Newspaper Page Text
1
THE NEWNAN HERALD,
J. C. WOOTTEH. Editor.
F. S. WELCH. Publisher.
NEW NAN. GA , SKPT , 30, 1805.
*Jcb Work.
_ fcoeuTherc are men whose apparent ob- |(
jeet in life is to create divisions, to array
Execution Among the Jews- Captain 'A irz. I ' ru ‘ d ’ v . ,
The Hebrews had no executioner.-j known correspondent of the . cw A or
When a man was guilty of homicide, the j World and News, pubhshes a lengthy let- .
the next of kin, by ter, exculpating Captain W irx irom re-
! in a recent battle. j the ri«ht of blood revenge ; in other sponsibility in regard to the h "^ h, P« u j
j Joseph Bonaparte, Prince of Masscna, cases, criminals were stoned by the people j the prisoners at Andersoavrlle. lie ctoscs
lied at Home. the witness’-etting the example; and when .thus:
The Secretary of the Treasury has dc- U, c King or chief ordered a person to (
if, as well skilled as the attorney ? We NEWS SUMMARY.
have thrown together hastily these ideas, ,
and would be rejoiced to know that they The Confederate General Parsons was
meet the approval ot the people of killed, while fighting for the Imperialists, I execution devolved on
Georgia-
•y FTP1 GEOUCvIA
Petroleum Company.
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be | No—the responsibility for the suffer
ings of our prisoners at Andcrsonville
Capital Sto<
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8100,000
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. ^ cut'* Job Work 8cc '* ons , churches and individuals against cided to take off the tax of forty cents a p U t to death, the office was performed by | _
. 'cBTCjsrfpar . j each other. They live in an atmosphere manJ on the manufactured tobacco in the person to whom the command was rests upon those who arc responsib c Tnvfhm
1,1 n , ' . . e .*V ,, " . of hate. Good feeling* is as deadly to the South to be sold for consumption. given, and this was generally a person keeping our prisoners there, instea o j-
excollcd bv any m the State. Uur terms .. . f , \ , , . , , ® — 1
,• -j , them as carbonic acid gas is to a ughtcu The officer of the guard placed ever whose considerate in life bore some pro-
” ■” ^ — — Clement Clay's casement was withdrawn portion to that of the person to bo slain.
last Saturday. It is believed that Clay Thus Solomoft gave the commission to
Ar'ses^mentH.
All Job Work most he paid
on delivery.
idle. Battlefields are their Kdens, car-
f or candle.
nage their life-blood, and human suffering
permitting them to be exchanged. The ^
Confeicrateauthoriti.es were anxious‘to j forking "Fund- - 8^0,000
have them exchanged. But the Secre- j
their delight. Their appetite forevil cannot and Mitchell will soon have their privi- kill Joab, the commander-in chief to Be- . tary of \\ ar refused to have them ex-j OFFICERS.
naiah, a person of so much distinction as 'changed on the pretext that the equality ^ p K|tI _ t0(JO< Xewnan, Secry and Treasurer,
to be himsell immediately promoted to the of negro soldiers with white soldiers must j L itotrsns, General Supcrintendant.
command which the death of Joab left ' first be acknowledged by the Confederate
In fact the office even of a regu-! Government, but really in order to pre-
uicans dis
LECTION TICKETS i he satisfied in this world. Their pleasure- leges extended upon their parole.
We ar* prepared to fill orders for tickets j boats can float only on streams of human j A misunderstanding having occurred
for the ensuing election, at short notice, j Mood and hu,,ian tcars ’ They smile only , between .he Mayor of A icksburg and the
,, , n „.;ti ..l,,™ on i by the light of burning cities, hamlets and J ne gro boarding-house bureau, General
Beni ember the election will take place on ; j . o . o > . ! ° c
Ihc first Wednesday in October. j cottages. Their music is the groaning* j Slocum has convened a nrhtary cemmis-
‘ m f of the afflicted and the wailings of the j s ion to investigate it
Speech of Hon. Alex. White. i dying. They pray and preach only for j The President has ordered 120 pardons
p.y request wc publish copious extracts j “ war redder than blood,” and dream of , to be issued, divided as follow?, viz : Mis-
fiom the speech delivered by Hon. Mr. j smiling landscapes changed to barren and ,.si?sippi, 0; Alabama, 42; South Carolina,
White of Talladega, in the Alabama | waste saharns. False to their own race
Convention on the 20th inst. Wc have they arc true to no other,
given the main propositions and the rea- ; To whom do you refer? asks the reader,
sons advanced in their support. Wc ask The Northern Radicals. From the very
from being rem-
vacant.
