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Howt Hii-tocelilij Courier
♦
M. dwinell, proprietor.
“WISDOM, JUSTICE, AND MODERATION.”
iVEW SERIES.
FOUR DOLLARS PER ANNUM.
ROME, GEORGIA, miSSm HOMING, AUGUST 2^1876,
VOL. 15, NO. 119
(Courier mid Commercial
CONSOLIDATED APRIL lO, 1870.
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The Campaign Opened.
Speech of Hun. J. W. Wofford, Candidate lor
Elector for the State at Large to Georgia
onTlldenntid Hendricks ticket, Delivered
at Ccdartotvn, Ga.. on the 32nd day ol
August, 1820,
Fellow Citizens : This is an impor
tant era in the history of the
gn-at Republic. A political war is
now being waged between the two politi
cal parties of the country, for the posses
sion of the machinery of the government.
These parties are the Republican party
and the Democratic party. The Repub
lican party has been in power since the
4th of March, 1861, when Mr. Lincoln
was inaugurated President. The issues
which were prominent in the public mind
when he was elected aro now dead :
deed, all the issues between the Republi
cans and Democrats, and which brought
on the late war, and issues which grew out
of its results are dead. The war was
waged to preserve the integrity of the
Union. Its integrity has been preserved
and it stands to-day cemented with the
blood, of both sections. If the people
of both sections from now on do their
duty, it will staud forever,
A consequence of that war was the
freedom of the negro held in bondage in
the slave States, the enactment of fundi-
raental and other laws for his protection
in all the privilege of a citizens,
and the transfer to him of all th8 political
rights of any other citizen in the Re
public.
Theso amendments to the Constitution
»nd tne laws passed in pursuance of them
are acquiesced in by every man, wo
man and child in Georgia. So far as my
experience and observation goes, there is
no one iierc, who would abridgo the rights
and the political privilege of the black
man.
I do not myself believe that slavery
was ever a benefit to the Southern peo-
I am perfectly confident, that the
Southern people are now universally con
vinced of the truth of this proposition.
And if the question of a re-enslavement
of the black man was to-day submitted to
*ho people of Georgia, it would be voted
down fifty to one. The tenacity with
which the Southern people clung to ihe
institution of slavery was not based on
their love of it in the abstract, but was
ostered in the opposition that is bred in
the heart of any one when his rights are
unlawfully invaded by another.
Slavery was peculiar to the cotton
•States and a few of what was known ns
t e border States ; a great political organ
ization grew up in the Northern section of
110 Lnion, the nvowed purpose of which
Was l ' 10 destruction of this institution
Pacular to our section. Our right to the
ownership of slavery was as old as Con
stitution itself, and one recognized by
nth the fundamental and statute law,
hen therefore a respectable and power-
II organization—composed of the ablest
8111 most intelligent men of the North
*as created for the express and the sole
Purpose of the annihilation of slavery,
e feeling of resistance which God has
P anted in tho breasts, of all us, came
m to play in all its force, and was fed and
vitalized by the protracted and angry dis-
™® ,on * indulged in by politicians of
sections until it culminated in tho
When the Southern people were sub
jugated and their former slaves were de
clared free men and the political equals
of their old masters, and this after one of
the most bloody conflicts on record, the
rational tendency was to make the negro
arrogant, protected as ho was by the bay
onets of the government. This taken in
connection with the universal poverty, of
the whites, and the bad useB to which the
negroes were put by bad men after politi-
privileges, were conferred upon them, and
the fact that the negro was being used, as
an element in hostility to the real or sup
posed interests of the whites, produced
naturally an estrangement between the
races. And this never went to the ex
tent of hostility on the part of the
whites to the negro as such, but mainly
to the men who used and the mean pur
poses to which his voting powers were
perverted..
If there is a race on earth who under
the same circumstances and the same
provocation would have acted with more
forbearance and more- charity than the
white people of the South acted
towards the black people after the latter
were freed, I want to see that people, for
they are'not of the seed of Adam.
There has never been a day or an hour
from June, 1865, to this blessed moment
when the black man Of the South did not
have a friend in -the white man of the
same section.
Under the law of Georgia a slave could
not hold property.' His accumulations
and earnings, were carried to the master,
consequently at the “ surrender” in the
spring of 1865, there was not a freedman
in the State whQ. owned one dollars
worth of property/.-There were in June,
1865, in Georgia about 80,000 colored
men over twenty-one years of age.
