The Atlanta daily herald. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1872-1876, August 29, 1873, Image 2

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The Daily Herald FRIDAY. AUGUST 29. 1873. , IK herald pubmshiso compahy, . I.KX. ST. CI.A IR-ABBAM8 IlKSllY W. ORADV. II. X. ALSTON Kditora And *E«»pn. HE TERMS of tho HERALD a* M foliowk : o ILV.A Month. .. 5 00 WEEKLY. 6 Month. J 00 D ,ILT. J Month.... J SO WEEKLY. 3 Mouth. 1LY.1 Month 1 00 • itvortioement. inserted *t niodermt* rmtaii. On . ription. »nd nlT.rtiMn.ent. wW" . ddr.ee HERALD PCBLISHINtt CO., Drawer 23 Atlanta, Georgia. Ac* on Alabama Street, near Broad. An Extraordinary Will Case. General Notes. Mb. T. J. Bosses is the only authorized 'J -.Telling Agent of the Hebald. Our State Exchanges. lUasOittlng., of M.ryl»nd, i.no. the expert And imph.hod tel.Rr.ph oper.tor at Milledgeville. • r. Charles T. Bayne, an eatimable and useful citi- /e.i of MilledgeriUe, died of typhoid pneumonia, on la*. Monday. 1 he Journal says nearly overy lamily in Perry and *»i ounding neighborhood, have been aick more — i r. W. M. Crouch, was struck by lightning in . ley county not many days ago, and oue side para- d for a while. He has nearly recovered, aa Comptroller General and the Governor hAve •sod the State taxation this year at four-tenths of per cent, upon the property of the State, aa re- ied by the Tax Receivers. Last year it was the e, only an additional tenth a as levied for school poses, making one-half of one per cent, for State tion last year. This year no school tax is levied. iat each tax payer will have to pay forty cents on 7 one hundred dollars of his property to the a, besides his county tax. a grand fancy ball at Old Sweet Springe, in West inia, Mrs. John Stoddard, of Savannah, Georgia, 4 cherry-colored silk with velvet trimming; black and head dress. Miss Belle Cohen, ot Savannah, rgta, wore dress of two shsdes of green silk; 1 ornaments; a splendid Boston dancer and a artin Duggan, an old and highly rospocted citizen avannab. died there Tuesday morning, of con- ive chill. He was one of the founders of the Irish t : jn Society, and was also an honorary member of * V’onng Men’s Literary Association. A member of Catholic church, be was an upright, honest man, od citizen, a kind and affectionate husband and a nt, and a warm friend. tloncl Batt Jones, of the Rockmart Reporter, has aa given out a contract for a new pair of boots. Wo k will be commenced on them at once, and it is b<- >d that they will be completed by the first of Oo- i is selling at fifty cents per bushel in Dawson a young lady in Savannah fainted from excitement n ioa streets the other night while going for a pbysi- ar to attend her dying sister. Putnam Superior Court will convene on the third lotday in September. C unterfeit nickels are in circulation in Augusta. They while away their time in Augusta in eeeing * much can be written upon a postal card. These ista chaps arc very ingenious as well as enterprise .. snd no doubt will reap their reward in the future. Chronicle of Wednesday says: We saw yesterday ital card ou which Mr. John O. Wicter of this city written six chapters of Job and neatly seven ters of Proverbs, in all 5,114 words. He also e in a circle the size of a five cent piece the Lord’ . er, a promissory note, the discovery of America jlumbus, and several verses from Proverbs. It ii a novelty of ingenuity and patience, nan in Savannah named Groover made an attempt ty to commit suicide, bnt finally gave it np ob. > uroe, in Walton county, shows many signs of ^vement, A new brick building is going up op- i the court bouse, to be occupied by Mr. J. W. 1- t ss a store, and by Major McDaniel as a law . Old buildings are being repainted—among s, the hotel kept by Mr. Lawrence. Everything the village indicates a prosperous condition. :re never has been better crops in Walton county it present. tag Hsmmett, who killed Boqiumore in Walto y, some four or five weeks ago, was tried snd cted of murder, but the jury recommended that imprisoned for life. The Athens Watchman * that Judge Rice has disregarded the recoin* eiion of the jury, and has sentenced Hammett hanged in October. r Baptiste in Griffin have commenced a series of ting in Griffin Church. fhe Griffin News says: Mrs Margaret A. Johnson, mother of Rufus Johnson, Esq., of this city, aged about eighty years, visited Griffin yesterday. Mrs. Johnson is the first white woman that settled in Troup county, and this is the first trip she ever made on a railroad, notwithstanding she is past eighty years of age. Learning that her son Rufus was very ill, she determined to risk it, and take the railroad to see him. hhsis still hale and hearty, and an amiabla and quiet old ladr at her great age. In the last Griffin News Fitch contributes a very readable article on what he saw on the Air-Line Rail road, of which the following paragraph is a specimen: Norciossisa healthy, growing, thriving village, but too near Atlanta to toon become a large place. It was named lor a “blareted yankee," well known in this country for more than a third of a century as Johna than Norcross, the first Atlanta merchant of any note; who went to the latter place when it was no larger than the new town which now bears his name, and who was known by every chicken peddler and every old woman in search of “spun truck" from tbs’ Chattahoochee to the Blue Ridge, aa Mr. Xartrou. And a great man truly, is this same old Yankee, who is now enjoying a hale and hearty old age near the scenes of his early adventures; and not only towns, bnt children have been named for the old pioneer, and mtny is the “kaliker" dress pattern and the bunch of “spun truck” that have gone across the counter to mothers of the little Jona thans, tor no other compensation than the compli- ment of bearing the name of the great merchant, for be it known that although the famous Yankee was vary popular with the aboriginal ladies of that day, >et hs was strictly and teetotal ly “proper" in all bis dealings with them. In January, 1872, Abraham Schryver, a wealthy hotel keeper lay dying in his house at Port Huron, Michigan. A woman who had long lived with him as his wife was watch ing him closely, for the sick man was flighty and she was anxious about his will. His daughter Henrietta, or a young married wo man by that name who never knew any other father, had come all the way from Pennsylva- nir to see him; but her supposed step-mother would not permit them to be alone together. One day when the end was drawing near, Schryver cried out, “ Why don’t you send that dispatch ? I want to go home,” and he sprang out of bed and struggled wildly but feebly with his nurses. He died, and his will, made at midnight and