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GEORGIA ENTERPRISE.
WILLIAM L. liESBB, Editor.
JOV I N ( iTO N- < i A
F&IDAV MORNING TAN. 22, 1809.
be NOT TfFRT'I’JV F.TJu
If is a rather hopeless notlcrtakinr to ilis
affl.lfc farmers from the folly of planting largely
of Cotton when it is commanding the, present
high prices ; for though they lmve never known
the high prices which induced the planting of
uh inordinate crop, to fail to be hrolion down as
soon as the new crop is produced, yet. like the
devotees of the gaining table, they are held hy
an Inexplicable fascination to the worship of
their cherished idol. Verily, if it is not true
•that “Cotton is king” in any other section, the
planters of the South have continued to recog
nize his stray in their efforts to rebuild their
shattered fortunes since the war. Hut whore
it the vast amount of money which cotton has
commanded since the war? Not less than a
thousand millions at the lowest calculation
lftust have been received for cotton nhmc sirieo
our ports were opened, but where is the money ?
'Phc fact is evident that it, has been spent for
fihotisionß and supplies which should have been
produced here. This system makes our section
i+implv tributary to the North-west, and is only
u continuation of the suicidal policy which
poured Southern wealth into Northern cities
before-the war ;in consequence of which we
are in our present prostrated condition, flic
remedy is entirely in the hands of Southern
planters. A small crop of cotton commands
rthout the same aggregate amount of money in
market as a full crop since the price is onhancod
hy the sca-city of the supnly. Now if planters,
trusting to the realization of present prices
next fall, place their whole dependence in
cotton, the consequence will be that they will
have to pay two oifthree prices for corn, and
sell their cotton for loss than the cost of its
production. It is right, of course, to make the
most profitable crops, hut let those who would
renp the profit of their own labor be careful to
plant only such an amount of cotton as they
can cultivate in addition to a full supply of
grain and meat.
AIR. HILL NOT TO BE ADAII TTEO.
Xha New York Tribune of the 16th inst. has
t|ja following in regard to Mr. Hill a chances
of admission. If they will pot receive him
tjjero ia little prospect for the admission of any
other man from Georgia :
it The question of the admission of Mr. IT ill,
0 r Georgia, to a seat in the Senate was to-day
Rattled, so fur as the action of the Judiciary
Gommittee is concerned. The manner of the
election of the Senators, the fact or the expul
sion of the colored members of the Legislature
on the ground that they were ineligible, under
the State Constitution, and all the points bear
ing upon the subject, were fully discussed.—
After a long consultation the committee came
to a direct vote on the question on the ad miss
sion of Mr. Hill, and a majority voted against
allowing him a seat. It Is probable that a
long debate wiH arise in the Senate when the
report is submitted, but the action of the com
mittee will doubtless lie sustained.”
Tyranny over the South.
When the new constitution for Alabama was
rejected by ft vote of the citizens nf the Stnt,e f
the Radical Congress, without right, reason, or
rhyme, declared or ordained it adopted. The
niew constitution for Mississippi has been re
jected by a vote of the people of the State, and
Congress, instead of ordaining, ns in the ease
of tho rejected constitution of Alabama, that
it shall he considered as adopted, is likely to
declare that the citizens of Mississippi may
take their choice between accepting it and liv
ing under a Provisional Government. But why
doesn't Congress treat both States alike?—
Why take one course toward one of them, and
nliothor toward the other? If the rejected
constitution framed for Alabama is declared
adopted, why not the rejected constitution of
Mississippi likewise ? And, if the people of
Mississippi are allowed to choose between ac
cepting tho constitution they have rejected and
having a Provisional Government, why not the
people of Alabama also? Can any of the
Radicals answer such questions satisfactorily :
The Radical party in Congress is in no
degree whatever a party of principle. It is
simply a party of expedients, very mean and
rascally expedients too. It won Id n t hesitate
to establish for the ten Southern States ten dif
erer.t, inconsistent, and contradictory policies,
each of the ten policies to be changed as often
as the hope of party advantage should suggest
change. The referring of the constitutions of
the Southern States to the votes of those States
is simply insult, imposition, cheatery, dupery,
mockery. The people are toll that they are
free to vote as they like, but there is no freedom
in the case. They n*ißt vote just as Congress
likes, or Congress will do with them just ns it
likes. The French people may vote for a ruler
of France, said Louis Napoleon, but any of
them that vote against me shall he shot. I
don’t interfere with their freedom of suffrage,
but.po one shall interfere with my freedom of
shooting them. —[Louisville Courier-Journal.
Tcnure-of-Office Bill*
Surely, to sustain Grant, the extremes meet.