These colored men have from then tc now,
by their own exertions supported their
families as renters on the land of the
white people and as hirelings to the white
people educated their children more or
less and have accumulated $5,393,885
worth of property. In the next ten
years, with the improved facilities, in
creased knowledge from experience, more
general education, their aggregate proper
ty will go to $30,000,000. For nearly
the whole of the $5,000,000 now
owned by the colored men of Geor
gia was made in the last b!x years; the
first five years after the “ Surrender” was
spent by the colored men in politics, and
in looking for the “forty acres and a
mule” promised by Radical politicians
from the scanty means of the Southern
whites.
As a lawyer I have defended a great
many colored peoplo; every lawyer of
much practice has done the same thing;
zeal for the client has never abated on
account of color; this is done every day
in every court of Southern States. In
almost every instance this is done without
reward or the hope of it. The better
class of black people do not commit
crimes. More than that, the records of the
courts will show, and to this I challenge
a contradiction, that there is as large a
per cent, of black mea acquitted of crimes
by white juries, as are of white men ac
quitted of crime by the same juries,
here assert, and the records will disprove
it if I am wrong, that this is true of every
court in Georgia from the lowest to the
'lie election of Mr. Lincoln and the at-
etnpted secession of the Southern States
from the Union.
There is not now, and there never has
a people on tho earth who would
a V . e differently, and there is not
intelligent man in world who does not
kn ° w Hus to bo true.
This I say, to the honor of Georgians
is true, in a State where every officer is a
Democrat, and where almost every black
man is a Republican.
Asti iking illustration of the feeling,
when uninfluenced by bad men, that ex
ists in the South between the blacks and
the whites, is found in the conduct of tho
great Bishop Pierce of the Methodist
Church South, meeting the with colored
people of Georgia in their annual confer
ence preaching and praying with them,
and giving them the full benefit of his
ripe experience—pure Christian charac
ter—in the management and control of
their affairs as a denomination of Chris
tians. No feeling in that good man
heart but love for his fellows without
reference to the color of their skins.
Another illustration of a class that
might be prolonged indefinitely: Bishop
Ward is a black man—a very black
He was for four years, ending last
spring, the Bishop in charge of the Meth
odist church o r tho colored people in
Georgia. He preached at all places
where his duties called him. Among
other places he preached to the colored
people in Carteraville, where I live; the
white people learning of his presence
they went to hear him; he is a very able,
eloquent man. Sometime afterwards his
business brought him there again; the
desire to hear him had became so general
that he was invited by universal scclaim
to preach in the Methodist Church
the white people, the finest building
the place. His audience was mixed in
color, but was large, respectful and intel
ligent. Nothing but good feeling pre
vailed and a common desire to hear the
black Bishop again.
The people of Georgia pay annually
of taxes to defray interest on the public
debt and the other expenses of the
State Government about $1,300,000.—
Of this amount the colored people pay
$26,969 42. It will be remembered in
this connection there are 121,819 white
males in the State over twenty-one
years of age, and 87,569 colored males
in the State oyer twenty-one years ol
ago. Now, in a State every department
of which is governed by white Dem
ocrats, and which pays to the public
school fund of the State over $300,000
annually, and in whioh there are about
400,000 children of school age both
whits and black, 160,000 of whom are
black, without reference to the fact
that the total tax paid by all the col
ored people in the State is only a little
over $26,000, and the white people pay
over $1,300,000, the fund is equally
distributed, and each black child in
Georgia gets just os much benefit from
the fund as each white child in Geor
gia. Teachers for the white schools
and teachers for the colored schools
are examined by the same commis
sioner and paid from the same ftmd
and precisely the same amounts per
scholar.
And yet it is said we are the ene
mies of the colored people. In the
light of the truth, I am willing to sub
mit to a candid world whether the
charge is true or false.
It is not our opinion that the mass
of the Northern people wish to do us
injustice. They have been educated to
their present opinions; what we need
is the truth presented to their minds.
