The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, July 04, 1879, Image 2

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TH E EAG LE. Y“iiEDW INE *, H VM. i'ridaj Morning. July 4, l STD. EDITORI AL E AGLETS. Hayes will keep his veto pot on l he rack. Spring chickens have grown about h If as large as the price. Middle Georgia has been suffering torn a protracted drought. Congress has adjourned and still L uuar and Conkling have not fought. *. The Governor has commuted the >1 uth sentence of Alford to impris onment for life. To read the congressional reports one would think that the rebellion was still going on. Macon will only put forth three <■ mdidates for Governor, Bacon, Hardeman and Blount. Macon threatens to have either water-works or a canal. She cannot Maud her whisky straight any longer. Christopher 1 that fashion plate was a pretty fair scheme, but Mrs. l'otls did not wear that kind of a bustle. It is rumored that Ex-Senator John A, Stephons, of Crawfordville, will be a candidate for Compfcroller < lonoral. Grubb’s Darien Gazelle is for Col quitt from the title page to the rear cover, and talks out in meeting like a little bell-punch. “Jimmy, we had custard for din ner. Papa came home drunk and mamma cried and then papa cust lurd-er than ever.” The best natured man will get a tr ille mad when his wife tells him she made ulsters for the boys out of his last winter’s ear muffs. ♦ Uussia has one hundred legal holi days, all of which means that there are a hundred times you must pay your bank draft the day before it is due. Hayes is a vimmy old viper. He can fulminate a veto as quick a a radical politician can tell a lie, and I uis is a voluminous tribute to his readiness. There is a tide in the affairs of na tions caused by an uprising of the 1-oople that sweeps frauds and ty ) mts from power. It will reach its II <od in this country next year. Uncle Gustavus Orr has a piece < t pickled lamb’s wool, a moffett > ogister on ice, and the bloody teeth oi a bob tailed cur all on exhibition toady for the inspection of the legis jve solons. A Lieutenant MeCawly of the 11 nited States Army suicided in At- I inta on Monday. The act was the i ' suit of a passion for gambling which had ruined him and beggared his 1 imily. What a sermon is here. And now they say that Sam Til don will in all probability take the nomination for governor of New York, boat the opposition clear out < f their boots, and thus raise his boom high above that of every other boom. Tho head of the Bonaparte family in France is Jerome Bonaparte, a ■on of Jerome Bonaparte by his Westphalia wife, and known as Plon- I’lon. He is fifty-seven years of •ge, and is represented as a man of l onsiderable ability. He served as a i oldier in the Crimea and the Italian wars. He is, howover, a Liberal in { olitics, and a recognized supporter v £ tho republic.. Senator Carpenter m ade the con fession, in debato in the senate the - ther day, that there is no such a t iling as trial by jury in the federal omrts; that tho marshal and clerk < in pack the jury to convict or ac quit as they please. This is the ■ ruth, and its admission by a leading republican is a very severe rebuke of nis party that have for years sus i lined so iniquitous a practice. The murderer of of Mrs. Hull who was found gagged and bound ii her elegant home in New York i liree weeks ago, was arrested in Boston on Monday in the person of a negro. He was traced by his pawn iig some of the jewelry of which t ie house was robbed, and the la dy’s watch was fouud on his person. 