Newspaper Page Text
(ii!i s isinuntm HOmilit.
rcr.r. uk» tt;:ekly f.veuy Saturday nv
3. C. WOOITKX, 3. A. WEI.Cn.
BOOT FEN & WELCH,
Proprietors.
J. WOOTTEN, Editor.
thru- or srsscRtrTiox :
One copy o:ic year, payable in advance, $ LOO
One copy six moot u ".50
One copy three moa hr, “..... 1.25
One copy oac mon!ii....“ 11
Club'of thrcd i*o»ics one year, 10 00
Club of five copies one year 15.00
(Fiftv numbers complete the Volume.)
to ftolife pnvs, flpinilto, tawnm*,
n.i+’i ■—l»» hi m "'T iz
xh3 Closing Year.
nv geouc:: i». prentice.
>i;- midnig’it’s hoiy hour, and silence now
Is brooding like a gcntla. spirit o'er
The still pulseless wbrld, -11 irk 1 on tlirwinds
The bell's deep tonc3 are swelling, ’tis the knell
O' the departed year. No funeral train
Is sweeping past: yet, on the.stream and wood,
■With melancholy light, the moonbeams rest,
Like a pale, spotless shroud: the air is stirred
As bv a mourner’s sigh; and on yon cloud,
Tint floats still and placidly through Heaven,
The spirits of the Seasons seem to stand—
Youn ,T Spring, bright Summer, Autumn’s
solemn form
In painful cadences., that comes abroad
Like the far wind harp’s wild touching wail,
A melancholy dirge o’er the dead year,
Cone from the earth forever.
’Tis Jt time,
For memory arid for tears. Within the deep,
Still cl ambers of the heart, a spector dim,
Whose tones are like the wizard voice of Time,
Heard from the tomb of age^'points its cold
A^id solemn finger to the beautiful
And holy visions that have passed away,
And left no shadow, of their loveliness
<):i the dead waste of life. Tint Specter lifts
The coffin lid of Hope, and -Toy, and Love,
And bending mournfully above the pale,
Sweet forms that slumber there, scatters dead
flowers
O'er what has passed to nothingness.
The year
lias gone, and with it many a glorious throng
Of happv dreams. Its mark on each brow,
Its shadow ia each heart. In its swift course
It inavCl its sceptre q,er the beautiful,
And they arc not. It laid its pallid hand
F ion Lhe strong man : and the haughty form
Is fallen and the flashing eye s diuij
p lr<i'l the hall of revelry, where thronged
The bright and joyous; and the tearful wail
Of stricken ones is heard, where crest t!lC Song
And reckless shout resounded. I passed o'er
The liatt’e plain, where swor.’, and spear, and
shield
Flashed in the light of midday; anil the
strength
Of serried hosts is shivero'd, and the gras*,
Orcen from the soil of carnage, waves above
The finished and mouldering skeleton. It
came,.
And faded like a wreath of mist at eve;
Yet, ere it melted in the viewless air,
It heralded its millions to their home
la the dim land of Arc.mis.
Fierce rpiluf of uicWgla'S ami syrnet—trim*
power
Can 'stay him in his silent course, or melt
His iron heart to pity? On, still on.
He presses, and forever. The proud bird,
T ic condor • fthc AmffSq that can soar
Through Heaven's unfathomable depths, or
The fury of a Northern hurricane,
And bathe liis plumage i.i the thunder's home,
1 itrls his broad wings at nightfall, and sinks
down
To rest upon his mountain crag; but time
Knows not the weigh; of sleep or weariness.
Ami irLiits deep darkness has no chain to bind
liis rushing pinion.
