Newspaper Page Text
j jiL-cjjS! Jjrctriliflfttro.
ATLANTA, OIOEOIA
Tuoslay M»mln«, N«v. IS. IM7.
7~vS * IHfH -
Wkm ilm KlaAciuna In*
Many Dcmucrni* Jump tolini oSfrclualun that
tin 1 i lfctliuwol this yr*r iMara <Mr maarn la
tli« iVueidvntlal canvass; many RnMoltoans
Alekemtn CsiTMlUI.
Sc* Fourtu Day's Proceeding* of the Alabama
Convention ou first pagr.
Oar Leals villa CarraapemAewt.
Tbs reader's attention Is directed to tha very
Intcrea.lng Inter, Inns Louisville, Kentucky, of
our cjmrepoutlcni Rrsaaix, which appears In
another column. Ou "fci natim bear A " after a
long absence, we ilo not wonder at the Just tri-
huts he has so gracefully paid to Louisville—a
diy to which Georgia’s suffering people, since
Ihecloeeol the war, are so much Indebted.—
Doubtless, at bis “Old Kentucky Hoese," "Bus-
SHU." received a hearty welcome
What <ne Blaetteae Have »ealien.
The article trom the Mew folk 1VoHi, with
the above htwdlng, which appears In another
column, we commend to the perusal ot our
leaden. With the conclusion at which Us Editor
arrivea, to tad: •• We may therefore consider It
as demonstrated that the present reconstruction
scheme Is furvdoomed,” none hut an Insane man
can disagree. Tbs attempt now being made In
41.i1®...*, and the one that will soon be made In
Georgia, to fore* the congressional reconstruc
tion enactments upon these two States, may
succeed; never, however, to be recognised by the
Southern people, save only as “bastard govern*
meats" not having, as the Worm says, the “slight*
eat validity."
the Aiireae or the Seam Corollas Css*
servailve Convention.
Oar Charleston exchanges brought to us on
yesterday the addressol the South Carolina Con
servative Convention, recently held at the capi
tal ol that suffering State. We regret that its
length precludes the publishing ol It In our col
umns, at least for tbs present It Is sn able and
eloquently appealing document to the men of
the North and West, in whoss veins the blood ot
the Anglo-Saxon race eounetb. It is an nppeal
also to their sense of Justice, to their humanity,
to their wisdom and statesmanship. We have
shown, says the concluding portion of the ad-
drem, “ Hint free negro labor, under tha sudden
emancipation policy of the government, ie a die-
eater Irani which, under the moet favorable cir
cumstances It will require years to recover.—
Add to tbie the policy which the reconstruction
acts pro|N ss to enforce, end yon place the South,
politically and socially, under tha heel ol tba
negro; these Influences combined would drag to
hnpelaaa ruin tbs most prosperous community in
Urn world. Whut do these Reconstruction sots
proposal Not negro quality merely; but ne
gro nprunacy. In the name, tben.ol humanity
to both races—In the name of oitmnuMp under
the Constitution—In tbe name of a common his
tory In tbe past -In the name of our Anglo-Saxon
race end blood-ln the name ot tba civilization
of tba nluetaenth century—In tba nama ot mag
nanimity end the nubia inetincu of manhood—in
tbs name of God sad nature, we proteet egalnat
these acts, as destructive to tba peace of toclety,
the prosperity of tbe country, and tbe gnatnesa
and grandeur of our common future.
“ The people of tbe South ore powerless to
avert tbs Impending ruin. We have been over-
boros, and the responsibility to posterity and to
Aha world hoi p.isaed into other hands."
Tbs recent elections In the North and West
Inspire us with confidence that these appeals
will not he disregarded—that they will not fall
upon the ears and hearts of the white rue in
habiting those sections ol tbs American Repub
lic, as rains upon Hi* sandy deserts, to be al>-
•orbed, yielding no sign thereafter oi Nature’s
beneficence to twin. The period In American
history has passed, when sectional strife between
North and South should alienate tha two peo
ples and make tbs one tba snemy of tha other
Tbs cause tor former alienation and war has
been removed—African slavery, tbe great bone
of contention, is dead. In its Interment, how
ever, there has arisen a war of root against roes,
Instigated by evil disposed white men, more for
tbe take or attaining political power, than love
for the negro, or eny other laudable or humane
purpoee. Will tbe white men of tho North and
tha Great West fall to eome to the reecne 7 We
answer lor them—thbt will rot rail.
Ob Becenetraetlea.
Tba Mew York Timm as our readsra know is
a leading New York StjnMioan Journal. Com
seeming upon tba reconstruction measures ol
Congtsee, end their recent condemnation by the
popular vote of so many Northern States, it says
of that body: "But tho ultimate responsibility
rests upon Congress, where statesmanship will
find ample exercise In the revision of th# work
performed by tbs Stats Conventions. By its
manner ot dealing with the toplca that will then
arise, tbe party In powar will vindicate Its state*-
■anahip or dtmonatrata its ineapaolty. If it
cany ont tba plana ot violent man and attempt
to perpetuate tbe disabilities at present In fores,
tolwAeisseAsms of rooonttruetion uiU fall to tho
ground. No settlement can last which denies
aa equality of rights or prolongs remembrance*
of the rebellion by punishments heaped upon all
who were engaged in it."
The Timm never uttered a more forcible truth
oo the subject matter upon which It has written
Is the foregoing, than when It says: "It It (Con
gram) carry out tbs plans of violent man and
attsmpt .o perpetuate tbs disabilities at present
la lores, Its whole scheme ol reconstruction
will fall to th* ground." It, la our Judgment,
has already Wien to the ground. Boon,
so poor to do it reverenc* I"
gnat
Tho project ol Inducing white emigration to
tbs Booth, In order to offset and overbear the
negroes In the mutter of reconstruction, is s very
good one, but it won’t work. That is its only
defect. Whites will not go South until the
Booth has resumed her place in tbs Union, and
again acquired some degree of political power.
Men can live under a had government much
better than under none. There are thousands
of Northern tnen who would not like to live In
a But* controlled by laws mads by negro votes,
hut they would prefer that to living In a State
which Lad no laws at ail. Whites will not go
South tor the purpose ol engaging In a contest
With tbs blacks Let the Southsru people make
haste to gut back loth* Union, to (orm end
adopt Buie Constitutions, establish Bute govern
menu,and make Siat* laws; then they can In
vlto white emigrants with some chance of sue
ossa. And If their governments need reform
tha Whites can then help reform them.—JR. 7-
2Vsua
When the State organisations are formed upon
a bools making pormanont the negro ss an ele
ment of power, w ill whites tHon oom* South
“tor the purpose of engaging In s contest with
the blacker” Will tho “contsst" be avoided
by coming at such a tlmeT Will It not then be
fiercer and harder than now 7 If not, let th*
Timm and kindred Journals show wby. To our
«ndvrtfrpdl"g, the 7Yme* has given the North,
s* well as the South, tho very best of reasons for
rejecting tho wbolo scheme of negro sufirago.
