The Hamilton weekly visitor. (Hamilton, Harris Co., Ga.) 1873-1874, September 05, 1873, Image 2

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C|p|)Milton^is : lDr BY Ik 'W, D. BOULLY. rMPAY SEPT. 5,1873. Nfirth and South Railroad. It w to be hoped that operations Will shortly le resumed upon this line, and that the road will be run ning to Chipley in time to carry off a portion, if no more, of the coining <crop. Several of our farmers in this Vicinity, who have heretofore shipped il their cotton to West Point and La Orange, and obtained their sup fdiea from there, state that, as soon as the road oroeaes the mountain, Co lumbus will be their market. Co lumbus will realime a large increase of trade as mm m the road reaches Hamilton, ew> Superintendent Chipley, in a letter from New York to Mr. Jarboe, of lia Orange, speaks encouragingly of the prospect* •of tlie road, lie says •that in addition to shipping anew 'engine, he has a!bo purchased fish plates, bolts aud sfiikee, and some iron. The further this road goes the bet ter it will pay. Once flntehed to La Grange, and the Company can then extend it at pleasure. Rut tlrey need help, end need it nme, to push on the next twenty miles. What say you, citizens of Harris? Will you longer let this great enter prise lie dormant for want of your assistance? or will you not help it onward with new subscriptions, and by increasing the old ones ? The Oldest Negro.— The Mount Sterling (Ky ) Sentinel says that tho “ father of all the darkies ” lives 111 Hath county, and his name is Sam Howies. Sam claims to have been a cook on the vessel that Brought Chris topher Columbus over, and thinks lie was over forty then. Ho has been bald-headed all over for nearly 200 years. The last thing he saw before ho went blind was Pouoe de Leon kissing an Indian princess at San Au gustine, Fla. llin blindness was brought about by his being stung in the eyo by a mosquito, or an alliga tor, or a buffalo—he doesn't know which, as he was asleep at the time. He lost his last tooth 160 years ago, and owing to chronic rheumatism in the gums, has been compelled to sub amt by smelling his victuals. “Mcsbxb will Out.”—A widow and her , daughter woro murdered in Germany in 1862. No due was ob tained to the murderer. Last July the bouse in which the murder had been committed was torn down. Be tween it and the adjoining house there was e space about e foot wide, and hemmed in there waa found the skel eton of tiie murderer. At his feet lay a leather bag containing tho dia monds, money and bonds of the mur dered wfdow. It is supposed, that in escaping over tho roof, his foot •lipped, and he fell into what proved to be his Kving tomb. CdßEEcnox.—A week or two ago we denounced as a foul mnrder tho killing of Wm. Clark, at Cowles* Sta tion, Ala., by Ed. Walker. Wo have aince been informed that Mr. Walker is a peaceable citiaen, and that Clark had threatened to kill him on sight, Mr. Walker gare himself up after the killing, nd was acquitted. Onr opinion was formed from the particulars in the Columbus papers, and we make the above statement cheerfully. ST A copy of the SavannAh News cornea to this post-office addressed to the H Expositor,” and another to the ** Dispatch.'* There ia only paper here—the Visitoh. Will Mr. Estill please have the Visitor entered upon his mail-book, and send only to it? Wa appreciate the News highly, and do not desire the proprietor to incur the extra tnx of sending a copy of his paper to one that doe* not exist, GT Ex-President Millard Fillmore is seventy-three years old. Fillmoro and Andy Johnson are the only ex- Presidents living, aud neither of them were elected to office. Mr. Fillmore, at Vico President, succeeded Presi dent Taylor, who died a little over a year after he was inaugurated, and Andy Johnson succeeded Lincoln. Goon Pxpkrs.—The Cotumbns pa pers don’t make much font about their circulation, and are not quite *o large as some of their contempo raries, bat, in our humble judgment, they arc unexcelled by any of the dailies of their sister cities. WBf Jem Clark, a well-known ool ared harbar ef CoUimhw*, died there last Sunday. Ha waa respected ly whites and Blaeka. The new engine for the N. fc 8. Hoad his arrived- sMMumbus. Georgia Railroad Frauds. Tho Augusta papers give tho fol lowing about certain irregularities discovered in official* of the Georgia Railroad. Mr. Carlton Hillyer has been investigating the matter. Mr. U, I. Rhodes the General Freight Agent is a defaulter. He has beou some fourteen years on the road By ingeniously manipulating claitus and appropriating money tor trans porting United