The Greensboro herald. (Greensboro, Ga.) 1866-1886, September 27, 1877, Image 4

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ff'sHiil to All. A little practical knowledge, combined with presence of mind,is invaluable in times of danger Hero is a suggestion: A pillow case, well saturated with water,and having a small hole torn in it to look through, placed loosely over the head, will be found an admir able impromptu respirator in the densest smoke. We saw this ex periment tried once. A common pillowcase, with a small eye hole, was placed over the head of a fire man, who, with the hose in his hand, went inside a burning build ing and remained ten minutes, when to assure his friends outside of his safety, he sang a comic song. lleneflt of llorNeluirk Killing;. No exercise that a lady can take is SO beneficial as horseback riding. A canter for a few miles is a most admirable promoter of female health and beauty. The cheeks,the eyes, lips, and every feature of the fair equestrian, when she dismounts, possesses the fresh and sparkling grace which is one of the most im portant requisites in feminine love liness, and which can be imparted only by purity of the blood and its brisk and equal circulation, which are produced by’ temperature ar.d exercise. The pale, sickly, and languid countenance of that lady whose hours of leisure have been passed without occupation within her chamber, or in listless loung ing upon a sofa or couch, tnay present attractions to such as have selected their standard of beauty from among the victims of a round of fashionable dissipation ; hut every man of sense and genuine taste will prefer the ruddy glow of health, the active, agile step, and exuberant gayetyofber who is ac customed to spend some timo of evary day in active exercise, on foot, or oti horseback, in the open ♦air. ————— *- liilliirsire <>l Hnl>it. Asa school-boy, Walter Scott possessed a fair sharo of the spirit ■of mischief. Always a diligent scholar, he generally stood high in his class ; but n boy invariably stood at the head of the elass, and as he never failed in recitation,' Walter could not pass him. Now the embryo novelist noticed that this boy had a habit, when pue 2 el by a hard question, .of twirl ing a button on his jacket, and this seemed to help him think out a right answer. Walter, more through miscdiief than any worse motive, cut off the button siyiv one -day, to see if it would make any difference. The lesson was a spol ling-lesson, and several boys at the foot missed a hard word. It eause around to the head. The boy ia-; -tinctively put his hand to the but ton. It \v is gone. Ho looked -down to find it, grew -confused, missed the word, ami Walter, went above him. The boy never got to the head again, seemed to have lost 9iis ambition, settled down into a second rate scholar, and new ac complished much in life. Walter .iScott declared that ho often suffer ed sharp remorse at the thought that he possibly spoiled the boy for school and for life by cutting off the button that hud done sack good service. Kriess'* Thomas has a boy baby about ten mouths old, who is admitted Jo the bepiuninp of this article to look just like bis inat tier, and to be the •smartest boy-baby of'his again Detroit, 'i le ot her morning <iie child was sit iing on the floext, playing with live or six buttons on ji string, and taking an occasional nibble at an apple to bring out hia first crop of teeth . Mrs Briggs and a neighbor were talking away tis only woman gussip, when the baby hid the buttons under the mat and started to finish the apple. A bit ol •skin got in the throat and lie gave a cough and a whoop and pawed the air rind rolled over ou his head. ‘ 0 them buttons ! he lias swallowed them but tons !” cried the mother, as she yanked hiui up and .-hook him ‘'Pound him, on the back! ” yelled the other woman trying to hold the baby's legs still.— •“llun fur the neighbors i” cried Mrs. Jiriggs. O he’ll die ! lie’ll die 1 ecrcauicd the other, as sho ran out.