Newspaper Page Text
Til* K*frip»]wr Pm*-A Rtfcm»U#»
—A uioetituUs) pm is of all iMuga wort
^ «ot)t*ni|i4gfcli'. It i« a specie of prustitQtiopi
f.paofcl proviain* of the Federal CoueUtuti*^
THURSDAY jjOHMXKQ. and •fcioh a«**ra in some farm in the Cuft«
eea. Or»*u
Tub Pilot who cam an© wiu onus tni
tfHir or Btatb bjjtblx tohovoh ipem* Utouu.
8TATKWBWH.
It rained iu AnguitU on Holiday uight
Augusta is building a fteedoiau’a hospital.
Few Suite pai*ra were reoeired yeeterdajr.
John Murohisou, an old and rained cituen
of Sarannab, died on Monday aveuiug.
The first Udo of Fiord county now cotton.
»as aold iu Home on Monday. It brought
911 oeuta.
Col. Cany W.JStyles. of the Albany New*, re-
tarued from the Prone Convention quite ML —
He is convalescing.
The mutilated remains of a newly born
infant were found iu the wooda ueir Americas
on Saturday.
The travel ou the Ceulral and Southwestern
Hail road* ban greatly increased since the in
auguration of the one fare system.
The Americas Courier says: One hundred
and sixteeu bales of uew cotton have been re
ceived in that city to this dato. The average
is about low tniddhug—though much of it is
of high grade. Average price 28cU.
The Americas Courier of Tuesday says
i still having dry hot weather, and
vegetation suffers terribly. The cotton has
been at a aUud-still for some time, and even
with the host of seasons from thifi ou, the
crop will be small. The late corn can do but
little: the forward crop- planted **arly. has
turned out pretty well, aud if a larger area
had been devoted to it, it would hare saved
us aome of the evils to which wo are to L»e
subjected by the short crop of the West. The
prospect for rain has been favorable for some
days. The counties between here and Macon
have had moderate raius the putt week, aud
tbo crops are coming out some.
kudltorlal BrlcfS.
Salt is $25 per ton in San Francisco.
The prairie chicken crop iu Illinois is light
this year.
San Francisco has a Meet of twenty vessels
engaged in codfish catching.
Mrs. Childs thinks of starting a woman*!
paper in opposition to the Revolution.
Gangs of night workmen are employed to
dig the cellars of the New York Poetoffice.
It is proposed to send a crew of American
dentists to show the Oxfords what pulling is.
The latest distinguished politicians inter
viewed by the New York Sun, are Vailandig-
ham, lteddy, the blacksmith, and Pendleton.
The Providence Journal describes the meet
ing between President Grant au.1 General
Burnside as especially cordial on both sides.
Business is brisk at the Charlestown navy
yard, and about 3,000 mechanics and labor
ers aro employed in fitting out and repairing
vessels.
The American Tract Society have sent a
devoted officer, with an experienced agent of
the society, to California, to do what lies
within the scope of this institution to give
the truth to the Chinese.
A woman died recently iu Trenton, Mich.,
in giving birth to her thirty-first child.
Among the thirty-one were three pairs of
twins, aud the eldest of them all, if liviug,
would be only twenty-nine years old.
The Young Men’s Christian Association of
San Francisco reports that since the first of
June they have had 118 calls from young men
desiring to find employment, and that thirty-
five found places through the aid thus fur
nished.
There were six births on the same day
house in Carroll countj*. Ga., Inst week,
lady bad twins, and two of her daughters
each had twins. The six were all boys. This
story is told by a Georgia paper ns a sequel
to the eclipse.
A woman was ov» rtnkeu bv a train on a
high trestle work mar Marietta, Ohio, re
cently. ui.d dropped between the ties, holding
larsclf by her arms until the train passed
when ‘dm climbed back again—all with
i scream.
„ri« ealte .m« Uv.. « .»r.ivitf»
inent inside which tell* the distance driven
and the amount of the tare. Tbo same ar
rangement was tried in this country twenty
j ears ago, but the livery stable men who tried
it lost all their customers.
Cigar smokers will bo glad to learn that a
large cigar factory has been established at Key
West, Fieri da, about seventy miles from Hav
ana, Cuba, which will be ublu to turn out
good Havana cigars at from thirty to forty
j>er cent less Ilian is now asked lor similar
brands in Cuba.
Out of 150,000,000 of people under British
dominion iu India, it is estimated that there
aro 110,000,000 Hindu™, 25,000,000 Moham
medans, 12.000,000 of th- aboriginul tribes,
and 3,000,000 or 4,(hm).ooO Buddhists, Jews,
and Parsces. The Kora on Catholics claim
040,000 adherents, and the Protestants 240.
000.
A remarkable feature iu the Androscoggin
river, in Maine, has been brought out in the
hydrographic survey just ended, namely: the
feasibility, at a low co»t, of a “cut" from the
Umbagog lakes to the Ellis branch of the An
droscoggin, through which the surplus waters
of sixty aqnare miles of lakes can be made
available, wholly in Maine, for the purposes
ot power and long driving,
It is a striking fact, as illustrating the world’s
progress, that in less than twenty-four hours
after the international boat race a thousand
journals, published in the English language,
at points widely distant from each other in
the two hemispheres, were commenting upon
the result, with the advantage of knowing
tho incidents of the contest us fully as if the
writers had witnessed it from the Middlesex or
the Surrey shore.
atituUou of every Bute iu the Uuiou, the
freedom of thepr*M*la without qualification.
Au editor may bvoome the chief of railors,
aud descend to the lower deep of blackguard-
tern with perfect impunity. HIb journal may
become a moral pestilence with no hand to
abate the nuisance, or sUy the progress of
venality, wheu Public opinion is silent or in-
different
Time was in this country whon every
aspirant to legislative, judicial or executive
honors, who could ooutrol a thousand dollars
(or a less sum), supplied himself with an
• organ. ” Consequently, there were as many
•Vrgnns" as there were aspirauts—very
seldom more aspirants than “organs.” The
operators—that is, the ostensible editors —
wen, iu many instances, men without pre-
Wusiona either to brains or o bar actor. They
were usually selected with reference to their
fighting qualities —that is, for tfieir brutal in-
sliucts. Such men were a sort of uscossary
appendage—a species of jacks napes—to the
higher order, or at least better favored class
of men she oontroled them. They moved
only as they were wrought upon. They had
tio opiuion except by influx from their
keepers. Their mission was to glorify, toady
to. aud fight for their masters. Argument
was a refinement of civilization of which they
knew nothing. They held all such attempts in
supreme contempt. Denunciation, personal
abuse, rtrticule, slang -these were the recog
nized implements of political disputation
those led to bullyisra, duels and murder, all
the bolter. A man was uot estoemed
“gentleman” until he had killed or attempted
to kill ooa of hia follows on “the field of
houor.”
