The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873, August 22, 1871, Image 3

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THE DAILY SUN. Tuesday Morning August 22. frtf New Advertisements altrays founu oh First Faye ; Local tout Jlusiness Notices on Fourth Faye. Sl T N -STROK KS. “Money ia ft queer institution,” says an exchange. Yes, there are some kinds of money known os “Queer.” iictr One hundred and forty-one now XutionalBauks are all that the country has heeu able to organize this year so far. B6L It is strange how some people will impose upon inoffensive children. — Colfax addressed a Sunday school in Min neflota lately. tdF “General Banks has gone to En gland fur health and recreation;’’ after which he ought to go to the Fejee Is lands for the benefit of his morals. They come r That when fog* are thick*c_ The mackerel fisher* shorten —ti r °r the signal they know wiU bring relief,- F.» r the voices of children still at play In a phantom hulk that drifted away Through channel* whose water* ucvoi It i* but a foolish shlpman's tale. A tin-uie fur poet's idle page. But still when the mists of time prevail. And we lie becalmed hy tho shore of Age. We hear from the misty trouble! shore The voice of the children goue before, Brewing the soul to its anchorage. WL The Harrisburg (Pa.) State-Journal quotes, approvingly, “Ambition makes fools of us all.” What an ambitious fel low the editor of the State-Journal must be l 1ft .The Courier-Journal exclaims, there no hand on high to shield the brave!” Of course there is; but it is not surprising that the O.-J. is not advised of that fact; since it is in no wise entitled to such protection. The Courier-Journal is “willing to smoke the calumet with the Bourbons.” No doubt of it; but are the Bourbous willing ? It is probable that they will first demand “works meet for repen tance,” M^ Collector Casey, of New Orleans, is Grant’s brother-in-law, and was once a 4 ‘copperhead” Democrat. It may be said of Democrats, as “Bill Arp” once said of Virginians, when one does fall lie hills far and he falls hard. Eft, The Baton Rouge Gazette and Comet has a good deal to say about “sore head Bourbons.” At the head of the ed itorial column of that paper is a para graph offering the whole establishment for sale. A gentleman in a neighboring city writing to a friend in this city, says “Ain’t we giving the slack wads the d—1 about their little slink movement! Every time I read Mr. Stephens’ editorials, I exclaim mentally and reverently, ‘d—n it, how he nicks ’em!’ ” Bcff* The Courier-Journal says: “The five-column flashes in Thb Atlanta Sun are said to l>e due to the Alecktricity iu the concern, but,they are not particularly enlightening.” The babblings in the Courier- Journal .are only those of water, but they were uot particularly dampening to Democratic prospects io Kentucky during the late elections. The New York World asks: “Can the President declare war ?” His broth- ers-in-laws can, it seems; else wbatgright hud they to order two companies of in fantry and those Utmni —— «» to New Orleans, to assist them in defend ing a Radical Convention against Radical opjMtsition ? The Courier Journal says: “The Dem ocratic party, the Democratic tqgnniza- tiou, the Democratic office-holders ought to 1)0 grateful for what they got of us. No doubt they would all be more thnu grateful if the C.-J. hud given them half the cause to be grateful that it gave Hurhui and the other Radicals. Swayze, of the American Union, gives his idea of who ought to be Radical leaders in this State during the coming oamp&ign by making the following nom inations: “For Vice President of the United States, Rufus B. Bollock ; Gov ernor of Georgia, James Johnson; for Chairman of the State Central Commit tee, Ben. H. Hill.” Ift.Jennic June (Mrs. Croly) pops the following question, in one of her recent letters: “What is the use of women trying to disguise themselves by bustles and bust*, and hips and calves that arc hung at every shop window; they are patent to every man and boy who walks tho streets as to women themselves; they teach everybody a lesson of distrust of his own mother before he has learned to have confidence iu her.” Auswers solicited from the ladies. Tho public want to be informed upon the subject. It is a mat ter in which all men, especially prospec tive husbands, feel an interest. *a-"Th« new departure of Ike Mlllkritet is mh far Ike third of next month." The Cvurtfr-Jonrna El harrowed on.- of HerUu's sbirUM an "-oe°- ZSSEirZ** reedy to Join the new departure. 1 ha garment just Sts.