Newspaper Page Text
SEMI-WEEKLY EXPRESS, j
• J " r v?r Harris «»d same h. smith[
EDITORS ANTI T*ROrKTETOHS.
CARTEHSVILLK.G V.. M \Y -j:;, 1871.
I>r. Lvvick l'icrcc. j
It Wfis our good fortune to be pres
s IJ t Sabbath morning at the Methodist )
Church, occupied as it was by this ag- ,
ed servant of God. Dr. Pierce is now
S7 years of age, and, though bearing j
about him manifest evidences of failing
bodily powers, he is yet the same mas
ter spirit in the pulpit which he has
been, by universal consent, for many
long years in the past.
On his Return from the Sunday
School Convention in Nashville, he call
ed by Cartersville, ond is the guest of
his son, Rev.' Dr. J. L. Pierce. Not
withstanding the weariness of travel
and the sorer evjl of a severe attack of
asthma, under which-he is laboring,
with a power, a clearness, an ability,
an eloquence, w hich is simply his own,
and in which he lias no superior, if any
equal, any where at. all,- for one hour
and ten minutes, he held his large and
deeply interested congregation spell
bound by one of the most forcible, af
fectionate and solemnly persuasive ser
mons we remember ever to have heard.
Surely, the man is a wender, a very
miracle in our midst; and, as he stood
before us arrd so “mightily” persuaded
the people, we thought withiu ourselves
that, would Providence allow, it would
Ire good that he could abide another 4
score and ten for the good of the
church, the proclamation of the gospel
end the benefit of tl.e people. On the
Sabbath before, we listened to that
“Prince of Preachers,” Bishop Pierce,
from the same pulpit, and perhaps no
more difficult task could be prepared,
than to decide which was the ablest
and most effective man oi the two, the
father or the son. A comparison of
these two very eminent and godly men
brings to mind the opinion of Bob.
Martin, celebrated for his wit and his
great powers of narration, as once ex
pressed by himself:
Very soon sifter Bishop Pierce was
admitted to the Conference, his great
pulpit ability became not only appar
ent but was the subject of frequent
conversation among his friends.
At tnis period of his life it was that
we met with Martin, and asking him
how the sou competed with the father,
‘‘Well,” said he, “the folks all say that
while they are trailing and running on
t.he track, that one is about as good as
the other, the old man may be a little
the bot-t, but that after the ‘varmint’
is treed, they think that George can
outbark him.” But be it as it may,
they are priceless gifts to the church,
and prized and loved for their great
talents and great labors—devoted to
the greatest of all ends, the service of
vheir kind and the glory of God. Few
fathers ever had such a son, few sons
ever had such a father.
Editorial Miscellany.
A negro woman was run ovor by a
runaway team in Savannah the other
day, and instantly killed.
Rev. Joseph Cross D.D., has resign
ed the pastorate of St. Stephens Church
at Atlanta, and \\i]l go to Memphis.—
He will edit the Banner of the Church,
which has also been removed thither.
According to the Census return, the
total colored population in the United
States and Territories is 4,857,000.
Oscar Ulmer had both of his feet
crushed off by a locomotive at Savan
nah last week.
Georgia has given $6,818 to the
American Bible Society, the past fiscal
year.
Edward Dickey a writer in Apple
tons Journal, says that “Paris has out
lived its prime," and that he sees no
prospect in our days that she will ever
recover her pristine grandeur.”
A Good Gun. —The other Jay, Mr.
John T. Arnold took out a rifle that
had been leaded for. some time to dis
charge it. He fired at the wall of his
larn, and the lead penetrated ibe
plonk, went through the other side
and killed a fine young mule.
South em llecorder.
The Alabama & Chattanooga Rail
road was finished on Monday the 15th,
and the first train ran through from
Chattanooga to Meridian on Tuesday,
making the tiip in thirteen hourp.'
[Columtnis Enquirer.
A Bill conferring suffrage on women/ 1
base been introduced in the Territorial
It gislatnie at Washington.
Rev. D. W. T. Brantly Las had a
call to take charge of a church in Bal
timore. It is doubtful as yet whether
he will leave Atlanta.
The good people of Atlanta, failed
to give Henry M. Law a hearing, and
so the lecture on Eloquence did not
take place. The Era says, “if Demos
thenes himself could rise from his
grave, he wofild find it an impossibili
ty to collect an audience in Atlanta.—
.We are disgusted,” Mr. Law in our
judgement is without a. peer in decla
mation.