One hundred years from now, in the
face ol the tale history will tell, it will
appear incomprehensible to impartial
men, that the President of the United
States, he who should know no sec
tion, he who should have no prejudices,
no partialities, he who should sit as
the goddess of justice, blind to all but
perfect equity, should have said in the
solemnity of a message to the congress
of the nation, that the officials of one
of the greatest States in the Union hold
their places by virtue of means foul
enough to disgrace savages. Yet that
was said without proof to sustain it,
and by a man who sits where Wash'
ington once sat.
A distinguished writer in Harper’s
Weekly of this week said iu an elabor
ate article, over his own name, upon
the political situation, that it would re
quire an “influx of gentle school mis
tresses from the North, to educate and
tame the savage spirits of Georgia and
Texas.”
Texas can speak for herself; but as
to Georgia, I ask in the name of her
people where is the outcroppings of
the savage spirit to which this writer
refers ? I here assert, that there is not
a negro church nor school house in
Georgia of any consequence, to the
building of which the money of the
white white people has not been con
tributed. I challenge the whole of
Radicalism to show this is not true.
The immediate cause of the Presi
dent’s gush of passion, the Hamburg
murder, finds no more approval in
Georgia or South Careliana that it
would find in New York or Massachu
setts. The murder of unarmed and
defenseless prisoners, no matter what
their personal guilt might be, is
outrage of such enormity os to meet
the just indignation of every good
man,
The people of South Carolina as
people, are no more responsible for
that ruffian act, than are the people of
any community responsible for the
death of an innocent man shot dead by
an assassin. Yet this is done, in this
country, but too often; and done North,
South, East and West. Life in no part
of this country is as dear as it ought to
be. Blood runs too freely and for oc
casions too slight. A drunken, reckless
vagabond, without the fear of God or
man before his face, shoots an inno'
cent man dead, or a number of them
combine and do the same thing,and the
community in which it is done 1b held
up to scorn and contempt for the act.
The latter is a crime of just a little less
magnitude than the other.
Two years ago when the Orangemen
paraded through the streets of New
York, it required all the police force
of the city to protect them from vio
lence. Without such protection many
lives would have been lost, hundreds
of peraons injured and muoh property
(CWfwW <v* /hurih sage.)
TAKE
SIMMONS' LIVER REGULATOR
For ill diseases of the Liver, Stomach and Bplooo.
WILL CURE DYSPEPSIA,
I UUST OWN that your
Simmons’ Livor Regulator
fully deserve! the popularity
it has attained. Aa a family
medicine it has no equal, ft
oared my wife of a malady I
had counted inourable— that
wolfsbane of our Amerloan
people, Dyspensta.
A. B. I>. ALBERT,
Professor in Nicholas Pub-
llo School, Parrish of Terre-
bonue, La.
MALARIOUS FEVERS.
You aro at liberty to use my name in praise
.. yonr Regulator aa prepared by you, and re*,
ommend It to every ona as the boat preventive
for Fever and Ague in tho world, f plant In
Southwestern Georgle, near Albany, Georgia,
and muet say that it hat done more good on my
dentation among my negroes, than any medieino
; ever ussdi it auperoedee quinine if taken In
time. Yours, &o.,
Hon. B. H. HILL, Ga.
CHILDREN !-Your Reg-
ulator is superior to any other
remedy for Malarial Diseases
among children, and it hat a
large sale in this aeotlon of
Georgle. — W. M. Rossini.,
Albany, Ga.
CONSTIPATION.
TESTIMONY OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE
OF GEORGIA.—I have used Simmons’ Liver
Regulator for oonatipatlon of my bowels, caused
by a temporary derangement of tho liver, for the
lilt three or fonr years, and always when used
according to tho directions with decided benefit.
I think It Is a good madleine for the derange
ment of tha liver—at least tuoh has been my
personal experionoe in (be use of it.
HIRAM WARMER,
Chief Justice of Georgle.
SICK HEADACHE,
EDITORIAL. —We have
totted iti virtue!, personally,
and know that for Dyspepsia,
Bilioasneti, and Throbb tog
Headaehe, it is the belt medi
cine the world ever tew. We
have tried forty other remedies
before Simmons’ Liver Regu
lator, but nonool them gave
us more than temporary relief;
bnt the Regulator not only re
lieved, bnt cured us.
—Ed Telegraph and Messenger,
Macon, 6c..
Having bad during the lest twenty year* of
my life to attend to Racing Btook, and having
had io muoh trouble with them with Colic,
Grubbs, ko., gave ma a groat deal of trouble.
