Newspaper Page Text
M OWINFXL, PROPRIETOR
0 SERIES.
“WISDOM, JUSTICE, AND MODERATION.”
ROME, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 26, 1879.
FOUR COLLARS PER ANNUM.,
: ~
VOL. 18, NO, 103
and gtoimumial
COHS'
OUDATED APRIL 10, 1876
rates of SUBSCRIPTIONS.
poll THE WEEKLY.
[One y ear *;
r months
[Three months.
POE THE TRI-WEEKLY.
84 00
2 00
1 00
I One square l'
lone-fourth column c
lOtie year-
i months
•Three no"®® ln advance, the price
contracTrateTofadvertisiI.
|onm<W‘f eo “ 0,,, ® n n t l !’ t i;" 'Z.ZZ.ZZ* 8 00
I One square tirc0 ‘“°““ 12 00
e twelve months......
ione month
lone-Ioortli column three months 15 00
b|F»r ss
lone-hnlf colemn six months 50 00
1 "e-half column twelve months 80 00
| One column one month " ™
lone column three months 50 00
linecolunm twelve months 120 00
1 m. mcMolnu rates are for either Weekly or
InEweffi When published In both papers, 50
][jrcent. nllOlUonnl upon table
The New Slave Power.
Little Johnny’s Fhilosonhy.
The Irish World.
Hard Scenes.
McKenzie, Tknn., July 21.—Train
■after train load of Memphians now 41-
Imost hourly paes through here, leaving
|a crowd of anxious people of the
Iplague-Btriken city waiting at the depot
1 ■ , for the first chance to get away.
D9 say that so determined are
(the people to get out of that city that
■they clamor with one another as a mob,
|and those passengers with the most
■strength and determination are those
■who run over the multitude of more
[timid people and escape. People have
(crowded about the depot for twenty-
[four hours before being able to get on
■the train. Overcome with the heat and
[fatigue, men, women andchildron sleep
[closely huddled together until aroused
land are told that the hour of their lib-
[eration is near at hand. A fresh train
[has been made up, and they paBS out
[to the transfer station, which is also
[crowded, fuatead of waiting for trams
[to carry them thither, they go out by
[every conceivable conveyance, and by
|that means often take the places of
i who have been forced to come out
■of the trains only to find that they
■have been deprived of a possibility of
[their early escape to a more healthy
[climate, Under these circumstances
[men grow desperate and fight like tigers.
[Revolvers are drawn in the most savage
[determination, and bloodshed is only
[prevented by the interference of a
[strongguard. People are so closely
■sandwiched in the trainB that the heat
intolerable. Passengers get
|restive and almost any one who makes
(itlmown can ho easily accommodated
[with a knock-down. A general scram-
[hle for seats continues all day along
|the Hues, until the conductor gets rid of
[the jam by dropping them here, there
|iaii everywhere.—Special to Cincin
|nail Commercial'.
A Terrible Joke*
hast Saturday night Mr. Anderson
jhriffin, of this county, proposed to Mr.
Ijlcssee Yarbrough, one of his tenants,
|to play off a joke on some young men
Iwlio had been raiding on his waterntol-
" n Patch. The plan was this: Mr. Yar-
young
There was a dog, and there was a cat,
v . ,.- IT . - ■. —id there was a lam, and there was a
lork ‘‘Herald’, was born in Paris the 0 x. The dog it said to the ox, the dog
other day. The day after the young did • *
gentleman’s advent his uncle, Jim Ben- “That’s a mighty long tail you got
nett, called to see him and laid on his there, mister, with a nice tosslo to the
ioo hundred United StateB bonds end, but you can’t waggle it wen you
of-*1,000 each, as a christening gift. mee t your master.”
This incident forcibly illustrates the Then the cat it said to the ox. too:
beautieB of our bond system. In giving -No, indeed, you can’t bio it up like
to this baby those 8100,000 m bonds a bloon wen you git mad:
Bennett wnn. in real! tv eenmvninc tel Then the lam it Said t
. .. , , . “You ain’t able for to twinkle it,
day, the number that at that rate of either, wen you think of something
wages it would take to pay the annual funny.”
interest of these $100,000. _ The ox he thot a while, and bime by
Stop for a moment and consider the he spoke up and said to liisself:
nature of this transfer. Doos it essen- “j plade hooky wen I was a little boy
tially differ from what used to frequent- so much that I dident learn them vain
ly take place in the days of slavery, accomplishments, thats a fack,.but I got
when the owner of slaves would make a tolably good bizness edueashun, and
a gift of some of them to a friend or j g 888 mebbe you fellers wud have to
a relative? Jim Bennett has had ten cum to me for to Y ou ou ^ H you
men constantly working for him. had to fill a order for ox tail soop.”
