The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873, July 03, 1871, Image 2

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    THE DAILY
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MUH. HE8SIOEH.
IVOR KENT—A KPL1NWD FRONT BOOM ON
r«s»4Rtt
j.inagf tf
“Om What ItMM (toll we to
lata the Fi(ht1**
Under this heading we gire our
readers to-day an article from the
Kichmoad Enquirer of the 37th ult.
In it there are many thing* which we
cordially approve, while there are
some others which we do not know
hut we rightly understand.
Aa to the issues upon which the
Democracy of the United States
should go into the great oivic atrug-
;le in 1873, we entirely agree with
the Enquirer in saying that the
whole question is presented in a nut
shell, by the St Louis Republican, in
that one paragraph quoted by the
Enquirer, and wkioli is in these
words i
‘‘The Constitutional question be
fore the people then is not whether a
“State has a right to secede, or to
“nullify any act of Congress. That
“was decided, in fact, by the late war;
“but whether a State has any rights
“which the National Government
“may not, at its pleasure, set aside.—
“When a Central Government begins
“to appropriate the powers of sur
rounding States or provinces, it
“never, of its own accord, coases from
‘the process. It continues the on-
‘croachment, if unresisted, until it
“has beoome irapcrialised, and the
“States reduced to outlying depen
dencies.”
The real true living issue iuvolvcd
u the next contest in this country,
i.s we view it, is thus briefly but
pointedly stated. The only change
or modification we would make in it,
would be to strike out the words
“National Government,” and insert
in their place “Federal Government;”
hut the context seems to show clear
enough that the meaning of tho
writer was the sonic. He only fell
into the very common error of speak
ing of tho •‘Federal Government” as
a "Xational Government.”
Now, what we do not know that
wo rightly uudarwtimd in this arti
cle from tho Enquirer, is, what is
therein stated uliont the absurdi
ty of the Southern States keep-
i ng up a party “organised on the ba-
"sis of the right of Secession, to be
“formally mainvuverod in every po
litical conflict,” Ac., and about our
“ivoiguuuiug a pro-slavery party in
“the country,” Ac.
We say, we do not know that we
rightly understand these und other
like i>ortious of the article in ques
tion. and therefore forbear all com
ments npon them, except to say that
wo know of no proposition or wish,
in any part of the Southern States,
entertained by even a single individu
al, to organize a party upon any of
these conjectural hypotheses.
The right of secession for all prac
tical purposes was, as we understand,
decided by the war; not that war can
ever settle or decide any principle or
truth in matters of government or
justice between men or States, any
more than in mutters of Saieneo, Alt
or iKeligiott. U’nr may divide, and
may determine permanently,questions
of policy, but never questions of
Right.
A legitimate result of the lato war,
we believe, was the settlement—and
settlement forever—In this country,
of the policy of Secession as a practi
cal mode of redresi against any nsnr-
patioos on the part of the Federal
Government
This legitimate result of the war
has been accepted in good faith by all
those States which recently resorted
tq this mode of redress for what
they Regarded breaches of the ooB* anti Hy
non both pact, and th reate UM 1Jr- «
potions by their confederated. .Msre- 1 lese
after the mode of redress for 48" aba- necked
ses of power by the Fi deralmovenij jthe
ment, which they seek, will be jo
make common cause with ill the
friends of the Constitution in all the
States ,
So of the old question of negro sla
very. The Southern seoeding States,
all—every one of them—abolished
that institution by their own acts.
This not on their parts respect
ively, may or may not be considered
as s legitimate result of the war—
Whether the one or the other, how
ever, it was done by these Statu
themselves, and after the close of the
war—after they had frilly resumed all
their obligations to the Union under
the Constitution, and ware fully re
cognised by the Federal Government
as constituent members of the Union,
and sntitled to an equal voice on aQ
questions pertaining to its welfare,
even those touching changes in the
organic law. It is by the act* of these
States that the Thirteenth Amend
ment of the Constitution is now a
valid pert of the organic law of the
Union.
There questions, therefore, relating
to the right of Secession, for all prac
tical purposes 'are considerations, it
well as those relating to the nature
and extent of negro servitude in the
Southern States, wc consider emphati
cally, among the “ dead ieeuee." We
have no disposition to revive them,
nor any questions relating to
them antecedent to the war.