wit nessed by hotol servants, left the hoik ot his large property to his supposed wife. Only five hundred dollars was bequeathed to Henri etta, and one of his farms was devised after his wife’s death to William, Alfred, Albert and Elizabeth Schryver, who are named in the will as children of his brother, Clark Schry ver. Henrietta was dissatisfied with this will and knowing that the testator had not been exactly in his right mind, she wrote to Troy, New York, for some information about Abra ham Schryver and his relations. The result was a most remarkable disclosure. He was not her father. The supposed step-mother was not his wife. The persons mentioned as the children of his brother Clark, were his own legitimate children, two of whom were dead, one of them having been killed in the Mexican war. For twenty-five or thirty years everybody about Troy had supposed Abraham Schryver dead. His own wife, who still lives, and his surviving children, during all that time had no suspicion that he was still alive. When wife’s father died he had settled up the estate and decamped with the proceeds, leaving his wife to provide as best she could for the four children above named and a young babe which bad not been named. For months she suffered agonies of sus pense and grief on account of his mysterious disappearance. Then came the news that he was in Canada, and that the wife of another man had accompanied him in his flight Later still, iD 1844, the deserted wife received a newspaper from Canada containing an obituary of “the late Abraham Schryver,” and thenceforward she and her children gave him np as one who had gone to his last ac count She struggled ou and brought them up well, and now when she is old and her middle-aged children are married and settled about her, the story ot bis wanderings is revealed to them in a most startling and dra matic manner. What became of the woman who eloped with him is not known, but it is supposed that she died soon and that Henrietta is the infant she took with her from New York. The child was placed in a convent where she grew up ignorant of her dead mother’s crime and never doubting that Schryver, who cared for her as his child, was her father. She matried a Mr. Dorman, and lives now in Pennsylvania. Schryver became a railway conductor on the Canadian Grand Trunk road and amassed a large fortune. There he found the English woman whom Henrietta regarded as her step mother, and who was with him when he died. With her he removed to Port Huron, in which place they kept a hotel, he having pur chased land in various parts of Michigan. The Schryver children, living about Troy, New York, will contest the will on the ground that their hither was not in his right mind and that the instrument is a forgery, as shown by mistake he could not have fallen into con cerning his own family. If they can identify the testator with the fugitive of thirty years ago, it is probable they will succeed. Some of the provisions of the will are suspicious. One requires the testator’s wife Eleanor to carry on the hotel in partnership with one Lewis Owens. It is now discovered that this Owens had been about Troy managing in quiries about the Schryver family and it is reported that he and the aforesaid Eleanor are engaged to be married. Hence it is sup posed that the will is the product of a con spiracy. Altogether it is a strange case and the contest over the will must produce a very interesting trial. S. M. Smith, Secretary of the Illinois State Farmers Association says that seven-tenths of the farms of Illinois are mortaged. Victoria county, Texas, is the scene of open warfare between two factions known as the Helm party and the Taylor party, forty and eighty strong. A battle was expected fast week. Minnesota liquor dealers refuse to pay the ten dollars tax for the support of the Iuebri- ate Asylum. They contend that the druggists who sell temperance bitters sin u.d also con tribute. ATLANTA PAPER MILLS. A tlanta paper mills—jas. ormond pro- prietob. For specimen of “ News," we refer to this issue of this paper. APOTHECARIES. H ENRY C. POPE, Wholesale Druggist, 27 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga. Howard & McKay, na itetau Drutririst. ‘ Peachtree street. Wholesale and Retail Druggtet, at the Old Stand’, AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSES. A Smart Western Thief. Alabama News. The grand jury at Selma last week declared in their official report that “the dissipated habits ot Mr. E. I. Morgan, present tax collector, render him totally inca pable of discharging the dutbs of his office." That’s the way for a jury to talk. The present condition of Alabama is appalling, says the Tuscaloosa Times. No thoughtful citizen can con template it without a shudder of apprebens on and alarm as to her future. The treasury is bankrupt; her credit is annihilated; her public debt, actual or prospective, equals in the aggregate one-fifth of the amount of the whole taxable prop erty of the State. Enormous taxes ct ash her people to the earth. Her current expenditures exceed her avail able income from every source. Her public school, her State University, and her hospitals, and asylums, are threatened with suspension for lack of means to carry them on. Labor is demoralized. All her in dustries are peralyzed. Onerous taxes aud unstable rules are driving both capital and population from the State, and deter both from coming into it. Her people are overwhelmingly in debt, and her revenue laws are working n rapid confiscation of their lands tinder enforced sales of them to pay taxes. A debased Supreme Court, by arbitrary and unconstitutional decisions, has virtually abotWed all distinctions between the races in the so cial and domestic relations, snd invited unnatural and abhorrent miscegenation between them. Her State officials are, the majority of them, incompetent and faithless. Corruption reeks in all departments of her State government. In a werd. a dark present and still darker future repress the hopes, and paralyze the efforts of her people. What has brought about this sad oondition of things in Ala bama? There Is but one truthful response that can be given to the inis rrogatory. The rule of the scalla- wag and the negro has been the architect of this disas trous overthrow of the fortunes and hopes of a great commonwealth. A “ black man's party," organized, manipulated and controlled by native apostates and hireling adventurers, has done the mischief. The negroes in Alabama, always suspicious, look upon the Patrons of Husbandry as a horrible political trick. The AdverUaer is informed that the Board of Trade of the city of Montgomery will be ready to begin ope- rations on the 2d proximo. They have bought their