Ruloff the scholarly murderer has
been hanged.
The Sontheren Baptist Convention
will be held at Raleigh in May next.
Judge J. O. Morton of Brooks Coun
ty shows a cabbage raised by him
weighing IG| pounds and is one of a
thousand weighing 6|, so says the
Quitman Banner.
The city of Chicago pays the tax
levied on the grave and monument of
Stephen A. Duglaes, and so the ashes
of the Little Giant barely escapes the
hammer of the auctioneer.
Street Car Biots are almost daily
occurrances in Louisville. The negroes
demand equal privileges with the
whites and will not ride in the sepa
rate Cars provided for them. The
whites have pretty well abandoned the
Cars altogether, and the negroes have
them all to themselves. Negro women
have hitherto assumed to ride on the
inside, and the negro men on the out
side, Lut now they are all on the inside
with the ; whites.
Savannah is to vote on the 25th i*
she will subscribe $500,000 to the At
lanta and Savnnah Railroad.
Jewell Las been inaugurated Gover
nor of Connecticutt.
Sir John Herschell the astronomer
ditdj on the 12th inst. ugod 81.
A great drought is prevailing in Ilh"
-nois.
Harrison Westmorland was found
guilty by the jury of an assault with
intent to murder, at the Superior
Court of Fulton county. The Court
has sentenced the prisoner to ten years
imprisonment in the Penitentiary. A
motion has been made for anew trial,
and the scentence suspended until the
motion is determined.
The Cincinnati Times has a compos
itor Win. McDarmaid by name, who is
90 years old, and used to set up Wal
ter Scott’s poems from the original
manuscript.
A Dutch Judge on conviction of a
culprit for having four wives decided
“He hash banishment plenty, for I
hash to live mit one.”
The Mississippi Legislature passed
a bill giving S4OOO per mile to all pro
jected Railroads in that State.
Bonner has lately purchased Mam
brino Bertie a three year old colt from
Dr. Herr of Kentucky, at and for the
price or sum of SIOOO.
By a late decision in the United
States District Court at Pittsburg, in
the oil torpedo case, E. A. L. Roberts
is threatened with an income of $15,-
000 per week.
Os the present members of Congress,
four w ere boru in Ireland, two in Eng
land, two in Germany, and one in Scot
land, and one in Germany.
Columbus Ohio, May 17, Adams
Express Office was entered. Two per
sons sleeping in the office were drug
ged, aud fifty thousand dollars in cur
rent funds taken. No clue.
Horace Greely made a speech in
New Orleans the 16th inst.
The Atlanta Constitution says the
first train of cars over the Georgia
Railroad to that city arrived there on
the 15th September, 1845.
The Ku-Klux Chinee—That Hea
then Outrages His Man and Brother.
—The New Orleans Times , of Monday,
Bth inst., has the following:
One of our coast planters, who has
a number of Chinese laborers in his
employ, seeing a disposition on the
part of some of the negroes to annoy
the Orientals, and apprehending a re
sort by the latter to the use of the
sharp knives which they always wear,
cautioned them not to take the law into
their own hands, but in case they were
troubled by any negro to bring the
offender before him, and he would see
that jnstice was done.
Accordingly, one day the planter,
whilst sitting onjhis gallery, observed a
procession of the Chinamen coming
from the quarters, bearing at their
head a dark package. They marched
with great deliberation and dignity up
to the mansion, and laid their burden
on the gallery at the feet of the plan
ter. It proved to be a “chunk of a ne
gro,” securely bound as only Chinumen
know how to tie a parcel of goods.—
The negro| was scared out of| his
senses, though eutirely unhurt. Lay
ing him quietly down on the gallery,
the leader of the Chinese, pointing to
the dark mass, said to the planter,
'“Niggah too much! too much Niggah!”
and then the whole party trotted back
to their w’ork.
It was an hour’s hard work to uniie
the frightened negro, who, on his re
lease, very cheerfully acted upon the
suggestion of the planter to “make
himself scarce.”
We publish this incident in antici
pation of the accounts which will doubt
less Ire forwarded to the North by the
correspondents of the Radical journals,
as one of the incidents of lawless vio
lence so common in the South, against
which President Grant has just issued
his high sounding proclamation.
Governor Walker, of Virginia,
being interviewed by a woman who
desired to know his position on a cer
tain question, asked her what she
thought of the matter hereif, and being
answered that she was on the fence,
graciously replied: “Madam, I wish
no more agreeable position that titling
by your side.”
