The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873, November 08, 1871, Image 2
THE DAILY SUN*
Wxdkxsdat Momenta Novkmbir 8
Mr Office in the Sun Building, Wat
tide Broad tired, Second Boor Soulh of
Alahiana.
§mt Nete Adrerli.ments always found
on Firtt Page; Jooeal and Business Notice* I tion of power advanced unopposed, were
din of the mart, or the ring of th" -ier
changer's table, so faseiuating n .ud,
that the .crash of the falling pillaia of
the Temple of Liberty cannot penetrate
the ear 1 '
The mad pursuit of wealth, immorali
ty aud crime, utter disregard of personal
liberty, vast accumulation of the public
domain in rapacious haods, whilst usurpai
i Fourth Page.
Agcau for'I Or las,
A. O {amviu, 1 hoaieoo. Ul
H. 0. iIawiltok, Dolton, uo.
\V C. Jr . Xotoutou. Go-
TitrA*. Mait k Oo., Wlat* BlotuA, (ireeu Co.. Oa
a. L. ttw ctaie naan,yen-
J, a Pabsam. LeGrange. Oa.
K. A. VAaarixja, IWoBtaarUto. Oa.
JC q. wiLLiAiaa, Union Total.
Aon B. baotra. Bbertoa. Oa
CSoagt nf On, Unbarrlpllon Pries.
We ask attention to our new termB of
snbneription in the first column on our
•«*M* —
We publish in full, the decisions of the
Supreme Court; also the daily "Pro
ceedings” of the Court, sod keep the
"Order of Business’’ standing in our
opium ns.W
lira nf Ike Fw M tbe
Cheering gentisnents from the
East.
We ssk the speeial attention of oor
renders to-day, to two articles in our
columns, entitled respectively, Politics
in New Hampshire, and Politics in
Maine. Let no one bo deterred from
their perusal by thsir length. These
are times when men who wonld preserve
their liberties, most understand. Free
Government can only bo maintained by
the Intelligence, Virtue and Patriotism
of the people. When bad men conspiro
against liberty, good men must unite
everywhere In it* support, not by vio
lence, but by n resort to those Constitu
tional instrumentalities which cannot
fail of ultimate suocess, if properly un
derstood and inflexibly applied on every
occasion. We firmly believe that an over
whelming majority of the Peoples of the
United States aro devotedly attsched to
the Institutions of their ancestors. All
that is needed for a rescue and preserva
tion of those Institutions is, united ac
tion upon the principles on which they
are based. A. H. B.
POLITICS IN * NEW HAMP
SHIRE.
From the Concord Patriot, 36th Oct.. 1871.
New Hampshire Democracy.
We do not desire to intimate that the
Granite State Democracy have any pecu
liar patent-right political creed to which
the other free and sovereign Statmof the
Union have no proper title or oloim; but
we do wish to allege, distiuctly, that tbs
worst place in all the broad domain of
the United States, for tbo introduction
of innovations and pestilent abams, is
the strong, stubborn soil of our Granite
Hills. The very air we breathe begets a
sternness of purpose that is marked and
peculiar; aud it would be blind and false
logic that would argue that beoause some
tbiugs may succeed in other sectiors of
our common country, they would there
fore be successful in New Hampshire.
No better illustration of tho unique and
heroic tirnmess of Democratic yeomanry
of our State, is needed than the (jlori-
nfter year, through darkness and de
feat, sustained and cheered by
the abiding conviction that Truth
and ltigbt must in the eud prevail.
Even our jiolitical opponents have stood
confounded before the grand spectacle of
Democratic devotion to principle, whiob,
through fifteen long, weary years, com
manded tbe respect of all men, and modo
the Orauito Democracy famous. No
man was so prejudioed or so unreflecting
ns not to see that tbeir ultimate triumph
vat simply a question of time, lint no
part of that glorious uud enviable repu
tation was gained by sordid mid corrupt
oouditions with spoils-hunting factious.
Tho respect, the confidence which that
answerving and glorious record had
gained for the Democracy was all their
own. It was not, it could not lie, divi
ded among tho dealers in small “loaves”
and smaller "flshee.” It was the herit
age of the sterling Democracy and of
the people. And now, if in an avil hour
it should be found that the leaders of the
ouce enviable Deinoeracy have stood si
lently or approvingly and seen miserable
soldiers of fortune, or false professors of
reform, elevatod to tbo highest offices,
let those leaders pause aud trem
ble ; for tbe rsuk and file of the
Granite Democracy are not with them iu
this work of foul demoralization.
