Newspaper Page Text
®ri-W**Mg ®ohw»,
Saturday Morning, Oct’r ( ( 1880,
may soon be amicably adjusted. Wo
suggest a conference botween tho Con.
tral Executive Oommitte^pf ^be two
early
aU is
can
work and enlighten ‘the people
OH "the weightier matters of the law.”
FOB PRESIDENT.
XfifH 8£tL of Tennessee.
Edward Evfltett of Mass.
ELECTORAL TICKET.
For the State at large.
HON. WILLIAM LAW.
HON. B. HThILL.
_ The Cleveland Herald sa;
Minnesota will have a grain si
year of at least twelve million
wjrgiBiMMruf muu> mtfwWHStwdffiw
not a mile o£ ...
her borders. Most of
ultural districts, now
are reriiote' from na
Our exchanges are fill
ALTERNATES.
hon. Hiflfes Holt,
HON. GARNET ANDREWS.
2d, -
3d'Si*
For oagressloaat Districts.
1st District.—S. B. SPENCER. ■
MARCELLOS DOUGLAS.
L. T. DOYAL.
W. F. WRIGHT.
J.R. PARROT.
H. Pi BELL.
IRA E. DUPREE.
LAFAYETTE LAMAR.
4th
6th
nr
8th
Hon. Bob. HUl in Columbus,
Ben. Hill spoke in Columbus on Sat
urday night Sept. 22. “In reply to
question of J. A. Jones, Esq., he fully
endorsed Bell in hi* position on the abolition
of slavery in the District, of Columbia. He
Baid: "I tfn.LT mme with John Bill.
Abb tod sin sued?”
We clip the above from one of our ex-
changes.
We like Mr. Hill forh is boldness and
independence. Ifheisinfhvor of abol
ishing slavery in the District of Columbia,
Why not say so, out and out T He is a
candidate for Elector on the Bell and
Everett ticket. The sentiment above
published is his own, and he has a per
fect right to express himself thus. We
hope our Bell and Everett friends in
this locality will face the music, honest
ly and fairly. Mr. Bell, the Know
Nothing candidate for President has
favored the'”abolition of slavery in the Dis
trict qf Columbia." Mr. B. H. Hill
dorses this pondon. What next ! Peo
ple of Georgia, beware of such: a party
Intel.
and of such sentiments.—Atlanta
Washington and Everett.
The New York correspondent of the
Boston Post says:
The
whiol
tions
Was!
just
selfish labors pf the scholar and states
man, dPwBbm we are all proud, and
whose successful devotion to the pur-
iVernon has challenged
iht
.h'depl
accounts of tho condition of
waters for tho'WatispoHlbn 6f this' Im
mense surplus. On the Minnesota riv
er, which drains' the’ central portion of
her present cultivated Area, navigation
Uhow entirely suspended, if wb except
alittie Steamhr pltfhk between St. Paul
And SUakopeei a distance of about thir-
milcs. On her great outlet, the Mis-
sippi, scarcely a steamer makes a
regular trip without lying upi6n sand
iHCfbr'hours and even days, and this
_ jfore the mkin movement has com
menced, ana when boats are not loaded
to one-tenth their capacity.
Gen. Lane Answers-Hc Won’t Rebel.
In the course of Gen. Lane’s ‘ speech
at Indianapolis, Indiana, on the 17 th
Sept., he was asked the question.
"What if Old Abo is elected?” Gen.
Lane promptly replied: 1 ' .
“Well, I say that If he should be
elected, we will' keep right on battling
“or. the principles of the National Dem-
fcrationarty. ", '' '•'"■i ■".
"Should he be elected b) his section
al j»arty,;.and on his sectional .platform,
we must content ourselves with the
thought that four years will quickly
pass; and at the expiration of that time
the people will rise in their might and
a man in the Presidential choir
Vfho will standby and to the principles
of the Constitution, as 'now expounded
■ rai
by the Supreme Court and hem by the
Breckinridge party. [Loud cheers.”]
