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A* KNOB MOUB PIGEON ROOST.
V Sight Worth Se«iHC In the Wit-
coBtin HUB
Oom.ixaataxr of Um M. T. K.Mln, PwA
The propensity of wild pigeons to
congregate in mnltitndss at giv«n
seasons is well known, and many tre-
m that she visits Smith's Ferry al
most every day to have some pins and
needles taken boa her bmast and
heel The pins are all bent as though
there had been an effort to break them
in three places, and all the leaders
appear more or lees corroded from
_ being in oontact with the In-ass pins,
stories"have bean told'of thqr got,«*«» » •
them, the details of which were
thought to make a heavy draught on
pnbltc credulity. We have now, how
ever, authentic information from a
gentleman of the highest reputation,
who passed last week in the section
of Wisconsin we are about to de-
scribe, of a “roost” so enormous in
extent that it throws all the older ac
counts in the shade.
Commencing near Kilboume City,
the breeding ground extends north
ward nine townships in leugth, and
» probably more, with a variable width
of from' ten to twenty miles. The
forests within these limits are made
Ihp exclusively of oaks and evergreens,
Ef a variety of sjiecies. It is a sandy
llistrict, embracing perhaps the poor
est soil in the State, and apparently
destitute of food for even moderate
flocks of birds. Yet almost contin-
uouslv. over the whole area, every
tree and sltruh is so loaded with nests
as to lie past computation in numbers.
On single pines from eighty to one
hundred were counted, when theiob
had to la- given up as impracticable.
Our informant, Col. Ilenrv Hern
don, gives some curious details of his
experience on this breeding ground,
and of the habits of the pigeon when
aggregated in such multitudes. The
nesting place is not, as would natu
rally be supposed, selected for any
abundance of food, for the pigeon
can readily pass in an hour from fifty
to a hundred miles, so that the range
is really across the entire State, and
the multitude is so innumerable that
they have carried wide-spread destruc
tion among the grain fields. The
male attends the young during the
middle of the day, the female return
ing toward evening to take charge.
Only one egg was anywhere found in
a nest. The incubation lasts about
two weeks, and the young in a short
time after are ruthlessly thrust out to
take care of themselves, and develop
so rapidly that few days suffice to give
them full maturity.
Probably the sex changes alter
natelv with each brood, as the pro
cess of hatching goes on continuously.
Millions of the young perish, but it
makes no appreciable difference in
the number. The woods are alive
with wolves, foxes and all the species
of native carnivora, who feed to re
pletion without making any sensible
reduction of the aggregate. Scores
of hunters catch their thousands
daily in nets—and bands of Indians
are busy in drying and pro)wring
other thousands as a supply for next
winter's use. But all the shooting,
netting, knocking from the trees with
poles, and every form of destructive
agency fails to make any sensible im
pression.
The scene in the night time is dcs-
crilied as most remarkable. Innum
erable flocks get Is-nighted while off
feeding, and, as they return, the roar
of their wings through the forest is
overwhelming. They pile upon each
other literally in heaps, breaking the
overburdened brambles, anti precipi
tating multitudes from their perches
upon the ground. The wild wings
and the chattering that fill the air
as late as midnight, is truly appall
ing. while the odor arising from the
countless dead and the droopings
produce a stench almost intolerable.
no one can solve. There seems to Is
no doubt but that she swallowed
them, but how many are yet to come
out of her system? It is a remarka
ble case.
Mea-MoBfcrt.
The Saturday Review discourses of
idea-mongers and Radicals as follows:
A man who has ideas far in advance
of hie own age wins very little credit
in his own age, and for the most part _ m ._
docs very little practical good. Tnej at'tia-gindaalsi- or ontliV- dock, letting
man who is really to guide his fellow - 1 uu-1, market lor himself, tla»n to have
ereatnres must in the nature of things; the laud owner sell it in hulk and ac
he in advance of other people, but he 1 count to the cultivator for hi» share of
must not be too far in advance of 1 *1"' l >r ‘
Mr. (ireeley'a Observation of the
t uiMimon of the Blacks in the
HbbMi.
