Cartersville express. Semi-weekly. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1870-1871, September 30, 1870, Image 1

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The Cartersville Express Is published Semi-Weekly on every TUES DAY AND FRIDAY", by SAMUEL H. SMITH, Editor and Prop’r. Ia th# town of Cartels vi lie, Bartow County, Ga. Terms of Subscliption: One copy one year (in advance,) $3.00 One copy six months. “ l.. r H Thursday Morning K<lition, one year) 1.50 This latter proposition is confined to citizens of Bartow county only. Terms of Advertising: Transient (One Month or Leas.) per square often •olid Nonpariel or Brevier lines or less. One Dollar for the first, and Fifty Cents for each sub sequent, Insertion. Annual or Contract, One Hundred and Twenty Dollars per column, or in that proportion. iffijofessional (£ards. John H . Wofford 9 ATTORNEY AT LAW. CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA. Office over Pinkerton's Drug Store. Oct. 17. Ir. T. WOFFORD, A. P. WOFFORD. W offord «fc Wofford, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, OAKTERSYILLE, GEORGIA. June 23, 1870. 11. W. Ylurplicj, ATTTORNEY AT LAW, SAETfiRSVILLE, GEORGIA. . Will practice in the courts of the Cherokee Circuit. Particular attention given to the col lection of claims. Office with Col. Abda .John iou. Oct. 1. John J. Join s. Attorney at law & real estate agent, CARTERSVILLE GEORGIA. Will attend promptly to all proffes-ionalbusi ness entrusted to hi* care; also, to the buying And belling of Real Estate. Jan 1. Jfere. A. Howard, Ordinary of Bartow County, and ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA. J*n 1,1870. A. 91. Fonfe, ATTORNEY AT LAW. CAKTEKSVILLK, GEORGIA. ( With t 'Vnrren Akin.) Will practice in the courts of Bartow, Cobb, Polk, Floyd. Gordon, Murray, Whitfield and ad joining counties. March 30. /RO. COXE, J. H. XVIKLE. Coxe «V Wihle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW AND NOTARIES PUBLIC. 0 AP.TERB VILLE, GEO RGI.A. John Coxc, Commissioner of Deeds for South Carolina. Sept 9. T. W. MILNER, O. H. MILNER. liter A" Milner, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. CARTERS VILLI, GEORGIA Will attend promptly to business entrusted to their care. Jan. 15. Warren Akin, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OAtTtRStILLtC, GEORGIA. Will practice in all the courts of the State. Katn. 11. Putillo, Fashionable Tailor and Agent for Sewing Machines, WILL attend promptly to the Cutting, Re pairing, and Making Boys’ and Mens’ Clothing; also, Agent for the sale of the cele brated Grover A Raker Sewing Machines. Of fice over Stokely & Williams Store. Entrance from the rear. feb 17. Hr. .1. A. .Jackson. PRACTICING PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, OFFIE IXDR. PINKERTON'S DRUG STORE. HE has so arranged his business that he is now prepared to devote his whole time and attention ts the practice, and he feels confident, with hi* extensive experience, that he can give entire satisfaction. A liberal share of patron age respectfully solicited. ( •rtersf ille, Jan fi. •loliii W. Dyer, HOUSE-PaIXTEE. CARTSKS VILLE,. GEORGIA. Will •ttend promptly to business in his line. Jftn 19, 1870 wly H . 11. MouiiteasOc, Jeweler and Watch and Clock Repairer, CAETBRSVIIJ K GEORGIA. OBc« in front of A. A. Skinner & Co’s Store. KenneMau House, MARItTTA, GEORGIA. ISttill open to the traveling public as well as summer visitors. Parties desiring to make arrangements for the season can be accommo dated. Rooms neat and clean and especially adapted for families. A fine large piazza has been recently added to the comforts of the estab lishment. F LETCH Eli & VItE Y E li, june!Bwtf Proprietors. lOiigtisli School. ’jV'TISS MIN DA HOWARD will open an Eng lisli Mixed School, in a School Room just completed, near the residence of J. A. Howard, €»rtersville, Ga., on the Second Monday in July next Girls and little boys will be admitted on the following terms: jFirst Class : Spelling, Reading, Writing, Primary Arithmetic and Geography, (per uonth) $1.50 Sttonb Class: English Grammar, Geography, Histo ry, and Arithmetic, (per month,). $2.00 Jto deduction made for loss of time, except in eases of protracted sickness. The term will end on the 12th of December Kex t. CartersviUe, june 30-wltn &.W.