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Terms of SulwriiMion r
syi.-* l —
RATICS:
„x coptw.®' 10 y* ar
** I'i.ntrt.onu ywr li mt
frenty -1 ° uc y ,:ar *•
. AJ.lrt'M all order* to
■ J. C. McMICIIAEL,
UCBUSHKR.
IdvcrtUiMg Rate*.
f Uoffinf r >' *' lC r4to * w^l * c h udliere in
Tbo tr i. M for adrertUiug, or where adTertinc-
C ? U ur* lauded in without Instructions .
* ni>n,,i uniiiire teu lines or (JJonpttriei type)
tW.Vtheii- aud #0 ceuts for each subsequent
“jjyLiber*l rate* to ooukraet sdvortisurs.
• t -,rAiih.s. I Ti~rTtf~| M. | e m | \i li
1 S ‘ l roe ...I 200 | 600 1000 j li 00 j ‘JI
I 2 00! 700 1590 | 2000! 30
3*’1 ,1U .... I 400 | 1000 2000 | 30001 40
*C n I 500 1200 (30 00 j 39 00 I 50
1V-.1,011 1000 '2OOO I 3.', 00 I 65 00! SO
k !uaian I 15 00 35 00 | 40 00 | 70 00 | 130
f.ICa.VL ADVKUTISIJia RATES.
1 eivtofore, tiiiu-e the war, the following are the
. "for notices ot Ordinaries, to.—to hr paid is
?yVAcs:
irt - n tt y* Notices $-00
Hotieus 6 26
1 iiida Ac. nor nor. often linen 6 00
■£*,*■ notices of Salon per *qr 1 00
T “”kii!KKh’Salks.— Vor these duhie,for every ii fa
*tfortea* Male® par spuaro $i 00
J. A. HUNT,
attorney at law,
BARNKBVILLE, 6a.
practice in tlic countie
V/y comprising the Flint Jutlicia
Circuit, ami in the Supreme Court of the
jj t!l tp. S*aU Ofllco over Drug Store of J.
W, Hightower. dec2-ly
attorney at law,
l AUMiBVII,T.K, (a. Will practice In the
15 counties of the Flint Circuit and In Iho su
preme* <.uit of tho State. sopstf-sm
BROWN’S OTBL,
Opposite Passenger Depot,
AfACOX, - - - GEORGIA.
E. E. BROWN A ION, Proprietors.
ItoiU'i! i>er Day.
mayi3-tf •
VEO-ETIIVE
PURIFIES THE BLOOD, REN
OVATES AND INVIGO
RATES THE WHOLE
SYSTEM.
It* Medical Properties are Altei atlvo. Tonic, Sol
vent and Diuretic.
RELTULE EV
IDENCE.
Mb. 11. It. Steven* ;
Dear Sir—l will most ohoor
fully add my testimony to the
great number you have al
ready received In favor of
your great and good medicine,
Vegetine, for I do not think
enough can be said in Its
praise, for I was troubled over
thirty years with that dread
ful disi-a.se, Catarrh, and had
such bad coughing spells that
it would seem hr though I
never could breath uy more,
and Vegetine has cured me;
and I do feel to thank God all
the time that there is so good
u mediclue rs Vegetine, and I
also think it one of the best
medicines for coughs and
weak, sinking feelings at the
stomach and advise everybody
to take the Vegetine, for I can
assure them that it is ono of
the best medicines.
Mns. L. GORE,
Cor. Magazine and Walnut
Sts., Cambridge, Mass.
GIVES
Health, Strength
And Appetite.
My daughter has received
groat benefit from the Vege
tine. Her declining health
was a source of great anxiety
to all her friends. A few bot
tles of Vegotluo restored her
to health, strength and appe
tite. N. II.TILDEN,
Insurance and Real Estate
A"t., No. 49, Sears’ Building,
Boston, Mass.
C ANNOT he BXC’ia.l.E
Charleston, Mar. 19, 1869.
