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THE DAILY SUN'
Batobdit Mobnino September
Office in the Sun Building, West
side of Broad sired, Second Door South
Alabama.
2fctt Advertisement* (dungs found
on First Page; Load and Business Notices
on Fourth Page. •
To Lawyer!.
We publish in foil, the ilecisions of the
Supreme Court; also tho daily M Pro
ceedings” of the Court, and keep the
‘Order of Business ’ standing in our
oolumns. tf
New Books.
Wo hate just received our copy ol
Appleton's Annual Cyclopedia and Beg
ister of important oyeuts of the year 1870.
This periodical, which has now reached
its tenth volume, has been late in making
ltsappeannoe this year; but, upon a cur
■ory examination, we find that it abounds
in —of equal interest with any of
pimlli—nn The volume, neatly bound,
wMfc copious indexes, consists of 780 pa
ges. The subjects embraced are Politi
«•!, Civil, Military sad Social Affaire
Public Documents; Biography, Statistics,
Commerce, Finance, Literature, Scienoe,
Agriculture and Mechanical Industry.
The price to subscribers varies accord
ing to style of binding. All who can af
ford it ought to possess themselves of the
work. Wo have been a subscriber from
the beginning of the Publication, and
speak of our own knowledge of its gen
eral value and merits.
a« rm»»^gA».i»inu Tu n, by PWIciuod Perch.”
This is a neat little volume of 250 pa
ges, just published by tbo Turnbull Bro
thers, of Baltimore.
It is from th« pen of one of the most
distinguished of Southern Humorists
and abounds with many racy scenca o
‘•Olden Times” in Georgia—some Atlanta
characters figure in it.
•• Tns U'r.JTH or Melmb* a»» '°™F?, JJU?
railed eud In pert Ooium>eetl, bjr Bsuic-l Belling r
to uui" •oent volume efion me.
pnbltohed by Kelly, Pletl k Compeoy, BalUmure.
This is quite a valuable contribution ti
Southern Literature in the Poetic Dc
psrtmont A. H- H.
Due Credit.
Under the above caption wo sco in tho
ltockport (Iud.) Democrat, of tho 20th
ultimo, the following statement, which we
copy in full, that credit may be given
where credit is due:
*n nrUcl. which appearedllnoorpaper ot Jnly 3Mh,
which Tan ATnASTArtunof Annual Idth , we. Ainu
nuuunk UI slvn u credit for. wnn In n jurat mennurn
dipped from »u editorial In Hull rtnrllnsnnduv
llvinif Democratic pgper "Jbmeroy i Democrat,
puhhiibed in the city f Newo York, which wo b»vc
iiwey# taken grest pleasure in recommending to
frieuds.
POLITICS IN GEORGIA.
From tho Columbus Bun.
Often and Secret Eneniies.
Kentucky is tho only Wcstorn or Southern State
that ha* spoken, end her roar against the I?" f
mrtuto of fifty thousand majority still gladdens tli
patriot's c*r.—Cmlunkut (««•)
Tho Kentucky Democratic platformi endorses whol
ly ths CongrcMrtonht address, which endorses tli
New Departure- Why this persistent mUreprcsenta
tiou?
We clip tho above from that fishy,
weak-kneed, slinky, so-called Democratic
paper, the Memphis Aralaische, of the
21th iust. Wo can respect and tolerate
mi open enemy, hut a treacherous, pre
tended friend can only be despised. Sir
Ocorgo Oockbum, who burnt tho oapitol
at Washington in 1814, as an enemy, was
certainly a more reputable character thiui
the traitor, Gen. Benedict Arnold. Saul,
with liis threatening* and slaughter, was
a better mau than the slippery Judas; ami
the secret arts of a crafty Siuou prevailed
when the combined power of Greece fail-
od in manly warfare to bring tho proud
woIIn of Troy to tho dust.
We never have aeon in eo little apaoe
as much low, menu “miarepreBentttUon
Ai is comprised in tho tWe linea we oopy
ulmve from the Memphis Avalanche. Iho
Avalanche must have faith enough iu tho
ignorance of its readers to remove moun
tains, or it must bo ignorant or corrupt
itself, to publish such stuff. Tho paper,
if it means anything, attempts, insidious
ly, t.i convey the idea that the “New De
parture” triumphed iu tho late election
iu Kentucky. Tho falsehood of the Ava-
lanche is in the assertion that the Con
gressional address endorsed tho New De
parture, and in the suppression of the
truth that the Democratic candidate oolil
1/ repudiated and openly denounced the
New Departure from one end of tho State
to the other. Hen* is tho proof:
It is well known that tho Louiavilh
CourieruJournal, contains all the brains
of tho Southern new departure press,
audit bitterly assailed the position of the
Democratic candidates iu this iiartieular
That Journal said on the 14th of An
put:
K*rlr in the t'Mliu i note of war Bounded
J£!f«£ Governor UM* without ths least.