States troops be scraped in between $7,000 and SB,OOO of the road’s money. lie also drew money for fictitious bands. The largest defaulter was I\ W. Printup, Road Master. He has been thirty years on the road* He used road timber for private use, trans ported grain and supplies for bis pri vate plantations, paid himself for slock not killed, built mills at the ex pense of the company, paid fictitious pay-rolls. His pickings, it is esti mated, sum up to SIOO,OOO. The third person who gobbled road things was J. S. Shipley, Super visor. He imitated Printup cleverly, lie was a nepotist on a small scale, putt ing lots of kin in office. These men have been dismissed, and also the entire force in the Road Master’s and Supervisor’s depart, inent. The new Road Master is Air. New non Hicks, and Supervisor, Mr. ! Thomas C. Hendricks. Tito Reign of Corruption. Never, sinco the foundation of this government, lias there been as much corruption in the laud as exists at tho present time—corruption in church and state—in high places and low placet—in office atid ottt of office corruption everywhere 1 One of the latest eases of official rascality recorded is tl).it of Bryce McLellan, chief postal clerk between New York and Washington, who has Just been detected in robbing the mails, and allowed to resign I Just think of it! He was Informed ou by an accomplice, who still retains his position, and not even arrested, but allotted to resign ! McLellan has stolen some $40,000. Ills thefts have been going on for some time, and consist of sums of $2 and sl, taken from letters Bent by Southern subscribers to Northern publishers. Tho old adage, “ Like master like man,” is fully verified hero. Now let those Southerners who have lost their money make another remittance, It may go safely this time, if McLellaids accomplice is also allowed to resign! A You no Suicide.—'Tho attempt of Nellie Smith to commit suicide nt Cincinnati, on Fridny last, camo very near being successful. The young man who saw her throw her self into the canal was a good way off, anil when he got her out she was insensible and nearly gone. Af ter being taken to a hottso near by and brought to, she explained that life had beoomo a burden to her, be cause her home was an unhappy one. She said sho had prayed before tak ing the awful plunge, and was ready to go. This desperate littlo Nellie was just seven yean old, and her im mediate reasons for being so *' rashly importunate *' ivhs a medium sized spanking which her mother had ad ministered that morning. Mrs, Smith heard hor suicidal threat, had seen her take tho earrings out of her ears and deposit them in the box with the rest of her toys and trinkets; but Mrs. Smith was astonished when Nellie waa brought home in a strange suit of dry clothes. She had no idea what precocious desjairadoes the modern dime novol makes ont of the infanta of this generaliou. X3F“ The Nashville Republican says that a great deal of excitement pre- Tailod at Chattanooga one day last week. A negro aud a man named Pearson, formerly a representative to the Legislature, having had hot words in a saloon, the negro attempted to strike him, when young Pearson stabbed the negro with the blade of a poeket knife in the chest, produc ing a mortal wound. As soon as the difficulty aud its supposed fatal ter mination had become known to the negroes, about two hundred of them assembled together, flourished pis tols and knives and swore vengeance against young lYarson. They de clared openly, it. is said, that they would mob him. By the prompt in tervention of tho police, however, tliis was prevented and the mob dis l*ofsvd. Had one shot been fired at any time daring tho excitement there would hare been Woedv work. Young Pearson was held in the sum of $20,000. Snakes are said to be more numerous in Georgia than before the war, and the cause is attributed to the absence of hogs, which used to 1 kill numbers of thru*. Mailers in Georgia. * Mr. Kinley, of Millcdgeville, lias sent to the Smithsonian Institute several valuable Indian relics. Two negroes have been ari'efeted for the murder of young Johnson at Smith villev Air. Charles Hammond, of Pike, is 81 years old, and still enjoys good health, lie doesn’t drink “pop-scull,” but don’t refitse the pure stuff. His wife Is 78, and aoes her own work. The Mayor of Columbus, last week, Very properly cleared the court-room of a crowd of hoys In attendance. Would that the Mayor of every city in Georgia would do likewise, if parents wotlld exercise a little more watchfulness over their children-, it would bo better for both. Toe new Masonic Temple at Ma