Pardon or Ux. Skddon—W* learned yester
day, officially, what has heretofore been pub
lished on conjecture, that James A- Seddon, law
Secretary ol War at tlw Confederacy, baa been
pardoned by tbe President. This set ol clemency
wan extended upon tbs recommendations ol
Horace Greeley, Henry Ward Butcher, Hon.
tfn. B. Dodge, (into a Republican member ol
Qongrom,) Gen. Burnelde, and the following
gentlemen of city of Mew Yorks Mayor
Hoffman, John J. Cisco, (tub treasurer,) H. Van
Dyke, Augustus Schell, and A. A. Low*.—Aa-
tfoiMt InltUiffrnetr
(AOUI8VIILK (K7) rOHUKSroSDKXCB. I
(•racuL to th* ui.i«t« imtm.i.io*m kii ] !
,v- te;*“«aiHu»sspK
of tha Uultsd State*, and familiarizing hi raw 11 ho n,*. candidate of their party. It would be
with tho sentiments of all claw** of her people, . difficult, In tha present stale ol our knowledge,
more than twenty year* ago. phlloeopldcally . Wcon'im theeoundaea. of sfchur toterenM; ul-
, , , <■ , , .though some pvraona may dettm them Inoanalat-
concluded that there was scarcely a foreigner In j t ., u * tlh other. This, at leoat, Is certalu:
America but preferred hit native laud u» that of * * —- ' "
his adaption. How uatural that wu should cling
In our nativity! Six years ago thousand* of
Kentucky'a noblest son* left their native Statu
with regrets—regret si partiug with old friend*;
regret that she should have taken a political po
sition contrary to their own; regret that per imps
tor tho last Uuio th* fomlUar teems ol their earli
est end best years were lading from their view.
Whilet many sleep their last sleep ou distant
•oil, the moat of those who survived the carnage
of tho itrllr, have returned, aud right gladly did
their old mother welcome them buck again.—
One, the "noblest Roman of them all,” ttill lin
ger* an exilo in foreign lands. There Is a void
In the heart ol Kuutucky—a vacant chair in her
council halls—that only a Bhkckinridob cau
fill. Ah, what evsnlftil yean have been the**
later ones to most of us I Th* change* they
bsv* wrought, who can tell? Tbs sad and
sorrowftol histories they have traced on many
hearts, th* historic pen shall never write. Per
haps no greater changes bsv* been wrought
than in Kentucky. BIx yean ago the viewless
links of despotism were eilently riveted u;»ou a
free people *s they unconsciously submitted to
lu galling chain. Tbs footsteps of the despot
silently and stealthily advanced ns with a ser
pent's smile; be lured but to deceive. Now hut
ona voice is heard, snd that iu bitter denuncia
tion of all hi* acta. Liberty triumphs again, in
eloquent condemnation ot tba wrong* imposed
upon the South. Such are the mutations of pub-
liosentiment. To-day the mob would execute;
to-morrow the hangman's ropo is changed into
a guerdon of love. Nowhere have I met with
such unanimity in public sentiment as here. Nor
AM editor became martial, end was crested
captain. Ou parade, Instead ot "two paces In
troel-adTsorer* he unconsciously bowled out,
"Oast-two dollar* a year—advance!”
this fsellug effected. It is the outspoken and
Indignant voice of s people, thousands ol whom
were betrayed into the villainous schemes ot
their couutry’e worst enemies.
During the past «lx years, Louisville has in
creased in population rnoru rapidly than any
her city In tbe Uuion. From 73,u00 she Ima
grown to 133,000. Nor U this growth of a
mushroom character. It is ba*ed on solid and
substantial prosperity. Iu every direction eireets
of compact block* have been added to the ex
tending skirts. Railways have been established
on th* principal streets, the old market houses
disappeared from Market street, which is des
tined soon to become the formidable rival ol
Main In the wholesale trsdu. Louisville is wak
ing up to the importance of becoming a manu
facturing city. Capital formerly employed in
banking and other business, is now seeking this
channel of investment. Formerly Ciuciunati
Shared a large trade, to which LmlUvillo was
partly entitled. This was solely the result ol
the former's superior inducements in <he inanu-
tacturlug line. The scale, however, is turned,
and as the two ci l s have been built up and
sustained by Southern trade, Louisville isoui-
stripping her rival, and in a short time Cincin
nati will be left out in the cold. Since the close
of the war, she bis had little or im Southern
trade.
With a prosperous and productive South, Louis-
villo is destined to become the leading city o:
the West. Her capitalist* and business men
appreciate her natural advantages, and are alive
to the importance of availing themselves of
them. In addition to the inducements oQercd
by her to th* Southern trade, her noble guner-
oeity In tbe hour of hunger and distress, by a
grateful people, I am sure, will novel be forgot-
ten. With tbe completion of her railroad to
Kuoxvllle t another, direct, to Cincinnati; an-
other to Paducah, through the immense coi.i
fields ol Breckinridge and Grayson, in addition
to her Nashville snd Memphis railway connec
tions, and her Ohio, Cumberland and Mississippi
river navigation; there will open up to her almost
every channel ot communication, necessary to the
growth and prosperity of a great city. With
these she combines the benefits and advantages
of a mild and healthy climate, tbe highest type
of refinsd society, and a surrounding country
highly productive in whatever is necessary to
onr physical wants.
Louisville has three daily papers, each one of
which, from appearance*, la In a prosperous con
dition. At least, like most branches oi business
at this time, U they sre not making money, it Is
fair to presume they are holding thslrown.—
George D. Prentice, tbs Nestor of the American
press, assisted by Hr. Shipman, whose facile pen
bss given additional atrtngtk and vigor to its
columns, still presides over the Journal. The
leaden weight of tbs put six years has fallen
heavily on Mr. P. In bis gray hairs, furrowed
cheeks, and emaciated form, I could scarcely re
alise that It wu the sum George D. Prentice,
whom, In years put, with raven locks, undimm
ed eyu, and vigorous form, I had come to vlsw
as one who had partaken of tbe waters of the
fabled Fountain of Yontb. Bnt time lays bis
buvy finger on tbo stoutest heart, and w i inkle*
the smootbut brow. In Georgs D. Pl enties the
firs ot Intellect still burnt, snd tbe scintillations
or bit genius flash in every line, u the keenness
of bis taicum cuts is every lane*.
