Newspaper Page Text
THE thomaston herald
Published by
H tV. A CA It AWA Y,
KVERY Saturday morning.
TERMS.
o ne iear..-
MX Months 1 50
]jt ;OAL ADVERTISING RATES.
* a heretofore, since the war, the following ar
'-p nrtces for notices of Ordinaries, Ac.—to Bh. i*aid
41)V aNCK:’
Tuny W 3 Notices 500
i.rtvWs Notice 625
c Yp4 Of Lauds, c. pr. sqr. of ten Lines 6 00
ckK Days’ Notices T 00
ctr Months’ Notles 10 oo
tpm D ivs’ Notices of Sales pr. sqr 2 00
1 srtgßiffS’ Sacks.—For these Sales, for every 11 fa
* 3 >tlrt:--age Sille3 . Der square $5 00.
Professional Pards.
Mix SANDWICH, Attorney at Law and Sollc
ttor in Bankruptcy. Practices In all the
Court- 1 , Loth State ami Federal. Office In Cheney’s
ijuildinfir. N sy 11,-tf
B TURKTEB,
. TTORNEY at LAW. Barnesvllle, ‘ca. Will
\ practice In all the Courts of the Flint Circuit.
Prompt attention criven to collection of claims.—
ofllie over £ xpress Office. Nov. 29,-ly
j w. Gbeknk. > W. X. Beall
GliE EN E & BEA LL,
attorneys at law.
thomaston, - - Georgia.
will Practice Law In the Counties of the Flln
Circuit; Clayton of Atlanta Circuit, and Talbo
Courts of the Chattahoochee Circuits; also.ln th
Vnltert States District court of Georgia at Atlau
ta and Savannah. Jan. 2,-tf
v 0 T I
IN Dr. J. M. BLALOCK, Dentist,
momaston, Oa. When you visit Thomaston, call
it' hi* office ami have your Dental Work done as
It should he. Teeth Inserted, teeth tilled, teeth
gxtractei, teeth attended to In the best style of
the Dental Art. Call once, and you will not only
call attain, hut will all your friends, lnelud
lu; f your sweetheart and mother-in-law. Office,
upstairs, Northwest corner, Cheney’s brick build
up-. March 22. 18T3.-ly
Hotels.
HRUW ITS_ hotel"
Reduction of Board I
$3,00 IPXE3r*. 2
tv !■:. BROWN .t ON, proprietors of this pop
lb, ular hotel, would Inform their numerous
friends that on and after the first day of Septem
ber the rates will be reduced to $3 per day.
The proprietors would respectfully return tlielr j
yrateful thanks for the very liberal patronage ex- !
tend. (1 to tha house for nearly t wenty years, and
assure tlielr many friohds that we will use our
best endeavors tor the future to the same !
satis! ictloii that we have In the past. Every at- I
trillion given to ladles and rainiiles. and large
looms always In readiness fsr commercial travel
ers visiting Macon.
Jan. y,-If E. E. BROWN & SON.
GREEK lIOUBE.
1. . CP.EEE, Frop’r
FORSYTH, ----- GEORGIA.
i—
li<t t'tl :
l Meal ..$ 50
1 iUV 2,ikj i
l 'Veek .... lo.tiu
i donth 25,an
I’oilte and attentive Peters. Table suppUtM with
th wr;. in si in- ui.u-ket alToals, Baggier car- j
k -iU.i -.iflil ire... i a-- f epoi free of marge, an l a 1
tie -ii, iv to and from Leo n to lieiol.
New. 2f. tr
kjTIBLLIufiELD i a till K.
Ivt ’vJmBERRY ST ,
MACON, GA.
Mrs. S. L. Whitehurst, Proprietress
o
TRANSIENT BOARD PER DAY $2.0
Regular board per month, on third floor. s2sand
89 oh second—flay ‘oard S2O per month. T his
house Is conveniently located next door to the
t uirt housed and has been t horoughly renovefed
mid refurerished. oct. 31,-tf
HOUSE,
SVhCVAH, a 1.
A. B. LUCE, Proprietor
(BOAKD TEK DAY $3,00)
JAM E. OCONNELL, CLERK.
ITVUNESVILLE HOTEL,
F. T. POUND,
Proprietor. - Barncsvilfe. Ga.
NATIONAL HOTEL
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
JAMES E. OWENS
prop ({i iyro is,
Late of Piedmont and Orange Hotels,
Lynclibuig, Virginia.
rHOMUSHLYJRENOVATtD, ELEGANTLY FURfsISHE
Board $3 per Day. Board $3 per Day
Baggage carried to and from depot free o
Charge.