1 fe confessed the crime, Let the days roll on, let the eaul dron political be set over tho fire of * vents, and begin to bubble. We hunger and thirst for the carnage i.nd the flow of bad blood. We want to see the sword of truth pierce deep the vitals of independentism and i very other like heresy; “Fee fi fo Jfun, I smell the blood of an English ■**—; -. ■ I'iiiunt go , ~ Something About a Newspaper. The last issue of the Gainesville Eaole was a notable paper. We are not much given to blowing our own horn, but we do not believe another weekly paper in the State, outside of those made up from the dailies in the large cities, can show such au array of live iuterestiug matter. Those who have never taken the trouble to look into the matter will be astonish ed at the ligures. In our last issue there were thirty-six Editorial items, fourteen Miscellaneous articles, forty .wo Georgia news items, five leading Editorials, a column and a half re port of a sermon, a communication on a scientific subject (Ozone), forty General news items, ten Agricultural articles, two hundred and twelve Lo cal items, and ninety-three Adver tisements, making a grand total of four hundred and fifty-four subjects matter, covering thirty-two columns, eaoh twenty-four inches long. Sub tracting the advertisements and mis cellany, we have left fifteen columns of original matter, representing nine ty long pages of closely writ'en man uscript. When we add to this edi torial labor, the reading of proofs, and the transaction of all the routine business of a newspaper office, keep ing up correspondence, revision of mail lists, and the thousand and one things which only a newspaper man can understand, we have in this sin gle sheet an amount of mental and manual labor that it is almost inored ible to believe can be done in six brief days. And this is not only* for one week, but it is every week, the same eternal unceasing grind from New Year to Christmas. And yet there aro people who think an editor has nothing to do. To make up these thirty-two col umns of matter, we have 112,000 ems of composition. To make these tho printers must handle, set up, put in forms, take out and distribute again in the cases, 336,000 different types. And yet people wonder and grumble when they see a small typographi cal error in a newspaper,and a corre spondent will grow frantic because his poorly written and badly spelled manuscript is not exactly as he thought it ought to be. This sheet which we have thus en deavored to describe, is only one of fifty that go to make a years sub scription, and yet there are people who grumble at paying two dollars a year, tour cents a copy fora news paper, and many indeed who uev r pay at all. I it any wonder that newspaoer men sometimes get discouraged V Goodbye. There is a tender sadness in the word goodbye. It is the precursor of a parting, the last memory of .a happy season of companionship, that may or may not in the mutations of earth be ever again renewed. How lightly sometimes we say it, and how soon afterwards are stricken dumb by the single word “dead.” We bade goodbye to the Seminary students last week. The long looked for commencement came. It was all brightness and joy, and white tarl ton and feathers, aud music and rhetoric, and a feast of reason and a flow of soul for a few brief days, and thon like all earthly things came—the end. The essays were all read, the ex aminations were closed, the diplomas were delivered, the valedictory sung its sad cadences to the trembling heartlutes melody, the music died on the Bummer air and we had to say, good-bye. Alas, what a miserable, unsatisfac* tory world it is anyhow, taken pure ly from a human stand-point. The brightest always goes first, the song bird is the first stricken by the archer’s arrows, and that we love best is fleet est. In two months many of tho pure nnoeent faces wo have learned to love will be back among us. We shall see them in the Sunday school, we shall luar their sweet voices hymn the dear songs, we shall see the brigtness they always bring, the bits of gay ribbon here, or the glim mer of a white dress turning the corner there, shall witness their romping, careless merriment, and be annoyed with their pretty wayward ness, but amid it all we shall miss some faces. The seniors will bo ab sent. Mayhap some of the others may not return, and alas—sad thought —such is the uncertainty of human life, the