governors, Judges, Con- I Water ... .Pet.
gressmen, Physicians, Ac., forwarded gratis, with . Specific gravity tf the lieer........ 1.0157
pamphlet explaining these diseases. One thousand jy3-tl
dollars will bs presented to any medicine for same I
diseases showing equal merit under test, or that can
produce one-fourtk as many living cures. Any per
son sending by letter description of affliction, will re
ceive gratis a legally signed guarantee, naming tbe
number of bottles to cure, agreeing to refund the
money upon sworn statement of its failure to cure.
P. B. WOODARD.
South Carolina Railroad.
TENNESSEE HOUSE,
Corner Tennessee *r.d Main streets,
Cnx-toratrillo, Georgia,
Grantville Hotel.
B. F. SVI. T. BRANNON.
I T1IRST-CI.AS.S HOTEL, situated immediately op
posite the depot, in the p!fa*ant little village ok
\ j Grantville, on Atlanta and West Point Railroad.
- A few summer boarders can find pleasant rocnis
' | aud good fare. » augS-tf
STAR CANDLES!
febS
rifler of the Blood. It thoroughly neutralize*
aud eliminates from the system the specific virus
which causes such a long list of sufl'eritig.
In every form of scrofulous, mercurial and const!
tutional blood complaints, it stands without a compeer
rapidly curing ulcers, pustules, carbuuclea, sca.d head
salt rheum, and the 88 different varieties of akin affec
tions. It is a positive curative for sorofula, and the
Charleston, June 29, 1S73.
BETWEEN CHARLESTON VNIl AVGUSTA
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Charleston 6n>0 a. m.
Arrives at Augusta 1:50 r. M.
Leaves Augusta 5:20 A. M.
Arrives at Charleston 1:10 r. m.
NIGHT EXPRESS TRAIN.
j Leaves Charleston 8:10 r. M.
j Arrives at Augusta 7:15 a. m.
• Leaves Augusta 6:15 i*. m.
i Arrives at Charleston 5:35 a. m.
Between Angnstn amt ('olitmbla.
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leaves Augusta 5:20 a. m
Arrives at Columbia 1:43 i\ m
Leaves Columbia r,:;io a. m
Arrives at Augusta 1:50 r m
NIGHT EXPRESS TRAIN.
Leaves Augusta 6:15 r. u
Arrives at Columbia 6:15 a. m
Leaves Columbia 7:15 p. m
Arrives at Augusta 7:15 a. si
Day and night trains out cf Atlauta eounect closely
with this Road at Augusta for Charleston aud Colum
bia.
PROCTER A CAMBLE’S
“Light of Day” Brand
STAR CANDLES!
Are of SU| enor quality, aud the standard
brand sold by
-A_ tin n t a , 7%(L n co u
A.U G USTA
apao-tf
GHOCEK8.
WANTED.
IRADI ATF. of tho South Caruiica Medical
Daily Train out of Macon makes close connection
with Night Train.
Night Train out of Augusta make* close connection
at Columbia with Groenville aud Columbia Railroad,
eliminating them from the eyetem. The Fluid Kitrmct : l'u.engers for points on the Or. cuville ind Columbia
of Queen’s Delight, prepared by Dr. J. 8. Pemberton, I —
has made the mest wonderful and astouishing cure*.
Its purifying, vivifying and touic properties exercise
the quickest aud most wonderful effects in restoring
health. It is harmless to the moat delicate, and can
never be used amiss. It is the true beautificr of the
complexion. If you want pure, rich blood, clear skin
and beautiful complexion, use tho Compound Extract
of Stillingia or Queen’s Delight. Read our treatise on
diseases of the BJood. The genuine has the signature
of the proprietor upon each label.
apll-yl-eod
Railroad will avoid a tedious delay at night iu Colum
bia, by taking this route.
Elegant new Steeping Cars on night trains between
Augusta and Charleston.
8. B. PICKENS,
angl-dtf tteueral Ticket Acent.
POST ROYAL RAILROAD
ran produce a certiCn
» the Faculty of the tun
a* a Licensed
k ss ir I F
IV '
College, who
Druggist froi
c r. e n
In some wholesale or retail Drug House.
Address, M. D.
P. O. Box EUT.
ang9- ChailettoD, P. O.. S. 0
S. M. F. COLLEGE.
H J
E.
A DO USTA, Ga.. Jtitle 26. 1S73. j
MONDAY, JOI'IHMMMM
this Road will run as follows
ATLANTA
WATER CUR
Dr. F. Kalow.
Corner of Hunter and Belle Street.
J^R Kalow, well known through his rapil aud
wonderful cures, has returned to our city, and opened j leave Port Royal at
an establishment agklti. f r tho cure of all Chronic \ J^avo Charleston at
Diseases, and ho respectfully informs the citizens of j Leave Savannah at
Atlauta aud surrounding country, that ho is prepared j Arrive at Augusta at...,...
to cure Liykb Complaint, Fi.vku. Rheumatism. ! nflWN NIRUT TRAIN
Nkuhalo.ia, Scrofula. Diseases Peculiar to Wo. i ll . 11 , UW ? "lUHl rAOOtimcn IHAIIV.
men, All Impurities of the Blood, Skis Diseases, iu l^ave Augiuta at.....