Hcvolutions sweep
O’er eaitli, like troubled visions o'er the breast
Of dreaming sorrow, cities rise and sink
Like bubbles on the water! fiery isles
Spring blazing from the ocean, and go back
io their mysterious caverns : inoimtinus rear
To II aven their bold and blackened cliffs, and
bow
Their tail beads to the plain ; and empires rise,
(lathering the strength ol hoary centuries,
And rush down like an A!nine avalanche,
Startling the nations; and the very stars,
I on bright and burning blazonry of God,
Glitter awhile in their eternal depths,
And, like the Pleiad, loveliest of their train,
Shoot lrom their glorious spheres, and pass
away
To darkle in the trackless void : yet Time,'
1 une, the tomb builder, bolds his tierce career,
Hark, stern, all pitiless, and tarries not
Amid the mighty wrecks that strew his path
l0 sit and muse like other conquerors,
Upon the fearful ruin lie has wrought.
VOL. I ]
isrjiFW'jsr.A.isr, Georgia, Saturday, dec. so, isgs.
[NO. 17.
From the Richmond Enquirer.
Graphic Description of the 'Character
of the Emperor Napoleon.
Character of the Empress Eugenia.
T:ie lust steamer brought the news
that a mysterious telegram received at
the Exchange, at Frankfort, had sudden-
13" caused great consternation among the
rich hankers of that centre of continental
finance, and produced a serious full in
man}" securities. It soon became known
that the dispatch spoke of a paralytic at
tack of the Fr- nch Emperor. The news
itself—which did not claim to be official
—r.ir.}’ have been true, or it may have
been mere speculation of* the kind which
once sent Lord Cochrane, justly or unjust
ly, into exile and disgrace; hut its im
mediate and marked importance which
makes the peace of all Europe, depend on
the health of single man. Whatever we
may think of the morale of Louis Napo
leon, it cannot he denied that the hold lie
has obtained on the mind of the French,
and the control over his 5l’0,000 bayo
nets, gives him a weight and influence in
the affairs ol the world which was pruba-
bly never obtained before b)’ a parcanu
ruler. It may, therefore, he of some in
terest to learn fiom a person, whom per
sonal relations alone brought, for a time,
in near contact with the Emperor, how
he appeals within the circle of his family,
from a home lie can hardly" Le said to pos
sesp.
11 is health is apparently exeijent, and
more and more temperate, afid^iis benuti- gestion?,- and thus preparing the reception Tll8 Arrest of Semmes.
ful wife has never had true cause for jeaf of the British Minister by President John- The following are the charges and speci-
ousy. At fhe table, he eats moderately j Son, which was regarded at the time by j fictions wh:ch, after seven months unm-
j and drinks Very little, and when lie joins the people to whc*c representative it was terrupted peace, are brought against Ad
the private circle, after dinner, lie shows | addressed as so friendly, and fair, and
no little humor, and by far more affection j dignified.
than his impassive appearance and stern I Mr. Frederick Seward’s first inquiry
manner would seem to pfoni’se. latter he came fully to his senses, which
His married life is, on the whole, a bap- was a long time after the assassination,
py one. The Empress, who represents j was, “ lias Sir Frederick Bruce been pre- Chari
admirably and generally wears the purple sented?” He thought thatonly one night
with much grace and dignity, has given
him what lie most desired on earth, a son
and a successor. II is highest wish to
found a dynasty, is thus apparently secur
ed, and lie is grateful to her for the noble
gift? IIis domestic relations, are, there
fore, as satisfactory as they can well he in
a sovereign’s palace. The Empress, no
longer as fair and as winning as in tlic
early days of her splendor, is still beautiful
enough for a diadem, and^understands
thoroughly bow to enhance her claims by
exquisite taste afid imperial splendor. Un
fortunately, she lias all the peculiarities
of Spanish women belonging to the high
er classes of society, and these seriously
impair the power of her good influences
and the happiness of her husband. She
is utterly uneducated, ignorant, and ’by-
no means desirous to improve herself,
without any taste for higher thoughts or
feelings. Iler on!}’ delight is in trifling
conversation, in every new amusement,
and a most extravagant expenditure —
ller religion is a pure superstition and
bigotry; her confessor is her true lord
had passed since lie knew not what had
happened to him, and liis mind took un
matters just where it had lc:t them.