IteifcaUI ourrMiwadoDc* of Uia Now York Tnbuur
IViib Vickhwiho. Miss., June 1.—Da
ring the last the e weeks I have made a
p ant of inquiring of all eliwiaes as to the
c audition, oonduut and prospects of the
freodnieu throughout the (lull Status._—
The •uliatimce of the testimony thus olio-
ited I slim up as follows:
The planters who ware formerly slave
holders have uniformly assured me that
their ex-iLtves are working better than
they expected, and better this year than
ever before. I cannot recollect a single
dissent from tliis averment. Most of the
old plantation hands either rent lands,
paving eo much cotton per acre, or they
work them on almrea —.-.ay half the crop
when they find their own team and seed,
and one-third when those arc found by
the land owner. And it has been found
far more satisfactory to divide the crop
them. He must uot be so far in ad
vance of them that they cannot un
derstand or sympathise with him.
Alike in sjieculative and practical
matters, a man who is so far above his
own age as to be out of all relations
with the men with whom he has to
keeping no
ace its, and not very careful in their
habits, usually lound, on settlement, that
they had eaten up their crop while it
sei' . I consider the vflnity of griev
ing for those whom we most quickly
follow. When I see kings lying by
those who deposed them, when I con
sider rival wits placed side by side, or
the holy men that divided tne world
with their contests and disputes, I
reflect with sorrow and astonishment
on the little competitions, fractions
and debates of mankind. When I
read the several dates of the tombs,
of some that died yesterday, and some
six hundred years ago, I consider
that great day when we shall all of
us be contemporaries, and make oar
appearauce together.
Sound Democratic Truth
Spreading.
The Louisville (Ky.) Jeffersonian Dem
ocrat thus refers to the appearance of an
aide advooato for old-fashioned Democ
racy, in the State of Mistoari, vis: the
Holden Democrat. After acknowledg
ing the receipt of the initial number, the
Jeffersonian Democrat says:
We ore glad of an opportunity of say
ing that another journal, anderetandingly
and sincerely devoted to the Jeffersonian
growing, uud were often in debt after it polities, his made He eppear-
htul been sold and accounted for. h
doubt they were eomelimea cheated; but
eveu wlion they were uot they supposed
they were. Kspeeiidly when, as in lHtiG,
deal, has but little influence, and can the crop was a failure, and tbeir share of
- • - --- it did not repay the hum owner nw ad-
l herefore do but little good. His acts,
his Hayings, his writings, may remain
to be wondered at by a distant pos
terity; on his own generation they
are thrown away.
“idea-monger:” in many times and
places he is lucky if he escapes the
Fauces, they could not undt-rHtand that
while “old master” bad all tli« n* wan,
they hail le.sa than nothing. The sys
tem woh had, ho its result* were evil.—
_. It in far better where they have no
He is sure to be mocked at as an ! credit, no advauces, and wtruggle through
the year as they can, ho that their share
of the crop, large or small, is all their own
when it in ready for Hale. On the. crop of
1869, those who worked on this basis
prison and the stake. Every move
ment—intellectual, political or re
ligious—has had its pioneers of thin
kind, whose influence, if they have
generally made money; on that of 1870,
which sold much lower, they made little
nothing; thisyear, I am assured, they
had any, hfcs not been on their own generally grow corn us well as cotton,
aqutatatporariea, but oil men long ‘ ‘ : "" ' A
after, who have heard their story or
read their writings.
Yet we cannot think tlmt such
men are altogether unworthy of hon
or; we cannot look on their prema
ture wisdom as nothing better than
folly. Take for instanoo the two Ha-
oons. Roger was at least as great u
man as Francis; considering the cir
cumstances of the time, we should lie
inclined to say that he was a much
greater man. But he had little or no
influence on his own age. simply be
cause he was so far in advance of it.
lie stands as an iaolated fact, to be
admitted by a late posterity.