TRYCH ISTIAN a large live, family paper, full of
* stories and good reading. No sectarian
ism. politics, pills, pulls nor advertisements. On
ly *scts. a year! Send 10 cents for 3 specimen be
toro you forget It! splendid Map Premiums
Agents wanted everywhere. Big Commissions
P alf l! H. I. Hastiggs, 538 Wafili’n St., Boston, Mass.,
Arch t., Phlla., Pa. 4w
SITERSKB V SCALE PIBOS
SQUARE AND UPRIGHT.
! best made. The touch elastic, the tone
t erful, pure and even through the entire scale,
• j mellow and sweet.
WATERS’ CONCERTO ORGANS
cannot he excelled In tone or beauty they defy
competition. The Concerto stop Is a line Imita
tion of the Human Voice.
, warranted for 6 years. Prices Extremely Low
wr cash or part cash, and balance in monthly pav-
f lu ts, .S'csond-hatid Instruments at great bar
* 8. AGENT*'WANTED. A liberal discount to
embers. Ministers, Churches, .Schools. Lodges,
r illustrated Catalogues mailed. HORACE
ER 4 ON, 481 Broadway, New York. P. O.
80. 61. 4w
51'CX Jiihf
i rn“elsftio apirror-.lof '■ try T nt -
Btut ai fives U a trial. A tri.ii at a*
* Com ress aCirma lis stren*ih, merits : *t*t
over an jla the market We are rrepn’®* Sr 4
7 the trade at markrt priees. <*r4#rs aaT me
Orders r.?*;>ectfiiUy AcMreM
A. J. MiLLiS* CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. gty
so, mTrs. AgM. Steels an t Irons of all kind*
,to w.t; Cotton 6w.*#ps, Hi 1 BjH
Bnovels. P>a Viuo Cutter*, Ac. ko. Ptco* r®
Ibr Nellis’ Process to suit, all kiadsof soil. I fjj
METER & CO,
r^ rosrle t ore fit the famous Chrrleston, 111. Tnllrm-
Sjweendoraed In the lost last, issue of the “Na
-8.,nil Jourual fit Health” by men of prominece
North. Also by fifty ministers of various
ohm..?Diatlona. An opportunity Is now offered to
Wither . a Hi< Ml rough examination and treatment
at omv tu ' lslt tle Infirmary. Address
PR. S. VAN METER & CO.,
Charleston, 111,
VOL. VI.
THE THOMASTON HERALD
S. .D. CARAWAY, - - Pi bi.isheh.
■L C. McMICHAEL, - Editor.
Tiiomastci Ga., Saturday. May 1. 75.
SOCIETY—WHY THE BOY T 8 DON’T
G ET ON.
e copy the following from the
Constitution, hoping it will be rend
by nil the boys old and young. It is
a good lesson to study. Should be
read once a week:
£ ‘A sreut many young men who
come from the country to New York
and get tolerable good salaries find
themselves at the end of the year in
debt, and they wonder why it is. The
young gentleman is a book-keeper at
a salary of $2,000. He pays sl2 per
week for board, which leaves Jiim
about $1,400, and he calculates to lay
out something of that. But he don’t,
and this is why:
Board per year s*.o4
Clothes 200
To,al
Then comes his little expenses as
follows:
Blacking boots, 10 cents p r day $ 36 51
Morning and afternoon papers 39 00
Three drinks per day, ’5 cents each 104 25
Four cigars per day at 10 cents each 146 00
.S’havlng twice per week, 15 cents each 15 60
Attending theater twice a week, season of
Klx months 7300
Four games billiards per week 3900
Strc et cur r.u-e. 10 cents each day 30 50
Totßl 86
He gets into “society.” Society de
mands a dress suit, which costs $125,
and society demands that, when he at
tends a party or a dinner, he put on
white kid gloves, $2,00 a pair. And
society, inexorable mistress that she is
demands that he shall take Araminta
to the opera once in a while, which
means gloves, neckties, boquets,
and carriage, which, with seats $4 each
means S3O for the night’s amusement.
And so Augustus discovers at the end
of the year that his $2,000 are all gone, I
that he has overdrawn SSOO to SI,OOO, j
and lie commences peculation or spec- ;
illation—tin l same thing so far as re- 1
suits go—and Augustus drinks to
drown his trouble, and dually he lands :
in the tombs. 1 Ins is what happens i
to a treat many Augustuses. Society •
is what does it for them.”