Every Democrat voted in the House to give
him a show, and the noble army of carpet
bag men went the same way. Thirty-five
Democrats and twenty surreptitious members,
taken from the vote of one hundred and
twenty-one that carried through the House
the repeal of the Tenuro-of-Oflice act, leaves
"but, sixty-six, only, out of a Radical member
ship of one hundred and seventy two on the
rolls, willing to give Grant a chance to see
■what he can do toward an honest and econom
ical public service. But forty per cent, of tho
Radical members willing to trust their Presi
dent-elect! This looks alarmingly like what
our English relatives call a vote of want of
.confidence, and seems to presage pretty much
Ithe same weary old suit of Congress vs. the
Pre ident that has worried us alrerdv *r
[ITorM.
linyti—The Motto! Republic.
Tho insurgents, or revolutionists, appear to
be gaining ground. Instead of being cm -hod,
as was reported, they, at last accounts, bad
laid siege to Port ail Prince, the capital, and
bombarded it for several hours. The Empe
ror President, Salnavc, was absent at the
time nt Mi'ngo.tnr, whereLe made a narrow
eacapo. While in church attending l)<:>nn.
a conspiracy was formed to kidnap him when
ho came out. Luckily ho got a tint of the
design and escaped hy the back door; hut his
staff officers, on leaving the chttreh, were as
saulted by the eons pi rators and cut to peiees.
Sal nave basgotinto trouble with the French.
The rascal, having bought some Lon-clad
steamers from the Yankees, is amusing him
self in coasting a'ong tho isle and bombarding
such towns as refuse to recognize bin authority.
While performing this operation at Jercmic,
he deliberately fired upon the house of tho
French Consul, over which the French flag
was floating—killed six persons in it—three
women and three children—two of the latter
sons of tho Consul. Besides the killed, seven
were seriously wounded.
The French Government is not likely to
submit quietly to that proceeding ; *and the
proposed Protectorate of the United States may
find itself engaged in a very serious business
from tho very start. - [Richmond Whig.
In view of these gay and festive proceedings
of this gentleman of the African persuation.
Mr. Secretary Seward may find it no joke to
assume the protection of this modern republic
of men and brethren. If a war with Franco
should be the initiative of this protectorate bo
will hardly bo able to make it pay even by
selling the island and its inhabitants.
Bill to Retire Judges of the United States
Courts.
Mr. Sherman introduced in ti e ‘Senate, on
the 11th imt., a Bill, which was referred to
the-Judiciary Committee, amending the .Judi
ciary Act of September 24, ITB9. The Bill
provides that any judge of any court of the
United States who is now seventy years of age,
or whenever ho shall nrrivc at that age, may,
upon his -written -application to the President,
be retired from active servioo on full pay.—
The second section of the Bill provides that
any United States Judge whose ago exeoed
seventy years, or if any such judge shall here
after arrive at. the ago of seventy years, shall
for one rear after tho passage of this Act, or
after arriving at the ago of seventy years, con
tinue to hold his office, it shall bo the duty of
the President to nominate and appoint an
additional judge for the same c >urt, who Khali
have the same power, and perform the same
duties, and receive the same compensation as
the judge then noting in such Court nr District,
and shall, in connection with, and in tho ab
sence nf his senior associate, bold the courts
prescribed by law.
Capital Co-mino Soutit.—The Atlanta Con
stitution publishes a letter from one of the
largest real estate agencies in New York, in
which it 73 predicted that there will be a large
movement of men and money toward Georgia,
and the south generally in a few months.
A SrSTER OF CrtARITV FROM CtMHLESTOX T\
Washivoton.—The Washington correspondent
of the New York Tribune, says: “A Si-ter of
Charity from Charleston, S. C., has arrived
here with a petition to Congress asking the
Government to rebuild the Catholic hospital in
that city. The hospital was destroyed hy the
shells from the Union army during the war.—
This being a similar claim to that of Sue Mur
phy, it will not be acted upon until after the
disposition of the latter hy Congress.
An exchange thinks that colleges should
boil dvtcu Greek and Latin into a six months'
study, and devote more time to the considera
tion of modern living languages.
Colored Aldermen,—At a municipal elec
tion recently held in the city of Knoxville
two colored men were elected aldermen. Why
not ? The oolored voters will, in time, discov
er a better use for thoir'*suffrages' than giving
them to schemers from Ohio and New England.
Let them vo‘o fur good honest men of their own
race, and send the carpet-baggers to where
they belong—hack home or to the penitentiary,
which, is not very material, its the country wi!|
have to feed them in any event. — Carmel, N. I".
Courier.
Theory- and Practice.— The theory of the
“man and brother” is very well, but even lowa
radicals do not like tlie practice. In Wapello
county, at the recent session of the district
court, the deputy sheriff summoned an en
franchised negro as a juror, hut Tannehill, the
radical judge, refused to let him into the jury
bo*.
A. majority of 24,000 opens the ballot box to
the negro, in lowa, but a radical judge shuts
the jury box against him. In the midst of
jubilations over negro suffrage, let ns hear a
howl over the action of Judge Tannehill.
A man named R. C. Gilchrist has just started
a school at the California State Prison for all
prisoners who aro unable to read and write, —
The school is held in the dining room, and
there were at the start sixty-live pupils. This
in the first experiment of the kind in that
prison.