cMion for it, made tho ' new departure an tasoe
tho cgnvui aud assailed it. He Mid, among other
thinii; that he didn't care what the Democrat..of
other State* wero in tavor of, ho waa agaiuet tho
This, too, was tho position of Carlisle,
10 candidate for Lt. Governor; of Horn
’roctor Kuott, whose eloquent si««eh
re published a few days ago; and of
ivory other of tho Kentucky patriots,
[•lie ticket triumphed gloriously while
he chariots and horsemen of tho cum-
lined New Departure and Radical foe
rant down never to rise again, into the
eop waters. Hear tho Iaiuiaville
]uuri«r-Jounuil of tbti 1*5tli, and lot the
Irakmcke and every other balMbwlicel
beet take warning and profit by its ex-
mple. Let them learn in time that the
ascent to tbo Radical Inferno is easy,
mt to recal the etep—-tbia i* the work,
hat is the labor. The Journal now
iyi:
11 the National Democracy I* for nullifying the
iicndtneuU, then indeed we arc not of it. t
Tw other words, if the National De-
uicracy ahould repeat ita words, and re-
imo to stultify its own solemn dcclara-
iona, then tho Journal is no longer
lemoomtfa. How different, and how
lose liberal, is the position of those vic
arious Patriots, Wot stigBUWieed «»
Bourbons” by the eemi-llsdiori press,
'he ledger, the organ of the Wire De-
locracy, says:
Evary DM at oar eandldatea and .uraSan, wbUa
fiiainai to abandon the poaitlon eudoraed by the
rmecmtloJ.lllloe.ln i**.. Ivclyed hi. laMaUon
r Iks nominee. of Ui« NaUoaal OoewettW;
lor no departure. That lathe aenUnMJt
:kvi that la the poatUoa aedoraad Of the
Jut to prove still further that the Avar-
:he misrepresents, we give ita ownmo-
rity for what it it worth. It MlVtai
112th of August:
aalle, Knott, and other Democratic
Bought to place the Kentucky Democ-
lae poaitlon befora tha coon try. The,
ticaen over their own platform becauaa It rultn-
I’li.hed a prejudice which events have rendered
The Kentucky Democracy accepted the
rue position, and the only thing kicked
aver was such feeble squealers as the
Avalanche, an. farther, they endorsed
icy (Leal
lidatea) SOI
in a ftdee
and verified the language of the Louis
ville Ledger:
The Democratic party In Kentucky ha* ad<'< 4 to
ita strength, because it htu refused to surrender lie
principle., ha. declined to occupy the abandon* <1
ramp and wear the cast off clothe, of RadlcalUm.-
Our victory, therefore, 1. a substantial one; it is a
Democratic victory- a victory of tho Democratic
theory over tho r- vluUonipta; a victory nut made
n by humiliating coin prom l m b an«l disgraceful
tion of truth; a victory which Uhmintakably de
monstrates that “honesty i. the beat i>ohiy."—r,.
lumbtu, Ua., Sun, 2DfA Aug., 1H71.
From the^McDufBo Journal.
“What of the Night 1”
The Conetilution calls itself the media
tor between the two wings of the present
Democratic party of this State, and says
that mediatorial assistance is given by
eight of the weeklies published in this
State. The Constitution has wielded—and
deservedly—great influence over tlie pol
itics of the State, but the people w ill not
foliowjts advice or illow their views to
bo contaminated by false doctrines, come
they from Constitution, Chronicle & Sen
tinel, Courier-Journal, or what not.
The Democratic party of Georgia is
not divided on the question of New De
parture, an a unit the true Democracy de
nounces its doctrines, refuses to stand upon
the platform offered by it, and boldly pro
nounces its adherents enemies to the Consti
tution.
Democracy as it exists pure in Georgia,
demands oil of the prerogatives delega
ted to the people, as individuals and
States by the Constitution of our forefath
ers—nothing more or less.
It demands as unconstitutional, null
and void the amendments known os the
XIV and XV to the Constitution, and ull
the laws passed since for the enforcement
and maintenance of these fraudulent out
growths .
They became, seemingly, parts of the
organic luw of the land without tho wish
of the people through the instrumentali
ty of bills of attainder, non-representation
and the bayonet. True Democracy will
never acknowledge them ns de jure laws.