The Old Woman’s Railway Sig
nal.
The most effective working force in
the world in which we live is the lawl
of kindness. For it is the only mora
force that operates with the same effect
upon man kind, beast-kiud, aud bird
kind. From time immemorial, music
has wonderfully affected all beings, un
reasoning, that have ears to hear.—
The prettiest idea and simile of ancient
literature relates to Orpheus playing
his lyre to animals listening in intoxi
cated silence to its straius. Well, kind
ness is the spontaneous music of good
will to men aud beasts. And both lis
ten to it with their hearts instead
of their ears; and the hearts of
both aie affected by it in the same
way, if not to the same degree. Vol
umes might be written filled with beau
tiful illustrations of the effects upon
both. The music of kindness has not
only the power to charm, but to trans
form both the savage heart of man and
beast; and on this harp the smallest
fingers in the world may play heaven’s
sweetest tunes on_ earth.
Some time ago we read of an inci
dent that will serve as an illustration
of this beautiful law. It was substan
tially to this effect: A poor, coarse fea
tured old woman lived on the liue of
the Baltimore and Ohio railway, where
it passes through a wild, unpeopled
district of Western Virginia. She was
a widow, with only one daughter, liv
ing with her in a log hut, near a deep,
precipitous gorge, crossed by the rail
way bridge. Here she contrived to
support themselves bj r raising and sel
ling poultry and eggs, adding berries
in their season, and other little articles
for the maiket. She had to make a
long, weary w ilk of many miles to a
town where she could sell her basket
of produce. The railway passed by
her cabin to this town; but the ride
would cost too much of the profits of
her small sales, so she tiudged on gen
erally to the market on foot The con
ductor came finally to notice her walk
ing by the side of the line or between
the rails; aid, being a good-natured,
benevolent man, he would often give
her a ride to and fro without charge.
The enginemen and brakesmen were
also good to the old woman, and felt
they were not wronging the interests
of the railway company by giving her
these free rides. And soon an accident
occurred that proved that they were
quite right iu this view of the matter.
Iu the wild month of March, the
rain descended and the mountains sent
down their rolling, roaring torrents of
melted snow and ice into this gorge
near the old woman’s hut. The Hood
arose with the darkness of tho night,
until she heard tho crush of the rail
way bridge, as it was swept from its
abutments, and dashed its broken tim
bers against the craggy sides of the
precipice on either side. It was near
ly midnight. The rain fell in a Hood,
and the darkness was deep and howl
ing with the storm.
In another half hour the express train
would be due. W hat could she do to
warn it against the awful destruction
it was approaching ? She had hardly
a whole tallow candle in her house; ana
no light she could make of tallow or oil,
if she had it, would live a moment iu
that tempest of w ind and rain. Not a
moment was to be lost; and her thought
was equal to the moment. She cut
the cords of her only bedstead, and
shouldered the dry posts, side-pieces
and head-pieces. Her daughter fol
lowed her with their two wooden
chairs. Up the steep embankment they
climbed, aud piled all their household
furniture upon the line a few rods be
fore the black, awful chasm, gurgling
with the roaring flood.
The distant rumbling of the train
came upon them just as they had fired
the well dried combustibles. The pile
blazed up into the night, throwing its
red, swaying, blooming light a long
way up the track. In fifteen minutes
it would begin to wane, and she could
not revive it with green, wet wood.—
The thunder of the train grew' louder.
It was w ithin five miles of the fire.—
Wotild t hey see it in time ? They might
not put on brakes soon enough. Aw
ful thought!
She tore her red flannel gown from
her in a moment, aud, tying it to the
end of a stick, ran up the truck, waving
it iu both hands, while her daughter
swung rouud her head a blazing chair
post a little before. The lives of a
hundred uuconscious passengers hung
on the issue of the next minute. The
ground trembled at the old woman’s
feet. The great red eyes of the engine
burst upon her as it came round a
curve. Like as a huge, skarpsigkteu
lion coming suddenly upon a lire, it
sent forth a thrilling roar that filled all
the wild heights and ravines around.—
The train was at full speed; but the
brakesmen wrestled at their leverage
with all the strength of desperation.—
Tho wheels ground along on the heat
ed rails slower and slower, until the
engine stopped at the decaying fire.—
It still blazed enough to show them
the beetling edge of the bluck abyss
into which the train aud all its passen
gers would have plunged, aud into a
death and destruction too horrible to
think of, had it not been fur the old
woman’s signal.
