Newspaper Page Text
GEORGIA HERALD.
VOL’ I*
Cljc Borgia Derail).
J
rrßLtj'iiKD By *
g a ll & Alexander.
every Saturday MoaXI.VH.
H TERMS.
.. , $2 00
On* '‘* r . i Mi
fli Mon.bo
AII paYMKXTHt.VV4RIABLT IN ADTA*C«.
ADVERTISING BATIiS.
•f*,* fo'lowlnj? utv the rate* to which !ulher<* in
~ , f, r ,;dv*-rtl»in(r, or where advertisements
-Vl'.Wi.-aiu without instructions. Di*i*layki> Ad-
Vr'ti--li'-nts will fie cbarg>'»l ucconiin* to the ispaok
lhe> occupy: .. ■* - ■ ■ •
I T. I M. 8 M t SI. 13 M.
TT7>.’ i«««a &o * 7 ooisuh> *<a m
* k ,' ' 3"') 5 (.0 Mon I 15 On! 25 00
; •‘j ‘ ' s *H*i 7 oo: 15 o>v 20 ooj ao no
; 'J‘ ‘ .. 4 0!) 10 0* 20 00 3') 00! 40 00
,S-• n i•’ " 2 3 ' ,l " 4:1 o<|i r>o 00
z V ”’ *'!Hi 00 t|ij 85 00; 65 Oil s, 00
q l>n _ wn .'.' 1 ! - Wf 25 iiOi 40 001 70 00 180 00
r i oin>i*tr.iK!i, AOMinmittnißs, <iu ait i»i\.vs, ao.
H hiTetutorc, #»nt:e Mtc war, the following are Iho
ftr r." I »r in'iCM ofOrrtinarios, Ac. —To HC PAID IM AD-
T* r ty f)« .V«(!c n * 500
I’urty Days' Nut ices 0 25
t. „f Lan Is. Ac pr. »qr of tea Lines 6 )>0
pixtv I'sis’ Notices 7 00
f, n l>iy ’ Notices of Sales pr sqr ... 200
v.,n,;irrr' Sam#—for Uus*e Sales, for every fl fa
g 8 '.o.
Mortgage Sales, p r square. s•> 00
Ohltu iiios are charged tor tiio same as other adver-
Jwnttnts
urrwtu-xr ui.i———■
iroffsstouflt Cartfi.
I *
|i t» ;c. ii Alt I & J V A t/i.KN. hhve
IJ mi. fed lor ’lie purpose of practicing Law. One
r *».•*, n v nlwa.vs he lotiu-1 in tlieir oflics. Bv strict
t- utinti to hnsines.A and lair doniing w ith all they
■ e in nicit n liht-rai share of patronage,
i he lenior mt mtier of ihe llrm refers with confidence
K, i|l lor w hom he inis done business during The past
Bear
I Wiil prictiMt by contract in any of the courts, or in
liv p'lttiun if the State.
■A’i. n- ision Oh., thin v*2, 1570. ]an2i?-8m
■a NDKKSOX it McCALL.V, Attorneys
■ \ it i.aw t’o’ lri ’* n, (‘c iigld. Will attend lvsru
-8,,v, and I’ra tee in the Snpernn: «'<>urt.s of the
■un is of Newton, :tu u, Henry, Spalding. Tike.
I iiiroe, Upson, Morgan, HeKalb, Gwiimette and das
■r. dec) 0-1 y
■ \MK- M. M ATliiivVS. Attorney fit.
B i.nwg, Talhotton. practice all the counties
■u.t> ~«ing the • hatialioochee Circuit and elsewhere by
Iscial contract declO-ly
■ V r lljlj(S& WILLIS, Att'irtievx hi Law
If Toll) tton, Os Prompt attention given to
btwi ness placed in our ha (is. declO ly
■> [\ TItIRRK, A r.irnev nr Law
B\ ” ,r.vtb, <H. Will nractie.e in the. Courts
■ i'l tie United States’ Diatrict Court at \tinntaand
Braanuh, Ua, # dec 0 ty
\ ; L'\ ( , Attoi t.ey at Law, liaroett**
B • *')').•, ' » \\i|| practice in all the counties >-f
B riot .ici jit an' 1 . Supreme Court of the State.
