Newspaper Page Text
THE DAILY SUN
TT
10 mvtt / I
VOL. HI
ATLANTA, GEORGIA. SUNDAY. APRIL 6, 1873.
a>tAbUnb««:
X H. IRADfTCKT * KOI,
HPHCYED BECAME AflEMCT.
;* »• WOtpA..,..
E2SSgS&3f*r
CN»mm Mum ummm
Du
DM0 BM >iy>w» SmtoyV
Tk. (w lW.yZ.rt tt« Wtot.
- AH Mill I WlgwaMl at •» WlKtr-
nuMtefli frifrftiwn ikntrin- of th*
uM ntudlMlHldaMMWIaol
JaekrauMa, M. Augrettoaaod HUta,
ot thartwraMtmaas— MTari oommer-
daledviatoffWlf tba Ut Johns, mid of
Man were along
th* banks ot this nobis river, we propose
in thk letter to relate IhasubaUne* of
interviews held with certain Northern
celebrities whom hibernating in the
“Lendof Moms.”
xx-atot— grasnc aneore-
This distinguished statesman and
aebolar bn been (pending the winter in
Jacksonville, *» th* gust of Alex.
Mitohell, Eaq., a gentlaman reputed to
be worth tea mfiHona of dollars, Who i*
acitisem of Miiwaakea, bat own* a mag
ufieeat winter IMtimi in thin city.
At theJieoae«it£ia monied-king a grand
leoeptioawaa given tart *e«t to Governor
a and Mh atthiapBahdd lady, to whioh,
in amaumjstih many-others, the writer
reoeived an invitation. We need not
atate here that Bin KxoeUeaoy in One of
the nobleat wtatKena of hnmaahp-and
one el ttie mnat erttivated gentlemen of
the ago. Uke great men generally,
- kstopteta Uananaeih and Me and
eeay in conversation. He does no* bash
tale toaay that it iabetter hewaa not
elected Prsriiisat of the United Staten
four yearn ago; that with the Congreea
largely arrayed ageinat him, he eonld
have aooompiialied no good for the public
in the Presidential Chair. He potato
to Andrew Johnson an a palpa
ble and painful illnatration of thia
fact He thinks, too, that the defeat
of Horaoe Greeley in tha lata elaetion ia
not lit Mr dapiond—that his (uooeaa
would hava bean no remedy for axiating
pnblio eritt. Though he anppoited
Qtcelsy tor the Placid snoy and has not a
partidenf ijiapaHtg wttn tha Ifeabti-
oan p«<yrt« assign* several rearon. of
a pablie oharaeter why the editor of the
Tribune mould not have bean elevated
to the highest offim within ths gift of
the American people.
The Governor has no doubt about tha
futuie prosperity, glory and virtue of the
ooootry. He bolde that the government
at Washington ia a mare incident—that
it lathe busiram man of the eonntry
who control our political again, and
that they will not permit Grant and the
Oangreas to trample on the rights of the
people with impunity or to punaee
purely uotionet polky to tlta fetomaaent
detriment Of *ny deportment of trade or
portion of tha eonntry. He (aye the
President is constantly watching the de
velopments at tha eeatres of wealth,
eommeroe and trade, and, that * every
member of Oongrasa moat bear thbvoloe
of hit constituent*, so that “the powers
that ba” know fall well that they cannot
go beyond the wishes of the Banking
and Railroad corporations, or violate
at pleasure tha commercial and agricul
tural interests of the oountry. The true
way to reioiai the government k to be
gin at home in the town, aoaaty and oity
elections, and whan these are oondneted
with Wisdom and parity a gnat m-aetion
will take place at the Capitol. Ilka
favorite expression of thk distinguished
civilian that tee laws of national life will
re assert themselves in spite of all oppo
sition, just as tuo laws of tha human con
stitution cannot be permanently check
ed or defeated by artificial means
and agendas. When the.Amsriean oon-
stitation was adopted it expressed pre
cisely the life of the American people
and no logialation at the present time
can continue long that does not repre
sent the honest ooaviotions and promote
the beet interests of all the people Thia
great fart of history is suited to stimu
late the loftiest hopes ot patriots and
Ms»en.