$6F*Has not the Hon. W. H. Stiles
repeated the words contained in the
first half honr of his speech on Monday
last, fifty times in the last ten years ?—
Would it not he well for him to ivrite
and commit to memory a new begin
ning to his speeches ? Old nge is hon
orable in men. but it does sometimes
happen that the same exordium will not
fit all sorts of speeches, and when it
does not, it is disgusting, rather than
pleasant, to his hearers. And we do in
sist that the Battlc-of- Watcrloo-pcroration
ought to be put upon the retired list and
pensioned oft It has been in the ser
vice of the honorable gentleman so
long in hit peregrinations up and down
the country, especially in the hills and
valleys of Cherokee, that it has become
an invalid by this time, and now, in its
old age, to trot it through the piny
woods, in this hot weather, will surely
kill it outright.—Thomasville Enterprise.
Is thb 8vnGrowingCoi.d and Dark?
—There are now more spots on the sun
than have been seen before for many
yean; some of these ore visible through
a smoked glass to the naked eye. SevJ
eral stars—some of them of great bril-
lianoy—which, from their ascertained
distance, must have keen as large as
our sun, have totally disappeared from
the sky; and the question has been
raised among astronomers, whether the
light and heat of the sun are gradually
fading away. As this would bo accom
panied by the destruction of all the
plants and animals on the earth, it is
rather an interesting question. The
sun’s light and heat, are diminished by
the dark spots at the-present time about
per cent.—-SiUntific American.
Good Bor.—The Prince of- Woles de
clines Col. Magruder’s invitation to go
buffido hunting, because he promised
his mother before he left England, that
he would be at home at a specified time.
How different is this young gentlemans
conduct to that of another rovinc;
youth, whose mother vainly expected
him for months? To be sure the neg-
lectful prodigal did-go book to the ma
ternal arms hut it took six horses to drag
him there. Even then he only tarried
long enough to receive a hasty embrace
having made a special engagement '
I;’} new and revised edition
cyclopedia Britannica. The
ling Edinburgh.publishers,, we
aignated .the Hate
b Writer Of iUa.
tiele on Washington for the Encyokri
ptedia, in its noWeditibny and had made
the task,’ The engagements already
pressing upon the great essayist and his-
tttftttf compelled ms declination of the
proposal, and at his suggestion, Mr. Ev-
in question. - The? selection. Was mi—
fortunate'; for in no one’s hands was
heart or mind ooitld sutfti a sutyect be
commended. - The result of Mr. Ever
ett’s labor is on the eve of publication
’in this country, by Sheldon ft Co., of
New York, in a 'tingle volume of 323
pages, with the appropriate prefix of a
portrait of the author, engraved after a
marble bust.
In this work Mr. Everett disclaims all
pretension to learned research or labo
rious investigation among original doc
uments and revolutionary manuscripts.
He ha* prepared ..fram the standard
worksalready existing, a comprehen
sive; and confparatively brief, memoir
of our national hero—comprising the
salient featnres of Washington’s career
and character—presented in that con
cise and familiar or necessarily charac
teristics of Encyclopaedia articles. The
biography is a model of condensation
and by-Its rapid narrative and attrac
tive stylo, must commend itself, in its
new form, to the mass of readers. ais the
standard; poputar Fife of Washington. In
no respeet pretentious oi ambitious, as
regards competition with, the monu
mental works of Marshall, Sparks and
Irving, this con arnore biography by one
so well qualified will fill a vacant niche
in literature, and Would Beam to
be destined to a circulation among
the' people Of both England and
America, such os no previous Life of
the Father of his country has ever at
tained. , ' ” ' V ■
In addition to the historical and bio
graphical incidents of Washington’s
on the nature of the disease of which
Washington died, the inventory of the
personal property at Mount Vernon- at
the time of the General’s death ;~and
tho Will of Martha Washington. It
may, also be stated,- tbat in\th* : preface
Mr. Everett pays a'passing .tribute to
the memory of Macaulay, which is
a model of beauty and' eloquence, ex
pressed with rare terseness and kind
ness.