furniture and are ready to take possession of their Everybody around Detroit, says the Free Press, has heard of or seen the notorious “Mollie Matches,” a young fellow of thirty or thereabouts, who has lifted more “leathers” than any pick-pocket of his age in the coun try. A day or two since “Matches” turned up missing, and his pals in Windsor announ ced that he had gone to Savannah, Ga., to see his dying mother. It seems that the thief wanted to go to Chicago, and fearing arrest on this side, he disguised himself as a clergy man, having on the standing collar, white choker, and double-breasted black coat of a regular man of the cloth. A wig and a pair of spectacles so changed him that he was safe, and for effect he carried along a Bible. The fellow asserts that thu9 disguised he talked with the officials of the ferry-boat and with a policeman on this side, and his questions were promptly answered and his disguise un suspected. He was in Chicago three diys, going about in the role of minister, and it is believed that he “lilted” greenbacks enough to make the excursion profitable. He started for home Tuesday evening, and while waiting in the depot for the train to leave he noticed a portly, good-tempered maa, evidently carry ing a full wallet, wiping his mouth as if he had just bad a drink of something cheering. “Matches” at once took the man aside and read him a lecture on the sin of swallowing mint-juleps and sweetened brandy. The man, who is reported to be a Bos tonian, interested in the sugar-stave bus iness, pleaded having a weakness which should have been suppressed long ago bnt for family trouble, and the two soon became well acquainted. When the train started both occupied the same seat, and their conversation for the next three hours was on such topics as to make a man feel nearer to that good place beyond the clouds. “Matches” finally introduced the subject of cholera morbus, in order to get back to the practical world, and he showed • he stranger a bottle of stuff which he said had been put up for him in Buffalo. The Boston man fasted, and the taste was no good that be wished he had the “morbus” a little in order to cure it. He was pressed to “take hold,” as the liquid was a preventive rather than a cure, and up went the bottle again and again. About midnight the Boston man was a picture of happiness. He slept without a break until be reached Detroit, and was then so stupid that if it hadn't been for the “preacher” he might have walked out ot the wrong end of the depot. His intention was to go east with the other passengers, and why he didn’t is more than he can tell. He woke up at 3 o’clock in the afternoon to find him- Mlt in bed at a small hotel on Woolbridge street, west. It is needless to say that he had been robbed of his gold watch and wallet, the latter containing several hundred dol lars. In Kansas if a man does not pay his taxes promptly, fifty per cent, is added. The peo ple think this is too harsh, and as they pro pose to be represented in the next Legisla ture there will probably be a change. The Hon. J. W. Nesmith is spoken of as the Democratic successor of the late Con gressman Wilson of Oregon. Benjamin Simpson, who managed Hippie Mitchell’s election to the Senate, expects the Kepubli- can nomination. Lake Tahoe, Nevada, has a curiosity. Half a mile from shore a tree stands perpendicu lar in eighty feet of water. It projects ten feet above the surface, and is fastened so firm ly to the bottom that it affords sata moorage to the largest crafts on the lake. District Judge Maury, of Texas, who issued a warrant for the arrest of the Supremo Court of the State for contempt, and was himself arrested and taken before the Court, has been admitted to bail, the Supremo Court Judges having quarrelled about the question of juris diction. The Democratic Legislative Convention of San Francisco includes an engineer, black smith, and news dealer on the Central Pacific Railroad, and an assessor who was legislated into office by railway influence. The Inde pendent ticket is the one for the people of California to support A man in Jackson county, Wisconsin, wish ing to get rid of his wife, sold her to a neigh bor, intending to send her and her purchaser to State prison after they should begin to co habit He next proposes to get a divorce aud marry his ex-wife’s sister, w hom ho has been courting for some time. One of the branches of industry developed in Baltimore lately, that demands no capital and no special endowments, is the mat trade. The way a stock is obtained is to walk up to the front door of a dwelling, take a mat, go home and wash it, and then go back and sell it to the former owner. Tho only unpleas- | antness in the way is that the police are so inquisitive. The American artist. Mr. W. Bradford, is now exhibiting his Arctic paintings in Lon don. The most striking of them is said to be one painted for Mr. Gardner Brewer, of Bos ton, representing a Scotch whaler crushed in the ice and abandoned by her crew. Mr. Bradford has received commissions from the Queen, the Princess Louise, Lady Contis, and other English notables. During the performance of a woman gym nast and velocipede rider on a tight wire in a theater at Leeds, England, a man in the gallery was detected in an attempt to unfasten the guy ropes by which the wire was strained up. The slackening of the wire would have thrown off the woman and killed her. The man was heartily thrashed by about a dozen in the gallery, and then kicked out. The Puget Sound Dispatch says that the title to the principal portion of the new town plat of Tacoma is in the names of trustees ostensibly representing the Northern Pacific Railroad, but that the chief managers of the affair are General Sprague and E. S. Smith, accredited agents of the “Lake Superior and Puget Sound Land Company.” It is a private speculation run tinder tha credit of the Nor thern Pacific. The will of the late Lord Westbury lms been proved under £300,000 personality. He leaves the present loid the sum of £2,000 per annum, subject to the control of his wife and trustees. The bulk of the property is not to be realized for a term of five years, when disposition is to be made of it. The will, which was made about six years ago, was drawn by the testator’s own hand, and, great lawyer though he was, he omitted, it is stated, to appoint executors, though he named trustees. At the Hereford couuty (Eng.) Assizes re cently one William White was tried for house breaking and stealing a watch and some cheese from the Louse. The foreman of the jury returned as a verdict: “Not guilty, hut we believe he broke into the house for all that.” The Commissioner not accepting this as a verdict, again explained the law to the