Tha Governor feels assured that the
national oonseianoa is now waking up to
s seeaa of tha aaotmitira of the conduct
of on c ruler*. as the Credit Hobilier oaae,
sad 'he late municipal elections at the
Nor a dearly indicate. Fhyaioians pro-
noonoe.it e favsrahls symptom when the
slightest sensibility rettums to thq torpiu
limb of tha paralytic. Ia like manner
the lets investigations at Washington ot
the charges of Mad sad aotruption
evums s retiming aaasa of integrity end
honor which k sore to eventuate ia n
inat utioBil pnnfloUon. In thia con
viotioa he soiacidss with our dietin'
gnishsd Ckorgiaa, Mr. fUtphens
Gov. Bsymues sxpvsssas the opinion
that there neese was more mantel and
moral power in Ota United States than
at me present time, but unfortunately
it is not in tbs ssrviee of the Govern
moat. Owing to tae posellar posture of
our pnbfie afkim ths hart intsUect of
the oountry is eoafiaad to spheres where
it cannot china out in its tali strength
and splendor.
He affirms sith emphasis that when
Southern statesmen were ia patser we
had a pore and glorious gorornmsot;
bat that k their exoiueion from office
crime and eonmption have ooma ia like
a load. Who woaid have thought of
smrniiitinf ,ruch notorious sosndsls at
bars lately ilsysnsd American stataa-
MLMMMIM T UKBCMM* irsrx.
-Iris nitdtVklMwfrilrri.^. filUllM
manahip, with the pore and illustrious
names of day, Calhoun, Hunter, Ber
rien, Stephens and a host of others
Whtoii esnnot now be recited f He is
(oll r pMSaaded b) 1 ** Southern men who
are gentlemen by birth and education
most elevate be negro M he ever k ele
vated. Because it k n foot with
whisk the wortd it familiar, that the
highest elks Of society has always ths
atrogart sympathy for the lowest aka.
The half-eduoalad and haH-enldvated
ham not thorn finer ssnribilitka and no
bler sWfiatirtti which Bt men for a great
work of humanity and petrietiiim. “A
httk learning k a dangerons thing.”
The high-toned Southron mast not
abandon the bkok-man in this orieir of
his histoi7, bat mast lend a helping hand
in edneating i>nd eiviiiiingthefreedmen.
By ddlng thk. he will still maintain bk
high obinotat for pbiliothiopj Mid pit-
liotism, and confer a great blearing on
the blacks.
The Governor eloquently prodrime
tha Sonthers women to be the highest
type and model of womanhood, and the
he aaaigna for tins is, that they
have always had the eare of a weak and
ignorant raoe, and that thia dependent,
domeetio oharge whioh Providence gave
them, has developed the noolert traits
Of sharaoter and the warmest feelings ef
philanthropy. ' Tha kind attentions they
have given* to their servants have lifted
them above the cold atmosphere bf ava-
rice end ealflahnrea, and made them pat-
rona of whatsoever things are pun, body,
and of good report, 1 If slavery was an evil,
it has bred the beat nee of meir’and wo
men the world ever saw.
Qdferfior Seymour olored his con
versation with a brilliant picture
of the future progress and gh»7 of
America. This eonntry whioh receives
daily twenty-five hundred immigrants
from tye Old World whioh hoi sixty
thousand miles of Baiiroad, whioh tokos
annually three hundred thousand pris
oners of peace from the goferoanents of
Europe, whioh,has eighteen, territories
lylag along the nan of the HbAviMonn-
tains and whioh can make a State while
the statesmen beyond the waters are dia-
oosaiag the qoastioa of governing a
dtate; stub a oountry is doftbtlehs des
tined to be incomparably the greatest and
grandest on the globe.
A PIm f.r Woman Swffrag..
■ Pact. Tern’s Cabla
■ ad Its Stan.
Latltadlaarlan R.llfloa. Wlows.
Having bad ooaasion, in nompaoy with
a eletioal friend lrom England, to visit
Mandarin, a small village fifteen miles
from Jacksonville, on the Bt. Johns, we
were invited to dine with Dr. Stowe and
family. The Dootor ia an eminent the
ologian and an exceedingly affable old
gentleman of 71 yea re of age. Be baa
reoovSrad sufficiently from his recent
paralytio stroke to use his limbs and lips
freely and effectively. His two daught
ers, whoQ we met at borne, are plain in
their manners and rather domeetio in
their lialptp. They seem to take the en
tire control of the household cares to
leave their mother uninterrupted in her
literary labors. Her whole time is occu
pied in writing books, contributing to
magsaines and periodicals, and in an
swering the letters of her numerous cor
respondents. On being introduced
to this tamale celebrity we eonfese to
oar utter disappointment in regard to
her person, manners and conversation.
