Newspaper Page Text
mHMlH
I}£ iw
JJ. DWINELL, proprietor.
“WISDOM, JUSTICE, AND MODERATION."
FOUR ^OEDARS PER ANNUM.
NEW SERIES.
ROME, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 13, 1875.
vorano, a
(jp
PUBLISHED EVERY
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday,
At No. 23 Broad Street.
-Weekly subscriptions,
...$i 00
2 00
1 00
One year....
BiJt months....
Three montuBs.ee*
WEEKLY SUBSCRIPTIONS.
W $2 00
Ono year. 1 oo
Six month*.. 50
Ibree ’ t i t iy ; n advance, the price of
w'» ». *5 00 a year.
Cl of fivo or more, one copy will be fur-
alflhod Fa**.
RATES of advertising.
(Ten line* or levs, of thi. type, make on* Square)
£° r each subsequent in.ortion 1 «»
®racelcr L fi’ duifa.
United States Mail Line-Tie Ooosa
River Steamers!
K AND AFTER NOVEMBER 30, 1874,
i gteamers on tho Coosa River will wb m
,"e a. follow., eupplying all the Po.t
v—cel on Mail Route No. 8100 :
Leave Rome every Monday *♦••■ * ?’ 5'
Leave Romo overy Thursday at„......... 8 A. M,
. .rivn atUadedon Tuesday end Friday.. 7 A. M.
0
LOCHRANE.
be
Interviewed in Regard to the
Civil Rights Bill.
Arrive at Gadsden Tuesday
Leave Gadsden Tuesday am. •••••• - rr- rj-
Arrive at Rome "Wednesday and Saturday fl F. M.
nov28 J. M. ELLIOTT, den*! Snpt
Home Railroad-Ohange of Sohedule
O N AND AFTER SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6,
1874, traino on this road will run m follow*:
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
Loeve. Romo at -- 1-®® Ji
Arrive at Rome....
•SATURDAY RVENINa TRAIN.
Leave. Rome at 5.U P. M
Arrive at Romo P. M
Each tr.in will make elo.a connection, at
Kingston with We.tern and Atlant o Railroad
train, bound for Chattanooga and Atlanta.
* C. M. PENNINGTON, Gen. Supt.
JHO.E. STILLWELL, Ticket Agent,
Georeia R, R,, Augusta to Atlanta.
D AY PASSENGER TRAINS ON GEORGIA
Railroad, Atlanta to Augusta, rnn a. b»low:
Leave. Augusta at 8.40 A. >
L«tvo» Atlanta at. «-S0 a.m
Arrive. Augusta at.. »•« r. s
Arrives at Atlanta at 5.45 r. ■
Night PasBenger Trains as follows:
Loaves Augusta at *•}* *• “
Leave. Atlantaat *•** f
Arrive, at Auguata *
Arrives at Atlanta at- ®-*® A- “
Accommodation Train as follows :
Leaves Atlante -® ?’
Loaves Stone Mountain -5 »» A. M
Arrives Atlanta ®* A H
Arriroe Stone Mountain 8 1“ r. M
The Selma, Rome & Dalton Railroad
T rains will run as follows over
thi* Road, commencing Sunday, Jan. 37,
1875)
orau. train iiahy—rorth
Leave Romo * -M®
Arrive at Dalton 12JI0 P. M
Making close connections at Dalton with th®
East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railroad,
and Western and Atlantic Railroad, for all
Eastern and Wostern cities, aud all Virginia
Springs.
MAIL TRAIN DAILY—SOUTH,
Leave Dalton 8»1® J* JJ
Arrive at Rome ®*1G “
Arrive at Calera.;,, 8*85 A. M
Arrive at Soltna 10.10 A. M
Making closo connootiona at Calera for Mont
gomery and points South, and at Selma with
Alabama Central Railroad for Mobile, New Or-
leans, Meridian, Vicksburg, Jackson, and points
South in Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi.
M. STANTON, Gen. Supt.,
RAY KNIGHT. Gon. T. A P. Agent,
W. 8. CRANE, Agent, Rome, Ga.
Western & Atlantic Railroad and its
Couneotions.
"KlUTSnsfKHA.W ROUTE!”
The following schedule takes effect May 25, 1873
NORTHWARD.