Every cent of their earnings went into Wen Mistqr Gipple was in Africa he
his pocket to pay him the interest on seen sum natif niggers wich is called
those bonds. Like the slave-holder of Hottentops, and they likes their beef
former times, he now makes a gift to r aw like doge, and he seen em cut it up
the labor of these ten men to his baby 0 rf of the cattle while they was a live
nephew, the only difference being that a nd bellerin.
the gift does not impose upon the re- But Mister Briley the butcher he
cipient the duty of feeding and clothing nocks em onto the hed with axes and
the bond slaves, as it would if they were cuts there throte in a minit, and me
chattle slaves. Whilst this baby owner and Billy we say hooray,
of these bondB in lying is his cradle, Cows is beef, and a oaf is veal, bu’ a
his ten slaves down in the mine, or in pig i 8 mutton.
the work shop, or in the field,are work- Onetime I was in Mister Briley’s
ing for him, spending their lives in the 8 h 0 p and he had outorf a pigs hed and
task of hoarding up wealth that he may Let it on the top of a barrel, and old
live a life of idleness. Gaffer Peters he cum and Been it, and
Seventeen yeare hence this baby will he said, old Gaffer did :
be on the thresoold of manhood. By “MiBter Biily yore pig is gittin out.”
that time his ten slaves will have earned Mister Briley he luked, and then he
for him in the way of interest the same fl aid:
amount that his uncle has just given “That’s so, Gaffer, you jest take that
him, and will not yet be discharged of stick and rap him onto the nose fore he
fhfiir rthliaftt.inn in work nn in hia srp- non flvnro if in ^
©rawktiB’ duide.
Rome Railroad—Change of Sohedule
O K AND AFTER WEDNESDAY, MAY 28td,
1879, tha trains on tho Romo Railroad w ill
run as follows:
HORNING TRAIN.
Lsares Roms dally at 8.30 A. M
Return to Roma at .18.00 A. M
SATURDAY ACCOMMODATION.
Leaves Romo (Saturday only) at 5.00 F. M
Return to Rome at 8.00 P. M
Morning train makes connection with tralaon
W. A A. Railroad at Kingston, for the West and
Bouth. O.M. PENNINGTON, Gen’lSupt.
JNO. E. STILLWELL. Ticket Agent.
United States Mail Line—The Coosa
River Steamers I
O Steamere on the Ooosa River will run as
per sohedule as follows, supplying all the Post
Offioes on Mail Route No. 8180:
Leave Rome ovary Tuesday and Friday
at 7 A* M.
Arrive at Uadsdon every Wednesday
and Saturday at 7 A. M.
Leave Gadsden evory Wednesday and
Saturday at 8 A. M.
Arrive at Rome every Thursday and
Sunday at — 7 P. M.
J. M. ELLIOTT, Gen’l Supt
Selmaj Rome and Dalton Railroad-
Change of Sohedulei
BLUE MOUNTAIN ROUTE.
O’
their obligation to work on in his ser-1 oa n draw it In.'
vice. So Gaffer he took up t
All this time the boy has done no and snooked up reel sli, arid fetched
work and though he feels grateful for the pigs hed a regular nose wipe, hard
the generous act of his uncle, he has as ever he cude with the stick, and
not the faintest conception oi being nocked the pigs hed orf the barrel, and
under any obligation to the ten work- you never Been sech a stonished old
ingmen who have earned for him an man. But Mister Briley he pretended
amount equal that of the original gift, like he wasent noticin, and old Gaffer
but on the contrary, if he has been a he sed
reader of the New York “Herald,” he “Mister Briley, you must excuse me,
has learnt, to regard them as belonging but wen I struck at that pig it dodged
to the dangerous class that muBt be kept and out its hed orf agin the edge of the
down with the strong arm of the law. | barrel.”
The founders of our Governmet, fear
ing the evils that flow from the estab
lishment of an hereditary aristocracy,
wisely abolished the law of entail. The
motive underlying that act waB the de-
Mr. Thurman on the Extra Ses'
sion.
