Griffin tri-weekly star. (Griffin, Ga.) 1865-1868, November 16, 1867, Supplement., Image 5
Tte Griffin Tri-Weekly Star.
Tan or t»nnm Buaunus Ceaa*.—l noon
m^nthfs’so-/month*
•SO j x m!«nm 1 matt. SZ6—l m.nth. *6O-8
aiocth* *7% 1 wlmu 1 mouth *4o—3 month* *76
—« Mosth* *l*6. W« will »trte*Jy adhere to them
term*. AdvertloemanU, to insure attention, must
he handed in before * o'clock the da, pret.on* to
publication, dice on Katt side of Hill street, sod
ear. Bread way—op stairs, in Me). Moot a building.
HF“ Aon Poarri-a eiecuted neatly and with tilt
gft Cri-Etofclt Star.
Griffin, Ga., I*v.;i«, IMt. ■
Hon. Thomas Ewln|, on the
Political situation. .
This gentleman, a member of the Re
publican party, bu written a letter on
the (abject of Radical reconstruction,
from which we make the following ex
tract, commending it to the perusal of
Referring to the scheme of reconstruct
“The President also disapproves of
the reconstruction acts, now in process
of being forced upon the Southern
States—and 1 concur with him. The
measure strikes me m neither wise nor
juet. Admit that the rebels are treat
ed in it with meroy ; that they all de
serve death as a punishment tor their
treason, without regard to the means by
which they came or were forced into it;
that in stead, they are merely placed in
political bondage, under their former
■Saves. Still the punishment is arbi
trary and unlawful; it has no consti
tutional warrant, and no one is bound
to gjabmU to H any longer than con
strained to by actual force —and it is
not likely to conciliate kindly feelings
of the men of the South whom it pro
scribe* and placet in subjection. The
measure, as I view it, is unwise and un
lawful as to them, and unjust and de
grading *o «* of the North who never
rebelled. Carry it into effect, and it
gives to the plantation' negro of the
South a large excess of power in the
Government of the Union over that
enjoyod by one of our Northern citizens.
Tor example, the proscription of the
whites gives to the negro in Louisiana,
efficiently, the jower of the State in the
local, and also in the general govern
ment, and the State is to have power in
the Union due to its whole population,
white and black. The census of 1860
Sve* Louisiana an aggregate population
705,000, composed of 357.0 0 whites,
and 251,<>08 black*. The State, there
fore, will he entitled, under the recon.
etruetion resolutions, to s«*v«n represen
tativee in Congress, of 351,000 blaoks
will be the whole efficient constituency
—the white men who can read, and
write, wrv.l cipher as far oaths rule of
three, having no more to do with it than
their mules and horses. So that 50,-
000 manumitted slaves sond a member
to Congress, and 100,000 citizens of
Ohio do the same thing, and no more.—
One manumitted plantation negro in
Louisiana will therefore, have political
power in the House of Representatives
equal to two citizens of Ohio, and the
preponderance will be considerably
greater, in the electoral college, for
President, The 351. 000 Louisiana ne
groes will be entitled to two Senators—
-2,300,000 citizens of Ohio are entitled to
two. One Louisiana negro will, there
fore, have political power in the Senate
more than equal to six ot our oitkens.
To prove the reconstruction scheme a
wrong against us, citiaena of a North
ern State, who never rebelled, it were
only neoessary to show that one of us,
a citizen of Cbio, is as good as a manu
mitted plantation negro of Louisians,
ought to have a voice as potent in
the general government of the Union.
