Weekly Atlanta intelligencer. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1865-18??, April 26, 1871, Image 4

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Wtm JattUigncrr ATLANTA. GEORGIA, Material Gauge A. Item baa Invented a procaas by which a cheap and durable artificial atone may be made far buiKttn* bate Arrival# fa Ibi City. The city thla weak baa been thronged with atzancere. and the hotela have beat overflowine. Amongst the arrivele at the KimbaU Honae, we would name, lor the aake o4 triendahlp andi the peat, aa well aa his sterling wmh, our aeaociste from yoaith, and late partner in law, CoL C. K. Sober, of Sooth Carolina. Hi* genial lace greeted ne yesterday and carried os back to better and brighter day*. He la on his way to visit a brother in Mia i rippi- •erlbner** BKontkly lor Hay* The May number (the beginning oi the sec ond volume) of Scribner's Monthly is at band. This number is aa exceedingly attractive one. The illustrations are beautiful, and the article* are exceedingly interesting “The Wonders of Yellowstone ” is its leading Uinstrated article, in which is described a district lying in Montana, toll oi natural wonder*. The other illustrated artie'es are, “Reminiscences of Charlotte Bronte“The Aye-Ayethe celebrated “Mo abite Stone;” ‘ Living American Artiste.” Al together, it presents a rich table of contents.— Scribner A Co., 654, Broadway. Terms—*8 a a Cm. Grill In Ohio. The Cincinnati Commercial (a Republican journal) says tnat it has leaked out that at the recent Radical caucus in Columbus, Ohio, the Federal officers mado a dead set to procure the endorsement of Gen. Grant for the nest “resi dency, bat it was whisded down contemptuously —a leading Republican declaring that the party had load enough to carry without shouldering Grant, the Dents and Domingo. All the speeches against Grant were received with uproarious applause, and were the grand demonstrations oi the englfp One speaker declared he did not with todevottr his time in the canvass to show ing why Sumner ooukl not be permitted to re main at the head of the Foreign Relations Com mittee, and why it was needful to annex a new supply of earthquakes end yellow fever. Akernssn*# Bmsc*. The Washington correspondent of the Hew York World] writes, under dale of the 14th instant, that “.the extraordinary and Radical changes made by the (Senate in the Ku-EJuxbill wen suggested by Attorney-General Akerman.” A northern man by birth, be cannot, perhaps, be called a traitor to the South. But he has spent a large part of his life In Georgia, and whatever success he has achieved is attributable to the countenance and support of bis people. He now turns upon them like the viper upon the bosom that had warmed it into life. Hu late political coarse met with their disapproval and condom nation, and he would now have his revenge by inflicting upon the outrage contained in these amendments. The difference between him and his Northern confreres is this: he tins knowingly, with his eyes open, while they msy not He knows the real condition oi things in the section of oonntry where he has his home, and he knows that it does not eall for the enactment of such laws as these amend ments provide. With him, therefore, the motive is mean and ignoble. It is hstred—the venom ous malignity that rankles in his heart against those who do not acknowledge his title to the place he has degraded by want of caps ’’ and dishonored by the meanest ingratitude. Lain Fair u< Lasts Farrar the Two Great a#n#atlon#. The great senraiion esaes of the hoar are those oi Lanra Fair in Ban Francisco, and Laut a Farrar in Chicago. Tb e former after dis posing of four husbands succeeded in making one Dr. Crittenden, who had a a lie and children the victim of her seductive arts, and a short time ago, actuated .by feelings oi Jealousy to wards Crittenden’s wl'e, pursued him and shot him down like a dog in her presence. For this heinous crime she has bean put on trial, and in her testimony, taken in the case, she glories in her shame—said that “in the sight of God she was Crittendens true wife.” In the case of Laura Farrar, one Dr. Scanlan was shot by the brother of his wife, on account of the attentions he bestowed upon Mre. Far rar. It appears that Mrs. Bcaulan had done all that a wife could do, and a great deal more than many wives would do, to win her husband away from Lanra, hut the charms of the latter were too power Ail to be broken by even a faith ful, loving, wile’s entreaties. His conduct finally outraged hie brother-in-law’s feelings to snob aa extent that a alight offense provoked the fatal shot. It doee not appear that the intercourse between Dr. Bcaulan and Lanra Farrar was criminal, ae that word is ordinarily understood. The case of Lanra Fair ia a fit commentary upon the vice of “ free love,” aa its votaries call it. The cate of Lanra Farrar illustrates the dangers of flirtations in married hie. They are examples that should exert a ta' utary influence Tka Harrlsc* Tie. One of the most alarming symptoms of the times is the slight estimation in which the mar- riagetie is held. In the Booth, to this time, this remark has little or no application. Before the war, especially, Southern *«c'ity was beyond the reach of criticism, even, U[h>d this point. Nowhere in the world could there have been found communities whose MsmUrd of morals and social virtue was higher than in the South' era States- especially amongst their women. They had never been contaminated by the vices ot grea^cities, and with them the marriage vow, and the parity of married life in thought and deed,were sacred, holytnhigs. Nor do we aay that any change in our general social status in this respect bu yet tern wrought The remark we eet out with hae a more direct application to other sections of the country- especially the great cities of the North and Noath west. Any one who reads at aii, cannot l*Ji to recognise the fact, that, ia theee localitha the marriage relation hae lout the mcrednet* w hiefc should belong to it Avery newspaper that comes to us, is filled with startling developments, or tales of honor, growing oat ot inledelity to the obli gations which it imp* see. Bopmente, divorces, and murders consequent upon violation ot those obligations, fill their columns. When we con sider that the institution oi marriage is a divine in stitntion, that it lies atthelcnndation of all social virtue and refinement—that it is, in fed, the great conservator of society itscli, the condition of things to which we refer is tearful indeed. We are not of those who would confine woman to the nursery, and make her a mere house wile She has other duties to discharge than this sphere requiresL Bat her dntiee begin there, if they do not end there. And in moat cases it is because she has been enoonraged to believe that the duties oi that sphere are not first and noblest, that she bee faUenhom her high estate. Fashion—exti avagsnee in dress, display ot per son—is the fraitfei source of the demoralization that has taken place What else could be ex peeled, when a woman’s worth, her claims to attention and admiration, are measured by the length of her trail, or the Lumber of diamonds that spaiUe on btr besom. The intellectual, high bred, lady is almost driven Irom society— ostraciz* d, if she does not woiship at the shrine ot fashion. The mere creature of the milliner is pr-ietrtd to the modest, refined lady, who has a proper estimate of her high dtsiiny, and who is governed by a cooac ; entions letting of duty to her family and to eoctety. Here a the root ot the evil we are striking at—the neglect ana disregard of the dories of the married relation. Let oar women think of Ur’s, and the men, too, f*-r it is too common with them to rail at lssbion while they are its blindest voiarie.