Fashionable people no longer call one another
liars; they nieraly sligmatieo the statement as
an “unqualified figment its a fertile imagina
tion.”
Take two letters from money and there will
he but one left. IVe knew a fellow who took
money from two letters and there wasn’t any
thing left.
Ben Butler was one-of the crowd that shook
Andy Johnson’s hand on New Year's day.—
How glad they must have been to see each
other 1
—«► *«»■>- am
The public debt statement for the month
shows an increase of the debt since tho Ist of
December by sl, 675,357. The total debt at
erss-ut ie $2,5f 1,433,002, with $111,826.401
a LC-rif-f
Advice L ; ( tillsand othcrCoiintyOfficer*. I
Make it a fixed rule to require of plaintiffs |
in execution, or their attorneys, to invariably
pay levying and advertising foes in advance.
It is almost always done in the cities. Why
not in the country ? Nino-tcnths ot the levies
now being made will he litigated kiiitu one or
both parties tiro dead ~r insolvent. Fhnil the
law officers and printers he kept out of their
fust duos? We hope not. Yet out of *he two
eolnmtiß of levies advertised in the Situ-for
January, we doubt if’ a half dozen levies went
to sole or were settled. They go into the
Courts, and if may he a very good thing for
the lawyers, hut it plays the “dotted” with the
Sheriffs and poor printers. We are glad to sec
that one of our Deputy Sheriffs has published
a notice, and hereafter these foes nm-t he pro
paid, and we hope the balance will follow his
example. It would he a good plan for all other
county officers to adopt the same rule as to all
new co-ts.
We clip the above from the Griffin Star, and
suggest to the county officers advertising in the
Republican, as a measure of safety to them
selves, the importance of exacting costs —par-
ticularly the printer’s fees, in advance.— Sttiri:
l'epub.
Remarkable Temperance Lecture*
Goethe tells the following story, which amu
singly illustrates the capacity for drink of the
Rhinelanders:
The Bishop of Mayenne once delivered a
sermon against dt-nnkrnnesfl, and, after paint
ing in the strongest colors the evils of over
indulgence, concluded as follow*: “But tho
abuse of wine does not exc’ude its use, for it is
written that wine rejoices the heart of man.
Probably there is no ono in my congregation
who cannot drink four bottles of wine without
feeling anv disturbance of his senses-, but if
any man at the seventh or eighth bottle so for
gets himself as to abuse and strike his wife and
children, and treat his best friends as enemies,
let him lo- k into his conscience, and in future
stop nt the sixth bottle. Yet, if after drinking
eight, or even ten or twelve bottles, be can still
take his Christian neighbor lovingly hy tho
hand, and obey the orders of his spiritual and
temporal supporters, let him thankfully drink
his modest draught. He most he careful, how
ever, as to taking any more, for it is seldom
that Providence gives any one the special grace
to drink sixteen buttles at a sitting, as it ban
enabled me, its unworthy servant, to do, with
out either neglecting my duties or losing my
temper.”
To Cure Warts on- Horses.—A correspond
ent of the Maine Farmer Rays:
“Please say to your readers, if there are any
who have horses troubled with warts, that 1
ltavo been ‘treating' one, by dosing with chop
ped cedar boughs, given in grain: also wash
ing his warts at tho same time with a s reng
decoction of crane. This reeipe was given me
Lv a physician, after I had tried several other
prescriptions, and had offered five dollars to
have several troublesome war's Corel. Re
peated doses and bathings of cedar have
annihilated them.”
An exchange paper i peaking ol the balls
and parties that “drag their ruinous length”
after midnight, says :
It is the after-midnight •arousal that is tin
derminitig our society, making rakes of young
men and mining happy homes. Let the gaiety
he confined to more reasonable hours. Away
with this foolish waste and night wakening.
The evil has been growing out of all bounds,
until it is a most serious one. It lias grown
till no father or mother can lie assured of the
safety of their children when out till neat
morning.
Smoking hy ladies in Boston is on the in
crease! An extensive cigar dealer in that, city
says ho sells an average of three hundred pet
day for ladies’ use, ami thinks a thousand per
da_v, at least, are puffed hy the fair ones.
Wit \TpßoroHTiow or the Crop is in Market.
—ln Monroe county the talk is that about one
third of ehttun crop of that county was in the
hands of planters on the first day of January,
amt in some of the Georgia counties one-half
was still in plantcrs'Jhands. The general aver
age throughout Georgia was believed to he
about a third.—[Macon Telegraph.
The Springfield Republican—which most
he out of its senses—says : “Murders are coin
ing thicker and faster hero in law-abiding New
England ; there is no need of going South to
find atrocities.” Is th■:> not treason?
Arkansas—A fine Specimen of Frf.e Gov
ernment, —The Little Rock Gazette says that
there are in the lower House of Arkansas
Legislature 83 members, of whom S2 are Rad
icals and 1 a Democrat. There are 9-1,500
voters in the State, of whom 70,000 arc whites,
23,000 negroes, and 1,500 carpet baggers, being
a wbito majority of 45,500. Yet such has
been the rascality of the Radicals, and sue!)
have been the frauds and impositions practiced
upon the people, that the Legislature is almost
wholly Radical.