[From the Minnesota Pioneer of 8epL 22.]
• ~ - - 1 stricken Murderer
.moon, n man came to
S r and inquired for the
ing Deputy Sheriff,
that he was charged
__ion of a murder some
in Virginia, and that
since then lie had been a wanderer,
and desired to deliver himself up, and
to have a notice of his detention for-
wnd'theSheriff wnrtrryeilterday to Vir
ginia, notify ing tim proper officers. He
came into toWp with a small Red River
cart, drawn by a yoke of small Bteers,
which, tdgothor'with lfis gun, he do-
tinedtira Sheriff to sell to the best ad
vantage; that he might haVe the pro
ceeds to pay his board; in case he was
notsent for, and for his defense in case
he Bhould be tried in Virginia for the
offense acknowledged to have been
committed.
He said his name was Samuel Stan
ley, and that he is charged with murd
ering a Mr. Peyton, in Cable county,
Virginia. He stated that he had work
ed on the Block and Chippewa rivers
in Wisconsin, and had been in Minne
sota three years, although he was a na
tive of Ohio, and had a residence there
when the murder, took place* Ho had
worked in Lower Sauk Rapids, on the
Red River at Pembina, and in -tainy
other places. Without manifesting
much contrition for tho crime or fear
of punishment, lie imagined,’wherever
he lived, that -everybody looked upon
him As a murderer. The elements
even whispered it in his ear, when he
had abandoned the society of man and
lived alone in the depths of the forest.
Consequently, he had no abiding place
for six years, but lias roamed through
the country from Texas to Minnesota,
suffering, as he says, "more than a hun
dred deaths.” At last almost- worn out,
he same tp, the conclusion to deliver
himself up, that after thei sentence of
the law had been -.executed, he might
again live among his frieiicls, or make
ii homo whero he would be undisturbed
hyits terrors. . *
On and after tho 1st day of
September next, the Coosa Riv-
or Steamboat Company will
charge on Packages of Money containing
One Thousand Dollars cr less 26c, over One
and under Two Thousand Dollars-*Oe. —urn
ELLIOTT 4. RUSSELL,
aug25 , J • •. U Agents.
ft^Abit of glue dissolved in skim
med milk and water will restore rusty
old crppe.
jgy-Mrs. June.. Mason killed two of
her children near Monroe, Mioh., last
week by an overdose of paregoric.
ftdto.flitoel’figeljwfe.
isrThc letters 1. II - . 8., so conspicu
ously appended to different portions of
Catholic churches, are said to have
been ’ designed by. St. Bematlino of
Sienna, to denote the name and mis
sion of the’Savior. They arb to be
found in a cifole above -the principal
door of the Franciscan Church of the
Holy Crosss, (Santa Qrdce,) in Florence,
and are said to have been put there by
the saint on the termination of the
plague of 1347,‘’afteV which they wbre
commonly introduced into churches.—
The letters have .assigned to them the
following significations : Icsn hominum
Salvator—Jxaua, the Savior of man. In
hoe sacus—In him is salvation.
Postponed Administrator’s Sale.
YTT7ILL lie sold before tl;o Court-house door
VV in Romo, between tho fcgul hours
of sale, on tho first Tuesday in November,the
following property, to wit:
Ono and a half shares, (there boing four
shares) of Lot No. 221, part of Lot No. 2IS.
lying on. the west sldo of the creek, with all
the’ privileges on tho creek for mnnufautur-
ing purposes. Also the south portion of lot
No 220, and 1 , part of Lot No, 249, adjoining
248, known Os the Under Vtind place in the
22d dlst. 3d soc. of Floyd county. Ga. Sold
by virtue of an order from the Ordinary of
said county,-as the property of Dr. Thomas
Hamilton, late of said county, deceased, for
the benofit of the heirs.