We believe also, that in this mat.
ter, we bnt repeat the universal
sentiment of the Southern States. We
are for dealing with the living present
and the live ieeuee now before us.
There are the ureurpatione of the
majority flection in the Congress of
the States since the close ot tho war—
since the proclamation of peace and
since the restoration of the Union by
the resumption of their obligations to
the Constitution, by all the States
which had attempted to withdraw
from it
The arraignment of the abuses of
power in these usnrpations, “before
the bar of public reason,” for popular
condemnation, is the platform on
which we stand. It is no “dead plat
form,” or platform erected on “dead
issues,” unless the principles of tho
rights of the people, os well as the
rights of States be dead. If this
be so it is useless to say anything
about the usurpations of Congress in
the Kn-Klux Bill, or the Election
Bill, or any other act of despotism
by a confessed consolidated empire.
But believing that this fatal end
has not yet boen reached, we believe
that the High Mission of the Demo
cratic party is far from being ended.
Its great work is to arrest the pro
gress of usurpation, and to save the
country from so lamentable a catas
trophe.
This Mission is not to bo performed
by “ cunning ” or tricks of any sort,
and abovo all, it is not to be per
formed by accepting as rightfully ac
complished facts, suoh m are not to
be questioned or assailed; any of there
flagrant usurpations of power by
which the Kn-Klux Bill and the
Election Hill ntv elumeil to be right
ful exen.-i.-ua of authority.
These fatal blows at Public Lib
erty are but the results of the pre
ceding more glaring usurpations.
They are bnt the frnits of the others,
and “ by thoir fruits ye shall know
them.” In the language of the St.
Louis ^publican, “ When a central
•‘government begins to appropriate the
“Rowers of surrounding States or
“Provinces, it never, of its own accord,
“ceases from the process.
This Process was begun by the ma
jority friction in Congress in their
Reconstruction policy so-called, by
which, at one blow, ton of the States
of the Union were stricken from the
roll of Commonwealths, and put in a
condition far worse than that of
Provinces. They were reduced, with
all their seven millions of population,
to a condition worse than that of
serfdom. They were subjected en
tirely to military rule, without the
nationally
no way oon-
resnlta of
frilly re
stored under the Constitution when
they were enacted. They were con
fessedly “outs|d#«rf|he (Jqnafgqgoit’l
manarefrf*M#»lf at w *MA
thority Constitutionally appointed. ■
One of the great Urn questions
now, therefore, Ifgfore. the Peoples of
the United States is indeed the Con
stitutional question, not whether s
State has a right to secede, or to nul
lify on set of Congress—but whether
a Stats has any right which the Fede
ral Government may hot at its pleas
ure set aside.
On ibis alone, we are willing to
unite with all friends of libarty in all
the Statea of the Union, in tho com
ing contest to put out of power those
who have the present control of the
Federal Government, and who hare
so wickedly abused their high trusts—
whose progress, if not arrested, will
end inevitably in Despotism.
If the battle be pitched upon this
ground alone, with no soli word* of
ursurpation* of any wort, there will ha
no need of “ levies.” Volunteers for
their owq accord, when tho signal is
given, will pour forth from every
quarter with that enthaaiam lor the
cause, which love of liberty ever in
spires, and which, in popular elections,
is ever the surest “ earnest of victory.”
a. ii. a
From tha Blohmond Enquirer, 37th Jus*.
Ok What Iaaei Skull We gs tats
the Fight?
dfos
*a=i
*hm$tUtn0K--£ite .
He* fiHwhidimif—tUe Jnsnrdflre
SOUTHERN WAlDJNrrRANCE
• Oeorgb
ATZ/uITA
/inblug'a Sons Jron iDorka.
Comes to Atlanta Again 1”
ATLANTA,
(\/< A. 1
Hoao
MBN a GORDON, A. H. OOLQUITT^ 1 ^ 111 #.
nhU-soilWMi
bUM MifttfH <**
BOARD OF* DIHHOTDn^.
J. B. GORDON.
WADXBAMtTOM.
MOL XT
AMU A* GHAT,
j.bTbctler.