If lIIIDV BL tIILJN K ...er»..v h
B J Law, Talboton, tla. Will practice In all the
B'eiies "f the Ch it ahooeheo ‘ 'ircuit, an*l Up-on and
B iweiher counties dee'S-ty
Jl> ALKX \ \ i ! Kiv A*' rev tr Low
• Thoma-ton, <l l. Will practice in all the coun-
B c M;>osln« tie Flint Circuit, and elsewhere t»v
Mir ' coni ret Special attention given to colloction,
■ .setiiepr., nptlv with diant*. dec'S-ly
loM \S BVi VLL Attrrnov at Ltw.
1 hoin.-.st.on Oa. 'Vi'd practice In the Flint. 1 ir
*#., -md else a here by sp. -i.**l contract. dac'S-l \
B\'i KU iSnltS wi'i <*' ’itinue the uraotie*
m? of Medi. ine. Odice as heretofore in the Webb
Block. deet'-lv
Hyi B 'S' T lI.sN.N Ml. is plea«e-i to
M- noti y the citizens of Upson that he will continue
Bp practic- 1 *. Medicine in Ha various branches at
n> - ut '" Q < fa. di-clB-1 v
»'>ll 1 1 HAI.L. .IONKIMI A. f'.HTI.N W.M. T WKAVKK.
n VLL. ro'ITF<\ T a WE \ VKR, AG
Mi ii'i-iu-v* i.nd Counveli'*'nt I.iw. u(Ti<-e in At
at"l Thomtiston, Gh Will |n-a< tice in (lie eouti
■ Cobh, Uninph U and Di-K.ilb * apt J
AM <aten, wifi give hi* ai ention to business ii th®
W" '.v.iu'Mes and will he found at all t-mean the
m ,r ) U uita. Will olso praetic' i- 'he eounties
i t >uv .nl, T'vlor, Talbot, and Merri
m in the Supreme (’ou t, and in the i'istrict
MB''• "f the United Stste* for ihe Northern District of
bfi r.in \:,.< srs Hall A AVeuver will give attention
dne*s in ih,* ahuve counties and will rein in in the
m in Ttioiuast.in, (,a. deelS ly
|dewtistb.y.
T’)’ Htvlersiejncd Wng pe'trtn tietitly
"‘e ! is Thoniston, still tenders his professional
■*' in toe prnetiee of Dentistry to the ci*i*ens «.f
H 1 1 and adjo'nins conntb-s Teeth inserted on at .Id,
■er, almemt! eor rnfiber. All work warranted and
and fit cu arm teed Ofiire up stairs over fit
■'hanth drug store.
N. BRYAN.
PUNTAL NOTICE.
BUK nn lersfigneJ ttike* pleasure in
.H ( ' I'tifvt j the eiii/.ens of Thiunns'on and t)>e vlcni-
H " a; those wishing anv kind of Dental work done.
operutlve or mechanical and done with
er<yen. can do so bycftlliog at my ofT ce or
to me at i> rntaviUe, and h t me know whert to
W G P. CAMPBELL,
, l’.ainesville, Ga.
|
I'UtMTI RIO
MOOMEY, BOYD & 00.,
MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
DEALERS IN
RJRNirURE of every Descripfion,
Our Manufactory has been overhauled, and Improved witn
new machinery, eopine. Ac , atnl we are now prepared to fur
nish the public with Furniture of all kinds at very low prices.
fbhlFlF difSE
K Nn'n^v'i OT| ban<l * LARGE ASBORT-
r. tr ™ the finest Burial cases to
■«<h>Ck fwM ‘•o'lmssh.uldbe
B*rvtofore S f ®r u th H'’ rge ‘ ,alron:, K' ! exten-md to
K.f. ’ ‘d will endeavor to deserve unincrease
Mten,lT * on SOLOMON ST
HWJntY, HOYO 41
THOMASTON, GAI., SATURDAY MARCH “0, 1870.
CARRIAGES,
BUGGIES & WAGONS.