It is no new thing for devices and ma-
Lceuveriugs to be resorted to for the pur
pose of success. False prophets existed
in olden times, and they are the curse of
the present epoch. A change of name
will never change principle-—clothe pub
lic rapine, theft, villainy and vice in
whatever garments you may ; dub them
Kadicalism or New Departure, or what
ever else you please—and despite it all,
something will protrude to reveal its true
character.
What honest man will approve the
State Road briberies, corruptions and
frauds? Not one!
Yet it drew its life-blood, its existence,
its perpetration from the grander and
more stupendous fraud which has char
acterized tho Legislative and Executive
acts of the same party ever since the
close of the late civil war. It is but one
of the offsprings from the dalliance of
brute force with unscrupulous conscience,
and less infamous than tho Attainder and
Ku-Klux bills its elder cousins.
If Now Departures will not pronounce
the State Rood swindles acts of honesty,
how can it pronounce the bustard oil
springs of tho bayonet legitimate?
It cannot, except upon the poet’s idea
of vice,
The people of Georgia have too much
common sense to follow any leader over
brinks of danger and destruction. They
despise and contemn the leaders that
would desire them so to follow. Past
events in the history of other nations
and experience, that best of instructors,
have taught the people—the true
Democracy of Georgia—that principle
deserted will prove their ruin, but
maintained and supported manfully,
will be to them an ark of mfety through
theso troublesome hours of Republican
ism and New Departurisin—and they are
determined, now and erer, to stand by and
maintain it by argument. MeDtgfie (Ga.)
Journal, 30th August, 1871.
The quondam Democratic papers are
becoming exceedingly nervous about
Democratic unity. Remote from the
noise and excitement of scheming rings
and tho seduction of public patronage,
wo havo not shared the apprehensions of
our “departed" cotemporurie-s. Stand
ing upou the firm basis of the Constitu
tion as it was left to us by its framers,
we have seen no cause either for alarm or
flight in the presence of present or pros
pectivo dangers. “Sufficient unto the
day is the evil thereof," is an inspired
maxim which holds good in nil the inter
ests and plans of human life it is as ap
plicable to politics as religion. Occupy
ing our rural stand point, and calmly and
dispassionately surveying tho whole field,
we have seen no occasion for depressing
our lance or fleeing from the great bat-
tlo-field of priuciple.
Whilst our noble old State was iu
duress and her beautiful feet in the
stocks, it was alike the dictate of good
philosophy and wise policy, to refrain
from active and promiuent participation
iu Federal polities, lt could only harm
her by inviting new insults and mor
onerous exactions from tho tyrannical
and scheming dominant party. Rut now
the case is changed. Reconstructed,
unfettered, rehabilitated, responsibilities
are laid upon her which she may not
shun. And what are these? We answer,
to labor quietly, but perseveriugly and
courageously to reform, preserve and
transmit that form of Government
of which she was an original fn
and partner, and iu which she still
has a proprietory interest. Those
sponsibilities she cannot shun and stand
acquitted before God and posterity—for
States like individuals are answerable to
both, though the penalty for delinquency
is different.
*##*,*• * *
Iu tho year of Groce 1871, however,
when tho government, as every oue eau
see, is steadily mid rapidly drifting into
Centralism or something worso—when
all tho mighty reformatory aud consor-
ative power of the United Democracy
i necessary to keep the old ship from
going down, a part of the Democratic
leaders became mutinous; take observa
tions of revolving lights; steer the vessel
among tho Radical breakers; jump into
the long boat, aud under false colors,
buccaneer on Radical commerce. These
hasty departures have not, however, ma
teriaily affected the unity or integrity of
the Democratic party. When the great
conflict for principle conies, the honest
masses North and South will rallv with
spontaneous enthusiasm to the old famil
iar standard which has floated trium
phantly over a hundred battle-fields and
will float over a hundred more. Who,
then, are tho schismatics ? Certainly
not tlnmo who abide in tlie old Demo
cratic ship ami adhere to tho old Demo
cratic principles !—Greensboro (Ga.,) Her
ald, 30 August, 1871.
POLITICS INI OHIO.
Frvm the Clncluts'l Empiirtr.
The Uoad to Imperialism.
Shortly after tho close of the war ap
peared a' weekly publication called the
Imjjerialist, which advocated the conver
sion of the Republic into an Empire.
The work was charged to be ill tho inter
est of those who held largely of the pub
lic securities, and those who were classed
as citizens of wealth and property, who
were supposed to favor a strong Central
Government, as better adapted to the
protection of life nud property than the
present system. It continued for a while
aud then disappeared. What impression
it made, or what seed it left to germi
nate he raufter, cannot at present be told.
