Newspaper Page Text
Patented Feb’y 27, 1871Jby Findlay k Oral*
early day to ——
R. FINDLAY'S HOMS. rtndMy’s
Deab Hi hh- UUtlU.fBUIpttr
■ . • . -v
MkDrlvIaf OoNm Ola* Mlaf Pm* te*l* >l OfW'» M » n V l <<te*
Cotton Uttoro art Cotton Soot (huu
NO. 3.WAKKKN BLOCK, OPPOSITE OLOBK H0T1A
All bnsioaaa wtntod to litem will hava (Met PteteMd oMi
Ordmter lteonuc, Tim or Uojm and Veteily Uyydatya
COMMISSION 1 1*4 MB*I CERT.
RiriKIIOIIl
THE J>AILY 8UN.
■tar m»
on Pint Page ,- Local < id Business
on Fourth Page. ^ _
Thvbsday MofWDta Shtewbeb 21
U N STROK ES.
MOT The Washington Chronicle has
mnuttking to hhj about “the Conservatism
of evil." It forgets tkat evil is always
Radical.
M-TIm Courier-Journal erica, "make
way for the Bourbon!" and instantly
every month in that offloe flies open and
idBratqf^Bteke way for” a quart of it
at feast.
0dh The idea that Ike public has that
tko editor of the Courier-Journal is a
nun of Addle age, is all wrong. He is
quite a young man—in fact, has not ar
rived iUb ‘tag* of mature reflealion.”
Dtk Mn—s appsunlly a> mall eo i
Washington Chronicle, un
bleached Radical, says “the Louisville
Courier-Journal ia an able paper." The
ChmmickM edited by W. W. Holden, late
of North Carolina. Borne compliments
IS- Tfe Mississippi Pilot says ‘•Gov
ernor A loam has been appointing Demo
crats to ofltoa daring the whole of hia
administration." Possibly that is the
flat time a Radical Southern Govemof
1 of doing a
tet~ The Radicals have had a good
deal it *ey about '•civil service reform,"
aadit ia now aoggvstofl that tbs asm e-
Tjt hte~T dafalcatinns, which have re-
oen tip come to light, were only oommitted
to shew the country the necessity that
exists for soeh a reform.
and returning, after a short absence,
found her a corpse.
The same psper 1>M the following
items:
Mr. Preslty Williams, agod one hun
dred and two yean, was sent to the coun
ty poor house on Wednesday afternoon.
Monroe oountv tax-payers will have to
contribute very liberally to meet the in
debtedness of the enrrent year. TheOr-
dioarv has not yet fixed the rate of taxa
tion, nut he says there is no doubt about
the redemption of much of his scrip in
this way. At present there ia no “sinking"
A SPEECH OF HAKE INTER
EST.
Remarks of the iloa. James
Jackson at the Alumni Ban
quet, Athens, Ga., Slst July
1H7L
The Louisville Courier-Journal
“The report that a Georgian is
*1 of canfaiballsm, springs from
the ted, we presume, that Mr. Stephens
bar been bjipg to chaw ns up.” Wbere-
npoa the Chicago Post retorts with the
following: “We submit that this effort
doea not prove that Mr. Stephens is a
cannibal It only proves that he is not a
Jew." ^ \
JtP An exchange says “about 350 'la
epa have sent their cards in to Mrs. Fair
Crittenden.” Tho fact
i is, thi term •“ladies" has
lao Indiscriminately that
lia spaying it to hla
I wife, except in oom
) all partieB are known, and
. Thi Courier-Journal mjt: “Rv«7
> State that haa yet spoken,
oar ted* of the
toteeky has spoken and
1 on yaw aide of the
l Democratic majority
wss unprecedented. California has spok
eu. She arrayed hersolf on your aide of
tho question, and went with yos over to
the Radicals.
’ GEORGIA NEWS.
AUGUSTA.
The Chronicle and Sentinel of the 18th
■ays:
W. 8. Ryan, a native of Ireland, but a
resident of this country from boyhood,
and a printer by trade, arrived in tins
city on Sunday morning by the train
from Savanna. He was u an exhausted
condition, produced by chills and fever
and dissipation, and died yesterday
masting- about iliac o'clock.
