Rome tri-weekly courier. (Rome, Ga.) 1860-1881, October 07, 1876, Image 1

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nw ' ui o; £ mi )( dwinell, proprietor. SERIES. “ WISDOM, JUSTICE, AND MODERATION." ROME, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 7, 1870. FOUR DOLLARS PER ANNUM. — .JidOhII VOL, 15, NO. 137 Ijutiw and (Smumctcial 'cONSOUDATED APRIL IQ, 1870. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTIONS. FOR THE WEEKLY. .. $2 00 Oo, j«»f i oo Si* “ onlh, ,v" tt FOR THE TRI-WEEK.LY. o„, jrui■ 01 fhrts Month, 1 ,*• t,.ni n»id str-t'T lu advance, the pr.ee ol fl I wLEnr O01U..I MU b. »J 60 a y*.r, and '"Ifive^orraore, one eopy will be fur- jiihed Feel. CONTRACT RATESJJF ADVERTISING. OMiquiieen, menth.j. » 4 00 On, iquar* three * ®* On, iquar. ,u months..... 1* 00 On,,quire twslve month....... JO 00 Ofl.-fourth column one mopth... 10 00 On. lourth colume three month, 10 00 Obe-fourth column «ix month...... .. On,.|,urth column tirelre month,... On, hilf column one month Oni-htH column three monthi One helf colnrnn lie month,... Oi,'h»lf column twelve month, On, column one month. On, column three month, On, column lie month,.... On, column twelve monthe ^W-The forsgoiag rate, ere for wither Weekly ir Trl-Weakly. When pnbllahed in both pepera, tl per Mil. idditienel upon table fetoe. SO 00 00 00 JO 00 tj 00 <0 00 164 00 tt 00 60 00 104 00 160 01 SIGEL TO INOERSOLL. The German General Rakes the Apostle of Hate With Slaughtering Fire. Ami Touche, lip the Field Marshal* or the llloody Shirt Brigade in Gal lant Style, Gen. Sigel, the distinguished Ger- man-American soldier, delivered a speech to S,000 Germans in Cincinnati last Thursday night, and before com mencing his speech, read the following open letter to Col. R. J. Ingersall, who had spokon the night before : .Vii Dear Colonel: * I heard your speech, or at least some part of it, last night, and was delighted indeed, but aB honest difference of opinion seems to me a Republican privilege, you will, I hope, permit me to make a few remarks. It would not do to draw a dividing line beween the North and the South—there is only one American people and one Ameri can history—nor was the war of rebel lion, in all its terrible features, any thing but an American war, a civil war, a war between Americans, the people of one soil and one country. It will not do, my dear Colonel, to go b«ckto tho fugitive slave law and prove that Americans were the greatest rascals on earth, unless you go further back and prove that Ameriicons, who burned men and women, exiled Roger A illiams and Hutchinson, and enacted the blue laws, were the greatest eav- oges and hypocrites on the globe. It will not do, my dear Colonel, to accuse the people of the South of the institu tion of slavery, with all its conse quences, unless you go back and prove that ihe slaves were introduced on Spanish, English, Dutch, German and American vessels; that the slave trade Fiskept up with persistent pertinaci ty’ 8 ? England and New England; that it was favored and maintained by 11 mea ns in their power; that the oufgoes of the slave vessels were empt- !i ° n American soil; that not only the South, but also the North, held laves against even the protests of .UffiF}, freemen, and that slavery , ss indirectly acknowledged and jogahzed as an American institution in 0 fundamental law of the American f.l ple T7 the American Constitution.