Newspaper Page Text
DAILY AND7WELKLY.
TUB SUN PUBUSHING CO.
Hon. A.H. STEPHENS
POLITICAL EDITOR.
THE
VOL. Ill
SUN.
BY TELEGRAPH.
jtew' ro«K.
Saw Yojuc, Haj 27.—Tue OauUmiU
iDMafontB hare purchased
General Siiertusa with a cargo ol
material.
The Colombian Government baa pur-
chimed the • learner Virginias.
Mo oorreepondeate or drill ana will be
allowed to aoeompan; the Tallow Stone
expedition.
The eaptolna cf the ships Horner and
R. 1* Meier, from Bio Jauerio bound
to Now Turk, both died of yellow fever
"fiflOTi*,* —lellow fever pa
tients are oommenoing to arrive at qoar-
antina.
Two ponng men (ongbt about a girl at
a picnic in Jefaej. One of them was
fatally stabbed.
Among Wallaok'a pall bearers were A.
Oskey Hsll snd Beoorder HsckstL
A negro fatally cut a white man with a
riser, tn XHaabeth, Hew York.
ThoMayof, Comptroller, and Oonndl
of (nit' city hive lent a request to the
Legislature for the passage of billa em
powering the imposition and collection
of taxes, is tnc new dty charter as
lately paeeed, virtually repeals suoh
powers.
Tnw body of Ms. On, laU Minister to
Russia, will He in elate in this dty be
fore being taken to Anderson, South
Orolina, for interment. The remains
have not yet arrived.
bjubi^sjub.
London, May 27.—The Alabama Claims
was dimmed in the House of Commons
to-day. Bentwick declared that the gov
ernment policy wns humiliating and de
grading; the government should have
broken the negotiations at the time when
the revalue of shame would have been
lent to England; the arbitration was the
greatest monument o( human folly.
Sir Stafford Nortboote admitted that
during the negotiation of the treaty he
had not minutely examined the oonse
quenoea for British subjects affixing the
ere of war st Lee’s surrender.
Gladstone said that the advancement
of indireot claims by the American Gov
ernment was a gigantic error. In *the
other tworespaots he defeuded the eourae
the arbitration had taken.
The debate here closed and the item
waa agreed to.
Loudon, May 27.—A fire in Berkly
Square look plaoe to-day. Six persona
were killed and six hurt. Mo water
available.
A motion to adjourn the Parliament
until June the 6th, for the Derby races,
was carried.
Tbe Weat India steamer, Moselle, ar
rived to-day from Nissan with the forger,
Bid well, who was captured in Cabs. He
was ooomitleu to Newgate.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY. MA Y 28, 1873.
NO. 913
IUUi cf lafesarlftliBi
DAILY-Per annum $$ 00
Half yearly...... A 00
Quarterly 2 00
Monthly, - to
WEEKMgwPer annum (a ou
«rTn Buu'a ooubined Daily mi
Weekly circulation is bugec than that of
any paper in the State.
trjtsmjrtiTojr.
Bjurntjurcuco.
San Francisco, May 27.—The Captain
ol Company A, First Cavalry, ol Grooa’a
oommaod, reports the killing of five In
dions snd eaptnring tbsir supplies. Im
mediately after the action the First Cav
alry was ordered to the Modoc country,
leaving Arisona exposed.
Ban Fbaniosoo, May 27.—The bodies
.of three Chinamen, who died from small
pox, won found to-day conoetled In the
pump boxes of the steamer Lord ol the
Isles, lying st her dock. Tbe vessel was
ordered to bo quarantined at once.
The patseogera ago in the oily, having
all lanaed yesterday.
Local opposition to Chinese immigra
tion is taking definite shape.
Tbe Board of Supervisors will pass an
ordinance that all Chinese sentenced to
county jail will ba deprived of their ,->ig
tails, and levying a tax of 116 a quarter
on Ofainsao humdrymeo and prohibiting
tur removal ol dead bcdiei to China.
The representatives of six Chinese com
panies have telegraphed to Hong Kong,
representing the state ol affairs, and ad
vising Chinamen to atop ooming to Cali
fornia. Sensation rejiorts are published
about the leprosy, as if it was a new thing
here. The cases are old ones, the dis
ease having existed in this oity M or 14
years.
fUUFWl.
HaiitCgR, Miff SB.—Tlia sohouuar
Annie ifcowt, which waaofaartorad by toe
New n>rk Wrecking Company to curry
goods from tne wreok, baa been aeiaod > y
orders of the Yioa Admiralty of the Court
at a anit 6f Edward Ryan, Jss. Oonlen,
and others, of Prospect, who ol sun $8,000
aa compensation for saving life and prop-
erty af'lbe time o( the wreok.
KA4A4A
Washington, May 27.—Zsusson*, the
New Mei’oan Commissioner, is expooled
next week with n treaty extending tne
commission two yean, when work will
bo retained.