Having heard of your Regulator as a oure for
the above dlsoases, I oonoludod to try it. Alter
trying ona Packaoi is Mata, I found it to euro
in every instance. It it only to be tried to prove
what 1 have said in its praise. I can tend yon
Certificates from Augusts, Clinton and Maoon as
to the oure of Horse.
GEORGE WAYMAN, Macon. Ga..
sap21,tw-wly July 24th, 187S,
United States Mail Line—The Ooosa
Eiver Steamers I
O N AND AFTER NOVEMBER 30, 1824,
Steamers on the Coosa River will run at
ior schedule at follows, supplying all the Pott
ots on Mail Route No. S18S:
Leavo Rome every Monday at. 1 P. M.
Leave Rome every Thursday at. B A. M.
Arrive at Gadsden Tuesday and Friday.. T A. M.
Leave Gadsden Tuesday and Friday 8 A. M.
Arrive at Rome Wodneadey end Saturday S P. M.
novS8 J. M. ELLIOTT, Gen’l Supt,
Rome Railroad—Change of Sohedule
O N AND AFTER MARCH 1st, the evening
trsln (exoept Saturday evening), on this
road, will bo discontinued. The trains will run
follows:
HORNING TRAIN.
Leaves Rome daily at 7.00 A. M
Return to Romo at 12.00 M.
SATURDAY ACCOMMODATION.
Leaves Rome (Saturday only) at 0.40 P. M
Return to Roms at 8.00 P. M
The evening train at Romo will make dote
connection with S. R. A D. R. R. train North
and South, and at Kingston with W. k A. R. R.
train South and East.
O. M. PENNINGTON, Gon’l Supt
JNO. E. STILLWBLL, Tiokot Agent. ,
Gooreia R. R., Augusta to Atlanta.
D ay passenger trains on Georgia
Railroad, Atlanta to Augusta, run as below:
Leaves Augusta at 0.00 a. a
Leaves Atlanta at.. .7.00 a.m
Arrlvos Augusta at. 8.S0 r. H
Arrives at Atlanta at. 4.00 p, m
Night Passenger Trains as follows:
Loaves Augusta at.. 8.11 r. a
Leaves Atlanta at .10.40 r. u
Arrives at Augusta .8.00 a. m
Arrives at Atlanta at....... 0.20 a. m
Aceomniodatton Train as foUowa I
Leaves Atlanta S 00 P. M
Leaves Covington ...0 00 A. M
Arrives Atlanta 8 14 A. M
Arrives Covington 7 20 P. M
0
I. P. FORD. M. DWINELL.
COPARTNERSHIP.
FORD & DWINELL,
Beal Estate Agents.
T he undersigned have formed a
copartnership, under the firm name and
atyla of Fonn k Dvixsll, for the purpose oi
buying and selling real estate, or renting prop
erty on oommiMion. Orders to bay or sell wild
lands or improved - property in upper Georgia
are solicited. - - I. D. FORD,
M. DWINELL.
Rome, Go., May 20, 1876—tw-wtf
A.THEWH. BROWER, H.D. COTHRAN,
President. Cashier.
BANK OF ROME,
ROME, GEORGIA.
Authorised Capital, - - • 1400,000
Subscribed Capital, ... 100,000
Collections made in all acoeulble points and
prooeeds promptly remitted. Exohango on all
principal oitlss bought and sold. Loans mads
on first class i ecu rifle*.
Correspondent:
BANK OF NORTH AMERICA, New York
apr7,twly
WHITELEY’S
OLD RELIABLE
LIVERY STABLE
W. L. WHITELEY, Proprietor.
KEEPS CONSTANTLY ON
hand to hire, Good Hone* end
Excellent Vshioles. Splendid
aoeommodatiom for Drovsrs and nthen. Hones,
Carriages, and Buggies always on hand for
sale. Entire satisfaction guaranteed to all who
patronise us. fab21,twly
THE ROME HOTEL,
(Formerly Tennessee House)
BROAD STREET, NEAR RAILROAD DEPOT
A. 8TANSBURY, - - Proprietor
Rome, Georgia.
6 THIS HOTEL IB SITUATED WITHIN
—.Ml twenty steps of the railroad plattorm, and
oen venient to the business portion of t >wn.