Nortiieln Men in the South.—
A correspondent of the Now York
tribune writes from Savannah, un
der date of the 2nd of April, as fol
lows:
“1 am a Northern man, have been
here seven years, part of the time in
government employment, and am
known as a Republican. Yet I can’t
*e that 1 am treated one whit differ
ently from those who were born here.
I am most cordially met by all classes
wherever I go, and my relations with
the people of the city are very pleas
ant, socially, politically, and in a
business way. My partner and my
self are known as Northern business
men, and if we lose a dollar's worth
of trade by the fact it is something
unknown to us.
This is written because false reports
are continually being circulated North
and I desire that the good people of
the South where I have made mv
home shall have full justice done at
least at my hands. They are fairly
entitled, in my opinion, to far more
praise than blame. You can make
any use of this you please, only I don’t
care to have mv name paraded out as
I am only a plain business man.”
Profanity. —We are emphatically
in the age of profanity, and it seems
to us that wo are on the topmost cur
rent. One cannot go on the streets
anywhere without having his ears
offended with the vilest words, and
his reverence shocked by the most
profane use of sacred names. Nor
does it come from the old or middle
aged alone, for it is a fact, as alarming
as true, that the younger portion of
the community are most proficient in
degrading language. Boys have an
idea it is smart to swear; that it makes
them manly; but there never was a
greater mistake in the world. Men;
even those who swear themselves, are
disgusted with profanity in a young
man, because they know how, of all
bad habits, this clings the most close
ly, and increases with years. It is the
most insidious of habits, growing on
so invisibly that almost before one is
aware he becomes an occoniplished
career.
Liberty county is ahead. The
Hinesville Gazette says that Mr. John
Middleton of that county, has a daugh
ter, Miss Miriam Matilda Middleton,
of whom he is inclined to be proud,
and over whose physique he is given
to boasting. She is thirteen years old,
and weighed 011 her last birthday,
15th ultimo, one hundred and forty
eight pounds, and her worthy progen
itor want? to know who ear* beat it ?
TIIOMASTON. GA.. SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 1, 1875.
THE BAPTISTS.
ANNUAL STATE CONVENTION.
A FEMALE UFIVIR3ITY.
ONE HUNDRED MEN FORCIBLT ENIIR
THE JAIL.
TWO OF THE PRISONERS CARRIED OFF.
Special Telegram to T he constitution, j
Milledgeville, Ga., April 23.
Thomasville selected to-dey, as the
next place of the meeting of the con
vention,
A FEMALE UNIVERSITY.
A resolution favoring the building
of a female university upon a basis or
on a grand scale like Mercer w;is pass
ed. A committee of tiftecn was ap
pointed to examine and select the
location. The sentiment of the con
vention is in favor of the old capitol
building at Milledgeville being donat
ed for that purpose.
PRISONERS TAKEN IROM JAIL.
This morning between twelve and
two o clock a band, estimated at one
hundred strong, (some negroes) went
to the jail and forced the sheriff to open
the door and took out Tobe Tompkins
jailed for kidnaping, and Wilson, sen
tenced to the penetentiary. Wilson
was not allowed to put on his clothing,
lompkins was kicked down stairs.—
Horses’ feet were muffled, and went
in the direction of the river. It is
not known whether prisoners are in
the bauds of their friends or enemies
DON’T ADVERTISE.
Don tdo it. Don’t advertise your
business; its paying out money to ac
commodate other people, if they want
to buy your goods, let them hunt you
up.
Don t advertise, for it gets your
name abroad, and you are apt to be
hooded with circulars from business
houses, and to be bored with “drum
mers from the wholesale establish
ments, all of which also results in
soliciting your order for new goods,
and money to pay for them, which is
very annoying to one of a dyspeptic
temperament.
Don't advertise, for it brings people
in from the country, (country folks,
you know, are on an enquiring turn
of mind.) and they will ask you many
astonishing questions about prices; try
your temper with showing them goods,
and even vex you with the request to
tie them up, which puts you to au
additional trouble of buying more.
Don t advertise; it gives people
abroad a knowledge of your town, and
they come and settle in it; it will
grow, and other business will be in
duced to come 111 and thus increase
your competition.