The following was received this morn
ing from Chicago, addressed to the bee-
rotary of War: General Anger telegraphs
that the Hexioaos on the border are well
I with the punishment given the
Kicks poos by MoKenzie. Tbe remain
der of the Kiokapooa threaten retaliation,
but wo are ready for them if they oouao.
(Signed) P. H. Shwdan.
Lientenant General.
The Secretary of War hat addressed
letter bo Quartermaster General Meigs,
stating that to* the purpose of decorat
ing the graves of deoeased Union
soldiers in tbe National Cemetery at Ar*
Iington it will ba under tbeoontrolof the
Grand Army of the Republic on the
80th inat, and that all organized pro-
oeesious or parties desiring to visit tue
cemetery for the purpose of decorating
graves other than those named above
oaa ba admitted on any day subsequent
to the ona above named upon proper
application.
MFiuXfH.
Sanannan, May 97.—Tbs annuel races
of the Regatta Association of Georgia
oommonood to-day under tbe most favor
able auspices. The weather beiog clear
and present drew to the scene an im
mense number of peraou. The baloo-
n.es and every available position oora
minding a view of the river were com
pletely jammed witn an enthusiastic
crowd of i pec tutors, who evinoed
great interest in the- three entries.
The first race, whioh was between
f mr-osred canoes end gig hosts 1 over a
straight oourse ol one mile, was woo by
Maggie, entered by the Tenon Club o
this oity. Time 6:32. Ssoond between
single skulls over the same oourse, won
by the Lilly Palmetto Club from
Charleston. Time 6:66. Th-y oontinue
two days more.
itjh.it.
Toxxba, Kansas, May 27.—A diapatob
from MBpIriffteJLthU Neosho river has
oveifiowed the banks coping, extensive
damage to oropa. Trains on the Mia
•oun, Kansas A Texas Railroad are de
layed at the bridge serosa the Big John
Creek, south of Connell Grove. The
walawie running mound both euda of the
bridge, destroying I
'Cottonwood Valley in
flowed. XhuMfcuad tfettsk is
The bridge mOeder Creak is gone, msoh
damaged and
vMjrcurjrat
s c DiritHi.ufi tottrty off snfi throw the flr'Srito f££<!S!£
ead body from the train.
Rohe, May 17.—Tne Pope, in s epeeoh
yesterday, deolared he bed eran prayed
for Fnnoe, bat would now pray with
greater oonfidenoe.
The election of MaoMahon was a guar
antee of order and jostioe, whioh had
been threatened on nil aides.
The Chamber of Deputies hive finally
passed the Dili abolishing religious cor
porations.
rjKW
Paris, May 2".—A special dispatch to
the New York Times says that tbe new
Government will adopt tbe free trade
polioy snd rodnoe the army expenses.
Thiers will resume his literary labors.
Thitrt took his seat in the Assembly
to-dsy.
Prinoe Pierre Bonaparte it in Paris
BjH.TIJUOHE.
Bai/tihobb, May 27.—The Assembly
referred nil overtures for a union,
paoially looking to the reformed aburoh,
to Bev. Adams, New York; Darling,
Albany; Musgrove, Philadelphia; 3a-
oobhs, Pennsylvania; Mitohell, Illinois,
and ionr elders.
ST. LOUIS.
St. Louis, May 27.—Mcmbrino Tern
pie, a famous stallion, ia dead.
St. Louts, May 27.—Two women were
killed by lightning in Kansas.
Dispatches from Kansas snd Iown rep
resent immense damage to oropa from
the rains ol the past week.
MBJiJTY.
Am amt, May 27. —Tbe decision of the
Court of Appeals in Stolen’ oaae will not
ba rendered for several days.
QUEUEC.
Quebec, May 27.—Heavy rains snd
five million feet of lumber adrift.
A4DMID.
diADUD, May 27.— Captain General
Pieltan has been offioially notified to
carry into effect tbe order of March 24tb,
liberating 10,060 slaves.
SuRVXY OF THS ATLANTIC AND GuLT
Uailboad.—Iu a talk with President
Screven, the editor of tno Thomasville
Enterprise learns the following:
The new survey for the Atlaotio and
Golf Bond, from Bsiubridge to Pollard,
la about ball completed, and tbs route
found to be the moat favorable yet sur
veyed ; making a difference of from
twenty to thirty feet average grading per
mile lees than the lormer hues. Two re
markable Ungents of a.iout twenty-five
mues also appears on the new route, one
of them eommenetng at Bainbridge and
the other at the crossing of the CostU-
hooehee, thus giving fifty miles of air
line road in the first fifty-two or fifty-
three mike surveyed.
•V* The printers of Geneva are on a
strike, and a queer one it is. They find
no fault with their pay or their hours ol
work, but they have ooncluded that it ia
degrading to have a toceman. They
want to rrgulata tbe composition room
aa equal partners. The Swiss 1 imea baa
set been abtu to see tntugs in tne same
light aa its oompuaitont, and* hence ia
aau tinning its pubiiaataoa under diifieul-
CONOWHMBD S1WS
Alabama llama.