Servants polite and attentive to tb nr duties.
mW All Baggage handled Free oi Charge.
*ribla THOMAS H. SCOTT. Olerk.
THE CHOICE HOTEL,
CORNER BROAD AND BRIDGE STREETS
J. C. Ratvllna, Proprietor.
(Situated in the Business part of the Oily.)
Rome, Georgia.
xV-Fassoogers takan to and from tha Depot
free of oharge. WM. S. POWERS, Clark.
ianl7a
1870 ESTABLISHED 1S70
AXE !
SO BROAD STREET, ROME, GEORGIA,
P AINTS IN THE LATEST STYLE. Warrants
his work and material. Paints without re
moving furniture or oarpets; not one drop
spilled. Graining, Paper Hanging, Gltslng,
Oalolminlng. Everything In tha line.
JW Bates Low. (Jun28,twSm>
r>. w. PROCTOR,
Attorney at a L n a J' , Sol ( C i (or ; n chancery
W ILL PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS of the
eonnty and Circuit Special attention
« ven to collection*. Offico with Hamilton
tnoey, in Smith’s Block, Rome, Ga.
aug],twflm'
THE BREATEST DI8C0VIRY OF THE ABE.
DR. TOBIAB’ VENETIAN LINIMENT.
Over 19 years before the pnbllo. Warranted,
or the money returned, to euro Dysentery,
Dlarrhoa, Oolio, Spasms, Croup and Vomiting,
taken Internally. Perfectly Innocent) see oath
with each bottle; and Chronlo Rheumatism,
Swellings, Sprains, Bruises, Pains in the Limbs,
Baok and Chest, externally. Not a bottle has
over been returned, although millions aro sold
annually. Price, BO cts. Dr. TOBIAS’
HORSE LINIMENT, in Pint Bottles, Is the
Beit in tht World for tha oars of Lameness, Old
Sores, Sprains, Collo and Distemper. Price,
•1.00. TOBIAS’ DERBY CONDITION POW
DERS are superior to any others, or no pay.
They allay Fever, Purify the Water, Soften the
Skin Give a Fins Coat and Improve tho Appe
tite. Price, 23 cts. Perfectly innocent, as
Col. D. MoDaniels, who has seen the reolpe, tes
tifies to, aa well ai the Liniment. He has some
of tho Fastest Banning Horsos In the World.
Thousands ot certificate! have boon received,
speaking in high tsrms of tho above mediolnet.
Sold by the Druggist*. LIPPMAN BROS.,
Savannah, Georgle, Agents.
New Advertisements.
<2?£»£k'-!<lt* p 5' r y aWeekto Agents. Samples
tpD'JO'Rtf I FREE. P.O. VICKERY k
CO., Augusta, Maine.
®*1 O a day at home. Agents wanted. Outfit
J. * and terms free. TRUE k CO., Augusta,
WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE,
MACON, OA.
Tha Thirty-ninth Annul Session begins
Sept. 20th, 1878. The oldest Female College in
the world. Location hoalthy. Curriculum
extended. A tall corps of experienced teachers
in ovary department. Advantages—educational,
aooial and lellgious, unsurpassed. For cata
logue*, containing full particulars, address
Rev. W. O. BOSS, D. D, President.
Selm&i Rome and Dalton Railroad—
Change of Sohqdnle.
BLUE MOUNTAIN ROUTE.
N AND AFTER SUNDAY, APRIL 28nn,
passenger trains will run aa follows i
GOING NORTH.
No. 1. No. 3.
Daily. Sunday excepted
Loaves Bolma 7.55 AM . 4.80 PM
Loaves Calera 11.23 A M......10.36 P M
Leaves Rome., 6.00 P M...... 7.00 A M
Leaves Dalton 8.37 P M. ....10 00 A M
Loaves Bristol 0.36 A M 10.10 P M
Leaves Lynohburg... 8.80 F M 8,00 A M
Arrives Washington.. 0.32 A M 4.16 PM
Arrives Baltimore.... 8.40 AM...... 0.06 P M
Arrives Philadelphia 1.20 P M 10.00 P M
Arrives Now York... 4.00 PM 0.16 AM
GOING SOUTH.
No, 2. No, -1.