We expected to find her a masonline
woman, of bold address and bitter speeob.
Instead ot this, aba ia posse seed of a
deiieate form, gentle demeanor and of
soft and winning tones of voioe. We
ooold scarcely believe our own eyes that
we had before ns that notorious person
age who had set the world on fire by
that masterly oarioatore, Unole Tom's
Cabin, and who had offended pnblio
teste end morals by the publication of
the Byron soandal. The conversation of
Mr*. Stowe tonched principally on
sociology and religion. She ia deoidsdly
in favor of female suffrage, bat thinss
the right ought to be exeroised with
delicacy and discrimination—that it
ought to bo restrioted mainly to matter*
of edooation, and not be carried into the
heat and pamion of palely political
questions. It ia her opinion that voting
on the part of women in the United
Sates ia only a question of time.
Mrs. Stowe thinks that the great social
aril of toe age is the refusal on the part
of both sexes to marry without money.
Hereenary matches are the corse of the
times Poverty has doomed many a no
ble woman to a Uto of perpetual maiden
hood and wealth hat wed dad many a
T-y—* man to a woman whom he has ren
dered miserable by hi* jealousy and dis
sipation. The institution of marriage is
based on the sflections, end whenever it
is sntersd from any vanai consideration
the most fatal oonsequenoss mast follow.
The morality of sooiety depends
oo the number ot marriages and
unless tbs expenses of living are
curtailed, tbs marital rites will be
more seldom celebrated. A young man
with a moderate mlary cannot support a
wife who Uvea up to the requisitions of
modern faeoioo, end ae a consequence
he will either chooee a life of single-
blessedness or resort to unlawful means
to meet the wants of an extravagant
partner.
If the yoong ladies of the lend wish
to tuts the sweets of connuoisl blue
they mast be more industrious and econ
omical—thor mart have lem acquaint
anoe with the merchant and mantnn-
msker and more acquaintance with do-
mestio eoonomy. “ My brother Hffuy,'’
said Mm. & “started without anything,
baths mid he woaid merry If he bed to
Hv* on the North side of a potato* and
now his salary is M&.OOU a ;
and his perquisites innumersbla.” Thk
sentiment she recommends to the young
men sad ladies at the preaentHime.
W* mart not omit to aaaatkm thus-tix
fortune* have beta realised from the sale
of “UnoleTom's Oebio,” hot .the pub
lishers poektted moot of the proceeds.
The author remarked modestly, “I w*s
about a year in writing thk book and
had no idea that it woaid have sash a
run or I would have made myself inde
pendent by keeping tins copy-eight in
my own name.” This great work of fi*r
tion ba* had a wider oironlation thenaiffr
book whioh baa appeared in the word for
lb* past two handled years. A section
of the British Museum bee been appro
priated to the reception «f the various
translations of this elaborate and thrilling
diatribe against 'skvery. A million ot
dollars from tha sale ef a mugle book is
an enormous emolument, bat , Unole Tom
took the tide of popular prejudice at
its torn and was tbns led on to fortune.
A woman of Mm. Stowa’s splendid gifts
and fanatical views on the imbjeet of
slavery wao the very psmoo to more the
heart and wield the sentiment Of the
world against what wa* supposed to be a
great serial and moral eviL *-
Mr». Stowe k well inatmoted on the
snbjeot oi religion and ia vary satire in
the Sunday School and in promoting
virions works of bsnevolenoe and chari
ty. Bnt she does not anbaenbe to mooh
of the old iron-oart theology of New En
gland. She thinka tbs Puritan divine*
bava presented the gospel in a battik and
repulsive light and have thus given ths
world a distaste for the dootrinm of
Christianity. AoCoiding to her 00norp-
tion their theology teaches, “yon most
and yon can't, yon shall and yon aha'nt,
and yoall be dvnned if yon do’nk” Tne
terrible representations of snath whioh
mark the history of Pori tan palpi la,
aho affirms have no foundation
in aoripture or reason, bat
largely the prodnote of imagination and
pamion. She would plaoe the sermon of
Jonathan Edwards “On Binne.-s in the
Hands of an Angry God,” along ride of
DinU'e Inferno, and Angelo’s least Judg-
She admits that tfie artistic and
dramatic power of all theae is very greet,
bnt that they belong to the •nperati-
tionfi of MedsBval times, and not to the
more mild and beantilnl lessons of the
New Testament A religion of love and
not of fear, ia to convert the world. She
regards the gospel as a pore, simple and
lovely system, whioh [rooiaites peace and
good will to all men. She ia aware that
ah* k not oontidered orthodox, bnt then
she claims the liberty of thinking for
herself on all snbjeete. She >s a man
of her brother's ohnroh in Brooklyn, and
ia about as laiitndinarian a* Henry Ward
Beecher. She rather oongratnlatae her
self on being on the advanced line of
modern thought on religion] as wall as
other matters. |
rruiAi ccLLajr mmrjurr.