In short, if you would have a quiet
town, not too large; if you would not
be harassed by multitudious cares and
perplexities of business; if you would
avoid being bothered with paying for
and losing time to read a great cum
bersom newspaper, just remain quiet;
don’t let the people know live miles
away where you are, nor what you are
doing, and you will be severely let
alone to enjoy the bliss of undistur
bed repose. —Gazette Redwood City,
Cal
THE FRUIT CROP IN MIDDLE GEOR
GIA.
A correspondent who is sufficiently
interested in the matter to be in posi
tion to obtain correct information
writes ns that he is of the opinion that
the recent cold snap, whatever may
have been its effect in the extreme
Northern and Northeastern portion
of the State, did not materially dam
age the fruit crop in Middle Georgia.
He is certain as to Washington and
the adjoining counties, and sanguine 1
as to those forming the more nothern
boundary as the section known as the
middle portion of the State. He calls
attention to the fact uniformly high
winds prevailed during the cold snap,
which prevented the formation what
might otherwise have been a very
destructive frost. The facts, coming
from a source of information rather
more credible than the average, leads
us to hope that the old-fashioned dish
of milk and peaches may come in be
tween thenuttsaud the wine (or when
ever a spoon is convenient) with as
inn eh regularity, in season, as hereto
fore. — Sav. Rows
AGENT FOR THE STATE.
Colonel W. J. Lawton, of this city,
has been selected by Governor Smith
to go to New York as the agent of the
State, to negotiate a loan of $250,000
for the use of the State. Colonel
Lawton will leave on Monday night
to execute his mission.— Telegraph
and Messenger.
THE SPARE BED.
When I go to the country to visit
my relations, writes M. Quad, the
spare bed rises up before my imagina
tion days before 1 start, and I shiver
as I remember how cold and gravelike
the sheets are. I put off the \isit as
long as possible, solely on account of
that spare bed. I don’t like to tell
them that I had rather sleep on a
picket fence than to enter that spare
bed, and so they know nothing of my
sufferings.
The spare bed is always as near a
mile .and a half from the rest of the
beds as it can be put. It is either up
stairs at the head of the hall, or off
the parlor. The parlor curtains have
not been raised foi weeks; everything
is as prim aa an old maid’s bonnet,
and the bed is ns square and true as if
it had been made up by a carpenter’s
rule.
No matter whether it he summer or
winter, the bed is like ice, and it sinks
dowu m a way to make one shiver.
1 he sheets are slippery clean, the pil
lowslips rustle like shrouds, and one
dare not stretch his leg dowu for fear
of kicking against a tombstone.
One sinks down until he is lost in
the hollow, and foot by foot the prim
bedposts vanish from sight. He is
worn out and sleepy, but lie knows
that the rest of the family are so far
away that no one could hear him if he
should shout for an hour and
this makes him nerveous. He
wonders if any one ever died in that
room, and straightway he sees faces of
dead persons, hears strange noises,
and presently feels a chill galloping
up and and down his hack.
Did any one ever pass a comforta
ble night in a spare bed? No matter
how many quilts and spreads covered
him he could not get warm, and if he
accidentally fell asleep it was to wake
with a start under the impression that
a dead man was pulling his nose. It
will be days and weeks before ho re
covers from the impression, and yet
he must suffer in silence, because the
si/tile bed was assigned him in token
of esteem and affection.
BUY AT HOME.
“If is too much the habit of seme
people,” says m exelpmy, “to look
with distrust or disrespect upon home
products, and to cherish the idea that
nothing can be good or reliable that
has not a metroplitan endorsement.
This is often found to be a mistake.’
)So say we, and it is well for people
to be reminded of the fact that he
who buys of merchants and manufac
turers and employs home mechanics
and laborers instead of sending abroad
acts the the part of a wise man.
No town or village can prosper un
less the business men prosper* And
bv business we do not mean merchants
only, but mechanics and manufactur
ers of all kinds. Every industrious
mechanic is a blessing to the town.
Every manufacturing establishment,
however humble, is public ’benefit.
Every chair, table bedstead, bureau,
wheel-barrow, harness, pair of boots
or other articles made at home keeps
money from going abroad, and to just
that extent helps ac town generally.
x\s all who have any permanent in
terest in our city wish to see it grow,
it is well to think of these things,
and act in a manner proinolive of the
public good.— Marietta Journal.
OUR EXECUTIVE NIOBE.
“HIS EXCELLENCY,” THE PRESIDENT,
IN A WEEPING MOOD.
