Newspaper Page Text
The Daily Herald
WEDNESDAY. JULY 9. 1873.
rHK HERALD riWUSH/JS IOJIPAJY.
ALKX. iT. CLAIR-ABRAM8,
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THE TERMS of th« HJERALPare a* follow* S
Sul?- . , ft5-:: w 5 5l3S8x«25tt;*i S
SilL?: ‘ Mootba -.. > SO WRJtKL*. 3 Month. "
° VirarttMMtete in««rt»a h moderate rate,. Sub.
<cnption. and adTartiaamanU i.rarUbly In MtTanca.
* nP ^ HERALD PUBLISHING OO..
Drawer 23 Atlanta. Georgia.
a i>hH»t Street, near Broad.
icriptione
Address
Af&eec
Our State Exchanges.
Rome hasn’t had a lire alarm in six months.
The Typographical Union in Savannah, it seems, is
at last “turned doom” by Estill, of the “Newa.** A
resolution was lately pasted at a fall meeting allowing
Union printers to work in the News office. And now
Kstlil has got his back np, and won’t allow them to
come. The truth is, there is no nae talking about
getting away with Estill.
Rome stands immortal aa having the only mas who
ever resigned a position in the Poet-office Department.
Albien On berg ia the wonderful man. He forma a
partnership with Mr. Pstriok in the book business. Is
the millcnium come to hand ?
The Albany News is going to be s daily after the 1st
of September.
A Mr. Alexander, of Hancock county, committed
suicide recently by taking laudanum and cutting his
throat. Domestic afflictions were the cense.
An Athens man rebuked a friend who pionsly wish
ed all the “d—n yankecs in hell." by remarking:
• For God's take leave enough to run a circus.”
The Savannah News says Mr. Patrick Henry yes
terday presented us with one of the most remarkable
curiosities in the agricultural line, that we have ever
seen. He baa a patch of ground which had been
planted in barley, and upon which is now growing a
healthy crop of corn. The cariosity of which we
have to speak ia decidedly a practical evidence of the
amalgamation of barley and corn—a kind of hybird
p. odnotion It ia a small aizsd ear of corn with the
complete rows of grain on the cob, growing to a long,
green stem, about an Inch in circumference. Spring
ing out from the bottom of the cob are alternate row*
of corn and barley, each one separate in itself and
forming, aa it were, a kind of covering for the cob,
from which it ia asperate. Some of these rows of corn
sre interspersed here and there with grains of bar-
I 7, and vice versa.
Macon ia very much worried about her dogs, and
she now proposes to give anybody, twenty-five cents
per head for all nn-collared dogs taken np. This
chance, combined with the flourishing blackberry
crop, will give the negro citizen an affluence of
source, truly joyful to think about.
Mrs. Dr. Chsillie died in Macon on Monday from
ovsr-dose of morphene. She was s daughter of the
late Leroy Napier.
The Sandersville Herald tells a mournful story con
cerning the misfortunes of one Scattergood of that
county, one of Farrow’s negro jurors at the recent
term of the Federal Court at Savannah. It says:
On last Tuesday night this juror was caught by our
City Marshal in the chicken house of a widowed lady
of thia city, Dave was not prepared for that sort of a
“box,*’ so he attempted to come out ot the coop, and
aa he did so the Marshal boxed him with hia club, and
scattered the rad juice of that juror. Dave succum
bed. and was sent to jail. A preliminary trial waa held
on Wednesday and the intelligent and honest (?) juror
was required to give bond for his appearance at the
Superior Court. Think of it. a negro chicken thief aa
a juror to try honest and intelligent men. A sad com
mentary on the Jury system, and the government in
stituted by Washington and Jefferson.
A Madman’s Letter.
moke .or walworth’s shocking missives to
HIS WIFE.
New York Herald, 38th.
The following letters were read by Charles
O'Conor, all written by Mansfield Tracy Wal
worth to hia wife. The date of the first letter
was not given:
“Why do yon not sign the papers which
yonr lawyer says he sent to you? Is it not an
honorable settlement, and was it not Bigned
by me promptly ? I waited weeks and weeks
patiently, hat as yoor lawyer said the doctors
wouldn’t allow yon to attend to any business
or sign it; and now, with the most marvelous
breach of good faith, your lawyer has ruth
lessly and treacherously gone to the Trust
Company, which, by settlement, the lawyers
listed should be left alone. If you inci-
Stand off. <J d 4 d yon 1 I ask you
to do nofiiing that yoor lawyers have not
stipulated tor. G——d d n you, you
false, cold, demon-hearted b—h !
Monday, 10 a. m. (supposed to be July 7.)
That same pleading, ever-present determi
nation is working me np to the final tragedy.
I go down in five minutes to see if my lawyer
has reoeivsd and Tied the agreement signed.
OUR HOKE. WATERING PLACES.
At last the hot season is upon us. June’s
last breeze has swept through her fleecy hair,
and her cheeks are aflame with Joly’s hot
breath. Delicious spring, with her dewy
eyes and her fresh pink face lies adead, gar
landed with her own violets, and bold-faced
summer, sweltering and dnst-begrimed, has
come harrying from the South.
The conundrum now agitating fashionable
society is:
“When shall we go ? At what eprmge aball
we sip our summer solace? Whence shall,
we flee stifling sultnis of the city ?”
Shall Saratoga receive ns ? Shall we bathe
at Long Branch, gamble at Newport, talk
politics at White Sulphur, or dance at Ball-
ston Spa ? Shall we take a dash across the
breezy prairie, or dawdle in the royal suburbs
of the Great Gotham ? In which of all these
pleasure spots shall we disport ourselves ?
In none of them, dear reader, if you will
listen to us. Avoid the stifling, crowded,
swindling, shoddy watering places of the North
and pay your respects to the beautiful and
cool retreats that invite you so temptingly
within the borders of your own or neighboring
State. Have yon ever reviewed with any mod
icum of attention the attractions offered you
right here at home, where you will meet good
society that you know to be such, and will be
served at prices that you can stand without
inconvenience ?
Have you thought of Catoosa Springs,
where Hewitt dispenses Virginia hospitality,
where breezes fresh from the mountains play
perpetual through the valley, where the dew-
drops wink demurely at the mid-day sun as
its aggressive rays are caught and tangled
like golden cobwebs in the arching trees
Of Mineral Hill—that dainty mountain nest
looking for all the world as if a tit-bit pieoe
of charming Switzerland, with all its fresh
ness and fragrance, had been plucked up and
bodily brought to our sultry South ? Of Cha
lybeate Springs, that mossy retreat, where for
years the fashion and beauty of Georgia has
met in comely revelry 1—or, of Indian Springs,
not less delightful and scarcely less renowned ?
Or, of Tallulah, that most beautiful of all
earth’s beauty spots?—of Toccoa, of Nacoo-
chee, or of Mount Yonah, that proud old
monarch, gemmed with violets and crowned
with honeysuckles? Have yon thought of
Cave Spring, that loveliest village of Georgia,
with its silver creek plashing and sparkling
in amorous windings through its very streets,
embracing its lovely body in half a dozen pas
sionate foldings before it can bear to say
“ Good-bye” in its journeyings to the ocean ?