con is nearly completed ; the cost of tho building will be $02,00; furniture and necessary fixtures will make the cost near $75,000. It will be the finest and most imposing Masonic Temple in the South. The State Grange, at its meeting in Athens, passed a resolution asking the Legislature to regulate the num ber of pounds of cotton seed to the bushel. The “Native Georgian’’ was the name of the first steamboat built in Columbus, Gov. Smith, in reply to a question in private conversation as to who the people should send to the Legislature, said: “ Send those who do not want to go —men who have no business of their own to look after, You may rest Well assured that the man who is most anxious to go is precisely the man who ought not to be elected.” A fifty dollar prize in gold for the best base ball club will be offered as an additional premium at the Macon Fair. A Oriffin gentleman has made a Wager ou the cotton crop of 1873 of a suit of clothes valued at siso, and which has been taken up, as follows: 1. That thy shipment from Griffin for the cotton year, commencing ou Ist of September, will not be ten per cent, less than that of the pro ceeding year. 2, That the crop in Georgia for 1873 is not less than that of 1878. 3. That the 1 growing crop will exceed four millions of bales. 4. That the crop of 1573 will exceed that of 1872. 5. That there is a seventy acre field of cotton not a thousand miles from Griflin that will muke forty bales. Says tho Gwinnett Herald of Wed nesday : “It is estimated that the corn crop of Gwinnett this year will be sufficient, if equally divided, to furnish thirty-seven bushels of coin to each man, woman and child in the county.” Governor Smith wants thieves disfranchised. A disease taking thb form of a swelled neck anil ibver blisters on the lips, has htttde its nppoarance among the children, black and white, in the neighborhood of Thoiuastom Anew hippodrome is te he built at Central City Park. The contract lias been awarded to Mr. Petit nt $3,200. Tho material used is the brick in the old one. Judge Hill has granted flu injunc tion restraining tho city of Macon from collecting taxes on tho property of the Macon and Western Railroad. The ease goes tip to the Supreme Court. Bainbridge claims a dog sixty-five years old. Mr. Pleasant Lawson died suddenly in Fayette county last weok. lie had split boards that day, and retired in his usual health. Soon after lay. ing down, his wife heard him cough, and calling him and receiving no an swer, struck a light, and found him to bo dying. Mr. J. N. Cardoza died in Savan. nah, last Saturday, aged 87. lie was a contributor to tho Savannah News up to about a year ngo, when the failure of his eyesight compelled him to quit writing. He was tho oldest editor in the South, if not in tho Uni ted States. A Cartersvifie cow enme home the other day, after a few days’ absence, with a part of her tail missing, which was afterwards found wrapped round | a sapling, where she had left it while | lashing off flies. The Standard is responsible for tho above. Tho Thomasville Times slops to I the front and says it has seen a | horned worm foui inches long, with i twelve legs, eight horns on its head, | and several smaller ones on its body. A horse in Cartcrsville, a few days I ago, fell at® a dry well some 30 feet ’ deep, after holding on to tho top of the well With his fore feet about twenty minotca. lie was taken out almost unhurt. Matters in General. The steamer City of Limerick was nearly wrecked at New York, last week, by coining in collision with the Castle Garden pier. Cause, a drun keu pilot-. A balloon left Philadelphia, a few days ago, and went fifty-two miles in fifty minutes. The yellow fever exists in New Orleans. The Bank of England forgers have been found guilty, and sentenced to penal servitude for life. A dispatch from Halifax reports a disastrous storm in that vicinity. Many buildings were prostrated, crops devastated, and bridges Washed away-. Some $75,000 damage was done to the shipping. The president of a national bank in Boston and the cashier of a na tional bank in New York, both com mitted suicide one day last week. At tJnion City, Tenn., 72 deaths from cholera have occurred, out of a population of 1,000, A man Was prepared for burial last week, in Maryland, when it was no ticed that the skin had assumed a natural appearance, and an examina tion showed that life Was not extinct. Physicians were called in, and the man is recovering. This case is the more remarkable, as the man had died, as was thought, three days be fore, and his body had been placed on ice. A lady in Olney, 111.