jury, and left them to reconsider their ver dict. The jury, however, stu: k gallantry to their original text, and coutentc l themselves with the simpler verdict of “Not guilty.” . - _ the bridge, makes advances to planters. A full line of Agricultural Implements, Publishers of tho Rural Southerner. street, Atlanta, Ga. A GO., Wholesale Grocer, Althtmt ^IMllONS St HUNT, Groceries of every description Country Produce at low rates, at Junction of Marietta and Walton street*. A DUB A BRO., Wholesale Grocer, AUbamattreaL ii. Atlanta. Ga. PAIUTS, OILS, GLASS, ETC. MEWING machine agencies. a lHE IMPROVED HOME SHUTTLE HEWING MACHINE. Cheapest and most Durable. Also, THE HOME—finest machine made. Pricer, low. u. G. Maxwell, Gen’l Agent, corner Broad and Marietta street*, Atlanta, Ga. WEED * Office, Corner Br< Broad and Marietta Sts. AUCTIONEERS. J. vances made WILLIAMS, AcuUoneor and Commission Merchant, Marietta street, near Peachtree. Ad- conslgnments. i and Dealer in Furniture, Marietta street. BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS. sellers, Stationers aud Pi; GUNS, PISTOLS, Etc. HARDWARE AND CUTLERY. chants, corner Decatur and Pryor streets, op posite tho Kimball House. in Hardware, Carriage Material and Mill Stones, 45 Whitehall street. W > Opera House. The “ Fast Gain- GEORGIA State Lottery FOR AUGUST. FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE 14° 111 OWARD A HOULE, Wheeler A Wilson SewiiiR Machine Sales Room, No. 25 Marietta st/eet Latest style patterns constantly ou lund. corner Broad and Alabama streets. HOTELS. ^HAMROCK HOUSE. WEST POINT, GEORGIA. The travelling public are informed that they can obtain Firat-clasa meals and good accommodations at this house. Traias stop here for dinner. Hotel situated left side of car shed. PAT. GIBBONS. ian26-d3m Proprietor LIVINGSTON HOTEL, NORTHEAST CORNER 8QUARE, LA FAYETTE k. MRS. M. MARBLE, - - Proprietress. Board by the Day, Week or Month, at the moat Reasonable Rates. LIVERY STABLE! CONNECTED WITH THE HOUSE. DRAWINGS DAILY, AT 5 P. M. REAL ESTATE AGENTS. BUSINESS COLLEGES. corner Broad and Alabama streets, Atlanta, Ga. A standard institution, the largest and best practi cal business school in the South. For circulars, etc., address B. F. Moore, A.M. President. EASTMAN ’S ATLANTA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Detwiler k Magee, Managers. Corner Line ami Peachtree streets. Three hundred Graduates now in position. IjI A Mis : BANKS. |ANK OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA—f'.’»L’Co counted. Deposits received. Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought and sold. Checks on all points in Europe, in sums to suit. Agents f.*r the Inman and Cnuard Steamship Lines. JC#" First class aud steerage tickets at lowest rates. sale dealers in Hardware, Cutlery, Harness and Iron Goods ol all descriptions, Peachtree street. Largest stock in the city. etc. ,No. 1 James Bank Block, ICE HOUSES. G EO. W. ADAIR, Wall street, Kimball House C. h Jn road. HAMMOCK, Whitehall street, SICN AND FRESCO PAINTING. Capital Prize $7,000.00 30,31(1 Frizes, Amounting to $53,2.>3.20. Tickets $1.00, Shares in Proportion SPOTSWOOD HOTEL, MACON, GEORGIA, THOMAS H. HARMS, - - Proprietor Board $3 ay Op. Paaaonger Depot, and Or’y One One Ml «Ji I N THE ABOVE SCHEME, FORMED BY THE . ^ternary combination of 78 numbers, making Pure Lake Ice kept in JEWELRY. SILVER WARE. Money to loan. FjpiiE DOLLAR SAVINGS BANK, No. 2 Kimball Jno. T. Grant, president; Perino Brown, cash'r NO. H. JAMES, Banker, James’ Block. S TATE NATIONAL BANK. CAPITAL $300,000 James M. Ball, President, W. W. Clayton, Cash ier. S i- proprietors, Propagators and Dealers in Fruit Trees, Grape Vines, Ornamental Shrubbery, Hot House Plants, etc. BAG MANUFACTORY. BOOTS AND SHOES. in Boots and Shoes, Republic Block CARPETS. MATTINGS, ETC. city. Marietta street. CARRIAGE MAN l FACTORY. A • Car G EORGE SHARPE, Jo." Agent, Dealer in Fine Jew elry and Sterling Silver Ware, Parlor Jewolrv Store, Republic Block, up stairs, opposite Kimball Ware. Agent for the Arundel Pebble Spectacles. 50 Whitehall street INSURANCE AGENTS. and Life. London ginia, Fire and Marine. Cotton States Life. Broad street. Atlanta, Ga. A tlanta department life association of America. Officers—T. L. Langston, Presi dent; C. L. Redwine, Vice-President; J. H. Morgan, Secretary; General L. J. Garirell, Attorney; Wi am G. Drake, Medical Examiner. Broad street, corner Alabama. P. O. Box 276. C 1HARLES A. CHOATE, Kimball House, corner / of V.'all street., General Agent of New York Equitable. gia of Republic Life Insurance Company, office Republic Block. Insurance Agency,office No. 2 Wall street, Kimball House. FINNEY, Manufacturer of and dealer in Carriages, Buggies, Wagons, Sewing Machine wagons, Ac. Send for Price List. Broadstrect, just beyond the Bridge. „ Wagons and Buggies, Decatur street. Mr. Litt, residing near Stanislaos, Cal., while sinkings well, and a f ter passing through hard pan and several strata of sand, at forty- five feet reached a bed cf gravel, and with it an abundance of good water. Imbedded in the top of the gravel was the skeleton of a mastadon. Several of the bones, in a good slate of preservation, were brought to the sur face. In oue of the bones was discovered a flint arrow head, such as is iu common use by the present Indians of this continent. The arrow head was so completely imbedded in the bone that there can be little doubt that it was shot ii.to the monster animal near the time of his death. This would seem to indi cate that these monster animals do not ante date the present Indian race inhabiting our continent. Seventeen Trunks. The Cherokee Advocate, edited by Col. Bondinot, says that the stories about the marvelous fertility of the Indiau Territory, which have been widely circulated, are ridic ulous falsehoods. As for the Cherokee coun try, so far from flowing with milk and honey, if it flowed with water where needed the In dians would be satisfied. The southern por tion of the Territory is like northern Texas, and the northern part like southern Kansas, The best part of the Cherokee section is cast of Grand river. The soil their is rich aud the climate excellent, but the climate and soil of neighboring Kansas are equally good and equally rich. Col. Boudiuet considers the brilliant description of the Territory as an ap peal to the whites to rob the Indians of their land by holding up the value of the booty be- fofe covetous eyes. and Pryor streets. COMMISSION MERCHANTS. W S. KEESE k CO., Commission Merchants, • 56 Peachtree and 39 Broad street. Best city reference given. Pryor and Hunter Streets, acceptance, made on goods i ding accompany Drafts. kinds of Produce, No. 83 