The Mobile and Girard Railroad has
carried into Columbus this year 17,618
bale* of oottoa
A sturgeon five foot long and weighing
one hundred end fifty pounds was caugb ;
in the Warrior river, near Tuscaloosa,
day or twoainoe.
Colton’s new pooket map of Alabama
ignores Colbert oountf, altogether. It
unites Franklin and Colbert and calls
the combination '‘Franklin."
Tbe Columbus Enquirer, of Friday,
save that crops below here, on tbe Mo
bile ud Girard Railroad, though book-
ward, are by no means looking so bn
promising h w* had expected to find
them.
The post ottos st Union Springs has
beau moved by tbs new inoumboat to a
vary iooonvenient piooe. The new post
master pays a high tribute to Grant by
publicly proclaiming that he, the post
master, it not fit for the offlos he bolds.
Tbe Selma Times, referring to tbs sus
pension of Ferguson A Co.,Tinkers, of
Selma, aays that "not n merchant or
business man will be involved or dam
iged, ud while the affair it, of oourse,
moon discussed, still there is no unessi-
and tbe oourse of business will not
be affected by it. People away from
Selma need not put any oonfidenoe in
uy will statements they may hear. Tbs
true status of tha affair will be furnished
through the Times, snd a reliable de
tailed statement of tbe oondition of tb*
firm wili be given as soon as it can be
obtained."
North Carolina Items.
The fruit erop in North Carolina will
be short this year. And from every quar
ter of tbe State the prospect for field
oropa is very disoouragiag.
The Wilmington, N. O.. Star ohronioles
several cases of small pox at Rooky Point,
there being as many as six in one family.
It baa raged mostly among the oolorel
people, but n number of whites bare also
<*d it.
The Goldsboro Messenger says the coat
of growing cotton this yetr cannot be less
than 14 cents per ponnd.
of Bonday
A man ud wmu married ye.
tendny morning, got drunk ov dinner,
ioegbt in ike elaornoon sun slept in tbe
~~ unaa-Aa,
with oil It was boiling a* Urn tune.
Political Hems.
Colonel George Williams, of Louisiana,
baa been appointed resident minister in
the Central Amerioan States.
Ev-Oongressman E. Y. Rioe of the 10th
Illinois District, is said to be building a
new house with bis $6,000 of the salary
grab.
A few weeks ago it was reported that
S. C. Pomeroy had given up politios
snd was shunt to honor New York City
by aooepting a luorative uusinees offer in
one of our great commercial houses.
Mrs. Harriet Beeober Stowe, writing
from Florida, aays: "With suitable iu-
stiuotiou, alligators may yet be seen in
the Legislature. They osrtainly would
not be more grasping ud voraoiotu than
many in the utuation; and there ia a fine
openness about their muner of doing
things that is prepossessing. ”
A special diapatob from Oolnmbut,
Ohio, says the Liberal republicans pres
ent at tbe meeting of themselves with the
Democrats, on Thursday, to fix tbs date
for a State Convention, manifested t
desire to preserve an independent organ
ization, and determined to issue a call
lot a mass Convention, to assemble st
Oolumbns on August 6, the date flxtd for
the State Convention.
The ornaments upon the Bepubliou
nomination lor Citato ofiloera in Ohio by
the prees of that Sts'e are somewhat in
teresting. The leasing aomini-trstion
journal, The Oineinnsti Gazette, emphat
ically commends both tbe tioket and the
platform, and thinks snooeas is even mure
oertain thu it was in 1871, whan Gov.
Ncyee was first eleoted. The Oineinnsti
Commercial (Ind.) ridioulss the platform
tor censoring Congress for the salary
grab, snd praising Geoeril Grant for bis
'rigid eoonomy”when his salary ha* been
inoreated to $200,000 a term. It thkhs
Governor Noyes hat gained popularity
daring nis official tom, bnt says nothing
about bis pros pints for re-eleoticn. The
Enquirer (Dem.) of the same Q'ty dis
poses of the matter in this summary way:
“The tioket represent# about as little
talent as uy planed in the field in thin
State under tbe present Constitution.
The gentlemen who brought it into the
world have been guilty of tbe orime of
the period." Tbe Columbus State Jour
nal (Rep.) thinks the platform a strong
one, but oonsiden its resolution for the
repeal of tbe Sultry bill too sweeping in
including tbe President’s salary ud that
of the Judges. It thinks Governor
Noyes will be re-elected by u increased
sjority,
Bs.lc.1 and D,-«Belle Items.
H. E K-mal Bey if said to have e hand
a new drama in Turkish, turning upon
incidents of the detenu «t Silistria.
Madame Nilaon-Rouzaud ia tinging in
London for the first time ainot her mar
riage. She is being encored ud admired
to her beirt’i content.