_ “The Constitution, aa it is, involves
inequality in this particular among the
citizen* of the different States, and I
would not amend it to remove them ;
it works no mischief, fir we are all one
people, of the same race, of like intelli
gence, in all things alike, morally and
socially. But I would not amend the
Constitution to increase it where it ex»
ists, or to create it where it exists not;
and, especially, I Would not give this
enormous excess of power to men of a
different race, who are not and can nev
er be our associates ; of whom we know
little socially, exoept that they are ig
norant and degraded, and nothing po
litically, exoept that they have always
been, ami are, a disturbing element in
our system. Their degradation, igno
rance and immorality, entitle them to
our ooinmisseration, but do not entitle
them to a place so much above us in
the seals of political power. It would
be a siolfi smaller concession by us to
the Afrioan, and more reasonable and
just, to give each negro in Ohio ten
votes, than to give the negro in tbs
South the power over us, in the Union,
involved in this plan oi reconstruction.
It may be said, and truly, that this in
equality will be bat temporary ; that
men have to die off, and all will be right;
a white man in the North will at length
become equal to a negro in the South.
This is true : even less than the truth ;
ever come into being; or, if created by
external power, shall stand alone for a
single moment. There Will be no at
tempt to carry them out, or any pretense
of the kind, beyond the next Presiden
tial election. In the meantime, there
will be war to the knife of black against
white; of barbarism and poverty aed
power combined against intelligence
and property, which can be restrained
only by military power ; fend the Unis
ted States wilt be compelled to keep up
standing armies in all the reconstruct
ed Statos until they shall be' again re
constructed.' During the process, the
fire Brigadier Generals will not only he
autocrats each of hie district, but will
oontrol the vote of the nine States, and
to the Senate eighteen
GRIFFIN TRI.WEEKLY STAR.
SXJI»I»LE]M[E]XrX.
five- in the electoral college one hun
red vote* for Preaideot.
“But look further to consequence*.—
If there shall b# a majority ot constitu
tional votes for one candidate lor the
Presidency, and if the one hundred mil
itary electors, added to the minority,
make a majority of the whole, there
will arise a question which oan be deci
ded only by the sword ; end the army
of the South, if united Under the gener
als, will settle tbs question of legitima.
oy at Washington, as the Ptetorian
guard were wont to do at Rome, and
the Jneiaaariee at Constantinople.
“tfor these reasons, I oonour with the
President in disapproving the Congres
sional plan of reconatauction ; and the
vote at the late election in Ohio has
strongly pronounced the disapproval
of the people, and their objection* will
not be removed when they consider it in
connection with its attendant conse
quences.
“On tho whole, I do not think it will
be practicable further to inflame the
public mind against the President, or
longer to retain party power by waging
war againat him. Whether be betray
ed his party in the absurd hope of there
by perpetuating his own power, or sac
rificing power and party on tho altar of
his own country, ceases to bs a ques
tion ot national importance. It is a
question on which opinions differ, and
oan ha better settled when the country
'is relieved from its present disturbed
condition.
“And on reviewing the ground. ••
far aa my limited observation extends,
I see no reason to anticipate a reaction
ary excitement in favor of extreme
Radical men or measures. The tide is
setting against them, aad cannot be
suddenly checked. The more Conserv
ative Republican leaders, if they would
retain power, must learu to know that
there is a public opinion, not created
by themselves or changeable at their
pleasure, wl ich, when it apeak*— a* it
has snoken—is entitled tq their respect.
In o' e dence to this they must dethrone
the Radical despot*, and conform their
aotion in Congress to the expressed pub
lio will, and legislate like rational men,
with calmness and consideration rath.
e* than with passion. It is hard to ask
a political party to acknowledge error
and retrace tbeir steps, but in this case
the good of the country requires, and
expressed will of the people demands it.
The correction must and will be made,
either by them or those who will succeed
them, and it were better done in a Con
servative spirit by them than by the
Democracy, who will Mt otherwise cal
led to the the task under more difficult
complications.
If the Republican* will do this
promptly ahd cheerfully,lthoy will prob
ably regain and retain their ascenden
cy, and they may rely on the Democra
cy to render them all needful kid in re
storing and securing it. That party,
whenever in power, will, unless they
have learned wisdom from hard expe
rience, adopt ohjeqtionnble measures,
or bring forward obnoxious men, such
as will destroy their nsoendanoy, if the
Republicans have conservative wisdom
enough to profit by their errors.’'