But in tne age of Francis Bacon
the world in general had advanced
beyond the age of Roger. Francis,
therefore, was not so far in advance of
his age but there were other minds
who were able to take up and follow
out his teachings. Roger, therefore,
simply remains the glory and the
shame of the thirteenth century.—
Francis Has been master of every age
since the seventeenth.
More tliau this, when the time has
really come when a new idea can lie
pressed with a hope of practical suc
cess, it is seldom the man who first
proffer the testimony of my eyes. To
say thut I have seen many more black
women tban white pereons plowing and
hoeiug in the corn, cotton and cane
fields of Louisiana and Texas, would bo
saying little; I am sure I saw half as
many Muck women as Muck men working
the crops; uud in many cases, father,
, mother and one or two children were at
Starts it who cither gets the credit ol wor k together. On the whole, I must
it or carries it out into practice. It regard the question, ■ Will free nigge
hoping to make their own bread and
meat, and leave their cotton clear.
Home will succeed in tliis, others will
fail; but taken in the average, I judge
that the freedom of the South, ru States
are this day in as good circumstances as
the hired w orkers who tilt the soil of any
European country. And I um confident
that the plantation lai.orers are rarely or
never in want of employment or of a
home. If there were profligate, idle,
pilfering fellows among them they art-
drifted away to the eities, or to some
other country than tliis. There is no
place for such ou plantations, and very
lew of them could stay there if they
would.
The oldest slaveholders, ou whose tes
timony 1 have mainly relied, thus far,
.elded that the black women are not do
ing so well us the men, but are mainly
intent ou finery and idleness. The chil
dren (the planters add) rule their pa
rents, anil uo little or nothing; so that
when this generation of ti. l.l hands,
trained to steady
unce. The believing Democrats of Kia-
souri should rally to the support of this
new journal at onoe, and that without
stint or procastination. It planed ai its
inust-head the first Kentucky reeolntion
of 1798, and gave the following reason
for it;
"There never hss been a time in the
history of this country when the promol-
galion of sound Democratic doctrine ww
of such paramount importance as at pres
ent. Believing that Jefferson's First
Kentncky Resolution is at onoe the dear
est and ablest exposition of oar Federal
f-vstem ever penned by mortal man, we
hoist it at oar mast-head, where it will
occupy a place as long is this paper
controlled by its present editors. ’
Again it says;
"The editors of this paper are not
Democrats because their fathers were,
nor from the force of eiroumstanoes, bat
they are Democrats from their sraoere
and honest oonviclions of right, and from
motives of pstriotism and love of oonn-
try, believing that the salvation of this
country su.l the existence of republican
government depends on the prevalence
and success of the principles of Democ
racy. Democracy is not a changing,
shifting party policy, bat a principle as
unchangeable as the decrees of Jehovah,
Policy is the invention of crafty and de
signing politicians, and often of diahoneet
men. ”
The Ancient Mariner.
Coleridge mentions somewhere that
Wordsworth assisted him in writing the
“Ancient Mariner." The two poets had
agreed to take a tour together, and in or
der to pay their expenses resolved to
write some poems, whioh were composed
during the tour. They gave eaoh other
slnili ! assistance in their composition ; in the
have died off, matters will have changed , "Ancient Mariucr,” the idea of the men
for tin-wonw. In opposition to this, I pulling the_rapes, which would seem
constantly happens, not at all neces
sary through any unfair practice, Hint
another ateppeth down Ik-fore the
original prophet anil wins the suc
cess and credit which should rightly
have bcon his. The first mover, there
fore, is laughed at as an “idea-moil
work?” satisfactorily answered. The
four anil a quarter million Hales of cot
ton grown in the United States in 1870,
are not to be gainsaid,
On another point the testimony of the
old masters is less assuring. They tell
me that their ex-slaves spend their earn
ings unwisely, iinprovidently, often
ger,” while I ho second conies ill for squandering in a mouth the hard-earning
the honor of a successful reformer.— of u j
If a man simply seeks for men to
speak well of him, premature wis
dom is certainly the height of folly.
