The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887, April 14, 1866, Image 1

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Oje Bctoium Jerald PTBLISHED VKWLY EVEBY SATURDAY BY J A. WELCH. j. C. WOOTTF.S, '• WOOTTEN&WELCH, Pr opr ietors. J. c. WOOTTKN, Editor. THE NEWNAN HERALD. TERMS or SCBSCBIPTIOS : One CODY one rear, payable in advance, $3.00 . ‘ u “ . i r>o One copy six One copy three months, “ ••••“ 100 (Fifty numbers complete the Volume.) Letter from Ex-Governor Harris. Wc find in the Nashville Union and American the following letter, which wc copy at the request of some of our subscribers : Cordova, Mexico, March 2, 18G0. Mr Dear Sir : * * * * * * * I am receiving by each American steamer an immense number of letters from all parts of the United States which my whole time, if devoted to it, wonbT" not be sufficient to answer. These letters show the existence of a lively interest in colonization in Mexico, and especially in the valley of Cordova. Several of the last steamers.have brought large numbers of immigrants from the United States. The lands owned by the Government in this valley have all been taken by the immigrants recently arrived, and were not sufficient to supply the demand ol those already here; but there are a great many large and valuable estates in the val ley, and some of them adjoining the colo ny, which can be purchased of private parties on accommodating terms. We purchased yesterday, for some"friend8 re cently arrived, an excellent hacienda of of 3150 acres, adjoining the lands of the colony at $3,20 per acre, one-tlurd cash, rid the balance on a credit of one and two years, without interest. There is a considerable amount of sugar and coffee already growing upon the estate* and a lair proportion of laud cleared and in cul tivation, with a number of Mexican hou ses on the place. In view of these id- vantages, I think these gentlemen have done better in purchasing than they would have done to have purchased land from the Government, as I did, and begin in the woods with houses to build and farms to open, etc. The Government lias lands in other and desirable localities of the two classes, i. c. the public lands proper, which have never passed from the hands of the Govcrn- ouent, and those that have passed'into private hands, been reduced to cultiva tion, and subsequently acquired by the Governmont. Lands of the first olass are given to immigrants in limited quantities for actual and immediate settlement.— Those of the latter class are sold to them in limited quanties for the same purpose, at very low rates and on a credit. The lands upon which the colony is planted in this district, are of the latter class. They were were sold to us at$l per acre, payable in five equal annual instalments, with six per cent, interest. [ find all immigrants arriving at Vera Cruz anxious to settle in this valley. It is natural tii.ft they should, as it is a beau tiful, rich, hcaiti.’V and highly productive country, very well timbered and watered by several bold, clear, rushing mountain .streams, and a large number of most ex^ cellent free stone springs, with a large number of Americans have already set tled here. But those who settle in this valley hereafter, will have to make their ovru arrangements with private par ties for lands; and my advice to those who wish to do so, is for ten or twenty fa-ieirtcss to unito, send an agent \?ith au thority and the means to purchase fcnds for them, or to examine the lands owneu by the Goverament in other localities, and determine where the colony is to set tle, and make all necessary arrangements preparatory to the coming of the fami lies. The purchaser of private property is entitled to all the benefit of decrees foe the etteottrxgeiiYect (<af,colonization. The year is divided here into the rainy and dry season. The former beginning in May and ending in October. We gen erally have bright and beautiful mornings during the rainy season, though about one, two, throe, or four o’clock in the evoEtcg you may calculate with certainty upon a -shower, if not a heavy rain. Du ring the dry season, we have occasional light showers, but not often. The best time for planting nearly all •crops here is May, June and July. To bacco is planted in September, November and December. The best time for fami- Jies to move to this country is in the dry -.season, and the earlier in that season the better. It gives time to prepare shelter before the rainy season, and get ready for a crop.. Families moving here should bring rwith them their bed clothing and a few fCollin’s axes. Farming implements can .be procured here with less trouble and as .cheaply as they can be trausported from that country. ' Good Spanish and Mexican males aod horses (not equal in size and form to the American, yet rety Lardy, .and servicea ble.) can be bought here at from fifty to .one hundred dollars; well broke oxen, .and as fine as I have ever seen anywhere, *t one hundred dollars a yoke. In the