hr executioner is not by any means dis- , vent (ten. Lee s army
honorable in the East. The post of chief forced by the rebel soldiers whom he held
executioner is in most oriental courts one
each reader to peruse attcmivciy every
line, and out word for it the time so con
cerned will be well spent. The conclu
ding paragraph is a brilliant specimen of
oratory.
The Election.
On Wednesday .next the people of
Georgia will elect delegates to the State
Convention, and we trust for one time
personal hates and preferences will bo
laid .aside, and selections made from merit
only. The gratification of placing a friend
in office if incompetent, will not compen
sate you for the loss sustained in State
interests. The Convention should be
composed of Georgia’s ablest, wisest and
best sons. The good or evil results flow
ing from the action of this body will be
incalculable. The voters have now their
destinies fn their own hands and we be
lieve, they will act wisely and well.
County Courts—The Convention.
ft is believed by those who have taken
the time and pains to investigate the mat
ter, that at least one half of the criminals
in Georgia have heretofore gone un-
whipped of justice. Why was this the
case? It was not attributardc to the dis
inclination of the Courts and juries to
maintain the dignity ot the laws, cr a
desire on the part of the citizens to screen
the guilty.
The failure to punish arises from a de
fect in our judicial system—the non-ex
istence of a clause in our constitution
providing for County Courts, with juris
diction over petty offences. Under our
laws, the offender, on failure to give bond,
is often compelled to lie in jail six months
before the sitting of a court at which a
true bill can be found, and at said term,
oftencr than otherwise, a continuance is
granted, thereby placing bis trial twelve
or more months after the commission of
the indictable act. In the meantime the
prosecutor relents, the witnesses die or
emigrate to other States; the violator of
the law is acquitted, the county forced to
pay heavy jailor’s loos, and a belief is
forced upon the public mind that prose
cutions should not be resorted to except
in high or capital offences. The conse
quence is crime increases.
The Superior Courts in many counties,
owing to a press of other and equally im
portant business, can not give trials to
one half the offenders, though both par
ties were prepared and anxious.
If such have been the facts in the past,
organization of this Government they
have been shrieking over the negro.—
They could not live in the same Govern
ment with slaveholders; it was sinful to
meet with them around the sacramental
board. Their consciences were uneasy
while living in national and church rela
tions with men who bought and sold
human beings. God bad selected them
to lead in the work of emancipation.—
War began and progressed for four years
and slavery was abolished. During those
years of gloom, misery and suffering, how-
joyous were their countenances. But lo
and behold, they are not content with
emancipation. The Almighty has ap
pointed them to lead in the work of the
legal and soeial equality of the negro with
the white. When this is completed, they
hope, by placiug our feeble hands upon
the coat-tails of the elevated, energetic,
noble, learned' superior black, to pull us
forward in the grand march of civilization.
They entertain no doubt of the success
of their labor of love, if the proud black
will condescend to intermarry with his
feeble dependant. They have discovered
the astounding fact that the white race is
a failure — (how they do wish they had
been blessed with a black skin) — and
miscegenation is a necessity to save it from
extinction.