H. It. Stevens:
Dear Sir—This is to certify
that I have used your “Blood
i Preparation ’’ in my family for
j several years, and think that,
i for Scrofula or cankerous liu
: mors or rheumatic affections.
■ it cannot be excelled ; and as
a blood purifier or spring med
! icine, it is the best thing I
have ever used, and I have
i used almost everything. I
I can cheerfully recommend it
| to any oue in need of such a
medicine. Yours respectfully.
Mns. A. A. DINSMORE,
No. 19 Russell street.
i 7?ECOMM-EJW / T
HEARTILY.
Soirrn Boston, Feb. 7,1870
Ma. STEVENff:
Dear Sir—l have taken sev
eral bottles of your Vegetine,
and am convinced it is a valu
able remedy for Dyspepsia,
Kidney Complaint and gener
al debility of the system.
I can heartily recommend It
to all suffering from the above
complaints. Yours respect
fully, Mrs. Monroe Parker,
80 Athens St.
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VDGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
VEGETINE
, Prepared by 11. B. STEVENS,
Poston, .Mass. janll-lm
VECJETINE
Is Sold by all Drugistgs
THE
Arkansas Gazette.
ILULY & WEEKLY.
Established ISIS.
'••'lest, ll.Ht, mul Chenprst I’nper In tlio
I. ami.
Weekly Gazette;
TERMS.
Payable invariably in Advance.
J'ttft Copy, six months *1 95
iu< copy, per month, less than six months.... 25
’ Ue copy, one year 200
£ lve copies, one year 9 (H)
ren copies one year 10 50
Daily Gazette.
One copy, one sio 00
une copy, Bix montlu 3 g
, |Cr pernwl, per month 1 00
Address ADAMS & BLOCH KB,
Little Kook. Arkansas.
'> f, J| ||
n * ° ' 'in Wovkliiff Class.-We tue
em. ,P re * )aro( l to turn is 1 1 all cla.ses with constant
t.J'WO at home, the whole of their time, or for
i ta , s l jar,! moments. Business new, light and prof
centst * ?cson3 of either sex eastly earn from 50
per evening, and a proportional sum by
au j ln “ iheir whole time to the business. Boys
see o - 1 a f' u nearly ns much as men. That all who
unn, ÜB ii D ?** ce ">ay send their address, aud test tho
fiMi offer: To such as are not well satls
writi " lil K, ' ,ul one dollar to pay for tho trouble of
doll !15‘, rull particulars, samples worth several
to .commence work on, and a copy of Home
p u , *? lr ®*ide, one of tho aargest and bosi Illustrated
w „ , leatl °UH, all sent free by mail. Header if you
‘ permanent, prolltabls work, address, gbougb
Bson 8i Cos., Portland, Maine.
•—
VOL. VIII.
• mler The Snow.
BY JOHN n. BONN EH.
[This beautiful poem originally ap
peared in the Salem (N. C.) Press. It
is one of the most beautiful gems that
we have encountered in many days :]
1 he brown old earth lies quiet and still
Under the snow ;
The furrows arc hid on tho broken hill
Under the snow ;
Every twig is fringed with mossy pearl,
The drooping cedars bend to the ground,
The rose-bud is drifted into the mound,
And still from the silent sky to the
ground
The white Hakes noiselessly whirl.
Tho roads and Helds are buried deep
Under the snow:
The hedges lie in a tangled heap
Under tho snow
And tho little gray rabbits under them
creep,
While the twittering sparrows cunning
ly peep
From the sheltering briars and co/.ily
sleep,
Under the snow.
The rough old barn and sheds near by,
The mounded straws of the wheat and
Are covered with snow ;
The straggling fences are softened with
down,
Every part is white with a beautiful
crown
Of drifted snow.
And I think, as I sit in the gloaming
here,
Watching tho objects disappear,
How many things arc folded low
Under the drift of tho falling snow.