0 -
Having procured the services us
MR. JOHN BLAND,
the well known PAINTER and TIITMER,
and the heat WORKMAN and BLACK
SMITH that can he found in the c< untr\ :
and have procured the airencv of a ;in« of
the firnt-clasa NORTHERN MANUFAC
tories, I ana prepared to furuish
VEHICLES
of nl! kinds and styles, from a WHEEL
BARROW to the finest
Buggy and Carriage
that can he gotten up. BUGGIES will he
my speciality. Sam idea will be kept on
baud at all times, where they can be seen
at my REPOSITORY. I can suit the fancy
of all. I propose to sell as low as they can
he purchased elsewher*# The best season
ed Northern timber will be used, and ihe
WORKMANSHIP
jill wfcvnrranted for twelve months—(and
no mistake). Two-horse Wagons of the
be>t and latest styles’will be kept constants
!v on hand ; also, one-horse
W A Gr O N S
and “DUM P 0 A RTS.” Repairing done.
Bring up your old Buggies and have them
repaired. I will regnpr them cheap, or
trade you new ones for them.
Shop next J. 0. Zimmerman’*
Furniture More. Gail and S’ j e me. Jl 1
should U« U.LISCIII. Mi. li.uiiO. « til nnn wu
you.
JOSEPH ALLEN.
Thomaston. Ga., Jan 7. 187 ;, -3m
WiildLEY & KNOTTY
Importers and Dealers in
HARDWARE, CUTLERY
\nd AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS
of all kinds.
Ivd! ACO TNT, GEORGIA.
S.de Afjeots for the Taylor Cotton Gin
in Macon. Gin Bonds furnished at Manu
lacturei s Price*.
Agents for Brinly’s Universal Plows,
Doty’s Washing Machine, Universal
u lothes W ringer. Buckeye Cultivator.
Improved Dickson Sweeps, of our own
manufacture 15 to 30 inch.
FERTILIZERS OF ALL KINDS.
jartls-3m
ASSOCIATE CAPITAL WANTED
r IVIE undersigned, for many vears pro®
1 pjiotor <>t the Th in.vs ton Factory, located nuar
Thomaston. U|»son county. Ua, wi ich property was
destroyed by the Federal troops In the Spiing of 1*65,
isdesirous of impr ving Said water pow, r. and wishes
to form a connection with someone or more parties to
raise a CnpiL i) of one hundred thousand dollars to he
invested at said place The property is iot offered for
side, but will he nut in at a low valuation, and an ud
d ti nal interest ret lined, amounting in all to twenty
live thousand dollars There are two privileges of 120
horse power ach, • ither of which is cap able of op r t
ing five or six thousand spin h-s and <wo hundred
ionms. There is on the piace. ready for use. an elegant
r«sidenee. which cost +5.000 before the war, and
other residences for fifteen families as operatives also
a dam and -tone canal at the upper power, the latter
needing repairs; a'so an inexhaustible supply of ex
c-.-lient granite. The location is •fe my access and as
healthy as the mountains. Address
LR C. ROGERS.
dec S-ts I bouiaston, Ga
Mac n Telegraph and Messenger copy one
month and send bill.
ZELL’S AMMONIATED
HOSE SITED PHOSPHITE.
TnoifASTON, Ga., Jaa. 3, 1870.
We are agents for the above Sta dard
FERTILIZER.
All persons who intend using it this sea
son will please call at our place of business
and get Certificates, and we will give all
information needed.
Respectfully,
ATWATER & SII ARM AN.
janß-tf
DR. J. O. HUNT,
\\J ILL conGnne the prac'ice «*f in<*d'-
\ V cine in Thomaston and Upson county.
WIU give prompt attention to calls, and wil’ devoie hi*
entire attention to the prartice. lie has moved (rom
bis oid residence to the > welling formerly occupied by
Mr A G Goree, on China sr. et. As soon ns finished
; ho will take an office up stai s in Mes ta Allen fit
j Cheney’s new building. Until then he can be found at
the Drug Storo of G>l B. L>. Hardawa/ A o*.
Clje (Storgia |)cntlb,
THOMASTON, GA., M’CII. 26. 7a
—"y*—— —————
A SINGULAR ROMANCE.
For the Georgia Herald]
[CiIKTIMSD FROM LAST VTEEK.]
Athens, May 16, 1850.
DearMits Maude: After dwelling
for sometime in the dark and misty
Azoic, Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Ce
nozoic ages, witnessing the gradual
drying of the earth’s surface, the
successive formations of rock and
coal-beds, upheaving of the horizonal
strata by the internal co operation of
fire and water, observing with much*,
pleasure the gradual rise of, and de
velopment of radiate, molluscan, ar
ticulate and vertebrate animals, and
the various kindsof plants which com
pose the vegetation of earth since its
creation, I gladly and cheerfully
leave all such wandering and fatigu
ing researches to commune for a short
period with her majestic and angelic
like spirit, which seems to preside
over my existence.