- O——
The Tritii Leaking Oft.— Tho Arkansas
outrages are getting too hoi and heavy even
for Radicalism. Tho Cincinnati Commercial
has ceased its merriment over the matter, aud
is becoming a little sober, as the following,
from its issuo of the 9tli inst., will show. It
says :
The militia are filled with partisan bitter
ness, ans many of them have personal wrongs
to avenge. Evidence is not wanting that they
do deeds of violence in the counties under
martial law, of which the ex-rebels have cause
to complain.
Striking fortue Crops. —ln South Carolina
the rice-field hands are said to have struck fur
half the crop. On the Ogeeebee they struck for
the whole of it after it was gathered. The ne
groes in their recent harmless piece of sport, are
said to havo carried off over forty thousand
bushels of rice which had been housed on the
Ogcechee plantations. It was, as Greeley savs
the prompting of‘‘a rude sense of justice.”—
[Macon Telegraph.
Tito Amnesty i’l'oc’awntion.
The Washington. (IX Ch,)‘ correspondent of
tho Cuic-uimui l untnioroial thus compli
ments Congress for calling upon President
Johnson for 'n authority upon which ho L v
sued tMc ;ipincwfy pi-odlai:iaiio*i % :
Y'o’n will ;■ on that our delegated fug 'oink
of t'iato dignity, tW inmate, yesterday pas. ed
a resolution cajung yippu,/• itd,i'cw Johnson to
jnform them yu; nf what jug he got the, cop*
Rtitutional law audio*»zing bin to giant a
jrci.erai amnesty.
If Andrew really u: rile r« total hi*- right*, as
President, vi/ttchsafi-tj hint b,y the Constituiiim.
lie would indorse on tho resolution, "IL-spect
fully returned to the Senate ol tho United
States, v itli ll;e information that the lint.re
signed holds his office under tho Constitution
from the people of the United State*, and
stieli is the- judge of his own constitutional
power, and is not-subh-et to ihe control u! the
Senate, or any other arm or body of the gov
ernment.” '*
If thti President exceeds his legally consti
tuted power he ia liable to impeachment, non
the pat ties sacking'to benefit themselves by
any such exercise of. power will find them
selves checked by tho Supreme ” art. But it
is not precisely the thing; fi«* the Senate to un
dertake to tench and control tho Exo-.~tt.tye in
this.
The debate on. tlio resolution shows how
little our So lons study the subjects they tail
about and ltpw .loosely they urn informed
Messrs. Ferry, Howard, Frclingnysen, and
Oonkling, all rwpnot like parrots, the same as
sertion—and that well founded—that there is
a distinction between the sovereignty of Eng
land, represented in the Queen, and the uov
ercign'v nf the United States, represented
hv the presider*. There is, in fact, a distinc
tion without a difference; the one gains it
through election, and tire' other through birth.
But the power is the same .in both. Doolittle
comes ‘sit them with ',the Garland case, and
finds that the Garland case does not apply, anil
retires to study it,.-uni then in u-profoundmud
dle the resolution passes.
Hath the dignified Solonft stopped to roinem
her .that old Andy > had at his elbow Mr.
Kvitrts. one of the ablest uml profound,eat
lu\syrni in the country-, to consult with, they
would have saved themselves souio trouble and
an ,absurd act.
Block vs. Y» hue-.
Tho •'Christian eburi-ty” -of tins age cl de
lusion and infatuation is pain tally, utmost
hdttfih’v, iHrisfnth.'d in ' the" r-a-c of Ts -ter
Vaughan, who. for ten months-; has lain in
prison in" RhjHib-fpltbr,' nrldcr sentence of
death for eatr-in'r th" death nf her illcglrl-m-'t'e
infant. Although there, are doubts if the child
was horn n’ive. and (hern are eiretims-atn-r.
palliating her guilt, at any rate. y-;t has she
lain under the. sentqnea .of death for tip
mentis, with tin sympathy .for her ia e on
the part f.f the “Christian” ladies and gcntjc
r:nn ot the dry of ‘’l-ry’hrrly ’ ' •-. But,
mark the charity.for fl* negro. On tho very
next nay after Hester Vaughan was (tentenced.
j a negro was convicted —in the same court, and
! before the same Judges —of the muv.hr of a
white '.voman : bnt imm-kv-'y the liftmen of
| 20,OU!) “respectable"T-iTTzcns of Philadelphia
1 were seitt to the Governor on a petition to# a
i eottimufaVuth or pardon of the black tnnr ler-
I or. Fitch is the drift of •■Gbidstian t-h-i. it v”
j in' this age nf bur !■ ■sotted find disgre,
country. No phy f:,r a 1--dutiful and ur.t r
j lunate girl, driven t<. despair and utnbne..- by
: the perfidy of a “man of position in'so-iety.”