&IE&CO. JjiVE TAKEN CHARGE OF THE Foundry and Machine Shop, heretofore ow ned and run by MR. B. SCOFIELD, es this place, and have engaged the services of John »l. MjaFontaine , Os Atlanta, Ga., as Foreman, which is a suffi cient guarantee for the success of the establish ment, as it is a well known fact, throughout the State, that for promptness and ability, he eun aot be surpassed. We have, also, procured the services of the Best Moulder In flic South; Also a corps of other Mechanics, and anew ■upply of Machinery and Tools have been pur chased. Mr. J. R. HOWELL, The Renowned Mill-Wright, Will make his headquarters at this Shop, where M* celebrated If" a ter Wheel, and other MILE MACHINERY, will be built. Orders are solicited , at once, for any kind of Ousting or piece of Machinery. We claim a trial, as we*are strictly Southern mechanics, and de fy Northern competition to do better or cheaper work. Wit (Kuarantj) 35h£rg Sob Site 390. Will tell parties to the day' when they can have their work, and, if not done according to prom ile, will make no charge. W e ask the patronage of our friends of the South. Aid us, and keep the money at home. G. W, LEE & CO. Cartersville, Ga., june 20, 1670. SAM’L H. SMITH, VOL. 9. H. 11. PATTILLO, Agent GROVER & BAKER’S CELEBRATED KWK BOTH THE KLISTIC AX» SHUTTLE OR LOCKSTITCH. SUITABLE FOR ANY KINO OF FAMI LY SEWING JIONE BETTER- Men and Boys’ Clothing Made on the Most Reasonable Terms. In fact, almost any description of SEWING done As Cheap as th© Cheapest! AND IA THE BEST STATE. R. REDDING, .mm ' m E) EAE ESI r\ STOVES, CRATES, AND LIGHTNING RODS\ PLAIN, PRESSED AND JAPANED TIN WARE, ANI) House Furnishing Goods, Maun Str., Cartersville, Ox. All kinds of Job Work done with neatness and dispatch. The firm of Strange & Redding having been dissolved, by mutual consent, I will continue the business at the old stand, feb 15 wly li HERDING. Atlanta Sternal & Variety Works! BEN. Z. DUTTON, Manufacturer of and Dealer in Stencil Brands Steel Dies, Steel Block Slumps, [turning It rands, B> ass Alphabets, and all Articles kept in a first class STENCIL HOUSE. PRICE LIST OV MA If.,A EL EAU7I CL ES Stencil Name l’lates for mark'g cloth'g, 75c Steel Ring, for keeping keys together, 2oc New Style key tag, with name neat eng. 25c Perpetual Almanac, the most ingenious little article of the age, * 50c Any of the articles in this list will be mailed, to any address, on receipt of price, or the whole of them for $1 25 Address BEN. Z. DUTTON. Lock Box 351, mch 22-wly Atlanta, Ga. N. B. —Circulars sent free. ©REPAIRER UF JEWELRY, CLOCKS, AND WATCHES; Also keep on hand and for Room in the store of Simon Liebman, Cartersville, moli ‘l2. stable. Ford <V Moon. CARTERSVILLE, GA., IS prepared, at all hours, to furnish con veyances into the country —saddle-horse, buggy, hack, rockaway, ov wagon. Also, to board stock, &c. nov. 3. G3arShop ’ i y - • W, C, EDWARDS, Harness, V !,■ Bridles, oi Saddles and GEAR, Manufactured and Repaired in the very best style of the art, in the quickest, time and at the shortest notice, and tor less money than is usually paid for such work and stock. Try me I W. C. EDWARDS. Cartersville. mch 9—wly . v. Dr. 17. 31. Ah J olinHon, U DENTIST. . -A- A A' ■ (l V Teeth drawn without pain, by the use of nar cotic spray. mch 9. W H GILBERT & CO., CARTERSVILLE, GA., Dealers In HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, NAILS, CASTINGS, AGRICULTURAL IM PLEMENTS, and GRASS SEEDS, TERMS FROM THIS DATE: STRICTLY CASH. Agents for sale of Threshing and Mill Machinery. Agents for sale of Murfee Sub Soil Plows. Agents for sale of FERTILIZERS. Dickson’s Compound; AHDREW GOE’S, Baugh’s Raw Bone, TAnd OTHERS. Agents for sale of Polk County Slates For lioofino-. ATLANTA SACK FACTORY. ' WE are prepared, at all seasons, to fill or ders for Grain and Flour Sacks, of any size, quality, or quantity at our factory in At lanta, Ga. ,W. A. MITCHELL & CO. sept.. 20, 1870. wly LABTKRSVILLE, BARTOW COOTY, GEOUGII, SEPT. 550, IS7O. TO PHYSICIANS. New York, August 15th, IS6B Allow me to call your attention to my Preparation of Compound Extract Buchu. The component parts are BUCHU LONG LEAF, CUBEBS, JUNIPER BERRIES. Mode of Preparation.