MW. HOLLAND,
WM. JOUBBOM, •
BOBBKT THOMAS,
V. J. PKUUCK,
H. V. M. MILLBK.
M wTElLAND,
J. M. JOHNSON.
C H. PHINfEY.
i. Is OB BOO.
A H. COLQUITT.
J.l HAMILTON.
B H. COWAN.
ricox.
Atlavta, GU.. Wy M. Mfl.
I of the •toefchoidsce and Directors of tbs Atlanta Department of the Houthern
■fiBtii, la oooogd—» wtth Mo ——< kmtm <*«Ho
IS radon. Stockholder, end rulloj-liolden. lira! Ike baalueee of
-Joera wltt •oodomr end tod theioor former con Odense
tie ebtlltj to furtueh to Dullcy-butor. „ ptoct enodriljr a. up In
CommitIm
A H. OOLQUIT. )
Is there any ]
Domosratioi
Or, we might pat
la the future for foe
its mission ended?
question in this
wins Is there nny piece in our Federal
politxue lor an Ojqxwitian party?—the
hsme 1* of seoondsry import
pieee of furniture which is only fit
lumber room. When it is ascertained,
in theoontee of human events, that
political party baa lost the canning which
wins victories, its mission is ended. To
stand on a dead platform may satisfy an
ootogon«rian, but it cannot satisfy tin
by the 16th am-
recognition of a single civil right 1 **
What are the usurpations of the Ku- — -
Klux Bill, oompared to this frllost of
all blows at the very citadel of Pub
lic Liberty?
Now we advise and oounael no
forcible resistance to any of these
usurpations. We advise obedience to
them so long as they have the forms
of law os judicially expounded and
enforced by thoee iu authority,
clothed with power to execute them.
But we do insist, that iu denouncing
the latter and later of these usurpa
tions, the roioe of the imople shall
not He silenced against the former and
. We moreover much mere
that the people shall not he
it to believe or assert for any
gad plat
. IfrW It
of the generation who are hi the
prime of Ufa.
If the Democratic party is merely to
keep the Held as sa Organised Minority,
it were aa well to oeaao oppoaitioo at
onoe.
H we should keep together a party at
the South, organised ou the basis of the
Bight of Seoeaaton, to be formally ma-
ncBuvered in every political conflict, the
absurdity would strike every one. If we
should re-organise a pro-slavery party hi
the country, to maroh up to the polls at
S election, and go through the for-
of voting, the emptiness of the
lure would merely provoke derision.
If, then, there is no reasonable hope
that the Democratic party, standing on
the taaoeaof 1888, can break the Betmb-
Uoan Una, if, after etetevea yearn at de
feat, their dieeomfltare can be easily fore
seen in the next President*! emotion
on the same issues, then, sad in this
ease, people will beoome disgusted with
theee mook-oonfliote, and will feel that
the sooner we have done with them the
batter.
The question is, Are there any misting
practical iasoea between the Republican
and lbs Democratic parties? Is there
any antagonism oa vital points which in
terest and oommand the attention of the
masses? Or, baa the Democratic party's
“oocnnation irone/’*
Hays the Chicago Tribune, one of the
ablest Republican papers in the oouatry.
“It is the tatdemy ot the Kn-Klnx bill,
“rather than the bill itaeU, or the caeca-
“Uon of it, which gives foroe to the as-
“saolto of the Democracy. This taaden-
“oy is towards the obAterkticin of States
•<and the oeetralisation ot all powers at
“Washington, after the French model of
••govarnment” It mentions tha Con-
gromtnaal election law as “another of tha
signs of this tendency,” and intimatae
that the transformation which this legis
lation foreshadows will never reoeive the
sanotien of the people.
And as that able Demoeratle paper, the
8t Louis Republican, says:
The oooatitational question before the
people, then, ie not whether a State has
s right to aeaede or to nullity aa act of
Congress—that was deoided, in fact, by
the lata war—bnt whether a State has any
rights which the Nation*! Government
Kay not St the pleasure set aside. When
a oentral govarnment begins to appropri
ate the powers Of surrounding States oi
provinces, it never, of its own aeoord.
ocean from the proaaaa. It oontiaoee
the encroachment, if nareeiatml, until it
has became imperialised and the States
reduced to outlying dependencies.”