Or, of Marietta and the princely enter
tainment of the Kennesaw House peo
ple ? Or, of lofty old Ixiokout, carrying
you up into the dewy depths of the very
clouds toemselves suggests the delicious ne
cessity of “blankets at nigbtr
If the object sought in a summer resort
to get there, one can forget at once the tur
moils of the world, and the discomforts of
the season, then our Georgia or Tennessee
watering places are unapproachable? Wbat
can compare with a retreat to Hewitt’s, where
in tbs shadiest, coolest valley in the South,
with wild flowers growing in profusion all
aronnd, and every branch in every tree tune
ful with the oorroilingi of some bird, there to
loaf, and dream and dream, feasting or
Hewitt’* eod water, big thighed chickens
flaky roila and elovar country butter. What
can equal a trip to Tallulah, where a man can
gather btubels of honeysuckle, where he can
lay down in riotous richness on beds of wild
riolet*, where he can here the chickens crow
under his window at the crack of day, and be
lullabied to sleep by the drowsy serenade of
the katy-dids, breathe air resinous and frm-
flrant from the sighing pine trees of the
mowntains, eat finite plucked by hia own
hand from the willing tree, and get a shower
bath from the shaking of every dew-laden
bosh in hi* path, where the men needn’t wear
cravats, and the women needn’t wear their
beck hair. Compare these delights with the
crowded, stifling misery of sleeping six i n ,
bod at Saratoga, or being packed like sardines
in. the sultry chambers of Newport, and then
lget some feint imsginieg of the dif-
stipuli
ted him to this
BREACH OF FAITH
yon met a most signal failure. Axe you, his
instigator, two-faced also ? 1 made yon some
offers to get to my t works, and gave yon
about $250. As J C is xny judge, I
never received the document which I wo aid
have abided by ; but now I never will make
such an agreement .Already $250 of my pre
cious money gone to my lawyer.
J God! aren’t you going to sign the
agreement your lawyer sent you ? You are a
demon, keeping me from success by wasting
the precious dollars and tormenting me after
a settlement has been agreed upon. Great
God, woman, let me go to my work. The
hardest time for “Delaplaine” is here. In
six weeks the fate of the book is told- Ellen
Hardin, sign this paper, which you agreed to
sign. Great God, are you going to allow that
cratty lawyer to get your name and to get my
name as
ANOTHER ‘WARWICK’
to spread his name before the American pub
lic as a divorce lawyer, for as sure as God is
in heaven, if this agreement is not signed, I
will place the facts before the public; but
that is not my only resource. There is mur
der and suicide. I waited six weeks patiently,
and by Christ, the living God, I will give you
no more time, but throw ‘Delaplaine’ into the
ditch, reopen the divorce, and sue for my
children, unless you sign the agreement, and
will devote the rest of my life fighting in the
courts and with murder and suicide in the
end.”
“July 17, 1861.
“You D—n Dishonorable B—h—Two
hundred dollars more of precious money gone
to my lawyers. I can’t get into a situation
where I can start afresh, and every day
causes loss and a plank is drawn from under
my feet, and I am on the verge of beg
gary and desperation every hoar. Why do
not you sign and give me a chance
in life? I signed promptly. Why mast
THIS DAMNABLE EXTORTION
of moDey for every adjournment go on? Don't
you know that your lawyer is charging you
fof every delay? Oh! I am crazy fer just a
few dollars to push my book “Delaplaine”
into snccess, and “Delaplaine” is dying—dy
ing! Two years more of my life wasted! O”!
J—s on Calvary—but do not think the last
cry means weakness; as, by theE — 1 G—din
wasting my time you have armed me. May
G—d d—n yon. I revoke every promise I
made you. 1 do not revoke my legal agree
ment. I stand by it as I do by every
honorable agreement I ever made. It is your
lawyer that played me false. This last
trick of your lawyer, that it is neces
sary to make a stipulation that I will
not break my engagement, is frivolous.
Why don’t he think of it before? I
do not care a d—m; but put it in fifty times if
you like; but hurry up, and stop this useless
waste of money since the first day I entered
Charles M. Whitney’s office. Eternal J s
can’t we get it signed ? He told me the law
yer had put the money stipulation into the
agreement of his own option; and even Judge
Barbour says to me that W r bitney is a Yankee
poppy, making oat of the misery and patience
and agonies of others delay and pay, and to
get it before the public in the courts; and I
am d—d sure he is pursuing the course to get
it there. I agreed with Judge Barbour to relin
quish all nearly to you but $200, and Whitney
never Sent the agreement to me, according to
promise. He is a G—d d—m liar; he never
Bent it to me. HurTy up for J s C ’a
G—d d—m you. You are a fool.
JULl o, 10 j A.
ATLANTA PAKR MILLS*
A tlanta papm
piutob. For
of this paper.
APOTHECARIES.
* VaNASbLXTWboleMle and retail - Drag-
gist* and Prescrtptionists, corner Peachtrae and
Decatur street*.
If you. want a summer retreat go to one of
got Home Watering Places. If you want to
waste a thousand dollars a month, and double
the Muttering from the beat and dust, go to a
Northern “Beeort”
Your lawyer asked .another adjournment to
day. I can not hold out longer. Tbe pis
tols are loaded. If you succeeded in getting
the $950 from the trust estate of my father, I
shall shoot yon, 6tamp ont your life with my
boot, and shoot myself if your mother is not
near. If she is near, I will use the second
6hot on her body and the third on myself be
hind the ear. Why? Murder for $750. you
ask? Why? Because you robbed me of my
young, and now, in my miserable agony, on
the loss of all that makes life tolerable,
you remorselessly seek to knock from under
A DESPAIRING WRETCH,
the last plank on which he can succeed. I
went to Judge Barbours to kill you; that door
chain alone saved yon. If you do not sign
the papers your lawyer says he sent you to
sign, and which your sickness alone prevent
ed you from signing, I shall shoot you. You
are dealing with a despairing, demoniacal
innrderer, or whatever despair makes a man.
Sign d—n quick.
June 20, 1871.
Your lawyer says to my lawyer that on Sat
urday he put a slight modification in the
articles ^f agreement, which he thought nec
essary for your protection, and laid before
you to sign. Is that truth ! And is the de
lay solely due to your not signing ? He says
so. Great J , cannot this thing be closed
promptly and business-like, and the waste of
the money on the lawyers stopped ? By the
eternal G——, I cannot be trifled with any
longer. Sign promptly and business-like.
Why am I so eager? Because I am hungry
and starvation begins to stare me in the face;
and this, added to the agonies of my heart,
will make me murder you myself.
oh ! can’t you see it ?
Won’t you sign it, and make your lawyer close
it op as quickly as he can ? Can’t you tele
graph to him to hurry it up and close the
business ? I am so hungry and so weak, and
the pistols for yon are lying loaded beside me
all the time. My book failed to bring me
money and my efforts to get a situation have
failed. I am a hungry demon, and am long
ing to lap my tongne in soft blood. You are
making your grave by the delay. But we
shall lie so peaceably side by side in death. O
sweet death ! Sweet death \
Saturday Night (supposed to be July, 1871).