Wo have now another effort in the
same direction, though somewhat modi
fied iu its recommendations from those
urged by tlie Imperialist. It is a labored
argument in the July number of that
well-known Radical monthly, The Radi
cal; of Boston. It is entitled “The Re
organized Republic,” by Conrad
VViegaud. It has been reproduced iu
pamphlet form, u copy of which is be
fore us. It is bold in its positions, and
advocates them with earnestness. Its
leading recommendation is
THE ABOLITION OF THE STATES.
To this, sooner or later, the nation
must come or perish,” says tho writer.
He insists that the States have fulfilled
their functions, aud the country ^ out
grown all necessity for them. “They
have no functions, "he says, “which can
not be fur better fulfilled by tho Republic
uniformly throughout her whole do
main;" aud therefore, he argues that the
abolition of tho States “is Freedom’s
dictate and the nation’s first necessity."
What has brought the writer to this
conclusion are several things which have
grown up “under our present forms of
Republicanism," and which now charac-
ize our social and political polity, viz:
partizanship over the common weal; ruf
fianism ruling the cities; religious creeds
takiug advantage of the number of their
adherents to shape State legislation, as,
ordering the liiblo to be read in the pub
lie schools; the formation of vigilance
committees, which shows weakness iu the
execution of the law for the protection of
persons and property and the preserva
tion of the peace; the growth of vast cor
porations, enriching themselves at the
expense of the public and of private indi
viduals ; Congress and States selling
themselves to corporations; courts of law
under the influence of political cliques;
Mormonism defying the public authori
ties, aud Ku-Kluxism at the South—these
constitute, in his opinion, an overshad
owing need for a revolution in the Gov
ernment in the direction bo indicates,
viz: the abolition of the States and the
disestablishment of State representation
in the Senate.
These are to be superseded by three
legislative bodies, in which classes, as
such, shall be represented capital, labor
and education. These to bo selected iu
the munner proscribed by law, and ac
cording to districts made without regard
to State lines. Au Executive Council
will relieve the President of his veto and
other legislative powers. The whole sys
tem is formulated by the author so as to
make its action complete aud its unity a
perfect nationality. There must be no
wheels within wheels, as States with sov
ereign powers within a general govern
ment of sovereign powers. The revolu
tion of 1801, iu the opinion of the au
thor, which made tho people believe that
the rights of the States wore not so “sub
limely sacred" ns they had supposed, bus
picpared the way for another and more
important revolution still—the overthrow
of all State governments, wiping out of
State lines, aud creating a consolidated
nationality, to be ruled from Washing
ton alone.
There can bo no doubt that there is a
considerable body of citizons whose con
victions are strongly with the author we
havo been noticing. The Attorney-Gen
eral, Akerinuu, is one of these. He be
lieves that the recent alteration of the
Constitution by the Fourteenth and Fif
teenth Amendments confers upon Con
gress the power to control State legisla
tion and alter State Constitutions. And
the Congros that passed the bayonet and
Ku-lvlux bills was of like opinion, for un
der the provisions of those enactments
the President is authorized to control
Stuto elections by means of United States
Marshals and deputies, backed by visible
bayonets; and he is also authorized to
supersede all State authority, and substi
tute therefor his will and pleasure. The
efforts of the Republican managers for
years have been to get rid of State obli
gations, to bring tlie Constitution into
coutempt, to accustom the people to leg
islation outside of the limitations of that
instrument, to make the military a lead
ing instead of a subordinate power, and
to have the gleam of bayonets strike the
eyo of tho citizen at ever step ho takes to
an election poll, a political convention,
or a political primary meeting. Ry this
process of educating tho people, iu time
they and their children will bo compelled
to bow to a dictator.
Mr. t’riitlli’toii on the New Departure.
Mr. Georgo H. Pendleton made a pi
litical speech at Loveland, Ohio, the
other day, which, it is claimed, indicated
his acceptance of tho departure which
proposes to pledge tho Democratic party
to abide by, and if it comes to power, to
treat tho Fourteenth and Fifteenth
amendments as legitimate parts of the
Federal Constitution. We think he is
greatly misunderstood by those who put
that construction upou his speech upou
that occasion. There are only two para
graphs in that speech which touch tho
question at all. The first oue is in tbea
words:
••Our Qovorunicut was—I say waa—a cotiHtiti
tional Kovermnont. It wan framed by tho delegtti
from State*, it was ratitled by tbo conventions «
stati h. It wa* a ereaturo of State*, endowed by
them with all the power* it po««ea*ed, and was*
I>]< ntiftilly endowed that it could, of itaelf, ]>erl'oru
the dutie*, detlno the power*, and perpetuate tho
exihteiu e which had been given to it. Those duU<
were tew, those power* were ample, but they wei
limited. Tho constitution and law* made in pu
Huanco thereof wore tho aapreme taw. AH powei
not delegated to Congrosa nor prohibited to Stab
wero reserved."