No. 11 No. 3 No. 1
Lve Atlanta...0 00 p m 8 30 am .10 00 p m
Arr Cartersv...8 16 p m... 11 Oft am 12 80 am
Arr Kingston 8 43 p in ...11 46 an^. 1 03 am
Arr Dalton...10 30 p m 2 01 pm 3 00 am
Arr Chattanooga 4 28 pm 6 00 am
SOUTHWARD.
No. * No. 4
Arr Atlanta ......10 46 p m... 1 45 p m
Arr Cartersvillo 8 lft p m...„.,..10 61 a m
Arr Kingston 7 44 p m 10 12 a m
Arr Dalton 5 35 p m 8 1)0 a m
Lve Chattanooga ...... 3 46 p m 6 45 a m
Pullman Palaco Cars on Trains Nos. 11 and
to Lynohburg and New Orleans.
Pullman Palace Cars on Trains Nos. 1 and 2
for Atlanta and Chattanooga.
No change from New Orleans to Lynohburg—
via Montgomery, Atlanta and Dalton ; only one
change trom Atlanta to Saint Louis—via Chi ‘
tauooga.
IS FIFTY-TWO MILES SHORTER
to New York *nd Eastern oitie.
than any other route (Torn Atlanta; and 24 hours
qui.ker to tho Virginia Spring, than any olh.r
line from Atlanta, avoiding an expensive delay
and transform Richmond.!
Passengers leaving Atlanta by the Lightning
Express at 8 p rn arrive in New York at 4 44 p nr
1, * ec °nd afternoon thereafter—IS hours and
• i mmuUs earlier then passengers by any other
leaving Atlanta at 10 p m by this
arrive in New York at the same time as
nnos®®*®” w ho lolt at 8 p m by the opposition
a whole ear through to tha
jJJ,,,u a s P" n 8 8 or to Lynchburg, should ad
dress tho undorsigned.
® ou ,te®plating traveling should send
formtp, sohedule, oto.
Quick Time, close Connections!
.^"Ask lor tickets via *• Konnesaw Route."
BWWRENN,
May^U ° r & " d Ti0k,t A * <>nt > MUnt, > Ga.
JOHNSON HOUSE
1AVE SPRING, GA.
J* PINK JOHNSON, Proprietor*
From the Nashville Banner.]
Knowing the general interest mani
fested as to tho prospective workings of
the civil rights law just passed, a Banner
reporter interviewed a number of rep
resentative personages on the subject.
Ex-Chiet Justice Lochrane, of Georgia
—who is equally at home on the bench,
making an impromptu spoe'eh full of
Irish, fun and poetry, telling a laugh
able story to a select crowd, or in the
hands of a newspaper interviewer—
was invaded in his cosy lair in the
Maxwell House, and here is. the result
of the interview which followed :
Question—What do you think of the
civil righto bill, and what will be its
practical effect?
Answer—The Judge remarked that
he regarded it as the most infamous
legislation that ever disgraced a statute
book.
Q.—But Judge you must recollect
ou are an Irishman, and the world
ias regarded the laws of England gov
erning Ireland are among the most
cruel and exacting.
A.—I am not unaware of your opin
ion in regard to English laws in Ire
land. But not even the penal laws
which followed the treaty of Limerick,
nor the confiscation laws which swept
1.30 p. M ou t 0 f ^0 hands of the proprietors
thousands of acres, nor tho legislation
of the Pale which interdicted the mar
riage relations were as black and cun
ningly devised in their scheme of con
stitutional injustice as this.
Q.—Well, considering its general and
acknowledged injustice what do you
think of its practical effects ?
A.—If you mean to ask me if I be
lieve negroes will ride in sleeping cars,
mingle with white people in theatres,
hotels, railroad cars, steamboats, practi
cally, all the devils in hell could not
enforce it.
Q.—But you know the penalties and
the extraordinary means enacted to en
force tho bill.
A.—I do. I have read it carefully
and with consideration, but Congress
in emancipating the blacks has not
made the white people 'slaves;'’ * I TSII
you that an acquaintance of over one-
fourth a century makeB me know the
people of the South, and a thousand
Federal lawsuits, or fines cannot estab
lish among them negro equality. We
would ride in wagons or walk, live in
boarding-houses or starve, live without
a’laugh or public entertainment, rather
than he dictated to, and mingled with
an element inferior, ill-bred, ignorant
and forced by law upon us.
Q.—But Judge, you deal in theories
rather than practical results. Suppose
a colored man should be induced b;
some lawyer to come to the Max-.ve
House with a view to test the question?