Daily. Minday excepted
Arrives Selma 0.16 A M 11.68 P M
Arrives Calera 4.33 A M 0.46 P M
Arrive! Rome 8.66 P M 0.46 A M
Arrives Dalton— 6.61 P M 7.04 A M
Arrives Bristol 4.40 A M 7.S7 P M
Arrives Lynohburg.. 6.80 P M....« 0 26 A M
Leaves Washington... 7.07 P M 11.57 P M
Loaves Baltimore 4.40 A M 10.10 P M
LeavesPhilidelphia..l2.45 PM 0.00 PM
Leaves New York 8.65 P M S 00 P M
Both trains make close connections at Calera
with trains of S. A N. R. R. for Montgomery,
Mobile, Now Orloans, Hufaula, Columbus, Ga.,
Jacksonville and Tallaheisoo, Fla.
Paaaongors going to Atlanta and points beyond
must take No. 3, whioh makes olose connections
through.
Connecting at Bolma with A. C R. R. (or
Meridian, VToksbnrg, Mobile, New Orleans, and
points In Mississippi and Louisiana.
Bleeping cars through on both train*.
Nos. 1 and 2 have sleepers from Mobile to
Dalton, with only ona change through to Balti
more.
Nos. 8 and 4 have sleeping ears from Mont
gomery to Dalton without obange.
if. STANTON, SnpL
RAY KNIGHT, G. T. A.
THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINES.
Tested by popular use for ov4r
A QUARTER OF A CENTURY!
Dr. Strong’s Compound Sanative Pills
cure Constipation, BUlouaneat, Liver Complaint,
Malarial Fevers, Rheumatism, Erysipelas, and
all diseases requiring an active but mild pnr-
Dr. Strong’* Pectoral Stomach Pills
cure Coughs, Colds, Fevers, Female Complaints,
SlokHesdtohe, Dyspepsia, and ■" ’
Ffopncwn/
$5 SJ20
Portland, Maine.
home. Samples
. Snssos k Co.,
NEW o 8 f^e P1R#
UNITED STATES.
A complete list of Amorlean Newspapers, num.
boring more than eight thousand, with a Ga-
settser ol all tho towns and elites in whioh they
srs published; Historical and Statistical Sketches
of tha Great Newspaper Establishments; 1116s-
tretod with numerous engravings of tho princi
pal newspaper buildings. Book or 800 Paois,
just iieaod. Mailed, post paid, to any address
for *6 ois. Apply (inclosing price) to Surxmx.
vsarxsv or toe Nnwararan Pavilion, Centen
nial Grounds, Philadelphia, or Ame-ioan News
Company, New York.
EVERY ADVERTISER NEEDS IT.
Western & Atlantio Railroad and iti
Connections.
“KENNESAW ROUTEI"
Tho following eohedulo takes effect May 21,1875
NORTHWARD.
No. 1 No. 3 No. 11
Leavo Atlanta... 200 pm... 020 am... 656 pm
Arr Cartorevillo.. 0 38 pm... 842 am... 860 pm
Arr Kingston 7 04 pm... 911am... 924 pm
Arr Dalton 841 pm.,,10 54 am...H46pm
ArrChattanooga.10 16 pm...12 42 pm.
SOUTHWARD.
No. 2 No. 4 No. 12
Lve Chattanooga 4 00 p m... 016am..
Arrive Dalton.... 641pm... 701 am... 100 am
Arr Kingston 7 68 pm... 8 07 am... 410 am
ArrOartereville. 812pm... 042 am... 618am
ArrAltante. 1010 pm...1166 am... OSOam
Pullman Falaoo Cars ran on Nos. 1 and 2
betweoa Now Orleans and Baltimore.
Pullman Palace Cara run on Nos. 1 and 4
between Atlanta and Nashville.
Pullman Palao* Oars ran oa Nos. 8 and 2
between Louisville and Atlanta,
pm- No ohange of oars between New Orleans,
Mobile, Montgomery, Atlanta and Baltimore, and
only one ohange to New York.
Pei sensors leaving Atlanta at 4.20 P. M. ar
rive In NevrYork the seeond afternoon the:
ter at 4.00 P. M.
Excursion Tiokels to the Virginia Springs and
various Hummer Resorts will bo on salt iu New
Orleans. Mobile, Montgomery, Columbus, Maeon,
Savannah, Augusta and Atlanta, at greatly
reduced rates 1st of Juno.