Under the management of Mr. Haldeman, tbs
Cburisr bu attained a wide-spread and deserved
popularity. Iu circulation la uid to exceed by
far that ot either of th* other dailiu. Mr. Hal
deman, betides being tbo cleverest oi gentlemen
Is the prince of newspsper men, adding to tact
In tbs butlnsu, many years of sticceuful experi
ence. Hit return to Kentucky trom tbe South
after tbe clou of the war, wan most opportune,
It wu the “tide taken at the flood" which is
destined to fame and fortune. I regret to learn
that the Senior Mr. Harney,has been an iuvalid
slnco May last, yet, under the conduct of Charlie
Kirk, familiarly kuown throughout the country
by tbe gracelul emanations of his pen, under th*
nom d*plum* of "So Du Kay," and Will Wallace
Harney, on* of the sweetest an i most pathetic
of Western poets, the Dunoerat is conducted
with Us usual ability. Indeed, the press ol
Louisville la quite ably conducted, the opinion ot
tbe New York Hound Tail* to the contrary not
withalanding. I should esteem Louisville a fa
vorable location for the publication of literary
works; yet, strange to aay, it has neither paper
nor periodical ot that character. Twenty yean
ago F. W. Tbomu and Bun. Csuaday, estab
lished a literary weekly hero, whose existence
was short Tbe ghost of their dead enterprlxe,
I presume, hat been ever since a fright to others
Inclined to embark in that direction.
Last night I had the good fortune, in common
with a Urge audience of Louisville's apprecia
tive cltixena, to hear a lecture by Rev. R. A-
Holland, whom you will remember was familiarly
known in th* South during the war as t lie “ boy
preacher." The subject, " Wlial will liu do with
II," was wedded to a chain ul sparkling thought,
the language ol wbicu waa musical as the flow
of streams or aong ol birds. Mr. Holland iu
dcstlosd to a brillant future, unless the firu of hi»
genius, uow so intense, should prciualuitly cou-
•ume bis frail and delicate physical powers.
In one of my letters irotn Cincinnati, I spike
of th* iron bridge over the Ohio at that point «*
a cementing liuk between the two gr.ut Stu’.is
l y ln K along Its opposite short*. Louisville U
forming * similur connection at this print be-
twe*n Kentucky snd Indians. Shu is erecting
•n Iron bridge of ibu Fink pattern one mile aud
imec hundred yards in leugili, 40 leut in width,
and 90 lect above low water murk. The bridge
complete is estimated to cost three millions of
dollars, and the work, uuder contract ol Mu»srs.
Nash, Flannery A Co., with Albert Fink a*
Chief Engineer, la to be completed by th* 1st of
January, W kc*sell.
that the Republican lnl*r*no* CMced** the
somidne** of tlw Democratic, on every other
bypoiliesi* than that Geueral Grant will consent
to lie the candidate ol the Republican party.—
But it Gi-m-rul Grant is their candidate nc must
indorse their policy. which Is th* very thing
w hich Imu heeu condemned and repudiated by
tlii-au elections. The horse General Giant Is
expected to rlduhavlog received a death-wound,
wv do not coimlder ft clear that so ihrawd a
horreman Will mount him
Tne Republican party (a so committed to It*
moribund reconstruction scheme that it cannot
retreat Irotn It without a universal guflaw of de
rision. It I* the maturcet efiort ot their wisdom,
proclaimed as such with every form of solemn
emphasis. The slow snd palnAil deliberation
w ith which It was consummated, the tumultuous
Indignation with which President Johnson has
been assailed for doubting Its wisdom, the ex
tra session of Congress to enforce Its rigor lu
opposition to the liberal Interpretation of the
Attorney-General, have committed the Republi
cans to it so irretrievably that It* ahtndoninent
would be fatal to the party. “You take my
house,” said baffled Shy lock, tu the agony ot
lost wealth and diauppolnird revenge,’’wheu you
do take the prop that doth eustaln my house;
you talte my life w hen you do take the means
whereby I live," The Republican party without
Its reconstruction policy would be In a similar
rendition ot deploring despair. It baa no other
principle to stand upon than negro euflrag* re-
cunalruction, it this he abandoned, It la a party
without principles. Even the TVimi, which has
Hie least heart in thl* abortive busincet of any
ul' the Republican Journals, sees tbe Impoeelbllliy
of abandoning it without th* total ruin of tbe
party. Im article yesterday reminds uaof the
ridiculous attempt ol the big-jointed sisters ot
Cinderella who “pared tbuir heels and pared
tiicir toes" iu the vain hope of wearing tbe slip
pers which would make ou* of them the king's
bride. Supposing Grant to be the prince, the
Republican parly will hardly euooecd in getting
its long-heeled negro feet into the coveted slip
pers. But it it cuts them off outright, what will
it have to stand on 7
It the Republican party adheres, as it needs
must, to the uegro-suffrage reconstruction scheme
its defeat in the Presidential election, no matter
who may he its candidate, is as certains* U Is
that a Presidential election will take place. It
W0uld bu tlio very insolence of tyrauny to force
negro suffrage upon tbe South wlieu it u emphat
ically rejected bjr the North. It would be such
an impudent inconsistency that no fair-minded
man w opld lor a moment Justify Ik Negro tuf-
trage having been overwhelmingly repudiated In
these elections in every State where the questiou
lias been presented, the logic of th* situation for-
hi is any further attempt to force the South. If
iwrsisied in, it must recoil with crushing effect
on tin 1 Kupu luau party. Negro suffrage may
be right in it.-elf when the negroes shall be bat
ter prepared; the progress ot opinion may com
pel its adoption five, or ten, or twenty years
tn-nce; but these elections have demonstrated
tint the public opinion ot the country has nor,
yet ripened to that stage; nor is there any possi
bility of its reaching it, after this great B*t-back,
lor several years to come. If you harness your
“■task tSTStlf."
LBV TH vaeta Of gwrunv as raisMvsnf
[RVemlAs Jftw tor* CUitm.)
w 7.7i£viVi n *h;arto u i:.“waim.
Bat oar bold we 1st go at tbs round,
For both heeds wurn required In the Saht,
And we war tor th* Waek hi then Brand
Quit* * tosgk job tor tlw Walt*.
Wall, w* fought—aya, fur foar jrrwriiwe ton**:,
Pouring out lavish traaaura sad Ilk—
Sid Un fits k then urlsu as bu ought.
Owning Northward wtih torch sad with half*»
Proa assisting Ih* champion, tbs Whit*
Did be ltd a* whta binding w* Mood,
Hunts*, powdtr, equipment* and tttun •
W# all know that la on* sing s Suit
A ruvolt would hers ended th* debt—
Bo no more of thslr "loyalty" prut*,
ter th* Mack rsh* wire won* tksa the WhMa.