Ohio papers print the following letter
sire to secure for 'themselves and their I from Senator Thurman :
few men absorbing the fruits of labor United States Senate Chamber, 1
through a monopoly of the land. In ,/j Washington, July 3,1879. [
that they acted wisely, and have justly My Dear Sir: The extra session is
earned the gratitude of thoir descend- a t an end. In ray judgment, no session
dants. But the evils that the fathers by 0 f Congress has done more for tho vin-
their wise legislation endeavored to pre- dication of the principles of American
vent havo been entailed upon us through liberty. We have successfully main-
the bond system. tained the principle that the bayonet
In the case of this child we have been 8 ba.ll not control the ballot-box ; we
speaking of we see that our bonds es- have repealed the infamous jurors’ test
tablished an aristocracy that robs labor oa th; we have provided for impartial
just as much as would that other aristo- juries in tho Federal Courts, North and
cracy that Washington and his asso- South; and we have maintained the
ciates sought to prevent by the abolition principle that the Federal Government
of the law of entail. | shall not interfere loathe election of the
officers of the State. A greater declara-
A Strange Phenomenon. I tion in favor of popular liberty has not
been made since the adoption of Magna
We are informed that a gentleman Charta. Yours truly,
residing in Wakulla county, by the A. G. Thurman.
name of Cox, who is cultivating a small The Hon. Henry C. Lord, Riverside,
farm, upon arising one morning last Hamilton County, Ohio,
week was surprised to find that during
the night his residence had been chang- yggo the Douglass and Johnson
ed from a region where water could tj 0 k e t W as very strong in Eatonton.
, —~r«*“ "*» •**»• “»• »«•- not be seen and was situated, on the appointment was made for Gov,
TOUgh, who is a young man about border 0 f a lake. When he retired on Hersche i y. Johnson to speak. A plat-
;!SLT n years old, was to get the par- the even ing before his house was far form wa8 ereote(i in t h e “City Grove”
suspected by Mr. Griffin to go into away f rom any pond, lake or river, but and a large oon course of people assem-
upon going out next morning, his sur- b j edi i n enunoiating the principles of
prise can be imagined when, instead of b ; 8 par ty, Gov. Johnson grew eloquent,
his garden, an immense sink, fifty or and j n tbe cour80 of his remarks said:
sixty yards square, filled with water, „Q n lb ; g platform I take my stand, and
running up within eighteen or twenty a jj j be combined powers of hell and
feet of his residence, met his gaze. Du- eartb cannot shake me.” Ab the words
ring tho night this transformation oc- dropped from his lips, the platform from
curred, leaving not even a vestige of I wb j cb he spoke gave way, and down
the tallest pine trees which were stand- catne the Governor with it. With the
* ’• --i- t—i"*i - • — -— shout
that
N AND AFTER SUNDAY, MAY
1879, train* will ran a* follow*:
GOING NORTE.
No. 3.
Daily.
(Sunday excepted.)
Leave* Selma » 4.00 P M
Leave* Randolph 7.15 P M
Loavea Galora 10.00 P M
Leaves Talladega 1.50 A M
Loaves Oxford 3.20 AM
Leaves Anniston 8.50 AM
Leaves Jaokaonvllle—. 5.00 A M
Leavss Patona... 5.50 AM
Leavss Tsoumssh... 7.05 AM
Leavos Prior’s 7 85 A M
Lsares Oavo Bpring 8.10 A M
Loaves Borne...., 0.55 AM
Leaves Plainville... 10.55 A M
Arrive* Dalton... 12.50 P M
GOING SOVTE.
' No. 4.
Dally.
(Sunday excepted )
Leavos Dalton 3.10 P M
Leaves Plainville 5.00 P M
Leaves Roms 8.35 P M
Leavos Cava Spring 7.45 P M
Loaves Prior’s 8.15 P M
Leaves Tecomsoh 8.40 P M
Loavos Patona 9 56 P M
Leaves Jacksonville 10.40 P M
Loaves Anniston 11,50 P M
Loavos Oxford 12 20 A M
Leaves Talladaga 1.50 A M
Loavos Calora 8.00 A M
Loaves Randolph 8.20 A M
Arrives Selma 11.25 A M
No. 1. Conneota cloBely at Dalton with E. T.