—Buchu, iu vacuo. Juniper Berries, by distillation, to form a fine gin. Cubebs extracted by displacement with spirits spirits obtained from Junip-r berries: very little sugar is U3e 1, and a small proportion of spirit. It is more palateable than any now in use. Buchu, as prepared by Druggists, is of a light color. It is a plant that emits its fragrance ; t.be action of a flame destroys this (it* active principle,) leaving a dark and glutinous decoction. Mine is the color of ingredients. The Buchu in my preparation predomi nates; the smallest quantity of the other ingredients are added, to prevent fermentation ; upon inspec tion, it will be found rot io be a Tincture, as made in Pharmacopeea, nor is it a Syrup—and therefore can be used in cases where fever or inflammation ex ist. In this, you have the knowledge of the ingredi ents aid the mo te of preparation. Hoping that, you will favor ; t wilh a trial, and that upon inspection it will meet with your approbation With a feeling of confidet.ee, I am very respectfully yours, 11. T. IIELMBOLD, C nemixt vnd Druggist of 1G gears' experience. [From the Largest Manufacturing Chemists iu the World.] November 4, 1854. “I am acquainted with Mr. 11. T. Ilembol l ; he oe cupied the Drugstore opposite my residence, and was successful in conducting the busii ess where others had net been equally so before him. ( have been fa vorably impressed with his character and enterprise.” WILLIAM WEIGIITMAN, Firm of Powers & Weight man, Manufacturing Chemists, Ninth and Brown streets, Philadelphia. Helmbold’s Fluid Extract of Bu^hu Is the great specific for Universal Lassitude, Prostra tion, Ac. The constitution, once affected with Organic Weak ness, requires the aid of Medicine to strengthen the ys cm, widen II EM BOLD’S EXTRACT I.UJUU in ariaffiy does. If no treatment is submitted tt, Cou- SmptGn or insanity endues, v Ilelmbold’s Fluid Extract of Buchu, In affections peculiar to Females, is uneqnaled by any other preparation, as in Chlorosis, or Retention. Painfulness, or Suppression of Custom* ry Evacuations, Ulcerated or Schirrus Stale of the Uterus, and all complaints incident to the sex, or the decline or change of life. Helmbold’s Fluid Extract Buchu and Improved Rose Hash. 'A ill radically exterminate from the system diseases arising from the habit* of dissipation, at little expense little or no ch mge in diet, no inc rnvenience of expos ure ; completely superceding those unpleasant and dangerous remedies, Copaiva and Mercury, in ail these diseases. Use Helmbold’s Fluid Extract Buchu in ail diseases of these organ*, whether existing in male or female, from whatever cause originating, and to no matter . f how lone standing It is pleasant in taste and odor, “immediate” in action, and more strengthening than ary prepsratitns of Bark or Iron. Those suffering from breken down or delicate con stitutions, procure the remedy at once. The reader must, be aware that, however slight may be the attack of the above disease!, It is certa.u to af fect the bodily health and mental powers. as All the above diseses require the *id of » Diuretic IIEMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUCHU is the great Diuret ic. Sold by Druggists everywhere. PRICE— SI.2S per bottle, or 6 bottles for $6.50. Delivered to any address. Describe symp toms in all communications. Address H.TJELMBOLD, DRUG AND CHEMICAL WAREHOUSE, 504 BROADWAY, New York. None Are Genuine Unless done up in steel-engraved wrapper with sac-simile of my Chemical Warehoues and signed XI. T. IIELMBOLD. SE MI-WEEKLT. DR. JOHN BULL'S c*reat Remedies SMITH'S TONIfi STROP! FOR THE CURE OF AGUE AND FEVER OR CHILLS AND FEVER. The proprietor of this celebrated medicine justly claims for it a superiority over all remedies ever offer ed to the puolic tor the safe, certain, speedy and per manent cure of Ague and Fever .or Chills and Fever whether of short or long standing. He refers to the entire Western and Southwestern country to bear him testimony to the truth of the assertion, that in no case whatever will it fail to cure, if the directions are strict ly followed and ca rled out.. In a great many cases a single dose has oeen sufficient for a cure, and whole families l ave teen cured by a single bottle, with a per fect restoration of the general health. It is, however, prudent, and in every case more w tain to cure, if its use i* continued in •mailer doses for a week or two af ter the disease has been checked, more especially in difficult and long stand ng cases. Usually, this medi cine will not require