market at Cordova beef is worth ten to twslFe cents a libra, (which is a little more than the American pound); corn nne dollar per bushel j flour eight to ten dollars a hundred; sugar twelve to twenty eects j lard twenty-five to thirty-seven and a halt cents a dozen. Fruits and vegeta bles abundant and very low. Dry goods and hardware, of almest every description, abundant at about double what they would have cost in the I nited States before the war. ^ egetation is always green here, and stock does very well the whole year with out being fed. * * * * There is an ample sufficiency of ^ood timber here for building purpose, but very few nulls; hehce, lumber is worth from 56 to $8 per hundred feet. Most of tha Spanish houses are built of rough ston* VOL. I.] I'TEWjST.A.Isr, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, APRIL 1-4, 1S66. [NO. 32. and mortar, covered with tile. The In- j dians live in little bamboo huts covered with long grass. I don’t remember to i have seen a brick house in any part of Mexico, though brick are as easily made here as elsewhere. The fences here are generally stone or hedge. The woods are filled with deer, squirrels, pheasants, and, I regret to add, wild cats and panthers; and Col. White, (one of the surveyors,) tellsmethe monkeys evineed a disposition to take his camp a few evenings since.— The wild parrot is seen in the forest every day. .You may assure the ladies that I have seen but one spake, only two or three tarantulas, and no centipede in all my travels though Mexico, and the flies and musquitos are not half so abundant here as they are in the United States, but I don’t choose to say anything about fleas. We have to rely upon the native Indian clrieflly for labor. They are capable of making excellent laborers, but they have a great aversion to work. We pay them 50 cents a day, they finding themselves, and work by the task. Labor can be ob tained more cheaply in other portions of Mexico, and is generally obtained here at lower rates, but at this time the construc tion of the railroad in this immediate vi cinity has caused such a demand for la bor that it cannot be obtained for less. Having taxed you with this rather lengthy though plain and unvarnished statement of the leading features of this valley, I will not prolong it to tell you of the infinite variety of delicious fruit*, gaudy and fragrant flowers, of the beauties or profits of a coffee plantation. Visit me a few years hence and you shall see aad enjoy them. Very respectfully, your friend, Isham G. Harris. A Wonderful Story. The New Hampshire, Iowa, Courier, makes the following relation of a father and daughter being lost in a prairie du ring the storm of Tuesday and Wednes day of last week: “ On Tuesday afternoon, the 13th inst., Mr. E. T. Runnion, of this town, visited Jacksonville, eight miles distant, on bu siness, and on his return called at the residence of W. E. Beach, one mile this side, to see his daughter, Mrs. P. B Weed. After supper, Mrs. W. resolved to accompany her father home, and hasti ly clad herself for the purpose. Leaving Mr. W T eed in the house, the father and daughter proceeded to where the horses were tied, and found them gone, but yet in sight. Pursuing the team for some distance, and finding it impossible to overtake it, Mr. Runnion implored bis daughter to return home, while he would make his way home alone. This she would not consent to unless he should accompany her and remain for the night. This was between seven and eight o’clock. The weather was then comparatively mild. They pursued their journey for a time without difficulty, but the night being quite dark, and the snow having oblite rated the track, they lost the road. Both were conscious they were lost, yet neither breathed it to the other, during the long hours from the departure from Mr. Reach’s house until 12 o’clock. The storm which bad been gathering now burst forth in fea -ful fury. Benumbed, lost upon the trackless waste, their steps followed by a pack ot "prairie wolves, whose quick, sharp bark frequently Tose above the nowling wind, each was consui° us their peril, yet encouraged the othC r > At last ex hausted nature cou'M do no more, both were tired out, and lay down beceath a drift of snow to watch for daylight. Mrs. Weed wore a beaver hoou, a scarf about her neck, a shawl, and blanket which she had thrown on her arm on leaving the house. The dawn came, and with it the fury of the storm increased. Mr. Runnion knew himself to be on Plumb creek, and resolved to strike for the nearest house, some two miles distant, but Mrs. Weed was so chilled that she could not walk, and after being carried some thirty or forty rods she begged her father to leave her and seek assistance. They sat down and calmly talked the matter over, she freezing all the while! To leave his child thus was a bitter thought. Knowing that she must perish unless succor came, he sought a plaoe to leave her; breaking the ice as he supposed of a