Thus ho makes the same issue with
Seuator Morton that we made, and de
fines tho Federal system as Jefferson and
Calhoun expounded it. More than that;
ho intimates that the constitutional sys
tem is eclipsed, if not subverted, by the
centralism of Morton’s New Nation. No
greater violence could bo dono to Mr.
l'emlletou’s life-long convictions than to
assort that he means to acquiesce in the
overthrowal of the the constitutional sys
tem which the States ereAted and set iu
operation in 1787. It is supposed by
some that the following closing paragraph
of his speech indicates that ho abandons
all hope of restoring tho Statos-union
system:
Put thG Democratic party iu power. It baa no
’ prouitae* to make, uo new pu dges to give. It
remember ita organisation, and history, aud
tradition*; it* principles aud policy, aa they have
bc«u proclaimed iu rcaolutions aud illustrated in
practice. It will reform abuso* ; it will mtnlsh cor
ruption it will restore purity to the legislation,
aud houeaty to administration; it will bo Just to the
public creditor, aud houcst to the tax-payer; it will
pa>- the debt iu the manner and at the time prom
ised; will forbid all uuurpatlou of power; it will
maintain coustituUoual government; it will obey; it
will exact from all obedience to the Conatitutiou and
all (be amendment*. It will restore self-govern
ment to al» the State*, and bring about au era of
harmonious uuiou, of real prosperity, of true lib
it would be just as sensible to assort
that Thomas Jefferson abandoned Re
publicanism because he said in his inau
gural address, upon entering tho office of
President, “ We are all Republicans; we
are all Federalists."
Mr. Pendleton expressly declares “that
the Democratic party has no new promi
ses to make, uo new pledges to give. * It
will remember its organization and history
anil traditions, its principles aud policy. "
What language could be employed more
clearly doclining to take tho New Depart
ure? No. The Democratic warty wijl
not depart It has uo new plcilges .to
give. It will remember its history, Its
traditions, its principles, its old-timo pol
icy, and it will not depart. What, then,
does Mr. Pendleton mean when he says
the party “will exact from all obedience to
theConstitotion and all the amendments?”
He means what he says; but ask him if
the debt which is to be paid “in the man- '
ner and :,t Fn«* time promised," is paya- 1
hie, as to the five-twenty bonds, in gold, j
and be will tell yon they are payable in
greenbacks ! Ask him it the pretended
fourteenth and fifteenth amendments ure
to be obeyed when the Democratic party
“exacts obedience from all to the Consti
tution aud all the amendments, ” and he
will tell you they are not amend meats,
but nullities! He stands, upon this ques
tion, precisely upon the ground occupied
by Isaac Caldwell, Judge Craddock, and
the Jeffersonian Democrat.
Indeed, he lias gone further than Mr.
Caldwell or Judge Craddock, but not be
yond this journal, and maintained that
the thirteenth amendment is a nullity,
because not nn amendment in pursuance
with the spirit of the instrument it pre
tends to amend. His position^* forcibly
stated in a speech delivered in Congress
when tho thirteenth amendment was
pending. It was, we think, the only
Hjicech made in Congress in opposition
to it.— Jefferronion Democrat, Louisville,
Ky., Aug. 26, 1871.
ittiscillatmms QUuntUmuius.
Cifc Insurance-—flroDibe for the fjclpleee.
Sfttetellantons.
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
IS DEVOTED TO THE
PRAOTICAIi,
USEFDiL.
O F young men, fitting them in tbe SHORTEST
time mil at tbo LEAST POSSIBLE EXPENSE
for a •ueceHHful future.
#fi. There are no vacation*.
Student* enter at any time.
Tbo institution i**ue* Life Schotarubip*, which
give to the bolder the privilege of completing the
courts at pleaauro, and to review at any future time
GRATIS.
For further particular*, Catalogue*, SjMjcinien* of
Penmanship Currency, Ac.,
Addrea*,
A. R. EASTMAN.
Box MS. Principal.
augH lm.
Mount De Sales Academy
FOR roirjra IsJiDMES,
(CONDVCTKV BY THE SlSTBM OT TUB VlNITATZOJf
fXToar Catonwvillo,
Five Miles West of Baltimore, Md.
rilHIS ACADEMY is situated in Baltimore county,
X commanding an extensive view of the surroun
ding country—the City of Baltimore, tho Patapsco
River and the Chesapeake Bay.
The grounds attsched to the Academy are exten
sive, and afford the pupils ample space for exercise.