daisies may bloom above the graves of some of the fairest and sweetest to whom we have said good bye. God forbid it. We wish the Seminary, as we do every other public enterprise in the city, God speed. It is doing a noble work, and though in the very nature of things wo must be saddened as we say good-bye to those who go out from her care, we trust that others may take their places, and so on un til in the dim, distant, far-off, uncer tain future, a long line of pure, good, honorable and true women, God’s oi \t, best gift to man, shall point to to)loved alma mater with pride, '-vd inllajnce Gaiuesville’s Future. There are people who are content to plod along in the same old way their fathers trod, while there are others who look out and beyond, and desiro to go forward in the proces siou of events, and keep pace with the progress of the atre. There is a future for our city. It has all the advantages and natural surround ings to make it the queen of the mountains, and the rival in every thing of its more pretentious neigh bors. Those, however, will not do it unless they are backed up by the energy and enterprise which is al ways the foundation stone of success. There are some things that we need to do, and some other things that we must not do, if we would aspire to out-grow the swaddling clothes of a country town, and become a live, progressive city. Let us mention some of them. Primarily we want the Gainesville & Dahlonega Rail Road. We must have it, it is a necessity. It is the yery artery through which the life blood of competitive trade must flow. It is the duty of every citizen to do everything in his power to in sure it. With this secured we are ready to throw out the grappling hooks of progression and seize hold on success. Secondly we want to get out of country town ways. Wo must lay down little spites aud jealousies, and gossip and wrangling incident to lit tle hamlets, and rise up to the plane of progress characteristic of ambiti tious cities. Every public institution should be fostered and encouraged Denominational, local, or personal prejudices must be suuk out of sight, everything ignored save the fact that they belong to Gainesville, are her Institutions and redound to her advantage. However much we may differ upon minor matters, when the interest, the welfare, the progress of our city, is at stake we must come together as one man. Especially should the press of the city be encouraged aud liberally sus tained. No other agency can do so much to advance its interests. Its hands should be strongly held up while engaged in this work. Of course there are some old fogies whose corns will get stepped on, but it cannot be helped. We must go up and onward, or retro grade. There is no such thing as standing still in this world of change. The present is a pivotal point in our history. Let us take the tide at its flood. The Gaim.avil* C-.iegc. The last two weeks mark au epoch in the history of our city, and are red letter days iu her calendar. The ex ercises of the Gainesville college have demonstrated the fact that we have in our midst an institution of learning that is a credit to our city aud justly a source of pride to its friends. Knowledge is power, and thinkers move the world. No igno rant people can be great or happy. Education is the Archimedian lever that swings the universe on its ful crum, and every institution that edu cates the coming generation, makes us wiser in all the grand economy of the material creation is a finished stone in the temple of our civilization that rears it that much higher to ward the pinnacle of perfection. We repeat that Gainesville has much to be proud of iu her college, her seminary and her private schools. There is no reason for any jealousies or undue competition. The field is as vast as the ability of man to ac quire knowledge, and the operations and influence of our schools need not be confined to any peat-up Utica. We wish them all God-speed, and our best energies shall be