little bayou, from which the water had receded, and making a cavity of some two feet in depth and sufficient length, he laid t her in it, wrapped the blanket and shawl about her and the scarf about her face. They hissed and parted. Then covering her with snow, marking the spot with willow twigs as best he could, he made his way to the house of Mr. Utley, about a mile from town, arriving there near 8 o’clock, a. m., (Wednesday), exhausted, with hands and face frozen, and nearly frantic. His story was soon told ; and although the storm was raging fearfully, and the hope of finding the poor girl, some three miles distant on the black, prairie, seemed like hoping against hope, a team was har nessed and Mr. Gilbert Vincent and Mr. M. M- Utley with Mr. Runnion, started for the rescue. Finding the place where the party had lain beneath the drift dur ing the night, they searched in vain un- til°about 3 p. m., passing almost directly over the spot where she lay. Finding the search vain, and Mr. Runnion fast fainting from exposure and exhaustion, with heavy hearts the party returned at evening. Mr. Runnion was taken to the house of Mr. Utley, where both Mr. and Mrs. Utley were assiduous in administer ing to his comfort. Thursday morning the storm had aba ted ; the sun shone clear aod bright over the driven snow ; the mercury had fallen from 14 the day before to 28 below zero. Mr. Runnion was brought home by 31 r. Utley, and his fearful story flew from house to house ; brave hearts and willing hearts were not wanting. Several sleigh loads of men, accompanied by Dr. Jlixer —who was careful to have restoratives— were swiftly on the search. The party reached the supposed locality where Mrs. Weed was left by her father, and the search commenced. Passing on either Eide of the creek, noting every track and mark and twig—with only the vague cer tainty that they might be near her, they persevered, guided alone by such instruc tions as Mr. Runnion in his eufebled and bewildered state _was able to give. At about 11 o’clock, one of the party, step ping directly over, fell through the snow into the cavity where she lay. She was found ! and—alive 1 A joyous shout rang out—overcoats and shawls weTe spread upon the snow, shovels procured from the sleigh, and she was raised, in sensible, from the snowy bed, where she had lain thirty hours ! Placed in a sleigh, the parfy drove with all speed to the nearest house—that of 3Ir. Jolly—where the skill and unremitting efforts of Dr. Mixer were crowned with success. We found that she had moved but little from where her father had placed her.— The ice upon which she had been laid had melted from her bodily heat, and when found she lay in the bed of the creek, nearly every part of her clothing being saturated with water. Her feet were doubtless frozen in the morning be fore her father left her, and to the provi dential fact of the coming in contact with the water may be ascribed, not mere ly the safety of her limbs, but the pre servation of her life.. Mrs. Weed was conscious while in her snowy prison house of day and night; heard the bleak winds as they moaned above her, her greatest fear being lest her father had, perished ; but hope never once forsook her; she heard her rescuers tramping above and around her, but was too weak to appraise them of her where abouts, and when found had been using all her remaining strength in endeavoring to dig to the surface, and had succeeded in removing the snow several inches from beneath the spot upon which the person finding her had providentially stepped. Mrs Weed has been married but a few weeks. Her miraculous escape from death, and her present unhappy condition, have caused a most profound sympathy in her behalf. • Anecdote of Gen. Hoke. We find the following piece going the rounds of exchanges: As the gallant Gen. Hoke, of North Carolina, was lately traveling on the cars from New York to Washington, on the seat in front of him sat a negro, and on that immediately opposite two United States officers, one a general. Soon after leaving New York, General Hoke saw a man who was walking through the car, pick up from the floor, near where the negro sat, what he, at that time, supposed to be a ticket, and when the conductor came round and was told by the negro that he had lost his ticket, but that he had bought and paid for one, and that he had a check for his baggage, the General was satisfied that the man he had seen walk through the car had found the negro’s ticket, and so informed the conductor, who accepted his statement, and went on marking the checks for other passengers. A change of conductors takes place between Washington and New York; and when the second one, ?n his round, was toid by the negro that he iiud l 081 his ticket, he said that was not his look out, and that he would have to be paid. Gen. Hoke then stated to him what he had told the first conductor; but instead of receiving and crediting the General’s explanation, he, in a pert and impudent