— . „„ ffou l 1 } not d°> my dear Colonet, to nrii U8e 6 “Southern” people of all the is and terrors of that black institu- i„. D ’, Un ™s you show that it was also iwj . on account of commercial ij'. rations, and was forced on L .f lcan B °il and made a lawful in- ren'oUM , of 11)0 children and child- It ,l^ ten °f the American people. ,L “ u 'd not do, my dear Colonel, to the ini Breat responsibility for all in ()l n luman ity and crimes committed on ti? n 0 ara8 antl behalf of slavery up- shnmti, i 1 , 11 alono > unless you also it. , at the power and the wealth of hoist mencan People, of which you | | 0n ’ J e * e the result of Southern cot- ;, re Southern gold, that it was of tL I ? u , of the labor and the sweat •W,; lao , k T an fry the Yankee or I ern i,i? an ^fr' exchanged with Norlh- banlo ° r v n( ^ deposited in Northern olitior < } u must n °t boast of the ab- Partv Mi 8 aver y fry the Republican tv of tv, D « yo H B fr° w that the majori- Srsudrf! American people was not of Bi.„Ir en , a . absolute emancipation tebehi^iM 016 the outbreak of the >.be r L?,n fr u . 1 that its abolishment was 'eauliin 1 ■ ffr e war i and war was the germ i»F . lrre .P ress) ible conflict whose itself j lt l *fr° American Constitution order—i 11 an historin of the first tainiv an fronest man—as you oer- for»t th!t BU i Pposed to be > y° u m ' if itim,i at s . lavef y would exist to-aay free men bee -S ,or 411088 roGU 008 01 and wh!, Wnom Europe has sent you, moral r„ eave y° u tne physical and 1 power u 0 ?- 6 ?’ that great balance of 'he Am?,i lc “ ma dc *t possible for you, Ooverl" 0 ? 11 P? 0 Ple, to maintain the I flr u overthrow the South- 1 e - You must, therefore, be . ust and not blind us with crippled ideas and false pretenses, and as I am one. of those who came to this, your great county, not by chance merely, but by choice, and assisted you as much as I could in the hour of danger, I maintain that we did not fight for tho suppression and eternal strife and war, but for liberty and peace, and we mean to have it now in spite of bloody- shirt speeches and blgody-shirt men.— Yes. we mean to have peace, not only m the North, but also in the South; we mean to have the great States of Vir ginia, Georgia ana Alabama as free and self-governing as the States of Ver mont and Rhode Island, or your own State, Illinois. Colonel, you have done well—beautifully well. You have fur nished to tho American people a mas terpiece of genius and malice. You have thrown a Popocatapeti of poison overlthe land—and covered it with an immense funeral sheet. YoU have done well, and I hope that every American heart will gladden at this masterly ex posure of American ferocity, because you have it noted down, and it will stand forever that a man, a nice man with the name of .Jacob Thompson, and a whelp, a nice whelp, with the name of Dodd, did grow up in this great, nice Republic, and behaved like leasts, and women and children wero burned by your countrymen in the nineteenth century. In comnarison with your gigantic efforts in vindica tion of American honor and the bloody shirt, the efforts of Oliver P. Morton, the’Field Marshal of the Bloody Shirt Brigade, of Kilpatrick, and innocent, pious Brother Blaine, will dwindle down to mere nothingness. But ono word more, for the sake of history. You speak of the Republio of Venice. Did you over know that a Venitian, with the name of Marco Polo, in his last will and testament, emancipated his slaves, or that slavery was abolished as far back as the mid dle of the fifteenty century, and Venice did never participate in American slave trade ? Or do you know that when the Venetian Republio elected a Doge the first condition was that he could not, under penalty of death, enter into any speculation ; while here, in our palmy days, the President of the United States or his Cabinet Ministers, eto., can?