No gain, in reputation or in power
cuu ever come to the Democracy from
coalitions with fragmentary and unprin
cipled factious. Disaster, contamination,
ruin, eertaiuly postponed victory, must
bo invariably the sad remit in every in
stance of corrupt or selfish amalgama
tion.
That any pretended fragments of dis
content, litim the two great political par
ties in this oonntry can ever assume aud
maintain a ja-rnmnent extstcuoe, is sim
ply tho pretended belief of knaves, or
tbe sincere conviction of uiunico. No
such faction can ever perform, thank
God! the more than Herculean task of
gobbling up the time-honored Demo
cratic party; nor ahould any such fac
tions, under tbe mere delusive cry aud
cntchwords of "reform,” be permitted to
mislead a single Democrat who values
hit honor and his reputation.
If real reforms arc ever accomplished,
it will be, we sincerely believe, by tbe
great Democratic jiarty, purge-1 of its
dead weight and its dross. And this is
the belief of s Urge majority of tbe hon
est people of New Hampshire to day.—
No surrender of stern principle will over
bring s single convert to our standard;
bat if mob should be attempted, would
repel them in disgust. Honesty, integ
rity, firmness end perseverance, these
are tbe virtues which the Democracy
most exhibit if they wonld unite a glon
out future to a glorious past.
Small schemes of politic chicaary will
always justly atrika their pompous in
ventors square in the face, And that the
Democracy of New Hampshire may be
saved further tbe terrible humiliation of
having any pert or lot in sneb unmanly
and undemocratic proceedings, is tbe
solemn prayer of Junes.
Politics IriMsIut.
tbe preludes of the swift pussago
of the ltoman Empire from the
calm repose of the Augustan age,
„ all the horrible and revolting
scenes—the conspiracies, the assassina
tions, the massacres, Inst, debauchery aud
the delirious madness—of the reigns of
Caligula and Galbs I
We have been led into this train of
thought by ovents of a startling and ap
palling character, now transpiring in a
remote State of the Union.
Header, have yon over thonght by what
_ slender tenure you hold your personal
liberty t If a reckless and anpnncipled
offloer, armed with a badge of executive
authority, seizes you in your counting-
room, your field or your bed, and vio
lently harries yoa away and tbrnsts you
in a dungeon—have you ever considered
by what mean, you wonld recover your
libertyt There vssatimeonee, in France,
when such means did not exist. Undor
shadow of executive anthoritv, innocent
men, by soores and by honored*, went
down into tbe dnngeona of tbe Bastile,
and never saw the light of day again.
But at last, after long, weary years ot
despotism bad rolled away, a means of
deliverance came—a terrible means I It
oaase in the form of the REVOLUTION J
_ revolution of blood and of horrors
sunb as the world had never before, and
lias never sinco, known. The beads of a
King and of a lovely Queen rolled from
tbe block, and tons of thousands of necks
were brought uuder the bloody knife of
tbe guillotine.
Iu England, too, there wasatimeonce,
wbon personal liberty hnd uo other se
curity than the copnco of an officer of
tbo crown. But at last a means of deliv
erance from unjust restraint and unwar
rantable imprisonment cumc at an earlier
day and in a milder and more enduring
form than in Franco.
More then seven centuries ogo, the
Barons of England assembled on the
green sward of Rnnnymede, on the banks
of the Thames, with drawn swords in
tbeir hands, compelled their treacherous
King John to sign magna charla, which
contained these words :
‘No XIAN HIIA1.D BE TAKEN OU IMl'IUS-
ONEI> DUT I1Y THE LAWFUL JUDGMENT OF
HIS 1’EEIIS, OB BY THE LAW OF THE LAND.”
It was this clause more than any ether
it contained, that gave to magna chorta
that grand anil high-sounding title— The
Palladium cf English Liberty.
Centuries rolled by, and still at inter
val* kings and kingly officers, ever intent
upon tbo usurpation of power, managed
to evade tbo clause, and to imprison
without trial and without law. Magna
Cbarttt bad declared tbo principle that
personal liberty was beyond the caprioe
and malico of the executive, but it ltad
not provided a means for the protection of
the right.