I have just come from the lawyer’s office.
He says the agreement has not been signed
and returned from Saratoga. G— d— you 1
Sign it, and let me out of the expenses of tbe
law. May G— d— the expenses of the law,
that are beggaring me. G— d— you. You
are planning some other evasion of your
plighted word. Beware of me. God damn
yon. I am dangerous. Listen to the mur
derer’s hiss, and beware of me. Yon robbed
me of my children, and you want to rob me
of my pittance. I am watching you with a
hawk’s eye and a despairing heart. Woman,
why in God’s name don’t you sign the papers ?
The pistol is lying beside me loaded that will
relieve me from starvation and hell, and like a
flaming demon I will scatter yonr brains. I
am in earnest. G— d— you. Do the words
sound tame on paper? Hog’s b—h, I will
murder you for depriving me of my sweet,
darling money.
hist ! hist ! hist !
Let that ring like fate through your d—d in
human ears. The broken-hearted wretch will
drag his torture with him to belL
July 8, 1871.
Again, to-day, I have been to my lawyer.
He says the papers to be signed are still in
Saratoga. You are delaying, b h of hell.
Another adjournment to be paid for and the
pennies are scarce! The hopeless wretch
grasps his pistol! You take from the hopeless
author bis last hope. Vile b h, avaricious
wretch, I grasp the deadly weapon for both of
us.
hi land off that property ! You robbed me
of everything sweet in life, and of peaee, and
I want to wreak a dying vengeance on you if
you do not relinquish your grasp on the only
thing, G—d d— n you, you can appreciate my
money. .Sign the papers you agreed to sign
long, ixjno, long ago,
and I will let you go, b b, dragging my
heartstrings after you. Let me go to my
sweet, darling, precious money. Too late I
have learned that money is the hope of life,
and that for industrious poverty, there is no
home, no hope, no success in life, no love of
children; ana I clutch the money with a da-
mon’s clutch, with a murderer's clutch; sad I
would gladly murder for it and die. Sign the
papers which you agreed to sign, *—t
Ton rave miscalculated mamstxeld trace
WALWOETH,
!L'?u er " l haTe don ®' You will awake to tbe
y? n beggar me and the ballet
crashes through your skull and through mine*
But my superhuman second sight tells me
that yon have again prevaricated, and that
CHANCELLOR MALWORTH’S YOUNGER BOM
must be a murderer and a suicide. Bo be it!
I have done all I could to avert it. I have
waited patiently for weeks. You are pushing
on your doom. By the Eternal J C ,
Ellen Hardin, the purpose of three years of
your life of abandoning me and grasping that
property shall be thwarted in your blood and
mine. If you fail, the catastrophe comes as
sure as fete, G—d d—n you. All tbe inten
sity of hate in my life is centered on yoa,
Listen for the crack of the pistol!
Publication House Cahleton A Co.,
August 27.
Sign this paper and I w ill trouble no fur
ther. The devil says to me, You fool, she
wants to beggar you; she wants two-thirds
since her father died; she has kicked you out
like a dog; she does not care a groat whether
you succeed or not; she means to torment
you about that property, because she is a
G— d— woman, a thief and a traiteress. Now
sign this paper, and I will try to bring this
tortured brain once more down to literary
work. My lawyer says, She will never sign
anything that you want her to, because she
gloats in torturing you.
G— D— YOU, ELLEN HARDIN,
It is in me to succeed at books if yon leave
me alone and take the apprehension of law
suits from me. Sign this paper, or a tortured
author will kill you, by J s. Why did you
make me give up my children to yotfcand
make no fight for them ? Because I thought
the trust property would be left to me, and
that I could succeed as an author. My lawyer
says, she says I am a fool; that she hates me;
that you say you will do nothing that I want
you to do just to keep you nneasy, and that
your brain can&ot bend to literary work; she
knows that if you succeed her affidavits must
ba perjuries before the world.
NOW, SIGN THIS PAPER,
or I will murder you. I do not believe in any
God, but I believe there is a devil, and that
devil is you. Why in the name of common
sense, after you robbed me of the sweetness
of life, do you not leave me in the undis
turbed possession of the propeity, so that I
can stay in New York and work? Here in
dustry accomplishes wonders, even in the
mere profession of authorship. Sign this
paper as a guarantee. What did Whitney
mean when he said there would be more
trouble about the property—that the Har-
dins’ pride will not allow them to contend
about this property? In the name of God,
when I gave you my children for money, am
I not allowed to live in peace, when I would
sell my soul for it ? Oh, money is as sweet
to the Hardins as anybody else; but there is
not one of them who has courage to marder
for money as I have, and I will if I am not
left in peace with this two-thirds; for when
that goes my last plank of ambition will be
taken from under me, and I will murder.
So hard, so hard is an author’s fate!
THE AGREEMENT.
“I promise before God to abstain against
all law suits or take any of the property. I
am satisfied with one-third “which he has re
linquished for my relief. I know he has had
enough to carry on his mind from remorseless
children, without my crippling him with law
suits or for more money. Sign this paper to
give me mental rest, necessary for literary
work. I will not approach his trust again or
enter any court so long as I receive one-third
trust property.”
EXTRAORDINARY BEYOND BELIEF.
The readings of these letters continued
from about half-past two o’clock until ten
o'clock in the afternoon. Down to the very
last letter Mr. O’Conor read every one of
them in a clear and distinct voice, and em
phasized them with marvellous precision and
with evident effect upon the jury. They were
all of the same ribald, blasphemous tenor,
some of them absolutely surpassing belief.
As the reading ol the .counsel drew
towards a conclusion th«y ocomoil to
become more blasphemous and ob
scene. The court room was as still as
death. Every voice was hushed but that of
the great old lawyer, and as his clear, em
phatic tones rang through the corridors out
side every heart was stilled with horror. It
was simply impossible to believe that a human
being could become so depraved as to address
such language to the vilest creature, not to
speak of addressing them by mail and occa
sionally with apparent coolness to the wife of
his bosom. At the end of each letter there
was an audible sigh of relief in court.
Most of them commenced, “Godd—n you.
you skunking of h—11.”
Others called on the Sun oi God solemnly
to blight her.
Seme were addressed to Mrs. Hardin, an
nouncing that he intended to kill even her
and her children, if his property was not re
stored to him.
Another was addressed to Judge Barbour,
threatening him that he would shoot him in
the public street and fall a suicide over his
body if he interfered between his wife and
himself, and if his property was not restored
to him.
Another was addressed to Father Clarence
Walworth, announcing that he intended to
kill him if he egged his wife on against him,
and saying that “he would spit upon the reli
gion” which could make a saint of such a
as him.
Several cursed his father—Reuben H. Wal
worth—who was in his grave, because he had
robbed him of his inheritance.
In some were fouod bullets and caps, and
in others powder.
