Newspaper Page Text
THE DAILY SUN.
H.ituhum Moicuxo Dkjkmdim 33
t&rFnc Advertiscmenls always fvund
on Firel Pint*: Load wvt Business F'liens
on Fourth Faye.
AN ANNIVERSARY.
Niue yews! And doea It aeem so Ions.
Dear Wife, that we hove btood together?
The njiid years hat prove we've hod
Come eunehioe ’mid our stormy weather.
Only thoM days are loaf that bring
Their bitter burdens for our bearing;
While those that glide on pleasure's wings
Are ail too fieaUy disappearing.
Cut we hare walked fa sup and shade;
There have beau storms no hand could tether;
And yet through all these years, dear lore,
in spite of storms, we’ye walked together.
If Fortune came, or fair or foul,
In her own proper form we took Lor,
Though she lias trundled to our door
No burdens of oonveuient lucre.
Fortune st best is what ww will.
And lock la but a rsrtd prancor;
We taka the good the gods provldo
While 111 goes fiddling for a dancer.
A cheerful heart la more than wealth:
A gentle hand Is mort than beauty;
And faith and love are more than all.
When walking, side by side, with duty.
Then, with, oar years, although they’re had
Boms ragged days of stormy weather.
Whan multiplied by nine will be
Bat a brief day thus spent together.
December M, 1«W.
SUM-STROKES.
People who, at their homes in the
North, are troubled with achin', are flee
ing to Aiken as a winter resort
9W The English people are raising a
subscription for the benefit of the fumily
of Mark Lemon.
The Mobile Register Buys “ A
Georgia paper rejoices in sausages and
other hog-killing perduities, which, per
haps, is Cherokee for perquisites.”
► ■
46?" “The churches was all well atten
ded on Suuduy,” is the way in which the
Oriflin Star rings the death-knell of poor
old Lindley Murray.
Emma mine is about to under
mine Schenck’s reputation ubroad. He
will be apt to bo allowed to come home
when he can giro moro immediate atten
tion to his mining interests.
>-»-•-«—
The Communist General Wro-
blowski has arrived in New York. The
nomenclature of the General adequately
explains his connection with the Com
mune. There is no other place for on
individual with such a name.
pbout Tub Si m office ever since, and the
last seen of the man, he was perfectly
blue in the face, and was calling lustily
for somebody to sit an him to keep him
from bursting. The ehauoes are that
if he is called upon to vead many more
such paragraphs- the Coroner will haw
to be called in to sit on him.
t&km “A political clown,” "an escaped
lunatic,” “a peripotetic madman,” “«
howling idiot,” are a few of the compli
mentary terms applied to Geo. Francis
Train by the press of the country.
06k» A Radical writer says that the
present administration "cannot be shaken
by the winds of disaffection or the storms
of opposition, because it is built upon
a rock. ” They do say a good part of it
is built upon Seneca sandstone.
w-e-4
Grant, the eminent contractor for
stone work*- not having, os yet, disposed
of his interest in the. Seneca quarries, is
still receiving bids for all work in his line,
not excluding the masonry of public
buildings.
A vicious New York poet bos writ
ten thirty-two nine-line stanzas on the
Chicago fire, of which the following isau
average sample:
“What trivial thing* sometime* decide the fete
Of cities and of nations ss of men I
The powers that human destiny aibitraU'
Are far beyond the reach of human kou:
Too soon they a»w the like, and worse, again I
That night a woman, at the hour of nine,
B®, The wit of the Atlanta Sun says
that the expression, “Neither of our pul
pits tras filled last Sunday,” is ungram
matical. We stick to it thut we were
right. Consult your grammar, Bro. Wat
son.— West Point News.
Now mako your quotations correctly,
will you? Tu Sum quoted you as say
ing, "Last Sunday morning neither of
our three pulpits was filled,” which The
Bum is still "free to maintain” is another
illustration of what an amateur gram
marian is able to do with a provincial
newspaper. If yon are unable to aeo in
what your inaoouraoy consists, ask some
boy, wbo has just passed the juvenile era
of grammatical lore, and he will tell you.