Harry’* BK»Moir.—‘Eddie,’ said flnr
ry, ‘let’s play at going to ohuroh ; and
I*ll be the minister and preaeh you a
sermon,’
‘Well,’ said Eddie, ‘and I'll bs the peo
pie.’
So they wsot up stairs together. Har
ry aet an old fire screen up in front of
him, by way of a pulpit, and thus be
gan:
‘My text is a very short and easy one—
‘Be kind.’ There are some little texts in
the Bible on purpose for little children,
and this is one of them. These are the
heads of my sermon:
‘Firstly. Be kind to father, and dont
make a noise when he has a hoadache.
I don’t believe yon know what a head
aohe is, but I do. I had one onoe, and
I didn’t waat to bear any one speak a
word.
‘Secondly. Be kind to mother, and
don’t make her tell you to do a thing
more than once. It* very tiresome to
say, ‘ita time for yon to go to bed’ half
a dozen times over.’
•Thirdly. Be kind to baby.’
‘.You hove left out ‘Be Rind to Harry,”
broke in Eddie, forgetting that he was
the people.
‘Yes,’ said Harry, ‘I don’t mean to
mention my own name in my sermon. I
was saying—be kind to little Minnie :
end let her have your red soldier to play
with when she wants it.’
‘Fourthly. Be kind to Jane;And don’t
scream and kick when she washes and
dresses you.’
Here Eddie looked a little ashamed,
and said:
‘But she pulled my hair with ths
• comb.’
‘People musn’t talk in churchi’ said
Harry. '
•Fifthly. Be kind to kiltie, and do
what will make her purr, and don’t do
wbat will mak* her sorateh and squeak.’
•Isn’t the sermon nearly done!’ oskei
Eddie.
*1 want to slag;’ and without waiting
for Harry to fißiah bia discourse, or to
five out a hymn, be began to sing: and
[arry bad to stop -, but it was a very
good eermon after ail. Don’t yon think
so! ■
KB- Os ail earthly music, that reach
es the farthest into Heaven it the beat
ing of a loving heart.
MF The greatest treasure of life is
contentment,
tOT Nothing is profitable which it
dishonest.
t&~ A failure in a good cause is leg
tor than a triumph in a bod one.
What ths Elections have De
' elded,
Mtny Democrats jump to the conclu
sion that the elections of this year in
sure our success in the Presidential can
vase; many Republicans jump to the
eonclueion that General Grant will be
the candidate of their party. It would
be difficult, in the present state of our
knowledge, to contest the soundness of
either inference ; although some persons
may deem them inconsistent with each
other. This, at least, is certain : that
the Republican inference concede# the
soundness of the Democratic, on every
hypothesis than that General (Sr int will
consent to be the candidate <»f the Res
publican party. But if Gen. Grant is
their candidate, be must endorse their
Coy, which is the very thing which has
n condemned and repudiated by these
elections. The horse Gen. Grant it ex
pected t > ride having received a death
wound, we do not consider it defer that
ee shrewd a horseman will mount him.
The Republican party is so commits
ted to its moribund reconstruction
scheme that ttonnnot retreat from it
without a universal guffaw of derision.