HU Ceweeptlaa of Trai Pootrf.
Aairlcsa Tanas KagltoS Ports.
A Lovor of Salari'i Poetrj.
This great American poet with his
two daughters, has favored Florida with
a visit this season. He is a venerable
old man of 78, and yet he ia aa brisk and
buoyant as a boy. He answers fully to
Oerlvle's definition of genins, which ia
the power to reprodnoe the romanoe of
youth. His long white looks are aerown
of glory to his head, and his benevolent
face, wreathed in smile*, attracts all
hearta to him. There ia an indescribable
simplioity and sweetness in hia manners
which at once removes all embamaamtnt
iu approaching him. Heisa remarkable
lover of nature and finds hia highest en-
joyment is boating exoutaions on glassy
lakes or amid foaming billows, or in
penetrating the wild forests in aearoh of
birds and flowers, .or in gaxing with
intense delight on the radiant skies and
rioli sunsets of a tropical ohm*. The
eublime and beautiful scenery of mono
tain, valley, aea and star furoiah him
with the loftiest inspirations and i
thrilling imagery. The poet must ever
borrow tb* elements of beanty and
power from the magnificent and lovely
landscape* of nature.
Oar interview witn Mr. Bryant was
port-prandial, but the noble old gentle
man ia so temperate in bis habits that be
is always ready to ooureraein an tnatroot-
ive and brilli int style. Hia favorite meet
is mnah and milk. He baa not drank a
onp of coffee for thirty yean. He
never studies after capper, bat spend*
ths lias* in conversation and in eater-
tain log reading. Hia habit ia to satis*
by ton at night. AH bis great mental la
bors for half a oentory have been per
formed in the morning. He mote the
Tbanatopeia whet be was eighteen years
old, and on thia exceedingly beautiful
and affectieg poem be won hia brilliant
reputation. Hia other rioh poetical effn
riuna bare marked the later periods of
biaiung career. When asked whether
he intended to give the wortd soy other
poem, be responded that that must de
pend ou circnautan'-es. The poet
indites hie celestial lines when he ba* a
“ fit/’ or wb-n the inspiration is upon
him, and he oanoot make hia muse work
at will The bard who rings for the age*
ia for the tune inspired, and it ia only
whan be bus the “divine afflUea” that
hia “eye in s line phrenoy rolling eta
dart from earth to heaven.”
Mr. Bryant holds that it k mors diffi
cult to re vie o peetzy than proas; baessae
in the revision of tk* former the mind
must be raised to tit* iervant bast It had
when it gave birth to the original concep
tion. No man oan aritiriss poetical mph
position whan the mind k in a sold staff
philosophical state. Of whan it has noth
ing to inspire it bnt the soosptsd rslss Of
art.
The author of Tl^matoprk regard*
Homer as by far tb* greatest port the
aaeteut world bar produced, and be
thinks that ths “old blind assn of Brio*’
rooky Ids” did not pikdnos ths Hisd and
Odyssey in s written form, bnt simply
reritad these golden-poems for the in
spasriten end admiration of his rad*
dafanttrymsta sad that they were so pro
foundly impressed and delighted by
these magnificent spies that they tnss-
ured them op in thair memories and
that they were thus handed don from
age to age till the art of writing was in
vented. There ia noevideuoetbst thissrt
was known in the time ot Homer.
W* find it diffionlt to memorise a few
pages of oomporiticn, bnt the wild pees-
an try of the earliest ages eonld repost
whole volnmea ot nsws|tten verses.