In the South there bos been a perceptible im
provement iu journalism. “Organs” aud organ
grinders are less numerous than they once were
uot that the number of aspirants have dimin
ished; bat that this, like other systems of bar
barism, naturally recedes before the
Civilization. And yet there still is room for im
provement. There is great need of a higher
standard of journalism in the South. Tuero
are still too many quacks, novices and slang-
whangers in the profession. It needs purg
ing. It needs accessions from the educated
and talented men of the country. The loafers
and bullies should be starved out. Ignorant
aud conceited creatures who are too lazy
and indolent for bod carriers, too dull and ob
tuse for blacksmiths, too poor aud Rhiftless
for “genteel loafers,” and too vulgar and un
gainly for dancing masters, should bo provi
ded for otherwheres than in the editorial pro
fession. And yet our noble profession will be
clogged with this disgusting literary fungi,
just so long as the People refuse to withdraw
their support from them. It is with the read
ing public to say what shall be the character
of our future public journals.
Each and every legitimate member ot the
press is personally interested in this reform
Aud each is uuder personal obligations to his
readers, aud to the profession whareof he is
a member, to do his full part in purging the
newspnper press of its siaog-whangers. If
every high-toned uud respectable journal in
the South would take high grouud iu this mut
ter, and thus, by their example, appeal to the
candor aud moral sense of the public, the
pro** would, in time, bo rid of its ignorance
aud bullyism. It will take some moral nerve
to do this, as it takes nerve to push any other
needed reform; but with sufficient nerve on
tl*o part of a f««- determined members of the
press, me worn can u« uappnj cuumiuhuiucu.
Urn. Gram ami the Kvll Genii—Wendell
Phillips.
Wo never read one of Wcudell Phillij.8’ well
written papers in the Anti-Slavery Standard
without a mingled emotion of admiration and
pity admiration tor his brilliant talent* und
polished sarcasm, and pity for his insanity.—
In in* last production, he opens with a scath
ing review of Andrew Johu&on's apostucy,
descends to the region of ‘genteel black
guardism” iu his indiscriminate abuse of ihc
Southern people, and winds up with a phren-
zied assault upon President Giant. As a lit
erary production, it surpasses “Junius” in
concise invective and eloquent wind. As you
rea 1 it, you can almost see the serpent un
coiling iu iu consciousness of muliguuut pow-
Caroline Bichings has lost her baby.
H. K. Brown, the sculptor, is in Milwaukee.
Victor Emanuel is about to visit Napoleon.
Eugenic takes 8,000,000 francs os pocket
money for bur trip to tie Suez Canal.
D. W. Bell, of St. Louis, has sold his trot
ting horse Henry to a New Yorker for 420,000.
Admiral Farragot was banqueted in San
Francisco on the evening of the 10th.
Gladstone is at Waitner castle, recuperating
after bis recent serious illness.
Serrano lias received an invitation to atteud
the opening of the Suez Canal.
The death of Dr. Caruw, Pranideut of the
Dresden Academy of Hcicncca, is announced.
Daniel Drew ha* gone to King Sing to a
camp meeting.
The death of the French poet, Louis Bonil-
het, is announced. He was chiefly success
ful a* a dramatic writer.
Bardou says he bus mad«* more money out
of the “Bcnoiton Family" than all tho rest of
his plays.
Aver, of “cherry pectoral" notoriety,
candidate for Congress from the Seventh dis
trict of Massachusetts.
Edmund Burke is connect* d with the propo
sition to galvnuixc the National Intelligencer
Mr. H. is not tho one who Im* hceu dead for
many year*.
Benor Kalazcr, ex-Mlnistt r of Maximilian, is
said to bo an nnmto of the Washington In
sane Asylum. Tbo misfortune of tho Mexi
can Empire, and tho confiscation of Ids pro
perty by Jtiartz, unsettled In* reason.
Commodore VundcthUt'* wife is stall, altm,
middle aged lady, of a fair complexion, with
black hair uud eyi s. She is a cousin twice
removed of her husband, and has the repo-
tation of being somewhat of a bine stocking.
The aompoHerH who take part in con
structing the liossini Requiem, are liar./.*la,
Bazzini, Pedrottl, (’nguoni, Hiccf, Nini,
liuchernn, Coccia, Otinpurt, l’latiucis, Pelrella,
Habellim and Verdi.
M. Laitd<>u, brother of the Viscountesa Lo-
marrots, who employs his vast fortune for the
benefit of meteorological and geographical
discoveries, and who eslablisbed m the
Desert of Kalian a modern acclimorv farm, is
about loexploro India, Japan, Australia and
America, fn the furtherance of his scientific
labors.
Governor Beutcr has bad a very pleas
ant and saliaf.iotory interview with bis Ex
cellency, President Grant
— - —
G«n. Gun by has issuod an order,
altering tho time for paying tho six months,
interest on debta under the stay law to H«p-
tember 30. All tho executions already issued’
gro stayed until that time.
er. You can almost fancy your ear
by the hissing idiom of tho viper,
you cuunot help reading on. There is a pow
er of sarcusm, un eloquence of invective, a
charm of diction, a brilliancy ot wit and an
eloquence of rhetrical tropes which is as
irresistible to the unwilling reader, as arc the
hissing, forked tongue and brilliant eye of
the serpent to the magpie. It is only when
you have read through, and laid osido the pa
per, that you fully realize that you have been
under some infernal spell, and silently give
thunk* for dtliverauee from mental consocia
tion with a madman. If, assume learned di
vines contend, there be an iuvisible genii
which give to every man his mental peculiar
ities in originating aud directing his thoughts,
what must be tho appearance And character
of those (to ns) invisible intelligences which
operate upon and control this brilliant litera
ry lunatic? His “surroundings” would in
deed be an interesting study for some of tho
professional clairvoyants. Meantime, let
express the hope that President Grant may
survive this last diatribe of this greatest of
Boston Fanatic* !
C«f|lil a Tartar.