Before his views are adopted, he is
l’he “flock," if that term is com-1 laughed at; after they are adopted he
year. One planter instanced the
case of a “boy” who recently bought at
onoe seventeen “JShoo-Fly” boxes, price
$1 each, their aggregate contents being
worth, perhaps, $5, and consisting of
oandirv and showy kuiok-kuacks, with
more like Coleridge than Wordsworth,
was suggested by the latter. The first
verse of the poem, “We are Seven,” was
written by Coleridge. Wordsworth com
posed thiH poem backward, beginning at
the last verse and going upward. He
and Coleridge were staying in a friend’s
home at the time of its composition.
Wordsworth was summoned to tea when
he had finished all but the verse, and
Coleridge told him to go into the draw
ing-room and he would complete it for
him. Coleridge, not Poreon, as has
been said, wrote some stanzas of South-
ey’s “ Devil’s Walk,” and Mr. Hobhouae,
afterward Lord Broughton, wrote ubout
thirty lines in Byrou’s “English Bards
and Hcotch Reviewers.”
Commodore Tattnall.
The condition of the brave veteran,
Commodore Tattnall, who was re
ported yesterday morning to be in a
ry low state of health, is still very
silver-hHif dollar perhaps in every fifth j precarious. At a late hour last night
Loolig Glass Plates.
nrpbcnaivo .-noiiffli is moving north- W forgofjfeti. Any one who lias stirred box. l.io-.-nleuee to this effect i» so lie was saul to he very low. Ourciti-
prenensixe i „ t e, , , mucli in controversy must have li veil 1 positive an. consistent that I cannot zens tool great anxiety in regard to
' .... doubt its gener-1 truth. The ex-slave, ' ... - .
ward, and "ill probably reach Ijako
Superior ill June, when the “season”
will close bv a return south, which
generally taken place by way of Michi
gan. They probably annually make
a great circuit, like the buffalo, from
north to smith and return. Any one
curious to six- this spectacle should
take the ears to Kilboume City, and
follow up the cast side of the Wiscon
sin river. The thousands sent to
market are caught at )>oint8 far dis
tant from the herding grounds, so
that the real locality is not generally
known.
Strange Account of • Girl Who
Was a M alkina Pin-cushion,
New Lisbon, Ohio, is certainly a
remarkable town for sensations.
Whether this be owing to the peculi
arities of the people residing there
and in the immediate vicinity, or to
extreme fertility of imagination on
the part of local journalists of the
place, we do not presume to say, but
some very strange “yarns” originate
thereabout. The latest, and perhaps
most remarkable. i> the following,
which is front the New Lisbon Jour-
uaL
“ There is a family living in the
east end of SL Clair township, this
oounty, near the State line, whose
name has escaped our recollection,
well known in the community as re
spectable people, wherein was a girl
of sixteen or seventeen years of age,
apparently ill with chills und fever,
but gradually kept growing worse
until the doctors pronounced it ty
phoid fever, bnt failed to cure. And
she lay all last winter with various
svmptums of diseuse, suelt as dyspep
sia, liver complaint, ta|a- worm, etc.,
but the doctors did not and could not
tell what wns the matter. Finally
early this spring she took to bleeding
at tne lungs, with paiuiu the stomach,
side, and ouo leg and foot—whioh
gathered at the heel, and formed some
matter, which the doctors opened and
took therefrom about one dozen pieces
of needles, and from which they have
taken at different times other pieces
of needles, making in all twenty-four
or twenty-five pieces out of her heel;
and about lour weeks ago one of her
breasts became swollen, and, upon
examination, was opened, and several
pieoes of needles taken out and one
pin ; and at various times lately, till
there have U-en fifty-seven pieces of
needles and four pin- from her hre.tot
and heel. Tile needles appear to have
been of various sizes, and generally
broken in three places, except 1a
pome of the smaller pieces. She is
plow in comparatively good health,
to hear his own saying quoted to him
as the last new discovery of the newest
light
Yet the poor “idea-monger,” the
old fogy who lias been so silly as to
think of a thing before other peojile,
may have been doing some practical
good all the same. He may have done
something to teach the newest light,
though the newest light may know
nothing about him. But if a man
wants immediate credit and immedi
ate influence, he will avoid the folly
of premature wisdom ; he will never
think of things before other people;
he will wait and find out whnt is in
the mind ot the public at large in a
vague and unformed shape ; he will
lick it into better slui]>e, and put it
forth to the admiring world as the
words of the newest anil deepest wis
dom. Verily he hath his reward ; hut
to our taste the reward of Roger Ba
con is better Worth having.