Henry J. Byron’s oomedy of “Fine
Feathers” has not been praised by the
London newspapers. His ‘Time'sTri
umph’ is ehortlv to be brought out at
tbe Charing Cross.
When Signor Goveau first offered his
'Geeu Cnsto” to the Teatro delta Corn-
media atMilao, it was forbidden; bat*
ohange in the title to "II Itedeatore”
made it acceptable to tha authorities.
Blanche Davenport, of Philadelphia,
daughter of E. L. Davenport, the trage
dian, is said to be the ooming Ameriou
trims donna. Blanche is in Italy, study,
ng under Perini, the tutor of Bose Her,
see ud Mian Gary,
A new Margutrilt was recently intro
duced at OoTunt Garden Theatre, in Lou
don, whom the critics do not teem to
It is said in a notice of her per-
fonnuoe that “tha ideal Grttchex neither
it a eoquetie nor does she gush."
Wevstge ll«m«.
On July 1st Prinoe Euwards Island
will become a part of tha Canadian Con
federation.
Nost, tne ourrioaturiat, ia in Boglsmt.
where be is ‘ikely to remain, ai d where
artist* are paid with a liberality unknown
to tbit country.
Newt of tbe serious illness of tbe Pop*
are again revived. He has lately bad
several severe attacks, ud la in
dangsr of -nffoosUon. Tbe Cardinals are
al tbs Va < aa ready foe uy emergency.
The Friuew ol Waits, Queen Victoria's
oldest toe, who I as beteiofon led a life
oi extravagance, is now said to be econ
omising, aad fo have saved 4500 oot of
kit put yearly aBomaor. though it is
be found the sum ia a
he had forgotten
Itsllgtewa luma.
Unitarian ism, it in said, is not as strong
in New York st it waa twenty-live years
ago.
One half of the Protestant Episoopal
Churches in the United States are free-
seated.
The number of converts in the Protest
ant missions of the world is computed at
1,334,993.
The Baptists in Iowa claim a member
ship of $20,000. They hive 374 churches
ud 109 pastors.
Tiehendorf, the eelebrated Bibliosl
oritio, will be one of the delegates from
Germany st the Conference of Evangeli
oai Alliance.
There are 821 students ra the seven
Congregational Thelogical Seminaries in
thj United States, forty-three more than
last year.
Aeoording to the last oensns there are
48,874 clergymen in the United Slates.
Of this number 8,572 reside in the State
of Ohio,
The Old Catbohoo have arranged for
the election of a Bishop st Cologne on
'the 4th of J one. This, it is believed,
will give definite shape and permanency
to the movement.
Aooording to Methodist statistics, the
increase of their denomination in the
United States for twenty years has been
fifty per oent greater thu the inoreaae of
population.
The rationalists of Germany are en
raged in a revision ot the Bible, whioh
they propose to call the protestaut Bible
of the New Testament. The same have
united in a uody called tht Protestant
Union.
A Methodist paper says it is no seoret
that the itinerant syate n, with all its ad
vantages, is severe in its severances of the
pastors aud peop'e. This is stid iu view
of the reoent removal ol several hundred
ministers.
A missionary in Utah states that of the
Mormons be found fifty-seven per nest,
had belonged to the Church of England,
sloven to tbe Methodists, and eight to
the Presbyterians; ouly six per out. had
Mormon parents.
Tbe oentenary of tbe firat Methodist
Eoclesiastio Convention held iu America
is to be eelebrated by the Methodists of
Philadelphia in July next, beginning on
Sunday, the 13th, ud continuing for
three days.
The organic union of the virion pres
byteries of British Amerioa ia now as
sured. Tbe committees, whioh met at
St, John, N. B., have sgieedupoa terms
of anion, snd notbiug remains but tne
ratification ot their work by the several
assemblies.
miwatlaaeoas Items.
The Uaion newspaper ol Columbia,
8. C. has been sold, and it is said will b*
discontinued or removed to Charleston.
The Oity Counoil of Riohmond offer
to give a site on Gambles’ bill, in that
oity, for the mouument to General Lea.
Mrs. Elizabeth Lee died at Sport m-
burg, S. O., about two weeks ago, iu her
100th year.
The report is that Chiosgo gets impor-
Ini .asm uf BuiVtrarau UiCIUUHUUiiro *>J UiV
way of Montreal muob cheaper than
through the New York Custom House.
The Mempnis Ledger says that Ham
Carter, u ex-Memphis negro politician,
will i s a candidate for Governor of Mis
sissippi belore the Radioal oonvention iu
July next.
There are 71,800 Baptists, 260 Baptist
Sunday Schools with 13,000 pupils in
Alabama,
The remains of General Oanby were
interred at Indianapolis on Friday last.
In the Connecticut Senate last week,
a constitutional amendment, providing
for one State oapital, to be loomed in
Hartford, was passed.
Of tbe grand jury impanusled to in.
vestig te the late troubles in Louisiana
sixteen ere colored, ud every one s Rad
ios!.
Ezekiel T. Oox, father of Hon 8. IS.