In one was found an extract from a news
paper, in which the foul murder of a wife by
a husband was described, and this ho likened
to the tragedy which was impending over her.
One addressed to his sister, Mrs. Backus,
threatened herself and her family with death
if $200 ot property, which he said was kept
from him, was not restoied to him. He said
the book trade was G— d d -d bad, and that
$200 would have got him circulars, and he
coaid have made a success of his book, and
earned hundreds of dollars,
In another letter he announced to this lady
that he was the Son of God, and came down
from heaven in a basket He intended to
divide the earth into four kingdoms, and he
would look out for her as she had for him the
last fell.
In one letter to his wife, he said that with
a dagger he would cut her entrails ont if she
did not give him his property. In all the let
ters he wailed piteously about his dread of
starvation and death from cold. He upbraided
his wife with keeping his property, and want
ed her to sign a deed giving him two-thirds
street, Atlanta, Ga.
AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSES.
J ~ BEN WILSON k 66., Broad street, next door to
• the bridge, make* advances to planters. A full
line of Agricultural Implement*, Publishers of the
Bond Southerner.
M
ARK W. JOHNSON, Dealer in Agricultural Im
plements, Seeds, Gnano, etc. Advances made to
r* Marietta street.
AUCTIONEERS.
J S
S IMMONS Jc HUNT, Groceries of every description
Country Produce et low rate*, at Junction of
Marietta and Walton street*.
DAIB k BRO., Wholesale Grocer, Alabamastroet.
Atlanta, Ga.
Peachtree and Wheat street*.
GUNS. PISTOLS, Mtc.
L E
I
Whitehall street.
J NO. M. HOLBROOK, Dealer in Hats, Caps. Furs.
and all the latest novelties in his line, White
hall street, Atlanta, Ga.
HARDWARE AND CUTLERY.
poaito the Kimball House.
_ _ in Hardware, Carriage Material and Mill Stones,
45 Whitehall street.
rp C. MATSON, Auction and Commission Merchant,
and Dealer in Furniture, Marietta street.
BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS.
sellers, Stationers and Plano Dealers.
tionery, 108 Whitehall Street.
BUSINESS COLLEGES.
oorner Broad and Alabama streets, Atlanta, Ga.
standard institution, the largest and best practi
cal business school in the South. For circulars, etc.,
address B. F. Moore, A.M. President. m
I Detwiler k Magee, Managers. Corner Line and
Three hundred Graduates now in
TAT L. WADSWORTH, Hardware, Cutlery, Guns,
' ” • Belting, and Carriage Material.
HtASS, J2TC.
.oleMLtJ’ijeiuer, la Burn-
Ocowrtea, 114 White-
_ Oil*, Paint*. Window Glass, Lamps, Etc., 35 Pryor
street, Atlanta, Ga.
T“
SEWIK6 MACHINE AIIKKCIIW.
THE HOME—finest machine made. Prices low. D.
G. Maxwell, Gen'l Agent, corner Broad and Marietta
streets, Atlanta, Ga.
CEWING MACHINE
Office, Corner Broad and Marietta 8ta.
i Opera House. The 44 Faat Gain-
Sc Wilson 8ewlng
C ^HALYBEATE SPRINGS, MERIWETHER COUN-
j ty, Georgia, wifi open for the reception of com
pany June 1, 1873. The hotel* and cottage* hare been
put in thorough repair, and largely refurnished, af
fording ample accommodations for FIVE HUNDRED
guests. J. C. Maclellan, of Macon, favorably known
to tbe people of Georgia and to tbe traveling public,
for bis superior ability in hotel management, ha* been
engaged, and will have entire charge of the table sup-
ipliea and culinary department, assisted by some of his|
best cooks and waiters from Brown’s and the Spots-
wood Hotels, regardless of cost. Mr*. L. L- Love has
kindly consented to assist, and will be happy to greet
her friends a« tha Spring*. A band baa been secured
for the seaaofl. Every variety of innocent amusement
will be introduced, and no trouble or expense spared
to make all comfortable and happy who may favor ns
with their patronage. Terms—$2 50 per day, $13 501
|pej^weelc. $35 per month. Children and servants half
prro. Daily coaches to and from Geneva, Tbomas-
too and LaGrange, via White Sulphur and Warmi
Springs. For circular or further particulars, call on
or address C. J. MACLELLAN, Spotswood Hotel. Ms
oon, until June 6th, or C. T. PORTER, care box 28 I
G». O., Talbottom CHA8 T. POBTKRj
■m*y27-su,tuAthtf Proprietors. ■
sale dealers in Hardware, Cutlery, Harness and
Iron Goods of all descriptions, Peachtree street.
Largest stock in tbe city.
ICE HOUSES.
JEWELRY. SILVER WARE.
BAG MANUFACTORY.
counted. Deposits received. Foreign and Domestic
Exchange bought and sold. Checks on all points in
Enrope, in sums to suit.
Agonts for the Inman and Cunarrt Steamship
Lines. First class and steerage tickets at lowest
rates.
9
k H. SALOSHIN, Bankers and Brokers, next to
• National Hotel. Exchange bought and sold.
>ney to loan.
THHE DOLLAR SAVINGS BANK, No. 2 Kimball
X Houae. Willi%m Gordon, president; Jas. M.
NTillis, cashier.
NO. 1L JAMES, Banker, James' Block.
I James M. Ball, President, W. W. Clayton, Cash
BOOTS AND SHOES.
of it, or be would kill her.
The Greensboro Herald says that about
fifty years ago, considerable pare copper was
discovered on the surface of lands recently
owned by Jndge Tuggle, situated in Greene
eounty, about three miles from Union Point.
A company was formed, and a shaft forty feet
deep was opened, going below the copper
Tem without touching. The work was then
abandoned. The works remained intact.
Quite recently a new company ha* been
formed with a capital of $10,000, all of which
will be expended, if necessary, in fully de
veloping the resources of the mine. They
have a twenty-horse power engine, and are
slowly progressing with their work. A
tunnel of twenty-eight feet carries them
to the bottom of the vein, which is exceeding
ly rich in pure copper. They have already
brought to the snrface many tons of ore mixed
with dirt; the valne of this mixture is esti
mated at $75 per ton, yielding from 15 to 2G
per oent of oopper. This estimate is not
from their last analysis, which is much richer.
It also contains sulphur in large quantities,
which may be readily converted into sulpha-
ric acid, for which thero it a great demand as
a means of converting the none phosphate
into soluble matter ready for the farmer. As
yet none ot the ore has been shipped, but ar
rangements are making to do so at once,
making Baltimore their market. According
to its present measurement and estimated
value, it is placed at $800,000.
The editor of tbe Thomaston Herald says,
in passing through a portion of Talbot and
Upson counties one day lost week, we noticed
that tbe con along the poblic roads ware un
usually good. We counted in some fields as
many as four silk* on one stalk. If tbe
weather oontfnues as it has been for ten
longer, the crop of corn in this section
will certainly be unusually large. Cotton in
such fields as had keen well worked was
looking well, in other fields, however, it
looked as though it had suffered for the want
of work, and, in some fields, it was still In
toe grass.