—Annate The Courier-Journal man will not wear Harlan’s shirt on that interesting occa sion. He would be in imminent danger of slipping out through one of the but ton holes.—Ijouisrille ledger. It was expected tint Harlan would “ta»r biaiUirt” when the election returns l,egwn to come in. but no one would have ■appobod Unit the rent, would he no Urge. However, it may be that the Courier Journal haa grown very small to Kentucky Democratic eyes. . * f The forthcoming September number o the AtUudic MoiUJUi/ will contain the fol lowing new poem from the pen of Bret Harto : A GBKYPOBT LEUlND. 1TV7. Thf coif M»f<4( U»»» cam* whitening dowu Tmwwuwl Ouo.1 can«c to.f»rl iu i Ue hulk that lay by the rutting pier, k ill. d with the children in happy pUy. Parted IU mooring* and drifted dear. Drifted clear, heyoud reach or cal - Thirteen chtldrcu thera were iu aU- All adriit iu the lower bey! Said a hard-faced skipper. •• G‘*l help u» M! She will hot tt»at Uli Uic turning Ud« • Said hia wuo. •• My darling will hear wy W heth SPEECH OF EX-GOV. 1IUOW BE Foil E THE AURICULTU- RAL CONVENTION AT ROME ON THE I1TII DAY OF A IT GUST. The Culture of Clover and tho Grasses. Best Fertilizer—Hillside Ditch- ing—Stock Raising. f Bus.] Mr. President : I rise for the purpose of seconding—which I do most heartily— the resolution of thanks to Dr. Jones, for the very instructive and practical address which he lias just delivered on the cul ture of clover and grasses in Green coun ty. It had been fully demonstrated, by previous experiments and practice, that clover and almost any of tho grasses grow well in all the section above Atlanta to the Tennessee and North Carolina lines but it was still regarded ns a matter of doubt, whether it could bo profitably grown us low down as Green county. The experiments of Doctor Janes, how ever, settle that question beyond further caviling, and it is no doubt true that clo ver and the other grasses may be profita bly grown us low down as the red or clay lands extend. The result of the Doctor’s experiment is truly astonishing, as the csll, And she lifted s quavering vote* and high, W lid Mill alfllip MI — ***'••?. 101 Um? sliO0d*r«u »oO wondered O her mine. The fug drove dowu on each laboring cr*w. Y«-iU-d cm b iron* «wl» s«»d the *ay and •**■». There wu b oi * sound but the bre^h th*y drew. Aud the tep of water and «*«nA of Mrs And they felt Uie breath of the downa. frwh yield is one of the largest I have ever heard of. On my best river bottom, in Cherokee, I had never mode but little over three tons to tho acre in one year, weighed when dried mid ready for the market; uud this I have regarded a very fine crop. Indeed, it takes our best lands up the country to produce tliat quantity. METHOD OF CULTIVATING CLONES. I am satisfied our people uro neglecting their best interests, whenever they neg lect to cultivate largely of grasses, or it is scarcely any labor to make the grass crop, and it is the most available crop made on the land when produced. A word as to the mode of sowing mid cultivating it. I have never, in u single instance, failed to get a good stand when I have sowed in. March with outs. I prepare my land thoroughly, then sow tne oats and plow them in, and, after they are plowed in when I would be ready to leave the field if I only intended to make un oat crop, 1 sow down the clover seed upon the fresh plowed land, at the rate of a bushel of clean seed to six oerffs mid brush them in with a brush cut in the woods near by, having a heavy top, which mokes n light load of two horses, running over, cover ering the seed, and leveling the ground, as our fathers formerly did their tur nip patches. A bushel to six or seven ucres is more seed than is usually put upon land, but I have found it in tho ciul much the cheapest to put on enough seed to be sure to get a good stand the first year. Some object to covering it with brush mid say it does just as well to sow it on wheat, or even on land un prepared, and leave the seed on tho top &,&£,‘SGcIi 1 WySfflRd !K9F,°“ solved in n very rainy time, this will do, bnt take one year with another and risk the season and it is entirely too uncer tain. It is said that the brush covers part of the seed too deep and they do not come up, and that we thereby waste seed. This may be true, hut it leaves a proper quantity the proper deptli under the ground, and when it comes up, having some depth of earth, the root is uot so easily killed by the hot sun as it is when the seed is on the top of the ground. I find it, therefore, decidedly best to brush it iu. Besides it leaves the ground level and in good order for mowing. The oat crop is the one to he looked to for that year, as we do uot exi>ect a crop of clover the first year; and