-, claims to be able to heal the sick by the imposi tion of hands accompanied by prayer ahd the repetition of Scripture. Ma ny prominent citizens are reported to have been cured. The lady is not a Spiritualist, and claims that she has been instructed by God to exer“ Hence her supernatural power. Gibson county, Tenn., claims a negro who is 124 years old, and has his second eye-sight, and anew growth of hair. He can read, or shoot birds and squirrels, without glasses. He is in good health; says he was never sick iu his life, nor ever look a dose of medicine from a doctor. lie hasn’t a tooth left. Alligator leather is superseding the Russian for ladies’ belts and trav eling-satcliels. The cxDcputy city of Brooklyn Treasurer, Rodman, has been arrested on the charge of a $203,000 defalca tion. Tho list of i'efuiiders of back pay now includes sixteen senators aDd thirty-six popular-benchers. The ag gregate refund to date is $218,045 84. A drove of 1900 goals lately passed through Dallas, Texas. The daily receipts of some of the Saratoga hotels arc fully $5,000. Michael Angelo McFarland, who spent $25,000 in defense of his brother Daniel, for the murder of Albert D. Richardson, died in Bellvieu Hos pital, and having no friends, was buried in Potter’s Field. A Grand Rapids, Mich., woman keeps seventy-six eats about her prem ises. When one dies she has a funeral procession half a mile long, com posed entirely of cats. As soon as the gfave is covered she gives a slg. tial, and the whole company bowl in concert; An loWa farftier sprinkled Paris green on his potato tops to kill the bugs, and throe valuable horses died from nibbling the tops, find then the bugs laughed at him. So great is the tnania for betting at Saratoga that thp ladies make wa gers as j,o the color of the next gen tlemau’a hair who will turn the next corner. Judge Advocate General Holt de nies having withheld from President Johnson a petition signed by five members of the Court when present ing the record of the trial of Mrs. Surratt. Up to August 12 there had been over forty-four million postal cards furnished to postmasters. The United Stales Hotel at Sar atoga will cost $1,000,000, aud will inclose five acres of ground. A sunken steamer has been dis covered in the Missouri river, with a cargo of 300 barrels of whisky, which has lain there fourteen years. Out of seventy-four Senators of tho last Congress, eight have still their back pay standing to their credit; ami oot of two hundred and twenty-five members ami delegates, five have still their back pay an drawn. A man in Terre Haute, Oafrted John Branch, had a finger pnlled out by tiie roots in jumping from a car; a ring caught in a screw. The burning of Blatz's brewery in Cincinnati caused a loss estimated at ; $300^0: Rough Times lit Texas. The news brought by our Texas exchanges is, as usual, of a sanguinary east. A gang of horse-thieves, over taken in Eastland county On the 14th, numbered four when the pursuers first came up. One got away; the other three were left lying on the ground for wolf bait, Mr. Savage, recently from Georgia, was found dead with thirty-two buckshot in his body, on the road between his home and a school he was teaching in Ti tus county, A neighbor whose dog had been scalded is suspected of hav ing taken satisfaction in this way for the indignity offered to his canine companion, Ambrose WheCler had been carrying his arsenal with Inin and keeping his eye skinned on ac count of a misunderstanding with two of the Reeds in Bosque county. They met him with such friendly oveittireS that he disarmed. In a day or ttJro the Reeds left the county, after giv ing direction where Wheeler’s body might be found. The prolonged hos tililies between the Hardin and Tay lor “crowds” in DeWitt county were suspended two weeks ago. One “ crowd ” to the number of sixty were besieging about twenty of the other “ crowd ” in a fortified house, when the sheriff arrived with a strong poSse and offered his mediation, and Succeeded in effecting a temporary truce. Indian robberies and minders in Palo Pinto ahd Young counties are tile latest reported in that line. What a Railroad has Hone, The Atlanta Constitution says of Gainesville i “Two years ago there were not 500 inhabitants, and not a single house had been built in twelve years. Now there are at least 2,500 inhab itants, and Sihcfe tken hot less than 30(1 houses have been built! In 1870 there was less than $30,000 worth of merchandise, all told, sold in the place. Last year the sales of merchandise footed up the grand sum of s4oo,Odd—nearly a half million. In 1870 the assessed value