WJ'*The Washington correspondent of
the Louisville Ledger states that just pre
vious to the Adjournment of the first ses
sion of the forty-second Congress a peti
tion was presented to the President,
signed.liy eighteen Radical Senators and
several Radical Representatives, recom
mending that he recoguizo Foster Blodg
ett as Senator elect from Georg in, so as
to give him control of the Federal pat
ronage of the State. The petitioners
said they hail examined iuto the case, and
were satisfied that Blodgett was legally
elected, nnd ought to be seated. Yet so
terrible has been the Radical fiasco iu
Georgia, that eveu those eighteen Re
publican Senators did ndfc have the ef
frontery to stuud up to Captain Blodgett
in bis lost emergency. The heaviest
blow the Radical party has ever received
bos been given it by the Kadicata of
Georgia. Eveu the Radical papers of
this State have no heart to come up to
the defense of their party leaders.
S6iT One Settle is United States Min
iater to Peru. He is home on sick leave,
drawing fall pay for bis services as Min
ifiter, and employing himself in trying to
secure the Radical Humiliationfor Cover
nor of North Carolina. "That do Settle
it.” ^
GEORGIA MATTERS.
The Rome Courier says: As Mr. Hol
land Bryant -one o’ the oldest and most
highly respected citizens of Floyd oouu
ty—was coming iuto town, hist Tueadiy
morning, hut bane took fright at the cars,
itud thr .w him, injuring him so seriously
that ho died in less than nn hour. His
age was some seventy-five years.
We learn, says the Rome Courier, that
on lost Tuesday night, Peter Turner, an
employee of the Stove and Hollow-ware
Manufacturing Company, was shot three
times, the balls taking effect iu his atom
ach. It is believed that he will die from
the effects. This man was intoxicated
and turbulent, and had been arrested by
M. J. Wimpee and Tobe Cooper. He
r* stated them, stabbed Mr. Wimpee in
the wrist, and was making at him with an
open knife, when Mr. Wmipee shot He
shot twice. Two other shots are said to
have been fired.
Old "Affairs in Georgia” of the Savan
nah News is uneasy. He mutters, "what
we will do for material for this column
next week, the Lord only knows. The
holiday movement is spreading among
our Georgia exchangea Like a ripe infec
tion.”
Mr. J. H. Estill, of the Savannah News,
publishes the following notice: We learn
that a party named E. A. Niven is going
about the city representing himself us a
reporter of the Morning Nows. It is but
just to ourselves to state that there i-t no
such person connected with this establish
ment. E. A. Niven hus been connected
with the reportoriul ooips of the News,
but lita utter unreliability iu every res
poet oocasio led bis discharge.
Richmond county cast 1,030 votes,
Baldwin G50, Warren 345, Floyd 400, and
McDuffie 350—all for Smith.
Cartersville proposes to amuse herself
with u horso-rnce Christmas.
And still the cry is ringing through the
laud, "no paper next week.”
We hear, says tho Griffin Star, that a
few nights since, a parcel of negroes,
said to be iu the employ of the Railroad
con(motors, made a mid upon our clover
friend Joe. Dawson, of lloury county,
called Joe to the door, and riddled his
dwelling with shut. Fortunately nobody
was hurt.
An Augusta person is providing for
a merry Christinas. Tho Chronicle and
Sentinel says:
The cutting winds of yesterday made
it anything but pleasant for the poor
people who were without a fire. Re-
mem hering the necessities of this class,
some kind Christian, who will not allow
his or her name tobe mods public, con
tributed fifty cords of wood to their re
lief. The wood was given out as soon as
received, and made many a pauper warm
last night and this morning.
Thomas Ducey, of Lowell, Massachu
seels, became a happy father for the thir
ty-fourth time a few days ago. Ho is
ninety ye rs old, aud is living with his
third wife. He cumo to this country
twenty-seven years ago, bringing bis wife
and eleven children, leaviug two in the
old country, and ouo having died. The
first wife died soon after his arrival. By a
second he had seventeen children, and
by the present wife three.
A safe way of doing kindness is thus
instanced by a Brownsville, Nebraska,
paper of recent date: "One of tho
coldest nights of the past week two women
of tho fallen sisterhood came to the house
of a wealthy gentleman of this town, and
frankly stated their condition—without
money and without acquuintnn e. The
worthy landlord was in a dilemma,
turn them oat in the cold night wasaome-
thiug lie could not think of doing, nnd
the possible consequences of sheltering
them might, be worse. So he had supper
prepared for them, which they devoured
with the keen relish arising from hunger.