ever bent to their building up and encourage ment. We congratulate the president and faculty of the college upon their re cord for the past year, aud trust that for the future it may be even brighter To the students who will not return the Eagle wafts its best wishes for a long, happy and prosperous life. Congress. Congress adjourned sine die on Tuesday afternoon at 5 o’clock. The outgiving that Mr. Hayes would re convene them in extra session provi ded the appropriation for Marshals was not made seems to have been without foundation, and ere this most of the members are at home. We cannot say that we are entire ly satisfied with the work of the ses sion, but on the whole wo believe that some good has been done the democratic party, and that the issues which have been make up between it and the fraudulent administration are such as it can safely take to the country. The appropriation bills, save that for the Marshals’fees, were passed, the duty on qunine repealed, the usu al closing ceremonies gone through with and the adjourned session was over. Zack Chandler took occasion to agitate the atmosphere with a windy tirade against the democracy durin g the closing hours of C ingress. It only provoked r’ ughter from the i which so went out and -i most GEORGIA NEWS. What the Local Editors see aud hear The legislature met on Wednesday. Mrs. J. J. Hardy, of Toceoa, is dead. Tkomasvillc is going to build a library hall. Alapaha is to liavo anew Methodist church. Fort Gaines has a slight eruption of base ball. Some of the Dodge county sheep raisers are opposed to a dog law. Fence or no fence is getting up con idcrable racket in Coweta county. Lumpkin has a chin music club. Other towns have, too, but will not own it. A Madison man shot and killed his mulatto mistress Sunday night and fled. Several parties in Laurens county are engaged in silk culture with eminent success. There is a talk of changing Laurens county from the Oconee to the Middle circuit. A colored child at Alapaha got hold of a ball of potash the other day and is no more. Newnan has a sheriff who, according to the local paper, puts a man in jail * ‘extemporaneously. ” The report that the two murderers, Cox and Hill had fought iu the Atlanta jail is strenously denied. Tho long talked of Atlanta cotton factory was started on last Monday afternoon at four o’clock. The countess of Temargo, whoever that may be, hasjpurcliased land and will build near Bainbridge. The legislature will have -to elect Judges for our two sea-board circuits the Eastern, and the Brunswick. The able solons of the rural press can now commence their periodical lauda tion and abuse of the legislature. A party of gentlemen from Thornas ville seined Linton’s lake, near that city, a few days since, and took 7,158 iish at one haul. A representative of the Cartersville Express has been coaching Bill Arp through Tennessee, and having a royal old time. Burton, of the McVille Georgian, lms just pruned his second crop of cat-gut bushes. His fiddle strings arc quite promising. The Central Georgia Weekly talks about “moral unscrutableuess’’ with a careless flippancy which can only come of lordly abilities. Madison has inaugurated a sewing society. The people of the neighbor hood had better put on their iron-clad characters. The Madisonian man has a barbecue, and ate so much his folks have to shear him twice a week to keep him at all comfortable. The editor of the Bainbridge Demo crat has bought him anew buggy. The idea of a country editor with money to fool away on such gewgaws as this. Frank Gordon, the able agriculturist of the Planter and Grange, advises peo ple to put stockings on their hens. Much as we can do to keep them on our children. Christopher’s suspenders did not come in from wash, aud honce he did not go to Madison last Sunday. His girl cried the heel taps off' her gaiters, but he came not. John Fletcher, of Irwin county, came rolling into Alapaha the other day with a thousand pounds of home made