TanliS—Credit to 1st.of January 1801, with
interest from date, if not punctually paid.
(ictOld D. M. HOOD, Adtn'r.
Importance of Publicity.
Hunt’s Merchant’s Magaxine for
June, one of the best numbers of
that excellent work ever issued,
JW ” - t #1
“Notoriety or publicity is an indispen
sable clement of success to the merchant
the manufacturer, oi* the mechanic, who
would give a wide and 'speedy circula
tion to the commodities and produc
tions, which he seeks to exchange for
money._ He may have capital, skill,
convenient position, punctuality, indus
try and honesty—every possible fitness
for his business and all is nothing if lie
has not sufficient notoriety. . Tins noto
riety, let it cost more or less, he must
purchase or provide for as he purchases
his stock of goods. Audit miift, in
tent, bear a certain relation tq the busi-
ness he would do; it must be both posi
tive and comparative. People must
not only know him andhfatbaainoM,
because otherwise they wfll '-uot' find
him; but they must know hltt,because
raaieaiSHS®
" The Lilies.—A traveler in Palestine
a * ii £>
“ Not for from the probable site where
the seymon on the Mount was delivered
Our guide plucked two flowers, supposed
to be of that species to which our Lord
alluded when he saidt “Consider the
lilies of the field.” Theealyx of this gi-
ant IjfewmWjd Mkmop-feltalft and
the gorgeous flower was of white and li-
monorch could
usly than
testimony
“ff-Falk and asked to kill a locust,
whioh she averred was in tho bed. The
search for the locust revealed tho pres-
enoo of a rattlesnake measuring tiuree
feet in length. It was dispatched with
out damage.
1W*Seven prisoners, who were con
fined lu one cell in the Memphis jail,
ned a hole through the outside wall,
‘escaped, last week.
Chattooga Sheriff Sale.
W ILL be sold boforc tlo.court house door
in SummorvUlo within thu legal'hours
of sale on Ihb first Tuesday in November
next, tho following'property, to wit:
Two lols of labd,'Nos. 9 and 28, both in the
13th District and, 4th Seotion. Levied on as
the property of E. L. Rosier to satisfy two
fl fas issued from the Superior Court, one in
favor of McCarter 4 CO, the other in favor of
Beach 4 Xing, for. the use of W. B. Force re.
J. R. and E. L. Rosser. Property pointed oiit
by plaintiff's attorney.
oet8-wld J. B. AKRIDGE, Sh’ff.
m
Chatooea Sheriff Sales.
’ILL bo sold before the Court House door
in Summerville on tho first Tuosduy in
November, within the legal hours of sale,
tbe following property, to wit:
E. L. Rosser’s i itercst in crop of corn, sup
posed to be one hundred bushels. Also four
bed-steads and one; feather bed, one sofa and
bureau, four tables, one cupboard, cooking-
stove and utensils. Levied on as the proper
ty of E. L. Rosser to satisfy a fl fa issued
from the Inferior Court in favor of Shepard
McCrayey A Co., vs. J. R. and E. L. Rosser,
LEGHORN, D. Sh’ff.
POSTPONED SALE. j /
Lots of .land nos. 108, 173, and 147, lying in
tbe 0th District of tho fourth section. Lev
ied on as the property of Marion Little to
satisfy a fl fa Issued from the Superior Court
in favor of C. C.CIcghorn, Guardian tor R. A.
Storey, lunatic, vs. win, Graham and Marion
Little.
octOtd J. B. AKRIDGE, Sh’ff.
Administrator’s Sale.
B Y virtue of an order of the Court-pf Or
dinary of Floyd county, Go., will Ue Sold
at the Court House in the town of Romo, on
the first Tuesday in December next, the fol-
A l?act o?Land adjoining lands of feam’l
Mobloy, Walton H. Jones and Rowland Bry
ant, containing 820 acres, more or less, abbut
200 acres in cultivation, the. balance welt
timbered. The place is well known as one
of the most productive und desirablo in
Vann’s Valley, lying within >1 miles of Romo
on the Cave Spring road. Tbe Geo. A Ala.