SAVANNAH.
The name of Gen. Joeepb E. Johnston
has bsen suggested by a correspondent
of ttoSavonah Rtpnbkcan as a oandi
date for Mayor of that city.
The Savannah Democrats arc organiz
ing for the municipal election.
Savannah, Apes a policeman $25, and
Boapanda Un for a month far goiag to
•leap on bin poet
There was a small piece of unpleasant
ness between two prominent Government
officials in the Custom House on yester
day, in which one was taken with a alight
case of “darkness about the eye." Both
being katosiewaly prominent in our city,
one as akteaTpeundan and the other aa
a Union House officer, the case assumed
rather aa interesting shape in the after
noon, and may perhaps go further. Ito
bow the Sing ie rung.
The Republican of the 19th aays:
The new oettea reap ia beginning to
oomo to quite freely, the railroads and
tho Savannah river steamers bringing it
now on every trip. We note the annul
of the steamers Swan and Rosa, from
Angaria and tendings ok the Savannah
river yeaterday, the former with forty-
two and the latter with one hundred and
eighty-foor bales of the new ootton crop.
The Advertiser of the same date has
thw luttawing:
In the Boston Advertieer of tho 13th
we And the following, of which wo be-
lieve there jarnTgoueral knowledge
dSStoofffiTlrie^omriodore ’josiah
Tatoall, died in Furtlaad on the 8th inat.
She was on her way from Halifax to visit
some friend in Hew Hampehire, but was
taken unite risk in Portland, being previ-
ouwy an S™S, 'and died at Mr. W. T.
Sargenfa, 22 Park Street The family arc
of that city, bring in attendance a* the
Maine Episcopal convention, took charge
of the remains.’’
IOXZ.
The Courier of the 19th, Ua the lot
knrin*)jli'lJ !
Work ia busy on the water-work*
down. Jt’
There has been quite a flush tide in
the Coosa, and from now oa thare may
hardly be expeated a aearaty of water
for the boats.
The ootton crop will be very short ia
this and adjoining counties.
icon BOS count?.
The Adrrrtiter of tho 19th announeea
Urn deaths of Mia. Mary E- ?•>“»“•
Hardy Perkins, Charlie King and Mrs.
John McCord. 01 the latter it aeya:
Mrs. John McCord, of this connty,
died very suddenly at Indian Spring on
Fridav- n - that after visiting the
Spring, Mr. M. went up to the village
leaving bis wile ia lbs waiting room at
Prow the Firmer and Artisan.
The following speech will be read with
the deepest interest by many hundreds,
and even thousands, all through the
Southern States, from the Potomac to the
Rio Grande:
Hon. James Jackson responded to the
eighth regular toast, which was:
“To the Alumni of the aeoond quarter
of the preeent century—they present
many heroic names, of whom our Alma
Mater may justly feel prond; but to indi-
vidualiae them might aeem invidious
Let ua cherish the memories of the dead,
and let ua love the living. We have a
heart for all our Alumni, of whatever
party or creed; a mother's full heart
goes out to each and to all.”
Mr. President and Gentlemen: The
blood of the mother ever courses iu the
veins of her children—her intellect re-
8 reduces itself in their brains. I feel,
lerefore, that I can reflect no greater
honor on our Alma Mater than to recall
the names and recount the deeds of head
and heart of sons born of her blood and
nourished by her intellect during the
second quarter of a century of her life—
the period covered by the toast to which
you call mo to respond.