Mr. Seward’s mental experience during
his supposed assassination was :n its nature
so like that of his son, that it raises the
question whether this absence 6t conster
nation and observation of minute partieu-
uiirat Seffime?:
Charge and specification of a charge
preferred by the Secretary of the Navy
against Raphael Semmes, late comman
der of the rebel steamer Alabama.
- violating the usages of
war.
Specification.—In this, that on or
about the 19th day of June, eighteen
hundred and sixty-four, off the entrance
of the port of Cherbourg, in France, the
said Raphael Semmes, then being in com
mand of the rebel steamer known as the
“ Alabama,” and an engagement having
taken place between the said steamer
. • Kearsage, ordered and permitted a white
lars is not common n circumstances ot c ’ *
.. i „ , • .... . r and master, and the only serious occupa-
ucn as seems to justify expectations or n ... 1
tion she ever engages in* is to intrigue
protracted life. It is true, the elasticity
of youth has disappeared, and signs of
tho riper-manhood of his fifty-six years
begin to show more clearly. The form
grows fuller, the carnage less firm, the
walk easier, the eye more languid than
ever, and the h iir disappears in all direc
tions. Rut. what is especially perceptible
hv those who are not in the way of seeing
the Etiip ror daily, is the general relaxing
of all the features. Still, these signs are
nothing hut what is noticed in every man
who has passed hi> fiftieth year, and has
ioil an .,<• live liiY with bodily and mental
peror can never have boon a handsome
man. not even in his youth; and ifow
that freshness and grace have long de
parted, liis app ar.ince'i.s in no.wise win
ning. The brow is too broad, the com
plexion too yellow, and the legs, half hid
under increasing corpulency", are too short
in proportion—a defect which is very-
striking when the Emperor walks out on
foot. The bluish grey eyes are more than
ever cast to the ground, and even when
raised the}- are only half unveiled. In
spite of these disadvantages, there are
noble qualities, great calmness, clearness
of thought and irresistible power of w ill
impressed upon that immovable face, that
looks as if were hewn out of granite
Phrenologists toll us, moreover, that the
breadth of the skull is extraordinary, and
indicates rare faculties,
famed for his skill in
against the Emperor for the benefit of
the Pope and the good of the Church.—
In public she is exclusively haughty, and,
therefore, little beloved by the people,
and still less by the army.
The little Prince Napoleon, the pride
and the joy of his parents, is a hearty,
blooming child, bearing all the signs of
full health and fine natural parts in his
carriage and language. The Emperor
is evidently exceedingly fond of the boy ;
he romps and plays with him and finds
great delight in scei ig him much by his
tured and "tlcveloped,.anti wtien he " rules
unexpected and not fully apprehended
peril. Mr. Seward was lying upon his
side, close to the edge of his bed, with his
head resting in a frame, which had been
made to give him ease and protect bis
broken jaw from pressure.
lie was trying to keep awake, having
been seized upon by a sick man’s fancy—
it was tkat if lie slept he would wake up i
with lockjaw, lie was brought to full j
consciousness by the scuffle in the passage
way, followed by the entrance of the as
sassin, and the cry of Miss Seward, “ Oh,
lie will kill my father! ’ Rut lie saw
nothing of his assailant until a hand ap
peared above his face, and then his thought
was, “What handsome cloth that over
coat is made of.” The assassin’s face then
appeared, and the now helpless statesman
only thought, “ What a handsome man.”
(Payne was a fine lookingjellow )
Then came a sensation as of rain striking
him smartly Upon one side of his face and
neck, then quickly the same upon the
other side, but he felt no severe pain —
This was the assassin’s knife. The blood
spouted. He thought “ My time has
come,” and filling from the bed to the
flag to he hoisted on board the said rebel
steamer, and took the opportunity of the
cessation thereby caused in the engage
ment, and of the trust reposed in him, to
make his escape from the said rebel steam
er, for the purpose of avoiding the actual
surrender of his person as a prisoner of
war, and the responsibilities thereby in
curred, and did subsequently, without
having been exchanged as a prisoner, en
gage in hostilities against the United
States.