— Did you ever , know that Venice, al though only a city, had almost as many vessels as we have to-day, and that in time of peace their naval fleet was transformed into a merchant fleet and chartered and sent out in ail di rections, to bring home the products of Asia, of Africa, of Europe, while six thousand of our vessels after the war were rotting in onr harbors or sold as old iron to the lowest bidder ? And why did you not mention that little, but glorious old republio of Switzer land ? Why not ? Have you never heard of it ? I do not think so, but I do think you do not like to mention it, because that Republio was a purely Democratic institution, based on Dem ocratic principles, a confederacy grow ing up ns a confederacy, developing to a national confederacy and standing to-day as a shining example of self government, of unity without tyranny, of nationalism without centralism, of freedom without intolerance andKnow- Nothingism. There are no Belknaps there, or Packards, or Caseys. You have also forgotten that glorious Con federacy of Ihe United Netherlands— but you have not forgotten the Repub lio of Egypt. Astonishing! What do you mean? The republic of Moses and his friend Herod ? or the republic of the Pharaohs ? or of the Saracens and Mussulmans ? or of the beautiful and accomplished Hypatia? or of the Khedive and hiB American friends ?— I am sure you did not mean that, but if I am not mistaken you meant that beautiful little republic in Egypt, Il linois, so near to and yet so far from your Republican heart. I hope you will awaken there safely on the 8th. of November, and find that the Egyptian republio, with all its imperishable Democrats, had voted for Tilden and Hendricks. Good-tyo, my dear Colo nel ; sleep well, and be not disturbed by the ghosts of Egypt. Your friend and comrade, E. Sigel. p. s.—I hear that you are accused of being an infidel. I deny this accusa tion. I brand it as an infamous inven tion and a lie, beoause I know that you believe in something in which no man in America believes—you believe in the virtue of the Republican part^. ^ Retiring Gracefully.—Mr. Glad steno, who has led English statesmen fpr a generation in public life, now snows them the art of retiring gracefully. He lives at his beautiful seat of Hawarden, occupying his leisure partly among his books, which, people of cheerful disposi tion will bo pleased to learn, he reads m a large and well-lighted room, having a wholesome horror of mould and darkness. Like our own Horace Greeley, he is.given to wood-chopping—thinnic.lewi with ms own hand his noble forest. Ha oratorical powers are not allowed to rust utterly, for ho receives occasional deputations of Liberals, who regard a pilgrimage to Hawarden a duty as well as a privilege, E Pluribus Unum.—Mr. Zachariah of Michigan is secretary of the interior. Mr. Chandler of Michigan is chairman of the executive committee of the Hayes campaign. Mr. Zachariah Chandler, sec retary of the interior and chairman of the National Republican committee, is a binocular fraud.—C hicaqn Timer. Grant Wanted to be a Confeder ate. Chicago Time; Special.] St. Lours, Sept. 20.—Jeff. Chandler, heretofore one of the leading Republi cans of this State, hus been called upon by the Republicans of the Third District Is Meept the nomination for Congress. He has written a letter which will be pub lished to-morrow, in which he declines to be a candidate, and says: “lam not in sympathy with the Cincinnati platform, and can not support its nominees." Chandler is form Michigan, and is a relative of the notorious Zacli. He is a graduate of Michigan University, and served with the Michigan troops during the late war, rising from the ranks to bo Colonel of his regiment. He settled in Missouri after the war, and up to this time has been a leading man in the Re publican party. He was on the ticket as Attorney-General which Gen. John B. Henderson headed four years years ago. The district in which he is asked to run is that in which R. G. Frost is, tho Dera- cratic candidate. Frost is the son of Geu. D. M. Frost, who commanded tho Stato troops here at the outbreak of the war, and was captured at Camp Jackson by Blair and Lyon at the head of the home guards, on the ground that Frost intended