Th* Whit* rtbol can* with a chtw,
~ ‘ s trlrnt and agio
nbsslai'kln th
r fou
Thslr bayuMti atlsnt and aglow,
Whll# th* Ittick rubs iltai
Assisting (and ftutly) c
Phillip*. Snmntr, and mi
May cllck-clatttr from iutnuui| mu i
But If Black or Whltu rrbtl* must nlu,
Thta, by Iwm t count main tor tSs White,
It would steksn u dog, this vile cast.
That we hstr of ‘raluck loyalty” now—
And I notice th* twaddler* who rant
On the suhjsct, w«r* hr from tbs row;
But line* cold has been Let's last gun,
Aod since Johnston ituchtd arm* after dght,
Wt art told b* •• Bitch talor wt won
'Tit nil humbug to laurai the Whit* t
To the 1
Tot’
tfr?an fhitt"to“IhHhrwttdouC»»d star I
To my heart with you. Lougt rttt snd HU1,
Jobuiten, Lat-tvtry man In tht debt—
Ton wtrt rtbala, and bad ontt, but Mill.
Ton a hart my mlstortunn—you'ru White I
MiLBt O'HMIAV,
Lett Private dTth Hegk M.T. VeL Inf.
the Black rubtlglonruad power, <
fo th* Whits rebel chains and dlMiua* I
. madnttt, and wort*, rnlts th* hoar,
cult to the plough when he is too young, you pot
i strain upon hla constitution which will prevent
his ever acquiring the strength ot n horse. Cer
tain it is that the puolic sentiment ol the country
will not grow to negro tuflrttue within tbe next
year; amt it it shall he the pivot Of the Ptesl-
huiit ul election, ihu Republican party wiilb* ISr
more ilirasiruusly beaten than it has been In tbe
State contests which have Just closed. But it
negro sutli'ige he presented and beaten tben,
what hopu will there he fur It afterward* f It is
the very essence ol tbe reconstruction scheme-
ill there is ol it, in tact, except prop* and scaf
folds. When this falls the whole edifice tumbles
with it.
Tin- impossibility of ripening the public opin
ion of the country to nccen. negro suffrage with
in the ensuing year thus looming up before the
Republican* like an obstructing Andes, what can
they expect to do? Will they be hardy enough
to proclaim that they mean to keep the Union
iikaevered, and the country unsettled, until year*
if mfoa'.lon shall bring the country up to tbeir
mark f Further persistence in tbe reconstruc
tion sciie me must mean thii,orit means nothing.
But with 'his platform they will be ousted from
every department ot ibe government ss test as
successive elections shall open tho way. No
time is U-tt them for ugitation to bring the pub
lic mind up to their standard. They are close
upon a Presidential election, which they must
cany, or their party is undone. The country is
already Impatient; and ss between a further
postponement ot mtorationand the Indefinite
postponement of negro suffrage, It will nod hesi
tate sn instant. By tbe recent election* the peo
ple have decided Uut they do usd went sano
suffrage, and tie want restoration; have dtdaad
tbat negro snfflwg* Is too grsat s prto* to pay
even for tmmediato restoration. Tbsy will bs
iocensud If, after tbls decision, the ItopubHosns
continue to Insist on a wholly Impnctfoabla
schema.
Tu* lact tbat negro governments an in pro-
cen of organisation, ana that Congress may ad
mit their representatives, doc* not vary the case,
except to renders degrading fkros mor*con
temptible. Certain it S that the Southern peo-
p'e will never recognise the** bastard govern-
menu aa having tbo slightest validity. Within
lour months alter tho PrasidtoHial cUetlon a
heavy battering ram wiB tnmbfo them Into
shapeless rubbish. The Boothscn people will
immediately reorgantn*, bold new emotions, oust
th*negroes,sand thslrown rmrsacnuttvss to
Washington, and the House will at once admit
them. Tbs Southern Senator* plus tbe Con
servative Senator* Irons tbs North will form a
majority ot that body, organise as such, and
neither the House nor tbe President will recog
nize any other Bens’*. This course Is entirely
feasible, will be perfectly constitutional, and be
yond nil question adopted, If tbe Radicals sre
msaue or way warJ enough to recognise tbs ne
gro governments alter this great rebuke. Tbe
only tiling that could prevent it, would ba sc-
quiesence by th* Southern whites In tbs Radical
scheme. Whoever expecu that, la better entitled
to a straight Jacket than a refutation.
We may, therefore, consider It as demon
strated that tbe present reconstruction scheme Is
foredoomed. But until its destiny Is recognised
by a considerable portion ol tbe Republicans, It
will iu vain to expect tbeir co-operation in a
wiser plan.
Murder Will Oct.—'Th* older portion of
tbo community remember the mysterious mur
der of Lyons, a watch-maker, who kept a store
on East Bay, near the Custom House. The mur
der occurred over twenty yean ago, and various
surmises were entertained, and seven) persons
arrested at different times on suspicion. The
store was broken open and completely gutted,
wl.ile Lyons was murdered In a moet barbarous
manner. A jeweler named Flash waa suspected
of having committed tha crime,snd, though tbe
evulencfl appeared strong, be succeeded In clearly
establishing Ids Innocence. Tbe evidence was
only circumstantial, and aeveral person* who had
oren intimate with Lyons were suspected, some
of them having carried the etigms to th* day of
tliuir ueutli, Reliable intelligence recently r*-
coived trom Germany states that a German named
Pappe, formerly a oleikin a drag store In this
city, was executed in Hungary for murder. On
tlie scaffold be coufcdfud that, among other
crimes, ho ha.I murdered Lyotts In ordar to rob
id* store. The uews will be extremely gratify
ing t > the old residents ot the city, snd espeolall
to those who have bacu so long auspectod ol thl
crimn. There la no saying mor* truthful than
dial murder will out, and it bu happily proved
correct in this cue.—Oharlmton Nine*
Tnx Union Cxntxh all Ricut.—Tht great
States of New York, Punusylvanla, and Ohio,
with Connecticut touching on ths East, New
Jersey In the middle, and Delaware snd Mary,
laud on the flank - having in them 11,000,000 ot
iK-oplo, have declared for III* Democracy. This
is a pivot to swing on, snd to tsk* in not ooly
the West, hu' tveu New England. Th* Pacific
coast has Iter pivot, too, In California and On-
gun, and Nevada will soon swing on It.—JR. 7.
Mprtm.
Tnx question whether a railroad oompany
which has printed on Its tickets that It la notre-
«|N>n*ib1e for moro Hum on* hundred dollsrs’
worth oi baggage cau ho made to lodsmotQr n
traveler for a lost truuk lias again b**n settled
agnin't a railroad cnmpsny In Brooklyn. Tbe
Judge helti bat In the hurry ot travel a party
wu* not to tu held responsible lor reading all the
reading ntutfor that might b* stuck at him
through the window on Ilia back of bis ticket.
