Newspaper Page Text
tiU Itustdfttt'
itlrCribe Sf
Fennesi
BdCUDXOAXi
W. L. Vance, Memi
F. W. Umith, Pr«udent P<
N. 8. Bhuck, W. a Broof
J. C. Fizkk, Uuilbre»th, 81
£ W. MuNj-oUb, Memphi
Napolbon Hill, Will,-Fan
[enraodo, Hina. j|
7, with a Capital Stock oS
aieeetl * million dcllara. /j
red every policy to »>e valued M
buiuluiM) aud tilt; fidelity aaf|H
^tultn of Mill'll ’iim'-r^^H|^
amt Imw
!■ Apptrio
15,000 V_
&aio^
OWIlf.
OR. JOS. P. LOO AS, RKOICAL EXAMINER;
PA, GEOBtil
Fronting Passenger Depot,
HHBMAK H OTIW
i..
||i^^H^I uli.'ii
■PPT.Iuly next, xfl
TTu- following propefl
*iit of a city Lot in tlid
corner of Alabama and
I'Uina street fifty fivef*
*d street HeU'iitj'flYM
orv Brit k Building M
i l.\ m r t.
1. rcuulMpH:
vs. M. I.. Roberta Dtl B» wi:
tiperty pointed out by plaintiff.
M. I'LUKLUaON, Dept. Sheriff.
tue a* au oat ray, on tho 29th da)
[, by Henry Brown, of the 732(1
Fulton county, Georgia, one jel
duate. who la
jaituaer in a mine in
Utah, writ# lirafe that he batterer that
the days tit Morincmlria will ba short,
and that Hannon Ribs particularly ara
down on polygamy, manifestinga wjll-
pignasa in all cases to many a Gentile
than a Mormon.
D. 0. Herbie, of Hartford, baa a woo
derfnl black Spanish hen, of which the
foliowiog are some of the exploits:
few weeks ago this hen laid two eggs per
day four or five days in snooeaaion; then
for a few daya but one egg, till one Sun
day she outdid herself by laying three
large eggs, tho drat being perfect, the
seoond containing nothing hot white,
and the other being all yolk.
|3y The Universalists of Syra
cuse, New York, have locked the door
^of the Church against the pastor,
v. G. P. Hibbard, for causing a
ante] to be oonatructwl and iutro-
dneing some forms of worship not
I customary in their denomination. It
is thought that the irrepressible ritu
alist movement is about to overtake
the Universalista.
J-fTf" A poor colored woman in
New Haven recently bequeathed be
tween two and three thousand dollars,
money she had saved by a life of toil
in washing and scrubbing, to educate
any poor colored student who might
enter Yale Divinity School to become
a preacher, and if no colored student
is presented, then the money may be
applied for the benefit of a white stu
dent. ^
ITrfT 0 race Greenwood made a
speech entirely out of the usual order
at a woman's suffrage convention in
Boston on Monday evening. She
suid she would limit tho suffrage to
three classes of women, and include,
first, unmarried women, and third,
such others as may desire the ballot.
She recommended a property qualifi
cation, and thought a voting woman
slionld be required to have a watch
regularly wound up and kept to time,
a clothes wringer and a sewing ma
chine. As an intelligent qualifica
tion she suggested that a woman
should be able to add up her millin
er’s hill imd verify its correctness, to
cut a priding, to put on a button,
and in an emergency, to keep u board
ing-house, and support herself and
her husband respectably.
A Mormon Love Story.
From George Alfred Townsend’■ Belt Like Corres
pondence to the Chicago Tribune.