Mr. Biysnt, in oomtaun with the ver
dict of mankind, plsoos Bhakspeare si
the head ot the world of modern poetry.
It isatrange to him that people who
claim to know something do not study
profoundly the works of tha master-dram
•tart.
Milton’s “ Paradise Lost'’ it ths next
greatest production of poetiosl genial in
modern times. In transparent parity of
thought and transcendent sublimity qf
dietioa it has never been equalled.
He plaoes Lord Byron vary high on
the roll of fame, and bnt for til bad
passions, ha would have stood in tha
first rank of the world’s poets. Heoould
ting like in angel and hate like s demon.
Obilde Harold ia tha loftiest achievement
of his genian He has n wonderful ad
miration for Bobert Boras with ail hi*
acknowledged aberrations and folHea As
toe port of the people, ha ia matablaaa,
and in hia power to open tha deepest
fountains of human sympathy, ha k ab
solutely peerless Hia Cotter's Saturday
Night k the finest moral painting ia tha
English language, and hia Tam 0*Sban
ter, as a piece of ludigroai humor, will
be admired forever.
Mr. Bryant boots at the idea that
Amerioa has not goto* gnat poets is
England at the present time. Ha insists
that Longfellow k the foil equal of
Tennyson aa a poet, whilst as • rigid
mataphyrioai thinker, tbs latter may
exoel the former. He
Evangeline and ths Pstlm of Life
aa the gems of our popular oountry man.
Itk a fact that Longfellow ia more read
in England than Tennyson.
Aa hoar with Mr. Bryant opened np
to tha writer a new world of beauty and
•nohaatment, and if the time did not fail
him he would bo glad to speak more at
length of tha brilliant gift* and beauti
ful thoughts of tha great port. W.
rifo
TO MERCHANTS!
cMjOcms] at iraoLKsavE i
—at—
EB LAWMHE,
HO. 60 WHITEHALL BT.,
ATLANTA, GA,
j bits xrnonD ABiuxaiMmm *r skim
AMB8ICAM CLOCKS,
STERLING SILVER-WARE,
JEWELRY and
Jawalara' Tool* and Materials,
At Wholcaulo to Dealers,
AT MW TOBK won.
To Everybody!
I offer and will clone oat mj eutlre yrwMt stock
of AroMtpina, Xu Bine*. Slh«rpkt«4 Ooo.'t, «tc..
At tirentl* Reduced Price*,
la slossoat torSU iSmi|i mr tiSn* anil
JOG WIDt borgBioB.
MybaaliMM will bo moatly wkoUtfe. bwt 1 will
oonttnoo toroUlU fewortlolM, tooh bd Wffilob—.
Gold Md Silver Obtain*, ▲modal IpBnifftM. he.
TbtataO SptacttacfeB wo reUlltad only.
BOptarlor. OtaU and exunlue than.
I invito mvrebanta to call 01
A U LAW8JUL
YYYY That Puna SmsoLsra,
Thd Uvd Oruoar, iVacbtrw atroat.
_ 5F- JOHN DAUBY, tba (TMt Cbamlat, cam
felly analysed UMOanmry. and Mfdtbaft Awfully
and atrwiftb" It "mail itaod pmdmlnan|."
Dn. W. W. HALL tba wfealy knawn adttor of
Hall's Journal of Uaalib, saya: It ia boyond 41a-
pata tbat bad wblaky—aduHamUt Hquora—aiavotM
a pwaictooa and dratmaWm toiuanoa otw tha
h.aUb, moral* aad mloda of vaat malUloda*; • and
* *aar nun who will fuamntaa t> funrtab a pora
la ot Mtiaulant mwnt* pubbu pwranaga u “
extent that *ooh aa artida la raaUv mommmj?
tent tba «*0*».tw?y' la *nalici la tt Unwaiir. yan
it it* qualify, aad unqaaatknnMy ahytad to.H
atadloal purpoa— “•
TO uquok DKALBB8 AND THX KJML10.
I HAY* Man appointed *»’• l|wt In Atlanta In
Btifal k PfaUfer * oal v . tt i *
LAOS* SEEM * OXEAM ALE
and any pararn dmriug * «plu*<Lti u. ola can gat it
nyapplytatla»a. Any (ooda *Upcadofdaltvavad
wlUba (uaraataad. a 0. GABUOLL
CONTRACT.