Following the example just set me by
my distinguished frieDd (Judge Harris)
I begin with the first class of that pe
riod—the class of 1826:
Two names on its roll are sufficient of
themselves to immortalize our illnstrions
Alma Mater. The ouo is Daniel Chan
dlcr, who, in a great address delivered
before this University, grvo the first im
potus to female education, nml the men
ument to whose memory is the beautiful
sisterhood of colleges, academics and
schools throughout the South, wheuco
educated woman ia annually sent to adorn
and sweeten oar homo life. The other
still survives, and as the head of the bar
of Now Orleans—preferring private sta
tion and poverty with tho South to tho
robes of high offico and wealth with her
enemies—as the head of that bar, and in
that privnto station ho reflects as much
honor upon the name of John A. Camp
bell as when on tho Supremo bench of
the United States, ho was the peer of the
proudest that sat by his side I
Sir, during this period of her existence
onr Alma Mater gavo birth to statesmen
illustrions on tho high arena of national
polities. I name but two. The one is
Alexander H. Stephens, who won tho
proud appellation of tho Great Com
moner of the South in tho Federal Leg
islature, and who, unable longer to stand
upon his feot and pour tho eloqnenco of
truth and patriotism into the populur
ear, traces, at Liberty Hull, with tremb
ling pen, lines of immortal thought oml
historic interest. The other has de
scended into the grave—a grave wet with
more tears than ever fell before on ooi'irao
of ptiblio man. Dear to me, sir, he was,
os was David to Jonathan; I revero the
grandeur of his intellect and the great
ness of his heart—the one exhibited in
the high positions he adorned, the other
in that constant flow of charity which
caused the widow’s heart to sing for joy
and the orphan's eye to dauce with glee.
Need I mention his name? Connected
with thia university as pupil and trustee
from Boyhood to the grave, and spring
ing now from every heart to every lip,
need I say I allude to Howell Cobby
Sir, during this period our Alma Ma
ter gave birth to Governors of States.
Again, I name but two. Both, with
talents befitting their exalted stations,
uniting the virtuee of private life, the
accomplishments of Christian manhood
and the parity of unsullied honor and
honesty. The one is Herschel V. John
son, ex-Govemor of Georgia; the other
it the class-mate of my distinguished
friend near me, Judge Vason, and my
own class-mate, John Gill Shorter, Gov-
ernor of Alabama. „ „
Sir, daring this period our Alma Ma
ter gave birth to Prinoee in Israel—lllus-
trioas watchmen on the heights of Zior.
Agria I name but two. The one ia
George F. Pierce, the Bishop of my own
church, under whose matchlem eloquence
I aat at Oxford but the other Sabbath,
bathed ia tears, and not ashamed of mv
■nsknere because all ether eyes which
£tari£ were wet too; tho other ia
Bauamin J*. Palmer, who site now in
onr preaaooe, and whose power wo ell
felt Yesterday, and at whose feet I had
designed toby a little chaplet of flowers,
but the distinguished President of tho
Board of Trustees, (Gov. Jenkins,) and
the accomplished Chancellor of the Uni
versity, (Dr. Lipscomb,) have scattered
them so profusely, yet tastefully, around
and over him. that 1 find no vacant spot
for my humbler offering.
Sir, daring thia iienod our Alma Ma
ter made judges who filled the Dench
with ability and dignity, and preserved
the ermine spotless in punty. Ayun 1
nemo bnt two, Judges of Georgia s on-
promo Court, whose opinions and Judg
ments will live on bar records forever.
The one is Henry L. Bonning, of i-onim-
bda; the other is Linton Stephens, of
*8ir, during the ssme period, onr Alms
Matergivo Inrth to lawyers of power and
erudition suffleient to make a hundred
jndgrs. Again I name bot two. Iwe
one is Robert Toombs, of whom onr la
mooted Chief Justice Lumpkin said that
ha was .the moat powerful intellect be
ever saw in a conrt room; the other is
Wiu. Hope Hull, who sits near me, most
worthy of all the men I know to wear
the robe which fell so becomingly around
Iba person of that accomplished lawyer
»nd spotless Judge.
Sir. during the awe period, our Alma
Mater gave birth to pbjwkmos, who, in
the more quiet walks and retired circles
of life, edminiaterod tho healing art to
HoffcriDK humanity, soothed the Borrows
of tbemek mid smoothed the pillow of
the dying. Again I name bot two-
dccply read to the science of medicine,
and Whose name and fame as great doc
tors are conuksasorate with the State.