They were then assigned to a room,
shown to it by the laudlady in person.
When they were comfortably secured
therein, the key was ciuietly turned from
the outside and transferred to the laud-
lord’s pocket. The night passed serenely,
and the next morning the women were
furnished with bieakfast aud weut on
their way rejoicing.”
IfeT The services of tho laughing ed
itor of the Sun had to lie culled iu yos-
terday to read tho following brace of
paragraphs, from the Courier-Journal:
The Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, who
will be remembered as the Georgia gen
tleman wbo sometime since wrote a para
graph in opposition to the " new depart
ure,” is now the sole proprietor oi The
Atlanta Sun. The Atlanta Sun is a
dread and fearful thing to be owned by
a man of his age aud size.
Mr. Stephens, who has dono all he
could to kill tho DoutocrdUo party, is now _ _
the owner of The Atlanta Sun. If Tiie jU , y foul aethority, having no oue at
Ki-w l...-..’* ..... ... l;r.v ; i : . J . 3 , . J ...
Over 20,000,000 letters were exchanged
between the United States aud foreign
countries during the last year.
There wero 13,000,000 of pounds of
mail matter exchanged between Europe
and the United States daring the last year.
Josh Billings says: "About (he higgost
joke there iz about the (all of in n iz,
that he hus laint how tow “rule hog or
di." This iz worth, in my opiuyiw,
very near fust cost. But 1 flatter miself
bi thinking in this way: that the man
who lives iu this world, an.) .luz a good
sqtmvo thing thru life, none of yer 8-
hour jobs, Wax more tew brag ov than
uny ov the angels up in heaven.”
A subterranean lake has been struck iu
sinking a wi ll at Louuii. III., which boils
nnd bubbles out to tho height of several
foot at regular intervals, and roors "like
the ocean or the Gulf of Mexico,” besides
making the ground tremble like an earth
quake.
This is a description of a terrible infant
iu Fentress county, Tennessee: "The
proffigy Is only fhreo years old, aud
weighs seventy-five pounds, has as much
beard as a twenty--year-old, his feet are
eight inches long, though small for oue
of his lmild; he is Mid of the society of
girls, but the boy a ho detests. Ilis voice
is coarse, and bta fits of passion ure ter
rific.**
Grant's Milxtaby Police in Illinois.
—A Washington dispatch to the New
York Post says: "There is much talk in
Washington about the President’s inter
ference with Governor Palmer in tho lo
cal work of Illinois It is accounted for
among candid men, by the weakness, or
at least error of tho Mayor of tho city in
calling for troops, aud by the President's
haste to snpport the cause of the oublic
peace. No legal authority defends the
legality of the Piesideut's or General
Sheridan's interference without a request
from tho Governor of the State; but it is
said that the President did not consult
Appointment* of tho South
Georgia Conference for 1872.
Savannah District—J 0 A Clark, P.
E. Savannah, Trinity—J E Evans; 8*
vannah, Wesley Church and City Mission
—G G N McDonald. Springfield—T B
Lanier. Mizpah—J J Morgan, flylva-
nia—W T McMichaeL Bethel—R W
Flournoy. Alexander—J A Rosser.
Waynesboro—N B Ousley. Louisville—
C C Hines. Sandersville and Dartaboro
—W 8 Baker. Washington—J B Cul
pepper. G.boon—8 N Tucker, J Domin-
goes.
Macon Diutkiot—J W Hinton, P. E.
Macon—Mulberry Street aud Vineville—
J O Brunch. East Maoon and Swift
Creek—J W Burke. First Street —W W
Hicks. City Mission— Supplied by B
Coin. Maoon Circuit—J a Jordau.—
Gordon—W J Oroen. Ifwinton—Sup
plied by F Flanders. Jeffersonville—R
r Evans. Twiggs—Supplied by W Grif
fin. Fort Valley and Marshalville-*-F A
Branch. Beaver Dam—W* \V Tidwell.