If D8iaoor.to.ro uot Uugltod out
of tho election, the psofle of Ohio KBit have
lost their appreciation of fun. In aefedoatintf
OsisMul Roaaurut»» they caught • tartar. lie
nol only embarrasses them by ffocliniuf the
nomination, bat he hMf just read them a re
markably pertinent lecture on a hut the Dem
ocratic party ought to bo aud do.
U ought to be the party of progress, he
says, of liboral ideas, of equal rights, of law
end order. \t ought to insist on the honest
payment of the debt, without ©evil, “even
though its present holders should have bought
it below its fair value.” It ought, he thinks,
to dt m-ed *unh a policy as will more quickly
raise our bonds to par, whereupon he believes
the currency will follow; that is to say, be un
wittingly praians Secretary Boutwe.ll.
The Democratic party ought also, bethinks,
to advocate a thorough revision and reforma
tion of the tax system on the principles of free
trade. It ought to oppose all removals from
office, except for good cause, such os ineffici
ency and dishonesty. It ought to “favor a
broad rather than a narrow basis of suffrage. "
All this the Democratic party ought to do,
Genetul Rosacrans tells the Ohio Democrats;
and the whole couutry will agree with him.
“ The Deuiooratio party ought to be u party
of priuciplo, a party of life, of action and of
progress. Fossils and fault-finders do uot
properly belong to the party, and if found in
it ought to go on tho retired list, leaving to its
opponents, of all shades aud grade*, all nar
row uud sectioual grounds, all monopolies
and favoritism, based ou olass, creed, race,
color or national origin. The Democratic
party of tho United States ought to bold high
the banner of uuivcrsul freedom, impartial
justice and equality beforo tho law of nil who
hve beneath the Hag of our country.
“ What of old gave the democratic party in
tho United States its prestige and spirit was
it* profound faith iu tho capacity of man for
self-government aud progress, under institu
tions based on the great principles of liberty,
fraternity and equality before the law, and its
courage in currying the logic of its laith into
action. Thence aroso that discipline, order
and progressive originality which have
marked its history and made its victorious
bauner tho symbol of hope to lovers of free
dom ut home aud abroad. ”
All this is Irue -but, alas! what the demo
cratic party was it has long ceased to be ;
wh«it it ought to be, it is not ; it has beeu for
years the refuse and creature of a party of
fossil whigs; and its leaders have lacked
courage to return to the old paths which for
merly led them to victory. Nor do they give
any signs yet of returning courage or genius.
General Roaocrans wrote :
“Should there be democrats whose mental
organization or temper does not permit them
to reoognizo existing facta or conform their
action to great popular changes, let them, for
the public good, abdicate tho leadership, and
leave the energies of the people free to aot iu
tho hue or life aud progress.”
But before bis letter was made public the
men to whom it was addressed had nominated
Peudleton in bis place—one of the very
leaders whom Rosccr.ins invited to abdicate,
y. Y. Fceniny Post.
The XV tli Amcndnuit.
The proposition ot the last Gougrosg that
no nativo naturalized citizen of the United
States shall hencefoith bo deprived by any
State of the Right of Suffrage because of his
race or color, is emphatically a measure of
pacification. It Is a practical confession of
the forco.ornt least the plausibility, of a sharp
Southern criticism ou the Republican Nation
al Platform on which Gen. Grant was nomi
nated that the North proposed to impost
Nt-grn Suffrage ou the South, but rejected it
for herself. It is a correction of existiug an
omalies utterly incompatible with genuine re
publicanism And it will put au uud to a
senseless, fruitless, irritating, damaging con
troversy. and enable our people to gire p«rn
mount if not undivided attention to great
questions of fiscul urn) industrial progress
which imperatively demand uudistractcd and
thorough consideration. There is not a couu
t^v in t he Union which would not be enriched^
would not have its value increased, by a spee
dy ratification of tho pending XVth Amend
tnent.
It i* announced from Washington that the
records ot tho State Department show that
this Ameiidmeut ha* been
VermyletHs Untitled by—North Carolina,
West Virginia, Massachusetts, Wiscon
Maine, Louisiana, Michigan. South Carolina,
Pennsylvania, Arkansas, Connecticut, Flor
ida-12.
ImperJtcJy Ratified by- Missouri, Kan
808—2.
Rejected by—Delewurc, Kentucky—-2.
This list is grossly incomplete. New York
has ratified, though our Democratic State
officers may have withheld the ©vide
this fact from the State Department. New-
Hampshire, Nevada, Indiana, have ceitainly
ratified; aud we supposed that Minnesota,
{ Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska, and Alabama, had
I done likewise. Vermont will ratify soon after
her Legislature meet* next October; and
Adwaaoed Ucwwraoy.
Mr. John Quincy Adame, the Demooratlo
euudiduto for Qovemor of IliMMaehiiKctta, fur-
nishee his brethren throughout the United
Stales with an example %hioh thoy might im
itate with profit. Mr. Woodkury, tho Presi
dent of the Convention* in his opening apeeoh
told the Convention tbat the time had coroe
when the Democratic parly must ooufeae
that some things may aud must be taken as
acoepted facte. Cone of those is tho scheme
of reoonstroetion adopted by the Republican
party. Buffrage must become the admittod
right of both clMsee. Tho foot that mao is
capable of self-government must be acknowl
edged. No man is hia brother's keeper.
Having hoard these truths from Mr. Wood
bury, tho Convention wus prepared to hear
Mr. Adams, when nominated, declare—
That Iho result of tho lust Presidential
oleotiou bad settled the question of ioooq-
struction aud uegro suffrage. The Henato,
tho ruliug power iu the country, was likoly
to retuaiu as it is.
They must, therefore, accopt tho situa
tion and bond it to their own uses. Wo
should look the matter in tho face and in
quire what tho public welfare now demand*.
There was no use in fighting over a defeated
battle, but wo must move up to a new posi
tion hoping to gain a victory there. Tlio
problems ot tho future are most important.
People aro beginning to weary of vague
declarations of right or wrong iu politics.
They are too much taxed to be willing to
listen to such disquisitions. The anxiety in
reference to obtaining broad for their families
is driviug philanthropic notions from the
minds ot men. He believed that the work
ingmen wero right in their uprising, aud he
oared not if he was called a demagogue for
sayiug so. He criticised tho tariff system of
tho country, quoting from Commissioner
Wells to sustain his arguments in favor of
free trade. The people want the intolerable
taxes that burden them removed.”