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Georgia. Orders aud consignments solicited. Re turns made promptly. i mission Merchant, corner Forsyth and Mitchell A LEYDEN, Warehouse and Commission Mer- • chant—Warehouse Corner Bartow Street and W. A A. It. It. Office, 9 Alabama Street Grain, Hay, Flour, Bacon, Bulk Meats, Lard, Hams (sugar-cured and plain) Lime, Cement, Plaster, Domestics and Yarns. R. PAYNE k CO., Commission Merchants and s Produce, Lime TEPHENS k FLYNN, Commission Merchants, and Grain, Flour, Provisions, Countryl i:d Cement. Forsyth street, Atlanta, » vision Dealers, Alabama street. Oldest Insurance Agency in the city. A TLANTA DEPARTMENT 8outhem Life. Jno. B. Gordon President, A. H. Colquitt Vice Presi- ent, J. A. Morris Secretary. TITM. MACKIE can be found at hia old stand, ▼ ▼ where orders will be attended to. Krueger A: Bro. can be found at the office of the above. G. W. Jacks, Whitehall street, Atlanta. SALOONS. ij OHN W. KIMBRO, Turf Exchange, No. 6 Decatur street. Finest liquors in the city. £ \ C. CARROLL, Chicago Ale Depot, Pryor street, near Alabama, is sole agent for the Old Russell Bourbon Whisky, T EE SMITH’S Saloon, Marietta street, the very best IJ of liquors mixed in the best style. STOVE AND HOUSEFURNISHING 600DS. ^ATEWART & WOOD, dealers in Stoves, Hollow ware, Housefurniahing Goods and Children’s Car riages, No. 73 Whitehall street. UNDERTAKERS. /SHAB. Ii. GROOMS, Undertaker, Hearses firompt- V-^ ly *^ut when requested. WHITE COODS, NOTIONS. ETC. ¥>HILLiPS, FLANDERS & CO., Dealers in Staple JT »nd Fancy Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hosiery, Ribbons, Notions, Etc., No. 88 Whitehall Street, At lanta, Georgia. LL^M. RICH A CO., Wholesale Notions, White Goods, TT Millinery and Fancy Goods, 15 Decatur street, Atlanta. Ga. Ylf F.IPECK A CO., Wholesale White Goods, Notions, Hosiery and Gloves, Kimball House. WOOD ENGRAVING. ■ TlDWARD H. HYDE, Designer aud Engraver in JEj Wood, corner Peachtree and Marietta, up stairs. TfEifLD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Alabama X JL street, near Broad. All kinds of Job Work neatly aud promptly executed. finUK WEEKLY HERALD, an Eight Page Paper, I containing 56 columns, the largest and most in teresting paper in the State. H. TURNER, Dealer iD Human Hair, aud Man- Vr • ufacturers of Human Hair Goods and Hair Jew elry, 15 Whitehall stroet, Atlanta, Ga. A KRGENZINGER, Manulaeturer of all kinds of m Bedding, Mattresses, Pilllows, Bolsters, Etc. Awning aud Tent Maker, No. 7 Hunter street, near Whitehall, Atlanta, Ga. ¥,1 H. LEDUC, Manufacturer of Tin Ware, Agent X • Tor Kerosene Stoves, Pratt’s Astral Oil, Triumph Washing Machine. Clothes Wringer, etc., Belgean Sheet Iron and Enameled Ware. Whitehall street. W A. SLAYMAKER, Manufacturer of School Furrn • ture. Office corner of Peachtree and Marietta. T FITCHCQCK k CO’S. Soap Factory—A full line ol XX Laundry and Toilet Soaps constantly on hand, Office 27 Alabama street, Atlanta. Ga. riTHE ATLANTA DAILY HER \LD contains muri X reading matte* than aav other paper in Georgia 76,076 tickets and the drawing of 12 ballots, there will be 220 prizes. <*ach having three of the drawn num bers ou it; 4,35G, each haviog two of them cn; 25,740, each having one only ot them on; and also them, being blanks. ■ To determine the fate of these prizes and blanks, 78 numbers, from 1 to 78 inclusive, will be severally placed iu a wheel on the day of the drawing, and 12 of them drawn out at random; and that ticket having for its combination tho 1st. 2nd. and 3rd drawn numbers. will be entitled to the capital prize of $7,000 00 That ticket having on it the 4th, 6th. and 6th drawn numbers, to That ticket having on it tho 7th, 8th. and 9thI drawn numbers, to That ticket having on it the 10th, llih. and 12th drawn numbers, to 650 01 That ticket having on it the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th 650 00 650 00 Kennesaw House, MARIETTA, CEORCIA. FLETHER & FREYER, PROPRIETORS. GAINESVILLE HOTEL 3M33 WY FITTED UP FREE HACKS TO AND FROM THE HOUSE. E. L. CALDWELL, - - - Proprietor. june4-dtf 650 00 650 00 650 00 650 00 650 00 650 00 217 60 217 60 20 00 drawn numbers, to C50 00 That ticket having on it the 3d, 4th and 5th drawn numbers, to That ticket haviug on it the 5th, Gth, and 7th drawn numbers, to That ticket having on it the Gth, 7th, and 8th drawn numbers, to That ticket having on it the 8th, 9th, and 10th drawn numbers, to That ticket having on it the 9th, 10th, and 11th drawn numbers, to That ticket haviug on it the 1st, 2nd, and 4tli drawn numbers, to That ticket having on it the 1st, 2nd, and 5th drawn numbers, to That ticket having on it the 1st, 2d, and Gth drawn numbers, to All other tickets (being 207, with three of the drawn numbers ou, each Those 66 tickets having on them the 1st and 2nd drawn numbers, each Those 66 tickets having on them the 3rd aud 4th drawn humbera, each All other tickets (being 4,224) with two of the drawn numbers on, each And all those tickets (being 25,740) with one only of tho drawn numbers, each l o CAPITAL PRIZE On Mondays capital will be $7,000 00 On Tuesdays andFridaye capital will be 4,500 00 On Wednesdays capital will be 6.000 00 On Thursdays and Saturdays 5,000 00 For further particulars tend for schemes. No ticket which shall have diawu a prize of a supe rior denomination can be entitled to an inferior prize. Prizes payable forty (40) days after the drawing, aud subject to the usual deduction of 15 per cent. All prizes of $20.00 and under will be pai-1 immedi ately after the drawing. 4®* Prizes cashed at this office J OHN A. WIMPY, Attoruey-at-Law, Atlanta, Georgia Practices in all the courts. Special attention given to the collection of claims, aud all business promptly attended to. i the United States Law, corner Whitehall and Alabama streets, up rietta street, up stairs, practices iu all the J OUN M1LLEDGE, Attorney-at-law, Whitehall street. Residence, < 10 00 5 00 2 00 THE JONES HOUSE, NEAR THE PUBLIC SQUARE. COVINGTON. CEORGIA. Free convey apriUdly R. W. JONES, Proprietor. from the Railroad. NEWTON HOUSE. MRS. JANET HAUDROP, $2.00 per day.. 50 per meal march 25 -tf. SPKTKG STREETS. SPARTA, GEORGIA. TERMS : Lodging included. Without Lodgin NATIONAL HOTEL. ATLANTA, GEORGIA, J. E. OWENS, Proprietor, Late of Piedmont aud Orange Hotel, Lynchburg. Va. HOWARD & CO., Managers, D'9r-feb21 ATLANTA, GA. LAGER BEER. T sale of the CRESCENT BREWERY VIENNA BEER, BAGGAGE CARRIED TO AND FROM THE DEPOT FKEE OF CHARGE. aprili Gaff & Co., Proprietors, Cincinnati, Ohio, aud Aurora, Iudiaua. This Beer is specially made for shipment South, and is, therefore, the best ever sold in this State. Every keg guaranteed to be good and sound. Orders Solicited. MS' We refer the public to the following correspon- PATENT MEDICINES. Ml £ CUTHMAN & HAAS. ATLANTA, GA. H O WA RD HOUSE BROAD STREET. Nearly Opposite Montgomery and EufaulaR. R. Depot EUFAULA, ALABAMA. BOARD—Per Day $ 2 The Best House in town, aprll ly W. J. HOWARD.Prop’r. UNIVERSITY ATLANTA, GA.. June 18, 1873. Mr. IF. J. Land, City: Dear Sir—Messrs. Gaff & Co., of Cincinnati, Ohio, desire us to accept the Agency for the sale of their Crescent Brewery Vienna Beer. We have tried the Beer aud find it a pleasant and palatable beverage, but before accepting tho sale of it wo want your profes sional opinion as to its purity, we, therefore, desiie you to call at our store and draw a sample from a small lot which we have here. After you have made an anal- HOTEL, ATHENS, GEORGIA, By R. H. LAMPKIN. Board.