The one is Dr. Paul E. Eve, of Augusta;
the other la Dr. Richard D. Moore, of
Athena; identified with thia University'W
pupil and Trustee from boyhood to this
moment, lie sits quietly at this Board,
high and work* as earnestly
any child she has
by those who dweH within the curtilage
of bor nwmaiow and wko minister at her
alters here—passing by another very dis
tinguished name. Professor Sanford, of
Mercer University --again I recall to your
memory but two illustrious names. Sir,
they have carried the fame of Georgia’s
University to the hu distant Pacific,
where the one as President, and the oth
er as Professor, of tho University of Cal
ifornia, illustrate the blood and the brains
of this “Grund old Alma Hater,” nay,
sir, more; wherever science is upprecia-
' ted, and scientific works ore read, this, or
the other side of the broad Atlantic, the
names of lire. John and Joseph Lecomte
ore familiar as household words. I,et
Georgia bring them back. Let this,
their mother, recall them to her bosom
to aaBist her to her new march to wider
Adda of victory, under better auspices
and more liberal endowment.
But, air, were I to go on with thia roll of
honor daring this period of our Alma
Mater’s history, to-morrow’s sun would
rise upon me 'still repeating the names
and recalling to mind the talents and
achievements, in every walk of useful
life, of those sons whom she gave to
Georgia, to the South, to mankind and
to God. There ie one other close I may
Dot omit—heroes who fell on battle fields
of victory were born to her here. I name
again but two. The one ia Frauds 8.
Bartow, the able lawyer, the cultivated
scholar, the accomplished gentleman, the
noble hero who fell in the arms of victo
ry on the plains of first Manassas; the
other ia Thomas B. It. Oobb, the only
universal genius I have ever seen. Law
yer, aoholar, statesman, soldier, orator,
Christian, patriot, it was hia to complete
the circle of human virtues and to fill
the measure of intellectual prowess.
Everywhere equal to everything he tried
to do, and trying to do only what hia
great heart told him was right, he too
fell in the arms of victory on the heights
of Fredericksburg, in sight of the house
where hia mother was born. “Par nu
bile Jratrum /”
One thought, Mr. President, and I
have done. If, while struggling with
poverty, fed by Georgia, when fed atoll,
with a niggardly hand, our Alma Mater
has produced suoh sods aa these, what
will she not aeootnpiiah when enriched
with that endowment of a million of
money for which oar Hearts now pent,
nod which onr hands must secure for her?
Sir, mingling onr hearts together in love
for her around thia festive board, let ns
pledge our hands to the work, and with
one vigorous, determined, united effort,
each in his place, yet all together, we
shall lift her aliove every want, nml make
her rich in endowment and cnlnrgod ca
pacity for good—the cqnal of tho proud
est University in all the land.
-Sjthilnrw Basis* Martin* ■
H, fj»>la*’*Bnia Irw IPaifcq.
T. Or. TBROWBR,
rrtqnwor Ezuteor riusnsc Works,
1\ O. llo* -Ilk), ATI AN I'A, UA.
_ui£M c»._ _
>UNDOr PY
Mutual Life Insura ace Co.,
OF ST. LOUIS, IVtO.
MYERS k JOHNSTON,
Agents tor Xoribvrn <»eorgin.
SHcm r ioaSkToa. )^AtlQ,lltcl,GB
orrioimst
JAMES U. KAILS, Preudeut.
A. M. MUTTON. Yice-PrMddeuU
t. W. LOMAX. Twwirw,
C. O. MULATTO*. OoBCMlAcrat.
W. MATCH. M. D.. ) ModicAl DorM
U. c UkUTOFUEM. H D. j Do * pd *
TIm Mlnirin* (entkiDin. Mob of «rhoia hold i
Policy la thin Company, have been organized Is tbli
oily an a
BRANCH BOARD OP TRUSTIER ■
1 Macon Cornea to Aifcfata 4A£Utf! ” II I
* mi* m*r*»v1»ub*> y 'V 1 -* OUr i rteaV'e- Atk *V
FINDLAY’S IRON WORKS
flliacellancons.