The hall for
STUDY AND RECREATION, THE DORMITORIES,
Ac., havo been constructed with a view to PROMOTE
THE COMFORT of the young l&dioa.
Address for particulars,
MOUNT DE SALES,
Cstonsvillo.P. O., Baltimore Co.,
HHU lm Maryla
B. z. DUTTON,
PRACTICAL
STENCIL CUTTER, DESIGNER AND
ENGRAVER !
MKNur.CTtTUB 0
B 1
9W N. B.—Particular attention paid to Brands and
Stencils for Merchant*, Miller*, Tobacconist* aud
Distiller*; also, to Name Plates, for marking clothes,
which will be sent to any address for seventy-five
cent*, including Ink, Ac. sepl6-ly
MHHOHANTSV
BUY
CROCKERY and GLASS
No. 17 Penchtree Street,
—FROM—
T. RIPLEY,
JAlrOBTEB AXD JOBBER.
ESTABLISHED 31 YEARS, ‘v,
Keeps a large stock.
Occupies THREE FLOORS-30x120 feet
Inducements offered to cash buyers
Equal to any .Market.
Atlanta. (1... August 3. 1871. tug 5 3lu.
MOO UukIicIm Hell Clover
XOO IJiimlielH Timotliy,
:tOO BiikIicIh Ky. Blue
Grams,
MOO UunlielN Orelmril
Gpiikn,
Hiii>Uu«f & Alsike Clover.
rpHESE SEED wero purchased directly from the
1 growers, are guaranteed Irtish aud pure.
ECHOLS A WILSON,
Agricultural Warehouse and Seed Store,
augJ3-0t Broad st.. tby tho bridge) Atlanta, Ga.
Huy Your Agricultural Implements,
machinery,
Gras* goods and Garden Weeds
AT ECHOLS A WILSON’S.
W E deal with manufacturer* and producers—
nay cash, sell for Cash—and cannot be un-
dersoln. Call on
feugaa ct echols & wilson.
ECHOLH & WILAON,
TUBNIP HEED,
F RESH AND GENUINE—All varieties, at
ECHOLS A WIL80N'S,
aug23-f)t Broad st. (by the Bridge.)
Huy (he Uuwt Proof Out
For Hood.
<>00 BUSHELS FOB SALE BY
aug'23-Ot
The Livest,_Best, Cheapest,
THE RURAL SOUTHERNER.
LARGE TWIN".
UAL and Family Monthly. Edited by SAM’L
A. ECHOLS,
ONLY ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM
AddreM ECHOLS WILSON. Publishers.
now E’s
IMPROVED
Lock-Stitch Sewing
MAOHINBS
A RE WORLD RENOWNED FOR DURABILITY
aud simplicity of machinery, the perfection or
the tension*, and the uuparalleled wide range oi
work they are capable oi performing without change
or re-adjuBtinent.
At the Great
Exposition Universalle
in Paris. 1807, they were awarded the Highent Prize
—a Massive Gold Medal—over 82 competitors, and
THE CRAND CROSS OF THE LE
GION OF HONOR »■» conferredlou ELIAS
HOWE as the original inventor of the Sewiug Ma
chine.
The growing appreciation of their characteristic
excellence by the intelligent people of this country
waa clearly shown by the unprecedented aale of the
Howe Sewing Machine
More than ONE THOUSAND of these ex
cellent mscLiu.b aio in daily use iu Georgia, aud at
thi* very large number a single cane of dissatisfac
tion cannot be lound. They make the
‘Howe, or Lock-Stitch’
chines that make this beautiful stitch to perfection.
Tho office has been recently established at the
corner of Broad aud Alabama streets. If you are
of any particular machiue, st
tho Sewing* Machine, and gave twenty year* of his
lif<‘ to perfecting thi* machine.
Every Howe Machine is
Warrantedfor 3 Years
Purchaser* are thoroughly instructed ;i
idence. by competent instructresses, iu e
ty of plain aud ornamental cewiug.
Genuine Wheeler A Wilson..
.75,150
...72.863
. ..08,208
The Howe Machine Co
Cor. Uroacl «fc Alabama Sts f
NEXT DOOR TO SUN OFPIO
JtTLJUTTJi, CJ.
AGENTS WANTED
IN EVERY TOWN AND COUNTY THROUGHOUT
TIIE STATE.
MgjtttQl oettO
1,000 BU1HBLV
Red Rust Proof Oats
AT
Mark W. Johnson’s,
OPPOSITE
Cotton Warehouse, on llroml Street.
ALSO :
300 Hush. Selected Seed Barley,
250 Bush. Seed Bye, to arrive,
500 Bush. Seed Wheat,
210 Bush. Bed Clover,
215 Bush. Bed Top or Herds
Grass.