A.—Why, in such a case, sue the
lawyer for champery in your State
courts. Such act would be stirring ur
worse than a lawsuit, it would be strip
and such lawyers would find their
level with their clients. They would
find the doors of decency barred against
them, and no influence could shelter
them from public scorn until they
apologized for the outrage. '
Q.—But still, Judge, they might
biing the suit, and what then?
The Plaintiff could not recover. In
fluencedby such motive, tho motive
would destroy the effect of the law,
But if courts were weak enough to re
cognize a made case, offset the judge
ment in tho State Court against them
and there might be some balance to
settle, as the one is limitted, and the
other would not be.
Q.—But, Judge, the law confers ex
clusive jurisdiction on the Federal
Courts. • '
A.—There you are mistaken. The
law confers exclusive jurisdiction
the one case, to try the violation of the
first section of the civil righto bill.
But a suit against the scoundrels who
fomented and inspired the violation
is not exclusive, between citizens of this
State cculd make it so. This is a co
stitutional question, and the Copstitu 1 -
tion has not been changed, although
it has been tranced upon.
Q.—Judge, by the bill any one inci
ting tho denial of equal privileges t<
the negro ismadfi liable and' the pur.'
ishment is prescribed.
A.—You can’t indict a whole people
when all concur in one policy of re
sisting degradation. _ Law can’t force
mon to social equality, and no law
against public opinion was ever yet, in
the history of any nation, onforced
A. hotel keoper fined, and hundreds
would subscribe to pay it. A theatre
manager under conviction would bo
more a criminal than O’Connell when
he held his levoes at Richmond prison,
A railroad president would be hailed a£
a hero, whose cars were sanctified by
his resistance to such a law,
livery
STABLE.
l N r,sm°^i N ?? T J 0N WITH THB ABOVE
•1ms m® 4 Hot ®' ths mideritgned will keep a trat
livery stable,
ly H 9, R8BB » Bd VEHICLES constaut
atrial, nKtto Uto please. Give mi
J. PINK JOHNSON,
Care Spring.
“When once to the wlnda
You fling tnoh a banner,
No tyranny bind*."
Q.—But is there no way, peacefully,
to evade it; cannot inns become board
ing houses? ,, , . .
A.—Evasions could only be tempora
ry, in the meantime letting the '
take root, while an overwhelming
universal disposition to disobey it would
irresistible and invincible by courts
juries.
Q.—But, could it not be evaded;
could not our Legislature, under the 1st
section, pass a law, as the right is grant
ed only subject to conditions and limi
tations established by law, applicable
all alike?
A.—Well, if evasion Wire to become
the established policy, the road is easy;
relieve hotels from the common law
applicable to public inns and let them
be sole judges of their own customers.
No hotel keeper ever yet allowed into
his hotel offensive guests,' irrespective
color or previourcondition. Drunk-
mrn are excluded—improperly
dressed men are hot allowed among the
pests. The owner of a hotel is- not
orced to take patients whose presence
would drive off his guests; this is a
privilege thiit has grown into, a law by
.to universal custom. Make it a writ
ten law and apply it to all irrespective
of color—Federal courts cannot decide
against a right as-old as the - common
law. In England even dress is pre
scribed to accomplish the result of com
fort to patrons of theatres and even
public gardens. Why not to all other
persons catering to the public ? If you
can tax them you can regulate them;
and if you can regulate them, the fact
embraces power to expel obnoxious cus
tomers. Who has sver questioned the
right of innkeeper or theatre manager
to repel the entrance of those, however
dressed and white, whose presence,
otherwise objectionable, would haye
dissolved the patron’s audience ?
Q.—Then you think the Legislature
should act?
A.—They ought to pass a bill to con
firm righto never heretofore disputed,
and which are essential safeguard p
righto of others.
Q.—Judge, you have the reputation
of being conservative if we do not mis
take?
A.—I am conservative-politic. I
might add conciliatory, but when Con
gress enacts that I shall ride in the same
car, mingle in the same audience, eat at
the same table with any men, or set of
meh, I don’t want, my policy and con
servatism and conciliation leaves me,
and I cannot but regard the Govern
ment that does it as a depotism, before
which monarchies ana tributitian
dynasties stand in glorious comparison.
Q.—Well, Judge you talk as if you
wanted laws to evade, while your feel
ings evidently exhibit resistance.