REMOVAL.
muz LONDON AND LIVKItrooL AND OLODR
X Insurance Company, General W. 8. Walker and
James E. Williams Agents, has removed to rooms in
tho Dollar Savings Bank, on Wall street, in the
Kimball House. R*ptl&-6i
New Iteute to Mobile, New Orleans
Vicksburg and Texas.
Blue Mountain Route
V I A
SELMA, ROME, AND DALTON
Kuilroad and Its Connections.
I |A38t..TtiLno UCAV1.TU niii/ta
A SIX A- M. TRAIN OP V
A. ATLANTIC RAILROAD*
at 10 A. M.. luaklug cloae connection v
FAS T EXI'H E S S
or Selma, Home and Dalton Railroad, i
TRAIN
ftlting at
...ftlOP. M.
and making close uonuectloos with train of Alabama
Central ltailn aU, arriving at
A. M.
Jackson... 11:M A. M.
Vlck.la.r« 3teP.lI.
ALSO, make cloae connection at CALETIA with
train* of Boutfe and North Alabama Railroad, arrlv-
lag at
Montgomery *• “•
Mobil* 1:4® A. M.
NnwOrlcMl. 4:85 T- *■
The Bond Sm tmn noontlr •qairpnd and IU
lulpm.nt U not .urvuMd hj mnj m the Sonth
v Jwnjtk and bent; n» SnUh.
•#- No chenve of <mre between Borne nad Seim*.
PULLMAN PALACE CARS
NO DELAY AT TEBMINAL POINT*.
u iow m bj anr other Houle
Pnrehue Tlckrt. rtn IlnaMon tl tho OenenJ
Ticket OOco, or *1 tho H. L Klmboll Hooeo.
JOHN B. PECK,
General Passenger Agent
E. O. BABNET,
Auction Sale.
W l WILL SELL THIS KOBKINO AT Wn»K
O'clock, corner of MrkctU ud Brood etreete.
11 hud of acddlo me mruem U«nm i AJjo, l ire
thru ime old Bnhmin (low ud Yoon* CMf ; rura-
Itnre, Drv Goode, do. 8dm podWve.
R. H. Baptwt, Anot'r.
MARALBOV * BRUCE. Propt’ra.
[POUNDBDIMI.]
MOORE’S
SOUTHERN
Business University,
Cor. Ilrtmd A Alabama Hfe».
ATLANTA. OA-
Open Day and Night
A THOBOUOI PBAfTirTAL AMD SYSTEMATIC
•ottiw of tmmeuettem tor
Young Mon anj Adultrf*
Qualifying theca foraay Pesitkm in
FluanceaudTrade,
In UM Oactmt pomlMo tuno led >1 the loul ox-
temee.
Evcnlag Scasiens from 7 to 9 O’clock.
arter Manf Uino. No leocklrm
but hopes
for the old Mother
during this period, our Alma Mater
made Ike men whothemWvea hare mode
pnroni Great teachers and professors
er (kUl'«U'< mat Specimens of ivnmoneldp
celled on epidlecdoc. AMram
U. F. MOORE,
wgahi pbinoipal.
'MlLLEUUE, Jr.,
attorney at law
Oflea la Gfaat’s Buitdiag. ooraer of MarlaU*
aad Broad itwfto.
PrartlrrE In the Ooaru ot ltd «dty aad aomty,
and Mm UalMI Ktataa W*
ji*eai» Coant of (li|pb.
STEAM
a lHK enderehmed U preperwd to fnndeh IMS
. EreUMS tee Sew Mills oc PlenUUua wo, of eoy
else deHred,rflho
Moot Improved Styles usd Best Mikm
oa the shortest uuUn. (Irina (lerenlec to eU mW.
ON HAND ron .(ALE
Ono lVhoree XepM end Sew UIU. cumfloM Urn
baan Med stxtf days.
Ako-oae Sow Portable Engtm-, ft-hor** power.
Win he odd et e bergeln.
Evan P. Howell.
J. C. Kirkpatrick.
John A. Kitten.