There are hearts that once were full of
love,
Under the snow;
There are eyes that glowed with the soul
ot lovo,
Under the .now ;
Thore arc faded tresses of golden hair,
And locks that were bleached with the
frost of caro—
There are lips that were once like the
rose,
There are bosoms that are stung with
woes,
There are broasts that oneo were true
and strong,
0, there’s a strange and,mighty throng
Under the snow!
Another mound will once lie deep
Under the snow 1
And I will with the pale ones sleep
Under the snow.
O, God, transform my soul with grace,
That in tho lovelight of thy face
I may stand pure when death shall
place
My pulses, heart and body low
Under the snow.
A Satire on “Bora Editor.”
Caromamlel Mail.
We learn that Mr. Montague
Browne, who for a period of over
two years has fillod the sub-edi
torial chair of the New Zealand
Herald, is about to leavo Aucland
for Dunedin, to fill an engagement
on the Guardian, a leading daily
morning paper. Although young
in years, Mr. M. Browne ranks
among the smartest newspaper men
in the colonv. or anv the neighs
boring coiomes, ana Irom our per
sonal knowledge of that gentleman
if he did not possess all the quali
fications for newspaper work we
should say, More shame to him !
Mr. M. Browne was born, some*
what prematurely, in an editor’s
room adjoining a newspaper prints
ing oftlce, and has been connected
with the newspaper press from
that hoar to this. At three weeks
old a girl, to whom the child had
been committed, let him fall into
a keg of printer’s ink, and it was
days and days before he could be
restored to his original complex
ion. At twelve months old nothiug
would pacify him so quickly &£ to
give him a pot of paste, & pair of
scissors and and old newsj. r -
At three years he escaped froi nis
nurse, got into a printing-office
and “pied’’ seventeen galleys of
type. At seven he coaxed his lit
tle sister to be placed on a double
demy Albion printing-press, and
was about taking an impression
from her, when lie was discovered
by his mamma, who did not fail to
make an impression on him.
At twelve years old our youth
ful journalist did his first atrocious
murder, in which he caused a
mother, the keeper of a sausage es
tablishment, to slay her child and
convert it into sausages, the whole
of which she disposed of to custo
mers. This murder sold five
hundred additional copies of the
newspajier it was printed in. A
month after this he perpetrated a
great bank robbery which will not
vet have died out of tho memory of
our readers. This was followed by
a dreadful conflagration, and after
ward by a miraculous escape of a
young lady from being carried off
by a female disguised as a man, in
a fit of jealousy, for haying attem
pted to wean the aflections of the
, gentlemen to whom she was cn-
THOMASTON, GA.. SATURDAY MORNING. JANUARY 20. H 77
gaged. It was a thrilling tale, —
The falling of a child down a 400*
feet shaft, the mother jumping
down after her, and both being
brought out alive, was a most affec
ting narrative. Since that time Mr.
Montague Browne lias filled va
rious appointments in the literary
department of a newspaper, and
has written more sin and crime and
villainy than any man of his
age. Asa sub-editor, or an all
round journalist, Mr. I3rown has
few superior to him, and ho has
never failed in preserving its tono
and maintaining its character for
thorough honesty and indepen
dence. And as for the very, latest
intelligence, if it is to be got he
will got it, and when it’s not to
he got—even then he’ll get it-
A Soldier’* I'onfideiiec.
Ono day, when Napoleon I. was
reviewing his troop in Paris, he
let fall the reins of his horse from
his hands upon the animal’s neck,
when the proud chargor galloped
away. Before the rider could re
cover tho bridle, a common soldier
ran out from the ranks and placed
tho bridle again in the hands of
the emperor. “Much obliged to
you, captain,” said Napoleon! Tho
man immediately believed the chief
and asked, “Of what regiment,
sir?” Napoleon, delighted with his
quick perception and ready trust
in his word, replied: “Of my
guards!” and rode away. As soon
as the emperor left, the soldier
laid down his gun, saving :
“He may take it who will,” and
instead of returning to tho ranks
whence he so suddenly issued, he
started lor .the company of staff
officers. They were amazed at
his apparent rudeness and disobe
dience of orders, and one of tho
generals contemptuously said :
\\ hat does this fellow want here?