to take the troops into the Con federate service. Frost, now, has the original letter written to himself and Gen eral Sterling Price when the Missouri troops were organizing, before the attack on Fort Sumter, from Ulysses S. Grant, then at Gelena, asking fbr’ a commission in the force South aud offering to espouse the Southern cause. General Frost de clines to make public the letter, claiming that it would not bo honorable. Ij, however, an attack be made on yoiurig Frost by reason of his father’s Confeder ate record, the letter will be produced, The existence of this letter is an indis putable fact, and neither the President nor his friends dare deny it. Grant’s per sonal habits during his residence with the Dents had been so bad that his offer was not accepted, and about five months af terward he went to Springfield and offered his services to Yates for the Federal army, . While Boutwell is going around mak ing lying speeches about the South, and justifying his proposition to reduce Mis sissippi to a territory, Tilden and Hen dricks colored clubs are organizing all over the State. Ex-Senator Revels, the first negro who took a seat in the United States Senate, leads the movement. A colored club at Magnolia, Miss., have is sued and address, in which they say: “ We are weary of being the victims of the lies of the carpet-bagger^ the .in struments of demagogues and oincejs6gk- ers." “The Democrats of Mississippi havo fulfilled every promise made to col ored citizens last year. They have re duced taxes one-half, the expenses of Government, and, instead of depriving us of educational privileges, they give our children five months of schooling, while they only had four under the Re publicans.” “We are not the enemies of the whites; we have need of their friendship, and their influence and their counsels." In 1875, the last year of Republican rule, the State taxes amounted to 8618,- 000; for 1876, tho first year of Demo cratic control, the State taxes are only 8200,605. It doesn’t take great learning to appreciate the facts. Senator Logan, in a speech in South ern Illinois, said : ‘T challenge any Democrat to point out a purer administration in the his tory of tho country than that .of Gen- Grant." This beats poor Carl Scliurz’s declar ation that “the administration of Grant has, by the greatness of its corruption shown the necessity of a Radical re form, even to the most stupid mind," and James G. Blaine’s charge that “no man who is not a thief by instinct has any influence with the administra tion.” ^ The Servian War.—Whoever had the advantage of the fight in the Morava Valley last Thursday, it is certain that it was not much of a battle after all. The main point in the news is that, although the Powers seem doing all they can to bring th6 war to a conclusion, events aie shaping themselves for a con tinuance of the struggle. Russian sol diers are still flocking to Prinoe Milan s standard, and Montenegro seems determined to take up the fighting whore it was left off three weeks ago. T A Ii u: SIMMONS' LIVER REGULATOR For *11 dissaaoi of tho Limr, Stomach and Splaon. WILD CURE DYSPEPSIA, I MUST OWN that your Siin-uons' Liver Regulator folly deaervta the popularity it haa attained. Aa a family medicino it haa no equal it cured my wife ol a malady I had aounted incurable—that wollebane of our American people, Oyapenala. A. K. P. ALBERT, Profesaor in Nlcholaa Pub lic School, Parrish of Terre bonne, La. MALARIOUS FEVERS. You are at liberty to use my name in praise of your Regulator as preparod by yon, and rec ommend it to every ono as tho boat preventive for Fsver and Ague in the world. I plent in Southwestern Goorgie, near Albany, Georgia, and Must say that it has done more good on my F lanthtion among my negrooa,than any medicine ever used; it superoedae tjutntno if taken in time. Yours, Ac., Hon. B. H. HILL, Ga. CHILDREN!