A Mormon, whom we call brother
Nehi Gibbons, took a wife at the
Rooming age of twenty-five. Hewus
tmus aim industrious, and seemed to
I*' perfectly satisfied with his bride,
whose name was unfortunate for a
heroine, being plain Mary Ann. She
was (he best of wives, and she sang
in the choir, bore Nehi a child, anu
bellied to cultivate his vine and fig-
tree 1 . Their upricots and pears grew
and nourished, their cattle uud sheep
increased, and nothing seemed want
ing in this comfortable establishment,
which was the envy of every youth
ful saint
Still, there was a skeleton in the
closet Marv Ann had a secret and
a passion. She wanted Nehi to take
a second wife! This was not only
because he was a good and true man,
and devoted and able-bodied, but be
cause she had set her mind ujion the
other wile lie was to take. Mary Ann
wanted to provide for her bosom
friend, Susan, who was in every way
deserving of Nelli’s affection, and
who loved Nehi us purely and as real
ly as Mary Ann herself! They had
conferred together about it Mary
Anu, who could uot be happy where
Susan was not—oven at Nelli’s side—
had broken the subject to Susau, and
her clearest suspicions were confirmed
by the disclosure that both the ladies
loved the same saint
Fur from feeling indignant at this
frank and forwum confidence, Nelli’s
wife received it with delight She
gave her maiden friend every assu
rance that their mutual choice was
worthy of their uuited ambition, and
they set to work to compel Nehi to
accept another Mrs. Gibbons. It
ISBSSs-
I'resldent Grsnt’l Appointment*
SUN
TH&J>
being unseemly for Susan to do more
than put herself as frequently as pos
sible in Mr. Gibbon’s way, the plot
ripened slowly, and, on conferring
with one of the Bishops of the Church,
he recommended both ladies to make
the consummation a subject for
prayer. They lifted up their hearts
together that it might be revealed to
Nehi what good gifts he was neglect
ing, but Nelli burdened his heart,and
refused to extend his table cloth.
He was as yet ignorant of the new
helpmate intended for him, but on
the suggestion of Mrs. Gibbous that
he was not glorifying his manhood
and his family, he said that a pair was
enough, and that he had no-wish to
marry. Under these circumstances a
little extreme diplomacy was adjudged
necessary, and Mrs. Gibbons, to com
pel a marriage, declared that her
household work was too onerous, and
finally affected to be grievously ill.
Nehi Gibbons, unable to resist this
description of appeal, obeyed the de
sire of his wife, Mary Aun, but the
woman he married was uot Susan!
He wus too blind to guess the person
intended, and he married au entirely
different woman.
Grave complications ensued upon
this precipitate action of Nehi Gib-
lions. The peace of his family was
disturbed, aud none the less because,
after the usual period, the second Mrs.
Gibbons had a baby. Mary Ann, re
doubling her efforts,met with no other
success than that Mr. Uibbons took a
third wife, and this time also it failed
to be Susan. The third effort Was
more directly made, uud with less
diplomacy. Mrs. Gibbons the first
suggesting expressly that her choice
was her bosom friend; and the power
of Candor wus never so well attested
ns on this occasion, for Mr. Gibbous
answered:
“Iluil 1 thought Susan would have
accepted me, my dear Mary Aun, I
should have made her my wife before
I proposed to you!”
Thus piety and patience were
crowned, friendship was rewarded, and
Busan aud Mary Aun being lovely in
life, in wedlock were not divided.
[Tram ibe ItlMoarl UepubllcM.
Qnlv a short time Since a person was
■amad as Minister to not th« least impor
tant of lbs European courts, whose sole
tMn lay in the fact that be had manied
a mater of the President. Hr. Sumner
then Chairman of the Committee on
Foreign Uelationa, and with that consci
entious regard for the public interest
which, with all his vagaries, he has ever
displayed, ho examined the reoord and
the acquirements of the President’s bro
ther-in-law carefully and im|»rtlally.—
He bund the rooord bad and the acquire
ments few and feeble, and so reported to
the Senate. Butin spite of this verdict,
the truth and honesty of which none
dared to question, the man was confirm
ed and received hia credentials for no
other reason than that he had formed a
matrimonial alliance on sound business
principles.