you should uot pasture the land the first year, unless you do so very late, say the latter part of Septem ber or the first of October. Of an ordinary season, the clover will, the year it is sowed, grow up a considera ble height, before frost, if the land it good; and with i| will lie a good coat of crab-gross and a consider able crop of weeds. Just before frost, I put my two-horse mower in and cut all this down, and dry it, and stock it, aud it makes a Hue crop of liny. The stock will eat all the young clover and the crab- grass, aud eveu the tops of the rug weeds, when they are cut green nud dried with the hay. But not the least benefit from this course is the fine order iu which your laud is left for mowing in the Spring.— If you do not cut down the grass and weed crop io the Fall, you will find, in the Spring, that the large dry weeds are very much in your way, and it will be necessary to ornploy bauds to gather them and pile tlifim out of the wuy, before you cau reap your crop of clover. CnOVRH AS A WtBTtUSfEB. Iu reference to the quality of luud best adapted to its growth, I state that, iu my opinion, it doea llest upon stilt black, rich river bottom, which needs no manure to make a good crop. If you put it on uplands, aud expect a good crop, you must manure your laud well before you sow; and wheu it is ouoe set with clover, if you cultivate it properly, you may keep it perpetually rich. If you have poor lauds and wish to enrich them with clo ver. you must turn over several successive crops iu the green state, giving them to the land, and, it you have the patience, in this way you cau soon improve it until it will produce a good crop for use, aud may then keep your laud rich tor the fu ture. But you need not expect 11 heavy crop of clover on poor land, any more it,.„ you may expect a heavy crop uf any other sort. THI QUALITY or LAKD SUITED FOB CUIVBB. And, iu this connection, I wish to nay a few words ns to the value of the clover crop as a manure. Wo have heard here a very interesting discussion oil the sub ject of commercial and domestic, or harn- lard manures, during which many very valuable suggestions aud interesting state- ments have been made. My judgment, however, is that the clover is the best of all fertilizers. It enriches the land, and coulinnes to keep it rich, if you con- linne to alternate the clover with other crons, or to run it a considerable portion of time in clover. The first two acres which I sowed in river bottom in Chero kee county, as an experiment, was Bowed iu the imthllo of a corn field, that it might be sure uot to be postured the first year. With the clover I sowed some longer than the clover. The latter should be plowed up evory third year. Tho Hoard’s Grass might bo continued indefi nitely, were it not that briers, broom sedge aud other wild growth, will spring np end compel you to eulUrate tho luud to get rid of them. Iu the Fall of the fifth year I had tho two acres above re ferred to turned under with a two-hors# turning plow, and I afterwards s .wed it, us I did the corn land around it iu wheat The following Spring, when tho wheat was about maturing, you could see tho difference to the very row, from a very considerable distance. That where tho clover had been was from twelve to eigh- teen inches higher than that around it The next year it was cultivated in corn, and the tenant informed rue that he could shut his eyes before ho came near the place aud tell by the looseness of the ground, the moment the plow struok tho part that had been in clover.— Tho corn crop was decidedly better on the clover land than on the same quality of the land around it which hod been in wheat the year before. The third year, which was the last summer, tho field was again sowed in wheat and I could have carried you into the edge of the wheat field and said “Two acres of this has been in clover,” and asked you to point it out to me, without my indicating tho place, and you could have showed me, to the very row, where the clover had been, as the wheat ou that part was deci dedly taller and looked better every way. Tho effect of the |clover, therefore, has been uot only visible, but very marked for three years after tho crop liad been turned under. HILLSIDE DITCHING AND DRAINING. We have heard somo very interesting statements here, on the subject of hill side ditching and dr&inugfe. In my opi nion, the very best hillside ditch that cau be made in this climate, is made of clover and grasses and deep plowing. If you will plow your lands deep, and keep your hillsides in clover and grass, and use them mostly as pasturage for your stock which will pay you better than any