of all the property in the town, both real and personal, was $89,000; ih 1872 it was $578,900. (The corporation has not been enlarged.) In 1870 there were eight bales of dottoh sold by planters ill this mar kef ; in 1872 there were over 2,300 bales sold by planters to the mer chants here! and from 300 to 400 shipped by planters at this point— making some 2,700 bales in all ship*: ped from Gainesville last year.” A Baby Frightened to Death by Thunder. —The Boston Herald as serts that an infant, only five days old, died from fright in Newtonville, Mass., on Friday last, under the fol lowing circumstances: On that even ing a very heavy thunder storm pie* vailed in that Vicinity, and at each report of the thuuder the babe jump-*’ ed spasmodically, and gave every eVi dence of thorough fright possible ih so young an infant. At last a terri ble clap came, the child’s limbs twitched convulsively, and it died in stantly. The lightning struck it house only a few rods distant, but it is not thought that the electricity had any effect upon the child, for it was not felt by any others. IS” Suppose a ship in distress fires a gun, the light of which is seen on shoVe, or by another vessel, twenty secohds before a report is heard, it is known to be at a distance of twenty times 1,142 feet, or a little more than four and a half miles. Sounds of all kinds, it is ascertained, travels at tho rate of fifteen miles in a minute. SST* A Dull Season—Boarding house pepper. Ftfr Loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Depression of Spirits & General Debility, in their various forms, Ferro-Phosporated Elixir of Calisaya, made by Caswell,Hazard fc Cos., New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic. Asa stimulant tonic for patients recover ing from fever or other sickness, it has no equal. If taken during the seasou it prevents fever and ague and other intermittent fevers. 4w HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE. I offer for Kilo a House and Lot in Hamil ton, on the west side of the public square, with 100 feet front and 200 feet back. On the lot is a good kitchen and stable, and one of the test wells of water iu town. Terms reasonable for the cash. seps-lm LEE DOGGETT. GEORGIA —Harris County. James Forbes, administrator of John West wood, decease;l. makes application for leave to sell the land tekmging to said deceased: All persons concerned are hereby noli Ik'd to show cause, if any they have, by the first Monday in October next, why said applica tion should not be granted. Given under mr hand and official seal. sepo-td J. F. C. WILLIAMS, Ord y. GEORGIA —Harris Ootirrr. George A. Redding, administrator of Mi nerva A. l’aulkenbeirv. makes application for leave to sell the land of said deceased: All persons concerned are hereby notified to show cause, if any they have, by the first Monday iu October next, why said' applica tion should not be granted. Given uuder my hnnl and official seal icpiktd J. F. C. WILLIAMS, Ord’y. JNO F FIOUBNOY. H. H. EPPJNG. C. C. M’GEHEE. B SN- S- HATCHES. ALSTON WAREHOUSE, -_§o§ FLOURNOt", M’GEHEE CO*, WAREHOUSE AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, COL EMBUS, ....... t ................. >v..GEDR GIA^ —M—^ ®gy Give Special Attention to the Storage and Sale of Cotton, "“©a Make Liberal advances on Cotton in store or for shipment’to other markets. Lagging and Thy always on hand at Lowest Market Prices. sug29-3m I I .I—jNULJ .Aj-t-i-JIIM I'll ——i—j THE GOOD TIME'HAS COMB When no good liousekvieper can afford to do without one of the celebrated Wiat are sold and warranted by tV. H. KOBABTS & Cos., Uolumbus, da , Manufacturers of Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper Ware of every description. Wholesale and retail dealers in Stoves, Hardware, Wood and Willow Ware; Crockery; Cutlery, arid HottSe-ftirnislung Goods generally. We are prepared to furnish Goods in our line as LOW as the LOWEST, wiTrt a GUARANTEE ON EVERY ARTiCLB) SOLS Call and see us before buying elsewhere. Columbus, Ga., Aug. 1, 1873 —3m W. It. ROBARTS & CO. L; M. BURRUSr G. M. WILLIAMS; BURRUS & WILLIAMS, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ALABAMA WAREHOUSE, ColuraLms, G-a. Special attention p-.id to storage arid sale of Cotton. Large lot of Bagging and '1 ies on haiid and for sale at the lowest matket price. We also sell the Brown Cotton Gin. angl-3m IIAMTO3! MALE COLLEGE, HAMILTON, GA. The Fall session begins on Tuesday, tiie 9th of September, and closes on Friday, the "28th of November. Tuition is from {2 to $5 per month, ac cording to grade of studies, with an inciden tal fee of twenty