Va. A Ga. R. R. for all Tennessee and Virginia
mineral springe, and for all Eastern oitle*. Also
with the W. & A. ft. R. for Chattanooga and-all
Woatorn cities.
No. 2. Connecting with E. T. Va. A Ga. and
W. A A. railroad* at Dalton, make* clo*e con-
neotion at Oalera for Montgomery, Mobile and
Now Orleans.
No. 3. Connect* at Calera with through mail
train of L. A N. A Gt. So. R. R. for Eastern and
Woatorn oitios.
No. 4. Leaving Dalton at 3.10p.u., connoots
at Calera with L. A N. A Gt. So. R. K. for Mont
gomery, Mobile anil Now OrleanB.
6 NORMAN WEBB, Gen. Snpt.
KAY KNIGHT, G. P. A.
W. B. CRANE, Agent, Rome,Ga.
after melons, while Mr. G.
jwotiia secrete himself behind a stump
|[; ear ®y* The agreement was that when
|, 6 ™ e JJ entered the patch, Mr. Griffin
| ould fire his pistol in the air and Mr.
I arbrough was to fall and pretend that
|.? w . t j a *ot Mr. Griffin did shoot and
J, r ' i&rbrough fell and cried out that
■,r “bet; The other parties ran off,
Ji,' continuing to shoot in the air as
in/. rc ‘/ ea ted. Mr. Griffin, on return
Ii.a.i t j. h° U8e , noticed that Mr. Yar-
tn«, not follow, but continued
a. I ® u *> 80 ho went to see what was
f On arriving at the spot, he
hr#in at 18 knd shot Mr. Yarbrough’s
* ° u, \ Mr. Griffin says it was
attaml. a< i C1 ^ enta ^ and states that as he
in thid to . ra ' 8e ^e pistol and shoot
“o air, having one *
[$*» and the other
from
finger on the
on the hammer it
his finger before the
H, to * ts P ro P er height.
Was i/ 8 / 6 'm no 'J ea that Yarbrough
r e2reV’t| Untl lle returned to him, and ba ii 0 t
.rf" accident very much. The ball0t
“ants w\7 aS " 0t dead at last ftC '
—i nut there is no hope of hiB re
VA*w Ol»»»vv-v “ . All vttUlV va*\J -- §
ing in their full majesty only twelve the cra8b came a l ou d, ringing si
bourn before. These sinks, however, from tbe cr owd: “I’ll be hanged if
are not infrequent in that county. It didn > t sba k e you.” This happy hit
has only been a shoit time since that a oam0 f rom a a mall Eatonton boy who
sink occurred near Lavander’s Mn*? h ag since made a mark in the world,
more remarkable than the one alluded He is one 0 f the spiciest writers and
to above, in that it occurred upon the br ightest stars in American journalism,
very tip top of a bill—one of the high- and at ro ll call he sometimes answers
est points of land in that country. Will to tho name of “Uncle Remus.”
points of - „
not some one explain these occurrences?
Tic
Tallahassee Floridian.
Representative Glover’s report on the
government bureau of printing and en-
raving at Washington shows that there
. aas been in the last eighteen years a theft
Were the question admitted to the and emb e ZZ l 6 ment of may million dol-
Hot and women were allowed to votei, j arg _ jje charges that there has been
^ i — 1nn/1 YT7 Vl A tlOfl 11RP.fl I if n UhIm/i nil nn A f
How Women Would Vote.