—Per day, $2.00 ; per week, $6.06. Madison House. MADISON, GEORGIA. w. , and Alabama streets (up stairs), Atlanta, Ga. atteutiou to tho prosecution of claims agaius State of Georgia aud United States. Office No. 1 Aus tell’s Building, up stairs. laud Commission Merchants iu Graiu and Produce. Handles pro duce by car load without expense, Yellow Front, Ken nesaw Block, Forsyth street, Atlanta, Ga, CLOTHIERS AND TAILORS. J.® P E] * L. D H Attorneys at Law, No. 20 OYAL k NUNNALLY, Attorneys at Law, Griffin years of suffering, by the taking Dr. Filler's Ve g ; enable Klaeumntic Syrup—the scientific discov ory of J. P. Fitler, M. D., a regular graduate physi clan, with whom we are personally acquainted, who has for 39 years treated these diseases exclusively with Astonishing results We believe it our Christian duty, after deliberation, to conscientiously request sufferers to use it, especially persons iu moderate circumstan cos, who cannot afford to waste money and time ou 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, Pounsylvauia. suffer ed siEteen years, became hopeless. Rev. Thomas Murphy, D. D., Frankford, Philadelphia; Rev J. B. Davis, Highstown. New Jersey: Rev. J S. Buchanan, Clarence. Iowa; Rev. G. G. Smith, Pittsford, N. York; Rev. Joseph Beggs, Falls Church, Philadelphia. Oth er testimonials from Senators, Governors, Judges, Con gressmen, Physicians, &c., forwarded gratis, with pamphlet explaining these diseases. One thousand dollars will be presented to any medicine for same diseases showing equal merit under test, or that can produce one-fourth as many living cures. Any per son sending by lotter description of affiiction, will re ceive gratis a legally signed guarantee, naming the number of bottles to cure, agreeing to refund the money upon sworn statement of its failure to cure. REDWINE k FOX, feb5 Wholesale and retail Agents Atlanta. Ga. result. Respectfully. GUTHMAN & HAAS. stairs, 1st lloor, practice in all tho courts. HOW THE MISSES HUNTEE CONTRIVED TO GET THETB LUOGAOE TO THEIR HOME. It Is rumored in Montgomery in railroad and finan cial circles that negotiations are now pending between Gan. Mahone, Col. Jaqoas, of the Southern Security Company, and Gen. Boaecranz, involving the conaoU- dstiou of tha last Tennessee. Virginia and Georgia, tha Mamphis and Chattanooga, the Bristol and Nor folk, the Memphis and LitUa Bock, and the Little Book and Fort Smith Roads, all to be pat under the management of Gen. Mahone and Col. Jaques, aod to he extended np the Canadian river to Albnquerqne, and constitute tha central route of the Southern Pacific Trans-ooutlnentai Road. The scheme, if consumma ted, will make Memphis quite an important point Correspondence of the New York Sun. Mobbistown, N. J., Aug. 23, 1873. The Misses Hunter of this town having spent an agreeable so miner vacation from their home, lately arrived in New York, pre vious to their starting for Morristown, and purchasing at toe Morris and Essex depot the necessary tickets, presented the same to the baggage master, respectfully requesting him to have their trunks, seventeen in number, checked. The shrewd dignitary gave a long, shrill whistle and informed them that the express office was the proper place in which to apply if they wished to take their trunks with them, as each passenger was allowed bnt one hundred pounds baggage. Inqniry at the latter place revealed the fact that the ex orbitant tariff of $1.26 was demanded for each trunk. Upon the ladies remonstrating, the expressman gallantly relented, aud agreed to send the contraband goods for one dolfar each. Hot (the ladies, remembering that a passenger—and a trunk, if he choose—is car ried over the road for eighty cents, demurred even to this magnanimity, and without fur ther ado quietly walked to the ticket office and bought fifteen tickets. These they exhi bited and the baggage official gave the ladies the checks which they sought. The result of this financial maneuver is that the Misses Hunter have fifteen tickets, only two being demanded of them by the conductor. A Pennsylvania lady has a most romantic and ingenious w*ay ot managing the gentle man so happy as to be her husband. Exas perated by her persistent conversation, he udgallantly boxed her cars tho other day. The wretched woman cast but one lingering, reproachfal glance upon her lord and fled, simply observing as she departed that the briny deep should wash away the insult. Leaving bchiod her everything most dear and precious to her—the home of her married life, lull of beautiful and cherished memories— this heart-broken woman rushed frantically to the canal, and,with one parting sigh,threw iu a large stone, which made a mighty splash. Then she went and laid herself in the bushes and giggled, while her husband and twenty other men hurried up, with horror depicted upon their countenances, and wildly dragged the canal for her body. When the injured wife became convinced that the wretch had suffered enough, she appeared from behind the bushes, and led him home a resigned and willing victim. A young married woman in Paris, who bad preserved her wedding dress with great care and had kept it* locked up in a closet, was hor&ified the other day to find that her maid Emma had been dancing the cancan in the sacred garment. This enterprising maid had the audacity to dance before her mistress in private theatricals in the wedding dress, and it was afterwards found oat that it was the fourth time she had danced in it A Wondebhtl Stoby.