INSURANCE AGENTS.
E. GODFREY k SON. General Agents Ht. Louis
i Mutual Life Insurance, and Royal of Liverpool,
, Office 56 Whitehall street. Agent* wanted.
GADSDEN KING, General Agent, Fire, Marine
“ ‘ nd Lancashire Fire. Vir-
mHl SINGER DROP-LEAF SEWING MACHINE,
i Beat Sewing Machine made. B. T. Smilic Agent,
oorner Broad and Alabama street*.
BEAL ESTATE AGEMS.
B ELL a GOLDSMITH, corner Peachtree and Wall
streets.
G
EO. W. ADAIR, Wall street, Knuball House
a
J* roa
HAMMOCK, Whitehall street, near Rail-
W ALLACK k FOWLER, Alabama street, opposite
Herald Office.
SICN AND FRESCO PAINTING.
W M wi
Jacks, Whitehall street, Atlanta.
SALOONS.
1 0HN W. KIMBRO, Turf Exchange, No. 5 Decatur
»treet. Finest liquors in the city.
i sole agent for tbe Old Russell
• .L-ue. Loiiaon
ginia. Fire and Marine. Cotton Stales Life. Broad I 2 8 Saloon, Marietta street, the very best
Street A tlanta. Ga. -M, of j^rs mixed in the best style.
A tlanta department life association ].
of America. Officers—T. L. Langston, Presi
dent; C. I*. Redwino, Vice-President; J. H. Morgan,
Secretary; General L. J. Gartrell, Attorney; Wi am
G. Drake, Medical Examiner. Broad street, corner
Alabama. P. O. Box 276.
STOVE AND HCUS'.Fl!FINISHING GOODS.
r Alabama,
i Boots and Shoes, Republic Block
CARPETS. MATTINGS, ETC.
_ _ Carpets, Oilcloths and Matting to be found in the
city. Marietta street.
CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY.
Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, Sewing Machine
Wagons, Ac. Send for Price List. Bro&dstreet, just
beyond the Bridge.
TYAVID McBRIDE, Manufacturer of Carriages
1/ Wagons and Buggies, Decatur street.
i and Pryor streets.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
J A. ANSLKY, formerly J. A. Ansley & Co., of Au-
• gusta, Ga., Commission Merchant, office corner
Pryor and Hunter Streets. Advances in cash, or by
when bills La
I Y t\ SEYMOUR & CO., Wholesale Grocers and
• Commission Merchants, and Dealers in all
kinds of Produce, No. 83 Whitehall Street, Atlanta,
Georgia. Orders and consignments solicited. Re
turns made promptly.
L AWRENCE & ATKIN SON, Grocers aud Commis
sion Merchants. Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Consignments solicited.
” | K. BEAGO, Wholesale Grocer and General Com-
• mission Merchant, corner Forsyth and Mitchell
•traeta.
W. & a. R. R. Office, 9 Alabama Street Grain, Hay,
Flour, Bacon, Bulk MeatB, Lard, llams {sugar-cured
and plain) Lime, Cement, Plaster, Domestics and Varus.
Oldest Insurance Agency in the city.
ture, Burglar and Fire-proof Safes, Broad street.
A TLANTA DEPARTMENT Southern Life. Jno.
B. Gordon President, A. H. Colquitt Vice Presi-
ent, J. A. Morris Secretary.
J OHN A. WIMPY, Attorney-at-Law, Atlanta, Georgia,
Practices in all the courts. Special attention given
to the collection of claims, and all business promptly
L J. GLENN k SON, Attorneys at I^w, practice
in all the State Courts and iu the United States
Courts. Office over James’ Bank.
W M. T. NEWMAN, Attorney aud Counsellor at
Law, corner Whitehall aud Alabama streets, up
stairs.
rietta street, up stairs, practices in all the
JOHN M1LLEDGE, Attorney-at-law, Whitehall
HOOFEB, A Horn
street, will attend t
rjiHos.
W IZARD HEYWARD, Attorney-at-La’
• Marietta street
all kinds of legal business.
No. 1
, Decatur and Pryor
■ b K. PAYNE k CO., Commission Merchants aud
XV• dealers in Paper, Paper Bags, Twines, Rope,
Paper stock, old metal, hides, etc., 33 Pryor street,
Atlanta, Ga.
^ITEPHENo k FLYNN, Commission Merchants, and
dealers in Grain, Flour, Provisions, Country
Produce, Lime and Cement. Forsyth street, Atlanta,
Ga.
Y 1". BLECKLEY, Attorney-at-Law, Office aud res-
jLJm nlenee corner Peachtree and Harris street*.
J^OYAL A: NUNNALLY, Attorney* at Law, Griffin
XX OWARD VAN EPPS, Attorney and Counsellor,
X 1 No. 5 and C Granite Block. P. O. Box 469.
X R. SIMMONS k CO., Wholesale Grain and Prc-
|| • vision Dealers, Alabama street.
|> H. k A. M. THltASHElt. 5 Marietta street, up
XPe stairs, 1st floor, practice in all the courts.
r Block, Forsyth street, Atlanta, Ga.
CLOTHIERS AND TAILORS.
H. DYKEMAN, Mercnant Tailor and Dealer iu
_ Gents’ Furnishing Goods, No. 4 Peachtree street,
near the NationaL
J?
W B- LOWE k CO.. Dealer and Manufacturer of
” • Ready Made Clothing, old stand, Whitehall
CIGARS, TOBACCO, ETC.*
P H. ENGELBERT, Manufacturers of Cigars and
• Tobacco. Finest brands always cu hand. Broad
B. MOSES, Authorized Agent for imported Ha,
vana Cigars, No. 4 Kimball House Block, and
Kimball House Cigar stand.
W.
Smokers Articles, No. 17 Peachtree street, Atlanta,
1 Whitehall street, near railroad.
CONTRACTORS
Contracts faith-
COPPER, BRASS AND IRON.
Founders, Finishers, Gas Fitters and Sheet iron
Workers, Broad street, opposite the Sun Building.
All work done promptly.
CANDY AND CRACKERS.
, Whitehall street, Atlanta.
Lnowles. Nos. 26 and 28 Marietta street.
CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE.
DYE-WORKS.
hall and Hunter streets, Atlanta, Ga.
6tT Whitehall
E D. CARPENTER, Dentist* No.
• street, Atlanta, G*.
D. BADGER, Surgeon Demist, P
, Work promptly and neatly fin ished.
FRUITS, VEGETABLES, ETC.
C.4CJ
Iu
CAHN & CAMP, Wholesale Grocers tnd
Provision Dealers, 80 Whitehall Street,
South Broad Stroot, Atlanta, Georgia.
k <i. f. ti&DO ft CO., Wboleule (J.lwer. and
Ilf T. LAINK, Famliy Groceries. Also has
M„•]
street, Atlanta, Ga.
i and Alabama streets (up 6tairs), Atlanta, Ga.