every'woman in the land who has used continuous abstraction of the fibre pa-
I)r. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription would p 6r and 8ay8 ( ba t by the use of that
TOvery R„.i 7 vote it to be an unfailing remedy for and impressions'^of genuine 1 plates ob-
annB should n .°L wh . ha , ndhn K fire; the diseases peculiar to her sex. Dr- tained by employes who were secured
■ u um not he inrinimu* nn.l pi erc0 i m8 received hundreds of grate-1 ap p 0 i n tment S for that purpose, millions
ful testimonials of its curative power. ot do llars of money have been made
t . Tmv. March 4 1878. and put out whioh cannot be told from
was a amount isnot ^
thB 'gSSSurf* ir y mfdeB C pail d I Q ^ d SSy^rhSlnd^tigmS
menoed the use of vour Favorite Pre- corrupt in every bureau,
scription. It speedily effected my en- ^ clergyman at a Methodist camp
tire and permanent oure. — meeting at Buoyrus, Ohio, prayed that
Y ° Mrs Paul ^’Baxter. I Godwfuld kUl.one member of every
|covery,
BStt not , be r indulged in and
lier, lydj 6 8 i°PPed.—Sandersville Cour
s Bpendlnv.h’ a Penn8 y'vania heiress
X, R S ine summer at Ry e Beach
| hotel' Miller, a sailor on the
■didn’t L. ^7 sa , w and loved her but,
IbuQe i n l 9 her so. She got a fish
■horse and r toat ' Miller mounted a
[doctor. If r ° d0 at a headlong pace for a
ruataiiind 16 > Wa ? ih row n on tbe way and
lector's nfr bro hen arm, but got to the
| oil. Th 0 j loe ! to * d hie errand and faint-
I'n time to R 0 ™“\?F riv ^ d at the hotel just
l n °»8ho io save .Miss Brown’s life, and
I Mention of ~ Ur8l ?K Miller r with the -in-
jin fit condit* rry ' ng M soon aa he is
25th,
R. T. IIOYT.
II. D. COTHRAN
HOYT & COTHRAN,
Wholesale Druggists,
HOME, GEORGIA,
HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LARGE CONSIGNMENT OF
Green and Black Teas,
WHICH THEY OFFER TO THE TRADE AT
NEW YORK WHOLESALE PRICES
free: ob- pbei&bt.
No. 1.
Dally.
0.00 A M
8.16 A M
0.35 A M
11.46 AM
12.41 P M
12.65 P M
1.28 P M
2.02 P M
2.44 P M
3.12 P M
3.31 P M
4.20 P M
5.00 P M
8.16 F M
No. 3.
Daily.
8.00 A M
9.10 A M
0.55 A M
10.30 A M
10.58 A M
11.00 A M
11.56 A M
12.23 P M
12.55 P M
1.03 P M
1.57 PM
4.35 P M
6.50 P M
8.CO P M
ALLEN & McOSKER
WIH mrem, ,,ow “KX£S5“ * SPLE,piD
" LATEST STYLES OF JEWELRY,
BRIDAL PRESENTS,
Engagement Rings,
Solid Silver & Plated Ware.
AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED PERFECTED SPECTACLES.
fg^Personal attention paid to Repairing Watches, Clocks, Chronometers and Jewelry
All kinds of Jewelry made to order. (apr20,tw.wtl
1879. SPRING & SUMMER TRADE. 1879.
New Goods! Fine Goods!
MRS. T. B. WIIiLIAMS,
JVX ILLIIVEPI,
No. 61 Broad Street, Rome, Ga.
T hanking my many customers for the liberal patronage given me
in the pait, I Am proud to say that I am better prepared to ettond to their wants then ever
beforo. I have now in store and to errivo Bonneta, Hati, Flowers, Plumes, Silks, Volvets, Plushes,
Ribbons, Ornaments, Hair Goods, Zephyrs, Combs, Notions, eto., otc., whioh I havo solected in
lerson in tho Northern markets. My Goods are in tho Latest Styles, and I havo my Trimming
one with good mater!dl*by experienced milliners. Call and examine my goods and got my prices
before purchasing elsewhere. (oct!7 tw wtf
Spring and Summer Sohedule of the
Steamer Sidney P. Smith.
O N AND AFTER MONDAY, APRIL 21st,
1879, the steamer Sidney P. Smith will run
as follows:
Leave Romo Monday at H A. w
Arrivo at Gadidon Tuesday at 8 *. 11
Arrive at Greonaport Tuesday at 12 k.
Leave Greonaport Tueaday at Ip.*
Arrive at Gad«don Tuesday at 5 p. m
Arrive at Rome Thursday at 5 p. m
S. P. SMITH, President.
W. & A. R. R. and its Connections
“KENNESAW ROUTE!”
Tho following schedule takos effect May 28,1876
NORTHWARD.
No. 1 No. 3 No. 11
Leave Atlanta... 2 00 pm... 820 am... 666 pm
Arr Oarteraville.. 6 36 pm... 8 42 am... 850 pm
Arr Kingston 7 04 pm... 911am... 0 24pm
Arr Dalton 8 41 pm,..10 64 am...11 45 pm
ArrOhattanooga.1015 pm...l2 42 pm.
SOU1HWARD.