— And the neighbors came in and made Lira lie on his stomach and cough, und then turned him on his b atk and rub his stomach, and joggled him about all sorts of ways, until he got mad and he went to howling. Then a boy ran for Briggs, ran for a doctor, and the doctor came aud clicked ihu baby and ordered sweet oil and a mustard plaster, and told them to hold biui on bis back. Everybody knew tiiat those six big buttons were lodge in the baby’s throat, because he was red in the face, and because lie strangled as he howled and wept. They poured down sweet oil, and put mustard across him and wept over him, and the mother said she never could forgive herself. Hoys drove by and calling out: ‘‘Slab wood for sale !” and the scissors man went by shouting, “Sharp ! sharp !” but that distressed crowd held the baby downand shed their tears over his whole length. The doctor was looking serious and Hriggs was thinking that he hadn't done anything to deseive such a blow, when one of the women pushed th< mat and discovered the buttons. Then everybidy laughed and danced, they kicked iho sweet oil bottle under the bed, threw the mustard plaster at the doctor, and Mrs. Briggs hugged the howling angel to her bosom and called him her' wopiy topy hopsy dropsy popsy little cherubim.”—Detroit Free Press. The carver asked Mr. which he would have, a leg or a wing '! “It is a matter of perfect indifference to me,” replieh (ho person addressed,— “And to me,” replied the carver, laying down his knife aud fork and resuming his dinner. A correspondent wants to know: “Can a Christian go to the circus '! ’ — Why, yes, he can go to the circus easi ly enough, but it will cost him a quar ter when he gets there to get in ; that’s where iho shoe pinches. You see a Christian is always t.o proud to carry water for the elephant, and there’s where the sinner has the advantage over him in the matter of free passes, ,m ii "1 Why .will I’m Pine Away! Without a I’arali.bi.. — The demand for Dr. J . Bradfleld’s Female Regulator is beyond precedent in the annals of popular remedies. Orders Come in so thick and fast (list the Proprietor lias, heretofore been'unable to fill them all. lie is happy to stale the arrangements are now com plete by which lie is prepared to manufac ture Female Regulator on n scale equal to the eiikorgCHey, and the public may feel as sured that tlteir wants may now ho sup plied. Physicians of high repute are use ing this great-remedy, in daily practice, all over Georgia. Here after no woman need suffer from suppressed, suspended arinrogatar menstruation. Thin valuable medicine is prepared by L. 11. Drat!field. Druggist, Atlanta. Ga., and sold at $1.60 per bottle by respectable druggist through out America. Hearty fStoomituj iViifouc, Marietta, Ga., March 0, 1870, Meai's, BradSeld & Co—Gentlemen : You will please ship vis another supply of your invaluable FrmasLF, Regulator, and forward bill by mail we are hapqiy-to state that this remedy gives hotter satisfaction than article wc sell. We have been selling lit since 18(18,and witnessed many remark able cures by k . Among others, tihere was a lady friend of ours who was saow aa I sickly until she was twenty-six years old when she was married. Iler husband lived two years and died, she continued in bad health ;in fact , sbe has never been what a woman ought to be. A few months after tlie death of heir husband, site saw your ad vertisement, and .came to our store and bought a bottle of your regulator for use, and took aocorcing to directions. It has cured her sound and well, brought herreg ularlymnnthly periods on, and to-day she she is a hearty blooming widow— with the use of hut too bottles of your Regulator, costing her only three dollars, av.lion she had tried several phvNVoifMiH and spent a great deal of money without a-i-y benefit Wishing you great suocessorith your val uable remedies. We are, respectfully yours, cts , tV. ROOT & SONS. TAKE THE BEST ! The Chronicle & Constitu tionalist, /“iOSSOMPATKD MARCH 17m. 1877, vy is t.lie Oldest and Rest Newspaper pub lished in the South. It is the only News paper published in the -City of Augusta— the leading Hailway and Manufacturing, centre of the South—and the only News paper published in Eastern Georgia Tito Clironicle & Constat tit ieualiet line a very large and daily ic.rcnsiug circulation in the States of Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina, au'd reaches every class of readers—merchants, farmers, professional men and working men,, and is a most val uable advertising medium. The DAIRY Chronicle & Constitution alrst publishes all the current liras of Like day, receive# all the reports of the Associ ated Press, and