1 fitit an 'ocean of tears and love for r. br-fttal
I m-grnj who cut out the h-airt of a.'white wo
man! [Old Guard.
Mail Ronanir.—The Washington «amw
pondent of tlnj Nw-Yovk Tribune, writing
under date of the IStll inst., says : " While the
express wagon containing the- .Southern wa;.
from New York. Philadelphia, and otter p- inis
North, was waiting in the court, of the Post
Office building in Washington, last night, to
he transferred to the Aequin Creek boat, two
boxes ami a pouch were stolen and conveyed
to an alley in the rca>- of tbo Chronicle build
ing, an J! there rifled of their contents, Tu
extent of the loss ia unknown, bnt the boxes
and pouch contained a large number of letters
and'packages, none of which were left.”
It Will Give Them ■Ehi’lotment.—'Tho
erection of factories in the South will give em
ployment to thousands of poor young « bites in
Georgia who now dcnmit earn their salt. It
will make producers out of this large class of
non-producers, and thus increase our material
wealth. Farmers,- take your money out of
your grand mother’s old stockings, and set the
loom and tli spindle in motion. —Daily ibresx.
Washington. Jan. 111.
A committee of the Colored National Con
vention called on Grant, who, in replying to
their address, said :
“ I thank the'ComverrtioTi, of which you are
the ropresentativos, for the confidence they
have expressed, and hope rincerely' that the
colored people of the nation may receive every
protection which the laws give them : they
shall have my efforts to secure such protection.
They should prove by their acts, their advance
ment to prosperity and obedience to the laws,
that they are worthy of all the privileges the
Government has bestowed upon them, and, by
their future conduct, prove themselves deserv
ing of all they now claim.”
The Sue Mu mutt Case.—ln the debate in
the Senate on this ea«o* Senator Fowler is re
ported as having said that if these claims of j
loyal Southern men were to be rejected on the ;
miserable ground that they were com tractive- ;
]y public enemies, you need not expect a sin- i
gte vote from that section. Every man, wo
man and child of the South will be up m arm?, j
aud oppose the bondholder rcctiving his pay.
The French have discovered that the white ;
of an egg given in sweetened water is a sure \
cure for croup. The remedy is to be repeated j
till a cure is affected. i
> ~ to: ? V. he it is
ground.
\ is Vtir
not c-..-1-rd F2HO.OOO.tiIW and the jwwsrociit
j f or y m f t , purposes must ho 1 rum ot)
Sjtot’ibl Notice?.
A JOY rOKLVEE
Who IVU I ivim- ? Beauty s.-cnied hy Itadvrev’s
iti-.iv itbi-r 11-f- ilvenl, containing Smsuper 1i m
il K . (ji v-u illiivc principle whoi-viii icsid'- aa the
%li t ties i>t' Sntvajinrilla. One bottle of Ib-sol
| ,i.i.- "tare of the cjir.iti w principle* of
bar .n.n iih., :lu.n ten of th - large hot I U-s..
Oue \ j .six fiml lvs of tills Woiui--lTul jnivjti T<>f
the blood','will change the fiiost repulsive body,
i-ovut’vd WJb the W«r*t Boers, lyl :era ntr.[ olhor
infirmities to .i st'iV.n 1 uml'healthy cdfhliifoh.-
It -maxes pure blood; it seattrea Stlear Fkin,
s.um 1 find White Teeth, gluati :iu*l 'T'gjdiir > u,-s.
•troti/andf \-;iriant Ilnir, hi-ig)it'at?l««iNEvk»,
Mviiei ami nitre bre itli— those who vse i(, how-'
i-vei- unionu-.ate iiiey tmn be in pitrsotial ap
pe. uaii'ie, .wiH s’..on realize its w.u.derbJ power
-iiiinti-tlng lieatili and beauty to nit, V.iee i'ue
1) .ib.t- per r.-tt'e. bold by • rugj-ts.
« in. Ua Iwny’s Aloiaftac for ihttS.
Now Aih't ifitetnciiti-.
Honey, lilymn.r, i.lilci Flotver, Roquet
!*:;•' Uhliij,
In Qmilliy,'Btyle an J I’erfunie w.iriamtOd < quiiT
; to the Knglisb and fully 50 percent cheaper,
which accounts, ior. the gi-eat tailing off in the
; deuisinl f>r th" (..reign eoup». an l H*e unprece
alented suece-s of the AMERICAN COMPANY
[TOII.IT SOARS, now sold even where in the
Cn i- ml. fbtni os. AtuKBONK. VAN jl.tAG.if.A a;
Bo!e M .nPis, i'hiaidelplii i, and New Yolk.
\\TAfitEtS— ft’ To :: sMi lire
VV A MEl’.it;AN KNITTING iIACHIN'R.