It is the matured effort of their wisdom,
proclaimed as snob with every form of
solemn emphasis. The slow and pain
ful deliberation with which it was con
summated, the tumultuous indignation
with which President Johnson has been
assailed for doubting its wisdom, the
extra session of Congress to euforce its
rigor in opposition to the liberal inter
pretation of the Attorney General, have
conutt'-d the Republicans to it so irre
trievably that its abandonment would
be fatal to the party. “You take my
bouse,” sfeid baffled Bhyloek, in the ago
ny of lost'wealth and disappointed re
venge, “when you do take the prop that
doth sustain my house; yen take ray
’ife when you do take the means where
by I live,’’
The Republican party without its re
construction policy would be in a simi
lar condition of deploring despair. It
has mo other principle to stand upon
than DOgm-Htiffrage reconstruction. If
this be abandoned, it is a party without
principles. Even the Times, which has
the lrast heart in this abortive business
of any of the Republican jooroarts, sees
the impossibility of abandoning it with
out the total ruin of the party, its ar
ticle yesterday reminds us of the ridicu
lous attempt f die big jointed sisters of
Cinderella who “pared their heels and
pared their toesV in the vain hope of
wearing the slippers which should make
one of them the king’s bride. Supposing
Grant to be the prince,, the Republican
party will hardly succeed in getting ka
long-heeled negro feet into the coveted,
clippers. But if it cute them off out- -
right, what will it hava to stand tut f
If the Republican party adheres, as
it needs must, to the negro suffrage're
construction scheme, its defeat in the
Presidential election, no matter who
rosy be its candidate, is as oertqin as it
is that a Presidential election will take
place. It would be the very insolence
o» tyranny to foroe negro suffrage Upon
the South when it is emphatically re
jected by the North. It wenld he such
an impudent inconsistency that no fair
minded man would for s moment justi
fy it. Negro suffrage having been over
whelmingly repudiated in these elec
tions in every State wnere the question
has been presented, the logio pt the sit
uation forbids any further attempt to
force it upon the South. If persisted In,
it must recoil with crushing effect oti
the Republican party.
Negro suffrage may bo right in itself
when the negroes shall be .better pre
pared ; the progress of opinion may
compel its adoption five, or ten, or
twenty years hence ; but these elections
have demonstrated that the public opin
ion of the oountry has not yet ripened
to that stage; nor is there any possibili
ty of its teaching it after this groat set
back, for several year* to oome. Ifyqu
harness your eoll to the plough when
he is too young, you put a strain upon
bis eonstituuuu which will prevent bis
ever acquiring the strength of a horse.
Certain it is that the publio sentiment
of the country will not grow to negro
suffrage within the next year ; ana if
it shall be the pivot or the Presidential
election, the Republican party wilt be
far more disastrously beaten than it has
been in the State contests which have
just closed. But if negro sufiVage be
presented and beaten then, what hope
will there be for it afterwardu f If i#
the very esaenee of the reconstruction
scheme—all there is of it, in fact, ex iopt
props and scaffolding. When this fait*
the whole edifice tumbles with it.
The impossibility of ripening the pub
lic opinion of the country to accept ne» ’
gro suffrage within the ensuing year
thus looming up before the Republicans
like fen obstructing Andes, what oan
they expect to do! Will they be hardy
enough to proclaim that they mean to
keep the Union disaeveredi and the
country unsettled, until years of agita
tion shall bring the country up to tbeir
mark! Further perdatonoe m there*
. construction scheme must mean this, or
it means nothing. But with this plat
form they will be ousted from every de
partmeot of the Government aa fast aa
successive elections shall open the way.
No time is left them for agitation to
bring the public mind up to their stand
ard. They are close upon a Presiden
tial eleotion, which they most carry or
tbeir party is undone. The country is
already impatient; and as between a
farther postponement of restoration and
the indefinite postponement of negro
suffrage it will not hesitate an instant.
By the recent elections the people
have decided that they do not want ne
gro suffrage and do not want restore*
tioa; have decided that negro suffrage
ie too great a prioe to pay area for im
mediate restoration. They will be in
censed if; after this decision, ths Repub
lican* oontinue to insist oo a wholly ira.
practicable scheme.
. Hie fact that negro governments are
in process of organisation, and that
Congress may sdmitthsir representa
tives, does not vary tbs coos, except to
render a degrading faros mors c-nrampt
ibie. Certain it it that the Southern
ale will never recognise these bos
governments as having the slight
est validity. Within soar months after
the Presidential eleotion a heavy bat
tering ram will tumble them into shame
loss rubbish. The Southern people will
immediately reorgnise, bold new elec
tions, oast the negroes, send tbeir own
representatives to Washington, and the
House will at onoe admit them.