Kidnev aud Bladder Complaints, Stocpaoe of the i 4 ; rr ‘ ve a * i£ rt **•••
Water, Piles or all Kinds, Strictures, Gonorrhea, ^ rr ! ve , Charleston at...
Eye and Ear Complaint after Measles, Soarlatiua, ‘ Arrive at bavaunah at
At a proof of liis success, tho Doctor take* pleasure UP NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN.
in referring to tho following persons: Mr. J. W\
Rucker, of the firm of Chapman, Rucker A Co..
Major, W. B. Cox, Mr. T. J. Hightower, Gen. W. 8.
Walker. John and James Lynch, J. Fleiachell, Boer man
& Kuhrt. Mr. Schulhaefer, Dr. M. Mitchell, Superior
Vicar, Mr. Turner, of Brooklyn, Father Marony.
Philadelphia. Rev. Mr. Smith, Macon, Col. Gaulden,
Quitman, Miaa Dim woody, Dariou, Mr. White,Conga*.
Outside of hia Institution he will treat all Acute
Diseases with groat success. This method or treat
ment is the most rapid, safest and only sure euro.
Particular attention given to tho cure of Suumier
Complaint, and Teething Period of Children. Menin
gitis is not dangerous wht-u taken in time. This
treatment gives a white and soft akin, aud everybody
wil loam to troat his family for ACUTE DISEASES.
DOWN DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
Will leave Augusta at 6:45 a.m.
Arrive at Port Royal at 2:16 p.m.
Arrive at Charleston at 4:45 p.m.
Arrive at Savannah at 3:30 p.m.
UP DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
9:45 a.m.
8:10 a.m.
9:30 a m.
6:38 r.M.
2:10 P >
11:35 P >
5:00 a s
12:30 p.j
Will leave Port Royal ai. 10:30 p.m.
Leave Charleston at 6:00 p.m.
Leave Savannah at 9:50 p.m.
Arrive at Augusta at 8;U0 a.m.
Passenger* leaving Atlanta by the I o'clock p. m.
train, make connection ai Augusta with Down Day
Passenger for Port Royal, Savannah, and poiut*
Southeast
Jyl-dlf
riyiu; FALL SESSION COMMENCES ON THE STTH
i lust, wiili a full corps of experienced Teachers.
Tuition $00 per annum. Board $18.00 to $20.00 per
month. Send for Catalogues.
attgli 2w J. N. BRAB8HAW, Pres.
Dr. JESSE BORING
AS RESUMED THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE
Atlanta.
with I ester & Thomson. Kimball Hone?.
Residence, northwest corner ot Houston and lv£
treet*. jy24-lm
ATLANTA
STENCIL AND VARIETY WORKS
Cor. Marietta and Bread St*.
BEN. Z. DUTTON.
PRACTICAL STENCIL CUTTER,
Designers and. Engravers,
aDDBKaa Lock Box 3M, . . - ATLANTA CA.
S TENCIL MARKING PLATES af ev,ry dMrnpti. ■
cut to order. Name platee for marking Clothir g,
with Ink aud brush, 76c; by mail s»V*. Iiagg&ge. hotel
and key Checks, Notary Public aud Society Soala, Al
phabet* aud everything in the Uuo made to order.
Cotton alphabet made a specialty.
Ojdera from a distance promptly attended t
_d*c4-Vv.
DAVID McBRID
SUCCESSOR TO
IBS'
McBRIDE & SMITH,
MANCr.VOTUStKR OK
j.» »•«»* JMigtuver >uu oupcnuiemuuii. { m | ^
SOUTHERN NURSERY. Hn6 CaiTIBgeS,
IRWIN * THURMOND.
W F. are offering to the public a selection of Fruit
adapted to tbe Southern climate, consisting of
Apples, Poaches, Pears. Plums. Cherries, (Juiocoa,
Grapes, etc. Our floral and Ornamental Shrubbery
Department ia complete. Wo have everything usually
found iu a well conducted Nursery, and of varieties
j we have tested end know to bs suite
climate. Wt are determined to m
sell at reasonable prices. All orders by mail attended
to with promptness and care. We have reliable agents,
either local or traveling, in many localities in this and
other States South, and we prefer, where convenient
to our customers, to do our business through them.
PARKINS & ALLEN.
3kHhite([ts and £u|jcr l uU$nd(>ut8,
Will furnish Plans and Specification* for
CHURCHES. RANKS. STORE BUILDINGS.
AND DWELLINGS
OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
nd price list,
jolyM-dly
PHAETONS,
ROCKAWAYS AND BUGGIES.
Repairing Promptly and N*atly
Executed.
»<AVn> McBRIDE.
mwt-U :« Orator Str, M.