other crop you can put upon them, you will have no use for hillside ditches aud the deep plowing and the clover and gross ’ill prevent aoy wash. REPROACH TO THE PEOPLE OF GEORGIA. I desire to state a fact here which is really a shame to the people of Georgia. The records of the W. & A. Railroad show that there was imported over tho road into the ritate, during the six months from tho first of January to the first of July, in TJund numbers, 83,000 boles of hay. This was worth about #200,000. If the same quantity should be imported for the last half year, it will be, say 60,600 bales, or #400,000 worth. Every pound of this should be grown in middle and upper Georgia, aud if our friends who raise cottou iu the sandy lands should de sire any hay, we should certainly furnish it to them. I trust our people will wake up to this subject. Not only should we raise all our own hay, but we should raise our own stock. Where we have our lands set with grass, we cau do this easily and cheaply. As an illustration—I keep upon my farm neither a mule nor a horse to aid iu doing the work, but I work mares entirely, and I have a jack and raise mule colts. Lost Fall, in No vember, I was on my plantation in Gor don county, and my manager, Capt. Fin ley, asked me how ho should treat the colts. I told him to turn them into the bottom laud upon a.clover field where we had mowed it for the winter, and let them mu there as long as it would sup port them, aud then give them a plenty of hay and some corn, if necessary, for the balance of the winter. The Fall had been a favorable one and the clover was a very considerable height and thick over the ground. The winter was wet about ^Christmas. The result was that there was enough clover for them to feed upon all the Winter. I again visited the farm the first of March, and went with Captain Finley to sec my colts, and found them in good growing order, doing well, aud he told me he had not fed them a ear of corn, during the whole Winter, and that they had run there upou the clover field and had had nothing else, ex cept that they had probably eaten about half a cart load of my seed clover, under shelter. This was cut when it was rath them in good order a id work them all summer. CLOVER AS PASTURAGE EOR HOGS. This is not confined to cattle or horses. A olover field is a most excellent place for your hogs. I set apart a field for that purpose, and have now from 130 to 140 Logs upon it, and they have been doing well all summer, with scarcely any corn. When the weather is very wet, the best plan is to move them off from it, to prevent them from rooting up the land. They will graze on tho green clover all the while, and it is an excel lent food for them. The cheu;>entway to make moat in tho up country is to have a good clover pasture for your hogs, and after you cut your small grain iu the summer, turn them iu for a time and pasture them thera Taking the two together, you need feed them very little com until August or September. Then as soon as your corn is in roasting ear, fenoe off a small piece at a time (for which Mr. Charles Wallace Howard’s portable fence, a model of which is now before the convention, would bo ver convenient), turn them upon it, or cut / and throw it to them, stalk aud all.— They will eat the ear and chew up the cob, the stalk and fodder, and it is all nutritions. Yon will find it will start them off to thriving, growing and fatten ing as fast as dry corn, aud they get a great deal more out of the stalk, includ ing tho fodder, ear, Ac., than they do out of u dry ear of com. Iu this way they may be carried on until corn-gathering time, and then feed them a short time upon dry corn, uud they are ready for the butcher. dry and hard for hay, when the seed got ripe, and they uid not like it, aud indeed they did not need it.— They aro now going on two years of age, and I do not suppose they know what com is. A mule colt, oe a clover farm, I find costs me less than a bull yearling to raise it HOW TO OBTAIN SEED. A word now on the subject of seed.