Parties desiring a whole oar through to the
Virginia Springs or to Baltimore, ebonld ad-
iross tho undersigned.
Parties contemplating traveling ehould tend
for a copy of Kcnnuaw Route Qaicttc, cottain-
ing schedule!, oto.
JFAik tor tlokots via '• Kennossw Route.
B. W. WRENN,
Gon’l Passenger and Tlokol A gt, Atlanta Ga.
mav26,t»tf
THE GREAT CAUSE
OF
I Hu man Misery.
Juil Published, in a Sealed Envelope. Price
six cents.
A LEOtURE ON THE- NATURE, TREAT-
5- MENT, and Radical Odra of Bemibal Weak
nasi, or Spermatorrhoea; Induced by Solf-Abuso,
Involuntary Emissions, Impotency, Nervoue
Debility, and Impedimenta to Marriage gener
ally; Consumption, Epilepsy and Fits; Mental
and Physical Incapacity, *o—By ROBERT J.
CULVERWELL, -M. D-, author ol the "Greta
Book,’’ £o.
Tho world-renowned author, In this admira
ble Leoture, clearly proves from hit own oxpori*
onco that the awfUl consequences of Self-Abuse
may be effectually removed without medicine,
and withont dangerous surgical operations,
bougies, instruments, rings or cordials; pointing
out a mode of ours at onoe certain and effectual,
by whioh every sufferor, no matter what hit
cenJItion may he, may onre himself ohoaply,
privately ana radloally.
This Lecture will prove a toon to thousands
and thousands.
Sent, under teal, In a platn envelop*, to any
address, on receipt of six cents, or two pottage
■tampe.
Address the FabllthnrSi
F. BRUQMAN & 80N,
41 Ann St„ New York; P. Ol Box4580.
Tie Georgia Daily Conowaaltl
IB PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING
(Exeept Sunday)
Br THE CoMHOXWS4LTH POSLISHIKO CoMfANY,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
And le Edited by Col. Osset W. Stiles, late of
the Albany Nicies, with effioient assistants.
Tax CoMHONWELLTn gives the current newt of
the city, State and elsewhere, market reports
and vigorous editorials on Municipal, Political
and General Subjects.
Tbs coming canvass, State and National, will
bo olosoly watohed and properly presented,
while the Moohanioal and Agricultural Interests
of the State will not tpe no&Ieotcd. It has a
large and rapidly increasing circulation.
TERMS:
One month, 75 cents; two months, $1.26; fonr
months, $2.00; ona year, $6.0*.
PRINTING, BINDING and RULING, of
every kind, done In the best style and at lowest
prices.
COMMONWEALTH PUBLISHING CO.,
Atlaxta, GxonoiA.
Newspaper Advertising.
Newtpapor advertising is now rooognlsned by
buainott men, having faith in tboir own wares,
as the most effective meant of securing for their
goods a wide recognition of their merits.
Newspaper advertising Impels Inquiry, and
whan the artlele ofiered le of good quality sad
at a fair pries, tho natural results It increased
sales.
Newspaper advertising is a permanent addi
tion to the reputation ot the goods advertised,
because it is a permanent infioeneo always at
work in their interest.
Newspaper advertising ia the meet energetic
and vigilant of talesmen; addressing thousands
each day, always in tht advertiser’s interest
and ceaselessly at work socking customers from
all classes.
Newspaper advertising promotes traile, for
eron in tho dullest times advertisers secure by
far the largest share oi what is being- done,—
John Manning
THIS PAPER IS ON FILE WITH
Where Adrcrtitlnj*
can be mad*
E. N. FRESHMAN & BROS.,
Advertising Agents,
190 W. Fourth St., CINCINNATI, 0.,
Are authorised to contract for advertising
in this paper.
Estimates famished tree.
Send for » clrc tar.
marlS.twtf
County Maps.
Orncx or Board or Couurssiosxns ]
Roads AHn Rivbxox or l'Lorn to., >
Roue, Ga., April 21, 1376. J
■PARTIES WISHING TO PROCURE A MAP
JT of the oounly can do so by oalling at roy
offico. Fries, $1.00.
» r ,25 THOS. J. TERRY, Clorlr