It was not until nearly two hundred
years ago—until the year 1679—that a
statute was enacted which forever placed
tho liberty of tho person beyond tbe
power of tbe King. To that act was
given the name of HABEAS CORPUS.
Reader, it is to the principles of tlii*
act, rc-cuacted in all the States of the
American Union, that you owo the secu
rity of your personal liberty against all
official usurpation, and against all wrong
ful restraint whatever.
And what is this Habeas Cuniqs which
is so powerful to protect tbo liberty of
the citizens against all wrongful exoroiae
of power?
>Ve will explain by an illustration:
Jo'ur'Home,"seizes yon, and hurries you
away to tbo strung jail in Penobscot
county. Ho delivers you ovpr to tbo
jailor who thrusts you into a Mill, you
protest against tho outrage; but tbo offi
cer is deaf to all your protests. Friends
pass along tbe corridors of the prison,
and yoa appeal to them for help; but
they caunot aid you. Whence is relief
to oome ? Through Habeas Corpus, nud
Habeas Corpus arena I
You have a friend. It may )><- your
wile. She knows tbe wrong you are
sutVering. She goes to any Judgo of the
Supreme Court. Bho tolls him that you
are wrongfully restrained of your liberty.
She dcmunii* of him n writ of Habeas
Corpus, He cannot, be dare not refuso
it. Tbe law compel* him to grant it.
Now wbat is this writ of Habeas Cor
pus ? It is a writ directed to the Sheriff
commanding him to bring before the
Judgo (id habeas corpus) jour bo<lu. This
writ the Sheriff must oboy. if prison
walls and prison bar* stand between him
and you, be must break them down. The
command of that writ musl bu executed,
even if tbo whole power of the State is
required to culoran it. You must bo
token nut of that cell ami brought lwforo
that Judgo, to the end that all tho world
may know irby you hav* been restrained
of your liberty.’ If, upon examination,
the Judge finds that you arc wrongful!
two hundred thousand people, men,
wumen and children, to the unrestrained
license of a brutal soldiery, of thieves,
plunderers and robber*.
Already the telegraph begins to toll tbe
tale of suffering, misery and distress that
prevail throughout those afflicted coun
ties. Innocent men, by scores and by
hundreds, have already been seized and
flung iuto prisons aud dungeons uud
compelled to berd with loathsome uo-
E imprisoned for marder, rape, rob-
and theft All business is snspen-
. crops are left unharvested; property
is given over to negro and carpetbag pil
lage, and citizen* are fleeing into adjoin
ing State* by thousands, to esespe tbe
walls of prison* from which there i* no
hope of deliverance.
And ithen and where is this thing to
end ? Is it to stop with nine counties in
South Carolina ? or is it to pursue those
fleeing citizens wherever they have gone,
and the limits within which habeas oor-
g as is suspended, shall embrace sixteen
tates, and tbe whole South be onoe
more declared in insorvection and rebel-
lien ?
Trying t® Keep'.Thin** Shady.
A heavy aud persistent effort has been,
and is being, made by various interested
parties- to stave off, postpone, smother
up and forever prevent, investigation
into tbeir official conduct, and connec
tion with schemes, enterprises, rings and
plunderings. They raise raw bead and
bloody bones stories, suggest suspicions
and surmises, and try to excite fears.—
They want nothing investigated by honest
and competent men. There are parties
whom the public do not Auspeot, who are
exerting all their powers, in every way
they deem jrrudenl, to keep down inves
tigation. Some men have been remotely
connected with the rings, on tbe sly, and
have made money or obtained advan
tages, the particulars of which they do
not want to see tho Jight of day, and to
whom public attention has never yet been
directed in connection with such matters.
They are opposed to investigation. They
favor every measure but the one likely to
bring oat tho whole truth—anything that
will not likely rip up the whole matter,
root and branch.
I Mr., uni. w
Whither Are We Drifting!
“ Ul feree the lend, to hoeteala* tllA AVrey,
When wcnta accumulate-, and w* deny.*'
•• Thie L> the mors) of All Luo.au leleo; ’
'Tie but the eeon rob oo reel ot tbo |)Oai:
Ftret In-doai, end Iheo glory— vtiou tbot Ml,.
Wool lb, rice, corruption. berberum el loot:
led bleterv, with ell lie roluwee reel.