“This fellow,” replied the soldier,
proudly, “is a captain of the guard
011! my poor friend ; you are
mad to say so,” was the answer of
the superior officer. “He said it,
replied the soldier, pointing to the
emperor, still in sight. “I ask
your pardon, sir,” said the general
respectfully ; “I was not aware of
it.” And so the soldier came duly
to his post as captain of Napoleon’s
Guard.
Prcsldcnl’s Son.
The New York corresjiondont of
the Rochester Chronicle says :
Tho death of ex-President
Van Buren’s youngest son
recalls incidents concerning
other Presidential children. The
childless Washington was followed
by Adams with two sons and a
daughter. The first of these be
came President, also; but the
youngest, whose name was Charles,
turned out badly and died in mid
age, leaving a widow and two chil
dren dependent upon the old gen
tlemen. The daughter married a
Col. Smith, but the Union was un
fortunate. Jefferson’s married life
only lasted ton years. It was of a
delightful character and brought
him six children—all daughters—
of whom only two grew up to ma*-
turity. One ot these (Mary) marAjd
John W. Eppes, while the orner
(Martha) married Thomas M.
Randolph. Madison, like Wash
ington, married a widow and had
no children. Monroe married a
lady of this city and had a daugh
ter, who became the wife of Sam
uel L. Governeur. The latter was
postmaster here under Jackson,and
Monroe died while an inmate of
his family. John Quincy Adams
had but one child, the present
Charles Francis Adams. This is
the only instance to be found in
America of first-class talent pro*
longed for three generations. Jack
son, though married, w as childless.
Of Van buren we . 4 ve already
spoken. Harrison ha .-1 family.—
Tyler’s children were of little real
character, though Rot>c‘-t was much
paragraphed by office seeking jour
nals. Polk, though narried, was
childless. Taylor had one daugh
ter, who married his popular aide
de-camp, Major Bliss. Pierce had
but one child, a promising son of
thirteen, who was killed by a rail
way accident a few months after
his father’s inauguration.
One bachelor and three childless
married men stand conspicuous in
the Presidential array. Of the
families which have accupied the
White House since Buchanan'.s day,
it is hardly proper to speak. The
children of Our Presidents have
been few in number and very limi
ted in point of attainment. The
most gifted were John Van Buren
and Charles Francis Adams. The
latter is sixty-nine years old, and is
a firstclass man in public and pri
vate life* Fie may be said the em
bodiment of all the Pi esidential
offspring in point of talent and
force of character. Thet*e has been
more than one family of children
in this country which outnumber
ed all the Presidential offspring
from Washington down to Lincoln.
An I/nirii*twoitliy
Tho Washington (D. C.) Chron
icle says : About the sharpest
dodge attempted by impostors in
the charity line was almost success
ful a few days since in this citv.—
A female of gtod address, but
poorly clad, culled on the rector
of Trinity Episcopal Church, and
stated that she had been a member
of that church, and attended there
when she could afford respectable
clothing, but that now she was re
duced in circumstances, and what
was worse than all, her sister was
a corpse in her house, and that she
had no means wherewith to bury
her. She gave her address, a house
on New-Jersey avenue, southeast
and so moved was the pastor by
her appeal, that through his efforts
and others charitably disposed,
quite a ium of monov was raised
by tho day following. Tffiis sum ;
together with the address of the
supposed sufferer, was handed to
some ladies, who proceeding to the
place indicated, were shown to a
second stoiy room, wherein was i
the body of a woman on a bed ;
apparently dead and motionless as
a corpse, with the side scene, of
a child crying, and the woman
who made tho appeal leaning her
head on the window sill overcome
with grief. Tho scene was so sol
emn and impressive that the ladies
soothing the grief of the latter
handed her the amount collected
and left, each thinking how little
one-half the world knew of the
sufferings of the other half. One
ot the parly, through having loft
hor gloves in the apartment, re
turned, when what should she see
to her astonishment but the corpse
sitting up in bed counting the
ney they had left. The scene that
followed and the ruse need no cx
explauation, and it is unnecessary
to say that tho donors immediately
repossessed themselves of the funds
of which they wero well nigh de
frauded.