special dispatches from Washington, Atlanta, Columbia, aud all other paints of interest, supplemented by correspondence. It gives full commercial reports of domestic and foreign markets, of all local and Southern matters, and edito rial comment upon public affairs. Terms; $lO for 12 months, $6 for C, $2.50 for 11, nnd $1 for I month, postage paid by us. The TRT-WEKKHY Chronicle & Consti tutionalist contains two day’s news of the Daily. Terms: $5 for 12 months, $2.00 for 6, postage paid by usj The WEEKLY Chronicle & Constitution alist is a mammoth sheet, and the largest and handsomest Weekly published in the South. It contains all the news of the week —telegraphic, local, editorial, mjscoilnn co*w —and carefully prepared reviews of the market. This edition is gotten up for circulation among planters and others liv ing in the country. Terms. $2 for 12 months. $1 for G, postage paid by us. TireChroniele & Constitutionalist is the pnper for the merchant, the planter, the lawyer, the mechanic, the politiciini. It is a paper for the office, the counting room and the family circle. Specimen copies sent free. Address. n .uLsii a vt itifdirr. Managers, Augusta, Ca ffiC£al Advertising- Hates Sheriff s Sales, per levy of ten lines, or less,. $2 50 “ Mortgage fi. fa. sales, per sqr. 500 Rations for Letters of Administr’u 300 “ “ “ Guardianship 300 Application for.Dismiss’n Adm’r'n GOO “ “ “ Gitard'p, 3 00 Application Leave to sell Land, 6 00 Application for Homestead. 2 00 Notice to Debtors and Creditors.... 3 00 Sales of Lands, etc., per square 5 00 Salos perishable property, per sqr.. . 1 75 Estray Notice, 30 days 3 00 Foreclosure of Mortgages, per square, each time 1 00 • mm "■ ....) " ■ Railroad Schedule. Arrival and Departure of Trains. Georgia ISttilrosid. Day Pastenycr Train. Leave Augusta, 8.00, a. m. Leave Atlanta, 8:00, a. m. Arrive at Atlanta, 4:00, p. in. Arrive at Augusta, 4:00, p. m. Night Pasaenytr Train. i.rnvt- /, m k .. , u. ie-_ „ Leave Atlanta, 10:30, p. m Arrive at Atlanta, 6:25, a, m. Arrive at Augusta, 8:15, a. in. ACCOM M OI) ATI ON Til A IN. Leaves Atlanta, 6:00 p. m. Leaves Stone Mountain, 6:45 a. m- Arrives Atlanta, 8:00 a. in. Arrives Stone Mountain, 6:15 p. m. S. K. JOHNSON, Sup’t. no • mm Western At Atlantic R II and its connections. —“K ENNE sA W II 0U T E.”— The following Schedule takes effect May 23d, 1875: NORTHWARD. No 1. No 3. No 11. Lv Atlanta, 4 20pm 7 00am 330 pm Ar Cartersville, 6 14pm 0 22am 7 10pm Ar Kingston, 0 42pm 0 66am 8 21pm Ar Dalton, 8 24pui 11 61am 11 18pm Ar Chattanooga,! 0 25pm 1 56pm SOUTHWARD. No 2. No 4. No 12. Lv Chattanooga, 4 00pm 6 00am Ar Dalton, 5 41pm 7 01am 1 OOnrn Ar Kingston, 7 38pm 0 07am 4 10am Ar Cartersville, 8 12pm 0 42am 5 18ain Ar Atlanta, 10 15pm 12 06m 9 30am Pullman Palace Cars run on Nos. 1 and 2, between New Orleans and Baltimore. Pullman Palace Cars run on Nos. 1 and 3, between Atlanta and Nashville. Pullman Palace Cars run on Nos. 3 and 2, between Louisville and Atlanta. No change of cars between New Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, Atlanta and Baltimore, and only one change to New York. Passengers leaving Atlanta at 1:10 pm. arrive in New York the second afternoon thereafter at 4:00 pm. Excursion Tickets to the Virginia Springs and various Summer Resorts will be 011 sale in New Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, Co lumbus, Macon, Savannah, A igusta and Atlanta,at greatly reduced rates Ist of June. Parties desiring a whole car through to the Virginia Springs or to Baltimore, should address tlie undersigned. Parties contemplating traveling should send for a copy of the Kcnnesaw Route Ga zette, contairdng schedules, cle. Bf§s“\\*k for Ticketsvia " Kcnnesaw Route.” B W. WRENN, ien l Pass, and Ticket Agent, Atlanta, Ga 1817. NEW YORK, 1877. The different editions of The Sin during the .next yen- will be the same as during the year that has just passed. The daily edition will on week days be a sheet of four pages, and on Sundays a sheet of eight pages, or 5fS broad columns; while the weekly edition will be a sheet of eight pages of the same dimensions and character that arc already familiar to oil rfriends. Tub Sun will continue to he the strenuous advocate of reform and retrenchment, nnd of the substitution of statesmanship, wis dom and integrity for hollow pretence, imbecility