M DE Git.VFFENliLED, Attorney at Law. spools
• atteutioa to the provocation of claim* agaius
State of Georgia and Umtol States. Office No. 1 Aus
tell’s Building, up stairs.
. Kimball House. Practice in all the courts.
LIVERY AND SALE STABLES.
/U
Vy 1 .
and Horses for sale.
Sash, Blinds, Mouldings, Ac., Broad street.
LIQUORS.
L AGER BEER BREWERY. City Brewery, corner
Collins and Harris streets. Lager Beer, Ale and
Beer, Fechter, Mercer k Co., office In Old Post Office
Building, Atlanta, Ga,
S HEPARD, BALDWIN k CO.. Wholcsalo dealers in
Wines, Liquors and Cigars, No. 11 Decatur street,
opposite the Kimball House, Atlanta, Ga.
_ Ga., Wholesale dealers in Foreign and Domestic
Whiskies, Wines, Brandies, Rums, Gins, etc., and
Pbopuiexoes or tuk Mountain Gap Wmaxis*.
Liquors and Cigars. Residence corner Cain and
i of the finest brands.
' mcstic Liquors, Peachtree street.
EADOR BROS., Wholesale Tobbat
35 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga.
MARBLE YARDS.
WILLIA5I GRAY, Dealer in Foreign and American
’ * Marble. Mantles Rtstusrv mud Vsnea Alahsms
MEDICAL.
D lt. W. T. Park, office No. 35Whitehall Street,
P. O. Box No. 168, Atlanta, Ga. Treatment of
Chronic Diseases, Impurities of the Blood, Obstetrics
and Diseases ofWomen and Children mads a spec
ialty.
MUSIC AND MU8ICAL INSTRUMENTS.
O L.HRAUMULLER, Dealer in Musical Inatru-
• ments, Stationery, and sole agents for Steinway
k Sons’ and other celebrated pianos, 15 Whitehall
street. Atlanta, Ga.
S OUTHERN NUR8ERY, Irwin and Thurmond
proprietors. Propagators and Dealers In Fruit
Trees, Grape Vines, Ornamental Shrubbery, Hot
House Plants, etc.
PRIVATE BOARDING HOUSES.
M RS. B. E. WILSON, South Pryor Street, between
Hunter and Mitchell. Large front roo^u, with
board. Day boarders wanted.
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY.
1 Drug Store, on Whitehall street,
otographs, etc., executed promptly, at reasonable
spadmtuz.
M 1!
raufiii
IBS GREEN, at the •‘Laraadon tfonaa.” —
Peachtrae street, can furnish pleasant room* to
families or single persons. Day boarders also re-
PICTURE8 AND FRAME8.
TAS. R. SANDERS, Manufacturer and Dealer in
t J Chromos, Mouldings, Looking Glasses and Plates,
*Q. 37X Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Stoves. Hollow-
i^JTEWART k WOOD, dealers „ wtvl>t 41-JJUlt ,
P ***** Housefurniuhing Goods and Children’s Car.
rlages, No. 73 Whitehall street.
UNpERTAKERS.
d 1UAS. It. GROOMS, Undertaker, Hearses nrumiit'
\y ly sent whan requested. 1
WHITE GOODS, NOTIONS. ETC
P HILLIPS, FLANDERS A OO., Dealers in Staple
and Fancy Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hosiery,
Ribbons, Notions, Etc., No. 88 Whitehall Street, At
lanta, Georgia.
W^.ro 0H * 00 •' Wholesale Notions. White Goods,
” Millinery and Fancy Goods, 15 Decatur street,
Atlanta. Ga.
YV ^‘ Is CO., Wholesale White Goods, Notions,
T T Hosiery and Gloves, Kimball House.
WOOD ENGRAVING.
E DWARD H. HYDE, Designer and Engraver^in
Wood, corner Peachtree and Marietta, up staira.
r-a
SUMMER RESORTS.
NASHVILLE, CHAT'1N00GA
AND
St.Louis Railway.
CENTRAL SHORT ROUTE I
T0H11 West aM Northwest!
SUMHrR SOHEMTLii, 1878.
TO MEMPHIS AND LITTLE
ALB’S-*?,
CELEBRATED
SULPHUR AND CHALYBEATE
Springs,
VR ROCERSVILLE, TENNESSEE.
BIS FAVORITE WATERING PLACE AND PLEA-
ant Summer Resort will be op tu tor visitors May Arrive Union City.. 0:50 a.
1st, 1873. * • Arrive Columbus.. .11:00 x.
Board per Day $1 50
Board per Week 9 00
Board per Month 30 00
4®“ Special terms for families.
To those having Scrofula, Dyspepsia, Kidney and
Mercurial Diseases, General Debility, etc., we say.
Come and be cured!
DR. J. A. TAYLOR.
Of Atlanta, Georgia.
DR. R. A. HOOKE,
Of Chattanooga, Tenn.
Leave Afksta . firtW a. if. 1 OjflO * *. *
Arrive Chat tan ** 4:28 p. w. 5.00 a- >
Arrive Nashville... 130 a Ci iftr. x.
Leave NaaL J . w Vt *>r w. 7--T- ? M
Arrive McKenzie... 7:6oa. m. u. 1*. * «,
Arrive Memphis... 2:16 r. m. 3:30a.m. 8:20a.m.
Arrive Little Rock.. C:15 a. m. 7:30 p. m.
TO ST. LOUIS AND THE WEST.
Leave Atlanta. 8:30 a. m. 10:00 p. m.
Arrive Chattanooga. 4:28 r. w. 5:00 a. m.
Arrive Nashville.... J:30 a. m. 12:15 p. m.
Leave Nashville.... 1:45 a. at. 12:20p.m. 7:00p.m.
Arrive 8t Louis.
TO CHICAGO AND THE NORTHWEST.
Leave Atlanta. 8:30 a. m. 10:00 r. M.
Arrive Chattanooga. 4 28r,x. 5:00 a. m.
Arrive Nashville... 1:30 a. m. 12:15 F. M.
Leave Nashville.... 1:45 a. m. 12:20 p.m. 7 00 a.m.
Arrive Uniou City.: 0:50 a. m. 7:35 r. m. 3:00 a. m.
Arrive Columbus.. .11:00 a. M. 8:40 p.m. 4:10 a.m.
Arrive Chicago 7:57 a. m. 4:45 p. m. 7:57 a. m.
TO LOUISVILLE, KY., AND THE EAST.
miscellaneous.
H erald publishing company!
street, near Broad. mjmm
aud promptly executed.
T HE WEEKLY HERALD, an Eight Page Paper,
containing 56 columns, the largest and most
teresting paper in the State.
i Human Hair, and Man-
_ Bedding, Mattresses, Pililows, Bolsters, Etc
Awning and Tent Maker, No. 7 Hunter street,
r Whitehall, Atlanta, Ga.
_ for Kerosene Stoves, Pratt’s Astral Oil, Triumph
Washing Machine. Clothes Wringer, etc., Belgean
Sheet Iron and Enameled Ware. Whitehall street.
MINERAL HILL.