A.—I do not want evasive laws. I
■Want laws to protect rights, existing
righto, rights inherited from the spirit
of the common law, righto that are the
inheritance of mon on this continent
before the Government was organized,
and of' which this legislation is intend
ed to deprive them.
Q.—Do not colored people eat, drink
and ride with whites in your country ?
A.—Not by force. No law stains
English legislation as bitterly and
bluntly offensive as this. When Eng
land emancipated she paid, and when
she paid she left society to protect itself.
Don’t mistake me because I happen to
be an Irishman. England is a freer
government than this to-day. Property
is better protected, and the social rights
of the people cannot be ruthlessly in
vaded.
Q.—Are there not laws in England
to compel the intermingling • of all
classes?
A.—There is not. Society has, in
England, the inherent power of pro
tecting itself. A law like this, to open
all public social meetings to every ono
who had a dollar to pay, would shake
the Plantagenes from the throne. The
rules wnich govern in England can be
adopted here. It is English liberty I
would invoke against factional injustice
to this people.
Q.—Supposing a Now England ne-
;ro, educated, well dressed, well be
haved, etc., should come to a hotel un
der the civil righto bill, what then ?
A.—My house would be full.
Q.—But supposo ho found out from
servants that rooms were empty ?
A.—I would give him an evasive an
swer.
Q.—Suppose he still insisted ?
A.—I would him tell him I did not
entertain negroes, not because of;his
previous condition, but his present con
dition, which would make it unpleas
ant to my guests.
■ Q.—But suppose he still insisted ?
‘ '.A.-^Yelli-jtJhink I would give him
au< Irishmaa’s hint to leave, and I don’t
thinkTjftor tMt lie would put any moro
questions.,'
Georgia News.
General Toombs has been seriously
ill with pneumonia, but is now con
valescent.
! Thomas county sold and shipped
sqventy thousand bushels ot corn last
yfcar.
Air. Alfred Grant, agent of the Geor
gia railroad at Athens, died on the 6th
litot.
Ninety thousand dollars is what the
sales of cotton aggregated in Columbus
for the week ending 6th inst.
, A Successful attempt has been made
in, Albany, in this State, to carry the
civil righto business into saloons.
>Miss Anna E. Diokinson proposes to
deliver alecture in Savannah, before a
great while, on a subject not yet an
nounced.
* Judge G. J. Wright has the appoint
ment of Judge of the Albany Circuit,,
bit Judge Strozier intends to contest
hia claim.
jAoron Alpeora, the great Savannah
wjthoo, is in jail in Charleston, for des
troying a document in the office of a
trial justice in that city.
The action of the Diocesan Commit
tee oi Georgia, it is predicted, will be
Unfavorable to the nomination of Dr.
DeKoven as Bishop of Illinois.
The ownership of the Cherokee rail
road will be determined this month,
after which, we presume, work will be
commenced upon it to complete it to
Cedartown.
-There will be a grand celebration and
jubilee in honor ot the passage of the
civil righto bill, on Thursday, March
11, 1875, by the colored people of Sa
vannah ana Chatham county.
Pneumonia is prevailing to an alarm
ing extent in the neighborhood of Al
bany. At Camilla the schools were
forced to suspend on account of theun-
liecedeuted amount of sickness among
itte pupils.
i The following are the prices for
drinks in Atlanta under the Civil
Righto bill: Beer by the glass, $10;
whiskey toddy, $15; brandy straight,
$J2. A liberal discount, to regular cus
tomers. Billiards are $100 a game.
Miss Lou Atkinson, daughter of Mr.
Si A. Atkinson, of New York, on a
visit to relatives in madison, Ga., com
mitted suicide by shooting herself with
aipistol, on Wednesday. She died on
EYiday, Depression of spirits, by ill
health, is supposed to have been the
cahso.
The Cherokee Iron Company are bu
sily eiigagedin finishing up their • fin*
mills, putting in machinery, etc. The
building is five stories high, and when
completed will be the finest building of
the kind in the State and the machin
ery will be in keebing with the bnild-
Special Notices.
One Foot in the Grave.