—Your Reg ulator is superior to any other reinody fir Malarial Diseases among children, end it has e largo sale In this section of Georgia. — W. M. Hdbsill, Albany, Ga. CONSTIPATION. TESTIMONY OF THE CHIEF JUS' ICE OF GEORGIA.---1 havo used Simmons’ Liver Regulator for constipation of my bowels, caused by a temporary derangement of the liver, for ihe last three or four years, and always when used according to the directions with decided beneSt. I think it is s good medicine for the derange ment of the livor—at least such has been my personal experience in the use of it. ' HIRAM WARMER, Chief Justice of Georgia. SICK HEADACHE. EDITORIAL.-Wo liitve tested ltd virtues, personally, and know that for Dyspepsia, Biliousnosj, and Throbbing Headache, it is tho best medi- oine the world ever eaw. We hate tried forty other remedies before Simmons’ Liver Regu lator, but none ol them gave us more than temporary relief; but the Regulator ,not.only re lieved,'but cured ns. —Ed. TtltgrapK and Mueengir, Macon, Oa. Having had during the last twenty years of . life to attend to Racing Stock, and having had to muoh trouble with them with Oolio, Grubbs, Ac., gave me a great deal of trouble. Having heard of yonr Regulator as a onre for the above diseases, I ooncluded to try it. After trying one Fxoxxoi in Mash, I found it to cure In every inetsnoo. It ie only to be tried to prove whet I here said in its praise. l oan send yon Certificates from Auguste, Clinton and Maoon as to the oure of Horse. GEORGE WAYMAN, Maoon, Ga., aepil,tw-wly July 24th, 1875. “7. The Case in a Nutshell.—It is all right fpr Mr. Barnes, the Republican can didate for Secictary of State, to be a tern peranco man; but when he proposes by the aid of legislaiive enactment to pre vent tho Germans, ana all others op posed to sumptuary laws, from taking a glass of wine or lager, ho is away ahead' of the age.—Cleveland Plaindealer. True to the‘Last.—“ Sue ’em,” said Commodoro Vanderbilt, the other day, when told by his son that a well-known citizen had failed to pay some money borrowed years ago. The dying million aire has been on the alert in regard to business matters, as well as to religions affairs, during his long 'Illness.—Hew York Sun. . d'-'.n The issue of the Republican canvass is a myth, and the candidate is a Hayes. Two nothings amount to nothing. ^rauelep’ (guide. United States Moil Line—The Coosa River Steamers I O N AND AFTER NOVEMBER SO.'ISmI Stoamera on the Cuoaa River will run at per schedule aa followa, supplying all the Pot Office! on Mail Route No. 0180: Laavo Roma every .Monday at 1 P. M. Leave Home every Thursday at- 4 A. M. Arrive atUadsdenTueiday and Friday.. 7 A. M. Leave Gadsden Tuesday and Friday ii A. M. Arrives! Rome WodntadayandSaturday 6 p. M. f novj8 J. M. ELLIOTT, Gon'l Supt. , Rome Railroad—Ghanfie of Sohedule fJN AND AFTER MARCH lat, tho evening kI train (except Saturday evening), on this road, will he discontinued. The train! will run u follow! t. Monjasa TRAIN. . Leave! Rome dally at 7.00 A. M Roturn to Rome at 12.00 M. SATURDAY ACCOMMODATION. Leaves Rome (Saturday only) at.... 6.45 P. M Return to Roma at.... >.00 P. M The evening train (t Rome will make Mule commotion with S. It. A D. R. R. train North and South, and at Kihgiton with W. A A. R. R. train South and East; C. M. PENNINGTON, Gon’l Supt. JNO. E. STfLLWRLL. Ticket Agent. Georgia R, R., Augusta to Atlanta. D AY PASSENGER TRAINS ON GEORGIA Railroad, Atlahta to AugUata, run al below: Leave* Aoguita at I, 8.00 A. ■ Leave* Atlanta at— ..7.00 a.m Arrives Augusta at. 8.80 r. u Arrive! at Atlanta at- ,.... *....4.00 r. a Night Paaiongef Train! aedolloWi: Leave! Auguita at— ...8.16 r. M Leaves Atlanta at..7. -10.40 r. u Arrives at Anguata - ... u .