[Signed.] Gideon Welles,
Secretary of the Navy.
Navy Department, Nor. 25, 1865.
Against which at rest, Adni’l Semuids
entered the following protest:
Sir :—On the 25th day of April, 18G5,
I was at Greensboro,’ N. C., in command
of a nnval brigade, forming part of the army
of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, and partici
pated in the capitulation between Gen.
Johnston and Major Gen. W. T. Sbennan,
commanding United States army of Noftli
Carolina. The condition of said capitula
tion on the part of Gen. Johnston, was
that the army under liis command should
cease all acts of war from the date of said
capitulation, April 2Gth, aforesaid. In
floor, he fainted. His first sensation of j consideration of which condition thus en-
returning consciousness was that he was t eret j j n to by Gen. Johnston, Gen. Sher-
drin king tea, anil that “it tasted good, j uiru stipulated that the officers and. incu
DRS. C. D. & I. E. SMITH,
H AVING associated in the practice of
Medicine, respectfully tender their servi
ces io the citizens of Newnan and country.—
Particular attention gi.cn to Surgery and
Obstetrics.
IfcjyMuy be found at nil hours, when not
professionally engaged, at their office on Brick
Front, South side of Public Square, third
door from Dodd's corner. [Oct. 21-7-tf.
X e w D rugs!!
rrUIE undersigned take pleasure in annonn-
j ring to the people of Newnan tlnd coun
try that they have just received a stock of
i'HESH PHTTGS.
B*3>„.\11 orders and prescriptions promptly
attended to. C. D. k I. E. SMITH.
December 1G-15-3L
DENTISTRY
J. W. WILEY, D. D. S.,
H AS returned to Newnan t* resume the
practice of
D entistry.
All Work Warranted.^©*
jjFaj“Offire on Depot street. [nor. 11-10-tf.
JOHN S. 13IGBY,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
NEWNAN, GEORGIA,
\X7H.L practice regularly in Coweta and
W the surrounding counties, and in the
United States District Courts for the Northern
and Southern Districts o' the State.
JtejjJ"";Special intention given to the collection
and securing of claims.
Sept. 9-1—tf.
J. C. WOOTTEN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
NEWNAN, GEORGIA.
BgfOffice in the Herald Office.'
Sept. 9-1-tf. - *
out on liis little pony, Grossed up in his
grenadier uniform, he excites the admira
tion of all men. Still, ^hcrc is occassional
sadnesss on liis smooth lirow, and few can seiousnc33
see him without asking what will, in God’s
Providence, be the fate of the tender child
that bears so great and so ominous a
In his youth,
ymnastics,
and
horseman,
the
lie very (
uiet.
es—the lx
st in
reviews
and
11 Europe—except
Meat hunts demand if, and evqn when he
Sir. Seward’s Account of the Attack
Upon Kira.
The American correpondcncc of the
London Spectator contain the following
account of a conversation with Scoretary
Seward and his son Mr. Frederick Seward,
j giving a description of their sensations
respectively at the time of the attempted
assassination :
Mr. Frederick Seward said that, upon
stepping from his bedroom out into the
passage, and seeing the nssasin, lie merely
wondered what lie was doing there, and
called him to account. On his resisting
the fellow’s endeavor to press into Mr.
Seward’s room, the assasisin drew a revol
ver, which lie presented at Mr. Frederick
walks out lie is apt to lean on the arm of, Seward’s head. What followed, it must
a companion.
liis mode of life is extrenicl}" regular.
be remembered, took place in a fe-w sec
onds. Mr. Frederick Seward’s first
He rises early and prises a large portion thought was, “That's a navy revolver,
of the day at liis writing table, a necessity j The man p>uilcd the trigger, hut the
j which is ca. i!}- explained in- a man who pistol only snapped, and his intended vic-
stiould return tb their-homes and there
asking and replying as to whether it would ! remain unmolested by the United States
be possible for him to recover. Ho could I authorities so long as they' observed the
not speak, but his eyes showed his con- j obligation they had entered into, and
and lie desired to
peak. obeyed the laws enforced where they re-
Thcy Lmught him a procelai.i tablet, on j sided. I have, this day, been arrested by
which he managed to write, “Give me the order of the Secretary ot the Navv •
some more tea. I shall get well.”—
And from that moment he has slowly
but steadily recovered both iu health and
strength.