Cox, of New York, died reoently at his
borne in ZaneeviUe, Ohio, and at a ripe
old age. Mr. Oox was many years j.rom-
inontiy identified with journalism.
The annual couuoil of the Episoopal
Ohurob of Virginia snd West Virginia
oonvened reoently at Winchester, for the
first time sinoe 1857,
The editors of Ohio in oonvention last
week deolared in favor of a discrimina
tion in postage oo newspapers circulated
in the county, distriol or btaie in whioh
they are published, and those sent from
a distance.
Nearly one thousand feminines of SL
Louis have signed a petition to the Ooun-
oil of that city asking a repeal of the
social evil regulation system in prautioe
there.
The Geneva Arbitration oost the Uni
ted States $144,000. The amount sward
ed in our fsvor ia fifteen ud a iuuf mil
lions
PtriOHtl Items.
Ex-Congressman George A. Halsey, of
the Sixth New Jersey Distriot, has re
turned his book pay to the United States
Treasury.
The present editor of Lippinoott's
Magazine is John Foster Kirk, who has
obtained a good deal of reputation in
Philadelphia from the authorship of sev
eral historical works.
After the late Captain Hall’s return
from nin first Arotio exploit!ion, Lady
Fruxlin journeyed tromCsliforuia, where
she wen traveling, on purpose to see him.
His additions to tbe mementoes of Sir
John Franklin greatly interested her.
s-V-e —
Tl»e Lata Wether Helmet.
In the death of Father DeSmet, which
occurred yesterday at the St. Louis Uni
versity, the Catholic Chuich loses one
of ill mutt em-nent ud veuersble rep
resentatives in the United Sistea, For
more than forty jeers, n resident of this
couutry, ud for a number of yean
mazing bis borne in St, Lonis, a con
siderable port-on of this period wts
spent in religions labors among tbe
Indiana of the far West, with whom bis
uooeie was unprecedented in mimionsry
so oats, at his memory will be long ud
affectionately venerated by the benefi
ciaries of bis nonle self-saorafioe. Full
details of this distinguished gentleman's
life ud eventful experiences, aa also tbe
arrangements for bis interment, will bo
found in our local ooiomas—Ex.
Present iadioaUuna
Samuel B. Oox will ba the
fund id ale lor Congress ia t!
trot of Maw York to fill
tana tat whioh Jamei
UccUiUaUcil.
THJ? KORTHKUN GBNBBAL AIUOIDLY
Baltimobe, May 24.—The Presbyte
rian General Assembly to-day appointed
a commute# to oontider ud to report to
the next General Assembly on the sub-
jeot of issuing a free paper. Tbe report
of tha Board of tha Ohureh Emotion
Fond showed receipt# daring the put
year of $110,774, number of ohurohea
contributing 1,903, not contributing 282,
amouut expended in aid of ohnrches
$88,091, oburohea receiving aid 160.
Daring the lest three yegrs the board has
completed 385 ohnrobes, free of debt,
ud insured aburoh property worth three
million dollars. The board recommend
that in the future not more thu one
thonsud dollars be allowed in aid of
any ono church. The report and recom
mendation wu adopted,
the sfiut of the southern assembly,
A special from Little Rook aays that tha
Southern Presbyterian General Assembly
have adjourned, ud that nearly all the
members have left for home. No defi
nite notion was taken in relation to an
organio anion, bnt tbe general sentiment
was clearly in favor of uniting with the
Dntoh Reformed Ghnroh, rather than
with uy other body of Preebyterius.
In the afternoon tbe repoit of the
Committee on Manses was taken up ud
dismissed until recess. Alter recess,
tbe special order, tbe report ol
tbe Committee- on Missions for Freed
men, wus submitted with a recommenda
tion that the Assembly oommend the
Miseions ol Freedman to tbe sympathy
and hearty support of the whole Church.
The report shows receipts during the
year of 863,125, expenditures $59,260,
The report gives tn interesting aooount
of number of oburohea, Sunday soho-ils,
Missionary associations, oomauinioants
ud Sunday school scholars.
Bev, A. 0. McCU llan, Secretary of the
regular Committee on Mission of Freed-
men, addreased the Convention snd was
lollowed by Bev. E. J. Adams, oolured,
wrho delivered a forcible speech. Other
speeches were made and tbe report
adopted.
Tbe Committee on Ohoroh Polity re
ported, and the Assembly adjourned un
til lip. e, wlion tbe report on theological
seminaries will be oousiaered.
OETTISBDEft KATAITSKE WATER.
T HE United SUtee DiepenMuNT, the eatherined
reoord of our Meterle Medio*. e)$n$$ thl*
Wefterwith the ■ * ~
known In it* i$l pw$$ni»| p»D|wrft*.
detorlontU. tj bottling end keeping. It he* never
been eleimed tor uxj other mineral wsterthe power
to dlMolve tbe aratee. or eo-celled oheik fonneUen*
in the bod j or en the ilnabe and Joints. This the
Qettjsbarg Ketelysine Wster (im done in handled*
of initsnoee. Gout, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dye*
pepele, Gravel, DUbetea, Kidney and Urlnmy Die-
■*“ generally have eU yielded to its influence.
gw-O made ia importing English or
phans for domsstio service.