bacon. We will wager something he has no bomb proof notes out. A young bull butted the editor of the Athens Watchman into a stream tho other day while out fishing. The bull has been elected an honorary member of the organized democracy. A Ncwnan man who walked two miles up the railroad to meet Mrs. Potts came back about a half mile behind with his hat off, his tongue hanging out, and looking as limp as if he had been chased by a bull all over a forty acre field. There have been four hundred and fifty tons of guano sold in Laurens county this season. The Dublin Gazelle opines that this will make the cotton COSt about fifteen cento per pound, and that it will probably be sold for nine. Charles N. Norton of directory fame was arrested in Macon on Tuesday for bigamy, ou a requisition from Pennsyl vania. He recently married a widow lady of Macon, and it transpires that he has married five other trusting fair ones, and has had as many different names. Shivers, of the Warrenton Clipper, and Harris, of the Constitution, are “in a-washing’’ in a very large pool of na tional politics. Every time Harris stops ducking Shivers, the latter gets his head above the water, shouts for more pen cils and paper, and goes under again. Mr. Rountree went to Valdosta, aud plugged himself with booze. Ou the way home he concluded to get over into Mr. Force’s water melon patch and get a melon. A colored woman who was on guard objected, a fuss ensued, the wo man was stabbed, probably fatally, and Mr. Rountree is a fugitive from justice. A party of Albany gentlemen went to Tybee last week. The Savannah News stated that they passed through that city, aud that the ladies wore beautiful and the gentlemen gallant. As there were no ladies with them when they left home tho home folks got as mad as Tucker, aud the absent kept the telegraph wires red hot for two days explaining. The Louisville branch railroad ispref grossing finely. Captain Twiggs has nearly four miles graded. The timbers have been secured aud are being hauled with which to build the n,-,. b r iq (TL J aud we understand that part of the coP.. tract has been sublet. A bridge wil soon be finished over Boggy Gut. -T ao Captain R. PALMOUR & CO. DEALERS IN GENERAL ME ECHANDISE, KEY STONE CORNER, OPPOSITE OLD GAINESVILLE HOTEL, GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA. Have now in store and constantly arriving BARGAINS IN STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS, ROOTS, SHOES, NOTIONS. HATS, CLOTHING, TRUNK3, VALISE3. SATCHELS, UMBRELLAS, PARASOLS, Etc. A large and well assorted stock of Shelf HARDWARE, the best brands of CARPENTERS’ AND SMITHS’ TOOLS, SHOVELS, PLOWS, HOES, MILL AND CROSS-CUT SAWS, SCYTHES AM) CRADLES MULE AND HOUSE SHOES AND NAILS* STOVES, BEDSTEADS, CHAIRS, Hollow-Ware, Crockery, Tin-Ware, Window Class, Etc., Etc, All sizes of OLD DOMINION IRON AND NAILS at wholesale or retail. WAGON HUBS, SPOKES, FELLOES, SADDLES, BRIDLES, and HARNESS. Also tho best COUNTRY-MADE WAGONS always on hand at manufacturers’ prices. Best brands of TURN PLOWS. A large supply of choice FAMILY G-RQCSRIES and PROVISIONS DYE-STUFFS, MEDICINES, Etc, Farmers will please recollect that we are always in the market for anything they have to sell for cash or barter, and we will not be undersold in anything they want to buy Don’t fail to call on us at tho TWO-hTOR\’ BKICK tiOltNElt of PUBLIC SQUARE, South of Old GAINESVILLE HOTEL. Goo ds promptly de livered to city customers free. TERMS CASH. inay9-3m Respectfully, R. PALMOUR & CO. A Millinery and Straw Goods, kj Azorian Fayal Hats 55 Cents, /o' \\ SAME AS SUL!) ELSEWHERE AT 85 Cts. /*/ LATEST STYLES IN SWISS CHIP, 75 CENTS. / / yr*\ Pine French Flow or* from 15 cents upward. fS 7 The handsomest Trimmed Hats in the State. /^/ ' ’ [LIBERAL DISCOUNTTO ~~THE TRADE/'' “IsT!! t. WURZBURG ~ - presaly tor us. **“ ® ™ S Saga g bS@ 3 ■ j cents amt up. Our 1 Temptation Corset SlvinTS. TTfF does not belie its Wide bem and 8 name; every lady tucks, Cc, Kutil' buys one, tor it is aud tuc It s •> oe. theTfe a V~BIB a _ a temptation; 75c. Same stylo, iioi\ gjf •*£ Mk A |iP UOSIEBYpIain 65c. Double rutile jg jp A!