This is the feast to which we arc invi
ted. God be praised that all men in the
North and West are not like these men;
for if the contrary were true, not one ray
of hope Qr light would dispel the dark
ness overhanging our pathway. There
is a party in those States, called by the
names of Copperhead and Democratic,
who in all government affairs sees, thinks
atid acts as we do. If they are false to
all else, they are at least true to their
own race—true to the principles ot our
fathers, and trge to the Constitution.—
Our people must lay aside prejudice to
name and sustain these men — our friends
— this party, for principles’ sake. IIow
base would be our ingratitude—how de
serving of scorn would we be, if in the
hour of trial we should abandon our
friends and join the ranks of out enemies,
who are alike foes to the Constitution.—
Once more in the Union, our plain duty
is, to unite our forces with those of our
allies and make one grand united effort to
of honor and distinction. Thus, when
there was no regular executioner, it came
3 ; Texas, 4 ; Louisiana, 3 ; North Caro- to be considered a post of honor to put a
lina, 1; Tennessee, 2; Georgia, 3; and distinguished person to death; and on
4 to the District of Columbia. J the other haud^thc death itself was hoiior-
Camp Dick Kobison will be rented to able in proportion to the rank of the per-
the highest bidder on the 13th of next SO n by whom the blow was inflicted. It
month. | was the greatest dishonor to per«sh by the
The President will not interfere with hands of a woman or a slave. We see
the action ot the Southern Bishops.— i this feeling distinctly in the narrative
They may unite with the Northern Church
or not, as they please. In reply to the
where the two princes much prefer to die
by Gideon’s own hand than that of a
remonstrances of the radicals, lie stated | youth who had obtained no personal dis-
that the Constitution was silent on the
subject.
A company lias been formed in Mem
phis, Venn., to furnish white laborers to
the planters of Eastern Arkansas, est
Tcnnnessee and North Mississippi, the
people there being satisfied.4hat the ne
groes cannot be profitably enjjjoyed ex
cept under a system of enforced labor,
which makes it necessary for them'to look
for help elsewhere.
Gen. Beauregard has not only taken
the oath of allegiance, but will apply for
pardon.
After a long controversy, it has been
decided to admit colored children atNew-
port, It. I., into the same school as white
children.
The defence of Captain Win have sub-
pccncd 112 witnesses.
Pardons arc issued now by the hun
dred per day The pardon machine is
working smoothly.
The acting Postmaster General to-day
ordered the reopening of twenty post-of
fices in Virginia, Mississippi, Alabama
and Georgia.
At the Fenian meeting last Monday
evening in Jersey Cit}', oue of the speak
ers declared that movements are progress-
tinction. As toAhe hero commissioning
his son to perform this offiee, it was, per
haps, partly to honor him with the dis
tinction of having slain two chief enemies
of Israel, as well as because the rules of
blood revenge made it necessary that the
execution of those who had slain his own
brethren shottW either be performed by
himself or a member of his own family.—
It seems very probable, from all that trans
pired, that Qreb and Zceb had taken
them captive, in the same way that they
were themselves slain.
Gen. Price’s Family.—The St.
Louis Republican, of the ISth, furnishes
the following:
Mrs. Sterling Price, hei daughter, Miss
Stella Price, and two sons, CcLsus and
Quintus, arrived in this city on Friday
evening, direct from Washington, Texas,
and are stopping at the Olive Street
Hotel. Mrs. Price and family are accom
panied by her eldest son, Gen. Edwin U.
Price, who left Brooklin, N. Y-, about
two months since and went to Texas after
the family. It is not certainly determin
ed upon whether Mrs. Price and the
younger members of the family will re
bonds for tin
mill
main m Missouri, or accompany her son
ing finely, and that bank note engraver? . Edwin to Brooklyn, where he has resided
during the past year. At present Mrs.
Price is not aware of the exact where
abouts of Gen. Sterling Price and their
third son, who accompanied his father in
to Mexico after the breaking up of the
Confederate forces under Gen. E. Kirby
Smith. When last heard from they were
in the City of Mexico.
at Chicago and Point Lookout.
A first lieutenant in a negro regiment
at Savannah, Georgia, recently married a
colored damsel, and the miseegenators im
mediately left for New York on a bridal
tour.
National banks have recently been es.
tablished at Paducah, Ky., and Selma,
Ala. There will be one in operation
shortly at Huntsville, Ala.
linn jiilnutisnnfttfe.