Soon after this brother-in-law was pro
vided for, e backwoods, bushwhacking
Judge from North Carolina was selected
as Minister to Peru, South America. No
body outside (Be land of gubl>er-peas bad
ever before heard of Judge Thomas Set
tles, bat he had borne swift and satisfac
tory witness against the “40,000 Ku-
Klux" in his native State, and this
was deemed sufficient endorsement of
his capabilities as a diplomat. The Sen
ate confirmed Settles, and thia sweet-
scented specimen of Radicalism is now
astonishing the Peruvians with the pro
fundity of his ignorsuce on every sub
ject where knowledge is of the slightest
importance.
But perhaps the most ridiculous illus
tration of the beauties of our civil ser-
vioe is the ease of Joaiah M. Lucas, ap
pointed United States consul to Singa
pore. Mr. Lucas, so the dispatchesstate,
was formerly editor of a paper at Jack
sonville, 111, and being an applicant for
uny diplomatic vttcuucy, his name wus
finally sent in lot tho consulship at 8t
John, N. B. Before the Senate Inul a
chance to act npon his nomination
oas was withdrawn from tit. JqJ
nominated to Singapore,
is on the north
America, and Si:
eastern oonst of
perhaps fifteen thoni
The former town is
small importance; the
city, and the centre of an
trade in which the Unite
ly interested. American
tne»e, American vessels
the property and the righi
require protection there.
man is needed for consul theiww and
Lucas was thought fit for St. John he is
not likely to be exactly the person to re
present us at the Indian capital. Yet ar
parently for no eause, except to
auce tho Presidential slate
villa gentleman is fiung from’
Singapore by a mere twist of
and to Singapore he will travi
ingly.
It in mud that the meml
Joint High Commission on
been jmld for their services
appropriation of 825,000 made
gress for the expenses of
ion. This is possible,
Hoar and Mr. Williams, of
entitled to any special pa’
>thers hod other offi>
regular solarii
$8,000 a year^flftral ScliJ
000 a year in^iu, and Jn<
$7,000 a year ah a Jucf
Court. Bat who fixe*
J udge Hoar and Mr. Wi!
Was there anything on The subji
the hill making the appropriation '
Commission ? An oniinsry rate
for such services to tho Governin'
$10 a day and mileage; but it woul
The Game of Sec-Saw.
The following appeared as a oomnmni-
Ihe following appeared as a oow
cation in the Washington Jfi'atriah
"Mem.jftJOytdar. r.f *
Workforruouey, mud throw it away.
“Papa, What is asked a little
1>oy in onr presence lost week, “what
doesil mean, anyhow?”
“Hoe saw, jay son,” the grave parent
replied, “ja a very old institution, but
which haft been revived this spring with
great cdut by the High Joint Commis
sion. *7
But what is the Joint High Commis
sion, papa? Is it a new base ball club?”
“No, my son; it is a pacific, mutoalad-
miration society, invented by oar ootis-
ins over the water, aud has for its aim
and otyjct
•To anckle A*>1“ ***d chronicle small beer/"
“How is see-saw played, paps?”
“Oh, very adroitly; two parties are
needed; one does ail the work and both
ride; here we go up, up, up, and here we
go down, downy—meaning the working
party goes down.”
“i)id the High Joint Commission make
auy presents, palm ?”
“It would bo difficult to say, my son.”
—
Messrs. Jams* li. Osgood & Co., the
Boston publishers, deserve the thanks of
tho reading public for an improvement,
which they hkve just adopted in “Every
♦Saturday.” The leaves are trimmed and
securely pasted together, thus obviating
the necessity of cutting in order to read,
and of stitching Ij^gdcr to preserve
them.
The. machine
result is the iuvei
tiers A Co., of Pj
to be the ouly
world. It foul*,
oj>*ration, whii ‘
The two -heeta
posftd tre f(*4 in
A murderer named ’
in the jail at Carniel, 1
juot of a huge amount of female sympa
thy. Young women and old Women
Hooked from far and near to see him.
local newspaper nays. “A young lady of
Brewer’s Station moving in high circles
in that refined community, cam* time
and again; and on the morning that he
was token to prison she was there bright
aud early, and parted from him with
many tears, and could not be content un
til she had obtained his photograph.” “A
married lady residing in the vicinity of
Croton Falls—one of the jewels of
lovely village—declared that, mooh os
she esteemed her dear husband, he was
as nothing in her affeotion to the darling
Trumpbour.”