®. Mr 4 Ihj m Misses fancy adios and tucks, tOe.lo . 10c up; ladies roale tucks, 75c. Bump, f ro m 6c up; oa.-v tucks and embro, y WFTTTFTT AT T CiT fancy 10c up; dered, 90c. Tu.-ks Drr VV Hi I x.Tt n_j_; L bi Balbriggan 25c. and embroidered, , ___ H’DKEIiCHIEFS. sl. kOb from Yl‘ M tV 7\ r JT _/V, Cjr Uwn only five Princess style irom - x -"cents; gents all lin slls upward. cn onl y !0 cents. CHKMlskfc. OFFICE, [ladies eitra flue Plain, but good pure linen 15 cents jsK’fiSTS446 Broadway, New York.. SSPTU edge, 36, 45, ou, oo and up; extra lino, G 5 and i0- very 16 inches wide, 25c liaudsomo tiiciis, These goods are im ;r“‘?* ,ns TiES AHD bows. ■ era-®- .tyi/ Ir ' u Swias embroidered Ties, 15 and 20 cents; s . retailed’at tuf dresso-, Extra flue Breto.nne Ends, or. Silk Ends, 2~) i>ur E te l ™lv Ti ™<; elegant designs, cents, the very latest; Duchesne, Bretonne and " l,i 10 ‘ 'im Kk Oluny 30, 35 and 40 cents; Handsome Silk<U\ 'YiV.'U m from 75c up. DOWS, 10, 12t and 15 cents, Pery stylo and— ■ i c olor / / ostrich feathers: T\ /?} ' . \A\ /(y LACES.—ReaI Bretonne Lace at 12, Jf> andJlUc... Extra fine and. wide, \ \ / /v 30e. Elegant Bratonuo Sctrßng 35c a yd. xVk /S* Immense bargains in Valenciennes, French and \^\ ,/V Torchon Laces. v><K /C/ \ v^\ SPECIAI, NOTICE. Oar express and mail order department is now fully organized, and ladies out of the city cau rely noon hiving their commissions executed with pnnctuility and dispatch. Sam ples sent on application. THEY ARE HERE. G RANI) OPEISrm'G OF SPRING & SUMMER GOODS AT C. W. DUPRE'S. My stock of Spring aud Summer Goods is now on the shelved, and it is by far the most varied and select that has ever been displayed in Northeast Georgia. Below I annex a few startling figures: Best Prints 5c aud 60. Good Bleachings 4.} to Go. Soft Finish 4-4 Bioachings, 71c to 10c, worth 2.]c more. Sea Islands to 10c. Cassimeres for Boys and Gents woar 20 to 35c; Coitonades from 12c up. DRESS GOODS. DRESS GOODS. In this department I simply defy competition. Linen Lawns 7c. Fine Muslins 10c. Gray Poplins l f ’>c. Cold Poplins 15c. Black and colored Alpacas Ise and up. Cashmeres 20c to 75c. Fans and Parasols* Parasols from 10c to $3 50. Folding Fans from 21c to $2. Kid Gloves, all colors, 25c to $1 25. SHOES. SHOES. SHOES. In my Shoe Department may bo found anything you may call for in Ladies’ Misses and Children s Shoes ; also iu Gents’ Boys’and Youths’ Shoes, at a very small advance on manufacturers’ prices. lam agent for Canfield’s world renowned hmd made Shoes for Gents—every p.tir warranted. I am agent for Keep’s Shirts, Keep’s Collars and Guffs, K >ep’s Kid G'ovos for Gents, and Keep’s Umbrellas. Keep's shirts have no equal on this continent. Every piece war ranted. Price sl. My Stock of sable Linens, towels, Lapkins, Handkerchiefs, etc., Valenciunes an Linen Laces, Zephyrs, and Knit Shawl.-*, is complete in every him, and prices down. “Clothing. Clothing. Ciothing. In this line I am full up, with anything that cm bo cilled for. from suits at $1 25 to $ JO buifcs foi little children; Suits lor boys; Suits tor Youths. Also a good lino of Straw, Wool and Fur H its of every style, quality and price. My prices shali be as low as the lowest, and every article guaranteed as repre sented. See my stock before buying. mar2l-lv C. W. DUPRE, Gainesville, Ga. Ul 4TTLEBAUM HOUSE, Green Street, Gainesville, Georgia. This elegant summer resort is now open for the reception of visitors. The table will be supplied with ovory delicacy to be had anywhere. The whole coun try, from the seaboard to the mountains, will bo ransacked for EVERYTHING THAT IS UIJ01) TO EAT. The rooms are large and airy. A m igmlieeat grove and tho best of water, are not the least of the attractions, llites reasonable, aud made known on application. The house is situated oa