— Until last year I have been buying my seed each successive year, from Ken tucky, because I did not wish to have the trouble of cleaning the seed. Last sum mer I had the second crop ou ten acres set apart for seed. I let it stand until the 8tN*d was ripe and had it mowed as I would mow liny, and hauled it up and put it under n shelter. In the spring when I wished to sow, I had it thrown out with forks upon the hard ground near the barn, and a couple of hands took Hails, such os our fathers formerly used in threshing wheat, and a few licks would beat off all the podl from a considerable bed of it. That was thrown asido and another portion thrown down, and hy continuing in the same way I had the seed thrashed off of the entire quantity. With the seed which grew off the ten acres, I sowed about sixty acres, the past spring, afid got an excellent stand. It was sowed ii) the rough seed chaff and all together, from seven to bushels to the acre, on fresh plowed land, so went in oats and brushed iu, as already stated in the the case of clean seed. The seed off of ten acres, if I had purchased it from Kentucky, would have cost mo about #100. I therefore recommend every far mer, of tho first year, to save his own seed. Buy your seed and sow tho first few acres; then set apart a portion of the second crop of each year for seed, an l save it uud prepare it and sow as above stated, and you will havo no ditticulty ul>out it You need therefore, after the first year, spend nothing for seed ; nor need yon 8])cnd any labor on the clover crop, oxcept tho simple labor of cuttiug and housing it. Thin is certainly much letter, under the present labor system, than our old habit of breaking up our land, planting corn and cultivating it all summer, and pulling fodder and th«i gathering the corn, hauling it up, shucking it and throwing it into the crib and carrying it out in our arms in baskets, and throwing it to our stock. lustead of all this labor, sow your hillside lanes, such as you caunct well mow, turn your stock upon it in the summer, and, uuless iu case of drought, they will do well upon it all summer, without any of your labor. Set apart some of your load, bottom if you have it, to mow; cut and save the crop there, now TO TURN A CROP UNDER. Before I conclude, a word more iu refer- ence to turning under the clover cron. As already stated, you do not pasturo it the first year, and your fist crop is saved, the next spring after it is sowed.— That year you may mow it twice, and the next year twice. The third year, you should cut the first crop aud save it for hay, aud you should turn the secoad crop under with a two horse turning plow, giving it to tho soil, and either sow it iu wheat that fall, which is probably best, or cultivate it iu corn, the next spring. It should not stand more than three years, without being turned under, ns the fourth year’s crop will not bo a very good one, and the wild growth aud broom sedge will become trouble some by tho fourth hear. I may also remark that the first crop cut each year, which in Cherokee, Ga., is ready for tho mower about tho last of May, is much the best for hay. Tho second crop will make your horses slobber, though tho hay is very good for cattle. The proper time to mow the crop, is when it is in full bloom, and a few blooms, here and there, of tho earliest, aro beginning to fade, preparatory to ripening the seed. The old theory was to let it stand until a third or half the blooms were fading, but this is not the best, os the stalk becomes rather hard and the hay is not as good. If cut iu full bloom, w^en only hulf of the earliess blossoms are changing color, your hay will be more nutritious and better. Bnt I have already detained you too loug, Mr. President My object was not to make a speech, as I do uot care to do that further than to offer a few practical suggestions, the result of my own expe rience, If by any effort I can make, or you, or this Convention, we can wake up the people to the great importance of this subject, wo will not have labored in vain. I thank you and the Convention for the attentive hearing which you have given gro was put iu irons, aud remained un molested until the following night, when a party of unknown men demanded the kevs of tho jail from Moses Jones, the colored jailor, threatening him with vio lence if he refused. Tho keys were de livered, and in a short time a number of gunshots were heard. Morning disclosed the fuct that Frank Perry had been shot dead, thus relieving our already bankrupt State from the expenses of his trial, aud giving the villain no opportunity to cape. “A. »-»■* Another Ship Canal to tho East. Steamers bound to the bay of Bengal, via tho Suez (‘anal, after coaling at GaJle, are obliged to steam around the eastern side of Ceylon. If they could get through tho Gulf of Mannar, on tb~ western side of the famed spice island, aud which separates tho latter from the moiulund on the Carautic, they would save over three hundred and sixty miles. At present this cannot be done, owing to a liue of low rocks, called ‘‘Adam’s Bridge,” which stretch across tho chan uel, through which a vessel drawingmoro than ten feet cannot pass. To savo the long detour around the east of Ceylon it is propof(d to cut a ship canal through a sand