Heth bet eue fego."
Are the American People enlireli/ given
over to the pursuit of wtolth} Hat the
low greed of gain become stronger than
*U higher and nobler deairs* ? Hath the
HltDribt & ffo.
tjotcl Director!).
s AS SE E N H O USE,
(Formerly United States Hotel.)
/CORNER ALADAlfA and PRYOR STBEETS, AT*
LAh'TA, GA.
E. R. SASSEEN, Agent, Proprietor.
GEO. W. SAKS LEX, Clerk.
TERMS—Transient Boarders. per day....•.-$2 00
Single Meal, or Lodging &D cents.
IN THB
CITY!
REYNOLD’S HOTEL,
NEWNAN - GEORGIA.
(FORMERLY McDOWELL 1I008E. J
Ant* licit*m Rates M 00 PKa DAY.
W.M. Reynold®,
octmt Proprietor.
KENNE8AW HOUSE,
MAIIIETTA, - - GEORGIA.,
O FFERS PARTICULAR INDUCEMENTS
f r min®a d twirl -* " ■
ter quarter*; only <
Jnsnratuc Companies.
Insure in the Strongest Company.
LIVERPOOL & LONDON & GLOBE
INEuRANCE COMPANY.
Cash Assets of the Company, over $21,000,000 Gold
Assets in the U. S. In a “ 3,300,000 “
Stockholders also Personalty tAable for all liny ay emeu In or
the Company.
B v<w m ride from Atlanta.
FLETCHER A FBEYER,
Proprlef
500 Crates assort
ed granite and C C
Ware for $80 per
crate. Cheapest ev
er offered in State.
Send for list of con
tents.
fUiscclIanecm#
Houses to Rent
A TWO STORY HOUSE, HAVING TEN ROOMS,
(on# garret room ressrvedfor a single gentle
man, near tbe Air-Line Depot. Terma euy.
ALSO, A number of small houaea In tbe aam*
neighborhood, Apply to
O. W. ADAID,
uovI -Ct Reel Estate i*geot
Liquors ! Liquors !
BUY YOUR
Ales, Wines S Liquors!
AY
KENNY’S
Chicago Ale Depot
AND
Wltolesule Liquor House.
MV hare a Large Assortment
ot alt kinds of LRfVORS,, trhlch
trIII be sold at the .Host lteason-
tnosuugo nuns mat you arc wrongiuuy,
and not lawfully, restrained uf vuur lib-
erty, be bids you go free.
Such is this grout writ of pcreonul lib
orty, Habeas Corpus It penetrates
every room, every den, every cavern,
every prison, every aril, every duugetin,
everywhere, in line, where a citizen, old
or young, may be wrongfully restrained
of bis freedom. Is it not a glorious heri
tage ? Is it not worthy of njl regard ?
Is not its preservation worthy of every
effort and every sacrifice ? Should uot
tho Constitution of both Iho Union uud
tho State guard and protect it ? It is the
ciluen's thlebl ugainet the usurpation 1/
those whom we art Miyed to ttdriisl with
power.
How carefully oor Constitutions have
guarded it ? Both the Constitution of
the United States and the Constitution
of Maine says :
"Tho privilege of tho writ of habeas
cor/ius shall not be suspended, unless when
in rasas uf rebellion or invasion the pub-
lie safety may require it"
In esses of rebellion and invasion the
writ may be suspended. But by whom .'
Not by the President or tho Governor ;
for that would be plaoing the liberty of
tbe citizen at the mercy of the very arec-
utiee authority against the wrougful ex
ertion of which U is emoted as a protec
tion; but by Congress or the Legislature.
Tiey ere the tide judges whether the pub-
lio safety requires its suspension. It it
a power that they may exercise, but
they cannot delegate it. In that, the
Kaxlnx law delegates to the Preeident,
not only the power to suspend habeas
‘ io the necessity
Danforth’s Dentrifrice-
octir-tf bepfine A FOX.
$25.00 Saved! $25,00 Saved!
PRICES AND TERMS OF
WILSON SHUTTLE
Sewing Machines.