The Thomasviile Enterprise, of the
20th, says: " We had the pleasure ol
meeting yesterday Hon. John Screven,
Preeiaeut, and Ooi. H. S. Haiuea, Super
intendent of the A lautio aud Unit Rail
road, who visited Thomseville on busi
ness connected with tneir road. A pleas
ant oh*t with thorn informed os that the
new snrvey for tbe extension of tbe At
lanta snd Golf Road *rom Bainbridge
to Pollard is about half completed, aud
the route found to be the mosi favorable
yet surveyed; making a difference of
(rom twenty to thirty feet average grad
ing per mile less than the former lines.
Two remarkable tangents ol about twen
ty-five miles eaob also appear on the new
route, one of them oommenoing at Bain-
bndge and tbe other at tne orownng of
the Chattahoochee, thus g viug fif-y
miles of air-line road iu tbe first Ultv-two
pT Uliy-Uirtm union Itaaa lojotl, I'.Auldwu
Sorcveu is aJJ ouergy aud activity iu set
ting ou foot tins muob needed exteusiou,
uud we hope to see tbe whole oouutry
support him iu the greet undertaking.
Jt is no smell matter to extend a railroad
oue hundred aud sixtjr or one hundred
and seventy miles in »nis section of the
oouutry/aud under the present stringeu
oy of the money market, bat 'f any muu
in Georgia cuu do it, we believe Presi
dent Wei even cun. Tne people slung tue
line, however, should not sit down, fold
their hands uud wait for him to open up
their localities to the world, uud mukt
their fortunes lor them. They snoulu
nsu up, like a strong man, and pat tht lr
ahoulders to the wheel also. If they
oovot the great benefits to be derived
from it, let them also show gnt and man
liuess in the acquisition. ”
lu« rtnorad mtuotUsr powsr to tbe pemJyUc, our*.
Abdominal Dropsy, and given healthy action to the
Torpid Liver, ft ha* oared Chronic Diarrhoea.
Piles, C
the tflu
IHam .
by the Bottled Water. It la a powerful antidote for
excessive eating or drinking. It correct* the stom
ach, promotes digestion and relieve* the head aim set
Immediately.
Pamphlets containing a history of the Spring,
reports from eminent pavslclans and mtdioal
writers, marvelous and well-attested corea. and tes
timonial* from dfjiingaiahod oltlaens, will ba fur
nished and aent by mail on application to
WHITNEY BBO.’B, General Agents,
W7 Sontn Front at., Phils Jalphla,
Gettysburg Spring* Oe.
For Hale by HEARD.OBAXQ k OO.
generally.
druggists
apdfla
Magnolia Balm
A FEW APPLICATIONS HASH A
Pure Blooming Complexion
It U Pttr.br ▼•eatable lu oamtloa Is
seen and felt aft once. It doe* away with the
Aluahed Appearance censed by Heat. Fatigue
ttxl Excitement, lloalaaud removes all Blotches
and Pimple*, dispelling dark and unsightly
Spots. Drives away Tan, Freckles and Ban-
burn, and by Its gentle but powerful iufloenoe
mantles the laded cheek with
YOUTHFUL BLOOM A YD BEAUTY*
Sold by all Druggist* end F*ucy Store*. Dc*
(ot, 83 Tark 1‘laoe, New York
SUtt gUtowtifiomnie.
J-ILANDEBDONtoOCh,
an iissaws Hmm, au.si», .
A““vwim*h torn* Motts* wan Si.
Mowers and Reapers,
Hone Hates,
Scrtbea aad CratU**
mito*.^nsesisss85i
AORIVDliTUHAL HIPLESISW,’
INCLUDING nKLItol 00m*,
HARROWS, PUMPS, WAGONS, NO.
AGENTS FOE
SHOWN’8 OXUBEATNV COTTON NSN,
TEXAS COTTON PRESS,
BLAND VS ST RAM RNGINBS xsn SAW WrVXA
Coll uid am is MMapiHhiatat MMvaqpS.
“JJ® J..H AWlTEHSOH a O f
GEO. E. WAKD&OO.’S
TO BTJY YOUR
CLOTHING!
Tb»r kmoptMAa vtaadid
Stock of Clothing
THIS OIIBATI
Southern Remedy
OoDiumptlon, BronohlUi, N.rv.tti DAbtlltp,
sisMMswuias fewm impure —■—
blood.
dittos *Mh.
WU1 of MSB. Osk.i Are...