Solid Soda Water.
Some genius, it is said, lately suc
ceeded in perfecting an invention
which will revolutionize the soda
water business. The invention con
sists of condensed soda water, put in
boxes containing material for sixteen
glasses of as pure joda water as can
be drawn from any fountain. The
powders charged with gas, swcetcued
and flavored with nine-apple, orange,
lemon, etc., ready for use, and a pic
nic party can carry their soda foun
tain in their pookets.
this heroic -nilor, whose deeds have
lKUoran; amt siie-' 1 --, finding him.seif for
the first or second time possessed of S100
to jfdOO, tlie price ot his crop, is too apt
to fool it away in purchases that wisdom
would slum and reason must condemn.
The blacks themselves, though such as
I have interrogated, give far more cheer
ing testimony. They admit that fools as
well as rogues are found among them, as
among other races ; but they admit that
the great majority are saving as well 7" . . . ", _ . M~
ns earning. They assure us that many American licet to-day til the waters
are buying lands, others aceiimnhiting China, the Catholic missionaries
money in the Freedmen's Saving Bank, i and the noble Sisters of Charity, who
with intent to own homes at uo distant were massacred last year, would lie
day, and that nearly all aro doing better | terribly revenged by the guns of his
from year to year. They say that most ships.—[Savannah News.
made his name famous throughout
the world. Every American add
British heart will beat in sympathy
with Georgia in tliis hour of her
hero’s illness; he who took the re
sponsibility of striking a blow in de
fence of Christianity and civilization,
against paganism, piracy and mur
der. If lie were in command of an
IMA CaL Fair Caatazit Suicide!
Ai aa interview whioh recently took
piaea between Mrs. Laura D. Fair and a
reporter ol the San Fraaoiaoo Chronicle,
the woman acknowledged that a mystery
hangs over the soppoaed suicide of the
man whose name she now bears. The
lady id thin Interview Says, first, that (Nil.
Fair committed suicide, and then says
that be wee shot by some person whom
she is very fbee to connect with the Free
Masons. Since Mrs. Fair's conviction
her counsel consider ft an only sign that
sheiboold make such assertions, th-re
being ih them aMnethihg sltdhst ns sen-
satiWist m (be disappearance Of Morgan,
ft aoems that While, long ago, the was
seated in Mr. Murphy's olfioe, watting to
him iS atari to her divorce,
to Uie ddrtr and quietly shot
bpjlfnffthe jiistol with the
sir of trohi'dWU'noe ax stlc did when
lied ML Crittenden. Hheewapcd.
ivefiteoUv it Whs said that Mi.
' toteftfitfifi urieffle. Whatever
nt iniu, owe \SHnot twip Mtieiuig
stab* moot desperate women, or
to year.
of those who owu no land* own mules
and plows, aud are steadily learning to
spend their money wisely or save it
carefully. I have conversed with no
black man who was uot hopeful and
confident as the future of his race. The
carpet-baggers, so-called, of course con
firm the tofstimony of the blacks. Some of
those arc good uud true men ; others aim
to be particularly good to themselves. At
the worst, it may be fairly urged in their
behalf tlint the blind obstinacy and dog
ged refusal of the planters to recognize
accomplished facts rendered them a nec
essary evil.