No. 7, Folding o
N». M, Full Cabinet, 100 110
So. fi. k'oldtug Cover. 1J0
WARRANTED FIVE YEARS UY
WILSON ailWINO MACHINE CO
Wit urtab U dialim-py umferaiood that tb«M are out
ternu from wbicb w« never deviate; aud w« ifuaran-
tao our Mat hiuPM to have every poiut of excellence
to be touud in any Underfeed Shuttle Machine, and
aa durable, made of as good material aa any Machine
in the world, and that it will do aa elegjmt work.
W. II. GRIFFIN. Gen. Axeut,
33 lYaciitri'ty^rcct. Atlanta. Ga.
Co-partnership Notice.
\I It. TQOMAR It. KlUm>X 18 ADMITTED A
.‘I Partner in our buaineea iu tbia city, to take
offret f ooi Auguet l«t, laid.
CRAKE. DOYL8TON k CO.
Atlanta, Ga.. N<*v. »—nova 3t.
$yo,oQo,
A PARTIN Ell WANTED,
V FJRST-CLA88 DU81NE88 MAN WITH A CASH
Caitiiml vt $'20,000 would 1k> admitted to a part
nerahiii in * iutyrcau£ile buaineM iu Atlanta, that
paya equal io fuy Imalnoaa in the Htate. Addreas
••X.” Care of Dalljr 8UN 0®ce,
nnvS-dAwCt Atlanta, Oa.
oorpus, but to determine
for it, it is s plain and (Ntlpable viola
tion of both the spirit end letter of the
Constitution, sod nusuthoritstire, null
and void.
Well, right in tho face and eyes ot all
this history, and all tbeoo facts, Ulysses
S. Grant, President of the United Stales,
has done what no king, what no queen,
what no regent of England has dared to do
for two hundred years. In violation of the
Constflution, and in violation of all law,
ho has ausjicuded tho writ of habeas
corpus in nine counties of South Caro
lina, and, by one stroke of his pen, he
has deprived a population larger than in
habits all that great part of the Stato of
Maine which lies east of the Penonaoot
river, of all the guaranties and protec
tion of Jaw. Ha has given over nearly
professional Curbs.
THOS. N. HOPKINS,
Attorney t’oqnsellgr iff Law.
BgPNSWiCy. ox.
WM. U. STKP1IENS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CtUwroBDVILLK. OA.
V. •. LAWMB.
«. L imrATUCL
LAWSON k FITZPATRICK,
Attorneys at Law,
SATONTON, OA.
Will practic* ia lb Ocrnal^ CJrcuit and 8a-
prciuri Court. Prompl aUautlon g iff an to CollrcRona
|fi. Tho Junior rafora, by pertuUaion. to Hon. A.
B. Rbphooa. Hon. 1*. R. BobOuoa. Hon. A. Her me,
Hon. L utopkana. ocU$-lat
J. MADISON CUTTS,
Attorney s Counsellor at Law
BOOM 8 MAY DUILDIXO,
Oor. 7th and E Street*.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
IW Pmcticc* in all tha Court*, be fora all Com-
miaaion*. and in th* Department*. oct!7-lm
ANDREW H. H. DAWSON.
COUNSELLOR AT LAW,
Oflc 1X1 Bradwmj, Roan IS, *
«t-tf NEW YORK-
JARED IRWIN WHITAKER.
Attorney at Law,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
\\TILb PRACTICE IN THE 8EYF4UL COURTS.
> V State and Federal. Duainras entrusted will
racelre prompt attention
MERCHANTS
IN
City and Country
C ONSULT YOUR INTEREST; EXAMINE OUB
■tock and price* before you buy. We Import
CUTLERY AND CROCKERY
And It la not to your interest to go a long dirtanoe
from home and pay a* much or more for the same
goods.
We call particular attention to our stock of TABLE
and POCKET CUTLERY, and do not believe that for
extent variety and prices It 1* equaled In the South.
AN IMMENSE STOCK
OF
George Wottenholm and Son's
Celebrated IX L Cutlery.
Rankin House,
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA.
J. ff. RYAN, Proprietor.
octsl-tf FRANK OOLDBK. Cl-rt.
IlHOWN’N HOTEL,
MACON, GEORGIA.
T his splendid fibst-class hotel is the
Urffest uil beat Hotel lb Uu CU,. It U ,1111.'
ted immediately opposite the General Passenger
Depot, and for Comfort, Elegance. Economy and at
tention of its Employees and attaches it offers great
er inducement* to the traveling public, then any oth
er house tn the Houtheru States.
novk-tf W. F. BROWN k CO.