TIIOMAS BARNES,
Depot Str., New nan, Ga.,
Will repair neatly and promptly
t CLOCKS,
WATCHES JP’
— ASD
JEWELRY.
September 20-4-ly.
J. M HOLBROOK, Ag’t,
FOB
P. CORBITT cfe Oo.,
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in
FIS isi Will
K A
m a Wsl
x b ’Jin
Salesroom, 203 Broadway, N- Y.,
Drancli, Wliiteh.aH St.,
ATLANTA, GA.
September 30-4-12m.
were already at work on
Irish Republic.
General Forrest is running a saw
in Mississippi.
On Wednesday last tlic President noti
fied the Attorney General not to make
an}’ more requisitions for pardons until
the great number now awaiting the Pres
idcuts signature were attended to.
A New York correspondent of a Phil
adelphia paper gives the following in re
gard to the Fenian movement. Negotia
tions are pending for the purchase of
eight ocean steamers, each warranted to
earr}’ a thousand men, with a certainty,
almost that the purchase will be made be
fore the first of October. There have
been immense purchases of anus from
defeat tho- Radicals. One false step is t b e Government by parties supposed to
fatal to us. If our supporters become
discouraged and our enemies inspirited,
our doom will be dark and unenviable.—
On the contrary, if wc say to the Democ
what will be the condition of the country j ^ bc of good cheeJ% we need entertain
with the negro emancipated and living
amongst us? Our people well know the
black’s inclination to lawlessness when
left to himself.
Again, it is not the harshness, but the
certainty and swiftness of punishment
that deters the evil-doers. A penalty
may he so severe as to exeite the sympa
thy of the jury for ,the accused, and
thereby work his or her acquittal. V hat
no fears. What Georgian will
incut hesitate to join the white man’s
party ? .
Tired of Freedom-
We predicted that the negroes who
were renting houses and trying to support
themselves would In many instances soon
get to the end of their row, and become
involved. A woman we’ve long known.
we need, thgn, we repeat, is a Court in and who, in Confederate times, lived sum-
each county having jurisdiction over mi
nor offenses, and so constituted as to ad
minister speedy justice.
The Inferior Courts are no longer suita
ble to the times, aud besides the number
tuously and paidgood wages to her master,
called upon us on Tuesday, in great dis
tress. She offered to sell herself back in
to slavery in order to pay nearly a hun
dred dollars rent accumulated against her,
of Judges and manner of selection will , and in order, too, to secure a permanent
forevjtr destroy their usefulness and vital-; home free from the anxieties and trou-
ity. The proposed Courts and the Ordi-; bles she had experienced since she be-
naries could, in addition to other duties, i came free; she was tired ot freedom.—
discharge county business with more bhc has found it by sad experience, utter-
promptness aud corrccmess. j ly impossible to provide herseif with the
This change in “ Court system" can 1 common necessaries of life and meet her
be effected without cost by our approach- • nmt. Now she is fearful that her land
ing Convention. We trust the alteration j harshly with her, and is
will be thorough, and that a clause may j trying to borrow the rent money, even
be inserted in the Constitution making | offering to become a slave again. She
oil persons ineligible to the judgship who a S r eed with us that the people generally
be identified with the Fenians, within
the past fortnight, and propositions for
further purchase now under considera
tion.
General Howard leaves Washington
for a mo- 10—day to inspect the condition of the
Freedmen in Virginia. Next month lie
will make a complete tour of the South
to investigate for himself, the new rela
tion between the planters and their late
slaves, with a view, if he finds them satis
factory, of contracting the operations of
his bureau.