The Southern Senators, plus the Con
servative Senators from the North, will
furnt a majority of that body, organise
as such, aud neither ths House no* the
President will reoogo ; te any other Sens
ate. The course is entirely feasible,
will be perfectly constitutional, and be
yond all question adopted, if the Radi
cals are insane or wayward enough to
recognise the negro governments after
this great rebuke. Tbe only thing that
could prevent it, would be oeqniesenos
by tbe Southern whites in the Radical
wham*. Whoever expects that, is bets
ter entitled to a straight jacket than a
refutation.
We may therefore oonsider it as dem
onstrated that the present reconstruction
scheme is foredoomed. But until its
destiny is recognised by a considerable
portion of the Republican*, it will be
vain to expect their oooperution in a wir
ser plan.— N. T. World.
E«»*oir on ths “Baht.”—One of
the sweetest and prettiest of Emerson’s
latest writings is the following :
Who knows not the beautiful group
of babe and mother, sacred in nature,
-tiered also in the religious associations
"f half tbe globe ! Welcome to the pa
rents is the puny little struggles strong
in his weakness, his little «rms more ir
rcsitable than tbe soldi*.’-, hie lips,
touched with persuasion which Chatham
and Periotes in manhood had not. The
small despot asks so little that all na
ture and reason are on his side. His
ignorance is mure charming than all
virtue. All day between his three or
soar sleeps he coos like a pigeon-bouse,
-putters and spurns and puts on facet of
iinbortanoe ; and when ho fasts, tbe
little Pharisee fails not to sonnd hi*
trumpet. before him. Out of block*,
thread spools, cards and checkers, he
will build his pyramid with! the gravity
of Palladio. With an accoustio appar
atus! ot whistle and raule he explores
the laws of sonnd. But chiefly like his
senior country men,the young Ameri
can studies new and speedier inodes of
transportation. Mistrusting tbs cun
ning of bit small legs, he wishes to ride
on the neokt and shoulders of all flesh.
The smell enchanter nothing oan with
stand—no seniority of age, nor gravity
of character ; ancles, aunts, couains,
grsndsirea, grandmas—all fall on easy
prey ; he conform# to nobody, fell con
form to him, all caper and make mouths
and babble and Chirrup to hint. On
the* strongest shoulders be rides, and
pulls the hair of laurreled beads.
An Editor Surd,—The editor of the
Muscatine (Iowa) Courier was sued the
other day. He took it philosophically.
Hear him.:
The dim reoessee of our dark sanctum
were illuminated yesterday bv the rubi
cund visage of our friend Constable
Scott. Our bair stood on ends os with
tears in his eyes he proceeded to read *
very nicely printed blank on which our
name figured conspicuously with that of
Justice Krein. To oat short a long ar
ticle, we were Sued. Were you ever
sued, reader! Yea. Nice, ain’t it!—
We put our pen behind our ear and
looked wise at the officer. He tr*m
bled a little, for ths idea of sueiog an
editor was new to him. Ho never im
agined that anything could be got of
“them fellers" by sueing— w# didn’t
either, we don’t now. The art of sue
ing is a science. Young lawyers *nx.
ions for suits sometimes bring them for
fan. Old one*, however, never do any
thing of the kind unless they oan get
something. We never knew anybody
to get anything where there wasn’t any
thing to be hod. We bone they’ll get a
judgment against os, then we hope
they’ll take oat v> execution, and lastly,
we beg they’ll execute it. If we’ve got
any property we’d like to know it. They
might garnishee a lot of other fellows
we owe around town. We geese they
will. If they are sharp they' ll com.
tnenoe on George Schneider. We owe
him for a glass of beer. If they get
that it would help a little. Failing in
this we recommend them to attach a bog
of soiled paper collars we have on band.
They havn’t been turned yet, and they
might use the clean side. If this won’t
do, we are unable.to help them.
United States Hotel,
(WHITAKkR * BA8&BKN, Proprietors.)
ATLANTA .GEORGIA.
