Newspaper Page Text
• lk ■■
(Continued from fret page.)
arguments in favor of the legal right
of a State to go out. The later Aboli
tionists did not attempt to conceal their
rancorous hostility to the Union. “ No
union with slave-holders,” was one of
their watchwords, and, down to the
opening of the war, its destruction was
the avowed object of their machina
tions.
There is one conclusive proof of your
enmity to the Union, and that is your
unwavering opposition to the Constitu
tion which held the States together.
You know as well as I do how absurd
it is to suppose that any man or party
can support the Union, and at the same
time trample on the Constitution; and
you certainly are not ignorant that you
and your predecessors, from the earliest
times, have been anti-constitutional in
all your proclivities. Contemptuous
disregard of constitutional obligations
is not now the mere germ of a doctrine;
it is a part of your settled creed, be
fore the war, and since, you have trod
den under foot every provision con
tained in the great charter of our liber
ties. I do not speak at random. I
challenge you to designate a single
constitutional right of the States, or of
individuals, which you have not, at
some time, or in some way, deliberate
ly violated.
LAWLESS LESS AND “ LOYALTY.”
This contempt for the Constitution,
this practical denial that an oath to
support is sacred, implies a disregard
of all laws, human and divine, and,
when adopted, it left nothing to guide
you except the propensities, evil or
good, of your natural hearts. Mar.y of
you, and notably you yourself, con
tracted no individual guilt, because you
were too proud for petty larceny, too
benevolent for large-handed robbery,
and too foil of kindness to break wan
tonly into tbe tabernacle of human
life. But generally the moral princi
ples of the ultra-Abolitionists (if they
ever had any) became so wholly per
verted that they saw nothing wrong in
the worst offenses that could be com
mitted against their political opponents.
In their eyes, theft and murder not
only lost their felonious character, but
became meritorious, if the victims but
lived south of Mason and Dixon’s lino.
When John Brown stolo horses in the
peace of God and the State of Missou
ri, he was taking his lawful booty;
when he sneaked into a quiet Virginia
village on a Sunday night, and assas
sinated defenseless citizens, he was a
hero; and when he died a felon’s death
on the scaffold, to which he was justly
condemned, he became a martyr.
THE DEMOCRATS OK THE NORTH.
You persist in misunderstanding the
ante-bellum attitude of the Northern
Democracy. We Btood steadfastly by
the Union against all attempts of the
New England party to break it up by
secession. We sustained the Constitu
tion against the ferocious assaults of
tho Abolitionists; we labored earnestly
to save Republican institutions from
destruction with which they were
threatened by you ; and as long as the
Southern people acted with us, we
gratefully accepted their nid in the
good work.
Your averment that the Democratic
party desired the aggrandizement of
slavery,and “yielded their consciences”
on that subject to the South, is grossly
unjust if you mean to charge them
with anything more than a willingness
to protect the Southern, as well as the
Northern and Middle, States in the ex
ercise of their constitutional rights. Wo
had disposed of slavery within our own
jurisdiction according to our sense of
sound policy and justice. But we had
made an express compact with the
other States to leave the entire control
of their domestic affairs to themselves;
We kept our covenant, simply because
it would have been gross dishonesty to
break. The ablitionists took a differ-
ert view, and refused to keep faith
They swore as solemnly as we did to
observe the terms of tho bargain, but
according to their code, it was a Bin not
to violate it. The fact is truo that we
did not think it right to cut the throats,
or shoot, or strangle the men or women
of the South for believing in negro
slavery ; but that is no justification of
your assertion that we yielded your
consciences to them.
Again : You charge us (the Northern
Democracy) with having given bad
advice to the Southern people. This
consisted, you say, in assuring them
that if they seceded, we would take
their part againBt any attempt to force
them back again into the Union. This
is a gross error, and you will see it
when I recall your attention to the
facts. In all our exhortations to South
ern men against secession we were met
by the expression of their fear that the
Abolitionists intended in any event to
invade and slaughter them. Some
reason for this apprehension was given
by the fierce threats of your leading
men, and especially by your almost
universal admiration of Brown for his
raid into Virginia. Certain Democrats
(and very good men, too,) did then
declare that a lawless expedition,
intended for purposes of mere pillage,
could not and should not be started in
the North, without such opposition as
would effectually stop it. But this was
before secession, and it was intended
to prevent that movement, not to en
courage it.