The Massachusetts Radical State Con
vention frankly admits that their intense
anxiety for the extension of the right of
suffrage to the negroes of the Southern
States does uot arise altogether from a
i desire to do good unto them, whom they
rather ostentatiously proclaim not to be
ouly men, but their brother;—but that it
is due greatly, if not entirely, to a very
natural desire which they feel “ to keep
the jewel Liberty in the family of Free
dom,” which being interpreted into Eng-
A meeting of the board of regents of
the Military University at Lexington,
was held on the 21st inst., when -General
Curtis Lee, son of Gen. R. E. Lee, was
elected to the professorship of Mechanics
and Military and Civil Engineering, and
Major Blair, another ex-rebel officer, was
chosen Professor of Natural Philosophy
The Time’s Washington special says,
the Secretary of the Treasury and the
commissioner of Internal Revenue have
•now under consideration a circular which
will be directed to the Government tax
commissioner, with a view of relievinj»th«
holders of cotton in the Southern States;
it is found that these cotton holders are
generally unable to raise the money to pay
the immense tax, etc., required by the
act of July 2d 1864, to be paid before
shipment, to the Government agent in the
nearest locality in which the cotton may
be found ; it is also found impracticable
and at times impossible for the cotton
owners to come North and obtain the re
quisite funds, by which they may protect
their staple as regard the law as hertofore
construed scent at present as an insur
mountable obstruction to the shipment of
cotton to tjie Northern ports, before the
’Government assessment shall be paid.—
But the secretary of the Treasury, with
the aid of the internal revenue, has a
plan by which owners may. ship their cot-
to Northern markets and pay the Govern
ment charges in those ports. If this
T
GEORGIA, COWETA COUNTY.
TWO months aftrr date application will hr
made to the Court of Ordinary ol said
county, nt the first regular term after expira
tion of two months from date of this notice,
tor leave to sell the Lands belonging to the
estate of Jacob Addy, late of said county, de
ceased, for the benetit of heirs and creditors
of said deceased. W. W. ADDY,
Sept. 30-4-2m. AdniT of Jacob Addy.
Administrator’* Sale.
ATT ILL lie sold on the first Tuesday in De-
»Y cember next, agreeably to a« order of
the Court of Ordinaryjof Merriwether county,
before the Court House door in Newnan, Ga.,
within the legal hours of sale, North li.tlf of
Lot No. 2-')3, second District of Coweta county,
containing ninety-six acres, more or less,
eighteen acres cleared. Sold as the property
of Peter Windom. late of said county, deceased.
Sold for the benefit of the heir* and creditors
of said deceased. Terms cash.
Sept.80-4-tds. MARK MORGAN, 4dm’r.
J
GEORGIA, COWETA COUNTY.
To all whom it may concern :
OH.Y TILLERY having in proper form ap
plied to^ne for permanent Letters of Ad
ministration, with the* will annexed, on the
estate of Matilda Elmore, late of said county,
deceased:
This is therefore, to cite all and singular the
creditors, and next of kin of Matilda Elmore
to be and appear at my office within the time
allowed by law and snow cause, if any they
can. why permanent Letters of Administration,
with the will annexed, should, not he granted
to John Tillery on Matilda Elmore's estate.
Given under my hand and official signature.
September 21st, lSt»5.
B. n. MITCHELL. Orda’y.
Septeracer 30-4-Sd.
DIRECTORS.
Taomas A. Gracf, Newnan,
Atlanta,
M. P. Kellogg, Newnan,
J. L. Rogers, “
J. J. Pinsos, 4i
jvg»"-()tlier Directors to be elected.
rjTHE property of the Company consists of
I leases for twentv years, with a royalty of
• ne-tenth of the Oil,' on frenfetn different
places, in St. Clair, Walker and Fayette coun
ties, Ala., embracing an aggregate of two
thousand two hundred and fifty acres. These
lands are all located in the great Coal Fields
of Alabama, and selected carefully on account
of the strong indications of Oil that are found
on them. They contain boring tonitor}
enough for several hundred wells.
The Company proposes to sell stock enough
to raise a working fund of $30.000,and pledge
the stockholders that the whole of this hind
shall be expended in developing ar.d improv
ing the property. Arrangements will be made
to commence work immediately, with the best
machinery and most skillful men that can be
had in the oil regions of the North, and the
work will be prosecuted with the utmost dili
gence. It is confidently believed that in a
few months the stock will command Irom 5 to
10 times its par value. [Sept. G0-4-tf.