Montezuma aud Providence—To be sup
plied. Perry—A J Dean. Hayuesville
—E H A McGhee. Wesleyan Female
College—E H Myers, President W. F.
C.: C XV Smith and W C Boss, Professors
Wesleyan Female College.
Columbus District.—T T Christian,
P E. Columbus—St Luxo—J S Key.
Paul—Arminius Wright Wesley Chap
el—M D Bond. Girard atd Asbury
Chapel—Supplied by J E Tooke. Mus-
;ee—To be supplied. Hamilton—W
Robinson. Talbot ton—R W Dixon.
Talbot—D R McWilliams, R L Honiker.
Geneva—S R Weaver. Juniper Mta-
aion—W A Green. Butler—J R Little
john. Buena Vista—W W Stewart.
Cusseta—S D Clements. Oglethorpe—
G S Johnson. LeVert Female College—
H D Moore. Lovick Pierce—Conference
Missionary Agent
Amkbicus District—J B Smith, P E.
Americus—A M Wynn. Bethel—J Har
ris. Magnolia Springs—A M Marshall.
Ellaville—C A Crowell, R F. Williamson,
sup. Smithvillo and Mission—D O
Driscoll Cuthbert—B F Breedlove.
St Pauls and Millers’ Chapel—E J Bald-
wiu. Spring Vale—N D Moorehouse.
Georgetown—To be supplied. Dawson
—G C Clarke. Terrell—G T Embry.
Weston—E J Rcutz. Lumpkin—J .a
Austin. Stewart—J B Ward law. Flor-
i—To be supplied. President Andrew
Female College—J B McGehee. Agent
Orphans' Home—S Anthony.
Batnuridoe District.—U B Lester, P
E. Baiu bridge—W Knox. Decatur—J
F Mixon. Trinity—-G C Thompson.
Colquitt—W F Roberta, J M Potter.
Fort Guinea and Blakely—\V M Hayes.
Morguu—J D Maudlin. Camilla—J T
Ainsworth. Cairo—I* C Harris. Groo-
ver&villo—R H Howren. Duncanvillo—
L C Peak. Thomasville—C R Jewett
Albany aud Mission—R J Coaloy.
Brunswick District.—L B Payne, P
E. Brunswick and City Mission—J O A
Cook. St. Marys—H P Myers. Centro
Village—W H Thomas. Waynesville—J
•L Williams. Waresboro—T S Armstead.
Jessup—W M Watts. llolmesville—
Supplied by J Ware. Stockton—S J
Childs. Valdosta—W M Kennedy. Quit-
mnu—S S Sweot. Morven—A P Wright
Hinksvillb District.—J W Simmons,
P. E. Hinesville—W G Booth. Darien
and McIntosh—E J Burch. Sosrboro—
W Glenn. Dublin—H J EUia.
Wrighteville—Supplied by W T Ray.
County Line—To be supplied. Swaines-
boro—C J Toole. Jacksonville—H C
Fentress. Oconee—R D Gentry. Alta-
maha Mission—W F Conley. Reidsville—
D G Pope. O A Full wood and ▲ A Rob
inson transferred to Florida Conference.
Hawkinsville District.—J E Sentell,
P. E. Hawkinsville—R M Lockwood.
Cochran Mission—L A Parser. Pulaski
aud Wilcox—Supplied by W D Bussey.
Vienna—L J Spence. Dooly Mission-
Supplied by W. M. Clemons. Flint River
Mission—Supplied by W M Russell,
Moultrie Mission—W M Buutin. Nash
ville—J J Giles. Allapsha—B 8 Key.
Ocmulgee—W Lane. O E Brown trans
ferred to Arkansas Conference. Next
Conference to be held at Thomasvile.
Conference adjourned si/10 die, with
doxology and benediction.
GEORGIA SHERIFF SALKS.
LOOK
Alatnal fife Jntntance.
TO YOUR INTEREST!
The Mutual Life Insurance Company
OF NEW YORK.
ITS CASH ASSETS OVER $50,000,000.
r HAS A SURPLUS OF MORE THAN SIX MILLIONS OF DOLLARS. AFTER PROVIDING FOR
*11 lUMUtise u determined by tho lusnraaoe Deportment of the HUto of New York. Hu tho Largest
A Met*, Income, Number Issued; and pay* the largest amount of Dividends, and ha* th* am all oat Percent
f expense* of any company In the World.