Both in my waking moments and
when my soul visits the shadows of
J §
the dream-land. Indeed you are
complimentary in saying you were
relieved of the loquacious young vvid'
ower, whose eloquence no doubt was
soul - chaining. While and
doubt for one moment that you»?re
relived, lam oftentimes induced to
give a different version to .such say
ings.
Who know’s but that Orphaeus
like songster has sent his thrilling
love songs throughout your entire
being, and ere many smiles from
“Aurora” greet the eyes of an un
known friend, you will have plunged
yourself into the vast and illimitable
ocean of wed-lock. But, let us not
dream over such probabilities. Look
to the Star of boon for mil' enfa an.lil
ance to me haven or your acquaint
ance, and despond not until the stern
reality is more glaring than the re
splendent beams of the “day god.*’
It is my painful necessity to state
that circumstances will debar me of
the pleasure of visiting Madison before
the 20th of June, which were it other
wise, we could almost see it. Imagine
my anxiety for this period since it
will be the climax of my college
career. I leave the cloister of the
student, cease for a time to look on
the flickering midnight taper, and go
foith into the world, mingle with my
long absent friends, meet those who
may prove 1 isting friends, and bask
for a time in ihe sun shine of life.
You no diubt will conclude that I
have been erecting some very extrav
agant castles. I confess my mind
has been roaming over life’s vast are
na. Indeed I have pictured the pal
ace in which love dwells roved along
the banks of the silvery stream amid
the richest foliage of natures vegeta
tion, with a devoted companion. I
have pictured some of the sterner
duties of life, but in ev.ery case imagi
nation has borne me to some blissful
E len. Hoping the intervening time
will soon pass, and that I will im
mediately realize a visit to Madison,
I beg to remain.
Your sincere friend,
William Adonis.
P. S.—For your photograph, all
thanks, I return mine, but a poor
compensation.
Atlanta June 10th, 1850.
Mr. Adonis: You can only fancy
how happy I am in believing you to
be rav iriend. May we be friends
forever. Y’our entertaining leUer
was a very ample compensation fur
my brief and uninteresting note.
Now r , that you are so soon to leave
the cloister of the student, and
with long absent friends you have
my most sincere wishes for a future
as bright and joyous as possible. We
are in the joyous morning of life, with
hopes gorgeous, rain-bow gilding
over sky, with romantic dreams of a
happy future, and with few corroding
cares. Why should we not enjoy it?
I am aware that hope oiten proves
deceptive and that behind the rain
bow the everlasting triple arch of the
sky-clouds aud darkness shroud the
heavens. But we should not anni
hilate the pleasures sf the present by
gloomy anticipations of the future.
1 restrain all sentiments in regard
to your photograph since you were
perfectly silent in regard to mine.
Your sincere friend,
Maude.
When Willie became the happy re
cipient of Maude’s last his duties
were so arduous that he c uld not re
spond. He was very assiduous to his
studies, and unusually so at this
eventful period, as he was soon to
withstand the ordeal of final exami
nations. He intended his first leis
ure should be consumed by a visit to
Atlanta, where he anticipated the
pleasure of forming Maude’s acquaint
ance, but circumstances over which
he had no control thwarted for a time
his fixed purpose. That bright mo
ment was deterred until near the
middle of July, when the “Fates”
happily contrived their meetjfig.
The commencement
Emory College had beer^Jj^rrogress
for two days. and hope
ful Demosth(yii£fisu"and Cicero’s had
poured fort Fie their eloquence and all
with the exhibition.
surprised, was Willie, when
he meet a friend from Madison who
informed him that Miss Maude was
present on this delightful occasion.
a thrill Gkf perforated
his entire being.