The ancient aristocracy of the South
remind me forcibly of the Federal squire
archy of our coumry after Jefferson's
election a* President. Instead of study
ing the new situation and seeking to
master it, they content themselves with
endless and fruitless complainings. They
lament the sway of the “carpet-bagger”
over their lute slaves,, but take uo effect
ive measures to counteract it. Rogues,
us some of the “carpet-baggers” aro, they
ore all zealous for the education of the
blacks, while the submerged aristocracy
grudge every penny assessed on them for
building school houses, and paying teach
ers as though it wore to be thrown into
the sea. The noblest, purest, moa intel
ligent women of New England, who have
come down here to teach black children,
are shunned aud banned by the aristoc-
acy os though they were camp followers
of Sherman's arm v, uud being thus doom
ed to associate only with bl icks uud live
with them, are nefually churned with this
as a betrayal of low taste*, when it was
the dictate of stern ueoc.witv. I appre
hend that the landowners will in time be
impelled by tbeir hate of the “carpet
baggers” to change their course, uud
seek a cordial welcome understanding with
the blacks, but they are n >t yet in the
the mood, and the longer they hold off
the more difficult the tusk * ill prove.
H. O.
Extract from Addison.
When I look upon the tombs of
the great, y emotion of envy dies |
in me; wheu 1 read the epitaphs of!
the beautiful, every inordinate desire
goes out; when I meet with the grief!
of parents upon a tombstone, my
An Average Juror.
The difficulty iu procuring a jury in the
car-hook mui\K r case iu New York, a few
days ago, produced a shower of newsi>tt-
per editorials on the subject of jury duty.
Among them is the following from a Wes
tern exchange:
Question alternately by the Court, the
Stutes Attorney, and the defence, as usu
ally answered by an “intelligent juror.”
“Are you oppoaed to capital puniah-
men?”
“Oh, yee—yes sir.”
“If you were ou a jury, then, where a
man was being tried for his life, you
wouldn’t agree to a verdict to hang him?”
“Yer sir—yee I would.”
“Huve you formed or expraased an
opinion as to the guilt or innooenoe of
the accused?”
“Yes, sir!”
“Your mind then, is made up?”
“Oh, no—no, it ain’t”
“Have you auy bias for or against the
prisoner.’ 7
“Yes, I think I have.”
“Are you prejudiced ?”
“Oh no, not a bit”
“Have you ever heard of this oaae?"
“I think I have.”
“Would you decide, if on the jury,
according to the evidenoe or mere ru
mor?”
“Mere rumor.”
“Perhaps you don’t understand; would
you decide according to evidenoe?”
“Evidence.”
“If it was in your power to do ao, would
you change the law of capital punish
ment or let it staud?”
“Let it stand.”
The Court:—“Would you let it stand or
chunge it?”
•“Change it”
“Now, which would yon do?”
“Don’t know, sir.”
“Are you a freeholder?”
“Ye®, sir, oh yea.”
“Do you own a houaa and land, or
rent?”
“Neither—I'm a boarder.”
“Have you formed an opinion?”
“No sir.”
“Have yon expressed an opinion?”
“Think I have.”
The Court:—“Gentlemen, I think the
evident he
vvhmui, w * .* • -j juror is oompeteut It is very
hoping that tnformalmea may not inter- J «wt hunts with compassion; when I | lua never formed or expressed an opinion
(era with her just poniahnmnt—(World, see t Ik tombs of the parents them- on any subject”
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
McBride & Co.
THE SI JOB OFFICE!
rjlIIE SUN JOB OFFICE HAS JUST BEEN SUPPLIED
™ with a splendid assortment of the Latest Styles of
NEW AND ELEGANT TYPES,
BORDERS, RULES AND OTBEB MATERIAL 1
And is now prepared to do the Finest Grades of
JOB PRINTING!