Thi* la to entity that wa hav# ihl* day tppatMad
D.C. OarroU Bola A|*A In AtUAfe Cflv our oal*-
jratad Ala and L*a*r btawc All ordarn MAN baaawt
Urcct to him. and any ordara addraaaad te O. 0
latvoil. Mo. t rryav anwi, Atlanta. #N. will ba
promptly flDad. . _
dal J. ITWR. h L
BYINGTON SOTEL
Oi-iffin, Oeorgire.
ota. w. ifwnDi,
—Inrfi lad Jnsbi-jou tou uoilndhiot
lOOK ■ A PCD WElWW-'JPAJPKfnk . : '-,o sdi rt 31
Athbkfr M ■ AaiMwAWIXXR
VArtta. ntnennrs Proastotor.
J ^(i rr • “t .
Crockery »lai
- jmmr
nit looifiiw xlaiganrtol
ferBrt^twtatatoratraaiptotaunofHaw* tapes.
ARE. ho
O CO.
JiKmtUng Item*. rj
WfA. *Ai)xaon’e bamah
Oouandn Doison. —fa. amdlnlv
- «!1Juif-31 ii/ilCasi/i ai -hiAv
, uxn nmuLAss on i>nan PAUADn
OM& B&a IM6 BOB DlBQtlBn. JSfdpHMBB
in thk condition with tba IniinngjaHitii
sr^x w tasar»r«^s3!:
of CrockarTs
at BALOON
• i tin 1“ 'ttu >H ili'ii |,!»»«• sid msjufiuina lol ..7-
P ARBI AGE 8, BUOOIES AND WA&ONS. -
A Jr. ra*B,
(Mamiiboturar and|1[)«aler in
ttiiHKs ui usgies, mt mo mi uu nms,
. yjtq&.qgo^Ajror^mgna ,
PIX)OK8, WATCHES AND JEWELRY.
m LAtnmm.
The Bailable Jewelry Etera,
JJ lJm itXlt 1 — — ra WAU. A1
BJtangSx.
PRUGS AND " MEDICINES. •
inexjui, cmjug h co*
Wholesale Drnggliata,
; No. IS Kimball Honaa.
i. —
agenk, *y vhoaa actioa: imparities shell
^MblTfrom^'m^^t^b^
uses, HamiltoaVBhahfi andPandelion
imparta fresh Ufa find vinos to them, aad
make* of them the Mil Mood purifier*
ou* van bare Thk preparation for sale
at Bad wines A Pox’s Drag Store.
Wamvso.—An e&ergaMtvesporianoed
satarufteesrsi
antssnibar to OonPnMtDripnnn> re-
otivss a oopy of tha oil tikrota* “Our*,"
bs tha moat valuable
prsmium picture; also
I * share to the dirtriltatlon off
new ohanoe
lien experl
i genarel agencies to invato-
il(r> iril»
ail
1 b.n.! - r 'i ' . ■'
URNITURE.
Pixnr tfloom
'i' l J " i .jit JArt*®fixragp owaorana
PMter btalta, UMahter *nits,|DlmiBf-hoMn
1:1 11 v .' BtsHv- naao. ._s s’-^.i^... rt -
in. il ; : I liiuriliiauoo
IRAIN, MEATS, FROf E. &c. "j |
armrmajrs tt j’arjvjr,
OeneraUConsusdoa Hordunts
T, XIAU TBS 0AP1TOL
IROOERIE8.
H
a. c. h ». r. rrisr,
WlxolemtlO OroeeM,
Oomxuli
oonront rarox axd wsoatpu i
ARDWARE, COTLERYA&o.!
TOJiunsr, OTEWaht tt ;*ma
Hardware Merobanta,
AGENTS,FOB
« etrrrjf art
goMxajggynA.E pktob m mtxre. m oSTSL xmuu im-.
IMPLEMENTH, MACHINERY, ho.
— WffiinrflURNWour,
-■ *!I5 DIALBB ia
idcmtol DuAeMb, Hacbiiorf Man,
■ Panrvwa prana , i
c
IQUORS, WINES, ho.
mALowur* coj\
Wholemla Dealers Us
M
MI MB oom n in UPAS
Bo. 1 beoarixr Btr—t.v ATLAWi. fitonuU.
P
ILLBBti A PHALBBM XN HTOOH FEED.