They did not stop to thunk her first
for the deliverance. The conductor
knelt down by the side of ihe engine;
the eugiue duvei and the brakesmen
came aud knelt down by him; all the
passengers came and kueit by them;
and there, by the expiring light of the
burnt-out pile, in the nun and the
wind, they thanked God for thj| salva
tion of their lives. All in the line of
the kueelefs and players sent up into
the duik heavens such u midnight voice
of thanksgiving as seldom, if ever, as
cended from the earth to Him who se
eth in darkness as well as in secret.
Kindness is the music of good will
to m* n; and on this harp the smallest
fingers may play heaven’s sweetest
tunes on earth. —Eiihu Burr tit.
ft cad the flaming advertisement of Me
liritie & Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
Rich music—A million air.
A woman’s ailment—The stitch.
Notes of admiration —Love letters.
The seat of war—ls that of a camp
stool.
“Tozzleeompoop’ is Illinois for busy
body.
‘I m a ’tickler friend of yours,” as
the snuff said to the uose.
M ateriug places that remain open
all winter-—The mouths of milk-cans.
M kich is the better off, tea or cof
fee? Coffee; it settles itself, but tea
has to draw.
1- ;f* * <“*.«*.' * i |
Aged Fish.— The possible extreme old
age to which certain animals may at
tain has often been a subject of specu
latiom There are a number of carps
at present in the lake at Versailles
which have silver rings attached to
their noses, which riugs were placed
there by La Belle Feuioniere, the mis
tress of Francis 1., before the discovery
of this continent. Recently au eagle
was shot near Belfort, which bore about
it a presumable evidence of great age.
Around its neck was a steel collar,
upon which was cut the date 1646, and
also au armorial bearing half effaced.
The ancient bird has been shifted aud
presented to |fie Museum Agram.
Ihe Countv Jail. —The contract for
building u new jail, we learn, has been
let by our Ordinary. Messrs. Jackson
A Cos., of Cartersville, and Mr. H. B.
\\ allace, of this place, have contracted
for the work at an aggregate cost of
about $4,000. — Marietta Journal.
«A ew Advertisements.
SHARP & FLO YD,
Successors to Geo. SHARP, Jr.,
ATLANTA, GhA„
Wholesale And Retail Jewelers.
We Keep a Large ami Varied Assortment of
FINE WATCHES, CLOCKS,
JEWELRY,
AND
SPECTACLES.
sdub mm mm,
A SPECIALTY.
We Manufactuae .Tea Sets, Forks, Spoons
Goblets, Cups, Knives, etc.
TVmiums 3for L cultural Ufai^s.
We arc prepared to All any order for Fairs at
short notice; also to give any information in
regard to Premium*.
Orders by mail or in person, will receive
prompt and careful attention. We ask a com
parison of Stock, Prices and Workmanship with
any house in the State.
Watches and Jewelry carefully Repaired
and Warranted. M titanic- Badges and Sunday
School Badges made to order.
All Work Guaranteed.
ENGRAVING FREE OF CHARGE.
MIvVRP A FLOYD.
May 53, swlv.
Mil SCO.,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
TO MERCHANTS.
500 CRATES of As-
GRANITE
and
Exactly suited to the wants of Countrv Merch
ants, of our own Importation, packed to our
own Order
IN EUROPE.
i
Wo sell them for net cash for SBO.OO
Direct Importation
OF
TABLE Asl> POCKET
C utlerv.
*tO
Any New York bill of
Cutlery-^
Silver Plated Ware,
nnd Crockery,
Duplicated.
Sure Freights, Itrenkage, and Delay, bv inly
ing from us.
Manufacturer’ll Agent**
for -
Glass-W are •
The largest aud cheaj>est stock of
FIRST-CLASS
FECIT JABS,
in the South.
SATE IftO>Uß FRUIT.
for Price Fists.
Mcßride & co.
may JJ2 wly ATLANTA, GA.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Eastman’s Business College
A Southern Institution, located ut
ATLANTA, GA.
PATRONIZE A HOME INSTITUTION, and
the rmtfaiwd Head of all (Joiumetrial or Rus
iness Schools for the practical, useful Educa
tion of Young Men. training them for an active,
successful life. Students are admitted every
week-day in the year. For further particulars
of the course of studv. terms. Ac- address
A. K. EASTMAN, Principal.
FOES" PER LINK
We will insert an advertisement
ONE MONTH
In thirtv-fonr first-class
GEORGIA NEWSPAPERS,
Including live dailies.