and fraud in the administration of public affairs. It will contend for the government of the people by the people and for the .people, as opposed to govern ment by frauds in the ballot-box and in the counting of votes, enforced by military vio lence. It will end nvor to supply its read ets —a body now not far from a million of souls—-with the most careful, complete, and trustworthy accounts of current events, and will employ for this purpose a numerous and carefully selected staff of reporters and correspondents. Its reports from Washing ton, especially, will he full, accurate, nnd fearless; and it will doubtless continue to deserve and enjoy the hatred of those who thrive by plundering the Treasury or by usurping what the law does not give them, while it will endeavor to merit the confi dence of the public by defending the rights of the people against tho encroachments of unjustified power. The price of the daily Sun will bo !i!i cents ft month or *(J,srt a year, post pail, or with the Sundry edition sY,YOayear. The Sunday edition alone, eight pages $1.20 a year, post paid. The Weekly Sun, eigh t pages of sf> broad columns, will be furnished during 1877 at the rate of ?! a year, post paid. The benefit of t his large reduction from the previous rate for .the Wf.fju.v can he enjoyed by individual subscribers without the necessity of making up clubs. At the same time, if any of oar friends choose to aid iu extending our .circulation, we shall be grateful to them, nnd every such person who-sends us ten oi more subscribers from one place will be entitled to one copy of the paper for himself without charge. At one dollar a year, postage paid, the expenses of paper and printing are barely repaid; and. considering the size of the sheet and the quality of its contents, we are confident the people will consider The Weekly Sun the cheapest newspaper published in the world, and we trust also one of the Tery best. Address, THE SUN, New York City,N. Y. Dec. Srh 187G—6ts. John A. McWhorter, Attorney at Law, GREENESBORO’, - - GA. ’olleelion of Claims a Sneettllfy, January 11, 1877. precise Dr. DURHAM'S Vegetable LIVER PILLS, for all [disorders of tbe Liver. jyfi-fitas CICAMPTON’S IMPERIAL SOAP IS THE BEST. Crampton’s Imperial .Soap is the best. Crampton’s Imperial Soap is the best. Crampton’s Imperial Soap is the best. Cranipton’s Imperial Soap is the best, Crampton’s Imperial Soap is the best Crampton’s Imperial Soap is the best. This Soap is manufactured from pure nia "terials; and as it contains a large percent age of Vegetine Oil, is warranted fully equal to the best imported Castile Soap and at the same timo contains all the wnsh nnd cleansing pro perties of the colebrated Ger man and French Laund jky S°iips. iitt l(^ ca "* the Laundry, nnwiim aud Bath Room, and for general household purposes; also for Printers, Painters, Engin eers, and machinists, as it will re move spots of Ink, Grease, Tar, Oil, Paint, etc., from the hands, The Huntington Monitor of April sth, 1877, pronounces this Soap the best in the market, as follows: “Reader, we don’t want you to suppose that this is an advertisement, and pass it over unheeded. Read it. No. want to di rect your attention to the advertisement of "Oampton’s Imperial Having used it in our office for the past year, wc can recommend it as the best quality of soap in use. It isa rare thing to get a .Soap that will thoroughly eleansc printing ink from the hands, also from linen; but Crampton’s laundry soap will do it, and we know whereof we speak. It is especial ly adapted for printers, painters, engineers and machinists, ns it will icmove grease of all desciiptions from the hands as well ns clothes, with little labor. For goner%l household purposes it cannot be excelled. Manujaciuretl only by US A n ITO A HEIOTIS I’IKS, Nos. 2,4, 5, 8, and 10, Rutgers Place,and No. 33 and 35 Jefferson Street, New York. For sale by B. W. ALLEN, Aug 30. ’77. Greenesboro’, Ga. $ 1,000 CASH! TO DE INVESTED IN REAL ESTA fE ! I AND near either one of (be following J towns, preferred : Union Point, Greenesboro, Madison, Social Circle or Covington. Apply to lEvrnDl OiSiro. Greenesboro’, Ga., June 8, 1877—tf. Atlanta Medical College. ATLANTA, GA. T I HE Twentieth Annual Course of Lec tures will commence October 15th, 1877, and close March Ist, 1878. Faculty —J. G. Westmoreland, IV. F. Westmoreland, W. A. Love, V. 11. Talia ferro, Jno. Tliad. Johnson, A. W. Calhoun, J. 11. Logan, J. T. Ranks. Demonstrator of l nalomy—C. W. Nutting, Send for Announcement, giving full in formation. JNO. TH.YD. JOHNSON, July 20, 1877—1 m Dean. J. F.