A. * MOCJIRI a CO,
DEPOT NO. 18 BANE BLOCK, Alahama Bruar. 1-
Wta>ss*»oatoa«rsaUsa»irer.Mssl.ta.elttv.s. top. OMaOore. tarn
IANOS, ORGANS h MUSIC.
erauwBO, wood tt c*mi
inoimi axd wnoLxauji oiAums at
MVRXOAX, MBROBAMXM
Pnbllshsrs of Goosyk Musloal BoteoUo,
AINTS, OILS. LAMPS, GLASS, Eto^Eto.
aijurr, boom 0 ew.,
S
Atmta Braick Great Soitbsn Oil ui Pali! flrb,
ia?2gjS5syim.wttote.
OhsaiAwpcsasrutaiss, sues wsr !»«*■> warn
ASH, BLIND8 AND DOORS.
HC.%DECK. tt CO.,
D.I AIL EJB ■aiM^.
lOBIS.iMR&LIIICS, IIKCKETS.iPIIITSIBIL, tliSS,S6IJUIIS
$
JTOYES, HOUSEFURNlSmNG GOODS, Eto.
no. 9 Marietta (street,
PLUMBERS, STEAM AND GAB HTTEB8, OOPPEB-
Smtibs, Bbort Iron Wash, ami Tin BootaUnc. Dealers^
in Btoren Tin Was*, Orates, Pomps, flora Tin
Plate, StertOopner, Bhert Iron. Steam Pip^
Gttagm Whiailsa Pitting., ate., sta., sSe.
jruarnjrAorannra otmraiBSi axwan rrin.
Rankin Hbnae,
Ooluiobj^l^j^prgia.
Dr. McLane’s
baars the sfgxtstura of Fkm-
" *pd thair
»no other.
_ of indtetiona. 7
It is the pspokr artdlot that peopte
•U^to rw^^bLaatfh^UVre PiUa
|»pinternett retiM ar; o,:.. c
Oirrr.TS ax6 EsVibc, fn all forms—
00 oh ‘^lYiniinb ^“^•^^drtU'r
1 .1 Anfsataartxre*
under the magioiiiflaepoe oTKriim Fever
Tenia A taw AmsS vXH start ths pro-
ptemptij, anikaw ta the plaw
a tutwalcome^gurate. ^rousblne,
bold, A aTpUia, Mb af titugs, is
tek Vtaf*pr»teV wkan thk
k taken aooording to tba
Aranad eatit bottle, the pro-
pristoa riamast it; to sure. Bed wine
is a certain i .
oenghs, colds, ato. Ilia agreeable t
taste, and ohildno trite it readily. Go
to your druggist and gat M atone*, it
may am ths Ilfs of yooefittk one.
Mobtlx, Ala., fit*? 27,1M0.
Dr. W. B. Tuttl
Dear Sir—I should ba plaaaad to ad-
vartiaa your medioinra mid will cheer
fully giva yon a good notice of yoor Ex-
psetorant, aa I nave personally need U
with great'satisfaction.
Very respectfully,
W. D. Man,
Pnquiatfn uf tha Mnhila Tlsgistor
Tn Barbara prefer Dr. Tati’s Hair
Dj*
Hatnroa Oo., Ga., Deo, 22,1888.
Jfissr*. Zedin * Oo., Maoon, Go.:
Gentleman—Simmons’ LivraBagnlrtor
has been natal in my family many yams
with great anoosea. J regard it an in-
valoabk family madioina, and Uks^aaa,
a taxult TxaAsrm.
Tha happiest end boat member of a
family k nsnally called the light of tba
household, beoanss, besides being happy
and obeertal himself or haraelf, ha or
mahra all aka happy and cheerful.
The Charter Oak is sock a treason.
Maui’s nun rowitan
Cannot ba excelled for making light,
sweet rolls, blsonits, waffias, eon bread,
eta It is always ready and reliable.
Pan msdioinri ase—Century Whiskey.
rtWrtJga^a—Mte
r^iMmrtfi ■ahi wMUU ft ran ■nnj i*mT1m
fMSratoSmkJSESarSSrc^S
erttaa ■sata.rt«—W« a lata* Mrtft*»iw«
3£r^H£sna.=a
-Bi‘^?S£rasr «sra«sast
bi^mlreSnaa saS ebitf’Julil'psi*
asoaUr • bysajaWttoa.