224 Bush. Orchard Grass,
lOO Bush. Tall JTleadotc Oat
Grass, to arrive,
175 Bush. Blue Grass, aud all
other useful Grasses, he.
500 Civl. Fresh l^irnlp Seep ;
ALSO:
lOO Totw Sea Fotvl Elitvan and
other Guano, for Wheat, Etc.
ALSO:
500 Blxic notes and other
Plows, from $3gG0 to |8 60, cheaper lhau homo
made "Scooters."
ALSO:
The Keller Patent Grain Brill
For sowing Wheat, Etc.
Mark W. Johnson’s,
P. O. BOX 230, Atlanta, Ga.
The Palace Dollar Store
u
PORTER FLEMING,
COTTON FACTOR.
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
JACKSON STREET. - - AVGUSTA, OA.
Commlulon for Selling Colton, 1Per Cent,
augll-siw
iNQKTH GEORGIA
FEMALE COLLEGE,
IVY 8TRBKT.
B ETWUOI Wheat and Llue strocU. Atlant*. Fall
•euioaopen* September 4. 1872. For circa) ars
containing foil parUoalar*. apply at the Book and
Music Store*, or the OMh'gi
jy26-<lkw'im A. j. * ANNIE I). HAILE.
Principals
15,000
$5,000,000
Dividend*
ID Annually'
tlie UontrlbutK^J^-^
R S, Ge^ e
"'-'-V. '• toYt rihiWo^^A
DR. JOS. t*. LOG AM, MEDICAL EXAMINED, ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
FSNHOSE contemplating Life Insurance are respectfully requested to exam-
JL lne the merits of this Company. They will find it
Superior to Many and Inferior to None, in the Ksgentlals tha
give Sound Insurance at tlie Least Possible Coat.
W. T. WATERS, Gon.Ag’t,
■ lv rtrrKK :i7 i-a, wiiitkhai.i. st.. A it.amta <ia
Jusnrnncr ffiomponn.
“Seven Per Cent. Interest Paying Plan.”
The Missouri Mutual Life Insurance Company
OF ST. LOUIS, MO. J
JColhinq Concealed—.JFothing Exaggerated .!'» False Expecta
tions Baised.
THIS COMPANY OFFERS THE PUBLIC A NEW FEATURE PECULIARLY ITS OWN. WHICH HOW.
X E^ Elt, does not dejiart from the old, well-tried aud safe principles, which underlie all sound Lift) In
surance.
It guarantee* an annual dividend to Policy holder*
O P SEVEN PER CENT.
On all cash Premiums paid to tho Company. This Dividend can be used
To Beduce the Jlmount of the JFext Premium—To increase the
Policy ; or, Can be Withdrawn in Cash at the End of
any Policy- Fear.
This is Beatty a Se-en per cent. of Money at Com
pound interest, Coupled with the Advantages of tAfe insurance.
There is uo uncertainty about the AMOUNT of tho Annual Dividends to Policy holders. It Is a definite
sum, fixed in the face of the Policy, being Seven Per. Cent. Compound Interest, on the amount of mo
ney paid by the Policy holder to tho Company, and left in its hands.
All Policies Non-Forfeitable After Two Full
ANNUAL PAYMENTS ARE MADE.
The Massachusetts non-forfeiting law i* adopted by the Company voluntarily. If at any time a Policy
SSIiF-SUSTAINING
For all time to come, and keep itself in force for its full amount WITHOUT ANY F URTHEFt
PAYMENT.
Tlioao ik-cl-vantagofii arc not Offorod toy any
otlxor Company.
Auother equitable feature iu the Company is that aU ita premiums taken in Georgia will l>« invested iu
tho State, to assist in building 1—
Thi* Company is not conflm
Burancc upon any the woU established plauu that may be desirod.
For Further Information Apply to
Cranston & Strobhart.
General Agents for Georgia,
Decatur Street. Opposite Kimball House, Atlanta, fli
Uniucreitn JJnblialjirtg Companti.
UNSECTIONAL, UNPARTISAN, UNPOLITICAL 8CHOOL-BOOK8.
The freshest series of Text-Books published—containing the latest
results of discovery and scientific research.
Officially adopted by the Virginia and Georgia State Hoards of Education,
13VZJHY SOUTHERN' STA.TE,
And in many Northern States.