TO liE CONTINUED.
National Democratic Platform.
»
The crowd of visitors now in Phila
delphia is placed at 200,000 by some
of the papers of thgt city.farexceeding
the Fourth of July numbers. The
sidewalks are reported as almost im
passable, except in the direction the
crowd is moving. The hotels and board
ing couses are doing a rushing busi-
ness, but, so far, there is no intimation
of an advance in their rates.
The election in Colorado, on the 10th
of October, will have uncommon in
terest, from tho fact that the Legisla
ture then chosen will elect two United
States Senators, and also the Presiden
tial electors of the States. The Legis
lature of South Carolina, it will be re
membered, formerly eleoted the State’s
Presidential electors.
We, the delegates of the Democratic party
of the United States, in National Convention
assembled, do horeby declare the ndministra
tion of tho Federal (Government in urgent
need of immediate reform, and do hereby
enjoin upon the nominees of this Convention,
and of the Democratic pnrty in each State, n
rcnious effort and co-operation to this end,
and do hereby appeal to our follow-citizens of
every former political connection to under
take with us this first and most pressing
patriotic duty.
For the Democracy of tin whole country
wo do hereby re-nffirm our faith in tho per-
tnanency of tho Federal Union, and our devo
tion to the Constitution of the United States,
with its amendments universally accepted as
a final settlement of the controversies that
engendered the civil war, and do hero record
our steadfast confidence in tho perpetuity of
Republican self-government; in a rcsoluto
acquiescence in the will of tho majority, the
vital principle of republics; in the supremacy
of tho civil over the military authority; in
the total separation of the church and State
for the sake aliko of civil and religious free
dom ; in the equality of all citizens before
the just lnws of their own enactment; in the
liberty of individual conduot, unvexed by
sumptuary laws; in the faithful education of
the rising generation, that they may preserve,
enjoy and transmit tho:e best conditions of
human happiness and hope, we behold tho
nob’est products of a hundred years of
changeful history. But while upholding the
bond of our Union nnd tho great charter of
these, our rights, it behooveB a free poople to
practice also that eternal vigilance which is
the price of liborty.
lteform is nocessaiy to rebuild nnd ostnb-
lieh in the hearts of tho wholo people the
Union, eleven years ago happily rescued from
the dangor of a secession of States, but now
to be saved from a corrupt centralism which,
after inflicting upon ten States tho rapacity
of carpet-bag tyrannies, has honey-combed
the officers ol tho Federal Government itself
with incapacity, wnste and frnud; infected
Stntes and municipalities with tho contngien
of misrule, nnd locked fast the prosperity of
an industrious people in the paralysis of
hard times.
Reform is nccoesary to establish a Bound
currency, restore the public credit, and main
tain tho national honor. We denounce the
failuro for all these eleven years to make
good tho promise of the legal tendor notes,
which are a changing standard of value in
tho hands of the pcoplo, and the non-payment
of which is a disregard of the plighted faith
of tho nation. We denounce tho improvi
dence which in eleven years of peace has
tnkeu from the people-in Federal taxes
thirteen times the wholo amount of the legal-
tender notes, and squandered four times this
sum in useless expense, without nccnmulating
any reserve for their redemption. We de
nounce the financial imbecility and immoral
ity of that party which, during eleven years
of peace, has made no advance towards re
sumption, nnd no preparation for resumption,
but instend lias obstructed resumption by
wasting our resources and exhausting all our
surplus income, nnd while annually profess
ing to intend a speedy return to specie pay
ments, 1ms annually enacted fresh hindrances
thereto. As suoh a hindrance wo denounce
the resumption clause of tho act of 1875, and
we here demand its repeal. We demand a
judicious system of preparation by public
economies, by official retrenchments, and by
wiso financial management, which shall en
able tho nation soon to assuro the whole
world of its perfect ability and its perfect
readiness to meet any of its promises at the
call of the creditor entitled to payment. We
believe such a system, well devised, and
above all entrusted to competent hands for
execution, creating at no time an artificial
scarcity of currency, and at no time alarming
the public mind into n withdrawal of that
vaster machinery of credit by which St5 per
cent, of all business transactions are per
formed, a system open, public, uud inspiring
general confidence, would, from the day of
its adoption, bring lieuling ou its wings to
all our lmrnssed industries and set in motion
tho wheels of commerce, manufactures and
tho mechanical arts, restore employment to
labor und renew in nil its national sources
the prosperity of the people
Reform is necessary in tho sum and mode
of Federal taxation, to the end that capital
may be sot free from distrust and labor light
ly burdened. We denounco tho pro.ont
tarifi, levied upon nearly four thousand arti
cles, as a masterpiece of injustice, inequality
nnd false pretenso. It yields a dwindling,
not a yearly-rising, revenue; it hns impover
ished many industries to subsidize a few; it
prohibits imports that might purchase the
products of American labor; it lias degraded
American commerce from the first to an infe
rior rank upon tbe high seas; it hns cut down
the sales of American manufactures at home
and abroad, and depleted the returns ot
American agriculture, an industry followod
by half of our people; it costs the people
five times more thnu it produces to the Trees
ury, obstructs the processes of production
and wastes the fruits of labor ; it promotes
fraud and fosters smuggling, enriches dislion
est officials und bankrupts honest merchants.