Aeoording to tbe Traveller, the will of
Hon. Osu.s Ami s was admitted to pro
bate on Saturday. The witnesses are
Moss* Dillon, N. G. Ordwsy, Philetna
Suwjar. Tbe beque-ta. areas follow*:
To his wits, Eveliue O. Ames, *100,009,
all the household furniture, hones and
carriage., snd the use of bis dwedinn
boose dnnng her life. To his daughter,
Susan E. Frenoh, 32,000 a year daring
her life. To eaob grand daughter, 320,-
000. To hi* son, Frank M. Ames, ail
his interest in the Kingnley Iron snd
Machine Oo., snd in the bouses, lauds
and buildings bought or received from
the estate ol Lyman Kingsley, iu Oan-
ton. To hi* sons, Oakes A. Amee snd
Oliver Ames, all bis rasl estate in Easton,
Canton, Hsintree and Weat Bridgew.ter,
with all msohinerj, tools and fixtures
that pertain to or in any way connected
with the shovel business. The income
of $60,000 .even per cent, railroad bends
to be used for tbe support of schools in
School Distriot No. 7, lu North Easton.
All tbe rest, residue, snd remainder to
be equally divided among hi* three sans,
Oakes A., Oliver and Frank M. Ames.
Oakes A Ames and Oliver Amen, his
sons, are appointed executors.
r will.
Died of Snahlb-bitb.—A negro boy,
eighteen years old, iu the eu,p!Ay of J.
M. Kimbrough, seven miles south of
Hamilton, Harris county, went fishing
on tne 18th inst., and was bitten on tbe
finger by a moccasin nmke, from which
he tiled on the 20th inst. A physician
wus called to bun eighteen hoars after
tbe oite sn l found him in a comatose
condition, talking incoherently. The
doctor says be frequently blew like un
adder, protruded bis tongue and struck
st every one within his reach—always
striking st anything be 'dt at. He
would seize tue bed clothing and shake
it, and in every way imitate the actions
of a on eke.—Hamilton Vitilur, 284 tone.
Another Bmaxzbite. —The Mar: na
(FI*,) Courier ol a recant data sms: Lit
tle ike Irwin, *on of OoL J, M. F. Ir
win, of Greenwood, waa nitteu on Sun
day last by a rattlesnake, whioh ha*
earned the little fellow great suffering.
Tha brave brother of the unfortunate
sufferer, Bryan Irwin,immediately tockid
the wound, and also brought tha vsnojn-
oqs rapti'a along with bis little brother
to the home. Oo!. Erwin applied the
inaiae ot a freshly killed chickan. whit*
warm, to tha wound, and g*v4 heavy
doss* of whisky toddv, with satisfactory
•access; and little Iks, when naard from
on Tuesday, was rapidly recovering.
_ . Mrs. Gan. & E. Lee ia soon to -
tpjiZxzrSF* y x m
invalid in* years, ba. a astd saw to ha i )
in batter health than lot tomattaMpHa.
Ska ia now with her aoc, Gen. W. H. r.
Lea, near White House.
known that % naiainn aotto* ia
“Had the radars of lfcta trana
otutoywm&si**
Certificate* oan be presented from many laadln*
l U7*loiaca, Mliilater*,and heads of famlllas thromrb-
•at the Soath, endonlng it In the uigheet term*.
The Fluid Bxtraot of Hoesdalla.
DB. B. WILSON OAHH, of Baltimore,
baa need It in out* of Sorofoia and other
with much satlsfbota j ”
n, T,-0. PUGH,«. Baltimore, reoommead* it te
ail persons aufferln* th di*eaaed blood, saying it
OBAVKN A CO., Ura (late, at OordonavUle, Va.
ItfScUon.
. Mnrfreeaboro Tenn.,
it cared him of rhe
it* it cared him of rh* istlns wh*n all else failed
Did oar epeoe admit, re could aiv-» you testlmo
nlhl* from every Rtate in the Souto from person
known to everr man, woman aad obild, either p«
sonaily or by refutation.
doaadallN la sold by all Druggists.
JLBMENT8. k OO., Baltimohs, Hole Proprieto
JOHN F. HKNBY. No. I OoLABOn PLACB Ml
ovk.W halemle Ageoov
GEORGIA—fnltsa Coanty;
Vo the Superior Court nf laid County:
T UX PZTITION of Loewi E. BI*okl*r. J.h* 0*1-
1U>. O PeepU*. Hobart H*ugh. N. J. r
mood, Wlhiaoj has rd, B. H. Thrasher, T. 8.
row, P. L. Myuatt, H*uben Arno I a, Jesse ftft. (
Georg3 Htllyer, B. H. Clark*, John A. Stephen*,
Henry Jackson, M. </• Clarke, Julius L* Brown,
Dennis V. Hau.mond, Sidney Dill, W. L. Oai boon
B. F. Hogs, B. P. UoweU, and such other person*
aa ar* now associated with them or may hersaflet
beoom aeaeclated with them, and wno are mem
ber* of the bar of the Atlanta Circuit, and resident
in the city of Atlanta aad said county and HUt -,
>heweth that they and their successors iwho shall
likewise us uiembei* or th* bar ol said oity) deair*
tael improvement aud to advauo* th* science of the
law; to tegulaU tha praUio* in the Court* of said
county, by sucq suggestion* aa the experience ol
your p< uuoner* may, ia aa organised form, pro
duce: to promote social intercourse amongst th*
member* of lb* bar ef said dty, aad to elevate the
tone of professional etiquette.