Tun election iu New Jersey resulted In tli*
eh'f lion of the Democratic candidate* by major
ities of lioin 10,WW to 19,000. They elect fit*
out of *ts new Bonaton, aud gala a majority la
th* Assembly.
Naurs tad Ollier IImm.
“ Horse Oil," Initead of butter, Is traquratiy
used in dressing vegetables In Paris.
An ingenious Frenchman baa Invented an Il
luminating cav*.
The Boston papers are all crowing luatlly over
the duleat oi tbe prohibltionisu.
Indiana boasts a new horse disease and stiver
mines.
It is said that a Chin*** rebellion Ml n tract
of 80,000 square mile* witbout an inhabitant.
A ladt recently died In Geneva who bad bean
in a state of lethargy exactly six months.
The New York Timm does not shirk th* Is
sue. It calls the defeat a lesson to th* Republi
can party, tbat U baa pushed ita “extrema and Ill-
Judged policy” too far. It saya the Republicans
art dissatisfied with tba results of their party
action, and we may well believe it true that the
thinking men of tbo party ar*.
In tlia New York Cbmmsrflfflf, Mr. Weed de
clares tbat be wu cast out of his party for his
timely aod independent uttorauoee. Again, It
says: “Tba Republican party, to retrieve what
is lost, must take In rail. ‘Freedom,’ in tbe •
of Radicalism, means negro supremacy. While
th* Republican party approve ot Mr. Sumner’s
Idea ot negro United States Senators, It will find
no'returning tide.’"
It » claimed for a certain ring, lately be
queathed to hia daughter by a knight who died
at Telgnmouth, that It wu once tbs property of
tbe Queen of Shaba, who gave It to Solomon.—
It wu taken from Jeruulem by Titua, brought
to Rome, and wu given by Clement VI1L to
Wolsey. From blm it passed to tbe monka Ot
Leicester Abbey, snd thence Into private ba ids
on the dissolution of tbo monasteries. It it
added that tbe fortunate owner of thlsancfont
relic It a ward in chancery.
An old gentleman ol Webster, Mass, hu or
dered a grave (too* trom a marble cotter of that
town. The epitaph Is u follows; "Who never
ucrified hia reason at tbs altar of a superstitious
gad, who never believed that Jonah swallowed
the whale."
A roRAOX dsalkb in Paris, whou premiss*
wars infested with rats, which neither cate nor
dogs could extirpate, recently adopted ths novel
mode of dipping a live rat in rad paint and ton
ing It loose. The vermin have entirely dlup-
peared trom hit premises.
Tan news of tbs Improvement In tbe health
of the unfortunate Empress Charlotte is oootn-
dieted by authentic Intelligence from Brussel^
which statu that It Is true tbe patient hu some
rare Interval* ot lucidity, but the slightest inci
dent is sufficient to throw her back into her for
mer deplorable state, and that, In abort, the new
treatment followed In Belgium hu bun unat
tended with the leut success.
Tn Boston Art uyt, with savage sadneu
"Temperance is no specicl virtue whan there Is
nothing to imbibe."
Only on* colored man it elected to ths next
Masuchusetts Legislature. The greatest opposi
tion to him came from bit own race.
Bonn of tbe Iowa Maaont want to admit ne
groes, but the Grand Lodge won’t do It.
Washington market suppliu over 9,000,000
of people per day with food, and forolsbea 00,-
000 persona a livelihood.
Mike Walsh, the once famous City Hall poli
tician, used to express his contempt forth* Hub;
by exylng that he would rather be a lamp-poet
In New York then Mayor of Boston.
Taut teetna to be diverse opinion u to the
pronunciation of Cheyenne. The Oheyaon*
Ltadtr insists that Bby-an Is a better sounding
word than any otber pronunciation that hu been
offered. Th* accent should be on tbe first sylla
ble.
“ST&GRAPh"
junr to*k AMitoauTMD nan DtogA tobao
Washington xleast,
Wasxirotor, Nov. 11.—Capt. J. N. Moffett
Is hen lowing tor hla confiscated property.
Negro suffrage hu bun detested In Minnesota
by AOOO. Republican Governor is elected by 1
•JIM- Wisconsin Republican Governor it
elected by 1,300.
Piped by lb* steamer Dovlehland contain the
following Item > While tbo Emperor ol Austria
wu enjoying bimull at the steeple chase at
Vincennes, the Emperor Napoleon drove In from
Bt Cloud and paid a abort visit to the exhibi
tion. It waa long enough, however, for comfort.
son* ooonrnd u unlocked tor u It wu dis
graceful. During bte visit an egg wu thrown at
tho huge picture of blm by Flardrlo, and when
bo appeared tn om ol tbo galleries a loud and
distinct biasing took pises on the part of a col
lection of men In Mouse*. Th* unpopularity ol
tbo lulls* lntervution, and tbs general state of
ioeu and dlsuttolactlon which exlsis
among tbo lower classes, were probably tbe
ueu of this demonstration.
Th* Democratic majority in New York it
46,«M.
Ths Democratic majority in Maryland Is 41,
M0.
Tbs Democrats have gained seven thousand
and sight hundred in Minnesota, while negro
■nffrmge, which wu voted on last year u well u
this, show* a gala of five hundred vote*.
Returns from tho western counties of Kansu
Indicate that moat el them have gone Demo
cratic.
Revenue to-day $430,000.
Tammany nominates Hoffman, Mozart noml
nates Fernando Wood, and John J. Antbon la
prominently mentioned by the Democratic
Union party for Mayor of Mew York.
Thsd. Btevtne hu written a five-column let
ter opposing National Banks, and argutog that
while Interest is payable In coin bonds can bon
eetly be liquidated with legal tenders
General Emory hu disbanded unauthorized
military organizations la th* District.
It Is said that Sheridan telegraphed Grant ad-
vising that Mower’s action In removing General
flaffu from tho Now Orleans Bborifislity be dis
approved.
The Vice Consul at Havana telegraphs tbe
State Department to-day that cholera is serious
at that port
COTTON WAREHOUSE.
Euttoteral'Ctetela Advanoon
a. MDAjrm. e. a. ttaoae. a. r. Roast.
IcDANIBL, STRONG k GO
COTTON WAREHOUSE
COMMISSION MEB0HABTS
Coner Prior an! Hunter Streets,
la tight el tbs Piissmw Dspet, sad star tba Vailed
lUtss u>4 Aatrltt!
ATLANTA, (MOllBIA.