Albert Howell,
Andrew J. Went,
Calvin Fay.
A. P. Thompson,
T. M. Elyaa.
John Koaly,
HKNBY MYE1UJ. _
C. A. UIMPHON. M. D.
George E. Gibbon,
Anthony Murphy,
J. J. Williams,
Dr. J. A. Link.
tUahanl P. Utena.
SbarETn. Killian,
Medical
V. A. BtmriqfB, RE. if.. I 1
J. W18TAU VANTE, M.D. f
All aoUoUa issuad by this Company become uou-
forfeltabla after the payment of oae tall annual paa-
aiiaai. No reatriottoaa an tnaal or ram draw.
Dividends declared annually on all policies which
have baan two yaars la loMp, and ta prnpnrttoa «a
tha amount of premium paid.
Offlec t Ua. 48 Whitehall It., Stain.
AgaaU Xor Northe rn Goocgia.
1,000 BU8UELH
Red Rust Proof Oats
Mark W. Johnson’s,
OPPOSITE
Cette* Warefcowoe, ea Bread StreeL
AIHO:
800 Outh. Selected Seed Barley,
360 Hush, sred Rye, la ssmsce,
600 Bath, heed OTtewt,
310 Bath, Bed Ctssrer,
316 Both. Bed Top or Btrdt
Oratt.
331 Bush. Orchard Oratt,
lOO Bath. Tall Meadow Oat
fyatt, to arrtee,
175 Bush. Blue Oratt, used alt
other utefut Grattet, he,
500 del. Fresh Turnip Seep ;
ALflOl
lOO Tons hea Fowl Fttwan and
other Guano, for Wheat, Eta.
ALSO:
500 Dixie Flows and other
Flow a, from $3^60 to $6 ^0, cheaper than I
mado "Scooter*.’’
AL8O1
The Keller Patent Brain Drill,
Per sowing Wheal, Etc.
Mark W. Johnson’s,
P. O. BOX 230, Atlanta, Oa.
ThePalaceDollar Store
? a
>
0
Id. U. PIKE,
TIE. £
TH V
Musical Instruction.
pBOF. HUTCH1M80N, Musical Director of the
Hooiaty, Atlanta, Teacher of Piano-Forte.
Organ and Melodeon.
Addrea*—Caro Lawshe and Haynea, Whitehall
air—t. orB.O. Bog-ML ——
To Parties Desiring to Build
rilHK anderalgned wonld rMpoatfuUy Inform tha
X dtlrcua of Atlanta that ha ia bow prepared to
Buptrtmtmd tho Mmtldlar •«! JNnithlmf, ar
thd Fin totting- lhparimrni dm ip,
Firtl Cl non Manor they map Mi
Mr** I*
Ha haa at hia command a picked aat of hands, and
feels confident iu giving i’i-neral —Uafhctlon.
““ BKFERENCE—Col. John L. Grant, Lopgley
► ►
Q K
iRhtni
lion, aad Pay k Corpnt, Archtterta.
L O meet tho domandii of an
1RCEEAB1NU WHOLKSALK BUIlREgl
’a have aaawred large aad commodious store rooms
i the Kimball House, fronting «*n Decatur Street,
_aarly apposite Moors k Marsh and Silvwy k
arty, which wa will occnpy
ON lat OCTOBER NEXT,
and where we will bo glad to receive our friends and
With the— increased facilities lot doing a
H'hmUmic l>i Hf UuMinrak
UABGB aad WELL AJMOBTE
•off/offer
PUPEBIOII IKDUi’KMKNTH
ta the trade.
Until 1st V
pScS
rMMMMMTMJr, TJk'LMM* €W. f
>ug» ia* Atlanta. Ga.
IvlEUrkOH-A. NTSI
BUY
CROCKERY and GLASS
No. 47 Peachtree Street,
-non- ■ t
T. I-C. mVl-iElY,
JKPOBTEn AND JOBBEK.
or BRABLUHED 31 IXAIUA
Keepa a large stock.