An artist, who has lately visited the fa
mous Yo Semite valley, says :
The grandeur of the Yo Semite cannot
be surpassed for its sublimity, and we
were not surprised to find so many of
our artiste there ; but we were surprised
to learn how little truth there wse in a
great picture of it reoently exhibited in
New York ; not bnt what individual parts
of it might be true, bnt the view has
been so transposed to bring it on one
canvas that nothing resembling it oan be
found in the valley.
IN TUB
vmmrr
Assetmu $1,0S*@,7'03.00.
No. Meriiwon Street, AtfonapiLlm, j
JEFFER/^TdA Presid
•KIMS,
rtrtt net rreeutent.
r.r. moriLK, Secretary.
A young married lady being applied
to for a nituation by a servant girl, naked:
“Why did you leave your iaat plane?”—
“Why, you see, ma’am,” replied the girl,
“I was too good looking, and when I
opened the door the gentlemen alway*
took me for the miada. ”
lie elevator of a New York Hotel got
' atween two flooro on an np trip
day, and hung like Mahomet’s
hour and a half. A lady
era, who had left
ith whom she was going
had told her to “wait a
d I’ll be down.” She
lady of Bainbridge, N. Y.,
bargain with Curtins Cooper 1
fifteen years ago, whereby she wa«
have a “ewe lamb and ite increaee un-
woh 21 yeare old,” In exchange for
atch key. She was but six yours
^ time, and now sues Mr.
lambs, or their value,
\ is $64,526.
[man, examining a
";ed, stripped and
wool. He went
.plied in thin
.nts for $2,000
the picture aa evi-
igggg^^wnHfl'^ml known in literary
Inislmial, itn alleotioimte
ex-deacon, at whom the
^^^^^^^Buspicion hua never been
jjgpPRFand on whose character the
Breath of calumny liaa never yet alight
ed, was the other day found devouring
a favorite author.
nnikoH these remafW!
jiun journals, in com-
Ittonrbon uddresH ro-
Aat ‘the voice of
K ho si mil rule. It
oqtjn
once beggiDg charity on
ifllmnb. A lady liuviug
||!^Atamu!t>li(-ity, how
was throwu
rogue w
■use of i
patient.
er to
500 Crates assort
ed granite and C C mm
Ware for $80 per
crate. Cheapest ev
er offered in State.
Send for list ofbon
tents.
Cutlery,
a Trays,
rjXHOSE contemplating Life Insurance are respectfully requested to <
JL ln« ttt* morita of this Oomptny. They wilt And it
Superior to Many and Inferior to None, in the Essentials y
give Sound Insurance at the Least Possible Cost.
W, T. WATERH, Gen.Ag%
•ly Qf»WJf 3T l-», U'MTKH*M.h AT., A lLANTA, li
hardly bo fair to limit two gen;
ho much distinction to ho lowi
pense. Besides, why should thl
only $10 a day when Gem “
was getting over $50 for the’
Congress at its next soesion ougl
quire into this subject, aud see that full
justice is done to all *
to in*
the members of the
Commission. Either Genoral Sehcnck
was paid too much or tho others too
little.—[New York Sun.
Reducing the Army and its Pay
—Officers Resign ing.