Tlic Ungrateful Goat.
Saturday three or four boys club
bed together and stolo a goat be
longing to a man on Park place.—
William is noted all through, that
ncighborhod as being a direct de
scendant of the wickedest goat
which evor walked on four legs.—
lie soon gave (he thieves to under
stand that they had better try to
steal a buzz-saw in motion, and
being unable to handle him, they
tied him in an alley behind a block
ol stores on Grand River avenue.
After an hour or so a grocery clerk
with red hair and a big heart hap
pened to look out of the back win*-
dow and discovered William stand
ing around and shaking with the
cold. “That’s a pretty trick, that
is,” said tho clerk as he opened
the door. “Some thief has tied
him here to wait for darkness.”
Ilis big heart prompted him to
advance and untie the poor animal
Ho walked around him to look for
marks of ownership, and was about
to take a close view of the goat’s
earß,when William doubled up like
a jack-knife, shot forward, and he
knocked that clerk fourteen feet to
an inch. It seemod to the clerk,
as he lay stretched out in the alley
that time enough passed before he
recovered his breath for the Pres
idential question to be fully settled
the new loan all taken up, St. Pa
trick’s Day to arrive and depart,
and Christmas, 1877, to arrive, but
in reality it was only one minute
and thirly-five seconds.
lie got up and began heavin;
barrels at the mild-eyed assassin,
and this is how a policeman came
to make threats, why a crowd col
lected, why a clerk swore loudly
and roundly, and why a goal walk
ed oft* on his elbow down the alley,
looking back now and then to see
it anybody wanted anything of
him. —Detroit Free Press.
Little Men.
Not long before his death Canon
Kinksleydrew attention to the sur
prising number of small young
men to be seen in an English
crowd, according to him it was
a sign of the deterioration of the
race. But there arc two ways of
looking at everything, and, for the
satisfaction of small people, we
would point out that it might also
be taken as an indication of intel
lectual prowess. Many-we might
always say most —of the great men
of history have been men of short
stature, from the days of that an
cient philosopher who, as the story
goes, was so diminutive that he had
to carry lead iu his pockets to pres
vent his being blown away. Ca
nute the Great, for example, was a
singularly small man ; Napoleon,
too, was little, Nelson had no
height to boast of and the Great
Conde was short enough. Hide
brand—Gregory the Seventh—the
mightiest of all the popes, was also
quite a diminutive person. Then
amongst men of letters, poeis and
philosopheis, Montaigne, the essay
ist, was little; so was Popo—‘a lit
tle crooked thing that aske ques
tion,' so was Dry den ; so was Dr.
Watts, who insisted, as we al
know, on the mind being the sta
turo of the man : and so was Scar
ron, who alluding at once to his
ill health and his size, calhd him
self an abridgement of human mis
eries., W ill any one, after sue!
names as these—and the list might
be indefinitely extended—look
down on little men with Jisdain ?
How file Shrewd ltu-iiic* viun
Tide* Over (lie Hard Time*.
Times are hard, indeed, and motl
ey is scarce; but merchants and
dealers can make them a great deal
harder and money much scarcer,
so far, at least, as they are concern
ed, by secluding themselves from
public gaze, as it were, and failing
to use every means within their
reach for doing at least a share of
what business there is to lx* done.
No matter how hard times may be,
a certain amount of purchasing
must be done daily by almost eve
ry family; and the harder the
more sharply are buyers looking |
out tor bargains, And a peculiari- j
ty ot the case is that in periods of
great depression a large portion of;
the small trade is for "cash. Busi- I
ness men who fail to advertise and
thus make known what special in
ducements they have to offer* are
therefore certain to be passed by,
while their energetic and enterpris
ing competitors are picking up
what money there is in circulation.