We refer to the Publisher of this paper, to
whom our responsibility is well known.
LIST SENT FREE.
Addres GKO. P. ROWELL & CO.,
Advertising Agents,
No. 41 Park Row, New York.
1 QOG use thT -vegetable” i
I Balsam”!O »1/
The old standard remedy for Coughs. Colds, Con
sumption. “Xvthing fatter." CUTLER BROS. A
CO., Boston.
FRACANT SAPOLIENE
Cleans Kid Gloves and all kinds of Cloths and
Clothing: removes Paint, Grease, Tar, Ac., cou
*tanthj, without the least in ! urv tothetlnest
fabric. Sold l»v Druggists asd Fancv Goods
Dealers. FRAGRANT SAPOLIENE' CO., :«
Barclay St. New York, 46, La Salle St., Chicago.
flh /Y A DAY FOR ALL, with Stencil
J.V Tools, Address E. A. Graham,
Springfield, Vermont.
jgb -k A month, horse and carriage fur
tushed. Expenses paid. 11. B.
Shaw. Alfred, Me.
Agents! Read This!
WE WILL PAY AGENTS A SALARY
OF *3O PER WEEK and Expenses,
or allow a large commission to sell our new and
wonderful inventions. Address M. WAGNER
A CO., Marshal, Mich.
CUT THIS OUT!'
And send twenty-five cents for a ticket and
draw a watch. Sewing Machine, or some article
of value. No blanks. Six for one dollar. Ad
dress Packard A Cos., Cincinnati. Ohio.
HERE'S YOUR GOOD PIC
The Mky-Light Gallery,
In Carters Ville, having just been rcruoddelled,
repaired and rearranged, is now in sublime trim
for taking correct and perfect
PHOTOGRAPHS
FERROTYPES.
We respectfully invite Ladies, Gentlemen and
Children of Cartersville and adjacent country,
to come to our Gallery, over the stores of Messrs
11. A. A 11. M. Clayton and G. L. McDonald, on
Main Street, and get the handsomest, cheapest
and yet the most life-like pictures, taken by
any artists in upper Georgia.
MOSELEY BROTHERS.
Cartersville, may 3, ’7l-swtf
For Sale.
A T PUBLIC OUTCRY, before the court
house door in the town of Cartersville,
Bartow County, Georgia, within the legal hours
of sale, on the first Tuesday iu June, 1871, what
is known as the
Cartersville Male and Fe
male Academy.
This applies to the house and not the ground.
Now occupied by the Rev. J. L. Pierce’s school,
and located near the Presbyterian Church in
the aforesaid town, for cash. Said house is sold
under an order from the Honorable Superior
Court of said county, for a distribution of the
proceeds of the sale among the stockholders,
according to the interest of each iu said pro
perty. This the 2nd May. 1.871.
ABDA JOHNSON,
P. L. MOON.
W. L. KIRKPATRICK.
Commissioners.
VJTJTE STATES
INTERNAL REVENUE
T X.
U. 8. Internal Revenue,
Collector's Office, 4th
7 v
District Georgia.
Atlanta, May 15th, 1871. J
I will attend by my deputy, Wells
B. Whitmore, as follows, to-wit:
Cartersville, Cass County, Thursday,
June Ist.
Calhoun, Gordon, Saturday, June
3d.
Spring Place, Murray County, Tues
day, June sth.
Dalton, Whitfield County, Thursday,
June Bth.
Ringgold, Catoosa County, Satur
day, June 10 th.
La* nyette, Walker County, Tues
day, June 13th.
Summerville, Chattooga, County,
Thursday, June 15th.
Rome, Floyd County, Saturday,
June 17th.
Trenton, Dade County, Tuesday
June 20th—for the purpose of Collect
ing the Internal Revenue Tax, assessed
on the Aunual List for 1871, by W.
L. Goodwin Assistant Assessor for the
Third Division of the 4th Collection
District of Georgia.
Payment at the times and places above
mentioned, for the several Comities will
save COSTS and PENALTIES imjjos
ed by law.
JAMES ATKINS,
Collector.
Strayed,
From the Old Lewis & Jones’ Furnace on
Stamp Creek, about ten dayg ago, two Colts
—One a bay horse colt, and the other a
gray mare colt, about two years old each.—
Any information of their whereabouts left
at the Cartersville Express Frinting Office,
or conveyed tome at my home, will be thank
fully received. R. M. STILES.