&J. G.HART, Retd Estate AGENTS, VJNION poivr, GA,, VRK Correspondents of Real Estate Agents, North and .South, for this section. Business solicited. oct27 Dr. J ola 11 E. Walker HAS removed his Office to the room lately occupied by J. L. Tnrwater, Esq., over tlie store of Barnhart & Kim brough, where he may he consulted as Phy sician and Surgeon, By those desiring his services' All necessary medicines furnished at reasonable prices for tiie <3ASH. Greenesboro’, Ga., July 6. IB77—if Scientific Fanner, Science if knowledge: scien'i/'c if .r- . ivy juft this an<i nothing Ice* 1 more Should Be taken by the intelligent farmer. Van 1 of use to every good farmer. In practice, most practical, liners < very State and Territory. Xothing i'iie it. published in the world. To all who wish to farm well, it appeals. In all things truthful and accurate. Tor one year, but one dollar. In every case, gives satisfaction. Cheap, scientific and reliable. |Jnr one dollar sent to the publishers And name and post-office plainly written, Iteturn mail will bring the first number. Tlany dollars value is often wasted live the best practice is discovered, nnd Itemcmbcr the Scientific Farmer saves and earns money to the careful reader. Address, SCIENTIFIC FARMER CO. Boston, Mass jggy- Eive copies 75 cents each. ESEKSHBERtg The Kennesaw Gazette, i A Monthly Taper, Published at ATLANTA, C; i. Devoted to Railroad interests, Liter ature, Wit and Humor. Tilly CtS. per Year. CIIROMO to evety subscri ber. Address g K EX,VESA IP GAZETTE, arouse Ifeg-Job Work solicited, and execu ted at short notice SOMETHING NEW. # 53rd Mile Post Georgia Railroad, March 30, 1877. A Large gathering of the citizens of Warren and several adjacent Counties met to day at the plantation of Will. I’\ HOI.iIEN, to witness the operation of the recently Patented HORSE 4-®* POWER ■p 1~ ; or s' I MESSES. RHODES & iioi.no CRAW FORD VILLE, Ga., June 23rd, 1877. J. 11. Lewis, Esq., Greenesboro , Ga., 1 enclose to you a letter from John 11. Bowles Esq. As Mr. Bowlts and the names he gives are known to be prominent and reliable citizens of Greene County I feel cofident his statements in regard to RHODES & IIOLDEN HORSE-POWER will be highly appreciated and while liis letter appears to have been written with no view of publication 1 take the liberty of forwarding it. to you and if be has no objection and you can be informed as to the fact, I have no doubt you will take pleasure in having his letter appear in your next issue. “ WOOD'TLLE, Ga , Juno 20th 1877. Mr W F. Holden : Dear Sir : I answer your letter as soon as I had the chance to try your HORSE-POW ER. I finished it last Friday and have had two exhibition and every body that has seen it tried is perfectly satisfied, I would not take it off and be compelled to do without it for two hundred dollars, I hitched one mule to it and he pulled as light as he did iiis part when I had five to the gin. Two tnules will pull it as easy as they will an ordinary size two horse wagon. A good many of my neighbors will buy the right as soon as (hey can, In short the machine does just what you claimed that it would do. You will find below the name of the one time put it up and my neighbors thai hare seen it at work, Mr. J, 8. Finch is the mechanic, DAVID WEST, TOM. WEST WILLIAM WILLIAMS, ROBERT WILLIAMS, W. G. WIIIGIIT, J. K. DANIEL, A. L. TUGGLE, WILLIAM TUGGLE. Three ofthefe men have already engaged the workman to come to their houses as soon as he gets done here. I don’t think that it will be any trouble to ysu to sell your HORSE-POWER in this county. Respectfully, JOHN 11. BOWLES. J. IS. Lewis, AGENT for Greonc County. IN THE Dmigns. PARLOR FURNITURE, DIN I NO-ROOM F U UNIT U R E, OFI AMBER FURNITURE, THE BEST GOODS MADE, "ww .jat LESS THAN MANUFACTURERS’ PRICES! 