19M ESTABLISHED. 1805
STUAltT RAILROAD IIOTKI^
Oppoeit* Depot-YALDOSTA. OA.
T his hotel is convenient to business,
pteMantli locUd. .U«ntlv. MrvinU. «nd
ebtree. moderit.. U- T. STUAltT-
novS-tl Froprle
LITCHFIELD HOUSE,
ACWORTH, GEORGIA.
best the market affords.^
nov4*tf
JOSEPH ROGERS fc SON’S
TABLE AND POCKET CUTLERY.
CK WARD 4r CO.
B 4 » ANY.
Wa arc agents for the
CELEBRATED HARD
RUBBER HANDLE KNIFE.
Do you leant If "adc If Butcher's,
Rogers if Son's, 1 X L and
other best Brands ot Razors,
Scissors and Knives. Call
on us.
McBride, a Co.
Looking Glass Plates,
T
We offer the
Cheapest and
Best line pi
House - Keep
ers’ Goods in
the City. Cut.
lery, Spoons,
Forks,Knives
Waiters, Cas
tors, Vases &
Toilet Sets.
In fact, any
thing needed
in a well kept
house. Call
with the cash
McBride & Co.
Jafyt-aodlv
Office Selma. Room A Del too RRCo,
nv. JOII1NNON, Local
NO. 4. THE H. L KIMBALL HOUSE.
Atlanta, Ga., October 13th, 1871.
F RKIGHT AND FARE over Dios Mountain Route.
via 8. ». AD. K. R. and it* connections to all
terminal points, aa low aa by any other routs, vix;
To MONTGOMERY, SELMA, MODILE,VICKSBURG.
JACKSON. CANTON, MERIDIAN anJ NEW OR
LEANS.
S. Y. JOHNSON, Local Agset S. B. A D. E. R.. No.
L osses by Chicago fire a little under $3400.000. the directors in new york ark
requested by tde Home Board to draw ou London for the whole lots, and not diaturb the American
Investments. * -
All Losses will be paid in Chicago at sight, and without discount
Tbia Company haa subscribed TE \ THOUSAND DOLLARS to the Chicago Relief Fund.
No doubt can enterthe mind of any one insuring in this Great Company, as to the perfect immunity
its Policies afford them amidst any conflagration that can possibly occur.
JT. E. JOHNSTON Ac CO.,
GENERAL ACENT8 FOR
Georgia, Alabama, Florida and Mississippi.
NAVANNAH, GA.
W. K WALKED,
JAMES E. WILLIAMS,
Atlanta & New Orleans
SHORT LINE
THE SHORTEST k QUICKEST DOUBLE
Dally Line From
Atlanta to the Mississippi River
VIA
WEST POINT, MONTGOMERY.
and Mobile, for
NEW ORLE ANN,
AND VIA
WEfiT POINT, MONTGOMERY,
BELHA AND MERIDIAN,
VICKSBURG,
And all intermediate Points.
O N AND AFTER SUNDAY. OCTOBER 1, 1871 t
Double Daily Passenger Trains will run on this
Road as follows :
Leave Atlanta at 7:10 A. M
Leave Atlanta at 7:00 P. M
Arrive in Atlanta at F. M.
Arrive in Atlanta at 6:4# A. M.
Night trains run through to Montgomery WITH
OUT CHANGE OF CARS, forming *
DOUBLE DAILY CONNECTION
with train* of the Mobile k Montgomery Railroad
for Mobile, New Orleans, and all points In Texas,
and with Trains for Seims end Meridian, Ala.; Jack
son, Corinth, Okalona, Vicksburg, and all points in
Central Mississippi, Central Alabama and Northern
Louisiana.
Passengers will find this routo 98 miles shorter
than the blue Mountain or any other route to Mont
gomery, Mobile and New Orleans, and47 miles short
er to Selma aud all points west of Selma.
BAGGAQECHECKED FOR ALL TER
MINAL POINTS.
Fare aa cheap and accommodations as good
as any other route.
Ask for Tickets via West Poiut and Mont
gomery.
Tickets for salo at the office of J. H. Porter,
General Ticket Agent, atthe Union Passenger Depot.
L. P. GRANT,
Superintendent.
W.J. HOUSTON,
General Passenger Agent " oct2-tf
ATLANTA, GA.