There b the issue in a nutshell, u
there anything left worth fighting for ?
Hai centralisation
l became a^fail accompli
> tha raroiattow which is
the right of access! os
‘ the right
.SUV*
baa been lost by tha war, and tha right
of suffrage to the negfo has been secured
, does that end the
ntral Government
The Republican party b tty no
through with its programme. Raima at
the alaolata deetruotioo of the Statea.
By the enfproeaeeat act* it has appropri
ated to the Federal Government the
war to regulate and conduct elections
_ the States. By the Kn-Klax MB it
hoe not only authorised the President,
at hh til, to suspend tha writ of habeas
corpus, tret it has appropriated to the
Federal courts, as declared by the Maw
York Tribune, nearly tha euUre criminal
jartadtatten of the States. Senator Wil
son, of KamaChuaetta. has warmty urged
the assumption by the Federal Govern
ment of the control of the education of
the children of the country. The Wash'
lugtau Circaiolahas duos the anmatluug.
A mil has bean Introduced inteUeagrem
with fob ohiast.
Kfoe Democratic party eaoM arrest
foe program of these foaagmia the
-hmrVr of Um Government, it woo Id
Imrt Aooomplifohfod a work 6f immonwe
ranra. .wrar, lira ^1*. £S“ iJhSTiirLfXa
usnrpations have been nothing but'Whether tha Damoesattc party, mesa
acts of settlements of question • grew- tetmMaUdfoc pari foauMta W foejj
out of the war or its results; and Pbfo nesii tpmwiahty aa foa pmtiorm m
above all we insist Aat these usur
pations shall never be leoogtumd by
the people at the polls, aa a »Uk*<
rm nt of any question “in the
j up a position to oommand tha ear
of the Northern masses, they shall obtain
tha direction of publio affaire, revivify
foe Constitution, and preserve the auton
omy of foe States and foe great prinojple
of weal self-government
This answers foe question whether the
mission of the Democratic party haeend-
ed. We most not indulge foe illiberal
fancy that the events of oar day have en
ded the ameer of humanity. We live ia
an age of revolutions The atmosphere
of the whole world b charged with revo-
fom. Venerable system* that have en
dured fur ages are falling to piece*; and
fteroar shook* than we have yet witaeemd
are, perhaps, in (tore for Europe, Asia
and I mari na
It b not wise to retro vert our gaze too
long. If there are any accomplished
tacts, the sooner we strike onr teats and
“move on” foe better. While we are
maundering over foe question of State
sovereignty the Republican* are snuffing
oat the Btata* themselves. White we me
balking over the question whether we
shall nave any wine for dinner they are
etoebtg du dtnittg^oom.
We have recalled a crisis; we have got
to get foe possession of the government,
or to go under altogether, and close up.
If tha Democratic party meets one more
defeat, it is, at least, doubtful whether it
will oontinne as an organized force any
longer. The eclat of ever-reoarring de
feats will be hard to shake oft, after one
more disoomfiture. And it that organi
sation should be broken up—what then?
Where will State Rights be Man—when
foe only hope left will be the gradual dis
integration of the Repabiioan party, both
wing* ot which are as ignorant of tha
Madisonian theory of onr Government aa
foe Communists of England are of the
British constitution. Aa Patrick
•aid, « must fight—and when w*
oor barite, it must not be wifofoa
Hlieieliancos Hbocrtisrimirnte.
NOnOH.
WHIM *MD ATUVTJO h. b. i
Ju.j 3d, 1871. )
JOSEPH B. MOWN,
National Hotel Sales.
rriBZPTVX S1LLUBD TABLE* WILL Ut SOLD
1- tatnnlajr, JULY IK. at 17 H.
of seeking foe crown of martyrdom;
with foe levies and foe enfoi *
are the earnest of victory.
that
One of the New York Herald’s Bo
hemians says, in his late “interview”
with Chief Justioe Chose, that the
following question was propounded
and the succeeding answer given:
T have heard some Republicans, Mr.
Ohtef Josttoe, my that had Vallandigham
lived, ha would probably have some over
to foe Repabiioan organisation What
da yon think of it?"
“Oh, no. foal’s a great mistake All
the Republican* he wanted would have
oome over to him. Theca weald have
an noaaearioa for him going to them."