Oeeuptee THREE FLOOM-HMl* iMt*
Inducement* offered to caMi buyer*
Banal to any Jttarhct
AUaata, Oa., AoguM 3,1»T1. •««
, t
Read of Third $t., Sign of
MAOON,H}EOItaiA.l (
THE LARGEST IK THE SOUTH!
SkiUed Labor aad Kodefti Kaohinerv.
An Work. rtKTarraziiaCL
Northern Prices for Machinery Duplicated.
hTBJM FUtrtUFTMB OF Xfr KIATD JdJtt*. USB,
m mtSSS!^i£iSS£fL
Fl tNiS. VrUMlfVe Ml
I I* I' JC.Cfci*
n-*>Owpk< Nnw pmkw. is RWateteM
ass of Deary Don
try of mH hissdi
N R 4’
r Oompetlth'd.
laery ftn- Saw
REPAIRING IN ALL
FINDLAY’S SAW-DU!
r SAW-RILL.—.
■matoaes, Beltiax, Clremlar Sawn, Steam Flttiaga, BabMVScW, ete 4 gjf,
rUBNHHED TO OODEB. TEHVS, CABU (IB APPBOVEB PAPZO.
B. FINDLAY’S SONS, MMWte'Cw <
* '•!.» ,,i b, li ui l*”I r>» <a f x—54 L-’ vte’i f
Jaisf.’.iua
THE GREAT
ECLIPSE Screw Cotton and Hay Pro*,
Wf Mil
_ «hdaftete to pronoun—
draught, moat powartai—In Mot. tha beat (without aa ttoeptiou) Ootton T
and all other Iron Screw Praises I ha— ever seen or Used, tha— M f—t
p r ^
for many order* from this section S nur neighbors a— detmn
twice m tast m any of the other Iron Screw Preaaaa oaa tag
rJ!*d* Hng1t *•
atawary turn of tna am*n Mfc—Mahk dea-nda 4— aft
vloe of the tube or nut iu which the so—w work*, ie *ueh
ora (non screw . the—br-ndartag (tea «-rtMh*rU
1ME or AMhvOTMEB iron ~ “ '
bla. aa ordinary mule oae he
BULITY, RAPIDITY. LIGHT DRAUGHT, end gTAXDUfi
s It the BEST Screw Frees Ilf THE WORLD, and
Tapur-M— WMUAEAMgWa
r I.IMT, KTO.
R. FINDLAY’S 80NS, 1 MflSflM, Oa.
CRAIG’S PATENT * BORSB
FOU OkUVXNO OOfTTOM OINS, i, Ut :» tea*
mini .m jet la.isli I. UwamateNWI
on b« pal up WITHOUT tk. Q4ol e Oeeteele, tU
Matialatlon Ouarantead or Mommy
KID VOW IU.DVTBATBD CfBCULOO. Ini
R. FINDLAY’S SONS;
ease—
n«f! n| fw.d ifihkl—i
boon. Oa.
The IY©w Portable
Ailmlnlal rn lor’m Sato.
grille or dooaui*, 1
Till'rratn Cotrerr. J
U T Tlrtan of ui order of *h„ CnmV rt IVVhore <f
m«uiawak,n.iuii«TMkfh
NovMnlwr uM, lull. UUW"U Up, Uwfal b.,nr.of
ule nefur,' lh( C -iirt [Tki^ Il'-.r In CrtVfunmn*,
In Mt<l TOtintT. Ik* PWnlrtkin abia, (r. Du..,
CPKmam Mlted U Ik. urn. nf l*r Wk Tk.
mIuaUuu I* h withy, rocic
t.supsBxna’M
LUMBER YARD,
|n>st otUce. Fend
I ua. or email grain;
Mr Ala—nder Clemmoum Is c “
COTTON FACTOB&
ta Cotton Food GNmaOr
cuiture of ooru. c
good rejialr. Mr. Ale—ndc
ice, and will lake pleasure in ■howam it to any
rwm vklrhlng to parch*** 1 . Term*, twelve month*
fe: W,Ul ““' r °" d t *rA , l» T N'TwPlS 1 i. r *•
•vyU 14* AlnjiaMrakw.