manner remarked that neither black man nor white man should pass him without paying, and that the negro should pay or be put off. The General then rising from his seat, and shaking his forefinger in front of the conductors face, informed him firmly and deliberately, that for the past four years he had been fighting for the negro, and though defeated, he would not even allow one to be maltreated in his presence; that the negro had paid his fare and should go through. The con ductor slunked away, the negro came on to Washington, but the United States of ficer* never said a word. Stuttering Ben, who was toasting his shins, observing that the oil merchant was eheating a customer in some $il, call ed out to him, “ Jim, I can t—tell you how to sell t-twice as much oil as you do now.” “ Well, how ?” groaned Jim.— « F-fill your measure*.” According to M. Babinet, a French savant, the coming summer will be very hot. All the springs, he states, will be dried up, for when there is no snow there are no fountains. It is the snow alone which moistens the earth internally, Bain water does not penetrate sufficiently, be ing carried off rapidly by evaporation, except in wooded distriets. An Irishman, by way of illustrating the horrors of solitary confinement, stated that out of one hundred persons sentenced to endure this punishment for life only fifteen survived it. A Scrap of War. KIRBY SKITIl’s INTENTION TO ATTACK CINCINNATTI. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Ga- zetto furnishes that paper with the fol lowing report of General Kirby Smith, which shows it was his intention to cap ture Cincinnati, if he had not been stop ped : Hd. Qr’s. Army of Kentucky, 1 Lexington, Ky., Sep. 3, 1862. j General : On the 30th ult., our for ces met and repulsed the enemy in three seperate engagements. General Clebnrn’s division which was in the advance, about six miles from Richmond, early in the day, drove him from the field before the remainder of my column was brought in to action. Falling back about three miles and a half, and receiving reinforcements, the enemy again made a stand and were again driven ftom the field in confusion. My cavalry having been sent to the ene my’s rear, I could not pursue rapidly, and he formed his line of battle in the out skirts of Richmond, his force- having swelled to the number ef 10,000, General Nelson commanding. Within an hour after their column was utterly routed and retreated in eonfasion. The cavalry came in upon their flank and scattered them in all directions, captur ing all their artillery and trains. Not a regiment escaped in order. The enemy’s loss during the day was about 1400 killed and wounded, and 4000 prisoners. Gen. Miller wa3 killed, Gen. Nelson wounded, and Gen. Manson taken prisoner. The remnant of the Federal force in Kentucky is making its way, utterly demoralized, to the Ohio. Gen. Marshall is in communi cation with me. Our column is moving upon Cincinnati. The country is rising in arms, and all that is needed to accom plish the object* of the campaign is to have our left in communication with your right. If I am supported and can he supplied with arms, 25,000 Kentucky troops would be added to my command Breckenridge and Buckner should be here. I am, General, very respectfully, Your obedient servant, E. Kirby Smith, Maj. General. To Gen. Braxton Bragg, Commanding Army of the West. A Plucky Officeholder. Paymaster General’* Office, f Washington, March 20. ( To Hon. E. H. Rollins, U. S. House of Representatives— Sir : I have just received a circular of the New Hampshire Union Club, request ing me to remit a sum equal to one and one-half per cent, of my annual salary, for the purpose of defraying the expenses of the approaching election. The circu lar states that such persons as go home to vote at said election are hereby excused from complying with this request. As I am not a voter, I must, according to this circuular, remit a sum equal to one and one-half per cent, of my annual salary. 1 am agaiust all measures which tend to destroy the purity of the ballot box, and this I regard as one. I have never given a cent for the purpose of bribing voters to vote contrary to their judgment, and never shall. Any man who sells his vote deserves to be disfranchised. I have watched the doings of Congress during the present session, and in so doing have noticed that you have acted with that dis- unionist, Thad. Stevens, and therefore I am led to believe you and your party par take of the cup which contains this es sence of disunion. Upon the principle that like begets like, I am led to believe this money, so raised, will be expended for the purpose *f elevating more disuuionists to power. As a stuuf nt the Constitution, I have been taught that a. 1 ] efforts made for the purpose of procuring powef an< ^ unfair means, are contrary to the spirit of liberty and justice. I do not believe that, during the present session, you acted in accordance with the will of the majority of