[Vice $25. The simplest., cheapest and best
iKnitti;: ; Mnel.in ewe invented. Wilbkhlt;l ; o,.- •
i Iff siiieees pea luinolo. Liben** it*duuuiii«-ni»
•to Agents. ; A.[dreXs AXJEIU•'AN -K\ITTIN <i
MACiiINK CO'., I'e.stt.n. .bass.. «* St. Iftuis, Vo
«: •; "■ : i >.'•• i.- t. !" :
Lii-piNOOTT a fiurif'.vru:
The peep <* see’r, ter }«• crazy alsmt yitnr.TKcD
.haute*- Axj:s. R-ku e send ica t.wuity dozen
lucre. X " n-s note, W; j>. F.
/ E d-- -i 5 i. ; .' k- r
f . t i-* :■
■- ” X-;-.-
I ’- * - -- * - j tiagTS
<; • I ’i'l< -N.—L npi in ij. ed denleis • r* sc! ing
Axes p:iin(i*i < <-/. »s tii i.nJ \cKeT *xs. Tire
gaud Y ; ; k- Itl f XC .-ull-i.-ls ill Ua -llltu
r (,'tpfit T -pi iiit; ■* mt in (he ii. -I-Rab,l.
Til • -ReJ J.>u .el ’ is to Ia Iff by.*; I jp.spoiisiUe
IStklxOfi *kii ic.
Pormsylvsn;.:; ikura JouerhJ.
Valrdtu
;\g. ieu t ae, !!•>:Cu'ai r ad ili;ral Ecpnoaiy,
l a iai.i’i a'f IMTT’ I' >A/
i. -M. it It KUtSTEII; Editors
or ii.- vl* s 4> I ') i oCU« -til 4/Olil l*i b
tii f:(i «»?: in; > QJI s till
A'U ei ”t) ,'i ' A»«r ‘ riu tor -•*»;»<•!» iti -ui- 1 ion,
< ('L LVTiOSH i F
j P 3 v i 7: x o> Z -a. zzi 1 o Z
! ft Comp’ 'te Library of i“ • Choicest
! COfinjOsitiOES. ~l'\ - : = yn e 1 ta AU (ifadeg
I <td 1 i.i/.-et:., i- ,i : i-c Ita the' loUnwi.-.g sorio
jO! el'-gaal vot■ i a ( all uae n«11 j c! 1. , VV OU M
t«o * in th »t-u I fat ia of.-!. !-t ,1| a-ie, ten tliun-
I ! lie J.| 0 -.
i il':. V. : Ai 'f (,]' Gi.Ms, ji;-;t. published,
j eoA'aiuii..- oci H/d 6l :u c at and must
! pT[uil.it- •'long-, Ualpi s, aad an. t- ot the flay,
j w ill Riiimi p.. itnei.l. l’ii 1-y iIO.VI li CiK
: t fdl, 2 vol* 4 cant iriina 'ta. e V*n t-e-, I’oikns
.'•“.aliiß ! -v 'pi t rill. f,,' t -un i-a D ittoes
RitiTKV' E»t{« t• ii.tt-d- i-'fl-.rdl'aaU d’i ces'—.
till-: idANjyi - .i.BEM. I id, A W ,tinV
■ Ipott of t I* SKO.C firs- if MaSie a-* Ib'af b.f tli’,.
vltuoie Gii-ebi.” -r-ii.V Eil Cl JO D. 1 vd.-
Suags, Jiu-is, X- 1 s. ,o*i ii ;au. lid* i'tafto Aiu’.,
$((; )W LU OS Ei..-.liig-. 1 >.*■!. Ci.oice Vocai
l)iie ! n, with Pi.-,:,., 'ei\ <i I.ißk.i-K GEltiiAN
t .-JONUU. 1 'id. OK VIS OR si tis
! 1 vid. I E - - <?!■■ s UD’.ED MtiNti. 1 vnt.
OPERATIC t’E.-'Rt.s. 1 v and ‘‘Vocal be.-iaiies of
the-tand ird o|>..ras,'"Wii E Pi-nicf ice’s. THE
OB EH \ IJOl.t H-E. co I- ’bn at Vocal ami la
4'rttioenial Cbms 'rum x ffmbach’s Opera ot
■Hirand i/uehe-sc," be iltK-ro,”. “Barbe
Bieiie,” aqd i.tners,
VkT6ks. Ea.-li ui , . irds, $“,50. Ciutli,
st'J Mb. (Hotlt, fr.ii -it. .; I,tyj, by 'niail,
[lost- paid, (a fun add
0!.!'. !■- R .■ i CO , l’abli-tci u,
2?i a-hingi a,* ,-itreel, 80-ton.
C. t(. DUMB-, .\ 7:! Broadway, New York
RE b \ 0t.1.K •—-Jlsli-hf-ip Tor-j uiing
3 <i llui-, who In; r ing , n e.i. desire a bet; -A- titjn
lioud. Bent ia senb-d b.-.|let,- eavi-lupes, freo-of
charge. If 1 'iudb-el nturn tin p-. t.ugc. —
Adt-'rcs. i" HE * 1 ililfOs, Box- R. 1 l.ila iaqJzia,
~'ru- Patent J-lagiC; Comb.
\\ ill Color gray ii-ur a jveian.iuejit black or brown.