What would bo thought of a farm *
er, who, having bought or rented
his place, ploughed his fields and
sowed his seed, would sullenly re
fuse to gather his crop because the
yield happened to lie lighter than
usual,-when, indeed, there was all
the more necessity for gathering
what there might be? Yet that is
precisely the attitude in which a
business man places himself when j
lie fails to advertise because money j
is scarce and business dull.-Wash* j
inglon Star.
Civc your Oliilti a Aiewsjmpcr.
An exchange very appropriately
says that a child beginning to read
becomes delighted with a newspa
per, because it reads of names and'
things which a*-e familiar, and it
will progress accordingly. A news
paper, in one yoar, is worth 4 quar
ter’s schooling to a child. Every
father must consider that informa
tion is connected with advancement.
The mother of a family being one
of its head, and having a more im*
mediate charge of children, should
herself bo instructed. A mind oc
cupied becomes fortified against the
ills, of life, and is braced for any 1
emergency. Children amused by
reading or study, are, of courso,
more considerate and more easily
governed.
The report of the commission
appointed by the president to ex
amine the several reports of the sur
veys which have been made at the
expense of the United States to as
certain the practicability of an in
ter-oceanic canal across the isth
mus, iavors the Nicaragua route,
and fixes its estimated cost at about
$100,000,000, and estimate that its*
construction will consume ten years
The president believes that the
prospect of an uarly beginning of
the work on this canal is very
favorable. Under his direction
communications have been sent to
the principals powers of Europe in
regard to the subject, directing
their attention to the satisfactory
results of the surveys which have
been made, and to the views set
forth in tho report as to the best
route.) Replies have been received
from several of the governments
thus addressed, in which they ex
press themselves favorable to an
early beginning of the work.
“What do they always put D. C.
after Washington for‘r asked Mrs.
Quilp of Mr. Q. “Why. ray dear,
don’t you know that Washington
Was the Daddy of his Country ?”
said Quilp, with a snicker.
Shut Your Mouth. — The
‘Science of Health” thus calls at.*
tention to a fact which cannot be
too frequently enforced on peophfs
minds ; “The pernicious babi f of
breathing through the mc; u tU while
sleeping or waking is Very hurtful.
There are many persons who sleep
with the mouth Open, and do not
know it. They' may go to sleep
with it closed, and awake with it
closed ; but if the mouth is dry.
and parcherl on waking it is a sign
that it has been open during sleep.
Snoring if, another sure sign. This
habit should be overcame. At all
times, (i'xeej)t when eating, drink“
i°g. or speaking, keep the mouth
firmly closed and breatho through
the nostrils, and retire with a firm
determination to conquer.—
1 he nostrils are the proper breath*
apparatus, not the mouth. A man
may inhale poisonous gases through
the mouth without being aware of
it, but not through the nose.
The Singer Sewing Machine!
I
THE PEOPLE’S FAVORITE!
I lli< ‘ Lprcnl Sales! f Because {Tin;Mod Popular!
Most Popular Because The Best !
VERDICT OF THE LADIES.
Aie title onlyVinew !J I |!' "i, n .l*' ■' ,U returns, th.it tlte NINGKB SEWING M U'lllNk
than noransntii'lvk‘ ( Ti* d TM’ IK ' m,s '‘ and ® ve 7 )w, uulntemiptouj
SS U ‘“ f - —h JHg
Singer Sewing Atacliine
Ul U “ 01 UU.1..U.,0X
“® toUo ' v *oS return* ox salt* tell Uie story :
ny tUK s I ngkh 11l ,ao Itl9,vs:q j* : £ i, 4 a J‘L..a in.isa.
Sales still 1 All CompctitionlDistanccd!
cuar arr*('omi I Cy— lll JI Vi!<7vLTiilT-iiV.V.'^Address* 1 U " )C ' >nts ' active men wanted m bmh
The Singer Manufacturing Company.
H. G TURPI N , Agent,
80 UuLMBBY STREET, G.
J * l ** J 1 B ° N • Aycut lor Pike county. * „ augio-ti
FURNITURE! , TROTgr RE
OASTLEBtRV & <'<!.