Secretary of the Navy ;
had a guard placed over my house, and
have been informed that I am to proceed
to Washington, in custody, there to an
swer a charge preferred against me, pred
icated upon facts which took place ante-
! rior to the capitulation between Gen.
Johnston and Gen. Sherman. This being
a violation of the capitulation on the part
of Gen. Sherman, I respectfully make
this, my protest against said arrest.
[Signed] II. Semmes.
Mobile, Ala., Dec. 15, 1805.
Tde Dead of the Valley—Major
The Clerk of the House.—As our
readers have recently heard a good deal
of Mr. McPherson, Clerk of the United
States House of Representatives, we give
the following pencil sketch of him :
“ Mr. McPherson is a native of I’enn-
s\lvania — like Forney, Buchanan and
Cameron—a State prolific of great men,
you see—and was born in Gctt\sburg,
July 31, 1880. lie graduated at Penn- Thomas P. Taylor, who has just returned
sylvania College in 1848, and, like Mr. ■ from Yv inchester with the remains of
Colfax, became an editor. His health several Confederate soldiers, s.i3"s that the
failin
him from the close attention re
quired in liis profession, lie abandoned
newspaper life, and applied himself to
graves of ail who lie in the burying
ground of that town are known, a plot of f
the whole being in possession of Mrs.
J. D. WATSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
A N D
REAL ESTATE AGENT,
NEWNAN, GA.,
I jHitt Si-Uing, .Heating-or .Buying. Re»LEs-
^ tate in Newnan, or in Coweta a.nil ail-
!■•■ 1.....«‘ ■ ■ mi .... ' f* US-8 Zy——
HATS! CAPS 1
J. M. HOLBROOK,
W OULD most respectfully inform the pnb-
Iic-nnd his old patrons that he is now
permanently located at liis old stand on
WHITEHALL STREET,
(Sign of the Big Hat,)
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
With a large stock of well selected HATS
and CAPS, all of which will be sold lo>v for
Cash at wholesale and retail.
Nor. 25-13-12m. J. M. HOLBROOK.
WM. 13 13ERRY,
WARE-HOUSE
GENERAL AGENT,
FOB Receivin'^, Put
ting in Order and Siiip-1 ,o«
ping Co'ton to safe and Ary*
responsitde firms in A11-
fiista, New York or Liverpool.
Liberal advances arranged for parties
desiring it.
Newnan, Ga.. Sept. 23-3-lf. .
Andrew Jolinson and Ben. Butler.
I lie Nashville Runner records the fol
lowing anecdote from the political histo
ot the past:
(Li Monday evening succeed
’Baltimore Convention of 1£
concourse of people gathered
the residence of J. e. Brec
Washington. lie had
ior President by a portio
which had seceded fro
thereof, and the c-lle.
allude was assenih
receiving his acknowiei
course ot the evening speeches we
by Mr. Toombs, Mr. Davis and 31 r. \V.