A A
THE TAITNE T>V
i xjxk A t
1,000
HIES IF IF5TIES;,
Of all kinds, nicely finished, for sale at New
York market prices. Will also exchange
r nun: T T7rn
LiLnniim
FOR IliuES
At old rates.
Sept. 30-4-Gt. THOS. G. BURPEE.
y. m. carcE.
TIIOS. S. MORGAN
E. M. BRUCE & CO.,
233 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.,
Bankers and Cotton Factors,
DEALERS EXCLUSIVELY IN
Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Coin,
Uneerrcnt Money and Coif on.
I HAVE this day taken into partnership.
Thomas S. Morgas. I do this jn recogni
tion and appreciation of his unimpeachable
integrity and high capacity as a business man.
and his long, satisfactory and successful man
agement of my commercial and financial af
fair*, and his fidelity to my interest/, (having
been with me almost without intermission for
more than fifteen years.) I do hereby com
mend him with confidence to the business
public. E. M. BRUCE.
tajC.MI papers in Georgia are rtquesled to
publish the above one month, and send hill to
K. M. Bruce k Co. [Sept. 30-4- 1m.
LEWIS L. ABBOTT. W. L. ABBOTT. B. F. ABBOTT.
GEORGIA, COWETA -COUNTY.
To all whom it may concern:
H ENRY A. NORTH having in proper form
applied to me for Letters of Administra
tion, de bonis non, ou the estate of Benjamin
W. North, late of said connty, deceased:
This is to cite all and singular the creditors
and next of kin of Benjamin W. North, to be
and appear at my office within the time allow
ed by law, and show cause, if any they can,
why Letters of Administration, dc bonis nan, j
should not be granted to Uenry A. North on
Benjamin W. North'* estate.
Witness my hand and official signature, Sep
tember 21. 136-5. B. II. MITCHELL, Ord'ry.
September 30-4-304.
GEORGIA, COWETA COUNTY.
To all whom it may concern:
O SBORN LIXCH having, in proper form.
applied to me for permanent Letters of
Administration on the estate of Alvin Chan-
lisb, means to keep the Federal Govern- j P ,an be carr,ed out lt W,H release and send
rnent and its enormous patronage and its ; to Northern market an immense amount
vast influences in the hand of the Radi-1 of P r0 P crt J which is ^ t,ttd U P in the dIer ’ ‘ ate ° f Sa ‘ d COUntJ ’ decMSed:
ca ] s | South by reason of the former strict and
The San Antonio (Texas) Herald, fur-1 technical construction of the law.
Hood: Last
*tio not possess legal attainments, and au
thority be given to the Legislature to
provide reasonable salaries to these offi
cers, It may also be necessary to create
the office of County Solicitor.
It is a mistake idea, which we hope
is exploded, that any good, clever and
intelligent citizen, unread in the law, can
make a good Judge. No one can repre
sent properly a case in Court unless he be
a man of legal learning, and hew can he,
whose dutv it is to render a correct legal
decision in the same case, do so unless he
were far bettor off, in a pecuniary point
of view, last year than at this time. Then,
everything was enormous high, but mou-
ey such as it was, was easily earned or
borrowed ; now prices are low, with mon
ey scarce and labor not in general de
mand. Her case is not an isolated one in
this city or in the Southern Star's. How
she regrets having no master to provide
for her in sickness and health and relieve
her mind of the thousand perplexities
that harass her. We could do nothing
for her and she went of! almost broken
uishes'this item about Gen. Hood: Last ; Negro Testimony.—In a case where;
week Gen. John B. Hood returned from ; several negroes were charged with gam- j
his short tour np in the mountains to bling. one cf the party was called upon Sept. 21, 18<>5.
our city again. He, however, made only ‘ tp testify what he knew of the matter.—
This is to cite all and lingular the creditors
and next of kin of Alvin Chandler, to be and
appear at my office within the time allowed by
law and show cause, if any they can, why per
manent administration should Dot be granted
to Osborn Linch oa Alvin Chandler's estate.