—Tho Oude (India) Excelsior prints the story following : “ Very recently a native, having ornaments on her person worth about 400 or 500 rupees, ac companied by her daughter, who also wore ornaments worth about two hundred rupees, alighted from the train at Hurdui, and hired an ekla to carry them to their viliago. On ar riving at a lonely spot about six miles from Hurdui, there being no villages within miles, the ckka drew np at the side of tho road, and the driver suddenly demanded tho whole of the jewelry to be given up to him. On being refused, he tied the woman aud the girl up to the ekka, and coolly divested them of every article. He then drew a knife, with the intention of murdering them, but in the excitement of the moment let the weapon fall into a ditch about three feet deep. He jumped down, and was just in the act of clutching at the knife, when a black snake darted from a hole and fixed its fangs in his hand; knowing the snake to be an extremely venomous one, be fell down almost senseless with terror and died in a few minutes. The woman and girl remained there about two hours, when, seeing some villagers at a dis tance, they screamed for assistance, and on being released gave information at the nearest thamnah. The police came to the spot and found the corpse of the ekka driver and the snake still there. The corpse was taken to the nearest station for an inquest to be held; the snake was blocked in its hole with a large stone, as the police had not the courage to kill it. The ornaments were found tied up in the kummerbund of the corpse, and were re stored to their owners. The foregoing facts were related to ns by one whose veracity we have no reason to doubt. ” the National. J G. JONES, Fashionable Tailoring Establishment e CIGARS, TOBACCO. ETC. I haml. Broad Importer of Cigars and Tobacco, Wholesale and B. MOSES, Authorized Agent for imported Ha, van a Cigars, No. 4 Kimball House Block, and Kimball House Cigar stand. W. J OHN FICKEN, Manufccturer, Importer and Dealer iu Fine Cigars, Pipes, Tobacco, Snuff Boxesaudj Smokers Articles, No. 17 Peachtree street, Atlanta, Whitehall street, z CONTRACTORS Contracts faith- COPPER. BRASS AND IRON. Founders, Finishers, Gas Fitters aud Sheet Iron Workers, Broad street, opposite the Sun Building. AH work done promptly. H UNNICUT k BELLING RATH S, Gas Fitters, Brass Workers, aud dealers in Stoves, Marietta treet, Atlanta. CANDY AND CRACKERS. CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE. J^JcBltlDK A CO., Wholesale dealers ijn Crockery, and Earthenware. Kimball linn DYE-WORKS. J AMES LOCH KEY, Atlanta Dye Works. Dyeing and Cleaning in aU branches. Satisfaction guar anteed. Post office box 540. OENTIST8. hall and Hunter streets, Atlanta, Ga. E D. CARPENTER. Dentist, No. 47 Whitehall • street, Atlanta, Ga. , Work promptly and neatly Anished. FRUITS. VEGETABLES. ETC. A NTONIO TORRE, Dealer lu Fruits, and Vogo- tables. No. 107 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga. Box 454. H. tryPri TUMLIN, No. 604 MARIETTA STREET-FAM ILY GROCERIES. Staple Dry Gooda. Couu- ’oduen at the lowest rates. Also, a fine WAGON G.&G. CAHN A CAMP, Wholesale Grocers an Provision Dealers. 25 East Alabama Street. Atlanta, Georgia. EO. T. FRY, Attorney-at-Law, No. 6 Kimball House. Residence corner McDonough and Rich ardson streets. It j ardso IT LIVERY AND SALE 8TABLES. LINT TAYLOR, Proprietor of the Archer Stables, ’ keeps always on hand a large supply of Mules aud Horses for sale. W. Sash, Blinds. Mouldings, Ac., Broad street. LIOUORS. j AGEK BEER BREWERY. City Brewery, corner Collins aud Harris streets, Lager Beer, Ale and ■, Fechter, Mercer A Co., office In Old Post Office Building, Atlanta, Ga, ^ Ga., Wholesale dealers in Foreign and Domestic Whiskies, Wines, Brandies, Rums, Gins, etc., and PBoriuETons of the Mountain Gap Whiskies. Ivy. Liquors aud Cigars. Residence corner Cain and C XOX A HILL, Wholesale) dealers iu Forigu and Do j zneatic Liquors, Peachtree street. M EADOR BROS., Wholesale Tobbacco and Liquors 35 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga. MARBLE YARDS. AlfiDICAL. D ll. W. T. PARK, office No. 35% Whitehall btreet, p. O. Box No. 158, Atlanta, Ga. Treatment of Chronic Diseases, Impurities of the Blood, Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children mads a spec ialty. MUSIC AND MU1ICAI HIITRUMMTS. ( 1UILFOHD, WOOD * CO.. Duller, lu Muilc, Or. X ~ ” ' ‘ kudu. rinnoH, MualcAl Merchandize, end Inipor- of Smell Instrument, aud Utringfl, 68 Whit,hall btreot. O L. Bit AU MULLER. Dealer in Musics* lustrn- • raeuts, Stationery, aud aole agents for btcinway k Sous’ aud other celebrated pianos, 16 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga. PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY. Drug btore, D __ Whitehall street. photographs, etc., executed promptly, at reasonable rates Call and see specimens^ ■’ PRIVATE BOARDING HOUSES. M llb. R. E. WILSON. South Pryor Btroot, between Hunter aud Mitchell. large frout roo.u, with board. Day boarders wanted. mjTM. A. eT SMITH'S, centrally located, nicely fur ^. _ n nished, carpeted rooms, walnut furnitoro, neat hornTe, a table provided with the host faro the market afford*. Call aud examine. No. 7W Whitehall Htreot. J ONH H. WEBB, Mo. 82 Whitehall, and 72 Broad m House—Near the Office, Library, otc. FEW ladles ami gentlemen can l>e accommodated A l with good board at Mrs. Overby’a, treet. Just aoroat the bridge. M ibb GREEN, at the “Larendon House, Peachtree street, can furnish pleasant rooms to ies or single persons. Day ooarders also re ceived. PICTURES AND PRAMES. ?J AH. R. BANDERS, Manufacturer and Dealer In Chromoe, Mouldings, Looking Glasses and Plf‘ ~ Io.|37>£ Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga. ATLANTA, GA., Jci.T 1, 1873. Messrs. Guthman A* Haas, Atlanta, Ga.: Gentlemen— 1 This will certify that I have made a thorough chemical examination ot the “ Crescent Brewery " Lager Beer, received of you a few days ago. I find the article free from Injurious substinces, drugs, etc., the bitter principle bting due to pure Hop Resin. The analysis herewith affixed exhibits the quanti ties of the main proximate constituents and compares favorably with the analyses of the best foreign beers and ales. I am, very truly, yours, WM. J. LAND, An. Chem. ANALYSIS: Extractive matter. (Sugar. Dextrine, Albu men, Hop Resin, etc.) Pet 6.6283 Alcohol—(volume per ceutage) 6.6025 Water Pet. 88.0717 Specific gravity of the Beer 1.0157 jys-ti f|>RAVELF.RS, invalids aud families will find this one l of the best hotels in the South. Porters at all tne trams who will take care of baggage. Terms P. B. WOODARD. TENNESSEE HOUSE, Corner Tennessee and Main streets, Cai'torsville, Gtoorgia. a-onable rate-. J. SUMNER. Grantville Hotel. B. F. M. T. BRANNON. I C7IRST-CLASS HOTEL, situated immediately op- 1 posite the depot, in the p easant little village of ta and West Point Railroad. posite Grantville, on Atlanta and Wes |j' A few summer boarders and good fare. South Carolina Railroad. STAR CANDLEST trill be run on the South BETWEEN CHARLESTON AND A Hi 1ST A and eliminates from the system the specific virus which causes such a