* .
WHOLESALE AND JwKTAIL Dealers,
cl M[ axx tlx 1* i\ <o "t xx x° c? x*
COMMON , MEI) 1u M AND FI N E
PUBNITUHifi.
$90,000 WORTH
Now in Our Two Stores—42 &44 Whitehall Street, and
Corner Marietta and Peachtree Streets.
O
CHAMBER PARLOR AND DINING-ROOM SETTS
In Endless Vdriety I
Manufactured in Atlanta, Ca !
0F TIIE BEST AMERICAN, ENGLISH AND FRENCH WALNUT.
'i.’iiU ? Mnrlih^cVtT°t?n Se *' tR co^f^ e ’ Wftln,u > 00 1 Oae-hali Mm Me ■ ©tt
iro,u * ,,w -
STEAM FACTORY,
corner Harris and butler street^
And propoaeTnnnufneturinjr all the Furniture at ttyvwij t?
pk>TH*nt to “Your IClncl ’ \nwL. K Encourage Horn© Indoatry, uod K i%, ur..
VI MCI. No troublo to answer Inquiries. Goods shlppod Ire© .3 riuug,.
CASTLEBURY & CO-,
ATLANTA, GA.
a _^EstabllshedMLßs6.
DART & REYNOLDS,
(A. A. DART.)
buildkrs of
Slight Carriages,
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
Manufacture work expressly for the SOUTHERN MARKET,and
from long experience arc thoroughly con vtrsant with the requirements
of the country. The work itself used in every Southern State is its
recommendation, and renders a detailed description unnecessary
We also manufacture the CELEBRATED
•
DEX TER
G ON
Now on exhibition at the Centennial. The best, easiest, and most du
rable vehicle in existence.
For C'irenlar*. Are., apply ns above.
uctfLtf
CHAMBERLAIN BOYNTON & CO.,
mm ■ mi
GO and GS Whitehall Street, Atlanta,
HAVE ItKCECIVED THEIR SECOND STOCK THIS SEASON AND HAVE IN THEIR DRY GOODS
DEPARTMENT ONE OF THE MOST COMPLETE STOCKS OF
Staple and Fancy Dry Goods,
BLACK AND C(>LORED SILKS AND FINE
DRESS GOODS AND LADIES’ CLOAKS
BYBBi OFFERED IN THE STATE. SAMPLES SENT TO ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY ON
APPLICATION
CARPETS NEVER SO CHEAP AS NOW !
N THEIR CARTET DEPARTMENT THEY ARE NOW DISPLAYING AS ELEGANT A LINE <F
Carpets, Shades, Oil Cloths, Rugs, Wall Paper and
HOUSI>FURNTSHING G.k)DB, AS CAN BE FOUND SO! Til OF PHILADELPHIA. LAMBRE
UIUN-i \M* OOUNICK M ADE TO OBDIit.
tall nA < aarnlii'', vtkl i>r<i<-n to
CHAMBERLAIN, BOYNTON & CO.,
{novt -Sm J r* h AN Wl.itrh 01‘Ng Atiantr.Oaarjmi.
L ate immense niscov-
V-l:iF.s PV STAM.hV AM* <>Tlf hll* AID! 4t"s|
ADDED TO TUE ONLY CXJMPLETL
' ni> MBORS OP l.lY]M;>kTo\K,
Thu. vot. riui . xpk.rvr anton* tb,. ~* h. -
tot* timin''* of the century, and tin* t> ~k . . . .
the ‘ Uinat ttractive, fascinating. richlr illiintmted
and instructive volume rwnimaj l".nl
only entire Mid authentic in©, lb, iuUlmm r,T vr
for It. and wideawake a_*. nta an* w.mt.d quickie
K>** *•< iiMtu** ad.lnw* Ilui.b *rd Bro*. i „bl
Iwh r*s Txi SanMni MrtMk, PhiU.
NO. (>