» undersigned will gladly give all Information necessary to effect lnanranoe on roar live*. Do your
to those that yau love by taking e policy in THE OLD MUTUAL*
Henry R. Christian,
SPECIAL, AUENT.
Iloo« . BUILDING, Whitehall Mtroot.
J. F. ALEXANDER. M. D.,
mkdioal examiner.
iu grants Wanted trho art Worker*.
{Jarbroarc, CmUrp, ©nne, &c.
W. L. WADSWORTH, Atlanta, Qa., ~ |
W. L. WADSWORTH
Importers and Dealers in
OH AS. WYNN.
& CO.*
Hardware;
Also, s Large Stock of Stoves and llotiac Furnishing Goods.
Opposite James' Hank, Whitehall Mt root.
Heptember 10-lv ATLANTA.
Cotton iattor* anb Cotton AooK ®uaao Apt *, <lt.
New Cotton and Produce Warehouse.
■phhi PSUANTTAQUI
LOAN AND SAVINGS “BANK.
rSuVMorlbedKOapltal
ON'E MILLION DOLLARS.
Tlie Warehouse of* Tl» .1
E
ICor. Campbell and Reynold* Btl
S NOW READY TO RECEIVE COTTON. LIBERAL CASH ADVANCES
QUlcinta Snn fjroopcctns.
Sale Day First Tuesday In Jan
uary.
Sum biuuj’i got iu* life iueuml, it ta liot
hnlf as ditKTift tu» u fill!-growu uewapuper
ought to be.
Loom* buttons have been lying
h/mri uri tin ad riser but Mr. Akennaii,
whose ability in uucli mutton ho did not
trust, and that lie was guided by tbe ad*
vice of General Porter. ”
FULTON COUNTY.
City lot in Atlanta—Fi fa in favor of
A. V. Brumby vs. Moses Jones and Wm.
Green (colored.)
House nnd lot in Atlanta—Fi. fa. in
favor of Ivy k Winn vg. Jefferson
Floyd.
The stone flagging and steps, North
side of Wall street, Atlanta—Mechanics’
and Laborer’s lien, in favor of Yoimg A
Walsh vs. H. I. Kimball
City lot at junction of Broad and
Peachtree streets, known as tho Sasseen
property.
Seventy acres of land lot 167, Folton
county—Fi. fa. in favor of Gilmore 8.
Drake vs. E. IL Sasseen.
House and lot in Atlanta—FI. fas. in
favor of John Keeley, Hunnicutt A Bel-
liugratlisand IL W. Satterfield A Bro. vs.
C. E. Grenville.
A lot in West End—Fi. fa. in favor of
W. H. Smith vs. Jnlina Gists.
Seventy acres of land lot 9, Fulton
county—Fi. fa. in favor of Wm, Wright,
et al. vs. Killia Brown.
City lot on Alal»ama street — Ti. fa. iu
favor of Gcorgi < Loan and Trust Com
pany va Peter Huge.
Fifty-seven acres of lots 93 and 100—
Fi. fa. in favor of Z. D. Graham vs. T.
E. Williams.
The H. I. Kimball House—Mechanics'
lien, in favor of Heuly, Berry & Co.
DOUOLA9 COUNTY.
Thirty sores of lot No. 78—Fi. fa. in
favor oi W. J. Hembree vs. James West.
anffin oomrv*
One two horse wagon and one set har
ness. Fi. fa. in favor of limes A Beeves
vs. J. M. Harris.
Four thousand pounds isacd cotton, and
50 bmthels com. Fi. fa. in favor of G. A.
Cunningham vs. Francis A. Cochran et ul.
160 itis. lint ootton and 200 bushels
>ttou weed, and sundry fi. fas., vs. J. A.
Bowles, E. A. Evans and Nelson Bowles
for rents nnd liens.
GWINNETT COUNTY.
100 ucres of laud lot No. 371. Fi. fa.
in favor of Willis F. Scales vs. Geo. W.
Dodd, ct al.
NEWTON COUNTY.
House und lot iu Coviugtou—fi. fa. in
favor of A. H. Lee vs. Benj. F. Carr.