Ollice in the Dollar Savings Rank, Kimball House.
mntnnl £ife insurance.
LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST!
The Mutual Life Insurance Company
OU NEW YORK.
ITS CASH ASSETS OVER $50,000,000.
s the smallest Percent-
Henry R. Christian,
SPECIAL AGENT.
Oflicc : JAMES’ BUILDING, Whitehall Street.
J. F. ALEXANDER, M. D.,
MEDICAL EX4MINER.
o/trents Wanted who are Workers.
** oct25-
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Insurance Company,
QP WE»y YQUK.
Cash Assets, October I, 1871 $4,723,306 53
Losses at Chicago will not exceed 3,000,000 00
Leaving cash assets, October 13, 1871... $3,733,306 52
Cu the loth instant, sts meeting of the Stock
holders, it wss unanimously resolved that, after pay
ing the Chicago lueses, whatever they iright be, they
would make up intact the
Pash Capital 2,500,000
MAKING CASH ASSETS
$ 4,000,000 !
THIS PLACES THE
SXQIVIE
Upon the «*me SOUND BASIS it heretofore oc-
yled, - • pi. * 1 '"f rs the best
possible security that can be ottered by
Any Oompniiy.
T H Id HOME
Continaea to iaaus policies at all ita Agendo*, and all
its losses will be promptly paid, os usual.
CHARLES J. MARTIN. President.
A. F. WILLMARTH.
V ire-President.
D. A. BEALD.
2nd Vice-President
J. H. WAsnmmi*. Secretary.
GKO. M. Lvov, Assistant-8e«n Ury.
JNO. C. WH1TNER,
Atlanta, Ga.,
“ CIUJAP CQAL. ”
W K WILL 8KLL TO THX CITIZIN* OF AT
LANTA LUitF COIL bj th. Cw Load, Load-
•d on Chrs at oar mine* at 9e per. basbel, or will
deliver It oa Oars, in the rtty at 33c per. bushal;
also, ine Coal o« Cara loaded at mines st 4c. per
bushel.
KENNEDY A MORROW.
Goal Merchants,
M3t Knoxville. Tena.
AfiffntM Wunletl l*or
? ^ ^ 1 ^ T*
GREAT UI8TOr*Y OF THE WAIL Complete in
volume. Mend for circular* with terms and a full
description of the work. Address Nstiooal Publish
ing Co.. Atlanta. Oa., Philadelphia. Pa., or St Louis,
New Ronte to Mobile, New Orleans
Vicksburg and Texas.
Blue Mountain Route
V I A
SELMA, ROME, AND DALTON
Railroad and its Connections.
TJA88EXOEB8 LEAVING ATLANTA DY THE
* atlantTc Sarroad
at 10 A. M., making close connection with
FAST EXPRESS TRAIN
Of gelma, Rome aud Dalton Railroad, arriving at
Selmaat 8:10 P. M.
and making close connections with train of Alabama
Central Railroad, arriving at
Meridian LOO A. M.
Jackson a. ...11:50 A. M.
Vicksburg P. M.
ALSO, make close connection gt C^LERA with
trains of South and North Alabama Railroad, arriv-
Montgomery 7:10 P. M.
Mobile 7:45 A. M.
New Orleans 4:25 P. M.
The Road haa been recently equipped and its
equipment is not surpassed by any in the South
for strength and beauty of finish.
fjf No change of cars beta-sen Rome and Selma.
PULLMAN PALACE CARS
run through from ROME VIA MONTGOMERY to
Mobilo without chauge.
NO DELAY AT TERMINAL POINTS.
Fare as low as by any other Ronte.
4V Purchase Tickets via Kingston at the General
Ticket Office, or at the H. L Kimball House.
JOHN Ji. PECK,
Oeneirf lMuobgor AgenL
E. O. BARNEY. ^ ’ '' 31
General Superintendent
E. V. JOHNSON. Local Agent,
soptld-tf No. 4 Knobs)) House. <
The Palace Dollar Store.
HURRAY'S LINE—NEW
a IRK &■ SAVANNAH.
EVERY TUESDAY fbom each fori.
INSURANCE BY STEAMERS OF THI8 LINE, ONE
HALF PER CENT.
, ®S*SSs
The first olass steamships!
LEO, DEARBORN, Ooimntnder.