WE take pleasure In informing onr oM friend*,
pntrom, nod tile public generally, that we
have refitted, painted. turnlahrd and enlarged the
above Home, making It in stria aad capacity equal
to any house In thia city. We have done this at a
heevy rxpsnss. Oar Houee le weU loci.ted, wltMa
1«0 yard* of the General Passenger Depot; and we
flntt.T ourselves that * long experience and strict
application to basins**, will not fail to he eppraoi
ntod by e generous public. Oar ehargea for tbe
prreent wifi be (I per dev for tranelent board, aad
we are offering,pedal Inducement! to buxineumea
r NVUtTAkiiB h BABSEEN, Proprietors.
_ June 1!*, l-fW-*tn _
HANDBILLS and Poster* of ail de
, Horiptions, printed in quick time a
this Offl te
LOUISVILLE CARDS._
COMMISSION, PRODUCE, ftC.
«*e. s. ■aVNAS.lst* with Bamberger, Bloom * So.
J*o« fut. feraa Grubb & Hardin.
HAWAII, HARDIN & (0.,
COTTON, FLOUR k GRAIN*
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
IQu-No. 70 Went Second St., between
—win and Market, Louisville, Ky.rtQg
flffirLiberal CASH ADVANCES
r. rones .....a x. x, w. mix
POUTER, FAIRFAX & CO.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Cotton Factors,
AND DEALKhB 111 J
Produce, Provisions, Breadatuffs,
BAGGING & ROPE,
MS Wsot M«tn Btreat LOUISVILLE, ST.
LOUISVILLE COTTON MARKET WAREHOUSE
AND FLOUR DEPOT.
L B.' O'BA.VXOIt W. BASBAW,
O'BANNON ft BASHAW.
■D. MU.
AKD
PROVISION MERCHANTS,
No. 30 Went Main Street, South Side,
between First and Second,
LOUISVILLE KENTUCKY.
BWCsmlxnmenta solicited, npoa whisk liberal
advance* will be mods.
-vr " - ■ 1 1 ■—*
w. allow iiexAanarm. ........ .william ucbaimo*.
W. A. RICHARDSON & SON,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
MAWUVACrTUftXItf AND DftALBM »
». 811. TUBE. K.
Ho. M Fourth St., (between Main and the Elver.)
LOUISVILLE, t KENTUCKY.
ID" W# are prepared to execute all order* for
Plantation Supplies. We sollolt consignments of
every Product and Manufacture, and an prepared
to wake OASH AttVANOKS.
COMMISSION k LIQUORS.
t. x. nan*,.... .’. a a nanar,
Florence, Ala. Voransrly Wort * Carey
J. M. BAVIS A CO.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
AND waoLBULB DIAMBa «H
tin si in mm
No. 155 Mud Street,
IfKTTSVNrLB ft...... .KENTUCKY.
BOOKS AND PRINTING.
JOHN P. MORTON & 00„
BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS, Bool<
AND JOB PRINTERS,
Blank Book Manufacturers,
No. 156 West Main Street,
L6IJISVILLE .KENTUCKY,
DRUGS, MEDICINES, &0.
H A ROBIN?OH, CHAffib H. PllHfy
W. WALLACE POWERS, A* ROBINSON.
R. A. ROBINSON & CO..
nm iKisTs.
No. 184 Main Bt.,
LOUISYILLE .KENTUCKY.
ESTABLISHED IN I*l7.
VSOO.B. Wthan*. Axntm reran.
w.tuDULixaioax ■jmvneooran
Hf ilnon, Peter 4* Cos.,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
lon nersiaraas or -ran
LISIU CHEMICAL Issi.
Cor. of Fifth and Mata Sts.,
LOUISVILLE .KENTUCKY.
New Millinery!
!NEW STYLES!
'l V >• ■ f . •« -V
--NEW STORE!
IT MBS. TIM’S U STUB.