L. Yancey. Towards the close, Mr. Ben
jamin I*. Butler, a secessionist of Massa
chusetts, was called for, and spoke ior
™ violently ™ vor
Southern rights than any of his prcdeces-
As lie concluded his harangue, the
Wiuer ot this brief reminiscence turned
to Andrew Johnson, who happened to he
s<anu.ng near at ham], and inquired what
he tuougnt ot it. 4 * Ry G—d. sir.’ he re
plied with eharacroris it* warmth. "I nevi-r
iixe a man to Le for me more than I’m For
myself’
agricultural pursuits. In 1858 he was Phil. \\ hilhams'and Mrs. A. If. H. Boyd,
sent to Congress from his district, and he ; These ladies arc also trying to raise funds
was re-elected to the37th Congress, where for the purpose of exhuming ainl collect-
lie served as chairman of the Library ing trie dead that lie in the neighboring
Committee, a position which he was cmi-, fields, before they shall he plowed over,
ne-ntly qualified to fill by reasnu of his ; and prepare a proper enclosure for their
not cuiy rules a great Empire, hut in lus j tirn thought “ ’liiat cap missed fire. ’ j extensive literary attainments. In 18o3, remains,
leisure hours translates Julius Ctcsar or IIis next sensation was that 01 conlu- j h e was -solicited to accept the appoint- ; In this pious work they should have
invents new kinds of guns. IIis German siou, and being upon the floor, resting j uien t of Deputy Commissioner of the the assistance of the people of the South,
education has made him thoroughly at upon his arm, which, like his father’s jaw | Revenue in the Treasury Department.— | whose dead lie scattered all about there,
d history; he speaks ! had barely re coved from a serious fracture j When tli
1 —the assassin had
ith fhe butt of the revolver—be put His j^jf lCH. He is a keen looking man of j ford county, Ya.j’will be appropriated. a.v
hand to his head, and finding a hole there, j middle stature and slightly built, with a aforesaid.
he thought, “ That cap .did uot uiiss fire ■ piercing eye, light hair, and somewhat j We would thank Southern papers to
38th Congress assembled, he 1 Funds for the purpose sent to this office,
felled him to the floor! Was elected Clerk of fchejHuuse by a vot® j or toAIajor Taylor, at Forest Depot, Bed-
e revolver—be put his j^f Hois a keen moking man of i ford county, Ya.j'will be appropriat
after all.”
Then he became insensible, and remain
cd so for two days oT more. His fifst
Scotch form of head and face.’
Cup} the above—Lgnehbnrg I irgiuiun.
A PENCHANT FOR ('OLLARDS Our^ A COMET A ISIBLE.— Bela’s COtliet.
• " indication of returning consciou-ness was! readers will remember how severely Cov. *hat is said to he now visible to the 11a-
the question, “ Have you not got the ball Brown was joked twelve months since ^ed eye, may be seen in the neighborhood
out ? ’ after which he fell off again into a -because lie carried off his coliards and l ^ ie constellation Pegasus, and close to
comatose condition,. which was of long ! turnips and various qther garden “ sass,” i bright star Marah, one of the bright
continuance. | from Millcdgeviile, when Sherman was j luuaioanes which form the well known
On the very afternoon of the day when ' making his raid, and a large amount of i ! ' < I uare Pegasus. It is pursuing a
Mr. Lincoln was assassinated, Mr. Fred-. State ordnance stores fell in the hands of south-easterly c-Ourse, and will cross the
m t
and
The o:t crick Seward,who was Assistant Secretary j the enemy. Well, a few weeks since this
Nap"leon had led. when 1 oung, a reckless, j of 8tute, had asked liis father what prepa- j honorable ex-Governor was negotiating
lawless Hie. is uot founded upon truth,' ratiou should be made for the presentation . for a heautiful house and lot in Atlanta
nor
TIIOMAS BARNES,
Depot Str., Newnan, Ga,,
Will repair neatly and promptly
-AND
<£T<o&HtPiy
September 30-4-Iy.
new bakery.1
Fresh FI read!
The undersigned is prepared to furnish
FRESH BREAD EVERY MORNING.
If liberally patronized, customers canMiave
bread.sent to them before breakfast each day.
Oct. ‘28-8-3m. W. B. CHAPMAN.