-. The great object of woman is the love and admiration of ■»», He, in a great measure, fixes the standard ot woman’s worth. If he planes it in silks and satins-the gewgaws of tashioa^-she will also. It he would have her retain tlia nond potttioa she has here tofore oecnpied in Bon then society, and exert toe influence fix good which she J has bereto- ore exercised, let him admire and love traits ol character, those qualities ot head sad heart, which really ennoble her, those virtues which rival the perfect glory of Aden before aometkisc A boat Atlanta. In the Nashville Union and American of the 16th instant, we find a letter written from At lanta by “ Sewanee,” the nomme de plume of a correspondent of that pape'\ under date of the 5th inst, in which he spe.ika of the Gate (Sty aa follows: “Atlanta has risen almost like the fabled Phoenix lrom the ashes and charred walls that Bberman left here in his march to the sea. The improvements that have been made are of the most substantial character, and would reflect discredit upon no city in the country. Many ot the private residences are exceedingly hand some and even elegant. Atlanta has eujoy< d wonderlul prosperity since the war, aa is indi cated by its rapid growth not only in population but in its trade, which is large and constantly Increasing. It ia remarkable how the place is sustained, for the country around it is not rich and productive, bat its railroads reach out into sections wbich consume large quantities of pro visions and bread stufls, and they look to At lanta for their supplies. It is the produce trade wbich has built up and sustained Atlanta. It ia called the “ Gate City,” and it is the gateway through which the West has heretofore emptied her granaries and meathooses into the South. But I find mere are tears entertained that this trade nr ay be interfered with by Savannah, aa that city is now in direct railway connection with the Mississippi at Vicksburg. While Sa vannah is putting forth such powerful eflorta to secure and control the cotton trade of the Mis sissippi above Vicksburg, it is not improbaole that sbe will set k to draw supplies ot produce in the same direction. It is certainly the inter est ot Savannah to cultivate sucb relations with the West, and it ia not improbable that that city will interfere very materially with the produce trade ot Atlanta. ▲ FINK HOTRL. The Kimball House is the pride of Atlanta. It is an imposing structure, six stories high, two hundred and ten teet tront (indeed it trouts on three streets) by one hundred and sixty-three teet deep, &i_d contains three hundred and sev enteen rooms, tarnished in very handsome style, some of them indeed elegantly. The carpets, lnnltnre and decorations are of very superior quality, and everything is kept “as nice as anew pin.” The diniDg room is spacious and the ta bles sumptuously furnished. It ia in all its appointments an admirably managed hotel— Having lound the Kimball such a house as 1 have descr bed, you may judge that my pride was considerably elated when I remembered hearing ladies and gentlemen who came from the West remark the other day in Savannah that the Maxwell House at Nashville was de cidedly the best arranged, neatest, most comlort- able and well kept hotel they had stopped at since crossing the Ohio river. After stopping at the Kimball, 1 am prepared to say that that award ia an honor ot which Mr. Kean my justly be proud. ▲ MAGNIFICENT DEPOT. The new Union Depot here is the finest bail' ding of the kind in the South, or rather will be when it is completed. Being constructed wh >1- ly ot iron, it is fire proof, and is an ornament to the city. HIGH BENTS. I find Atlanta is Buttering from high rents There is such a demand tor houses, both busi ness and dwelling, that landlords are stimulated to demand exhorbitant rents. This will be found a great drawback to the prosperity of the place, sb it has been to other cities. The evil will com ct itself alter awhile, but then it may be too late to benefit Atlanta. Sbwansr. Attempt to Liberate Prisoners In JAM The Augusta Constitutionalist says that, on Monday night last, a bold and daring attempt was made to liberate two prisoners, Morphy and Whitehouse, who are confined in jan in that city, upon the charge ot robbery. By means ol a ladder their cells had been reached by some one who furnished them, as was found upon a search being made, with implements by which they would have probably effected tb* ir escape, but lor the vigilance ot the jailor whose suspicions had been aroused by signs about the premises. Tqitmai, Adventunb oi vkb AND THE Cats.—The f&t that Mr. Oliver lived in a uniform row of houses in the Fourth Ward was the reason why he was nofortura e. One moonlight night last week the noise made by tbe cate was simply awful Mr. Oliver lay in bed trying in vain to sleep, an 1 grinding his teeth in r&ge nntil at last the uproar nvi-rhe id became unendurable Mr. Olive* - crept out ot the bed softly, so that his wife could not be awakened. He pat on his slippers, seized a boot in each hand, and clad in the snowy rob s of night he opened, the trap-door and emerged upon the roof. There were thirty or forty cats out there, holding a kind of a general syuod in the cool of the evening, enjoying the bracir g air aud singing glees. As Mr. Oliver approached, the cats moved out to the next root. Mr. Oliver advanced and flung a boot at them. They then adjourned suddenly to the summit of the adjoining resi dence. Mr. Oliver projected another boot and then went over after the first one In this man ner the synod retreated and Oliver advanced uotil the row of twenty houses was reached, when the cats arranged themselves in a line along tbe parape*, raffled up their fur, cum d their spines’and spat furiously at Oliver. That bold warrior gathered up his hoots and deter mined to retreat. He walked over a dozen houses and descended through a trap-door. He went down stairs to his bed-room and open* d the door. There was a man in the act of walk ing up and down with a baby. Before Oliver had recovered from his amazement, the man fiuDg the baby on the bed, and se zing a revol ver began firing rapidly at Oliver. It then dawned upon O'iver that he had come d wn the wrong trap-door. He proceeded up stairs again suddenly, the man with tbe revolver prac ticing at him in a painful manner. When Oliver reached the door he shut the trap quickly and Btood upon it. The man fir* d through the door twice and then hooked the door upon the inside. A moment after aid Oliver heard him springing a watchman’s rattle from tbe front window. As soon