bank near the mainland two hun dred uud fifty yards wide, and then through Tonitory Point, in the district of Madura, This improvement. It timated would cost but £90,000, and business COLLEGE 18 DEVOTED TO THE USSZTDL II O WES’S IMPROVED Lock-Stitch Sewing MAOHINBS ‘ A re world renowned for durability •ml Simplicity of miohin*!?, the perfection „ „Bio tensions, and the uuprtUeled wid* range ures aro also muds to show tlmt n very pprror “"“ ! ’ ,,m ‘ on ' ' •mull tonuge toll would pay good Interest' on tho investment. The New York Com-1 m , mercial Advert is. r nays that the expendi- XjXpOSitlOH UUlVCrSftllC ture required to make tho canal is so . _ small, ‘compared with the advmitag*, that private partiea in England are ready THE GRAND CROSS OF THI Li te commence the work immediately, or O'#".SSM’L'TorTr'STl^iaTi^ us soon as the government intimates its]chine. 8 unwillingness to undertake it. As this probably will uot be loug deferred, the work is likely to bo shortly u iderwuy, aud another important curtailment of time and space between the West and tho BoWG Sc Willfif Mftfihinft Orient be soon aeeomnlislind. I ® during the just year, being (hr In sxceaa of thoae of •uy other one patent. The growing appreciaUon of their characteristic by the intelligent people of tbla country ..i a— . ■ —- of the GEORGIA AEWS. Toney of opinion Saturday, when Halo drew a knife uud “ caned iu a way that all iu! mired. ” The Chronicle and Sentinel of Sunday says: On yesterday afternoon Richard Lu- zouby and Radford Perkins were brought to this city under arrest hy Sheriff Sto vall and Mr. Ilamsey, of McDuffie coun ty. It apiiears that several months ago, ou the thirteenth dav of last May, a negro man, numed Ephraim Giblies, was slightly cut in u difficulty near Thomson, and the two prisoners, together with two other residents of the county, wore charged with l>eing implicated in the affair. Some time afterwards Bullock is sued a loug proclamation, offering a re ward of three hundred dollars cash for the arrest of the parties, with evidence to convict them of the crime of ussuult with iutent to murder. Ou Friday night Messrs. Lazenby and Perkins were ar rested near Thomson. As there wits no jail iu tliis county they were brought to the Augusta jail for safe keeping until they cun have a preliminary examination. They are arrested under a warrant issued by Judge Gibsou. Judge of the Augusta Orient be soon accomplished. It is said that ground acorns and horse ohestnuts enter into tho composition of a | Moro thau ONE THOUSAND of these ex- large portion of tho cheap macaroni and ^Hent machlnt-H are in dally uae iu Georgia, and of vermicelli maimfnctnreil in New York. ^ i»Ti3 * c *“ 3 * M “ ufcc ' Alvin Adams, the founder of the ex- ^TTe%wmT press business iu this country, who was a Or AiOCiL m OLltCIl |>OOr man thirty years ago, now resides which haa the same beautiful appearance on either in Watertown, Moss., and is one of the •! doof llte fabrls eewed, and they arc the only wa- wealthiest men in New England. I ch,n ” thMt maku thl< bt * uUfaI perfection, Tho Princes Joachim and Aolmio, sons i corner of Broad and Alabama’atreeta7 if yoii ut of Lucien Murat, who have been released pn-Judiced in favor of any particular machine, at from imprisonment, havo goue to Ver- ?. ,owo bef ?[ # porchsee. 1*- ... , x .1 , n . .. | n»*inoflr that Mr. Howe was the original 1 sallies uml placed themselves at the Ills- the Bowing Machine, and gave twoiity y position of tho French Government. I*° perfecting tide machiuo. 1 | Every Howo Machine la The sun, shining through a slightly convex pane of glass, ignited a box I UTorrnnf aH fnr A Vao matches in a house iu Canandaigua, N. I IUi O X fiftTs Y., a few afternoons since. I constant use by the Company, aud la kept always in Tho English divines engaged iu revis-1 iwfsctorder by the Company, ing tbo New Testament have held their Pu rcU.«.r. .ro thorough), iu.tn.ct«a.iu..ir eleventh session, and got OS far iu their IdBncc, by competent Instructresses, in every VI work ns the end of tho sixth chapter of ty of ptoi “ Mld ®rnsu»«atsl sowing. St. Mark S Gospel, I An efllcinrit lady operator will bo in constant a/- I tcndauce at the olHi Lightning strnck tho fgos pipes in a I _ . ... church nud exploded tho street maius nil tk?