Mr. Adams is evidently ahead of his party
in Ohio and Pennsylvania. He said nothing
against tho Fifteenth Amendment or negro
suffrage ! nor was he in favor of repudiation
What Is a T*«m OtiMsrsti
TliU iuteraMiuu ronoudrum It Mtowertnl by
lb* Mobil, tritiaua, iu t went iane. Tbat
aW. jouruajkbayai T .
“If a tr(b Sootb.rn mu ban an politioal
.totoa in a •atiunal a.uaa,Ji. ia a Damocrat.
Th* on], Man at la* North with ariaao viewa
ha bom—tl, coincide, art thoaa who daring
tba w»r ware oaltad 'oooparbaada,' and who
aince the oonoluaton of the war bare proteaUd
and voted agafoat all tba anaotmento of a cor
rupt Oongreia. The true Democrat beliovii
tbat tba reeonatruoUou Uwa ought to bw wear-
thrown at the point of tba Federal bayonet, if
caoeasary, aud that the negro abould be de-
prired of the right of aulraga illegally eon-
feiaed upon him.
“When we abandon thoao priuclplea we
abandon the Democratic parly, and with it
tho forlorn hope of restoring tbo government
oh it wae.“
What docn Mr. Jobu Quiucy Adurna, of
MnasachuaetU, cay to tbat definition? And
ill not tbo Mobile Tribune toll a ourioua
public what it Ihinke uf Mr. Adurna as a Dem
ocrat?
pH- Hon. W. H. Howard huB mado n very
thorough inspection ot tho Auiorioao posses
sions ou the Pacific, aud late advices from
Mcxioo indicate that ho is expected in tba
Republic, aud tbut President Juarez is pre
paring to give him a hearty welcome.
ivsaaifltfffb'wss srjzx
Ji.HL MUTTONi *b2i.°ev.' irn’TS.-AIl ~wu.lettr.
third BM*, ot .redlMn will bjluld tt Ur. I
.Uc. Ul •***“ b * r to U SJ' I *r r H, Olert.
I Ore D* y nwi me* e, , - .
Imwtw. iaaa, Miao-elooh,.. ». why Mid Met-
ruot .hould nol h. duoharaed from ell hi. dabu Th.
2£‘.TLl Ihird m2torJn«*m,™ wUl b. hdd .1
“ nm. Urn. tai pleoo. 1M tyUmbn. u«*
s«p 2-lt
OREENBACKs
ABB
W ORTH S A V I ^
It you thloh ao. then look to yowr tolana* aod mo
COAL CHEEK COAL,
ikorcby MvinK M> to 100 per ceot. 1,000 Toms os hasil mmd im arrive la tfc«
Boat Lway 0e*l U «U. Per Bub.1 .f »0 Piuid. ky tba 0*r U*l, ufMlb. Ml
IS y RXAn MUINN, WHIOHHT wto O*
ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED.
J. M. BORN, JR., &
ITU, Clark. tf-deowTin
I N the District Coart of the UbMM 8Ut«s lor tke " . TrrrrinmTa
■«s*i david htjestis.
FRED. H
sons Interested are notified to l»«" —■*
Ister BUck, AtUnU, Osorgt*, ou Iks 16th day of Hsp-
imbSTihie “ lO o-ctaS i. «. why «Ud bjnhrapt
■hould uot be discharged from *11 his debts. The sec-
ondond'third meeting ofcrsdltorswlll bs held »t the
£ s iho KUtrtct Court ot Uie United Hut-, fur the
Northern lrutrict ot OeorgU.-In tho matter ot
WlId-iaH BANKHTON, brn.rupt, No. 13J.-AU uer.
sons Interested *ro notified to show esuse beforo -™*>
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. J bU5R
.honiu jot b.. r.
0*11 be undo by buying ihe brat
FOR SALE,
A NICE Well-finished OotUgo and S14 scree of lend.
The house contains five rooms, with all
ry convenience*.
Good Kitohen and Carriage House,
Excellent w*t*r »nd three hundred choice fruit trees
of tho usual variety, and all uuder good toua '
property l* situated ou the corner of
Gt-raxxt and G-loiin&tm
joar the residence of L. 1*. OrauL For furtli
tlculars, inqiilro of
WALLACE k FOWLER,
Real Estate AgenU.
Bank Block, Alabama Htroot.
.Naval.— Lieutonat 11. D. Hitchcock is dt?
tached from theNipsic and orderod to repoit YV. ADAHly AllCtiOIlCCF•
to Roar Admiral Htriugbum, at Now York, for
duty. Ensign Cornelius R. Meeker, from th©
receiving ship at Now York, and ordered to
tho Severn.
■hould not ue aiscoargeu irum m* w~">.
oud and third meeting of creditors will be held at the
samo time and place. Ut September, Wg.
Umber, 1M6». fit
W. B. BM1TH, Clerk. 1
MIIH is particularly a fact In buying a 8TOVE. The brat Stove# in U*e eountry ara utd« 1,
“TUB NATIONAIi STOVTJ WOHHa/i
OF NEW YORK. THEY MABE THE
“MUTUAL EKIElsrU,’
"Live Oak," "Good Will," "Confidence,” "Southern States," and
Come thou fount of every lilevaing,
Cable thy step t» the Eiehange hulomi;
Where eenlcilyou’ll get without iindreaalng
And alp your L*#er nJlh n Silver Spouu.
PIUDAT '8
COOK.XNG- STOVES.
And a coinuieU m«,rlnii.iit of I’AKLOB. STM UK uid OI KIOE HKATINO NTOVgS. Abo, tb«
UurlmUd HiinfiUH.1 » -.MAMMOTH" or “<M,OBk. ' He«iw» TW
FOWF.EFUL Hoatlug Stove# ever IntrodacM In till* or any other markat. They are admirsbiT if-
BA1LBOAD DEPOT8. FAOTOUIBB, 8TOBK8. PUBLIC ROOMH, or any place where citeaslvs ksfi
ed—very durable and economical. Their immense snooess baa bronght oat BQmerons imHaUoMtf
greatly Inferior.
THE “JfMJMJflOTH” NTiLL HTAJTDH trjTRi I MI-El
THE “MUTUAL FRIEND” HA8 NO EQUAL!