as the neigh bors knew there was a man on the roof they all flew np stairs and fastened their trap-doors, and Mrs. Oliver fastened hers, with the firm con viction that some predatoiy-villain had entered while she slept and stolen her Oliver. When he tried the door it was fa9t. and Mrs. Oliver was screaming so fiercely that he coulcTnot make himself heard. By this time the street was filled with policemen, all of whom were blazing away at Oliver with tneir revolvers, while the youg men in the houses 'across the street kept up a steady fire with their pis’ols, shot-guns and miscellaneous mtssiies. Oliver, with every advantage for forming an opinion,.said that Gettysburg was a mere skir mish to it. He hid himseli behind a chimney, and lay up against the bricks to keep himself warm, while the policemen stationed themselves all around the square to capture him when he would slide down one ol the water spouts. But Oliver did not slide. He sat on that rool all night, with the bitter air circulating through his too trifling garments, listening to the yowl ing cats and the occasional shouts from the picket line below, and thinking ot the old Jews who used to pray from their house-tops, and wondering if Mussel men were ever shot at or bothered with cats or policemen when they practiced their evening devotions on the roofs. And then he wondered how it would do to take off his night shirt and wave it over the edge as a flag of truce. He concluded not to, because of the daager ot a bullet from some misguided policeman not familiar with the rules of war. When daylight came, the neighb* *rs rallied in a crowd, armed with all kinds of weapons from howitzers down, and mounted to the root. Oli ver was taken down and put to bed, and he now has more influenza for a man of his Bize than any other citizen ot the Fourth Ward. He says he is going to move as soon as he gets well —he is going to move into a house that is next door to nobody; a house that stands in the mid dle ot a prairie ot some kind, and he intends to stencil his name in wbite on the tiap-door. Hoii. W. **. Price. In a letter addressed to the Atlanta Constitu tion, and published in that paper, Hon. W. P. Price states that when the vote was taken in the House upon the Ku-Klux bill and amend ments, he was paired off with Mr. Dunnel from Minnesota, who is a radical, and would have voted to the contrary ot Mr Price upon all the questions made. Tuis letter is written in reply u> some strictures wbich were made upon Mr. Pi ice’s course iu being absent at the time tbe votes were taken, by tbe Washington corres pondent of the Constitution. Advertising on a Large Seale. In last .Sunday’s issue of the New York Herald there were over fitty-lonr columns ol advertise meets, exclusive ot those devoted to marriages and deaths Small Clipping#. The Southern Radical candidates for the Rad ical nomination ler Vice-President on the ticket with U- 8. Grant are, Governor Alcorn, of Mis ajssippi; ex-Governor Clayton, ot Atkanses Horace Maynard, ot Tennessee; ex-Governor Orr, ot South Carolina ; Governor Bullock, ol Georgia, and ex-Senator Revels. A man out in Illinois, alter witnessing the performance ot a tight rope artist, said it was easy enough to walk a rope it a man had the nerve, so ne fastened the clothes-line from the top ol hiB barn to the chimney of his house, look a hoe-handle to balance himseli and start ed. The funeral was largely attended. The late editor of the Loudon Observer, who recently died in his nine.y-ninth year, is said to have been the oldest journalist in the world, having been an active member ot the profes sion for over sixty years. The Nilsson necklace is all the rage. It is made of three separate spiral chains ot gold of various lengths, fastened at the back with a rich clasp. A vacant office. The President’s father-in- law is a widower. Tbe Flathead Indians want one of their tribe appointed to West Po nt. Married ladies are not allowed to hold posi tions as teachers in the public schools ot Balti more. About six o’clock, Saturday morning a Ger man carpenter found a box in a secluded place, about three hundred yards lrom the Elizabeth- port station, New Jersey, containing some two or three hundred pairs ot ladies’ garters. The excitement that followed was never equalled, save when the California minor exhibited a wo man’s gaiter. Every male Elizabethan wanted to take a look at the interesting relics. The read’ng ol the prayer for the President of the United States and all others in authority, in the Episcopal church in Concord, N. K., on Sunday morning last, was interrupted by r. man in the congregation, who exclaimed audibly : ’ I object, I object l ” Tbe sad story of the two little children oi Branell Bonaparte, ot Wickford, Rhode island, who were buried alive by the falling in ot the wall ot a cave, has a sad sequel Mrs. Branell, who was ill, died lrom the shock, and Mr. Bru- nell, the lather, has become *naan« At Milwaukee, the other day, a little girl sup posed to have died of croup the day before, was about to be buried, when the officiating clergy man diecovt red some warmth in her iorehead, and by proper care animation was restored. It is a noticeable fact, says the New York World, that Senator Morton in his serenade speech, in Washington, on Saturday night, did not commit bimselt to Grant’s renomination Morton is a candidate bimselt, and the serenade was the initiatory step (o bring Morton forward. An Indiana young lady sued for $20 000dam ages to her lacerated aff-action* and recovered the full amount lacking $19,999 SI. In making an excavation fora new building, on the corner ot Pium and Fifth streets, Cin cinnati, the workmen, tighieen inches below tbe cellar door, came up m a skeleton of what appears to ha\e been a joung gi*l, with a rusty, stiarp-p'tinted knife near by The absence of all appearance ot a coffi*, with oihtr circum stances, has created much sp* culation, not a lew believing the gill has been mj sieriously mur dered and been secreted here, where it was hoped she would never be discovered. The strongest propensity in woman’s nature, says a rareiul student ot the sex. is to want to tsn w wba* is ipting on, and the next strongest is to boss the j >. The Roanoke (Va) Times announces that General A. C. Gar.mgtoD, on* heavy editor, will deliver the annual address before the Lt’erary Societies of Roanoke College, on tbe 20 h ot June next. This Local has a high opinion ol Geu Garlington’s abilities and congratulates the Road* ke Colit ge on having made so jaoi— cious a s. lection. Gtrats Peace Celebration In Sew York. Among the events which more than partisan movement influence and characterize the condi tion of the United States, the late German peace-celebration in New York is one ot great importance. Unparalleled tn regard to num bers and surpassing in cove ty and magnificence every other public exhibition previoua’y wit nessed in the coy ot New York, the procession moved through the priacioal thoroughfares ot the me'ropohs not only without the least dis turbance from any side, but it was most enthu siastically received by almost every class ot the inhabitants. The addresses delivered on this occasion, by Govern ir