Green .street, aud connote Iby street car tin s with Gower Springs, post office, churches and the railroad depot. White and Colored Quilts, 25 por cent, un der the market. Victoria Lawns, 10c up. Checked Nainsooks, 15c up. White Swiss, 10c up. All my White and Linen goods are bargains Hamburgs 2c to 30c. j Bargains in Black Silks, j Bargains in Summer Silks. ! An endless line of Plain and Fancy Dress Goods, from 20c to 50c worth 25 per cent. more. Bargains in Black Grenadines. | Au immense lino of Ladies Ties in Lace Muslin, aud Silk, 10c up. || Silk Handkerchiefs, 10c to $1 25. JOHN RYAN, Atlanta, Georgia. Largest Dry Goods, Carpet and Shoe House I > I’ll i : SOUTH, IMMENSE ASSORTMENT or Silks, Dress Goods, Hosiery, Calicoes, Window Shades, Carpels, Lace Curtains, Lambrequins and Shoes. 175 pieces Black Silk at 75c per yard cheap at $1 00. 225 pieces Black Silk at $1 00, well worth SI 50. 132 pieces Black Gros Graiu Si'k at 50, cannot be matched iu Georgia for 00 Greatest bargains in America. 40,000 yards Dress Goods at 6c, cheap at 12c. 20,000 yards Dress Goods at 10c, well worth 20. 18,000 yards Fancy Dress Goods from 15c to 35c. JOHN RYAN can show more DIFFERENT STYLES IN DRESS GOODS Than all the dry goods houses in Atlanta combined. THE HOSIERY DEPARTMENT Is overflowing with all the novelties of the season. A beautiful assortment of Gloves, Rucking, Zephyrs & Fancy Goods. SHOES, SHOES. JOHN RYAN, the groat loader, comes to the front with another stock of Shoes, and is selling them at less than cost of manufacturing. CARPETS. CARPETS. CARPETS. This department, one of John Ryan’s specialties, is far ahead of any Carpet depart ment South ot Philadelphia, and at such prices as to astonish one. Elegant assortment of Axminsters, Brussels, Tapestry and Ingrains. This is the house for real bargains. All goods advertised can be found at this house and for one price, and none are deceived. Those visiting Atlanta would do well to call oh John Ryan, as they will certainly save from 25 to 40 per cent, on their purchases june2o-tseptl r R' • G. Ashley, Wholesale and Retail Dealer iu White Pine Doors J Sash and Blinds, Window Glass, Putty, Locks HINGES, BLIND HINGES, SCREWS, all otlu.i kinds ol Builders HARDWARE, at the very lowest cash Prices. No. 33 South Broad Street, ATLANTA G-A __ TWELVE LIGHT WINDOWS AND BLINDsT PLAIN BAIL SASH,PRIMED AND GLAZED. • OUT BLIND,BOLL SLATS ! 4-light wiudOWS& Blinds “ 8S 8 t Sfr p n M I®; :: iSll 212x5 2 HI 2 12x5 3! ill “ . 10x16 2 10x5 10 165 2 10x5 114 112 Always m stock at like 10x18 2 10x6 6 185 2 10x6 }rn ! red, * Ced Pnces, strictly -IQxjO 2 W iLL j_lo_ |!S $ IS r“ h - Wh te Pine Doors, 4 panels, Montded on Stilesa~E<* Kails. O. G. Raised _ ONK-XNCU dopes. 1 8-16 inch H ( . )x,; 0 §1 00 2ox 6 0 41 OK o 77TJ 2 4x6 4 1 05 0 l , .i{ bxb $1 4o 2 6x6 6 ... i jo o 6v6 6 J 40 2 Bx,; 8 160 2 10x6 10.. J 45 9 K , 1 70 3 ox 6 6 195 3ox 6 6 150 3ox 6 6 ' }l®lo to 3ox 7 0 195 liaised moulded 4-panol front doors ‘2 lOvfi in tn q..q , S3 50 u, $8 55. Ml 0,5,,, „ ;omt , t | y ~,e j jSke-JS’Vy"’ E. Van Winkle, MANUFACTURER OF COTTON PRESSES COTTON GINS & FEEDERS, Circular Saw-mills, And all kinds of Mill work. 10 Foundry street, Atlanta, Ga. ap4-ly CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. Oil ami alter May 17tli double daily trains wil run on tins road as follows: GOING EAST, ICght Mail and Passenger train. Arrive Gainesville 5:50 pm lj6aVQ “ 6:51 “ Day Passenger train r rive a m Leave 615“ Local Freight and Accommodation train Arrive Gainesville 11:10 aw Ll)iVo “ 11:25 “ GOING WEST. Night Mail aud Passenger train. Arrive Gainesville 9:20 a m Leave “ 9:21 Uay Passjngor train. Arrivt > “ B:lspm “ 8:16 •• Local Freight and Accommodation viai i. Arrive Gainesville l:ioa m Leave “ 2:01) “ HARMON & CANNING, FLOWERY BRANCH , GA Agents For 0. &G. COOPER & CO’S CELEBRATED TRACTION OR Sell-propelling Engines. SAW MILLS, Threshers. Sorgo Mills, THE Winsh.ii> Grins, And all kinds of Planta'iou Machinery