Railroad, which is now in an active state of
progress, runs through tbe tract. There is a
good Gia House, Stables and Negro Cabins
on the plaeo, well watered and in a good
neighborhood.^ Sold as tho propel
Terms—Ouc-thUbd -Cj
one and two yean
oct4—twStawtd,
M IWOWWW . , r> - -
Tomlin & McCarvc
IHh-
r 6r ’ 8
STEAM SAW MILL. 'Y
T HE proprietors will furnish first quality
long leaf Pino Lumber, sawed at thoir.
Mill on the Coosa River, 14 miles from Borne,
as follows:
Delivered at the Mill at$l,M per hundred,
or at steamboat landing in Romp, or at inter
mediate landings on the River at $1,25 per
hundred. For dried lumber $5 .cents per
hnndred additional will be charged.
ROBT. G. TOMLIN,
J. L. McCABVER.
sep22tw4w#m
eiuioiie Flavoring Extraete, Coco-
aibe, Kulleston and Tooth Wash—a
FARELL A VEI8ER.
Geo. & Ala. Railroad Go. N. York & Savannah Route.
B T .
’ Resolution of the Board of Directors
the 4th Installment, being 10 per cent,
>n the,stock subscribed.,
lie on 6r by the 1st day oi
0. HSMITHS
septl3—twtd
Steamboat
. *’^y e d th rough by'the MaSatton
or Sale.
The..... .. .
fers for Bale his Plan
tation bn tho South’
RtfetV s'ev&Hei from ^n^ftonaS
ing tho celebrated place of Col. Nathan
This Land is bounded on tho north’ h'
river which separates it from the Rome 1
road track. ~ ? -
The place coatains Five Hundred Actei of
Land—one hundred and tWenty-flvo first
quality river bottom, and the balance first
quality up land. Thero is about 300 aores
in cultivation, and iho remainder well tim-
bored.' There is a comfortable dwelling and
out-houses, including an almost new Gin
Houso and Screw.
Price $11,000—Terms, $5,000 cash, and the
balance in notes at one, two and three years
with interest from duto and well secured.
Come and’seo the place or address, j
' JOHN C. EVE,
junc7-w2t±tigtf j ^ Kingston, Ga,
Baggagei _
Express Company, on the'Central Railroad,
and delivered'anywhere ii> Note York or vi
cinity. . •
By the'Splendid and Commodious Steamers,
R. B. CUYLER, (new) 1800 tons Capt Croekef
MONTGOMERY 1000 “ “ Berry.
HUNTSVILLE*,.. 1000 « " Post,*,
MT. VERNONr(D«w)1000 “ fi LayfleM
2,000 ACRES
H arf.'tif? of
CEDAR VALLEY
The samo ari-angoment exists from New
York, whore the sloamers leave Pior 12 N. B.,
on Thursdays and Saturdays, with the same
through rates of'fare and oxpress facilities.
These Steamships are new, and built ex
pressly for this route, and for speed, comfort,
and elegant accommodations, are not excel
led by any steamers on the ocean. . »
Through Tickets can be procured at the
following plaoos:
New Orleans—R. Gkddeb, OOGravierst.
Mobile—Cox, BnAiNAnn 4 Co,
Columbus—8. II. Hill, agent Harndon’s
Express, and J. M. Bivens, Tr R. R. Ticket
Agent.
Eufauia—A Stow.
Montgomery—J. W. GnsttoRr, General
Ticket Agent.
A Porn, agent W 4 W. R. R. and at all
other points, from connecting Railroad Tick
et Agents. BRIGHAM, BALDWIN 4 CO.,
FOR SALE !