““ over Iowa City, the other day. f Genuine Ellas Howo 7A,1M New England complains of want of <»vuuiue Mngsr 72,ww rain, and envies the Middle States their Gouu,ne Whweler * "’Ua°u 6s,aos recent drenching showers. Showing that the Howo Machine bears 1 Uon with the public that cannot be excelled by other miscellaneous. Gainesville Sulphur Springs The Howe Machine Co BOARD IT.lt MONTH - . f 40 •• •• WEEK - - 12 •• •• DAY • - % Children under la yearn ot ago and aorvanta half . rtroad A: Alabmmi HIh, NEXT DOOll TO HUN OFFIO ■jn.V3r-a\dj.w .1 Tf.J.tT.I, fi.l. O UwsaLd at tha^LIx for a Mraeaafel fntnv*. **- TTy y aq v—tlo—. *V Students enter at any time. The institution teauaa Ufa g give to the holder the privilege . ocuraa at pleasure, and to review GRATIS. &For farther particulars, Catalogues, Q f Penmanship Currency, Ac., . wfcfcfc isaesy.fi: A. R. EASTMAN, FURNITURE AT PRIVATE SALE DAILY. AUCTION AT 9 0,clock, forenoon, Tuesdays and Fridays nntU all le sold. a. K. IEAGO, A large Stock all grade* Flour, Coffee, etc., etc., In store. CHICK PIANOS! THE UNDERSIGNED 1 GENERAL 8TATE AGENT For the WORLD RENOWNED Obickering Pianofortes STOCK KEPTATHISMVSICSTORK OR DIRECT FROM THE FACTORY, parties may desire. CATALOGUE 1IOOKH, Giving PRICE. DESCRIPTION and ENGRAVING o each sty la, sent, post-paid, to any party, os applica tion. Manufacturer't CertUlemie mmd trmrrmmln ACCOMPANIES EACH UI8TBUHUT. EDWnr FAXOlf, OomUUM B*0*0 AMD XUDHTi tfBCKTS. angSui Atlanta, Ga. KAM’L II. STOUT, 31. JL>.,J in every town and county turodohocT Agent for Introduction of THE STATE. Harper & Brothers’ j EDUCATIONAL WORKS. NOTICE. J. J. KNOTT, >1. I).I l>ortation to the luterlor. ^ JFUCE OVER JOHN KEKIA ‘8, corner all and Hunter streets. RESIDENCE—Collina strovt, between Cain and I v pre|ierod to receive heavy cargoes **2:>.00 Saved! PRICES AND TERMS OF WILSON HIIUTTLE Sewing Machines. «!>KurKED nrrrrASH. $10 pumo. |5 r» 6, Plain Table $ 4.1 $ f.r. frtO No. C, balf-eaac, pin bx 10 00 06. No. 7. do fan’y 61 M 70. No. 7, Folding cover 70 ho l ——«• will l»e completed for the protection of B „- mjxs-lm l a , IO| #IM i other heavy articles of freight, which per- #25.04) Saved! I tl,, “ 40 * uve for fnture shipment, J. F. WARING, ang7 2m f Forward ina Agent. GEORGIA FEMALE COLLEGE WARRANTED FIVE YEARS BY WILSON SEWING MACHINE CO (Ve wish It distinctly ut •«i* from which we net i our Machlnm to have be found iu any Underfeed Shuttle Muhin . ' s good material a* any Machine A r P I , A \JfP A It will do sm elegant work. 1^* *■ JJ-fE.lv 1 erntood that thoi r deviate; and w. ry point of t 1 Shull l U. GRIFFIN, Gen. Agent, Tfftho People of Fulton and Surrounding | 4'oiintlos. | HAVE a select Stock of Family Groceries, Cut- I kery, Tm-ware, etc.,and a good stock I liberal patronage, which I hope to receive in the fn- j tore at toy old stand, on McDonough Road, just < lde the corporation li A. A. DcLAl'EKUlKUK. AuglTdlw, Henry Bisohoff & Co.,| WHOLESALE GROCERS, AND DnAT.F.Rfl IN Circuit. The Waynesboro £qmstfcra4yi: “That ou Saturday last a youug geutlemuii of this town, wliilo duck hunting, found a negro babe io the poud—evidently thrown there to drown, lie ordered u ne gro boy, who accompanied him, to take o&re of the 'abandoned' until his return, which the boy fuiled to do—aud upon his return to tho spot the child had dis appeared. Tho fact was communicated to judge E. F. Lawson, who took every means to ascertain tho whereabouts of the child and the ‘perpetrators of tho deod.’ No doubt a satisfactory termina tion would have been reached, hut for the calling away of the Judge to his sick wife at the ludiau Spring. One negro was lodged in jail ou Sunday, hut was set at liberty ou Monday, no one having appeared to make or sustain a cliargo against him. At the present time the affair is veiled in mystery—the which, however, we hope willcomo fully to light iu a few days aud the murderers bo brought to justice.” A correspondent of the SavonDali Xeict ot the 19lh, writes as follows: On Mouday, while Hiram McClelland was attending the election ut Webster, Clay county, Florida, Mrs. McClelland was alouo at homo near Doctor's Ia,ke. Shortly alter the departure of her hus band alio was attacked and ber person violated by a uogro man living in tbu sumo vicinity, known as Frank Perry. — Beforo he succeeded in his hellish deed, a torrible struggle ensued. Tho dog of, the negro came to the assistance of his master, tearing nearly all tho clothing ly.t.li, Windows * from the lady, aud wounding her peraun, 1 BUnda and braining her iu a fearful mauner.