Sales op Gold.—Tho Acting Secretary of 2 Houtefl and Lots and 3 Unimproved Lots,
the Treasury has directed tho Assistaut Treas
urer at New York to continue the purchase of
b onds and the sale of gold during September
to tbo 1 ame extent and in tho same manner
August
O N FRIDAY NEXT, tho 3d of September, at four
o'clock, I will sell ou tho premises, corner of Cain
and Collins streets, one lot, 81x137 feet, having or “ “
newly-repaired, convoulenL'y-arranged, well-built
The Democrats of Pennsylvania ought
to condole with their strickeu Ohio brothreu;
but how can they, when the arrow from Uoho-
crans transfixes both Packer and Pendleton ?
BY TELEGRAPH.
ASSOCIATED tRESS DISPATCHES.
Washington, September 1.— Sentcr and
Stokes are both here.
The President leaves to-night to bo absent
two week*, when ho will return and remain.
Dent has departed for MissiaMppi.
The debt statement shows the decrease ot
debt to be five and a half millions. This stale-
incut includes eleven millious for pension
Philadelphia, September 1.—The Conti
nental Hotel was saved from burning, bat the
Club Stable, on Broad street, and thirly-nine
horses were burned.
The Imperial Insurance Company paid one
hundred thousand dollars on the whisky re
■ntly burned, aud iu a few days will pay two
hundred thousand more.
Bouton, September, 1.—Seven firms on
Pearl street will loso $200,000 by the failure
of a St Louis shoe-house; three of tho firms
are nearly ruined.
Scranton, Pa., September, 1.—The miners
have voted 411 to 221, iu favor of resuming
Cottage With Nix Uooms,
With all kitchen aud out-building xecommodations.
It In :t nice place, in one of the best neighborhoods
in tho city, near Col. J. A. Stephens, Mr. Marsh, Rob
ert M. Farrar, Dr. Jesse Boring, Mr. Frazer, Mr.
Pratte, Mr. Edwards, tho young Winahips, aud many
others.
ALSO,
Adjoining the abjve. a CORNER LOT 50x137 feet,
aud one fronting ou Coilius street 00x131 feet.
This is No. 1 property, cither an a whole, or the lots
taken separately.
ALSO,
A SMALL LOT fronting on Coliiua struct, opposite
Mr. Frazer*# new house.
ALSO.
A HALF ACRE LOT, well-enclosed, having » K*>d
ell aud a TilUEE*ROOM COTTAGE plastered and
finished. This is im Cain street, between Calhoun
aud Butler, and one block oast oi the laat-uamed va-
G. W. ADAIR, AUCTIONEER.
THURSDAY’* SALES.
O N THURSDAY NEXT, the 2d ol September.
mencing at 4 o'clock, I will sell the following
property on tho premises:
puurt.
mHE ENRIOlIT LOT, a beautiful half-acre, fronting
J. on Crew street, opposite 8. B. Love. Bold by «
der of Court, FOR CASH, and possession given
Capitalists, aud tUu
NIGHT DISPATCHES.
General
Colonel Edusnli sail (ht tVation Offlr
Uiukrr«Ki.
Thu Georgia Republican, in its issue of the
28tli, publishes a batch of letters relative to
thu alleged corruption aud iutrigiKH of W. H.
Watson, tbo Into Assessor for IhJs District,
and one Mr. Barney. These, together with
the explanations and comments of the editor,
make out a pretty strong case against Mr.
Watson. Thu same article also implicates
Col, W. P. EdwanR member of Congi
from thu Columbus District, iu iho sab) ol
Federal offioes.
Wo canuot, (or 4 moment, believe Col. Ed-
wards guilty of this grave charge. Wo teiil
not buliovo it uutil some better « viduncu of
the fact cun l«o produced. This U certainly a
grave allegation to prefer ngainst a member of
Congress—eo grave that it may not be passed
over in silence. Wo therefore, in justice to
Col. Edwards, demand the proof of the exis
tence of the truth of his complicity iu this
nefarious business; or, in default of that, we
ask in the name of jastico and propriety, that
those charges and insinuations bo recalled or
phoned away.
W« liavo not a doubt but that Co). Edwaids
Is entirely innocent of any affiliation or eon-
with thia disgusting species ol broker
age, and it is due alike to bis constituency
and t<* himself tbat the charge lie either with
drawn or established. 11ns Is all bis friends
ask; his enemies cannot grant less.
— Wl»
■eereUiry ItawHne.
The health of Heoretary llawlins is grad
ually improving. He ie recommended by hia
physician to remefn m quiet ee possible, and
will therefore relinquish official duties until
strung! li is regained.
The Albany News of the 31st reports
Colonel C. W. Htyle* still very sick, though
convalescing.
saluted j Rhode Island, we are assured, will do like-
And yet I wiwe 1U November.
But these, with tbc error* iu Missouri und
Kansus corrocted, will but swell the list of
ratifying Slates to 25, and four more are need
ed. These might have been virtually secured
by this time. Had tho overtures oi the Wal
ker party iu Virginia, and of tho correspond
ing organizations in Mississippi aud Texas,
been met with frank and prompt cordiality—
had early elections been hold iu each of those
States, and their Legislatures been promptly
convened—we might havo secured a ratifica
tion from each, without serious opposition, by
the 1st. of September. And, with such ratifica
tion assured, tho end would have been in sight.
In fact, had tho Legislature of Virgiuia been
promptly assembled, uo test-oath imposed,
and the XVth Amendment ratified by hor
“Conservative" lenders, the strugglo would
havo been virtually closed. Tlie Democratic
canvass in Ohio, California, tic., would buve
been puraljzpd, nnd the wretched bubble con
cerning “niggers," “nigger equality,” Ac.,
consigued to the dusty-lamber room wheriu
is garnered tho outworn paraphernalia of dead
controversies.