<c Itttiwmtjj §ufcMing Co.,
An Association composed of many
the several Southern States, fcel-
School-Books which should be en-
unpolitioal, which should present
science—arc now issuing a com-
Text-books by the eminent scbol-
whieb are the
of the most eminent citizens of
ing the necessity for a scries of
tirely unsectionalunpartisan, and
only the facts of history and
pletc series of School and College
ars and educators named below
Cheapest, Best, and Most ‘4 Beautiful School-Books
Now published. Tho “ University Scries” embraces
MAUfSY’o Geographical Series,
By Commodore M. F. MACRT.of the Virginia Military Institute. A scries of books which
made an era in the study of this science, and which, in the words of a well known and ac
complished Soutnvmtenchcr, “ are characterized hv a felicity of arrangement and simple
freshness of at vie which must ever render them attractive to the voting, and which will be
ed by all who wish to teach Geography as a science, as something to make pupils think
y as an enumeration of dry facts.”
Holmes’ Readers and Spellers,
By (iKonoE F. IIolmks, LLP , Professor of History and General Literature in the Uni
versity «>f Virginia. A series of Readers unequalled in cheapness, excellence, and typo-
graphical lieautv. They arc steadily progressive in character, bright and fresh in their
selections of prose
and i
L. 13. PIKE,
PROPRIETOR.
. R.—.GOODS SENT TO ANY PART OF THE
INTBY. jqgiMm
XJnolnimcil Freight.
CO , ITllta Dru , .1 WHI'h IV. A. AiBlUIl, 1 UUI,
W. H. Broach, 1 box; T, Allen, 1 bag heana; John L.
Conlay, 2 boxea; James Fret man, 1 bedstead; R. L.
Emery, 1 awed cleaner; Henry A Oo., 2 bbl*. liquor
and 1 box; J. Jonca. 1 package l-cdding; F. M. Rich-
ardaou, 1 stove ami fixtures; P. Tboinaa. I box; Wm.
Wood, 2 package* moulding; O. A. Witty, 2 boxea
tobacco. ED. A. WJsBNEB. Agent.
aug2rt lm
Notice.
I HEREBY oonaeut tor my wifo.MUS. E. W. MAB-
The.fe
and verse, and illustrative of Southern scenes, incidents, and history.
Venable’s Arithmetical Series,
Vekj
books arc received everywhere by intelligent tenohe^ with tho highest
•dm
ion tal drill, as well as for business cduca-
nr, distinct logical, and comprehensive,
n. a* being most admirably adapted for
eir methods, rules, and reasonings m
ties is carefully graded throughout.
holmes' history of tho United States,
;k F Holmes, LL.D., of the University of Virginia. It is enough to say of
iteresting, impirti.il, and truthful, ns well as pure and graceful in
iy History of the United States which is strictly unpartisan. It
By G
this admirable work,
style, that it is the
comes down to the present date. Also,
Do Vere’s French Crammar, Readers, etc.,
Cildorsleeve’s Latin Series,
Carter’s Elements of General History,
Holmes’ English Grammars,
LeConte’s Scientific Series,
Johnston’s English Classics,
Duntonian Writing-Books, etc., etc.
Send for our new II.U'STRA.TEI) DESCRIVTIVK CATALOGUE, wiuch will be
niniled free to any teacher <>r school officer. 1: tells what teachers think of tho books, and
contains specimen pages of each.
Addrra, UNIVERSITY PUBLISHING COMPANY,
1">5 and 157 Crosby Street, New York.
w . A . S Ii A Y M A K E R
GENERAL AGENT,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
0/^°° : Corner Marietta, and Peachtree
tSurimarc, Cntlcrn, ©tins. #c.
w.
CO.,
L. WADSWORTH Ac
IMPORTERS AND WHOLSALE DEALERS IN
HARDWARE, CUTLERY, GUAS,
Carrlago MalLors and Builders Material and
Tool., Rubbor and Xraatbor Boltins-
No. *4 Whitehall Street, Cor. Alabama, Oppoaite Jamea' Bank ATLANTA C A-
August—tillSaptIO
subscribe
FOB
THE HUN’
THE SVJT
is only 87 per year.
FOUR-ROOM HOUSE
TO RENT.
t OFFER to rent a Cotta#* of tonr rooms, on
Walksr Ktreet, near Nelson. Good water, geod
garden, fruit treea, kc. Apply to
MRS. ELIZA 808WORTH,
•cpl lw. On the pretutae*.
Rev. E A. BONHeIM’S
TT'NOLISH AXO HERMAN HCnOOL, CORNER OF
i. klih'hellaml l’ryor Itrvcw, will be re-ob«ue<l on
the 4th of September. Iu this school lh<* usual
branches, as wells* tbe German language are taught.
Tuition $5, #4 and $A. according to the bran< hr*
taugnt, payable in advance.
daughter of the liev. H. Bokurn.
aug2-M-t