[CMnciunitl Quetta Washington Special,
The United Stoies army has finally
been reduced to a peace footing, in ac
cordance with the act of Congress passed
July 15, 1870. Under this arrangement
our regular army will consist of one gen
eral, one lieutenant general, four major
generals and three brigadier generals,
with the usual complement of stall' in tho
field. Besides, there will be tho adjutant,
quartermaster, commissary aud surgeon
general, with their respective subordi
nates, the corps of engineers, the ord-
nanoe department, signal corps, ten regi
ments of cavalry, five regiments of artil
lery, twenty-live regiments of infantry,
the militmy aendemy, and a body of In-
diuti scouts. The rank will consist of
thirty thousaud enlisted men, appor
tioned as follows: Engineers, 300; in
fantry, 15,000; cavalry, 10,000; artillery,
3,635: non-commissioned stall, 601; ord-
u&nce sirgoants and men, 130; Indian
scouts, 125; company laundresses, 170;
employes ot the quartermaster’s depart
ment, 2,500. The total amount of en
listed men and attaches tor whom rations
will have to bo issued, are 35,284. It is
expected that it will be necessary to re
enlist 6,000 during the year to keep the
army up to its standard, and, as the pay
will be reduced to the ante-bellum rates,
this will be no easy task. The commis
sioned officers are tendering their resig
nations in such numbers that there is no
longer a surplus, and the Secretary of
War has decided to accept no further
resignatious, except for reasons reoog
nixed in war times as absolute. Among
those who have thus far resigued are
many who achieved reputations for hard
service during the war.
Mr. Nordholl, of the N. Y. Evening
Post, writes thus, of the scene from the
Cliff House, near San Francisco:
If you have children in your party,
they will not tire of watching the sea
lions, no matter how long yon stay. And
if you have any fanoy yourself in wild
beasts you will be both amazed and
amused at the huge, strange creatures
which cover the rocks two hundred yards
from yon. aud look with their pointed
heads and stony bodies like monstrous
maggots crawling and squirming; who
lie like dead things upon the rocks;
whose howls and hoarse, discordant
ruea across to you and make a strange
music for your meal.
A seal in Barn urn’s Museum is a strange
boost, but these monstrous misshapen
creatures) furious, wild, free, yawuing in
your face, pushing each other aside,
quarrslgw, suckung their young, rolling
“ “i precipitous rooks into the sea,
‘ * bt my eyes tvCr
»jre could see thin,
rnihcr wuif^ picture to
Mio strangest
orrare.
thu;
ot it?
I>OU
the picture beforf hiM.
• - - - iy, that's
Ee in
may be interedl^|ki ki
National party
Czar to a war ngnifist Austria, in oj
proparo the way to Constantinople by
weakening the Hapsbnrgs. Whether the
Czar will allow himself to be led into this
adventure is difficult to predict; how
ever the temptation is very gtffi^^Cler-
many would remain neutriilh^^Huncc
would hardly be in a posil
Still, it would always be
greuter from the fact thaWw^ms.sian
army will require several years to com
plete its new organization”
Astonishing events transpire in Con
necticut. The recent purchaser of au
old mansion in Stratford, formerly owned
and occupied by the late David Brooks,
while engaged in tearing down the stpne
chimney, came across a large earthen pot
of peculiar shape ami very ancient, con
taining specie. What amount of treasu
ry was found the lucky individual is re- v
luctant to state, but it is noted that after
his good fortune the gentleman, who had
been engaged in the dry goods and gro
cery trade for a number of years, to the
surprise of his many friends, Hold out hja
stoek aud fixtures, leased his store ana
retired from business.
What stuff is sometime^ sold as tea
may be learned from a London commer
cial circular, which says that recently 300
half chests' of tea dust, called scented
orange Pekoe siftings, were sold by auc
tion, without reserve, on account of the
importer^, aud part realized one penny
per pound, adding that “it is a matter of
considerable doubt whether tl\is article
is tea at all;” it is certainly utterly spu
rious and unfit to drink ; the leaf is in a
great measure composed of dirt and steel
filings, and if a magnet be thrust into a
sample, on examination, it will be found
covered with small particles of metal
We are informed that tho Han Domingo
report, with the accompanying docu
ments, is nearly ready for distribution.
It will make a volume of about three
hundred pages, and u large partof it 1b
devoted to describing bugs and inseeta
indigenous to that famous island. Thia
branch of the work will no doubt be a val
uable contribution to the important sci
ence of bugs; but why in the world the
United States Government should go to
the excuse of publishing it, is a conun
drum too hard for the unaided mind to
answer.—Neic York Sun.