We demand that all custom house taxation
shall be on’y for revenue.
Reform is necessary in tho scale of public
expense, Federal, State and municipal. Our
Federal taxation has swollen from 160,008,000
gold in 1860 to $450,000,000 currency in
1870, nnd our aggregate taxation from $154,-
000,000 gold in i860 to $730,000,000currency
in 1870, or in one deendo from less than five
dollars per hend to more than eighteen dollars
per head. Since the restoration of peace, the
poople linvo paid in taxes more than thrice
tho sum of the national debt, and more than
twico that sum for the Federal Government
alone. Wc demand n rigorous frugality
every department, and from every officer of
the Government.
Reform is necessary to put a stop to the
profligate waste of public lands nnd their
diversion from actual settlers by the party in
power, which hns squandered two hundred
millions of acres upon railronds alone, and
out of moro than thrice that aggregate has
disposed of less than a Bixth directly to tillers
of tho soil.
Reform is necessary to correct the omissions
of a Republican Congress and the errors of
our treaties and our diplomacy which havo
stripped our fellow-citizens of foreign birth
nnd kindred race, rccrossing the Atlnntic, of
the shield of Americnn citizenship, anp have
exposed our brethren of tho Pacific coast to
the incursions of a race not sprung from the
same grant parent stock, nnd, in fact, now by
law denied citizenship, though naturalization
is being neither accommodated to the tradi
tions of a progressive civilization nor exer
ciscd in liberty under equal laws. Wo de
nounce the policy which thus discards the
liberty-loving German and tolerates the
revival of the Coolie trade in Mongolian
women, imported for immoral purposes, and
Mongolian men, held to perform servile labor
contracts, and demand such modification of
tho treaty with tho Chinese empire, cr such
legislation within constitutional limitation, ar
shall prevent tho further importation or im
migration of the Mongolian race.
Reform is necessary nnd can nevor be
effected but by making it tho controlling issue
of the elections und lifting it above the two
false issues with which the office holding
class and the party in power seok to smother
it—the fnlso issue with which they would
enkindle sectarian strife in respect to the
publio schools, of which the establishment
and support belong exclusively to the several
States, and which tho Democratic party has
chorishcd from their foundation, and is re
solved to maintuin, without partiality
preterence for any class, seet ot creed, and
without contributing from the Treasury to
any, and the false issue by which thoy seek
to light anew the dying embers of sectional
hato between kindred peoples, once unnat
urally estranged, but now re united in one
indivisible republic and a common destiny.
Reform is necessary in tho civil servico.
Experience proves tbnt the efficient econom
ical conduct ot the Governmental business is
not possible if its civil servico be subject to
change at evorv election; be a prise fought
for at tho ballot-box; be a brief reward of
party teal, instead of posts of honor assigned
for proved competency, and held for fidelity
in the public employ; that tbe dispensing of
patronago should neither be a tax upon the
timo of all our publio men, nor the instru
ment ot their ambition. Here again the
professions falsified in the performance attest
that the party in power can work out no
practical or salutary reform.