tiofiiuau and William Cullen Bryent, to a mass metting ot upwards ot fii*y thousand Germans, expressed sentiments which proved their perfect understanding ot the characteristics and merits ot the German ele ment in this coun-ry. The vulgar may still en tertain preju :ice?; the grta* mass ot the Ameri can people tree ly acknowledge the goo 1 feat ures of tbe German char-tier, and they are even reconciled with its peculiarities and idio- syncracies. It is d ffic.il: to delineate a picture of the progress ot the German e ement in tb's country and lrarne if so as to make it intelligible at a single glance. Neither their increase in num bers, nor their distribution over almost every State in the Union, nor even the r late voluum- ry collections lor the su; port of the sick and wounded in the Frei ch war, aft >rd an insight adequate to the development ol that element. The great peace celebration in New Y* rk, taken in connection with tiiealmos* abs* lute insignifi cance of the G man ei> inent m this country about tiity yeais ago, offers, perhaps, the most complete picture ui its astonishing giowth. It i3 like an exotic plan - , which, alter many years ot slow development, tin t’ly exhibits iisb auty in a superb crown ot flowers. In a procession of twelve miles in kngilt, con posed of legion** ot German people, r. presenting every art in which they are misters; every trade in which they excel; every octupa i n ot life, and every capacity ot the German cnaracter and intellect, they exnibited, as it were, in a mierocoism the reflex of their cond Lon tUionghout tue coun’ry. And the overwhelmingly American and Irish population of New York, by their fullest re cognition of the greatness and magnificence of the eight, mirrored tbe views ot tbe whole na tion in regard to the German population of the United Slates. In renumbering the doubtiul commence ments of the first German settlers, the troubles which they had to meet lrom all sides, and in comparing th* ir early sufferings with their great success in every oirectior, the hearts ci the German Americans may properly swell with satisfaction and pride.—St Louis Republican, Madame Delaohamus ALONE IN A [MOUNTAIN GORGE Snugly eeconsed In the wilds of one ot'the Middle Stales, lived Madame Delachamps, many years ago, with nokniwn protector, save a ia;thiol dog that ever stood Mill her to defend in time ot need Her sinab. moss-covered cabin, wrapped with the wiid-r >se ana honeysuckle. appeared hid away by a cluster of undtr- gro win, a ad closely environed on the north and east by a deep, craggy ravine that led away bacx to the moun tain gorge. Her aiuffllug the ambient air. watted from nature’s green sward clinging to toe mountain side, bathing her brow in early morn's gciitie dewurop, she lived solitary and alone lor many tong .ears. ‘The catainoout'e un earthly midnight yen, and the won’s doieiai howl, fre quently aroused her lrom pleasant midnight slumbers. Now ana then she would emerge from ner unknown home and mingle with the mdatutaats around about lor one or two months at a tune, She was eccentric in her acts andatl viewed her as a living curiosity. While lrom home, she apparently had oat one object, and that was the redei of her afflicted sex. Under a belt on the leit side, could be seen an Old tashioned dirt oi considerable size, carried tor her own pro lectio a, .vime strapped across her shoulder was suspended a ca- '.ous sac# made from the SRINS OF RABBITS^ IND’RACCO ON i Arranged in alternate stripes. This bag contained some oid parchment, carious relics, a lew lignt garments, and a smaller sack containing a course power made .rom certain roots known only to herself, the secret ol which she emng to as with the tenacity of de.th. She sallied lortn lrom her wild mountain home, to act the Good Samaritan, with this unknown vegetable powder, which she claimed possessed a wondsrftn power over ah disea ses incident to the female sex. She termed it “ womb physic,” with which ehe proposed to cure ail aflecuons and derangements oi that organ, and kindred com plaints tree oi cnarge. With such singular magic dm she relieve aii who applied, that within a lew years ner name and fame became known tar and wide, and hun dreds ot stillering lemaiee applied tor rebel and returned to their homes healthy and happy. Many were anxious to know ner great secret, and large sums oi money were odered il she would divulge it - hut sue stubborn ly reiused. Daring her solitary life she became intimate with only one woman, a noted midwife some miles distant, to whom she promised to Fbom the report of the City Treasurer, Peri- oo Brown, Esq., we learn that the total boedey debt of Atlanta amounts to eight bundled and seventy-eight thousand, two hundred and fif'd dollars. That the taxable property of the city ia worth at a ready cash value thirteen millions ot dollars, and that the tax on real estate ia one percent. The manhood or the South not Lost In tbe War. It there is any man, clique or newspaper id the North, Radical or Democratic, that wishes the people ot the South to commend themselves to the favor ot any power on earth, by eating their own words, apoligizing for their own acts, or by maligning and spitting upon their own leaders, who fought and lost with them, they might as well make up their minds at once that we do not mean to sne k into the sunshine ot such favor by any such mean and back door indirection. We differ with the Unionists; we lought them like men; and, when the fortune of-war turned against us, we surrendered like men. But it never entered tbe mind of man or woman in the South, ihat through this chapter of history the South had lost its man ho* d. We were not Helotes scourged from the fielda by the whips ot masters, but Romans —before, in the midst of, and alter the baitie. If there are vile curs anywhere, so loe' to magnanimity and chivalry as not to be satisfied with beating their foes in the open field, but whose dastardly bate can only he sppeastd by degrading his enemy beneath the dignity ol manhood, that carrion appetite will be baulked ot his lood here Is there any party in* the North that thinks that the late seeeediDg States will never he fi' asso ciates for it in the restored lamiley of the Union until their people become the mean-spirited, degraded wretches they are trying to make them ? Are we to be bypocrits and liars and in- grates before we are fit to keep political com pany with the North ? If so, the answer is you are not fit to keep our company. Popular or unpopular, we will and must revenge the mem ory ot RoUt. E. Lt e, and adorn the graves oi our unrecordid dead. We will not turn cur backs upon Jefferson Davis, or any other leader, who suff red with us. If we cannot recom mend cmr-tlves to you oi the North we mean at !