Very sensible and pertinent reply,
isn’t it? SquiBBu.
Democratic Cist at CampMl
Cweuaty.
The Fairbum Sentinel informs us
that a Democratic olub was recently
organised in that place for the pur
pose of correctly representing the true
politicnl sentiments of the people of
that county upon the preaeut admin
istration of our State and National
Governments, os well os to correct the
misrepresentations of political ene
mies of the Democracy of Campbell.
To complete the orgodization of the
dabs throughout tho county they
have invited a citizen’s meeting at
the Court House, on Tuesday next,
to-morrow. The following names are
atttached to the resolutions adopted
at the first meeting
E. C. Mobley, S. G. Johnston, T.
W. Latham, K Floyd, S. J. Johnston,
T. T. Bohauan, G. J. Cochran, W. B.
Swann, W. P. Davis, W. M. Bartlett,
I. W. Carter, 0. A. Cantyeri, L S.
Roan.
Ok. G. Goooran, /
i. G. Lister, Chairman.
Secretary.
JunflMt
N. R. FOWLER,
AMlgnM.
A CALL
FOR A CONVENTION
OF THE
RBGl'LAR PHYSICIANS OF GEORGIA.
F KOM AN intbbohanob of
opinion* with the ohlent Medic
» Urge number ot the moot pro mu
in the Htete, it it beliefed the! it in oeeinoie ui*t a
Convention of the Reguinr Phyaicaiua Of Oeorgie
•hook! he held ftteomo nultnhle tlm« end piece, to
•zpreae the views of the Profession st Urge as to the
notion of the Ue| meeting of the Georgia Medical
Association in reversing the judgment passed at
1870^ in relation to the AtUnU
to elicit suoh an anthoriteur# expreaalon «»i opinion
aa would eerve as a guide to the *' next meeting of
the UeurgU Medical Association, to be held in Co
lumbus, <*a-. whereby all questions portainiug to tiie
Atlanta Median! Collage shall be dattuitely ami.Anal-
Uv settled.”
i, hereby respectfully
and invite the preeenoand co o,.,-ration of all the
regular Parslcians of the Stale who are desirous of
the dignity ahd honor of the Medieni
J. B. Boon, M. D. R. D. Arnold, M. IX
Wm. B. Burgees, M. D. W. G. Bullofh, M. D.
7. G, Oastlen, M. D. Thos. J. Chariton, M. D.
B. Piugeraid, M. D. W. M. Chartors. It. D,
Jns- Mercer Green,If
Chan. H. Hall, M. D.
D. W. Hanutu
J. L. Baffle, ]
Geo. N. Holmes, M. IX Judah Harris, M- h.
Wm. T. HoK, K. D. John M. Johnson, M. D.
0. W, Johnson. M. D. P. M. kqlloek. M. 1>.
A. L. 0. Magruder. M. D. G. J. Bollock. M. D.
KSShS-Xn. i:&aSS4*o. D ’
S3SW
Dnvia, M. D. K. J. Nunn. M. D.
W. P. Jennings. M. D. J. K. Newman. M. D.
tu snaf*’ H’fSSJScV
Eobrat BKU,. U D. A J.men aaS.DL (
THOMAaxoM, uiwom oo. W. a. dpenoe, M. L.
MiO.DwM.ILD. J. A Nnhlvnn. M. D.
OOLUWBUS. H. F. Sheftsll. M. D.
W. H. Btlttag, M. D. • Thornes natth. M.D. <
T. F. Brewster. M. D. J. D. Thomas, M. D.
B. L. dsGraflsnmid. M. D. W. A. Waring, Mi D.
a f. deGraflenretd. M. D. Keaton Yonge, M. D.
John *. Mesen, M. D. omm. *a.
Wm. K. Schley. M. D. M. J. DenieL M. D.
MMumow. AA. B. F. Knott. M. D“
WrSfSaxVa -&US9BAF-
OAWOOOHBK, OA. WtUJU)«KTLLIJ(.
C. Ia. temple. M. D. Oherfes M. Bees, M. D.
nniMuninLLs, ua. Wsocge D. Owe, M. D.