Th* privileges that your petitioners desire to ex
rote* umler aad by iha lunie ^ T»- liar
Association ar* such aa by C - -
y hai
r Nnoftil
ueorgia are now,
*“ irclsed by
_ _ amount of capital proposed to b« employed
by your petitioners is only su h aa may aria* from
initiation fees aud dues, aad from donations by gift
tiuoner* aa
lag of an _
at ora said aad oontervlng upon them and (heir
successors the prtvtleces specified, aud suoh other
privilege* as are now slloweu by law and may htre-
after be conferred by law.
This May 13th. 1813
SIDNEY DBiJe,
Attorns.i
«xtraot from tha ml nates.
W. B. YKNABLB. Oterk.
Gen. Lee at “StoieialTi” flme.
A 14 x It inch Bngravlnff ef the grave of ••stone
wail* J so-sun, in the Lexington, Va.. eam<
t*ry Th* noble Oen. Lee stands beside the flowei
strewn grave over which uang* a weeping willow.
In in* distance is to be seen a beautiful tan
$ a gem of art: on* which abeatd hang la the
parlor of every soother t home. It ia withouf a rival
the awoeteet and soogt tottuhtagly oMUfnl hagrav-
Utd before the public. A oopy td this beauUful *o-
graving will be a«ntty mad. poet-paid, to every
peraou sanding to cento for six mouth* subeertp
THE SOUVENIR,
attraattfU-ma,
I0n Marietta Street in Odd Fellows’ll
Blitting.
myMtf.
C. BOUAIFIfiLD,
Funeral Undertaker, I
Setalic Caskets, Burial Cass I Coffin,
Agent -CWjS* Preaervsri
so. i Dsai/n ofbu noun.
ATLANTA WATXik vtlML
Dr. F. KA.
D R. F. IULOW, w.Uferenra tbraask Me srett
and rapid euras haafWanied to our dtp aad
opened again an eaiahiltkmsoa for th* oom ef att
Chronic Diseases, of what ha will laspaetfnliy
fora tha otitoana ef AMana
•teriUty, Asthma. Nervous .
indigostlo., UnsuMATUM. NnunALuiA, Mcrofula,
Diseases psoouau to W«mm, all iMreamns oe
theHluoo,aug Dmuasm, Kldteiy an* ateddm
Oomptolut, dtoppag# or th* Water, Piks of all Kinds,
*, toeneawBiRA. By- and Ur (iitonpiainM
T. W. Mucker, of Chapman, Bucks* k Oa.ilfsfa*
W. B v'-x, Mr. T. J. Hightower, 0*«L W.«. Wtehar.
emptb Jean aad James ignoa, T. Flsishsl, Seen-
man k Kuhrt, Mr. Nhulh ler/Dr. M. MM-ball, Ba>
psrto* Vloar* Mr. Inaner, of Brerkiynj VkthawMa*
rouy, Fhila .eiphiat Mev fr. Smlih, MaooataaaL
don yuiunan, Mrs. Dsnwoody, Dtotfli Mr. White,
Oo.yers-
plaint, Teething periods of Children,!.
~ ~ ifite hoars viU be saActoat tor some. Mtew
i no danger when psohie call me liamediatoiy
at the fir fit symptoms. Thin treaiwagj gftvos 0 ,
white, soft skin, aad etkrybody wbl Marti to teraC 1
hisiamUy atacfje(|ig)f>ra ,7. . jjpdtitpi ifj
wAsavAA^ewrante m -
operators. Terms modatam and advsategte nasiM.
passed. Good ayD g poMiiona a* *qop aa gntetiwl
Ad.ras. J. W. FOMMtoU. anp i,
myflUf. id uhnieh street, IbahvilM- Tram
iSfiSlAlT ATU ltl(
HAIl.ROAD.
OFFIOttl
uumkoa. feuz m, i
cn.feSZ OV SCttttDU LK.
toaSA
wofsO
On AND AFTEB SUE DAT, »TH INSTANT ..
Anlve i
Inward fnin from New York
Leave OhettesMaga...
ra,L*n
Leave 1
Arrive MAUauto ii
feet Use te New Yen
brave A tier's v
rrtveat Dalton
Vest laua wid put og and take an pateengwe MVp.
Meneti*. Oerters vibe Kingston and DteMte•>
Way pmsengera are requeued net to get on thto
uralounUmtheywiteto be
•miw
GROOBKIBj^
u utt .. »;«• w .wo y«tt
New Gtoc«rjr
ra.aro.uiJ>Ji'
PARKS aud AIXAK::