«• t • ■ preset ve our own self-respect. We will n i read ourselves and our chiets, like wild beasts, or trample on the ashes ol our dead. We believe that tbe great heart ot the Ameri can people will respond to this view ot Southern du y, and wc are sure there is not an enlight ened Christian, not one genuine patriot or true man north ot the Poiomac or west of the Ohio, who will not eay we are right. Why, then, listen to the hyenas and jackalls of the Jaco bin party, and try to assuage their ferocity by bringing the South to its knees, to surrender not only its honor, but its civilization aud human ity ? It cannot be—God forbid that it should be —that the suffragans of this great country are sc lost to the sense ol rectitude and honor, that they will vote to spurn the people of the South, and keep them under the ban ot Radical dis franchisement and p* rsecution because they will not stoop to their own degredation. We have surrendered all to you that tbe laws of war demanded from the conquered to the cocqu; ror. When you ask us to assail our souls, we refuse —they belong to God and to ourselves.—Mobile Register. Whitewater (Wis.) correspondence of the Milwaukee Sentinel. A Singular Tragedy. On Snnday morning last our citizens were pained to hear that Mrs. Foster, wife of Wm. F. Foster, aud daughter of Salmon Clark, ot this village, was dead, and soon after were startled by the report that Mr. Foster had ‘hot himself. The facts are these: Some six years ago Wm. F. Foster, a brother of Geo. H. Fos ter, of Milwaukee, was married to Came Clark, a beautiful and accomplished young lady of this village. They soon after removed to Chicago, where Mr. Foster went into butiuess, aDd where they have since resided. To the buppy couple life was all pleasant, and they seemed to live for each other and be happy in each other’s love—bat alaB, misfortune came. By the tail of an elevator in h*s store at Chicago, Mr Foster was seriously injured, and lor a tune his life was despaired of From the effects ot this fall hi never eniire'y recovered, but sufficiently, how ever, to attend to business. Soon alter it became evident to the husband and friends nf Mr*. Foster that the fell disease, consumption, was cl timing her ior its own. Every thine th it skill could do, or afl* ction devise, was done, bu; withou avail. Finally, Mr at d Mrs. Foster, and her mother, went to Fioride, hoping that tbe climate there m-ght benefit her. This, too, tati*- ' a> ti the fir-* o! Mere r sh* w»* t r .-ugh) h-ck u- re, wit*rc s. e died on t*und«y merning last. During all her sickn.ss. Mr. F s er wa; un wearied in his attentions, caring not or hiin- se f. only for her. H-r sickness seemed 'o prey upon his mind and be was heard to say, “he c<red not to live ait r Carrie’s dea’h and ihjit without Ler the wotid.was nought i-> Lim ” a- d cow appears he had marie pitr«ii..u.i o i .k" his ov:i Ire r’o er. kn -a i ,-h »vas about io d.u, iearii g h * ff cl up >n her husband, said to him, “husband, had you not belter go into the otber room ?” and almost im mediately expired. He. Fortcr, who was very much affected, stood 'or a tew moments, then said: Is ray uarling wire -deadf and left tue room. He so.m returned, threw himself ch the foot and side oi the bed, cryine, “1 am coming, let mis die by the side ol my wife,” placed th pietol against his person and fired. Mr. Clara, who was Branding near the bed, overcome with grief, hearing the cry, and seeing Mr. Fos’tr throw himseli on tbe bed, instantly seiz-d him, bat only in time to prevent the bait fr> m going through the heart. It went through the left breaat, lodging, it is lhaught, in the Sung There ia bat little hopes of Mr. Fus er’s recovery, the entire community sympathize with tue family in their double affiicti- n. Uommnntcition Chicago Republican. Why Women Fall—'S ite Passlou for Tin sel und. Flue D e#a. The <! social evil” is not confined, by a great dea , to the places where it exists in its more public mani estation. Awhile ago, having some curiosity to ascertain it the “ personals ” in the Sunday’s Tribune were bona fide, and if so what was the character ot those thus advertising, I answered lour of theta. In due time I received replies, with the loliowing result: No. 1—A widow who keeps a boaiditig house on Michi gan Avenue, about 30 years ot age, with one child; No. 2 -A young lady on Waba*h ave nue, near Twenty-second street, about 22 years old; No. 3—A widow in one of tne *' Courts,” between Wabash and Michigan avenues, abput 32 years ot age, with three children; No. 4 — A married woman residing on South Park ave nue, about 30, with a sickly husband and no children. All warned a::out the ta.ne thing—a “friend” who could assist them—the young lady and the married lady spoke of dress par ticularly. So much for that one experiment, which I assure you, is liteially true. Now, the organ ot this class ol people is publishing these “Per sonals” all the time—especially entry buud*y, The facts that 1 have reiakd to go to show that the “ evil” is leariuily prevalent all over the city, and indicate a stale ot morals not ol the inrst la.o abie kind. One result ot u.y invrs'.igition^ on this sub ject is to lead nfb to tne c! inclusion that the passion for dress ana dt play i-> the Cau=e of a larger portion ot mis evil man any oue thing I am thoiougbly convine* d that more girls are seduced into a life oi shame througu a Uestre to keep up with tue timer in lashu.nable aitite tuan iu any other way In lact, 1 Otlteve that three out ol every ti e enter me gate tnaiieads to dis iuctiou through the wiles ol the temper — Fashion. The worn* n themselves, ther* fore, who run riot in the ex ravagence oi dress, ate primarily more chalgtaoie, in my Opinion, witu the ex istence ami extension ot me “ social evil 1 ’ than ate the men. QUiti-thr* CiT i'xiji .so CJ lxi ON L Y GENUINE STtlAlii PORTABLE GRIST MILLS; C ORN MEAL., WHEAT FhOUKING AND STOCi. FEED, Hotting .-i|»parald=>, coiutters, Corn Sheoen- e'ionr Hackers, and VI I I . 1, WOilli OJBNKRAloJL a . _ These Mills w-re first mauelo ^ supply the wants ol rfie flaniert ana oiuu tiro wurt oi tne eoutL, bai-tt ir tame has spread to ever.* quatter tue mo be, and they an □ovv .-o.i- ui.u used in Europe, Asia. Alrica and south America. It BUpi.iy the 1UCI easiog demand vu have eiiiargen _ur Munuiaciory ami add d va.uable improvement- Id to the Mid Ab hereioiore, onr Mills will Dt built ol choice Burr Elocka, selected at tbe quarries in France. Send for Descriptive Pamoniets containing Treauet on Milling, sent by mail iree. nddreas, ^ ISAAC »'X’ rv * Vi AS CO«« Cor. irom and John Streets, miyis-d&w. uiNelbN.iTL O. DIVULGE HERj^iECRJT Before dying. night In s few years, ss the (sombre shades to close around her tottering frame, she THE GREAT FAMILY MEDICINE. TAKEN INTERNALLY, It cures Bndden Colds, Concha, &c„ and Weak Stom- och. General Debi'ity, Nursing Sore Month, Canker, L.ver Corupla nt Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Cramp or Pa’n in tne iBtomarh, Bowel Complaint, Painters’ Colic, Asiatic Cholera, Diarrhoea and Dysentery. APPLIED EXTEKNALLT, Cures Felons, Boils and Old Sores, Severe Burns, Scalds. Cuts, Brni-es and Sprains. Swelling of tbe .loins. Ringworm and ' otter . roken breast". Frosted Feet and i h'lbiaiLS. Toothache, Pam in the Face, Nen- ralgia and Rheumatism. It is a sore remedy for Agne, Chkls and Fever. PAIN KILLER, Taken Internally, should he adulterated with milk or wa*er, or made into a syrup with molasses. For a Cough a few drops on sugar, ea.en, will be more effec tive than anything else. See orinted direct'oue, which accompany