— I .III Kltulx ol Itrexxcd and Mrs. McClelland is » young and delirato fVnnifngr !.umber. woman, within a few weeks of oonffne rrWMr a. i.ANnsnirRO * oo.. Prepn.n>r.. men* with her first child. Alter Ferry j had left, she in her terrible condition j managed to make her way to the house' of her mother, distant two miles from her liouie. The negro was not seen until, LIVERY AND SALE STABLES, night, when a party of men, consisting srt To THU geo not ABDUL, jinv.te eunv.i sue. legislative Charter Unrated In 1849. Itev. Uro. Y. Brown, President rj'Mli: next Academic year brgina ou MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18. An Eclectic Clan* lias been formed for tho benefit I of thon* graduates who may desire atill further I improve tb« iintelves, or to prepare for teaching. New Patent Arion Square Graud Pianos art used. g *>. F.ipenscs are as moderate as in other similar Institutions. farther particulars address the President Madison, July 29, 1871. Jy11-d2tawAw2m. MERCHANTS! BUT PDnrrTOVomi at a as No. 47 Peachtree Street, —FHON- t. n.. niF'XjEnr, JHPOBTIB AND JOBUUK. ir ESTABLISHED It TEAM. ■%» Keep* a large stock. Occupies THREE FLOORS—*0x120 fast Inducements offered to oash buyers CfiMl to Mmrkt*. Atlanta. Ga.. Amrn*t 2.1871. an* 1 2m HOUSE, Uy Mr». K. Fitzpatrick. v prepared t Transient and Regular Boarders. The traveling peblic will And this House Afly yards ot tho l*a«eongar iH-poL Porter* in atteudanc* on arrival of all trains. TERMS OF BOARD PER PAY $ 2 00. EU WEEK 10 00. PER MONTH 90 00. DAY BOARD PER MONTH 20 00. anglilw. Uims \ViucM, Llquoi'Mi Ho- I *o*T. a. nows. «AU mvmvm. m, To imcco. &o. Wf UI No. 197, Kind llay Street, CHARL,EST< >N, S. C. H. niarnorr. c. wclb #. ■. rtsrss. julyft-ttrn LANDS BERG'S LUMBER YARD, OPPOSITE (ItOHQIA BAILBOAD DEPOT. AT LA rVTA-OA. Bawoct aiilnslon and Untliw, Wlilto rlno LEE & HIGHTOWER Ut'iflin, - - - - - - Qq. 1, .... , io,,, t,. r —. -ncctMive tween tho two crape, no far ua your stock , raptured linn, and Uxik him to the coun- ■-, lr ^ --; n ” ul , n a.. wued . Heard aUraioi need, k , ,, ■ , .mod , ty jsil, where he wu.i imjiruioned. k l J 1 ' , ,]|,ui. m .vtvii** Vl,..M .1—ina. u, years 1 got '“nivy crops of cioief from , ,,' w . ( ot i u clover »nd groan ! next morning ho was taken before Judge 1 m.i, th-tnp Ud. file odover decidedly predomina-1 _II.you ,widlsowaitown <nov ^ Baddington » nd j u , tic0 Eph Will-, and | them 1 Mrs. MeLlelhiud was sent for, Mrs, M. stated that the uegru qc-; iKitween the two; aud the Ifftli year it was | plenty oue compiished hit fiendish purpose in spite IlMC'lilHE FOX* THK BUN’ HOWE & HUBBELL, JAIl'OllTF.HH OF AND DEALERS In «B kind, of FOREIGN AND tFO MEITI XjXQtJOn*. SPECIAL ATTENTION TO BOUTUKRR TRADE. JVV 83, 85 mmd 80, %><**>**< fffr**f« VtWiJTJr* Ti, 0StI». INIs B. Z. DUTTON, PRACTICAL STENCIL (UTTER, DESIGNER ASD ENGRAVER ! HAKOTAOTVMMM OS B rass alphabets, dry and FLUID STENCIL IN Kb, Btenoil Dtes Stamping Diva. Railroad and Hotel OtiMks, M Hrands, he., No. 61 Whitehall 8t, a faw doon Hunter street Se~ N. B.— Particular attentlou paid to Brat Stencils for Merchant*. Milter*. Tohaocoaista and Dlatilirra; also, to Name Plates, for marking clothe*, which will be**ntto any address tor ■sventv ‘ < including Ink, he. a*pl6-] Dutch Pete’s Restaurant, Under Jamr«’ Hank, | J AS lil ts llECENTLV FURNISHED WITU No. X COOK, And all other modern appliances; MKAL8 SUPPLIED AT ALL HOUM. tv REGULAR BOARD $6 PER WERE- 18, THE REST THE MARKET AFFORDS WIIX ALWAYS BE FOUND AT H18 TABUS. Lookout Mountain FROM ATLANTA, OA- WEBTERN k ATLANTIC RAILROAD. \ Atlanta, Ga.. Jan* 2MA, 1*71. f rnioKm, for thb round trip, nine dol. 1 LARS AND HEVENTY-FIYE CERTS, inolo- ding Stage Fare, can be had on appNsaMoa to J. R. Porter. General Ticket Agent. Union Passenger De pot, Atlanta E. B. WALKER. JuiMSO-lm Master th—pnrteM—. Mount De Sales Academy for rovjtra ijunm*, (Conducted by tub 8umn* or ran Visitation Near OatonarlUe, Five Milee Wot of BoltSon, Md. alva. and afford the pnpUa antpia apnea for sxarcias. Th* haU for STUDY AND RECREATION, THB DORMITORIES, Ac., havo been constructed with a vtew to PROMOTE THE COMFORT of the young ladies. Address for ptHitehn, MOUNT DE BALEE. t atqravtlte.F. O., Rellfm Oo., I AM GLAD RE BAR OOKB. Th* Best Fapsr^Eajjsr tm ths Itet* s*- S I CAM now CM* your ehalra, and gMk* them teed# new far the —a you wiB nap fctrahtetnm HP ’ charg* for varatehlngohatn when I «anatetMa. and a 1 to give satisfaction. Fumitur* eavar* raLnaada and a at warranted. Mali and f ilf teaMr—te nett te order. Allkind* of h*u*aknj fortedana nadnr holatary dona al th* ah*rtent Milan. T hun* ■dll' t no tit moved to D*Oive‘a srsjsrhsf O. R. ERf To Parties Desiring to Jtoild IK underelgaed would n^ntfaM RafotUS the cltlxena of Atlanta Uml ha te mow p»*f and to AWateAAar Agsrlawaf sm%s sT mm — Atoms Mm sm* ate** to Md a picked sal of hands, and ooufldeat In giving j “ “ ^ RFRBRBCE—Ool. A A RoUnaon. and Fay A Oorpwh A OFFICE jOMJtr c\ l IN AIR-LINE “jGrtssti^ MARTIN INSTITUTE, Jrtrnon, Jackwi Co., 8| mla T B U«io^ S»T«B - Wadnaadsf. thaltto, as tt Man “ We think r