An apprehension exists in Franco that
the vexed question of the future govern
ment for the country will be summarily
settled by the regular army as soon as a
firm foothold is tstabhshod in Par*.
They have returned from their prisons in
Germany not at all pleased with the neg
lect with which they have been treated,
and their concision with the army that
Gamt>etta created, and which receives
from tho Versailles government the li
on’s share of public recognition and min
isterial favors. If the regular army
should, as apprehend*d, make a coup
tVetal, it is not difficult to imaging in
whose favor it would b*
Looting Glass Plates.
IDailg Son Book anb Job (Dfficc.
•Fulton Count,.
u Court—Apsil Trim, 1871.
my 1-5* kl
Georgia—
Fulton SrpffHi.
M cut a a F. Ryan)
vh, S Libel tor Divorce in Raid Court.
Gkubob A. Ryan. )
It appeanug ta the Court, by Iho
Sheriff, that Qoorgu A. Rvau, tli«* !»•
•bore utatt'd ca*e, doe* not reside in m.i! count) of
Fulton, and it *1ho appearing tliat he d*
in Mid sut*< of Georgia, it is, therefore, onit
the Court that eerviow of Mid libei Ite made
George A. Ryau, by publication of thin order
public gMetta iu t'tta State once m month for fuur
luouths, proYiou* to the next term of thta Court.—
Granted by tho Court.
J. M. Calhoun & Bon., Plaintiff'» Attorney.
A true Fxtract from the minuten of Mid Court,
June lat, 1S/1,
JumiS-lani im W. K. VENABLE, Clerk.
In the District * ourl oMIic United stale*
for the Northern District of Ocer-
Kla—In Bankruptcy.
A T ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THIS
27th d*y of May, 1871,
The uuderhigued hereby give* notice of hia ap
pointment ah Aeaiguce of Jouue A Ilar]>er, end
Charle* M. Ifarpcr, of Runic, in the county of Floyd,
and State of Georgia, within Mid District, who have
been adjudged bankrupts upon the pctltiou of their
Creditor*, by the Dtatrict Court of mid District
BOBtliT T. HABGBOVB,
may25-law3w
A Bill to rc|ieal tha lav requiring# de
posit ot “caution money” by newuqiere,
aud to aboliah the penalty of deprivation
ot the right to epufj on the newspaper
biisince for infraction At the preiw law,
has been adopted by the Imperial Ger
man Diet over the votee of the Old
Conservative) and alow Catholic* The
bill nbw goee before the Imperial Conn
cil. A similar proiHMiitiou to improvethe
* iu thu Diet of North
f iWfnt; t very dork print, cil. A xunilar propom
, s»!” ••Rare*' We no iloubt pr.e* laws <ht* *ade 1
e^.itc«rtafci%V ao(.VpU.dnaa”vjOouuwy. l»k filed.
Dancing Class!
1 JBOFJUS.SOR NICHOLS HESPEOTFOLLF AN-
XT NOUNCES to former patroiut aud the publi*
generally, that he will commence Clause* at
CONCORDIA HALL, WHITEHALL 8T.
On T1IDHHDAY. June lat, at 8 p. m., for genta, and
eontinue for one Hettaion of two months, <
Thursday au*l Friday.
ClaM for I,adies and Children every Friday Aftar-
hoou, at p. m., and Saturday morning at 10 a. x.
For particular*, apply at tho Hall, or at Phillips A
Crew’s. may 31-St
COTTAGE FOR SALE
Tn q-rlffBn.
lot. containing
_ a «mIbnA
flr*t rata. Will be sold low to a cash purchaser. For
further information apply to 8. W. Woodworth or I
t. U. Logan, Qrlflln.
my37.tf H. 0. OOODWTH.
Cottage For Sale.
T WILL HELL A BARGAIN IN A NEW TASTILY
1 built COTTAGE of Three Large Rooms, and asms
number of exoeilout basement rooms, with closets,
hall and all these coxy little convenience*. The tot
tn on Went Baker etreet, near Peachtree.