-8.00 A. a' Arrive! at Atlanta at- .6.20 a. m Accommodation Train ae follow* t Leaves Atlanta ,...;.6 00 P. M Leave* Oovlngton ,..,,.....6 60 A. M Arrive* Atlanta .8 16A.M AMvaa Oovlngton ' j 1 7 80 P. M Selma. Rome and Dalton Railroad— : Change of Sohedule, 6 BLUE MOUNTAIN ROUTE. N AND AFTER MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11th, 1876, pauenger trains will run a* G'otNO NORTH. I. D. FORD. M. DWINELL. COPARTNERSHIP. FORD & DWINELL, Beal Estate Agents. rpHE. UNDERSIGNED HAVE FORMED A X copartnership, Under the firm name and ■tyle of Ford i Svunu, for, the purpoie of buying and ailllhg real e*tate, or renting prop erty on eommiaaion. Order* to buy or loll wild land* or improved property in upper Georgia are lolieited. I. D. FORD, M. DWINELL. Rome, Oa.i May 20, 1875.—tw-wtf A. THE W H. BROWER, H. D. COTHRAN, Proiidont. Cashier. BANK OF HOME, ROME, GEORGIA. Authorised Capital, • 4. $500,000 Subioribed Capital, - - - 100,000 Oollsotlon* made in all aoosuiblo point* and proceed* promptly reinilMd. \ Ezehango on all principal oitial bought and pold. Loan* made on firat clan neuritis*. Correspondent: BANK OF NORTH AMERICA, New York. apr7,twly 7 WIIITELEY’S OLD RBLUBLE LIVERY STABLE I W. L. WHITELEY, Proprietor, KEEPS CONSTANTLY ON hand to h!re> Good Hones and Excellent Vehicle*. Splendid accommodation* for proven and other*. Hone#i Carriage*, and Buggie* always on hand for •ale. Entire satisfaction guaranteed to all who patroniie n*. <ebll,twly THE ROME HOTEL, (Formerly. Tenneaeoe Homo) BROAD STREET, NEAR RAILROAD DEPOT J. A. STANSBURY, - - Proprietor Rome,Georgia. - , ' f THIS HOTEL 18 SITUATED WITHIN I twenty *tepi of the railroad platform; and oenvenient to the buiinen portion of t >wn. Borvanta poliWand attentive to tbiirdutle*. All Baggage handledNra«.of Charge. fabSx THQMASjH. BflOTr, Clerk. follow*: Leave* Selma, .... Leaves Cal'era.. 7. Leave* Rome..,, , Leavei Dalton....; Loaves Bristol.. No. 1. Daily. 7.66 AM i 11.28 AM 6.50 P M . 8.12 PM 8 -“°:M Leave* Lynohburg. ,7...12.00 night Arrive* Washington.....'. 0.82 A M Arrive* Baltimore 8.80 A M Arrive* Philadelphia 1.20 P M Arrives Now York - 6.10 P M —i- i i l 1 .'..' /, AMERICAN & FOREIGN PATENTS. fWIJ.MOHR j, CO., SUCCESSORS TO VJ CHIPMAN, 1I08MBR 4 CO.. Solicitor*. ...-MaeiudMB » fees fur making preliminary ex- No additional foe rehearing. and conducting a rehearing, cision of the Unary ex- for obtaining By a recent do- mtuissioner ALL rejected appli cations may h* revived. Special attention glvon to Interferon** dales before the Patent Office, Extensions before Congress, Infringement Suits in different States, and all litigation appertain ing to Inventions or Patent!. Send stamp to Gilmore 4 Co. lor pamphlet ol eixty pages. LAND OASES, LAND WARRANTS, AND SCRIP. Contested Land Caies prosecuted before the ■ S. General Land OfilCo and Department of the Interior. Private Land Claim*, MINING and PRE-EMPTION Claim!, and HOMESTEAD Ceau attended to. Land Borip in 40, 80 and ldO aore piaoei for salt. Thi • Scrip is assignable, end can bo located in the name or the purohaier upon any Government lend subject to private entry, at $1.25 per aero. Ie is of equal value with Bounty Land W err ante;' Send stamp to Gilmore A Co, for pamphlet of Instruction, ARREARS OF PAY AND BOUNTY. OFFICERS, SOLDIERS end SAILORS of the late war, or their holrs, ere in many cues en titled to l. onoy from tho Government of which they here <io knowledge. Write full hletory of eervice, and state amount of pay end bounty received. Enclose stamp to GILMORE 4 CO., and elull reply, alter examination, will be glvee you free. V PENSIONS. , . All OFFICERS, SOLDIERS end BAILORS wouudec), ruptured, or injured in the late wtr, however slightly, can obtain a pention by ad- dreuing GILMORE 4 CO. base* prosecuted by GILMORE A CO. befor* the Supreme Court ef the United State*, the Court of Claim*, end the Routhern Claim* Com- miision. Each department of our bueinei* I* conducted In a separate bureau, under charge oi the nine experienced parties employed by the old firm. Prompt attention to ell business entrusted to GILMORE A CO. is thus secured. We desire “Fvrvw’siiawtw i <29 F. Street; Wsehltfgton, D, C. 