The world is familiar with the tears
of Brother Shearman, and we have
seen Tilton and Beecher weep; but
Grant 111 tears is anew tiling. Yet
it seems that even without any symp
tom that he is teareful from liquor,
this grim-visaged, hard-headed soldier
can assume the character of a sympa
thetic weeper; and indeed, he is ex
hibited in that capacity by the Nor
walk Gazette, from whoes columns
we borrow* the following anecdote
respecting the pardon of the notorious
Col. Hodge:
“The wife of a defaulting officer
called upon President Grant last De
cember to implore the release of her
husband from the Albany peniten
tiary. She told the president that,
crushing as the sorrow was to herself,
she would try to bear it. but that
every morning, without an exception,
since her husband’s incarceration, her
four little children Had come to her
bedside with the tearful inquiry,
“Will dear papa come home to day?”
•‘This plea of my children will, I
know, ere log drive mo into insanity.
And now, said she, my little ones
have varied their agonizing question
ing, with a pathos that is maddening,
1 to±-‘Won’t pa come home Ohrist-
mas?’ Madam, I will consult the at
torney general, and do whatever I
can for your husband with his approv
al’. ‘I know that will all be useless,’
said the grief-stricken wife. ‘His de
cision will be only adverse, and I may
as well go home and tell my children
at once that papa can’t come home,
and give up in despair.’ ‘Wait a
moment,’ said the president, and set
ting down, he hastily penned a note
to Attorney-General Williams, and,
nervously handing it to her, said, ‘Go
and tell your children that their papa
shall come home Christmas!’ Almost
fainting, the woman was carried from
the executive office with the opeu note
in her hand. On examining it, it
was found to a peremptory order for
the immediate release of the husband
and father. But this was not all.
All over the page were great blots of
the President’s fast falling tears as he
wrote. ”
After his various exploits with the
ashington ring and the New Orleans
ring, we should say that if Gen. Grant
is to cry for an individual, it should
be for Hodge above all others.
This man had stolen four hundred
and fifty thousand dollars of the peo
ple's money. For this great theft ho
was tried and sentenced to ten years
imprisonment in the Albany peneiten
tiary. It was a mild sentence, and
there was no decent reason for chang
ing it; and yet Grant pardoned him
out after a few months; as we now
learn, he shed tears of melting com
miseration as he set his hand to the
instrument which let the scoundrel
loose again upon the world.
This, however, was eminently prop
er for Grant. lie was personally re
sponsible for the crime of Ilodge, for
lie gave Him the power to commit it.
Hodge became acting head of the pay
department because Grant insisted on
restoring Brice, an incompetent
drunkard, who had been caught pay
ing forged bounty claims and retired
from office as paymaster-general by
President Johnson. The very first
Oifieal order of President Grant was
to restore this drunken payer of
forged claims: and as Brice was in
competent to do business, Ilodge be
came acting paymaster-general.
It was this rascally action of Grant’s
that gave Hodge the authority and
the opportunity to consumate his
enormous robbery; and, therefore, it
was appropriate that Grant should
hasten to pardon him, and should
shed fast falling tears over his mis
fortune as he signed the paper. —New
York Sun.
MR. BEECHER’S KISSING BUSINESS j
A clergyman who goes among his
flock with his kisses of inspirations
his holy kisses of pleasure, and kisses
of enthuiasm, to say nothing of par
oxysmal kisses, and displays so extra
ordinary a power of analysis respect
ing the oscillatory art as Mr. Beecher
has done, may yet avoid debauchery;
but he must strike the ordinary man
as lacking certain of the characteris
tics of a religious guide as that thing
is conventionally unaerstood, even if
he does add others which are new to
the apprehension of less impulsive
mortals. Whatever may be the issue
of this case, the parties engaged in it
have removed themselves from the res
pect of people of good taste, leaving
morality out of the question alto
gether.
A TERRIBLE DREAM REALIZED.
Lawienceville (Ga.,) Herald: “One
night last week Mr. Thomas Allison
dreamed that his brother, John Alli
son, had been murdered and scalped
by the Indians. He lives in Califor
nia and trades to Oregon. The dream
made so strong an impression upon
Allison’s mind that he told it to sev
eral parties in town next morning.
That day, when the mail arrived at
12 o’clock, he received a letter in
forming him of the death of his broth
er. He crossed a mountain in Ore
gon, and the party was attacked by
the Indians and John Allison was kill
ed and scalped. He is not acquainted
with the party who wrote the letter,
but from the statements made, he is
afraid it is true.
OF INTEREST TO MERCHANT’S.