T^TB tavtte th* sttsattea *f FUNTIES, tad all
ss* wu deal taOOTTON.w tbs test teat we aieaswsB
Mg a* greet tedHttes sad ladusmmt* ter tksBTO-
RAOXsadBALB of thslr OOTTOMIa Atltals ueu be
■forded them la ear otbae asrbst
Oir WinInn Is PRWurpmsI
b tee Bute, belag large sad eoMedisea, asssaalhU te
tea vailou Babesia, ssmxMMr *b*fosed,u4 almsat
fittrsl j lf*pcoot
w* partieatartj direst thslr eNeattoa tabs test that
AdaateteatwaCtfoe JfoM,whtr* tbssteBlmnsb
wtruhedUpeisdof at u high Rrlsea, leteMvefo. Ula
ear etber-teevtaf to th* vaitow rUattrs aa tea Hass *1
the Atfoieat Itadieada Itadteg to
insnt to iMb btfORd.
T* all xaidsa isaUtet to ttea dteUetltea BltMtl whs
■ardeelrtteihlf to as, we wU tarnish ths *tian*l
tb* Collector to make tech utupmsat wMtertamfW
mmttf Tm.
We or* site pruparud to ask* LUtBBAL BAEBAD-
VANeEao*eoeiipaui*,**dl**i waste wtesdb
ee liberal tadeesmata at tar ether leeued tn
blgtf. The targe WRertaau to Oettehefefi the
Screed ear Sm It egwraty tut
mated s* *u ewe win he xsttartte snd
Ion drooping B*W-» 1.000 lihloe at 18$ to 19.—
riiignr steady. Coffee firm. Midaeeu dull.
Turpentine 0U to 85*. Rosin $3 80 to H 86.
Tallow quiet 11$ to 111. Freight* quiet.
Government securities dull. Money 7 per
cent. Five-Twenties ol 1863 pn-chascd *t 1081.
Five-Twentiua ol 1804,103$ Gold 88|.
Mouilk, Nov. It.—Colton cloud firm at 16|
for Middling*. Buies 1,600 bale*. Receipts
Is | 1,789 bales.
Acucsta, Nov. 11.—Cotton firm. Bates 099
baits. iU-cuipit 088 bales. Middling* 18.
Wilminoton, Nov. 11.—Spirits Turpentine
weak 61 to 63. Rosin $3 63; No. 3, $4. Pale
Tar firm at $3 70. Cotton steady at 16} lor
Middling*.
Baltimore, Nov. 11.—Cutton quiet 18 to 18$
Flour dull; choice Howard street extra $11 60.
Wheat dull aud drooping; declined 6 to 10 cents
Corn active; old white $1 80; yellow $1 88.—
Oats dull; prime 70 to 73. Rye dull. Provi
sions dull snd nominal.
Nxw Orleans, Nuv. 11.—Louisiana Sugar
and Molasses active; supplies light, and ull
soon as landed. Sugar fully lair at 144; second*
14$ ; yellow clarified 10. Molasses—fair to choice
76 to 90. Cotton firmer. Middling Orleans 184.
Bales 1,800 hales. Receipts since Saturday 1,96?.
Exports 607. Gold 89. Sterling commercial
47 to 48. Bank nominal; York sight per to 4
premium.
CaERLESTON, Nov. 11.—Cotton quiet. Market
dosed somewhat easier. Sales of 480 bales
of middlings 174- Receipts 1,680.
Savannah, Nov. 11.—Cotton opened heavy,
but closed quiet snd steudy, with middlings at
174. Ssles 1,187 bales. HeC' ipis 4,000.
Foreign Market*.
1st TH CAULK LIN’S.)
London, Nov. 8.—Consols, 944- Bonds,
70 16 10.
Livkhfool, Nov. 8.—Noon.—Brokers’ Circu
lar report sales for week 85,000-speculation
6,000. Exports, 18,0o0. Stock, 671,000-lM,-
000 American. Sale* to-day 15.000. Market
firm. Middling Orleans, 9d. Middling Up
lands, 8$
Amsterdam, Nov. 8.—Bank raised rats from
34 to 8.
Multan]
SEED STORE,
No. 131 Main Street, opposite National Hotel
LOUISVILLE, KBNTVCKY.
John Durrr.
3AS. M. r*TTIX
JOHN DUFFY A CO.,
UBALIIli IN
FARMING IMPLEMENTS
FIELD AHD QIRBEH SEED],
Ume, Flatter Farts, Fertilisers, Ouao, lee* Bui,
OCA A TOOK or IXPIXVA.VT3 COBNUtt.
Calhoun Steel Plough.,
Avery's Loul.vill* Cut Flonahs.
Brhuy ■ Steel Plough!,
Doable and dingle St*el Hhovst,
Aud a variety of Mod sad Stubble Ploughs, Douhu
Biased Harrow.. Qeddin*'.Harrow, Vandever lawn*
Cora Planter—piauu two rows, tlilwr drill or chwk. u
accurate a. hand planting.
Sulky Hiding Plough, or Corn Cultivator
with adjoeub « ateel teeth.
Cotton aw*«*ps and dcrapsre.
Jcwdlng’s Power Corn dueller, capacity
1.000 bu.h*l. per day.
Virginia Corn Sbuller, tor hiad or power
Wcitern Hand Corn 8b*U«r.
Thermometer Churn*.
Hswltt’* Patent Cbnrn (mw),
Sanford 81 raw Cntiar, thru* slaaa.
Dayktn'a Watar Drawara.
Wheat Kant, us Yoke*. Wathlng Macbtaa.
Btraab'a French Burr Cora HUlt,
from IS to nS Inch itonas
Railroad or Laveo Wheelbarrow*.
We arc A.euta for dcoSeld and Watt'* Hand.Loom
Our at--eh of OAKDBN nCdDd ar* aalveird with tha
graataat cars, which wo warrant ganmna and tn* tu
nama. Thl* hr inch of our bualnaas wa make a ipactali.
ty, andjrtv* It onr ueraonal attention.
Onr FIELD shEDd-aucba* Clover, Timothy. Blu
On**, orchard Oran. Rad Top. MUlat Saad, Huotirtaa
Orau dead. etc., ar* uf tun vary beat quality. Alan.Saad
By*. Whut. Gate, Corn. Ac. notf-Sm
HatlroaA Celltetem.
MxMrats, Nov. 11.—Two paeaengtr trains
oollldsd near Grenada on Friday night. Loco
motives smashed—on* negro injured.
Bank Statement.
Nnw Yon, Nov. 11.—Tbe bank statement
shows loans increased $491,000; specie Increased
$8,749,000; circulation Increased $83,000; de
posits dsertaaed,909,000; legal tenders decreased
$1,800,000'
FhHsMfhta Items,
PnLADXLPnts, Nov. 11.—Heavy rain since
last evening. The street oars have returned thulr
Sunday (rips.
Tko Trial of Hr. Davis.
Wasxinoton, Nov. 11.—It itssesrtained from
s rellsbls soorct that tbe Government will be
ready to prooesd with the trial of Mr. Davit on
tbs 98th. Both sides, however, desire that Chid
Jostles Chase shall preside with Judge Under
wood, ud therefore, it is possible that tbs trial
may be postponed for a short time to enable
Chase to make arrangements to preside. Legal
oontidtrsUons alone prompt th* detlrt that the
two Judges should preside In the case.