'MT, ; ,ii">uK'HWy MB) THE GREAT CAUSE OF Human Misery. Just flfbluAefojrf jO' tyltf.Eiwplppt. Hritt A LECTURE ON THE NATURE, TREAT- MEN?,.and Radical Cure of Seminal Weak nesi, or Spermatorrhoea, induced by Belf-Abute, GOING SOUTH. No. 3. Daily. 8.86 AM 4.33 A M Arrivoe Selma Arrives Celera Arrive* Rome.'. ..,. 8.65 F M Arrive* Dalton - - 6.00 P M Arrive* Bristol .' 4.30 A M Arrive* Lynohburg..- -uX... 5.16 PM Leave* Washington - 8.07 F M Leav** Baltimore 0.00 A M Leavei Philadelphia ...12.46 A M Leave* New York 8.66 PM No. 1 makes oloie connection at Dalloti with W. A A. R.R. for Chattanooga, Naahville, Louis ville, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louji, and with E. T. V. A Oa. R.R. for Bristol, Lynohburg, Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York. Has Blooper from Vicksburg to Dsltop, with only ono ohange through to Baltimore. No. 2 make* olose connection at Celera with S, A N. R. R. for Montgomery, Eufeula, Colum bus, Ga., Tallahassee, Fie., Mobile and New S rleans; at Selipu with Ala. Cent. R. R. for erldian, Jackson, Vicksburg end ell points in Missiailppi. Hu sleeper from Dalton to Vioks- burg. M. STANTON, Supt. RAY KNIGHT. O. T. A. W. B. CRANE, Agent, Rome,Ga. THE OHOIOE HOTEL, CORNER BROAD -ANC BRIDGE STREETS J. C. Rawilha, Proprietor. (Situated in the Business part of the Oily.) Rome, Georgia, 'e#>P»*(ongors taken to end from the Depot free of oharge. Q. RAWLINS, Clerk. fanl7x Western & A^antie Railroad ail'd itB Connections. “KKNNESAW ROUTE!" The following schedule take* effect Hay 28,1176 NORTHWARD. No. 1 No.S)ii: No. 11 Leave tytlenta... 2 00 pm... 0 20 em... 6 66 pm ArrCarterivllle- 6 30 pm... 842 am... 8 60 pm ArrKingston 7 04 pm... 911 am... 924pm, Arr Dalton 8 41.pm...1064 am...11 45 pm ArrChettanooga.1016 pm.,.12 42 pm. SOUTHWARD. No. 3 No. 4 No. 13 Lve Chattanooga 4 00 pm... 616 am.. Arrive Dalton 6 41 pm... 7 01am... 100 am Arr Kingiton 7 88 pm... 9 07 am... 419am Arr Oartorsvilie . 812pm... 942 am... 618am Arr Altanta. 1019 pm...1166 am... 9 30 am Pallman ralace Care run on No*. 1 end 2 between New Orleans and Baltimore. Pullman Patao* Car* run oq Nos. 1 and 4 boiwoon Atlanta and Nashville. Pullman Palace Cere run oa No*. 8 end 2 between'Loulevllle end Atlanta,. ipar- No ohange of oare between New Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, Atlanta and Baltimore, and only one ohange to New York. Faaieugeti leaving Atlanta at 4.20 F. M. ar rive in New York the ieeond afternoon thereaf ter at 4,00 P. M. Excursion Ticket* to the Virginia Spring* end various Rummer Resort* will b* on *sl* in New Orleans. Mobil*, Montgomery, Columbus, Maoon, Savannah, Auguita and Atlanta, at greatly reduced Tates 1st of June. I Pertiee deciring a whole oar through to the Virginia Springe or to Baltimore, ehould ed- iress the undersigned. Parties contemplating traveling should send for * copy of Hennuaio Route Gatclli, contain ing schedules, eto. ,i *B'\ e “T^BNN?‘'' Gen’l Passenger end. Ticket Agt, Atlanta Ga,. mav2t,twtf lly. end Physical Incapacity, Ac.