Witness mv hand and official signature, this
B. II. MITCHELL, Ord'ry.
cpt. 30-4-SOJ.
a short stay in our midst. He has now | There were five others besides himself, GEORGIA, COWETA COUNTY.
To all whom it may concern:
M ARY E. BROWN having in proper form
applied to iae for permanent Letters of
Administration on the estate of Joseph M.
gone out on the Cibolo to spend a month ; and jj e swore that four of the five were
or so with histriefids. His health which,! guilty, but pointing to his friend said he
has been quite feeble of late, is somewhat W as not. His friend was immediately
improved. He will probably be with us placed upon the wituess stand and con- Brown, late of said county, deceased:
again towards the last of September. At v [ c t e d the former witness. Goin" out of* Tbis to cite a!1 and 5in f ul * r th e creditors
a meetiug of citizens in £«an Antonio, on t h c court room the first witness remarked j aQ d appear at my offiee within the time allow-
the 16th, to inaugurate means to provide he didn’t care a dam for the fine and * ed b J ‘ aw and show cause, if any they can.
a homestead in Texas for Gen. John B. j punishment, but after he had swore to a : granieYITSy tBroimo? Joseph"!?! Brown !
Hood, it was recommended that a sub- J ain lie to clear his friend, that friend j estate,
hearted and despairing of assistance — scription for that purpose be opened • turned right round and convicted him.—;
Mont. Lodger. , every coamy in the State. ) Reliable witness indeed.—M.tcon JmrnaV September 30-4-30<L 1 *
ABBOTT & BROTHERS,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
AND
WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALERS
IN
PRODUCE l.\D GROCERIES,
Wliltoliall Str«,
ATLANTA, GA.
Wc keep constantly on hand and for sale a
good stock of
Flour, Corn,
Bacon, Lard,
Sugar of all grades,
Coffee, Mackerel,
Pepper, Spices,
Soda in Ke^s,
Tobacco, Lime,
Cheese, See.
September 30-4-Cm.
PLACE! TO IVUY
-6-tv -nv oj
MORGAN & CO.,
DEALKBS IN'
m ly m IIT W it 1
Parlor Sets, Chairs,
Bedsteads, Gilt Frames,
*V7> <■*? '*>
1
fjvr
I l? A A)
1if I Af.3 f
AND
AT
WEI0M
OR
IS AT
Black’s Store,
XVlutelial! Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
Bushels Dried Peaches
WANTED,
For which the highest Market
Price will he paid.
JACOB BLAf K.
Sept. 3£>-4-3:n.
1*. P. PLASH & CO.,
RECEIVING, F33WARDIN3
AND
dSION-
Careful and prompt attention given to buying
anil selling
COTTON, REAL ESTATE.
AND
FILLING ALL ORDERS.
Agents for Selling Products from Cotton
and Oil Factories.
Also, Agents for selling
PRESERVED FRUITS,
Pickles, Meats, <fcc., 4c.,
In Sealed Cans and Bottles,
AT ‘WKO&SSAXiE,
Atlanta. Oa.
Sept. 20-4-.':m.
M. LYNCH & CO.,
BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS,
• —AND—
SEWS S3AS.EES,
WHITEHALL STREET, ATLANTA, GA.,
S£S~Two Doors West of Tost. Office.
September 30-4-3m.
Mat trasses,.
Bureaus,
Wardrobes,
Wash Stands,
Pictures, Shades,
White Lead,
Linseed Oil,
Ben?ine,
Tables. Safes, Japan Varnish,
Lounges, Patty, <kc.,
All Sizes Window and Looking Glass.
Corner Peach Tree and Marietta Str*., up stairs,
ATLANTA, GA.
Sc;.‘.ember 20 4-1 m.
I. Y. SAWTELL,
GS06S3T 1-. COMMISSION
MERCHANT,
Corner Whitehall and Kitchel Streets,
Keeps constantly on hand a large and choice
assortment of
EaLIILY groceries*
ALL KI-XD3 OF
bought and sold at reasonable prices.
September 20-4-2rj.