No. 3 No. 4 No. 13
Lvo Chattanooga 400 pm... 516 am ..
Arrive Dalton 64lpm... 701am... 100am
Arr Kingston 7 38 pm... 9 07 am... 410am
Arr Oartersville.. 812pm... 041am... 618am
Arr Altanta 1010 pm...ll 55 a m... 0 SO am
Pullman Palace Oars run on Nos. 1 and 3
between Now Orleans and Baltimore.
Pullman Palaoe Gars rnn on Nos. 1 ana 4
between Atlanta and Nashville.
Pullman Palaee Oars run on No*. 3 and I
between Louisville and Atlanta.
pgr No change of oars between New Orleans
Mobile, Montgomery, Atlanta and Baltimore, and
only one change to New York.
Passengers loaving Atlanta at 4.20 F. M. ar
rive in New York the seeond afternoon thereaf
ter at 4.00 F. M.
Exoureion Tickets to the Virginia Springs and
various Summer Resorts will be on sale iu New
Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, Columbus, Macon,
Savannah, Augusta and Atlanta, at greatly
roducod rates 1st of June.
Parties desiring a whole oar through to the
Virginia Springs or to Baltimore, should ad-
Iraas the undanigned. ...
Partis* contemplating traveling ahould lend
for a copy of Kmnuaw Routt GateUt, ooitaln-
ing eohoduloa, eto.
-jir-Atk lor ticket* via ” Konnoiaw Route.
. B. W. WRENN,
Gen’l Paiiongor and Tiekat Agt, Atlanta Ga.
HARDY, BOWIE & CO.,
WHOLESALE HARDWARE DEALERS,
BHO-AJD STREET, ROME, GA.
WE CARRY IN STOCK
RUBBER BELTING, 3 ply, 2, 2 1-2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 inches;
“ “ 4 ply, 8, 10, 12 and 14 inches.
RUBBER PACKING, 1-8, 3-16 and 1-4 inches.
■^Strictly Best Goods Made.
HEMP PACKING—MANILLA ROPE—LAQE LEATHER—CUT LACINGS—
UTRIGHT MILL SAWS— CROSS CUT SAWS— ONE MAN CROSS CUT
SAWS—SAW SWAGES—FILES—BELT RIVETS—FINE HAMMERS—
WRENCHES, Ate., making Complete Line of Mill Furnishings.
OUR PRICES ARE ALWAYS RIGHT.
OLDEST AND BEST
DR. J. BRADFORD’S
Liver & Dyspeptic Medicine
This is a Prompt and Certain Cure for all Diseases of the Liver,
Snch as Dyspepsia, Headache, Chills and Fever, &c.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN EVERY CASE, OR MONEY RETURNED.
FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS GENERALLY.
J. Gr. YEISESR,
Dealer in Drugs, Medicines, Garden Seeds, &c.,
Solo Proprietor, Home, Go.
R. T. Hoyt, Wholesale and Retail Agent for Rome, Ga.
febl tw wly
anti-Chrietian family in the county.
a r rr"ntilafl Texas, -believing ThiB exoited the wrath of the sinners in
A uegro at Dallas, lexae.uui b C onere-ation, and the tore down they
that God demanded S w? l 5 d fa 0 and tent. whipped the minister, and would
Georeia R. B., Augusta to Atlanta.
D ay passenger trains on Georgia
Railroad, Atlanta to Auguita, run a* belowi
Leave* Augmta at 8.00 i.n
Leave* Atlanta at— ..-7.00 a.n
arrives Auguita at. 8.80 i.u
Arrive* at Atlanta at- 4.00 T. x
Night Poiienger Train- a* follow*:
Leave* Auguita at— 8.15 r. »
Leaves Atlanta at ; ..—10.40 r. u
Arrives at Augusta -8.00 A. x
Arrlvoiot Atlanta at— 6.20 A. h
Acoommodatlon Train a* follow* :
Leave* Atlautr — 6 00 P. M
Leave* Covington 50 A. M
Arrive* Atlanta -8 15 A. M
Arrive* Covington 50 **
ALBIN OMBERG,
Bookseller, Stationer^ Printer
No* 33 Broad Street,
Has just received a Large Stock
CROQUET SETS, BASE BALLS, ETC.
A LAKGE STOCK WALL
apr0 ; tw-wly
t&rWRITE FOP. SAMPLES AND PRICES.-®!