FAYETTE COUNTY.
150 acres of land—fi. la. in favor of S.
E. Dorsey vs. Juo. C. Smith.
OOBB COUNTY.
Land lot 1185—Tax fi. fa. vs. E. C.
Mason.
OOWETA COUNTY.
J. D. Hanson's interest in a stock of
goods—Fu fa. in favor of Horsey, Mil
ler A Co.
Half of land lot No. 130—Two tax fi.
fas. vi. W. F. Wright
2024 sores of land—Fi. fa. in favor of
M. Salvshin vs. W. F. Wright
CHKBOKKK COUNTY.
LoU No'. 1060, 10»1, 1010, uul limit ot
1011—Fi. b. in f.Tor ot W. B. D. Mom
vs. Suoford Leak.
Lot’. No'. 152 Mil 162 and 162. Fi.
to. iu favor of Nonli JoriUo VI. E. F.
Mahout*.
One cslr.y ox, tatrayed by Tim Law-
son, aud one yoke of oxen estrayed by
Ira W. Waldrop.
THE ATLANTA SUN!
DAILY AND WEEKLY,
live Paper on Live Issues’
FXTBI.ISECKD BY TIIE
bo made upon Ootton In Warehouse, or upon Bailrend Beceipta.
Parties Storing Ootton with the Bank will be fantiahed nith HMfpUtor
•une that will be available in thia city or My other foe borrowing awnep.
W The Bank ia prepared st all Urns* to Bake LOANS ON PBODUCE or
PROVISIONS on the moat reasonable terms.
m~ Parties would do well to apply at the Warehouse, or eommnaieate with the
Offieena
C1UULES J. JENKINS, PnaMent.
J rfO, P. KINO, Vloe.PrsaW.nt.
T, P. BRANCO, Cmahl.r.
a*Wa
BRANCH, SONS At CO.,
OOTTOIV PA.0TJ01KJB
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Oflloo nt Pluntera' Loan AHavlnga llnnkW*reho»*e
AUGUSTA. OIOROIA.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
AL1HANDEII II. 8TF.PIIEN8,
•T. IIENLiY 8MITII,
j Proprietor*,
Alexander H. STEPHENS, Politicall Editor
A. R. WATSON. News Editor.
J. Henly SMITH, General Editorland Business
Manager.
terms of subscription.
Twelve Months
Dally—Single Copy.
*10 OO I Three AIontliM
• 9 OO ( On* Month •
OluDs For Daily-For Annum i
Three Copies
Pour “
Five 44
27 OO I Eight 44
88 00 Tun 44
4,3 OO Mlnifle Copy
Weoltly-For Annum i
Slnyrle Copy . • •
Tlxreo Coplo* • •
Five Copies • • •
On© Hundred Coplow
3 OO
5 OO
8 OO
Ten Coplo* • •
Twent y Copies
Fifty Copies •
ON OO
S4 oo
5 C*t*
• 18 OO
• 3 N OO
OO OO
• 130 OO
Single Copy
Til roe Copies
Five Cople*
Ten Cople*
Weekly for Six Montlasi
Twenty Cople*
Fifty Coplo*
1 OO
3 OO
A OO
7 OO
One Hundred Cople*
Hlnglo Copy
10 OO
34 OO
ao oo
o ct*
So SubwrlpUoui, Iota. WKKXI.Y. roocWoJ for . .Sorter ported ll;»n rtx m.mth.
XII ■abMoripUon* «nu*t b« pold for lu *dv*uce; *u«l *U umum will b* *trloliou from
CLUBS:
tlmo, *a<l Uk* th* *p*por for Uio a
r Book* wbou Ui*
*11 W » ,ut *t th*
Oflloo.
will bn writu-u oa his popT-th*
l I* onljr n«<-<w**rj th*t “ * ‘
Mil ottho MUkif UiB*, ftu.l Ui*t *11 I,* L*k.»n *t thu i *i
Name* f«*r 0LUB8 i
,1111 *111>0 At ilto **IU«
K*ch aulieoribor’* I
klv*DUfi<i* of Club rote*
In dab* a* otli«nrl*«. To t* curo 1
iu toriu of *ub*urii>tioB tor c*cb one »h*l) Ih^Ib ■
Ho*t Offlc*.