SALINE, mm, ALDM,
——AND
Chalybeate Springs!
miles from Morristown. E. T. A Va. Railroad, has just
been SPLENDIDLY FITTED UP for the summer
of 1873.
OUR SULPHURS!
<Red, White and Black), Alum and Chalybeate Waters,
need no comment, as their effects are generally known;
but we would call your particular attention to the won
der of the age, as a mineral watei —
OUR SALINE SPRING!
better known as Black Water, which is magical in its
specific effects in cases of RHEUMATISM,SCROFULA,
DYSPEPSIA, all Diseases of the Blood and Skin, and
especially adapted to the Diseases of Females.
HOT AND COLD SULPHUR BATHS!
the cool and bracing mountain air, tocetber with, the
MAGNIFICENT MOUNTAIN SCENERY, tend to make
this one of the most pleasant summer resorts in the
gy These Springs are accessible by daily hack lines.
Parties desiring to visit us will stop at Turley House,
Morristown, and call for William A. Dickinson, propri
etor Hack Line to Mineral Hill. Address
DRS. TAYLOR k HOOKE, Pbopbietohs,
Bean’s Station, East Tennessee,
Arrive Nashville... 1:30 a. 3
Leave Nashville 5:00 i
.Arrive Louisville-.. 2:25 1
10.-OOp. t
5:00 a. a
12:16 r. J
1:35 p. 1
10:15 p. 3
flS*Call for your tickets to Memphis and Little Reck
via Chattanooga and McKenzie, Tenn. To St. Louis,
Chicago and the Northwest, via Chattanooga, Nashville
and Colansbua. To Philadelphia, New York, Boston
and ths East, via Nashville and Louisville.
For further information, address
ALBERT B. WRENN,
Southeastern Passenger Agent,
Office No. 4 Kimball House—P. O. Box 253.
W. L. DAN LEY, General Possenger and Ticket Agt.
J. W. THOMAS, General Sup’t, Nashville. Tenn.
junel5-tf
w
W A. SLAYMAKER, Manufacturer of School Furni-
Y T • ture. Offico corner of Peachtree aud Marietta.
rpHE ATLANTA DAILY HERALD contains"more
JL reading matter than any other paper in Georgia
PATENT MEDICINES.
mHia Concentrated Vegetable Specific is a true Pu
JL rilier of the Blood. It thoroughly neutralizes
aud eliminates from the system the specific virus
which causes such a long list of suffering.
In every form of scrofulous, mercurial and consti
tutional blood complaints, it stands without a compeer
rapidly curing ulcers, pustules, carbuncles, sea d bead
salt rheum, and the 88 different varieties of skin affec
tions. It is a positive curative for scrofula, and the
deadly enemy of mercury, lead and arsenic, quickly
eliminating thorn from the system. The Fluid Extract
of Queen’s Delight, prepared by Dr. J. 8. Pemberton,
has made the must wonderful and astonishing cures.
Its purifying, vivifying and tonic properties dxercise
.the quickest and most wonderful effects in restoring
health. It is harmless to the most delicate, and can
never bo used amiss. It is tho true beautifier of the
complexion. If you want pure, rich blood, clear skin
and beautiful complexion, use the Compound Extract
of StlUingia or Queen’* Delight. Read our treatise on
diseases of the Blood. The genuine has the signature
of the proprietor upon each label.
J. 8. PEMBERTON & CO.,
apU-yl-eod 1 .... . Atlanta, Ga.
of Chronic and Acute Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lum
bago. Sciatica, Kidney aDd Nervous Diseases, after
years of suffering, by the taking Dr. Fitter’s Veg
etable ithrunutic Syrup—the scientific discov
ery of J. P. Fitler, M, D., a regular graduate physi
clan, with whom we are personally acquainted, who
ha* for 39 years treated these diseases exclusively with
astonishing result*. We believe it our Christian duty,
after deliberation, to conscientiously request sufferers
to use it, especially persons in moderate circumstan
ces, who cannot afford to waste money aud time on
worthless mixtures. As clergymen, we seriously feel
the deep responsibility resting on us In publicly in
dorsing this medicine. But our knowledge and expe
rience of its remarkable merit fully justifies our ac
tion. Rev. C. H. Ewing, Media, Pennsylvania, suffer
ed sixteen years, became hopeless. Rev. Thomas
Murphy, D. D., Frankford, Philadelphia; Rev. J. B.
Davis, HIghstown, New Jersey; Rev. J. 8. Buchanan,
Clarence, Iowa; Rev. G, G. Smith, Pittaford, N. York;
Rev. Joseph Beggs, Falls Church, Philadelphia. Oth
er testimonials from Senators, Governors, Judges, Con
gressmen, Physicians, kc., forwarded gratis, with
pamphlet explaining those diseases. One thousand
dollars will be presented to any medicine for same
diseases showing equal merit under test, or that can
produce one-fourtk as many living cures. Any per
son sending by letter description of affliction, will re-
ceivo gratis a legally signed guarantee, naming the
number of bottles to cure, agreeing to refund the
money upon aworu statement of its failure to euro.
RED WINE k FOX,
febS Wholesale aud retail Agents Atlanta. Ga.
LIFE AND MONEY SAVED NO HUMBUG
has Induced me to enlarge my facilities for man
ufacturing. and I am now prepared to furnish it in
any quantity to auit purchasers. Tho efficacy of this
44 Great Remedy,” for Dysentery, Diarrha, the Chole
ra Morbus, and Dentition (cutting of teeth) of child
ren, is, without question, as hundreds of certificates
will testify, that nothing has ever been offered to the
public aa a cure for these diseases that is its equal. In
premonitory symptoms of the much dreaded epidem
ic Cholera, its effects are speedy and aure. It is pleas
ant to the taste, has no nauseating effect, and to be
convinced of Its virtue 'tit only necessary to give It a
trial. It can be purchased at the drug store* or Col
lier k Venable, oorner Decatur and Marietta, and Mr.
Howard. Peachtree street and at my office.
I have takeu the liberty of appendiug the names of
a few of our citizens, to whom I respectfully refer as
to the merits of this Remedy. They having used it
some of them for years past, both individually *nd in
their families:
Jno R Wallace, Jndge O A Loch race- A K Sea go. Jno
George. J T Porter, T J Maher. Leroy Morris, Joseph
Woodruff, Jordon Johnson, KUsh Robinson, Matt E
Walker, R Montgomery, Geo W Horton, JnoC White,
W J Johnson, Joe H Ransom. Wo McConnell, M Hall,
O Kick lighter, T^R Snell, Cobh co. Geo Sherdon, J A
Hayden, Robt M Farrar, Wm Powers, Anthony Mur
phy. V R Fowler, Thoa G Crusaell, A L Holbrook, Jas
Caldwell, Geo Winahip.
S. T. BICCERS,
bolk MtopKnrroB,
“ BIBBER’S SOUTHERN REMEDY . ”
MSf" Office: Peachtree street, To well’* Building.
Jy2eo<13m
FARMERS
Wo ask yonr attention to oar Large and Com
plete Stock of Wield mnd GmZden Seed*,
AffrieulHtrml Implement* A Mmehinery
WerUlioer*, Jbe. Bend for Catalogue.