Sold every w her:. S, tr uy mail for fjil ,25*
Address WXI. RATTt.tN, Tr« asurer
Miipie Ccmh fgO ajiatVy, Rpi-ingfi.-M, Mass.
AO'i-lN ! S \V ANfi-r ■ Ftfli TiTS . “
Gray Jackets,
I Aiicj hew i’aug l and lor J>jxie,
wit h luoiUents hi.d >krtolios ol Lile in
tho ( Uri!( ‘ier-uty.
Tie Spiciest t’ltrapsst fir M PtttMed.
Send fox t'i,ic-tt.ai ands sour tL*ijn-;, wall a
full description of (he w **k, Addi ess JONEI-i
BROS, it i 0„ I’hila ul; hu, Ra„ Atlanta, d!a.,
or st. Bonis, Xlo.
\V ASTTSIS A&SJTfS, *75 to «“b0
»V per every win-,tnale and femnlo,
laintrodii-n the GHNEhVE IMRRoVEI) (!o.\l-
MON SENSE EAM 11 V SKWlsfi MACHINE.
This machine will stitch, hem, fell, tuck, quilt,
eSrd, taml, braid and embroidi-r in a most supe
rior manner. 1 ri.-« only4*l ß. Fully wan-antod i
for five years. We will pry AlnUO (o. tiny ma- i
chine that v. i- rv; n -ui ui ’.-r, more beautiful, |
or more ehistii: tiiaa'Ouis. It males the I
“Elastic I theh.” Ive y -eeond stitch can i
bo cut, am! si ill the clot h e iu .nt, t« pulled apart !
without tea i- git. We pay v • nt- from f75 to i
SZOU pm- muiit h aHd ev <ir «, eununissio'c |
from which twice that nni.m ~ can Le made.— j
Address .- ECOil B E Ctj., ihltal in gli, l a , Bos- j
..loti, Mass., or St. Lou.s, Mo.
CAETIGN —Do not b: iuip sad upon by other I
parties p.-ttming u.f WOrttiie cask iron n acliines, i
iiinh.r the svue ii iriie or otherwise. Ours is the '
ouly genuine aaid rt-al!\ p ..uti ail cheap mac-fcioC !
m«iu;ijclurcd. I
•‘Ot j, B llmirn. Pi Cos , offer to n t
tj.r most, complete method of re*»l,C .Y r,Ue c
li , through the new papers, of anv L * l’" b '
Dm oouubry [BpfingtleM so.) Tnf„ •»
IT- YOU WANT TO ADVERTS
IF H)U Vi \NT TO ADVsS
Sl'N O A- STA M1 j
SEND A STAMP
FOR -
1-iOli,
fill!. NEW OllitiULiUl
oIK NEW CIli.UJ.Au’,
CONTSIMN’G I, I STB
CONTAINING I.ISrS 3
,0f (T-ll the- Desl .-civerUainq Medium
Os all the Best Advertising,MeSS
THE NAMI-'.S AREGIWv
THE XAMK' ARE Giwj f
AND
AND
THE naCES are GIVEN w
THE I’ltTU-rt ARE GivjiV
YvU CAN ESTIMATE
YOU CAN ESJ’INf \T E THE
AND
MAKE YOUR ORDER LARGE oaSVArr
.MAKE YOI'R ORDER LARiiEohsMu
<>DR LISTS OF 100
OCR LIST’S OF 100
LOCAL I’Ai’KRS
LOCAL PAPERS
AND HIGH-PRICED VVFE|,’iip c
AND HIGH PRICED WEEKLIS
ARE LARGELY C>ED nv AD VERT.sfS
ARb.LARGELY UsEl) nv ADX'ERPIsvVr
BE I ’ACsE THE sI'E C IAL R \TFi ‘ i
•nEOAHSETHE SI»ECIaL R\TKs
AND T.U.K C.liOK’E POSITIONOFFEto 1
MAKE THEM PAY*. 'i 1
'GKO. P. ROWELL A CO K
(lEO. P. ROWELI. <k CO.,
ADVERTISING AGENTS
ADVERTISING AGENTS,’
NEW Y.ORK,
NEW York,
"The hi nse of Oto 1 B. Kowki.l & Cos. i,'a,
only one in thetni di css t' at has itself u»ed,j
1 vVMfelrtt to any g- F:tt i xtent to advance iti««,
triteri-sts. 'Urey sprtid )a;ge Bum*, ondfiidljf
petsonal eiepcriejici- what adveitisine i, KT I V
best.”-- [N. V. -Mill'. fc J ’
« a si'
V:s [ iif
! 2uU bags Rio CViFod,
c . s.ivks I.figuiru, H|pl Java CvflVe,
100 r.atytrs '.i-fsnC'l Sugiirs, \
K. us l»e-t la-amis, flt]
.It i'-arri t*. ni>ky,. Bum and Bin,
I- 1 .art, r i ask- .-sherry, and Madeira Wiiu
Sfkr thus prop s ~r,
B’b I- h Raz ti and and Duponts Powder.