Apply *t onoe. _ Q. W. ADAIR.
June*-JR
We offer the
Cheapest and
Best line oi
House - Keep
ers’ Goods in
the City. Cut
lery, Spoons,
Forks, Knives
Waiters, Cas
tors, Vases &
Toilet Sets.
In fact, any
thing needed
in a well kept
house. Call
with the cash
McBriila & Co.
nriHE SUN JOB OFFICE HAS JUST BEEN SUPPI.IP
— with a splendid assortment of the Latest Styles of
NEW AND ELEGANT TYPES,
BOBBERS, RULES AND OTHER MATERIAL 1
And is now prepared to do the Finest Grades of
JOB PRINTING !
THE PLANTATION
•Xm Jfrindlaraf r«dr% «T fortm P«r«,
fn JittanitA, Oo„
EVERY SATURDAY.
FMICM |» jmt Jim for Staff* Cap*.
M *• for CMi Jfff-Al.
M for CtmAm *f IWIy.
T HIS paper ta edited by Rev. 0. W. Howard, a*.
•toted by OoL R. A. Ala too, and la eqnal to any
Journal of the kind In the United States in point of
t&~ SEND FOR A SPECIMEN COPT.
GOOD AGENTS WANTED, tt
ADDRESS,
MORRIS * HOWARD.
myie-lm Drawer 81, Atlanta, Georgia.
Auction & Commission.
WIT. hereby aotlfj the public ud trail ucc. men
ZlooSSSHiliZLZ'"' °» u,i tut auction
**• Dmgme BmUdlig, BUI etreet.
mad* on goada in aiara, to be aold at auction. Reg
fiwpttesaqr,**
t. A. CHXkBY, luoaouwr.
amtmt. oa. me a.
HENRY CARD.
HITCHCOCK A WALDEN,
tduiiNTV an ufiii DKi&caa n
Removal.
Eichterg’ A LanggesrS
Having removed their
Plumbing&Gas-Fitti'?
ESTABl ISHMENT,
From No. «. Marietta *tree«. *
32 Peachtree Strt pf i
NtAB ORNER OF WALTON, I
A re ready to receive orders. t ^!J
reapoctfully inform their fttohda
will continue to keep a full atock ot
tlae, Steam and mater I
GAS FIXTURES :
AMD
OHAND ELIBR 9
BathfiTubg,
PUMPS OF AT.T. DB8CIUPT If •
Water Closet •
ff»*h RasliiH, Pomps an4a FuUU» f-
HARDWARE [,
WK HOP*, BY (ITBICT ATTK'™"
TO B17S1NBS8, TO MR KIT A |
ttnuancb or tub sibbbai. r> ’ |
**«’
thonaue which ha«
hkrktofukk given to
ror rent. Commission llerchiuit, etc., Books and Stationery. Eichberg A Langgessei
r-RnoMotyrTAONS. ■ " s» Pwehl.wa8tw*L
ACCOMMODATION W II A EX.
lm IM MM «.U Cmmet Ibr M. JlVrlke.
8M.VI mt Ummrrlm.
Ouurt of MlU
■yW-fewtw
** ;w BSa* °5i1
etc., also
irthandlM ao.
i. George A. Trenholm k Bon. Charleaton,
am S. OMacruu. Prentdant Booth OaroUna
4'ompauy. Charleaton. 0. C.
i _ „
LT. k R.
iPOWILL’S BLOCK,)
ATLANTA. OA
M I "* 141 p N»r Md flUnk Book.
80018 “ d H toDlBITTO
roar. u. howl WAri*"” I
HOWE & HUBBLE-
JMrOBTKKS Ot AND DEALKB81« .U
FORIIQN AND
iiiQuona- #
1 8PECTAI, ATTKNTION TO SOPTHM***^
Jib. u:| # IA , ,ri Art.
ii.«7.v.v.ifi, eMJri
mylMw