It, as the saying h, you have " one foot in the-
grave," it is olearly wiser to poll it out than to
let tho other follow it. Low as ilcknoss u ay
have brought yotn Vrxioxn Bittxbs will build
you up again, unloss organic disease* have
lapped the very foundations of your system; It
ie a Vital Tonlo, composed entirely of the juices
of hygerlan herbs and roots found only in our
Ptolflo region, and has no equal as a remedy for
nervous debility, emaolatlon, liver complaint,
renal disorders, mercurial disease, muscular and
glandular complaints, dyspepsia, pulmonary
Sffeotlons and oonstlpatlon. marll.blw
Our Purple President.—Beecher is
not the oniy public man afflicted with
a purple face and apopletic possibili
ties. Hero is what the Washington cor
respondent of the New Orleans • Times
says about PrbSident'Grant:
The President has greatly changed iu
two years. His face is red, approach
ing at times to purple, with apoplectic
threatening, and, if looks augur any-
thing, there are chances that the third.-
term questiou may be settled, if he
changes not his course of living, by the
sudden clip of Clotho’s scissors. “I see
death in hia face if ho keeps this thing
up three months longer,” said a physi
cian, whose name is eminent amonj
the faculty in both hemispheres, and
renowned even in the L. College of
Surgeons, as we left tho White House
that evening.
t is rumored that the Savannah
Volunteer Guards, the old Eighteenth
Georgia, battalion, will visit one of
our sister cities during the summer.
The guhrds, besides their services in
Virginir, were among the defendente
of Charleston, and lost some of their
command at Morrislsland.
An Unconstitutional Measure,
Go to Texas via the Lone Star
Boute!
(International and Great Northern Railroad.)
Passengers going to Texas vie Memphis and
Little Rook, or vis Shreveport, strike this line
at Lougview, the But Route to Palestine, Hearne,
Waco, Austin, Huntsville, Houston, Galveston
end all points in Wsstsrn, Central, Eastern and
Southern Texas.
Passengers via New Orleans will find It the
Best Route to Tyler, Mineola, Dallas, Overton,
Croekett, Longview and all polnte in Eastern
and Northeastern Texas.
This line Is well built, thoroughly equipped
with ovary modern Improvement, including
New and Elegant Day Coaches, Pullman Palace
Sleeping Cara, Weallughouss Air Brakes, Miller’s
Patent Safety Platforms and Couplers; and no
where elst oan the passenger so completely de
pend on a speedy, safe and comfortable journey.
Tho LONE STAR ROUTE has admirably an
swered tho query: »How to go to Texas 1” by
the publication of an Interesting and truthful
dooument, containing a valuable and oorreot
map, whloh oan be obtained, free of oharge, by
addressing the GENERAL TICKET AGENT,
International and Great Northern Railroad,
Houston, Texas. feb7-twly
Newspaper Advertising.
Newspaper advertising is now recognisned by
buslnesi men, having faith In their own wares,
as the most ellbotiye mesas of securing for their
goods a Wide recognition of their morits.
Newspaper. Advertising Impels Inquiry, and
when the article oflerod is of good quality and
at a fair prlos, the natural results is inersased
sales.
Newspaper advertising is a permanent addi
tion to the reputation of the goods advertise^
because it is a permanen t Influence always *
work In their interest. 1 'l • I
Newspaper advertising Is the most energetl
and vigilant oi salesmen; addressing thousand:
each day, always in the advertiser’s interest
and oeasolessly at work seeking customers fro*
all classes.
Newspaper advertising promotes trade, ftj
evmfTn the dullest tlmee advertisers secure bjj
far the lergeet share of what la being done.-
Jokn Manning
Dr. J. Walker’s California Vinegar
Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation,
made ehlefly from the nativo herbs found on
the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains
of California, the medioinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom 1 without tbs use of Alco
hol. The question la almost daily asked, “What
is the cause of the unparalleled suocess of Vis
ion* Bittxbs 7” Our answer Is, that thoy remove
the cause of disease, and tha patient recovers
his health. They are the great blood purifier
and a life-giving prinolplo, a perfeot Renovator
and Invigorator of the system. Novor before In
the history of the world has a medloine her
compounded possessing tho remarkable qualltlo
of Vikboab Bittxbs in hoallfig th* Blok of eyery
disease man Is'heir to, - They are a gentle Pur
gative as well as a Tonio, relieving Congestion or
Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs,
In Bilious Diseases. They are oasy of admin
istration,prompt Is their results, safo and reliable
la all forms of diseases.
No Person can take these Bitters accordtog
to direotlona, aud remain long unwell, provided
their bones aro not destroyed by mineral poison
or other means, and Vital organs wasted beyond
repair.