long list of suffering. In every form of scrofulous, mercurial and const! tutioual blood complaints, it stands without a compeer rapidly curing ulcers, pustules, carbuncles. sca.d head salt rheum, and the 88 different varieties of skin affec tions. It la a positive curative for scrofula, and the eliminating them from the system. The Fluid Extract of Queen’s Delight, prepared by Dr. J. 8. Pemberton, has made the most wonderful aud astonishing cures. Its purifying, vivifying and tonic properties exercise the quickest and most wonderful effects in restoring health. It is harmless to the most delicate, and can never be used amiss. It U tho true beautifier of the complexion. If you want pure, rioh blood, clear skin and beautiful complexion, use the Compound Extract of Stillingla or Queen's Delight. Read our treatise on diseases of the Blood. The genuine has the signature of the proprietor upon each label.; apll-yl-eod ATLANTA. WATER CUR E. Dr. F. Kaiow. Corner of Hunter anil Belle Street. D R. Kaiow, well known through his rapid aud wonderful cures, has returned to our city, and opened an establishment again, f r the cure of all Chrome Diseases, and he respootfnlly informs the citizens of Atlanta and surrounding country, that he is prepared to cure Livkk Complaint, Fever. Rheumatism, NkURALOIA, 8CROFULA. DISEASES PECULIAR to W© men, All Impurities of the Blood, Skin Diseases, Kidney and Bladder Complaints, Stoppaor of the Water, Piles of all Kinds. Strictures, Gonorrhea, Eye and Ear Complaint after Meaalcs, Scarlatina, etc., otc. As a proof of his auccess, the Doctor takes pleasure in referriug to the following persons: Mr. J. W. Rnoker, of the firm of Chapman, Rucker A Co.. Major, W. B. Cox, Mr. T. J. Hightower, Gen. W. S. Walker, John and James Lynch, J. Fleischell, Bcerman k Kubrt. Mr. Schulliacfer, Dr. M. Mitchell, Superior Vicar, Mr. Turner, of Brooklyn, Father Marony, Philadelphia. Rev. Mr. Smith, Macon, Col. Gaulden, Quitmau, Mias Dunwoody, Darien, Mr. White,Congas. Outside of hia Institution ho will treat all Acute Diapason with great success. This method of treat ment la tho most rapid, safest aiul only sure cure. Particular attention given to the cure of bummer Complaint, and Teething Period of Children. Meuin- gitis is not dangerous when taken iu tiuio. This ATLANTA SELECT SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, Corner Mitchell and Forsyth streets. By Prof. J. H. LOGAN, A.M. f 17ALL BES8ION opens MONDAY. August 26th. and ' continues twenty weeks, closing Januarv 1st, 1874. at ea of Tuition per Month $4, $5, and $6, accord* sexger train. Leave Charleston... Arrives at Auguste.. Leaves Augusta at Charles NIGHT KXPRES! Leaves Charleston 1:10 p.m. PROCTER Sc GAMBLE’S “Light of Day” Brand STAR CANDLES! Atlanta, Macon AUGUSTA GKOCERS. •psn-tt t Charleston. 5:35 Between Augusta mul Columbia. DAY PASSE> Leaves Augusta Arrives at Columbia Leaves Columbia ... Arrives at Augusta NIGHT EXPRESS TRAIN. Leaves Augusta 6:15 r. M Arrives at Columbia 6:15 a. m Leaves Columbia 7:15 p. m Arrives at Augusta 7:15 a. m Day and night trains out cf Atlanta connect closely with this Road at Augusta for Charleston and Colum bia. Daily Train out of Macon makes close connection with Night Train. Night Train out of Augusta makes close conuectibn at Columbia with Greenville and Columbia Railroad. Passengers for points ou the Greenville and Columbia Railroad will avoid a tedious delay at night in Colum bia, by taking this route. Elegant now Sleeping Cars on night trains between Augusta aud Charleston. S. B. PICKENS, augl-dtf Geuepal Ticket A«ent. PORT ROYAL RAILROAD ENGINEER AND SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE) Or Port Royal ILulkoad Company, J Augusta, Ga., Juue 28, 1873 ) O N AND AFTER MONDAY. JUNE 30, TRAINS ON this Road will run as follow*: DOWN DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. Will leave Augusta at 6:45 a.m. Arrivo at Port Royal at 2:16 f.m. Arrive at Charleston at 4:45 p.m. Arrive at Savannah at 3:30 p.m. UP DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. Will leave Port ltoyal at 9:45 a m. Leave Charleston at 8:10 a.m. Leave Savannah at 9:30 a.m. Arrivo at Augnata at 5:38 r.M. DOWN NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN. Will leave Augusta at 2:10 p.m. Arrive at Port Royal at 11:35 p.m. Arrive at Charleston at 6:00 a.m. Arrive at Savauuah at 12:30 p.m. UP NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN. Will leave rort Royal at 10:30 p.m. Leave Charleston at 6.00 r.M. Leave Savannah at 9:50 p.m. Arrive at Augusta at 8:00 a.m. Passenger* leaving Atlanta by the 6 o’clock p. m. train, make connection at Augunta with Down l>ay Passenger *for Port Royal. Savaunah, and points Southeast JAS. O. MOORE, jyl-dtf Engineer aud SuperintomteuL SOUTHERN NURSERY. IRWIN A THURMOND. W E are offering to the public a selection of Fruit edaptod to the Southern climate, consisting of Ayploa, Peaches, Pears. Plums, Cherries, Quinces, Grapes, eto. Our Floral and Ornamental Shrubbery Department is complete. Wo have everything usually the Southern climate. Wo are determined to make good stock and ■ell at reasonable prices. AU orders by mail attended to with promptness and care. We have reliable agents, either local or traveling, in many localities In tbia aud other States South, and we prefer, where convenient to our customers, to do out business through them. We wlU. upon application, furnish gratia onr catalogue and price Ust, Address P. O. Box 565, Atlanta, Ga. Ju)y24-dly IRWIN & THURMOND. WANTED. GRADUATE of the B TAO College, who can produce a certificate as a I Druggist from tho Faculty of the same, a cun n it s n i In some wholesale or retail Drug House. arolitsa Medical Address. M. D. P. O. Box 536. Cbatleston, P. O., »*. O. S. M. F. COLLEGE. Tuition $60 per annum. Board $18.00 to $20,00 per month. Send for Catalogues. augl2 2w J. N. BRADSHAW. Pres. Dr. JESSE BORING HM ATLANTA STENCIL AND VARIETY WORKS Or. Marietta and Kroad Sts. with Ink and Brash. 76c; by m»il S5c. Unarm*, hotel nnd key Check,. Notary Public end Soctoty Scale. Ah phabeta and everything in the line made to order. Cotton alphabet made a specialty. Oaders from a distance promptly attended deo6-lv. DAVID McBRIDE, HCOOKibSOa TO McBRIDE A SMITHS" MANUFACTURER OF Fine Carriag PHAETONS, ROCKAWAYS AND Bl r Repairing Promptly a' Executed. DAVID 1 ■THE FALL SESSION COMMENCES ON THE 27TH S RESUMED THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE in Atlanta. with l ester 4 Thomson, Kimball House. Residence, northwest corner of Houston and Ivy treet*. Jy24-lm BEN. Z. DUTTON, PRACTICAL STENCIL CUTTER, Designers and Engravers, ADDKK*a Lock Box 351, - - • ATLANTA, CA. STENCIL MARKING PLATK8 of every deecription