(orsa VLtmsTXB 4 brooks,)
HILL STREET........GRIFFIN, OA
MISS MOLLY SHEPHERD,having
just returned from the Northern
market*, where she visited the latoopcn
iogsof the most fashionable Millinery
House*.io New York and Baltimore,
and selected a magnificent stoek of
Mine) mil White Goods,
suitable for the Griffin trade, we are
now prepared to give tbe utmost satie*
faction to all tbe Ladies who may fever
us with their patronage.
CLOAK & DR WAKING
Also done in the moat approved style.—
Material for Cioaks, ana Trimmings, on
band.
9X. A, SHEPHERD A CO,
Griffin, Oct. 15.-3 m.
NASHVILLE COLUMN.
TOBACCO AND NUFFS.
S & It. Whorley,
topeiwa and Bonier* fee
Snnfl , Pipes,
FOREIGN snd DOMESTIC
CIGARS A TOBACCO,
no. At Market tt.,
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE
HOTELS.
STACEY HOUSE,
CX.AX ROBERTS, Proprietor,
Cfeisrcts Street,
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE.
GROCERS AND PRODUCE.
Gilbert, Parties Jt Cos.,
GROCERS. 51 ffiCTBRS,
Aad Cominluston Merchant*,
feko, Af»r>. . few Crescent ami Msnl Mills COT
TON TAKNtJ and bItEXTDtGd,
80*83 8. Market Street,
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE.
Paily, Ordteay P Cos.,
WBOLZSALS
urn ecu fin®
AMD D SALEM Os
Baoon, Lard, ft all kind* Produce,
Noe. 6 aad 8 Bread B*.,
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE,
GROCERS AND LIQUORA
S. B. Spurlock $t Cos.,
WBOL.XSALS
GROCERS and COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
in & in hob,
88 Broad St.,
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE.
0- *- efcaxnux a. r. wool*
Cheatham, Woods # Vo.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS.
Dealers in FINE BRANDIES,
KIKES, DOMESTIC LIQUORS, CI6MS,
TOBACCO, ETC.,
Corner of Ohuroh and Oollege Streets,
i NASHVILLE.. ....TENNESSEE.
Treanor & 00.,
, KHoLHAIB
GROG BS,
Rectifier * and DietiUen of Pare ROB
ERTSON County WHISKET.
AND DEALERS IN FOREIGN AND OOMESTIC U
QUORS, CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
IVo. TT aad TANARUS» Market Street,
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE.
PRODUCE.
SMITH & PjfeKES,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
and- DIALUffi IN
CORN, BACON, FLOUR, BAG*
GING, ROPE, Etc.,
NEK NOS. !4 ANB II MARKET ST RET,
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE
Rhea, Smith # Cos.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
DEALERS IN 9
Groin, Flour, Bacon, Lard, to.,
And fesnnts Aw the
Ohio Elver Sail teapeiy
Ko. C) heath Market Street,
NASHVILLE.... TENNES&BE.
M. A. Parrish & Cos.,
« FIDTOHS, FROBICI
COMMISSION m FORWARDING MERCHANTS.
Dealers in Corn, Hay Oats, fto.,
FRONTING ON OOIXRGR and MARKET STS..
(south or broad)
NASHVILLE .TENNESSEE.
Jttassengalc P Snyder,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
amd wnouaaia szAun* tx
GRAIN, FiOtn, HAT, and rWBVChfCMMtIy,
Km. !• aad iffi s. Market at.,
NASHVILLE TENNESSEE.
TIN ft SHEET-IRON WARE.
«.w.wn*0x...,..a w. stwwsrt •• wmm
3. W. Wilson A Co-,
NO. a COLLEGE ST.. NASHVILLE, TENN.
lin P Sheet-iron Wtare,
WrongM Iron Oookln* «t»v**. WhoVwat* onfev*.
toil d**l«f» In Cooking and Heating Sum*,
llonm Furnishing Gond», C.,11 Oil and Coni f*i
Larnpe, Tin Plot*. Bbset ItomWlra end TtenanT
FI solas*, safe Tlowar* of EVERT DOuSBUN