the people of New Hampshire ; and I confidently hope that you and your disun ion copartnership will, at the next elec tion, meet with that rebuke you justly deserve. Your appeal for funds argues the weakness of your cause. I am yours, respectfully, E. B. Johnson. INDORSEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT. The independence exhibited by the writer in resisting the attempt to levy a tax upon him as an officeholder under the Federal Government, and his just state ment of correct principles, entitle him to respect and approbation. I, therefore, as an evidence of my appreciation of the qualities manifested in the letter, recom mend him to the Paymaster General for early promotion. Andrew Johnson. Executive JIansion, March 15. It is reported that 3Ie*srs. Harper & Bros, have ordered a whole ship load of white paper from Belgium; Ticknor & Fields, Boston, have ordered 5,000 reams in London. It has been estimated that at present prices good book newspaper can be delivered in New York, all duties and expenses included, at three-quarters the price of American paper of the same grade. Another estimate makes the dif ference in favor of foreign paper ten per cent., instead of twenty-five per cent. It is certainly demonstrated that paper can be imported at cheaper rates than our pa per makers are demanding. A Sherriff’s Attachment. "We have heard a good story, of whisk an Alabama Sheriff was the hero. Court was in session, and amid the multiplicity of business which crowded upon him at term time, he stopped at the door of a beautiful widow, on the shady side of thirty, who, by the way, had often bestow ed melting glances upon the aforesaid Sheriff. He was admitted, and the wid ow appeared; the confusion and fright which the arrival of her visitor occasion ed, set off to greater advantage than usual, the captivating charms of the widow M . Her cheeks bore the beautiful blended tints of the apple blossom, her lips resembled th£ rosebuds upon which the morning dew yet lingered, and her eyes were like the quiver of Gupid, and glances of love and tenderness, with which, they were filled, resembled arrows, only invited a ‘bean’ (pardon the pun) to do full execution. After a few common place remarks : “ Madam,” said the mat ter-of-fact Sheriff, “ I have aaattachment for you.” A deeper blush than usual man tied the cheeks of the fair widow; while the cfcwn- cast eyes were centered upon her beauti ful foot, which was half concealed by flowing drapery. “ Sir, the attachment is reciprocal.” For some time the Sheriff maintained an astonished silence, and at length he said: “ Madam will you proceed to court ?” “ Proceed to court ?” replied the lady with a merry laugh, then shaking her head, she said, “No sir, though leap year, I will not take’advantage of license therein granted for my sex, and therefore, I great ly prefer that you should proceed to court.” “ But madam, the justice is waiting.” “ Let him wait; I am not disposed to hurry matters in so unbecoming a man ner; and, besides sir, when the ceremony is performed I wish you to understand that I greatly prefer a minister to a jus tice of peace.” A light dawned upon the sheriff’s brain. “Madam,” said he, rising from his chair with solemn dignity, there is a great mistake here; my language has been misunderstood, the attachment of which I speak was issued from the office of Squire C , and commands me to bring you instantly before him to answer a contempt of court in disobeying a sub poena in the case of Smith yb. Jones.” We drop the curtain. Declaration of Independence. Politicians of the Sumner way of think ing make frequent appeals to the princi ples embodied in that famous instrument known as the Declaration of Indepen dence, to which our lespected fathers sub scribed their lives, their fortune and their sacred honor. It was a very credible document to have been written by a slave holder, “who traded in human flesh,” and to have been made good by the sword of a slaveholder who “ bought and sold hu man souls.” The Declaration denounced the King of England, among other things, for having “ erected a multitude of new officers"’ and for having “ sent hither swarms of officers to harrass our people and eat out their subsistence.” For having “ kept among us in time of peace, standing armies, without the con sent of our Legislatures.” For having “ affected to render the military independent of, and superior to the civil power.” “ For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us.” “ For imposing taxes upon us without our consent.” “ For depriving us in many cases of the benefit of a trial by jury.” “ For taking away our charters, abolish ing our most valuable laws, and altering, fundamentally, the forms of our govern ments.” This George III, who did all these things, must have been a magnificent vil lain.