War Mayor of Hew York,
Nnw You, Nov. 11.—Hoffman bt* been
nominated Mayor by Tammany Hall.
Llghikeae* DeetroyeA—>Cable Dispatches
Nnw Yonn, Nov. 11.—Th* Ughtboiu* at Key
Wert wu destroyed daring the 1st* gal*. No
cable dispatch** have been received for three
days.
Alabaanm MykrM Convention.
Mohtocmut, Nov. 11.—Io tb* Reconstruc
tion Convention today th* Elective Franchise
Committee presented majority and minority re
ports. Th* majority report disfrancblse* all
who refused to vote for or against th* Constitu
tion whan BObmttted to the people, and is other-
wins proscriptive. These reports wars mod* ths
special order for to-morrow.
A White Manta Convention.
Macon, Nov. 11.—Th* Atynph of to-mor
row will advocate the holding of a State Con-
esrvative Convention, to moot la Maooa Thurs
day, Dsoambsr fftb.
Nr*as (tow Orleans.
Nxw Oxlbamb, Nov. 11.—No deaths trom yel
low few reported to Board ot Hsaltb yesterday,
and no applications at Howard Association for
relief.
On a forth*.
Philadelphia, Nov. 11.—About two thou*
sand cigar makan ar* on a strike.
Vrsn tetakaaeaC.
Ricmmoxd, Nov. 11.—Gen. Bchofleld to-day
ordered a court martial to meet on tho lfftb in
stant, for th* trial of Col. Ross, U. B. A., oon-
doctor of oiccttona hero, formally charged by
cMmm with conduct unbecoming an officer and
gentleman—drunkenness, Oc.—on election day.
Tho DiogatcA bu so account ot the mobbing
of Frank Butte; former Bureau Agent tor King
WUUam oounty, by negroes there. An attempt
waa made by tho civil authorities to arrest the
ring-leaden, bat wu resisted, snd a military
fore* sent for.
Tba leading colored dtlaens hors will bt out
in a card to-morraw, disavowing ths Incendiary
sentiments attend by Lindsay, colored delegate
to th* Convention.
OM. Stows Again.
Wasxinoton, Nov. 11.—Fred. A. Packard
long prominently connected with the American
Sunday School Union, is dead.
Thar* seems Uttlo doubt that Gen. Grant told
Montgomery Blair, on Thursday, that no one
was anthovlxed to speak for him. It Is, however,
equally well established that Gen. Grant waa
sdvissd of th* bearings of Forney’s arudspravl-
oas to Us publication, and made no objection.
• BY TNR ATLANTIC OABLB.
Neredga News.
London, Nov. 9.—Second typhoon at Mocao
very violent No particular*.
It Is laid that Lavolett* will resign- Roubtr
New Advertisements.
Garibaldi's friends say tbat h* bad but 4,000
man, and that bis sons an not captured, but
Par*, Nov. 8.—ii yellow book ready for pub-
lloation shows tbat fteteMi waa long warned of
tho plans of tbo Insurgents, and action ot
Franco.
Moouora asks withdrawal ot French troop*
from Rom*.
ffhOBMWB, Nov. A—Garibaldi to to b* triad.
COMMERCIAL IKTKLLI01J01.
AT TMLAMUTB.
Naw Yon, Nov. U.—Blocks dull Money 8
to7. Quid 19. Sterling, tong,94. Couponsot
*trh to Iff oenta lower. Wheat 1 to I
osota lower. Oon X cant hotter. Ryo drooping.
Sfflf5rt«WW “ & c “““
lsvaraw.1
Nnw You, Nov. 11.—Flour closed more so-
•JjBJrt decline 1 Mate $B10 * $19; Boutucru
$999to$14 WtaMbstterMlagwHhbirex
port 9toi demand; Mixed Wsotara Oon $167
GREATEST DISCOVERT OF THE AGEt
oa TBS
GREAT LABOR.SAVER!
PATENTED ISO*.
Time, Money, Labor, anil Clothes Saved
BT OSINS
JACKSON'S
I T MAKES Cl the* whiter end weir longer. When
awl according to direct un-. uowath board or wash
tux nwchlna la u.-a-tao, and bj It* u,a aehlldtwalv*
J v«r» 0 d can eaaily do tha waahiau fur a larg* laaliy. A
•lugin trUi U .ufflcleot tu prov« it. tap rionty ov«r eU
other piaparatloii.. It mukaa th* band, toil tad white,
»n w.U i.ut inlur* thu mort dell,at* labric.
Fiimi'i*. will b* aupp.led with a aafflclcnt quantity of
the compound lor trial frau. Family Bight, only us*
Dollar: W. L. LAKLEY, Afant.
novii—fit*
TO
TUE JTJBLIC,
F. CORRA
W OULD aa'l th* attention 0: th* pnb'ls to th* test
tbit hla muraat is hit old ator* batwaan Ala
bama >'r.ai and tb* railroad ha* ocaaed tine* tha 4th of
Moy laat He lnvita. hi. new and o d eu.tomar* alnoe
ldHa to glia him a ca l at hia new and beautiful ator* of
Confect tunartar, fancy grcioei lea, Ac., and all brand! of Li-
S aura, winea, Ac, on whit hall, betwaan A la hams and
antur atr*eta-w*.t aid*, Oupo.lta J.ck't rtoia, Atiaa<
la, Oa. notS—lrtuew
fielding, cwynn a oo..
UB Faarl btract, Saw Tork,
and
N. GWYNN * CO.,
Mate - • Louiailli*, Knteaky,
piOTToN and Tobaeooyacicn, anl General Coauulaalrv-
v Ma.ctauia Lineal c ah advance! mad* by'll.
uwynn a to on com-tinmen* to the Naw York Uotu*.
. Defer to tb* Mercnanta of Loul*villa generally, and to
J. X B irrlctt, At ants, Oa.
naviu-»m O. W, PKABX, Agent.
JUST RECEIVED.
J CAS LOAD KINGSTON UME,
SO barrels par* Proof Com Whisky,
M tens Raid's Fbotphsts,
10 tar loads Virginia Balt,
LANGSTON, CRANE A HAMMOCK,
Alabama ■ treat. Attests, 0*.
•AOK8 WANTED.
10000 * fCC01,0 * BAM0 som sacks,
10000 tacoad hand Burlap Backa.
LANGSTON, CRANE * HAMMOCK,
Wholesale Dsalere In Groceries and Frodno*.
A OOOO INVESTMENT.
80UTHERN 0L0THE8 WASHER!
Fataated May 7th, 1967, by F. Eldss, Chaster, 8. C.
3 7 HIS MACHINE la simple In lie construction,durable.