ar.y aid to keep th* bowels in good order; should the patient, however, require a cathartic medicine, after having taken three or four doses of the Tonic, a single dose of BULL’*} VEGETA BLE FAM’LY PIILS will be sufficient. DR. JOU.V BILL’S Principal Office No. 40 Fifth, Cross street, Louisville, Sy, Bull’s Worm Destroyer. Io my United States and World wide Read ers: I lIAIL received many testimonials from profes sional and medical men, as rny almanacs and vari ous puolications have shown, all of which arc genuine. Ihe following from a highly educated and popuiar phpsici&n in Georgia, is certainly one of the most sen sible conimunicationf I have ever received. Dr. Clem ent knows exactly what he speaks of, and his testimo ny deserves to be written in letters of gold. Hear what the Doctor says of Bull's Worm Destroyer Villanow, Walker co., Ga. ) June 29th, 1866 £ DR. JOHN BULL—Dear Sir:—l have recently giv en your “Worm Destroyer” several trials, and find it wonderfully efficacious. It has not failed in a single Instance, to have the wished-for effect.. lam doing a pretty large country practice, and have daily use for some article of the kind. lam free to confess that I know of no remedy recommended by the ablest, authors that is so certain and speedy in its effects. On the con trary they are uncertain in the extreme. My object in writing you is to find out upon what terms I can get the medicine directly from you. If I can get it upon easy terms, I shall use a great deal of it. lam aware that the use of such articles ft contrary to the teachings and practice of a great majority of the reg ular line of M. D.’s, but I see no just cause or good sense in discarding a remedy which we know to be ef ficient, simply because we may be ignorant of its com bination. For my part, I shall make it a rule to use all and any means to alleviate suffering humanity which I may be able to command—not hesitating because someone more ingenious than myself may have learn <l its effects first, and secured the sole right to secure hat knowledge. However, lamby no mtans an ad vocate or supporter of the thousands of worthless nos trums that flood the country, that purport to cure all manner of disease to which hum in flesh is heir.— Please reply goon, and inform me of your best terms. I am,sir, most respectfully, JULIUS P. CLEMENT, M. D. Bull’s Sarsaparilla. A GOOD REASON F n R THE CAPTAIN'S FAITH, READ THE CAPTAIN’S LETTER AND THE LET TER FROM HIS MOTHER. Benton Barracks, Mo., April 30, 1866. Dr. John Bull—Dear Sir: Knowing the efficiency of your Sarsaparilla, and the healing and beneficial qualities it possesses, I send you the following state ment of my case: I was wounded about two years ago—was taken prisoner and confined for sixteen months. Being moved so often, my wounds have not healed yet. I have not sat up a moment since 1 was wounded! I am shot through the hips. My general health is im paired, and I need something to assist nature I have mere faith in your Sarsaparilla than in any thing else. I wigh that that is genuine. Please express me half a dozen bottles, and oblige Capt. C. P. JOHNSON. St. I *ouis, Mo. P. B.—The following was written April 39, 1865, by Mrs. Jennie Johnson, mother of Capt Johnson. Dli. BULL—Dear Sir: My husband, Dr. C. 8. John son, was a skillful surgeon and physician in Central New York, where he died, leaving the above C. P. Johnson to my care. At thirteen years of age he had a chronic diarrhoea and scrofula, for which I o-ave him your Sarsaparilla. IT CURED HIM. I have Tor ten years recommended It to many in New York, Ohio, and lowa, for scrofula. feve r sores, and general debili ty. Perfect success has attended it. The cure* eject ed in some cases oj scrofula and fever tore* were almost miraculous lam very anxious for my son to again have recourse to your Sarsaparilla. He is fear ful of getting a spurious article, hence his writing to you for it. His wounds were terrible, hut T believe he will recover. Respectfully, JENNIE JCIHNSOU. BULL’S CEDRON BITTERS. AUTHENTIC DOCUMENTS. ARKANSAS HEARD FROM, Testimony of Medical Men Stony Point, White Cos., Ark., May 23,’66. DPw. JOHN BULL-Dear Sir: Last February I was in Louisville purchasing Drugs, and I got some of your Sarsappanlla and Ce Iron Bitters. My son-in-law, who was with me in tho store, has been down with rheumatism for some time, commen