each bottle. Sold by all Druggists. *nlv2a-<llrr Aw Agents Wanted. S PECIAL and Local Agents ; also canvassers;wanted for a first class L’te lisarance Company. _Apply t>j Letter, Lock Hc*x SM, Atlanta Post Offlce. d£"wt* Fresh Harden, Frewer, Fruit, Herb. Tree and Shrub. m*cf Evergreen Seeds, u’ctiaid by mail, w in directions tor col ture. Twentv-S^e different packets of either class lor $1.0J. Tbe six classes $5-00 20,' oo ponnds Evergreen an-I Tree Seeds ; Apple, Fear, Cherry. &c.; Grars Seer s ; Beet Cabbage, Carrot, Oc’on, squash, iurn’p, and aii Veg table and Flower -eedi, in smah or large quantities ; al-o Smalt Fruits, Stocks, Bulbs, t-hrnos, noses, Verbenas, Ac., by mail, prepaid. New Go.den Bonded -Japan Lilly, L0c. Priced Descriptive Cataiogne sent to any plain aedress, gratis. Agent. A anted. \Vh*rltsa>e i 1st to Ageqta, Clubs and tne Traje Seeds on commission. B. Mas ATsON. Old Coiony Nurseries and Seed Warehouse. Plymouth, Mai=._ Es’ablished inlS43. ianStr-wgm. ;ht began to close around her totterinj parted this great secret to this in end. ^ She too gained quite a reputation for relieving the suffering of her sex, and strange it may appear—she r i r ceiy ever failed to core those old Chrome iemal i plaints that had resisted all ordina y modes of treat ment. Many years ago, the writer of this, while en gaged in tne practice ot medicine, by a little strategy, succeeded in procuring tbe secret ot this wonnaenul vegetable Regulator, which had never been known to tee Medical ProiesBlon. He gave it a fair and impartial trial in the treatment of various forms and stages oi female complaints witb suen decided satisfaction, that in IttttO he called public attention to its virtues in Gross’ Medico Chirurgical Review. Combined with other known vegetable Tonics, havin: great power over the uterine organs ; wuh Black i.ooi to act upon tbe liver and bowels, and Soluble citrate Iron to correct tbe blood, ho has formed a wonder! combination lor tbe care ol all Female compiamta, con s dering it the only Female Regulator known, and now ofiere mis valuable compound..to the afflicted icmale. under the name oi ENGLISHj /FEMALE.i BI T,T ER S The Medical Profession at large, have long felt’ the need oi such a medicine, consequently it is not strange tha they so *agerly p.eBcnbc and recommend theee lucre io their lemmepatients. 11 you cotnd see the pile of smiling appi ovals and en coiuiums irom physicians and the public » ho have cure- their daughters, their wives, and their friendb, by the c-e of these bitters, no sickly lema.e would beeitate to ase them. This F’emaie Hegnlator is adapted lor old, junj., married or single females, who aie affected with -cute or chronic forms of Uterine derangements. 1 hey cn e painlul, suppressed, scanty, prolnse or irregular menstruation, CUiorosis or Green Sickness, Fluor A>bus or V\ hues. Hysterica, Falling of the Womb, Ulceration ano lrra ab Tty oi the Womb, pain in tht side, back or loins, sick Headache, palpitation or fluttering oi the Heart, hurried breathing, swimming oi the bead, cold Feet and Hands, loss ot Appetite, indigestt n, torpid Liver, Melanchoily, Nervousness, Wakeiulness, Barren ness, physical Prostration, etc. Many ol these are re- eved fe'ner.o ""ly one bottle. THE LIFER AND, T 0 M A C H Are thoroughly aroused and restored to a healthy action, by tbe nee oi these Hitters. Its peculiar Iron and Vege table c. mbination, pieces It lar ahead ol any similar preparation before the public. Females, alter confinement and convalescents from any debilitating complaint, who remain weak and fee ble, wuh little or no appetite, are at once aroused and strengthened by their use. As a Family To ic lor men women and chiidaen. it has no equal. Ode taolespoon- lul contains more medical properties, than one bottie ol any oi it e common and pleasant “ dilate alcohol ” bot- ters. to be lonno all over the country. When the manu lacturers ol the common beverages ol the day eay they cure a l diseases, they well know they are ’ puiling the wool” oner yonr eyes, and langnat your stupidity in bein' so easily hnmDngged whenever tne article smacks of wduekp. It you leaiiy desire a valuable Iron and Ve getable Tonic ror yunreeli ana family, one bottle of B F. U. will last longer and do more good than one dozen of the ordinary ”grog shop” bitters, aa one tablespoon (oi in water, is sufficient ior a whole family. As FRiMjtLpE REGULATOR It has no equal on this continent, acting powerfully and promptly mail cases, where no organic lesion exists.— It is Just tne medicine for young girls, who have some difficulty in retaining tbe bloom on the checks, and who do not feel exactly right. For the mother at the “ change of life,” lt soothes and qniets until the critical riod is passed, as sweetly as if enjoying the brightest per . _ and merchants throughout the country. Address J. T. DBOMGOOLE Sc CO., Prp’B, Msaaphls, Tens. Why has not the Passenger Depot been fin ished ? We notice piles ot lumber underneath it, and as yet no platforms have been con-1 siracted. j Th* Post Office gem ral delivery is crowded daily with persons asking for letters. This morning the line lormed there extends even oat ca the sidewalk. Mortgage Siienff aaie. W ILT.be soli Ire ore the .'oort-h >u-e door, in the city * f Atlanta, f tue u-uri houre of sale, on the First Tnesuay in May next, the foJowin? properly, to-wit: Oue large Ho- press, t lo’ o Ho? pr“s«, 8 imposing atones, IU stands. 2 n 2i c -cs type to eaeu cub- i-'et, 1 ear 1 press, 18 pairs ot ewe- w m ’ype. aj non chases, 2 ru e c»-c- with rn r. 12 b as- irai eye, 7 wooden gad yr 1*11 nis wood poster >yp ,1 font metal type, 1 o-sk, 1 lot meiai tq i . 9 ran comoos’ng -tc.-,l"i -7-1,1 o .tls .a .-, lleil cut —- C-J’arcs; - * o.oo pr s. ■,-.n ds. 3S piir i-vs i • z p , 4 j ,-s 1 n ng mac line, 1 standing pre--, 2 paper • nn-r=, 1 Ooard cu ter, 1 set binder's :oois, 1 cabinet with t oo, 1 wo.-a Oe"cb, 6 taol-e, 12 enure, l book cise xiet d -k, 1 lire-e iron safe, and r *• ood w .i c too .. fi-e. Levied on the prop eriyt.f T . A’uitaker by vir u: ot a^d to s-tisty a mortgage fi. ia . .a^at-d .rom r'u. on 8 per ior Court in fsvor ot B U r ncey vs. Tared 1 Wnitaker. Also, at *.he same t me md pac-* 1 j >o o jo* printing press of K. Hoe iUo’i puc t. now ;n u-e >n tba .ffice o< tne Aua-ita fateliig-ucer Lavi -donas he property of J I. .vnti-.feer oy vir u of an I io satis y a m irtgage fi. ta , ireuei f -m Fulton -cp.-rior Com" in tavor oi B. G Ya cey ys J l. v> n tiker Also, .a tue s ime t me au i place one hnn ’red., and sixty ( bOj cases, and o :s hticrrei and seventy-five (175) fonts ol ty^-e of ci .rent flz -i snl ceairiMton, and eiev n (111 »tanas, x own aa the Atlanta Inte l; fencer Job office. Levied oa aa 1 ae property or Jared I. Wcitsker by virtue of and to sacsiya nor-eagefi •a., issued from Fulton superior C iarc m lav »r f D. M. Bain vs. Jared i. Wnitaker. Property pointed out by plaint'IPs attorney. Also, at the same and place 1 lot of mprchand : »e con sist ng of eroeeriea, do--resiles, boots, .iu.s, calicoes hardware, &C- Levjtd on- as the pr.