cents per trionth. Mtisic on Piano, Organ or Guitar, is $5 per month, with a charge of fifty cents per mouth for the use of instruments. Pupils will be charged from the beginning of the scholastic month in which they enter, to the close of tho session. No deduction w 11 he made for absence, except in cases of protracted sickness, Oue-lialf of the tuition will he required in advance —balance at close of session. Board can be obtained at sls per month. J. H. IiOVELACB, President. GEORGIA —Harris Cobnty. Wm. Nelson, executor of Abe! Nelson, de ceased, applies for letters of dismission: All persons concerned are hereby notified to show cause, if any they have, by the first Monday in December next, why said letters should not he granted. Given under my hand and official seal. aug29-td J. F. C. WILLIAMS, Ord'y. (with LATEST IMPROVEMENTS.) FOR 20 YEARS THE STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE THROUGHOUT THE WORLD. Over 800,000 in use. If you think of buying a Sewing Machirve, it wtll pay you to examine tin- records 6’f those now use, and profit hy experience. The Wbekmsr & WnaoN stands alone as the only Lwrrfr lU'n.mm; Machine using the Rotary Hook, making a Lock Stitch alike on both sides of the fabric sewed. All shuttle j machines waste power in drawing the shuttle Iwek after the stitch is formed, bringing don-1 ble wear and strain upon both machine and operator; hence while other machines rap idly wear out. the Wheeler & Wilson lasts a Lifetime, and proves an economical invest ment. Do not believe all that is promised by so-called ‘cheap’ machines: you should require proof that years of use have tested their value. Money once thrown away can not te recovered. Send for our circulars. Machines sold on easy terms, or monthly payments taken. Old machines put ijj order oi received in exchange. Wheeler & Wilson Mf'g Co.’s Offices: Savannah. Augusta, Macon and Columbus, Ga. IF. B. CLB YES, Gen. Agt., ‘ augl-lyr Savauuali, Ga. THE CHRISTIAN INDEX, Atlanta, Georgia. Organ of the Baptist Denomination Rev* D. Shaver, D. D., : : Editor.* ASSOCIATE EDITORS! Re V; E* Butleß, Dr. J. S. Lawton*’ CORRESPONDING EDITORS I Rev. S. Renders ofa, D. D., Alpine, Alai Rev. E. B. Ykague, D. D., Selma, Ala Rev. T. G. Jones, D. D, Nashv’e, Tenil Steadfastly devoted to the tcifei# ail'd great interests of tiie Baptist denomination, this paper, which, for nearly half a ceutniy, has* been the organ and favorite of the Baptists of Georgia, and for the past seven years bear ing the same inti-nato relation to the broth erhood of Alabama and portions of Tennessee, South Carolina, Florida and Mississippi, will, in the future, merit, by the excellcncjr of its character, their highest appreciation. Tiie’ reader will find that, besides the large quan tity of moral and religious truth with which it is freighted weekly, a chaste selection of miscellaneous reading, and a complete sum mary of reliable intelligence—both domestic arid foreign—will render them independent of other papers. Correctly printed market reports of the principal cities will make the’ paper invaluable to all classes of our people. As an advertising medium, possessing, as it does, a constituency of over 250,000 intelli gent, substantial Christian people, it is une-’ qualed by any other publication in the South.’ The Index clubs with all the leading pape& and periodicals In the . United States. The interests of friends remitting us will be care ful I y protected. Price, in advance, $2 50 a year; to Minis ters, $2. J. P. HARRISON & CO., Pfop’rs. , To whom all communications mast be ad dressed. HT* Send for specimen copies, circulars, etc. In connection with the Index we hare per haps the largest aud most complete Book and Job Printing office in the South, known as The Franklin Steam Printing House, At which every style of Book, Mercantile, Legal and Railway Printing is executed. In excellency of manner, promptness and cheap ness, we defy competition. Our Blank Book Manufactory is likewise well appointed.- Orders solicited for every gf..de Of work in this department. County officials will find it to their interest to consult us as to legal Form Books, Records, Minutes', Blanks, etc. Books, newspapers, sheet music and pci iodicais bound and rebound to order. Remember to make your ordOre cm the Frank-' lin Steam Printing House: J. P. HARRISON & CO., Atlanta, Ga. w X£X. DNT. Brok.er, INSURANCE AM REA& ESTATE AC’ETT,’ COLUMBUS, GA. Will give attention to purchase and sale of Real Estate, placing Insurance in liret-clas* Companies, ail 1 will invest funds or negotiate* h>ante for those dusiiing it. tvb2B-l>r