Rclorm is necessary even more in the
higher grades of publio service. The Pres
ident, Vice-President, Judges, Senators, Rep
resentatives, Cabinet officers—theso and all
others in authority nro the people’s servants;
their offices are not a private perquisito, they
are a public trust. When the annals of this
Republic show the disgrace and censure of a
Vice President, a late Speaker of the House
of Representatives marketing his rulings ns
a presiding officer, three Senators profiting
secretly by their votes as law-makers, five
chairmen cf the leading committees of the
late House of Representatives exposed in
jobbery, a Into Secretary of the Treasury
forcing balances in tho public accounts, a late
Attornoy-Gencral misappropriating publio
funds, a Secretary of the Navy enriched or
enriching friends by per centage levied off
the profits of contractors with his depart
ment, an Ambassador to England censured
in n dishonorable speculation, the President’s
private secretary barely escaping conviction
upon trial for guilty complicity in frauds
upon the revenue, a Secretary ot War im
peached for high crimes and confessed mis
demeanors, the demonstration is complete
that tho first step in reform must be the
people’s choice of honest men from another
larty, lest tho disease of one political organ-
zation infest the body politic, and lest by
sinking no change of men or party we can
;et no change of measures and no reform,
til these abuses, wrongs and crimes, the
; iroduct of sixteen years’ ascendancy of the
Republican party, create a necessity for
reform admitted by the Republicans them
selves; but their reformers are voted down
in convention and displaced from the Cabinot.
Tho party’s mass of honeBt voter’s is power
less to resist eight; thousand office-holders,
its leaders and guides. Reform can only be
had by a peaceful civil revolution. We
demand a change ot system, a change of
administration, a change of parties, that we
may have a ohange of measures and of men.
A Farm and Home
OF YOUR OWN.
Now is the Time to Secure It!
The beet and cheapest lands in matkot are in
Eabtebm Nebraska, on tho line of the Union
Pacific Railroad, The most favorable terma, very
Ion rates of fare and freight to all Bottlers. Tha
best markets. Free passei to land buyers. Maps,
dcicriptivo pamphlets, now edition of “Tub
Piosaaa” sent free everywhere. Address O. F.
DAVIS, Land Commissioner, U. P. R.R , Omaha,
Nebraska.
THE MARKHAM HOUSE,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
JAMES E. OWENS, PROPRIETOR.
ITUIIS POPULAR HOTEL, the very model of
a publio Homo — new, elegant, luxurious
end home like—is still in the very high tide of
pub.io favor.
Since my connection with hotels in Atlanta,
my prices have remained the line. Four years
at the “ National,’’ aDd now at the new and
elegant MARKHAM HOUSE. At a
THREE DOLLAR A DAY HOUSE
it has no Superior. I am now prepared to give
my friends and tha public generally BETTER
SATISFACTION than ever before.
The people of the State have given me a
liberal patronage, for which I feel thankful, and
aak for a continuance of the same.
No oharge on baggage to and from the Depot.
JAMES E. OWENS, Proprietor.
augtDtwlm
New Advertisements.
S TAMMERING cured by Bates* appliances.
For description, Ac., address Siarscs A Co.,
Box 5070, N. Y.
DR. STRONC’S SANATIVE PILLS.
Proved by successful use throughout he
eountrv for over
A QUARTER OF A CENTURY!
The best Purgative and Anti-Bilious Medicine
known. Cure Conitipation, Bdiouenese, Liver
Complaint, Malarial Fevers, Kheumatiem, and
all kindred disorders.
DR. STRONG’S PECTORAL STOMACH PILLS
cure Coughs, Colds, Fevers, Female Complainta,
Siok Headache, Dyspepsia, and all derangements
of the Stomach. C. E. Hull A Co , New York,
Proprietors.
flbe a Week to Agents. Samples
I FREE. P. O. VICKERY A
CO., Augusta, Maine.
TEE ID GEAN GEERS’
Life and Health Insurance Co,
OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
Authorized Capital, - - - $4,500,000
EA “ I i,?n I VfL, I l£ Il0ME COMPANY, AND RETAINS NINETlf PER CENT zip
CAPITAL ST CK AND ITS ENTIRE RESERVE FOR LOAN AND INVESTMENT 18
PAKiLiT OFFICE,
MOBILE, ALA.
Cash and Bonds, .... $200,000.
F. E. Davidson,President.
W ANTED. —ANY PERSON CAN MAKE
•600 a month selling our letter-copying
book. Any tne that has a letter to write will
buy it. No press or water used. Send stamp
for circular. EXCELSIOR CO., 17 Tribune
Building, Chicago, Ill.
WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE,
MACON, CA.
The Thirty-ninth Annual Session begins
Sept. 20th, 1S70. Tbe oldest Female College in
the world. Location healthy. Curriculum
extended. A full corps of experienced teachers
in every department. Advantages—educational,
social and teligious, unsurpassed. For cata
logues, containing full particulars, address
Rev. W. C. BASS, D. D., President.
GEORGIA DEPARTMENT,
ROME, GA.
Loans and Cash, - - - -
Board of Directors Georgia Dejd.—k. P.
Allgood, C. Rowell. Alfred Shorter, A. U.
Jones, Hon. D F. Hammond, D. B. Ham
ilton, Cain Glover, T. McGuire. F. Woodruff,
J. L. Camp, C. G. Samuel, M. II. Bunn,
Hon. W. M. Hutchings.
ALABAMA DEPARTMENT,
MONTGOMERY. ALA.
LoanB and Cash, - - - -
NEWSPAPERS
OF THE
UNITED STATES.
A complete list of Amorican Newspapers, num
bering more than eight thousand, with a Ga
zetteer of all the towns and cities in ahich they
are published; Historical and Statistical Sketches
of the Great Newspaper Establishments; illus
trated with numerous engravings of the princi
pal newspaper buildings. Book or 300 Pzois,
just iisued. Mailed, poet paid, to any addross
for 35 ets. Apply (inclosing price) to Supbris-
TBRDBHT OF THB NkWBPIFBB PiVILIOtT, Conton*
nial Grounds, Philadelphia, or American News
Company, New York.
EVERY ADVERTISER NEEDS IT.
0- 0 Samuel, President.
Alfred Shorter, Vice Present.
100,000. S* T,eai:
’ c. Rowell. Attorney.
100,000.
i H5 clnt0 >h, Pr sident
L W ,' ®“ k ’ ,lenor » 1 Agent.
W.O DUNCAT, Secretary.
MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT,
OKALONA. MISS.
Loans and Cash, 100,000.
g on -N- N. Clement., President.
Hon. David A. C.opton, Vio-Pre,
W. L. Chambers, See. and Trea«.
SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT,
COLUMIIIA, S. C.
Loans and Cash, 100,000. U4 8' 5014 ™ntten, den. Agent,.
Tboa. B, Jtlor, President.
Thomas A. MoOreery, Vice Prei.
H P. Green, Secretary.
TEXAS DEPARTMENT,
AUSTIN, TEX.
Loans and Cash,
Total Assets,
Geo. B. Z m pieman, Preiident
Hon. N. G. Shelter, ViooPrei.
A. J. Joreigan, Secretary.
- 100,000. R 4 Blandfi.rd, General Agent.
- $700,000.
Executor’s Sale.
GEORGIA, Floyd County,
U NDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A DECREE
of Floyd Superior Court, will be aold on the
First Tuesday in October, 1876,
before the Court House door in Rome, Ga., to
the highest bidder, for oash, tha following real
estate belonging to the estate of Dennis Hills,
late of said eounty, deceased, to-witi • I.o's of
land numbers 418 and 726, In the 3rd dlstr.ct
and 3rd seotion of Paulding county, Ga. Sold
for the benefit of heirs and oreditors. Sept. 5,
1870. SAMUEL B. CHAMBERS,
«ep7,td Executor.
Tho great popular feature of this growing Company is that each State Department is in truth
and fact a Home Company, and loans its entire reserve at home, at a low rate of interest, on
undoubted real estate soourity. The Parent Office roceives the doath Ion and pays tho death lois.
ALL FORMS OF ENDOWMENT AND ACCIDENT POLICIES ISSUED.
Good Agents wanted to canvass during the next six months.
Address C. G. SAMUEL, President,
R. J. GWALTNKY, Secretary,
augl2,odaugl»,tw-wly ROME, GA.
Notice.
A ll persons concerned will take
notico that Barbara Skinner, Administra
trix of John Skinner, late of Floyd county,
deceased has made her applination in due form
for leave to sell all the lands belonging to the
estate of the tail deceased ; and that, unless
satisfactory reaeons to the contrary are shown,
leave will be granted at the October term of tho
Court. Soptember 4,1876.
sepfi.wlm H. J. JOHNSON, Ordinary.