C. H. 8TOCKKLL 400.
Rockbridge Alum Springs
VIRGINIA.
Open Juno Xst. 1873.
P.ace will offer additional attractions this season.
It possesses a magnificent Ball Room, fine Billiard
Rooms, Bowling alley for ladies and for gentlemen,
and a superb Croquet Ground. It Will be kept in a
style not surpassed anywhere in Virginia.
The waters of these special Springs eit
greatly relieve most cases of Scrofula. In-
sumption, Chronic Bronchitis. Chronic _
Chrouic Pneumonia, Chronic Dyspepsia, Chronic Di-
arrhua, Chronic Dysintery. They are also of great
valna in thosr affections which are pccnii»r to tbe fe
male constitution; and. as an appetizer, a tonic aud a
general restorative, they are, perhaps, unrivalled
amongst mineral waters.
The proprietor has provided for the lawn* and Dili
Room a first-class Band of Music, aud iu general all
the sources of amusement and recreation usually
found at our best eurnmer resorts will be at the com
mand of the guests at 44 ROCKBRIDGE ALUM.”
The place is within from eleven to thirteeu hours of
Richmond. Washington. Baltimore, etc., by rail, all
daylight. Passengers leave tbe cars of the Chesapeake
and Ohio Railroad at Goshen Depot, and new and ele
gant stage coaches, pasting rapidly over a smooth and
level road of only eight miles, set down the visitors ai
the Springs to tea. JAMES A. FRAZIER.
Proprie'or.
Dn. J. S. Davis, of the University, Resident Physi-
A. It. Doom, Office Manager,
S. M. MrLLurx, Office Manager.
£A~This water tor sale by Red wine .v Fox, Allan-
LAWYERS.
THOMAS FINLEY.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
ATLANTA GEORGIA.
P RACTICE IN THE SUPREME AND CIBCUIt
Courts, and elsewhere by special contract. Al
business attended to with dispatch. Ofltee: North
East Corner of Broad and Marietta Streets, BeU Build
g. up-stairs. dec31-
S. A. DARNELL,
Attorney -at-Law
SPECIAL COMMISSIONER OF CLAIMS
For Georgia. Office comer Broad and Alabama St«
Will practice in the Courts of Atlanta and Blue Ridge
Circuits.
A W NOllUS.
A. C. GA R L I N G T O N,
Practice in All ths Courts.
Office : James’ Block,
Ofl>2-flfe MUota Georgia.
CHARLESTON CARDS.
Geo. W. Williams,
William Bi&xir,
Jos. R. lioBimsv.s,
Jas. Entiv.K, Jr..
Bout. 8. Cathcabt.
Frakr E. Taylor,
. ff, WILLIAMS k GO.
WHOLESALE GROCERS.
Cotton Factors and Bankers,
HAYNE ST., CHARLESTON, S. C.
WILLIAMS,lilRNIE & CO.
Commission Merchants,
65 Beaver Street, Jiew York.
HENRY BISCHOFF & CO
WHOLESALE GROCERS
AKD DEALERS IK
Carolina IIloo.
J. E. ADCER & CO.
IMTORTERS OF
HAPUDWAJEUEI,
CUTLERY, eons, BAR IRON, STEEL AND ACRICDITO-
RAL IMPLEMENTS.
13!) Meeting Street and 62 East Bay Street,
CHARLESTON, S. C.
atuMMm
STAR CANDLES!
PROCTER A CAMBLE'S
“Light of Day” Brand
STAR CANDLES!
Ara of superior quality, and ths standard
brand sold by
A. tlanta, M noon
AUGUSTA
,p30-tf
GROCERS.
BEST SHUTTLE.
NO FRICTION ON
TRo Botofeiii!
“ FAMILY ”
HAS THE
BEST TENSION !
NO STRAIN ON
Tho T li r c a ci I
FA.VORITE
NO DEPENDENCE
Oil Springs £
NO COGS'.
NO CONCEALED MACHINERY!
SEWING-
ITS MOTION
|Xs Positive.
ITS MACHINERY
IS SXMPIjE:!
MACHINE!
Agents Wanted..
Address
weed s. m. co.,
jttaels-atm Atlanta, Ca.
JOHN J. SEAT. WILLIS WALKER.
SEAY & WALKER,
ROME, GA.
MANUFACTURERS OF
COPPER STILLS, PLUMBING
GAS AND STEAM FITTING,
AUI> EXCLrsi
Au Kinds of
Brass and Iron Castes
kade to order.
Bills AM) BANKERS.
BANK.
FREEDMAN'S SAVINGS JL TRUST CO.
{Chartered by Government of United Mats*.
Office Broad Street, corner Walton,
Five Cent* upwards. De-
demand with interest. In le
per annum. Send for cirular.
PHILIP D. CORY Cashier.
r
Bone Hollow Ware ui Stove
Manufacturing Company.
ATLANTA NATIONAL
et the City of Atlanta.
DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE UNITED STATES
Capital, $300,000.
Dnuecrous—Alfred Austell. R. H. Richaras, E. W.
Holland, John Real, 8. M. Inman, W. J.Garrett. W. K.
Oox.
Special attention is made to collections,for which we
remit promptly at lowest rate of exchange.
Alfred Austell, President; W. H. Tuller, Cashier;
P. Romare. Asst. Cashier. nov*22.
ALLGOOD & HARGROVE
BANKERS,
Homo, Groorfti a
Special Attention Civen to Co lections.
Correspond with and refer to
HOWES ets MAC .
Ko. SO WALL STRUT, KXW YORK,
nov27-Cm.
DOLLAR SAVINGS BANK.
No. 2 Wall Strxst.
Atlanta, Georgia.
AUTHORIZED CAPITAL, $300,000
Interest allowed from date of Deposit. nov22-ly.
DOLLAR SAVINGS BANK,
a WALL STREET.
Authorized Capital$300,000
H'Vq A GENERAL BAHKIXG^IUSISKSE. COL
U lections made at alTJoTht* n^!NNMIiCr **•" *•
Interest allowed on Deposits: also. anoweJKy?
charter to negotiate Loena, Sureties or
and sell Promissory Notes, Railroad and State Bo
and all other valuable#.
W. L. GORDON, Pres dent. | J. M. WILLIS, O
Among the Stockholders ere:
E. W. Holland, J. E. Browu.
John Neal. Henry Jackson,
U. L. Gordon, Dr. J. H. Lowe.
Hon. I>. A. Walker. Hoa. G. N. Lester,
W. 8. Thomson, Captain J. A. Fit tea
O. W. Henderson, W. M. Lowry.
J. L. Wooten, Al*.
junc6-eodlm
JOHN H. JAMES.
BANKER AND BROKER,
tor two or tuoro montlia Collection, promptly
tteuded to. Kel.n to uid eoriwoponil, with the N».
o nol Park Bulk or Wtflr Twk. Bee. bnUneu tho
M auto* Incorporated Bonk. novzasre.