10.0 D■ >-. “3 New Layer Haisims,
5” , boxes New Layer Raisins,
1 No 0 t irl. i Boxes X.w Bayer Hamas,
!<!0 iVnitp Fir- i rilrke s.
.40 Coils Pai'e Hope,
itH Brijf ..Gunny I'aaglng,,.,
t.u -x- Fai t. and -t.ite Cheese,
. Bid Ihiyka.a ui NY tv Xiaok.-rel,
Ev. I pice, <linger. Candles, Soap, S-.artk,
-• •’ ' - (••■’.: i ' Ciyst-is and l.oUtm ,
•S. :.. s riimking m l Ch' wing Tobacco, If.B .
iVate, me, , 1
At L'iwi:.-i M.uh't Ihicsa.
PYa'-GP St WALTON,
11**2 uni tre-t’, Augusta, 0».
ATLA N T A
:■ lOiS ii\id WORKS
A X D
•IRON ANJCJUUSS FOUNDRY! ,
? 0 R T E R & SUTLER
I’.a-Pi-.IKTi US.
Me am f : ' ..a> u.lo tnaiuTaiJiire and t-fpli
..' -h a C 5 i'T. 1 TCL O 3? y ,
Such a I’nitn -b- mnl . v f-iiim.arv Stesm Kngin*
•Ii -rs. Or ' am! sax Mill Vachineiy,ft
llouce ,'c UrowitV li •«*.- l-owt-r, Wright's. Pat«m
Coitn.-t * -r-.-'v, Gin.. Fans, Bark Mills. Ala
Ca-t Iron riym , (run Bailings, Sugar Milt
""-I Bi '.e P'pes, Ibt] Icy Os Car Wheels in
Bail.-, a ! in -of t-v. ry desr.ription.
’ ' idnstia . s made vit I out extra ehnrg* ti
patt.-i'iiS when in regular line, of
1“ .. Haws Be Too;.bed and Gummed in tl*
best rninuc .y v .q
TP-H AT S CASH!
•la-*. TT Prv.tr:.'•: ) -BJ Stand of J. L. T>tinning
B 11. Hi ri.ii:!. ) fintjfi Atlaxta, Ga
:t c:;
T r 111 a view to turn tuy whole attention l»
‘ and tlie ( OMMI-SK IN BBSIN KSS, I, on the
“Ol b in-aaut, . :.f.s,-d of n y entire stock of
Gr..ee.ri.!s, Aav, in W. M DUN BA II .t CO., wb*
«id yontd".|.- the G itt >i lii’.Y 13CSI.\K>S» l
tiit same 'd stan L an.) for wbotn I bespenkth
patroung.; of my friends.
A. STEVEN*."'!
w v - the undersigned, having this day forrael
a t’opa rt iiei ship f,.r the trsuenCtlon of •
(JUOCEJIV arid I’H(>l l Ui 1 E 151 >1 N ESS, itndsr
the nr me md stylo *fWM. M. DUNBAR i G () " |
du r- spet tfnlly »• licit the patronage so lib«r*l(r i
bc»stowed on our
VVM. M. DUNTBAR, i
tt;OvS5 —ts THUS. M OOLDShI
MOTJ C E ! *
I I .V'.'E G.laiirglit out the siock intrude oik’'
1 i MTRN'KNSi wehavefonned aCoparinei>W| *
for the piirpi. e of earn ing on a GROOEIiI
ijOMMISSION BUSINESS/ _ ,1
: "c will also dull in Canters’ Suppli**. ***
everyMitiig a-ttft'lv found in a fir.--( class ('rcc-i?
Iluiise. We will give prompt attention to# 11 ?
consignment of C< tto*» or other produce mode t*
"his, anil do our beat to deserve the patronag 1 '
ilie cu■tumors of tho old House, which, for t»
past, thirl y years, has been favorably kno»*
her ■, and ot' a;l . r own friends who may f*V* ;
us with business. '.V. M. DUNBAR AC"-
W. ,M. Dunbau, of South CurolinA,
Tuns. li. (JoLtiABY, of Virginia,
Nov. 25, —Ilf I
HiLW STORE !~ MEW STOCK!
WHI.LIAM SI!,VEUBI.BG, would Bailed
aHoniion of the. citizens of this city * ,
stjireintding Country, tliat lit- has open*
U’liit'diad stmet, Atlanta, Ga,, second g
rr m I. T. Bank', a large and well assorted* ‘
of Dry (ftudts, Clothing, Boots and Shoes, H 1
Caps, Trunks, and Gentlemen’s Furnis 1 ‘ i
Goods, all of which 1 intend to sDI as c * lf Jjj |
in can be don-. Remember the place. ,»
JOtIftSTOX, CREWS & t' o ’’
Iniporteis and VVhol sale Dealers in
STAPLE AND FANCY DEY GOODS, t
A, & yOKNATOS,
a. J. i-RETra, fill Hoyne street,
,T. -M. DRAY/JM'r,
,j. fc- v ry. Charleston,