Henry 8. Smith. M. D. Wm. M. Hell. M. d.
w.^SJ^d. t2GS%S&7.t:»
vassal D - ■
loTSSXh-h.
W. T. ■aUtSVraurth, sdj.S - .
e-sEMshLS-u- e. h. a»Tmi s. d.
ATLAMfA, OA. taVlHaTOW, OA.
Sr'CRAIG’S
B. J. Pelmer, M. D. Wm. Taylor, M U
Chns. Pinckney, M. D. ^ mbWnan,
ZtSSSL&j*, tSSST^
B. J. Boech. M D.
IRON WORKS,
Head of Third St., Sign of “The New Ping.”
MACON, GEORGIA,
THE LARGEST IN THE SOUTH!
Skilled Labor and Modern Machinery.
aii Worls. Warranted.
Northern Prices for Machinery Duplicated.
STE.un Avrcircx or J.rr Hi.ro jur» size.
FlmMagie Improved Circular Saw .Will, .Iferchant MUI Hearing,
mass approved kinds: sugar Mills and Syrup Kettles) Iron
fronts. H'indow Sills and Lintels ; Castings of Iron
and Ur ass of Every Description, and Machtne-
ry of all kinds TO ORDER,
IRON RAILING,
REPAIRING IN ALL
ITS BRANCHES !
any section of
Competeut Workmen furnished upon application to overhaul Engines, tew Mills, etc.,
the couutry.
FINDLAY’S SAW -DUST ORATE BAR
SHOULD BE IJJED BY EVEBY SAW-HILL I'ltOPMETOE.
Millriunre, Britlng, Circular Saw*, Steam Flttlaga, Babbit Metal, etc., etc.
FURNISHED TO ORDER. TERMS, CASH OR APPROVED PAPES.
R. FINDLAY'S SONS, Macon, Ga.
K THE GREAT
ECLIPSE SCREW COTTON PRESS!
Patented Feb’y 27, 1871, by Findley At Craig.
An ANn-FIUOTlON HI’KKW—A MECHANICAL WONDER. This wonderful Meohenkel achievement in
polntof RAPUMTY aud LlGHTNE-iH of DRAUGHT, STANDS WITHOUT 4 RIVAL, end ia destined at an
early day to nuiKiteode ALL OTHER Cotton Screwa, be they fhbrioat»d of Wrought <ar Oast Iron.
CoukPABonnn. Ga., December >1* 1870.
R. FINDLAY’S SONS, Findlay 1 a Iron Works. Karon. Oa.:
Dkab Sue* Late thin tall 1 purchased from you one of your Findlay k Orelg Rrlipee Patent Rorew Cot-
full end fair trial, do not UcMitato to prunouuce It (lie moot rapid, of lightest
planter ahodlu nso your Press. ' JOHN 1_
P. S.—Ton rasv consider my order in for two more of the above Preaaca for next acaeon. and nmg look
for mauy orders from tin* section • iny ne<ghl>ora are determined to have them, me they can pa k by hand
twioe as fast at any of the other Iron I irew Press** can by horse power. J. £. G.
Since last fell, and before ocoepllug Patent, we added impi-ovAiuents and labor-saving conveuisnoes—
rendering it PLHFKOT in every particular The soruw or pin, h«s a pitch. Of fail, ef inches ; that Is,
*t hvery turn or thu scrw, follower block diwcouds (or ascends, as tha esse mg)' bnl 614 Intihm The de
vice of the tube or uut in which the screw work-*, is such ss to in ate 1 i u lly redact) tiie friction, eo great In the
screw ; thereby rend ring it an easy task for three hands to pack a bide of cotton In HALF THE
_ mon arrow ; thereby
TIME OF ANY OTH K it Iron Screw Press l.y horsepower. (8ok J, I,. (Mtha t’a apt) iflonUJ Whan dssira-
ble. an ordinary mule ra • be mu list 1 tub'd for three m«n without change of fixtures. HTRXNOTM, OTRA-
IUUTY. ltAi’Ij)!IT, LIGHT DRAUGHT. a»ul STANDING KOOV* atop or box. eke , eke . in abort, we pro
nounce It the dent Screw Press IN TfTK WORLD, aud reapeetRilly invite a public last with any and ail
other Hotww Presses. To purchaesrs wa GUARANTEE MAIT8PAt?TT0N Or RRFUNt) PRIOKMONEY.