Cartersville, may I9th, 1871-swtf
Georgia, bartow county.-By virtue
of an order from the Court of Ordinary of
said County will be sold on the lirst Tuesday in
July, 1871, at the Court House door in said Coun
ty, Within the legal honrs, a house and lot in the
town of Aduirsville, in said County, whereon
Charles Hollis now resides, containing three
acres, more or less, fronting on. Centre Street,
and bounded on the North bv the lot of James M.
Vcach, and on the East and South by streets;
also a vacant lot in said town, on "the West
side of the W. & A. It. R., 20 feet front, by eigh
ty feet deep, being a corner lot, adjoining the
vacant lot of A. Johnson, and known as tne E.
Porter lot. Sold for the benefit of the heirs of
William 11. Eidson, deceased. Terms, Cash,
TIIOS. if. BOM AR,
A dm'r, tie ftonix non,
chw tmUimento annexo.
Os said deceased-
J. & S, BONES & CO..
IMPORTERS OF AND DEALERS IN
IRON AND STEEL
Hardware, Gwtlery, Gits, & Ct| 5
ROME, CA.
Besides having D£€IDEDLY the LARGEST HTa
of HARDWARE, in all its Departments, i n the
kee country, we arc the Exclusive Agents for in,. H ,‘! *
■E X
Celebrated Portable, Stationary.
AND
Plantation Engines.
PORTABIi: < IIU t I.AR SAW AND GRIST MILL*.
AYR MILL MACHINERY OF ALL KINDS.
Persous intending to erect Mills of any kind, would do well to consult with u .
Ami can he furnished at Strictly Manufacturers Prices
Blandy’s Portable Steam Engines and Saw-Mills have taken
the First Premiums at
The United States Fair,
The Ohio State Fair at Cincinnati,
The Ohio State Fair at Dayton,
The Ohio State Fair at Zanesville,
The Ohio State Fair at Sandusky,
The Indiana State Fair at Indianapolis,
The Missouri State Fair at St. Louis,
The Tennessee State Fair at Nashville,
The Goergia State Fair at Macon,
The Arkansas State Fair at Little Rock,
The Agricultural Fair Association Ga. & Ala. Rome Ga.
The Kentucky North Western Agricultural Society
The Great Industrial Exposition at Cincinnati,
And many other Fairs of less consequence, and never failed
to beat all competitors, in any contest in which they were evei
entered.
We give a full square guarantee upon all the Machinery sold
by us. Send lor Catalogue ar and Price List.
March 31, 1871. J, & S. BONES & CO.
RUBLE & HIGHT,
AGENTSTFOE EUBSELL & CO’S.
€ELEBR.iTF,n UOI’BLE FAX, PIVOTT CYLINDER
THRU HITSH]REAR THRESHER,
And Separator, and also,
Impi’ovcd Sclßßnking Reapers mid Mowers.
Jttsf Hettbeil
A NEW SUPPLY OF
(fftkbratlb Jfartit
(Uflagons,
IMPROVED SINGLE AND DOW STAR CORN SHELLERS.
Improved Peacock Flows,
Cast-Steel Excelsior Flows,
Silver Steel Clipper Flows—All sizes.
THE EUREKA SMUT AND SEPARATING MACHINE.
GALE'S COPPER-STRIPPED FEED CUTTER,
HAY-PKESSBS,
Jffiauaey’s Broad-Cast Seeder and Caltlvator,
And a General Stock of Well Assorted AGRIUCTURAL
IMPLEMENTS, always on Hand.
FARMERS CAN OBTAIN FROM US DUPLICATES OF
ANY FARTS OF MACHINERY WHICH MAT
RREAK OR WEAR OUT.
We keep nothing which cannot be warranted No. 1 of its kind.
Finding by long experience in this trade, that it is much more
profitable to keep none but good, substantial and reliable Imp’ e ‘
meiits Soliciting your orders, we are, Respectfully,
RUBLE & HIGHT,
Agricultural Depot, Cor. Market and Eight Streets,
Chattanooga. Tennessee.
Janl7th 1871—ts.
PHILADELPHIA and ATLANTA
Wine and Liquor
COMPANY.
NO. 8. GRANITE BLOCK, ATI.ANTA,
DEALEIiS IN
PURE WINE jS. Nl> UQUOft*.
Call Particular Attention to their
Peach 1 Apple Brandy
June 7, 1870. wOrn