ced on the Bitters, anC soon found his general health improved. Dr. Gist, who has been in bad health, tried them, aod he also improved. Dr. Coffee, who has been in bad health for several years —stomach and liver affected —he improved very mufch by the use of youir Bitters. Indeed the Cedron Bitters has given you great Popularity in this settle ment. I think I could sell a great quantity of your medicines this fall—especially of your Cedron Bitters and Sarsaparilla. Ship me via Memphis, cart of Rickett A Netly, Respectfully, C B WALKER. All the above remedies for sale by Xi. H. BRADFIELD, Druggist, WAITE HALL STREET, ATLANTA, GA feb'2o, 1869tclt/ Editor and, Proprietor. Startling Effect or a Hymn. A Hong Kong correspondent of the Boston News tells an interesting inci dent He had been entrusted with packages for a young man from his friends in the United States, and after inquiry learned that he might proba bly be found in a gambling house.— He went thither, but not seeing him, determined to wait, in the expectation that ho might come in. The house was a bedlam of noises—men getting angry over their cards and frequently coming to blows. Near him sat two men—one young, the other forty years of age. They were betting and drink ing in a horrible way, the elder one giving utterances continually to the foulest profanity. Two games had been finished, the young man losing each time. The third game, with fresh bottles of brandy, had just begum and the young man sat lazily back in his chair while the elder shuttled his cards; and the young man looking carelessly about the room, began to hum a tune. He began to sing the beautiful lines of Phoebe Cary: “One sweetly solemn thought Comes’to me o’er and o’er, I'm nearer to my Father’s house, Than Fvo ever been before. “Nearer the bound of fife, Where we lay our burdens down, Nearer leaving my cross, Nearer wearing my crown. At first, says the writer, these words in such a vile place made me shudder. A Sabbath-School hymn in a gamb ling den ! But while the young man sang, the elder stopped dealing the cards, stared at the singer a moment, and throwing the cards on the floor, exclaimed: “Harry, where did you learn that tune?” “What time ?” ‘Why, the one you have been sing ing-’ The young man said he did not know what he had been singing, when the elder repeated the words, with tears in his eyes, and the young man said he had learned them in a Sunday" school in America. Come, said the elder, getting up; come; here’s what I’ve won from you; go and use it for some good purposes. As for me, as God sees me, I have played my last game and drank my last bottle. I have misled you, Harry, and lam sorry. Give me your hand, my boy and say that for old America’s sake, if for no other reason, you will quit the infernal business. The writer says these two men left the gambling house together, and walked away arm-in-arm. Tlie Wife. Here is the best tribute to woman we have ever read: Only let a woman be sure she is pre cious to her husband— not useful, not valuable, not convenient simply, but lovely and beloved; let her be the re cipient of his polite and hearty atten tions, let her feel that her cares and lore is noticed, appreciated and return ed, let. her opinion L*p asked and her approval sought; and her judgment be respected in matters of which she iscoguizant; in short,let her only belov ed, honored arid cherished, in fulfill ment of the marriage vow, and she will be to her husband, her children and society a well spring of happiness. She will bear pain, and toil and anxie ty, for her husbands love to her is a tower and fortress. Shielded and sheltered therein, and adversity will have lost its sting. She may suffer, but sympathy will dull the edge of sorrow. A house with love in in it— and by love I mean love expressed in words, and looks, and deeds, for I have not one spark of faith in love that never crops out —is to a house without love, as a person to a machine; one is life, the other a mechanism, the unloved woman may have bread just as light, a house just as tidy as the other, but the latter has a spring of beauty about her, a joyousneos, a pen etrating and pervading brightness to whieh the former is an eutire stranger. The deep happiness of her heart shines out in her face. She gleams over. It is airy, and graceful, and warm and welcoming with her presence; she is full of devices and plots, and sweet surprises for husband and family.