Tbe subscriber offers'for sale, all
his. .lands lying .in Cedar Valley
uml near Cedar Town. There is
about two thousand acres lying in
one body and it will bo sold all In.
gctlicr or will bu’divided to suit purchasers'.
Thero are four dwellings and sets of out
buildings and the lands so surrounding ns to
conveniently make four settlements. The
dwellings nro ail good, two of them the resi
dence oi' the undersigned, and that formerly
occupied by Judge Wm. E. West, linve eight
rooms each and thu other two are framed
uottnges with fuur rooms each.
Thero is also on the place a first class
flouring mill and two good Saw Mills, nil
carried by water power.
Thesp,Lauds are ail of the: best qualityhf
tho famous Cedar Vnlloy Lands, and that
strangers mav know something of their pro
ductiveness I
subscriber would state that
in 185d lip made a lit tie over ten, fiyo .hun
dred pound balcB of Cotton to the htitid, and
in 1859 over eleven same sized bales to tbe
hand. —_.
Tho dwellings on tho abnvo named places
are all within one mile of tho Court House,'
and consequently convenient to Chttfahes
and Schools. Persons desiring to purchase
are requested to corns and see the lands or
for further particulars address
J. J. MORRISON.
maylS-triiw-tf. Cedar Town, Ga.
J. C. BAKER.,
...R. W. ECHOLS
NEW
FIRM
BAKER & ECIIOLS,
DEALERS IN
(It
n / > j} :• •; ; • ft »}’
Colognes and Flavoring Extracts.
GLASS, PUTTY, ^
DYHSTUFFS8
FINE CIGARS,
LIQUORS for Medical Pur
poses, &c.,&c. &c.
[triwAwtf.]
Rome. Ga. Feb. 18th.
Diarrhoea! Cramps! Cholera!
This medicine lins
LIFE DROPS. ) been tried, tested and
au.ixu X proved by ten years
i; J experience'.to bo the
only certain,sufo and
rclrablq remedy for all Bowel Derangements,
Diarfhten,' Dysentery', Crnrans, Pains, 'Chol
era, Cholic, An.,‘now before tuo public. One
or two doses of 20 drops, will cure the most
severe cramps in the stomaeh in 20 minutes.
A sitjgl.s dofto often cures tho. Diarrhoea and
it never constipates the-bo well.' One dose
will satisfy any one of its merits. Price
only 25 Cents.
Prepared by S. D. Troll, 43 Bowery, New
York, and sold by Druggists generally.
In Romo by Baker 4^ Echols, and Newmsa
4 Nowlin. , • , [oug2tw*w
Railroad Notice,
Office Daltox 4 Jacksonville R.R. Co. )
Dalton, Ga., Sept. 8,1800. f j
The Annual Meeting of the Stockholdersiof
the Dalton 4 Jacksonville Railroad Company
for the pqrpose of electing Seven Directors,
and attending', fa othor business that may
come before them, Aill bo held at the office
of < the Company in Dalton, -efc’the lint Vfed-
ueiday in Oetober next, at 2 o’clock, P. M.
By order, • EDWARD WHITE,
■ aepHwlm ' ' 1 ' 'Serfy.
GREAT BARGANS
.Sr«T?-iTPI3
TOWMPftaPBUTY
idlARaAlN IN THE >ALf!
. 7 ‘ P ^Ht. tl J, klNQ.
GEORGIA, Fiord County.
T O all whom it may coneern, Holley Hicks
JUvtng in proper form applied to me for
permanent letters of administration on the
estate of Henry W. Hicks, late of said county,
this ie to eite all and singular, the crodltora
and next of Idttof Eti»r W. Hicks, to be and
appear at my office within the time allowed
by law, and show cause, if any they can.
why permanent administration should noi
be granted to Holley Hicks on Henry W,
&• estate. . • • - *
Siren under my bend and official signa
ture at office, this 1st Ootober. 1800.
oeta J. LAMBERTH, Ordinary.