VlltUO, BULKLEY, Commsnder,
Compose this line, and one of these steamship*
leaves each port EVERY TUESDAY.
Through bills of lading given by these steamships
by ail railroad connections, and also through bills
lading given in Savannah on Cotton destined for
Liverpool and Hambnrg by first class steamsbips.-
For freight orpaesaye, apply to ♦
HUNTER k GAMMELL, 84 Bay street.
PHILADELPHIA _ AND 8AYANNAH MAIL 8TEAM
vniLJink jrtt &/??
is****
EVERY SATURDAY from each port
INSURANCE ON COTTON BY 8TEAKKR8 ON THI8
LINK ONE HALF FEB CENT.
CABIN PASSAGE $30
DECK, with subsistence 10
TOW AWArfDA DARttKT, Commsiidor
One of those steamships leave each port EVERY
SATURDAY. Through bills lading furnished by
those steamships by all railroad connection*. For
freight or passage, apply to
HUN
I k^or* New.York.
L. B. PIKE, | hex. eakses.
r* V ILrt x THURSDAY,
insurance by this Line can ba effected under cm
open policy at one-half per osnt,
I CABIN PASSAGE $3-) »0
The first class a team ers
■ Herman LI vtstgslaste, Cheeeeiutu, Oom.
Oess. Oarncs, F. O. Mallory, Com.
I Will sail as follows:
I U. LIVINGSTON October 6th. at 12:30 r. *.
3ff, at 13:30 r. u.
IB, at 4:30 P. M.
37, at 4:30 P. M.
Bills of lading given hereon ootton and wheat thro,
A Card to the Public.
L. B. DAVIS,
INSURANCE AGENCY,
IS, WktultaU limb
■»t door |o J. g. fyop,' ftaftjt,
Atlanta, Oa„ Oct, 10th, Wtl,
I HAT* FIVE A xo. 1 USPBAIICI OOMFAXIEX
U>«t *,n not ropnouttod in tbo
Great Chienso Dimotor.
^ThmocomiMolM npromol ,Ckpltalof lltf.floo.-
Tho .root -AXDI8" .UU stooda forth la ito
rtrouath ud power. Atoo, the Firtmu'a Fund I,
iotoct wuad ud —S—ot,
HtUa written et edeqwrte ud eqaitohle ritee.
Oompuiee rarrtrlM the terrible mkfntloiHt
an advanc* over former raise.
L. B. DAVIS,
. „ General Insurance Agent
Whitehall straat, next door to Jamas* Weak.
QCt|5ffl-3t
WE
Baltimore & Savannah
-k Either port every Sra (ft) da/o.
Through Bills of Lading and Paaaongar Tickets,
Issued to all pciata in Oaorgia, Alabama, and Fieri-
da.
I The ships are all first-class, and composed s« fc'-
' lows:
Saragosss Capt. HOOPER.
Buggies 1 Harness !!
I N CONSEQUENCE QF THE DULLNESS OF THE
aeasen. and having a lance supply of the shove
iz&sesgir m ‘ ,fu **" * ^
SEDUCED DATES.
For worhmenehip and iljlo, I hare a well-eetoV
lishntl prestige; and 1 have long maintained a com-
pt-tulou sgaiuat every other iu my lino in tho
STalTE OF GFOnar.l.
Parties visiting the Fair will fln.1 it to their inter-
eat to give a call at my Repo«itory.
Also keep a full stock of Carriages, Buggies, 4c j
mad# by KIMBALL BROTH£R«Bosfc>a.
octlilm A. T. FINNEY- 1
f. B. Amiagws, Agent,
Baltimore, Md.
■apt 28-if
BOSTON asiVANNWR
fiHowmxihlB bins-
‘„“ 8 i/i?HXwS" ,PL *" 'W"‘ 0l 't
SteanUlp - ORIENTAL - (IK pmi), C,r> ■’ K
SHOW.
Reilia* trutn oacb port oa (ho 10th, 30th end A«h
r every month.
Through U11*
8onth sod East.
Freight aud insurauoe st low rates. Good p*«-
•engt-r sccommodstlons.
Goods forwarded free of commission.
Order goods by the direct line from Bostou. and
avoid transhipment
RICHARDSON 4 BARNARD.
Agenta, Savannah.
F. M1CKXBBON 4 OO.,
•eptlS If