It is a grave mistake that this has not been
done; but thu error is uot yet fatal. The
postponement of the Mississippi and Texas
elections to tho lest of November must, wo
suppose, be submitted to ; but Virgiuia should
bo restored to herself forthwith. The gentle
men who couut on electing themselves to thu
United States Scuatu by tho votes of defeated
candidates for th« Legislature should be
promptly advisod that the operation is too
costly, and must bo forborne. There have
been injurious delays, bat a* yet uo irrepara
ble mis step. We hope yet to hear that the
Legislature is to be organized In accordance
with the votes of the people. If not, and tb<
XVth Amendment should in couscquencc be
lost, grave will be the error And tcnrtul the
responsibility. —iV. Y. 'fribune.
p*r- l'robidunt Grunt arrived at tturulo a on
Katnrday evening by a special train from Rut
land. Ho was received by a largo orowd at tho
depot aud escorted to tho Union hotel, wheroan
fiddle** of welcome was made by Hon. C bail os
L. Lester, ol the local committee, to which
the J’resident briefly responded, and then re
tired to the cottage reserved for him. Ho will
probably remain there until this afternoon.—
Wtiuhinjton Republican, Any. 30IL
Governor Boutwell is at Groton, Mans.,
engaged on an nununl r«pmt, nnd will Im iu
Washington in a few days. There 1* qnitn u
struggle for the vueaucy in his old district,
the 7th. The story that Judge Hoar will be a
cuudidalt 1 is wholly without foundation. “Uo
i« wanted in tho Oubiuot, and does not wish
to leave It," says the Springfield Republican.
ptP General ltosscrans has proved the
sincerity of his first excuse for not acceptiug
the Democratic nomination for Governor of
Ohio. He said he owed some dslittf that he
wanted to pny, aud then he shows that hs
could uot have done it if ho bad acted with
the party ha almost dirsotly aocasos of repu
diation.
Hupcrvisor Dutcher, of New York, has
•aued tba distilleriM of F. C. Farrell aud
Dwyer k Oo., in the Third New York district,
for violation of the Internal revenue laws.—
Both of thete diatillerioa are large establish
ments.
Washington. Sept. 1.—Attorney
tioar is uxpeohta cariy nexi week.
Spanish Minister Roberts 1 ml Secretary
Fish visited Grant with credentials from
Zcrrauo. No speeches.
(»ov. Walker, of Virginia, visited Graut,
Wm. M. Moore is appointed Collector ot
CuKtoui.-i at St. Murks, Florida ; John II.
Stewart, Oonsul to Turk's Island, nnd Isaac
Jenkinson, Consul to Glasgow.
(’«>in in the Treasury one hundred and one
millions; Curreucy twelve millions; Sinking
Fund foartevu millious; Coin interest benriug
bonds twenty-three millions; drawn from tho
Treasury during tho mouth nearly thirty-ouo
millious.
Gov. Walker returned to Richmond.
ltuiz, one of the Cubau represenatatives,
had an hours’ interview to-day with Grant.
The particulars have not transpired.
Barziza, Attorney for certaiu persons now
under trial in Texas, before military Commis
sions, visited tbo President and acting At'
torney General, ond received verbal assur
ances* that the arrangements iu tho Yorger
0M• would bo adhered to in tho matter of
habeas coqius in all similar cases.
Boston. September 1.—Dispatches from
Mount Washington report a heavy storm.—
Thermometer 28 degress. Two inches of ico
formed on the telegraph wires.
New Orleans, September 1.—Tho l’ica-
yuno publishes forty-five names which Georgr
Griualey swears are Democrats, employed by
Casey in the Custom House, docapituted.—
Treasury agent Bchenck has gono to Wash
ington with tho document In tho meantime
Casey gives Griudiey permanent leavo of ab
sence to await the termination of Schenck's
exposition.
Paris, September 1.—Tho Constitutional
says Zerrano is becoming daily more promi
nent as a candidate for tho Spanish Throuo.
Montreal, September 1.—A private letter
from Mr. Davis says tho unfavorable accounts
of his health are greatly exaggerated. Ho
will probably contiune his residence in the
United Kingdom tho rest of his life.
St. Louis, September 1,— Rev. Father
Murphy, a well knowu Catholic priest, was
killed in getting off the cars whilu moving.
TELEGRAPH MARKET REPORTS
New York, September 1.—Cotton firm;
sales fiOO bales at 35c. Flour firmer; super*
fiuo $5 80 to G 25; extra $625 to 6 80; ohoicu
$6 80 to 7 25; fancy $0 95 to 7 45. Wheat-
winter, red and old $1 65; new $1 58 to 1 62L
Com unchanged. Beef steady. Pork lowwr
ut $31 874 to 32 10. Lard steady. Whisky
dull at $1 17. Sugar firm. Turpentine 414
to 484. Rosin $2 30 to 8 00.
Governments firm; G2’e 234- Southerns
doll. Mouey easy at 5 to 7 per cent. Ster
ling steadier at to 9J. Gold dull; closing
at 1334. Stocks irregular and excitid.
New Orleans, September 1.— Cotton quiet;
sales 89 bales; receipts 81 bales; middlings
32c. Flour firm; market bare; superfine
$G; doublo $G 30; treble $G 50. Corn;
mixed 974a to $1; white $1 05. OatR G5 to
flfle. Bran $1 02$. Hay $26 to 27. Pork
held at $35 50. Bacon firm at 19J to 194c.
I«ard; tioroa 20<o; keg 224 t° 23c. Sugar
inactive; common 11 to 12©; primo 14 to 1440.
Molasses; roboiled GO to 70c. Whisky weaker;
western rectified $i 25 to 1 Jo. Coffee dull;
lair 14$ to 154o.
Gold $132$. sterling 45). New York Sight
4 premium.
Baltimore, September 1.—Cotton 344o.
Flour active and firmer; Howard street super
fine $6 to 0 25c. Wheat firm. White corn
$1 16 to 1 20c. Oats 57 to 60c. Pork $34 25c.
Hauon firm. Lard quiet, Whisky steady at
i I 17c.
Louisville, September 1. -Provisions de
dining. Pork $31 to 34 25c. Hbouldors 16c;
clear sides JD$o. laird 20|o. Whisky $1 124o.
Augusta, September 1. Cotton market
continues active, with good demand; *nle« 76
bales; middling 311 32c. Receipts 58 halos.
Ht Louie, Hcptember, 1 .—Whisky heavy at
$1 15. Provisions quiet Pork $34. Bacon;
shoulders 154 t<> 15|o;d«ar sides 19 to 194c.
Hams plain canvassed 19c; sugar cured 21 e.
Cincinnati, Remember, 1.—Whisky firm
and nothing doing ut $1 15. Pork $33.
Bacon aotive; shoulders 15c. Lnrd nominal.
Liverpool, September 1 Cotton a shade
firmer; uplands 13|d; Orluaus 13$ to 13Jd;
sales 8,(KM) balsa; export n|Hicnlation 3,000
bales.
Charleston, September 1.—Cotton iu fair
request; stooks light; prices 4o better; sale*
27 bales; middling at 32(o to 33c; exports
ooastwise 1T0 bales.
WlUUNOToM, September 1.—Turpenlino
firm nt 384c. llosin steady st $J 60 to 1 654.