Arrangements were soon made
and Wil.ie and his friend were in the
dniwing-rooin awaiting *\{aude’s ap
pearance. Her extreme anxiety ush
ered her almost imperceptibly into
his presence without giving her toilet
the coup de grace. Picture, now in your
mind this of two
i much of each oth
er, yet they were t . ,
Maude’s exquisitely beautiful and
symmetrical form came to Wile
view he rose from*the i oft settee and
stood as wlflfr Maude
advanced, anil setting aside the rules
of formal extended lur
hand to receive the first grasp ol
friendship. scene was affecting
even beyond description. The Wtie
spectator was so overwhelmed that,
his senses were lulled while Willie
was more enamored with his new
mistress than the self-adoring Nar
cissus. The valentine and corr- s
pondence were the principle topics
of conversation, neither reiterating
in words the assertions which they
had formerly penned, but both speak
ing volumes more in their glistening
orbs. The closing scene of these ex
ercises was a literary address to each
of the societies. Willie attended
Maude to the wdl known Few, where
they exchanged glances fraught with
meaning as they listened to the elo
quence of Prof. Hopkins. The ad-
dress concluded, the hall soon rung
with the enlivening accents of a mer
rv crowd. Willie and Maude desir
ous of a little more silence and soli
tude than the crowded hall afforded,
seek a promenade. As they pass
out, to the right was seen a beatiful
grove where others had gone and
were making an appee; fance, such a
we fancy the Dryads of mythology
to have made. As they perambu
late this delightful place, fair Luna
smiled with purer and clearer beauty,
shedding a halo of light over earth’s
daik bosom, bathing all thihgs in her
refulgent light. As her gentle rays
glance through the opening trees,
here, and there, at intervals might be
seen some twinkling star as it were a
‘‘living spirit” gazing upon the happy
couple. Did I but hold the lyre of
Homer and could sing like one en*
spired, I might feebly describe the joy
of those happy spirits. This bright
dream was continue I until the soft
lulling of the midnight gale admonish
ed both, the merrv occupants of the
hall and of the moon-lit grove that
they must seek their nocturnal abodes.
Imagine Willies private medita-
tions as lie winded his way home iu
the “we sma hours bevant the twail”
w
beneath a canopy illumined by the
silvery bright ray. Said he to him
self let poets rave about mermaids
sitting on the coral cliffs of ocean
braiding their sea-green ringlets ; of
maids enticing the river deities with
their strains of more than mortal
melody, but they compare not with
this sweet spirit, the Aurora Borealis,
child of pure affection. Oh ! that
raven hair flowing in ringlets of
diamonds ; those eves like warm, soft
sumraer stars, sparkling under their
charming lashes; that smile, the re
flection of moon-light on the polar
seas, and her soft breathings like the
whisper of invisible spirits. If 1
could only be her cherished object, I
would never more sigh lor the forfeit
bowers of Eden. A few days inter
vening and Willie and Maude met
*ag;iin in Athens. Willie desiring to
intimate to Maude some of the mys
terious symptoms of an indisposition
with which he was afflicted, proposed
to show her the beauties of the ccme
tarv. When they had wandered
a nid the green paths and lovely en
closures of this “silent city of the
dead” till they (elt their spirits bath
ed in divine repose of the scene, they
slowly advanced to an elevated rock
bending over the yellow waters of
the Oconee, famous as the lover’s
leap. Near by her side, Willie seat
ed himself, as if desiring to catch
inspiration and receive the electric
charge by contiguity. With trem
bling voice he began to breathe forth,
the warm and fervent aspirations of
a soul almost convulsed by its strug
orlinets. The trembling orator worm
ing into power applied the golden
key that opens the fount of love.
Says he, I bow before a shrine where
nope sits brooding like a dove, where
life is a thing divine and all things
SHte *"l"riow “attempt" so" Bleat fi
mv first young vow, while the sum
mer flowers send their sweet fra
grance on the vernal breeze sighingly
softly : “Tt cannot be the first time
your young ear has heard a lover’s
burning sigh or silver word. I can
but hope'your mind will not be con
fused, but that (as my own) your
bosom will be made a paradise, and
my soul illumined by your rain-bow
smile. I need not . Such is in
evitably the case, lovers will cave
about this time. This eloquent
speech, though a failure in the end,
did not “waste its sweetness on the
desert air.” While Willie was writh
ing in the agonies of painful embar
rassment, Maude was not entirely
free from a similar diflidence. The
Commencement exercises being over,
Willie attended Maude safely r.ome
to her father’s mansion in the “Gate
City.” Vivid, indeed, were the
imaginations springing from his en
chanted mind.
The theatre of life possessed many
charms, and like most young men,
Willie was eager to become an actor.