UCTION IN RATES
PASSAGE.
- - $16 00
... 7 00
ment for Through
— NEW YORK.
FROM
Memphis, $31 79
Nashville, M
Chattanooga, 26 00
KnoXTiUe, 26 50
n°5§
LEAVING SAVANNAH EVERY THURS
DAY AND SATURDAY.
sep!
Agents, Savannah.
H. B. CROMWELL 4 CO.,
ts, 80 West st. and 335 Broadway,
mrfNew York/
Seed Wheat and Rye!
1 l/Y Bush, prime Red Mediterranean
1UUU Wheat.
2000 Bushels prime Rod Walker Wheat.
1200 “ “ White Ky. “
300 libls Flour.
500 Bush Seed Rye,
On hand, and to arrive, for sale.
ELLIOTT A RUSSELL.
Rome, Sept. 17, ’00.—sopl8tw2m
DODWORTH’S
MUSIC
STORE.
No. O ASTOtt PLACE, N. Y.
PUBLISHER
ASI) DEALER IN
FOREIGN AND AMERICAN^
MUSIC,
Instruments.
AND MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
Songs and Compositions for the Piano Forto,
By the Best Masters,
Sacred and Organ Music; Dance and
Military Music, for tho Piano Forte,
Sent by mail, postage free.
(Stamps may be sent instead of change.)
CATALOGUES OF MUSIC FOR
Brass Bands;
Quadrille Band,, small or largo Orchoslrns.
PRICE
List of Brass Instruments,
Senton, application.
THE
“Journal for Brass Bands,”
A new publication of Band Music, is issued
?!*. ll 1 ™. of enoh month ; also, tho '-COM
PANION,"containing Marches, Medleys, Ac.
The instrumental parts in these words are sep*
nratc and ready for performance.
1IARVEY B. DODWORTH,
sepll-twOm. Director of Dodworth’s Bands.
Phelan's
Improved Billiard Tables
AND COMBINATION CUSHIONS,
mmmm
1 r "'“ te l ty..letters patent dated Feb. II
185 , n - Oct; 28. 1850; Dee. 8, 1857; Jan.
12,1*58; NAy. 15, 1858, afid March
29, 1859.
The recent improvements is theso table
make them unsurpassed in tho world The-
aro now offered to tho leiohtiflo Billiard play
ers ns combining speed with truth, never be
fore obtaining in any Billiard Table. Sales
rooms Nos. 65. 07. and 00 Crosby street
PHELAN & COLLENDER,
sepll—tn3iq , Manufacturers.
Real Estate for Sale.
Havingdetermined to rcmoi
permanently to Atlanta, wo o
for for sale that property i
, 11. pm DeSoto, improved by us, ac
whereon the Garden and Nursery, cstablisl
ed by us, is situated. 1
Tim place contains Ten Acres, with a con
fortablo residenco and desirable adyantagi
in tho way of Fruit Trees, Vines, Ao. 8
■ < JOSEPH LAMBBRT.
sopll—tw4t ALPHONSO LAMBERT.
Geo. & Ala, Railroadr
STOCKHOLDER’S’MEETING.
Pursuant to notice given by thora recre
there n wm to.® thlin ° n e-thirdof the s^k
^amaotlng of the stockholders !i
RomeThn sttard^^'istV^ W.H« in
ngemgiri qf ’prprk. ;; r .
I.%v SMITH, Bee'y.
“J*®* Cedar Town, con*
2 °1 f®re», 20 cleared,
tho balance in Umber. Com!
knownw'rhiet^irfetoNT
Valley land, enfl is ons of the best improved-
placesfn thh Valley. Haying on it Vhow
an a db^dT lB1,l i?
and baakporohes, frame negro eabins, cook
room, emoke-house, stables and cribs! also,
?. n ®*y w »t®red by a fine well ten steps from
tha house, and Big Cedar Creek runulng on
L. Nowm * n ’ Rom *’ *•-
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