-ps.iy of Samuel Jackson ty virtu* of and to sktsfj a m r-tage fi' fa., issued from Fnlto i ^up-r-or « 'onrt in favo o Henry H. J cobs. Fiops’ty jioivted out by plaintff’s at torney. A, JC. FErtESKSoN, Dcpaiy S-ieoff, mart-30*i i-iiBtsrifee St) pgr Isfy^ DR0MG00LE k CO.’N bllHC. The beet and cheapest combination ror all affections of the Kidneys and Bladder ever offered to the public. It is prepared by regular physicians and need by the profession. Price $1, or six bottles for $6- Sold by Druggists acc xerchante everywhere. J. P. DROMGOOLB A CO., nov20—rt*we««l4r»» Mi-r-rtno. r r«Tir. Administrator’* (sale. B Y virtu-e of aa order granted by the court of ordi nary of Foiton Cbuntr. Ga., I will sad before the Court-house of Fulton cotthty, oa the First Tuesday in April next at juo io oiicry, to the highest bidder for each, the following lands ; Lo s ol land numbers 80,36, 338, aud 381, all lying in the 13th District ot Miller county, containing 250 acres each. Also, lot of land No. 923, lying in the ISth District ol Worth county, rontalng 25u acres. Sold for the ben efit oi the creditors of tae estate ot Jo. A. Davis deceas ed. D. P. HILL, Adm'r. for Xatate of Joel Davis marf-tds printers tee SS per squar. PRICE REDUCED ONLY $50 PER TON. IN FITE TON LOTS. £ore than Two Hundred Planters m LAIM FERTILE aie heardfrom it. us I DEITY and STRENGTH are guaranteed. The value o BOH¥ FK0 COTTCN SEED MEAL as am'ture. Is known to every SCIENTIFIC AGRI CULTURALIST. lhe*e artxles form the balk o (4-5) o : the '•NGDON,” to wnica aae added proper quan- tiriee of POT ibH, GYPf-UM and SALT. These five ingredients form the compound. IT 13 A HOME PRODUCTION. Larcre capital in vested h*re in the works, aflords a security for the guarantee of its PUiilTY. HON. C. C. L A NC DON, (Agricultural Editor Mobile Register.) gives advisory supervision to the production of this Fertilizer. No high IreighflPtrom the far Jsast, nor large com missions to agents here, have to oe pt ,u, as mast be tine of an articie oi foreign (Northern) man'lac ture, and hence the '• Langdon ” can be sold, and IS SOLD CHr.APEK, than any standard Fertilizer in the market. The COTTON SEED MEAL, ia produced at the works, and too R - W BON tv' are gathered from the sur- ronnding country and ground at my Mihs. • Farmers are invited to visit the Mobile Oil Mills and witness the operations of producing the Langdon Fer tilizer Planters should instruct their Merchants to buy for them. THE LANGDON FERTILIZER) Because it is a simple composition of articles known to be good, a; d the purity ot' wh ch is insured Because it is e-'l-l at a lower orice than any article of like quality could be, which ia brought from a distance. Because it would give greater returns from its use, pound :or pound, than any other Fertilizer, ne matter what the pr.ee. FROM THE MANY TESTIMONIALS from practical men, these are here given : Tuscaloosa, Ala., December 92,1870. Cot. W. D. Mann : Sir—-onr circular of the let instant, came to hand. As we found the Langdo . Fertilizer the best that we tried, 1 give you my experience with it. Onr land is pour, red bill lana. Used 2u0 lbs. to the acre We ur-ed one ton of vnllam’s, at *76 ; three tons of Zell's, at $s5 per ton; two tons of the Langdon, at $60 per ton. The laud was all worked alike, and the same quan tity used ol each. 1 did not keep foe weights of each field separate, but attended to the picking and weigbiu] myseli, and know that there was more cotton gaihere* to the acre on the Langdon than any other pan oi the place. The Zeli’s was next. From my own experience, ana in the opinion of all larmers who took notice of it, the Langdon Fertilizer was tar superior to any that, we used. Retpectluiiy youre, <fcc. -C. H. FITTS. Mr. Thomas H. iakjsrreuT, oi Meridian, Miss., alter recounting ms experience in the use ol the Langdon Fertilizer, says : *’ hen i lived on my plantation in Alabama, i used many kinds ol manure, but I never need any tiling r.r.at wouia begin * compare with the Langdon Fertilizer. ” THE PRICE AT THE MILLS IS *50 PER TON IN FIVE ToN LOi'ts; *55 FOR A SINGLE TON *3 PER 10f LB'. FOR S a ALL LOTS, it is exchanged ior Lotion oe< d, 3LHJ pounds, in strong sacks, delivered free on board boat or cars at Mobile, ior one ton Coito- _,Ct d, tree at the landing • >r depot np coumy—sucksand i wiue lurmsaed by tne Mills. Ot its cneapuess, Colonel Langdon savs • *• its cheap ness -1 am tully convinced tuat, at the price now hxed by you to-wit: $qtiper ton, since reduced to $55, it is mneb the chbapes lerttlizer in our market. Pound ior pound, 1 consider it more va'nable than me prepaiations that are selling at $76 to $S0. For my own use, 1 would greatly preler it to Peruvian Guano at me same price.” OX its merits De says: .*• The remit ia the oest r ertuizer in the world lor onr southern lauds, in my opinion.” igaiu : '* it contains mote luily and completely than an\ olh-T, ihe iementB necessary lor lee product'on ol Southern crops ana tbe renovation oi Southern soil. Prol. Charles U. nhepard, Jr., 51. D, rrokssor ol Chemistry eouth Caroiiua Hectical College, and .nrpec tor oi Fei linkers lor E-outu Carolina, who made ami aid careful analysis ol the Langn on s'ertili*er, says O' it: It is a ve-y superior a- tide.” I als>. crush at the nulls, Raw Bones, hare ground fine. Pnceai me Mills $4o per ton. G-onnd Raw Bone ir too we 1 mow,, a - a strong Fertilizer to need com menl. For i re-- s. Shrubbery ana Grapes it has no equa lnc Gaounu Bone tne UuUde Oil Mills is warrantee to - onlam Homing but Bone. Acuress aii orders ior eitbeir oi the above Fertilzers, accompanied oy eusu or ordeis on your merchants, to MOBILE olL :M1lL&, •Y P. O Box 72 Mobile, Ala. (W *12,P? per ton. Cash paid or Con >n seen ueliv- ereu at the whorl r deuot here sucks and twine furn ished tree ol charge at your i nding or depot. TEE GEE1T FERTILIZER. tmmh RASY ESSE STANDARD GUARANTEED BONt « WAKTtSO, $15.00 per t r. will be i-ai-J lor Bones delivered at tLe Mule, ft will pay io ea-Uer mein, about the country and ship to the Mobile Oil MPit-. FRENCH Cognac Bitters, w FIRST PRIZE Paris Exhibition 1867. Purify the blood and strengthen the system, eradicating the effect of dissipation, maintain the human frame in condition of healthfulness, dispel the Blues and all mental dis tempers, and relieve those whose sedentary habits lay them open to depression. They prevent and cure SUi~ ons and other Fevers, Fever and Jlff-iee, Chills, ^Diarrhoea, 'Dysen tery, ^Dyspepsia, Sea - Sickness, Colic, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, and every complaint inci dental. to diet or atmos phere Ladles will find them a sovereign boon, as they eradicate all traces of Debility, Nervousness, Inertness, and Diseases peculiar to the sex. {^Thousands of Testimo nials can be seen at the office of M. JACOBSON, Sole Proprietor, '' 64 & 66 Water Street, N. Y. 91. FERST & CO., General Agent# for tne State ot Ga. Jan2I-d&wly MANUFACTURED BY WALTON,'WHAHN&C WILMINGTON,DEL. FOR SALE BY '™ HERRING; '0rul? N FACTORS I fission MERCttfei We again ofrek to the public THE CJ reat Fertilizer J WHANN’S RAW BONE SUPER PHOSPHATE, Which has Given Such "Universal Satisfaction • During the Past two Years. We Gaarsntea it Tqual in Quailty To that Previously Sold by UIS AND OUR AGENTS, AND We Refer to all wto Have Used It, FBICBl $51 Cash, Delivered on Cars at Charles ton. $58 50 For Factors’ Acceotaoce, Dae 1st November, Delivered on Cars at Charleston. $54 00 Cash, Delivered on Cars at Au gusta. 