. not liable to gat ont ol ordar. snd will wash ate
irta, or that bulk, if proparly Uaad atcardlng to th* di-
rations.
Mr Eldar comet with hla Maohln* wa'l rtoommaedad
H* can ba aaea at th* U. H. Hotel with hi* Macbtaa.
wharaha wtfi takaplaatorateahowlaglt; aadli daalred,
u* will have It teat to soy private family * raaldanca,
where they can teat lu merit* with thetr own clothe*,
watar. and aoap. aa h* 1* aonddant of platting all.
K. Eldar, th* paiantaa, la daalrou* or tailing State and
Connty Sgbt*, or of getting a ganeral agent to manufac
ture aud 'all.
uovl —et* F. ELDER.
ADMINIBYBATOXX*! HALE.
DT virtue or an order from th* Conn of Ordinary ot
O Milton county, Oa., wlirb* aold, before th* conn
house door tn laid oonnty. oa th* Bret Tuacday iu Jaau*
ary next, within tb* legal hour* of talt, tb* tend ou
wnteb O. M. Partou, deceased, lived, conalating of SU
acre*, In tha lat dittrtet and 1st taction of aaid county,
for tba baneBt of tba hair* and credttore of aaid dacaasad.
Tarma, twelve month* aradit. Title* not mad* until pur
chase money la paid. November 8. 1867.
JACKSON OKK8HAM, Administrator.
novlO—td Printer’* tea It'
WANTED,
Previous to Ootobor IBth, In Lots of
FIVE CENTS AND UPWARDS,
11,,ooo is ools, Hivaa, u, aauauou,
In Exohnng* for
Boots, Shoes, Leather.
AND 8HOI-FINDINGS,
At Low Prlo8« 1!
HOAX TBjUi 100 CAM!
NEW 80008 OPENED THIS WEEK t!
And ether* Arriving Dally.
9*Cosntiy Merchants ar* particularly Invited to «a
amine our stock, aa wt wtU offer thsaa master indues
moot* than esabs kadttetwhtt*.
TO BOOT AND SHOE-MAKERS.
“Of alt thing* under th* ibb,:
Hurrah 1 there is nothlsg Uhe das Star"
And If yon oonrait year boat irtasast, yet will ssnste
bay your aappUa* or
I. T.
BANKS,
Hecuuaa ba makes “ Quirt tolm and AmaA Aqdfc, and
earn for rash ooly, thus lasvlug no had «*bu to to* mad*
up in rstra ptuSts.
NTXamtaster ike Pine* and Blge.
I. T. HANKS,
^awssa’BBalltog.ses. Whitehall sad flumsrBt*.
SST ABLIIHKD 1661
laiwit La ABtOTT. w. 1, AABOTT.
ABBOTT A BROS.,
Commission Merohants,
And Wbolaatta Daatan la
PRODUCE, PROVISIONS A 8R00ERIE8,
wnitshaU foraet.
ATLANTA, OEOROIA.
CLEAR HIDES.
-| A CASKS vary Cools*. Jut received ud ter lata
IV cheap, by
ABBOTT * BROS,,
Cummivaion Marohanta,
Whit* lull ■ treat, Atlanta, Oa.
Far
BACON SHODLDEBS.
10 0 **taby CB0IC * BAC0N 8HUDLDKRS.
ABBOTT A BEOS.,
Commiaaiun Marchuts
Whltauali tuatt, Attests,«.
nrNNT *BAGGlNO.
T JE I9IS9 HAT r India BAOGQfO. Just ra-
IO rale by
ABBOTT A BROS-
Commiaabis Xarahanta,
WbltahsU suast
COFFEE, COFFEE.
me BAGS COFFKX of variou qunUtl**. for lata
* W ABBOTT A BBOA.
CommUalos MarehanU,
Whltahail auaat, Atlanta, 8*.
FLbVR,
QAA BAGS CHOICI EXTRA FAMILY.
UVV SOU bag! Choioe Extra,
SC bag*CnolcsBuparlna.
For ista at lowaatoaah prices, by ,
ABL’OTT A BROS..
Commlaalos XMSak
Whltahail a treat. Attests. G*.
BAGGING, BAGGING.
gQ BOLLS KENTUCKY BAGGING. Forest*by
ABBOTT A BROS..
Cummlsalon Marubeni
Whitehall,treat. Attest*,
ROPE, DOPE.
gQ BALES BOFK, hast vnallty. Forestaby
ABBOTT A »ROI..
Cemmlaaios Marehanta,
Whltahail a treat, Attests. Oa.
\9
BBLS EXTRA C8COAR,
10 batralt Tallow C Sagsr.
aateby
ABBOTT A BROS.,
Oommlaaiun Marehanta
WbltahsU ■ treat. Attests, (
VIBOINIA HALT.
9KAA>44*71R01!IUIUT. Forastastate*
Z0UU ^bloiT A BROS,
Cemmtealon Marehani-,
WsltakaU (treat.
SHEETINGS AND YABM9.
6 BALES 6-4 SHBBTINOS, _
6 balaa Cotton Torn*.
For asl* by
nov7—ly
ABBOTT A BROS,.
Commiatlon Marehanta.
Whitehall .treat, Atlanta, U*.
a. aaiua. f. a I
fWtntrly of Atlanta, Oo.
8. K B AM U 1« Ml MON.
aasMTa »on Tn* mu or
FRENCH WINDOW CLASS,
Whits Lend, Oils, and Paints.
W ILL ba piaaaad to raealv* ordar* from oar friend*
snd tha public gtaurally; will toll our good* **
cbtep at they ots tabu^htas^wlwrejje tMe aosnmy.
No. 6 Baldantos euaat,
octt—8m Baltimore. Mary land.
EVERY KIND OF
PLANTATION MACHINERY,
ENGINES, MOBSB POWMBS, GIIH
MILL*, AOHICGLTVHAL
IMPLEMENTS
Of tvary description Is itort, sndterasta rtthstowaal
ret**, by
sign-
THE TOMLINSON HOUSE
TO BENT.
•llukiAd on Ivy fftrost, Ailnnw, Go-
S R TOMLINSON BOUSE, oa trv etreet, be MM
twees tha rwidvBcta ul X. S. Walker sad MU
« Wits*. Aaqre., u ter rest. Apply W mm
trfrfL
IZ-BSRiTOL,
Louisville Steam Bakery
F. W. &TIMMKL 4 OO.,
809snd 010 West own •**••*»
LOGISVILLE, BT.*
WhttaMte Daelere sad Msnskstwan ol tU rt*4s •*
OR-A.OKERS.
Agents Her Itlmmal'i celebrated fiP/Cff Flirt
**Pt»-Xra
REMOVAL 1
LAYTON A ADAlfr. Commtado* Marehasta eto