—By ROBERT J. OULVERWELL, M. D., author of the “Grets Book," Ac. > ui The wurld-renowntd .author, in this admire- bio Lecture, clearly proves from hie own expert- enoe that the awrul consequences of Seli-Abtut may be effectually removed without medicine, ond without, dangfrout surgical ..operations, bougter,'Instruments, ring* or cordials; pointing out e mode of cur* at once certain end effectual, by which evory sufferer, ho matter what his condition inky b», may care himself cheaply, privately and radically. fm~ TKit Lecture to ill prove a toon lo lhouear.de apd thaueande. dent, under seal, In a piafih envelope, to any address, on receipt of six cents, or two postage • tempi, eeiiiw— mill Address the Publishers, F, BRUGMAN & SON, 41 Ann St„ New.Xprkl.F. 0. Bex 4580. Tie Georjia My Commonwealtii IS PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING (Except Sunday) Br txx Comtonwexim Poiuamixe Couraxr, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, Is Edited by Oaf. Cinxr W. Sttlks, late of ie Albany Neioe, with efficient assistants. Tin OoxnoitwixtTX rive* the current news ef the city, State end elsewhere, market report* end vigorona editorials on Municipal, Political end General Subject*. ' The Coming canvass, State end National, will be closely watohed end properly presented,, while the Mechanical end Agricultural Interests of the State will not be negleoted. It has a large end rapidly inerenetngreironletion. • TERMS: One month, 76 cents; two month*, $1.25; four months, $2 00; one year, $8.00. PRINTING, BINDING and RULING, of every kind, done in the bast style end at lowest prices. — — - ■ . COMMONWEALTH PUBLISHING CO., AvnanrA, Oxcneia. And the ROME MERCHANTS ' 1 ; — AND — Business Men Generally I It will Pay You to Advertise jk THE ELLIJAY COURIER, PUBLISHED AT ELLIJAY, Giluxb Oouarr, X Ga., And having e large end almost exclusive circulation in EIGHT surrounding counties— Gordon, Murrey, •nrroundlng < Pickens, Gilmer, Union, Towps and Fannjn. Lowest advertising rate* of any paper in ike State. Write for •nccimen—mailed Me. Address 1870 ESTABLISHED A. X E ! 1870 SO BROAD STRB^T, ROME, GEORGIA, P AINTS IN THE LATEST STYLE. Warrant* 1 hi* work and materiel. Pa|ni* wjlkout re moving furniture or carpet*; not on* drop ■pilled. Groining, Pappr Hanging, -GUSing, Caiolmialng.. Everything in.the line. - ’'Rates Low. ■ (jnn28, Rates Low. A”' '•< (jna28,lw8la*i i>. iv. x»ijo6toiV, ,, Attorney solicitor in Chancery. t, PRACTICE IN ALL OOUBTS of the WJfey end Circuit. Special attention given 'te collection*. Office with Yancey, in Smith's Blook, Roue, tie. aegr.twaas Newspaper Advertising; Newspaper advertising is now recognianed by businosa than, having faith jn their own ware*,' as th* most pypotlvopirkfi* of securing for their goods a wide recognition of .their merits. Newspaper advertising impels inquiry, end when the article offered Is of good qnelltyr end a* a fair prlo*; kho natural - results it intrealed aelhe.' ■; .ii;in/ '. New*papqr .advertising lea permanent addi tion to the reputallon of the goods advertised, because it {* a permanent Influen** shwsyi at work in their internet; ■ ' Newspaper advertising i* the. mo* t J energetic end vigilant ol salesmen; »ddf easing thousands •ach iey, alway* in the advertiier’s interest end ceeseleuly at work looking customer* from ell ole****. “I. special attentton Office with Hamilton ffltt d “ U ?‘ «4v*rti*er.-..cure hy far the large*! ihar« ol.what 1* bsmg doa*.- Jthn Manning SAMUEL B. FREEMAN, , , Editor end Proprietor. UNIVERSITY OF; VIRGINIA. LAW DEPARTMENT. J B. MINQR, Lti.D.; 1 Pffir. Cora, end 8tat. • Lew; 8. O. Southall, Lit 17., Prof,-Equity and Law Merchant, Internat'l Law, etc. Season begins Oot. 1, 1876, and continues nine vtonlni. Instruction by text-books and lectured combined;' Illustrated by Moot Court exercises. For Cata logue, apply (P. O. University ol Virginia) to WM. WERTENBAKER, Sec’y Fao’y. •a p6,tw.wlm , E. N. FRESHMAN & BROS., Advertising Agents, 190 W. Fourth St., CINCINNATI^ 0., ' lAre authorised to contract for advertising in this paper. Estimates furnished free. Scud fbr a elrc J»r. •marl8,twtf ~ . PRESCRIPTION FREE E OR THE SPEEDY CURE OF SEMINAL .Weakness, Lost Manhood and *11 disorders brought on by Indiscretions, or exoeea. Any Druggist haa the-ingredient*. Address DAVIDSON A CO. >' v 2298,N*w York. , ■•pj.twly