Sugar and other samples, done up
in double boxes, the inner one of tin
aud the outer one of paper, will now
be passed through the mails at third
class rates of postage (one cent per
ounce,) with a view of testing wheth
er they can be carried in ttie mails
without injury to other mail matter.
Tel & Mess.
Why is a newspaper like a tooth
brush 5. Do you give it up? Because
every one should have one of his own,
B nd not be borrowing his neighbors.
Ehowe
SETTING MACHINE
IS THE SIMPLEST
And Most Durable Machine Mdae
IW“ Aeents Wanted in every county. June 8 l
Standard American Billiard TablesT!
(Talented June 6, 1871 and Dee. 23, 1873.)
NEW DEBTQNB.
11. W. CO LLENDER
SUCCESSOR TO
Phelan & Cos 11 end er.
NO. 73 8 BROADWAY,
r. O- BOX, NEW YORK.
CLOTH,
BALLS,
CUES,
And Even thing Appertaining to
n I LLIARD s-
ZW* a I IHE LOWEST PRICES. Illustrated Catalogues sent
H Jan. 9 t 1875.-ly
THE SLYGBR SEIM MACHEES.
The First and Only Machine Ever Intro
duced in Schools!
SEWING MACHINE SALES OF|lB7
The iable of Sewing Machine Sales for 1873 shows that our Sales last
year amounted to 232,444 (two hundred and thirty-two thousand four hun
dred and forty-four Machines,) being a large increase over the sales of the
previous year (1872.)
The table also shows that our Sales Exceed those of any other Company
for the period named, by the number of 113,254 Machines, or nearly double
those of any other Company. 4
It may be further stated that the Sales of 1873, as compared with those
of 1872, show a relatively larger increase, beyond the sales of other makers,
than of other year. " *
lor instance, in 18 ■ 2 we sold 45,000 more Machines than any othe
Company, whereas, in 1813 the sales were
113,254 Machines in Excess of Our High
est Competitor.
These figures are the more remarkable, for the reason that the sales of
the principal Companies in 1873 are LESS THAN THEIR SALES IN 1872
whereas, as has been shown,
Our Sales Have Largely Increased.
The account of Sales is from the rctur ns made to the owners of the
ing Machine Patents.
It will hardly be denied that the superiority of the SINGER
CHINES is fully demonstrated—at all events that their popularity in
household is unquestionable.
THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO.,
17 Broughton t, vaanna, £ra .
C A VOSBURCH, Manager,
FOR SOUTH CAROLINA, GEORGIA, FLORIDA and part of ALABAMA
Liberal Terms to Agents who can give bond and furnish their own horsei
BRANCH OFFICES: Atlanta* Ga.,G. W. Leonard. Ag’t. Macon,
L. M. Murray, Ag’t. Thomasville, Gra. ; 8. L. Mallard, Ag’t. Nov. 11.-
TO GROCERY HEALERS!
Seymour, Tinsley Co s..
MACON, C3- .i3L .
T\r E i^vrl handa f r Larfre Complete Assortment of GROCERIES and
~~ * 7JGeorgia. Ojders filled at Lowest market
ntt'S. WV.A C.IAUION GLARAXIEDD. G-jods sold only in whol*
packages. RetaLers will hear this in mind. Trial orders solicited.
JaM - 9 >- tf SEYMOUR, TINSLEY & CO.
ANDREW P. STEWART. } TTf p Wftnn
“M A Y-F LOw ER CO OK ST OV E
STB w ART cfc W OOR f
WHOLESALE ARD RETAIL DEALERS IJf
STOVES. TT OEE O W W ARE,
House-Furnishing Goods, hildren's Carriages,
TIN WORK OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
UO Wtiltoliall St-, ATLANTA, OA
Nov. 2t,-fia 5 *
ADVERTISING RATES.
The following are the rates to which we atfhe
In all contracts for artTertlnlng'.or>rher advertise
meats are handed In without Instructions.
One square ten Uses or less (Nonpart.] type) f
for the first and M cunts for each subsequent la.
sertlon.
~ squares. iTTTTTrjrarri arris y.
1 Square SI OS St SO '|T nso'|TsT
SSquares 100! 500 10 ee uttt 1 |
3 Squares 3no too is oo ae on' eo*
4 Squares 400 10 00 10 SO SO 1* #0
if column ...,... 300 noo so oo 4000
X Column 10 00 SO 00 SB OO SA 00 SO OS
mu IS SO SB 00 40 00 TO 00 ISO oS
—jsgg.fi ■laiai-j — 1 sb
NO 22.