— She has never done with the romance anil poetry of life. Sim herself is a lyfic poem setting herself to all pure and gracious melodies. Humble house-hold ways and duties have for her a golden significance. The prize mkkes her calling high; and the eixl sanctifies the means. “Love is Heav en, and Heaven is love.” / [ 0 [Translated for the Cincinnati Commercial by 11. 11. lasting out a The voiceofaDonkey in Ilit*Church. A preacher signing himself “Hann communicates to the Froehliehe J>ot schi/hr, a German Methodist journal published in Dayton ,Ohio, the follow- , ing amusing story from his own expe rience: “Once I was a pastor in a congrega tion in which there Vas a family who owned a dog that used to run on three legs only. Although the owner dislik ed it exceedingly, the dog would ac company him into church. In fact he seemed to know instinctively when Sunday had come, for early in the morning he would get ready, at some distance from the hous to go to church with the family, and each timp he managed to get in. “One Sunday morning he was there, as usual, promenading on his three legs up and down the aisles of the church, causing a good deal of disturb ance to myself as well as to the con gregation. Getting a little out of hu mor, I said, somewhat angrily, 'Open the door and drive out the dog, for I believe the devil is in the dog, and tries ro disturb the congregation.’— The dog cast a sharp glance at me, but decamped as soon as the door had been opened—never to return. “Alany times the attempt had been previously made to expel the dog with out success, but this casting out of the dog-devil was a triumph. “Now for another story. Out iu the bush, where meeting houses are not fenced in, congregations are fre quently disturbed with cattle brows ing in the neighborhood- Iu the sum mer, they seek the shade of the house, and in the Winter protection from the cold winds. JTO. IH. “Now, it so happened that a minister was preaching to a large and attentive audience. 11 being verry warm, the windows were open, and outside a good many of those animal* had congregated, whose peculiar voice is familiar to all. One of them seem ed to be particularly curious to see what was going on inside, and would, repeatedly look in at the window. “This, as a matter of course, greatly disturbed the congregation, especially those sitting near the window. Bu& when the worthy pastor solemnly ap pealed to his auditors to heed the words of the Gospel preached to them, and, after pausing a little while, asked them, ‘Well, my dear beloved friends in Christ, do you believe in the Word of God?’ one of the said animals thrust his head in at the window, and amid the solemn silence that hud suc ceeded the words of the pastor, utter ed twice a significant ee-uli, ee-ali!— At first the whole congregation were stupefied, but soon they all burst out into loud laughter. And so the effect,, of the Word of God I had to them was gone —it had been de stroyed by the donkey’s voice. We believe that the devil makes use of va rious means to earry out his plans and to drive the Word of God from the hearts of the people. “This disturbance could haAe been avoided had the people fenced in the meetinghouse, and thereby put tip a fence against the devil, which would be good if it were done oftener.” A country fellow went courting his girl, and wishing to be conversational, observed: ‘ The themoukron is twenty degrees below zelen this evening.” “Tes,” innocently replied the maiden,, “such kinds of birds do fly higher some seasons oi the year than others.” Among the many laudable en terprises being undertaken in our city, we chrouicle none with more pleasure than when we announce that Messrs. Rondeau & Cos., Furniture Dealers, are erecting a large factory of their own for manufacturing the furniture they sell. The firm are erecting their factory on the corner of Butler and*, Harris’ streets, and it will be run by steam. Their building, which will be very large, is to be filled with a large lot of improved machinery, which is already here. When completed, the establishment will turn cut as good furniture as there is in the South. Such enterprise is commendable, and deserves success. —Atlanta Svn. BguJ. R. Brown has been nominat ©d for Senator of thirty-ninth district.