862 For Factors’ Acceptance, Due 1st Fovember, Delivered on Cars at Augusta. agentsw^nted fobthe THE AMEBIH N FAS ER’8 HORRB BOOK : 1 fit: acki.owledgnu rt: < .:ri , 41*t tiouaand now ready, cd tne demand aa steady and Bare as for vi heat. A!eo, for In tx ih Kiigiit-li and Ge mat. nmuianing the AUopafb- c. Homeoparhic, Hydro; ath'c, Bciccwc and Herbal ■ ol Tnatment. 644 cii eely primed pare* Pnc. or. y *2 on, The n-ort. omplOe, waip ct, relia- anc popular fami.y m- otca! took on'. 21st «*».<}•’.- ate EOwieai y For c.rca _rs v».ln lout- ’. ; . : p"'.C- cai 'e-*9 fl both work;, adcreaa G. F V->:T. Publish er. ■ 5 Wett Fourth a teet, Cincinnati, Ohio. mh29-eoc8:&w Forsyth Sheriff Sales. W ILL be f=o’d before the court hon«e door. In tbe town of (.nmxniufif, «*a., oa tne first Tuesday in Ma> Lex*., De r w«*en in*s doot^ ol ea?e, .Lot of JL.ii d iso. 20*9 in the 14m D strict of the 1st section ol Forsjtn c u .iy, tia, Levied on satisfy sun dry fi a’s iffcQsG lrom a Jurt cj Court in said county, in layor ol Mareas S. t'ool vs. Joda LrvW, as tne property oi said John Cow, pointed *»at by ueiencani. Levy made and returned to me oy ML Tatum, L. C. 9 this 99lh March. 1871. mh31 wtdi JOHN A# SIMS, Ordinary. SECOND HAND COTTON MACHINERY FOB SALE. C ONSISTING of Owara, Lappera, Cards, Drawing Frames, Bpeedera, Spinning Frames, Ac.. Ac. This machinery is bat partlaDj worn. All in good condition and will b# eoM cheap. Jfor description and price Agent Tzeraont andSuffolk Mill*, ct*-«odAwte* Jamil, Kara. FORSrrH SHERIFF’S SALE. - WJTTLL be sold before the court house door fn the $r toor Camming, h’o'syth county on the First Tuesday in April next, wi.hi the iegal hoars o. sale, lot ofiand No. 1.19L, in *he 14th Diet net atid 1st sec tion of Forsyth •■xmnty, Ga. Levied oa he property oi A. H. Melton aid. t j satisfy an ati*uhm<mt ttuin lavor ol Truman H. Sanford. Pointed ous in said n flu Levy made * nd returned to me by a co&aiaole# J. A« Si as, Denaty Sheriff, mcM-ta prune*’* lee $4 W per lety FOH HXLE BY G W CAMP, Bowtnsville, Ga. M B DEVaUGH-EN, Join-shorn, Ga. WOOO & ROGERS, C*>- i'iion,Ga. STILLWELL & PENT1 OST, Home, Ga. W L HIGH, Madieon, Ga. W B HAYGOOD & W J RUSSELL, Athc-us, Ga. A LEYDEN, Atlanta, Ga. CLAGE0RN, HEURI G & CO., COTTON FACTORS Commission Merchants, AUGUSTA, GA. iai.Zfl-i’AwZm CH -% K f.ENTON, S. O. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla I S a cuncenimed extinct oi the choice ro.jt, bo com bined witb other subc-tai ceg of 8till gri-ateralteraiive pov.er agio afford an eflertnal anti dote tor uiseaseu s>ar»ap- rilla is reputed to cute, fcuch a remedy is eurey wan.id !v tboee who suffer from fetrr mouE> complaints, and that oi wh ch will accomplish iln cure must prove, as thiB has proved, ol immense eerv ce u< thin targe clasr ot < ur afflicted fellow-citizeuB. How complete y . - c.. . ... a will do it, ha- be,.n proven oy exnerune u on ia my ol the worst ca»e» ko be oaud In tae lobowiug comp.amts .— Scrofula, acroi .luu« ••iweinng'* and sores, skin Dis eases, Fimpies. P .states, Blo cuus, Hraptlous, Bt. enthony’s rire, u- se >r Erysipelas, Tetter or Salt Rheum. Scald Head Ringworm. «e. Syphilis or Ventral Uiase n- exnel'ed from tbe sys- iem oy tab prolonged use of tnis S a hs ap a hill a, and the pane t is left in conipa ative hea.ih Female Diseases are caurea by Sc-oiula In the blood, and are o.teu soon cured by this lxthact or Sahsa- P KILL A Do i ot reject this invaluable medfoine, because you have bet n imposed upon ly something pretending to be Sarsaparilla, whi e it wa- not. w i en you have osed Axxk’s—then, und not till then, wil you Know ihe vir tues of Sarsaparilla. For minute puiticumrs ol the diseases It cures, e reler you to Ayer’ij American Almanac, which the agent below named will lurmsh gratis 10 all who call lor it. Aybb s CaTBaktic ills, for the enre of Gostive- cess. Jaundice. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Dyse tery, Foul Stomach, Headache. Piles, xthea.aatlsm, Heart- buru arising lrom Di.-ordcrod Stomach, Pain or Morbid inaction of tne Bowels, Flutuleucy, Loss ot Anueitte, Liver Oomplaiat, Dropsy, Worms, Gout, Neuralgia, and l a Dinner Mil, are unequalled. •they are sugar-coated, ro '.hut the most sensitive can take them worn pleasure, and they are the best Aperient in the world lor all the purposes of a family physic. Prepared by DB. J. G. aYuK ez aj.. Lowed, Mass., and sold by all Draggtsts and dealer? in medicine everywhere. Agents at Atlanta, PEMBERTON, TAV LGK & GO. *r. chln-d de waru LOOK TO YOUR CHILDREN. THE GREAT SOOTHING HEDEDY MRS. Whitcomb’s SYRUP MRS. Whltromb’a STROP. MRS. White mb’* BYKUP. ( Cures Colic and Griping m i PKK'B the Bowels, and uciiitaies > 25 th.- process ol Teething. 1 GENTS. [ Sundries iloovnMoiik and i PRICE overcomes all dieeu-e-j mcl-> 25 i dent to nfantsand chpdr’n. j CENTS. 1 Cares Diarrhea, L>y eotery i PitlCE [ and Mummer CompPii.ot in > 25 I Chil-iren of ail ages t CENTS." It IS the Great inlant’s and Cnildren’s Soothing Eemedy in all dis*Jiders brought on by Teething or any other cause. Prepared by the GRAFTON MEDICINE CO. 8t. Louis, Mo. 8old by DrnggiBts and Dealers :n Medicines every here inueo-dAwlv OEOR6IA. FatsttbCountt Oitr.iNA ry’s OppiCK. March 23, 1871. W HERE48, George W. Dir* applies to me or the Gnardianship of tne persons ana lopatyof me minor children of John W. Davis, aeceus-'d — All pers-ids c«,iicenjed are notified to ale their oo]e*> tioas, in my office, if anv exet. w foin t-.e t m- alio red bylaw to said appointm-nt.othi.rwi letters of auar- dfanshio will b.i grant-d the ac; licaut, a- upp ie<i ior on tne first Monday in Mavaex- DAVID C. MiNu'f O-'i .- mh31-30d Prurrilesja. GEOHGIA. Faybtts Cou ty Co-RT or Oroikaut, March 24, 871. J LH W L) D? hartaz a »p is {tor ' r-isof , Admmiatra'loa upon 11. e- »te ol John or- tcn. late of slid coaai •. l eer. ie l — Tnis is. tnere orj, to n it fy all ptrs no - re ... to file iUe.ronj jciion, i" auy ,uey can oa or by tne May Ter - 1b71 ol this Court, «* sa letters will be grunted Uw apofioanu DaViDC. MI vDK.Urd nary. mbte-80d Printer’s fee $3. GEORGIA, Fayxttk C’otJSTX. Oaoi.VABT’s Upfiob, April Term, 1871. jgkLY security tor R imo is ColUna Guardian of Paschal K. Collins, minor of Pascual a. Coilias, deceased, haring represmted that ne nas fully dis- cnarged said trust— Tins is, mere ore, to notify a'! persons concerned to file thair objections, if any they have, on or before the July Term, li'7L of this Conn, w <y letters should not be granted said applicant. aprt-fd DAVID C. MINOR, Ordinary, - Printer’s iee A3. GEORGIA, Clayton C psti. Court of Ordinary. Airilfid, ISTLi. W W C-.MP having apalied icr LWters of Ad- , mi istration upon tire estate of Wiiiian Cates, late oi said county, decea-ed— This fa, therefore, to notity all persons concerned, to file their objections, if any tney can, oil or by the .May Term, 1871, of thm Court, else letters will oe granted th* SDiilicant. J. B. MORROW, Ordinary. W pnutef’a tea $$,