147, 117 1-2, IHi lute! IE road Strcrt, A HOIST A, S^HOR^IA. Undo si ii king in nil its branches, morning calls at the store—Night calls 160 liroad Street. May IS, 1577. The most Powerful tor their weight of any Engines bsiiit. Simple, Strong, Durable and Safe. Require no Leveling and are Complete in all 'their parts. ALSO, The Boss Clipper, Dry Steam and Stationary Engines, Saw Mills, Portable Grist Mills, Mill Stones nnd Flour Mill Machinery ; Wire Hope, Transmitting Machinery, Shafting, Gearing, Pulleys, etc., etc., furnished to order. Circular and Price I.ist, appply to llElllll Ell*: A ID). AGENT, Greenesboro’, Ga., April 27, 1877. GREEN ESRURO', GA (tjkl 8 b make money. If you can Sis Kg not get gold you can cet RIF I ilr greenbacks. We need o r." \7 S-ifi* ©person in every to' o o take subscriptions for the largest, cheapest and best Illustrated fm'. ly publication in the- world. Any one cat. become a successful agent The most r-’- gant works of art given free to subs. The price is so low that almost everybody subscribes. One agent reports making over $l5O in a week. A lady agent reports taking over 400 subscribers in tea days All who engage make money fast. You can devote all your time to the business, or on ly your spare time. You need not lie away from home over night. You can do it as well as others. Full particulars, directions and terms free. Elegant and expensive Outfit free. If you want profitable work send us your address at once. It costs nothing to try business. No one who en gages fails to make great pay. Address “THE PEOPLE’S JOURNAL,” Aug. 13, 1877—1 y Portland, Marne. C 4 EORGIA— Greene County. T Janies L. Brown, Administrator <ie boiut non. with the Will annexed of Gwvnn Allison, applies for Letters of Dismission, and such Letters will be granted on the first Monday in November next, unless good objections are filed. JOEL F. THORNTON, Ord’y. August Ist, 1877—3 ms ("1 EORGIA —Greene County. JF On the first Monday in Septembc. next, an order will be granted to John A. Miller, Administrator of the Estate of Thos Miller, to sell all the Real Estate of said Thomas Miller, unless good objections are filed. J. F. THORNTON, Ord’y. August Ist, 1877—-4wks •I’HOS. S. HUTCHINSON has had a VI I pul up i ".iifutinu with his is prepared to make number lne . . . .. all customers, day 4i.n 1877 —tt. / 4 EORGlA—Greene County.— Mrs. Lu- VJ cretia Mapp, Adm’tr’x T)e bonis non with the Will annexed of Robert 11. Mapp, applies for Letters of Dismission, ami such Letters will be granted on the first Mon day in November uext, unless good objec tions are filed, JOEL F. THORNTON, Ord’y. August 6, 1877—liu tX EORGlA—Greene County. T On the first Monday in September next, an order will be granted to Ilenry II Moore, Administrator of the Estate of Geo. Moore, to sell all the Real Estate of said George Moore, unless gootl objections are filed. J. P. THORNTON, Frd’y. August Ist, 1877 —4wks. (”> EORGlA—Greene County. I Mrs. Marv S. Jarrell, Administrate of the Estate of Elisha P. Jarrell, applies for Letters of Dismission, and such Letters will be granted on the first Monday in No vember next, unless good objections are filed. J. F. THORNTON, Ord’y. August Ist, 1877—3ms* X TO (tt*)rv per day at home. Snra *7?' * *4Px—U pies worth $1 free. BTINSON & Cos., Portland, Maine. Waverify Magazine. FOR FAMILY IXSTRLCTION AND AIHI SE MENT Kditcd ly BIOSES A. HOW. Office, Waver lei/ Publishing House ; Order Box , 41 Court Street , Boston t Mass. IMIIS paper is the largest weekly oTr published in this country Its con tents are such as will he approved in the most fastidious circles, nothing immoral being admitted into its pages. It will fur nish as much reading matter as almost any one can find time to peruse, consisting of Tales, History, Biography, together with Music and /'oetry. The paper contains no ultra sentiments, and me' Rs with neither politics nor religion, but. is characterized by a high moral tone. It circulates all over the country, from Maine to California. Terms—Always in Advance. One copy, post-paid, for 12 months, $5.00 One copy, post-paid, for 6 months, 2.51 ' n, NllfisSHMrs 'turtle Trovinces, the same. Anew volume commences every January and July; but if a person commences at any number in the volume, and pays for six months, he will have a complete book, with a title page. When a subscriber orders a renewal of hie subscription, he should tell us wliat was ibe last number lie received; then we shall know wliat number to begin at without hunting over our hooks. Otherwise we shall begin when the money is received. We will send one copy of weekly Wavbr lky Magazine and “Ballou’s Monthly Mag azine” one year, for six dollars. Any one sending us six dollars can have the Waverley Magazine an t “Peterson’s Lady’s Magazine” one year. For seven dollars, we will sand the Wa verley Magazine either “Lady's Ga zette of Fashion,’’ “Atlantic Monthly,” “Harper’s Magazine,” “Weekly,” “Ba zaar,” or “Godey’s Lady’s Book,” one year. All letters concerning the paper must be addressed to the publisher. We make no discount to clubs. The Way to N unseat be.