THE PLANTATION
Jm Afrtrmllurml U'etkly of Mxtten r*yet.
1* ob! I shell in Atlanta, Cfa.,
EVEJtY SATURDAY.
PMlCK—%3 per .lnnttm fmr Nin+U Copy.
$4 50 for Vlmbt of KiyM.
• ‘4 for Clubf of Twenty.
FI1RI8 paper is edited by Rev. 0.
1 Hinted by C
8END FOR A 8PECIMKN COPT. -%%
mw GOOD AGENTS WANTED. -£t
ADDRESS,
MORRIS h HOWARD,
Drawer 31, AtknU, Georgia.
Auction & Commission.
VirE hereby notify the public and hunt new men
ft geuenlly that »«* Unv« opened Miction
and oommiMic > buniuee*
HEN RY CARD,
(IMF BHOH.KH
Commission Merchant, etc.,
4000BVWD4TIO* WHARF,
for Colton, Bioe, etc., also
ikUtKB
*
Miara. George A.
. 0.; Oeocpe a Omm
mb e®4 Truet Compery,
«U, Rea., London, Kngienrt; ■<
Pelf a Go., Ul very Hi. EagfMid;
•Wolf A Oo., HtUhsTKove tooti*.
Tran holm A Bon. Oharieefam,
Degen Baddl->g, on Hill street,
where we will be pirated to serve those who may
I ne»*d onr services. We propose to sell any species
"1 property, deal right aud make prompt returns of
I all h. lee. «’oneignmente solicited. Liberal sdvsoces
m*J< ou goods In store, to be sold at suction. Reg
ular sale days, Wednesdays and Saturdays. Sales of
Real Estate promptly attended to.
J. A. CHERRY, Auctioneer.
McDowell a co.
GRIFFIN, GA., May 19, 1811. my90-3m
HITCHCOCK dr WALDEN,
WHOUUALS AND RETAIL DEALERS Ol
Books and Stationery,
M PBACHTRRK STREET,
(POWELL’S BLOCK.)
ATLANTA, GA.
K EEP ou band a large and elegant
stock of STATIONERY, such as Piner Rn
ve lopes, Pens, Ink, Inkstands, Pencils Slates P«i£
et Books, Knives, etc, roo*.
Fine stock of Initial Paper and Blank Books.
Also, SUN DAY 8QHOOL ROOKS and REQUISITES.
f ALBUMS and MOTTOES—u»e latter
! Choice l«i
mlapte«) far tondai School*, a large stock of MteceT-
I IraT”* Tb ' Ol0 * K *‘ 00OkS, Uk^MM
Removal.
Eichberg & LanggesseT,
Having removed their
Plumbing&Gas-Fitting
ESTABLISHMENT,
From No. 4. Marietta Street, to
32 Peachtree Street,
NEAR ORNER OF WALTON,
A re ready to receive orders, they
respectfully inform their fnenda thattbej
wiU continue to keep a full stock of
Steam and Water
GAS FIXTURES,
ciTTAiw-mKiT.nimS
Bath-Tubs,
PUMPS OF AT.T. DESCniPHOW
Water Closets,
Wash Basins, Pumps, and i Full Iin«
HARDWARE !
W» HOPE, BY .STRICT ATTBBTIO
TO BClIRBai, TO MKRIT A CO! •
TIIDUCZ OF TUB LIBERAL PA-
T RON A UK WHICH HAS MU
HERETOFORE GIVEN TO Vi.
Eichberg & Langgesser,
PeMchtrop Street.
ROBT. ■. ROWE. WARS RTW , > "
HOWE & HUBBLE,
J^MPORTERS OF AMD DEALERS in all kinds of
foreiqn and domesti
UQUORS.
w* i*l AT-ntN-no* to a. arruiaa bub*-
-At>. » «, ».i .mi an «*<•,
CMU.T.V./II. Ml,-