Crude turpentine unchanged. Tar $2 40.
Oottoui middling 32o.
Havannah, Hcptember 1.—Cotton receipts
444 bales. Market firm At last quotations
PROPOSALS.
fiiruinhii)^ the (^uvrtenuaiLer’* Dupartraei
HARD WOOD,
tearmrco'Kt: 'arntT iffir
Tho wood to be araaoned hard wood, ot merchant*,
bio quality.
4 * triplicate, with a copy of tli ■
■ advertisement will be :
The Government rcaorvcs tho rij;bt to rejoct any or
all bid*.
Proposals ahouht bo addreasrd to Uic undcrai^ned
and endorsed on tbc envelope, “Proposals for the de
livery of wood.”
By order of Brevet Lieutenant Colonel A. It. Eddy,
Chief Q. M. O. K. HANDEIWON,
sep 2-codOt Capt. and A. A. Q. M.
T N the District Court of lh« UniU d Btatea for the
X Northern District of Georgia.—In the matter ol TIM
OTHY FORD. Bankrupt, No. 47\—All pemon*
interested are notified to show cause, before Register
Black, Atiauta, Georgia, on the '.Kith day of Sep
tember, ls69, at 10 o’clock, a. u., why raid bankrupt
•hould not be discharged from all hia debt*. Tho sec
ond and third meeting of creditor* will he held at the
time and place, lat September. 1869
sep 3-11
W. B. SMITH, Clerk.
I N the District Court of the United BUtes for the
Northern District of Georgia.—In the matter of
JAMES K. GODFREY. Bankrupt No. 438.—All persons
interested are notified to show cause, before Register
Black, Atiauta, Georgia, on the 33d day of Septem
ber, 1HC9, at 10 o’clock, a. M., why said Bankrupt
should not ba discharged from all hia debts. The soc-
ond aud third mooting of creditors will bo held at tho
same time and place. 1st September, 1869.
sep 2-lt W. B. SMITH, Clerk.
I HN the District Court of the United States for tho
Northern District of Georgia—In the matter of
/.ACUABIAU FORT, Bankrupt, No. 413.-A11 parsons
of Sept., 1869. at 10 o’clock, a. m , why said Bankrupt
ahould not bo discharged from aU his dobts. T he sec
ond and third mooting* of the creditor* will be hold at
I N the District Court of the United State* for the
Northern District of Ueorgia.~in the matter of
JAMESN. CARTER,bankrupt, No. 480.—All persons
Interested are notified to show cause, before
Register Black, Atlanta, Georgia, on the 21 at
day of Bopt., I860, at 10 o’clock a. m., why raid Bank
rupt should not bo discharged from ail hia debts.—
Tho second aud third meeting of creditors will be held
' ‘ the samo time and place. 1st September, 1869.
sep2-lt
W. B. SMITH. Clerk.
I HN the District Court of the Uutted States for the
Northern District of Georgia.—In tha matter of
WILLIAM CHARM AN. Bankrupt, No. 408.-All
)>rrsons interested are notified to show ranee, before
| Uogiaier Black, Atlanta, Georgia, on the 30th day
- whyaaid
September, I860, at 10 o'clook,
bankrupt should not bo discharge,! from'all'his debt*.
'1 he sjoond and third meeting of creditor* will be held
tlm* ana place. 1st Heptember, I860.
W. B. SMITH, Clerk.
SECOND.
A NICE UNIMPROVED LOT ou Fair street, adjoin
ing tho one sold ou Thursday last, at tho corner
oi Loyd aud Fair atreeta. TERMS CASH.
THIBD.
riUIAT exquisitely Leautiful terraced FLOWER
JL YARD aud OOlTAGE, in a half-acre lot, ou Pryor
street, recently built by Mr. Van OoidUnoveu, and the
TWO UNIMPROVED LOTS adjoining it on the South,
each 63x300; also, a HALF-ACRE lot. fronttn
Jones street, and in rear of D. Wallace's uew resi
dence. Thia la a BIG BACK IA>T, aud will sell cheap
Terms. Half cash; remainder in 3 aud G month* with
interest.
yOCBTII.
rrUAT NICE WELL-ENCLOSED LOT, at tho -
We also keep constantly on baud, a complete assortment of
HOUSE FUHNI8HINOr GOODS!
Fancy aud Market BASKET'S, WOOD-WARE, SILVER-PLATED WARE, CUTLERY, ke.
HUESTTS & HOPE,
JUKKIIAM’S K.Ml'IllK BLOCK. WHITEHALL STREET, ATLANTA, u
aug213m
SPEAR'S FECIT
^RESERVING FLUID!
ohdeh of saijE.
1st The Enright lot ou Crew streot. 2d. Vacant
lot on Fair, near Loj d street. 3J. The beautiful cot
tage and fiower yard, aud two lots adjoining, on Pryor
’ - " lot, on Ji
of Jones
G. W. ADAIR.
sep l-2t
English, German, and Classical School.
mHE REV. HERMANN BOKUM will begin bts Kng-
X h*b. Cl*raio*l, *nd Orrmtn School on the first of
September, at the Good Templars’ 11*11, corner of Ma
rietta and Broad streets.
Price per month for English aud Gorman $2 60
Greek and Latin $1 (X) extra.
Mr. Boknm wilt also give private inatruotisns.
ang 31 -6t
FOR RENT.
H OUSE, five rooms, pantry, closets, kitchen, ser
vants’ quarters, stable*, Ac., large lot finely
shaded, excellent water, pleasantly located on Ivey,
near junction of Peachtree street. Renta low. pos
session given immediately. Applyjo
ang 29-61
NEW ROUTE NORTH !
THE ST. LOUIS,
Iron Mountain & Southern Railway
Ia now open for haaines* from
COLUMBUS, KY., to ST. LOUIS;
TO ST. LOUIS!
Passengers Uiklui: tills Haute AVOID ONE
CHANOB OK CARS nml a TRIHOPS
HIVER TRANSFER of 20 MILES,
aud arrive in SL Tunis
41-2 HOUES ln AW n »
Train* leav* Columbus, upon the arrival of
trains on the Mobile A Ohio Railroad.
W. R. ALLEN,
*ug 29-1 m Geu’l Ticket Agent
IKYON’S CKLKB&ITED SPOUTING
ri i f ij e s:
For rale by all gun dealer*.
EDW'D K. TUYON, ,T r ., Sc CO.,
Maiiufkcturer* and Importers,
bum, 1’iiloU, Mportisg Apparatus.