—The proper mode to subscribe for a paper is to inclose a money-order in a letter, atid address the publisher direct, giving individual name, with the post-office, comity and State very plainly written, as post-marks are often il legible. Wholesale Agents. “American News Company,” 121 Nassau Street, New York City ; “New England News Company,” Boston, Mass.; “A. Winch.” Philadelphia ; “Taylor & C 0.,” Baltimore; “Western News C 0.,” Chicngo. January 2fi, 1877 —tf NEWSY, SPICY, RELIABLE Use Atlanta Consti tution. Under its new management Tiik At, lanta Constitution Ims won for itself the title of the leading journal of the south.— Its enterprise, during the recent election excitement, in sending correspondents to different portions of the country, and its series of special telr grams from Washington while the i eleetoral commission was engaged in consummating the fraud that placed radi calism once mo-e in power in our national councils, are evidences conspicuous enough to prove that no expense will be spared iv make The Constitution not only a leader in the discussion of matters of public con. cern, but a leader in the dissemination of the latest and most reliable news, There is no better time than now to subscribe for A I’resli it mi Vigorous \en s pa tier. Albeit, there lias been a quasi settlcmten of one of the most difficult and dangerous problems of modern federal polit cs, the discussions springing therefrom and the results likely to ensue have lost nothing of their absorbing interest. In addition to this, the people of Georga are now called upon to settle The 1 'onveil!ion Question, and in the discussion of this important subject (in which the Constitution will take a leading part,) every Georgian is in terested. If a Convention is called its pre ceedings will find their earliest and fullest embodiment in the columns of Tint Consti. tution, nd this fact alone will make the paper indispensable to every citizen of tbo State. To be brief. TSS!'I ATIAYTA IF A ELY <O.Y STITLTIOY will endeavor, by all the means that the progress of modern journalism has made possible and necessary to hold its place as a leader of Southern opinion and ns a pur veyor of the latest news. Ils editorials will he thoughtful, timely and vigorous—calm ind argumentative in their methods and thoroughly Southern and Democratic in their sentiments, its news will be fresh, reliable and carefully digested. It will be alert and enterprising, and no expense will be spared to make it the medium of the latest and most important intelligence. Tli Heeklj Coiistiiiilion. Besides embodying everything of interest in (he doily Tin Weekly Constitution will contain a Department of Agriculture, which will be in charge ef Mr. M 1 bnsen, the well known Score ary of Georgia Stale Agricnltarcl Society . This department will be made a specialty, and will be thorough and complete The farmer will find in it not only all the current information on tlie subject of agriculture, hut timely sugges tions and well digested advice. Subscriptions should be sent in at once. TERMS FOE THE DAILY. 1 Month $1 00 3 Months 3 00 6 Months 5 30 12 Months 10 00 TESMS FOIt THE WEEKLY: (3 Months $ 1 10 12 Months 2 20 Money may he sent by postoffice money order at our expense. Address : THE CONSTITUTION, Atlanta, Ga. (4 EORGlA—Greene County. John M. Colclough Administrator n the Estate of Susan E. Colclough, applies for Letters of Dismission and such Letters will be granted on the first Monday in September next, unless good objections are filed. JOEL F. THORNTON, Ord’y June 4, 1877—Sms. (4 EORGlA—Greene County. JCj Mrs. Fannie A. Stocks, Executrix of Thomas Stocks, applies for Letters of Dis mission, anil such Letters will be granted on the first Monday in October next, unless good objec‘ ; ons are filed. J F. THORNTON, Ord’y. _J uly 2d, 1877-3mg-tt —-Job work done bore.