COOK STOVES
d XI cl
T i/i ~W are.
there ativ permature decay or fear- of Sir Frederick Bruce, which was to take with Mr. Root; he complained of the j *T om .. Ua on ^ eighteen
’ | miliums of miles.
ful secret disease kuown to exist in him. place the next day. Mr. Seward gave' high,price of the property. But whil
that could be attributed to youthful ex- him the points of a reply to le made to looking about the premises, Mr. Root 3Ir. Greeley is not respectful toward
travagance. This does not imply that he Sir Frederick, and he laid the outline of took him into the large fine garden, where! J 1 '" 3 brother Republican, Brown'ow, whom
has always led a truly pliilosphic lite;; the* speech upon the President’s table, was a luxuriant growth of coliards. As
his fondness 'T cards and women are too and, as I have previously informed my! soon as the Governor saw these, he said,
well known, but it is Certain that since readers, Mr. Lincoln that afternoon
bis elevation to ilic throne lie Ins become' out the reply, adopting Mr. Seward
he alludes to as ‘‘a Reverend blackguaird ;
styled Governor.” Get your bath ready,
i Horace, for the “Reverend blaekgnard ”
on wrote “I will take the place, it is cheap enough. : w iH be after joa with his sludge bucket,
trd’s SUg- —Rome Courier. 1 for this Boston Co*t.
W. M. noynolds
WJ OULD respectfully . inform everybody
Vi and the balance of mankind, that fie is
now prepared to fnruish anything" and every
celestial squ ire about the middle of this j tiling in the way of
month. It will continue to approach the '. mrTy
e*rth until the end of February, when its ; ^ A AAit ELklfif
At the very lowest prices and shortest notice.
Best Patent of Family Cook Stoves,
from $25 to according to size
and ohtfit-
Tin Ware reduced 25 per cent, under
any other market.
Corne, come everybody,and boy!
I will dupHeaCe bills iioogfre at wholesale iu
any market in the Union since the war.
4sgJ“Sbop at present Hire' - doors from Pub
lic Square, on Depot street. [dec
liuiirinii IBtroUt.
F. S. WELCH,
- Publisher.
Rates of Advertising.
Adf'ertrsefnents inserted nt $1.50 per square
foftewiifiCs or space equivalent.) for first inser
tion. and 75 certfs for ench subsequent in
sertion.
Monthly or semi-monthly advertisements
inserted at the same rates as for new advertise
ments, each insertion.
Liberal arrangements will b« ,mnde with
those advertising by the quaiter or year.
All transient advertisments. must be paid
for when handed in.
The money for adrortiscing due after the
fTrst insetli'ort.
T
C
l
l!
J. LORCII & CO..
Have just received at J. M.
DODD’S old stand, South-
West Corner Public
Square
NEWNAN, GEORGIA,
A new and large supply of
REABY MABE
p T AT TT T TVT P
tlJbU 1 n I i\ (X,
STIFLE GOODS,
0
LADIES and GENTLEMEN’S
iiiiiia©©!®!!
All varieties of
CBZ&aBLES’S SHOES,
BOYS & GENTLEMEN’S
NOTIONS
Of all kinds;
HOOP & BALMORAL SKIRTS |
CLOAKS, COftSETS;
HAED-W^RE
Ajvd
-CUTLERY.
Also a large and full supply
of all kinds of
GROCERIES Sl CROCKERY,
J. M. MANN, I Salesmen
J. A. HUNTKI?, / Nc.vti-'in,- (Ja.
It. T. HUNTER, 1 Salesmen
JOS. NALLS,, j-for Lorch&Co.-
A. M. WOOD, ) Salesmen
W. MARTIN, /Franklin, Ga.
Sept. lG-2-tf.
E. M. BRUCE & CO,
BANKERS
—AND—
COTTON FACTORS,
AUGUSTA, GA.,
E. F. METCALF &c CO.,
COMMISSION
A2TD
FORWARDING MERCHANTS,
SAVANNAH, GA.,
E. M. BIIUCE, MORGAN & CO.,
Forwarding Merchants,.
APA LACIIICCLA, FLA.
Advances made on Consignments made fo» |
WATTS, CRANE & CO., New York,
WATTS, GIVEN k CO., New Orleans
W. C, WATTS & CO., Liverpool, Eng.,
by < ither of the above Houses.
October 2--7-3m.