After much debate in his own mind,
he decided to follow the beaten track
of his father, and launched his bark
on the sea of mercantile life. Little
business, however, of a mercantile
character was transacted for some
time. The loadstone of his soul was
not to be found amid the folds ot dry
goods. He worshipped not at the
shrine of mammon, but was desirous
of forming a connubial union with
her on whom he had lavishly bestow
ed the deepest affection.
But a few flank movements were
made wilh the greatest art and strate
gy. when the fortress with all of her
treasures rec pitulated. Maude’s
soliloquy is now to be realized. She
has left the ideal and merged into
the pleasing realities of wedded life.
As the beautiful crescent of the
into the%ill orb
of they are delight
ed with the beautiful and imposing
scenery of Tullulah and Toccoa,
awed by the grandeur and sublimity
of Niagara, refreshed and invigorat
ed by imbibing pure draughts from
the spriuor of Helen, perfumed with
Arcadia’s most mellifluent odors and
overwhelmed with visions from the
white crested summit t { Parnassus.
TIN AND STOVE
BTO R E .
AVI ICQ at liwK proeort-d the B©rvio«*
oi h flr*t-cUM TiaiMtX I am prepared to do nil klai es
Tin Wwl
T I TV - W A R 13
Manufactured and 101 l at the lo»«t possible prtoee
and all kind# «*( repairing at the a<Hk«. Aov
lllg us agent loC
P. M. RICHARDSON'S
Justly oel.hmted Stove and Tin H<>e#e, In A Manta, l
am |trrp»fcil io>‘ffrr tlii
those lii want cl a Move oi a;iy kt.«l.
COOKING STOVES
splendidly famished, and guaranteed to fire perk'd
iuUslaclion. lum *Ldra s ent lor the celebrated
“COMMON SENSE FAMILY
SEWING MACIIJNE.”
The very beat made, high priest or low. only S3O. Call
and examine my slock, and I wilp be iliaukiui for §»*-
tronace
W. W. IIAUTSFIELD, Ageat
Jan29-tf
THOMAS * KTHEL,
DEALER IN 4
DM GOODS MD GROCERIES
JTAS on hand & Large, Well Asaorted
aud oue of the BEST
SELECTED STOCKS
brought to this Market, and which he deskee in ax
charge r»r
Cotton or Greenbacks,
Placers in thU oml adjoining counties, who wish Good
GOODS would t’o well to eall and examine bis slock
efor* purchasing else where.
the aameat his NEW FIRE PUOOF STORE, Thomas
tan, On.
GRIFriN CAillUAGfl
REPOSITORY!
T rilS Repository, which for the laet
twenty-five years has supplied Fiddle Georgia with
thv beat CASRIAGBS, BUGGIES Ind PLANTATION
a
WaGONS, ever known in this country, is now stocked
again from the same Faotories, and can supply any
style of
Carriage or Buggy,
that may be wanted. Will always keep on hand the
celebrated Buggy called “The Woodruff Conoord,*
which are knewn to be superior to any other. Tb#
axles of this Bu.gy are all ma le ofs-rap iron m&nofao
tured expressly for this work. The dash frames are »f
Norway iron that will bend fi it down and hack without
braking. No Buggy can run lighter, ride easier or lest
Roger, or be bought cheaper to its real value than thia.
Will also k ep on hand the
WOODRUFF PLANTITI ON WAGON,
which is knows all over the State, and took the Ursa
premium at the late State Fair of Georgia.
W. W. WOODRUFF.
dceiMy Orif&n, Go.
• AIM SHADY.’
SPREADS HER BANNERS TO
TIIE OUTER' WALL.
NEW MILLINER?
F Choice Patercs and Latest Styles for
F-A-X/L. &£, 'W'XTsTTEH.
will be found at my ESTABLISHMENT, and I atn de
t. rmined to «'o work in my liue CHEAPER *nd
TER than anybody. MKB. 8. A. JaCKSO v .
Griffin, Gu, Dee 9 3ra Over Drewry & Cos., Hill st.
M.C.& J.F.KISEIL
WHOLES ALU DEALERS IN
Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods,
Notions, Roots, Shoes, Hats, Ac.,
NO. 76 WHITEHALL STREET,
ATIiANTAy OA»
ftb*-e<n
INTO; 10.