GratcfUl Thousands proclaim Virboab Bit-
tsbs the most wonderful invigorant tbatevor
sustained the sinking system.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain
In the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest,
Dlssiness, Sonr Eructations of the Stomach, Bad
Taste iu the Month, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation
of the Heart, Inflammation of tho Lungs, Pain
In'the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred
other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of
Dyspepsia. One Bottle will prove n better guar
antee of; Us merits than a lengthy advertise
ment.
Scrofula, er King’s Evil, White Swellings,
Ulcers, Efjrsipolos,'Swelled Neok;Gottro, Scrofu
lous . Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations,
Mercurial Affoctions,.Qld Sores, Eruptions of tho
THK ROME HOTEL,
BROAD STREET, NEAR RAILROAD DEPOT
(Formerly Tennessee House)
J. A. STANSBURY, - - Proprietor
Romo, Georgia.
IHJfTHIS HOTEL IS SITUATED WITHIN
JiiiL twenty steps of the railroad pla’torm, and
convenient to the business portion of town.
Servants polite and attentive to their duties.
AH Baggage handled Free of. Oharge.
febSA THOMAS H. SCOTT, Clerk.
Senator Carpenter, to his credit be it
said, made an able legal argument
against the civil righto bilir* In the
course of his remarks he said:
All of the provisions of this bill are
in conflict with tho Constitution of the
United States as expounded by the Su
preme Court. It may be said that
those decisions aro incorrect. If this
were conceded, still it must be admit
ted that the decisions exist, and that
they prescribe for the Judicial Departr
mentof the Government a rule that
must he applied to this bill, and under
which the courts must hold it invalid
and void. And of what advantage can
it be to tho colored citizen to declare
he may bring arsuit in which it is cer
tain he cannot recover: a suit which
must be attended with vexation and
expense, and result in defeat and dis
appointment. The colored citizen is
authorized to bring a suit in which
everybody knows he cannot recover.
The Supreme Court of the United
States, in two well-considered decisions,
have settled principles upon which the
validity of this civil righto bill must
be deuied; and every Circuit Court in
which a suit may be commenced un
der its provisions will be Completed, in
proper judical ■Subordination, to rule
against a recovery. Its only effect,
therefore, will be to inv'Olte^he colored
man in litigation in which he certain,
to be defeated, keeping* the • promise
to his ear and breaking it to his bape.’
THE CHOICE 'HOTEL,
CORNER BROAD AND BRIDGE STREETS
J. C. Rawlins, Proprietor.
(Situated In the Business part of the City.)
Rome, Georgia.
yW-Passeagers taken to and from tho Depot
free of charge. ARTHUR FORT, Clerk.
tanlfA
H. D. COTHRAN, C. O. SI ILLWELL,
President. Cashier.
ISAAC C. OGDEN, Jr., I Vice-Presidents,
A. THEWH. BROWER,] ~ ~
BANK OF*
• $600,000
• 100,000
NewTofk,
ROME,
ROME, GEORGIA.
Authorized Capitol,
Subscribed Capital,
Collections made in all accessible point* arid
proceeds promptly remitted. Exchaugo on all
prlapipaloittsi bought aud sold. Loan* made
on first olass securities.
Correspondent:
OGDEN, BROWER A CO., Bankers, New York.
apr7-twly
NEW FEED & SALE STABLE!
-by-
Cotton Receipts.—The' Associated
Pre«s report for the week ending Friday
night, showed a heavy falling off. Re
ceipts of the seven days 76,510 bales;
against 148,756 last year—showing a
falling off for the week of 7.2,246 titles,
aud a gross falling off in the receipts
of the cotton year, up to jhat date," of
215,72 bales. The long croppisto' are
in a bad way. The nett falling off in
crop receipts since the firet week in
January, has been 401,579 bales, which
certainly looks like very short raftonB.
But the cotton markets don’t seem to
l*o materially affected by it.
The London Observor states that the
war rusior which appeared in the Cal- .v
ctiila Englishman of the 5 th, and sentfor-1 u— c •
ward by telegraph, ha? no foundation. J boy and roan by wild shots.
JiCtviL Rights in Missouri.—Civil
rights in the interior of the State, has re-
rulted in the killing of one negro who
inter- r-id with a bar-keeper for refusing
black men. Another trouble
a negro, but-killing a
JAMES DOUGLAS & CO.,
NO. 40 BROAD STREET (OPPOSITE DR
HOYT’S DRUG STORE),
T he undersigned have rented,
Enlarged and Thoroughly Repalred the
above named Stable, and are prepared to do a
General Livery Business. -Mr, Douglas trusts
that his long experience at Cap'- May’s stable
will be a guarantee for faithfulness.. We have o
good stock of horses and vehicles, end will ,da
our utmoet to eatisiy our customers.