Store* 10 North Sixth aud 230 North Second Streets,
Philadelphia, Penn. Itluntrated price list seut by
dealers when solicited.
aug?7-12t
WHAT
sep 2-lt
T N the District Court Of tho United States for tho
1 Northern District of Oeorgl*.^In the matter of
ltOBT. A. ALS’l'ON, bankrupt, No. 431.—All lwrsors
intereated are notified to allow cause, lietore
Register Black, Atlanta, Georgia, on the goth day
, why satd t.ank-
KA-ptenihcr, I860, at 10 o'clock, - _
mpt should not be discharged from all I heir debt*,—
The second and third meeting of creditor* will ho held
at tho same timo and place. 1st September, I860.
Boi> 2-H W. U. SMITH, Clerk.
I N the District Court of tho United State* for the
Northern District of Georgia.—In tho mailer of
COLLIER k GROOVER. W. T. Collier and Thomas
Groover, bankrupt*. No. 400.-All persona In-
(created are notifiod in show cause, before Reg-
later Black, Atiauta, Georgia, on tho klat day of Sep-
*—• >or, 1869, at 10 o'clock a. n., why said bankrupts
■uwuld not bo dlschargorl from all their debts. iHie
second and third meeting of creditors wtU be held at
samo timo and ploco 1st September, 1869.
BOV 241 W. U. SMITH, Clerk.
I N tho District Court of ths United State# for the
I Northern District of Georgia.—In the mattsr of
MARYF. DURAND, Bankrupt, No. 406.—AU persona
interested are notified (o show oauao, beforo Hog-
later Black, Atlanta, GeorgU, on tho tOUl day of Sep
tember, i860, at 10 o’clock a. M., why raid Bankrupt
should not be discharged fiom all her debt*. The set',
ond and Uilrd meeting of creditors will be held at the
■aino time and place. l*t September, UW9
WT »-U W. B. SMITH. Clerk.
I N the District Court of the United States for the
Northern Dlstrtot r*r Georgia.—In the matter of
lHLLAltD M. YOUNG, Bankrupt No. 467.-AUito.ra.ms
Intereated are notified to ahow cause before Reg.
“ u ~*- “ “ the 91st day of Hep.
- why raid Bankrupt
Black, Atlanta. Georgia, r
* -df* I860, at 10 O'clook, *. aa., wuj aaiu n«nB
should not be dla harged from all hi* debt*. The
•cling of oredttors will be hold i
aoe. Ut B*pt«mher, i860.
3-1* VV. U. SMUH. < i. ik.
I N th# District Court, or the United States for tli^
Northern Dutrlct of Georgia.—In tha matUr ol
GEORGE K. HAMILTON, bgBirunt, No.
Interest.>d or* notified to show cause beforo keg-
UUr Black, Atlanta, Georgia, on tha 20.1 day of fiete
tsmber, I860, at 10 o'clook, A. m.. why raid iNmkruut
ahould not bs discharged frotu all bla debt*. Th* •*<-.
ond and third meetlr^ of creditor* win bo held at the
Urns and place. 1st BapUmbar, Ifififi,
2-U W. B, filtlTU, CUrk.
f N the District Court of th* United State* tor the
X Northern Dlstrtot of Georgia.—In tba matter of
AUGUSTIN L. DORSEY, bankrupt. No. 73,-AUper
•on* Interested fir* notified to ahow cause before *Reg.
later Blank, AtisnU, Georgia, on ths IM day of BmL
tsmber, Ifififi. at 10 oVJoeiTa. m , why raldbankrunt
•hould not be discharged (tom all hi* debt*. The aeo-
ond and Ulrd meeting of creditor* will be held at the
mm* time and piece, lat September. IMP.
fi»P Ml W. B. SMITH, OUrfc.
REDWINE 8f F0
ATLANTA, GA.,
■W
And Dealer* In REED, CARNRICH k ANDRUS’
Standard Chemical Preparati
A Fairr Article of Sperm Oil,
A Fine quality of Wool Oil,
The Best Brands of Lard Oil,
Strictly Fare
COMBINATION SPINDLE OIL, FOR MACH
Tli- BEST Mou.pxplofiT, COAL Oil., PURE WHITE LEAD. <Al*o cbf«n,r (ndM.1 UESEOJ*
TIME, »nil ev.ry wictj of PAINTERS’ MATERIALS. All .old »t Hi. LOWEST MARKET PRICE
REDWINE & FO
auglS-c
DO
Ja U Urn ability U> entertain your friend* well, or to
telp tli* charitloa of tho World 7
YOU
WANT?
»o P«r*3» Ktla b.U M OUM. or u . towor prtoo, tout
I. T. BANK*,
Rawaan kaUdlng,
Oor. WRUohMl Hd Uuulw
MEADOR & liRO
^ TOBACCO
COMMISSION MERCHANT
-AND—
Manufacturers of Cijfn^
WHITEHALL. STREET, ATLANTA, Ok
3,000 lloxcfs 'Various Brands, Styles and Qn'
Chewing and Smoking Tobaccos,
—ALL AT—
MANUFACTURER’S PRIC
We make CigarB of the Best Material, and Guarantee the Smoki
ties and Workmanship aa Good as any mado in the Onited
Soil, ft grill* for R. T. INIklnUnN Rrnnd, «f CkfWlar »■< SmUlt
FRUITS AND FLOWERS.
g 1 <\3in
COMMONWEALTH,
MARK W. JOHNSON,
(MM) AMI COMMISSION MERCHANT,
TW In th, wnrlft, iImtt XX Ill.nkrt Mi
I>«tljul«1) luvllnl to ...nun. b5.
- fun,, * h
Ulor., Urw,
«»•■><>. WtoOlTM Boom. Uml Pl>»
jp iMi,
JAMES M. BI8H0P,
ArrOBNBT AT LAW,
DiWSOHTnXE, RRORUU.
£ aftOncBii«ftUtoftnwHM ftu, Rto,
uMiaiiiik. MM Ik« ; u» liSui
M torto. Non ton Dwrld «* 0-,^,“’
ii rommjin
FBBtBT M
KM ITMVBOM STV «■ _ .
II ku ptotoMd tolr wtotow*
In MtomDlwBlft
It naoTM Mto, toftrfi, to 1 *
s
UR MU «f Mtut* to-
PMfftnftutoto
DR. R. a. FOMel» <,
No. 17 Alabama Htrfi«*i