—Exchange. The Assassin of Lincoln. The declaration of the man in Louis ans, that he is the assassin of President Lincoln, is net an uncommon exhibition of the perversity of hetman nature. The books abound with instances of the con fession of offenses by persons who were known to be innocent of the acts they avowed. Nay, men who have been actu ally executed on confessions of crimes, which subsequent relations proved they could not have possibly committed.— There is no explaining these eccentricities but on the hypothesis of insanity. Yet, after all, is it not barely possible that the wretch in Louisville tells the truth ? Wilkes Booth wa3 never convic ted of the murder of President Liucoln. The body brought to Washington, and so clandestinely interred, was never indenti- fied a* the corpse of Wilkes Booth. We remember with what care the remains were covered from public vftw, and de posited in a spot whence they can never be reclaimed. Why all this mystery? These “ history doubts” we commend to the scrutiny of the Slant. Where is the man Baker ? He should “ work up ” the case. The Quincy, Fla., Commonwealth says that the citizens of Florida are raising money to defray the expenses of Major Gee’s defense before the 3Iilitary Com mission at Raleigh. The Macon Tel egraph says that if Georgians would also like to throw in their mite, the Governor of Florida wiil thankfully receive all sums that may be sent him for that purpose. J. T. REESE. DRUGS. November l&-Id-6nr. Who Wants Literary Aid? I WILL give Literary aid in any direction, for moderate remuneration. I will furn ish, at short notice. Essays on any snbject, Orations, Poetical Etrusions, Communications for the Pres3, and such like. All communica tions strictly private. Address, enclosing stamp, A. J. SMITH, January 20-6m. Newnan, Ga. JOHN S. BIGBY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, NEWNAN, GEORGIA, W ILL praetice regularly in Coweta and the surmw.ding counties, and in the United States District Courts for the Northern and Southern Districts of the State. flgy»Special attention given to the collection and securing of claims. Sept. 9-1—tf. J. D. WATSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, —AND— REAL ESTATE AGENT, NEWNAN, GA., F OR Selling, Renting or Buying Real Es» tate in Newnan, or in Coweta and ad joining counties. [Oct. 28-8-ly. VIRGINIA TOBACCO HOUSE. D ON’T purchase until von call at P. A. POWER’S TOBACCO HOUSE, where you will find him ever ready and willing to accommodate all ana give GOOD BARGAINS, Either at WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Tobacco, Cigars, Snuflf, Soda, Cheese, Crackers, Sugar, Coffee, Flour, Bacon, Salt, Sorghum Syrup, New Orleans Syrup, Spades, Shovels, Factory Cotton, Brooms, Water Buckets, And a general assortment of everything kept in a rum GROCERY. Go to the Tobacco House at once to purchase. February 3-22-tf. THOMAS BARNES, Depot Str., Newnan, Ga., Will repair neatly and promptly <29H<s>c&Qx5B0 —AND— September 30-4-ly. HATS t CAPS! J. M. HOLBROOK, W OULD mo3t respectfully inform the pub lic and hi3 old patrons that he i3 now permanently located at hi3 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 low for Cash at wholesale and retail. Nov. 25-lv-12tn. J. M. nOLBROOK. F". S. WELCH, Publisher*. Rates of Advertising. Advertisements inserted at $1.50.per sejnaro- (of ten lines or space equivalent,) for first inser tion, and 75 cents-for egck subsequent in sertion. - Monthly or. semi-mcnllrly. .advertisements inserted attire same-rates as farnew advertise ments, each'io^erUon,- , r Liberal arrangements will be made with those advertising by the quaiter or year. All tEahsienfa^veitismeats must he paid .*6r-whcujiand*d in. The money for" advertiscing due after th» first insertion. i. J. EORCII & CO., ' — *- • ' ! •** : * Have just received at J. M. DODD’S oW‘ stand, South- West Comer Public Square-, NEWNAN, GEORGIA, A new and large supply ot READY MADE £ TftTHTNG IX Jb JL JLJL JL JLY U y A3VTT LADIES' and GENTLEMEN’S , All varieties of CHILDREH’fl SHOSS, BOYS & GENTLEMEN’S » NOTIONS, Of all kinds; jswstiv, HOOP & BALMORAL SKIRTS; CtOAKS, CORSETS; HARD-WARE AJMX> CUTLERY. Also a large and full supply of all kinds of GROCERIES & CROCKERY. J. M. MANN, \ Salesmea J. A. HUNTER, / Newnan, Ga. R. T. HUNTER, 1 Salesmen JOS. NALLS, . / for Lorch&Go. A. M. WOOD, 1 Salesmen W. MARTIN, /Franklin, Ga. Sept. 16-2-tf. PHffiNIX TIN SHOP, —AT THE— TIN TREE. W. M. Reynolds W OULD respectfully inform everybody and the balance of mankind, that be is now prepared to furnish anything and every thing in the way of STOVES & TIN YVS.BE, - :;i At the very lowest prices and shortest notice. Best Patent of Family Cook Stoves, from $25 to $50, aceordiDg to sizef and outfit. L Tin Ware reduced 25 per eent. under 1 any other market. ? Come, come everybody, and buy 1 I will duplicate bills bought at wholesale in any market in the Union since the war. January 2Q-2h-7m. DEALERS IN FURNITURE, •Waitresses. . r * __ Looking Glasses, Gilt Frames, Pictures, , Window Glass, Carpets, &e., Ac., Marietta-;^., Atlanta, Ga. ONE DOOR FROM PEACH-TREE. Feb. 10—23—3m.