Feed and Care of Stock a Speciality.
JAMES DOUGLAS A C
deel0,tw2iu-wlt
CO.
WHITELY’S
OLD RELIABLE
LIVERY STABLE
Skin, floro^^es, stc., eta. In these, as in all
other constitutional Diseases, Dn. Walkib’s
Vnine An ilittbrs h'aVe shown thoir great onratlvo
powers In the most obstinate and Intractable
oases. . ,. + , j ■ -
For Ioflaminatory-and Chronic Rheuma
tism, Gout, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent
Fovers; Diseases of tho Blood, Liver, Kidneys
end Bladder, those Ritters have no equal: Such
Diieaiea are caused by Vitiated Blood,
For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt
Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Bolls,
Carbuncles, Ringworms, Roald Hoad, Boro Eyss,
Erysipelas, Itoh, Scurfs, Dieooloratloaa of tho
Skin, Humors and Diieasos of the Skin of what
ever muno or nature, are literally dug up and
Carried out of the system in a short Umo by the
use of these Bitters.
Pin, Tape, mid other Worms, lurking in
theeystomiof so many thousands, are oflectually
destroyed aqd removed. No system of medicine,
no vermifuges, no anthelminites, will free the
system rfodi worms’ like these Bitters.
s'JFOr I-'chinle Complaints, in young or old,
married or single, at the dawn of wemanhood or
the turn of Ufo, these Tonlo Bitters display so
decided an Rifluonee that Improvement Is loon
perceptible.
Dr. 3. Walker’s California Vluegut
Bitters aro a purely Vegetable preparation,
made chiefly from the native hiWis founl on the
lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of
California, tho medioinal properties Of which
are extraettd therefrom without the use of Alco
hol. The question is almost dallv asked, “ What
ti the cause of tho unparalleled success of Vis-
so ab Bittxrs 7” Our answer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and tho patient reeovers his
health. They are the groat blood purifier and a
life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and
Invigorator of the system. Never bofore in the
history of the world has a medicine been com
pounded possessing the remarkable qualities ot
VuuflA i Bjrrsns in healing the sick of every
disease man is heir to. They are a gentle Pur
gative as well as a Tonlo, relieving Congestion or
Inflammation of. the Liver and-Visceral Organs
in Bilious Diseases.
If men will enjoy good health, let them ueo
Viuesar Bitters as a medicine, and avoid the
use of alcoholic stimulants in every form.
r. h. McDonald & co..
Druggists and General Agents, San Francisco
California, aqd cor. Washington and
Charlton Sts., Now Tork.
Sold by all Druggists and Dealers.
ootfl,tw-wly-eom
BOOBAEM & VAN BAALTE,
18 VESEV ST., NE1V YORK,]
W. L. WHITELY, Proprietor.
— 1 keeps constantly on
hand to hire. Good Horses and
Excellent Vehicle*.- Splendid
accommodations for Drovers and otheA. Honor
Carriages, and Buggies always on hand fo.
•ale. Entire satisfaction guaranteed to all who
patronise us. foblt-twly.
AGENTS IN UNITED STATES
Only 25 Cents!
TWENTY-FIVE CENTS TO
THE
gEND
« KBNNESAW ROUTE GAZETTE,’’
ATLANTA, GA.,
And that spicy paper will be sent to you
monthly for ono year. flMT-Rlohest thing out
Feb20-lm,
FBANK HOLMES,
FASHIONABLE BOOT MAKER
OPPOSITE HOYT’3 1 .IUG STORE.
PERFECT FITS IN ELEGANT STYLE
JT guaranteed. The best French Calf and
I Sol* leather always op hand, janlo,tn2m
Bus <fc Co., Burton, on Trent, England.
Pale & Burton Ales lit Ballr aud Bottles.
Curvolsler Brandy, Curvoisler & Curlier
Freres, Iarnac, France, in Cases,
Octave* and Quarter Casks.
Rademaker’s DeValk (Falcon) Gin,
llademaker & Co., Dclfshaveu,
Holland, in Cases, Octaves,
and Quarter Casks.
P.
Marsala Wluo, Wqodhouse & Co., Mars*
in Octaves and Quarter Casks,
octl.twly