Dow to XL xn.lt Montyi
Ftl Of ■
oaey mu
•Ul ’MOV'D' tbi i*fs
kpre*M, or by Dr*fl, but not ol
Uie lo*s of Ui* person nvikUbk It.
No i»iM>r will bo **ut from Utu ofllce till it 1* ptld for. *ud t*a.a* will *lw*y* bo *r***d wU*u to* Urn*
p*Jd for exiurrt.
Roroou* Modiug money by Kspr*** luuat prepay marge*.
ITo Ooi 4 respondLonts s
HUphflu* will r><toolri In OrswferdrUla. Hit ononootlou with THE SUM n "‘ Oanif bi
Ideaoe. All letter* intoudod lor him, either on private matUr* or conuoctod with Ute Political Ltopari
o? this paper, should be *,i>lr**Md to biui at Crawford*ill*, tla.
All latter* ou biuuue** of any hind. oouucot*d with I'liU HUS, iL*pt IU FolltiMl Departmeit. *hould
b* addn>H**d to J. lleuly Siuith, Manager, AtUfiU, O*.
The Weekly Sun
J^IUERAL CASH ADVANCES MADE ON OOTTON, TO BE ELD HEBE,
or for Shipment to Domestic or Foreign Markets.
I&- SPECIAL ATTENTION paid to the WEIGHING of Ootton.
sept2G-6m
■Tamils Tanotiu firming HUct)inr«.
W W -jy—.
Family Favorite Sewing Machine.
ECONOMICAL.
WITH
FEWER
of
SIMPLE, DURABLE,
Will do a greater variety of work,
changes thM My other raaoaine. Sold on the installment plan, ia
an dollar, a month. Offloa and aaWsroom at
Orauxt'ai Blcxda, BI aCorlotto Straat,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
■prlOWa Ga V.
t CtaB.Ag>*.
Pniberaitg p»bll*l)l*g g—|w»s.
UNSECTIONAL, UNPART18AN, UNPOLITICAL OCHOOL-BOOK8.
The freeheet series of Text-Book* published—cotUaininy the i«M
results of discovery and scientific reoemth.
OOdally adopted by the Virginia and fleergfa State Beerds et
WOW LA MELT IW l* tW
MVBnT HOUTHHRN mVJAJVMp
And In many Northern States.
® ht fnMtilniu) €»,
tlie suvontl Southern State*,
School-Book* which should be en-
unpolitical, which ah on id present
•oicucc—arc now issuing s com*
Text-books by the eminent schol*
which are the
Cheapest, Beet, and Moot
et the mm wdntm dttaens sf
fag the nrnsMiv Mr * gates of
tirely vnnetimtu, mmmrtism, end
only the feu* of Mswy g*4
piste series of School s*d Ccllsgt
art and. educates! named below
Beautiful Mitoi ReeSe.
Now publiihed. The “ OMvenlty Scrim” ernkmem
Maury’s Geographical Seriea,
Bv Commodore M. V. Mxcar.of the Virginia MMtaiy limftate. A ^
maA an tra in tho .tody of thla aeimee, and which, in lha words of a watt kaowa aad ae-
rom|>lishcd Southern taachar, ” ara charaateriwd by a fMIcity of anau,saint and riaqda
froihneu of at, la which must ever read or them attractive to lha vaoac. aad whiefc will be
uacd by all who wiih to teach Geography as a science, al aaorthlag to Bake pwpttr tJusdc.
and not merely a. an enumeration of diy facta."
Holmes’ Read** and Sp*tl*r*,
By (jkokok F. Holmes, LL D., Pnteesor ct Hletefy and Omni
versity of Virginia. A *" ‘ “ ‘ ' A
gr*|iliivAl beantr.
seloctious of (Nfose
a. A series of Headers unequalled In chmpaess. excellence, aad typ*>
They are steadily progreastre in character, bright aad frseh in tnor
and vsrm, and Ulastratire of Southern scenes, indlea-, aad htateiy.