^■vi\ wig puli‘k 1 y,ryr XTKC.
It. FINDLAY’S SONS, Mooon, Oa.
-:o:-
*. M. p.
^ MUM, OA.
J. A. HunnicuU. M. D.
Tuaanmouam. ua.
D. E. Gay. M. D.
K. W. lane. M. R.
7. T. Pendleton. M. D. A. R. Wailaca, M. D.
ApidicatWa has Uew mads ko the OMeme of tbs ra-
aowvamy er allowing rgyiinui apsiwiy In* Cow
'
Orarrte SWww fC JL—foeri.
ing Called UR Mh Jtafg.
OYFICE OEOBOIAWEggjRE B. ROO. ^
A >*SwS*c a m. twN at Dimur. crabs
Hu qrararajWiq tbSSesta* MloWag naMuto*
jy-afrv-yw
i watoa Msomi te wr+Hi
Sfns HksntiscweMM.
rpziT»
STORE ROOM,
HowowapMtrXX. MtMWMl to*
hv#*y dssirahis
RESIDE WC®,
t&s&&arz'tx£j3£
6mm iWNk BN.
IMLP MPTM, wile o(f.
G* oi p. a. Bit m. (her
iSjvStivstS
Si§SmP:
NOTICB,
fyug.^s.gjgay^gxa
otFaMomOsssSf. vKta ptaMCtaS la Ora ******
a into *otra. ni.nrarai.ra wa.bat*
PATENT HORSE POWER,
FOB DRIVINO COTTON OINH.
r yet invented. Requires no Wood Work. Mrls upon the ground, and
-iot a Me banic ^p
or Money Reflinded.
Hattelatlon Guiirnntood
I SEED YuK ILLl’^TUATED CIRCULAR. .
R. FINDLAY’S SONS, M«oan, G»-
TUo New Pormble Ntontn Fngfne
For Driving OoUnn Gins, mating Pros ass, and for any purpose requiring from ou# to ten bores power.
5 ? t I B
1 ^ 11 1 I
... . ■ 2
TUSMrw
Jiwmvk PMo ncmoN \gainrt BRPTaision. It 4a a natural “spark arrmter." as NO
A thNln dm JW ^ NO MATTRR WHAT FUEL IH UriKl>—an imp >rt* I • onridsmtkm in ootbm glu-
r 9 iring uni -iinils- wo.k. Award** 1 rt, t prv mmme by Am erican losilhite tfs.'J-TO. fiend tor Detcripuv#
m, n lMkn) 1 Oirrulai vid Pries l.mt.
R. IL umm<^ fKv*vyd i u Old claias wen ordsii.
a. FINDLAY’H BOMB,
r
LEE & HIGHTOWER
Wi iflftin -' - i - Ga.
livehy and sale stables,
to**raa‘iralra«a**araMd. >l <rai*ra* toaatt'a.rjl'! A abTOIVimifl B A T.T!
rL».i2221a “frr’, *> nm* ***.*.
VA '-^ _ sr is Mm JOs
a. j. ki r>i».
Kju Mdtey\.'st
ISm
■—* rilraiciWlo fora a —^ iW
■i
Isms IT Is UssSrsftot'
»PHI* «**!«• n,.« I vUl ratt, pnrara-it u-
«ra*«« -ara* ra. a«a 0. a aararara uaat
tunWouamBctotosottn, , .
u Oa Monday .Homing,
eOmUBd mttawwemr at Rwtlsrand Harris streme,
ln-thaatty at AHantn. oomfiaHnc at tha home and
hk e Thl ■ fhe—a er thesrim M puhMaouL
rewhuthskegheriVtii 1. Tetmsoarh.
^r. R. HAMMOND, Assigns#.
MKIT TO THA OHO GIA HOTXL,
BUGGIER PHd&TONHaad CABR1
Will send pas««ng*rpto Indian ftprng, Ckallebi
ata Hpruigs. and to any potnt ia reach of OrUtn. by
privalc conveyance.
Gnfltn U oovt-nlent to Oa shove named places,
and! vUlUke pleasure in eernag thorn darirlag ke
junclS tf •