McWilliams & co.
EXCLUSIVELY? WHOLESALE.
To the Trade of North Georgia and Alabama.
Having closed out our Retail Stock to the young and enterprising firm of Knox Jk Parks, in or*
dor to devote ourselves exclusively to the
JOBBING BUSINESS,
We take pleasure in announcing the fact, and cordially invite the trade to an aminatio
our
Immense Fall and Winter Stock
Before making purchasci for the season. Our facilities are ample for supplying the merchants
of this district on as favorable terms as any Jobbing House in the Unitod States, and it is our do
termination to make
PRICES AS LOW AS NEW YORK
Or any other Market. It has been with some reluctance that out of deference to those who have
patronized us liberally in our jobbing department, we gave up a large and profitablo retail busi*
ness, and wo hopo to onjoy the same liberal patronago from old custouiors, as well aa to make
many new ones by the change. *
The above, together with the rapid increase of business in our wholesale department furnish
our reasons for this ehange, and we earnestly solicit of every dealer in this section a fair test as
to what we claim.
DEPARTMENT ISTO. 1.
PRINTS. BLEACHED AND BROWN COTTONS, BHEE TING, 6HIRTING8, OSNABEKGS,
PLAIDS, STRIPES, TICKS, DRILLS, YARNS, ETC.
DEPARTMENT TSTO- 2.
JEANS, CA83IMER3, REPELLENTS, WOSTED3, LINS3YS, FLANNELS, DRESS GOOD3,
SHAWLS, FELT SKIRTS, TWEEDS, UNDER WEAR, BLANKETS, ETC.
DEPARTMENT Ts O 3
WHITE GOODS, LINENS, HOSIERY, GLOVES, HANDKERCHIEFS, TOWELS AND N>-
TIONSOF EVERYKIND.
DEPARTMENT 3STO 4-.
CLOTHING, FURNISHING G00D3, HATS, CAPS,TRUNKS, VALICES, SATCHELS, ETC.
DEPARTMENT NO 5
CARPETS, MATTINGS, RUGS, OIL CLOTHS, DAMASKS, MIRRORS, ETC.
Wo offora good itock to aalaet from in a homo market, obviating tho nocoisity ol buying largely
at a timo and having the goods decline on their hands, aa baz too often-been the experience of most
dealers. Wears protected by the manufacturers and can at all times supply the trade with goods
at lowest pricer.
Gratefully appreciating the liberal patrousge which has been aeoerded to us in the past, wa
hereby extend a cordial invitation to all dealers to call and see for themselve.
Very truly, etc.
W. T. Me WILLIAMS & CO.
sepfi-lw wlm.
Turner & Braumuller,
“Old" Southern Music House:
Sole Agents for the World Renowned
STEINWAY AND OTHER PIANOS,
TAYLOR & FARLEY ORGANS.
Reliable Agents Wanted in Georgia,
Alabama, Florida, North and South
Carolina and East Tennessee.
ALSO PUBLISHERS OF AND DEALERS IN
Sheet Music and Musical Merchandise.
30 WHITEHALL ST., ATLANTA, GA.
nov27,twly ,
AYER & MCDONALD,
71 BROAD
stre®'*’.
ROME, GA»
ARE OFFERING THIS SEASON THE OLD RELIABLE
Victor Mill and Cook’s Evaporator,
Made by the BLYMYER MANUFACTURING COMPANY. Theie Mills and KT *PjTj‘°fJomol.
wall known throughout this entire seotion that thoy require no special commenaa ... D ids
Sufiioe it to say that they are thoroughly end fully warranted. Wc also offer a comm Rill,,
by tho tamo Company, the GREAT WESTERN and the KENTUCKY, * r . < ’iS R WEE 1 "
hut may render good service. Wo aro Agents for tbe AMERI ’AN TURBINE WAT
and keep on hand
A FULL STOCK OF HARDWARE
PLOWS of the most Improved patterns, and other Agricultnral Implements.
especial attention to the BROWN and PPffiNIX COTTON GINS, COTTON Uiri j
WRIGHT’S ANTI-FRICTION nORSE POWERS, and COTTON PRESSES of differ*® b ,(ot«
Parties wishing to buy any of tho above mentioned articles would do well to .j*
;haame olaewhare.
call
purchaaing elsewhere.