Venabl*'* Arithmetical Iwls*
Vniau, LLD., PVnhwcr of Marhemarira la lha Uaina
That* hooka am now red ererywhww by iateUigrel amclwgi with tha i
. AS being moat admirably adapted for mental drill, nr wall as forbaaiaam
r methods, rules, and rcaaoninga are clear, distinct, logical, aad wap*
* /ally gradad tkmaghoat.
i**’ History ot th* United State*,
was, LLD., of tha Vnireiaity of Vhgiak. B b sasagh a w if
htMtasriag, impartial, aad trathiU, as wag as pare aad greateW la
oulf uiatwry of tha United Stater wkiah b aaea* wpateteaa. h
m au 1
| I* * lAKp'. H pihtfG aho*4 (la •i-iitlo foriu) lilted with the c'i
“* •*-- ■- ||* *“ ■ deity Lmu* Ut
•«t revling msUer.tJIt ronUin* th** rr-
g of gtfiiur^ lEU>r**i. All ol Mr. bUph-
THE SUN iu tiie organ of the People, the Advocate of Justice, the Defender of
Popular Right*, and the opponent of burdens hoaped upen a tan-paying people,
end Oppressions of ell kinds.
It will adhere to the old, safe, time-honored landmarks of the Democratic Par-
tv Nr STEPHENS is thoroughly enlisted in the Work, and will contribute to Its
columns almost daily,
circulation. Our Weekly t* * very
We sek the friend* of liberty, everywhere to *M In extending <
“» Club Katee *r* perticiilarly fbvorablc.
1 for lH7i will be the ui<tat uuportant la the history ot Auetioe. The h
• In-
velved ere momentous, *ad *11 th*t petiioi* bold deer L*
rtdellty to the CoueUtuUon la th* true teat of Detu ecracy in every 8tete of tho Union, end we rucoguln rewry
one wbo Is s true friend to tUel men <1 tuetruinoni, *g * co-worker with u* lu the great ueu*« 01 Americas
Liberty. Th* rlghu end libertte* of the whole {Mtople are Jeopardized—not any mure eo la the South than
bt the North; and we of th* south here no inUr**u et eteke ts the momentous imnee ef the day. wluoi
> North and South, silk*.
W* re* pert fully aSk a fElr share of public patrong*.
All eommnsteatioe* or letters on liuslarno should I
b* stldremed to
J. HENLY SMITH, Manager,
ATLANTA, QA,
Bv On axles
Virginia.
satkfactkm,
tion. Their 1
and the series is cartfully graded throughout.
Holmes’ History ot th* United State*,
Bv Osouns F Hounts, LL.D., of the University of
this odtulrabie work, < ^ *^ r —’
*Uta, that it is the « v ^ _
coincs down to tho present date.* Aim.
De Vere’s French Crammer,
Cildersleeve’s Latin Series,
Carter’s Element* of General Mtstofy,
" " ‘ “ lare,
fiorlos
Johnston's English Claseloe,
Duntenlan Writing-Books, ete., etc.
fiend for rav new ILIAJflTnATKD nK8CRtFT!VR CATAtOOUK, wwch wffl U
■talk'd faoo to say teacher or school uffictek It tails what taschwt thluk of the book*, mi
contains specimen pages of each. * .1
Address UNIVERSmr PUBLISHING COMPANY,
IU Mg 167 Creehj Mrcet, tew M.
Holmes’ English Crammer
Leconte’s Bolentiflo 8f
w.
A. SLAYMA KB R.
GENERAL AGENT,
Drawer XO, Office 1 Comer
NOW IS THE TIME TO PLANT
rhit it and oamMarMA rmamm, ammmma
Kooto, teurgi iwn, fb.il l>g f»g—to, KnKoido
Roots, Wwgtifiy JPismte, ne*»b*r
find 8EE»»'
SsmusM-mis. toms Os mss. £*7
**te*»,
H[T roc» or tr Aaova n itnms* uro or ni ren
TREES, PMAJNTS
say amts bustaeea, and ia odMrtae thee* tamy uumeeens easts
of Intention and ooueneaoethatl would It teah be.
Peruene Itvtsg si a diemuee will pleane sMi me a Hat ot wtad
that I feel oonSdent will prove sal I Unlaw.
Sd~ Order* auUclted and promptly filled.
F. O.—Box 914. (decIS]
tend I
Bs Vi